Songs You May Have Missed #310

king m

King Missile: “My Heart is a Flower” (1991)

John S. Hall lays down some of his distinctive brand of rock poetry. You either find him amusing or you don’t, so this is for those of us who do.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/12/17/songs-you-may-have-missed-260-2/

Who Is Making Today’s Most Original Music?

bjork_bastards(Reprinted from MSN)

by Robin Hilton

Full disclosure: I stole this one from a friend’s Facebook page.

I also know the answer (I don’t really know the answer). It’s The Dirty Projectors. No, wait! It’s Animal Collective. It’s definitely Animal Collective. Or actually, maybe it’s Radiohead. Or … Micachu.

Lord. I don’t know. I guess first we should define what it means to be original, especially in an age where it feels like there are no new ideas. (Ask any generation and we’ve been in this age since the beginning of time. When Loglog, a Neanderthal, started banging rocks together around 200,000 years ago, everyone said he “borrowed heavily” from Ahknok, a well-known Homo Erectus who was doing the same thing with sticks in the later Pleistocene epoch. Duh!)

When I listen to music, it’s usually easy for me to hear its roots. I can tell where it’s coming from. This is how we come up with phrases like “folk-flavored Brit psych-pop” or “punk-inspired drone-rock.” (I’m sorry about that, by the way). The vast majority of what we hear can be traced to an earlier sound which, in turn, can be traced to an earlier sound, and so on and so on. And, of course, that’s totally fine.

For me, the less I can make sense of the music’s roots, the more original it feels. I mentioned Dirty Projectors and Animal Collective, and the music of both of those bands often does leave me scratching my head as I attempt to link it to the past. Some of the stuff on Sufjan Stevens’ Age Of Adz challenged me to rethink what makes a song a song, especially the genius closing track “Impossible Soul.”

With that in mind, I think I’m going to have to go with Bjork. Bjork most consistently challenges just about all of my notions of music — where it comes from, how it’s made, what it means and, most importantly, my expectations of how it should be. Over the year’s she’s obliterated standard chord progressions, rhythms and melodies, severing ties to any clear, preexisting genres and reconnecting them in ways most of us have never imagined. Her most recent project, Biophilia, was so inventive it was hard to say what, exactly, it was. It was music, sure. But it was also a series of apps with strangely alluring, interactive graphics that allowed you to travel through the songs visually and even dismantle the music to make your own versions of each “track.” The beats, lyrics, everything about the sounds felt like it came from another planet. It’s easy to dismiss Bjork as just being “weird,” and a lot of people do. But really, I think she’s a genius who’s thinking and operating on a completely different level.

But Bjork is far from the only musician doing these sorts of things. Tell us who you think is making the most original music now, in the comments section.

Report: Bunny Wailer blasts Snoop Dogg for new Rastafari persona

Snoop Lion Portraits

(Reprinted from MSN)

Bob Marley’s former The Wailers bandmate Bunny Wailer has reportedly taken aim at rapper Snoop Dogg for posing as a member of the  Rastafari movement after immersing himself in Jamaican culture last year.

The hip-hop superstar previously revealed he had been anointed Snoop Lion by a Rastafarian priest after experiencing a spiritual awakening while recording his first reggae project, “Reincarnated.” He adopted the traditional dress and  dreadlocked hair during his time in Jamaica and filmed his transformation for a documentary, also titled “Reincarnated.”

But Wailer is not convinced by Snoop’s new lifestyle and he has accused the rapper of the “outright fraudulent use of (the) Rastafari community’s  personalities and symbolism,” according to TMZ.

Members of the Rastafari Millennium Council have also launched a verbal  attack on Snoop, demanding he refrain from using the moniker Snoop Lion and  apologize for his behavior or face legal action, according to TMZ. They have also fired off a seven-page letter to the marijuana-loving star, insisting that “smoking weed and loving Bob Marley and reggae music is not what defines the Rastafari Indigenous Culture.”

Songs You May Have Missed #309

dickinson

Rob Dickinson: “My Name is Love” (2005)

Rob Dickinson’s solo debut displays the ex-Catherine Wheel guitarist/frontman’s penchant for the epic, soaring ballad–a perfect setting for his conversation with the Goddess of Love herself. His music packs an emotional wallop without overwrought histrionics.

And speaking of histrionics, Dickinson is the cousin of Iron Maiden’s Bruce Dickinson.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/03/10/songs-you-may-have-missed-44/

Songs You May Have Missed #308

jens

Jens Lekman: “Become Someone Else’s” (2012)

Jens had me here from the first two lines of the lyric:

Jennifer called, told me ’bout her latest admirer

Said, “Someone should make a pamphlet called ‘So You Think You’re in Love with Jennifer'”

Add the sly slip-note piano lines and I’ve fallen for another sweetly skewed Jens Lekman song, despite not really knowing what he’s on about with the cherry-sucking bats in the last verse.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/08/06/songs-you-may-have-missed-160/

Top Ten Singles 30 Years Ago This Week

Week ending January 29, 1983

  1. Down Under-Men at Work
  2. Africa-Toto
  3. Sexual Healing-Marvin Gaye
  4. Dirty Laundry-Don Henley
  5. The Girl is Mine-Michael Jackson/Paul McCartney
  6. Maneater-Hall & Oates
  7. Baby, Come to Me-Patty Austin (with James Ingram)
  8. Rock the Casbah-The Clash
  9. Shame on the Moon-Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band
  10. You and I-Eddie Rabbitt/Crystal Gayle

(Source: Billboard Hot 100)

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