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, January 10, 2015

Shuffle #43 (January 10, 2015)


Remember (Walkin’ In The Sand) – The Shangri-Las
Rattler – The Seekers
Funny Not To Care – Lake Street Dive
Deep & Wide & Tall – Aztec Camera
Snow Queen – Blood, Sweat & Tears
Leaving On A Jet Plane – Peter, Paul & Mary
Check Out Your Mind – The Impressions
Let’s Go Crazy – Prince
That’s All Right – Elvis Presley

Favorite (live) Albums


Since I finished posting my favorite 100 songs of all time, I’m turning my attention in 2015 to favorite albums. As with the songs, I decided to spread the love around by having no more than one album per artist. I also ruled out best-ofs and other compilations, since it seemed to me that these would have an unfair edge. (Might possibly get around to doing a separate list of those later.)
 
After starting to figure things out, I decided pretty quickly that 100 would be much too high a number for albums; 25 seemed to be about right. I did cheat a little by coming up a separate list of my 5 favorite live albums, rather than including those in the main list.
 
 
Favorite Live Albums
 
5.  The Robert Cray Band – Live From Across The Pond (2006)
 
As with Richard Thompson and James Hunter, I’ve always felt a little jealous of Robert Cray – it seems unfair that one person should be so gifted as a songwriter, singer, AND guitar player. Cray has gotten some static over the years for not being a pure enough bluesman; while his lyrics are as bluesy as you can get, his music leans more on Southern soul than it does on the traditional 12-bar blues idiom. Although this 2-disc set omits a couple of my favorites (“Strong Persuader” and “Night Patrol”), Cray and his band (especially keyboardist Jim Pugh) are great live, and this probably serves as a better introduction to his music than any of his studio albums do.
 
Best tracks:  Phone Booth, Poor Johnny, Right Next Door (Because Of Me), Bad Influence, The One In The Middle
 
 
4.  Into the Mirror: Del Amitri Live in Concert (2014)
 
Since Del Amitri is one of my all-time favorite bands, this one is a no-brainer, although (1) I’ve only had it for a couple months, and (2) it’s a limited edition. (From the band’s Facebook page: “Demand for the live album of this year's tour was so great that it sold out on the day of release. We have decided to make the tracks available digitally over the holidays - you can now purchase the tracks from "Into the Mirror" at iTunes, Amazon, Spotify etc, etc, etc. (No more cds though, I'm afraid; if you want the nice box and the booklet you will have to steal one.)”)
 
The band broke up in 2002, but decided to get together for a 20-date UK reunion tour in January-February 2014. (If they had picked a more tourist-friendly time of year, I almost certainly would have planned a vacation in England to overlap with one or two of the shows.) This double-CD set documents the tour, featuring most of their most familiar tracks plus a few that were new to me. The band sounded as though it had never left, and the crowds were appropriately enthusiastic.
 
Best tracks:  Always The Last To Know, Be My Downfall, Roll To Me, Driving With The Brakes On
 
3.  The Allman Brothers Band at Fillmore East (1971)
 
One of the all-time classics, dating back to my college days, by the greatest blues/rock/jam band of all time. The only problem is that listening to it properly in the car requires some planning, since 2 of the 7 tracks are each over 19 minutes long. (It does make for a nice round-trip drive to Nats Park, though.)
 
Best tracks:  Stormy Monday, In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed, Whipping Post (all 23:03 of it)
 
 
2.  The Youngbloods – Ride The Wind (1971)
 
To the best of my admittedly hazy recollection, this was the first LP I bought after enrolling at Lebanon Valley. I didn’t buy it at the college bookstore, but at a newspaper/magazine store a few blocks off campus that had a small selection of records. It was pretty much of an impulse purchase – I loved their modestly-successful single “Sunlight” and had picked up “Get Together” when it was first released in 1967, two years before it hit the top 10 – and this album contained both songs.
 
Interestingly enough, I didn’t realize when I bought it that it was a live album, since nothing on the outer packaging explicitly says so (although I might have guessed from the length of the 6 tracks). Like the Allman’s effort, it was recorded at the legendary Fillmore East in New York (over three nights in 1969). Turned out the Youngbloods were a pretty great jam band in their own right, although with more of a folk-rock feel. I’ve never been a huge fan of jam bands in general, since I’ve heard too many overextended performances that simply meander aimlessly, but here the band manages to stretch out the songs nicely from the original studio versions without losing the main thread (or the listener). They also had a sense of humor; “Sugar Babe” is one of the few songs in my music collection to feature a kazoo.
 
Best tracks:  Sunlight, Ride The Wind, Sugar Babe (basically side one of the original album)
 
 
1.  Eva Cassidy – Live at Blues Alley (1996)
 
I’ve raved enough about Eva Cassidy elsewhere, so I won’t repeat myself here. This was Eva’s first solo album (on an obscure local label, naturally), and in fact the only solo album released during her lifetime. Despite her shyness, she was a dynamic live performer, and one who refused to limit her repertoire to a single genre; she could mesmerize an audience whether doing jazz, blues, standards, folk, or soul. In addition to Eva’s vocals, the arrangements and band on the album are superb. This set doesn’t include “Over The Rainbow”, but otherwise is a great introduction to her work.
 
Best tracks:  People Get Ready, Stormy Monday, Blue Skies, Fields Of Gold

Friday, January 9, 2015

Favorite Christmas Songs


By popular request, I gave it some thought and made a list of my favorite 10 Christmas songs of all time. (A little late for this past December, but really early for 2015.) 
  1. White Christmas – The Drifters
  2. Santa Claus Is Comin’ To Town – Bruce Springsteen
  3. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas – The Pretenders
  4. Please Come Home For Christmas – The Eagles
  5. Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) – Darlene Love
  6. Blue Holiday – The Shirelles
  7. Christmas Auld Lang Syne – Bobby Darin
  8. All I Want For Christmas – Timbuk 3
  9. Merry Christmas Baby – Charles Brown
  10. The Christmas Song – Nat King Cole

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Serendipity #28


On And On – Stephen Bishop
 
Heard 1/2/2015 around 11:45, at Wegman’s (Germantown)

Shuffle #42 (January 4, 2015)


Country Comfort – Elton John
Endlessly – Brook Benton
Day Tripper – The Beatles
Let Me Be The Man My Daddy Was – The Chi-Lites
Train In The Distance – Paul Simon
Dirty Work – Steely Dan
Istanbul (Not Constantinople) – They Might Be Giants
Manic Monday – The Bangles
Hearts And Bones – Paul Simon

Friday, January 2, 2015

Best Music of 2014 (Update)


I’ve updated my Best Music of 2014 lists to include where the songs and albums wound up in the WXPN, WTMD, and mvyradio countdowns.

I did a lot better than last year. Four of my favorite eight albums also finished in the top eight of the mvyradio listener poll, including Lake Street Dive’s Bad Self Portraits topping both lists. Song-wise, 7 of my 10 favorite tunes made the WXPN Top 200 and/or the WTMD Top 89.

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes w/ Ashleigh Chevalier, Birchmere, 12/27/2014


Southside Johnny may have been a little under the weather (bad cold), but he and the Jukes nevertheless managed to put on a great show for a large, appreciative crowd at the Birchmere Saturday evening. They started with an abbreviated version of “Talk To Me” (doing the full version later), then moving right into “Angel Eyes”. Other highlights included “Better Days”, “Love On The Wrong Side Of Town”, “No Easy Way Down”, and a tremendous cover of Jimmy Cliff’s “Many Rivers To Cross”, sung by keyboardist Jeff Kazee. They got to “The Fever” near the end, with Johnny’s voice clearly flagging, so the band then gave him a break by belting out an extended version of “Lookin’ For A Love”. He then returned for “Havin’ A Party”, but didn’t have enough left for any encores (so we missed out on the traditional “I Don’t Want To Go Home”). I don’t think anyone felt cheated under the circumstances, since the show still ran over 90 minutes.
 
The Fredericksburg-based Ashleigh Chevalier opened with a 30-minute set, accompanied on guitar by Bruce Middle. Her repertoire blends genres, with flavors of folk, country, and blues. Nice voice, although we weren’t particularly blown away by her original material. She did do a nice version of the blues classic “Ain’t Nobody’s Business If I Do.”
 
Enjoyed the Margarita Chicken Salad, and (unlike last time) managed not to make any wrong turns on the way home.

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Shuffle #41 (December 28, 2014)


I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry – B.J. Thomas
Only A Memory – The Smithereens
Closer To Fine – Indigo Girls
Zydeco Dog – Zachary Smith & The Dixie Power Trio
Wouldn’t It Be Nice – The Beach Boys
The Price You Pay – Bruce Springsteen
Love Shack – The B-52’s
Tunnel Of Love – Dire Straits

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Favorite 100 Songs Trivia


Total time of all songs – 6 hours, 25 minutes
Average song length – 3:51
 
Shortest songs:
    2:07  #65  Do You Believe In Magic -- The Lovin' Spoonful (1965)
    2:08  #72  Mama Said -- The Shirelles (1961)
    2:10  #46  One Fine Day -- The Chiffons (1963)
 
Longest songs (all in my top 20, for whatever it’s worth):
    7:43  #19  Bustin' Loose -- Chuck Brown & The Soul Searchers (1979)
    6:59  #5  Slippin' Into Darkness – War (1972)
    6:22  #7  Canadian Railroad Trilogy -- Gordon Lightfoot (1967)
    6:14  #1  Stay In My Corner -- The Dells (1968)
 
Shortest song title:
    #67  Mystery -- The Manhattan Transfer (1984)
Longest song title (tie):
    #100  Somewhere In America There's A Street Named After My Dad -- Was (Not Was)  (1988)
    #35  Neither One Of Us (Wants To Be The First To Say Goodbye) -- Gladys Knight & The Pips (1973)
 
Songs by decade:
1950s – 2
    #93  Fools Fall In Love -- The Drifters (1957)
    #83  This I Swear -- The Skyliners (1959)
1960s – 37
1970s – 23
1980s – 21
1990s – 11
2000s – 4
2010s – 2
    #86  Wide River To Cross -- Diana Krall (2012)
    #91  The Walk -- Mayer Hawthorne (2011)
 
Year with the most songs – 1965:
    #8  You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' -- The Righteous Brothers
    #9  A Change Is Gonna Come -- Sam Cooke
    #21  Ride Away -- Roy Orbison
    #33  I'll Feel A Whole Lot Better -- The Byrds
    #57  New York's A Lonely Town -- The Tradewinds
    #61  The Carnival Is Over -- The Seekers
    #65  Do You Believe In Magic -- The Lovin' Spoonful

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Shuffle #40 (December 14, 2014)


Smoke Gets In Your Eyes – Patti Austin
Seen And Not Seen – Talking Heads*
Rainy Days And Mondays – The Carpenters*
I Feel The Earth Move – Carole King
Did It In A Minute – Hall & Oates
Dance To The Music – Sly & The Family Stone
Try Me – James Brown
I’m A Man – The Yardbirds
Someday, One Day – The Seekers
Shower The People – James Taylor
Sledgehammer – Peter Gabriel

* -- Probably the only time in recorded history that these two songs have been played back to back.