I Am The Walrus (1967) – the Beatles

The Beatles were peaches when they first started out. Strapping young lads in their sharp suits singing I Want to Hold Your Hand with the adjoining bowl-top haircuts. Just dishes they were – and boy did they ever make those girls scream their heads off! Everyone was in love with them.

But then they met Bob Dylan in 1964, which famously led to the band’s first experiences with marijuana. That sleek veneer of four lovely boys from Liverpool singing sweetly about holding hands – who you could bring home to meet your mum – gradually started to wear off.

They began to individualise and experiment – not only with drugs, but also with attire, facial and head hair, and most significantly their music and songwriting. Then LSD came into the picture for John Lennon and – boom. Combine that with his cynical disposition toward people offering overly serious scholarly interpretations of Beatles lyrics and you get today’s featured song: I Am the Walrus. I like a bit of wacky, zany Beatles, and “Walrus” is most definitely that – another great B-side track (to Hello, Goodbye).

You know you are going to have fun when a music video opens with a Bus Conductor saying: “We are concerned for you to enjoy yourselves, under the limits of British decency. You know what I mean, don’t you? Well, don’t you?!” What a great blend of playful irreverence and the era’s cultural constraints.


The following was abridged from the Wikipedia article below:

The music video below is from from the Beatles 1967 television film Magical Mystery Tour. It depicts a group of people on a coach tour (including the band members) who experience strange happenings caused by magicians.

Lennon was partly inspired by two LSD trips and Lewis Carroll’s 1871 poem “The Walrus and the Carpenter“.

Since the “Hello, Goodbye” single and the Magical Mystery Tour EP both reached the top two slots on the British singles chart in December, “I Am the Walrus” holds the distinction of reaching numbers one and two simultaneously. Shortly after release, the song was banned by the BBC for the line “Boy, you’ve been a naughty girl, you let your knickers down“.

[Verse 1]
I am he as you are he as you are me
And we are all together
See how they run like pigs from a gun
See how they fly, I’m cryin’

[Verse 2]
Sitting on a cornflake
Waiting for the van to come
Corporation tee-shirt, stupid bloody Tuesday
Man, you’ve been a naughty boy
You let your face grow long

[Chorus]
I am the eggman
They are the eggmen
I am the walrus
Goo goo g’joob

[Verse 3]
Mister City policeman sitting
Pretty little policemen in a row
See how they fly like Lucy in the sky
See how they run, I’m cryin’
I’m cryin’, I’m cryin’, I’m cryin’

[Verse 4]
Yellow-matter custard
Dripping from a dead dog’s eye
Crabalocker fishwife, pornographic priestess
Boy, you’ve been a naughty girl
You let your knickers down

[Chorus]
I am the eggman
They are the eggmen
I am the walrus
Goo goo g’joob

[Bridge]
Sitting in an English garden waiting for the sun
If the sun don’t come, you get a tan
From standing in the English rain

[Chorus]
I am the egg man (Now good sir, what are you?)
They are the egg men (A poor man, made tame to fortune’s blows)
I am the walrus
Goo goo goo joob
G’goo goo g’joob (Good pity)

[Verse 5]
Expert, textpert, choking smokers
Don’t you think the joker laughs at you?
(Ho ho ho, hee hee hee, ha ha ha)
See how they smile like pigs in a sty
See how they snied, I’m cryin’

[Verse 6]
Semolina pilchard
Climbing up the Eiffel Tower
Elementary penguin singing Hare Krishna
Man, you should have seen them
Kicking Edgar Allan Poe

[Chorus]
I am the eggman
They are the eggmen
I am the walrus
Goo goo g’joob g’goo goo g’joob
Goo goo a’joob g’goo goo g’joob, g’goo
Joob! Joob! Joob!

[Bridge]
Joob! Joob! Joob!
Joob! Joob! Joob! Joob! Joob!
Joob! Joob!
Joob! Joob!

[Outro]
Umpa, umpa, stick it up your jumper
Everybody’s got one, everybody’s got one

“Villain, take my Purse
If ever thou wilt thrive, bury my Body
And give the Letters which thou findst about me
To Edmund Earl of Gloucester: seek him out upon the English Party
Oh, untimely death, death–”
“I know thee well, a serviceable Villain; as duteous to the Vices of thy Mistress as badness would desire”
“What, is he dead?”
“Sit you down, Father; rest you”

References:
1. I am the Walrus – Wikipedia

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Night Fever (1978) – Bee Gees

Night Fever comes from the soundtrack album of Saturday Night Fever. The soundtrack became the highest-selling album of its time and helped launch the Bee Gees into global superstardom. My family contributed to that statistic – we owned the record when I was growing up. I’m sure we weren’t the only ones among readers here.

The Bee Gees had a string of US Billboard Top 10 hits from that record. Night Fever bounded up the charts while the Bee Gees’ two previous hits from Saturday Night Fever soundtrack (How Deep Is Your Love and Stayin’ Alive) were still in the top ten.

Night Fever seemed like a couplet song to Stayin’ Alive. For example, for the first five weeks that Night Fever was at No. 1, Stayin’ Alive was at No. 2. This song was the Bee Gees at literally fever pitch in their disco heyday. According to Allmusic critic Donald A. Guarisco – ‘The song convincingly recreates the euphoria disco fans feel while dancing to their beloved music‘.

I didn’t like Night Fever much for a long time. I found the chorus a bit bland and repetitive, and its over-saturation on the airwaves and in popular culture didn’t help. But now when I hear it, I can’t help but appreciate what it took to craft that sound, with its strong hooks and driving rhythm. Then there’s the moment when Barry Gibb kicks in to start the verses, and the Bee Gees strut their stuff. It’s way cool to me now! – even if disco fell out of fashion not long after, only to come back into vogue decades later.

A big part of its popularity came down to Barry Gibb discovering that unmistakable falsetto voice. Listening to it, you almost understand why men wore such tight jeans back then. Barry didn’t even realize he had that register until he was fooling around in the studio one day. But once the others heard it, the Bee Gees knew they were onto something. From then on, they milked it for all it was worth and pretty much built their disco sound around showcasing that voice.

As aforementioned their meteoric rise had a strange backlash. As disco fever took hold, every Tom, Dick, and Harry jumped on the bandwagon, often with laughable results, and the genre quickly became a punchline. The Bee Gees, unfortunately, were lumped in with it. Radio stations and record companies wouldn’t go near them with a barge pole. So, left with few options, they reinvented themselves as behind-the-scenes hitmakers – and to remarkable effect which I’ve expanded on in previous articles. 


Interesting trivia from Wikipedia:

  • Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb and Maurice Gibb completed the lyrics for Night Fever sitting on a staircase (reminiscent of their first international hit New York Mining Disaster 1941, which was also written in a staircase back in 1967).
  • The song replaced Andy Gibb’s Love Is Thicker Than Water at number one and was in turn replaced by Yvonne Elliman’s If I Can’t Have You – all of which were written and produced by the Gibb brothers.
  • A music video was made for the song in 1978 (see below) but not shown to the public until 26 years later, in 2004.

[Verse 1]
Listen to the ground
There is movement all around
There is something goin’ down
And I can feel it
On the waves of the air
There is dancin’ out there
If it’s somethin’ we can share
We can steal it

[Pre-Chorus]
And that sweet city woman, she moves through the light
Controlling my mind and my soul
When you reach out for me, yeah, and the feelin’ is right

[Chorus]
Gimme that night fever, night fever
We know how to do it
Gimme that night fever, night fever
We know how to show it

[Bridge]
Here I am
Prayin’ for this moment to last
Livin’ on the music so fine
Borne on the wind, makin’ it mine

[Chorus]
Night fever, night fever
We know how to do it
Gimme that night fever, night fever
We know how to show it

[Verse 2]
In the heat of our love, don’t need no help for us to make it
Gimme just enough to take us to the mornin’
I got fire in my mind, I get higher in my walkin’
And I’m glowin’ in the dark, I give you warnin’

References:
1. Night Fever – Wikipedia

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Train, Train (1979) – Blackfoot

Down-and-dirty rocker music is not usually my thang, but dang, Blackfoot can play wicked, boot-stomping rock ’n’ roll – which is right up my alley, especially in today’s featured song, Train, Train. It has a serious train-like rhythm (no surprise there), a drawling blues harp, a shredding guitar riff, and some raw, deep Southern vocals.

According to the article below: ‘When Blackfoot lead singer Rickey Medlocke needed a harp player to open the song “Train, Train,” he called in his granpappy Shorty Medlocke. It was a canny choice – not only can Shorty perform a mean suck and blow on the old harmonica, he also wrote the song‘.

Train, Train is some really intense American Southern rock in the vain of some of Lynyrd Skynyrd and The Allman Brothers music. In fact Rickey Medlocke played with an early incarnation of Lynyrd Skynyrd and re-joined permanently in the mid-90s. Effectively he remains active in both bands: Blackfoot and Lynyrd Skynyrd.

Train, Train was released on Blackfoot’s third album called Strikes. This song and Highway Song were released as singles, reaching No.38 and No. 26 on the US Billboard respectively. They remain the band’s best-known and most successful songs.

Blackfoot originated from Jacksonville, Florida and formed in 1970. The group disbanded in the early 1980s but has reunited a few times since then, the second time including all the original members except Medlocke, who had rejoined Lynyrd Skynyrd in 1996.


From Wikipedia:
The band changed their name to Blackfoot to represent the American Indian heritage of its members:Jakson Spires (from Oklahoma) had a Cheyenne/French father and a Cherokee mother; Rickey Medlocke’s father was Lakota Sioux and Blackfoot Indian, and his mother’s side is Creek/Cherokee, Scottish and Irish; Greg “Two Wolf” Walker is part Eastern (Muskogee) Creek, a tribe recognized by the state of Florida, but not federally. 

[Intro]
Oh, here it come

[Verse 1]
Well, train, train
Take me on out of this town
Train, train
Lord, take me on out of this town
Well, that woman I’m in love with
Lord, she’s Memphis bound

[Verse 2]
Well, leavin’ here
I’m just a raggedy hobo
Lord, I’m leaving here
I’m just a raggedy hobo
Well, that woman I’m in love with
Lord, she’s got to go

[Verse 3]
Well, goodbye, pretty mama
Get yourself a money man
Goodbye, pretty mama
Lord, get yourself a money man
You take that midnight train to Memphis
Lord, leave if you can
Oh, take that midnight train to Memphis
Lord, leave if you can
Oh, take that train, baby

References:
1. Song Of The Week: “Train, Train” by Blackfoot1 2 3 o’ clock 4 o’ clock Rock
2. Blackfoot – Wikipedia

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Give Me One Reason (1995) – Tracy Chapman

Give Me One Reason by Tracy Chapman is one heck of a catchy blues number. It just screams – cool and sexy at the same time. The singer is bold and sultry, and desires a lover who will take the initiative and call for her sweet ol’ attention. Because as she says – I’m too old to go chasing you around.

However, she’s not seeking a desperate (or crazy) lover – someone who will squeeze her into submission: “I don’t want no one to squeeze me / They might take away my life.” She still wants her space, but a little tender loving wouldn’t go astray as they rock her through the night.

Is it just me or it getting hot in here? Well it’s all Tracy’s fault and there seems no way to turn down the thermostat.

No, really… anyone who needs a reset and a good, long, hard look at themselves in a relationship may as well listen to Tracy – or better still, read the lyrics below and take counsel from them. There’s good insight here on how to get back on track in attracting a partner, while also getting yourself back in the mood. I’m starting to think I should have added a warning label to this post.

It goes without saying the instrumentals in this bluesy and gritty number complements everything Tracy is saying. And as each verse progresses and the band kicks in – the pleading in her voice becomes cathartic, begging for a reason to stay while knowing it probably won’t come.


Give Me One Reason is from Tracy’s 4th studio album – New Beginnings. The song is Tracy’s biggest US hit, reaching No. 3 on the US Billboard and No. 3 in Australia as well. It topped the charts of Canada and Iceland. But get this – it peaked at No. 95 in the UK! I’m keeping my lips well and truly sealed on its under performance there ;-P

Tracy first performed Give Me One Reason during her 1988 tour, seven years before its release. She earned the Grammy Award for Best Rock Song for the track.

[Chorus]
Give me one reason to stay here
And I’ll turn right back around
Give me one reason to stay here
And I’ll turn right back around
Said I don’t wanna leave you lonely
You gotta make me change my mind

[Verse 1]
Baby, I got your number
Oh, and I know that you got mine
You know that I called you, I called too many times
You can call me baby, you can call me anytime
But you got to call me

[Chorus]

[Verse 2]
I don’t want no one to squeeze me
They might take away my life
I don’t want no one to squeeze me
They might take away my life
I just want someone to hold me
Oh, and rock me through the night

[Verse 3]
This youthful heart can love you, yes
And give you what you need
I said this youthful heart can love you
Oh, and give you what you need
But I’m too old to go chasing you around
Wasting my precious energy

[Chorus]

[Outro]
Baby, just give me one reason
Give me just one reason why
Baby, just give me one reason
Oh, give me just one reason why I should stay
Said I told you that I loved you
And there ain’t no more to say


References:
1. Give Me One Reason – Wikipedia

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Tonight, Tonight (1995) – The Smashing Pumpkins

This is the second song by The Smashing Pumpkins to feature here in fairly quick succession after Today – a happy quirk of the alphabetical order of song titles. Tonight, Tonight is a grand juggernaut of dreamy, celestial alternative rock. The song and its video are epic and feel like an odyssey. The music video was inspired by Georges Méliès’ 1902 silent film A Trip to the Moon. It shows a couple taking a trip to the moon, while the band performs the track as if floating in space.

The grand scope and symphonic string and drum elements of Tonight, Tonight mark a strong shift from the prototypical alt-rock grunge sound heard on their earlier album Siamese Dream. As Frontman and guitarist Billy Corgan sings, “In the resolute urgency of now” it pulls you into the present moment, and everything comes together in the chorus. The strings were recorded with members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Corgan said that recording with a 30-piece string section for the song “was probably one of the most exciting recording experiences I have ever had.”

The song moves into quieter moments with just guitar and Corgan’s raspy, nasal voice, before returning to the sweeping strings and pounding drums, with Corgan crying out “Believe!” He has said the song is addressed to himself – a message to the child who survived an abusive upbringing – urging him to keep believing in himself. It is that contrast between the huge cinematic sound and the reflective passages that gives the song its power and emotional reach.


Tonight, Tonight was released as the fourth single from the Smashing Pumpkins third studio album Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness in 1995. The recording of Tonight, Tonight first began while the Pumpkins were still on the Siamese Dream tour.

Tonight, Tonight was critically acclaimed and commercially well-received upon its release. It reached No. 36 on the US Billboard, No. 7 in the UK, No 21 in Australia and No. 1 in Iceland.

[Verse 1]
Time is never time at all
You can never ever leave
Without leaving a piece of youth
And our lives are forever changed
We will never be the same
The more you change, the less you feel

[Pre-Chorus]
Believe, believe in me
Believe, believe

[Chorus]
That life can change, that you’re not stuck in vain
We’re not the same, we’re different
Tonight
Tonight, tonight, so bright
Tonight
Tonight

[Verse 2]
And you know you’re never sure
But you’re sure you could be right
If you held yourself up to the light
And the embers never fade
In your city by the lake
The place where you were born

[Pre-Chorus]
Believe, believe in me
Believe, believe

[Chorus]
In the resolute urgency of now
And if you believe there’s not a chance
Tonight
Tonight, tonight, so bright
Tonight
Tonight

[Bridge]
We’ll crucify the insincere tonight (Tonight)
We’ll make things right, we’ll feel it all tonight (Tonight)
We’ll find a way to offer up the night (Tonight)
The indescribable moments of your life (Tonight)
The impossible is possible tonight (Tonight)
Believe in me as I believe in you

[Outro]
Tonight
Tonight, tonight
Tonight
Tonight

References:
1. The 100 Greatest Music Videos – Rolling Stone
2. Tonight, Tonight (The Smashing Pumpkins song) – Wikipedia

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Piano Concerto No. 4, Op. 40 (1926) – Sergei Rachmaninoff

‘With enough patience this elder and wiser Rachmaninoff’ will start whispering to you’

– Ben Laude (Rachmaninoff’s 4th Concerto is Criminally Underrated)

Piano Concerto No. 4 in G minor, Op. 40 is a concerto for piano and orchestra by Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff, completed in 1926. With today’s Rach 4 (many people affectionately call Rachmaninoff “the Rach” for short), we complete the set of his four piano concertos on this blog.

Rachmaninoff’s No. 4 is the least well known and least well received of the four, but I consider the first movement in particular to be some of the most stunning, exuberant, and dramatic music from any piano concerto I have heard. In fact, I’m not the only one singing its praises. The video at the end of this article calls the Rach 4 his unsung masterpiece and says it is criminally underrated.

It’s striking that the first movement – Allegro vivace (G minor) – opens almost like a climax. Oddly enough, it begins with a bold, commanding statement from the piano, which can sound like the ending of one of his earlier concertos. In the video at the end of this post, pianists give examples to support their views on the piece, including the powerful opening piano theme. The music moves into some dark and unsettled places. Many listeners did not respond warmly to Rachmaninoff’s Fourth at its premiere, which disappointed him.

I should admit that I am not a great fan of the repetitive and sometimes sour-sounding second movement. Some listeners have asked: where is the sweeping romantic second theme we expect from Rachmaninoff? For example Piano Concerto 2, Movement. 2 is about the most romantic music I’ve ever heard.

If you listen to the Fourth with “Rach 2 or 3 ears,” you may feel a little disillusioned. As suggested in the documentary below, the music can seem to be searching for a clear identity. He wrote it after settling in the United States, during a time when he struggled with homesickness. Some hear this tension and restlessness running through the concerto.

It may be more of an acquired taste than his other concertos. But the more you listen, the more the music begins to make sense and reveal its character.


From Wikipedia:

Following its unsuccessful premiere (1st version), the composer made cuts and other amendments before publishing it in 1928 (2nd version). With continued lack of success, he withdrew the work, eventually revising and republishing it in 1941 (3rd version, most generally performed today). Many have noted Rachmaninoff’s inspiration from George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, a piece for piano and orchestra completed in 1924, only three years before Rachmaninoff finished his own.

References:
1. Piano Concerto No. 4 (Rachmaninoff) – Wikipedia

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Tonight, I’ll Be Staying Here With You (1969) – Bob Dylan

I came to this song via the live 1975 Rolling Thunder Revue version in Montreal, but having heard the original studio version again from the Nashville Skyline record, I am quite taken with it as well. The two versions and Dylan’s interpretation on both couldn’t be more stark – each is nearly unrecognisable from the other – that’s Bob Dylan for you!

On Rolling Thunder he’s got that hoarse, shout-singing voice. On Nashville Skyline he’s got a soft, affected country croon. Instrumentally they are just as far removed, with the uptempo rock-edged arrangement on Rolling Thunder and then the warm, mellow country sound on Nashville Skyline.

I imagine when I heard the later Rolling Thunder Revue version that I hadn’t associated it with the original release, which I had heard years before. If there’s one thing that can frustrate fans at Dylan’s live concerts, it is how his reinvented versions are almost unrecognisable from the originals that fans are used to. So as he begins a song, many are left baffled about which one from his collection he is singing. If a given fan hasn’t heard their fair share of concert bootlegs, then when it comes time to attend your first Dylan concert, you could feel like a fish out of water. It’s not like a Rolling Stones concert (who tour once in a while, unlike our never-ending tour Bob), where they play their biggest hits and they sound just like the studio versions.

Personally, that’s what I find endearing about Bob’s music, and one of his best attributes is how he is able to transform and reconfigure his songs into something new. No two performances are ever quite the same, keeping the song fresh and enigmatic. Over the years, Dylan modifies verses, swaps lines, or emphasizes different parts of the lyrics depending on the mood of the performance. Dylan’s chameleon-like approach ensures his songs remain living, evolving pieces of art rather than static historical records.

For further information about Bob Dylan bootlegs, I point you to a project I initiated in 2014 on the Bob Dylan Expecting Rain – Rare Recordings forum, which entailed compiling Bob Dylan’s greatest live recordings that members felt surpassed their originals. I called it Dylan’s Desert Island Revue. The aim was: “If you were stuck on a desert island, is there an unreleased live recording of a song that you would want, or could happily live with, in place of the official studio version (or official bootleg)?” Over two months and 89 nominations later, you can find in the previous link the Dylan’s Desert Island Revue (DDIR) compilation.

Now finally on to today’s featured track – Tonight, I’ll Be Staying Here With You. The song expresses Dylan’s devotion to his lover and his willingness to stay with her. Dylan was off somewhere, had his tickets ready and his suitcase packed, but such is his desire to be with his dearest that he’s throwing all of that aside to spend the night by her side. He sounds pretty desperate, but her love comes on so strong that he feels he has no other choice than to give everything up for just another night with her.

He says – in no uncertain terms – that he’s under her spell, foretelling a future song (a brilliant one, by the way) by that name on the maligned 1986 Knocked Out Loaded record. In the Revue version below you can sense that desperation in his voice and the edgy music. It ends so romantically, as seen below, and the implication of the song is that the singer is willing to stay permanently and become a family man.

I can hear that whistle blowin’
I see that stationmaster too
If there’s a poor boy on the street
Then let him have my seat
‘Cause tonight I’ll be staying here with you


The following was abridged from the Wikipedia article below:

Tonight, I’ll Be Staying Here With You is the closing song of the album. The song was the third single released from the album, after I Threw It All Away and Lay Lady Lay, reaching No. 50 on the US Billboard, and reaching the top 20 in other countries…
Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here with You” was written over two days at the Ramada Inn where Dylan was staying, and recorded over 11 takes on February 17.

Dylan did not play “Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here with You” live in concert until the Rolling Thunder Revue tours in 1975 and 1976, and it was not played live again until February 1990 on the Neverending Tour.

[Verse 1]
Throw my ticket out the window
Throw my suitcase out there, too
Throw my troubles out the door
I don’t need them anymore
‘Cause tonight I’ll be staying here with you

[Verse 2]
I should have left this town this morning
But it was more than I could do
Oh, your love comes on so strong
And I’ve waited all day long
For tonight when I’ll be staying here with you

[Bridge]
Is it really any wonder
The love that a stranger might receive?
You cast your spell and I went under
I find it so difficult to leave

[Verse 3]
I can hear that whistle blowin’
I see that stationmaster too
If there’s a poor boy on the street
Then let him have my seat
‘Cause tonight I’ll be staying here with you

References:
1. Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here with You – Wikipedia

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Mrs. Robinson (1968) – Simon & Garfunkel

One of Simon & Garfunkel’s most popular tunes comes to us today: Mrs. Robinson. It’s known in pop culture largely for its use in The Graduate, which featured a monumental Simon & Garfunkel soundtrack, including other great songs like The Sound of Silence, Scarborough Fair and April Come She Will. Unlike those restrained, pensive, harmony-soaked tracks, Mrs. Robinson is a curious, unorthodox, upbeat, and rollicking number.

The following was abridged from the Wikipedia article below:

The song was released on the duo’s fourth studio album bookends. It was only meanwhile Mike Nichols was shooting The Graduate that he became fascinated with two of the duo’s songs. He met with Columbia records to ask permission to use Simon & Garfunkel music for his film. They agreed and envisioned it being a best-selling soundtrack album.

Simon was initially not so keen, viewing movies as akin to “selling out”, but he agreed to write at least one or two new songs for the film after being impressed by Nichols’ wit and the script. Eventually a deal was negotiated that paid Simon $25,000 to submit three songs to Nichols. Simon reemerged with  Punky’s Dilemma and Overs, neither of which Nichols was particularly taken with.

So later they returned with a early draft of Mrs. Robinson only singing dee de dee dee de dee dee dee because there was no verse yet, but Nichols liked even that. Before that they had it as a working title of “Mrs. Roosevelt” (Eleanor Roosevelt). And because of the character in the picture they just began using the name ‘Mrs. Robinson’ to fit. 

The recording was released more than three months after the release of The Graduate, but through its numerous radio plays became an important cross-promotion of the film during its initial run in theaters. Mrs. Robinson became the duo’s second chart-topper (after The Sound of Silence in 1966), reaching No. 1 on the Billboard, as well as peaking within the top 10 of the United Kingdom.

For trivia buffs out there:
Simon was a big Mickey Mantle fan and when asked by Dick Cavette why he chose Joe DiMaggio in the last verse, he said – “It’s about syllables, Dick. It’s about how many beats there are“.

Simon met up with Joe Di Maggio in a New York City restaurant in 1970 and Joe asked him – “What I don’t understand, is why you ask where I’ve gone?“…Simon replied “that I didn’t mean the lines literally, that I thought of him as an American hero and that genuine heroes were in short supply. He accepted the explanation and thanked me. We shook hands and said good night“.

Following DiMaggio’s death in 1999, numerous media outlets ran headlines stating: “Joltin’ Joe has left and gone away.
Simon subsequently performed “Mrs. Robinson” at Yankee Stadium in DiMaggio’s honor (leaving out the second verse).

[Intro]
Dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee
Doo doo doo doo doo doo doo doo doo
Dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee dee

[Chorus]
And here’s to you, Mrs. Robinson
Jesus loves you more than you will know
Woah, woah, woah
God bless you please, Mrs. Robinson
Heaven holds a place for those who pray
Hey, hey, hey
Hey, hey, hey

[Verse 1]
We’d like to know a little bit about you for our files
We’d like to help you learn to help yourself
Look around you, all you see are sympathetic eyes
Stroll around the grounds until you feel at home

[Chorus]

[Verse 2]
Hide it in a hiding place where no one ever goes
Put it in your pantry with your cupcakes
It’s a little secret, just the Robinsons’ affair
Most of all, you’ve got to hide it from the kids

[Chorus]

[Verse 3]
Sitting on a sofa on a Sunday afternoon
Going to the candidates debate
Laugh about it, shout about it
When you’ve got to choose
Every way you look at it, you lose

[Chorus]
Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?
A nation turns its lonely eyes to you
Woo, woo, woo
What’s that you say, Mrs. Robinson?
Joltin’ Joe has left and gone away
Hey, hey, hey
Hey, hey, hey

References:
1. Mrs. Robinson – Wikipedia

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Land Ho! (2014) – Martha Stephens and Aaron Katz (Friday’s Finest)

You might have seen those “bucket list” movies where ageing stars team up to tick off lifelong dreams and get into a bit of mischief along the way. You know the type – pleasant, sentimental, and fairly predictable.

Now we come to Land Ho!, which shares a similar idea trying to reclaim a sense of youth. But the actors here are hardly household names, and nothing they do is especially extravagant or wild. It’s simply two former brothers-in-law vacationing in Iceland. When I first started watching it, I thought it was a travel documentary. The realism, the small details in their behaviour, and the improvisational feel make it hard to tell where performance begins and ends. They visit Reykjavík nightclubs, soak in thermal baths, explore rugged campsites – and yes, they even share a puff of weed.

Principal photography took just 16 days in Iceland. Naturally, the cinematography is stunning – it is Iceland, after all. You could almost just point and shoot. It was shot on two Red One cameras to better capture natural reactions, edited in six weeks, and remarkably, only one year and three days passed between its conception and its premiere at Sundance.

As the film unfolds, you become quietly immersed in their “quest” – though what that quest is exactly remains unclear. That’s part of the charm. There’s no grand objective, no dramatic destination. It’s simply about living and companionship.

What I appreciated most was the contrast between the two men: one, a loud, bawdy, free-spending American surgeon; the other, a quieter and more reserved Australian. But that simplification shouldn’t suggest they are stereotypes. Far from it. This is a character-rich story. As critic Glenn Kenny wrote in his review for RogerEbert.com, there’s “character driven,” and then there’s “CHARACTER driven.” That sums it up.

The filmmakers don’t force us to either love or dislike these men. They have flaws, irritations, warmth, and vulnerability – just like anyone. They don’t behave as if they are trying to impress anyone. Their chemistry feels genuine, and the message they convey is subtle but touching. This is a refreshingly unsuperficial film.

One of the most intriguing turns in the story comes when the men meet two young, independent women during their travels. The encounter makes the older men playful and hopeful. You feel for the women too, wondering how they will respond to this unexpected attention. It’s a delicate dynamic, handled with restraint and charm. The interactions are nuanced and gently comic, reflecting the spirit of the entire film. As Manohla Dargis of The New York Times observed, the film offers a portrait of men who are gloriously alive and who just happen to be old.

The movie wasn’t especially well received by general audiences, earning a modest 6.0 on IMDb and 54% on Rotten Tomatoes. Critics, however, were far more positive, with 82% on Rotten Tomatoes and a strong 3.5 out of 4 in the Roger Ebert review below. I fall firmly in the critics’ camp on this one. Is it a must-see masterpiece? No, not at all. But it is a refreshing and quietly funny adventure-comedy for mature audiences – and I got a real kick out of it.
The film won the John Cassavetes Award for Best Feature under $500,000 at the 2015 Independent Spirit Awards.

Thanks for reading.

References:
1. Land Ho! – Roger Ebert
2. Land Ho! – IMDB
3. Land Ho! – Wikipedia

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Tougher Than the Rest (1988) – Bruce Springsteen

I remember owning that cassette single above as a 13-year-old. Gee, I wore it out, since I was such a huge fan of this song. I also remember watching the official video on Saturday mornings, catching the Top 40 on Rage in Australia. Despite those strong memories, the single only reached No. 35 in Australia. Bizarrely, it wasn’t released as a single in the US and has never been one of his most popular songs there. In Europe, however, Tougher Than the Rest remains one of Springsteen’s most beloved tracks and charted strongly in several countries, including the UK.

Bruce Springsteen had not previously explored country influences so clearly as he did on Tunnel of Love, which at the time was one of the most highly anticipated albums in contemporary rock. Coming off one of the biggest-selling albums of all time, Born in the U.S.A., expectations were sky-high for Tunnel of Love.

When it became clear that Bruce had shifted away from the power rock anthems of Born in the U.S.A. toward a more introspective and restrained sound, the reaction was more mixed than before. The album seemed to reflect the breakdown of his short-lived marriage to model and actress Julianne Phillips.

The record included sombre and reflective songs like Brilliant Disguise, the title track Tunnel of Love, One Step Up, Cautious Man, and Walk Like a Man. The latter two, in particular, echoed the stripped-back storytelling and introspection of Nebraska.

Now back to today’s featured track – Tougher Than the Rest. More than any other song on the album, it suggested a turning point for Bruce after his personal struggles and divorce in 1988. It also became closely linked to Patti Scialfa, his future and now longtime wife, especially through their duet performances on tour. The chemistry between them on stage was clear. Both seemed to be stepping out of past relationships and into something new.

The song opens with a moody and heavy drum entrance before that wiry, winding guitar line moves through the track. My favourite part is that lingering, curling guitar which gives the song a grainy country tone. The studio version is more keyboard-driven and does not feature the aforementioned guitar sound heard in many live performances, like the official video below. Interestingly Tougher Than The Rest was originally written as a rockabilly song, but the final version has a slower and more methodical rhythm.

It’s a romantic, country-leaning love song with a gritty yet honest edge. You can hear the sincerity in their voices – the willingness to stand firm and prove that his love can last. When Bruce and Patti look at each other during live performances, it’s hard not to feel the emotion. They stand there in front of the world, pledging lasting love – and nearly four decades after its release in 1987, that promise appears to have endured.

The video is pretty cool too. It features Bruce and Patti singing to each other and is interspersed with highlights from his live shows. I like how it begins by showing real-life couples and then cuts to other couples throughout.


[Verse 1]
Well, it’s Saturday night
You’re all dressed up in blue
I been watching you a while
Maybe you been watching me, too
So somebody ran out
Left somebody’s heart in a mess
Well, if you’re looking for love
Honey, I’m tougher than the rest

[Verse 2]
Some girls, they want a handsome Dan
Or some good-lookin’ Joe
On their arm, some girls
Like a sweet-talkin’ Romeo
Well, ’round here, baby
I learned you get what you can get
So if you’re rough enough for love
Honey, I’m tougher than the rest

[Bridge]
The road is dark and it’s a thin, thin line
But I want you to know I’ll walk it for you any time
Maybe your other boyfriends couldn’t pass the test
Well, if you’re rough and ready for love
Honey, I’m tougher than the rest

[Verse 3]
Well, it ain’t no secret
I’ve been around a time or two
Well, I don’t know, baby
Maybe you’ve been around too
Well, there’s another dance
All you gotta do is say yes
And if you’re rough and ready for love
Honey, I’m tougher than the rest

[Refrain]
If you’re rough enough for love
Baby, I’m tougher than the rest

References:
1. Tougher Than the Rest – Bruce Springsteen

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