Deep Album Cuts Vol. 319: Oasis

Thursday, August 31, 2023

 






This year brought another dreary Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds album, and perhaps more chatter than ever before about whether Oasis will ever reunite. Ordinarily, I think it's pretty sad when bands with siblings in them break up, but the Gallagher brothers seem like real dumbasses who make each other miserable, and I doubt any good songs would come out of a reunion, so I kind of hope they stay split up and that people stop pressuring them to get back together. 

Oasis deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Slide Away
2. Up In The Sky
3. Bring It On Down
4. Married With Children
5. Hey Now!
6. Cast No Shadow
7. She's Electric
8. Hello
9. Be Here Now
10. I Hope, I Think, I Know
11. Talk Tonight
12. Half The World Away
13. Fuckin' In The Bushes
14. I Can See A Liar
15. Hung In A Bad Way
16. A Quick Peep
17. The Meaning Of Soul
18. Turn Up The Sun
19. (Get Off Your) High Horse Lady
20 Waiting For The Rapture

Tracks 1, 2, 3 and 4 from Definitely Maybe (1994)
Tracks 5, 6, 7 and 8 from (What's The Story) Morning Glory? (1995)
Tracks 9 and 10 from Be Here Now (1997)
Tracks 11 and 12 from The Masterplan (1998)
Tracks 13 and 14 from Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants (2000)
Tracks 15 and 16 from Heathen Chemistry (2002)
Tracks 17 and 18 from Don't Believe The Truth (2005)
Tracks 19 and 20 from Dig Out Your Soul (2008)

Obviously, they're a classic example of a group that peaked early, but I found some good tracks in the later albums. They definitely went off a cliff on Be Here Now but recovered a little bit. By that point, though, Guigsy and Bonehead had left, and certainly Oasis doesn't quite have the same loutish charm without guys named Guigsy and Bonehead in the band. The 7/8 verses on "The Meaning Of Soul" were a nice surprise, I didn't know they had something like that in them. In America, I can appreciate Oasis as just another '90s band with some good songs, but in the UK they were the '90s band, which is kind of depressing, just imagining a monoculture with them at the center. 

I suppose the eternal debate is between Definitely Maybe and Morning Glory, and while the latter is a little more hits-and-filler, I think the change of drummers gives the edge to Morning Glory, and "Cast No Shadow" and "Hey Now!" are personal favorites. As a Mellotron superfan, I am obliged to point out that "Cast No Shadow" has some really nice Mellotron on it. I once wrote a Spin piece about albums where a new drummer had a big impact on the band's sound, and cited the great story that Alan White walked out of an early Oasis gig because the drumming sucked, and then got to replace Tony McCarroll a year or two later. And Alan White totally makes "Wonderwall," that is not the same track without him. Walmart declined to sell Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants because of the track "Fuckin' In The Bushes," which is a little different than what happened with Sheryl Crow and much more hilarious. 

I love the tradition of '80s and '90s alternative bands having b-sides compilations that are as good as some of their proper albums, and Oasis's The Masterplan is a classic of the form. My favorite Oasis single is "Don't Look Back In Anger," and while I wouldn't go so far as to say Noel should've sang lead on all the songs instead of Liam, I like the contrast between their voices, and The Masterplan has several excellent Noel vocals, including "Talk Tonight" and "Half A World Away," which also appeared on the band's biggest-selling best-of album, Stop The Clocks. The 6-minute live "I Am The Walrus" cover feels a bit unnecessary, though. Oasis covering The Beatles in general just feels like a hat on a hat. 

TV Diary

Tuesday, August 29, 2023








a) "Ahsoka"
I've always been a pretty casual viewer of all things Star Wars and have been indifferent to most of the TV projects outside "The Mandalorian" and "Andor." But so far, "Ahsoka" is moving along briskly and amiably, most of the cast are babes, only some of them in weird alien makeup, and the late Irish actor Ray Stevenson, in one of his final roles, is a pretty good villain. 

b) "Who Is Erin Carter?"
"Who Is Erin Carter" is a UK show about a British schoolteacher living in Spain under a false identity, trying to start a new life and get away from some kind of dark past, until she stops an armed robbery and ends up on the news, and people from her past find her. All the dialogue is in English so it feels like they didn't need to bother setting the show in Spain, it doesn't seem to have much bearing on the story. But a decent show, some good fight choreography in the action scenes. 

c) "Painkiller"
Netflix's "Painkiller" is the second streaming series about the Sackler family and the opioid crisis, after Hulu's "Dopesick." They're not as closely about the exact same story as, say, "Candy" and "Love & Death" - the only person who's really a major character in both is Richard Sackler (played by Matthew Broderick in "Painkiller" and Michael Stuhlbarg in "Dopesick"). But it's hard not to compare them each other in your head if you've seen both, and while "Painkiller" has fewer composite characters and more real people in the story, it feels a bit broader and more heavy-handed. 

d) "The Winter King"
"The Winter King" kind of mixes real British history with Arthurian legend, Eddie Marsan is always a good scenery-chewing bad guy, but I dunno, the whole thing feels very overblown and dramatic and boring to me. 

e) "Only Murders In The Building"
The second season of "Only Murders In The Building" ended with a murder, though it didn't take place in The Arconia. And it feels like during the hiatus they got self-conscious about breaking the 'rule' of the titular podcast, so they had the murder victim come back to life, and then die again in The Arconia, which was kind of stupid, but it's a comedy, who cares. Having Paul Rudd playing an unlikable diva and Meryl Streep playing a nervous, inexperienced actor are fun stunt casting, but the core cast is really still what makes this show work, I really think this is some of the best work of Martin Short's career. 

f) "Killing It"
The first season of "Killing It" featured Craig Robinson and Claudia O'Doherty as two people who teamed up to make money killing pythons in the Everglades, and it was a pretty funny little dark comedy. But I really feel like it really took off in the second season, as they move from one bizarre criminal enterprise to another. One of my favorite episodes of television this year is the one where they find out that Pitbull employees half a dozen Pitbull impersonators, and Timothy Simons has a hilarious recurring role as an FBI agent who can't stop mentioning that he's bisexual. Probably the best show Peacock's made outside of "Poker Face," "Bust Down" and "Girls5Eva." 

g) "Invasion"
It feels like Apple TV+'s "Invasion" attempts to translate War Of The Worlds-style alien invasion event movies to series television much like "The Walking Dead" that zombie movies could become a long-running series. I love that idea on paper, and "Invasion" has pretty cool-looking visual effects and a big talented cast, but the first season was frustrating, with odd pacing, and the anticlimactic death of one of the more interesting characters in the first episode. The second season is introducing new characters, and intriguing new story possibilities, but I hope they have a plan, I'm not really sold on this show having long term potential yet. 

h) "Winning Time: Rise of the Lakers Dynasty"
I initially got the vibe that "Winning Time" might turn out to be an anthology series where each season has a different subject, and I was glad to hear that it was in fact an ongoing series about the Lakers. That being said, the show's shortcomings are getting harder to ignore. And it's really only one: the cast is great, the story is interesting, the direction is distinctive, but the dialogue is just lousy. Every character speaks as directly as possibly about whatever the scene is about, nothing rings true or has any sense of patter or period-appropriate flavor to it. 

i) "Billions"
I really liked season 7 of "Billions" without Damian Lewis, but I thought the show underestimated how many viewers saw Axe as the main character of the show. And I actually watched the season 7 finale under the impression that it was the series finale and it, well, didn't feel very final, so I was relieved to hear they were coming back for one more season, with Lewis returning. I'm particularly happy that it feels like they're giving Wendy and Wags good stories to go out on, Maggie Siff and Costabile are MVPs of the "Billions" cast who felt a little underused in the last season or two. 

I'm mostly aware of Nathan Pyle's Strange Planet comics from the handful that have been spread around the internet as memes, and if you've seen a couple of them you get the idea: blue aliens living everyday lives much like ours, but speaking in stilted, clinical terms like Mr. Spock. Teeth are "mouth stones," parents are "life givers," alcohol is "mild poison," pizza is "dough slices," raccoons are "greyscale finger bandits," salads are "leaf buckets"...it kind of goes on and on like that. There are some really sharp comedy minds on the writing/producing side of things on this Apple TV+ series (Dan Harmon, Demi Adejuyigbe, Beth Stelling) and it occasionally gets a big laugh out of me, but I do wonder if it's going to develop into anything more than a one trick pony. 

We don't know what "Rick & Morty" is going to sound like without Justin Roiland voicing the title characters for a while, but we now know how he's being replaced on the other show he co-created. In the first minute or so of season 4 of "Solar Opposites," Roiland's character Korvo gets shot in the neck, his wound is repaired, and suddenly he has the voice of Dan Stevens and speaks with a British accent, and they just move on and accept it. And honestly, it works. It might even be a better show now, Korvo always felt like kind of a stock cranky Roiland character who wasn't as funny as Rick Sanchez, so now it doesn't have that baggage and they're also really leaning into Korvo and Terry being a couple now. Kind of crazy that Thomas Middleditch wasn't the guy who got fired from this show first, though. 

I think I've gained a greater appreciation for "Futurama" over the years because of how much my wife loves it. I kinda took the show for granted as a lesser "Simpsons" sibling, but I think the sci-fi angle has let them stay pretty creatively resilient and there's a certain distinct rhythm of "Futurama"'s misdirection jokes and wordplay that I really enjoy. The recent 8th season for Hulu has been strong so far, the first episode was a pretty good satire of modern TV and streaming services and there was a hilarious crypto episode, but it hasn't all been super 'timely' 2023-inspired storylines. 

m) "A Town Without Seasons"
This Japanese show on Hulu is about people who've lived in 'temporary' housing for over a decade after some unspecified disaster, and I kind of like that by not tying it to any real life event they can kind of take the premise to whatever extremes they want, and make it easy to see parallels to things like New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina or whatever. And the dialogue is really well written. 

n) "Behind Your Touch"
A really surreal South Korean show about a psychic veterinarian and a detective teaming up to solve cases in a small town. Definitely one of those times when I'm glad Netflix makes a lot of shows in other countries and you get to see something that would never get made on American TV. 

o) "Mask Girl"
Another South Korean show that doesn't feel like anything on U.S. television, about a woman who becomes a masked internet personality and then she gets mixed up in this violent crime plot. Not super into it but I respect its originality. 

p) "Moving"
"Moving" is a Korean show on Hulu, with a very familiar "Heroes"/"X-Men"-type premise about teenagers with superpowers, seems like a decent show but I've just seen this kind of thing done better before and the special effects aren't very impressive. 

q) "The Chosen One"
In "The Chosen One," a 12-year-old boy in Mexico begins performing miracles and is hailed as a new messiah, and as disinterested in anything this overtly Jesus-y, it's pretty well made and compelling so far. 

r) "The Devil Judge" 
"The Devil Judge" is this very dystopian South Korean show about this society ruled by three judges, very dark but feels a little too unsubtle to be particularly thought-provoking. 

s) "Zombieverse"
"Zombieverse" is a South Korean show with the kind of brilliant idea of setting a reality competition show in a zombie apocalypse, so people are trying to survive and complete quests while actors playing zombies chase them. I'm kind of surprised this hasn't been a huge hit in America. 

t) "Lighthouse"
In my habit of just checking out random foreign shows on Netflix, I stumbled upon "Lighthouse," a Japanese talk show where every episode is a discussion between two show business veterans, Gen Hoshino and Masayasu Wakabayashi. And even though I don't know anything about these guys' careers, I find their conversations pretty interesting, they're witty and thoughtful guys, almost feels more like My Dinner With Andre than an American talk show, and Hoshino composes an original song to perform at the end of each episode inspired by what they discuss. 

u) "The Last Hours of Mario Biondo"
A Netflix true crime series about the mysterious death of a Spanish TV host's husband. Slightly intrigued by the story but probably not enough to actually finish the series. 

v) "Telemarketers"
I remember one summer when I was 19 I worked as a telemarketer for a couple months, just a total shit job and I sympathize with anyone who finds themselves having to do that for a paycheck. This HBO docuseries is about some telemarketers who realized the company they were working for was some kind of scam and decided to expose it, it's full of a lot of quirky personalities and takes its time to tell the story in this casual, ambling way, which I get the impression some people really loved but I found it a little tedious. 

w) "The Love Experiment"
This MTV reality series is kind of formatted like a real life dating app, where three women sort of walk through a gallery of men and pick and choose who they want to date. It's a decent idea with some slick production values but it all feels just gross and like everyone is playing a part for the cameras. 

x) "Superfan"
This CBS show starts with an audience full of fans of a particular famous person, and then they pick 3 to be contestants, "The Price Is Right"-style, and they answer trivia and stuff to be named that celebrity's biggest fan. I enjoyed the LL Cool J and Shania Twain episodes, it's fun that they also get the celebrity to perform and honestly, it just feels like the whole thing harkens back to a more wholesome old-fashioned idea of fans who just go to a lot of concerts and collect memorabilia but aren't, like, stans who fight people on social media. 

y) "Mech Cadets"
A mech suit anime series on Netflix with a cool rotoscope-style animation style, my son and I watched a few episodes one day, he seemed to dig it. 

z) "DreamWorks Dragons: The Nine Realms"
My 8-year-old has always loved the How To Train Your Dragon movies, but he's really been big on them lately, rewatching all the movies and many seasons of TV spinoffs. We recently stumbled upon this series that's been on Peacock since 2021, which takes place in the modern day with kids discovering that dragons still exist, but my son watched one episode and decided pretty quickly that it didn't have the charm of the movies set in a mythical past with Viking characters. 

The 2023 Remix Report Card Vol. 3

Monday, August 28, 2023













 








Here's Vol. 1, Vol. 2, and the Spotify playlist with every remix I've covered this year: 

"Bed Time (Remix)" by Flo Milli featuring Monaleo and Gloss Up
The Missy-sampling "Bed Time" was one of my favorite tracks on You Still Here, Ho? so I was excited to see that there was a remix with 2 rappers I like. Both verses are good but Gloss Up is one of my favorite rappers right now, would love to hear her on more beats like this. In a more ideal world this would've been a big hit and Missy would've jumped on the remix too. 
Best Verse: Gloss Up
Overall Grade: B+

"Breaking Point (Remix)" by Leon Thomas featuring Victoria Monet
Leon Thomas was a child actor who co-starred with Ariana Grande on the Nickelodeon series "Victorious" and launched a pretty successful producing/songwriting career after working on Grande's debut album a decade ago. And the single from his first major label album as a solo artist has a remix featuring another singer who's written a lot of Ariana Grande hits. Thomas and Victoria Monet's voices sound good together, this song feels like it's more ideal as a duet. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: B

"Dial Drunk (Remix)" by Noah Kahan featuring Post Malone
"Dial Drunk" was the sleeper hit single from Vermont singer/songwriter Noah Kahan's third album, but it was the first I'd ever heard of the guy, and shortly after the song showed up on the charts, a remix with a massive guest star became the version that's currently ubiquitous on pop and alternative radio. As much as I like Post Malone more as a pop/rock artist than as a rapper, I don't think the remix is as good as the original. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: C+ 

"Don't Think You Ever Loved Me (Remix)" by Tyrese featuring Jeezy and 2 Chainz
A couple weeks ago I raved about Tyrese's latest single, a 7-minute ballad featuring guitar by Lenny Kravitz. And there's also a remix (on YouTube but not on streaming services for some reason) which completely changes the song into a breakbeat-driven banger with a couple of Atlanta rappers, pretty fun track that still has a little of the emotion of the original.
Best Verse: 2 Chainz
Overall Grade: B

"Hrs & Hrs (Remix)" by Muni Long featuring Usher
The timing of a star-studded remix can be very important in terms of whether it makes an impact or raises the profile of the song. And while I was appalled that Armani White released the "Billie Eilish" remix 8 months after it debuted on the Hot 100, Muni Long released this remix a whopping 17 months after "Hrs & Hrs" had its initial chart breakthrough. Usher sounds great as always but I don't love the song as a duet, beyond the anticlimactic timing of it all. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: C+ 

"ICU (Remix)" by Coco Jones featuring Justin Timberlake
Justin Timberlake has had a pretty bad rep with R&B fans for years now, so there was some backlash to the announcement that he'd be on the remix of one of the best R&B hits of 2023, with a lot of people suggesting someone else like Usher should've been on it. It's better than the "Hrs & Hrs" remix, though, JT totally gets that the triplet cadence of the vocal over the waltzing drums is what makes "ICU" sound good and leans into that. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: B

"Keep Dat Part 2" by iCandy featuring GloRilla, Kali and Big Boss Vette
Florida rapper iCandy's KC And The Sunshine Band-sampling "Keep Dat N****" blew up on TikTok, and since pop radio takes most of its cues from TikTok, we had the uncomfortable spectacle of a song with the N-word in the title being getting played on White radio but not Black radio. The remix is fun, though, GloRilla toys with a slightly different flow. 
Best Verse: GloRilla
Overall Grade: B

"One Margarita (Margarita Song) [Saucy Remix]" by That Chick Angel featuring Saucy Santana, Casa Di, and Steve Terrell
"One Margarita (Margarita Song) [Ladies Remix]" by That Chick Angel featuring Sexyy Red, FendiDa Rappa, Flo Milli, Casa Di, and Steve Terrell
One of the funnier, more surreal viral sensations in recent memory is the backstory of "One Margarita": Sister Cindy, a hateful religious zealot who's been showing up on college campuses for decades to lecture young adults about the evils of premarital sex, was filmed giving a hilarious speech with college kids hooting and hollering like she's a comedian ("if you buy her one margarita she will spread her legs, if you buy her two margaritas, she will pounce right on your penis!"). Then rapper That Chick Angel turned it into a song, with a couple remixes featuring some of the raunchiest rappers of 2023. I think the song is more funny than good, doesn't quite rise to the level of being as instantly iconic as, say, "Pound Town," but most of the verses on the remix are pretty good. 
Best Verse: Flo Milli
Overall Grade: B

"Perc & Sex (Remix)" by YN Jay featuring G Herbo and Sexyy Red
A lot of the rap nerds I know on the internet are obsessed with Michigan rap, with its wildly offbeat flows and outrageous punchlines over Bay Area-influenced beats, it's cool I guess. Sada Baby's "Whole Lotta Choppas" was the scene's first mainstream viral success three years ago, and this year Flint rapper YN Jay's "Perc & Sex" inspired a lot of weird TikToks of children and white ladies dancing to a song about fucking on percocets. The remix is hilarious because G Herbo and Sexyy Red are two of the Michigan rappers most associated with rapping offbeat, and it feels like there's not a single bar of the song rides the beat. The remix came out a couple weeks after the world found out that G Herbo's entire jet-setting lifestyle is made possible with wire fraud and stolen credit card numbers, so it's funny that he's still earnestly bragging about his wealth on here ("really rich, I got 16 different spots"). 
Best Verse: Sexyy Red
Overall Grade: B

"Point Me 2" by FendiDa Rappa featuring Cardi B
This isn't the first Cardi B's been on a drill beat but she really ripped this one, a 24 bar-verse, probably her best feature outside of "Tomorrow 2," she's basically at the Andre 3000 level of staying relevant off a couple hot guest verses per year. Will there ever be another album? Who knows! Is she writing her verses by herself now that Pardison Fontaine isn't on the songwriting credits of her recent stuff? Who knows! 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: A-

"Sittin' On Top Of The World (Remix)" by Burna Boy featuring 21 Savage
Brandy's Ma$e collaboration "Top Of The World" kind of flopped considering that it was her follow-up to "The Boy Is Mine." So I was surprised that Burna Boy sampled it for its latest single, but then I didn't think "He Wasn't Man Enough For Me" was one of Toni Braxton's more fondly remembered singles before Burna Boy sampled it on "Last Last," go figure. 21 Savage feels like an appropriate guest for the remix since he's one of the dullest monotone rap stars of his era just like Ma$e was.  
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: C- 

"Talibans II" by Byron Messia featuring Burna Boy
Not much music from the Caribbean has crossed over in the U.S. since Afrobeats sort of supplanted dancehall in American clubs a few years ago, but Byron Messia from Saint Kitts has blown up in the last few months. Burna Boy being on the song's remix sort of confirms that "Talibans" is a fluke and Nigeria is still making more hits than the West Indies, though. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: C+ 

"Throw It! (Remix)" by Spiffy The Goat featuring Big Boss Vette
"Throw It!" is one of the many rap hits in the last few years built on the bed-squeaking loop from Trillville's "Some Cut." But it kinda feels like that's all there is to the song, Big Boss Vette's verse definitely adds some extra flavor that the original was missing. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: B

"Unavailable (Remix)" by Davido featuring Latto and Musa Keys
Davido's 2017 single "Fall" was one of the first Afrobeats songs to really take off on American radio, and "Unavailable" is his biggest U.S. streaming hit since "Fall," so it was smart to get a big American star on the remix. Latto doesn't really match the sound of the song, for me, would've made more sense with a singer than a rapper. 
Best Verse: n/a
Overall Grade: C+

Wednesday, August 23, 2023






Bossman is throwing out the first pitch at the Orioles game tonight and celebrating 20 summers of his Baltimore anthem "Oh," and I interviewed him for The Baltimore Banner

Movie Diary

Monday, August 21, 2023








a) Evil Dead Rise
As poorly as the most recent Halloween trilogy ended, I'm not feeling very charitable towards 'clever' 
modern revivals of old horror franchises, and it feels kind of like willfully missing the point to make Evil Dead movies without Sam Raimi, Bruce Campbell, or anything like the wild-eyed low-budget moxy with which they made the original movies. That being said, the "Ash vs. Evil Dead" series kept that spirit alive pretty well, and I liked both 2013's Evil Dead and this year's Evil Dead Rise (the former a bit more than the latter). Rise really puts you through the wringer, one of the bloodiest, nastiest, most unrelenting mainstream horror movies in recent memory, with a plot that puts a little psychological horror into the mix as well with children watching helplessly as their mother becomes a murderous demon. It's pretty impressive stuff from the young Irish director Lee Cronin, but it mostly left me wanting to see his other feature and looking forward to his future (hopefully non-franchise work). Also, it surprised me to realize that though the movie takes place in America with American characters, it was filmed in New Zealand with mostly Australian and NZ actors during that COVID moment when it was much easier to film in NZ than in America. And it works kind of to the movie's benefit because it's a great cast full of people I've never seen before. 

b) Heart of Stone
I like a good dumb espionage action movie, and with Mission: Impossible movies getting bigger and more bombastic all the time, I don't mind these breezy, forgettable Netflix action movies. In Heart of Stone, Gal Gadot plays an agent whose real name has 'Stone' in it and whose code name has 'Heart' in it, so that's the level of fluff you're dealing with. There's some pretty well choreographed action scenes in this, I enjoyed it. But it's definitely a little beneath Tom Harper, who directed the great understated country music drama Wild Rose just a few years ago. 

c) Asteroid City
I'm a poor sport about Wes Anderson, loved his first 3 movies but generally look down upon people who've maybe never seen (or just never appreciated) Bottle Rocket and eagerly await all his new movies and don't find themselves groaning at his shit. The French Dispatch was my favorite thing he's done in a long time, though, and I wanted to give Asteroid City a shot at winning me over as well, especially with the full circle feeling of that strange, charismatic teenager from Rushmore playing a graying, emotionally distant father 25 years later. I thought it was a pretty mixed bag, though, I really liked parts of it (some great moments from Matthew Dillon and Jeffrey Wright), but the play-within-a-movie stuff didn't work for me, great as the Margot Robbie scene was, I think I would've liked a more straightforward movie without all that stuff, and the ending felt like an abrupt shrug. The stop-motion animation sequences, which apparently took 2 years to complete, looked like absolute dogshit, felt shockingly out-of-place given how thoroughly committed Anderson is to his visual aesthetic. 

d) Happiness For Beginners
Coming out of hiding two years after the surreal Veiled Prophet Ball controversy, Ellie Kemper stars in this charming, formulaic rom com about a recently divorced woman who goes on an Appalachian hiking trip, and is dismayed to find that her brother's ruggedly handsome best friend is in her hiking group. It all goes pretty predictably, but there was one little twist or two that I found poignant, the whole thing was enjoyable. I especially liked Ben Cook as the perpetually annoyed guide. 

e) Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3
Most MCU trilogies have a consensus weak link (most trilogies in general, really), but it feels like most people agree that Guardians stuck the landing with three movies of roughly equal quality, although I'll definitely say Vol. 3 was probably my least favorite and I personally rate Iron Man as the best MCU trilogy. Apparently Starlord got a Zune with modern music in the Christmas special, but so much of the appeal of the first 2 movies was the retro soundtrack, having Starlord suddenly listening to Flaming Lips really made me roll my eyes. There's a bit less of Bradley Cooper doing that dumb voice, though, so that's nice. 

f) The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
I was trying to find something on Paramount+'s infuriatingly unhelpful menu screen the other night, and eventually gave up and just clicked on the first classic movie I hadn't seen. Jimmy Stewart is definitely one of my favorite actors of his era and it's very interesting to see him star opposite John Wayne, in some ways the contrasts between them also showed some parallels in how they had these familiar sets of mannerisms that could be tailored in subtle ways to each role. Some really beautiful framing and cinematography, definitely need to watch more John Ford movies. 

Saturday, August 19, 2023





I ranked and wrote about every Nas album for Spin

My Top 50 Albums of 1978

Friday, August 18, 2023







Here's the Spotify playlist with one track from each album:

1. Elvis Costello & The Attractions - This Years Model
2. Bruce Springsteen - Darkness On The Edge Of Town
3. Talking Heads - More Songs About Buildings And Food
4. The Cars - The Cars
5. Warren Zevon - Excitable Boy 
6. Devo - Q: Are We Not Men? A: We are Devo!
7. Little Feat - Waiting For Columbus
8. Chic - C'est Chic
9. Van Halen - Van Halen
10. Kate Bush - The Kick Inside
11. Tom Waits - Blue Valentine
12. Peter Gabriel – Peter Gabriel 2 (Scratch)
13. Teddy Pendergrass – Life Is A Song Worth Singing
14. Marvin Gaye - Here, My Dear
15. Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band - Stranger In Town
16. Cheap Trick - Heaven Tonight
17. The Rolling Stones - Some Girls
18. Blondie - Parallel Lines
19. The Police - Outlandos d'Amour
20. Big Star - Third/Sister Lovers
21. Thin Lizzy - Live And Dangerous
22. Public Image Ltd – Public Image: First Issue
23. The Clash - Give 'Em Enough Rope
24. Billy Joel - 52nd Street
25. XTC - White Music
26. Maze featuring Frankie Beverly – Golden Time Of Day
27. Rufus featuring Chaka Khan - Street Player
28. Queen - Jazz
29. Ry Cooder – Jazz
30. Wire - Chairs Missing
31. Todd Rundgren - Hermit Of Mink Hollow
32. Robert Palmer – Double Fun
33. Parliament – Motor-Booty Affair
34. Rush – Hemispheres
35. Bobby Caldwell – Bobby Caldwell
36. Nicolette Larson - Nicolette
37. Neil Young - Comes A Time
38. Kenny Rogers - The Gambler
39. The Ramones - Road To Ruin
40. Willie Nelson – Stardust
41. Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - You're Gonna Get It!
42. Television – Adventure
43. The Doobie Brothers - Minute By Minute
44. Willie Nelson - Willie And The Family Live
45. The Band - The Last Waltz
46. Nick Lowe - Jesus Of Cool aka Pure Pop For Now People
47. The Who - Who Are You
48. Mere Haggard – I’m Always On A Mountain When I Fall
49. George Jones – Bartender’s Blues
50. Al Green - Truth n’ Time

I don't really think there are weak years for popular music in the modern era, there's treasures in every year, but there are certainly years that seem like particularly great ones depending on your taste, and 1978 is a big one for me, up there with 1994 and 1987. That's a top 5 I'd put up against just about any year. Punk and new wave were in full swing in '78, with a lot of sophomore albums even better than the debuts, and some of the old guard reacting to them in interesting ways. 

Previously:

Deep Album Cuts Vol. 318: The Band

Monday, August 14, 2023





Robbie Robertson died last Wednesday, leaving Garth Hudson as the only living member of The Band's classic lineup, so here's a look at some great lesser known songs in their catalog. 

The Band deep album cuts (Spotify playlist):

1. Look Out Cleveland
2. Chest Fever
3. Stage Fright (live)
4. Forbidden Fruit
5. When I Paint My Masterpiece
6. Katie's Been Gone
7. The Rumor
8. To Kingdom Come
9. When You Awake (live)
10. I'm Ready
11. White Cadillac (Ode to Ronnie Hawkins)
12. Arcadian Driftwood
13. The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show
14. Get Up, Jake (live)
15. Where I Should Always Be
16. Knockin' Lost John
17. The Unfaithful Servant
18. Country Boy
19. Yazoo Street Scandal
20. Out of the Blue

Tracks 2 and 8 from Music From Big Pink (1968)
Tracks 1 and 17 from The Band (1969)
Tracks 7 and 13 from Stage Fright (1970)
Track 5 from Cahoots (1971)
Track 14 from Rock Of Ages (1972)
Track 10 from Moondog Matinee (1973)
Track 9 from Before The Flood with Bob Dylan (1974)
Tracks 6 and 19 from The Basement Tapes with Bob Dylan (1975)
Tracks 4 and 12 from Northern Lights -- Southern Cross (1975)
Track 16 from Islands (1977)
Tracks 3 and 20 from The Last Waltz (1978)
Track 18 from Jericho (1993)
Track 15 from High On The Hog (1996)
Track 11 from Jubilation (1998)

In The Band's storied beginnings, Rick Danko, Levon Helm, Garth Hudson, Richard Manuel, and Robbie Robertson first came together as a backing band for Toronto singer Ronnie Hawkins, dubbed The Hawks. Then came their legendary run as Bob Dylan's backing band, followed by The Band making its own classic albums. 

One of the most unique things about The Band is that most of their songwriting was credited to Robertson but it was usually Helm, Manuel, or Danko singing his lyrics. Helm later asserted that The Band's songwriting was more collaborative than the liner notes indicate, so there's always been some skepticism in how Robertson sort of positioned himself as the focal point, both in writing credits and in The Last Waltz. The Band got their name from simply being referred to as 'Bob Dylan & The Band' during the Dylan tours and keeping that anti-brand going when recording without Dylan, but it's appropriate because they always seemed like such a strong collective unit, five distinctive instrumentals, several distinctive singers. 

Robertson eventually released solo albums where he sang lead, but you don't hear his voice much on The Band's albums outside of "Knockin' Lost John" and shared vocals with Manuel on "To Kingdom Come." I've made a couple albums with four or five other people singing my lyrics, though, inspired in part by unusual bands like The Band, so I relate to what Robertson did. For that matter, seeing Levon Helm's amazing performance in The Last Waltz really gave me confidence to try singing and playing drums at the same time. 

All in all, Robertson is probably one of the best songwriters Canada has ever produced, alongside Jon Mitchell, Neil Young, Leonard Cohen, and Gordon Lightfoot. Great guitarist too, "Forbidden Fruit," "The Rumor" and "The Unfaithful Servant" feature some of my favorite guitar playing by Robertson. And I really love a lot of the singing on The Band's records, particularly Helm's voice, so I think they made some pretty canny decisions about who sang what. 

A lot of The Band's early repertoire was worked up in the basement of the fabled 'Big Pink' house in Saugerties, New York, near where Dylan had holed up in Woodstock during his reclusive period after a motorcycle accident. The songs they recorded there were mostly sent off to publishers to be re-recorded by other artists, given the high demand on the pop charts for Bob Dylan songs performed by more commercial vocalists. Those heavily bootlegged recordings, mostly from 1967, were finally released in 1975 as the landmark double album The Basement Tapes, with 16 songs sung by Dylan and 8 sung by members of The Band. By that point, The Band had sold millions own their own, and had also reunited with Dylan for Planet Waves, a huge tour, and the Before The Flood live album. 

Like a lot of people, particularly people who weren't alive during their peak, my introduction to The Band (aside from hearing "The Weight" on the radio) was seeing The Last Waltz, Martin Scorsese's film of their star-studded farewell concert. While that movie and soundtrack album has some great performances of some of their best songs, I was kind of pleasantly surprised to find a wealth of other great songs in the studio albums. I was also surprised to learn that The Band reunited without Robertson less than a decade later, releasing three more studio albums in the '90s (which included a couple of old recordings like "Country Boy" with Manuel, who died in 1986). 

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. 313: Sheila E.
Vol. 314: The Roots
Vol. 315: Urge Overkill
Vol. 316: Tony Bennett
Vol. 317: Robert Palmer