January 9, 2010

Playlist 1-9-10

* Buxtehude: Six Sonatas (Holloway, et al.) (Naxos CD)
* Geminiani: Cello Sonatas, Op.5 (ter Linden/Mortensen) (Brilliant Classics CD)
* Vivaldi: Cello Sonatas (ter Linden/Mortensen) Brilliant Classics 2CD)
* Vivaldi: Late Violin Concertos (VBO/Marcon/Carmignola) (Sony CD)
* Vivaldi: Violin Concertos, RV 331, etc. (VBO/Marcon/Carmignola) (Archiv Produktion CD)
* Handel: Trio Sonatas, Op.2 & Op.5 (AAM/Egarr) (Harmonia Mundi 2CD)
* Sun Ra: Queen Elizabeth Hall, London 11-9-70 (AUD 2CDR)
* Sun Ra: J.P. Widney Jr. High School, Los Angeles 6-12-71 (AUD 2CDR)
* Sun Ra: Sound of Joy (Delmark CD)
* John Coltrane: Interplay (d.1-3) (Prestige 5CD)
* Bobby Hutcherson: “Mellow Vibes” (selections) (Blue Note mix CDR)
* Andrew Hill: The Complete Blue Note Sessions (1963-1966) (d.1-4) (Mosaic 10LP)
* Evan Parker Electro-Acoustic Ensemble: Toward the Margins (ECM CD)
* David Torn: Prezens (ECM CD)
* Earl Klugh: Finger Paintings (Blue Note/MFSL LP)
* The Beatles: Anthology 2 (Apple/EMI 2CD)
* The Beatles: “Revolution 1” (take 20) (fan/boot CDR)
* The Songs the Beatles Gave Away (fan/boot CDR)
* Led Zeppelin: In Through the Out Door (Swan Song LP)
* King Crimson: Epitaph (live 1969) (DGM 4CD)
* Grateful Dead: The Spectrum, Philadelphia 11-5-79 (set 2) (SBD 2CDR)
* Grateful Dead: The Spectrum, Philadelphia 11-6-79 (SBD 2CDR)
* Big Star: Keep An Eye On the Sky (d.2) (Ardent/Rhino 4CD)
* Palace Songs: Hope (Drag City 12”EP)
* Yo La Tengo: Popular Songs (Matador CD)
* The Flaming Lips: Embryonic (Warner Bros. DVD-A)
* Sigur Rós: Ágætis Byrjun (PIAS CD)

Commentary:

Snow, ice and bitterly cold temperatures has made for a harsh first full week of the New Year, making me want to go into hibernation until spring. I mean, geez, I moved south to escape this kind of weather! Oh well, at least I can sometimes sit by the fire and listen to records -- and read a good book:

With all the excitement of the The Beatles boxes, I checked out a book from the library I have been meaning to read for a long time. Having almost finished it, I have to agree that Ian MacDonald’s Revolution in the Head: The Beatles’ Records and the Sixties (Henry Holt & Co., 1994) deserves its reputation as one of the best books about the Beatles ever written. Combining socio-political commentary with precise musicological observation, MacDonald attempts to explain The Beatles’ historical significance through a song-by-song analysis of the recordings. It is refreshing that he is not overawed by his subject and sometimes offers withering criticism of what he considers sloppy and careless efforts, while providing genuine insight into what makes their greatest songs work and why they had the impact they had on the culture at large. I may not agree with all of his opinions (I think he gets “Lucy In the Sky with Diamonds” totally wrong and his utter disdain for what he terms “rock” causes him to miss the importance of proto-punk songs like “Helter Skelter”), but he makes eloquent arguments backed up by firm grasp of music theory and relevant studio technology. Perhaps not the last word on Beatles scholarship, MacDonald’s book is a step above the usual journalistic or otherwise purely sociological writings that inevitably fail to address the music itself which result in an unconvincing special pleading for the Beatles’ inviolable canonical status. As such, Revolution in the Head is an excellent companion to the newly remastered catalog and one of the better books about music I have ever read.

4 comments:

  1. Totally with you on Revolution in the Head--I read it years ago and I should pick it up again. You can find a detailed analysis of it here:
    http://www.popmatters.com/pm/tools/print/115775 Pop Matters did a nice job with their whole Beatles overview feature "Re-Meet the Beatles," definitely worth checking out.

    Along the same lines, but focusing primarily on the mechanics of the music itself, without any sociopolitical commentary, are the two excellent books by Walter Everett, The Beatles As Musicians: The Quarry Men Through Rubber Soul and The Beatles As Musicians: Revolver through the Anthology. Highly recommended!

    And while I'm at it, perhaps the best overview of the Beatles and their importance is Can't Buy Me Love: The Beatles, Britain, and America, by Jonathan Gould. I can't say enough good things about this one.

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  2. Here's my playlist for the past week. For the hell of it, I also decided to record what played on my iPod. I'll stick that in a separate comment in the interest of space.

    Playlist 2010-01-11

    *Luigi Nono: Retrospective, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London 2005-04 (BBC), disc 1 (CDR)
    *Ravel: The Piano Concertos (Pascal Roge/Orchestre Symphonique de Montreal)
    *Schoenberg: Das Klavierwerk (Peter Serkin)
    *Art Ensemble of Chicago: The Alternate Express
    *Albert Ayler: Holy Ghost, disc 1
    *Anthony Braxton Quartet: 1975-??-?? Bremen (CDR)
    *Anthony Braxton Diamond Curtain Wall Quartet: 2008-06-17 Besancon (CDR)
    *Anthony Braxton: Quartet (Moscow) 2008
    *Rodger Coleman & Sam Byrd: 2008-03-24
    *Miles Davis: Seven Steps: The Complete Columbia Recordings Of Miles Davis 1963-1964, disc 3
    *Billie Holiday: The Complete Original American Decca Recordings, disc 2
    *Charles Mingus: New York Sketchbook [East Coasting]
    *Roscoe Mitchell: Nine to Get Ready
    *Evan Parker Electro-Acoustic Ensemble: The Eleventh Hour
    *Evan Parker Electro-Acoustic Ensemble: Memory/Vision
    *Paul Smoker Trio: QB
    *Sun Ra: 1970-11-09 Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, disc 2 (aud CDR)
    *Sun Ra: Cosmos
    *Sun Ra: Detroit Jazz Center, disc 6 (1980-12-27) (CDR)
    *Cecil Taylor: 1971-07-24 Town Hall, NYC (solo) (CDR)
    *Cecil Taylor Unit: 1976-04-15 Ann Arbor (CDR)
    *Cecil Taylor Unit: 1983-09-04 Saalfelden, Austria (CDR)
    *Cecil Taylor: 1989-10-22 Skopje, Macedonia (solo) (CDR)
    *That's What I Call Sweet Music: American Dance orchestras of the 1920s (from R. Crumb's 78rpm record collection)
    *Animal Collective: Merriweather Post Pavilion
    *Beatles: The Beatles at the Hollywood Bowl Deluxe (Purple Chick) disc 2 (The Mixes)
    *Beatles: The Beatles (2009 stereo remaster) side 2
    *Fela: The '69 Los Angeles Sessions
    *Golden Palominos: This Is How it Feels
    *Grateful Dead: 1977-05-28 Civic Center, Hartford, CT (CDR)
    *Grateful Dead: 1977-06-07 Winterland (CDR)
    *George Harrison: All Things Must Pass (remastered ed.), disc 2
    *Praxis: Transmutation Live
    *Sonic Youth: A Thousand Leaves
    *Stooges: Fun House
    *Porter Wagoner & Dolly Parton: Porter and Dolly (The Essential ...)

    Reading log 2010-01-11

    *A New Literary History of America (ed. Greil Marcus & Werner Sollors) (started)
    *Deadhead's Taping Compendium, vol. 1 (in progress)
    *Larson, Gary. The Complete Far Side (in progress)
    *Shakespeare, William. Romeo and Juliet (Arden ed., 2nd series, ed. Brian Gibbons) (in progress)
    *Musil, Robert. Man Without Qualities (in progress)
    *Theroux, Alexander. Darconville's Cat (finished)

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  3. I thought I'd list out what played on my iPod for a good part of the week. This is what showed up on shuffle, out of about 16,000 songs. I don't think I'll do this again--too much typing--but it's interesting. "Shuffle" seems to ride on particular artists or albums. So, this was my soundtrack for most of last week's driving back and forth to work and doing the dishes:

    iPod shuffle week of 2010-01-03/07 part 1 (I had to break this up into two comments because of length quota, sorry!):

    You got to get out of here --Memphis Minnie
    Halloween in Harlem --Sun Ra
    Calling planet Earth --Sun Ra
    Love in swingtime --Duke Ellington
    Jubilesta --Cootie Williams (Duke E. small group)
    Senior service --Elvis Costello
    Lowe groovin' --Joe Morris
    Crown of creation --Jefferson Airplane
    The piccolino --Fred Astaire
    Never my love --Booker T. & the MGs
    Higher --Sly & the Family Stone
    Do you like worms? --Beach Boys
    More than you know --Billie Holiday
    Everybilly --Tad Thaddock
    Milkcow blues boogie --Elvis Presley
    Blues by five --Miles Davis
    Morse code of love --The Capris
    Complaints Dept. --Stock, Hausen, & Walkman
    Star dust --Duke Ellington (live Fargo)
    What you're doing --Beatles (mono)
    I got the feelin' --James Brown
    Wham --Duke Ellington
    Stuck inside of Mobile with the Memphis blues again --Bob Dylan
    A sailboat in the moonlight --Johnny Hodges (Duke E. small group)
    Bluebird --Charlie Parker
    In a jam --Duke Ellington
    Only the strong survive --Jerry Butler
    This boy --Beatles (live)
    A place nobody can find --Sam & Dave
    The lucky old sun --Willie Nelson
    Wheel of fortune --The Cardinals
    Like a rolling stone --Bob Dylan
    Savoy blues --Louis Armstrong
    Ina silent way/It's about that time --Miles Davis
    By your side --Tower of Power
    Somewhere out --Sun Ra
    I could have danced all night --Sun Ra
    Wayo --Fela
    Please be my baby --The Shirelles
    Licking stick, licking stick --James Brown (live)
    bit from Cryptic Jr. (anthology of early home recordings of me and my brother)
    Still raining, still dreaming --Jimi Hendrix
    You couldn't be cuter --Al Bowlly
    Twist and shout --Isley Brothers
    Midriff --Duke Ellington
    Beg me --Chuck Jackson
    Let me tell the world --The Impressions
    Klaunstance --Charlie Parker
    Judy --Al Green
    Space cadet 2 --Kid Koala
    Taxman --Beatles (mono)
    Heroes and villains (45 version)--Beach Boys
    I'm only sleeping (rehearsal) --Beatles
    Stay out of the kitchen --Mable John

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  4. iPod shuffle week of 2010-01-03/07, part 2:

    When it rains it really pours --Elvis Presley
    Pygmy brats pt. 1 & 2 --Tad Thaddock
    How long --Frank Stokes
    What's to say --Art Ensemble of Chicago
    Body movin' (Fatboy Slim remix) --Beastie Boys
    ?? --Anthony Braxton Quartet (Knitting Factory '93)
    You're no good --Betty Everett
    Golden teardrops --the Flamingos
    Studio dialog --James Brown
    Every little thing --Beatles (mono)
    Lonesome day blues --Bob Dylan
    You're gonna make me cry --O.V. Wright
    Danger zone --Wilson Pickett
    I got a woman --Beatles (BBC)
    You can't do that --Beatles (live)
    These arms of mine --Otis Redding (live)
    bit from Cryptic Snippets (anthology of early home recordings of me and my brother)
    Parker's mood --Charlie Parker
    Cottontop --Stan Hasselgard
    I saw her standing there --Beatles (BBC)
    I am the alter-destiny --Sun Ra
    You go to my head --Anthony Braxton
    Flying --the Residents
    Adventures in space --Sun Ra
    Believe in me --Jerry Butler
    Let him go --Bob Marley & the Wailers
    Stupidity --the Van Dykes
    Where's my sweetie hiding --Arcadia Peacock Orchestra
    It's too late --Charlie Rich
    Chi chi cha --Beatles (Let it be sessions)
    Tender years --George Jones
    Home in your heart --Solomon Burke
    Along came Ra --Sun Ra
    East St. Louis Toodle-oo --Steely Dan
    Good morning good morning (sound effects) --Beatles
    Never get enough --Bobby Byrd
    No strings --Fred Astaire
    I would die 4 U --Prince
    Lemon song --Led Zeppelin
    Honest with me --Bob Dylan
    Gnik nus --Beatles (Love)
    Georgia on my mind --Delta Rhythm Boys
    Future --Sun Ra (acetate)
    If you really love me --Stevie Wonder
    bit from Cryptic Jr.
    Double cross --Spring Heel Jack
    The last thing on my mind --Porter Wagoner & Dolly Parton
    bit from Cryptic Snippets
    Wild man blues --Louis Armstrong
    Anything you wanna know --Joe Tex
    Ain't it a shame --Joe Tex
    Improvisation for the march of time --Wild Bill Davison
    Voodoo child (slight return) --Band of Gypsies (live)
    Pathways to unknown worlds --Sun Ra
    Thoughts under a dark blue light --Sun Ra
    Black comedy (alt take) --Miles Davis
    New Orleans joys --Jelly Roll Morton
    Terms of psychic warfare --Husker Du
    Sweetie dear --Sidney Bechet/Tommy Ladnier
    Sweet mama --Duke Ellington
    Mad love --Muddy Waters
    Tonky boogie --Forrest Sykes
    Rainbow people --Fraternal Order of the All
    Comp. 25 --Anthony Braxton
    Maybe the last time --James Brown (live)
    Underneath the Harlem moon --Fletcher Henderson
    Penina --Beatles (Let it be sessions)
    Nobody knows you --Otis Redding
    Bold soul sister --Ike & Tina Turner
    bit from Cryptic Snippets
    It's the beat --Major Lance
    Mobile blues --Wade's Moulin Rouge Orchestra
    Untitled in CoF minor/A valentine to Sherwood Anderson --Mikhail/Gertrude Stein (DJ Spooky remix)
    Born to be together --the Ronettes
    No head no backstage pass --Funkadelic
    Vertical responsibility paradigm > Closed doors E (Get serious) --UYA (live Johnny D's)

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