Feb 172012
 

I just heard a brief report on the news that the US Postal Service is considering raising its regular letter rate to 50 cents and discontinuing Saturday deliveries, among other cost-cutting moves, to stem an estimated annual loss of about $18 billion per year by 2015. In honor of the rapidly diminishing old-time practice of sending and receiving physical letters through the mail, I declare a Last Man Standing on songs centered around the practice of sending and receiving letters, including the practice of mail delivery. A mere reference to a letter is not enough; the postal service and its deliverables must be central to the song.

I’ll kick it off with one of my favorite childhood rockers, “The Letter”!

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Feb 162012
 

A few odds and sods that have been rattling around in my brain that I thought I’d dump on you… Feel free to return the favor!

Friend of the Hall Ben Vaughn (original late-’70s demo version of the song performed above here!), featuring my close personal friend and longtime musical collaborator Townsman Sethro on drums, is featured tonight at 10:00 pm on Philadelphia’s PBS station WHYY (and possibly PBS stations elsewhere). The performance was from a fun show in a South Jersey park late summer or early in the fall of 2011. Perhaps you’ll see me and my family sitting in the audience, off to the right side (from the audience’s perspective) of the stage. You may also see a guy who looks like me with shorter hair. That would be my brother.

Marc Maron interviewed Nick Lowe on his WTF podcast. I’m a real late-comer to this show, and despite having some problems with Maron’s “cool-guy” penchant for dropping F-bombs, his too-familiar-for-my-comfort self-absorption, and in this interview with a musician, obvious gaping holes in his musical knowledge, the interview really pays off if the music nerd in you can get by Maron’s Larry King–like lack of preparation. Lowe shares a lot about his early days.

A week or two ago I caught a clip of Christina Aguilera hamming it up at Etta James‘ funeral. That’s one low-hanging cross! There’s got to be an amazing Ham-Jam out there featuring Aguilera that blows away her role in the star-studded quartet version of that old LaBelle song some time ago.

This morning on my local Oldies radio station the DJ and news person made a Flavor Fav reference in their crossover. It made me feel 100 years old.

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Feb 152012
 

Today we launch another chapter in our ongoing effort to squeeze some fun and entertainment out of popular music’s banality, with a segment I call:  In a Word — Schtick!

Here’s how this is going to work: contestants will vie for the coveted RTH No-Prize by attempting to use as few words as possible to describe a vital component of a given performer’s “signature” move, or Look, or some other thing by which he, she, or the group is identified. The goal is to have RTH readers guess the artist in question with the schtick-clue provided. The fewer words used, the bigger the prize awarded — and prizes are only awarded to townspeople who can provide a clue that elicits a correct artist ID on the first try. You lob a schtick clue into the void, and hope the first guess that comes back is the right one. If it is, you win! If it isn’t, it’s the dreaded buzzer for you.

For example — if I wanted you to guess “Keith Richards,” I might submit “drugs” as a one-word clue — but chances are that clue would be too broad, and somebody might incorrectly guess “Sly Stone.” BUZZ! If, on the other hand, I offered the schtick-clue “skull-ring” — that might work.

A few ground rules are in order:

  • God-given/natural aspects of appearance or behavior are not allowed as clues — so, for example, saying “big lips” to get us to guess Mick Jagger would result in a buzzer. But “omega shirt” would be okay.
  • Dialog is only appropriate if it was part of the artist’s schtick, and no famous one-time quotes qualify — so “thank you very much” is allowed for Elvis, while “I’ve got blisters on my fingers!” is not allowed for John Lennon.
  • No song lyric snippets or alliterated riffs are allowed.  It’s about the schtick!

I look forward to your responses.

HVB

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Feb 152012
 

I’ve just heard on the radio that Dory Previn has died at the age of 86.

Sometime around 1981, having mined the Leonard Cohen canon and on the lookout for something a bit less frivolous, I was delighted when a friend played me Mythical Kings and Iguanas.

I’ve returned to it often ever since. I am possibly in a minority in the Hall in admitting to enjoying confessional singer-songwriters, but that album knocks most other albums of the genre that were being made at the time sideways, a quiet and extremely controlled dissection of a howl of agony which, as the last song winds down, it is quite clear has only just begun. You get the sense that if she allowed herself to let rip at any point she would never get up again. This is, in fact, Lou Reed as he was always meant to sound

I know very little about her life other than that she married Andre Previn, and when he left her for Mia Farrow she had a breakdown and made a short run of albums to exorcise her distress, all of which are worth a listen, although Mythical Kings is the best one to start with for the uninitiated. A glimpse at Wikipedia suggests that the last 3 decades had been happier times for her, and even collaborated with Andre Previn again in 1997. Her last live appearance was in 1988; I wish I had been there.

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Feb 142012
 

The Family Stone vs The JB's

As we progress through the Semifinals round of our tournament to determine—once and for all—rock’s greatest backing band ever, the Expansion Conference comes down to a battle between The Family Stone and The JB’s. The winner of this match will face Legacy Conference champs The Crickets.

Through the long, painstaking course of this tournament adequate arguments have been made on behalf of all the semifinalists. That doesn’t mean you’re not encouraged to continue arguing for your selection in this round, but you are welcome to cast your vote now. Voting in this match will run through 11:59 pm on Friday, February February 17, 2012.

Semifinals, Expansion Conference: The Family Stone vs The JB's.

  • The JB's (66%, 21 Votes)
  • The Family Stone (34%, 11 Votes)

Total Voters: 32

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Feb 142012
 

One of the details I believe I remember from the highly entertaining Led Zeppelin biography, Hammer of the Gods, is a story about drummer John Bonham‘s rationale that his constant cheating on his wife while he was on the road indicated how much he loved and missed her. I bet he was a fan of Stephen Stills‘ anthem of rationalized infidelity, “Love the One You’re With.”

What love songs of questionable intent would you like to celebrate this Valentine’s Day?

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