Sunday, November 30, 2014

One at a Time: "Burnin'" (1973) by The Wailers

#319 "Burnin'" (1973) by The Wailers

I knew a couple of songs on here, but I'm not that familiar with reggae in general. I do know that I used to sort of sneer at kids in college who had Bob Marley posters on their wall, mostly because I knew that they didn't have it there because they were big Bob Marley fans (I'm sure that exists, but I've never known one), but because they liked to smoke.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

52 in 52: Week 7 - "The '59 Sound"

Week of 11/23/14 - 11/29/14

Album from 2008

In my very first post, I briefly lamented not choosing "Get Hurt" by The Gaslight Anthem for the 2014 album. I didn't mind as much though, because I already have 2008's "The '59 Sound" on vinyl and it's a much more full and complex album than the band's newest.

Fallon and his band used to get a little grief for being a Jersey band that "ripped off" Bruce.

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

One at a Time: "Bookends" (1968) by Simon and Garfunkel

#233 "Bookends" (1968) by Simon and Garfunkel

This one gives me a little bit of trouble. It's such a good album, with songs on it that are just so kickass.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

One at a Time: "The Slim Shady LP" (1999) by Eminem

#273 "The Slim Shady LP" (1999) by Eminem

This is the situation I've been dreading. I'm not closed-minded enough to dismiss any of the rap records on the top 500, but I also know that I haven't listened to nearly enough of the genre to actually talk about it in an even-handed enough way. I gotta admit, I was a little bit excited for the prospect of actually finding this album enjoyable - after all, this list is largely 1960s and 1970s old guy music. It's mostly stuff that they play on "classic rock" radio stations and that forty and fifty year old white guys listen to. Unfortunately, this wasn't the one to break that up, for me. To me, this album seems vulgar. And I'm by no means a prude person. 

Sunday, November 23, 2014

One at a Time: "Tapestry" (1971) by Carole King

 #36 "Tapestry" (1971) by Carole King

I have to admit that I'm already very well acquainted with "Tapestry." I listen to it all the time. I have two vinyl copies of it (one for me, one for my mom). I even have all seven seasons of "Gilmore Girls" on DVD, a TV show for which the album's 8th track, "Where You Lead," is the theme song.

52 in 52: Week 6 - "Astral Weeks Live at the Hollywood Bowl"

Week of 11/16/14 - 11/22/14

Album from 2009

Since this project has been really draining on my wallet, I decided to use another album that I already own. I've been rationalizing that these are all things that I would've bought eventually anyway, which is true, but in such a condensed period of time, it can be a little taxing. Anyway, the two albums that I own from 2009 are "Astral Weeks Live at the Hollywood Bowl" by Van Morrison, and "Aim and Ignite" by fun., and since I just did fun.'s second album three weeks ago, Van Morrison it is.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

One at a Time: "Honky Chateau" (1972) by Elton John

#357 "Honky Chateau" (1972) by Elton John

Hello! This is the first post in a series of posts where I'm attempting to re-rank Rolling Stone Magazine's 2003 issue, "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time." Check out my introduction to it here. The first number I randomly selected was 357, which I was quite relieved to find was an album that I know by an artist I love: "Honky Chateau" by Elton John. 

One at a Time: Re-Ranking Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums

Here's how this will hopefully work. I will pick a number at random (using this random number generator), and then find which album that is on Rolling Stone's list of 500 Greatest Albums released in 2003, and then write about that album. It's sort of based on this website called Flick Charts, which is a cool website for ranking movies. It starts by asking you a simple question, "Which one is better?" and then shows you two movies. You have to pick, and once you've answered enough head to head, you've got a list of your favorite movies, ranked in the order that you just said.

This won't work exactly like that, because I'm not going head to head. Instead I'm just going to keep a running list of the ones I've already chosen, and then rank the current one against those. So whichever album gets picked first, that's going to be ranked number one right away, until it gets taken down by another one. So each time I choose a new album, I'll have a list of the previous ones to weigh it against, and then place it somewhere on that running list.

Also, as a side note, I do know about "Kill Your Idols," which is a book edited by Jim DeRogatis where a bunch of critics do take-down pieces on classic albums based on the same Rolling Stone list. It's a very cool book, I've read a number of the articles. The only real idea that's similar to what I want to do is to talk about the albums on the list, but also to talk about them without the context of what they are; the books subtitle is "A New Generation of Rock Writers Reconsiders the Classics." I want to ape that a little in that I don't want to say something like, "this album was the most important album," or "everyone I knew bought this album," or "this influenced a whole new generation of X genre." I just want to write about the music as music, and eventually I'll have my own list of the way that I'd rank the 500 albums on Rolling Stone's list.

Now, I can't exactly commit to finishing this. Even at twice a week (which isn't going to happen), that's still almost five years. Because of this, I'm not going to limit myself to posting on certain days or anything like that, I'm just going to post when I can, and hopefully jump out ahead of that ten-year-pace.

And finally, I'm sure that this is going to seem a little off, and totally biased towards the music that I already like or don't like. I'm fine with that. For instance, there's five U2 albums on the list, and I dislike U2. Of course, when it comes to those albums, I'm going to give them their fair share and try to listen to them completely unbiased, but I'm just laying it out there now that it may not end up changing my mind on certain things. I've never been a fan of much hip-hop, but I respect its place in the music industry and in the canon. It's just going to be hard for me to talk about an album like, say, "Reasonable Doubt" by Jay-Z, because I haven't listened to enough hip hop/rap music to talk about it critically in any way. I promise I'll give each one a fair shot, though. But this is, after all, my ranking of the 500 albums, not necessarily one that is best. I'm not a professional critic or anything like that, so don't blame me when the bottom 50 end up being all hip-hop albums that I'm listening to for the first time and the top ten are all Bruce albums.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

52 in 52: Week 5 - "Lonely Avenue"

Week of 11/9/14 - 11/15/14

Album from 2010

This week, of the list that I made when I went out shopping, I decided to get the only one I hadn't listened to at all, not even a little bit. So this write-up of "Lonely Avenue" by Ben Folds and Nick Hornby is of a complete first listen.

It's a little bit weird that I've never listened to this album before. I'm a fan of Ben Folds/Ben Folds Five, and I own mp3s of all of his music and have listened to all of it, and know most of it pretty well. He's not an all-time favorite of mine, but he's a pretty damn good songwriter and listening to his music is a great way to pass the time.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

52 in 52: Week 4 - "Collapse Into Now"

Week of 11/2/14 - 11/8/14

Album from 2011

There was a bunch of stuff I thought about writing about this week, but I'm still somewhat limited by the fact that 2011 is still relatively recent, and anything from that year is going to be somewhat pricey, and there aren't going to be as many in actual stores. If I'm going to spend more than $15 on a record, I'm going to do it for one that I actually want to own.

So I made a list of albums from 2011 that I would both like to own and would like to write about: "Thank You, Happy Birthday" by Cage the Elephant, "Augustana" by Augustana, "Wasting Light" by Foo Fighters, "Collapse Into Now" by REM "Yes and Also Yes" by Mike Doughty, "The Whole Love" by Wilco, and "Birdy" by Birdy.

Of the two that I was able to find actual copies of, "Collapse Into Now" was much cheaper than "The Whole Love" (which was over $25), so this week I'm going to write about the last REM record.

Monday, November 3, 2014

52 in 52: Week 3 - "Some Nights"

Week of 10/26/14 - 11/1/14

Album from 2012

I sort of stumbled upon this weeks record. I was actually at the record store trying to get a new needle and I happened to see "Some Nights" by fun. sitting out in front. Now, this is yet another one that I already own the CD of, but it's not one that I've listened to obsessively, and not one that I particularly love, which I thought would make a nice contrast from the last two weeks, when it maybe felt like I was gushing a little too much.


I can deal with overexposure, and with bands that I like becoming more than just a personal thing, and to some extent I can deal with bands trying to tweak their sound a little to appeal to a larger audience. It's just when all of those things coincide with a step down in quality that I'm not as forgiving.

At this point, I'm sure plenty of people have heard from their indie-rock hipster-kid friends that fun. like, totally sold out, man, and that they used to be, like, way better. And it's basically true. Their first album, "Aim and Ignite," was fantastic, and one of my favorites. I was excited about another album, and I even remember being excited when I heard "We Are Young" in that Super Bowl commercial, saying things like, "Hey that's fun.!" and "they're totally going to blow up now, it's going to be awesome." And they did, which I love. But they lost the oddly specific sound from their first album that was part of the reason it was so great. I actually didn't expect to like them. I was a fan of Steel Train and the Postelle's, who were opening up for fun. on their first tour after "Aim and Ignite," and I wasn't planning on staying. A friend told me to stay, that I'd like it. And my immediate thought when they stepped on the stage was that this friend didn't know me too well. I mean, Nate walks up wearing the skinniest of skinny jeans, Jack's got these huge-rimmed glasses, their name is a total grammatical nightmare, with all lower-case and a period at the end which are clearly only there to be contrarian, and perhaps to let their name stand out from actual fun, but in the end, I bought the CD right there at the merch table by the end of the concert.