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Thursday, 12 June 2008
Tuesday, 27 May 2008
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Currently Listening
Innervisions
By Stevie Wonder
see relatedInnervisions
It’s 11:00 AM in the office, and I’m jamming out to some Stevie Wonder. “Golden Lady I’d like to go there” baby, yeah! (To be said in my best Bootsy Collins impression). Stevie was never much of a lyricist, but his voice sure convinced you of whatever he said. There is one bit on the “Innervisions” record I find rather intriguing. In the song “Higher Ground” it can be induced that Stevie subscribes to a reincarnation philosophy, which is unique to an African American R&B singer. “I'm so darn glad he let me try it again, Cause my last time on earth I lived a whole world of sin, I'm so glad that I know more than I knew then, Gonna keep on tryin' Till I reach the highest ground”. Hmmm.
These floating and flowing humid summer days of mine are spent reading and dreaming and playing some guitar. If only the rest of my life could be so simple and contented. Last night I went walking after a short rainstorm, the slick asphalt darkening the roads as the leftover raindrops sporadically fell from the trees. I feel as though I’m still learning how to listen to music. It is one thing to hear, and another to allow the sounds to penetrate your soul. Music, like philosophy, should change your life, not just passively make its way through it, like background noise that only occasionally sparks your interest. It should make a difference.
So many folks miss out on the beauty music can offer us in its more pure forms. I’m not an elitist to the extent that I’ll exclusively advocate pre-rock & roll genres, although I’m tempted to peer through that lens from time to time and question rock (as all good things should be examined). So what do I mean by pure forms? The answer involves distinguishing art from product.
On a technical level, there are certain aspects of commercial recording that drain the pith from music. Namely, over-compressing and auto-tuning methods can render a song “too clean” to the point that all the elements are so perfect they become inhuman (yes, imperfection is inherent and necessary in all regions of human life, not that we know any other scenario). Running the risk of an embarkation into a debate on the merits of electronic music (which I’m not opposed to at all within a certain extent), I’ll make the claim that computers have no soul; music is to be made by living breathing beings. By not appreciating these recording techniques one pigeon-holes just about everything you hear on Top 40 as a sterile product, mixed in such a way that no element is too abrasive, edgy, or threatening so as not to tip off the listener of its inanity and intellectual vapidity. The big record companies just want to give you a catchy seven note ditty that you’ll pay to hear again and again until, just as the previous hook wears out, they can sell you a new one (fortunately, the major labels are dieing an increasingly rapid death. Anyone interested in the decline of mainstream music and the various new directions should check out Bob Lefsetz’s blog at http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/).
Trying to avoid the temptation to negatively define what music is not, let’s examine what attributes real music displays. Really, it all comes down to soul. But what does that ambiguous term entail? The soul is the quintessence of all other signs of life. Just like humans, in order to be considered alive music must show some portent of consciousness. There must be breath, counterpoint, a sensitive and clear perception, sincerity, and perhaps most important, dreams and ambitions, a striving after unreached heights. It may be difficult to hear these concepts in music, but try listening to a record like you would a brand new acquaintance. Even when you first meet someone you can intuit the level of their sincerity. You often tell immediately whether they are insecure, arrogant, spunky or friendly. In this same way you must allow a song to speak to you. Depending on the music you are familiar with you may be alarmed at the inability of some records to say anything. Yet, you may also garner an entirely new perspective from a record you’ve spun a hundred times. So, don’t just listen to music on shuffle in your car or while you work out. Sit down, pick an album you enjoy, and consume it from beginning to end without distractions. You never know, you might learn something.
Tuesday, 20 May 2008
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Currently Listening
Motor Booty Affair
By Parliament
see relatedOh comely (some thoughts before I left for Nashville)
Oh comely. Tomorrow I see Radiohead in Charlotte, and Saturday I depart for Nashville to do some recording with my band. This will be our second EP, the first being tracked on my computer and is still currently unfinished. Starting with Merlefeast I have been to around six different shows in the last couple of weeks, the most recent being the likes of George Clinton with Parliament and Funkadelic. Music, hmm. It is difficult to try and place where in my life and to what degree of importance music plays in my unraveling strand. For a long time music has just been there. Yet as I reflect on my few years I can already see the various shifts and roles it has taken on at different points.
I look back to the Fifth grade when R.E.M. was my favorite band. They served to imbue me with such an energy, yet simultaneously with a penetrating melancholy, a sort of beautiful awareness of the ever-present sorrow in all things. All these sentiments I drew solely from Eponymous, which was a collection from their years on the I.R.S. label, and Green, which if I’m not mistaken is their major label debut. “This one goes out to the one I love, this one goes out to the one I’ve left behind, flyer.” There was something in the simplicity of that soaring chorus amidst the offset complimentary backing vocals that intensely struck a chord with me, reshaping my phenomena of living in this world. I’d picture myself with possible future loves, folding laundry in a small apartment and spontaneously embracing just at the climax of “Fall on me”. All kinds of amorous dreams were given to me by the songs on those two records. Listening to “You are the Everything” I would envisage scenes of my elderly days spent with an aged girl “in the backseat laying down the windows” and I’d “look at her and I see the beauty of the light of music, the voices talking somewhere in the house late spring and you’re drifting off to sleep with your teeth in your mouth.”
Other songs were filled with unrelenting exuberance, like “Radio Free Europe” which had me singing at the top of my lungs “Calling out on the transit! Calling out on the transit!” Man, I was eleven years old and I memorized the lyrics to “It’s the end of the world as we know it”, and I felt pretty cool about that. In fact, I felt pretty cool about my R.E.M. infatuation anyway because I was the only kid within my sphere of interaction that knew about them at the time. I suppose that brings us to another point; why is there such a mystique and sense of self-satisfaction that accompanies the discovery of an unheard of band? It makes you wonder why so many hipsters seem to hoard their gems either to themselves or their esoteric friends instead of bringing them into the light for all to see. I guess it says something about the pomo (an abbreviation for postmodern that I learned the other day and I’m choosing to flaunt now) world where individualism is valued exponentially more that the community. Not that I’m one to talk.
(Part Two of this blog will be published at a later date.)
Tuesday, 06 May 2008
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Currently Listening
Hello Starling
By Josh Ritter
see relatedBright Smiles, Dark Eyes, and the Summer Manifesto
I had the privilege of attending a Josh Ritter concert at the Orange Peel last Friday. For me the most poignant moment of the show was his rendition of “The Temptation of Adam” from his record “The Historical Conquests of Josh Ritter”http://www.joshritter.com/news.php . After strapping on an acoustic guitar as the rest of the band left the stage, he stood alone and asked for all the lights in the venue to be turned off. Then in the dark he slowly made his way through this chilling and completely original song. I mean, seriously, have any of you heard of an amorous liaison set in a missile silo? Incredible stuff. Here are the lyrics:
The Temptation of Adam
If this was the Cold War we could keep each other warm I said on the first occasion that I met Marie We were crawling through the hatch that was the missile silo door And I don¹t think that she really thought that much of me
I never had to learn to love her like I learned to love the Bomb She just came along and started to ignore me But as we waited for the Big One I started singing her my songs And I think she started feeling something for me
We passed the time with crosswords that she thought to bring inside What five letters spell ³apocalypse² she asked me I won her over saying ³W.W.I.I.I.² She smiled and we both knew that she¹d misjudged me
Oh Marie it was so easy to fall in love with you It felt almost like a home of sorts or something And you would keep the warhead missile silo good as new And I¹d watch you with my thumb above the button
Then one night you found me in my army issue cot And you told me of your flash of inspiration You said fusion was the broken heart that¹s lonely¹s only thought And all night long you drove me wild with your equations
Oh Marie do you remember all the time we used to take We¹d make our love and then ransack the rations I think about you leaving now and the avalanche cascades And my eyes get washed away in chain reactions
Oh Marie if you would stay then we could stick pins in the map Of all the places where you thought that love would be found But I would only need one pin to show where my heart¹s at In a top secret location three hundred feet under the ground
We could hold each other close and stay up every night Looking up into the dark like it¹s the night sky And pretend this giant missile is an old oak tree instead And carve our name in hearts into the warhead
Oh Marie there¹s something tells me things just won¹t work out above That our love would live a half-life on the surface So at night while you are sleeping I hold you closer just because As our time grows short I get a little nervous
I think about the Big One, W.W.I.I.I. Would we ever really care the world had ended You could hold me here forever like you¹re holding me tonight I look at that great big red button and I¹m tempted.This summer I will attempt to learn to be a person again.
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Currently Listening
The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein
By Parliament
see relatedWeddings...
I’m not sure that I have ever been this excited about summer before. My band played at a friend’s wedding last weekend. Weddings put me in an uncanny place; I really do not know how to feel about them. Being at such a ceremony seems to me as though my quintessence has been poured into a strange sack of corduroys and a collard shirt and then forced to wander through a world of chocolate strawberries and beanie weenies, flowers and bubbles, and somehow I cannot seem leaven the initial awkwardness that is aroused at the unusual combination of these elements. Of course this being the first occasion in which I have assisted in instilling the impetus to dance as opposed to watching passively, the experience differed slightly from attendances in the past. Playing in a band at a reception has a certain vantage point; no one pays any attention to the band so it really is like viewing the whole shindig through one-way glass. Weird stuff.


