Nov 042008
 

Hopefully this is old news for most of our United States Townspeople, but don’t forget to VOTE! I won’t tell you who to vote for, but I will tell you that Drive-By Truckers have posted a song for free download on their website through today, on this election day. Check it out.

In the spirit of election day, we’re posting a few election-themed songs for the soundtrack to your personal voting booth. Enjoy. And vote!

James Blood Ulmer, “Election”
Neil Young, “The Campaigner”
Robyn Hitchcock, “The President”
The Clash, “Washington Bullets”
Curtis Mayfied, “Choice of Colors”
The Who, “Won’t Get Fooled Again”
Woody Guthrie, “This Land Is Your Land”

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Nov 032008
 

There are few things more delightful than the Pince Nez at Rock Town Hall. What’s great about this moment goes beyond the brazen display of rock nerd one-upmanship: those who don the Pince Nez in the Halls of Rock almost always educate us in the most unexpected way! In October, The Great 48 whipped out a motherload of education on us in response to a Townsman’s claim that Ian Whitcomb “vanished into obscurity.” The Great One wrote:

Er…Ian Whitcomb hardly disappeared into obscurity. He’s probably the leading living expert on the early days of popular music, from Stephen Foster to the 1920s. He’s written books on the subject (I have an autographed copy of his AFTER THE BALL, which my friend Janet Klein gave me in exchange for writing her official bio a few years ago; he’s something of a mentor to her), and compiled and annotated several excellent collections of said music. Plus he did a terrific album a few years ago as Ian Whitcomb and the White Star Orchestra, which was a recreation of the sort of music that would have been played on the ocean liners of the Titanic era.

Not rawk, tis true, but Ian Whitcomb is a bit of a legend in musicological circles.

Only in the Comments section of Rock Town Hall! You rock.

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Nov 022008
 

Get a load of those guns!

Each new release by Lou Reed promises a mix of beauty, truth, horror, and mostly unintended humor. That’s a big part of why I’ve hung in with the guy through so many stilted, hectoring albums, such as the spiritually rock-bottom Rock ‘n Roll Heart, the squirm-inducing Mistrial, and the critically prematurely acclaimed New York, an album that within a few years of its release played like a grainy rebroadcast of an outdated CNN current events show.

Reed never ceases growing up in public, and when we catch him at a relatively fruitful stage in his development he’s still loaded with so many rough edges that even his most ardent fans disagree about the fruitfulness of a given album. Reed’s 1973 rock opera, Berlin, is a good example of this. Following his breakthrough, David Bowie-produced Transformer album, Berlin was panned by many critics as a bloated, forced, doomfest. Rock fans hoping for a catchy hit single to follow “Take a Walk on the Wild Side” were ignored. Slowly the ornately arranged album gained a better reputation, first through its “train wreck” appeal, then perhaps, through a grudging acknowledgment that although the album is a bloated, forced, doomfest, so are hopeless relationships of the variety of the album’s down-and-out protagonists, Caroline and Jim. I never understood the appeal of mopey bands like The Smiths, but I do my share of moping, and in my book Berlin is as good as any album for working through a case of the bad vibrations.

In 2006, Reed announced that he was going to perform Berlin in its entirety at Brooklyn’s St. Ann’s Warehouse with a monster band of loyal Reed contributors, including Fernando Saunders, Rob Wasserman, Antony, and one of the original Berlin guitarists, Steve Hunter, best known as half of the legendary Hunter-Wagner guitar duo from early Alice Cooper and Reed’s live Rock ‘n Roll Animal band! It was a night that no Reed fan within a 90-mile radius should miss, and of course I missed it. Luckily, this release is a document of that show and accompanies the release of a Julian Schnabel-directed DVD of the proceedings, Lou Reed’s Berlin.

This grand, hyped-up live staging of an ancient, already grandiose rock opera easily could have been a disaster as a live CD, but it’s not. The band stays true to the album’s arrangements, but minus the album’s ’70s studio thud, some of the more visceral parts of the arrangements, especially Hunter’s guitar fills, are allowed to breathe. This adds a lot to the brassy numbers, like “Oh, Jim,” which threatens to break into a mid-70s Stones coda, and “How Do You Think It Feels,” one of the original album’s at-best guilty pleasures. The limited, declining quality of Reed’s voice and the need to project cuts both ways. Quiet, introspective songs that benefitted from the lush mush of Bob Ezrin‘s cluttered studio production don’t translate as well. The biggest disappointments for me are “The Kids” and “Men of Good Fortune,” on which the live-audience performing Reed can’t manage to sound as isolated, bitter, and paranoid as he manages to sound on the album’s “head mix.”

The payoff moment for me, however, is the live performance of “Sad Song,” always my key song on the record. Reed struggles with the tender opening lines, but all is forgiven when the bombast of the band backs up the chorus’ succinct couplet, “I’m gonna stop wasting my time/Somebody else would have broken both of her arms.” The care Reed, Ezrin, and the band take in preserving the album’s arrangements make this affair work as a night of finally fulfilled rock opera.

This album is now playing in streaming audio on Phawker Radio. Click the link at the top of this entry to link to Phawker.

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Oct 302008
 

Here’s a follow-up message I received from RTH Labs Senior Analyst Milo T. Frobisher this morning:

Greetings, Hrrundi!

Well, I see that the pale and pasty residents of the Hall have acquitted themselves surprisingly well on our most recent laboratory challenge. Nevertheless, I suspect many will be surprised when they hear the songs that continue to mystify them — once they hear them “forwards.” Would you be so kind as to post the collage I sent, in “forwards” mode?

Thank you again for your dedicated service to the scientific pursuit of rock and roll.

Sincerely,

Milo T. Frobisher
Senior Research Analyst
RTH Labs

Milo’s wish, as always, is my command. Here’s the file in question.

HVB

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