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Thursday, January 22, 2009

GMVW # 55: "A New Beginning"

Gem Music Video of the Week # 55:  A New Beginning
Song: Democracy by Leonard Cohen
(Songwriter: Leonard Cohen)
January 22, 2009

I avoided tackling this Gem during the primaries, conventions, and general election (for, ahhhh…. many reasons), but now seems about as good of a time as any.

I’m not sure my inauguration day experience matched Joe’s daughter, niece Meghan, (who was in Washington D.C. on Tuesday), but it was memorable.  I was in a room full of USGS scientists and technicians in Denver, taking time off from a meeting to watch the inaugural address on television.  There was plenty of emotion, and when President Obama stated “We will restore science to its rightful place”, there was a loud spontaneous cheer, as there was when he stated “and each day brings further evidence that the ways we use energy strengthen our adversaries and threatens our planet.  These are the indicators of crisis, subject to data and statistics.”  Good stuff.  There were many uplifted people in that room.

** The room then broke into a rendition of Thomas Dolby’s ‘Blinded Me With Science’.  Observation wells were uncorked.  A few atoms were split for good measure (ok, perhaps I’m taking a little narrative license). **

The days events had me thinking back 16 years to another inauguration   I recall watching the evening’s events, which included an MTV hosted concert featuring members of U2 and R.E.M., Natalie Merchant, and a reunion of Fleetwood Mac.  What I remember most about it though was Don Henley closing the event with a then new song, “Democracy” by Leonard Cohen, this week’s Gem.

Looking up ‘Democracy’ in Wikepedia, I came across this definition:

“Even though there is no universally accepted definition of 'democracy', there are two principles that any definition of democracy includes. The first principle is that all members of the society have equal access to power and the second that all members enjoy universally recognized freedoms and liberties.”

So, according to Cohen (in the lyrics of ‘Democracy’), one or the other (or both) are still lacking in the U.S.A., but also according to Cohen, we are as near as any country in closing that gap.  Note the lyrics, in reference to the U.S.A.:

“It’s here they’ve got the range
 And the machinery for change
 And it’s here they’ve got the spiritual thirst”

So anyhow, a change in administrations is certainly not the know all, end all of the immediate future, but it is a time for renewal.  Let’s hope for the best.  This week’s Gem is the official music video of Leonard Cohen’s song “Democracy”.  Below that is Don Henley’s cover of the song (I admit, Cohen’s vocals are an acquired taste, so I included Henley's version).  Below that is a great url link (with lead intro from the original attachment) sent to me from Mom, who very insightfully anticipated this week’s theme.

Top of the morning! (Mom’s link will explain this greeting)

- Pete

“ I'm sentimental, if you know what I mean
I love the country but I can't stand the scene.
And I'm neither left or right
I'm just staying home tonight,
getting lost in that hopeless little screen.
But I'm stubborn as those garbage bags
that Time cannot decay,
I'm junk but I'm still holding up
this little wild bouquet:
Democracy is coming to the U.S.A.

Leonard Cohen video:

Henley:

“ Moneygall is a small village in County Offaly, Ireland.  It has a population of approximately 300 people, has a Roman Catholic Church, five shops, a post office, a national school, a police station and two pubs.  President-elect of the United States Barack Obama's great-great-great grandfather, Falmouth Kearney, emigrated from Moneygall to New York City at the age of 19 in 1850 and eventually resettled in Tipton County, Indiana.  Kearney's father had been the village shoemaker, then a wealthy skilled trade. And now for the SONG...Crank up your speakers. ”


_________________________________

About the video: Rare MTV-like video. 

Video Rating: 1
____________________________________

Best Feedback: Tina

dear pete,
i cant believe meghan was there. if they post pictures, will you pass them on?
 i love your snapshot of what obamas speech sounded like to the scientific community, and when i read the speech again, i will see you all cheering and splitting etc.
if you have a minute, take a peek at the song i chose (ROSA SAT @ http://www.wavyo.com/blog/). i just loved the images and progression of sat, walk, run and i loved the accompanying pictures.
 have a lovely day, pete, and thanks for sharing with me.
Tina
______________________________
Also: John
"The room then broke into a rendition of Thomas Dolby's 'Blinded Me With Science'".

You be hanging with NERDS, man!

Thursday, January 15, 2009

GMVW # 54: "All Systems Go"

Gem Music Video of the Week # 54: All Systems Go
Song: Dirty Boulevard by Lou Reed
(Songwriter: Lou Reed)
January 15, 2009

Setting aside relationships, studies, and work for the moment, I’m sure everyone here has experienced a period in their lives when they had a Zen connection with a hobby, an exercise routine, a handicraft, writing, mechanics, or even something potentially overlooked, like understanding the talent behind a master artwork or the nuances of a sporting event.  In the latter case, I know brother Pat (there are two Pats on this email list) has connected the dots better than most of us when knowing what it takes for a team to win the Stanley Cup (I was in that Zen mode in the mid-80’s).  As for the other categories, just thinking of everyone on this list, there’s cooking, running, wood work, scuba diving, weightlifting, writing, playing a musical instrument, swimming, knowledge of world history, rebuilding an engine and knock ‘em dead humor.  I’m sure I’ve missed a few, but hopefully you get the picture.  That Zen period can last a month, a year, or with any luck, a lifetime.  If you lose it, you may try to get it back at a later date, not often to your satisfaction.

Same goes with an ear for music.  I recall a stretch in the mid 90’s when every visit to Franklin would include an invitation from Dad to his study, where he would sit me down and have me listen to Mozart.  To say Dad was into the music of Mozart at the time would be an understatement.  Dad would turn the music up during a particularly poignant stanza in a concerto, opera, or symphony and then say something along the lines of: “Can you believe that!”.  It was brilliant.  Dad was in the zone (perhaps the result of successfully raising a family, along with Mom of course).

I think everyone’s been there at one time or another.  I’ve seen it with Mac at Grateful Dead shows, Jeff Strause at folk festivals, and Mom listening to ‘The Gospel Music of Elvis Presley’ cd.  It’s when you are connecting with the music at a bit higher of a level than those around you.  It can happen in spurts with a given song or album, or cumulatively with a record collection or a string of concerts. 

I can trace back to 1989 as the period when I was most in tune with great music.  I know this because this was the year that Lou Reed released his ‘New York’ album, which I enjoyed thoroughly.    Not that I am a big fan of Lou Reed.  I look at it more along the lines of Lou Reed being that layer of musician that I could only tap into by wading in over my head.  To get to Reed’s ‘New York’ album, I had to go through Beatles ‘White Album’, into Townshend’s ‘All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes’, into the Stones ‘Exile on Main Street’ into The Band’s ‘Music From Big Pink’, into Roger Water’s ‘Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking’ into Robbie Robertson’s self titled solo debut, into Dylan’s ‘Basement Tapes’.  I’m not sure there could have been an easier route, and it could only happen during an intense stretch of concert attendance and listening loudly to music on
Lake Street
in my bachelor days. 

Critics reviewed Lou Reed’s ‘New York’ album as a return to his Velvet Underground days, so in a way I got to experience that 60’s New York City ‘underground’ sound that mesmerized many (including Jonathan Richman).  Reed followed up the release of the album with a tour.  A number of us got to see that tour when it stopped at the Orpheum Theatre in Boston.  What a show!  To enjoy it, however, you had to know the ‘New York’ album, because that was what Lou Reed played, from beginning to end.  At one time a guy got up and yelled “Play Sweet Jane!”, to which Reed replied “Sit down and shut up or get out of here!” (the exchange was later documented in a Rolling Stone review). 

Lou Reed is not one for pulling punches, as revealed in this week’s Gem ‘
Dirty Blvd
’ (off the New York album).  Feel good song, it is not, but, a gem nonetheless.

- Pete

“This room cost 2,000 dollars a month
you can believe it man it's true
somewhere a landlord's laughing till he wets his pants”

Gem Music Video: Dirty Boulevard (the original link has been lost temporarily *Dec, 09*.  This is an admirable live version)



About the Video: Rare MTV-like video.  This one was introduced by someone speaking German, so it may have been a more popular video overseas.

Video Rating: 1

Best Feedback: John

I was driving somewhere with Mac when I first heard that song.  When it was over, Mac turned off the radio and "Hey Lou, cheer up, will ya."

Now about World War II......


Also: Amy

I guess I was the "knock em dead humor person??"
xo

Thursday, January 8, 2009

GMVW # 53: "Gonna See My Picture on the Cover"

Gem Music Video of the Week # 53: Gonna See My Picture on the Cover
Song: Dixie Flyer by Randy Newman
(Songwriter:  Randy Newman)
January 8, 2009

Most everyone has a favorite magazine subscription, whether it is Sports Illustrated, National Review, the New Yorker, Smithsonian, Country Living, People, National Geographic, Bon Appetit, Newsweek, or any number of other periodicals.  For some time now, my routine monthly reading has been Natural History, but for 12 years from the mid 80’s to the mid 90’s, I was an avid reader of Rolling Stone Magazine.  Anybody who visited
109 Lake Street
in Waltham knew as much:  The most recent issue was typically sitting on the lobster trap coffee table in the living room.  I was always up for discussing the latest cover story, which was either based on an interview, a retrospective, or on occasion an investigative report.

In 1987, Rolling Stone Magazine celebrated its 20th anniversary, which was launched with a fantastic 2-hour television documentary.  Following up on that, there were three special edition issues released over the course of the year, including one which reviewed some of the magazines best feature articles over its history, and another which contained lengthy interviews with many of rock n rolls most respected musicians.  It was the 3rd special edition issue, however, that had the most lasting impression on me.  This was the issue which featured Rolling Stone’s top 100 albums of the prior 20 years. 

‘Top’ lists have been all the rage over the last few decades or so as the baby boomer generation seeks to define itself in history.  You see them everywhere: Top 100 Baseball Catches on ESPN; Top Comedians; Top Singers; Top Movies; Top Actors; Top Athletes; and a slew of Top Songs lists.  Most have been entertaining, but for me, none have hit the nail on the head quite like that September 1987 Rolling Stone issue.  Often with a ‘Top’ list, I see a hidden agenda, but not with this one.  Predictable it was not.  Insightful and entertaining it was.  The first 10 albums were 2-page stories, and all 100 had interesting tidbits of information. 

Looking back on this list (which is below), a number of pleasant surprises still jump out at me: ‘Plastic Ono Band’ (Lennon’s first solo album) at # 4; ‘Astral Weeks’ at # 7; ‘Horses’ at # 16; ‘Shoot Out the Lights’ at # 24; ‘Tonight’s the Night’ at # 26; ‘Trout Mask Replica’ at # 33; ‘Squeezing Out Sparks’ at  # 45; ‘The Modern Lovers’ at # 52; ‘Sweetheart of the Rodeo’ at # 82; ‘Sail Away’ at # 89.  Rolling Stone Magazine was not looking to put together a most popular album list, not even on the scale of an individual artist.  This list was looking at what was innovative, what was pushing new boundaries, what was influencing peers.  A perfect example was Neil Young’s ‘Tonight’s the Night’.  Neil Young has had far more financially successful ventures, but this dark, brooding album made the list for the brutal honesty in the music and lyrics.  It also had a brilliant on-the-edge sound (N. Young albums are known for minimalist overdubbing in the studio where the musicians play as a live band, typically releasing the first cut).

I know this list prompted me to expand my knowledge of at least 2 musicians.  The first was Richard Thompson, whom I have written about (along with his ex-wife, Linda Thompson) in earlier gems.  The second was Randy Newman, whom I have also written about and whose song ‘Dixie Flyer’ is this week’s Gem.  ‘Dixie Flyer’ (or ‘Dixie Fly’ as Charlotte and Peter used to sing in their younger days), shows another side of Randy Newman from what I discussed in Gem # 11.  This song reveals Newman’s ability to take you back in time.  Few artists are as good at this as Newman (Steve Earle comes to mind).  

Below this week’s Gem is a link of Dr Hook and the Medicine Show singing ‘Cover of the Rolling Stone’ with many of the best Rolling Stone covers shown.  Below that is the list of the 1987 Rolling Stone Top 100 Albums of the prior 20 years.

- Pete

“Her own mother came to meet us at the station,
  Her dress as black as a crow in a coal mine
  She cried when her little girl got off the train”

Gem Video: Dixie Flyer

Cover of the Rolling Stone

ROLLING STONE TOP 100 ALBUMS OF THE LAST 20 YEARS - September & October 1987
Editions (As part of the 20th anniversary celebration of the magazine)
1. The Beatles - Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
2. The Sex Pistols - Never Mind The Bollocks
3. The Rolling Stones - Exile On
Main Street
4. John Lennon - Plastic Ono Band
5. Jimi Hendrix Experience - Are You Experienced?
6. David Bowie - The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust
7. Van Morrison - Astral Weeks
8. Bruce Springsteen - Born To Run
9. The Beatles - The Beatles
10. Marvin Gaye - What's Going On
11. Elvis Costello - This Year's Model
12. Bob Dylan - Blood On The Tracks
13. Bob Dylan & The Band - The Basement Tapes
14. The Clash - London Calling
15. The Rolling Stones - Beggars Banquet
16. Patti Smith - Horses
17. The Beatles -
Abbey Road
18. The Rolling Stones - Let It Bleed
19. The Band - The Band
20. Prince - Dirty Mind
21. The Velvet Underground - The Velvet Underground And Nico
22. The Who - Who's Next
23. Derek & The Dominos - Layla
24. Richard & Linda Thompson - Shoot Out The Lights
25. The Doors - The Doors
26. Neil Young - Tonight's The Night
27. The Clash - The Clash
28. Bruce Springsteen - Born In The U.S.A.
29. Evis Costello - My Aim Is True
30. Sly & The Family Stone - There's A Riot Goin' On
31. The Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers
32. The Velvet Underground - Loaded
33. Captain Beefheart And The Magic Band - Trout Mask Replica
34. Rod Stewart - Every Picture Tells A Story
35. Pink Floyd - The Dark Side Of The Moon
36. Creedence Clearwater Revival - Willy And The Poor Boys
37. Stevie Wonder - Innervisions
38. Television - Marquee Moon
39. Prince - Purple Rain
40. Bruce Springsteen - Darkness On The Edge Of Town
41. The Band - Music From Big Pink
42. The Pretenders - Pretenders
43. Creedence Clearwater Revival - Green River
44. Jefferson Airplane - Surrealistic Pillow
45. Graham Parker - Squeezing Out Sparks
46. Joni Mitchell - Blue
47. Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin IV
48. Aretha Franklin - Lady Soul
49. Randy Newman - 12 Songs
50. Big Brother And The Holding Company - Cheap Thrills
51. Bruce Springsteen - The Wild, The Innocent And The E Street Shuffle
52. The Modern Lovers - The Modern Lovers
53. Talking Heads - Remain In Light
54. Graham Parker - Howlin Wind
55. The New York Dolls - New York Dolls
56. Paul Simon - Graceland
57. Talking Heads - More Songs About Buildings And Food
58. R.E.M. - Murmur
59. Van Morrison - Moondance
60. Original Soundtrack - The Harder They Come
61. John Lennon - Imagine
62. Jimi Hendrix Experience - Electric Ladyland
63. Bruce Springsteen - The River
64. Stevie Wonder - Talking Book
65. Elvis Costello And The Attractions - Get Happy!!
66. Neil Young And Crazy Horse - Rust Never Sleeps
67. Bob Dylan - John Wesley Harding
68. Michael Jackson - Off The Wall
69. Ramones - Ramones
70. The Rolling Stones - Between The Buttons
71. Neil Young - After The Goldrush
72. Fleetwood Mac - Rumours
73. Todd Rundgren - Something/Anything
74. Crosby, Stills And Nash - Crosby, Stills And Nash
75. Al Green - Call Me
76. Elvis Presley - From Elvis In Memphis
77. The Mothers Of Invention - We're Only In It For The Money
78. Sly And The Family Stone - Greatest Hits
79. Pink Floyd - The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn
80. Talking Heads - Talking Heads: 77
81. Miles Davis - Bitches Brew
82. The Byrds - Sweetheart Of The Rodeo
83. Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin II
84. Roxy Music - Siren
85. Michael Jackson - Thriller
86. Richard And Linda Thompson - I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight
87. Sly And The Family Stone - Stand!
88. Iggy And The Stooges - Raw Power
89. Randy Newman - Sail Away
90. Various Artists - Nuggets: Original Artyfacts From The First Psychadelic
Era, 1965-1968
91. Aretha Franklin - I Never Loved A Man The Way I Love You
92. Southside Johnny And The Asbury Jukes - Hearts Of Stone
93. Simon And Garfunkel - Bridge Over Troubled Waters
94. Talking Heads - Fear Of Music
95. Otis Redding - History Of Otis Redding
96. David Bowie - ChangesOneBowie
97. The Velvet Underground - The Velvet Underground
98. Steely Dan - Katy Lied
99. The Who - Meaty Beaty Big And Bouncy
100. T.Rex - Electric Warrior



About the video: Performed at the Jazz Open in 06

Video Rating: 1

Best Feedback: Jen

Pete,

Sometimes it takes me a few days to get around to the Gems, but I always do.  I enjoyed this....your commentary, Randy Newman singing, and seeing the covers along with the "Cover of the RS" audio. Thanks.

Jen

Thursday, January 1, 2009

GMVW # 52: "Natural Wonders"

Gem Music Video of the Week # 52: Natural Wonders
Song: Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald by Gordon Lightfoot
(Songwriter: Gordon Lightfoot)
January 1, 2009

Musical taste covers the gambit, so I’m sure nobody has agreed with every single one (or even a majority) of the gem choices I made over the past year (if I were to guess, I would think Mac comes closest).  Most of the gems have been rock-n-roll songs, and I know at least several on this email list who would much rather listen to classical, jazz, country, or blues.  Others seem more inclined to listen to music more for the dance beat than the lyrical content.  I also know a few who turn to music more often as a temporary reprieve from the daily dose of negative news that floods the airways…this would be the soft-rock/easy listeners among us. 

Kinder, gentler musicians certainly have an appeal in this dog-eat-dog world.  Personally, if a musician has a soft side, they also need to throw a reality check at me every so often.  Neil Young does a masterful job of this, composing a wide range of music, from easy listening to hard edge rock and a plethora of great heavy-subject-matter songs.  This is a rare feat, though.  Most musicians are allied to either one camp or the other.  Easy-listen musicians rarely break the mold.  One of the kindest, gentlest souls in the easy-listen music world had to have been John Denver.  Yes, I can appreciate to a degree, but there’s nothing in his catalog that rises to the level of Gem for me.  A shame, because this week’s theme is about the grandeurs of the natural world, and if any acclaimed musician can be associated with the great outdoors it’s John Denver.  However, one of John Denver’s favorite places to sing about was the Rocky Mountains, which is a wonderful thing because this helps me segue into the next paragraph.

This week’s Gem has two stories behind it.  The first took place in the Canadian Rockies, where Fred, Mac, John, Kurt and I (and other Franklin-ites) went on a ski trip in the winter of 1988.  Most of the trip was spent on the slopes, including Lake Louise and Banff (Sunshine).  There was one day during the week, however, when we rented a car and took the 3 hour drive north to Jasper through the Canadian wilderness.  It was an amazing journey through valleys surrounded by high peaks, and on a picture-perfect day to boot.  Mountain goats, big horn sheep, bison, moose, eagles and elk were all common sightings along the park road.  It was also along this route where an uncommon event occurred:  Kurt belted out a song.  There was no music playing on the radio.  No accompaniment whatsoever.  This would have been standard fare for me, but Kurt is generally more reserved.  What could have caused this momentary lapse of reason?  I have to give all the credit to the scenery around us.  It was the most unique aspect of that moment. I don’t believe I had witnessed Kurt singing a-cappella before, and I have yet to see it again. 

Anyhow, the song Kurt sang, from beginning to end, was this week’s Gem:  Gordon Lightfoot’s ‘The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald’.  Go figure!  Here we were surrounded by some of the Rocky Mountain’s highest peaks, and Kurt was singing about a sinking ship.  Looking back, though, there was a correlation, because as much as Lightfoot’s gem of a song is about a sinking-ship disaster at “sea”, it’s also about the majesty of the Great Lake it sank in.  Driving through the Canadian Rockies gave Kurt (and the rest of us) the same sense of wonderment one can get from viewing the Pacific Ocean, the Grand Canyon, Niagara Falls, Yosemite, a glacier, an iceberg, giant sequoia trees, or …..a Great Lake.

So it was, several summers later (1992), that Nancy and I took an actual Great Lakes trip.  Perhaps it was inspired by Kurt’s rendition of the Ed Fitz.  Whatever the reason, our 2-week trip included visits to all of the Great Lakes, most notably a circumvention of Lake Superior, the largest of the five, and the geographic heart of Lightfoot’s tale.  The Great Lakes region is extremely underrated as a vacation destination.  There are so many natural wonders, including the Bruce Peninsula, the Apostle Islands, Niagara Falls, Mackinac Island,  Sault St Marie, Pukaskwa National Park (Canada), Sleeping Giant Provincial Park (Canada), Georgian Bay (including Parry Sound, Bobby Orr’s hometown, where Nancy and I met Orr’s brother at his clothing store, and when I told him we were from Boston, he took us in the back room and gave us a handful of Orr/Bruins memorabilia), and so much more.

A long-standing memory I have of this trip was when we pulled into Duluth, Minnesota, bordering the west coast of Lake Superior.  This was the farthest western point of our trip, which called for a reward of sorts.  We walked thru town and into an old record store, where we purchased a Gordon Lightfoot tape, which included ‘The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald’.  We must have played the song 40 times over the next week as we drove north and east around the greatest of the Great Lakes.  The drive made it abundantly clear how a ship as large and solidly built as the Edmund Fitzgerald could have sunk:  Lake Superior (or as the Chippewa call it “Gitche Gumme”) had all the characteristics of the open ocean.  A natural wonder if there ever was one.

A nice live version of Gordon Lightfoot singing the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald is below as this week’s Gem.

Happy New Year!  Here’s a resolution: Get out and enjoy the natural world.    There’s plenty of it here in the Pepperell area. If you want a guide, give me a call.

You can even sing about it if you feel the urge.

- Pete

“Lake Huron rolls, Superior sings
In the ruins of her ice water mansion
Old Michigan steams like a young man's dreams,
The islands and bays are for sportsmen.

And farther below Lake Ontario
Takes in what Lake Erie can send her
And the iron boats go as the mariners all know
With the gales of November remembered.”





About the video: I never found the ideal Edmund Fitzgerald video.  This one was a little grainy, so the video is still up in the air.

Video Rating: 2

Best Feedback: Tina

dear peter,
thank you so much for keeping me in your music loop. even though i seldome write, i am always delighted with stories and your musical selections. you are like a music encyclopedia and i like the way your brain ties everything together.
happy new year and love to all,
tina


Also: John

Wow.  That was a shocking video.  I used to tape his music from the vinyl onto cassettes, because his was good music to listen to on long drives (
Carefree Highway
?), especially if you were by yourself or with a young lady in a tank top.  I remember his album covers and him being a robust, good looking dude with that curly blonde hair, not a gray haired, gaunt and sickly looking old man.  So first, I must be getting old, and second, thank the Lord I never was a smoker. 

And third, what ever happened to that young lady in the tank top?