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.)

Sunday, February 23, 2014

#77 I Loved And I Lost -- The Impressions (1968)



I’ve always felt that Chicago soul music never got the credit it deserves. In terms of soul music, you hear much more about Detroit for Motown, Philly for the Gamble and Huff days, Muscle Shoals, and Memphis. Even when it comes to Chicago, people think much more about Chicago blues than about soul. Yet Chicago produced some of the greatest R&B music of the 1960s and 1970s. In addition to the Impressions, you had former Impression Jerry Butler, Gene Chandler, Major Lance, Alvin Cash, Billy Butler, the Dells, the Chi-Lites, the Marvelows, and I’m sure some folks that I’m forgetting.

Curtis Mayfield, of course, was the driving force behind much of this success. In addition to writing nearly all of the Impressions’ material, he wrote hits for fellow Chicagoans Jerry Butler, Gene Chandler, and Major Lance, as well as for Aretha Franklin and the Staple Singers. He also was a producer, started his own successful record label (Curtom), and had a notable solo career in the 1970s.

Picking just one song by the Impressions was even harder than picking just one Steely Dan tune. Most of the album cuts that Mayfield wrote for the Impressions are just as strong as the tracks that got released as singles, in sharp contrast to the filler that mars so many 1960 albums. If you like this one, be sure to check out their other stuff – you’ll be glad you did.

#78 A Dream Goes On Forever -- Todd Rundgren (1974)



Todd Rundgren may have been one of the most ambitious and eclectic musical figures of his generation (note-for-note recreation of “Good Vibrations,” anyone?), but he was never better than when he was crafting great classic pop songs. “A Dream Goes On Forever” was never a big hit, perhaps because it was not nearly as catchy as “I Saw the Light” or “We Gotta Get You a Woman”, but it’s one of his most affecting efforts. A close second would be “Love Is the Answer,” whose incredibly soulful cover version by England Dan and John Ford Coley (of all people) deservedly hit the top 10 in 1979.

All in all, I guess I can forgive him for producing Meat Loaf’s Bat Out of Hell album.   ;-)

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Serendipity #9


Pay Me My Money Down – Bruce Springsteen (2006)


Heard 2/19/2014 around 6:10, Potbelly (downtown Rockville location)

#79 My Old School -- Steely Dan (1973)



Picking just one Steely Dan song was really difficult, but I remember this one being our favorite back when I was in college. When I moved down to the DC area I was intrigued by the Annandale reference, but later learned that it referred to Annandale-on-Hudson in New York, rather than to the town in Northern Virginia. Oh well.

On the other hand, R.E.M.s “(Don’t Go Back To) Rockville” really does refer to Rockville MD.

#80 Nothing But a Breeze -- Jesse Winchester (1977)



I had always liked a lot of Jesse Winchester’s material, but remember being frustrated many years ago because the domestic Best-Of compilation didn’t include this song, despite it being one of only two songs he ever did that cracked the U.S. Hot 100 chart (albeit only very briefly). I was delighted one day when, browsing through the bins of a now-defunct used CD store in Silver Spring, I found a 25-track imported compilation that did include “Nothing But a Breeze,” as well as my other favorites by him. I brought the jewel box to the counter and paid for the CD, not knowing that this was one of those places that kept the actual CDs behind the counter. Naturally I was unpleasantly surprised when I got home to find nothing but an empty box, and highly irritated that, despite a couple of calls to the shop, I had to drive back down to the store to pick up the actual CD. (I never went back there again.) It was well worth the wait, however, and as far as I know is still the only Jesse Winchester collection containing this classic.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

#81 A Quiet Place -- Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters (1964)



Although I listened to Top 40 radio almost constantly from the age of 12 and fairly often even afterwards, only once can I remember actually requesting a specific song. WBT radio (1110) out of Charlotte NC could be heard easily in Pennsylvania after dark, and at one point I frequently listened to Rockin’ Ray’s “Sunday Night Hall of Fame,” which was on the air from 1971 through 1995. On one show he played “A Quiet Place”, which I had never heard before. I liked it so much that I sent in a postcard requesting the song the next week. What I can’t remember is whether or not he actually played it again.

The song is widely considered to be a classic example of “Carolina Beach Music”, although it’s much slower and more melancholy that most other CBM songs.

#82 Any Day Now -- Chuck Jackson (1962)



Soul singer Chuck Jackson had a long recording career without a lot of big hits – “Any Day Now” was his biggest, and it didn’t even make the top 20. It’s a great song nonetheless, even if more people may be familiar with Elvis Presley’s cover version.

This past Tuesday, which was the 50th anniversary of the Beatles’ first American concert (at the Washington Coliseum), the Smithsonian presented a program featuring Mark Lewisohn, who has published several books on the Fab Four, including the recently-released first volume of a planned three-volume biography of the group. He noted that at one point while visiting America, the Beatles sat in on a broadcast by famous DJ Murray the K, who let them request songs to play. Lewisohn presented slides featuring the songs, which included a variety of both well-known and obscure Motown tunes, along with songs by Chuck Berry, Richie Valens, and the Ronettes. “Any Day Now” was among the songs on their request list.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings / Valerie June at the Lincoln Theater, 2/10/2014


Concert-wise at least, there can’t be too many experiences like sitting in the front row of a show by Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings.

Since this was my first time at the Lincoln in years, with one of the hottest acts around (two sold-out shows) and general admission seating, I figured I’d better arrive early, but wound up overdoing it a bit, getting off the Metro around 4:50 with doors scheduled to open at 6:30. No line yet. I walked a few blocks down U Street, picked up a few things at a CVS, and got back to the theater at 5:00 – there was now a line consisting of one person. Stopped next door at Ben’s Chili Bowl, got some chili, and went back outside around 20 minutes later, at which point person #1 had been joined by her friend, making me #3 in the line.

More folks gradually arrived, and with quite a bit of time to wait plenty of conversation ensued, including a discussion of the best place to sit. We all agreed to shoot for the front row, which turned out not to be quite as easy as it sounded. They finally opened the outer doors around 6:45 and let people into the lobby area. Maybe 10 minutes or so later, they opened the lobby doors so we could get into the hall and stairs leading to the theater, but not into the theater itself. Of course, by this point the original order of the line had not exactly managed to hold up all that well. Miraculously, however, once they opened the final set of doors a few members of the original group managed to secure enough front-row seats for all of us early-arrivers. (Another note – “doors open” apparently also meant that the outer doors remained open, at least until the show started, which meant that the lobby was absolutely frigid. I felt really sorry for the folks who were running the two small bars out there.)

Valerie June opened around 8:00 for a half-hour set that was enthusiastically received by the crowd. She characterizes her sound as “Organic Moonshine Roots Music,” which is probably as good a description as any, with shades of country, blues, and especially Appalachian. She has quite an unusual voice – check out “Working Woman” (which has been getting some play on WXPN) on her web site. 

The Dap-Kings (who may be best known for providing backing instrumentals for Amy Winehouse’s breakthrough CD Back in Black), came out around 9:00, with a short warm-up to prepare the crowd for Sharon’s entry. Despite recently overcoming bile duct cancer, there was no decrease in her energy level, as she prowled all over the stage for nearly the entire set of soul originals and a few great covers (“This Land Is Your Land” and “I Heard It Through the Grapevine”). Other highlights included “I Learned the Hard Way,” “Stranger to My Happiness” (her current single), and “100 Days, 100 Nights” (my personal favorite and the first song of hers I ever heard), although there really wasn’t a weak moment in the show.

To get an idea of Sharon Jones and the band live, check out this performance from SXSW a few years back.

Schooner Fare at Wolf Trap Barns, 2/1/2014


I believe this is the first time we had seen Maine folkies Schooner Fare for a full show since they were down to a duo after the passing of former member Tom Rowe. The Romanoff brothers nevertheless continued to perform at a high level, beginning the show with Bill Staines’ “Roseville Fair” and continuing with a mix of original songs and those borrowed from others, accompanied by a variety of humorous and other anecdotes. The set list managed to include three of my favorites: “Red, Red Robin,” “Calgary, My Home Away from Home,” and of course “Portland Town.”

Good-sized crowd – looked to be either a sellout or very close to it. Unfortunately for the band, due to a shipping screw-up the CDs that were supposed to be available for sale at the show didn’t manage to arrive in time.

Serendipity #8


Can’t Get Used to Losing You – The English Beat (1980)
Heard 2/12/2014 around 5:45, Potbelly (downtown Rockville location)