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Top 5 songs for the aftermath of a soul-crushing political defeat

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

votingAlarm goes off. You look around. Birds are singing, the sun is shining through the remainder of the autumn leaves. Looks like it’s going to be a great morning. And then you remember – something was going on the night before. What was it?

It wasn’t like that night three years ago in Tijuana that involved swallowing the tequila worm and the resulting three hours of hallucinatory debauchery, culminating in you purchasing a cock-fighting franchise.

No, this is different. Despite it being a beautiful Fall day, and though there’s no male prostitute named Pedro passed out in the shower (this time, thank God), things seem more ominous.

Then you remember: Yesterday was election day.

Oh, what terrible things befell the American public by its own hand? Shaking, you turn on the TV just in time to see the cheery, slightly bulbous form of Willard Scott give way to the local news, where a reporter informs you that Proposition 23, which amends the state constitution to allow the eating of kittens wrapped in a burned American flag, while at the same time banning marriage, hugs, high fives and eye contact between members of the same gender, passed 87% to 2%. Noooooo!

It’s going to be a long day.

Top 5 songs for the aftermath of a soul-crushing political defeat

1. “American Tune,” Paul Simon
“American Tune” was written in the wake of the reelection of Richard Nixon in 1972, though this could have easily been written in the wake of the reelection of George W. Bush in 2004. That’s politics for ya.

2. “I’m So Bored With The U.S.A.,” The Clash
You know what? Constitutional democracy was so 18th Century.

3. “Oil Man’s War,” Kathleen Edwards
I’m moving to Canada! No, I really mean it this time! Canadian singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards said she’d give me a lift.

4. “Days Like This,” Van Morrison
OK, relax, mellow out, man. Your mama told you there’d be days like this, and the soulful feeling of this song will make it a little easier to swallow.

5. “Walk On,” U2
Don’t give up. Keep on trying, though it’s hard, though it might be the last thing you feel like doing. Walk on …

Top 5 songs for the aftermath of a soul-crushing political defeat

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Tags: Kathleen Edwards, Paul Simon, The Clash, U2, Van Morrison

Distant ships on the horizon: Top 5 versions of of ‘Comfortably Numb’

Monday, September 14th, 2009

comfnumb

What is it about Pink Floyd’s Comfortably Numb that makes it such a favorite 30 years after it was released on “The Wall”? The song is dark and paced without ever feeling like it’s plodding. It’s like the un-Eagles, which makes it a friend to me. It’s also theatrical without feeling overblown. And Gilmore’s guitar solos made me want a Stratocaster more than anything Eric Clapton has done.

The great sage Wikipedia tells us: “According to Rolling Stone the lyrics came from Roger Waters’ experience when he was injected with tranquillizers for stomach cramps by a doctor prior to playing a Pink Floyd show in Philadelphia on the band’s 1977 tour for the Animals album. ‘That was the longest two hours of my life,’ Waters said. ‘Trying to do a show when you can hardly lift your arm.’ The experience gave him the idea which became the lyrics to this song.”

When I complied the list for Top 5 list of gangster film songs earlier in the week, I had to include the live version by Roger Waters, Van Morrison and The Band, my personal favorite. It made me want to discover the other …

Top 5 versions of “Comfortably Numb”

1. Dar Williams with Annie DiFranco
Perhaps the most successful of the low-key (a relative term) versions of “Comfortably Numb.” Williams strips away the strings and lets some electric slide guitar and some formidable vocals do the heavy lifting. The interplay between Williams and DiFranco gives me chills.

2. The Bad Plus with Wendy Lewis
Progressive jazz combo The Bad Plus is known for turning pop standards on its ear, and they do it again on their take of “Comfortably Numb.” The Bad Plus incorporates the truly haunting vocals of Wendy Lewis with harmonies by bassist Reid Anderson. The result: Verses that are so darkly intimate, they turn the bridge/chorus crescendoes into the aural equivalent of tossing a bucket of cold water onto a drunk.

Comfortably Numb – The Bad Plus

3. Dream Theater & Queensryche
I’m just as surprised as you are. Or maybe I shouldn’t be, because there’s definitely a larger-than-life aspect to The Wall. It may be overkill, but the two bands do a nearly note-for-note rendition that somehow doesn’t feel warmed over or, for that matter, over done.

4. David Gilmore and David Bowie (Live at Royal Albert Hall)
This version clings closely to the original with one major exception: Bowie’s inflections, far from using Waters’ clinical voice, seems near-breaking, making the doctor’s role more akin to mad scientist, giving the song an unnerving and, arguably, a more dangerous feel.

5. Pink Floyd – Live 8
Roger Waters rejoined with the rest of the members of Pink Floyd to participate in Live 8 in what for many was the highlight of the London portion. Given the serious nature of the song, and the deadly serious business of wiping out poverty, it’s a wonderful contrast to see how much the band and the audience are enjoying the moment.

Runner Up: Staind, with a cool, stripped down version.

Comfortably Numb (Live at Hiro Ballroom) – Staind

Comfortably dumb: Tool; Luther Wright & The Wrongs; Arturo; Scissor Sisters (may have to suffer the eternal burning of the fires of hell for this sins of injecting a great song with strains of Stayin’ Alive)

Just plain confusing: Gregorian Chant — The verse for this song was never meant to be performed by monks, and overall, this feels overproduced – Yanni-ized as it were. But I venture to say that there are parts where it sounds very pretty, such as the use of violin in place of guitar between a good attempt at the first chorus and second verse.

Comfortably Numb – Gregorian Chant

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Posted in Top 5 | 2 Responses »
Tags: Ani DiFranco, Arturo, Bee Gees, Dar Williams, David Bowie, David Gilmore, Dream Theater, Eric Clapton, Gregorian Chant, Luther Wright & The Wrongs, Pink Floyd, Queensryche, Roger Waters, Scissor Sisters, Staind, The Bad Plus, The Band, Tool, Van Morrison

Top 5 overlooked gangster film songs

Monday, September 7th, 2009

filmweek

gangster filmsSay what you will about the mafia genre of film and, to a lesser extent, television. It certainly has helped redefine the stereotype of Italian Americans. Once thought of as wine-guzzling, pizza-making oafs who couldn’t win a world war to save their basil, hits like The Godfather, Goodfellas and The Untouchables helped redefine Italian Americans as wine-guzzling, pizza-making oafs who’ll break ya fuckin’ thumbs! Va fungul!

As an Italian-American, I can appreciate this.

The mafia movie is a sub-genre of gangster film, which seems to have fun with all ethnicities, like The Departed (Irish) and American Gangster (African Americans). Everyone’s a gangster. If you’re Amish, you’re a gangster.

A good soundtrack can help make or break a gangster film. I daresay Scarface (Cubans) would be far more watchable if it weren’t awash in ’80s synth and Donnie Brasco (more Italians) would have been enjoyable if it weren’t for its melodramatic music cues. Many gangster films pepper their soundtracks with Tony Bennett and that dreaded “That’s Amore” song. Some take a different approach. Scoresse particularly seems to enjoy twisting our minds so we associate “Layla” with Frank Sivero’s frozen corpse. Still, there are a lot of other easily overlooked musical gems in gangster films, and I’m only too happy to unearth them, get them to testify, and send them off to an undisclosed location as theFiver presents the:

Top 5 overlooked gangster film songs

1. “Comfortably Numb,” Roger Waters feat. Van Morrison & The Band > The Departed (Irish)
The Dropkick Murphys’ “Shipping Out To Boston” may be synonymous with Red Sox relief pitchers and Scorsese’s The Departed, but this live collaboration of Waters ‘n’ friends hits a certain bittersweet spot.

Comfortably Numb (Album Version) – Roger Waters feat. Van Morrison & The Band

2. “Remember (Walking In The Sand),” Shangrilas > Goodfellas (Italians)
3. “House of the Rising Sun,” The Animals > Casino (Italians, Jews, Dick Smothers)
Alright, lot of Scorsese, here. What can we say, he’s got a good ear, and he knows which melodramatic songs punctuates the fall of empires.

House Of The Rising Sun – THE ANIMALS

4. “If Love Is A Red Dress,” Maria McKee > Pulp Fiction (African Americans, Italians, Spanish, British, Red Necks, Scandanavians, Portguesse, Breakfast Cereals, Orangutans, Klingons …)
Maria McKee western-inspired ballad is heard only briefly in Pulp Fiction as its played on a radio right before some very bad things are about to happen to Butch and Marcel. Was Quinten Tarintino trying to juxtapose the song’s gentleness with the immenent violence, or was he just trying to use it to emphasize the fact that, hey, here’s some rednecks? On its own, “If Love Is A Red Dress” is sparse, lonely and strangely beautiful.

If Love Is A Red Dress (Hang Me In Rags) – Maria McKee

5. “Cavalleria Rusticana,” Carmine Coppola, Nino Rota > The Godfather Part III (Italians)
OK, OK, we know how everyone feels about The Godfather Part III. Settle down. Let’s take a look at the film’s climax, where assassination and conspiracy are juxtaposed against a bit of 19th century opera. It’s a device carried over from the two previous Godfather films, but ratcheted up a notch.

Cavalleria Rusticana (1987 Digital Remaster): Intermezzo from Cavalleria rusticana – Philharmonia Orchestra/Riccardo Muti

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Tags: Carmine Coppola, Maria McKee, Nino Rota, Pink Floyd, Roger Waters, Shangrilas, The Animals, The Band, Van Morrison

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