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 3, 2019

Lyle Lovett and His Large Band w/ Mavis Staples – Wolf Trap, 8/1/2019


The crowd at Wolf Trap certainly got its money’s worth on Thursday evening, as Mavis Staples started things off for 45 minutes, followed by just over two hours by Lovett and crew. On a night that was hotter and stuffier than I expected, Mavis was the only performer who wasn’t wearing a suit.
 
Staples’ energetic opening set got a rousing reception as the attendees gradually filtered into their seats, with a standing ovation for “We Get By” midway through. Other highlights included two Staples Singers hits (“If You're Ready (Come Go With Me)” and “Touch A Hand”), a cover of Talking Heads’  “Slippery People”, and her current single, “Change”.
 
For the most part, Lovett’s set followed its usual pattern, with a spotlight song each for guitarist Keith Sewell and fiddler Luke Bulla, a four-song break for the band in the middle, Francine Reed doing “Wild Women Don't Have the Blues”, and several of his best-known songs saved for the end. He did throw one curve, as he, Bulla, and Sewell started off by harmonizing on “Once Is Enough” before the traditional “Blues Walk” opener. Highlights, in addition to the usual suspects, included the multiple solos on “My Baby Don’t Tolerate” and the pensive ballads “North Dakota” and “Twelfth Of June”.
 
Setlist (Staples)
Setlist (Lovett)

Thursday, August 1, 2019

2019 XPoNential Music Festival, July 26-28, Wiggins Park (Camden NJ)


“The XPoNential Music Festival presented by Subaru features three stages, 30+ performers, and an eclectic line-up of established and up-and-coming artists heard on WXPN 88.5FM, the award-winning Philadelphia public radio station. We’re proud to celebrate over 25 years of bringing the XPN community and true music fans together for a 3-day, family-friendly experience along the [Camden] riverfront.” (from xpnfest.org)
 
This ranks as one of the better XPNFests I’ve attended, especially since it did not coincide with the record-breaking heat wave of the previous weekend. It was hot, but not unbearably so, with no rain, moderate humidity (the first two days, anyway), and at least the occasional breeze.
 
I didn’t even bother trying to drive/park on Friday, instead opting to take the River LINE (their caps, not mine) from the Route 73/Pennsauken station – in the middle of nowhere, but parking is both plentiful and free, and seniors can ride for a mere 75 cents. The final Wiggins Park set (Dawes) started at 7:40, so I figured I should be able to catch the whole thing and still take the last train back at 9:31. As it turned out, I was actually able to (barely) make the previous train at 9:02. It was a positive enough experience that I did it again on Saturday, since I wasn’t planning to stay late,  although weekend parking near Wiggins Park has never been much of a problem. I did drive to the riverfront and park Sunday, since the closing set by the Amy Ray Band didn’t start until 8:00.
 
BEST 3 SETS (ALPHABETICAL)
 
Kathleen Edwards – The only previous time I had seen Edwards was at the 2003 festival, back when it was still on the Philadelphia side of the river. I didn’t get to the festival in 2012 when she returned, and she subsequently took a break from music to open a coffee shop (a pursuit she strongly advised the audience against on Sunday). I’ve always had some difficulty putting the Canadian singer-songwriter’s music into a neat box: maybe guitar-heavy alt-country with frequent hints of Neil Young. (On Facebook, she facetiously specifies her “genre” as “black metal meets contemporary Christian”.) At any rate, she and her band put on a great show Sunday afternoon and had a lot of fun doing it, especially for someone who’s not exactly known for her light-hearted party tunes. (For an example, check the lyrics for her first single, “Six O’Clock News”.) She even managed to change the words of “Back To Me” on the fly, improvising in a reference to her “bad hair day”.
 
Guster – Also XPNFest veterans, Ryan Miller and friends were next up on the River Stage Sunday afternoon, producing both the biggest surprise and the best stunt of the festival. Part of the way through “Overexcited” (their latest single), Ryan mentioned how much they had enjoyed touring with Barenaked Ladies some years earlier. With that, he brought three of the BNL guys onto the stage – they happened to be sharing the bill that evening next door at BB&T Pavilion – at which point two of them inserted part of the rap from “One Week” into the middle of Guster’s song. Between tunes a bit later in their set, Ryan talked briefly about the wide selection of lawn chairs visible in the crowd. He followed that up by going out into the crowd as he sang “Doin’ It By Myself” (no mean trick with a non-wireless mic), borrowed a lawn chair from someone near the front of the lawn, and took it back to the stage, where he sat during the rest of the song. (Yes, we standees passed the chair back to its owner after the number was over.) Showmanship aside, the band also kept the crowd happy with their music, reaching into their back catalog for favorites such as “Barrel Of A Gun”, “Careful”, and “Satellite”.
 
Sister Sparrow & The Dirty Birds – One of the joys of XPNFest is when you discover someone you weren’t previously familiar with. This Brooklyn-based band, led by singer-songwriter Arleigh Kincheloe, has been around for 10 years or so; it’s possible that I might have heard a song or two of theirs on WXPN, but nothing ever jumped out at me. That wasn’t the case on Saturday afternoon, as they struck me as a 21st-century version of Cold Blood, with a brassy jazz-funk sound, great material, and Kincheloe playing the role of Lydia Pense.  
 
A FEW OTHERS WORTH MENTIONING
 
Dawes – Although my concert history with Dawes has been mixed, I was looking forward to them closing out the Wiggins Park part of the festivities on Friday evening. For me, their set wound up being solid but not transcendent, better than their 2017 Lincoln Theatre show, but not as good as when I saw them in 2015 (both at the Warner Theatre in June and at XPNFest a month later). The highlights this time included “Feed The Fire” (the second song in their set), the solos during “If I Wanted Someone” later, and especially “A Little Bit Of Everything”, which for the first two verses was limited to Taylor Goldsmith’s poignant vocals and Lee Pardini’s piano.
 
As was the case in 2017, volume was the main problem. After standing in the “pit” in front of the stage for 45 minutes before their performance in order to get and keep a good position, the sound level of their opening song (especially the bass), was nothing short of painful, so I hastened to return to my spot on the lawn, where it was still quite loud. The volume was especially obnoxious during the normally-lovely “Time Spent In Los Angeles”, which was truly bludgeoned into submission.
 
They also get a demerit for omitting my all-time favorite, “From A Windowseat”.
  
Bettye LaVette – Earlier on Friday, veteran soul singer Bettye LaVette put on a well-received performance. She started with two tracks from her album of Dylan covers – “Things Have Changed” (my all-time Dylan favorite) and “It Ain’t Me, Babe”. She then proceeded to move through a summary of her lengthy musical history, with a cover of Lucinda Williams’s “Joy” as her penultimate song. I hadn’t realized that she was the first to record “Let Me Down Easy”, which is one of the best tracks on Cold Blood’s eponymous 1969 debut LP.
The Wood Brothers – This was a shorter set than when I saw them at Wolf Trap a month ago – no “Big Boss Man” to start or Dr. John tribute, but nevertheless a lot of overlap, including “Keep Me Around” and “Shoofly Pie”. 
 
Low Cut Connie – I certainly didn’t see every act at the festival, but Low Cut Connie frontman Adam Weiner definitely gets my award for most charismatic performer. While their musical style (glam rock meets punk?) is not normally my cup of tea, their material and performance were both strong. “Beverly” is surprisingly mellow but not at all typical; their opening “All These Kids Are Way Too High” is more representative. They also threw in a few covers, including a blistering version of Harry Nilsson’s “Jump Into The Fire” to close their set.
 
Amy Ray Band – With the Indigo Girls on temporary hiatus (they’re working on a new album, expected out early next year), Amy Ray (the tall, dark, intense one) has been touring with her own band, including Alison Brown on banjo. She got a rousing reception for her festival-closing set from what was left of the Sunday afternoon crowd, although I suspect most of them were as unfamiliar with her material as I was; “Rise Of The Black Messiah” was the only Indigo Girls song, with almost everything else from Amy’s own albums. (“Sure Feels Good Anyway”, from her most recent album, did get quite a bit of well-deserved airplay on WXPN.) There was a fun moment midway through the set when, after mentioning that her home state of Georgia has had some problems recently, she name-checked Stacy Abrams (applause), Jimmy Carter (loud applause), John Lewis (more applause), and Lil Nas X – until I read the review, I hadn’t noticed that she was wearing a Lil Nas X t-shirt. She ended the show with a rousing version of “Refugee”; Tom Petty would have been proud.

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Favorite Musical Artists: Mary Chapin Carpenter


I’ve already told the story of how I first got into Mary Chapin Carpenter’s music. She continues to put on excellent concerts, although her days of country music stardom are long past. I recently went back and re-listened to her first five albums, from 1987’s Hometown Girl through 1994’s Stones In The Road. All are excellent, but I guess that Come On Come On (1992) would have to rate as my favorite: it produced 5 of the 20 songs listed below, and that’s not even counting “I Take My Chances” or her cover of Mark Knopfler’s “The Bug”. For a great introduction, check out her 1999 compilation-with-a-twist, Party Doll And Other Favorites.
Favorite songs:
 
Passionate Kisses
Outside Looking In
He Thinks He'll Keep Her
Down At The Twist And Shout
 
Hometown Girl
I Feel Lucky
Dancing In The Dark (live Springsteen cover)
Shut Up And Kiss Me
Goodbye Again
 
The Hard Way
I Am A Town
Quittin' Time
10,000 Miles
It Don't Bring You
 
The Way I Feel
How Do
Party Doll
Almost Home
Why Walk When You Can Fly

Friday, July 26, 2019

Art Neville


 
I saw the “first family of New Orleans” a couple of times at Wolf Trap, but my favorite set by them was a few years later, at a drizzly evening at Rockville Hometown Holidays; the band seemed to recognize that much of the crowd was unlikely to be especially familiar with them, and so they stuck with their strongest material.
 
Favorite Neville Brothers songs:
 
Fire On The Bayou (my #4 all-time favorite song)  
Sitting In Limbo
Washable Ink
Fear, Hate, Envy, Jealousy
Brother John / Iko Iko
 
Yellow Moon
Hey Pocky Way
Congo Square
On The Other Side Of Paradise
Voodoo
 
Highlights of Art’s earlier work include “Mardi Gras Mambo” (with the Hawketts), “All These Things” (solo), and “Cissy Strut” (with the Meters).

Sunday, July 14, 2019

Shuffle #116 (July 14, 2019)

Making Plans For Nigel – XTC
Johnny Hold Back – Charlie
Feel It All – KT Tunstall
Hit The Road Jack – Ray Charles
Brooklyn Roads – Neil Diamond
This Wheel’s On Fire – Siouxsie & The Banshees
Smackwater Jack – Carole King

Saturday, July 13, 2019

Shuffle #115 (July 13, 2019)


Adios To California – John Hiatt
The River – Bruce Springsteen
All Around The World Or The Myth Of Fingerprints – Paul Simon
Jimmy Loves Mary-Anne – Looking Glass
The First Sight – Teenage Fanclub
Gone Daddy Gone – Violent Femmes
Hasten Down The Wind – Linda Ronstadt
Stay – Jackson Browne
The Big Heat – Stan Ridgway
Loves Me Like A Rock – Paul Simon

Tuesday, July 9, 2019

July 7, 2019 – Nats 5, Marlins 2 – Nationals Park


 
Weather: 82 degrees, Cloudy.
Wind: 1 mph, In From RF.
Umpires: HP--Barksdale, 1B--Barrett, 2B--Lentz, 3B--Tumpane.
Time: 2:37
Attendance: 21,873
 
Patrick Corbin had another strong outing for the Nats, setting the tone by fanning the side in the top of the first, and retiring the final 9 batters he faced. The fourth was his only rough inning, when he gave up 3 of his 5 hits, but Robles gunned down Alex Gordon on Cheslor Cuthbert’s one-out single to keep the visitors off the board.
 
Kansas City’s Jakob Junis was almost as effective through his first 5 innings, although he did allow a solo HR to Brian Dozier in the 2nd. The Nats missed a great chance in the 6th, when Rendon grounded into a double play and Soto flied out after a Turner double and an Eaton walk. They did double their lead off Junis in the 7th when Robles homered.
 
As has so often been the case, however, the 8th inning was not kind to the Nats’ bullpen. Martin Maldonado led off with a single off Fernando Rodney, and pinch-runner extraordinaire Terrance Gore promptly stole second. Rodney retired the next two batters, but Adalberto Mondesi blooped a single in front of Soto to score the Royals’ first run of the game. Davey’s strategy of having Doolittle warmed up for the left-handed-swinging Gordon backfired, as he doubled on Sean’s first pitch to tie the game.
 
The Washington offense finally came to life in the bottom of the inning, with Jake Diekman replacing Junis on the mound. With one out, an Eaton single and a Rendon double gave the Nats back the lead, then Kendrick doubled in two insurance runs following a Diekman error. Doolittle preserved the victory in the 9th, despite subpar velocity on his fastball.

Thursday, July 4, 2019

July 3, 2019 – Nats 3, Marlins 1 – Nationals Park


 
Weather: 90 degrees, Partly Cloudy.
Wind: 7 mph, In From LF.
Umpires: HP--Guccione, 1B--Carlson, 2B--Gibson, 3B--Segal.
Time: 3:07
Attendance: 25,483
First pitch: 6:05 PM
 
It was an interesting first inning for Stephen Strasburg Wednesday evening. The good news: he fanned the first two batters, and induced a harmless ground ball for the third out after walking Garrett Cooper. The bad news: he needed 20 pitches to get through the frame. On an oppressively hot and humid day, I remember thinking that he wasn’t destined to get very deep into the game.
 
Strasburg had other ideas. He continued to pile up strikeouts (13 through 7 innings, including an immaculate 9-pitch 4th where he struck out the side). During that time, he allowed only two baserunners, both harmless singles. No one even reached second base.
 
Meanwhile, the Nats struggled to get on the scoreboard against Miami starter Sandy Alcantara, the team’s lone All-Star representative. After wasting two-out doubles in the second and third, they loaded the bases with just one out in the fourth  on two walks and an error,  but Alcantara retired Robles and Gomes on strikes to extinguish the threat.
 
The home team finally broke through in the 6th, on a one-out single by Soto and a two-out homer by Dozier (which I more or less called). Dozier’s dinger also enabled the Nats to set a franchise record, with at least one home run in 17 straight games.
 
Stras still looked strong, ending the top of the 7th at 98 pitches, so Martinez let him hit in the bottom of the inning and come back out for the 8th. He promptly walked leadoff hitter JT Riddle and hit Bryan Holaday with a pitch. He exited one batter later to a standing ovation after fanning pinch-hitter Brian Anderson. Fernando Rodney allowed a single to Nats-killer Miguel Rojas to load the bases, but got a double-play grounder to end the inning and protect the shutout.
 
Matt Adams’ solo homer in the bottom of the inning provided some insurance, which felt good as Sean Doolittle navigated a rocky 9th inning. After retiring the first batter, he allowed three straight singles to load the bases. He struck out Riddle after falling behind 3-1, but then hit Cesar Puello to force in a run. We could finally exhale when he fanned Yadiel Rivera to nail down the save.
 
The early start and the lack of rain let the Nats proceed with their post-game “Freedom Fireworks” display. Somewhat oddly, the musical accompaniment began with “Time Of The Season” by the very-British Zombies. The remaining selections were certainly all-American, although I thought that CCRs “Bad Moon Rising” was an equally discordant choice to end a celebratory show. (Check out the lyrics if you don’t believe me.) Perhaps “Proud Mary”, or even “Born On The Bayou”, which actually mentions the Fourth of July?
 

Democratic candidates veer left, leaving behind successful midterm strategy


 
One cautionary take on last week’s Democratic debate doubleheader.

Friday, June 28, 2019

Favorite Musical Artists: The Beach Boys


It may have been fate that I was listening to the final half-hour of Rich Russo’s Anything, Anything this past Sunday night, as I caught his segue of Barenaked Ladies’ classic “Brian Wilson”, preceded by a partial live cover by the man himself. While the other members of the Beach Boys certainly played a major role in the group’s success (as evidenced by some fine work while Wilson was in the depths of his long-lasting mental health issues), there’s no question that Brian Wilson deserves his accolades as a musical genius; I’m not sure who else has been included in lists of top singers, songwriters, AND producers by major music publications. Except for when one of my dorm neighbors in college frequently played the underappreciated Surf’s Up album, I was always more inspired by the band on a song-by-song basis: not just the big hits, but many of their more obscure tracks as well. Although Brian Wilson’s melodies and vocal arrangements get the most attention, many of the band’s lyrics are also notable, initially evoking both the joys and difficulties of the teen years, and tackling more sophisticated topics later with the likes of “Long Promised Road” and “Til I Die”.
 
Favorite songs:
 
Wouldn't It Be Nice
Barbara Ann
All Summer Long
Please Let Me Wonder
 
In My Room
Long Promised Road
Help Me, Rhonda
Fun, Fun, Fun
When I Grow Up (To Be A Man)
 
Sloop John B.
Good Timin'
Surf's Up
Darlin'
Surfer Girl
 
Good Vibrations
California Girls
Disney Girls
Wendy
Surfin' U.S.A.
 
Holiday bonus – just about everyone is familiar with the classics “Little Saint Nick” and “The Man With All The Toys”. They also did a stunning version of “Graduation Day”.