Dec 222008
 

We’ve been talking a lot about Jesus’ birthday ’round these parts, and I thought it only fair to bring some Jewish Rock to the table, in celebration of everything rock-tacular that that fine culture has brought us. Official emissaries of this holiday message: the band with the highest quotients of both rock and Jewishness I can think of (though David Lee Roth has a big set of boots to fill): Seth Justman, Peter Wolf, Stephen Jo Bladd, Danny Klein, Magic Dick, and J. Geils — the J. Geils Band.

Happy Hannukah!

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The Other CD

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Dec 222008
 


There’s no sense in doing this half way. I’d like to hear suggestions for one 20-track CD, on the crucial high points of rock and roll/popular music from 1930 until 1969. For the purposes of placating the Robert Johnson contingency, the ’20s will be (great) grandfathered into the ’30s. Other than that, the ground rules remain the same:

1. We’ve got 20 tracks to fill.
2. Each decade has to be represented by at least three tracks.
3. No single band gets more than two tracks.
4. Nominate one track at a time, then wait for a “second” on your motion. Seconded nominations will move to the official track list, but may be bumped by a veto of more than three specific counter-votes.

I going to go out on a limb and suggest the ’30s and ’40s are easier to fill that the ’90s and the ’00s from the previous disc.

I will leave you guys to fight over Beatles songs and I’ll start with “What a Little Moon Light Can Do,” by Billie Holiday (1935).

I look forward to your responses.

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Dec 212008
 


In the tiny high school that Andyr and I attended, there was a guy name Chris who was 1 year ahead of us. Chris emerged, around 1979, as our high school’s primo rock hero. Word had been getting around that the loner with the long, stringy blond hair and army jacket was an amazing guitarist. A handful of those much cooler than Andyr and I had already seen his Southern Rock-style band play a party. As his band’s upcoming school assembly concert approached, the word on the street was universal.

“Amazing!” said the guy in our school who could play the unaccompanied guitar solo in Led Zeppelin‘s “Heartbreaker.”

“Amazing!” said the other guy in our school who could play the unaccompanied guitar solo in Led Zeppelin’s “Heartbreaker.”

“Amazing!” said the guy who played flute and styled his Look after that of Ian Anderson.

“Amazing!” said the big asshole in Chris’ grade who could drum a little and who was beloved by the cool kids for god knows what reason.

“Amazing!” said the hippie girl I’d occasionally realize I had a little crush on.
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Dec 192008
 

So my business partner has a somewhat bookish uncle who, when asked what he might like for Christmas, replied: “I dunno… has there been any good music since the sixties?” My business partner has decided he’s going to take on the holiday challenge of educating his beloved uncle, over the span of one 20-track CD, on the crucial high points of rock and roll, from 1970 until today. Naturally, this wacky challenge made me think of all my nerdy friends at RTH — and so it is that I turn to you for guidance on his behalf. Here are the ground rules:

1. We’ve got 20 tracks to fill.

2. Each decade has to be represented by at least three tracks.

3. No single band gets more than two tracks (sorry, 2000Man!)

4. Nominate one track at a time, then wait for a “second” on your motion. Seconded nominations will move to the official track list, but may be bumped by a veto of more than three specific counter-votes.

I look forward to your responses.

HVB

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Dec 192008
 


Recently we pondered the musical foundation of Classic Pink Floyd. I learned some useful information, such as the influence of Miles DavisKind of Blue on Rick Wright‘s keyboard stylings and the fact that “Run Like Hell” was a pisstake on disco. All that I learned helped strengthen my confidence in my recent realization that Classic Pink Floyd, beginning at the time the band found its true voice on Dark Side of the Moon, had more in common with The Who and U2 than I’d ever considered, something I will hereby term Popeye Rock.

“I am what I am.”

I believe the case can be made that most rock bands that connect with the public to some degree develop their sound from an established musical foundation, or traditions. In some cases the influences run deep and are easy to spot. In other cases, as is especially true in the playlists and sales charts of any given genre, the traditions may run as deep as last week’s playlists and charts. In short, rock ‘n roll musicians usually structure their individual talents around an identifiable sound. The craftwork rock musicians typically put into their music involves applying the “fabric” of their instruments to an existing “frame”: stylistic conventions dictating beat, melody, verse-chorus-middle eighth structure, etc. The Beatles are credited with blowing open the vault of rock’s available frames, but it was always the frame that dictated the course of the music.

This was the uninterrupted history of early rock ‘n roll until The Who came along. They may have introduced the Popeye Rock approach that, while still not the norm, has become a viable path toward making rock ‘n roll, especially following the massive popularity and influence of both Pink Floyd and U2.
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Dec 182008
 


“Christmas spirit” means different things in different cultures. In England, people still dig Roy Wood‘s Christmas hit, “I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday.” Although the song made no splash in the US, it’s still so beloved in the UK that to coincide with the holiday, Pringles has chosen Wood to serve as its “Jingles for Pringles Ambassador.”
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