Friday, July 10, 2009

Weekend Listomania (Special Anywhere But Here! Video Edition)

Well, it's Friday and you know what that means. Yes, my Oriental manual catharsis engineer fille de whoopee Fah Lo Suee and I are off to Wasilla, Alaska, where we'll be joining soon to be former Governor Sarah Palin [R-Mother of the Year] in a ceremony proclaiming Space Moose Alaska's Official State Animal. And I should add at this juncture that if you already know who Space Moose is, you ought to be deeply ashamed of yourself.

In any case, posting by moi will necessarily be sporadic for a little while.

But in the meantime, here's another little project for you folks:

Best Post-Elvis Song or Record Referencing Going Somewhere (Anywhere!) in the Title or Lyric!!!

No arbitrary rules this time, you're welcome very much, and if this is a little too similar to a Listomania I may or may not have posted in the past, please forgive me -- I'm old and senile.

In any case, my totally top of my head Top Seven would be...

7. Dashboard Confessional -- As Lovers Go



Okay, I don't much care for these guys, and I know it's not really about going somewhere, but I wanted to have something recorded in this century for a change. So sue me.

6. Dionne Warwick -- Trains and Boats and Planes



Said this before, but I think on balance this is not only her best record but Bachrach and David's most beautiful song. Alas, Dionne's version isn't on YouTube, but I was absolutely staggered to find that the Box Tops cover (with the teenaged Alex Chilton) which I had no idea existed, is. Truly amazing....

5. The Smashing Pumpkins -- Bullet Train to Osaka



As in Billy Corgan's pretentious cue-ball noggin wants to get on board the titular vehicle enroute to the titular city. That voice you hear is saying "All aboard the bullet train to Osaka" in Japanese, obviously.

4. Bessie Banks -- Go Now





Much as I adore the Moody Blues version (with my fave piano solo of the Brit Invasion) I've come to appreciate the original even more.

3. Nils Lofgren -- Keith Don't Go (Ode to a Glimmer Twin)





That's Keith, as in Richards, and don't go, as in don't kill yourself. From 1975, when such a thing seemed eminently possible. Lofgren's a mensch, obviously. And a great guitarist (dig the "Satisfaction" quote).

2. Katrina and the Waves -- Going Down to Liverpool





The Bangles version is more famous, and it has that Leonard Nimoy video obviously. But the original, with composer (and once and future Soft Boy) Kimberly Rew on guitar is the great one, I think.

And the numero uno This Must Not Be the Place tune, let's not even argue about this okay, obviously is --

1. Fairport Convention -- Si Tu Dois Partir



"If You Gotta Go," the Bob Dylan song, and in fricking French. Invitations to take a walk don't get any cooler.

Awrighty -- what would you choices be?

[Shameless Blogwhore: My parallel Cinema Listomania -- theme: movies with cool courtroom scenes -- is now up over at Box Office. As always, if you could see your way to going over there and leaving a coment, I'd be your best friend. And you can watch the complete courtroom scene from Woody Allen's Bananas, which is about as funny as it gets, so it'll be worth your while. Thanks!]

26 comments:

  1. Canned Heat - "On the Road Again." Seems ike everbody in the '60s had a song called "On the Road Again" up to and including BD himself, but this is a fishing beautiful record and for my money the finest reimagining of an old blues there is. That includes "Love in Vain" and I'll fishing well stand on Keith's coffee table in my broughans and say so.

    PS. I do not want to hear either the word "Willie" or the word "Nelson" in connection with this. I am in earnest, although with the release of "Bruno" that phrase is less useful than it used to be.

    "Key to the Highway" by anybody. It's a brilliant piece of folk poetry and it does what a standard is supposed to do: a) sound good no matter how badly you play it and b) sounds GREAT if you CAN play, no matter how many times you've played it.

    "Riding with the King" I like John Hiatt's original but it's another song that sounds great no matter who does it.

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  2. steve simels7/10/2009 7:59 AM

    Pete:

    I'm with you on "On the Road Again" -- everything about that record works, including the production, which still sounds completely modern. Alan Wilson really is one of the great underrated guys of all time...

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  3. should i stay or should i go - the clash
    do you know the way to san jose - dionne warwick
    wait - beatles

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  4. Lofgren's "Keith Don't Go" on the Authorized Bootleg album is even better!
    Live in the KSAN studio, that is one of my favorite albums of all time.

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  5. America - simon & garfunkel
    Two Of Us -- Beatles
    Marrakesh Express , CSN
    On the Road - Canned Heat
    Roam -B52's
    Born to be Wild - steppenwolf

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  6. A pregnant topic, for sure. Here's a few:

    Go to the Mardi Gras: Professor Longhair
    I'm Going Upstairs: John Lee Hooker
    If You Want Me to Stay: Sly & the Family Stone
    Why Won't You Stay: American Music Club
    Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You: Led Zep, Joan Baez
    (the utterly sublime power pop gem) I Don't Know Why You Stay: Essex Green
    and Steve, how could you forget "Stay With Me Baby" by Lorraine Ellison

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  7. Cool Alex Chilton song, I have not heard that one before! I am trying to get all his stuff I can, same thing with the dB's guys. My favorite recent Chilton acquisition is Cliches. It is just Alex with a guitar, and there is not a speck of irony in the whole record. Nary a jot nor a tittle.

    It is kind of strange, as I love Alex's sardonic delivery, but give it a listen you guys.

    Trey

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  8. What's that Guess Who song about a place where it's "rainin' all the time" and if you go there, "you'll get your feet wet"...?

    Teh Google is no help. I remember it from a mix tape my pal Bobby Bo-Bags gave me many years ago. (He named himself that - obviously - as lead singer of a blues band I was in. His trademark was the mid-song exclamation "Hoo-ah!," years before Pacino stole it. Furthermore, this blues band played CBGBs one Sunday in 1986 and cleared the place out in seconds flat.)

    Also.

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  9. Headin For The Texas Border by the Flamin Groovies from Flamingo !

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  10. Hey Steve, can you send me an email? I stupidly deleted your addy. Tank you.

    BTW, on YouTube there is a cool vid of Nils doing "Keith Don't Go" on acoustic.

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  11. 2000 Light Years from Home - Stones

    Route 66 - covered by everybody

    Woodstock - Joni or CS&N

    That leaving on a Jet Plane song.

    Yellow Taxi - Joni

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  12. Going Mobile - the who
    Laura Nyro - And when i die
    Laura Nyro - Poverty Train
    Mott the Hoople -All The Way to Memphis

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  13. Space Moose! I had not thought of that in years!

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  14. I'm in a Motown mood today:

    Destination Anywhere (Marvelettes featuring another of Wanda's great leads) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMXe6A2bnHk and features one of my favorite lyrics:

    "But it was just the conductor saying
    Which stop do you prefer?"

    Twenty-Five Miles (Edwin Starr's greatest) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Me2-HVKCuv8

    When I'm Gone (Brenda Holloway)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZfXNLP2KAZw

    Weirdly, my two favorite Supremes singles are both "going somewhere songs": "Come See About Me" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PycKSdKG_74 and especially "Let Me Go the Right Way" with a wonderful Diana Ross lead: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsMOMNrAkgE

    Martha and the Vandellas' "Nowhere to Run" (Here's a Shindig video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhcflDSUMvc)

    "Going To a Go Go" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sWt4Hz1KGcQ) The Miracles' original can help save us from memories of the Stones' cover version)

    Arguably, the first Motown song is a great gospel-tinged pop confection by Marv Johnson, written by Berry Gordon, "Come To Me" (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=quo4ndbOVZc&feature=channel_page)

    I'm not anti-disco, but "Don't Leave Me This Way" and "I'm Coming Out" didn't make the cut.

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  15. Mystery Train - The Band (from Moondog Matinee)

    The Train Kept A-Rollin' - Yardbirds

    You Can't Catch Me - Chuck Berry

    Kansas City - Wilbert Harrison/Beatles

    He's Gone - Grateful Dead

    Everyone's Gone to the Movies - Steely Dan

    Exit - U2

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  16. He took his potatoes down to be mashed & then he made it on over to that million dollar bash – Dylan.

    Unrelated but ... Drake Levin (Aug. 17, 1946 - July 4, 2009) RIP

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  17. steve simels7/10/2009 10:55 PM

    Unrelated but ... Drake Levin (Aug. 17, 1946 - July 4, 2009) RIP


    I will grieve, as Mr.Spock said.

    I loved his playing...totally underrated guitarist.

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  18. Peter--As much as I too love "Key to the Highway," I have to point out that the song is way pre-Elvis, with the earliest versions recorded in 1940 and '41 by Charles Segar and Big Bill Broonzy, respectively.

    That said, allow me to seize this opportunity to show off my own antiquity:

    Beach Boys - I Get Around
    Dylan - Santa Fe
    Dylan - Desolation Row
    Paul Simon - Take Me to the Mardi Gras
    Steve Miller - Jet Airliner
    Arlo Guthrie - Coming Into Los Angeles
    CSN&Y - Pre-Road Downs
    Steely Dan - Show Biz Kids ("Go to Las Wages")
    Steely Dan - Midnight Cruiser

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  19. Good additions, o ancient one, but don't you mean "Lost Wages"? That's the joke of it! Also, I hadn't known Drake Levin by name but did very much dig his playing, esp. on "Him or Me?" which is not one of Paul Revere's better known hits but one of my faves: totally exhilarating!

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  20. Going Out Of My Head - Little Anthony and the Imperials

    :-)

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  21. Top of the Going Somewhere Pile, for me, has to be:

    R.E.M. - (Don't Go Back to) Rockville from Reckoning. The chorus and bridge (especially) are etched into my mind. (Really glad to have a chance to find this Youtube clip).

    A close second, hilarious and insanely catchy:
    Fountains of Wayne - Red Dragon Tattoo from Utopia Parkway
    "Monday gonna take a ride on
    the N train down to Coney Island"

    Others worth mentioning

    The Box Tops - The Letter

    Liz Phair - Go West from Whip-Smart

    Stevie Wonder - Living For the City from Innervisions

    Neil Young - Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown from Tonight's the Night

    The Band - Up on Cripple Creek from The Band. "Straight down the Mississippi river, to the Gulf of Mexico"

    Violent Femmes - Please Do Not Go from their self-titled first. The Youtube link is a bit embarassing, I'm afraid.

    Elliott Smith - Rose Parade from Either/Or - as in "Won't you follow me down to ..."


    And, although there wasn't a call for worst, let me nominate
    Wham! - Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go

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  22. David - Of course I know the joke is "lost wages"; I just thought they were singing it rather subtly.

    Christ! I'm old, not stupid, you know. ;)

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  23. Sorry about "Key to the Highway." I'd just listened to it and had it on my mind.

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  24. Steve, sorry to have ever doubted you! But on a similar tip, the line in "Keith Don't Go" that you take to mean 'don't go kill yourself'--wasn't it really about not going to Toronto to stand trial on drug charges? Or were you (once again) being waggish? If so, I will absolutely sit quietly until I have something sensible to say....

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  25. A little late to the party, but you could also have chosen Lofgren's "Goin' Back".

    And regarding "Keith Don't Go," I thought, when it came out, it was a reference to the rumors that Keith was going to leave the Stones. A couple of years later, btw, Lofgren changed part of the lyrics in his live show to "Keith don't go - oh, to the town called Toronto!"

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