Albums for the New Depression

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I must admit that I’d been feeling pretty daunted about choosing ten of my favourite albums from 2010. However, it wasn’t such a bad year for music after all and it actually took me a while to narrow it down to twenty. In no particular order, here are numbers 11-20, with the Top Ten coming tomorrow. Two of my favourite Scottish bands added to that country’s fine melodic tradition with their most recent efforts. Write About Love by Belle & Sebastian and Shadows by Teenage Fanclub were two of last year’s more uplifting albums. Lowering the Tone by The Brad Pitt Light Orchestra is the first of two Irish debuts in my Top 20. The band is largely composed of the Blake siblings from Limerick and their well-crafted Brechtian songs are equally well-performed on their first full-length record. The total running time of these first three records is just over two hours, which is only slighter longer than Have One on Me by Joanna Newsom. It’s probably going to take me a few more years to really get to know the album as only three of its eighteen tracks are shorter than six minutes. In contrast, each of the next three albums are only slightly longer than 30 minutes in length. Contra is the title of Vampire Weekend‘s follow-up to their eponymous debut album and it suffers from the difficult second album syndrome as I feel it’s not as good as its predecessor. Loudon Wainwright III brings his customary wit and way with words to bear on his collection of 10 Songs for the New Depression. He compares the current economic downturn to the one from the 1930s and includes two songs written back then along with eight of his own originals

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Suddenly It’s Christmas!

Loudon Wainwright III‘s seasonal tune is as unseasonal as you would expect from this fine songwriter. Suddenly It’s Christmas is a frenetic rant against the commercial side of the holiday and, in particular, the suddenness of its arrival each year. This is certainly not a recent phenomenon and the early marketing of Christmas puts many people off the whole thing. The song is taken from a wonderful live album called Career Moves (1993), which I first owned on cassette. I listened to this album more than any other for over a decade before replacing my Sony Walkman with an MP3 player. The album includes much more of his acerbic material as well as his moving songs about failed relationships and the single life. In addition to the songs, I loved hearing his hilarious introductions to each one and came to know his intros just as well as the songs. This humour comes across in the almost conversational nature of his delivery and is evident right from the first lines here:

Suddenly it’s Christmas,
Right after Hallowe’en.
Forget about Thanksgiving;
It’s just a buffet in between.

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Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder


The cover of Kate & Anna McGarrigle's first LP

Kate McGarrigle, the Canadian folk singer, songwriter and musician, passed away last week. She formed a successful musical partnership with her sister Anna and a less successful one with American singer-songwriter, Loudon Wainwright III. Kate and Loudon were married to each other for a few years in the early seventies, although this union managed to produce two more talented singer-songwriters, Rufus and Martha Wainwright. The two kids have become quite successful in their own right, but I first encountered Rufus and Martha in their father’s songs, stuff like Rufus is a Tit Man and Five Years Old. Around the time I was getting into Loudon, I also came across the debut album from Kate and Anna McGarrigle (pictured above) and learned more of Loudon’s relationship with Kate through Loudon’s sometimes funny, sometimes sad songs about their last years together and its aftermath. This was one hell of a musical family and each member used the lyrics of their songs as a cathartic device to express their feelings in song. Previously, I’ve posted Rufus’ interpretation of his father’s One Man Guy here, and both Loudon’s song about Rufus and Martha’s song about Loudon here. Here are a few more songs that chronicle this family dialogue beginning with a song that Kate wrote about Loudon that appears on the sisters’ debut and concludes with (if my French is correct) an ode to drink that, I guess, acknowledges Kate’s French and Irish heritage. In between, I’ve included more of Loudon’s songs about Kate, Martha and Rufus along with some responses from the kids. You’ll also find a song that Rufus wrote about his mother’s facial mark and Martha’s In the Middle of the Night, which concerns her mother’s illness

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Return to Sender


I had been so busy preparing my birthday tribute to David Bowie that it completely slipped my mind that the Chameleon of Pop used to get his birthday cards on the same day as the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll. Yesterday marked the 75th anniversary of Elvis Presley’s birth in Tupelo, Mississippi. Like Bowie, Elvis was also an actor, although the films he appeared in were merely vehicles for his star status and internationally-recognised persona. And, like Bowie, Elvis was a huge influence on the development of popular music. Of course, his music wasn’t as innovative or original as that of Bowie, but Elvis inspired more people than anybody else to go on to become musicians and performers. Growing up in the 70s, his music was all over the radio and the neighbours beside me were huge fans. I’ve always liked him as a singer and a performer despite the fact that he never wrote any of his own songs. Last night I put together this mix of Elvis songs as well as songs written about him. I start off with three songs by The King himself. The first two concern an American state where I lived for a while and appear on my two favourite albums by him: The Sun Sessions and From Elvis in Memphis. They’re followed by his interpretation of an old Irish tune. Next up are two Elvis impersonators with a couple of pretty impressive-sounding impersonations. The next batch of songs represent a selection of the many tributes written about Elvis. Some are affectionate and commemorate his death; some describe pilgrimages to Graceland; and the others poke fun at his legacy and particularly the many sightings of him since he died. Finally, I’ve included some of my favourite covers of songs made famous by Mr Presley. Elvis has left the building

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The Ballad of Yoko Ono

Yoko-Ono-trees

This week’s episode of Later…with Jools Holland features Smokey Robinson, The Dead Weather, Bassekou Kouyate, Miike Snow and Basement Jaxx. Basement Jaxx are joined by Yoko Ono, who will also perform without the band. This week I will just focus on one of those guests. Yoko Ono is an artist and musician, who got her start in music when she hooked up with a singer named John Lennon. Lennon was a member of a band from the sixties called The Beatles and Ono’s relationship with Lennon was seen by many as a major reason for that group’s untimely demise. Lennon was quite fond of Ono and wrote a number of songs that expressed his fondness for her. They were man and wife for the whole of the seventies, but the arrangement ended at the end of 1980 when Mark Chapman took Lennon’s life. Here are a number of songs sung by Yoko Ono plus a couple written by John Lennon about her. I’ve also included a few more songs about Ono, the breakup of the Beatles, and Sissy Spacek’s displeasure at the cover of the Two Virgins LP

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Letting Off Steam While Getting Steamed

Swearing

A bar in Spain has come up with an unusual marketing plan for these recessionary times. Customers at the Casa Pocho bar in Cullera, southern Spain, are encouraged to come in for a drink and to insult the staff while they’re at it. Free drinks will be given to patrons who can come up with novel or humorous ways of verbally abusing the bar staff. To be frank, I experience this every time I go to The Abbey Bar in Galbally, Co Limerick. The customers are often quite explicit and forthright in their criticisms and demands of the bar staff who, to be fair, are well able to give it back. I also experience it every time I go to The Wild Onion in Limerick, and they don’t even serve alcohol there. I’d be quite willing to return the abuse, but I’d really miss the omelettes if I got barred. Here’s a mix of abusive tunes to get you in the mood should you decide to visit the Casa Pocho. Some of the songs are harmless, others are witty or funny, while a number of them are downright offensive and contain language that some people might find offensive. Happy listening, you miscreants!


01 Waitress In The Sky – The Replacements

02 You Talk Too Much – Sultans of Ping F.C.

03 Piss On You – The Wannadies

04 Tell That Girl to Shut Up – Holly & the Italians

05 Hey (Shut The Fuck Up Boy) – Peter, Bjorn & John

06 Guess Who Batman (Fuck You Very Much) – Lily Allen

07 Fuck Me Pumps – Amy Winehouse

08 Bloody Mother Fucking Asshole – Martha Wainwright

09 Rufus Is A Tit Man (live) – Loudon Wainwright III

10 Your Feet’s Too Big – Fats Waller

11 Hound Dog – Big Mama Thornton

12 Road Rage – Catatonia

13 Why D’Ya Do It? – Marianne Faithfull

14 How Do You Sleep? – John Lennon

15 Short People – Randy Newman

16 Brilliant Mistake – Elvis Costello

17 Positively 4th Street – Bob Dylan

18 Under My Thumb – The Rolling Stones

19 Fortunate Son – CCR

20 Common People – Pulp

21 You’re So Vain (Carly Simon cover) – The Feeling

22 Fucker – Eels

23 Fuck You, It’s Over – Glasvegas

It’s a Long Way to Tipperary

Bob Fest 09

My friend Keith Forde plays electric guitar with a local Limerick musical combo. Like me, he’s a big fan of the music of Bob Dylan. A while back, he approached me and an acquaintance of ours named Brian Fitzgerald, another Dylan fan, with the idea of putting on a celebration of Dylan’s work. Only a few weeks later, we now have a venue, a date, some ideas and a poster. It’s a free event that will take place in Co Tipperary, not too far from Limerick City on Saturday, July 18, 2009. After many minutes of discussion, we decided that we would call the event Bob Fest 2009. Nifty, eh? Keith has put together a house band featuring local musicians and friends and Keith’s going to spend some time getting them into shape and practicing some songs. If you’re a musician and you have a love of Dylan, a musical instrument and some songs to sing, get on the MySpace page mentioned on the poster and signal your interest. As it is a free event, there will be no payment for performers. However, there will be free camping at the venue and a Bob-B-Que will be laid on to feed the hungry souls that show up. It is also advised that attendees should bring their own liquid refreshments. Please note that this is not The Electric Picnic and places will be limited. Check out the MySpace page and watch this space for further developments. In the meantime, here’s a few songs in praise of Dylan and his music, a few that parody his work, some that are inspired by him, and a couple by the great man himself

At the start of the 70s, many singers and bands had been influenced by Dylan’s musical style and lyrical content, but David Bowie was the first one to release a tribute song to Dylan, Song for Bob Dylan, one of the tracks on his Hunky Dory (1971) album. Dylan might not appear to have been an influence on Bowie’s music, but Bowie’s earlier songs were in the singer-songwriter mode. The first lines of the song reveal Bowie’s intentions: “Oh, hear this Robert Zimmerman, I wrote a song for you. About a strange young man called Dylan with a voice like sand and glue”. The poet and writer, Joyce Carol Oates, also referred to this quality in Dylan’s voice when she wrote: “When we first heard this raw, very young, and seemingly untrained voice, frankly nasal, as if sandpaper could sing, the effect was dramatic and electrifying.”

01 Song for Bob Dylan – David Bowie

Syd Barrett would not seem to have been influenced by Dylan, either, but he recorded his tribute to Dylan a year before Bowie. Apparently, Barrett wrote his song in 1963 after attending a Dylan concert. However, Bob Dylan Blues would not see the light of day until 2001 when it was released on The Best of Syd Barrett: Wouldn’t You Miss Me? The tapes had been discovered by David Gilmour, who effectively replaced Barrett as guitarist in Pink Floyd in 1967. Incidentally, Pink Floyd’s Shine on You Crazy Diamond from Wish You Were Here (1975) is their tribute to Barrett

02 Bob Dylan Blues – Syd Barrett

The influence of Dylan on Loudon Wainwright’s music is far more evident. Wainwright was approached by Dylan’s record label to write a song to mark the occasion of Bob’s 50th birthday in May, 1991. The resulting song is a playful homage to Dylan’s music and persona, as well as a comment on Wainwright’s part in the New Dylan phenomenon that came to be attributed to nearly every male singer-songwriter in the late sixties and early seventies. It is obvious that Wainwright is a big fan of Dylan, but that doesn’t prevent him from throwing in a few digs at some of his music as well as imitating his voice on a number of occasions. It is a worthy tribute by a talented and witty songwriter whose son and daughter have also gone into the family business

03 Talking New Bob Dylan – Loudon Wainwright III

Cat Power is the stage name of Chan Marshall, born in Georgia in 1972. She released a number of albums throughout the 90s, but has only recently achieved success, particularly with her album The Greatest (2006). This release was preceded and followed by two albums of covers, The Covers Record (2000) and Jukebox (2008). Additionally, she has recorded and performed dozens of other cover versions over the years, including many of Dylan’s songs. She is an acknowledged Dylan fan and the Jukebox album contains one new song that she wrote herself, Song to Bobby, a homage that reads like a love letter to Dylan

04 Song To Bobby – Cat Power

The title of Cat Power’s Song to Bobby is an obvious nod to Song to Woody, Dylan’s own tribute to Woody Guthrie that appears on his first album, Bob Dylan (1962). Along with Talkin’ New York, it is one of only two original compositions on a debut that is an homage to the blues, folk and country songs that influenced him. A song that was recorded around this time, but didn’t appear on the album, is his version of a song by Hank Williams, (I Heard That) Lonesome Whistle Blow. The song was originally recorded by Hank in 1951, two years prior to his death at the age of 29. The song is similar to Johnny Cash’s later San Quentin in that it’s told from the viewpoint of a prisoner whose predicament is not helped by the sound of the passing train and the freedom it represents. In the film Dont Look Back (sic) (1967), Dylan sings another Hank Williams’ song, Lost Highway

05 (I Heard That) Lonesome Whistle Blow (Hank Williams cover) – Bob Dylan

Simon and Garfunkel’s A Simple Desultory Philippic (Or How I Was Robert McNamara’d into Submission) appears on their third album, Parsely, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme (1966). With such an unwieldy title, it should come as no surprise that the song was not released as a single. It is a re-recording of a song that appears on The Paul Simon Songbook from the previous year. The re-recording is an obvious parody of Dylan’s musical style, use of rhyme and abstract lyrical content. In one of the verses he sings about a man he knew:

He doesn’t dig poetry. He’s so unhip that
When you say Dylan, he thinks you’re talking about Dylan Thomas,
Whoever he was.
The man ain’t got no culture,
But it’s alright, ma,
Everybody must get stoned.

Even though the man in question may not be Bob Dylan, this verse pokes fun at how Robert Zimmerman took his new name from the Welsh poet, Dylan Thomas. The last two lines of the verse quote two separate Dylan songs, It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding) and Rainy Day Women Nos 12 & 35. At least Dylan chose conventional titles for his songs!

06 A Simple Desultory Philippic (Or How I Was Robert McNamara’d into Submission) – Simon and Garfunkel

Dylan’s influence on popular music was becoming more evident and was even creeping into the music of four lads from Liverpool, England, who were part of a popular beat group known as The Beatles. This influence was particularly evident in the songs that John Lennon sang (and wrote) such as You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away from Help (1965). It is also present in a song from the other album they released that year, Rubber Soul. The style of the song and Lennon’s wordplay are obviously influenced by Dylan even though the song also features George Harrison on sitar, the first time that instrument appeared on a piece of popular music outside of its native India

07 Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) – The Beatles

Dylan had obviously heard Rubber Soul as his next record, Blonde on Blonde (1966), contains an obvious parody of Norwegian Wood. It doesn’t feature a sitar, but its musical tempo and style is almost identical to the Beatles’ song. The song’s narrative is also similar in that it chronicles an apparent one night stand that ends in failure from the point of view of the narrator. However, Dylan’s version is far more playful and witty and he seems to be saying to Lennon: “Anything you can do, I can do better”. This sentiment appears to be expressed in the song’s closing couple when Dylan appears to address Lennon: “I never asked for your crutch, Now don’t ask for mine”. In subsequent interviews, Lennon first saw it as a parody of his song, then later as a playful homage

08 4th Time Around – Bob Dylan

Along with The Beatles, Dylan’s songs have been the most covered in popular music. These cover versions have encompassed a wide range of musical styles and genres. He has written so many songs that even his less well-known ones have become hits for others. Many artists, such as Jimi Hendrix’s version of All Along the Watchtower, have taken what was essentially a demo by Dylan and transformed it into something that even Dylan couldn’t have imagined. Generally, people have stayed away from some of his more famous songs. Dylan’s own version of the opening track from Highway 61 Revisited (1965), Like a Rolling Stone, is pretty definitive and is regularly cited as being one of the greatest rock songs ever recorded. Nevertheless, it hasn’t stopped people from trying to better it and even Hendrix had a go. One of the more interesting versions is an Italian language hip hop version by Articolo 31 that samples parts of Dylan’s original. In fact, Articolo 31′s version is a cover of an American hip hop version by a band called The Mystery Tramps

09 Come una Pietra Scalciata (Like a Rolling Stone) (Bob Dylan cover) – Articolo 31

What More Can I Say About My Workingman Blues? is a mashup featuring an instrumental backing and the vocal chorus of Bob Dylan’s Workingman Blues #2 from Modern Times (2006) and What More Can I Say? from The Black Album (2003) by Shawn Corey Carter. Mr Carter is better known as the hip hop performer, Jay-Z

10 What More Can I Say About My Workingman Blues?

Nine Days is a New York band that had a few minor hits in the USA in 2000. Their song entitled Bob Dylan appeared on their first mainstream release that year following three previous independent releases. Musically, the song bears no resemblence to Dylan’s work. It’s also not clear what the song has to do with Dylan apart from the title, a couple of references to and samples from his work

11 Bob Dylan – Nine Days

Dylan is the title of a song that appears on First Love (2009), the first, and so far only, album by Emmy the Great. Emmy was born Emma-Lee Moss in 1984 in Hong Kong, but moved to England with her family when she was 12. Like the song by Nine Days, its lyrics are not necessarily about Dylan, although it has more in common with his style of music. It does contain the line, “Like reading an Italian book from the 13th century”, which is reminiscent of the line, “Written by an Italian poet from the thirteenth century” from Tangled Up in Blue that appears on Blood on the Tracks (1975)

12 Dylan – Emmy The Great

Belle & Sebastian’s Like Dylan in the Movies is not about Dylan, either, but uses the title of D.A. Pennebaker’s documentary, Dont Look Back (sic) (1967), to pass on some timely advice to another character in the song

13 Like Dylan In The Movies – Belle & Sebastian

Colin Hay was the lead singer of Men at Work who came from a land down under. What Would Bob Do? is a humorous narrative song that appears on his album, Are You Lookin’ at Me? (2007). Again, the song is not about Dylan, but it contains similarities to some of his amusing ‘Dream’ songs from the 60s

14 What Would Bob Do? – Colin Hay

Talkin’ Seattle Grunge Rock Blues appears on Todd Snider’s debut album, Songs For the Daily Planet (1991). It pokes fun at the Seattle grunge rock scene and is a parody Dylan’s many talking blues tunes

15 Talkin’ Seattle Grunge Rock Blues – Todd Snider

Weird Al Yankovic has been performing parodies of contemporary hits since the 80s and first gained fame with his versions of songs by Madonna (Like a Surgeon), James Brown (Living With a Hernia) and Tiffany (I Think I’m a Clone Now). His versions are quite funny and he’s still going strong today. His song Bob parodies the musical style of Dylan, while each line in the song is a palindrome. And, of course, Bob is also a palindrome

16 Bob – Weird Al Yankovic

Kevin Ryan has released a whole album of Dr Seuss songs performed in the style of Bob Dylan! I found it a bit hard going listening to all of them, but here’s one of the better ones. This goes out to my nephew, Seán, who is a fan of Dr Seuss, though I don’t think he’s into Dylan yet

17 Green Eggs & Ham – Dylan Hears a Who

Finally, the real Bob Dylan doing a version of The Beatles’ hit from 1965, Yesterday. This was recorded around 1970, possibly for Self Portrait (1970). I came across it for the first time yesterday

18 Yesterday (Beatles cover) – Bob Dylan