Jul 232008
 

In a move that happened too fast for most online music news sources to notice, Paul Westerberg released a new, online-only album today, 49:00, for only 49 cents.

Follow the relevant link on the fan site Man Without Ties for the details. At this point, it’s available from Amazon.com and something called Tunecore.com, apparently the only sites that would agree to the 49-cents thing.

Of course, with Westerberg there’s a catch. You get all the songs in one big MP3 file, and no indication of song titles. (Although another fan site made pretty good guesses.)

There’s plenty of other curve balls. Firstly, it’s only 43:55 minutes. 49:00 at times sounds a bit like an old TDK blank tape he saw fit to cram with as many songs and scraps as he could on one side. Some songs begin just before the prior ones abruptly end. Occasional six-second splurges of unrelated songs bridge one “proper” song to the next. You might think this is Westerberg being lazy, but I don’t.

Like everything he’s released this decade, except the Open Season soundtrack, this album is a one-man-band-in-his-basement affair. When he first unveiled this new direction, on 2002’s awesome Stereo/Mono, he seemed to hit upon way to treat lo-fi as a sonic value. It’s as if he realized he could get a better, more unique sound on his own, with rudimentary engineering skills. Rather than hire a bunch of session hands to try and fail to re-create, say, the classic Stones sound, he himself tried and failed to re-create the classic Stones sound. In the process, he found a cool sound all his own.

Based on one listen, 49:00 could be the next step for Westerberg’s evolving aesthetic. The album functions equally well as an endearingly sloppy take on Let it Bleed and Gasoline Alley, or a musique concrete deconstruction of itself.

My take on Westerberg, which has no basis in any real interaction with the man, is that he’s a lot like Neil Young: A curmudgeonly control-freak perfectionist who wants, no demands, that things sound messy. He wants that off-the-cuff one-take vibe, and has little or no compunction about dropping your ass if you can’t supply it. I’ll admit, it can provide a listener with a severe case of cognitive dissonance at times. But it also allows him to tap into that devil-may-care, funny streak that made The Replacements so endearing to a lot of people.

It ain’t Loser Rock, that’s for damn sure!

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Jul 232008
 


The other night while washing dishes I turned on the radio, hoping to find a few good songs to play in the background. The local Oldies station was playing Gary Puckett & the Union Gap‘s “Lady Willpower”. Those of you who know me know that I despise that song – even while finding it unintentionally hilarious (a characteristic that usually carries a lot of weight with me). I quickly changed the station.

I switched over to the local Classic Rock station, which was playing ZZ Top‘s “Sharp Dressed Man”. That song makes me nauseous! There was nothing else on the radio. I couldn’t bear to go back to “Lady Willpower”, yet I had the chilling thought that I disliked the ZZ Top song more than the Gary Puckett song. I had identified my personal benchmark of disdain: to truly say I have disdain for a song, I must despise it more than “Lady Willpower”.

On a personal level, this is a powerful conclusion I thought I’d share. Perhaps you have identified your own benchmark of disdain.

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Jul 212008
 

A Townsperson Wants to Know

Following our recent appreciation for the Look of the MC5, a Townsperson wrote me offlist to ask this question:

“I’ve been hearing a lot about the MC5 for years, but beside ‘Kick Out the Jams,’ I can’t say I know a full song by them. What I hear sounds pretty cool and I know a lot of you guys love them, but where do I start? What’s their best album?”

As Moderator of Rock Town Hall, I don’t think I alone should assume the responsibility of steering this Townsperson toward a starting album. Beside, I don’t love the band the way some of you do. I ask you, Townspeople, to suggest the best MC5 album.

Our friend surely looks forward to your responses.

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Jul 212008
 

I joked in a previous thread that the flute has no place in music. Well kinda joked. With the exception of “Moondance”, I can’t think of an instance of the Rock Flute that didn’t make me reach for the dial.

I invite you, individually and/or collectively, to offer up 10 great rock songs that feature a flute. I’ll be the judge and jury.

Here are the rules:

Not including Moondance.

  • The flute must be relatively prominent and integral. Don’t split hairs, you know what I’m sayin’.
  • I flippantly said “music,” but for this challenge I’m limiting you to rock songs.
  • No more than 2 songs by a given artist. I confess that there might be other Van Morrison songs that I’m unaware of. (BTW: Van Morrison is the exception to another one of my rock laws. Stay tuned.)
  • Mellotrons, and other devices, that sound like flutes don’t count.

Tip: Don’t even try any Tull. DOA

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Jul 212008
 

Congratulations to Townsman Sammymaudlin for correctly — even if a bit cheesily with that laundry list of mid-80s bands it could’ve been — ID’ing Scot-rockers Big Country. Somewhat reluctantly, I hand over the coveted RTH No-Prize. Congratulations, Sammy!

Greetings! Here’s a quick one for you: who’s the band charging out of the gates with a dreadful cover of this Stones classic (click “MYSTERY DATE,” below)? This is devilishly tough, so I’ll give you a few clues:

MYSTERY DATE

1. That’s not the normal lead singer guy on vocals. Obviously, the drummer, or lead guitar guy, or bassist, wanted some face time with the crowd, and this was the best they could muster.

2. It’s entirely possible some of you may have been at this show!

3.

HVB

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