Songs You May Have Missed #229

shane

Shane Nicholson: “Safe and Sound” (2006)

Australian-born singer-songwriter Shane Nicholson is probably less famous than his wife, roots country singer Kasey Chambers–at least Chambers is pretty famous in Australia. The two have recorded two acclaimed albums together, 2008’s Rattlin’ Bones and this year’s Wreck and Ruin.

Shane’s solo stuff stays more to the pop side of things. “Safe and Sound” sounds to me like one or both of the Finn Brothers.

Did Obama’s Taste In Music Help Him Win?

(Reprinted from NME)

As Barack Obama goes through the rigmarole of humping those boxes back into the Oval Office, he might reflect that he owes his continued employment to popular music. No, bear with me.

Rarely has a political leader made such capital of his musical tastes, and rarely have so many praised stars returned the high-five. Not since the heyday of Tony Blair and his groovy-dad endorsements has a politician gone cap in hand like this to the Cool List and seen it pay off. It might seem like facile conjecture, but we know Obama and Blair share an understanding of the heft of perception. Policies and position on the spectrum might be the foundations of an election win; the face that fits is the architectural clincher. And if Jay-Z’s taking care of the cornicing, so much the better.

Barack Obama, Beyoncé and Jay-Z

On the iPod

We’ve all done this one – picked out the coolest stuff from our iPods to impress the, erm, electorate. They don’t need to see the Rolf Harris and Pinky & Perky tracks that are on there “for the kids”. Politics is about getting your message across clearly and concisely without umming, ahhing and fudging around the embarrassing bits. Hit ‘em with a few randomly* (*precisely) chosen favourites like James Brown, The Rolling Stones, Eminem, Stevie Wonder, John Coltrane, Fugees and Gil Scott-Heron, and you’ve picked off some crucial demographics.

When you’ve got a rival like Mitt Romney, who namechecks country stalwarts Garth Brooks, Kenny Chesney and Toby Keith, it’s easy to bag the cool vote. And Romney even admits that acts he digs – like The Eagles and The Killers – might not be wild about being mentioned. The message is that pop supports Obama, so that’s a hell of a chunk of youth onside already, potentially. As well as another few million who merely think they’re still young and cool.

Bruce Springsteen

Shout-outs

It’s been a two-way street for the Big O. Bruce Springsteen’s been composing ditties for him and Jay-Z and Beyoncé have thrown their considerable cultural weight behind him. They may have been a bit heavy-handed with the puns/rhymes but these guys are power-brokers. While this kind of backing may put some people off, you have to play the percentages at least, and Obama’s a canny operator.

How to Wake Up a Kid

Jazz For Cows

Who’d have thought?

(Thanks Dave!)

Songs You May Have Missed #228

mike

Michael McDermott: “Forever” (1996)

As I sat to write a few sentences about Michael McDermott, I intended to do so in “whatever became of” terms. Then I saw he’d just released a new album a month and a half ago, and read that he’s rebuilding his career, and his life, after some very dark years.

A Chicago Tribune article from 2011 tells the sad story of a kid who once was being compared to Dylan and Springsteen, but who ultimately couldn’t handle the trappings of talent and let cocaine and other forms of self-abuse derail his promising career. The story had a reasonably happy ending.

Songs You May Have Missed #227

liar

Carolina Liar: “Last Night” (2008)

It would be reasonable to assume the members of a band named ‘Carolina Liar’ would hail from one of the Carolinas. Turns out lead singer Chad Wolfe, from Charleston, SC is the only one. His three band mates are from Sweden.

Modern Rock radio embraced the band on the release of their 2008 debut, Coming to Terms, but their pop melodicism set them apart within that format.

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