Song of the Day: “Girl From The North Country”, off of Nashville Skyline, Bob Dylan

Today’s song comes from the little known Bob Dylan album Nashville Skyline where Bob took a more country route in his songwriting. Here he goes back to one of his first songs from The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan and turns it into a much more forlorn affair, with “The Man In Black” himself joining in.  Bob also uses his natural voice here, much better suited for this bucolic number.  Download it here after the jump.

Continue reading Song of the Day: “Girl From The North Country”, off of Nashville Skyline, Bob Dylan

In Memoriam: John Lennon

On the 70th anniversary of his birth, I’ll be the first to admit that there was a time where I was obsessed with the man, since being a Beatles fan at the age of 5, I delved into the mythology, the legend that made up the story of John Lennon’s life.  It was always an intensely sad and morose feeling listening to songs like “Across the Universe” and “Imagine” with the knowledge that a man who was at such peace to write these things was dead, assassinated, murdered by a man who made no more sense than the Catcher In the Rye he claimed to be.  I too, as a tremendous Beatles fan, fell victim to blaming his wife Yoko Ono, of destroying the band and was also blinded as to how far love will make someone go.  Yet as I reach the final mark of adulthood, I find myself almost at odds with the continuing legend.

Sure, there’s using his image and fame for peace, that’s noble, and true to what Lennon himself believed in, Peace is truly more than just limited to the life of one person, and using a status of fame and fortune for a good cause is never a bad thing.  Yet, it’s almost a twist in the gut to at the same time release a remastered Lennon catalog, things that have stripped down the original versions.  If anything, this is something ignoble, and something Lennon never would have stood for.

“It’s better to fade away like an old soldier than to burn out. I don’t appreciate worship of dead Sid Vicious or of dead James Dean or of dead John Wayne. It’s the same thing. Making Sid Vicious a hero, Jim Morrison — it’s garbage to me. I worship the people who survive. Gloria Swanson, Greta Garbo.”

So although it is painful to acknowledge the death of a prolific man before his time, it is almost criminal how his image continues to be used for profit.  I do not stand to say that I believe Yoko Ono is a woman without talent but I will say that she is a woman without shame.  Remarkably, she claims to stand for what her late husband stood for, but has no problem with keeping the money that comes along with it.  She refuses to forgive his killer, even though in John Lennon’s message of peace, it would be understanding, and moving, to forgive a man who did not know what he was doing.  John Lennon was a great man, a great musician, a great writer, but he was not God.  He never wanted to be.  So yes, on his 70th birthday, celebrate his music, his fight for peace, and mourn that he died a horrible death.  But please, do not spend your money doing it.  John Lennon is no Che Guevara.  Every time you see him featured in a TV ad, what he stood for dies a little.  Remember the man for the man that he was, not the image that Yoko Ono has made him be.

 

So in remembrance of his music, I give you three songs which were symbolic of his musical output (inspiring, anthemic, and introspective), and a great cover of one of his best.

Continue reading In Memoriam: John Lennon

Song of the Day: “Knock On Wood”, Eddie Floyd

Eddie Floyd’s “Knock On Wood” is a timeless Stax classic.  Don’t let the new movie Easy A tell you otherwise (its the featured number near the end of the movie) everything about “Knock On Wood” is in a groove, the rhythm guitar is warm and pounding, the vocal performance is electric and those horns are as pumping as ever.  If you want to download it, stay tuned after the jump.

Continue reading Song of the Day: “Knock On Wood”, Eddie Floyd

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Going back in time for this one, “Hey Hey What Can I Do” by Led Zeppelin off of Led Zeppelin IV well at least it was a bonus track on this vinyl edition that I found it on.  “Hey Hey” is already a great song on its own, one of the few that wasn’t clearly ripped off from earlier influences.  Here though, in its original vinyl form it takes on a greater warmth and depth, everything about it just sound better.  So enjoy “Hey Hey What Can I Do” the way it was originally meant to be mixed, and the original way it was heard. If you like it, you know the drill, head on over to Art of the Mixtape and download it