"Your child constantly addresses you as 'JACK'!" 😎
I don't care if it's not really synced to the music; that's the most amazing footage of them I've ever seen.
Attentive readers are doubtless aware that those guys are pretty much my fave band of all time, so it will come as no surprise that seeing that for the first time after all these years has been something akin to a religious experience for me. 😎
I mean -- wow. 😎 😎
So I had occasion this week to re-read Jules Feiffer's superb 1965 The Great Comic Book Heroes, still one of the best books ever written about pop culture and one that had a huge impact on me when it first came out. Feiffer concludes it with the following paragraph; he's talking specifically about comics, but in retrospect, I now I think the point he's really making is somewhat broader.
Comic books, which had few public (as opposed to professional) defenders in the days when Dr. Wertham was attacking them, are now looked back on by an increasing number of my generation as samples of our youthful innocence instead of our youthful corruption. A sign, perhaps, of the potency of that corruption. A corruption -- a lie, really -- that put us in charge, however, temporarily, of the world in which we lived and gave us the means, however arbitrary, of defining right from wrong, good from bad, hero from villain. It is something for which old fans can understandably pine -- almost as if having become overly conscious of the imposition of junk on our adult values: on our architecture, our highways, our advertising, our mass media, our politics -- and even in the air we breathe, flying black chunks of it -- we have staged a retreat to a better remembered brand of junk. A junk that knew its place was underground where it had no power and thus only titillated, rather than above ground where it truly has power -- and thus, only depresses.
As I said, Feiffer was talking specifically about comics, but he might just as well have been talking about...oh my gosh -- rock and related pop musics, no?
And if so, the question arises -- is what Feiffer's getting at just a philistine old man's prejudice or an actually valid point?
Discuss.
I go back and forth on this, BTW. 😎
Meanwhile, have a great weekend, everybody!!!
Meanwhile, bogus "musical" acts like Geese get to be on Saturday Night Live.
I don't get it. 😎
I first heard about those kids over at our friend Sal Nunziato's invaluable Burning Wood blog the other day; normally, I wouldn't try to steal Sal's thunder but I fell so hard for Music City that I really wanted to second that emotion, if you catch my drift. 😎
In any case, the whole album is just fantastic, and basically sounds like a great '80s skinny-tie pop band you somehow missed. Which is to say they seem to have been genetically bred to make music I was guaranteed to flip over.
The album -- aptly titled Welcome to Music City -- is dropping (as the kids say) over at Amazon, Spotify and the rest of the usual outlets on Feb. 27th. Apparently the only physical version of it available will be on vinyl, which frankly I am planning to enjoy immensely.
I should add that you can preview the entire album on YouTube OVER HERE; the band doesn't appear to have an official website where you can find out more about them yet, but I'll keep you posted if and when that changes.
So the other day, I was talking with a friend about The Rolling Stones -- something that seems to happen less frequently than it used to, now that I think of it -- and the subject of some of their, shall we say, problematic songs came up. By which I mean the, you know, kinda sexist stuff like "Under My Thumb" et al, and as often happens, we drifted off into the larger issue of morality in art, i.e., is it still art if it's also morally reprehensible? Or, frankly, does art have a responsibility to be moral?
Yeah, right, yada yada yada. I should add, BTW, that in terms of music, at least, it's not just pop that has these kinds of problems. For example, I have Jewish friends who absolutely will not listen to Richard Wagner and (to a lesser, perhaps less fair, extent) Anton Bruckner because the sound of jackboots intrudes for them. And what about my personal favorite guy, Carlo Gesualdo...
...the 16th century aristocrat and composer who wrote some absolutely sublime madrigals at the same time he was murdering and mutilating people and getting away with it because of his social status?
Anyway, at some point in our discussion the subject of Richard Thompson came up, and my friend allowed how it was becoming difficult to overlook the fact that Thompson -- genius songwriter that he most certainly is -- was responsible for what might possibly be considered an inordinate number of songs that demonstrate a, shall we say, problem with the ladies. I countered that this was more misanthropy than misogyny, but I was probably just being difficult; in any case, it got me thinking.
It also gave me an excuse to post clips of two not as different as you might think versions of a Thompson song that could be exhibit A for what my friend was talking about -- "Turning of the Tide."
How many lips, how many hands, have held youOkay, so first here's Richard's version, from his 1988 album Amnesia. As you'll hear, it's kind of a jaunty rockabilly song despite the downbeat lyrics. Amazingly lyrical guitar, too; the overall effect is strangely poignant.
Like I'm holding you tonight
Too many nights, staying up late,
Too much powder and too much paint
No you can't hide from the turning of the tide
Did they run their fingers up and down your shabby dress
Did they find some tender moment there in your caress
The boys all say "You look so fine"
They don't come back for a second time
Oh you can't hide from the turning of the tide
Poor little sailor boy, never set eyes on a woman before
Did he tell you that he'd love you, darling, for evermore?
Pretty little shoes, cheap perfume,
Creaking bed in a hotel room
Oh you can't hide from the turning of the tide
And now here's the revved up punk rock version by Bob Mould, from the 1994 Thompson tribute album Beat the Retreat. Apart from the dangerous speed level, you'll note that Mould sounds far more disgusted with the trollop in question than the composer did; I'm reminded of Jules Feiffer's famous line that "In this culture, it's not just homosexuals who hate women -- it's everybody." 😎
In any case, a great song, if arguably troubling, and both versions are keepers, I think.
Your thoughts?
In any event, it sprung to mind after I stumbled across this interesting story online a few days ago.
Here's a hint: The Floor Models pretty much agreed with Townshend.
Anyway, you can read the complete article over at the link HERE. In case you're wondering, it was Pete's daughter Emma who outed him in this regard.
Which leads us, inexorably, to the subject of the weekend's business. To wit:
...and your favorite objectively schlocky post-Elvis pop/rock/soul-r&b/country hit song that you love unreservedly anyway is...???
Discuss.
Arbitrary rule: I'm disqualifying obvious novelty records, i.e. "Gimme Dat Ding" or that kinda stuff. Instead, we're talking about records that aspire to something serious/artsy/significant, but simply fall short for whatever reasons. Or that you love, but everybody else makes fun of you for it. Or that just strike most normal people as kinda cornball.
And in case you're wondering, apart from everything else by ABBA, my nominee is...
Actually, a pretty good, if overly melodramatic song, and Pitney's great, but hey -- some of the arrangement touches, like the wailing girls chorus vocals? I mean, oy gevalt.
So alrighty then -- and remembering the Shaw quote -- what would YOUR choices be?
And have a great weekend, everybody!!!
I really liked that at the time, corny as it is, and still do. BTW, when I found that clip, it dawned on me that this was the first time I had ever heard it in stereo.
Wiki also informs me that the song was co-written and produced by the great Bob Crewe, of Four Seasons and Mitch Ryder fame.
In any case, a coveted PowerPop No-Prize© will be awarded to the first reader who gleans the song's significance to the theme of tomorrow's Weekend Essay Question.
Love that last one particularly, although the youngsters in the photo probably have too many teeth. 😎
An idiosyncratic blog dedicated to the precursors, the practioners, and the descendants of power pop. All suggestions for postings and sidebar links welcome, contact any of us.