On This Day in 1970…

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(via The College of Rock and Roll Knowledge)

The Who’s drummer, Keith Moon decided to go to the Red Lion Pub in Hatfield, Hertfordshire, UK on Jan. 4, 1970. Keith went with his wife and some other friends. Keith’s friend and driver Neil Boland, drove them in Keith’s Bentley.

The people in the pub were more working class than Rock Star class (some say it was a skin head crowd). They started giving Keith and his friends trouble so they decided to leave. The crowd moved outside and started throwing rocks at the car and started rocking it. Boland got out of the car to try to cool off the crowd. However, Keith got scared and decided to make a get away by driving the car himself. What he didn’t know was that the crowd had pushed Neil under the car. The car ran over Neil and dragged him for a ways, killing him.

Moon was arrested and charged with a number of crimes. 6 weeks after the incident, Neil’s death was ruled accidental.

Neil’s death continued to bother Keith until his own death.

Video of the Week: Natalie Prass–“It is You”

Honey-voiced Natalie Prass strips away the orchestration that adorns this track on her debut album, bringing an amazing voice–and some wonderfully sympathetic acoustic guitar–front and center.

Songs You May Have Missed #563

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The High Llamas: “Pilgrims” (1996)

There are albums that, on first listen, are difficult to absorb due to their sheer abundance. They Might Be Giants’ Flood comes to mind, or Elvis Costello’s Get Happy. Downside is, it takes some time and patience to digest the wealth of musical ideas they offer. But the upside is they often (eventually) become favorites of your collection.

The High Llamas’ third album Hawaii may not stand with the classics I mentioned, nor indeed with the works that seem to have inspired it, Brian Wilson’s Pet Sounds and Smile LPs. But across its sprawling 29 tracks (and six more on a bonus disc) it does share with all those albums a wide artistic scope and a richness of sonic detail.

Some of the orchestral soundscapes songwriter Sean O’Hagan achieves are unlike anything you’ve previously heard on a pop record. But most often when this music does evoke something familiar, it’s nervous breakdown-era Brian Wilson. In fact, the lack of hit singles aside, listening to this record must be rather like the experience first-time listeners to those Beach Boy records had.

“Pilgrims” also evokes for me some of the gentler ballads in the Steely Dan catalogue.

Natalie Cole Dead at 65

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R&B singer Natalie Cole passed away last night of congestive heart failure. She’d canceled tour dates in November and December due to an unspecified medical procedure which required hospitalization. She also suffered from Hepatitis C and had received a kidney transplant in 2009.

Hers was a rollercoaster career with a promising start in 1975 (her first chart hit “This Will Be” saw recent second life as the jingle for eHarmony dating service) followed by substance abuse issues and rehab, then a comeback in 1991 with an Album of the Year Grammy for Unforgettable…With Love.

Her early singles were made in the mold of Aretha Franklin, whose dominance in the Best Female R&B Vocal Performance Grammy category she challenged in the 70’s.

This is what R&B music used to sound like:

Video of the Week: DJ Earworm’s ‘United State of Pop 2015’

With his yearly fusion of pop tracks from the year just passed, DJ Earworm once again produces something greater than the sum of its parts.

Each year this guy creates an indefectible compilation mashup that’s actually more listenable than most of the individual songs that comprise it.

Each year he astounds–only to surpass his accomplishment the following year. DJ Earworm is the best at what he does, and he’s just getting better.

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