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.)

Friday, July 17, 2015

Guster w/ Kishi Bashi, Wolf Trap, 7/16/2015


Row B, Seats 26-27 (dead center, second row in back of the pit)
 
Proposition: Guster is the world’s greatest rock band that almost no one has ever heard (of).
 
Last night at Wolf Trap provided evidence for both ends of this, as the guys put on a fantastic show in front of a smallish but enthusiastic audience. (“Smallish” here meaning that if the Filene Center were a glass, it would have been closer to half-empty than half-full.)
 
All 5 “members” of the band (Ryan, Adam, Brian, Luke, and ???) displayed their musical versatility – despite the apparent looseness of the show and the repartee, it obviously required a huge amount of organization to keep track of who was playing what instrument as they moved between songs. Front man and resident goof Ryan Miller, for instance, played 3 or 4 different keyboards (xylophone, organ, …) at various points, in addition to guitar and bass. The biggest cheers, however, seemed to be reserved for Adam Gardner whenever he picked up his trumpet, while percussionist Brian Rosenworcel moved seamlessly back and forth between two drum kits while in one song also showing both standard and distinctly non-standard uses for a trombone. (Trivia note – Brian’s sister Jessica is one of the five members of the Federal Communications Commission.)
 
From the beginning of the show, the band demonstrated the depth of their catalog, starting with “Long Night” (the first of several tracks from their recent Evermotion CD), following that with “Careful” (from 2003’s Keep It Together), and going back to last century for tunes such as “Barrel Of A Gun”, “Happier”, and “Either Way”). They also resisted the temptation to only play their hits (OK, they really didn’t have any actual “hits”), eschewing more familiar tracks such as “One Man Wrecking Machine” in favor of less-played tunes such as “Lightning Rod” (a personal favorite of mine).
 
The band ended the pre-encore portion of their show with a rousing crowd singalong on “This Could All Be Yours”, followed (after perhaps a 15-second break) by “Kid Dreams”. They then brought back opening act Kishi Bashi to add violin on the classic “Satellite” and a rousing version of “Come On Eileen”, after which they strolled back to the lawn for a short acoustic conclusion to the show. By this time it was 10:55, which is the closest any show I’ve been to in the past few years has come to the Wolf Trap curfew. (Guster started just after 9:00.)
 
Ah, what to say about opening act Kishi Bashi (the “nom de la musique” for 39-year-old violinist and singer Kaoru Ishibashi)? The Wolf Trap program notes that he “blends elements of pop, classical, electronica, and beatboxing to create an experimental sound that transcends cultures and pop music eras.” Lots of looping on both violin and vocals. Very personable guy – not exactly my cup of tea style-wise, but certainly one of the more unusual openers I’ve seen recently.

Serendipity #42


I Just Can’t Stop Dancing – Archie Bell & The Drells


Heard 7/17/2015 around 6:30, at Panera (Tyson’s Corner)

Monday, July 13, 2015

LP #8 Gin Blossoms – New Miserable Experience (1992)


I’ve posted a longer discussion about the Gin Blossoms elsewhere, so I won’t repeat it here. New Miserable Experience didn’t catch on immediately, but it was all over the radio from the summer of ’93 through fall ’94, with 5 of its 12 tracks getting significant radio airplay. The other tracks are well worth a listen as well, especially the poignant “Pieces Of The Night”, which was among the 6 songs on the album written or co-written by the late Doug Hopkins.
 
Favorite tracks:
Hey Jealousy
Until I Fall Away
Allison Road
Found Out About You
Mrs. Rita

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Shuffle #61 (July 7, 2015)


(large economy size)
 
Nick Of Time – Bonnie Raitt
Things We Do – Indigenous
Walking Down Madison – Kirsty MacColl
Island Girl – Elton John
Weekend In New England – Barry Manilow
The “In” Crowd – Ramsey Lewis
Drown In My Own Tears – Eva Cassidy & Chuck Brown
Omaha – Counting Crows
You Send Me – Sam Cooke
Everything Your Heart Desires – Hall & Oates
You Never Need Nobody – The Lone Bellow
Go Ahead And Cry – The Righteous Brothers
Sight Unseen – Richard Thompson
Till The End Of The Day – The Kinks
Psycho Killer – Talking Heads
Things Have Changed – Bob Dylan
Talk To Me, Talk To Me --- Little Willie John
Ain’t No Mountain High Enough – Marvin Gaye & Tammi Terrell
Great Goodbye – Kwesi K
King Of Anything – Sara Bareilles
How Far We’ve Come – Dawes
The Heart Of Rock & Roll – Huey Lewis & The News
Kiss Away – Ronnie Dove
Fields Of Gold – Eva Cassidy
Step Right Up – Tom Waits
Inner City Blues – Brian Auger’s Oblivion Express
The Light – Brewer & Shipley
Talk It Over In The Morning – Anne Murray
Holiday – Green Day
Pretty As You Feel – Jefferson Airplane
I Can’t Understand – Los Lobos
Wooden Ships – Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

Monday, July 6, 2015

July 5, 2015 – Nationals 3, Giants 1 – Nationals Park


 
Attendance: 33,157
Game Time: 3:02
Weather: 83 degrees, cloudy
Wind: 3 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Phil Cuzzi, First Base - Gerry Davis, Second Base - Pat Hoberg, Third Base - Will Little
Seventh-inning stretch song: Higher Love – Steve Winwood
 
Highlights – 7 effective innings by Jordan Zimmermann (3 hits, 1 walk, 8 Ks, 100 pitches), with the only blemish being a fourth-inning homer by Brandon Crawford on a 3-0 pitch … 2nd-inning RBI single by Michael A. Taylor after leadoff walks to Ramos and Espinosa … 6th-inning solo homer by Ramos to restore the Nats’ lead … 8th-inning insurance run on Harper double and Ramos single … another home save (and free Chick-Fil-A sandwich) courtesy of Drew Storen … periodic updates on the U.S. Women’s World Cup championship win over Japan, which elicited enthusiastic crowd chants of U-S-A
 
Other – beat the traffic by leaving Rockville 5 hours before game time (we wanted to arrive early enough to eat at Nando’s and get to the stadium in time for the Strasburg bobbleheads (no, they didn’t portray him clutching some body part on the way to the DL))

Serendipity #41


Move By Yourself – Donavon Frankenreiter


Heard 7/6/2015 around noon, at Zoe’s Kitchen (Kentlands)

Sunday, July 5, 2015

Serendipity #40


Put The Message In The Box – World Party


Heard 7/5/2015 around 12:15, at McDonald’s (Derwood)

Friday, July 3, 2015

Serendipity #39


Come Running – Van Morrison


Heard 7/3/2015 around 3:40, at Wegman’s (Germantown)

Shuffle #60 (July 3, 2015)


I Am Your Man – Ryan Shaw
Love Story – Katharine McPhee
Have You Seen Her – The Chi-Lites
I’ve Got You Under My Skin – The Four Seasons
Take Me Out – Franz Ferdinand
Rattle My Bones – The Secret Sisters
Love Will Lead You Back – Taylor Dayne
Let There Be Music – Orleans
Watershed – Indigo Girls

Thursday, July 2, 2015

John Fogerty (“1969” tour), Wolf Trap, 6/30/2015


Row K, Seats 60-61 (right side)
 
The first third of Tuesday night’s show by John Fogerty and his five bandmates (including son Shane Fogerty on guitar and the ubiquitous Kenny Aronoff on drums) was good. The remainder of the show was superb.
 
The turning point was an extended version of “Keep On Chooglin’”, an album track from Bayou Country, the first of three LPs that Creedence released during 1969. They followed with a well-chosen mix of hit singles (such as “Lodi” and “Green River”), extended workouts (“Ramble Tamble” and of course “I Heard It Through the Grapevine”), and covers of early rock classics (“Good Golly Miss Molly” and shortened versions of “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” and “Rockin’ Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu”, both of which featured Fogerty on piano). I was particularly impressed by their versions of a couple of singles that I had never counted among my favorites: “Hey Tonight” and “Long as I Can See the Light.”
 
The band kicked it into overdrive near the end, winding up with “Down on the Corner”, “Centerfield” (which drew the biggest crowd reaction of the night), an extended version of “The Old Man Down the Road”, and “Fortunate Son”. The enthusiastic crowd was rewarded with two classic encores: “Bad Moon Rising” and “Proud Mary”. (For whatever it’s worth, by my count just 10 of the 27 songs actually came from the year 1969, not that I’m complaining.)
 
The show started at 8:20 and ran just over two hours. In lieu of an opening act, the evening started with a 15-minute video focusing on the tour’s title year, with photos, concert footage, and some reminiscing from Fogerty. It wasn’t bad (and no doubt was particularly useful for those in the audience who didn’t live through it), but it tended to ramble at times, and for me ran at least 5 minutes too long.