Mixtape Monday: Theme #1: Escapism

As I’ve been awfully bad at updating this old blog of mine for the past couple weeks I’ve decided to start a new kind of weekly post, a mixtape not dedicated to showcasing new artists all the time, but getting back to the roots of what a mixtape meant, which is to hold a theme through a variety of different artists and songs.  This inaugural mixtape theme is Escape.

The feeling of escape in music is one of the strongest themes in rock and roll, we find ourselves transfixed by the places it can bring us to, the painful emotions it can mute, the happy emotions it can bring out in sad times.  This mix doesn’t count on containing unknown songs by artists you’ll hopefully like, rather I composed it to enhance the feeling, to get lost in the world of music and somehow through it all the songs meshed together perfectly, as if the order was supposed to be this way.

  1. Born to Run- Bruce Springsteen

One of the most perfect escaping anthems ever put on paper, Bruce Springsteen was writing more than just a song when Born to Run came to be.  He had been the unknown maverick, a little known musician compared to the likes of Bob Dylan and Van Morrison in his poetry and story telling but had yet to find his sound.  But from the snare intro till the end, this song provides the escape he needed to make it big, and the escape of the American Dream that’s in all of us

  1. Son of a Preacherman- Dusty Springfield

From the beginning the guitar transfixes you, her voice takes you away

  1. September- Earth, Wind, and Fire

Sometimes escape isn’t always about going somewhere but about remembering the good times, and September is just that a remembrance of good times you had

  1. Midnight Train to Georgia-  Gladys Knight and the Pips

Because dreams don’t always come true, but sometimes its just making the effort that makes it all worthwhile

  1. Friend of the Devil- Grateful Dead

For the literal escape from our lives (if you’re a criminal)

  1. Tighter, Tighter- Alive N’ Kickin

For the escape that love can provide, even when its done by a bond that brings people closer

  1. Octopus’s Garden-  The Beatles

No matter how many years have passed by, this song will always bring you back to the innocence of your childhood and how you can take comfort in your imagination

  1. Take the Money and Run-   Steve Miller Band

For even if you do something bad once in a while, live a little, just live in the moment and have fun

  1. Hungry Heart- Bruce Springsteen

Sometimes you just want to take that wrong turn out of your driveway forget it all and never come back, it’s the essence of youth, the young and the restless

  1. Strawberry Fields Forever –  The Beatles

For escaping the barriers of your own perception

  1. Let’s Take the Long Way Home-  The Beautiful Girls

Sometimes the quickest way is not the most satisfying, theres always the road untaken waiting for you, when the time comes

  1. Bet You Never Thought-  Brighton, MA

Because sometimes it isn’t what you’d think, Life especially

  1. Rebel Rebel- David Bowie

For the inner rebel in all of us

  1. Romeo and Juliet- Dire Straits

Some songs in their stories become almost surreal in how real they feel, how you identify with the characters and the beauty within

  1. Fables- The Dodos

The story isn’t just in the words, but in the music that surrounds it as well

  1. All She Wants- The Kooks

When an artist covers another, it gets deeper because it shows where they escape to, outside of their own music, and what really influences them

  1. Heart it Races- Dr. Dog

Another escape, a mental journey expressed as physical

  1. Castles Made of Sand- Jimi Hendrix

Because no matter how great the escape, everything is fleeting

  1. Simple Twist of Fate- Bob Dylan

Because the change you want, the escape you long for, is sometimes just up to fate

  1. A Change is Gonna Come- Sam Cooke

Because the message is so powerful, and the voice just carries over everything, it’s no longer an escape, it’s an escape realized

After hours

Last call for drinks everybody pull up a chair, this mix is for those late nights whether you’re alone in a bar or in a haze or just wanting to be whisked away by the power of music, enjoy

Drunk Hearted Boy

The Allman Brothers at their boozy, wistful best

Tears Dry On Their Own

You’ll recognize the backing track, but you’ll hear it in a clearer way than ever before

Nice Day

You can almost watch the sun setting from the porch in the midwest listening to these guys

Baby, Baby, Baby

Aretha Franklin may best be known for Respect, but I’ve never heard her more soulful

Yes it Is

A beautiful understated melody and lyric by the Beatles, sometimes called a rehash of This Boy by jaded critics but it has its merits and its all the more sweet

La Mar

Wistful acoustic  beauty

Earthquake Weather

This song belongs in a Wes Anderson movie, or Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, after a character has gotten to a drunken/drugged stupor and the world around him is unfolding

Lean On Me (live)

The best anthems are those that are the most simple in their message, and this makes simple look complex

New York State of Mind

Is their anything better for those late lonely nights than a pianist with chops, i think not

Things Ain’t Like They Used To Be

Beautiful melody

Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands

Bob Dylan, in a bar, at 4 am, theres no other way to describe it

You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome

There is a certain familiarity and beauty in Bob Dylans meld of harmonica and guitar that the world hasn’t heard since

Put it On

A criminally underrated Bob Marley song

Evangeline Tonight

This guy is pretty much unknown but this melody is timeless

Meeting Across the River

Bruce Springsteen, sounding more forlorn than ever, and yet the songs beauty is on parallel to West Side Story

New York City Serenade

A stunning piano intro that melds into the most gorgeous acoustic guitar and piano interplay in the history of music

Dancing on the Ceiling

Frank Sinatra simply sounds better and more talented when he’s not trying to swing

Political Science

For the cynic in all of us

Just Like A Woman

As much as Bob Dylan wrote beautiful songs, Richie Havens interprets it as if it shouldn’t have been recorded any other way.

New Coat of Paint

A nightcap to the end of a very late night, hell i can smell the bar