Listen to the Music (1972) – the Doobie Brothers

I always enjoyed that line from Jack Colton played by Michael Douglas in Romancing the Stone – ‘Dammit man, the Doobie Brothers broke up! Sh*t! When did that happen‘?
When something bad happened as kids, my brother and I said “Aw man! The Doobie Brothers broke up!” Apart from this song I knew next to nothing about the Doobie Brothers until researching it here.

The Doobie Brothers did break up in 1982 but in 1987 they reformed. They are an American rock band formed in 1970 in San Jose, California. Today’s song Listen to the Music was recorded on their second album Toulouse Street and their first big hit.

[Verse 1]
Don’t you feel it growing, day by day?
People getting ready for the new
Some are happy, some are sad
Wo-oh-ah, we gotta let the music play
Mh-hm

[Verse 2]
What the people need is a way to make ’em smile
It ain’t so hard to do if you know how
Gotta get a message, get it on through
Oh now, mamma don’t you ask me why

[Chorus]
Woh-ho-ho, listen to the music
Woh-uh-oh, listen to the music
Woh-uh-oh, listen to the music
All the time

Writer Tom Johnston described the motivation for the song as a call for world peace:

“The chord structure of it made me think of something positive, so the lyrics that came out of that were based on this utopian idea that if the leaders of the world got together on some grassy hill somewhere and either smoked enough dope or just sat down and just listened to the music and forgot about all this other bullshit, the world would be a much better place. It was very utopian and very unrealistic (laughs). It seemed like a good idea at the time.”

The song remains a staple of adult contemporary and classic rock radio. The band also uses it as an encore song during live shows. The staff of Billboard rated it the Doobie Brothers‘ best song, saying that it “ranks high in the pantheon of rock n’ roll feel-good hits” and should “get your foot tapping and bring a bit of a smile to your face“.

Reference:
1. Listen to the Music – Wikipedia

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Linger (1993) – The Cranberries

I began the previous song article Dreams by The Cranberries with – ‘Can we all go back to the 90’s now‘? You know when Whitney Houston opens the 1991 Superbowl with this version of Star Spangled Banner that good times are in store.

Linger and generally The Cranberries material from this epoch encapsulated that carefree vibe and impressionable sound to a tee. Linger has an acoustic arrangement featuring a string section and became the band’s first major hit. It was voted by Australian Triple J listeners as number 3 on the Triple J Hottest 100, 1993 chart.

[Verse 1]
If you, if you could return
Don’t let it burn
Don’t let it fade
I’m sure I might be rude
But it’s just your attitude
It’s tearing me apart
It’s ruining everything
And I swore, I swore I would be true
And honey, so did you
So why were you holding her hand?
Is that the way we stand?
Were you lying all the time?
Was it just a game to you?

[Chorus]
But I’m in so deep
You know I’m such a fool for you
You’ve got me wrapped around your finger
Do you have to let it linger?
Do you have to, do you have to, do you have to let it linger?

When lead singer O’Riordan was auditioned as the lead singer for the band, she wrote the lyrics, turning it into a song of regret based on an experience with a 17-year-old soldier she once fell in love with. Drummer Fergal Lawler recalled:

We gave her a tape of the music for ‘Linger’, which she took with her. The following week she came back, and she had lyrics written out and melodies and she sang along to what we were playing, and it was like, ‘Oh, my God. She’s great’.

I’m going to finish this article with this immense quote from lead singer Dolores Mary Eileen O’Riordan which made me laugh out-loud:

“I remember when MTV first put Linger in heavy rotation, every time I walked into a diner or a hotel lobby, it was like, ‘Jesus, man, here I am again’. It was trippy, like Jacob’s Ladder. I didn’t even have to take drugs.”

Reference:
1. Linger (The Cranberries song) – wikipedia

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Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts (1975) – Bob Dylan

Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts is an epic ‘Western’ ballad and the third song to appear here from Bob Dylan’s 1975 masterpiece Blood on the Tracks. I consider Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts in the upper tier of Dylan’s musical output and a big part of the reason that Blood on the Tracks is considered one of the best albums ever made. I have loved this song for over 35 years… and it gets better every time I hear it!

Consummate with other stupendous music, I find myself discombobulated, wondering how Dylan realized Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts. I am listening to the same artist who wrote Visions of Johanna almost a decade earlier and yet the two genres, musical arrangement and themes couldn’t be further apart. But the lyrics are so damn good they evoke a picture for every line. ‘Visual music‘ is what they both have in common and when I listen, I retreat into total humility and awe.

[Verse 1]
The festival was over, and the boys were all planning for a fall
The cabaret was quiet except for the drilling in the wall
The curfew had been lifted and the gambling wheel shut down
Anyone with any sense had already left town
He was standing in the doorway looking like the Jack of Hearts

[Verse 2]
He moved across the mirrored room, “Set it up for everyone,” he said
Then everyone commenced to do what they were doing before he turned their heads
Then he walked up to a stranger and he asked him with a grin
“Could you kindly tell me, friend, what time the show begins?”
Then he moved into the corner, face down like the Jack of Hearts

Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts is known for its complex plot and nearly nine-minute running time. It is one of five songs on Blood on the Tracks that Dylan initially recorded in New York City in September 1974 and then re-recorded in Minneapolis in December that year; the latter version became the album track.

I think the only other songs I prefer ‘sentimentally’ over Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts from Blood on the Tracks are Tangled Up in Blue and If You See Her Say Hello; the latter I wrote about in September last year. These two like Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts don’t sound like any other songs I have ever heard.
With Blood on the Tracks, the manifestation of ‘a new music playing field‘ which was Like a Rolling Stone was relocated, re-landscaped, manicured and expanded.
To quote Edward Norton (again talking about Bob!):

Oh, you like what I’m doing? I’m gone..I’m over here..’enjoy’…You’re not gonna like it because you liked what I just did and now where I’m going you are going to be discombobulated and upset and eventually, you’re going to catch up and when you catch up, I’m going to move onto something else.

Dylan says that Blood on the Tracks was “an entire album based on Chekhov short stories. Critics thought it was autobiographical – that was fine “. According to his official website, Dylan has played the song live only once, on May 25, 1976, in Salt Lake City.

Reference:
1. Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts – Wikipedia

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Lily of the West (1973) – Bob Dylan

There are some good tracks to be found even on Dylan’s ‘throwaway records’. Lily of the West is one such song from his record Dylan (1973). Although the record received very poor reviews upon its release, it managed to reach No. 17 in the U.S. and was certified gold. It was Dylan’s 13th album made up of outtakes from his earlier records, namely Self Portrait and New Morning. The nine songs featured on the album consist of six cover songs and three traditional songs, adapted and arranged by Dylan.The album followed the artist’s departure from Columbia for Asylum Records.

In Europe Dylan (1973) the album was re-released in January 1991 with the title Dylan (A Fool Such as I). I owned that CD titled A Fool Such as I when I lived in Melbourne. I probably paid a fortune for it on Ebay or somewhere. An apt title that album. I still have a plethora of still-sealed Dylan LPs residing with my mother in Australia. The going price is a Billion-Zillion dollars.

Lily of the West is a traditional British and Irish folk song, best known today as an American folk song. The American version is about a man who travels to Louisville and falls in love with a woman named Mary, Flora or Molly, the eponymous Lily of the West. He catches Mary being unfaithful to him, and, in a fit of rage, stabs the man she is with, and is subsequently imprisoned.

[Verse 1]
When first I came to Louisville, some pleasure there to find
A damsel there from Lexington was pleasing to my mind
Her rosy cheeks, her ruby lips, like arrows pierced my breast
And the name she bore was Flora, the lily of the west

[Verse 2]
I courted lovely Flora some pleasure for to find
But she turned unto another man whose sore distressed my mind
She robbed me of my liberty, deprived me of my rest
Then go, my lovely Flora, the lily of the west

Many broadsides of the song were collected in England and Ireland around 1820-50; the English and Scottish versions generally begin “It’s when I came to England some pleasure for to find“, whilst the Irish broadsides began “When first I came to Ireland some pleasure for to find“.

Joan Baez recorded Lily of the West in 1961, including it on her second album; her live concerts have frequently included performances of the song well into the 2010s. Her version can be found following Dylan’s version below. I can see why Dylan remarked about Joan’s artistry: ‘She’s a really excellent guitar player‘. Apart from Dylan and Baez; Peter, Paul and Mary and Mark Knopfler covered it amongst many others.

Reference:
1. Lily of the West – Wikipedia

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Like a Rolling Stone (1965) – Bob Dylan

We’re in for a treat because the next three song trips will be by Bob Dylan because it so happens his three songs come in alphabetical order in the Music Library Project. Anyone than can guess correctly the next two songs following today’s song win themselves a grand ‘virtual’ pat on the back from your’s truly. Today’s featured track needs no introduction since it is widely believed to be the greatest rock song in the history of contemporary music. In 2004 Rolling Stone named Bob Dylan’s Like A Rolling Stone the greatest song of all time.

Where does one start here?
I’m going to go with Max at PowerPop who wrote in his article:

A snare drum shot starts this song that helped shape the sixties‘ and ‘when Bob sings “How Does it Feel?” you can feel the venom.’

The folklore surrounding this track boggles the mind:

  • Radio stations refusing to play it because it runs at 6:13 (as many stations refused to play songs much longer than 3 minutes). Even Columbia Records was unhappy with both the song’s length at over six minutes and its heavy electric sound and were hesitant to release it. 
  • The ‘Judas‘ shout in the1966 Live version and it being the pivotal track representing Dylan going electric and God forbid that a band back him up. Dylan’s rebuke to being shouted as ‘Judas’ at the Manchester Free Trade Hall 1966 concert was ‘I Don’t believe you. You’re a liar‘ then he told the Hawks in no uncertain terms ‘Play it fucking loud!’ They launch into Like A Rolling Stone. The rest is history. Music forever changed.

Critics have described Like a Rolling Stone as revolutionary in its combination of musical elements, the youthful, cynical sound of Dylan’s voice, and the directness of the question How does it feel? It completed the transformation of Dylan’s image from folk singer to rock star and is considered one of the most influential compositions in postwar popular music.

Wikipedia see citation below

Some may argue Subterranean Homesick Blues; the first ever rap song was the real kicker, but his colossal game-changing material of this era manifested a new music playing field. If songwriters or musicians weren’t listening to his music, then they fell behind.

Once upon a time you dressed so fine
Threw the bums a dime in your prime, didn’t you?
People call, say “Beware doll, you’re bound to fall”
You thought they were all a-kiddin’ you
You used to laugh about
Everybody that was hangin’ out
Now you don’t talk so loud
Now you don’t seem so proud
About having to be scrounging your next meal

[Chorus]
How does it feel?
How does it feel?
To be without a home?
Like a complete unknown?
Like a rolling stone?

In 1966, Dylan described its genesis to journalist Jules Siegel:

It was ten pages long. It wasn’t called anything, just a rhythm thing on paper all about my steady hatred directed at some point that was honest. In the end it wasn’t hatred, it was telling someone something they didn’t know, telling them they were lucky. Revenge, that’s a better word. I had never thought of it as a song, until one day I was at the piano, and on the paper it was singing, “How does it feel?” in a slow motion pace, in the utmost of slow motion following something.

During a difficult two-day preproduction, Dylan struggled to find the essence of the song, which was demoed without success…A breakthrough was made when it was tried in a rock music format, and rookie session musician Al Kooper improvised the Hammond B2 organ riff for which the track is known.

Reference:
1. Like a Rolling Stone – Wikipedia

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10/4 – 16/4/23 – Bible, NAVE & Elon

news on the march

Welcome to Monday’s News on the March – The week that was in my digital world.

Ben & Russell Brand Uncover Shocking Biblical Truths
Video interview at Ben Shapiro

Ben Shapiro sits down with actor, comedian, and cultural thought leader, Russell Brand, to discuss the state of our culture today. They also analyze what the Bible says about slavery and the contrasts between Christian and Judeo beliefs. (Watch video clip here)

NAVE – Interview & Album Review: “God’s Waiting Room”
Music blog article by Jeff at Eclectic Music Lover

I wrote about NAVE’s ‘Broken Record’. But what I’ve heard so far from the music here is really enticing. It will take time to absorb it.

NAVE, the solo music project of British singer-songwriter, composer and producer Nathan Evans. Incorporating a broad array of genres and styles, including alternative rock, electronica, trip-hop, ambient, orchestral and dark wave, the hyper-talented Bournemouth-based artist creates dramatic, incredibly compelling music that’s often atmospheric and gorgeous, but sometimes also harsh and disturbing. (Read entire article here)

Full Elon Musk BBC Interview with Video and Timestamps 12th April 2023
Video interview at Tesla Inteligencia UK

Calmness, sincerity, authenticity and the playfulness of someone who knows he has the upper hand. The BBC’s desperate and plainly ignorant attempt to undermine all of this is just pathetic.

(Watch entire interview here)


news on the march the end
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Posted in Music, News, politics, Reflections

Lightening Crashes (1994) – Live

Hearing Lightening Crashes transports me to Mornington, Southeast Melbourne and the golden – age rock scene. It seems to me ‘The Nineties‘ was a good decade in many respects and the music released during that era reflects it.

Lightening Crashes was released on an album called Throwing Copper which has some other excellent songs on it like Selling the Drama, All Over You and Hold Me Up. The song has a slow, deep, and meaningful build-up. You gotta earn that rise to crescendo.

The song was released in September 1994 as the third single from their second studio album, Throwing Copper. The song also topped the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart for 10 weeks and the Modern Rock Tracks chart for nine weeks. Internationally, the song reached No. 3 in Canada, No. 8 in Iceland, and No. 13 in Australia.

[Verse 1]
Lightning crashes, a new mother cries
Her placenta falls to the floor
The angel opens her eyes, the confusion sets in
Before the doctor can even close the door

[Verse 2]
Lightning crashes, an old mother dies
Her intentions fall to the floor
The angel closes her eyes, the confusion that was hers
Belongs now, to the baby down the hall

[Chorus]
Oh, now I feel it comin’ back again
Like a rollin’ thunder chasing the wind
Forces pullin’ from the center of the earth again
I can feel it

The band dedicated the song to a high-school friend, Barbara Lewis, who was killed by a drunk driver in 1993.

Lead singer Ed Kowalczyk said:

While the clip is shot in a home environment, I envisioned it taking place in a hospital, where all these simultaneous deaths and births are going on, one family mourning the loss of a woman while a screaming baby emerges from a young mother in another room. Nobody’s dying in the act of childbirth, as some viewers think. What you’re seeing is actually a happy ending based on a kind of transference of life.

References:
1. Lightening Crashes – Wikipedia

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License To Kill (1983) – Bob Dylan

License To Kill is the fifth song so far to appear here from Bob Dylan’s 1983 record Infidels – if I include the Blind Willie McTell and Foot of Pride out-takes from the sessions. It boggles the senses how he could just leave those two off the record, but any-hows. Another notable outtake was Someone’s Got a Hold of My Heart which I also treasure.

Infidels was produced by Mark Knopfler and Dylan himself and is seen as his return to secular music, following a conversion to Christianity and a subsequent return to a less religious lifestyle. Infidels gained much attention for its focus on more personal themes, in addition to commentary (such as with today’s song License To Kill) on the environment and geopolitics.

Man thinks ’cause he rules the earth he can do with it as he please
And if things don’t change soon, he will
Oh, man has invented his doom
First step was touching the moon


Now, there’s a woman on my block
She just sit there as the night grows still
She say who gonna take away his license to kill?


Now, they take him and they teach him and they groom him for life
And they set him on a path where he’s bound to get ill
Then they bury him with stars
Sell his body like they do used cars

Many critics saw Dylan return to secular music in Infidels as also a return to musical form. The critical reaction was the strongest for Dylan in years, almost universally hailed for its songwriting and performances. Dylan initially wanted to produce the album himself, but feeling that technology had passed him by, he approached a number of contemporary artists who were more at home in a modern recording studio. David Bowie, Frank Zappa and Elvis Costello were all approached before Dylan hired Knopfler.

Knopfler who featured here with Let It All Go and the Going Home soundtrack theme of the movie Local Hero said about his experience making the record Infidels:

Yes, it was strange at times with Bob. One of the great parts about production is that it demonstrates to you that you have to be flexible. Each song has its own secret that’s different from another song, and each has its own life….I’d say I was more disciplined. But I think Bob is much more disciplined as a writer of lyrics, as a poet. He’s an absolute genius…The music just tends to be a vehicle for that poetry.

In the song License to Kill, Dylan seems to convey a strong, strange dislike for space travel, and that it can be heard on the first few lines – Man has invented his doom/First step was touching the moon. A harsh indictment accusing mankind of imperialism and a predilection for violence: the song deals specifically with humanity’s relationship to the environment, either on a political scale or a scientific one. ‘A skeptical opinion toward the American space program was shared among evangelicals of Dylan’s generation‘ as stated by critics Robert Christgau and Bill Wyman.

References:
1. Infidels (Bob Dylan album) – Wikipedia

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Up In the Air (2009) – Jason Reitman (Friday’s Finest)

Five films have already featured here starring George Clooney and today’s Up in the Air will be the sixth. That surprised me when I looked that up since I wouldn’t have classed myself a George Clooney fan, but he obviously does something right. So, I guess I’m a fan. I really enjoyed this unassuming drama-comedy because it’s very nuanced and doesn’t belittle its audience.

Up in the Air seems to be a showcase for Clooney – ‘ok strut your stuff George with little to work on and lets see what you can churn out‘. In similar vein to how Tom Hardy was set up for Locke recently reviewed here at ‘Friday’s Finest’. In the end they both deliver powerhouse performances and demonstrate why they are such engaging performers and go-to men for the heavy parts. The Descendants is another movie you could argue Clooney was just thrown in there.

IMDB Storyline:

Ryan Bingham is a corporate downsizing expert whose cherished life on the road is threatened just as he is on the cusp of reaching ten million frequent flyer miles, and just after he’s met the frequent-traveller woman of his dreams.

I presumed that I wouldn’t engage with Up in the Air based on its premise. What would be so interesting about seeing a brash, new-age sophisticated man (SNAG of sorts) firing people from their jobs? Especially Clooney of all people. But it somehow turns everything on its head. You have to see the clip below which features ‘real’ people who have been shown the door from their jobs and concludes with the magnificent J.K. Simmons (Whiplash and La La Land) giving them his piece.

What Up in the Air demonstrates is that despite how you might conceive the intention and jobs of these professionals who fire people, that seeing what life (and suffering) from their perspectives is just as compelling as seeing anyone else’s. In the end, as individuals we all just get-by with what tools we have in the kit and make-do. That’s it.

This simple, but polemical drama-comedy is just breezy to watch. You don’t have to think too much about it, rather just let it woosh past. Having said that; there is a kicker-twist in the finale which makes you think about it some more.

IMDB Trivia:

  • A large number of the people we see fired in the film are not actors, but people who were recently laid off… When people showed up, they were instructed to treat the camera like the person who fired them and respond as they did or use the opportunity to say what they wished they had. 
  • When Bob shows Ryan a photo of his two children, it is a photo of J.K. Simmons’s real children.
  • Vera Farmiga used a body double for her nude scene. In an interview she stated she has no problem being naked in a film, but she had recently given birth and “The breast milk running down would have been inappropriate.”
  • George Clooney’s wardrobe for the entire movie actually fits in one carry-on suitcase.

References:
1. Up in the Air (2009 film) – Wikipedia
2. Up in the Air – IMDB

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Liability (2020) – Lorde (Alex and Jo Music)

I first came a fan of hearing Lorde (inset left) sing Team on an ESPN film clip. My kids and I love that song! Then when I heard Alex and Jo (above) sing a song from Lorde, I was all ears.

I first heard them sing Christina Perri’s Back in Time which astounded me. I told Alex and Jo that I hoped that Christina Perri stumbled upon their rendition and referred their names (and performance) to a producer or someone.

Since then, I have enjoyed other versions by the Serbian twins including I Know the End (2020) by Phoebe Bridgers and today’s featured track Lorde‘s Liability.
Just after I drafted this article, Alex and Jo published a version of Flightless Bird, American Mouth by Iron and Wine which was released on the Twilight: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. A song featured here recently by Christina Perri – A Thousand Years was written for The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1.

[Verse 1]
Baby really hurt me, crying in the taxi
He don’t wanna know me
Says he made the big mistake of dancing in my storm
Says it was poison
So I guess I’ll go home
Into the arms of the girl that I love
The only love I haven’t screwed up
She’s so hard to please, but she’s a forest fire
I do my best to meet her demands, play at romance
We slow dance in the living room
But all that a stranger would see
Is one girl swaying alone, stroking a cheek

Ella Marija Lani Yelich-O’Connor (born 7 November 1996), known professionally as Lorde is a New Zealand singer and songwriter. Taking inspiration from aristocracy for her stage name, she is known for her unconventional musical styles and introspective songwriting. Liability is a song from her second studio album Melodrama (2017). Music critics praised the song’s lyrical content and Lorde’s vocal delivery. Jon Blistein of Rolling Stone described the song as a “short but poignant song that finds Lorde grappling with fame and how it can change friendships and relationships.”

Lorde told a crowd at a secret iHeartRadio concert she held in Los Angeles in August 2017 that Liability was inspired by a night she became “overcome with anger and emotion“. She walked 8 to 10 km before ordering an Uber to take her home. According to this video interview on The Late Late Show with James Corden, Lorde has cleansed herself of social media and thrown her cellular device in the water and can’t be reached. Good on her.

Below are presented Alex & Jo’s cover of Liability and the original.

References:
1. Liability (song) – Wikipedia
2. I Know the End – Wikipedia

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