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.)

Monday, September 4, 2017

Walter Becker


 
Phrases from Bruce Springsteen’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame blurb: “a voice of underdogs and the working class” … “deeply romantic and sentimental” … “His music has enormously appealing qualities—sincerity, earnestness, optimism, realism”
 
Phrases from Steely Dan’s blurb: “wry, nuanced and hyper-literate” … “desiccating wit” … “cutting, urbane and often black-humored lyrics”
 
One made his name touring with a band whose members would later be inducted into the R&R HOF on their own. The other gave up touring a few years into their career, relying on an dazzling array of guest studio musicians for their recordings.
 
What they had in common: no acts spent more time on my turntable when they hit the musical scene during the early 1970s.
 
Favorite songs:
Reeling In The Years
Deacon Blues
FM
Do It Again
King Of The World
Don’t Take Me Alive
Dirty Work
Hey Nineteen
Bad Sneakers
Show Biz Kids
Here At The Western World
Only A Fool Would Say That
Kid Charlemagne
Josie
 
True fans can amuse themselves by matching each song above to its opening (answers at https://www.steelydan.com/lyrics.html)
 
“A world become one of salads and sun”
“Agents of the law, luckless pedestrian”
“Down at the Lido they welcome you with sausage and beer”
“Five names that I can hardly stand to hear”
“Hello one and all -- was it you I used to know”
“I remember the thirty-five sweet goodbyes when you put me on the Wolverine up to Annandale”
“In the morning you go gunnin' for the man who stole your water”
“This is the day of the expanding man”
“Times are hard, you're afraid to pay the fee”
“Way back when In sixty-seven, I was the dandy of Gamma Chi”
“We're gonna break out the hats and hooters”
“While the music played you worked by candlelight”
“While the poor people sleepin' with the shade on the light”
“Worry the bottle Mamma, it's grapefruit wine”
“Your everlasting summer you can see it fading fast”

Thursday, August 31, 2017

August 29, 2017 – Nats 8, Marlins 3 – Nationals Park


 
Attendance: 25,924
Game Time: 3:11
Weather: 66 degrees, rain
Wind: 14 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Greg Gibson, First Base - Sam Holbrook, Second Base - D.J. Reyburn, Third Base - Jim Wolf
Seventh-inning stretch song: Moves Like Jagger – Maroon 5
 
Game notes – Edwin Jackson had a tough and lengthy first inning, giving up a long tater to Giancarlo Stanton and subsequently walking the bases loaded … managed to escape that jam and only gave up one more run through the 6th … Nats finally got to nemesis Vance Worley (who had beaten them twice earlier in the month while allowing only one run), scoring in the 3rd, 4th, and 5th to take a 5-2 lead into the 7th … biggest blow in the rally was a clutch two-out, two-run single by Murph in the bottom of the 3rd … Jackson lasted 4 batters into the 7th, leaving with one run in and the bases loaded, but Perez and Albers combined to retire Yelich, Ozuna, and Realmuto without allowing any further damage … Nats took full advantage of their similar opportunity in the bottom of the inning on a 2-out, 3-run double by Rendon
 
Other – it was raining both when we got on Metro (around 4:00) and when we arrived several minutes before the gates opened just after 5 … the new Skittles tarp was on, and it kept raining while we waited for a seat at the facility formerly known as the Red Porch Restaurant, as well as when we were dining … they announced a delayed start (7:30) while we were eating, and it had pretty much stopped raining when we went back outside shortly before 7 … did get some light-to-moderate rain in the first inning, but nothing after that … actual attendance was significantly under the number of tickets sold, given the weather, so plenty of Harper Starting Lineup Action Figures remain available

Monday, August 28, 2017

Serendipity #71


Save It For A Rainy Day – The Jayhawks


Heard 8/28/2017 around 11:35 at Cava Grill (Montgomery Mall)

August 27, 2017 – Mets 6, Nats 5 (Game 1 of split double-header) – Nationals Park



Attendance: 31,904
Game Time: 3:34
Weather: 75 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind: 6 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Andy Fletcher, First Base - Ramon DeJesus, Second Base - Nic Lentz, Third Base - Bill Welke
Seventh-inning stretch song:  The Twist – Chubby Checker 

Game notes – Nats fell into an early hole when emergency starter Erick Fedde yielded an infield single, hit batter and 3-run homer (by Asdrubal Cabrera) before retiring a batter in the first … a 2-run shot by Wilmer Flores made it 5-0 in the third … Nats fought back in the middle innings and finally tied the game in the bottom of the seventh, but Amed Rosario homered off Joe Blanton in the 8th for what turned out to be the winning run … Nats provided some excitement with two outs in the 9th, when Lind got a pinch single and Murphy doubled, but pinch-runner Edwin Jackson was thrown out at the plate to end the game … Fedde did manage to get through 6 innings for Washington … Terry Collins managed like it was Game 7 of the World Series, lifting starter Tommy Milone in the 5th after 82 pitches, then using 5 relievers to get through the 7th before turning to closer A.J. Ramos for a 6-out save

Friday, August 25, 2017

August 22, 2017 – Dodgers 6, Pirates 5 (12 innings) – PNC Park (Pittsburgh)


 
Attendance: 19,094
Game Time: 4:35
Weather: 83 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind: 9 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Scott Barry, First Base - Quinn Wolcott, Second Base - Brian O'Nora, Third Base - Paul Emmel
Seventh-inning stretch song:  Build Me Up Buttercup – The Foundations
 
Section 119, Row H, Seats 11-13 – great lower-level location, looking down the first-base line
 
Home-team highlights – Pirates took an early 3-0 lead on back-to-back homers by Jose Osuna and Sean Rodriguez off Alex Wood in the second, and a solo shot by Sean Rodriguez an inning later … Pittsburgh starter Gerrit Cole held LA scoreless over the first 6 innings … after giving up the lead, the Bucs tied it up at 5 in the bottom of the 8th off former Pirate Tony Watson and the wild Pedro Baez … former Phil Joaquin Benoit bent but did not break in the 9th and 10th, giving up 4 walks among his 38 pitches but keeping the Dodgers off the scoreboard
 
Other – Cole had a tense 6th inning (stranding the bases loaded after a HBP, single, and error) and struggled in the 7th, remaining in the game with 1 run in and the bases loaded to face Curtis Granderson, whose grand slam put the Dodgers on top by 2 … as Pittsburgh was short on available relief pitchers (scheduled Tuesday starter Jameson Taillon was warming up in the final inning), Dovydas Neverauskas made his third appearance in 3 days in the 12th, giving up the deciding HR to Yasiel Puig on his second pitch
 
Ballpark notes – the city skyline views were every bit as outstanding as advertised … traditional walk across the river on the Clemente Bridge was fun, although it wasn’t pedestrian-only due to the temporary closure of the nearby Warhol Bridge … free program as in Nats Park … didn’t do Primanti Bros. as we ate at their Market Square location the previous evening, but black bean quesadilla wasn’t bad (although the hot dogs were reportedly not that impressive) … somewhat surprised by the relatively small crowd (maybe everyone went to the previous afternoon’s Steelers game)

August 20, 2017 – Dodgers 3, Tigers 0 – Comerica Park (Detroit)


 
Attendance: 37,182
Game Time: 2:57
Weather: 80 degrees, sunny
Wind: 10 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Adam Hamari, First Base - Chris Segal, Second Base - Bill Miller, Third Base - Todd Tichenor
 
Section 219, Row 5, Seats 3-5 – front row of upper section, just outside first base, good view, easy access to aisle
 
Home-team highlights – after walking the first batter of the game on 4 pitches, Tigers starter Michael Fulmer pitched effectively and well, blanking LA for 6 before giving up an unearned run in the seventh
 
Other – Dodgers scored single runs in each of the last 3 innings … Tigers managed only 4 hits, although they did load the bases with 2 outs in the bottom of the 3rd before Cabrera struck out
 
Ballpark notes – the lines for the Alan Trammell bobblehead giveaway weren’t as long as I expected … impressive cat sculptures at the main entrance and elsewhere, and a “Big Cat” food court with a carousel and several food stands … the “Detroit Coney Deep Dish Pizza” from Little Caesar’s was rated the weirdest food item in the park in a Sports Illustrated article, but it was actually quite good … didn’t seem to be as many people in the stands as the attendance figure suggested, although the lower concourse was quite crowded during the game

Monday, August 14, 2017

August 13, 2017 – Giants 4, Nats 2 (Game 1 of split double-header) – Nationals Park


 
Attendance: 30,866
Game Time: 3:09
Weather: 82 degrees, sunny
Wind: 9 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Ryan Blakney, First Base - Ryan Additon, Second Base - Jerry Meals, Third Base - Chris Guccione
Seventh-inning stretch song: Can’t Stop The Feeling – Justin Timberlake
 
Highlights – fill-in starter AJ Cole did all right, going 6 innings with the only hiccup being a 3-run second inning … Nats Park Public Enemy #1 Hunter Strickland was booed early and often (as he walked in from the bullpen, when he was announced, when the inning ended) before, during and after he pitched the 8th inning … Rendon exacted a measure of revenge for Harper’s beaning with a 2-run tater … new bullpen stalwarts Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson did the honors for the pre-game autograph signing
 
Other – Nats weren’t able to do anything against SF starter Chris Stratton, who began the game with an ERA above 6 but pitched shutout ball into the 7th, fanning 10 in the process … traffic was relatively light coming down, although there was quite a backup on the GW Parkway on the way back

Mary Chapin Carpenter with Lucinda Williams – Wolf Trap, 8/12/2017


Row H, Seats 32-33
 
It was certainly not a night to be on the Filene Center lawn, as shortly after Lucinda Williams started her set at 7:30 the skies opened up, with torrential rain and enough wind that we felt a few drops, although we were sitting right in the middle of our row. Despite the weather, the two women (and their excellent bands) combined for almost three hours of top-notch musical entertainment.
 
Williams referenced the violence in Charlottesville earlier in the day both in her intro to “World Without Tears” and with “We’ve Come To Far To Turn Around”, which despite being a new song has a chorus that makes it sound like a classic from the early 1960s Civil Rights movement. Other than that, she ranged from previous-century classics such as “Joy” (her finale), “Drunken Angel”, and “Lake Charles” to “Protection”, “West Memphis”, and “Foolishness” from 2014’s Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone. The not-unexpected high point, of course, came midway through her set, when she brought Mary Chapin out to duet with her on “Passionate Kisses”.
 
Carpenter also had her share of topicality, opening with a one-two punch of “The Times They Are A-Changin'” and “Stones In The Road” (with a clever lyrical alteration referencing tweets), and then including “The Age Of Miracles” a few songs later. Most of the highlights came from her longtime uptempo favorites, most notably with a blistering version of “The Bug” that let her bandmembers stretch out, and her first two encores, “He Thinks He’ll Keep Her” and “Down At The Twist And Shout”. Following that, she thanked the crowd for continuing to support live music and general and her in particular, mentioning that once again she was ending her summer tour at Wolf Trap. She then noted that this was the 30th anniversary of her first album, Hometown Girl, and concluded by performing the title track. There couldn’t have been a better way to end the evening.
 
Setlist (Lucinda Williams) 
Setlist (Mary Chapin Carpenter)

Friday, August 11, 2017

August 9, 2017 – Nats 10, Marlins 1 – Nationals Park


 
Attendance: 25,951
Game Time: 3:02
Weather: 82 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind: 7 mph
Umpires: Home Plate - Ryan Additon, First Base - CB Bucknor, Second Base - Fieldin Culbreth, Third Base - Manny Gonzalez
 
Highlights – perfect night for baseball weather-wise … Gio gave up some hits, but only one run in his 7 innings, with no walks and an economical 103 pitches … Nats chipped away at Miami starter Adam Conley and the Marlins’ bullpen, scoring in 5 of the first 7 innings … Zim started things off in the 2nd with a solo HR, setting the all-time franchise record for RBI in the process … not satisfied with that achievement, he added 3 more hits (plus a walk) and 4 more RBI, missing the cycle only because he homered again rather than hitting a triple in his final plate appearance
 
Other – drive down was not quite as bad as our previous weeknight treks … yes, you can buy a plain half-smoke at Ben’s, but it still costs $9.25

Serendipity #70


Heaven – Los Lonely Boys
 
 
Heard 8/10/2017 around 5:45 at Habit Burger (Rockville)