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Michael Bennett writes

iPod/MP3 Friday Shuffle — War of the Worlds Edition

What’s the iPod/MP3 Shuffle? It’s just a way to get people to share music and foster some discussion. I started doing this on my Facebook page a while back and it’s been great seeing friends exchange comments on each others lists. Every Friday, I get out my 120 GB iPod (which has about 24,000 songs now), hit shuffle and write about the first 10 songs that come up. Sometimes the 10 songs are kind of conventional, sometimes there’s a lot of obscure stuff. So check mine out and please add your own shuffle or discuss other people’s shuffles!

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It was 71 years ago that Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre scared the living you-know-what out of everyone with a radio production of H.G. Wells’ War Of The Worlds that fooled some people into thinking that Martians really were invading Earth. In honor of this Grade A chicanery, grab your iPod/iTunes/MP3 player, hit shuffle and share the first 10 tunes that come up with everyone.

  1. D.O.A. — World War 3 (The Dawning Of A New Era):  This is old style punk from this Canadian band.  The music is pretty basic, made for raising one’s fist in the air, with the requisite angry left wing political stance.  This sound is dated, but the feelings and attitude still translate.
  2. Elvis Costello & The Attractions — Brown to Blue (Almost Blue):  This is my favorite song from Elvis’s country album from way back when.  I think this was originally by George Jones.  It’s a pretty classic honky-tonk tune — “you changed your name from Brown to Jones/and mine from Brown to Blue.”  This album was produced by Billy Sherrill, an architect of the ’60s Nashville Countrypolitan sound.  Sherrill was best known for producing Tammy Wynette.  The Attractions fit uncomfortably with standard country motifs.  And Elvis is not anyone’s idea of a classic country singer, but on this track, and a few others, he gets the emotions underlying the clever lyrics, and connects pretty well.
  3. Nouvelle Vague — Friday Night Saturday Morning (Nouvelle Vague):  Yes, this French band, who does mellow bossa nova versions of old punk and new wave songs, is a novelty.  But, for the most part, they do a good job of capturing something in each song they choose.  This Specials song was a B-side of their classic “Ghost Town” single.  Unlike some of their interpretations, this song isn’t recast too much.  Terry Hall was a hangdog loser on the original, and now it’s a cute French gal (I’ve seen them live — she’s a looker) doing the same thing.  It still works.
  4. Lush — Hey Hey Helen (Gala):  Lush worked with Robin Guthrie of Cocteau Twins, who were a big influence on the band’s sound.  They combined that airy, floaty Cocteau thing with some shoegazer guitars and the winsome harmony vocals of Emma Anderson and (major crush object) Miki Berenyi.  I think this was an Abba song.  It certainly sounds like it could have been.
  5. The Minutemen — Swing to the Right (Post-Mersh, Vol. 3): A short buzzing live track from what may be the greatest American rock band ever.  They were lumped in with punk, but incorporated funk, jazz, CCR and so many other things into their music.  But this is a quick punk riff type of tune.
  6. Buddy Holly — Peggy Sue Got Married (The Buddy Holly Collection):  I wonder if Buddy would have dropped some of his vocal affectations if he hadn’t died so young.  This sequel to one of his best known songs has some rock ‘n’ roll twang, but also has a little bit of a Latin flavor.  A good, but not great, Holly tune.
  7. Robert Gordon — Sea Cruise (Red Hot 1977-1981):  Gordon was an early rockabilly revivalist, down to the duck’s ass haircut.  He was generally reviled by mainstream rock critics.  He wasn’t authentic enough.  Perhaps.  But he had a really good voice and worked with ace guitarists like Chris Spedding and the legendary Link Wray.  This is a rocked up version of Frankie Ford’s one big hit.
  8. k-os — B-Boy Stance (Joyful Rebellion): This Toronto hip-hop artist seems to come from the school of acts like A Tribe Called Quest, as his songs are pretty introspective.  This was the first single off this album, and the rhythm track is sample heavy and constantly moving, with two big hooks in the chorus.  The production is creative, and when he breaks into the flamenco styled middle eight, you get the idea that k-os isn’t going to play by anybody’s rules.  His first three albums are all worthwhile.
  9. XTC — This is the Way (Drums & Wires):  This is a lesser track from the band’s first album with guitarist Dave Gregory replacing keyboardist Barry Andrews, who went on to form Shriekback.  This almost sounds like it was written for one of the two prior albums, as it has a bit of that herky-jerk sound.  But they slow it down just a bit, and then throw in this languid pretty instrumental break coming out of each chorus that is totally cool.  A lesser XTC track is better than about 96% of everything else out there.
  10. The Morrells — Beatnik (The Morrells Anthology “Live”):  This ’50s style instrumental is a showcase for guitarist D. Clinton Thompson.  It’s not quite surf rock, not quite Duane Eddy or Link Wray.  But it’s insinuating.  This comes from a limited edition 4 CD set with four full concert recordings of this Springfield, Missouri bar band.

Posted on October 30, 2009 Permalink 4 Comments

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What They're Saying

Michael Gibson, on Oct 30, 05:24 AM, wrote:

Oh man, nothing like a crappy, rainy Friday morning to put a smile on my face. :) Let’s do this…

1. Steve Earle – (Quicksilver Daydreams of) Maria (Townes)
2. Stapleton – From Wood To Ridge (Rest and Be Thankful)
3. Lush – Never-Never (Split)… Read More
4. Finally Punk – Manatee (Self-Titled)
5. The Brunettes – Mafioso (Holding Hands, Feeding Ducks)
6. Rappresaglia – Attack (Skins & Punks = TNT 7”)
7. Polysics – Psycho Psycho San (Now Is The Time)
8. The Bristles – Sick (Don’t Give Up 7”)
9. Ben Folds Five – Dick Holster (Naked Baby Photos)
10. 65daysofstatic – When We Were Younger & Better (The Destruction of Small Ideals)

Wow, that was, uhm, a strange mix of music. Good times.

DJ Bylamplight, on Oct 30, 07:29 AM, wrote:

Hmm, odd one today:

1. Nina Simone — Sinnerman (Edit)
2. Electric Five Samba — No Puedo Parar
3. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah — Clap Your Hands!
4. Gescom — Polarized beam splitter
5. Los Holy’s — El Hombre Desnudo
6. Daniele Brusaschetto — Ciao Belissima
7. Johnny Cool — That’s You My Love
8. Buck 65 — Up The Middle
9. Jay Dee a.k.a. J-Dilla — Body Movin’ Featuring J. Rocc & Karriem Riggins
10. Swaggersaurus — Nick Wilson

Ciao Belissima came out on an ultra limited CDR called Blasé by Italian master of darkness, Daniele Brusaschetto

Swaggersaurus is an unreleased tune by Londoner Nick Wilson, author of http://toiletcast.blogspot.com/ . A very cool pseudo soundtrack / oddball number in a Wevie Stonder style.

Owen, on Oct 30, 08:28 AM, wrote:

Rainy Days & Mondays always get me down. That’s why we have music. And umbrellas.

1. Hello Sailor – Blue Lady (NZ)
2. The Byrds – The Christian Life
3. The Kinks – Waterloo Sunset
4. Michael Jackson – Don’t Stop ‘til You Get Enough
5. The Decemberists – The Queens Approach
6. Teena Marie – I Need Your Lovin’
7. 3D’s – Beautiful Things (NZ)
8. Marion Black – Who Knows
9. Concord Dawn – Man for all Seasons (NZ)
10. Iggy & the Stooges – Gimme Danger

Billy Kalb, on Oct 30, 11:52 AM, wrote:

1. Vetiver — Amour Fou (Vetiver): Man, remember freak-folk? Devendra Banhart has a new one out this week, but the movement itself never seemed to get that far. I come back to this record now and again, though.

2. The Undertones — Male Model (The Undertones): Like early Clash, but a touch sweeter. Their “Teenage Kicks” was legendarily one of British DJ figurehead John Peel’s favorite songs.

3. The Wrens — Boys, You Won’t (The Meadowlands): Six years on and still waiting for that next Wrens album. I figure they don’t have enough heartbreak stockpiled yet to match the potency of the last one.

4. Franz Ferdinand — Walk Away (You Could Have It So Much Better): I know I should like this, but I have a tremendously hard time caring about FF beyond their debut album. They have the sound; they just haven’t taken it far enough.

5. Kano — Mic Fight f/ Demon & Wiley (Run the Road): I loved me some first-wave grime, crystallized nowhere better than on this comp. Kano was one of the most promising of that crew, but if he delivered on that initial promise I must have missed it.

6. Iron & Wine — Hickory (Around the Well): Still sifting through this rarities comp and liking what I hear, even if nothing in particular has stood out to me.

7. M.I.A. — Galang (Arular): I bumped into Maya Arulpragasm at Coachella 2005 as she was checking out her then-boyfriend Diplo’s DJ set. Awkward fan photo ensued. I remember wearing a D.A.R.E. t-shirt and cargo shorts. I don’t remember her being impressed.

8. Cool Kids — What Up Man (The Bakesale EP): I don’t have much patience for MCs who strive to “bring back the old school days,” but I get the impression that these two have something bigger than that in mind.

9. Casiotone for the Painfully Alone — Airport Samba (Pocket Symphonies for Lonesome Subway Cars): Artist, album and track names all align to sound like exactly what you’d think they would. It’s 57 seconds of lo-fi electro bummer.

10. Eels — Efil’s God (Electro-Shock Blues): Eels started out sounding like a novelty, and recent albums haven’t done much to change that perception, but somewhere in the middle was this album, a staggeringly beautiful and raw piece of music that knocked 16-year-old me on his ass for an entire year. Criminally under-appreciated.

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