Songs You May Have Missed #350

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Billy Bragg: “The World Turned Upside Down” (1985)

Billy Bragg tells the story of the Diggers, a movement in mid-1600’s England to create a classless society by seizing land (which they felt had been unjustly taken through the Norman conquest) and holding it in the common good. They did so successfully and peacefully in areas of Kent and Northamptonshire, in defiance of laws and landlords, for over a year. They were eventually, and easily, suppressed by Cromwell and Fairfax.

Bragg sees lessons in the story for the powerful and dispossessed alike:

You poor take courage/You rich take care/This earth was made a common treasury for everyone to share

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/03/22/songs-you-may-have-missed-59/

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Singing as if Prizes Depended on It

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(Excerpted from The New York Times)

By  CORINNA da FONSECA-WOLLHEIM

A singing competition is no ideal biosphere for music to flourish.

That much was clear from the finals of this year’s George London Competition, which offered the unnatural spectacle of opera arias morphing into sales pitches in the hands of 24 young American and Canadian singers. In the presence of a jury including opera greats like Nedda Casei and George Shirley, contestants apparently felt compelled to force out top notes and sing very loudly — notwithstanding the aggressively amplifying acoustics of the Gilder Lehrman Hall at the Morgan Library & Museum

(Read more here: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/05/arts/music/george-london-competition-at-the-morgan-library.html?ref=music )

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As we’ve previously ranted on this site, the current mania for competitive singing may be to the eventual detriment of pop music, if it hasn’t already. And the above excerpt suggests such effects may not be limited to pop, but have been seen in the classical music realm as well.

If young singers can be made to understand the difference between singing as conveyance of emotion and singing as a July 4th fireworks display (in shorthand, the difference between, say, Barbra Streisand and Celine Dion) maybe it’s not unthinkable we’ll see another Karen Carpenter or Roberta Flack on the charts again someday. But as long the prize-givers are in control, it’s unlikely.

Songs You May Have Missed #349

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Dzintars: The Latvian Women’s Choir: “Where Have You Been, Brother?” (1983)

Another beautiful piece of Latvian choral music from the 76-member choir whose 1983 album was produced by Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead.

See also: https://edcyphers.com/2012/03/02/songs-you-may-have-missed-35/

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Songs You May Have Missed #348

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Showoff: “Falling Star” (1999)

Chicago band Showoff have been called emo-core, pop punk, and a bubblegum version of Green Day. Whatever way you want to label them, this tune’s hard to get out of your head after a few listens. In a good way.

Songs You May Have Missed #347

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Yuck: “Shook Down” (2011)

The prettiest, most restrained moment from Yuck’s debut album. This young band’s sound marks them as obvious descendants of the 90’s lo-fi indie rock of bands like Dinosaur Jr. But the gently melodic mope of this song also puts them into Teenage Fanclub territory.

A nice song for making breakfast, relaxing with a chai, or to fall in love to. Whatever’s your poison.

Spike and Iris’ Ubercool Wedding

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