FOR THE TURNSTILES
housewives' choice!
Saturday, June 28, 2008
NEW HORIZONS
Totally over it!
I kindly direct you to the newer bigger better and weller written blog coauthored by the many talented Joe Dixon proprietor of Shake Appeal records and self proclaimed "dirty sound enthusiast"* and the ever vigilant Dylan Travis of the Bay Area outfit Man/Miracle.
*Not an actual quote.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
BABY PLEASE DON'T GO, AGAIN
What's particularly interesting about these songs, inherent in the volume and time span of recordings, is how the many versions illustrate the shifting styles of prewar country blues, to Chicago blues, and ultimately R&B and rock. And that the British invasion was largely responsible for bringing blues back into the pop idiom or at least back to the white market. The rise of the Animals, Them, the Stones, meant producers and A&R men saw dollar signs beyond the black working class audience blues based music was understood to be limited to. As is the case today the teen market = the big bucks. As blues and R&B rose in stature deep soul (southern soul, soul with more explicit blues and r&b qualities) was no longer regarded as niche music. In my sort of naively post-racial understanding of musical history I had never realized just how segregated music remained, as with everything else, well into and beyond the mythic utopia of the sixties.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
TURN YOUR LAMP DOWN LOW
From wikipedia...
Baby, Please Don't Go" is a blues song first recorded by Big Joe Williams in 1935. It is related to a group of early 20th century blues and work songs that include "Alabama Bound", "Another Man Done Gone", and "Don't Leave Me Here", and "Turn Your Lamp Down Low"
Big Joe Williams - Baby, please Don't Go(1935 original)
Big Joe Williams - Baby Please Don't Go (1945)
Butch Cage & Willie B Thomas - Baby Please Don't Go
Bukka White - Baby Please Don't Go
Mississippi Fred McDowell - Baby Please Don't Go
Vera Ward Hall - Another Man Done Gone
Henry Thomas - Don't Leave Me Here
Big Joe Williams - Don't Leave Me Here.mp3
Them - Baby Please Don't Go
John Lee Hooker & Van Morrison - Baby Please Don't Go
Friday, May 09, 2008
Friday, May 02, 2008
ADDENDUM
Upon greater reflection, I've been unfair to Ms. Nash, in that she is but a tiny piece of a much bigger and grosser context. And while I don't want to be listening to her music, neither am I interested in the alternative I seemed to have suggested she default to (self serious emotionalism). I suppose what's obnoxious to me is that these little tricks of non-committal meta-song interruption seem favorable enough to audiences, for instance, college kids hosting radio shows, into deciding Kate Nash or Jason Schwartzman (the song West Coast, also a campus hit), or Yael Naim, are more honest or interesting or otherwise credible than the monolithic mainstream that they are most formally aligned with.
I don't mean this as a "fuck those tasteless college kids." I simply find it interesting, and frustrating, that there's a serious commercial market that has sprung from, in part, the indie rock idiom, marketing music to the moderately contrary youth, and this youth market still recognizes something of themselves in this stuff. Or maybe they just like those catchy beats.
But the indie rock self-consciousness was grating enough when coupled with an often imaginative musical freedom and invention and the righteousness of a reactionary alternative and autonomy.
I don't mean this as a "fuck those tasteless college kids." I simply find it interesting, and frustrating, that there's a serious commercial market that has sprung from, in part, the indie rock idiom, marketing music to the moderately contrary youth, and this youth market still recognizes something of themselves in this stuff. Or maybe they just like those catchy beats.
But the indie rock self-consciousness was grating enough when coupled with an often imaginative musical freedom and invention and the righteousness of a reactionary alternative and autonomy.
Monday, April 14, 2008
KATE NASH, YOU DEVIL
I'm sitting in the student commons area of my school here in the South Loop listening to Kate Nash's Mouthwash over the speakers. The cloying fey pluckish willful inanity of this song makes me yearn for the self importance of Grunge's ennui. Nash sings lyrics like "although you try to infringe you cannot confine" and "even if you try and hold me back there's nothing that you can gain." before moving to the chorus "And I use mouthwash/ Sometimes I floss/ I got a family/ And I drink lots of tea." It's as though she's apologizing for having nearly presented an emotional condition. Maybe she's trying to 'ground' us by the removal of any subjective content? I'm comfortable with burdensome emotionalism, we all are, but buoyant pop so self aware it can't even give us that!? Just sing about a fucking boy.
A tireless machine needs fuel and this is the kind of song the new world order has condoned. It is equally at home in a commercial, place of commerce, or on your miniature music playing device. Perhaps the smaller the player the tinier and more inconsequential the song and its themes.
A tireless machine needs fuel and this is the kind of song the new world order has condoned. It is equally at home in a commercial, place of commerce, or on your miniature music playing device. Perhaps the smaller the player the tinier and more inconsequential the song and its themes.
Saturday, April 12, 2008
DERRICK MORGAN
Derrick Morgan - Moon Hop
Derrick & Patsy Todd - Housewives' Choice
Derrick Morgan - Forward March
Derrick Morgan - Tougher Than Tough (Rudi In Court) Often considered the first single to typify the Rocksteady sound.
Derrick Morgan - Seven Letters Likewise with this song in the transition from Rocksteady to Reggae.
All songs found on Derrick Morgan - Moon Hop: Best of the Early Years 1960-69
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