Posts Tagged ‘The Who’

If it’s far out, was it ever far in?

May 5, 2008

Friday May 2

The Flaming Lips – “Free Radicals”

Ryan Adams – “Halloweenhead”

Yeah, I’ve been alone on the highway late at night and proudly butchered this song at the top of my lungs. What of it? Mindless idiot-rock from Ryan Adams, of all people. Still, he managed to turn this into a piano ballad when I saw him at Cain’s a few months ago. Unreal.

Hey Mercedes – “Eleven to Your Seven”

The Feds – “Angels & Devils”

Ryan Adams & The Cardinals – “Magnolia Mountain”

Low – “Closer”

Jesse Malin – “High Lonesome”

Islands – “Jogging Gorgeous Summer”

Elbow – “Fugitive Motel”

Mute Math – “You Are Mine”

Watched a couple Mute Match videos on YouTube before a party this weekend (a party at which I am rumored to have set myself on fire, even if I dispute it). Somehow, I think I managed to see Mute Math play a less-than-stellar show at Cain’s a few months back. This isn’t to say I wasn’t floored at that Cain’s show – it was easily one of the most extraordinary and original things I’ve ever seen. That rhythm section is alien, I swear. I only say less-than-stellar now, after seeing the madness that ensues at other shows. This band might just take over the world with its next record, or it might just fade away. Either way, at least I got to see it.

Stars – “The First Five Times”

Guster – “Two Points for Honesty”

RAWK SAWNG OF THE DAY: Injected – “Burn it Black”

Tom Waits – “Blue Skies”

June 23 – Dallas at Palladium
June 25 – Tulsa at Brady Theatre

The Who – “My Generation” 

Ben Folds Five – “Your Redneck Past”

Breakdown: 16 songs, two places

I’ll be working out of the paper’s Capitol Bureau from now until next Friday. This means little-to-no time for tuneage at work. Instead, I’ll be listening to the music of conference committee reports, filibusters, partisan pandering and engrossed bills. May God help us all.

Short playlists ahead, but big news music news for yours truly will make up for it. Stay tuneage-d.

Bombed

April 21, 2008

After finishing one of the best records I should’ve known about three years ago, today’s playlist was:

Rose Hill Drive – “Cross the Line”

Ears were ringing for days after I first saw these guys. I didn’t mind a bit. I’m sure the other 20 people there felt the same way and would gladly brave the sonic assault once again. As badass as the show was, I kept wondering and cursing how a band can open for The Who at Ford Center and be named one of Rolling Stone’s top bands to watch in 2007 only to play for 20 people at Conservatory. Especially when they’re as good as Rose Hill Drive. I blame these clowns, who clearly represent all that is wrong with the universe.

LCD Soundsystem – “give it up”

Hey Mercedes – “A-List Actress”

The Feds – “Juliet”

Wilco – “Misunderstood”

One of the most underrated – and “misunderstood” – choices Wilco ever made was selecting this song as the opening track to Being There. It was a proverbial middle finger to everything everyone ever thought they were, and it pissed off a lot of folks. I’ve always thought the sign of a great artist is the willingness to risk their reputation for art, even if it alienates people. Many of my favorite records have that quality to them, and Being There is a perfect example. 

Guided By Voices – “Gold Star for Robot Boy”

The Flaming Lips – “Goin’ On”

Guster – “Fa Fa”

Foo Fighters – “New Way Home”

Eels – “Teenage Witch”

RAWK SAWNG OF THE DAY: AC/DC – “Back in Black”

Could there logically be any other choice? Absolutely not. Anyone who disagrees gets ten minutes alone in a room with no windows with the maniacs below:

The Land Down Under brings us the RAWK SAWNG OF THE DAY from AC/DC and today’s BEST BAND YOU’VE PROBABLY NEVER HEARD: Skybombers. These guys don’t have a record deal in the U.S. yet, but they’re lighting fires in Australia. I bought their five-song EP a few minutes ago after hearing one verse and one chorus online. Anyone who knows me knows I don’t make up my mind that easily 99 percent of the time. That’s how good these Aussie rockers are. The song that grabbed me isn’t on the EP, but it’s called “Always Complaining” and has more hooks than a tacklebox. After a first listen, the best track on the EP is this ferocious freakout called “Russian Roulette” that’s the RAWK SAWNG I’ve been waiting to hear all year.

Plenty of bands like to brand themselves as Clash / Kinks / Stooges hyrbids, but more often than not those bands are putrid embarrassments. Not Skybombers. They can actually claim those three as peers without sounding like pompous hipster knobs. The songs on this EP swagger and swing with that confident recklessness the aforementioned bands had, only the hooks are bigger. That’s a dangerous cocktail and I love it. Hell of a find for a Monday night.

Point of the gushing is: Don’t be surprised if Skybombers blow up like Hiroshima.

Little League Friday

April 11, 2008

Queens of the Stone Age – “You Got a Killer Scene There, Man…”

Stereophonics – “Caravan Holiday”

Blue October – “James”

Cold War Kids – “Hang Me Up to Dry”

The Who – “Squeeze Box”

RAWK SAWNG OF THE DAY: Priestess – “Blood”

I’m thinking I’ll start a daily feature here on Daily Tuneage. I’m thinking I’ll call it Rawk Sawng of the Day. I’m thinking Priestess is the perfect band to kick it off.

Pull off shameless lyrics like “It all started because / she wants to drain his blood” and “Before you can rip into his veins / you’d better take the reins / ’cause he’s riding into the sun,” and there’s just no way to go wrong! Fawk! Rawk!

I’m a fan of “Blood” because it really sticks out on the Hello Master album. It has a more controlled tempo, layered texture and subdued mood than the fist-to-the-face pace of the rest of the album. Wonder if this is the direction the next Priestess album takes? Wouldn’t mind, but I wouldn’t mind more rock-knuckle sandwiches, either.

BEST BAND YOU’VE PROBABLY NEVER HEARD: Clearlake – “Good Clean Fun”

I’m thinking I’ll start another daily feature here on Daily Tuneage. I’m thinking I’ll call it Best Band You’ve Probably Never Heard. I’m thinking Clearlake is the perfect band to kick it off.

Just go to the Clearlake page and check out everything you can. If Blur was more organic and focused on honest songwriting instead of quirky gimmicks, they’d sound a lot like Clearlake – one of the few bands I can call “charming” without feeling like a giant vag.

This song is one of Clearlake’s best and its off the Amber album. As far as a new album goes, the Clearlake page brings this news: “Your correspondent has been reliably informed that the new stuff sounds fantastic and is not inclined to argue…” Glad to know!

Varnaline – “Indian Summer Takedown”

Ryan Adams – “Do Miss America”

George Harrison – “I’d Have You Anytime”

Bloc Party – “Waiting for the 7:18″

Little League Hero – “I-35″

Might be my favorite LLH song. Fitting, considering what’s in store this weekend. See below.

Albert Hammond Jr. – “Bright Young Thing”

He is Legend – “The Creature Walks”

Ben Folds Five – “Sports and Wine”

I always think of the two years I lived in Ben Folds’ native North Carolina when I hear his music. You know how there’s often that unique attachment to artists from your town or state? I’ve felt that with Folds ever since “Brick” blew up when I was in eighth grade at Alexander Graham Middle School in Charlotte, N.C. I’m a fan of plenty of artists from Carolina, but I don’t feel like a hometown fan to any of them but Folds. Strange. Almost as strange as “Sports and Wine.”

Spoon – “Everything Hits at Once”

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers – “Billy the Kid”

Stars – “He Lied About Death”

Refused – “New Noise”

Breakdown:

18 songs

7 during commute to work

9 at work

2 during commute home

Tonight is the first night we say goodbye to Little League Hero, one of the best Oklahoma bands of their time.

About seven years back, I spent some late nights at Tony Romanello and Steve Gooch’s rent house in Tulsa stuffing bubble-wrapped manila envelopes with CDs by Little League Hero and the rest of their little record label’s stellar roster. Those nights wound up being the building blocks of why I feel the way I feel about music today. I never would’ve started my own label or managed bands if it wasn’t for Tony and Gooch and Engine Shed Records. Needless to say, I’d be a very different person today if they hadn’t had me over to stuff envelopes when I was just a kid working at a record store and writing sloppy album reviews for local rags.

(I can’t continue without giving props to Joe Cinocca and Yawn Records for hooking me up with the Engine Shed dudes in the first place. So, props to Joe!)

Stuffing those envelopes was a romantic adventure for me. It was noble and just and ridiculously exciting. I was giving people a chance to hear music I felt simply had to be heard. I was part of something bigger than myself. 

I’ve seen how hundreds of labels work in the years since then. There’s no doubt Tony and Steve did it up right for their bands, even without any money, a staff or many connections in the industry. They cared and they loved the music they released. That’s rare.

Cool thing about them was they had some of the best ears around. Just check the Engine Shed catalog – it’s chock full of some of the best albums ever made in this state. Few albums have lived up to Engine Shed releases like Look! by The Pistol Arrows, Start by Little League Hero, Counting Stars by Tony Romanello and Shades of Grey by his band, TRB.

Engine Shed also put out a record by a band called Standing on Zero that never really did much outside Tulsa, but they did manage to write a few of my favorite indie pop songs to this day. The songwriter, Mike Taylor, was a regular customer at the record store where Gooch and I worked. When Standing on Zero’s bass player left after its Engine Shed release came out, I somehow wound up having a hand in helping my buddy Jarrod Major replace the departed bassist. Jarrod and I were 17 or 18 at the time, and these guys were all in their mid-20s. That was kind of a big deal for us, as ridiculous as it sounds.

And I never thought about it until now, but SOZ was one of the first bands I was involved with outside of writing about them. That’s pretty monumental considering I spent most of my college years trying to help artists of all types by doing more for them than just writing an honest review of their music. So, for what it’s worth, thanks SOZ.

Anyhow, back to this weekend’s farewell Little League gigs at The Speakeasy.

I’ve thought about Engine Shed at each of the dozens of Little League Hero shows I’ve seen since the label folded. I think they’re the only ones, aside from Tony, who are still playing as the same entity that was part of that special Engine Shed adventure.

I’ll clap for all the Engine Shed bands when LLH walks off the stage for the last time this weekend. All good things end sometime. I’m just glad I had a small hand – even a pinky – in it.

Miss Jones taught me English

March 28, 2008

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers – “Swingin’”

Sometimes I wonder if Petty writes every one of his songs about girls he sees on the side of a road. Opening lines of this song: “She was standing by the highway / in her boots and silver spurs / gonna hitchhike to the yellow moon / when a Cadillac stopped for her.” The girl in boots and silver spurs proceeds to run into trouble with the law, go on a Vegas bender and call her mother-in-law for help only to go “down swingin’.” Opening lines of some other Tom Petty song: “She’s a good girl / loves her momma / loves Jesus / and America, too.” We all know what happens to that girl: Vampires, broken hearts, Ventura Boulevard, bad boys – the whole lot. Years back, I saw an interview with Petty where he’s talking about how “Free Fallin’” started out as a joke song about a girl he saw on the side of the road on the way to the studio one day. This makes me curious, but really makes me wish more girls would hang out on the side of the road near Tom Petty’s house.

The Clash – “Janie Jones”

Injected – “Untitled”

Elvis Costello – “No Action”

Fake friend Rob Gordon wouldn’t be happy with me, but “No Action” is much worthier of Top 5 Track Ones – Side Ones distinction than The Clash’s “Janie Jones,” which was the song before this one during today’s shuffle. Come on, Rob (or John Cusack, or Nick Hornby – whoever you are), ever heard “London Calling?”

The Flaming Lips – “One More Robot”

Centro-matic – “Tundra (Part Seven)”

Dead Moon – “It’s OK”

Finch – “Miro”

None of the emo kids liked the second Finch album. Probably because it was actually good. Damn good. One of my favorite loud r-a-w-k records from 2005.

Ben Folds Five – “Jackson Cannery”

The Used – “Greener with the Scenery”

John Coltrane – “Summertime”

Third Eye Blind – “Slow Motion (Dirty Version)”

This version of the song didn’t make the “Blue” album. There was a mostly instrumental sleeper instead. Probably something to do with the opening lines: “Miss Jones taught me English / but I think I just shot her son / ’cause he owed me money / with a bullet in the chest you cannot run.” Just gets gorier and more cryptic from there. It’s everything Third Eye Blind isn’t, and everything I wish they were.

Ben Folds Five – “Emaline”

Spoon – “The Beast and the Dragon, Adored”

Sufjan Stevens – “Casimir Pulaski Day”

Social Distortion – “Sick Boys”

Bob Dylan – “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues”

Billy Joel – “Ain’t No Crime”

The Who – “Magic Bus”

The Pistol Arrows – “Who is the Dreamer and Who is the Dream?”

Sloan – “The Other Man”

The Beatles – “Hello, Goodbye”

Tom Waits – “Everything Goes to Hell”

Doesn’t this pretty much sum up every Tom Waits song?

Islands – “Rough Gem”

May 16. Dallas. Granada. Anyone who lives in Texas should go. These guys were the best band I saw at SXSW – show is unlike anything I had seen before.

Breakdown:

24 songs

2 during commute to work

20 at work

2 during commute home

Went home from work sick today. Was listening to Tom Waits at the time and nearly succumbed to his wishes for everything to go to hell as I ran into two curbs on account of the wooziness from the meds. But I’m alive for now. Nice try, Tommy boy.