Posts

Showing posts from 2022

Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac has died

November 30, 2022

Fleetwood Mac singer and keyboardist Christine McVie has died at age 79.

She wrote many Fleetwood Mac songs, including “Don’t Stop,” on their 1977 album Rumours.

As you can see in this video, Christine McVie sang the second verse, after the first verse was sung by guitarist Lindsey Buckingham. They sing the last verse together.

I love this song.

“Don’t Stop” is featured in The War Room, a great documentary about Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign. Here’s the post on my movie blog where I chose it as my favorite movie of 1993. (That post includes links to stream it on HBO Max or the Criterion Channel.)

President Bill Clinton ended his speech at the 2000 Democratic convention, when Al Gore was nominated, by saying: “Don’t stop thinking about tomorrow,” right as that song started playing.

Christine McVie in concert on June 8, 2019 (via Wikipedia).

Happy 30th birthday to Miley Cyrus!

November 23, 2022

Miley Cyrus turns 30 today. My favorite song (co)written by her is “Plastic Hearts,” from her 2020 album of the same name:

Live version outdoors:


She’s also an excellent interpreter of other people’s songs — here she is singing her godmother Dolly Parton’s “Jolene” (1973):

A guest singer with Metallica on “Nothing Else Matters” (1991):

And she’s hilarious …

300 years of The Well-Tempered Clavier

November 18, 2022

300 years ago this year, in 1722, Bach finished the first of two books of The Well-Tempered Clavier.

Wikipedia says this sprawling composition — “two sets of preludes and fugues in all 24 major and minor keys for keyboard” — “is generally regarded as one of the most important works in the history of classical music.”

Here’s the first of the two “books,” starting with the beautifully serene Prelude in C:

Jerry Lee Lewis has died

October 28, 2022

Jerry Lee Lewis has died at age 87. (New York Times obit.)

Here he is performing a medley of “Great Balls of Fire,” “What’d I Say,” and “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin On”:

Now the last of the greats of ’50s rock ’n’ roll has gone.

Buddy Holly (1936 - 1959)

Elvis Presley (1935 - 1977)

Bo Diddley (1928 - 2008)

Chuck Berry (1926 - 2017)

Little Richard (1932 - 2020)

Jerry Lee Lewis (1935 - 2022)

R.E.M.’s Automatic for the People

October 5, 2022

30 years ago today, in 1992, R.E.M. released their 8th album, Automatic for the People.

Drive”:

Man on the Moon” is a tribute to the subversive comedian Andy Kaufman. This song is featured in the 1999 biopic about him, also called Man on the Moon, starring Jim Carrey and directed by the great Miloš Forman. You can stream the movie for free on Tubi (with ads).

Everybody Hurts”:

The day Alice in Chains and Stone Temple Pilots both released classic albums

September 29, 2022

30 years ago today, September 29, 1992, was a great day for grunge rock. Alice in Chains released their second album and what many would call their greatest album, Dirt, and Stone Temple Pilots released their debut album, Core.

I’ve always found AIC’s “Would?” to be one of the most emotionally affecting songs of the grunge era. I love the coda (the part that begins, “Am I wrong?”) … when they shift to the relative major key with a sense of absolute determination.

“Them Bones”:

“Down in a Hole”:

STP’s “Plush”:

“Creep” (not the “Creep” I was blogging about in my last post!)

30 years of Radiohead’s “Creep”

September 21, 2022

Radiohead released their first single, “Creep” 30 years ago today, in 1992. 

At first it was a flop. BBC Radio considered it “too depressing” to play on the air. So the song didn’t belong in their home country, until it started getting played in other parts of the world — in Israel, Spain, Australia — and eventually the world realized that Radiohead is special 

Radiohead long refused to play “Creep” in concert, but here’s a live performance from 2006:

Last year Thom Yorke released a remix of “Creep,” slowed way down to make it 9 minutes long. A YouTube commenter says: “Feels like Thom just wanted all of us to know the endless pain and agony of playing Creep again and again.”

And now, here’s a revelatory reinvention: “Vintage Postmodern Jukebox” version by Haley Reinhart (see YouTube for info on the musicians)

Brad Mehldau’s Largo

August 13, 2022

The pianist Brad Mehldau put out his Largo album 20 years ago today, in 2002. It deviated from the more traditional piano/bass/drums lineup of his series of five Art of the Trio albums he had put out from 1996 to 2000.

The first song on Largo, “When It Rains,” is a transcendent exploration:

The album includes covers of two songs on the Beatles’ White Album (“Dear Prudence” and “Mother Nature’s Son”) and Radiohead’s “Paranoid Android.” Here’s the Radiohead song:

Motown songwriter Lamont Dozier has died

August 10, 2022

Lamont Dozier, one third of the legendary Motown songwriting team Holland-Dozier-Holland (H-D-H), has died at age 81.

H-D-H wrote “Baby Love,” which made the Supremes the first Motown group to have multiple #1 singles in the US. Here’s a live performance by the Supremes (with Diana Ross singing lead):

Here’s a video of Dozier talking about writing some of the H-D-H songs. He keeps saying about different songs: “It’s always about love. … It’s all about love.”

That video ends with Dozier talking about “How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You),” which was originally performed by Marvin Gaye, before James Taylor recorded an even more successful version. Here’s the original:

The NPR obituary says:

Dozier grew up in Detroit. In 2004, he told NPR it was an elementary school teacher who liked his writing and encouraged him to keep at it. “She thought it was very astute of me to have such a feel for words and stuff,” Dozier said, “So I started to put these words to music by the time I was, like, 12 or 13.”

NPR neglects to mention that H-D-H went beyond just songwriting, as Wikipedia explains:

During their tenure at Motown Records from 1962 to 1967, Dozier and Brian Holland were the composers and producers for each song, and [Brian’s older brother] Eddie Holland wrote the lyrics and arranged the vocals.

From the Washington Post obituary:

During [Berry] Gordy’s reign at Motown, the record label was run like an auto plant because that was the only other work environment the boss knew, Mr. Dozier said. The songwriters, session musicians and others had to punch a clock. As part of “quality control” each Friday, H-D-H and other songwriters had to write down their songs from the week, and Gordy and other executives would vote on the ones they liked.

The H-D-H songs were usually the winners, Mr. Dozier said.

The Beatles covered one H-D-H song: “Please Mr. Postman,” which was originally done by the Marvelettes. John Lennon sang lead:

Wikipedia points out:

Motown played an important role in the racial integration of popular music as an African American-owned label that achieved crossover success.

You Can’t Hurry Love” was originally recorded by the Supremes in 1966. Phil Collins did this cover in 1982:

My favorite H-D-H song, and one of my favorite songs by anyone, is “Reach Out I’ll Be There,” which was sung by the Four Tops. Wikipedia quotes Dozier:

Lamont Dozier said that he wanted to write “a journey of emotions with sustained tension, like a bolero. To get this across, I alternated the keys, from a minor, Russian feel in the verse to a major, gospel feel in the chorus.” He developed the lyrics with Eddie Holland, aiming for them to sound “as though they were being thrown down vocally.” Dozier said that they were strongly influenced by Bob Dylan at the time, commenting: “We wanted Levi [Stubbs] to shout-sing the lyrics … as a shout-out to Dylan.” For the recording, the writers and producers intentionally put Levi Stubbs at the top of his vocal range, according to Abdul Fakir of the Four Tops, “to make sure he’d have that cry and hunger and wailing in his voice.”

Will we still need Kate Bush when she’s 64? Yes!

July 30, 2022

Happy 64th birthday to Kate Bush!

Kate Bush in 1978 at the Dickens Inn in London. Photo by Anwar Hussein/Hulton Archive/GI.

Kate Bush, the daring, eclectic British singer/songwriter, has been in the news for having a resurgence of popularity since her 1985 song “Running Up That Hill” has been featured on the Netflix show Stranger Things. She wanted to call that song “Deal with God,” but was told she couldn’t because the song could be censored in some countries. 

She wrote the song to say that she wished she could make a deal with God for women and men to switch places so they could understand each other better. 

Here she is playing “Running Up That Hill” live, with David Gilmour of Pink Floyd on guitar and backing vocals:

It’s hard to say what’s better about Kate Bush: her own body of work, or the massive influence she’s had on so many other musical artists, including Tori Amos, Björk, Regina Spektor, Goldfrapp, Florence + the Machine, St. Vincent, Bat for Lashes, Ellie Goulding, Antony and the Johnsons, Tegan and Sara, Lorde, Outkast, the Cure, Stevie Nicks, and Rufus Wainwright.

If you love some of those artists but don’t know much Kate Bush, I recommend her albums The Dreaming (1982) and Hounds of Love (1985), both of which she also produced. This is “Cloudbusting” from Hounds of Love:

Quotes on Kate Bush:

Alison Goldfrapp of Goldfrapp: “Lots of hippies liked Kate Bush where I grew up, so I associated her with bongs and incense and everything disgusting. Then I heard this album [Hounds of Love]. I realised that she was beautiful and interesting, which is not a common combination. It seems very deep somehow.”

Björk: “I think what is really underrated is the production. I think it’s really original and really feminine. … She created her own look and she produced her own sound.”

Tori Amos: “When I first heard her, I went, ‘Wow, she does things that I’ve never heard anybody do, much less me.’ But I could hear a resonance in the voice where you’d think we were distantly related or something.”

Kele Okereke of Bloc Party: “The first time I heard [the song ‘Hounds of Love’] I was sitting in a reclining sofa. As the beat started I was transported somewhere else. Her voice, the imagery, the huge drum sound: it seemed to capture everything for me. As a songwriter you’re constantly chasing that feeling.”

Big Boi of Outkast: “[Kate Bush] became my favorite artist of all time. Her and Bob Marley would tie for first. I used to listen to ‘The Kick Inside’ and ‘Wuthering Heights’ and ‘This Woman’s Work’ … just admiring the style of music she was making, from the production side of it to the lyrics. It was kind of mind-blowing. I was like OK, I wanted to be like her.”

Nerina Pallot on why she started playing and writing music: “It was Kate Bush. I was around 14 when The Sensual World came out and she played ‘This Woman’s Work’ on Wogan [a British talk show]. I remember watching her and being transfixed and understanding that was what I wanted to do. … I had to write songs and get under the skin of the music.”

Regina Spektor on her influences: “I grew up on classical music, the Beatles, and Queen. But then all this other stuff came into my life. … Nirvana, the Ramones, Madonna, Eminem, Rufus Wainwright, Tom Waits, Patti Smith, Kate Bush, David Bowie. … I love music that takes chances.”

Kate Bush: “Every female you see at a piano is either Lynsey de Paul or Carole King. And most male music — not all of it but the good stuff — really lays it on you. It really puts you against the wall. And that’s what I like to do. I’d like my music to intrude.”

This is my favorite Kate Bush song: “Hounds of Love,” from her album of the same name.

Thanks to my brother Chris for video suggestions … and for introducing me to Kate Bush’s great music.

Brian Wilson is 80

June 20, 2022

Happy birthday to Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys!

He wrote so many great songs, often seeming simple but with subtle sophistication. “Good Vibrations” stretched the envelope of pop/rock music beyond the usual verse/chorus/repeat formula. Wikipedia says it influenced the Beatles’ “A Day in the Life” and Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody.” I’d also suggest it could have inspired Radiohead’s “Paranoid Android” — think of how both songs get slower and quieter with an interlude in the middle: “Gotta keep those lovin’ good vibrations happening …”

More from Wikipedia:

The making of “Good Vibrations” was unprecedented for any kind of recording. Building on his approach for Pet Sounds, Wilson recorded a surplus of short, interchangeable musical fragments with his bandmates and a host of session musicians at four different Hollywood studios from February to September 1966, a process reflected in the song’s several dramatic shifts in key, texture, instrumentation and mood. Over 90 hours of tape was consumed in the sessions. … Band publicist Derek Taylor dubbed the unusual work a “pocket symphony.” It helped develop the use of the studio as an instrument and heralded a wave of pop experimentation and the onset of psychedelic and progressive rock.

“Don’t Talk, Put Your Head on My Shoulder,” from Pet Sounds, is a beautiful song for when words feel beside the point.

In our time of anxiety, maybe we need this: “Don’t Worry Baby.”

Paul McCartney turns 80

June 18, 2022

Happy birthday to Paul McCartney!

All four of the Beatles are/were so great, but as time goes on it’s become clearer and clearer to me that Paul is my favorite Beatle. Why? Partly because of his songwriting, his singing, and his playing of multiple instruments; he’s one of the all-time great innovators on bass.

Paul McCartney and John Lennon both can’t be pigeonholed. They worked together and took on each others’ qualities. Yes Paul wrote soft, lovely pieces like “Yesterday” and “Blackbird” …

… but he also pioneered heavy rock with “Helter Skelter” on the White Album in 1968 (before Led Zeppelin put out their first album).

And sometimes we get both sides in one song: “The End.”

He was the clear extravert of the Beatles … yet “For No One” is beautifully introspective, and even a song as extraverted as “Hey Jude” has a contemplative side.



John rightly gets much of the credit for “A Day in the Life,” which is often said to be the artistic high point of the Beatles’ oeuvre — but it wouldn’t have achieved those heights if it had been all John. Music is all about context, and the dissonant orchestral frenzy wouldn’t have been as interesting if it had gone from John back to John again. It needs to give way to Paul waking up and reeling off the details of his ordinary life, before drifting off into a dream.

When paying tribute to a singer/songwriter, the natural tendency is to focus on that person’s songs, but Paul also helped make other people’s songs great. John Lennon’s “Dear Prudence” is grounded by Paul’s bass line, before reaching ecstasy through Paul’s drum fills. George Harrison’s “Something” sounds so wonderful thanks in part to Paul’s melodic bass playing and tenor harmony vocals.

Beyond his stunning talents, there’s something more intangible about Paul: a sense of humility and decency. He puts aside rock ’n’ roll bombast and arrogance to sing about ordinary people like Eleanor Rigby and the residents of Penny Lane — the nurse who “feels as if she’s in a play …”



I like knowing that whenever I buy Beatles products, such as my Abbey Road guitar strap, I can be assured they’re not made from animal products. That’s because of Paul’s commitment to fighting cruelty to animals. While some stars glorify themselves, Paul puts a spotlight on the other inhabitants of our world.

Paul has been writing songs for over 6 decades, since he was a teenager. It’s hard to believe he was only 27 when the Beatles broke up — by that point they had evolved so much. Sir Paul was still evolving in his late 70s when he wrote “Deep Deep Feeling,” an epic musical and emotional journey. Amazing that in 2020, he sang and played everything on this song:



The parts where he sings “So intense the joy of giving/How does it feel?” give me chills.