The Listening Room February 19, 2007: Guster, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Bowling for Soup, Autechre, Rickie Lee Jones, Ben Kweller, and Sly And The Family Stone - Page 4

Part of: The Listening Room

Also highly recommnded are a couple of live shows from the Fillmore recorded during about the same period that are available now over at Wolfgang's Vault that are off the hook.

Cara de Pescado: “Walking In Memphis” from Marc Cohn by Marc Cohn

First, who can’t appreciate a man who was shot in the head and released from the hospital the next day?

Sometimes I feel nostalgic and want to listen to music from the early 1990s. “Walking In Memphis” always makes the cut. Something about a suave baritone voice singing over the smooth piano makes the song speak to my soul. Plus, it is fun to sing along and really find my groove. I can sing neither gospel nor blues, but “Walking In Memphis” lets me pretend I can sing a little of both. Knowing the story behind it adds to the soul of the song.

Marc Cohn was at an old slave commissary turned into a café called Hollywood. A woman was at a piano, singing spirituals and the like. Cohn spoke with this woman, each sharing their live stories. Their two spirits drawn to each other, she asked Marc Cohn to join her in singing “Amazing Grace.” Her name was Muriel.

Benjamin Cossel: "I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive" from Your Cheatin' Heart by Hank Williams

Williams' final released single, no one at the time of its writing could have known the poignancy the song would take on. This is a song about living too hard, drinking too hard, and realizing there's only one way out at the end. A good Sunday morning, you drank too much the night before tune and one of my personal favorites of Williams'.

Michael Jones: "All The Things She Said" from Once Upon a Time by Simple Minds

I can remember playing the daylights out of my cassette tape of the album this comes off of. When I'd heard another of this album's songs playing on Sirius a while back, it immediately made me wonder why I'd never purchased this as a CD. I was floored... this was an album that I'd basically adored at one point, and I'd come to the point where I'd nearly forgotten it.

I'm sitting here listening to the song I chose, "All The Things She Said," and it all came rushing back. I can remember sitting on my bedroom floor with my cassette player, just listening and grooving to the music until I heard that harsh "click," which meant it was time for me to flip the cassette.

Continued on the next page Page 1Page 2Page 3 — Page 4 — Page 5

Article tags

Spread the word
Bookmark and Share
Profile image for josh-hathaway

Article Author: Josh Hathaway

Josh Hathaway is a Sr. Music Editor for Blogcritics.

Visit Josh Hathaway's author page

Read comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own

Article comments

— go to most recent comments
  • 1 - Pico

    Feb 19, 2007 at 1:08 pm

    Lisa McKay: "Don't Take Me Alive" from The Royal Scam by Steely Dan

    Ah yes, the second Larry Carlton showcase on Royal Scam (the first being "Kid Charlemagne"). SD would have several more memorable guitar playing after this one, but never again would it be so freewheeling as this one. And then there's that trademark dark wit on full display, too. Good stuff.

  • 2 - Connie Phillips

    Feb 19, 2007 at 1:57 pm

    A round of applause for all the writers who participated this week and a special thank you to DRJ for putting it all together for us.

    It's nice to see so many suggestions from people whose opinion I've come to trust. I have a feeling a better part of the afternoon is going to be spent checking these songs out.

  • 3 - Lisa McKay

    Feb 19, 2007 at 2:08 pm

    It's fun to do, and yeah, a special thanks to the DJ for making a venue available that's kind of like "writing for the time-impaired".

  • 4 - DJRadiohead

    Feb 19, 2007 at 2:30 pm

    Great job, everybody. There are a lot of selections this week I have never heard and some I have never heard of.

  • 5 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 2:50 pm

    autechre may not be as obscure as they used to be, (in popularity, never in sound,) but it is still surprising to see them on blogcritics. woo, tom!

    between all the "walking in memphises," (memphi?), simple minds, toad the wet sprockets,(could of dealt without that, thank you,) etc, it's nice to see something pop up that's more than just a memory.

    come on people, whip out the strange, the obscure, the new! (no offense if you didn't this time, but this is your last warning.)

  • 6 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 2:54 pm

    ok, i've never heard of gorod. i admit it.

  • 7 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 2:57 pm

    and el bicho and anna creech get away with it on the obscure/new tip (respectively). this despite el bicho's anti-prince tirade somewhere else. fuck you, he's god.

  • 8 - Mark Saleski

    Feb 19, 2007 at 2:58 pm

    no fair zing! i usually get accused of hanging around in obscureland (especially with jazz)...so then i bring in Rickie Lee Jones...which, if you give it a listen, is actually obscure (at least in sound) AND new.

    ok, next week...something really whacky.

    ps. i've never heard of Gorod either.

  • 9 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 3:03 pm

    yeah, ok. it is new. i forgot about that one. ok, a lot of you are getting away with it. so, i take it back in a way. except "walking in memphis." and toad the wet sprocket. feh!

  • 10 - DJRadiohead

    Feb 19, 2007 at 3:03 pm

    Careful, Zing, I am both a Toad the Wet Sprocket fan and married to the wonderful woman who championed that song. =) You treading on dangerous ground. Besides, that really is a great song.

  • 11 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 3:08 pm

    bring it on, you wet sprocket fans do not frighten me. i'll just raise my voice above a soothing tone and your heads will implode into the void of your own obvious self-loathing. why would you harm yourself by listening to that smooth, smooth buttmud? ahh... how i love to hate...

    that said, i just read the last line of her "championing" of the song, and i see your revenge is already complete. you need not respond.

  • 12 - Mark Saleski

    Feb 19, 2007 at 3:11 pm

    why listen to Toad? because any band that can write a song like that AND do a cover of "Rock 'n Roll All Night" is OK in my book.

  • 13 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 3:13 pm

    ahem, "FEH!" (growled with lower lip starting tucked behind overbite, then thrown out with as much spittle as possible, left dripping onto the floor with nostrils flaring, eyes cocked at wrong angles, crotched rudely grasped to increase the look of pain on the face.)

    thank you.

  • 14 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 3:15 pm

    that's "crotch," not "crotched," and it totally ruins my fun.

  • 15 - Cara de Pescado

    Feb 19, 2007 at 3:32 pm

    I stand by Waking In Memphis. It's a great tune to play in an entirely hokey playlist!

  • 16 - El Bicho

    Feb 19, 2007 at 3:43 pm

    I just updated my piece with a sample of Mr. Green for your listening pleasure.

    zing, my comment wasn't anti-Prince.

  • 17 - Anna Creech

    Feb 19, 2007 at 4:27 pm

    Last year, a friend recommended I check out some Toad the Wet Sprocket. So I picked up their best-of album and was surprised that I a) knew a lot of the songs and b) actually liked them. Go figure!

    zingzing: You wanna talk obscure? Hm. Well, then I'll be browsing through my indie singer/songwriter collection this week. Although, a number of them are starting to get national attention.

  • 18 - DJRadiohead

    Feb 19, 2007 at 5:37 pm

    Zing, fear not me nor the other Toad fans. Fear TheWifeToWhomI'mMarried. ;-) She did have her defense on the field already, though, didn't she? Now you know why I encourage you all to fear her. Unless this would displease her. Right, of course.

    Besides, soothing tones are no bad thing in a world that is... less than soothing?

    Anna, the best of collection is a decent compilation. Too many of my favorites aren't on there, but best of's aren't usually designed for the devoted. Dulcinea is my favorite of their proper albums.

    Lisa, the bite-size nature of this does make things a little easier, doesn't it?

  • 19 - Matthew T. Sussman

    Feb 19, 2007 at 6:07 pm

    The sound of my own voice. I love that song.

  • 20 - DJRadiohead

    Feb 19, 2007 at 6:41 pm

    Sussman, shouldn't you be talking about NASCAR or something?

    On the obscure issue... I might have one or two items that would qualify. I listen to some stuff that is not on the hit parade, but I don't know where you draw the line with obscure.

  • 21 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 7:55 pm

    it doesn't just have to be unpopular, it has to be deservedly so!

    nah. just something that you won't find through most media sources, and not because it's crap, but because it's out there, at the edge of music.

    take this, for example:

    recently, i heard a song called "you're nogood" by terry riley. it seems that he was playing one of his more typical minimalist pieces in a club (nyc? la? don't know,) and the club owner was impressed and ask riley to make a piece of music that he could play at the club before bands came on. so riley asked for his favorite current song and the club owner brought out "you're no good" by someone named Harvey Averne. (i swear you've heard the song before, but it in itself is also quite obscure.)

    so, riley took the record, gathered up a moog synth, a white noise generator, a couple of delay pedals, some tape and about 20 minutes spare time, sat down and recorded this doozy. it starts with about 3 minutes of moog and white noise, with a steady rising tone in continuous peak until... a soul song starts. riley plays most of the song before he starts to mess with it, delaying and layering it back upon itself, vocal lines and horn hits whining and eating themselves, then looping around and around... it becomes hip-hop.

    this was made in 1967.

    the song continues to eat itself, becoming more and more chaotic, before snapping back into place and going down a different path towards ever more chaos and rebirth, including a final section where white noise meets soul cut-up. yum.

  • 22 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 8:00 pm

    sorry for the nakie link, but here it is:
    "you're nogood" by terry riley

    [Naked no more, zinger! Comments Editor]

  • 23 - DJRadiohead

    Feb 19, 2007 at 8:37 pm

    While I am sure that's great stuff, Zing, the purpose of The Listening Room series is not to come up with the most off-the-wall songs we can conjure up- although. It's simply a group of us talking about what we've been listening to, however main stream it may or may not be.

    Thanks for commenting and mixing it up with us. I am going to check out your link.

  • 24 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 8:40 pm

    thank you, sah. i've never learned how to do that... but i don't do it too often, and it gives you something to do other than take out "fuck off, you pussbag of human butt mud" and shit like that. must be refreshing.

    did you listen to it? listen to it! lovely stuff.

    i'd listen to it on speakers, not headphones, as the stereo effects of 1967... well, they leave something to be desired. too black and white for my tastes. listening to the beatles and the who on headphones makes me want to die.

  • 25 - zingzing

    Feb 19, 2007 at 8:44 pm

    well, dj, much as i respect the idea, wouldn't it make more sense to come up with something people don't know? you guys do this to some degree, but it would be absolutely pointless to have a three paragraph statement about how you've been listening to "heart of glass" or something like that...

    it's not off-the-wall that i'm trying to push, particularily, it's lesser-known stuff. stuff that people might not be aware of.

Add your comment, speak your mind

Personal attacks are NOT allowed.
Please read our comment policy.
Please preview your comment.

blogcritics lists for Nov 30, 2009

fresh articles Most recent articles site-wide

fresh comments Most recent comments site-wide

most comments Most comments in 24hrs

top writers Most prolific Blogcritics for October

top commenters Most prolific Commenters in 24 hrs