Saturday, February 27, 2010
The Beatles - "Don't Bother Me" (1963)
The rhythm guitar is really nice on this - perhaps a bit of a precursor to the rhythm part on "I Feel Fine."
Monday, February 8, 2010
Klaatu - "Dear Christine" (1978)
Simplicity emerging out of progressivism, not as a retro style but as structural pristinity.
With only two verses, this song's nearly four minute duration comes primarily from repetitions of its beautiful chorus.
The entire Klaatu catalog (CDs, LP, and mp3s) on BullseyeSongs.com.
With only two verses, this song's nearly four minute duration comes primarily from repetitions of its beautiful chorus.
The entire Klaatu catalog (CDs, LP, and mp3s) on BullseyeSongs.com.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
The Paley Brothers - "Too Good to Be True" (1978)
Here, it's the guitars that turn a fairly simple power pop song into a bit of a tour de force. Really unique and pleasant mixture of parts and tones, right through to the closing.
"Too Good to Be True" on Lala.
"Too Good to Be True" on Lala.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Shoes - "Too Late" (1979)
Such a period piece, and a very nice composition made great by the unusual vocal harmonies in the chorus.
"Too Late" on Amazon.
"Too Late" on Amazon.
Friday, January 22, 2010
R. Stevie Moore - "Melbourne" (1976)
After the intro, a pleasant enough melange of sounds. First diversion is cut off after two bars and ends up functioning as a closing for the first (post-intro) section. When it comes back at 1:40 after the repeat, these same materials blossom into some kind of bold transcendence.
"Melbourne" on Lala.
"Melbourne" on Lala.
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Forever Amber - "Silly Sunshine" (1968)
True British Invasion-style compositional richness, but from 1968. Very moving to hear that essence, already lost at the time, preserved and delivered so beautifully.
From the album The Love Cycle.
From the album The Love Cycle.
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Bobak, Jons, and Malone - "On a Meadow-Lea" (1970)
The yin softness of a contained space. Graceful, even noble, movement ("Riding on a meadow-lea") within that space. Joy not just in light but in shadow.
"On a Meadow-Lea" on Lala.
"On a Meadow-Lea" on Lala.
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Os Mutantes - "Desculpe, Babe" (1970)
Whatever genres this song may be said to evoke, it is an instance of bull's-eye compositional archetypicality: the great triumph of musicians managing in precisely that archetypicality to perhaps, in a small but profound way, say something for a whole culture, a whole people.
"Desculpe, Babe" on Lala.
"Desculpe, Babe" on Lala.
Thursday, December 31, 2009
The Pretty Things - "She Says Good Morning" (1967)
Not only does the masculine impulse of rock and roll manifest here clearly and strongly, but never, perhaps, was it so successfully aligned with the genre's metamorphosing predilections toward beauty.
"She Says Good Morning" on Amazon.
"She Says Good Morning" on Amazon.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Pink Floyd - "The Scarecrow" (1967)
Might be the best of Barrett's early lyrics with its coherence, the cadence of the wordplay in the verses, and the sheer poetry of the single line (non-rhyming) chorus. Arrangement is very pleasant: sparse, but also very rich when the two acoustic guitars enter at the end.
"The Scarecrow" on Lala.
"The Scarecrow" on Lala.
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Blossom Toes - "When the Alarm Clock Rings" (1967)
Great arrangement carries the listener through the verses into that beautiful chorus.
"When the Alarm Clock Rings" at Anthology Recordings
"When the Alarm Clock Rings" at Anthology Recordings
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Michael Angelo - "Bonjour Mr. VIP" (1977)
There is both strength and ease in the way Michael Angelo moved from style to style, keeping them all within his aesthetic. That he managed to accomplish this even with early Dylan was a great achievement!
"Bonjour Mr. VIP" at Anthology Recordings
"Bonjour Mr. VIP" at Anthology Recordings
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
The Beatles - "For No One" (1966)
Only six chords in the whole song, but still managing not only to mix a real sense of diatonicism with a bVII chord, but also an unusual modulation: the tonicizing of the ii chord in the chorus (returning so simply and easily to the home key by means of its dominant chord).
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Brenton Wood - "I'm the One Who Knows" (1967)
Rhyming resourcefulness, everyday language creatively fitting melodies, melodies perhaps even expanding (without stretching too far) to accommodate the language. Masterful execution.
"I'm the One Who Knows" currently available on this CD.
"I'm the One Who Knows" currently available on this CD.
Sunday, December 13, 2009
George Harrison - "Dream Away" (1982)
Something characteristic about the melodic line and the harmonic progression but in a song style seemingly unique in his oeuvre, with real compositional economy and propulsion. If the greatest thing about this song is not the chorus, it is surely the bridge, which twice plots its way cleverly through seven lines of text. The greatest Beatle moment of this period.
"Dream Away" on Amazon.
"Dream Away" on Amazon.
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