Movie Diary

Monday, March 29, 2021





a) Pieces Of A Woman
I checked out Pieces Of A Woman because Vanessa Kirby is nominated for an Oscar for it, and even though Frances McDormand and Viola Davis both deserve it to, I think I'm really rooting for Kirby now. I've never seen a movie deal so directly with the trauma of losing a baby in childbirth -- there's no cinematic shorthand here, the tour de force opening half hour of the movie is an extremely realistic depiction of a home birth that ends with the newborn turning blue as EMTs try to save it (it's kind of mindblowing that Kirby isn't a mother, but her performance gave me flashbacks to the births of my kids). The rest of the movie a more slow and subtle portrait of grief and forgiveness and a really moving ending. Was surprising to see comedian Iliza Shlesinger in a drama like this, even in a small supporting role, cool that she ended up in an Oscar movie. 

b) Tina
It was cool to watch this after I just spent a lot of time going through Tina Turner's catalog for my posts here last week, the movie actually opens with a performance of one of my favorite deep cuts, "Ask Me How I Feel." I wish they dug a little deeper into her work -- the documentary literally carries on as if her first 4 solo albums don't exist -- but there's a lot of great interviews and some incredible live footage. I didn't realize Kurt Loder co-wrote Turner's memoir that the biopic was based on, it was cool to see extensive interviews with him since it's been a long time since he was on MTV every day. It was interesting to see how they addressed the weird sort of commodification of Turner's life story that the documentary itself is a part of, how hard it was for her to be really one of the first celebrities in a famous couple who spoke openly about being abused by her husband. It felt like Tina was a good way for a legend to kind of have the final word on their life and career while they're still alive. 

c) Irresistible
After Jon Stewart's underwhelming directorial debut, the 2014 drama Rosewater, it seemed encouraging that his second film was a little closer to his comfort zone, a political satire starring one of his most famous "Daily Show" co-stars, Steve Carell. Irresistible isn't a home run, but I enjoyed it, particularly how the movie kind of made me roll my eyes at some of the Sorkiny inspirational speeches and depictions of Wisconsin as an outdated cultural backwater, until the twist ending affirmed that the movie was in on the joke. Some of the directorial decisions were outright bad, though -- like the opening montage signified election day 2016 with that famous footage of the vaudeville guy getting hit in the stomach with a cannonball, really corny stuff. Rose Byrne was definitely the funniest part of the movie, I think they underused her a little. 

d) I Used To Go Here
I feel like at least a dozen movies exactly like I Used To Go Here hit VOD every year -- a dramedy with familiar likable actors from TV where a writer or artist goes back their hometown or where they went to college and has awkward confrontations with people from their past and wacky adventures with quirky locals. But it's good, I'd recommend it if you like Gillian Jacobs and/or these sorts of movies. 

e) The Hustle
I think I already would've forgotten this movie came out 2 years ago if that one gif of Anne Hathaway tipping her wine glass hadn't become ubiquitous on Twitter in the last few months. But I've accepted that I'm just a basic bitch straight millennial white guy who will watch Anne Hathaway in absolutely anything, and it was fun to watch her do a goofy Dirty Rotten Scoundrels update with Rebel Wilson. 

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 228: Ike & Tina Turner

Wednesday, March 24, 2021





Yesterday, I collected deep cuts from Tina Turner's solo career. Today, I'm going back to the Ike & Tina Turner catalog. 

Ike & Tina Turner deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. A Letter From Tina
2. If
3. The Groove
4. Sleepless
5. Won't You Forgive Me
6. Those Ways
8. Don't Play Me Cheap
9. Pretend
10. Gonna Find Me A Substitute
11. Tinaroo
12. Hold On Baby
13. Save The Last Dance For Me
14. Every Day I Have To Cry
15. You Don't Love Me (Yes I Do)
16. Early In The Morning
17. I Smell Trouble
18. It Ain't Right (Lovin' To Be Lovin')
19. Unlucky Creature
20. Contact High
21. Let It Be
22. You Can Have It
23. What You Don't See (Is Better Yet)
24. Pick Me Up (Take Me Where Your Home Is)
25. Moving Into Hip Style - A Trip Child!
26. Help Him
27. Popcorn
28. I Had A Notion

Tracks 1 and 2 from The Soul of Ike & Tina Turner (1961)
Track 3 from Ike & Tina Turner's Kings Of Rhythm Dance (1962)
Tracks 4 and 5 from Dynamite! (1962)
Tracks 6, 7 and 8 from Don't Play Me Cheap (1963)
Tracks 9 and 10 from It's Gonna Work Out Fine (1963)
Tracks 11, 12 and 13 from River Deep - Mountain High (1966)
Tracks 14, 15 and 16 from The Hunter (1969)
Tracks 17, 18 and 19 from Come Together (1970)
Tracks 20, 21 and 22 from Workin' Together (1970)
Tracks 23, 24 and 25 from 'Nuff Said (1971)
Tracks 26, 27 and 28 from Let Me Touch Your Mind (1972)

Obviously, Ike Turner was a shitty person who beat and abused Tina Turner, which was the first thing I knew about him, since Laurence Fishburne was nominated for an Oscar for portraying him as such when I was a kid. In a way, Ike Turner was the first musical icon whose legacy was completely poisoned by his personal actions, something that happens a bit more regularly now but flippantly called 'cancel culture' instead of accountability or consequences. But Ike is dead now, he spent the last decade or two of his life in disgrace, and was in jail when he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, so it at least feels like there's no harm in listening to Tina's music with him now and enjoying that part of her catalog. It's a lot more complicated for other current artists who are comparably shitty people just out using money and their fanbases to avoid any kind of accountability. River Deep - Mountain High, half produced by Ike and half produced by convicted murderer Phil Spector, is a great album with a pretty complicated legacy, to say the least. 

Just as Tina Turner's early solo albums are frustratingly missing from streaming services, a lot of her early albums with Ike are unavailable too. There are about 18 Ike & Tina Turner albums (not counting 3 albums their label assembled after they divorced), and only about 11 of them are available in their definitive form on Spotify and so on, mostly albums from the mid-'60s and mid-'70s are missing. Ike & Tina Turner's Kings Of Rhythm Dance is an instrumental album, so Tina isn't actually on it, despite her name and picture on the cover. 

I tried to stick to original songs, mostly written by Ike, but there are some good covers in there. Ike & Tina's version of "Let It Be," released 8 months after The Beatles one was released, is interesting to me because they completely overhauled the lyric and sort of made the civil rights movement the subtext of the song. In Tina Turner's four decades of recording albums, her only songwriting credits, for 30-something songs, spanned from the late '60s to the late '70s, on the later Ike & Tina records (she doesn't have a single writing credit on her solo albums). Unfortunately, a lot of the records that contain those songs are the ones that aren't on streaming services now, including Nutbush City Limits, the title track of which is definitely the most famous song Tina wrote. The last 6 tracks on here were all written by Tina, and that's really some of the very best stuff on the playlist. It's a little hard to say for sure who wrote what back then, however -- the 1972 version of "I Had A Notion" is credited to Tina, but the "I Had A Notion" on their debut album in 1961, the same lyric and basic song with a different arrangement, was credited to Ike. 

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 227: Tina Turner

Tuesday, March 23, 2021




When Stevie Nicks became the first woman to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice a couple years ago, I speculated on who could repeat that feat, and the two most likely names I came up with were Diana Ross (already in with The Supremes but not as a solo artist) and Tina Turner (already in with Ike & Tina Turner but not as a solo artist). And this year Turner has a shot of making that happen as one of the 2021 Hall of Fame nominees, along with Jay-ZFoo FightersMary J. BligeLL Cool JTodd RundgrenThe Go-Go'sRage Against The Machine, and New York Dolls, among others. And she's the subject of a new documentary, Tina, that will air on HBO this Friday. 

I thought about whether to do one playlist including Tina's solo work as well as the Ike & Tina Turner records. But since both are Hall of Fame-worthy catalogs, I'm going to give each its own playlist, and the Ike & Tina group playlist will follow tomorrow. 

Tina Turner deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. I'm Movin' On
2. He Belongs To Me
3. Bootsy Whitelaw
4. Backstabbers
5. I Might Have Been Queen
6. Steel Claw
7. 1984
8. Overnight Sensation
9. Till The Right Man Comes Along
10. I'll Be Thunder
11. Ask Me How I Feel
12. Falling Like Rain
13. Not Enough Romance
14. Stay Awhile
15. Confidential
16. All Kinds Of People
17. Unfinished Sympathy
18. I Will Be There

Tracks 1 and 2 from Tina Turns The Country On! (1974)
Track 3 from Acid Queen (1975)
Track 4 from Love Explosion (1979)
Tracks 5, 6 and 7 from Private Dancer (1984)
Tracks 8, 9 and 10 from Break Every Rule (1986)
Tracks 11, 12 and 13 from Foreign Affair (1989)
Track 14 from What's Love Got To Do With It (1993)
Tracks 15, 16 and 17 from Wildest Dreams (1996)
Track 18 from Twenty Four Seven (1999)

I was pretty disappointed to find that Tina Turner's first 4 solo albums from the '70s are all missing from streaming services and out of print. I was able to include a handful of tracks from three of them that have turned up on quick cash-in Ike & Tina compilations, but there's nothing at all from 1978's Rough that I could find. Obviously this era wasn't as successful as her work with Ike, and not nearly as successful as her '80s solo work, but there's some good music in there and I really wish those records were commercially available in full. "He Belongs To Me" is a gender-swapped cover of Bob Dylan's "She Belongs To Me," and of course "Backstabbers" is the O'Jays classic. 

Obviously Private Dancer is by far Turner's biggest album, and it's one of those '80s blockbusters that only had 3 songs that weren't released as singles, including a cover of David Bowie's "1984" from Diamond Dogs. One of them, "I Might Have Been Queen," was later featured on the What's Love Got To Do With It soundtrack alongside some of her biggest hits and a few new songs. 

The writing team behind "What's Love Got To Do With It," Terry Britten and Graham Lyle, continued writing more songs for Turner, including "Till The Right Man Comes Along" and "Stay Awhile." I've never been a fan of Private Dancer's Mark Knopfler-penned title track, but the song he wrote for Turner's next album, "Overnight Sensation," is a great song that really sums up her career well. The Bee Gees wrote 1999's "I Will Be There" for Turner, and that's another song so well tailored to her life, I'm surprised neither of those were singles. 

1996's Wildest Dreams had a pretty interesting mix of songs -- the Pet Shop Boys wrote "Confidential," Sheryl Crow wrote "All Kinds of People," and Turner covered Massive Attack's "Unfinished Sympathy." One of the singles featured Barry White on the U.S. version of the album and Antonio Banderas on the European edition, which is just weird. But I think that kind of speaks to how big and how respected Tina Turner is, at one point just about everybody across the spectrum of rock and soul and beyond was happy to work with her or write a song for her. 

Previous playlists in the Deep Album Cuts series:
Vol. 1: Brandy
Vol. 2: Whitney Houston
Vol. 3: Madonna
Vol. 4: My Chemical Romance
Vol. 5: Brad Paisley
Vol. 6: George Jones
Vol. 7: The Doors
Vol. 8: Jay-Z
Vol. 9: Robin Thicke
Vol. 10: R. Kelly
Vol. 11: Fall Out Boy
Vol. 12: TLC
Vol. 13: Pink
Vol. 14: Queen
Vol. 15: Steely Dan
Vol. 16: Trick Daddy
Vol. 17: Paramore
Vol. 18: Elton John
Vol. 19: Missy Elliott
Vol. 20: Mariah Carey
Vol. 21: The Pretenders
Vol. 22: "Weird Al" Yankovic
Vol. 23: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Vol. 24: Foo Fighters
Vol. 25: Counting Crows
Vol. 26: T.I.
Vol. 27: Jackson Browne
Vol. 28: Usher
Vol. 29: Mary J. Blige
Vol. 30: The Black Crowes
Vol. 31: Ne-Yo
Vol. 32: Blink-182
Vol. 33: One Direction
Vol. 34: Kelly Clarkson
Vol. 35: The B-52's
Vol. 36: Ludacris
Vol. 37: They Might Be Giants
Vol. 38: T-Pain
Vol. 39: Snoop Dogg
Vol. 40: Ciara
Vol. 41: Creedence Clearwater Revival
Vol. 42: Dwight Yoakam
Vol. 43: Demi Lovato
Vol. 44: Prince
Vol. 45: Duran Duran
Vol. 46: Rihanna
Vol. 47: Janet Jackson
Vol. 48: Sara Bareilles
Vol. 49: Motley Crue
Vol. 50: The Who
Vol. 51: Coldplay
Vol. 52: Alicia Keys
Vol. 53: Stone Temple Pilots
Vol. 54: David Bowie
Vol. 55: The Eagles
Vol. 56: The Beatles
Vol. 57: Beyonce
Vol. 58: Beanie Sigel
Vol. 59: A Tribe Called Quest
Vol. 60: Cheap Trick
Vol. 61: Guns N' Roses
Vol. 62: The Posies
Vol. 63: The Time
Vol. 64: Gucci Mane
Vol. 65: Violent Femmes
Vol. 66: Red Hot Chili Peppers
Vol. 67: Maxwell
Vol. 68: Parliament-Funkadelic
Vol. 69: Chevelle
Vol. 70: Ray Parker Jr. and Raydio
Vol. 71: Fantasia
Vol. 72: Heart
Vol. 73: Pitbull
Vol. 74: Nas
Vol. 75: Monica
Vol. 76: The Cars
Vol. 77: 112
Vol. 78: 2Pac
Vol. 79: Nelly
Vol. 80: Meat Loaf
Vol. 81: AC/DC
Vol. 82: Bruce Springsteen
Vol. 83: Pearl Jam
Vol. 84: Green Day
Vol. 85: George Michael and Wham!
Vol. 86: New Edition
Vol. 87: Chuck Berry
Vol. 88: Electric Light Orchestra
Vol. 89: Chic
Vol. 90: Journey
Vol. 91: Yes
Vol. 92: Soundgarden
Vol. 93: The Allman Brothers Band
Vol. 94: Mobb Deep
Vol. 95: Linkin Park
Vol. 96: Shania Twain
Vol. 97: Squeeze
Vol. 98: Taylor Swift
Vol. 99: INXS
Vol. 100: Stevie Wonder
Vol. 101: The Cranberries
Vol. 102: Def Leppard
Vol. 103: Bon Jovi
Vol. 104: Dire Straits
Vol. 105: The Police
Vol. 106: Sloan
Vol. 107: Peter Gabriel
Vol. 108: Led Zeppelin
Vol. 109: Dave Matthews Band
Vol. 110: Nine Inch Nails
Vol. 111: Talking Heads
Vol. 112: Smashing Pumpkins
Vol. 113: System Of A Down
Vol. 114: Aretha Franklin
Vol. 115: Michael Jackson
Vol. 116: Alice In Chains
Vol. 117: Paul Simon
Vol. 118: Lil Wayne
Vol. 119: Nirvana
Vol. 120: Kix
Vol. 121: Phil Collins
Vol. 122: Elvis Costello & The Attractions
Vol. 123: Sonic Youth
Vol. 124: Bob Seger
Vol. 125: Radiohead
Vol. 126: Eric Church
Vol. 127: Neil Young
Vol. 128: Future
Vol. 129: Say Anything
Vol. 130: Maroon 5
Vol. 131: Kiss
Vol. 132: Dinosaur Jr.
Vol. 133: Stevie Nicks
Vol. 134: Talk Talk
Vol. 135: Ariana Grande
Vol. 136: Roxy Music
Vol. 137: The Cure
Vol. 138: 2 Chainz
Vol. 139: Kelis
Vol. 140: Ben Folds Five
Vol. 141: DJ Khaled
Vol. 142: Little Feat
Vol. 143: Brendan Benson
Vol. 144: Chance The Rapper
Vol. 145: Miguel
Vol. 146: The Geto Boys
Vol. 147: Meek Mill
Vol. 148: Tool
Vol. 149: Jeezy
Vol. 150: Lady Gaga
Vol. 151: Eddie Money
Vol. 152: LL Cool J
Vol. 153: Cream
Vol. 154: Pavement
Vol. 155: Miranda Lambert
Vol. 156: Gang Starr
Vol. 157: Little Big Town
Vol. 158: Thin Lizzy
Vol. 159: Pat Benatar
Vol. 160: Depeche Mode
Vol. 161: Rush
Vol. 162: Three 6 Mafia
Vol. 163: Jennifer Lopez
Vol. 164: Rage Against The Machine
Vol. 165: Huey Lewis and the News
Vol. 166: Dru Hill
Vol. 167: The Strokes
Vol. 168: The Notorious B.I.G.
Vol. 169: Sparklehorse
Vol. 170: Kendrick Lamar
Vol. 171: Mazzy Star
Vol. 172: Erykah Badu
Vol. 173: The Smiths
Vol. 174: Kenny Rogers & The First Edition
Vol. 175: Fountains Of Wayne
Vol. 176: Joe Diffie
Vol. 177: Morphine
Vol. 178: Dr. Dre
Vol. 179: The Rolling Stones
Vol. 180: Superchunk
Vol. 181: The Replacements
Vol. 222: Fiona Apple
Vol. 223: Van Halen
Vol. 224: Whodini
Vol. 225: Britney Spears
Vol. 226: Todd Rundgren

The 2021 Remix Report Card, Vol. 1

Monday, March 22, 2021

























Another year, another wave of remixes. Here's my year-end 2020 Remix Report Card, and here's the Spotify playlist of this year's remixes so far. 

"34 + 35 (Remix)" by Ariana Grande featuring Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion
This is a pretty good remix with well chosen guests putting in excellent performances. But I must admit, Ariana's 2nd and 3rd verses that the guest MCs replace are my favorite parts of the original, if radio stations started playing this version more I might honestly be a little disappointed when it comes on. 
Best Verse: Megan Thee Stallion
Overall Grade: B+

"At My Worst (Remix)" by Pink Sweat$ featuring Kehlani
This isn't really one of my favorite tracks on Pink Planet but I'm glad it's doing well as a single and it's a pretty sweet little song that I think works better as a duet, I think Kehlani's voice is well suited for this kind of balladry. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: B

"Beat Box 2" by SpotemGottem featuring Pooh Shiesty
"Beat Box 3" by SpotemGottem featuring DaBaby
"Beat Box (Big Latto Mix)" by SpotemGottem featuring Mulatto
"Beat Box" is already on the way to becoming the next "Old Town Road" where it becomes kind of a running joke how many official remixes there are. The first remix with Pooh Shiesty came out in December, although the TikTok challenge that went viral and propelled "Beat Box" onto the Hot 100 used the original SpotemGottem solo track. DaBaby then did his own version, which SpotemGottem's label picked up and turned into another official remix and pushed the song higher up the charts, despite the fact that DaBaby's verse mostly got attention for a poorly phrased punchline that made people think he was dissing child star JoJo Siwa. And then a couple weeks ago we got yet another remix with Mulatto, who still hasn't given us that badly needed name change she promised a few months ago. 
Best Verse: Pooh Shiesty
Overall Grade: C+

"Best Friend (Remix)" by Saweetie featuring Stefflon Don and Doja Cat
I don't really understand the point of this remix, other than that maybe it signifies that Stefflon Don's about to get a lot of promo this year -- conceptually she's a third wheel on the song and she doesn't really stick to the topic, and is an odd musical fit for the beat, and doesn't add any starpower to the song. It's not a bad verse, though. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: C+ 

"Blinding Lights (Remix)" by The Weeknd featuring Rosalia
Rosalia's verse sounds a little out of place but I really like the harmonies she does on the chorus. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: B-

"Buss It (Remix)" by Erica Banks featuring Travis Scott
The "Buss It" challenge was even bigger on TikTok in January than the "Beat Box" dance, but the song has been slower to really pick up steam as a chart hit, so I'm not surprised they tacked a major star onto a remix to keep its buzz going. But Travis remains kind of a bland empty calorie guest rapper, there's a reason he's not on remixes very often relative to his popularity, and his usual reverb-heavy vocal style just doesn't fit well over a Nelly loop. Really this remix should've had a Nelly verse on it.  
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: D

"Go Crazy (Remix)" by Chris Brown and Young Thug featuring Lil Durk, Mulatto and Future
As of this writing, "Go Crazy" is still #1 on R&B radio for the 25th week and I'm just tired. A remix doesn't do much to make such an overplayed song sound fresh, but Future sounds like he really likes the song and is genuinely inspired, rapping for 24 bars and incorporating the melody of the hook. 
Best Verse: Future
Overall Grade: B

"Good & Plenty (Remix)" by Alex Isley featuring Lucky Daye and Masego
Nice song, and Lucky Daye's voice is a welcome addition to it. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade:

"Hittin' (Remix)" by Money Mu featuring Moneybagg Yo and Foogiano
"Hittin'" is a funny song, Money Mu opens the track saying "I don't even need too many ad libs on that shit" and then the entire song sounds like ad libs. Moneybagg doesn't miss these days so he really elevates the song. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade:

"Moonwalking In Calabasas (Remix)" by DDG featuring Blueface
It's hard to think of a less exciting title for a rap song than "Moonwalking In Calabasas" and the song itself isn't much better. This is another song that has several official remixes, but the Blueface remix has about 5 times as many streams as any other version of the song, including the original, and I didn't think he had enough clout to blow a song up post-2019. His verse is good by Blueface standards but I'd much rather listen to the YG remix. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: B- 

"No More Parties (Remix)" by Coi Leray featuring Lil Durk
This is an increasingly unpopular opinion but I still think nobody does AutoTuned melodic rapping worse than Lil Durk, he sounds ridiculous on tracks like this. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: C- 

"Oops!!! (Remix)" by Yung Gravy featuring Lil Wayne
I already wrote about how much I hate this song literally the first day that I heard it, and it's probably too soon to breathe easy, but the song has not blown up like I feared it would since then. Lil Wayne has a long history of showing up on absolutely terrible songs and giving them more effort than they're worth, and his verse regrettably adds a little entertainment value to this horrid modern day "Rappin' Rodney." 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade:

"Opp Stoppa (Remix)" by YBN Nahmir featuring 21 Savage
I have never really had a problem with the 2-minute rap hit coming into fashion in the last few years but I was kind of shocked at just how short "Opp Stoppa" is -- the original is only 1:04, and the remix is 2:14. I hate the way 21 Savage says "pussy" and he says it a lot on this. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: D

"Spicy (Remix)" by Ty Dolla Sign featuring YG, J Balvin, Tyga and Post Malone
Posse cut remixes where the main artist actually contributes a new verse are incredibly rare these days, so I will give Ty Dolla Sign kudos for that (although the Post Malone verse from the original is reprised). 
Best Verse: J Balvin
Overall Grade: B-

"Throat Baby (Remix)" by BRS Kash featuring DaBaby and City Girls
BRS Kash also gets credit for putting new bars on the remix to his breakthrough hit, and I like his back-and-forth verse with DaBaby. This remix mostly made waves for the video, in which DaBaby skis down slopes of CGI semen, but I will say that as someone who doesn't really like "Throat Baby" as a song, this is a quality remix.
Best Verse: JT
Overall Grade: B+ 

"Whoopty NYC" by CJ featuring Rowdy Rebel and French Montana
At this point it's a joke that every time a new New York rapper gets a hit that French Montana has to piggyback on it. He doesn't sound as awkward on this as he did the last time I heard him on an NYC drill beat, but I still wish these new guys could get like an actual New York legend on their remixes when they blow up. 
Best Verse: Rowdy Rebel
Overall Grade: C+

"You Got It (Remix)" by Vedo featuring Young Dolph and Money Man
I chuckled when I saw who was on the remix to this song but I have to give Dolph credit, he understood the assignment and put together a good sincere R&B verse as well as a more predictable guest like Wale would have. 
Best Verse: Young Dolph
Overall Grade: B

TV Diary

Wednesday, March 17, 2021





a) "Generation" 
On the surface it feels a little redundant for HBO to have another edgy show about the drugged out gender fluid misadventures of Gen Z teenagers. But "Generation" is a half hour show that takes itself a lot less seriously than "Euphoria" does, and I like it a lot more. The chopped up chronology they use to introduce the characters in the first episode is a little exhausting, but the next two episodes are a little more straightforward and it's really growing on me. There is a little of the vibe that behind the camera are some aging millennials behind the camera desperately trying to keep a grip on the zeitgeist (Lena Dunham exec producer credit and all) but again it doesn't feel like it's trying as hard as "Euphoria" on that front. 

b) "Debris" 
Sci-fi shows on the major networks have been dullsville for so long that I'm trying not to get my hopes up too much about NBC's "Debris," but it's pretty good so far. The premise, where debris from an alien spaceship start crashing on Earth and causing weird phenomena, is interesting, the visual effects are great, and there's a little of an "X-Files" vibe to having two government agents tracking down the debris and investigating what's been happening. Also Scroobius Pip, a British spoken word artist who had a horrible novelty hit circa 2007, is in this show for some reason. 

c) "The One"
"The One" is about a near future where a super sophisticated and effective matchmaking service totally upends dating and relationships around the world, and it has the bad fortune to premiere a few months after a show with a similar premise, "Soulmates." But where that was an anthology show looking at different people who use the service, "The One" is more of a suspense/mystery revolving around the person who created the service, so it's not too similar. Didn't love the first episode but I found the story suitably intriguing to watch more. 

"Wonder Years" has become a pretty durable sitcom format, particularly the "Everybody Hates Chris" variant where it's a celebrity narrating the dramatized anecdotes from their youth. So now it's Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson's turn, and the weird framing device of his version is that he's recounting these stories as a presidential candidate in 2032. Even weirder is he's telling these stories to Randall Park, who starred in another "Wonder Years"-style show, "Fresh Off The Boat," and in this show plays himself having transitioned from acting to being a TV news anchor. The fact that Johnson makes a joke of running for POTUS gives me some hope that he won't ever actually run, but at this point who fucking knows. It's a cute show, though, they did a good job with the casting of the young Rock and his dad and some other old pro wrestling icons. 

"The New Adventures of Old Christine" was right on the line of being too hokey and broad, but I think the cast really helped redeem the show and make it watchable. Creator Kari Lizer's new show starring Kyra Sedgwick, however, doesn't get over that line, it's just a little too old-fashioned and cheesy. Emma Caymares has good comic timing, though, she has some career potential. 

f) "The Great North"
I'm glad FOX got a new show created by "Bob's Burgers" writers in the Sunday night animation block instead of giving yet another timeslot to Seth MacFarlane or something, and "The Great North" has a pretty strong voice cast including Nick Offerman, Jenny Slate, and Will Forte. I have to admit, though, the show hasn't really made me laugh a whole lot yet, at most Will Forte's line readings give me a chuckle. I don't necessarily want it to be more like "Bob's Burgers" because we've already got one of those, but I'm hoping they find their own comic rhythm. 

g) "Superman and Lois" 
I don't watch a lot of The CW's D.C. Comics shows, so I didn't realize that the stars of this show have been playing Superman and Lois Lane on various other series for a few years now. And that surprised me because I think casting is this show's biggest weakness, besides the title being so clunky compared to the very cleverly named "Lois & Clark" series from the '90s. It just feels like they grabbed the first two dark-haired actors they found, why does Superman look like Ty Burrell from "Modern Family"? Some of the dialogue is really lame, too, this is an actual line from the show: "Y'know what, babe? You do your Superman stuff and I will do my Lois Lane stuff." It's a moderately charming show, though, and Sofia Hasmik is really cute. 

h) "Batwoman"
When "Batwoman" debuted in 2019 starring Ruby Rose, it very quickly became apparent to everybody who saw it that she could act just enough to get through small roles in Pitch Perfect and John Wick sequels but not enough to actually carry a series in the title role. I figured that meant that the show would get canceled quickly (or just run for years in relatively invisible mediocrity like many other CW shows), but instead Ruby Rose left the show after the first season, her character went missing, and a new character played by Javicia Leslie finds her batsuit and decides to put it on and become the new Batwoman. Leslie's definitely a more capable lead, but since I didn't watch most of the first season and tried to pick it up again, I'm a little lost since they've otherwise kept the rest of the same cast and ongoing storylines. So I don't know if I'll keep watching, but I've definitely seen enough to know it's an improvement. 

i) "Devil May Care" 
Right after SyFy premiered a live action show starring Alan Tudyk, "Resident Alien," they also added another show with Tudyk to their animation block. But like a lot of SyFy's other cartoons, it's perfectly enjoyable while also a little obvious, like something Adult Swim would've ran 10 years ago but would pass on now because they've moved on to other kinds of shows. 

j) "The Equalizer"
I've never seen the original '80s "The Equalizer" series, but it was pretty entertaining to watch a 60-something Denzel Washington kick ass in the recent movie version. So it was smart to cast a woman in the new series and avoid having some guy pale in comparison to Denzel in the role, and Queen Latifah is an inspired choice. The action doesn't feel very exciting in this show, though, like you can only get so violent on CBS so it's a little toothless. 

After a staggering 15 sesasons, you'd think maybe the stars of "Supernatural" would both be eager to do something besides a CW series, but Jared Padalecki went right back to work in a "Walker, Texas Ranger" reboot of all things. It feels like they're trying to take the show seriously and not be campy at all, which is fine I guess but it's pretty bland. His partner Lindsey Morgan is really pretty, though. One episode features a whole car of people born after 1980 singing along to Fleetwood Mac's "Tusk," which was odd and not that plausible. 

l) "Beartown" 
I'm a little surprised that HBO is airing this Swedish miniseries instead of making an Americanized version, simply because the story is so familiar and easy to extrapolate to a U.S. setting: a star high school athlete rapes his coach's daughter and it sets off a whole course of events that tears a small town apart. But the cast and the direction is excellent, I am kind of glad that I got to see this version instead of a remake.  

m) "The Investigation"
This Danish miniseries is about journalist Kim Wall's death after boarding Peter Madsen's homemade submarine. "The Investigation" is a very dry, no-nonsense depiction of the police investigation, just gathering evidence, talking to the victim's parents, not a lot about the suspect or the victim or the submarine, which I think is what most people would focus on in a series like this. I sort of respect that decision but I also find it kind of pretentious to tell the story of a very unusual case that made headlines all over the world and then shy away from the details that interested people. 

n) "Murder Among The Mormons" 
This Netflix miniseries is about a pretty fascinating story about a collector of Mormon religious documents who got in too deep selling forgeries and started planting bombs and murdering people in Salt Lake City in 1985. I was a little kid back then so I wouldn't have heard about it at the time, but I'm still surprised that I'd never heard of this story before watching the series, what an insane sequence of events. 

o) "The Lost Pirate Kingdom" 
This Netflix series feels very much like a History Channel thing, it's mostly a documentary with talking heads but it's also got some actors dramatizing the stories. That's a format that always frustrates me a little and makes me wish I could just watch either a full-on documentary or a full-on scripted series, and I don't think they did this as well as those History Channel shows, the dialogue in the dramatized parts is really dumb. 

p) "Soul Of A Nation" 
This 6-part series on ABC is sort of like a "20/20" offshoot where it's just a traditional newsmagazine about current events in black America, plus musical guests. But it kinda has the vibe that they decided to make this last summer and a lot of the stories now are things that happened a few months ago, to say nothing of vague, sort of dated trendpieces about things like TikTok dances and black Twitter, feels a little like they missed the mark for what they were going for. 

q) "The Netflix Afterparty"
Talk show-style discussion panel shows like "Talking Dead" airing after popular shows are a format that comes really naturally to cable that don't necessarily translate to a streaming platform like Netflix where there's no timeslots. But they've decided to try it anyway, with an 'afterparty' for a different Netflix series in each episode, and instead of an excitable fanboy-type host like Chris Hardwick, they went in the opposite direction and got David Spade, who never seems like a fan of anything. But I will give Spade credit, he seems to actually watch the shows and think of things to talk to the cast about, like he talked to Anya Taylor-Joy about playing chess growing up and seemed to genuinely like "The Queen's Gambit." 

r) "Game Of Talents" 
It feels like "The Masked Singer" opened the floodgates for FOX to just try the most bizarre game show concepts they could put on the air. A few months ago there was "I Can See Your Voice," where people lip sync and contestants try to accurately guess who can actually sing well and who can't, and now there's the similar "Game Of Talents," where the contestants have to guess if someone is a dancer or a gymnast or a magician or whatever. "I Can See Your Voice" has a surreal fever dream quality that this show doesn't, though. 

s) "Snowpiercer"
This show was kind of a letdown when it debuted last year and I wanted to give it a chance to grow on me the second season because the cast is pretty good. But it's still really underwhelming and retains less and less of what I loved about the movie. 

t) "American Gods" 
By its 3rd season "American Gods" had already shed a lot of the people that made it an exciting show in the first place (Bryan Fuller, Gillian Anderson, Orlando Jones, Pablo Schreiber), many of them under a cloud of controversy and conflict, so it's tempting to just discard the show and forget about it. But I'm still really enjoying it, there's not much else on TV like it. Shadow Moon started a new life under a new identity this season, and his new hairstyle looks absolutely ridiculous, but otherwise it's been an interesting storyline, and when he finally reunited with his dead wife Deadwife this season it felt like a really poignant, emotional culmination of their whole story arc. 

u) "Grown-ish"
The show has been good this season, I feel like they're starting to really appreciate having Chloe and Halle in the cast and have been giving them juicier storylines of their own and not just little comic relief moments. 

I'm sad that this show is ending its run this month, but it's also kind of alarming to realize it's been on for 6 seasons -- Mark McKinney and "Superstore" will have squeaked ahead of "NewsRadio" by 16 episodes to become the longest-running NBC sitcom with a cast member from "Kids In The Hall," and these things are important to me. The show has continued to be great since America Ferrera left at the beginning of the season, but she's apparently going to be in the finale and it feels a little pointless that she just stepped out for 12 episodes towards the end of the show's run. 

This new Netflix show is really interesting and unusual, with animated characters over live action backgrounds, in kind of a dry mockumentary style, with a group of kids who go around Los Angeles visiting buildings that have ghosts and learning about them. It's very droll and artsy and it kind of feels like it's more for adults than for kids, but my 5-year-old loves it. 

x) "Pacific Rim: The Black"
My kids have never seen Pacific Rim but they really enjoyed this anime spinoff series on Netflix, they devoured every episode in about a day, definitely recommended for kids who love Transformers. 

y) "Numberblocks" 
My son who's in kindergarten is absolutely obsessed with this show on Netflix and I'm actually kind of shocked by how much he's learned about math from it. In class they're doing simple addition and subtraction but he can answer multiplication questions pretty well just off of how much "Numberblocks" has helped him understand and visualize these things. If you have young kids, definitely try to get them hooked on "Numberblocks." 

z) "Simon" 
A really cute little French cartoon about bunnies named Simon and Gaspard that my kid has enjoyed lately, I enjoy that Netflix has brought in so many cartoons from other countries, it's cool to see what kids are watching in Europe. 

Monthly Report: March 2021 Singles

Monday, March 15, 2021






1. Morray - "Quicksand" 
There's a really amazingly wide range of ways singing and rapping can be combined and there's so much creative potential in melodic rap, but for a lot of the last decade the dominant style has been post-Kid Cudi groaning and whining. So I love hearing guys like Morray, who like Roddy Ricch has a knack for putting together really precise, sharp-elbowed flows but still pretty much singing every word. Morray only has a handful of songs on streaming services right now but they're all pretty high caliber, now that 2 of the biggest rappers in the world are from North Carolina it'd be cool to see someone else from there become a major star. Here's the 2021 singles Spotify playlist I update every month throughout the year. 

2. Jazmine Sullivan - "Pick Up Your Feelings" 
I've generally thought Jazmine Sullivan's best songs are album tracks but this might be the best single of her career, glad it's been getting some real momentum on the radio after her last project didn't get too much airplay. 

3. Megan Thee Stallion f/ DaBaby - "Cry Baby" 
"Cash Shit" is still the gold standard of Meg/DaBaby collaborations but this one hits the same mark almost as well, I like how they each do a different variation on the hook. 

4. H.E.R. - "Damage"
Other than "Slide," H.E.R.'s singles rarely grab me immediately, but they usually grow on me, and this one has really started to hook me in the last couple weeks, great production and such a hooky vocal melody. 

5. Jam & Lewis f/ Babyface - "He Don't Know Nothin' 'Bout It"
It's crazy to think that in all their decades of making hits Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis have never released a record of their own. And this single from their upcoming album sets the bar pretty high for how good a guest-filled album from them could be. 

6. Billie Eilish - "Therefore I Am"
One of the things that I think really made When We Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? a phenomenon was the way Billie Eilish built her buzz with some fairly quiet and creepy singles and then let the one big uptempo song, "Bad Guy," explode after the album came out. And I've been curious to see if that song would remain a unique moment in her career and whether she'd be able to have more major hits without more songs like that. And "Therefore I Am" navigates that issue pretty well by kind of showing what she can do with an uptempo song without rubber stamping "Bad Guy" into a formula. 

7. Justin Moore - "We Didn't Have Much"
Kind of a low key lead single but it really hits a sweet spot with Justin Moore's voice, some of the best steel guitar I've heard on a country hit in a while too. 

8. Ed Sheeran - "Afterglow"
Ed Sheeran doesn't really have the luxury to do anything small or out of the spotlight, and No. 6 Collaborations Project, kind of a stopgap between proper albums, was a blockbuster by any normal metric. So I was surprised that he was able to release a quiet and restrained new song, state explicitly that it's not the lead single from his next album, and actually have it kind of fly under the radar. I tend to find his ballads corny, but this is just a nice understated acoustic song with some interesting vocoder textures. 

9. Nipsey Hussle & Jay-Z - "What It Feels Like" 
Obviously you never know what an artist had in the pipeline when they die suddenly and tragically, but I'm surprised that there hasn't been a whole lot of Nipsey Hussle music released since his death, especially since he hadn't released a project in over a year when he passed. There's just been a little trickle of material, the DJ Khaled song and the Big Sean one and now this, whereas Pop Smoke and Juice WRLD have had probably the most successful posthumous rap albums since 2Pac and Biggie. And even this feels like they just had one verse from him and took one line and looped it for a hook, but it's a great verse, makes me wonder what a real Nipsey/Jay collaboration would've been like. 

10. Foushee - "Deep End" 
Last month I wrote about Foushee's current R&B radio single without realizing that she also has a hit on alternative radio right now. "Deep End" is a pretty different song from "Single AF," makes me wonder if she'll keep getting promoted in both directions or will kind of pick one and stick with it.  

The Worst Single of the Month: Travis Scott & HVME - "Goosebumps"
After the enormous success of the Imanbek remix of SAINt JHN's "Roses," I'm not surprised to another thumping dance remixes of a melodic trap song on pop radio. But this is really a garbage remix that removes almost everything I liked from my favorite Travis Scott single, and that song was pretty huge the first time so it's weird to see it come back in this form 4 years later.  

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 226: Todd Rundgren

Friday, March 12, 2021





Todd Rundgren is one of the 2021 Rock And Roll Hall of Fame nominees, along with Jay-Z, Foo Fighters, Mary J. Blige, LL Cool J, The Go-Go's, Rage Against The Machine, and New York Dolls, among others. And it's interesting to realize that Rundgren has gotten the nod 3 years in a row now, after over 20 years of being eligible and never nominated. So I guess there's some building momentum there. So I decided to finally dive into his big and intimidating catalog, and I'm glad I did. 

Todd Rundgren deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. She's Goin' Down
2. Forget All About It
3. Broke Down And Busted
4. Devil's Bite
5. Chain Letter
6. It Wouldn't Have Made Any Difference
7. Little Red Lights
8. Dust In The Wind
9. Just One Victory
10. Zen Archer
11. Useless Begging
12. Freedom Fighters
13. The Death Of Rock 'N' Roll
14. Black And White
15. Determination
16. Bread
17. The Very Last Time
18. Pulse
19. Influenza

Track 1 from Nazz by Nazz (1968)
Track 2 from Nazz Nazz by Nazz (1969)
Tracks 3 and 4 from Runt by Runt (1970)
Track 5 from Runt. The Ballad of Todd Rundgren by Runt (1971)
Tracks 6, 7 and 8 from Something/Anything? (1972)
Tracks 9 and 10 from A Wizard, A True Star (1973)
Track 11 from Todd (1974)
Track 12 from Todd Rundgren's Utopia by Utopia (1974)
Track 13 from Initiation (1975)
Track 14 from Faithful (1976)
Tracks 15 and 16 from Hermit Of Mink Hollow (1978)
Track 17 from Adventures In Utopia by Utopia (1979)
Track 18 from Healing (1981)
Track 19 from The Ever Popular Tortured Artist Effect (1982)

When I was 7, I remember my dad was pretty excited to pick up the new Todd Rundgren album, 1989's Nearly Human, and him telling me, maybe then but probably years later, about how Rundgren was this really eccentric but brilliant guy. And when I revisited that album this week, I was surprised by how familiar most of its songs were to me, so my dad must have played that one around the house quite a lot. But I grew up not really knowing Rundgren's most songs well, or simply not knowing that he was the guy that did "Hello It's Me" and "Bang the Drum All Day," or even having the faintest idea that those 2 songs were by the same artist. So it's been interesting to get into him and realize he was a pretty big deal in the '70s, even if he kind of pointedly sabotaged his commercial potential at various points throughout his career so future generations would only be vaguely aware of his work. 

I incorporated the output of Rundgren's bands Nazz, Runt, and Utopia into this playlist, since they all had Hot 100 hits and they're all tangled up with Rundgren's solo catalog in different ways. The psych rock garage band Nazz's highest charting song, "Hello, It's Me," was later re-recorded and also became Rundgren's biggest solo hit. Then he made two albums with the trio Runt that were sort of a soft launch for his solo career, and both albums were later re-released under his name and are often officially considered part of his solo discography. And Utopia, a prog band comprised of people who played on a lot of his solo albums, was initially billed as Todd Rundgren's Utopia, although all members of the band wrote and sang, and bassist Kasim Sulton sang the band's biggest hit, "Set Me Free." Utopia has a ton of albums and are a popular touring act in their own right, but I just included a couple of tracks from their most famous albums. 

After the breakup of Nazz, Todd Rundgren was hired as a producer/engineer at Bearsville Studios, a place outside Woodstock owned by Bob Dylan manager Albert Grossman. Rundgren wound up recording for Bearsville Records imprint distributed by Warner Bros., and I think that really allowed him to have the career he had: he was Bearsville's most consistent seller besides Foghat, and incredibly prolific, so they released over a dozen albums by his various projects in the '70s. He was one of the first major rock artists who often produced and played every instrument on his records, and wound up being a role model for Prince, to say nothing of a couple generations of more niche artists. And he's produced a pretty impressive range of classic albums for other artists, including Meat Loaf's Bat Out of Hell, the New York Dolls' debut, XTC's Skylarking

For better or worse, Todd Rundgren's enormous talent and creative freedom meant that he really didn't have to edit himself much, and released a lot of odd, inessential stuff alongside the classics. He released 3 double albums in a row, and then the next one, Initiation, was one of the longest single LP albums ever released, sacrificing sound quality, volume and the durability of the record itself in order to cram 67 minutes of music onto its two sides. 

Still, those first two double albums represent his creative pinnacle. Something/Anything? is one of the best albums of the '70s, a compellingly messy sprawl of pop craftmanship and experimentation that appeals pretty strongly to someone like me whose favorite Beatles record is The White Album. The followup A Wizard, A True Star is notable for being a far less commercial album that Rundgren released at the height of his fame. No singles were promoted from the album, but it remains one of his most celebrated and influential records. Frank Ocean sampled "Flamingo" on "Solo," "International Feel" was featured in Daft Punk's film Electroma, "Rock & Roll Pussy" kicked off a few years of Rundgren feuding with John Lennon, and "Just One Victory" is one of Rundgren's longtime live staples. 

After Rundgren kind of deliberately swerved away from pop stardom and became more of a cult artist, he continued to make some pretty excellent records and occasional hit singles. The most well regarded album of this period also birthed one of my favorite "30 Rock" jokes, from an episode where Liz hears someone call her a cunt ("He called me the worst name ever...the one that rhymes with your favorite Todd Rundgren album." "It rhymes with Hermit of Mink Hollow?"). 

Faithful is an odd record that's got extremely accurate note-for-note recreations of '60s classics by the Beatles, Dylan and others (i.e. 'faithful' covers) on one side, but the flipside features a handful of his best original songs. The spirituality-themed album Healing is one of his most earnest and sincere records, which is a little refreshing after all the weird jokey tangents. And the Utopia albums have some pretty top shelf Rundgren songs on them. I continued the playlist up through 1982, the year of his enduring novelty hit "Bang the Drum All Day," which was on his final album for Bearsville. 

Movie Diary

Wednesday, March 10, 2021





a) Nomadland
Frances McDormand is a national treasure so I'm happy that she has a shot at winning a third Oscar, and for a much better film than the last one she won for. For a fictional movie based on a non-fiction book, I like the way Chloe Zhao split the difference and used a lot of the real locations and a few of the real people from the book but dramatized things just enough, the humanity of the characters felt so unforced and fully realized. It'll be interesting to see Zhao follow this with a $200 million budget Marvel movie. 

b) I Care A Lot
I watched this the same weekend as Nomadland and it ended up feeling like a double feature about how terribly this country treats its elders. Rosamund Pike was so fantastic in Gone Girl that I was always disappointed that it didn't immediately propel her into a lot of big projects, and so I feel odd about her most buzzed about role in 6 years being a sort of calculating sociopath that gets compared a lot to her Gone Girl character (I know Pike has made plenty of other movies, but I never seem to hear anything about them, so I'm open to recommendations). That said, this is not really the same kind of movie, certainly not as good but also meaner and tawdrier in a way that I enjoy, the way the story escalated once Peter Dinklage entered the picture was really unexpected and enjoyable. It puzzled me that people seem to struggle with whether to root for Pike's pretty awful character or congratulate themselves for not rooting for her, it didn't seem like a hard call to me. I also thought Nicholas Logan was really good and memorable in a fairly small role, and Eiza Gonzalez with messy curls is one of the most beautiful humans I've ever seen. 

c) Coming 2 America
I think the hardest kind of sequel to pull off has got to be a beloved comedy that's more than a decade old. Once people have watching a movie like Coming To America on TV over and over and quoted it to each other a thousand times, there's really just no way to recapture that dynamic, even if you do manage to make a really funny movie again. And Coming 2 America is not a particularly funny movie -- I'm not sure I laughed out loud once. But it is fun enough, seeing Eddie Murphy play all his characters from the original, all the callbacks. Kenya Barris, who already made a Shaft movie feel like Shaft-ish, did his part to fill the script with some corny of-the-moment cultural references, way too many song-and-dance numbers and tedious G-rated stuff like taming a lion with a can of cat food. But Jermaine Fowler is deserving of the big look he got in this movie and held his own in driving the B plot, even if it did make the whole thing feel like they were afraid to rest the movie on Eddie's shoulders again or he just didn't want to do as much. 

d) Bliss
It's now been over 20 years since The Matrix, but it still feels kind of a bold move for a movie to open with a guy in a dreary office job finding out that his entire life is a simulation and his real body is hooked up to a big contraption that's feeding this narrative to his brain. To Bliss's credit, it goes in a pretty different direction from there, and I mostly like it, because it ends up being a little more emotional and character-based, but has a few moments that mess with your head and keep you guessing about where the story's headed. Ultimately, it didn't totally work -- casting Owen Wilson and Salma Hayek for a kind of dry, serious script was a strange choice, they would've carried the movie better if they sprinkled a light romantic tone in with the sci-fi like The Adjustment Bureau, but I would say it's at least a pretty interesting failure. 

e) Joker
It's weird to see a movie like this more than a year after it captured the zeitgeist, but I managed to go into it without knowing the entire story. I definitely disliked it and kind of wish it didn't exist, but it was okay, I guess. I think Joaquin Phoenix is great sometimes and sometimes goes too over-the-top, and he really shouldn't have gotten an Oscar for this bloated origin story junk, I'd never put his joker on the level of Ledger or Nicholson. 

f) The Call Of The Wild
My 11-year-old son really wanted to watch this and it became kind of a nice family movie experience. The CGI dog weirded me out in the trailer, but I was ultimately pretty impressed by the technical accomplishment of the digital St. Bernard and have to acknowledge that you wouldn't be able to do all of this with just a real trained dog in front of the camera.

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 225: Britney Spears

Tuesday, March 09, 2021




I've always wanted to do a Britney Spears playlist in this series, because sometimes I'm educating other people about the albums by a big singles artist and sometimes I'm educating myself. And I've never really listened to her records much, but she was kind of the living embodiment of pop music for a decade or two there. I was gonna wait until the next time she released an album, but the Framing Britney Spears documentary has kind of put discussion of her entire life and career front and center lately. And that whole conservatorship thing has always been really strange and alarming to me, I hope something changes and she regains her freedom soon. 

Britney Spears deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Deep In My Heart
2. I Will Be There
3. E-Mail My Heart
4. Can't Make You Love Me
5. What U See (Is What U Get)
6. That's Where You Take Me
7. Lonely
8. What It's Like To Be Me
9. Brave New Girl
10. Showdown
11. Breathe On Me
12. Get Naked (I Got A Plan)
13. Heaven On Earth
14. Why Should I Be Sad
15. Shattered Glass
16. Lace And Leather 
17. How I Roll
18. Gasoline
19. Alien
20. Body Ache
21. Just Like Me
22. Just Luv Me

Tracks 1, 2 and 3 from ...Baby One More Time (1999)
Tracks 4 and 5 from Oops!... I Did It Again (2000)
Tracks 6, 7 and 8 from Britney (2001)
Tracks 9, 10 and 11 from In The Zone (2003)
Tracks 12, 13 and 14 from Blackout (2007)
Tracks 15 and 16 from Circus (2008)
Tracks 17 and 18 from Femme Fatale (2011)
Tracks 19 and 20 from Britney Jean (2013)
Tracks 21 and 22 from Glory (2016)

I didn't hear ...Baby One More Time when it came out, but I remember reading a couple reviews at the time and chuckling over there being a song titled "E-Mail My Heart" -- I'd had an e-mail address for a couple years by that point, but it was still kind of a novelty in pop culture (You've Got Mail was released about a month before Britney's album). That first album was made before they knew what the winning formula was and it's kind of fun to hear some different, breezier attempts at finding the Britney Spears sound -- I particularly like "I Will Be There," which was produced by Max Martin but sounds like Natalie Imbruglia's "Torn." The next couple albums tighten up the formula a bit, "Can't Make You Love Me" and "What U See (Is What U Get)" sound like they could've been smash hits if they'd gotten the push instead of "Oops." 

When I learned that "...Baby One More Time" was originally offered to TLC, that helped me make some sense of Britney's weird vocal style -- she was basically doing a T-Boz impression on her first single, and she gradually came to pattern a lot of her singing after that. But on her later albums you tend to hear her stretch her voice in different directions -- "Heaven On Earth" and "Brave New Girl" are really good pop songs and I have to wonder if they weren't released as singles mainly because she didn't fit the mold of a Britney single. My taste in Britney hits tends towards less obvious songs like "(You Drive Me) Crazy" and "Work Bitch." But I'll stand with the consensus that "Toxic" is her best song, and "How I Roll" and "Showdown" are for my money her next best tracks produced by Bloodshy & Avant. 

Britney Spears doesn't have a lot of writing credits on her songs, and seldom the singles -- on this playlist, she co-wrote "Lonely," "Showdown," "Brave New Girl," "Alien," "Body Ache," and "Just Like Me." "What It's Like To Be Me" was written by Justin Timberlake and choreographer Wade Robson, which is a little awkward considering that Robson is often implicated as being involved in Justin and Britney's breakup, but it's a good song. But what surprised me is that one of Britney's later albums, Blackout, is about half DanjaHandz doing FutureSex/LoveSounds retreads, which makes me really look sideways at the cult that insisted that album is her best. "Get Naked (I Got A Plan)" is at least a pretty funny "SexyBack" retread. And I was never that into "I'm A Slave 4 U" so I think "Why Should I Be Sad" is the best Britney/Pharrell song (even if Skateboard P really recycled Twista's "Lavish" for the track). 

Friday, March 05, 2021

 



Back in October I made an offer on Twitter to record drums for people in any BPM they requested, and ended up recording drums for I think 27 people. The first person to turn my drums from that experiment into a song and release it is George Bonanza (chug), who put "Waynesboro" on his album JOCKEY, I really like the track. This week he released another project, Farm Loops 99, which has more of my drums on opening track "Vanilla Sky" under a sample of David Lynch's voice.