Summer Shuffle

… over a two-week period where I never stopped running around. Still no sign of things slowing down. Out to LA on Thursday for only three days. A whirlwind. Here’s the music that’s been in my ears over the last two weeks. From Charlie Rich to Charli XCX. As is right and proper.

“Amazing Grace” – Charlie Rich. I’ve been on a Charlie Rich binge lately. I can’t get past his “Amazing Grace” at the moment. When Charlie Rich sings, he’s “hot”, but also with a deep strain of almost … existential melancholy … I don’t know what that mixture is but it is uniquely his and I love it.

“Wonderful” – Brian Wilson, from SMILE. Talk about existential melancholy. Nobody does it better. It’s a heart PANG rather than a heart CRACK.

“Delta Dawn” – Tanya Tucker. This Shuffle is already one for the books.

“Under the Boardwalk” – The Rolling Stones. This is truly surreal.

“Hey Porter” – Johnny Cash. The guitar has that “rhythm of the tracks” that Keith Richards talks about in his wonderful book, the rhythm of rhythm & blues, and the importance of trains.

“I Never Want to Let You Down” – Lenny Kravitz. He’s so sexy, so talented. I’ve been “in” since the first album and I’ll follow him anywhere.

“Dum Dum” – Brenda Lee. I get such a kick out of her. One of the biggest stars of her day. Now … almost forgotten. Yes, I know, to music people she’s remembered. But out there in the culture? Is she still there anywhere? I have a ton of her stuff and, to be honest, her ballads often sound all alike. Not her vocals, but the background arrangement. You can tell that she was a hit, and so the powers that be were like, “Okay, don’t change a thing! Keep doing the same thing!” When she starts to rock, or swing, and roughs her voice up in that famous way of hers … to me, her stuff comes alive in a profound way that still feels fresh and fun. A #1-selling artist. Who set records not broken until Madonna. Her “female perspective” (yuk) is one of her defining characteristics: a girl entering the boy-land of rock ‘n’ roll. Her songs are not just songs about love, there are songs about sexual urgency, need, desire. But it’s all from the brief pre-pill era in the 1960s, that feel more like the 1950s in terms of conformity … the 60s were far worse for women (at least in terms of cultural representation) than the 1950s were. It’s like the culture snapped back into place after the Elvis Explosion in the 50s, and re-asserted its primacy, but in even more conservative ways. But the sexual revolution had already started- the pill would be the final nail in the coffin – and in the meantime, the 60s had a blend of prudishness and prurience that looks truly psychotic now. Brenda Lee presented an unthreatening persona. A sweet woman, petite (understatement), wearing big poodle skirts, saddle shoes, and singing with a huge voice. But she wasn’t, say, Joan Jett. Or even Wanda Jackson, earlier, who was the real pioneer. I don’t know, I’m sure there are people who have written about “The Brenda Lee Thing”. She seems like an intermediary figure … a person who would not have found the fame she had if she had started even 5 or 6 years later … and certainly wouldn’t have found fame if she had started 5 or 6 years earlier. In a way, she was part of the mainstreaming of rock ‘n’ roll. Turning the grease-bomb sex-mad rebellion of those Southern country boys into something white kids in suburbia could enjoy and that their parents would approve of. And yet there’s subversiveness in her stuff too. The willingness to admit girls want sex, have desires, etc. She’s not just singing sentimental ballads. I mean, listen to the lyrics of “Dum Dum.” It could be sung by a man. She’s pushing the boy to go farther, even though his mom is in the next room. Great! And then there’s the voice. That is not a “pretty” voice. It’s big, it’s tough, it gets rough (in a way that is still thrilling), and it can SWING. This is not a “good girl” voice. It’s something else entirely. I love her a lot, in case that wasn’t clear.

“Thirteen” – Big Star. One of the best songs about adolescence ever written. And it’s thirteen-year-old life. Not sixteen/seventeen-year-old life. It’s the tiny breath before the real craziness of teenage-life begins. It’s beautiful and poignant. And of course these boys hailed from Memphis.

“Tuckered Out” – Jackie Brenston. Recorded at Sun Studio. I love the guy-chorus doing call and response. It sounds like Cab Calloway’s stuff. And it all has that indelible Sun sound. What IS it about that drab nonentity of a room that makes a sound like that? Was it just the vibe of the people who worked there? Or Sam Philliips’ interest in the recording artists just being themselves, finding themselves, taking risks? But there’s something in the acoustics. Slap-back? That’s not really happening here. It’s only a piano, as far as I can tell, and then Jackie and the boys in the background. It’s maybe just that you get the sense that this is a moment in time, a live take, those guys in that room at that particular time … and so this is a time capsule, a “moment” captured. That was what it was like in the room, and you can’t manufacture that, or put it together in post-production. It’s spontaneous.

“Bosom of Abraham” – Elvis Presley. Instead of the Jordanaires, doing backup for this 1960s gospel album, Elvis had The Stamps. Their harmonies were a little different, and there was a little more “church” in their sound. Elvis is lit up working with them, you can tell. Something is unleashed in him in those mid-60s gospel tunes, that carried on into the 70s, when the Stamps, of course, toured with him.

“Home” – The Foo Fighters. A beautiful simple heart-crack ballad.

“02” – Pimp Fu. Yet another talented O’Malley. My cousin Tim. An actor. A rapper. He recorded this entire album in the basement-apartment he shared in Brooklyn with my brother. Brendan would go off to work, come home, and Tim would have recorded 5 songs in his absence, these crazy innovative hilarious songs. My brother appears on some of the tracks, including this one. O’Malleys Rule.

“Future Sex/Love Sound” – Justin Timberlake. Incredibly hot. Sex distilled.

“Sittin Pretty” – Brendan Benson. I keep singing his praises in these Shuffles hoping to pass on the word. He first came to my attention because of that old iPod commercial with the catchy tune “I Don’t Know What I’m Looking For.” Yes, I bought an iPod because of that commercial. But I also thought; “Who the hell is that singing? Is that a jingle?” Well, no, it wasn’t. Brendan Benson is a folk singer, really … that’s his milieu – but he writes great pop songs. “Hits” that nobody has heard of. I have all of his stuff now, because of that one damn iPod commercial, and I love him. He’s prolific. I love prolific people, especially if they maintain quality. He’s an artist. He writes songs, he plays small gigs, he loves what he does, it’s so obvious.

“Papa, Can You Hear Me?” – Lea Michele, from Glee, singing the song from Yentl. Gorgeous song, with melancholy minor chords, by Michel Legrand with lyrics by Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman. Babs wasn’t messing around. I admire Michele for her courage in singing quite a few Barbra numbers on Glee, an artist who obviously means a lot to her, an artist who is so unique and so talented that it’s almost a fool’s journey to “cover” her stuff. But Lea has the pipes. Not Barbra’s pipes, because those are once-in-a-century pipes, but she can do it. She can pull it off without strain.

“I Don’t Know What You’ve Got (But It’s Got Me)” – Little Richard – so bluesy, so slow, exquisite with a buildup of hysterical emotion. Church/Sex: the same thing.

“End of My Journey” – Sam Cooke and the Soul Stirrers. Talk about “church”! I love Sam Cooke’s pop hits. He had a gift as a lyricist, and an understanding of the “hook” that is unparalleled. But boy, there’s something about the Soul Stirrers stuff!

“One-Sided Love Affair” – Elvis Presley. Recorded at Sun in the epochal year 1956. LISTEN to what Elvis does here. It borders on parody. Already! How quickly it happened: his style, his awareness of how the style worked, his awareness of himself as a phenomenon. He was aware of everything. This song really swings, and I love the bridge, with the boogie-woogie piano, Elvis yelling “Yeah!” etc. But what is so amazing to me about this track is his vocals. He’s 21 years old. He’s one year into his career, basically. His fame is exploding but it was just the beginning. If you want to hear why Elvis was weird and unlike anybody else … listen to this track and just listen to his vocals. They’re hilarious! He’s jutting and grunting and pushing his voice into eddying and flowing fits/starts … swooping down low and shimmying it about like a burlesque act … all harbingers of his early style, and done with a joy and a pleased-with-himself feeling that was part of the overpowering reality of his presence. He turns a boring song (in my opinion) into a tour de force of sexual expression, but with a very light touch, almost feather-light, so that it’s all fun as opposed to not fun. The arrangement is rockabilly, obviously. But the way he SINGS it is like a backwoods preacher in a tent in the middle of a field on a rainy Sunday morning. Listen to what he does on “Fair exchange and there’s no robbery …” What? Where did that come from? What I am trying to say is that the choices he makes, how out there they are, how instinctive, feel like they come from someone with 20 years of live-performance experience. He knew who he was. He could do no wrong. Everything he tried worked (at least in 1956).

“TV Show” – Everclear. Maybe the main reason I respond to them so strongly is their chord changes? I don’t know. It’s a mystery to me. But something primal happens when I listen to them. The songs put me into a zone. It’s not the lyrics. It’s the sound.

“With a Little Help From My Friends” – The Beatles. When The Beatles took over my grade school (years after they broke up, of course), this song touched us so much because it was about friends and we were 10 years old and we all loved each other. The drug message went right over our heads. We would swing on the swings singing this song at the top of our lungs. I looked like this, just so you get the full picture.

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“See You Tonight” – Green Day. From ¡Dos!. They know how to write a song, that’s for sure. This is Everly-Brothers-ish.

“Teo Torriatte (Let Us Cling Together)” – Queen. From Day at the Races. Freddie Mercury at his melodramatic operatic best. I miss him to this day.

“Sexed Up” – the great Robbie Williams. The man is a hit-maker, a superstar, one of my favorite performers today. Keep on keeping on, Robbie. So often his songs start as what might seem like conventional ballads … and then they go somewhere else. “Sexed Up” is one of those songs. Gorgeous.

“O Dana” – Big Star. Okay, so perhaps only people well versed in Film Twitter will remember this ridiculous-ness. There’s a film “critic” who has a very popular site (bafflingly so), who is a vicious misogynist, horrible writer, and, generally, a terrible terrible person. I don’t follow him or read him because I find him toxic, but I can’t avoid him because Film Twitter gossips about him all the time, so his name shows up in my feed. Maybe last year, he wrote some piece – and for some reason – whatever movie he was writing about referenced “Big Star” (maybe they were on the soundtrack), and he sneered, “Never heard of them.” His point being: If I haven’t heard of them, they are irrelevant. His readership is (in many cases) as horrible as he is, although a lot of people seem to just read him now to give him shit. Even his loyal fanboys were embarrassed for him in “Big Star”-gate, and the comments section filled up with: “Uhm … Big Star were kind of a big deal, dude. Still are.” He was lambasted for his ignorance everywhere. He was made fun of. (You reap what you sow.) And instead of being like, “Oops, never heard of them, my bad” he dug his heels in with a “Listen, if I’ve never heard of them, then clearly they were not that big a deal.” It was RIDICULOUS. Imagine thinking something wasn’t a big deal just because you haven’t heard of them. And then REITERATING that point when you were educated by literally everyone – even your defenders – who told you, “Big Star is not some unknown little band, hate to break it to you.” Imagine the ego. I’m embarrassed for him, in general. If you don’t know who I’m talking about, 1. consider yourself lucky and 2. you’re not missing out on anything. He’s worthless.

“Brennan on the Moor” – The Clancy Brothers & Tommy Makem. Classic Clancy Brothers. Folk music, but angrily political. Pioneers in that respect. Bob Dylan was inspired by them. Everyone was. Me? This is the music of my childhood.

“Love You To” – The Beatles. Eerie. Very very druggy. Like being in a cult that involves taking LSD. Music meant to drown your critical thinking skills.

“Blackwater’s Side”- The Clancy Brothers & Tommy Makem. I’m proud of my heritage. I was seeped in it from the moment I was born, and I’m glad of it.

“The American Ruse” – the rocking and ferocious MC5. Great lyrics.

“Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)” – The Rolling Stones. Off of Goats Head Soup. Those horns! Those backup singers! Very very funky, with very dark lyrics.

“I’ll Be Waiting” – Adele. She kicks it old-school. Diva.

“When Sin Stops Love Begins” – Waylon Jennings. Wow. This is from his first recording session ever. Buddy Holly, his mentor and friend, did the arrangement. Amazing to hear this. A saxophone break.

“Tymps (The Sick In The Head Song)” – Fiona Apple. She’s so bizarre. I love her.

“Let Me Go” – The Rolling Stones. From Emotional Rescue. Good old-fashioned rock ‘n’ roll, with that edge of depravity they brought to everything. I mean, rock ‘n’ roll was already depraved, but they brought it to the next level. I love tuning out Mick and listening to what the other guys are doing, especially Keith.

“All Apologies” – Nirvana. A perfect song.

“Steadfast, Loyal and True” – Elvis Presley, from King Creole. A cappella, with background from The Jordannaires. It’s a school anthem, and he’s forced to sing it in the film by Walter Matthau, because that’s how things happen in Hollywood.

“Rehab” – Amy Winehouse. Yes, it’s chilling to listen to this now, considering what ended up happening. But still: the song still shocks, outside of that autobiographical context. It’s still bold, crazy, and real “fuck you” rock star stuff. Disturbing? Yes. Self-destructive? Sure. But if you’re looking for rock stars to be role models, you’ve got some serious problems. She’s honest and fucked up and adorable. I miss her.

“Cannonball” – The Breeders. Talk about missing people. I miss these broads. I miss all those broads from that era, before women had to be “sexy” in order to get radio play. These girls were not sexy. They were musicians. They wore cargo pants. They drank beer onstage and smashed shit up. I love them.

“That’s Why God Made the Radio” – The Beach Boys. So romantic. And melodramatic! Hits the spot, I tell you.

“Act Naturally” – The Beatles. Hilarious. My cousin Liam killed this one one night in karaoke.

“I’d Do Anything”- from Oliver!. It’s hard for me to talk about Oliver! without going into childhood reminiscences. Oliver! was my first obsession, although there had been clues from my earliest days that I would be an obsessive person. (Kimba, the White Lion. Orphan Train. Fred Astaire. But all of these were just rehearsals for what came over me with Oliver! It was painful. And it had no end. NO END. How perfect, then, that smack-dab in the middle of the obsession, I got to play Artful Dodger in the school play (I was 11), and my partner-in-obsession, Betsy, played Nancy. I was LIVIN’ THE DREAM.

“Sexx Laws” – Beck. Awesome. The lyrics! The orchestration is hilarious. Banjo closing it out? What?

“Got a Lot o’ Living To Do” – Elvis Presley, from Loving You. This is the one with the almost-parody-line-reading: “Come on, bab-eh!” This has a lot of joy and innocence and verve. Just re-watched Loving You. I love it. It’s also one of the only times – except for childhood photos – where Elvis wears blue jeans. It looks weird. Elvis hated jeans.

“Don’t Be Cruel” – Elvis Presley. Mere words cannot express how huge this song was in 1956. It was released with “Heartbreak Hotel” on the other side. And that, as they say, was THAT. The world went batshit insane.

“Lean On Me” – the Glee cast covering George Harrison’s song. I like it best when they re-imagine these well-known songs in a high-school-chorus way, as opposed to just covering it obediently. Their “Rehab” is a perfect example, which has a marching-band arrangement. Anyway, this is beautiful, with layered harmonies. Very CHURCH.

“You Ain’t Been True To Me” – Faye Adams. Do NOT fuck with Faye. She will call you OUT.

“Hair of the Dog” – Mike Viola. So sad it’s almost unbearable. Are you aware of Mike Viola? If not, you should be. His band is the Candy Butchers, but he does a lot of solo stuff too. Great songwriter.

“Nothing Ordinary” – Lucius. These women are so fantastic. Her voice! There’s an Annie Lennox quality to it: its range, its strength, its eerie-ness. I only have this one album but I am in love with it.

“Leave a Light On” – Garth Brooks. Oh, Garth. My love of old-school country – Waylon, Willie, Merle, Dolly and Porter, George – well, I can get why people think Garth Brooks – and what he signified – ruined country music. What is the current attitude towards Garth? Anyone know? There were a couple of his songs that I loved enough that I attended the concert he gave in Central Park. It was INSANE. It was also FREE. And he brought onto the stage the “man who most inspired me” … and out came Don McLean, and they sang “American Pie” together – which, seriously, made me lose my mind. I grew up with Don McLean. As I’ve written before, in kindergarten show and tell, other kids brought in their gerbils and their Barbies. I stood up and recited the entirety of “American Pie.” I’d never seen Don McLean live. I had no idea he was going to be there. So it was thrilling.

“Endless Journey” – Bill Whelan, composed for Riverdance on Broadway. I admit it, it’s thrilling. Plus sentimental bullshit. Both. I saw Riverdance multiple times. Not crazy about its later incarnations, which were so multi-culti that the Irish-ness of it started dissipating. Yes, yes, we are all one, got it, but let’s have more step-dancing, please.

“Wednesday” – Tori Amos, from Scarlet’s Walk. I go back and forth on her. I listened to Little Earthquakes so much that I can’t really listen to it anymore. I saw her play at the Park West in Chicago right before Little Earthquakes came out. It was just her and her piano. The show was amazing. I caught her right before she exploded. Since then, I have followed her. I have loved some of her stuff (less and less, though), and been baffled by others, and annoyed by her prosody and purposefully confusing pronunciation. I’m not as “into” her ballads. I like her pissed and sexual and funny. Those were my favorite songs off of Little Earthquakes, too. I like this song.

“Come On Girl” – the aforementioned Mike Viola. He’s wonderful. Incapable of writing a boring or stock song. His influences are clear and he has done many tribute-like albums: The Beatles, Paul McCartney’s solo stuff (he and a couple of other people did an entire concert of Paul’s solo stuff – it’s on iTunes, it’s great!), ELO (he did an ELO-inspired album with a couple of friends). He wrote the songs for Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, as well as the songs for That Thing You Do (although they fucked him on the credit for that one) … so you can see his wide and all-encompassing interest.

“Within You Without You” – The Beatles. They came a long way from “Help!”, huh? It’s like the whole culture just jumped off the diving board into nothingness. Such a short time span.

“Candy” – Big Maybelle. What a VOICE. And love the lazy romantic horns behind her. The whole vibe. Romantic.

“You Don’t Love Me (You Don’t Care)” – Bo Diddley. So hot.

“Star Spangled Banner” – Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock. Epic.

“Come What May” – Elvis Presley. Not very well-known. I love it. Recorded in 1966, in the middle of the movie years. There’s energy and joy here. The hand-claps, the horns, and Elvis himself.

“Singin’ in the Rain” – Doris Day. Perfection.

“The Road So Far” – from Supernatural: The Musical. This comes up and I start laughing out loud. I’ve watched “Fan Fiction” so many times that I have every edit, every cut, every shot, in my head.

“Dear Prudence” – Dana Fuchs, Evan Wood, Jim Sturgess & T.V. Carpio – from Julie Taymor’s Across the Universe. It’s a favorite Beatles tune of mine, and this is eerie and bizarre … with gorgeous harmonies.

“I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow” – The Soggy Bottom Boys. I think this is off the great O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack. I wish everyone would cover this song. It can take infinite interpretations.

“I’ll Know It When I See It” – Bleu. This guy is unbelievable. I went to see him in November 2012 by myself. I was suicidal that week. I am not exaggerating when I say I’m lucky to still be top-side after a week like that.

“Just Another Lie” – Brenda Lee. Do not lie to Miss Brenda. Do not do it.

“The Man That Got Away” – the exquisite Audra McDonald

“If We Never Meet Again” – Elvis Presley. I love all the Elvis-es, but God, I love Jesus-loving Elvis.

“I See a River” – the rousing production number that closes out Urinetown. My family went to see it on Broadway – all of us together, and I can’t remember the occasion – we were all adults, but there we all were, Mum, Dad, and the rest of us. It was a hilarious afternoon at the theatre. It’s a good memory.

“Chinese Food” – Pat McCurdy. A live recording and this must be from Milwaukee Summer Fest, because the crowd sounds huge. I performed with him at Milwaukee Summer Fest, one of the funnest experiences of my whole life. Here’s a picture of me backstage during Summer Fest. Slightly NSFW. I’ll just leave that there with no comment. Because what else is there to say. It says it all about what was going on and how insanely fun that whole experience was.

“On Horseback” – great Irish fiddler Eileen Ivers.

“On the Mend” – Foo Fighters. One of their lovely soft ballads.

“Heaven From Here” – Robbie Williams. God, he can sell a song. And write a song. I love him. And he’s young. There’s so much more to look forward to. My favorite Robbie anecdote: Interviewer: “So what’s the strangest thing one of your fans have given you, Robbie?” Robbie: “Herpes.” Ba-dum-CHING.

“I’m a Slave 4 U” – Britney Spears. Hot. Disturbing. Funky. Britney being all like, “I’m grown up now.” Different sound for her. Prince-ish. Pharrell Williams wrote it. Apparently it was meant for Janet Jackson originally.

“Topsy Turvy” – The Bughouse 5. Fun rockabilly. It’s all about that bass-line. Keep it steady, keep that structure firm so the song can exist, because without it … you got nothing. Over and over and over … that bass line goes. God bless bass players, especially with rhythm & blues.

“Long Train Running” – The Doobie Brothers. “Looo-oooo-OVE!” Always loved the harmonies there. For me, that’s the best part of the song.

“Birds and Ships” – Billy Bragg and Wilco, on their great joint album Mermaid Avenue, covering little-known Woody Guthrie songs. This song features a blast from the past, Natalie Merchant. This album always makes me think of the time when Cashel was born. We all were listening to it then, and Cashel – the newborn – loved it, and would wiggle around on his blanket on the floor. Heart-crack: Cashel is graduating from high school in a couple of weeks.I just can’t believe it!

“My Baby” – James Cotton. Recorded at Sun Records. Of course it was. There’s that Sun sound. Every single song recorded at Sun sounds like it probably went down at around 2 o’clock in the morning.

“That’s Me in the Bar” – A.J. Croce. Intensely pleasing bluesy lament.

“Padre” – Elvis Presley. One of my favorite 1970s tracks. My God, he sings the hell out of this one.

“Twist and Shout” – The Beatles. Off the Anthology. This appears to be live, but I don’t have the liner notes. Not sure where this is. Their ferocity leaps out of the speakers.

“You Haven’t Seen the Last of Me” – Cher, from Burlesque. I hope not, Cher!!

“Guilt Trip” – Kanye. It’s completely hypnotic.

“Millbrook” – Rufus Wainwright. Gorgeous. One of my favorites of his. It has that bittersweet melancholy thing he does so well.

“From the Morning” – Nick Drake. He was so special.

“Gonna Get Back Somehow” – Elvis Presley. Off his horribly titled album Pot Luck. (The album title was not his fault.) Great vocals here from him, and I like the arrangement. It’s a silly song but I like it.

“Criminal” – Eminem. From The Marshall Mathers LP. A great great track. Crank it UP.

“Time After Time” – Cyndi Lauper. This song was huge at our high school dances. And I can still see the music video unrolling before my mind’s eye.

“Love Yourself” – Justin Bieber. I love this song. “My mama don’t like you, and she likes everyone.” BURRRRRN. I ranted about Justin Bieber here.

“Shine” – Everclear. When I was cracking up in 2009, this song was a lifeline. Why? I don’t know. I just clutched onto it for dear life. Weird.

“When I Come Around” – Green Day. From International Superhits. Hard to believe that this band would end up doing American Idiot and 21st Century Breakdown. Doesn’t seem like the same band. I like a-political Green Day but politics unleashed something in them. I don’t entirely agree with their politics, but I love the songs that came out of their convictions.

“We Shall Overcome” – Peter, Paul and Mary. Oh, the earnestness. I’m a child of the 70s not the 60s. Which means I am suspicious of earnestness. Unfortunately. Or fortunately. Who knows. I just know that it is so. This is lovely, though.

“Symphony No. 4 in B-Flat Major, Op. 60: II. Adagio” – Beethoven. This is from my London Symphony Orchestra Beethoven album. Sometimes his stuff is almost unbearably emotional. But I don’t know how to describe it. Jaquandor? Wanna help me out here?

“Jesus Christ Pose” – Soundgarden. Oh, Soundgarden. Part of the grunge soundtrack of my 20s. Chris Cornell has one of the all-time great rock-star voices.

“The Sadder but Wiser Girl” – Robert Preston, from The Music Man. And this is the joy of Shuffle. From Soundgarden to THIS. And I’m a “sadder but wiser girl.” Come on boys, line up for the chance to enjoy me. Where the hell are you.

“Before the Parade Passes By” – Barbra Streisand. A cosmic performance.

“Gone, Gone, Gone” – The Everly Brothers. I have so many versions of different bands playing this song. This one is my favorite. It grinds. Those harmonies. That background arrangement. Perfection.

“Famous Last Words” – My Chemical Romance. I always want to tell these boys to take a day off, relax, have some fun, get laid. Or take a Xanax. Who can LIVE at such a melodramatic pitch??

“Our Father” – Wynona Carr. Such a sincere gospel tract you want to fall to your knees. She’s so great.

“Swamp Root” – Harmonica Frank. He’s so much fun. One of his best qualities is that he is so clearly HIMSELF. He imitates no one. Whatever he does – the squeaky speech impediment here, his laughs, his spoken-word style … it’s so HIM. Very influential in an almost invisible way. (See Greil Marcus’ essay on him in Mystery Train.)

“The Angels Rejoiced Last Night” – The Louvin Brothers. The harmonies. Even with their fire-breathing ultra-literal Biblical outlook: rock ‘n’ roll would not be what it is without them.

“Sound Of My Own Voice” – Mike Viola. So sad it’s almost too hard to listen to.

“Stopping the Love” – KT Tunstall. What’s she up to these days? She was everywhere for a hot second with “Black Horse and Cherry Tree.” I like her a lot.

“Mother Mother” – Tracy Bonham. Her one radio hit. I was in a Virgin Records in Chicago and it was playing in the store. I stopped in my tracks. WHO IS THAT. I went up to an employee and said, “WHO IS THAT.” He told me and I bought her CD on the spot. Fan for life from that day.

“Beautiful Day” – U2. I like them better an angry/political/Irish than inspirational. When Bono gets inspirational, he gets self-important. But it’s okay. This is a beautiful song.

“Working on the Building” – Elvis Presley. Of all the gospel he put out, this is one of my favorites. When you hear him start clapping … well, I’ll just speak for myself: It makes me want to cry. He means this shit. He meant everything he did. That’s why he is who he is. As Dave Marsh wrote in his book – the final words:

He was a man who refused to be told that the best of his dreams would not come true, who refused to be defined by anyone else’s conceptions.

This is the goal of democracy, the journey on which every prospective American hero sets out. That Elvis made so much of the journey on his own is reason enough to remember him with the honor and love we reserve for the bravest among us. Such men are the only maps we can trust.

Raved about Dave Marsh’s book in my recent conversation with critic Padraic Coffey.

“Trouble Baby” – The Bughouse 5. Great bar-scene blues.

“Blitzkrieg” – Metallica. Metallica covering Blitzkrieg. Grinding, fast, dark. Love these guys so much.

“The Morning Papers” – Prince. From the infamous “Love Symbol Album.” I’ve been listening to a lot of Prince – no surprise – and this was a song I had kind of forgotten about and am so happy to re-claim. I love it so much: melody, lyrics, mood.

“You Get What You Deserve” – Big Star. Chilton was such a boy genius. And Big Star has those chord changes that go right through you. This one’s got a couple of them. If you haven’t read Robert Gordon’s wonderful It Came From Memphis, I can’t recommend it highly enough. There’s a Big Star chapter, of course, but there’s so much more. It’s basically about the history of the Memphis music scene in the 20th century – focusing on what else was going on there BESIDES Elvis. Gordon is from Memphis, a musician, a wonderful storyteller, knows the subject first-hand. Wonderful book.

“Love in Vain” – The Rolling Stones. from Let It Bleed. Those guitar parts underneath Mick’s voice … a swooping almost Hawaiian-sound, and then the little gentle-bend-y finger-picking … It’s haunting. It sounds like some bad shit might be about to go down. I love this.

“Swlabr” – Cream. Undeniably good music. It’s fun to hear those guitars. But … self-indulgent? Maybe? Will I be tarred and feathered? Maybe this is the consensus view of them, I have no idea. Weirdly, I just tripped over this article last week (article is from last year), and found it interesting. It’s all news to me. I’m not a huge Cream person although I have a bunch of their stuff.

“Elephant Love Medley” – Ewan McGregor/Nicole Kidman, from Moulin Rouge. Magic. It’s impossible to say this without sounding melodramatic but this movie was a lifeline for me once upon a time during a terrible season. I watched it (on VHS) once a day, sometimes twice, for weeks. It was the only thing that gave me a sense of any hope for any future. I fell on black days. It’s hard for me to watch the movie again because of that. People seem to dismiss this movie, or call it “over the top” (one of my least favorite phrases), or “too much” … when what I sensed it in then and still sense in it now is sincerity. Pure and diamond-bright. Sincerity courses through every moment, every song, and everyone MEANS what they are doing. Every actor. And it’s a broad vaudevillian style, totally out of time, out of fashion, a lost art – but here, again, alive. I love it.

“How Blue” – Bleu. So gorgeous and haunting. He has an incredible falsetto. His voice, in general, is amazing – it can do anything. A fantastic rock star voice. I am glad he exists.

“Stormy Weather” – Sammy Price. This is off this great compilation album called “Piano Boogie Woogie,” with all these great old tracks.

“If I’m Dreaming, Just Let Me Dream” – Brenda Lee. Listen, she wants to keep feeling what she’s feeling. She’s “bubbling over with joy supreme” and she doesn’t want to know if it’s a dream. She wants to stay happy. Sexy.

“Little Pig” – Dale Hawkins. Talk about sexy, my God. I was so psyched when my pal Kim Morgan turned her considerable talents onto Dale Hawkins’ version of “Ruby”.

“Rip It Up” – Wanda Jackson covering her old boyfriend’s hit song “Rip It Up.” I love it when she covers Elvis. This is off the album that Jack White (BLESS HIM) produced. He loves the ladies, he loves the Divas, and he DOES something about it. The production of this number is gigantic, Brian Setzer-ish, rockabilly bombast, with big-band horns, and it’s awesome. I love that whole album.

“Kokomo” – The Beach Boys. Their stuff just works. That’s all. It’s timeless.

“Tonight Is So Right for Love” – Elvis Presley. This one MOVES. Elvis pushing his voice, going for it. He can do it. He knew himself. He pushed himself. He was competitive with himself, always to stunning results.

“Music For a Found Harmonium” – Patrick Street. An Irish folk group, fiddles, accordions, and all the rest. I love them. And this is beautiful, how it builds, adding layer upon layer upon layer.

“Ain’t That a Shame” – Fats Domino. Bluesy, boozy, classic bass line. Keeping the song in line, as it were. 1955.

“Why Don’t You Love Me” – Tom Hiddleston as Hank Williams in I Saw the Light. I couldn’t help it, I bought it. No, he’s not Hank. But who is. I appreciate the attempt, though. He doesn’t have that depth that Hank had in his voice, that … something else … that made him so radical, so influential, a voice that launched a thousand ships. But still: this is okay and I thought the movie – flawed though it was with the biggest flaw of all: it failed to show us WHY Hank Williams became so huge, what he was doing that was so DIFFERENT that made him the first crossover star 10 years before the Big Kahuna Crossover Elvis – had a beautiful strain of compassion running through it. It was made with love.

“24 Hours” – Eddie Boyd. What the hell IS it about the blues? It’s everything. Duke Ellington said, “I merely took the energy it takes to pout and wrote some blues.” That about sums it up.

“Hello, Mary Lou” – Ricky Nelson. Ahhhhhhhhhh saaaaaatisfying. Here he is performing it, the great James Burton to his left. So psyched I went to see James Burton in 2013: he played it all, including this one.

“God Is Dead?” – Black Sabbath. Adore that question mark. Love Lester Bangs’ investigation into the whole Black Sabbath scene when they first arrived and freaked everyone out.

“The Honeydipper” – Cab Calloway. I have his greatest hits and they are a joy. It is also a joy to go from Black Sabbath to Cab Calloway.

“Fairytale” – Elvis Presley covering a Pointer Sisters song. I mean, just the fact of that is fantastic. Old-fashioned country. I love his emphasis “But I BET you won’t forget me when I go” and I LOVE LOVE when he goes up the octave near the end. Mitchell and I had fun watching 1. The Pointer Sisters performance and then 2. Elvis’ recording.

“Flower Child” – Rock on, Lenny Kravitz. You just keep doing you.

“Next to You” – Junk Food. I wonder where I find this stuff. And when I bought it. No memory of it in any way/shape/form. Derivative, but fun.

“Tomorrow Is a Latter Day” – from The Book of Mormon. So outrageous and so entertaining. I can’t believe it exists.

“I Won’t Let You Down” – Ok Go. This is very Jackson-5, it seems to me.

“Long Black Veil” – The Band. Oh, The Band. Why do you fill me with such nearly unbearable melancholy … and nostalgia … to quote Nancy Lehmann in her novel The Fiery Pantheon: “She had a nostalgia for a life she had never led.” That’s what The Band sounds like to me.

“Kangaroo” – Big Star. Wow, where did all this Big Star come from? I don’t know, the mystery of Shuffle, the luck of the draw, but I am happy about it.

“Heart of Glass” – Blondie. She is so hip. Still is. I mean, who is cooler than Debbie Harry?

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“Your Love” – Faye Adams. Her vibrato is out of control! In a good way. It’s her sound. Emotion trembles in that vibrato. I love her.

“Barnyard” – Brian Wilson, from SMILE. Animals again. Pet Sounds everywhere, still. Fabulous harmonies, harmonies that get under your skin.

“Night Time, My Time” – Sky Ferreira. So glad a couple of “best of the year” lists included her album, which made me curious enough to buy it. It’s terrific. There’s something very deep and dark going on, so that when she does express some hope (I love “Boys”) it’s even more touching.

“After the Lights Go Out” – The Walker Brothers. Kind of luscious. And when the harmony of the chorus comes in … goosebumps. There’s the hook.

“Dixie Fried” – the great Carl Perkins. Yes, I would like to get dixie fried too, Carl. Sign me up.

“Runaway” – Del Shannon. In the running for my favorite song of all time.

“Time of the Season” – The Zombies. The way “for loving” resolves itself is what makes the sound unforgettable. I love this interview with Rod Argent where he talks about Elvis and recounts “stopping by” Graceland to see if Elvis was home.

“Never Been to Spain” – speaking of Elvis. But aren’t we always? And if we aren’t, we should be. This was one of the staples of his live shows in the 70s, and this recording comes from the Madison Square Garden triumph. His live versions of this are always spectacular: he clearly loved the song and singing it clearly released something in it. When he goes up the octave? The crowd goes absolutely insane.

“Blue Gardenia” – Dinah Washington. Who is more romantic than Dinah Washington? Even broken-hearted, she aches with romance, she exudes it. Her VOICE.

“To Know Him Is To Love Him” – The Teddy Bears. My music collection is nuts. When a song like this comes up on Shuffle, I realize just how much music I have.

“I’ve Just Begun Having My Fun” – Britney Spears. I’m happy for you, Britney, but maybe put the brakes on sometimes? Really good song, though, with a killer-funk arrangement behind her. I’m an unapologetic fan.

“Honky Tonk Song” – George Jones. This is a sorry-ass story. As so many of his songs are. Hilarious lyrics, though. It’s a whole story. And what a voice: clear and true. And he’s not sorry about anything.

“Big Wheel” – Tori Amos. Her best song in years. I’ll keep buying whatever she puts out, even though her strange diction and ache-y line readings drive me up the PMS wall. I like her pissed, sexy, and funny. I know, I know, it’s not up to me. This song rules. I’m not sick of it yet and I’ve been listening to it on nearly constant rotation since it released.

“Didn’t It Rain” – Mahalia Jackson. “Uh-didn’t-it-UH ..” I love that this entire song – epic in her variations – has, what, a piano and maybe a stand-up bass behind her? I only hear her piano. And why are they there? To support her. That’s it. SHE’S the main instrument. And she’s driving the whole thing. They’re doing their best to keep the hell up with her.

“Oh Death” – Jen Titus. Well, my Supernatural friends will know all about this one. Best sequence the show ever did.

“Legacy” – Eminem. As of now, my favorite off of his latest album. Goosebumps-Worthy. I also love it when a woman co-stars with him in his songs. Rihanna being the obvious example (they’ve done 4 great collaborations together, plus going on tour together) … but this one features Russian singer Polina Goudieva (who co-wrote the song with Marshall). Her contribution is haunting.

“Jack the Ripper” – Link Wray. The inventor of the power chord. His guitar goes right through you. The coolest cat ever.

“Lady Cab Driver” – Prince. Okay, maybe Link Wray isn’t THE coolest cat.

“Lay Your Shine On Me” – The Box Tops. I’m so excited! Big Star AND The Box Tops in one shuffle? All hail, Alex Chilton. This song is so funky.

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“The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul” – XTC. Nobody else really like them.

“Breaking Up” – Charli XCX. I love this pop-diva-queen. She’s got some anger. I like that. Young women need a little bit of anger.

“Sexy Silk” – Jessica Cornish. Hot as hell. I bought this because it’s on the soundtrack for Easy A (great soundtrack, in general), and I was like: Oh my God, this SONG.

“Junk Bond Trader” – Elliott Smith. I suppose it’s just because I know his horrible end … but even if I didn’t know, I would hear the despair breaking off these songs like giant rollers hitting the sand.

“Lucky Motel” – ELO. There’s something about their chord changes. What IS it about the harmonies and chord changes? I mean, I can hear in them The Beatles, and The Everly Brothers and The Beach Boys. But the chord changes … I wish I knew how to talk about music better. Then I could describe why the opening sequence of this instrumental song satisfies me so deeply. But also makes me slightly sad. It’s all in that music.

“Man In the Wilderness” – Styx. Oh sing out your sadness, boys. It’s hard to be so alone, I know!

“Little Girl Blue” – Nina Simone. Devastating. Eerie. Almost frightening. Almost??

“Done Somebody Wrong” – Elmore James. Great artist. Multi-talented. He did everything. King of the Slide Guitar. You can hear why here.

“Push” – Prince. Great dance track. A call to the dance floor. I catch my breath when his tunes come up now.

“Tuesday Morning” – The Pogues. Angry young men. I love them.

“You Can’t Call Me Baby” – Teddy Thompson & Kelly Jones. Have you heard this album of country duets they did? Little Windows? They sing these country songs without irony. No winking. No sense of condescension. Beautiful harmonies. Men and women rarely sing together like this anymore. There’s such a toxic divide between men and women now. Here, here, is a collaboration. I love this album.

“The Ballad of Stagger Lee” – Mississippi John Hart. Stunning. Raw. Spoken-word for half of the song. You’re on a porch of a shack in the Delta listening to some tall tales. And when his guitar-picking starts in … it’s transportive. If you haven’t read Greil Marcus’ essay on the song “Stagger Lee” and its various iterations, I highly recommend it. (It’s included in Mystery Train: Images of America in Rock ‘n’ Roll Music.)

“’97 Bonnie and Clyde” – Eminem. So disturbing. So insane! Chapter 1 of the 500-page novel called Marshall and Kim. I wrote a whole thing about “Kim”, which takes it to another level, here. “Bonnie and Clyde” is extra disturbing because the daughter is – supposedly – present. It’s a fantasy. Maybe you fantasize only about a Happy Unicorn Utopia. Most of us are not so lucky. Evil fantasies are a part of art. And, whaddya know, Kim Mathers is still walking among us.

“Meet Me at Mary’s Place” – Sam Cooke. His lyrics are so special. He starts with a detail: the cha-cha, slide rules, a chain gang … and here, let’s meet up at Mary’s Place for a good time. The specificity of the worlds he creates with his lyrics still live. They’re stories.

“Now That It’s Over” – Everclear. One of my favorites in a genre I call the “Bad Sport Breakup Song.” “My bad dreams don’t seem the same without you.” Wow. I, for one, am sick of being a good sport when a man does me wrong. I stopped being a good sport years ago. Much better for everyone involved. A clean break full of rage. You recover much quicker.

“Thieves in the Temple” – Prince. He’s PISSSSSSSSED.

“Do You Believe In Love?” – Huey Lewis & The News. He was my first live concert ever. And perfect that less than 10 years later, I was an extra in one of his videos. You can’t see me in the footage (you’ll see how many of us there are), but we got to hang out all day and it was a free concert. I could have reached down from my spot on the scaffolding and touched him.

“I Touch Myself” – Divinyls. Holy shit, I own this? I am laughing out loud.

“2 X 4” – Metallica, from the reviled album Load. I really love Load. Has time redeemed its reputation? Anyone know? It definitely is a more mainstream sound. I prefer the “real” Metallica, but I still like this album.

“Country Boy’s Dream” – Carl Perkins. Like Sam Cooke, his lyrics are very specific. Backstage at some show, he heard a musician (the stories vary on who it was) say to another musician, “Hey, lay off my blue suede shoes.” And history was made. He wrote about what he saw, what people wore, what people said.

“Sing This All Together” – The Rolling Stones. From Their Satanic Majesties Request. I often don’t recognize the songs from this album as The Stones. A weird moment in time. I guess it shows the enormous impact that Sgt. Pepper had on everyone, although I may have gotten the timeline wrong.

“Main Title to Escape From New York” – John Carpenter. YES. J’ADORE. And it’s so simple. So catchy. Gorgeous.

“Beautiful Woman” – Charlie Rich. Oh, Charlie, Charlie, I love you so. And … due to the symmetry … I’ll end this Shuffle now.

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36 Responses to Summer Shuffle

  1. Helena says:

    Big Star.

    Big Star are a big deal and that critic sounds like a twit of the highest order.

    I loved Big Star back in the 90s and I still do – I don’t listen to them a lot these days, but when I die they can fire my ashes into the sky to the tune of September Gurls. That song is the sound of joy and heartbreak for me. I got to see them in the early 90s around the time the world caught up with them and they were on tour intermingled with The Posies. All the bands I was into then loved Big Star and Brian Wilson in equal measure. It was a very tuneful and twangly time.

    • sheila says:

      Oh I’m so envious you saw them, Helena!! The world definitely needed time to catch up. Their story is so interesting, I think – and Alex Chilton’s whole story is even more amazing. A boy genius. Troubled, but … just so compelling. What was he like live?

      • sheila says:

        oh and yes, this film guy is just awful. And way too old to be that immature. But the Big Star thing just made me laugh – like, “Dude, you were busted on not knowing this really really cool thing. Stop trying to make everyone admit that Big Star isn’t a big deal so YOU don’t have to feel like such a dope.”

        It was so bizarre and embarrassing.

        “September Gurls” – yes. God, that song!!

      • Helena says:

        God, it is such a long time ago. Big Star was a bit of totem band in those pre-internet days, and it was like a unicorn had dropped by for a visit to South London. Chilton was in great voice, but iirc actually a bit ornery and not really into the waves of adulation coming his way from a very reverent crowd. Collective holding of breath when he sang 13. I mainly remember the huge smile on Jody Stephens’s face throughout the entire gig.

        Thanks for the book rec, I’ll see if I can catch up with it!

    • sheila says:

      and yeah – Big Star was so influential. I highly recommend “It Came From Memphis,” which tells the entire Big Star origin story – written by a guy who knew all of them.

      • While we’re making recommendations let me tell you about Bruce Eaton’s book about Radio City from the 33 1/3 series. Bruce used to produce jazz concerts here in Buffalo, and the book is about his discovery and investigation into the whole Big Star thing. It culminates with his inviting Chilton to come to Buffalo to play with his band– a chance to play with a rock and roll hero, and a storybook ending if there ever was one.

  2. Natalie says:

    Oh, God, The Morning Papers. I was in 8th grade and had it on cassette single. I think I listened to it so much that the tape wore out. I don’t understand why this one hasn’t gotten more love in all the Prince tributes. I really need to shell out for the Love Symbol album.

    I also have a total weakness for inspirational U2. I love them being Irish and political, too, but the self-importance doesn’t bother me from Bono – he’s kind of earned it, I think. And Beautiful Day has a special place in my heart, because it was what I listened to all day right after my oldest niece was born, because it was the only song I could think of that really captured how I was feeling at that moment.

    • sheila says:

      // I don’t understand why this one hasn’t gotten more love in all the Prince tributes. //

      Natalie, me too – it’s a really special song, so simple and clear. I love it!

      // it was what I listened to all day right after my oldest niece was born, because it was the only song I could think of that really captured how I was feeling at that moment. //

      That is so beautiful!!

  3. mutecypher says:

    /“I Touch Myself” – Divinyls. Holy shit, I own this?/

    Some of us are unsurprised. Those references to The Hitachi…

    • sheila says:

      My point is the song is not good and I barely enjoy it. And I have no memory of shelling out the 99 cents to buy it. Like, why would I do that?

      Mysteries abound.

  4. Heather says:

    Sheila
    Elmore James! YES.
    I purchased one of his albums by pure luck; it was on the 2 for $20 shelf, I was already getting another and so took a chance. I started listening to it on the drive home and I was immediately happy that I had bought it. I don’t know if I get him, or he gets everyone, or what. He is just excellent.

    • sheila says:

      I totally agree! I have a bunch of his stuff – random songs I downloaded – it’s so rich. He really did it all! I love his voice!

  5. Dg says:

    Time line correct on Satanic Majesties.. The Stones were a bit lost here and yeah Sgt Pepper …even the album cover. At this point the Stones were in danger of becoming another Hermans Hermits or whatever …we’d all be like oh yeah the guys who did Satisfaction. Sometime after Satanic Keith took off one the strings from his acoustic guitar and plugged into one of those little dictaphone tape recorders and the into an amp… And along came Street Fighting Man and Jumpin Jack Flash… To grab you by the throat and never let you go.

    • sheila says:

      Wow. Amazing. I know Sgt Pepper had an impact, obviously, on everyone in the culture – but it’s especially interesting to consider the impact it had on musicians. Like a huge whirlpool sucking everything into it. How does one resist it, something that took over so completely?

      I need to go back and read Keith’s memoir (which I’ve been meaning to do anyway) – I seem to recall him talking quite a bit about that period.

  6. One of my Memphis nephews used to run the streets (with, among others, Bill Black’s nephew, who got beaten to death on those streets some years later) that Alex Chilton wrote about in his Big Star phase. They didn’t know each other (Chilton was a little older and an upper middle class bohemian visitor to the ‘hoods, not an habitue) but based on the stories my nephew told, I’d say Big Star got the FEEL of that part of Memphis the tourists never see more right than anyone ever has. It was (and I suspect still is) a very rough place. I mention that only because its not an aspect of Big Star that gets mentioned much and its the very same place Elvis and so many others fought to escape, with, as we know, world-changing consequences.

    And one of these days I’m gonna develop a long piece on my unified theory of rock criticism as a specific conspiracy designed to drop Brenda Lee down the memory hole! Heck, you may have just inspired me to do just that!

    • sheila says:

      Seriously, who was bigger than Brenda Lee in her day? And now? Crickets.

      It’s kind of like Doris Day’s strange reputation now. She was the biggest star of her day. One of the most talented women ever in show business. And now? I mean, of course she is HUGELY beloved by her fan base. But in terms of critical appreciation … it’s like she’s skipped over. All the time. No Lifetime Achievement Oscar, for example. A crime.

      and yeah, Big Star. I was fascinated reading Gordon’s book about the burgeoning folk-music coffee-house scene – mixed with the dangers of the streets, and old r&b players still wandering around – present/past, all mixed together – one of the most powerful elements of Memphis, in general.

      William Eggleston’s photographs of Memphis – and of Big Star – are so gorgeous.

      • My short term version of the crickets on Brenda Lee (and it would probably apply to a lot of overlooked female performers) is summed up by Nik Cohn’s reaction in his great Rock From the Beginning. Basically, writing straight from the sixties, the only two things that clearly disoriented and frightened him were Brenda’s pipes and Tina Turner’s butt (which he described as “exploding”)….I think fear of the femme is a real element here! You don’ t tend to analyze fear. You tend to sweep it under the rug.

  7. Jessie says:

    The transition from Sgt Pepper’s to With a Little Help From My Friends is my FAVOURITE THING EVER!!!!

    • sheila says:

      Oh man, I know, right??

      It blew me away as a kid – the fact that there wasn’t a clean break between the songs. I remember thinking, “You can do that??”

      • Jessie says:

        Revolutionary! And all it is is the rising excitement of the set-up, the trickle-down guitar line, and Ringo’s big ol’ friendly voice.

  8. Yay, Brenda Lee! Do I love Brenda Lee? Yes. Did I watch her itty bitty self on the Perry Como Show in the ’50s? Yes. Does Plumly, the narrator of my middle grade ebook titled (oddly enough) Plumly, announce that her singing voice is exactly like Brenda Lee’s? Why, yes, yes, she does.

  9. Fran in NYC says:

    I think “Lean on Me” is by Bill Withers, not George Harrison?

    • sheila says:

      Fran – Yes, you’re right!! Oops. I think I was thinking of “Everybody Needs Somebody to Lean On” … if I can re-trace my steps there. The Glee cover in question is definitely “Lean On Me”!

  10. mutecypher says:

    Elephant Love Medley… When Christian and Satine are framed by the heart, just as they move into “I Will Always Love You,” and the sparkles explode behind them… is so beautiful and perfect and romantic. A tear-stained Toulouse singing “how wonderful Life is while you’re in the world” as he lives vicariously through them. “Come What May” every time they sing it. Yes to that movie.

  11. Nicola says:

    I love that Sky Ferreira album. I’m waiting anxiously for her follow up. I think “Everything is Embarrassing” is my favourite. Have you listened to Halsey at all? I don’t know why I kind of think of the two of them hand in hand. Really interesting, cool sounding female artists. Love them.

  12. Guy Nicolucci says:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YVkDvdntTIU

    Love your shuffle, darling.

  13. Matt Blankman says:

    Hey as you are probably already aware, Mike Viola is all over the new Monkees album (which is damned good).

  14. CleverlyLemon says:

    Shelia

    Have you heard Justin Beiber’s Love Yourself in a minor key by Airspoken? Best use of 1 minute 27 seconds in a while…

    https://youtu.be/3ye7dOIMgIQ

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