"Without music, life would be a mistake." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche
Musical taste is wildly subjective. I like all genres of music as
long as the music conveys extraordinary emotions. If you are familiar
with my psychotherapy work and DVDs
you know that I believe that our society tolerates an extremely narrow
bandwidth of emotions; the underlying psychological purpose of music is
to allow us to cathartically experience some of the emotions that would
otherwise be deemed unseemly by our fellow pedestrians.
I grew up listening to rock music - Led Zeppelin, Aerosmith, The
Rolling Stones, The Doors, Pink Floyd, Boston, Queen, Rush - now often
divided into "Classic Rock" and "Hard Rock" - as well as "Alternative
Music," which during the 1980s were these weird little rebellious bands
that couldn't get onto mainstream radio, e.g. U2, R.E.M., Elvis
Costello, The Talking Heads, The Cure, The Smiths, et al.
After university I lived in Manhattan where I found out the real
meaning of "alternative" by frequenting places such as the Knitting
Factory (then on Houston Street) and experiencing musicians such as John
Lurie and the Lounge Lizards (with at various times John Medeski on
keys and Marc Ribot on guitar), John Zorn and Bill Frissell. At the
same time, I made no bones about using my expired student ID to finagle
my way into Avery Fisher Hall and Carnegie Hall whenever possible. surre
I still go to rock shows but I would much rather see Patti Smith at the Troubadour reciting "Piss Factory"
like a homeless person in Tompkins Square Park, than waste my time
watching David Lee Roth act like a buffoon at the Staples Arena while he
massacres beautiful Van Halen songs.
The best written and recorded songs of the last fews years in my humble opinion are "Little Talks" by Of Monsters and Men and "Mulholland Drive" by Gaslight Anthem.
Over the years I've collected 23,503 songs according to my iTunes
account and below are ten recordings that I doubt many of you have ever
heard but I think you will enjoy. The only common threads I find in my
choices are funky bass lines, heavy drum sounds, boppy horn riffs,
luscious guitar lines, densely layered crescendos, and heartfelt singing
of somewhat ironic lyrics or tearjerking poetry. Plus the fact that
not many of these songs spent much if any time on American radio (unless
you consider KCRW to be located in America) even though they all have
more hooks than Bubba's Bait & Tackle Shop. One of the below
choices is a blatantly dated, cheesy early 80s tune but I hope that
you'll forgive the tinny synthesized sounds (produced by a young man
named Jimmy Iovine) and appreciate the lush vocals and brilliant
songwriting.
So here goes:
"The Only One" by Mazarin
- This is a classic, timeless pop song. It has a 1950's swing, a
1960's kick, and funny 1970s lyrics. The drums are tribal, the bass
seamlessly wafts through, and the sax and guitars rock it forward. If
Bow Bow Wow's "I Want Candy" could last for twenty years on the radio then so could "The Only One" if someone had given it a shot.
"Amo La Vida" by Jacqueline Fuentes
- Here is the case of a song that is simply too powerful, poignant and
beautiful for the radio. Thousands of cars would end up on the side of
the road if this mesmerizing song ever made it onto the radio.
Jacqueline's trilling in the second verse makes me stop whatever I'm
doing and pay 100% attention to the rich interaction of bass, guitar,
clarinet, and vocals.
"Tripping Over Gravity" by Sam Phillips
- This is a haunting, luscious symphony. The way all of the
instruments mesh with Sam's voice and hurl the song towards a surreal
gothic ending is so smart, unexpected, sophisticated and engaging. Make
sure to listen to the last minute with the volume turned up high. The
swelling reminds me of Gorecki's #3 for some reason.
Speaking of threes... "Three" by Scott Walker
- This is admittedly a bizarre track. I don't think they used an
octave machine to double the voice; I think Scott is singing the eerie
harmonies as well as the melody. The attention to all of the tones of
the instruments reminds me of Lou Reed's collaborations with Hal Wilner,
which I refer to as "A Museum for the Ears." I find this song to be
unexpectedly meaty, hearty, tasty.
"I Said a Prayer" by The Red House
- This rock gem was buried on a CMJ sampler that I got in 1990. I love
the twang of the rhythm guitar but to be honest, I admire the singer's
raw, splenetic anger in the choruses - it is so pure and honest and
rises from such youthfully innocent verses. I could easily envision
these guys opening for Bruce Springsteen if they had some stage presence. Really sweet guitar licks over thick drums on this track too.
"Little Darling" by Joy Askew - If you like Rickie Lee Jones
(whose "Live at Red Rocks" is one of the greatest live recordings of
all time) then you will be blown away by this song. The piano and bass
are so soft and precious. Joy's ethereal voice will move anyone with a
beating heart. This song is magic.
"Rocky World" by Daniel Lanois
- Every verse of this song is like a antique postcard with dog-eared
edges. The only people who can melt phrases together like Daniel are
fellow Canook Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan. So many words flow, rhyme or
float together in this epic ballad that has the most colorful and
gorgeous poetry of anything I have heard since Joan Baez's "Diamonds and Rust." The only ballad that moves me as much as "Rocky World" is Richard Thompson's "Beeswing."
"Every Lover's Sign" by The Lover Speaks
- I know I'm going to take alot of flak on this one. It's so terribly
dated, I know. But try to look past the electronic drums to hear the
backing vocals over the chorus. I would put this up against Jimmy
Iovine's other hit from that era anytime: Stevie Nick's "Stand Back."
"Spam" by Save Ferris
- This song just makes me smile. It's so brave to write a serious ska
tune about canned pig flesh. The bass and the horns are so rocking. I
don't see much difference between "Spam" by Save Ferris and some of No
Doubt's best songs such as "Different People" and "Excuse Me Mr."
"Carnival 2000" by Prefab Sprout
- This song encompasses so many genres and yet eludes them all. It's
so soulful, peppy, and hooky - it reminds me of an upbeat, Spanish
version of David Bowie's "Young Americans."
Well, those are ten relatively obscure pop songs and ballads that I
think you will like. Please turn me on to new music by leaving links in
the comments below.
Thanks so much!!!