Music

Friday Evening Videos: “Authority Song”

I know, I know. It’s Sunday night, not Friday. But I intended to post this on Friday, I just didn’t get around to it….

So, anyhow, I had a couple of bad experiences at work last week, the kind of demoralizing, infuriating things that make you feel beaten down and not at all respected, and which leave you wondering what the hell is the point of continuing to bash your head against this brick anyhow? Believe me, I am not whining when I say that “proofreader” is probably the most thankless job in my entire industry. And yet come tomorrow morning I know I’m going to get up and ride that damn light-rail train into downtown and be at my desk ready to do it all over again. Because that’s just the way it is. And that reality makes me think that this little ditty must surely be my theme song, at least when it comes to matters of work:

John Mellencamp — or John Cougar Mellencamp, as he was known when he recorded this song for his 1983 album Uh-Huh — has never exactly been a favorite of mine. That is, if you asked me to name my favorite musicians, I probably wouldn’t think to add his name to the list. He’s always struck me as a little too dour, a little too self-important for my tastes. He comes across to me as something of a dick, to be frank. And yet, when I run down his discography, it turns out he’s recorded a tremendous amount of music that I’ve liked, and which has formed the background soundtrack for a big chunk of my life. Including, obviously, “The Authority Song,” his own take on the rebellious theme of the Bobby Fuller classic “I Fought the Law.” Like the latter, “Authority Song” is upbeat and infectious, while wryly observing that there’s not much the little guy can do to counter the power of The Man. And yet, like the song’s smart-ass narrator, you fight on anyhow, because the struggle is the thing that counts, not the victory.

The tune reached number 15 on the Billboard charts. I think I read somewhere that Mellencamp refuses to play it at his live shows anymore because he’s too old to relate to the song’s youthful sentiment. Whatever. Mellencamp may be old and settled, but “I fight authority, authority always wins” sounds like the story of my life, even as I push on into middle age…

spacer

Christmas Eve Videos: “Deck the Halls (with Boughs of Longboards)”

Well, here we are again… another Christmas Eve. And for the first time in a very long time indeed, it arrives to find me feeling some degree of contentment. Against all odds, I’ve finished all my shopping early and even managed to get everything wrapped a couple days ago. I dodged a bullet at work and have an entire week off to enjoy. I have nothing on my agenda today (I’m thinking I’ll go see The Hobbit, actually…) And I’ve realized that, as eventful and traumatic as this year has been in many ways, I’m in a much better situation now than I was 12 months ago. It’s not in my nature to say “life is good” — that just invites a downturn, if you know what I mean — but for right now, today, this afternoon… it sure ain’t bad. So I wanted to post a little something that reflects my current, uncharacteristically upbeat mood… and what better for that than a surf-rock-tinged version of “Deck the Halls” by none other than my main man, Rick Springfield? This is from Christmas with You, the holiday CD he released a few years back, and it’s tremendous fun. Honestly, I wish he’d do an album of nothing but covers of the ’60s rock he so obviously loves (he occasionally does a really kick-ass version of Clapton’s “Crossroads” in his live shows, for example). Maybe one day… and in the meantime, we have this (watch for the dolphin at about 0:44!):

I hope everyone else out there is in a good place this year, too… merry Christmas, happy holidays, peace to all.

Oh, and just for a little bonus:

It just wouldn’t be Christmas without a peek at that sweater!

Related posts:

 

spacer

Friday Evening Videos: “Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around”

It’s a grey and gloomy day here in the SLC — by mid-afternoon, it felt in my office like it was past dinnertime already, because the light was so dim outside — but it’s not too terribly cold, a combination that always puts me in a strange, difficult-to-describe frame of mind.

As it happens, my trusty iPod often seems as if it’s capable of reading my mood and somehow proceeds to find exactly the right song for the moment. Here’s what it served up while I was out taking my daily constitutional today along South Temple, Salt Lake’s grand boulevard of Victorian mansions and towering oak trees:

I don’t have much to say about this one. I have no particular memories associated with it, aside from being introduced to the song in the back bedroom of my grandma’s house by my cousin Stacey. Despite being a year younger than me, Stacey always seemed to be slightly farther along the arc of musical sophistication, and I recall her introducing me to quite a few songs and artists at that crucial moment when you’re beginning to take an interest in adult things, but still haven’t quite reached puberty… that moment in which, in my experience, so much of our tastes are truly formed. As far as I can recall, I’ve always liked this song. And I really like looking at Stevie Nicks circa 1981, but I suppose that goes without saying.

Anyway, for whatever reason, this turned out to be the perfect tune for a comfortably chilly afternoon with an iron-gray sky overhead and wet, faded-gold leaves whipping around my ankles as I walked and remembered things that once made me sad but recently seem to have lost some of their power over me…

And on that note, I’m calling it a week.

spacer

Friday Evening Videos: “Patience”

Confession time: I’ve never especially liked Guns N’ Roses.

This may strike some Loyal Readers as strange, given my well-known affection for the hard-rock bands of the mid to late ’80s, the so-called “hair metal” guys. (I prefer the term “pop metal,” incidentally.) But G N’ R didn’t really fall into that category, did they? Their sound was louder and more anarchic than their contemporaries, closer in spirit to late ’70s punk than anybody like Def Leppard or Bon Jovi — which is, of course, what their fans and the critics thought was so great about G N’ R. But then I’ve never liked punk either. I enjoy a little melody with my crunchy guitars, please. Then there was the band’s image… oh, boy. Even at 19, I couldn’t help but roll my eyes at lead guitarist Slash hiding behind that mop of hair and that dippy top hat, and lead singer Axl Rose is precisely the sort of scrawny little smart-ass who somehow manages to enrage me simply by breathing. He puts off the same vibe (to me) as Adam Sandler, another smirky, beady-eyed little twerp I’d love to sock right in the nose. You just know these guys used to be the kid back in school who’d fart in his hand and then hold it over your face — the dread buttercup technique, the name of which, I suspect, is one of the reasons why I’ve never warmed much to The Princess Bride and its unfortunately named heroine — and then somehow you would be the one to get in trouble for disrupting the class.

I do like a number of individual G N’ R songs, though, or at least I like them at first. That is, they start off great. But inevitably, somewhere just after the second verse, the drummer starts ramping up the pace and Slash takes off down some self-indulgent back alley, and the whole thing runs off the rails in a nerve-scraping crescendo that I rarely manage to tolerate all the way to the end. “Sweet Child o’ Mine,” possibly the band’s best-known hit, is a perfect example. The first two-thirds are a near-perfect rock tune. Then it just gets obnoxious. And this is enough of a pattern with the band’s output that it keeps me from ever really saying that I like them.

But Guns N’ Roses did record one song that I like without reservation, and it’s a song that’s been on my mind a lot this week, what with my anxiety leading into the election, followed by the apocalyptic post-election laments of the heartbroken Republicans and all the tiresome back-and-forth about what exactly happened that night and what it all means. I’ve also been thinking of the troubles a couple of my friends are going through at the moment, and of course there’s my own eternally fragile state of mind and my weariness with all the worn-out bullshit of life. And throughout this past week, when all this stuff has reached a critical mass and I’ve felt like I’m at my lowest, most exhausted point, this song has flickered through my mind… and weirdly enough, the thought of it has kind of helped. And maybe it can help some of the people reading this, too, the ones with the problems and the ones who are afraid and unhappy, and the ones who, like me, are just plain tired. It is truly a song — and a sentiment — for our moment.

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you “Patience,” from the 1989 album G N’ R Lies:

And on the note, I bid you all a pleasant weekend…

spacer

Friday Evening Videos: “I Gotsta Get Paid”

For we Gen-Xers, it seemed as if ZZ Top didn’t exist until the night they came blazing out of our cable-TV boxes in their ’33 Ford coupe, fully formed in all their outlandishly bearded glory, but of course the “li’l old band from Texas” was an established force in the music industry long before MTV came along. The band got together in 1969 — the year I was born, kids! — and scored their first radio hit with “La Grange,” an infectious ode to their home state’s infamous Chicken Ranch brothel, in 1973. (Incidentally, that link to the Chicken Ranch is perfectly safe to click… it directs you to the site of a writer who has just completed a book on the subject. Lots of interesting history there… ought to be quite a book!)  Even so, there’s little question that the three music videos they made in support of their Eliminator album — “Gimme All Your Lovin’,” “Sharp Dressed Man,” and “Legs” — catapulted the band into much wider prominence than they’d previously known, or have managed to retain in the years since. Of course, it helped that those three songs are great songs, but really it was the imagery and, perhaps more importantly, the mythology established in those clips that linger in a generation’s pop-cultural imagination: the desert scenery; the mysterious (and apparently enchanted) hotrod that appears out of thin air and vanishes again when its mission is complete; the hot babes who teach downtrodden young people how to strike back against The Man and, more importantly, how to score. Admittedly ridiculous in the same way that so much of ’80s pop culture was, this was also deeply powerful and memorable stuff that touched on some primal chord — at least in the young men of the day. So perhaps it’s no surprise that the Top would eventually feel compelled to revisit this familiar territory.

Here’s the video for “I Gotsta Get Paid,” the first single from ZZ Top’s latest album, La Futura, which was just released about a month ago:

It’s not quite a return to their classic MTV clips. The band’s sound has become more funky and dirty than it was in the Eliminator era, and interestingly enough, the visuals here reflect that change. Instead of the slick and polished Eliminator car — which mirrored the highly produced music of those days — the cars in this video are the bare-metal, rough-welded “rat rods” that are currently popular in gearhead circles. (My dad loves ’em, for some reason.) Rat rods are literally cobbled together from whatever the builder can find, so they’re very organic and even artistic in appearance, but they’re also raw and primitive-looking… and deliberately so.  The girls in this video also have a different look than the classic ZZ Top babes; their outfits, like the cars and the music, have an improvisational, post-apocalyptic trashiness, whereas the old ZZ babes were more refined… in a sleazy sort of way, of course.

While the specifics may have changed, though, there are hot cars and hot women here, and they, like the sound, are unmistakably ZZ Top. And of course there’s that talismanic keychain, fashioned in the shape of the band’s double-Z logo. In the old videos, it seemed to represent freedom, exploration, and sexual license. (Would anyone be surprised if I reveal now that I’ve used a ZZ Top keychain for my old Galaxie since I was 17 years old?) I’m not sure if it has any such symbolism in “I Gotsta Get Paid.” But it sure made me smile when the girl held it up for the camera at the end. It’s good to see it again…

And on that note, hope everyone has some good plans for the weekend ahead!

spacer

Reviewing Rick: Introducing a New Feature

rick-springfield_songs-for-the-end-of-the-world_coversIf you haven’t seen any of his myriad appearances on TV talk shows this week, you might not know that my main man, Rick Springfield, has a new album out. Songs for the End of the World was released on Tuesday, and I’m sure none of my Loyal Readers will be remotely surprised to learn I already have my copy. (A couple of them, actually, thanks to an insidious marketing scheme involving different covers and bonus content unique to each variant… oh, well. Such is life as a collector/fanboy.) I like it. It’s a good album. I thought at first it was more of the same thing we got with his last one, Venus in Overdrive, but the more I listen, the more I’m thinking of it as a kind of thematic and sonic sequel to his 2004 release shock/denial/anger/acceptance, only with less rage and hurt, and a bit more humor. It’s kind of like we’re checking in on the “character” from that primal scream of an album a few years later and finding him farther down the road to recovery, a bit happier about his life, but still trying to process the emotional hangover. Which, of course, is a pretty accurate description of Rick Springfield in 2012 versus the 2004 Rick.

But I’m getting ahead of myself here.

You see, I’ve been thinking for quite a while that it might be fun to go through Rick’s entire oeuvre in chronological order, all his official albums — as opposed to the dozens of fly-by-night greatest-hits packages that have been produced since his heyday in the mid-80s, as well as a couple of weird bootleg items I know about — and review them as a recurring feature here on Simple Tricks. Now, before you say something smart-assy like “that shouldn’t take long!,” you should know that Rick has been in this business a lot longer than most people realize. He’s recorded 18 studio albums over a span of 40 years — yes, that’s right, his first record was released in 1972. A long time before anyone ever heard of “Jessie’s Girl.” And that’s just the solo work he’s done here in the United States. He also played and recorded with several bands in Australia before he moved here in search of greater glory. More on that another time, though.

I know going in that this project may not be of much interest to anyone except myself and possibly The Girlfriend. Also, I’ve got to admit I’m really not confident I can pull it off, since music is outside my comfort zone as a writer and a blogger. I love music, especially rock and blues, and I have my opinions about it, obviously, but no actual training in it, no technical knowledge or formal understanding of how it works or why it doesn’t… which means I don’t feel that I have much vocabulary for describing my opinions. But I want to try.

I thought Rick’s music was cool when I was young, then I lost it for a while. I’ve told that story before. But in the 12 years or so since I rediscovered him, it’s become, well, meaningful to me. All the moreso as I’ve learned more about the man and his life and his problems. I don’t see him merely as my guitar hero anymore, but as a guy, a guy not unlike myself, an all-too-human being who has screwed up in some pretty spectacular ways and somehow managed to soldier on through. And I like this guy. His music has evolved considerably over the past 40 years. So has he. I hope my skills are up to the job of analyzing the evolution, and conveying why it matters to me.

As I said, I intend this to be a recurring feature. Hopefully I’ll manage to make it a fairly regular one… I know myself too well to make promises about how frequently it will appear, though. Just keep your eyes open, I guess… assuming you care…

spacer

Cassette Memories

***PHOTO MISSING***

I had my wisdom teeth removed on Monday, only about 25 years later than I probably should have. What can I say, I tend to put things off. Thankfully, it went much better than I was afraid it would, although the actual process was pretty disconcerting. I elected to have a local anesthetic only, rather than being “put out,” the thought of which gives me a major case of the wiggins. We all have our irrational fears, don’t we? The local was effective enough — I felt very little in the way of pain — but the numbness wasn’t total, and I was completely aware of everything the oral surgeon was doing. Especially when he was prying underneath the stubborn bottom teeth with a miniature crowbar, and wiggling the pliers back and forth until the little buggers finally cracked free of my jawbone. And then there was the unforgettable snapping sensation when one of them broke, followed by more prying to get the remaining portion out. I have to admit, I took a certain macho pride in remaining awake and enduring all this, especially after the surgeon patted me on the chest and told me I was very brave, and very few of his patients elect to do it that way. Brave or not, though, the adrenaline surge left my hands shaking and my heart racing for a good 30 minutes after the last tooth came out, and I really dislike that sensation.

My recovery has been smoother than expected, too. Several friends had warned me to expect the absolute worst, and I took the entire week off on their advice. But as it happens, I’ve had very little pain, bleeding, or swelling, and I started experimenting with actual chewable food only two days after the surgery. So much for all those horror stories I’ve heard.

Still, I’m never one to complain about time spent away from the office, and I’ve managed to get a lot done around the house in the past couple days. Specifically, I’ve made some significant steps forward in the overwhelming and seemingly never-ending process of reclaiming my living space from all the crap I’ve accumulated over several decades of packrattery. Today, for instance, I’ve been going through boxes of audio cassettes — most of which I long ago upgraded to CD, none of which I’ve actually listened to in years — pulling out the small handful that have some sentimental value as objects and tossing all the rest in the donation box. It’s been an interesting walk down memory lane. Generally speaking, I don’t give up my preferences easily… if I once liked something, there’s a very good chance I still like it. But not always.

For instance, is it really possible I was once an Air Supply fan? Apparently, as I have two of their albums and a greatest-hits package. I don’t think I’ve had the slightest interest in hearing Culture Club since 1985 or thereabouts. And given my modern-day disdain toward country music, the four Alabama tapes I’d forgotten I ever owned were something of a surprise. And then of course there were the two Chicago tapes. I’ve loathed Chicago since that one horrible summer back in my multiplex days, when their greatest-hits CD played for three months straight, every single day, from open to close, continuously rubbing salt in the wound of a recent breakup with every single overwrought ballad and maudlin heartbreak song until finally one afternoon… something happened to that disc. Now, I’m not admitting to anything here. All I’ll say is that CDs look remarkably pretty the way they flash in the sun as they sail off a movie-theater roof across a parking lot that looks impossibly black and glossy with its fresh coating of asphalt. Needless to say, those Chicago tapes aren’t anything I want to hold onto. (For the record, they were Chicago 16 and Chicago 17, every Chicago album being oh-so-imaginatively numbered, rather than titled.)

But then there are the tapes that still actually mean something to me, the ones that hold volumes of sense-memory wrapped in their clunky plastic casings, their smeary labels, and their too-tiny cover art. Handling Olivia Newton-John’s Physical once again reminds me of how deliciously rebellious I felt listening to something that got the local prudes all huffy, how early I made my choice to stand apart from Utah’s dominant culture, and how much of that choice came from simply liking things people around me told me I shouldn’t like. (Yes, Olivia Newton-John was once subversive here in the squeaky-clean Utah of the early ’80s, as ridiculous as that now sounds.) Asia’s Alpha brought back long afternoons of solitary adolescent brooding on my old backyard rope swing, my refuge from the confusing, hurtful world of middle school. The long out-of-print soundtrack to the long-forgotten movie Teachers triggers images of times spent with my buddy Kurt Stephensen, who gave me that one for Christmas one year. Bob Seger’s Night Moves did constant duty on my old Walkman as I stalked the hallways of Bingham High in my army-surplus trenchcoat, my hands jammed into my pockets and a pair of cheap 7-Eleven Ray-Ban knockoffs covering my eyes (these days, I’d no doubt get thrown out as a security risk, looking like that). Fleetwood Mac’s Tango in the Night recalls afterschool make-out sessions with a certain young lady in the back of my ’70 T-Bird, parked in South Jordan City Park with the hot spring sunshine flooding through the windshield. Little River Band’s First Under the Wire was the soundtrack for several long summer-vacation nights spent chewing the fat with the Skinner boys as we camped in my family’s boat underneath the endless Milky Way. Sammy Hagar’s Cruisin’ & Boozin’ was the first (and last) item I ever shoplifted. Karma got even with me, though; the tapedeck in my Dad’s Bronco ate the damn thing the first time I tried to play it. I managed to pull the tape out of the machine without breaking it, but it was stretched and never sounded quite right again.

And then there’s the homemade mixtape with the magazine-ad photo of a sailboat for a cover. That one stirs up feelings I once had for the same girlfriend whose rejection contributed to the Multiplex Chicago Incident; she made the tape for me when she left for college, the transition of our “perfect” romance (or so I believed it was) into a long-distance love affair, and the beginning of the end for us. I recognize only one song on it, Modern English’s “Melt With You.” She and I never did share much in the way of music.

So while the majority of these dusty old outmoded forms of media are on their way to the thrift store — assuming they even want them at this late date — there are some that are going right back into the shoebox they came out of. I’m trying to amend some of my obsessive materialism… but let’s not get crazy here!

spacer

In Which I Cryptically Quote Some Lyrics for You

“Oh every night, and every day
A little piece of you is falling away
But lift your face, the western way, baby
Build your muscles as your body decays.”

A verse from one my all-time favorite songs, “Hammer to Fall” by the inimitable, indispensable Queen. Just a little something that’s been running through my mind tonight as I contemplate my approaching birthday, my various medical misadventures of the past year — long story, but don’t worry, I’m okay — and of course my impending appointment tomorrow with an oral surgeon to get all four of my wisdom teeth yanked, only about 25 years after I probably should have had it done. What can I say, I tend to put things off. As you can probably imagine, I’m really not looking forward to a week of living on Jello and Lortabs. But that’s tomorrow, isn’t it? For tonight, let’s lose ourselves in the rock and roll, shall we? Which, oddly enough, is the general theme of “Hammer to Fall”:

spacer

Friday Evening Videos (Special End-of-Summer Edition): “Going to California”

I discovered Led Zeppelin my freshman year of college.

Well, wait… no. That’s not entirely accurate. I was aware of Zeppelin as early as middle school; it was pretty much impossible for a young person not to be at that point in time. Lots of kids were wearing t-shirts with the “Swan Song” logo on them, and if you listened to Rock 103 or Rock 99 — which I did — it seems like either “Black Dog” or “Rock and Roll” played every single hour on the hour. And of course “Stairway to Heaven” got a lot of attention during the Great Satanism Hysteria of the early ’80s. Many of my classmates seemed to believe that listening to that “Stairway” song while playing Dungeons and Dragons under a blacklight would open a direct portal to Hell in your closet, or something like that. So, yeah, I knew of Led Zeppelin. But I didn’t really start to appreciate them until one beautiful fall afternoon when I was driving along 13th East in my little VW Rabbitt — what, you think I drove the Galaxie or my old T-Bird to the U of U everyday, and then left it in one of those tiny little parking stalls to get all dinged up? Not even.

Anyhow, I was driving along that day with the westering sun flashing and winking through the trees and golden leaves the size of salad plates fluttering down to the road from the stately trees overhead, and onto the radio came the Zeppelin song “Ramble On.” That’s the one that mentions Gollum from The Lord of the Rings, which, I will admit, was the thing that first caught my attention. But it was the overall mood of the song and the non-Gollum imagery that stayed with me and was still on my mind later that evening. It was one of those rare moments when you hear some random piece of music that seems so perfectly suited to the setting or the activity that it feels as if your life has a genuine soundtrack. Before long, I’d bought a copy of Led Zeppelin IV and a paperback copy of Hammer of the Gods and was on my way to becoming at least a casual fan of what was once called “The Biggest Band in the World.” (To be clear, I never got really into Zep, but I enjoy a lot of their stuff.) To this day, their music always seems to remind me of back-to-school time no matter what season I actually hear it in.

So it seems perfectly fitting that one of their songs happened to come up on my iPod tonight as I was walking around the dark subdivisions that crowd the Bennion Compound on three sides, reflecting with much melancholy on this, Labor Day, the last night of a summer that never seemed to get started for me. Doubly fitting that it was one of their mellower, slightly sad ones as well. Ladies and gentleman, to note the coming crisp evenings and yellowing of the leaves, I give you “Going to California,” one of my all-time favorite Led Zeppelin tracks:

Zeppelin predates the music video by quite a few years, so the most visually interesting version I could find on YouTube was this live clip from one of the five sold-out nights the band played at Earls Court Arena in London in 1975, when they were at the very peak of their popularity and creativity. I think this is a beautiful song, even if the lyrics about girls with flowers in the hair are incredibly dated at this point. It’s startling to realize that Led Zep was actually contemporaneous with the whole flower-child thing, considering that they don’t really sound like a typical “Sixties band.”  In fact, for a long time while I was in high school in the ’80s, I thought they were a current band, because their music was still so ubiquitous on the radio. (They actually broke up in December of 1980; I was in my first year of middle school then.)

You know, it just occurred to me that I really don’t hear Zeppelin on the radio much anymore…

spacer

Friday Evening Videos: “Midnight Blue”

Tonight’s video selection isn’t particularly significant, and I have no particular memory or anecdote associated with it. I just like the song:

Lou Gramm was, of course, the lead singer for one of the biggest bands of the classic-rock era, Foreigner. But like so many leads from bands that peaked creatively in the late ’70s and early ’80s, including Steve Perry of Journey, Roger Hodgson of Supertramp, and especially Stevie Nicks of Fleetwood Mac, Gramm felt the need to go solo for a while in the late ’80s. He scored a couple of hits from two solo albums, of which this single — “Midnight Blue” — was the biggest, charting at number one on the Billboard charts for five weeks in the spring of 1987. As I said, I have no specific memory associated with it, but the melodic guitar and propulsive bassline always appealed to me on a purely sonic level, and hearing it now reminds me of a time and a general emotional background state.

For the record, I don’t recall ever seeing the video before this afternoon, so the imagery of a brooding, leather-jacketed young man in a long red convertible had nothing to do with me liking this tune. Any resemblance to my persona at the age I was when this song came out is purely coincidental…

spacer