As a fan of a wide variety of popular (and not-so-popular) music from the 1950s (and sometimes even earlier) up through the present, one of my bucket list projects for years has been to put together a list of my 100 favorite songs of all time. At some point I decided that, once I got around to figuring that out, I could put it out on a blog, for the infinitesimally small proportion of the Internet world that might be interested. So, here we are. While the Top 100 will be a major focus, I also plan to post on a variety of other musical (and occasionally non-musical) topics, in which you may or may not be interested. (If a particular posting doesn’t ring your bell, you’re only a few clicks away from a dancing cat video on YouTube.)

Saturday, August 15, 2015

Lyle Lovett & His Large Band, Wolf Trap 8/14/2015


Row D, Seats 42-43
 
Another year, another excellent show from Lyle and the crew, most of whom seem to have been with him for 10 years or longer (in some cases, much longer). The inimitable R&B singer Francine Reed was heavily featured this year, standing in the front line of performers after she entered down the left aisle while singing “Wild Women Don’t Have The Blues”, following the usual opening instrumental “The Blues Walk”. As usual, Lyle also gave longtime members Luke Bulla and Keith Sewell a chance to showcase one song each from their solo recordings. The somewhat sedate audience certainly got its moneys worth, as the band came on at 8:00 and didn’t finish until around 10:40. As usual, the musicianship was superb, with everyone getting solos at one point or another.
 
The band certainly hit most of the favorites in the Lovett songbook – “Here I Am” near the beginning, and “If I Had A Boat”, “She’s No Lady”, and “That’s Right (You’re Not From Texas)” just before the end. Personally, I was equally impressed by a number of songs that I was not especially familiar with, notably “Family Reserve” (a Twitter request he neglected to respond to in his previous show), “South Texas Girl”, “Don’t Touch My Hat”, “I Will Rise Up”, and “All Downhill”. While he frequently closes his main set with an upbeat gospel-tinged number, this year’s selection of “Pass Me Not O Gentle Savior” was slower than the usual, although with a set of superb vocal solos it brought the crowd to its feet for the first time in the show. (I later discovered it could be found on a CD called Ultimate Gospel Hits, Vol. 1, in the company of “Gonna Build A Mountain” by Sammy Davis Jr. and, even more oddly, “People Get Ready” by Lee Atwater.) Appropriately enough, the encore was “Closing Time”, the final track from Lyle’s debut CD.

Shuffle #66 (August 15, 2015)


I’ll Feel A Whole Lot Better – The Byrds
Fate’s Right Hand – Rodney Crowell
I’ve Never Found A Girl (To Love Me Like You Do) – Eddie Floyd
Slum Baby – Booker T. & The MG’s
Summerfling – k.d. lang
Walk On – U2
Tears Dry On Their Own – Amy Winehouse
No Fair At All – The Association
I’ve Got Sand In My Shoes – The Drifters
The Way – Ariana Grande

Friday, August 14, 2015

LP #6 Patti Austin – The Real Me (1988)


Although I don’t really keep track, I’m pretty sure I don’t buy as many albums as I did 20 or 25 years ago. (While I do buy singles on iTunes, my album purchases are still on CD.) One of the reasons for this decline is the disappearance of physical music stores that have enough of a selection to make browsing through the bins a worthwhile endeavor. One of the best places for browsing, of course, was Tower Records; before they opened a store just down the road from me at Congressional Plaza in Rockville, I would make special trips to their more distant stores, in quest of something that no one else would have to add to my collection.
 
Of course, Tower always had music playing over the store’s sound system. Very little of it made much of an impression on me, but one day while I was in their Foggy Bottom store in DC they put on an album that grabbed me immediately. I had never been a big Patti Austin fan, primarily because the songs of hers I’d heard on the radio always sounded pretty generic, but these songs were classics (admittedly some more of my parents’ time than mine) and the arrangements were wonderful. She even manages to surpass the Platters’ version of “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes” (which I didn’t think was possible) with a slightly off-the-beat rendition here.
 
Favorite tracks:
Lazy Afternoon
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
How Long Has This Been Going On?
They Can’t Take That Away From Me

Shuffle #65 (August 14, 2015)


Once In A Lifetime – Talking Heads
Havin’ A Party – Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes
Talkin’ Bout A Revolution – Tracy Chapman
Say Hey (I Love You) – Michael Franti & Spearhead
Can’t Get There From Here – R.E.M.
Rumour Has It – Adele
Come Go With Me – The Del Vikings
(He’s) The Great Imposter – The Fleetwoods
Way Over Yonder – Carole King

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Shuffle #64 (August 13, 2015)


Tequila Sunrise – Eagles
Hang On To Your Love – Sade
Satellite – Guster
California Sun – Gin Blossoms
Hot Rod Heart – John Fogerty
Johnny Hold Back – Charlie
Levi Stubbs’ Tears – Billy Bragg
Rider In The Rain – Randy Newman

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Culture Club, Wolf Trap, 8/10/2015


Row F, Seats 37-39
 
I liked most of Culture Club’s singles back in the 80s but was never a diehard fan, so I didn’t know quite what to expect from their reunion tour. The show – almost two full hours with no opening act or intermission – actually was very good, with an extremely enthusiastic although not sold-out crowd. The number of performers on stage rivaled the size of Lyle Lovett’s “Large Band”; I counted 3 backup singers, a 3-person horn section, 2 extra percussionists, a keyboard player and a guitar player in addition to the four core members of the band. They didn’t pull any punches from the start, getting the crowd on their feet with three of their biggest hits (“Church Of The Poison Mind”, “It’s A Miracle”, and “I’ll Tumble 4 Ya”), and keeping us there for “Like I Used To” (a strong cut from their upcoming Tribes album) and a reggaefied cover of Bread’s “Everything I Own” (which I subsequently discovered had been a #1 solo hit for Boy George in England). The rest of the show mixed familiar and more obscure older material – they eventually got to all of the 8 singles that hit the top 15 stateside, plus Boy George’s title track from The Crying Game – with some additional tracks from the new album. The other two best new tracks were the Johnny-Cash-inspired “Runaway Train” (which was the next-to-last song before the encores) and the first encore, “More Than Silence”. They closed the main set with “Do You Really Want To Hurt Me” (a phrase that was also prominently featured on one of the t-shirts available for sale), on which they paused for maximum effect before kicking the song into gear. After everyone went off, Roy Hay and bassist Mikey Craig came back and led the cheers to get Boy George and the rest of the crew back on stage. After “More Than Silence” came the inevitable “Karma Chameleon”, with the crowd singing along, and finally an extended cover of T. Rex’s “Bang A Gong (Get It On)”, during which Boy George introduced everyone on stage.
 
Yes, there were Boy George costume changes; I won’t try to keep track of all of them, but he started out in a patterned red, white, yellow and orange outfit with a black jacket, wide black tie, and black fedora with a feather, and he was wearing all black during “Runaway Train”. Fortunately the changes didn’t disrupt the show, as he typically just made a quick trip offstage while someone did an end-of-song solo. If you really want more details about the costumes, check out this review of their earlier show in Bethlehem.
 
The traffic map was encouraging enough around 5:00 that we took I-270 to the Beltway rather than the usual Falls Road route, making it from Westat to the Pike 7 Plaza in a quick 30 minutes – early enough that we decided to try the Thai restaurant there (which was good) rather than checking in at Panera. I also got out of the parking lot much more quickly than usual, getting back home around 10:45.
 

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Serendipity #45


Second Chance – Peter Bjorn and John


Heard 8/11/2015 around noon, at Zoe’s Kitchen (Kentlands)

Monday, August 10, 2015

August 9, 2015 – Rockies 6, Nationals 4 – Nationals Park


 
Attendance: 33,157
Game Time: 3:24
Weather: 84 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind: 2 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Alan Porter, First Base - Mark Ripperger, Second Base - Jeff Kellogg, Third Base - Brian O'Nora
Seventh-inning stretch song: I Got You (I Feel Good) – James Brown
 
Highlights – Ryan Zimmerman and Jayson Werth led off the bottom of the second with back-to-back home runs … Zimmerman went deep again in the third … new no-VA route to the park worked well (37 minutes)
 
Other – Max Scherzer was touched for 4 runs in 6 innings, including two solo dingers by the hot-hitting Carlos Gonzalez and one by the light-hitting Daniel Descalso … Storen gave up the deciding runs in the eighth inning for the second time in the series
 
If the Nats want an appropriate James Brown song for the seventh-inning stretch, perhaps they should go with “Talking Loud And Saying Nothing”, given that they’re a mere 4 games over .500 with more than 2/3 of the season now in the books. (Boswell’s column this morning, however, references Toots and the Maytals instead.) The safest prediction of the year is that, if the Nats are out of playoff contention going into their season-ending series in New York, Bryce will be hearing loud chants of “where’s my ring” from all of the Mets fans in attendance.

August 5, 2015 – Diamondbacks 11, Nationals 4 – Nationals Park


 
Attendance: 37,572
Game Time: 3:56
Weather: 87 degrees, clear
Wind: 5 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Gabe Morales, First Base - Tripp Gibson, Second Base - Brian Gorman, Third Base - Mark Carlson
Seventh-inning stretch song: It’s Not Unusual – Tom Jones
 
Highlights – in the top of the first, Nats took maximum advantage of leadoff Escobar double and subsequent walks to Rendon and Harper, scoring 2 runs on sac flies by Zimmerman and Werth … Gio battled out of trouble throughout, fanning 7 and allowing the Diamondbacks to cross the plate only once before being lifted after yielding a leadoff single in the top of the sixth … Tyler Moore came in to face Paul Goldschmidt with one out in the ninth and got him out, then finished the inning without allowing a hit
 
Other – in short, one of the longest and ugliest games of the season … after taking the lead in the bottom of the first, Nats offense failed to score again until the bottom of the ninth, when they were 9 runs down … Aaron Barrett and Tanner Roark allowed the D-backs to take a 5-2 lead in the sixth after Gio’s departure, featuring a thrown-away bunt by the former and two consecutive walks to force in a run by the latter … Thornton and Rivero completed the bullpen meltdown by giving up 3 runs each in the 8th and 9th, respectively