Dec 292013
 

I had mixed feelings about pitting three songs up for Song of The Year instead of the usual two, but this was an unusually strong year in pop music. And when I say strong I’m referring to quantity and not quality. Yet, some would have thought that with the breakup of the Jonas Brothers (?) and the lead-ballooning of Lady GaGa’s Artpop and Justin Timberlake’s 20/20 Experience, the four horsemen of the Pop Is Dead Apocalypse would be riding up and down the aisles at this year’s American Music Awards. No, we had respectable, albeit retro “hits” from Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky” and “Treasure” by the beta version of the hardest working man in showbiz Bruno Mars. That’s where the good news ends because for the most part the radio sliced and served more moronic dancy nonsense like Macklemore/Ryan Lewis’ “Can’t Hold Us”, fey losers Passenger’s “Let Her Go”, and by the numbers collaborations from Pitbull.

thicke

Yet, none of those songs could hold an iPhone lamp to the song of the summer (and NSFW video of the year) “Blurred Lines”, which itself blurred the lines between tribute and theft of the Marvin Gaye song “Got To Give It Up”. It was reported that the songwriters, fearing a lawsuit, lobbed a pre-emptive strike against any potential copyright issue coming from Marvin Gaye’s estate. But as we all know good influence can be diluted, especially after being filtered through the soul of the son of that Canadian guy who played the dad on Growing Pains. In the right hands (Pharell should have taken the lead on this one) the song could have been decent. Unfortunately, Thicke handles the song with all the charisma of a pizza delivery man in a porn shoot.

Meanwhile, the trend of the smug acoustic back to earth music that started with Mumford & Sons continued unabated this year with the addition of The Lumineers and Civil Wars to the fold. Another trend that won’t die is the positive affirmation anthem that started a couple years ago with GaGa’s “Born This Way”. Continuing this movement on radio and television in ubiquity were Katy Perry’s “Roar” and Sara Barreille’s “Brave”. Yet there was room for another female voice of power, but no one knew it would come from an unassuming 17 year old from Australia.

Share
Dec 282013
 

For the last few years I’ve been picking away at a memoir, of sorts, on my formative life and musical experiences. For my own edification above all else, as well as a possible guidebook to help my sons understand why their dad is weird, I am examining how these experiences and the sounds swirling around me worked together to “save me” from the hazards of childhood, to set me on the path of becoming the man and rock nerd I am today. Suburban kid‘s excellent Dad Rock thread inspired me to share a current draft of an opening chapter, some of which you may have seen or heard in earlier stages of development.

easyrider

My first music-playing device was a plastic, olive-green record player that was pleasingly textured on the outside, like stucco, nubby upholstery, or Naugahyde. Flip up the top and the plastic was beige—also textured, to better pick up smudges from my dirty hands. The turntable itself was brown, with a brown rubber mat to soften the blow of singles released from the multi-45 stem. I can’t remember for sure if the arm was brown or beige, but I remember my shaky hands were always challenged by lifting the arm and dropping the needle onto a specific album track. My beat-to-hell childhood 45s, these days crammed into my original orange vinyl box along with other singles picked up through the years, can attest to this challenge. The cord was a brown 2-pronged affair. I experienced my first electric shock on that cord when I left one of my shaky fingers slipped between the prongs as I plugged it in. Ouch!

I used that record player from the age of 4 or 5, playing “She Loves You” over and over, singing along with my speech-impeded “l” sounds (ie, She wuvs you…), through about age 15, when I’d long mastered consonant sounds. My uncle gave me my first stack of LPs as well as a box of 45s. The LPs included Steppenwolf Live, with that snarling wolf on the cover and Santana’s first album, with its sketch of a roaring lion that contained hidden figures and each Carlos Santana guitar solo deliberately articulated with a long, bended note, played high on the neck. He gave me The Band’s second album, which to this day is one of my Top 5 favorite albums ever, and about a half dozen Beatles records, including early ones through their then-recent psychedelic period, Sgt. Pepper’s and Magical Mystery Tour. A year or two later I got Let It Be and the Beatles Again singles collection, the one with them dourly dressed in black and standing in front of a big door. I didn’t know “singles collection” from “proper” release, and thought nothing of the stylistic and sonic differences between “I Should Have Known Better” and the scorching single version of “Revolution.” The band members looked their coolest in the mustachioed, sideburned photos of their psychedelic years, so I “updated” my early Beatles’ albums, drawing the appropriate whiskers on the lads and the distinctive granny glasses on John.

Share

Dad Rock

 Posted by
Dec 262013
 

paulpetersen020

Dad Rock.

“Dad Rock” is a term for all that old ’60s and ’70s music that today’s dads listen to. I’ve seen references to it online, heard my kids mention it, and I’ve even tuned into a radio show called Dad Rock. Understanding the demographic of this site, I think it’s fair to say many of us have Dads that are from the pre-rock era. That’s the case for me, too, but that didn’t mean we didn’t have any rock(ish) records in the family record collection when I was a kid.

My parents were in college when rock and roll emerged, and were graduates when it was only a couple of years old. To them, rock and roll was teen music, utterly beneath them. In the 1950s, the median age for getting married was 20 for women and 23 for men; if you were in your 20s, it’s safe to say you identified as a grown-up.

My dad was an amateur musician and was in charge of entertainment on his army base in Germany, but he never ran into Elvis (who was there at roughly the same time). In 1977, he and my mom were dragged by another couple to go see Elvis on what would be his last tour; they attended ironically and the performance simply confirmed their long-held biases.

But they had been liberal young parents in the ’60s. We had a Pete Seeger record stuck in among the jazz, classical, light opera, and show tunes albums. And they were not completely closed off from the pop culture. Indeed, I think they tried to like rock at some point in the late ’60s or early ’70s, but didn’t get too far.

What rock or pop-rock records did your parents have? Here’s about all we had:

  • Simon and Garfunkel – the one with Mrs. Robinson (Bookends?)
  • The Hair soundtrack
  • Tommy by the Who

I think my dad, despite not really getting rock (I remember one conversation I had with him where he had no clue who Chuck Berry was) respected the Who’s crack at making an opera. He never listened to the album much, but he liked owning it and I believe he went to see the movie version, and possibly the stage show.

Dad turned 80 the other day. We got him tickets to Madame Butterfly.

Share
Dec 262013
 

StarGuitars101

It’s the day after Christmas. Whether you celebrated or not, I hope you had a marvelous day. In the true spirit of the holiday… sowhatchaget? What new music-related items have entered your household?

Santa brought me a new, sparkly red amp, a set of glasses decorated with images of cassette tapes, and an awesome book on legendary guitars, with a foreword by Billy F Gibbons.

HVB: What’s with the middle initial in your boy’s name? Has that been going on for some time, or is this how Billy distinguishes his literary side?

Share

Long, Long Songs

 Posted by
Dec 242013
 

I was adding Kurt Vile‘s “Walking On A Pretty Daze” to my “most played” 2013 playlist the other day and realized it’s by far the longest song to make the cut. If you haven’t heard it — it comes in at about 9 and half minutes or so. I used to routinely put longer songs on mix tapes and CDs, but in the age of iTunes and eMusic, I’ve been doing less of it.

One my favorite Zep songs is “Achilles Last Stand,” at 10-plus minutes, Derek and Dominos have “Layla ” at 7:05 and a version of “Key to Highway” at 10 minutes and change. Lots of prog rock bands have album cuts that take up a side or most of a side of an LP. What is the cream of that crop? I thought The Clash put some long ones on Sandinsta!, but looking back, nothing over 6 minutes — for some reason I thought  “The Call Up” and “Charlie Don’t Surf” were really long, but they probably just seemed long to me because of all 2 minute songs I was listening to at the time.

Anyway — what are some of your favorite longer tracks — just to be arbitrary — clocking in at 7-plus minutes?

Share
Dec 232013
 

Nothing’s stopping Yoko. What’s stopping you? The All-Star Jam is the place to do your thing.

Not enough time to use your Back Office privileges and craft a new thread? Throw the germs of your rock brilliance up here!

Some obscure rock figure die who we may not have heard about? May he or she rest in peace!

Relatively new to the Halls of Rock and ready to make your first splash? There’s no better place than here!

Share

Lost Password?

 
twitter facebook youtube