Songs You May Have Missed #176

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Jennifer Cutting (with Grace Griffith): “My Grief On the Sea” (2005)

One of the loveliest voices in contemporary Celtic music belongs to Washington, D.C. area’s Grace Griffith.

If you’ve heard of Eva Cassidy, you have Griffith to thank. It was at her urging that Bill Straw of Bix Street Records signed Cassidy, whose career was cut short by melanoma in 1996. Griffith herself has yet to become a household name on the order of Cassidy despite having won multiple Washington Area Music Association awards (“Wammie Awards”).

Griffith was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1998 and has since become a speaker and educator on Parkinson’s.

“My Grief On the Sea” is actually from an album by Jennifer Cutting called Ocean: Songs for the Night Sea Journey, which won Cutting five Wammies in 2005. It’s a beautiful album which was the better part of a decade in the making.

See also:

https://edcyphers.com/2012/11/19/songs-you-may-have-missed-246/

Billie Joe Armstrong Freaks Out at the I Heart Radio Music Festival

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The Sad Irony of Green Day’s On-Stage Tantrum

(reprinted from The Atlantic)

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Billie Joe Armstrong’s righteous rock-star routine looked more like a faded pop star’s existential crisis.

iHeartRadio is a website and app that streams more than 1,500 radio stations nationwide, owned by the consolidated-media behemoth Clear Channel Broadcasting. iHeartRadio was also, this weekend, the host of a music festival in Las Vegas where Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong threw an on-stage fit that looked like what you’d choreograph for a B-grade rock biopic about a performer terrified by his own irrelevance.

The video of Armstrong meltdown is below. The gist: Green Day’s concert, initially planned to be 40 minutes, had been halved because Usher’s performance had gone long. (The source for this version of events, as far as I can tell, is the YouTube user who uploaded the video). Armstrong, upon realizing he has one minute left to play, says “fuck” a bunch of times, touts the fact that his band’s been around since 1988, and sort of inexplicably points out that he’s not “fucking Justin Bieber.”

Yep, Armstrong isn’t Bieber, and that’s the point. There was a time when Green Day and bands like them would be the most-important act at a purely mainstream festival like iHeartRadio (where set times are already notoriously short), but that time has passed. Rock is no longer the default genre for kids to listen to, and Green Day’s forthcoming trio of albums may not change that. Their new single, “Oh Love,” is the No. 2 rock song in the country, but it peaked on the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 97. They’re still a popular band that  sells out arenas, but that’s almost entirely because of their decades-old back catalogue. Of course, Armstrong and his fans have a right to be annoyed at being cut off. But why should they expect priority treatment at a festival devoted to showcasing music that moves units, especially when pitted against the likes of enduring hit-a-minute artists like Rihanna and Usher?

And it’s sad to see Armstrong claim credibility on the back of longevity and the fact that he’s “not fucking Justin Bieber”—in other words, a rock star, not a pop star. Of course, for a band like Green Day—pop-punks, right?—there’s not much difference. This is a corporate rock band, and I don’t mean that pejoratively but rather as a point of fact: They’ve allied with and profited from the commercial forces that lead, among other things, to independent and alternative radio stations being killed and local DJs being replaced with automated playlists. That’s fine. It’s allowed a lot of their very-good music to find a very-big audience. But in Vegas, he made a spectacle of acting like he’s been playing a different game than that.

Of course, Armstrong knows all this. He’s a self-aware master of staging: American Idiot, after all, is now a Broadway production. He may have even scripted this whole meltdown before singing a word. Quietly submitting to a quick set sandwiched between dance-pop superstars might not have played well with the Green Day diehards tuning in. Those diehards almost certainly made up a minority of the audience paying attention to the festival, but for them, a couple “Fuck this shit”s and a smashed guitar may help keep some myth of punk nobility alive. For most anyone else, it’s just kind of embarrassing to watch.

by Spencer Kornhaber

Video of the Week: Krispy Kreme’s “Haters Wanna Be Me”

Krispy Kreme and Money Maker Mike have raised the stakes in the rap game. Watch out Jay-Z and company–there’s a new baller in town.

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General Makeup of Techno Songs

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ELO Front Man Jeff Lynne Makes a Return

(From Rolling Stone)

For the past decade, not much has been heard musically from ELO mastermind (and  solo artist/former Traveling Wilbury) Jeff  Lynne. For fans clamoring for some new Lynne recordings, you are about to be  treated to a pair of new releases from the bearded, sunglass-sporting gentleman.  October 9th will see the release of both Long Wave and Mr. Blue  Sky: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra – the former a covers  collection of early radio favorites of Lynne’s, and the latter re-recordings of  ELO classics.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/videos/premiere-jeff-lynne-covers-soul-nugget-mercy-mercy-20120921#ixzz27D46Y8a9

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