Old Things That Are New To Me — Sick of Myself

Wow. Here’s an oldie. That is, a 90s power pop gem from the olden days when college radio didn’t completely suck and I actually listened nightly to 105.9 the Lazer from Lawrence, Kansas. In those middle school days of the early to mid-nineties, grunge was on its downslide.

But with power pop bands like Weezer and Matthew Sweet combining elements of crunchy garage rock and that California slacker vibe, it was still a good time to be a fan of popular rock music. And shockingly enough, it was PLAYED on the radio, so kids like me were able to, you know, hear it.

I had all but forgotten about Matthew Sweet and his single off of 100% Fun, “Sick Of Myself” until about two months ago, when some blog posted a live studio performance by Death Cab for Cutie covering this song. But once I refreshed my memory, I was reminded how much I enjoyed it when I used to own this album. It’s a perfect combination of simple chord changes, driving beat, sad sack outlook, and killer hooks that will have you singing along.

By today’s standard, it’s not experimental, challenging or even all that original, but who gives a crap? That does not diminish it’s status as a very agreeable rock confection; one I certainly wouldn’t turn off if it popped up on my car radio. That is if a) they played this sort of thing on the radio b) I had a car.

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Other random thought: Was this video really directed by Roman Coppola?

Old Things That Are New To Me — Cooking With Rockstars

I don’t know how I came across this website, or really how long its been around to be honest, but Cooking With Rockstars is great. It’s one of the more original music-related features I have seen in awhile.

The premise is pretty durn simple… talk to musicians or indie bands about what they like to eat or cook. Why go through the motions, asking the same tired questions to artists who’ve long grown bored waxing on about their influences or defending stylistic changes, when you can ask Jenny Lewis about her near-vegan dietary restrictions and what cities you can get great ‘fake meat?’ Or Jack Black about his famous ‘Dorito Burrito.’

Despite the lacking video quality — seemingly shot handheld with a cellphone or shitty digital camcorder (do we still call them camcorders? I’m out of touch) — it scores some points in having a great line up of interviews with the likes of Ben Gibbard, John Vanderslice, and Sam Beam of Iron & Wine (among quite a few more).

These days, since I’ve been co-producing a food show for NPR (Kitchen Window), I am becoming more drawn to food, food journalism and how and what people like to eat… So combining that with my love and obsession with music, this is a great little concept… I hope they keep it up.

Check out a past interview with Jack Black

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Old Things That Are New To Me — All the Young Dudes

Mott the Hoople's All the Young DudesFor years, this is one of those songs that I have heard a million times that I have always loved when it popped up on the radio, but I never knew what it was called, or for that matter who wrote it. After hearing it in a trailer for the upcoming quirky indie comedy Juno, I decided now’s the time to look it up.

It wasn’t hard, and in hindsight it’s a little embarrassing I didn’t know considering that “All the Young Dudes” is a Mott the Hoople song and written originally by David Bowie (it makes SO much sense now). Ironically I even have the albums it appears on — Mott the Hoople’s on the creatively titled All the Young Dudes and Bowie’s as a quick interlude on the film soundtrack to Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Whoops.

As the rock folk lore goes, Mott the Hoople was on the verge of breaking up in the early 70s due to poor sales and disappointing previous albums. That’s when Bowie contacted them and offered to produce their next album. He also delivered the song “All the Young Dudes,” which soon became a long overdue huge commercial hit for the band. It’s a great mixture of post-Beatles pop and pre-disco\pre-glam rock bombast with an insanely catchy anthemic refrain that will get stuck in your head forever.

Though Mott never quite reached the huge success of the Beatles, Bowie or T Rex, this is a classic album worthy of pulling out from time to time.

Take a listen to\watch these videos (via YouTube)…

Bowie:

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Mott the Hoople:

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Old Things That Are New to Me — Zachariah

While doing some research today on the new Bill Frisell\Matt Chamberlain project Floratone (more on that in a few days perhaps), I came across this video on Chamberlain’s MySpace page under his ‘influences.’ At first I thought it was a straight forward old Western film, until the gunman turn out to be none other than drummer Elvin Jones.

The apparently very surreal gunslinger film, called Zachariah was released in 1971 and featured the Jones as ‘Job Cain.’ While made in the early ’70s, it certainly seems to hearken back to the 50’s style hokey Western genre, starring mostly no-name actors. Well, except for Dick Van Patten who played a character named ‘The Dude.’ All I can say is that I’m amazed that jazz-funk and explosive drum solos even co-existed in the days of the Wild West.

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Sonny Rollins' Way Out West cashed in on the imagery of Wild West nostalgia of the '50s.One additional random thought… What’s the story on the 1950’s pop cultural love and goofy nostalgia for all things Western? Was there a reason it reached such a pinnacle in this era? Much like jazz, the Western genre has never quite reached the heights of mainstream popularity since those days of Gunsmoke, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance and all the various Saturday matinée serials.

Even the imagery of Sonny Rollins’ great album Way Out West jumped on that bandwagon. The album, for those interested, is something of a ‘lesser’ work by the ‘saxophone colossus’ (if you can say that about anything Rollins released) but is still a great jazz record.

Old Things That Are New (Again) To Me — Down In a Hole

REDISCOVERING ALICE IN CHAINS..and the DIMINISHING RETURNS of GRUNGE BANDS

Rediscovering Alice in Chains

The other day, when I came across a Ryan Adams performance of Alice in Chains’ song ‘Down in a Hole,’ memories began flooding back to when I was younger and how much I listened to this music. Though I mostly look fondly at this era, a recent review for the new Nine Inch Nails record in Paste Magazine opened with a notion that got me thinking. They pondered, “Has any genre aged more poorly than grunge?”

The more I thought about it, the popularity and commercial peak of the alternative rock of the early 90s, that Seattle sound, in many ways set alternative music off course for the remainder of the decade. More and more, the cliche trappings of the genre — overwrought throaty vocals, the crunched wash of guitars played through Marshall stacks, the long haired drummers pounding with heavy metal gusto — are growing increasingly out of favor especially, as Paste put it, “in this era of effete rock stars.” Obviously, as time goes by, there will be gradual changes of taste, but has the impact of grunge bands has experienced diminished returns?

I often joke about longing for when the 90s return to favor so that I can finally pull all my flannels and Stone Temple Pilot tshirts from the bottoms of boxes in the basement (mind you I was barely in middle school then). Yet I honestly cannot imagine anyone actually wanting to go back to those oversized relics. Similarly, it’s hard to imagine many new artists revisiting the same tropes.

Can we blame grunge bands like Pearl Jam for the sins of the late 90s music? And why are hard rocker bands still dressing like this?

Up until the most recent indie rock explosion of bands like Arcade Fire, Modest Mouse Death Cab For Cutie, and The Shins breaking through, mainstream (not indie) rock music was still stuck in that brooding post grunge pit of despair. Certainly we cannot blame Eddie Vedder (or can we?) for later-day and lesser talents such as Creed, Staind, Lifehouse and all sorts of other dreck that still populates modern rock radio today (do these bands even exist anymore? Actually, I have no idea, so I might be completely off base on my whole argument).

Fans had to retreat to those underground and independent labels, scour your weird friend’s collections or dig through stacks for the quality indie rock (Pavement, Guided By Voices and so on and on and on…). And in my case, I devoted much of my attention to jazz as a savior of music as an art form and not a commercial venture brought to you by Budweiser and the Mattress Warehouses.

Anyway, while it’s not my place to give the final verdict on where grunge music (or any music from the 90s) fits into the realm of rock history, I think the reason grunge still induces some groans is perhaps because much of the worst mainstream rock hasn’t evolved much from that era. Perhaps we simply don’t yet have enough distance to filter the good from the bad.

In the span of that ‘twenty-year cycle’ fans and consumers can gain some wisdom and perspective on music, art and even fashion. And yet I certainly can appreciate that, at least in my mind, the creative height of grunge was probably the last time artists in the MTV radio mainstream were simultaneously critically praised…at least until the last few years.

Its interesting to note that of the big four from that era, only Pearl Jam remains (which is more a testament to Vedder and company’s devotion to its fans and endless touring). And these days they aren’t so much grunge anymore as a modern version of straight up classic rock. But where is everyone else? Almost everyone else has broken up, moved on to other bands or even more unfortunately, died off. Suffice to say, if the lingering legacy of grunge are bands of the Nickelback ilk, perhaps then the true art of the music died when Kurt Cobain did. But that’s not to say that there weren’t songs that still hold up to the tests of time.

Which brings us back to Alice in Chains. Alice in Chains’ popularity never quite reached the heights of their peers, and like Nirvana, their careers (and hopes of a reunion) were cut short when Staley died of an overdose in 2002. But as we qualify the lasting legacy of grunge, Alice in Chains will always be in that conversation.

Peaking around the same time in Seattle, the band was lumped in with those artists, yet probably owed more to heavy metal than classic rock or punk like Pearl Jam or Nirvana. Alice in Chains was definitely harder edged and thicker in sound but singer Layne Staley’s distinctive voice pierced through the often murky layers of crunchy guitars. Staley’s voice was quite influential as was his passionately personal, pain-filled, yet timeless songwriting.

As such, it will be interesting in years to come to see what artists emerge that attribute their sound to growing up with grunge bands in the same ways bands now are taking claim on Gang of Four and Joy Division. It could be that perhaps guys like Adams, or Death Cab’s Ben Gibbard performing Nirvana’s ‘All Apologies,’ by putting their own spin on the song, could bring attention to some of the great songwriting of the era and rediscover the potential of these songs. ‘Down In a Hole,’ much like Adams’ own rendition of Oasis’ ‘Wonderwall’ displays a great reinterpretation of a timeless classic. Or at very least, provides a few minutes of music listening.

What is the legacy of grunge to the pantheon of music? Guess we’ll have to wait to find out…until then those old STP shirts will have to remain in those boxes.

Check out the Ryan Adams performance here and below the Alice in Chains’ live performance from MTV Unplugged.

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Newish old things that are new to me: Look Around You

I love stumbling onto brilliant things that I never knew existed. Yesterday during my daily internet trolling session, I ran into this series of videos that resembled the old 80’s school instructional videos I remember as a student. They have that style down to the “T” and the complete and utter missinformation that they are basing this science on is fantastic. So to relate to music we can start with Synthesizer Patel:

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And another favorite on video games:

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I absolutely love the synth interludes they use, the terrible experiments, and the delivery. If you look closely you can see some of your favorite comedic actors, i.e. , and from “Shaun of the Dead” and (the first two) from the awesome fake trailer “Don’t” from the recent Rodriguez/Tarantino release “Grindhouse”. Also is Olivia Colman who made a brief appearance on the UK version of The Office.

Enjoy!

UPDATE: I just found the entire music episode, check it out here:

Old Things That Are New To Me — Whole Wide World

This past Thanksgiving when in Kansas City I took in a movie with my family; a surprisingly good and quirky romantic comedy of sorts with Will Ferrell called “Stranger Than Fiction.” The offbeat, Charlie Kauffman-esque, fourth wall-breaking plot told the story of a straight-laced and boring man (Will Ferrell) who began to hear a voice narrating his very ordinary and uninspiring life. As he slowly began to realize the narrator was an author writing his story he begins to unravel and find ways to instill new things into his plot line to prevent his ultimate fate.

In one particular scene, Ferrell sits nervously on the couch of Maggie Gyllenhaal’s apartment trying to show his romantic sincerity. Revealing that a secret dream of his was to play guitar, he picks up an all-too-coincidentally placed acoustic next to him and plays the one song he knows.

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The whole film up to that point was backed by the music of the boozy indie-pop of Spoon, so I figured this song was by them. Eventually Ferrell’s version fades out and a Clash-like version (the original) fades in. It was such a catchy, simple pop punk perfection I left the theatre humming the song so I wouldn’t forget.

Afterwards I spent a good part of the afternoon figuring out the song was titled “Whole Wide World” by an artist named Wreckless Eric, something of a 70s Brit Punk outfit that had a few albums and faded away.

You know how it seems that once you find something, it then becomes more apparent that that it was in front of your eyes the entire time? The other day I found an old live performance of Elvis Costello and the Attractions from 1977. Buried about eight songs deep into the setlist? “Whole Wide World.”

Take a listen to that great performance:

[audio:https://hellocomein.com/soundbox/ElvisCostello_WholeWideWorld.mp3]

I always love when a film introduces me to some old obscure song or artist I had previously overlooked and use it in a great cinematic way. So treat this as a lesson in romance… to impress, pull out old your rickety acoustic guitar and strum out that long lost classic tune and their hearts will melt.

UPDATE: Here is the Wreckless Eric’s version of the song:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUFL8WSxTgY[/youtube]

Old Things That Are New To Me — Okkervil River

Okay so they’re not really that old. I am behind the curve, but that is sort of the point of my occasional confessional “old things that are new to me.” So beyond being aware of their name for awhile, I think I am really only hearing Okkervil River for the first time recently. So when a remastered “deluxe” edition of their 2005 album Black Sheep Boy came across my desk the other day I decided to give them a go. Between the great artwork on the packaging and the opening title track I was hooked.

Sort of a mixture of summery indie pop and darker, Neil Young-inspired alt-country rock, this band, led by singer-songwriter Will Sheff is able to be infectiously melodic, emotionally visceral and yet still rock out with solid authority. Despite coming to them later than most, gotta say they’re pretty great.

Here is the video for the second track on the album, “For Real.” Its not my favourite song on the album by any means…in fact it sort of is the one radio-friendly, made for climatic titular scene at the end of a Greys Anatomy episode, but still not bad. I wish they had other songs I could more easily link to. Alas…
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Old Things That Are New(ish) To Me — I’ve Got a Feeling

I’ve heard this song a million times. It’s of course the Beatles from Let It Be. I once rented the movie when I was in middle school but haven’t seen it in years. Somehow a new song I’ve been writing has a bit of this vibe and I found myself humming the melody to it over the instrumental tracks.

Catching this one brief clip put me in the mood to watch this groundbreaking behind the scenes film of the Beatles working on the record (and subsequently bickering and breaking up in the process.) This kind of drama would give Wilco a run for their money. But behind all that drama is some amazing music played live on a rooftop, back when playing on a rooftop was still novel.  Still can’t top the Beatles.
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Old Things that are New to Me — Christmas Time for the Jews…

Not headed home for holiday time this year due to work which isn’t so bad except for one thing: Christmas time can be pretty quiet and dull when most people leave town or spend time with their families.  So while watching an SNL rerun from last year, just saw this pretty great TV Funhouse song:  Christmas Time for the Jews.

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This song perfectly captures all the glorious things that happen when all the Jews run the town, while the X-Masers are nestled in bed with their sugar plums and calling birds.