04 August 2023

4 August 2023 - J. Geils Band - Centerfold

Seth Justman wrote and produced this song.  Not coincidentally for this keyboard-heavy song, Seth Justman was also the keyboard player for the J. Geils Band.  

He was not J. Geils, though.   

Neither was Peter Wolf, although a lot of casual fans of this song, the band's biggest hit (six weeks on top of the Billboard Hot 100 in 1982) sure thought he was.  He was the vocalist and most prominent publc face of the band.

No, no.  J. Geils was the guitarist for the band.  And their leader, I suppose.

This is Jay.  John Warren Geils, Jr.

 A little strangely, the video takes place in a high school classroom full of young women who end up being relatively scantily clad.  It makes sense to the plot of the song - the narrator has discovered his high school crush has appeared as a centerfold in an unspecified men's magazine that we can only assume is Playboy.  He's both titilated and, well, confused, I guess is the right word.  

I don't have any explanation for the milky drum, though.


The band did have some hiatuses - hiati? - but remained mostly intact until 2013, when J. Geils passed away.  They did tour through 2015 at least - as shown in this live performance from that year.


Contrast that with this performance from 2009, with J. Geils still on guitar.  I think it's a better performance, frankly.

03 August 2023

3 August 2023 - Lyle Lovett - Church

Perhaps my favorite album title of all time is Lyle Lovett's 1992 album, Joshua Judges Ruth. For those Chritians out there, they are the 3 books immediately following the Torah (the first five books) in the Old Testament.

That is a pretty cool way to title your album. 

The former Mr. Julia Roberts has carved out a nice alternative country career that has recieved a lot of critical acclaim, and with good reason - he writes and performs good, unique country music.  Take this song, from the aforementioned album.  It would not be out of place at a Southern revival, or on country music radio.  It's a spirited song.


The beauty of Lovett's music is when it is performed live.  You can see just how much of this song is powered not by musical accompaniment - which is sparse but ever-present - but by the power of his voice and of his backing vocalists.  This song really and truly takes on a spiritual feeling - and you actually hear the lyrics.  It's really not a terribly spiritual song.  

02 August 2023

2 August 2023 - Madonna - Music

If I ever go back to adding artists to our Hall of Fame, I have a list of potential inductees.  

Madonna tops that list.  She's a prolific performer, who has had a very long career - spanning about 40 years, during which time she's frequently released albums and performed live.

What a lot of people DON'T know is that she also has written a lot of her music.  Take this song, a single she co-wrote and co-produced with Mirwais.  She's also all the voices in this song - she's the one asking if you like to boogie woogie throughout.

More than fifteen years into her career, this song was yet another #1 song for Madonna, in 2000 - and remains one of her largest worldwide hits.

The video features a pre-Borat Sacha Baron Cohen, who was largely unknown to the US audience at that time, in full Da Ali G Show character.  Amazingly, Madonna was pregnant during the filming of this video.  


The real reason we're posting this?  In a live version, Madonna interlaced this song with "Disco Inferno".  It's way more incredible than it deserves to be.


In 2012, Madonna did the Super Bowl halftime show, which was epic and full of guest stars.  Here, she merged "Music' with LMFAO's "Sexy and I Know It".  Also, at the :31 second mark, she almost falls.

01 August 2023

1 August 2023 - Kacey Musgraves - Blowin' Smoke

I'm haivng a little trouble believing that Same Trailer, Different Park, the debut album by Kacey Musgraves, is ten years old this year.  

This was one of the singles off that album.  It was a relatively big country radio hit and even bubbled under the Hot 100, which means it got a lot of POP radio airplay - in a era when such a crossover was uncommon

The song is a clever play on words - the "Blowin' Smoke" is both a reference to the protagonist of the song smoking and also to the phrase "blowing smoke up one's ass", or in other words, talking trash and generally doing a lot of talking - her words.  And, there's a lot of blowin' smoke in this song - mostly about her co-workers, one of whom just left for Vegas (so there's a little jealousy going on here). It's clever and witty - and a little dark.


It's refreshing to hear a live version of a song sound a lot like the studio version.  The song is just as quietly cool unproduced than it is on vinyl.   Also, that tambourine playing by Kacey is epic.


But what about when the stage and crowd get a lot bigger, like at Farm Aid 30, in 2015?  By this time, her 2nd album, which had a more traditional country feeling, had been released, and so her band was tuned for that.  It sounds less pop and more country - but it's still the same old song about blowin' smoke.

31 July 2023

31 July 2023 - Loretta Lynn - One's On The Way

This was originally written for last week, but you know what they say about plans - man plans and God laughs.  I still wanted to share this post with you, and it it a fitting end to a busy July. 

I grew up in the 1970s, the son of van owners.  We had an eight track and later a cassette deck in the van.

My parents were also Columbia House Record Club members, so, well, they had a lot of 8-tracks and later cassettes.

My mother was a huge fan of Loretta Lynn, so I heard a LOT of Loretta Lynn music.  One I remember hearing is perhaps one that could have been considered my mother's theme song (although I hope not completely).  A song earnestly performed by Lynn, it was about a woman who married too early and kept getting pregnant, while envying those who were marching for women's lib.

Loretta Lynn, like my mother, was a feminist.  No doubt.  In 1971, this was controversial.  Loretta Lynn was frequently a controversial figure.  So was my mother, in some ways.  

The best part of this song - which was a huge country hit, reaching the top of the charts in 1971 - is the songwriter.

Shel Silverstein.

The Where The Sidewalk Ends guy.  

Shel Silverstein.

This performance is from the Grand Ole Opry in 1972.


Famously, she also performed the song in 1978 on The Muppet Show..... with a lot of small Muppets. 

28 July 2023

28 July 2023 - Elvis Presley - In The Ghetto

My parents were country music fans and we listened to it in our family van all the time.

One of the cassettes my parents had was a Mac Davis compilation.  Included on this was a song called "In The Ghetto", a very sad song about a child who grows up poor and completes a vicious circle of violence and poverty.  

It would be many years before I learned that was an Elvis Presley song.

It would be a few years after that before I learned that Mac Davis actually wrote the song and was covering a song HE wrote - a year after Elvis turned it into a hit song.

This was Elvis's first release after his 1968 comeback special - and it ended up being a worldwide hit.  It remans to this day one of my favorite Elvis Presley songs (don't tell my parents).  

27 July 2023

27 July 2023 - Sinead O'Connor - Take Me To Church

I felt this was a good bookend to yesterday's post - because it came from the other end of Sinead O'Connor's career.  This song was the big single from her 2014 album, I'm Not Bossy, I'm The Boss, which would be her last.  

I actually found this song hoping to post a cover of hers that wasn't a Prince song over on Totally Covered.  I thought this was the Hozier song.   

It is not the Hozier song.   Sinead O'Connor wrote the lyrics and co-wrote the music for this one.  

The video, directed by James Lees, is particularly striking for me.  It superimposes images of Sinead O'Connor from her "Nothing Compares 2 U" video over her in the present day - with hair (that she removes at approximately 2:00 in the video - it's a wig).  

I encourage you, however, to pay attention to the lyrics.  It's raw and honest performance by O'Connor.