Tune of the Day


"Blue Rondo a la Turk"  on the Two Generations of Brubeck album.  Wow.

There are many fine versions of this tune, but this one gets me dancing, clapping, fist-pounding, whatever, every time....and it's not easy to dance in, what, 9/8?  I love tunes that grow, build, develop, and move through changes.  This one just picks me up and takes me right along with it.  Great melding of jazz and rock idioms, too.  It's fun to imagine Dave Brubeck setting the groove and then sitting back to hear where his kids and their friends take it. 

You can continue exploring Dave and the kids on Two Generations of Brubeck, "The Great Spirit Made Us All".  And Chris Brubeck's rock/jazz band Sky King on "Secret Sauce".

For extra credit, give a "spin" to Chase, "Bochawa" from their last album, Pure Music.

Anyway, that's my two cents today.




77jovian
Sorry, can't help myself. Adding a second tune of the day......

Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers - "Roadrunner"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gy88-5pc7c8

"After You’re Gone" by Mary Gauthier, on her Filth & Fire album. A new classic, imo. It’s an unfortunate myth that being a good musician automatically makes for a good songwriter. Damn those Beatles ;-) .

Dig how Mary goes to the "different" chord only at the end of what you think will be the final line of the last verse (as she sings "gone"); she instead then repeats the chord progression leading up to that chord, but then DOESN’T go to it this time, but to the one in the earlier verses (in songwriting that's known as a "turnaround"). THAT’S masterful songwriting; playing an instrument well has NOTHING to do with songwriting. Keith Emerson was a much better pianist than is Brian Wilson; who wrote "better" songs? If you say Emerson, we’re done ;-) .

I hear a lot of music "written" by musicians who obviously don’t have the knowledge of music itself required to do it well enough for me to find it musically satisfying. It is considered common wisdom that The Beatles revolutionized Pop music. I don’t disagree, but was it all to the good? Prior to them, only the best songwriters were professionals, and only the best musicians were on records. You had all the Brill Building songwriting pros composing songs still considered classics, songs still recorded anew. You had The Swampers (the house band at Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals), The Wrecking Crew (Hal Blaine, Carol King, etc., heard on SO much of the music recorded in L.A. in the 60’s), and The Funk Brothers (the Motown house band, whose members included the great James Jamerson on bass), plus Booker T & The MG’s backing Otis Redding, one of the greatest singers.

Yes, The Beatles changed all that. After them, every band and group was expected to write their own songs. NOTHING they had done as teenagers (learning how to play guitar, bass, piano, drums, whatever) prepared them for doing so. That The Beatles were as good a group (as opposed to band) as they were, AND as good of songwriters, was a once-in-a-lifetime fluke!

@bdp24 

I love Mary! It seems part of your accolades for her is her technical song-writing ability. Regarding The Beatles, I certainly don't have any real  musical or song-writing training, so I come at it on my end by just what I find interesting. Regarding your last statement....(from my perspective) The Beatles as individual song-writers had great to moderate success. All of them hard charting songs.  It seems you're kind of hard on them. I do appreciate your perspective though.

I heard the other day that Paul said in an interview that John never told him but once that he wrote a good song.

@slaw, my main attraction to Mary Gauthier is in her honesty, vulnerability, and all-around pathos. I mentioned the turnaround (also called tag ending) she employed in "After You’re Gone" just as evidence of her also having a good understanding of classic Pop song construction and songwriting technique (to create and achieve a desired emotional response in the listener). Brian Wilson she is not (he’s about the most sophisticated in those terms of all the Rock ’n’ Roll songwriters), but then he doesn’t have her abilities either (lyrically, of course, but also as a singer).

I’m a much bigger fan of Lennon & McCartney together than either alone. They really were an excellent team, and the music of each imo greatly benefitted from the influence of the other. That’s one reason I liked them less and less in their final couple of years, after they had stopped writing together (post-Rubber Soul). But I really like the first couple McCartney solo albums, and none of Lennon’s. They also became less and less a good band, as a performing combo. They were a young Rock ’n’ Roll band (my God, George Harrison was 20 years old at the time of Meet The Beatles!) who became a Pop group. By the time of their last few years, I had moved on (I liked other writers more, and other bands---as a group of musicians---as well). I have no use for Magical Mystery Tour (true, not a real album. I have the UK double 7" EP version), Get Back/Hey Jude is just awful, and though going out on Abbey Road was an improvement, for some reason I just don’t like it. Most others seem to like it, so it’s not them (The Beatles), it’s me!

Patto - "The Man"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7gEsG7ftsCo

Don't switch it off during the first minute or two. It takes a while to build, but it's worth the wait.
Cracker "Sweet Thistle Pie"   that female vocal...the great Joan Osborne
@slaw I never realized that was J.O.    I’ve lost that CD and I sure do miss it!
@slaw, I too consider Joan Osborne great. I just so happen to be listening to her Pretty Little Stranger album right now; it's in my regular play (every day) pile.
It's been a couple of years since I read this but David Lowery teaches a class a Georgia Tech on finances/regarding the music business.
Kirsty MacColl: "There’s A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He’s Elvis". Kirsty was part of the 1976-77 Punk wave coming out of England, but the music she made was not at all Punk. She had a great sense of humour, as the title of this smokin’ slab of Rockabilly displays. It rocks the way Dave Edmunds does. You ARE hip to Edmunds, right? Look for this song on You Tube, it’ll be worth your time. Absolutely infectious!