Adventures in aural organization!
I rate my iTunes library. and you watch.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Aftermath- The Rolling Stones
The facts: Released 1966. They had been huge, I guess, by the time this came out, but this was the real clincher. It showed they deserved their acclaim. Paint it, Black was their first #1 on both sides of the pond.
Why I have it: Got it from the Library. A few months ago I read in a magazine a list of "75 albums every man should own". I'm a real sucker for those sorts of things, so I put something like 40 cds on hold from the public library the next day. This was in there somewhere. No doubt a really good album, but I don't really find the time to listen to older stuff.
1. Paint it, Black - 4 apples
2. Stupid Girl - 3 apples
3. Lady Jane - 2 apples
4. Under My Thumb - 5 apples
Demeaning women never felt so exotic.
5. Doncha Bother Me - 3 apples
6. Think - 4 apples
7. Flight 505 - 3 apples
8. High and Dry - 3 apples
9. It's not easy - 4 apples
10. I Am Waiting - 3 apples
11. Going Homes - 4 apples
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Leadbelly's Absolute Best
Now: Leadbelly: Absolutely the Best
The FACTS: This is kind of a "greatest hits" compilation of Leadbelly's finest folk songs. Creedence Clearwater Revival and Led Zeppelin covered his songs and Bob Dylan really liked him. He's got a picture in the rock n roll hall of fame. He lived 1888-1949. His lyrics reflected political and racial disparities that he observed.
My experience with lead belly: I first heard of him listening to Bob Dylan's "Song to Woody". I heard "Goodnight Irene" when I visited the Rock n Roll hall of fame and decided it was high time I got listening to leadbelly, so I got this album.
Track 1. In New Orleans (House of the Rising Sun)
An almost joyful counterpart to the Animals' version I usually hear. Hauntingly beautiful lyrics make the song a classic and a keeper.
Rating: 5 apples
Track 2. The Bourgeoisie Blues
O the weary weary life of a black Marxist in middle America. The song is a little downbeat. I dig the message though. Best line is no doubt "Land of the brave. Home of the free. Don't wanna be mistreated by no bourgeoisie."
Rating:4 apples
Track 3. Goodnight, Irene
A beautiful country waltz. Classic tune that's worth keeping around.
Rating: 5 apples
Track 4. Looky, Looky Yonder - Black Betty - Yellow Women's Doorbells
No guitar on this track. Just voice and slaps on the ground or something. At some points it's just ol huddy making a froggy rasp into the mic. It's fast and catchy, but too slow and sparse to be fit for regular listening.
Rating: 2 apples
Track 5. Borrow Love And Go
Fast blues. Really short, so you can't really get into it, but a real catchy tune.
Rating: 4 apples
Track 6. De Kalb Blues
Apparently mr belly was down and out in De Kalb, Mississippi at some point. Pretty typical blues lyrics. "Hey there woman, see what you done done?" Not all that special
Rating: 3 apples
Track 7. John Hardy
Real catchy and fast. A moving story about a convicted murderer. "I've been the death of many a poor boy and now i'm ready to die."
Rating: 4 apples
Track 8. How Long
Slow, wailing blues. So repetitive that I usually just listen to the thump of the guitar strum. It's a good melody though.
Rating: 3 apples
Track 9. Roberta
Some neat vocal warbling on this track, and pleasant guitar riffs.
Rating: 3 apples
Track 10. Pretty Flower In Your Backyard
Moderately fast blues. I think this is a sexual metaphor of some sort. But maybe he's just singing about gardening. I don't know.
Rating: 3 apples
Track 11. The Gallis Pole
Angular and dark; also fast and energetic. Although it's in a major key, the subject matter (something about a gallows pole) is dark. Not particularly memorable for me and not spectacular enough of a great listening experience to warrant regular listening.
Rating: 3 apples
and...
a voice you'll recognize
Track 12.Where Did You Sleep Last Night
Also dark, a beautiful solemn melody and story .
Rating:3 apples
Track 13. Midnight Special
Fun, fast and well-written. Nostalgic melody; world-weary, but hopeful.
Rating: 5 apples
hard to find a leadbelly original, so
Track 14. John Hardy (Version 2)
The same song as earlier, but with an accordion. Not really needed
Rating: 2 apples
Track 15. When I Was A Cowboy
Also dark and beautiful. The melody are remembrances of a dark time. A noble, but rollicking elegy to the cowboy life.
Rating: 4 apples
Next: The Rolling Stones- Aftermath
p.s. Have you ever heard this?
The FACTS: This is kind of a "greatest hits" compilation of Leadbelly's finest folk songs. Creedence Clearwater Revival and Led Zeppelin covered his songs and Bob Dylan really liked him. He's got a picture in the rock n roll hall of fame. He lived 1888-1949. His lyrics reflected political and racial disparities that he observed.
My experience with lead belly: I first heard of him listening to Bob Dylan's "Song to Woody". I heard "Goodnight Irene" when I visited the Rock n Roll hall of fame and decided it was high time I got listening to leadbelly, so I got this album.
Track 1. In New Orleans (House of the Rising Sun)
An almost joyful counterpart to the Animals' version I usually hear. Hauntingly beautiful lyrics make the song a classic and a keeper.
Rating: 5 apples
Track 2. The Bourgeoisie Blues
O the weary weary life of a black Marxist in middle America. The song is a little downbeat. I dig the message though. Best line is no doubt "Land of the brave. Home of the free. Don't wanna be mistreated by no bourgeoisie."
Rating:4 apples
Track 3. Goodnight, Irene
A beautiful country waltz. Classic tune that's worth keeping around.
Rating: 5 apples
Track 4. Looky, Looky Yonder - Black Betty - Yellow Women's Doorbells
No guitar on this track. Just voice and slaps on the ground or something. At some points it's just ol huddy making a froggy rasp into the mic. It's fast and catchy, but too slow and sparse to be fit for regular listening.
Rating: 2 apples
Track 5. Borrow Love And Go
Fast blues. Really short, so you can't really get into it, but a real catchy tune.
Rating: 4 apples
Track 6. De Kalb Blues
Apparently mr belly was down and out in De Kalb, Mississippi at some point. Pretty typical blues lyrics. "Hey there woman, see what you done done?" Not all that special
Rating: 3 apples
Track 7. John Hardy
Real catchy and fast. A moving story about a convicted murderer. "I've been the death of many a poor boy and now i'm ready to die."
Rating: 4 apples
Track 8. How Long
Slow, wailing blues. So repetitive that I usually just listen to the thump of the guitar strum. It's a good melody though.
Rating: 3 apples
Track 9. Roberta
Some neat vocal warbling on this track, and pleasant guitar riffs.
Rating: 3 apples
Track 10. Pretty Flower In Your Backyard
Moderately fast blues. I think this is a sexual metaphor of some sort. But maybe he's just singing about gardening. I don't know.
Rating: 3 apples
Track 11. The Gallis Pole
Angular and dark; also fast and energetic. Although it's in a major key, the subject matter (something about a gallows pole) is dark. Not particularly memorable for me and not spectacular enough of a great listening experience to warrant regular listening.
Rating: 3 apples
and...
a voice you'll recognize
Track 12.Where Did You Sleep Last Night
Also dark, a beautiful solemn melody and story .
Rating:3 apples
Track 13. Midnight Special
Fun, fast and well-written. Nostalgic melody; world-weary, but hopeful.
Rating: 5 apples
hard to find a leadbelly original, so
Track 14. John Hardy (Version 2)
The same song as earlier, but with an accordion. Not really needed
Rating: 2 apples
Track 15. When I Was A Cowboy
Also dark and beautiful. The melody are remembrances of a dark time. A noble, but rollicking elegy to the cowboy life.
Rating: 4 apples
Next: The Rolling Stones- Aftermath
p.s. Have you ever heard this?
1st blood: Abbey Road
OK, I'm starting with something easy. An album I love and that most of the sentient world also loves. Abbey Road by The Beatles.
The facts: Abbey Road was recorded in 1969, and recording for it was interspersed with recording of the beatles' last album, Let it Be (originally titled Get Back). It was their second to last album recorded and one of their best selling studio albums, having gone 12x platinum. It was also number 3 on the iTunes album charts after iTunes finally acquired the rights to sell the Beatles catalog.
Opening thoughts: These are all ridiculously good songs. But If I rate all of them at 4 or 5 stars, they'll all pop up in my top rated playlist, which I'm hoping will be one of those experiences where every song is a smile and I don't feel like skipping any of them. And I can think of a few that won't always be smiles ("Sun King" and "Because" come to mind). I've logged somewhere in the triple digits in terms of play count on all the songs on Abbey Road, so many of these songs will probably be boring to hear too many times again. But I would like them to hold their own in my Top Rated playlist lest it become overrun by newer, less familiar tunes.
Track 1. Come Together
OH god. I've played this badly so many times in my basement that it's wonderful to hear the original. You can't help but sigh and squint at the contact coolness you get from the bassline. And the lyrics, even though they don't cohere as a poetic whole, they're written to be sung. It's like you can feel Mr. Lennon spitting in your ears from his eager consonants. And of course the eerily prescient "shoot me" of the opening groove.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 2. Something
The lustiness of this one has worn off over the years. And since I've known all the lyrics by heart for a while, the way they magically fit is not as amazing as it used to be. Everything about the song is spot-on and extremely clean, like all of this album. Maybe too clean.
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 3. Maxwell's Silver Hammer
The story on this one is so eerie it never gets old to sing along with "bang bang, maxwell's silver hammer came down upon his head, made sure that he was dead." Probably the most macabre beatles tune.
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 4. Oh Darling!
No doubt that this one's got a great groove, and is way more fun most doo-wop tunes with similar words. I gave this one 3 stars a while ago, just because I think the lyrics are so much like normal pop. But Paul really gives us some good screams on this track, and isn't that what we all really want?
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 5. Octopus' Garden
One of only a couple that Ringo penned, I think. And not as WTF? as Don't Pass Me By on The White Album. This track's got a sanguine childishness that's hard to find anywhere nowadays. The lyrics are like a kindergarten kid's homework assignment, but their cute honesty is what makes them work. And I love the groove.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 6. I want you/She's so heavy
More angular than most beatles stuff and real good on screams. The guitar solo is another masterpiece of George's understated stylings.
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 7. Here Comes The Sun
The one everybody'll sing along to. The "Sun, Sun, Sun, Here it comes" part always makes me want to join in. And you can probably only live in northern Britain or Syracuse, New york to really appreciate the sun coming out.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 8. Because
Alright, I've been really nice so far. That ends now. I don't know why getting turned on and getting high have to sound so dreary, and the harpsichord at the beginning sounds kinda like a dying goose to me. The melody to the chorus is pretty nice. So I won't just give it a 1.
Rating: 2 Apples
Track 9. You Never Give me Your Money
This always feel like you've read a whole book after the 4 minutes of the song is done. And I really like that we can have a happy song about being broke. Helps you think about the setbacks in life with a smile.
Rating 5 Apples
Track 10. Sun King
A really cool, chill tune, but kinda boring. Admittedly, if any contemporary band came up with a song like sun king, I'd probably 5apple it in a snap. But in the context of all these fast grooves with fun lyrics, this track comes off as the buzzkill of the Abbey Road party.
Rating: 3 Apples
Track 11. Mean Mr. Mustard
The best 1 minute song I could ever imagine.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 12. Polythene Pam
The 2nd best 1 minute song I could ever imagine.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 13: She Came In Through The Bathroom Window
This continues to groove and the medley continues to be awesome.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 14: Golden Slumbers
A really pretty melody. And those opening lines are killers. "Once there was a way to get back homeward". It sounds like it's a reprise of some other song, though. And isn't quite as smile-inducing as the rest of the album.
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 15: Carry That Weight
I'm surprised more people don't chant this at football games.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 16. The End
Doesn't really have a melody, or exceptionally good lyrics. It's a killer way to end the album if you're listening to it the whole way through. But as a single track? I think I'll bury it below the best-rated songs.
Rating: 3 Apples
Track 17. Her Majesty
Hitting on the queen of england is such a rascally thing to do. And some great folky strumming to go with it.
Rating: 5 Apples
Next up: The Absolute Best of Leadbelly
The facts: Abbey Road was recorded in 1969, and recording for it was interspersed with recording of the beatles' last album, Let it Be (originally titled Get Back). It was their second to last album recorded and one of their best selling studio albums, having gone 12x platinum. It was also number 3 on the iTunes album charts after iTunes finally acquired the rights to sell the Beatles catalog.
Opening thoughts: These are all ridiculously good songs. But If I rate all of them at 4 or 5 stars, they'll all pop up in my top rated playlist, which I'm hoping will be one of those experiences where every song is a smile and I don't feel like skipping any of them. And I can think of a few that won't always be smiles ("Sun King" and "Because" come to mind). I've logged somewhere in the triple digits in terms of play count on all the songs on Abbey Road, so many of these songs will probably be boring to hear too many times again. But I would like them to hold their own in my Top Rated playlist lest it become overrun by newer, less familiar tunes.
Track 1. Come Together
OH god. I've played this badly so many times in my basement that it's wonderful to hear the original. You can't help but sigh and squint at the contact coolness you get from the bassline. And the lyrics, even though they don't cohere as a poetic whole, they're written to be sung. It's like you can feel Mr. Lennon spitting in your ears from his eager consonants. And of course the eerily prescient "shoot me" of the opening groove.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 2. Something
The lustiness of this one has worn off over the years. And since I've known all the lyrics by heart for a while, the way they magically fit is not as amazing as it used to be. Everything about the song is spot-on and extremely clean, like all of this album. Maybe too clean.
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 3. Maxwell's Silver Hammer
The story on this one is so eerie it never gets old to sing along with "bang bang, maxwell's silver hammer came down upon his head, made sure that he was dead." Probably the most macabre beatles tune.
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 4. Oh Darling!
No doubt that this one's got a great groove, and is way more fun most doo-wop tunes with similar words. I gave this one 3 stars a while ago, just because I think the lyrics are so much like normal pop. But Paul really gives us some good screams on this track, and isn't that what we all really want?
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 5. Octopus' Garden
One of only a couple that Ringo penned, I think. And not as WTF? as Don't Pass Me By on The White Album. This track's got a sanguine childishness that's hard to find anywhere nowadays. The lyrics are like a kindergarten kid's homework assignment, but their cute honesty is what makes them work. And I love the groove.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 6. I want you/She's so heavy
More angular than most beatles stuff and real good on screams. The guitar solo is another masterpiece of George's understated stylings.
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 7. Here Comes The Sun
The one everybody'll sing along to. The "Sun, Sun, Sun, Here it comes" part always makes me want to join in. And you can probably only live in northern Britain or Syracuse, New york to really appreciate the sun coming out.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 8. Because
Alright, I've been really nice so far. That ends now. I don't know why getting turned on and getting high have to sound so dreary, and the harpsichord at the beginning sounds kinda like a dying goose to me. The melody to the chorus is pretty nice. So I won't just give it a 1.
Rating: 2 Apples
Track 9. You Never Give me Your Money
This always feel like you've read a whole book after the 4 minutes of the song is done. And I really like that we can have a happy song about being broke. Helps you think about the setbacks in life with a smile.
Rating 5 Apples
Track 10. Sun King
A really cool, chill tune, but kinda boring. Admittedly, if any contemporary band came up with a song like sun king, I'd probably 5apple it in a snap. But in the context of all these fast grooves with fun lyrics, this track comes off as the buzzkill of the Abbey Road party.
Rating: 3 Apples
Track 11. Mean Mr. Mustard
The best 1 minute song I could ever imagine.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 12. Polythene Pam
The 2nd best 1 minute song I could ever imagine.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 13: She Came In Through The Bathroom Window
This continues to groove and the medley continues to be awesome.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 14: Golden Slumbers
A really pretty melody. And those opening lines are killers. "Once there was a way to get back homeward". It sounds like it's a reprise of some other song, though. And isn't quite as smile-inducing as the rest of the album.
Rating: 4 Apples
Track 15: Carry That Weight
I'm surprised more people don't chant this at football games.
Rating: 5 Apples
Track 16. The End
Doesn't really have a melody, or exceptionally good lyrics. It's a killer way to end the album if you're listening to it the whole way through. But as a single track? I think I'll bury it below the best-rated songs.
Rating: 3 Apples
Track 17. Her Majesty
Hitting on the queen of england is such a rascally thing to do. And some great folky strumming to go with it.
Rating: 5 Apples
Next up: The Absolute Best of Leadbelly
Monday, January 3, 2011
Inaugural post
Hello internet,
Welcome to my blog. I wanted an excuse to write about music, so I made this. Every couple of days I'm going to listen to an album that's been sitting in my iTunes Library for a while unrated and talk about it. The discussion will probably range from my limited knowledge of pop music history to my experience with the artist or songs to the mood i was in when I rated it.
Hopefully you will find this interesting
or you're killing time and desperately want to read something you also know something about.
I pray you won't think i'm a hipster....
like this guy.
anyways, cheers! I start rating... NOW!
Welcome to my blog. I wanted an excuse to write about music, so I made this. Every couple of days I'm going to listen to an album that's been sitting in my iTunes Library for a while unrated and talk about it. The discussion will probably range from my limited knowledge of pop music history to my experience with the artist or songs to the mood i was in when I rated it.
Hopefully you will find this interesting
or you're killing time and desperately want to read something you also know something about.
I pray you won't think i'm a hipster....
like this guy.
anyways, cheers! I start rating... NOW!
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