Throw enough sh*t at the wall, and something is bound to stick. It worked for FDR during the New Deal, and it sometimes works in music as well. If someone has a base level of musical skill and talent, over time, they are bound to get something right.
It is easy to hate Billy Joel. Very easy. When I was in middle school, though, I loved his music. I own most of his records on vinyl from back when I was buying vinyl before the dawn of CDs (now I am back to buying vinyl again). But his music has not aged well at all. He was cheeseball with the ballads, and when he tried to pose as a rocker it just looked and sounded ridiculous (“Big Shot,” anyone?)
But…there is one Billy Joel record that still sounds so great, and it remains amongst my favorite records. Songs In the Attic (1981) is a live record he put out with a specific purpose, and he accomplished it brilliantly. In the well written liner notes by Joel, he talks about how he was never happy with the way his first four records sounded. After he got big with The Stranger, his band gelled and they presented the early material live the way he had wanted all along.
Hence Songs in the Attic. These are live renditions of album tracks from the early records performed with his more (at the time) current band. He only had one pre-Stranger hit, and that was the ubiquitous “Piano Man,” and thankfully that is not even on this record. As he stated in the liner notes, “Piano Man” never sounds different live than on the recording anyway, so why bother putting it here? The tracks that are here are uniformly superior to their studio counterparts, so he was right to try and get them a second listen. They are all deep album cuts, and good choices. Even though they are taken from different shows and even tours, for whatever reason, the record has a real cohesion to it. It sounds like it was meant to be put together in this way.
It is often this way with music, but I remember listening to this record during a certain period in my youth. Pulling the vinyl out late the other night…wow. A strong wave of nostalgia and those memories of youth came flowing back. Makes sense that the record closes with his own nostalgic look back, “I’ve Loved These Days” (a much, much more effective song that his later cheesy semi-hit “This Is the Time,” which tries to cover the same ground).
Even if you don’t like Billy Joel, this record may be the exception to the rule for you. It certainly is for me.
Now, to be fair, records I hate by artists I otherwise love. There are actually many of these I could choose from. We all make mistakes, even the best of us. Here are some mistakes…
Neil Young: My favorite artist of all time. But Living With War and The Monsanto Years both sound like some angry old man with half the facts on some simplistic political rant. Might be OK over the dinner table with friends, but it doesn’t make for great records.
Bruce Springsteen: Human Touch, where Bruce completely loses his sound and makes a record with slick L.A. session players. By the numbers songwriting too. Working on a Dream, where Bruce finally becomes a parody of himself in places.
The Who: Endless Wire. I was genuinely intrigued with what a post-John Entwhistle Who record would sound like. Surely someone as smart as Pete Townshend could age gracefully in music. Nevermind. Half-baked concept album about something I don’t care about.
Peter Gabriel: I don’t know, anything post-1992? Let’s go with OVO, his misbegotten soundtrack for the Millenium Dome Show in London. Bland songwriting, bland production, annoying guest artists. To quote Donald Trump, a disaster.
Dire Straits: On Every Street. Wonderful title track aside, it is no wonder Mark Knopfler ended it after this record. Pressure of following up something like Brothers In Arms was too much, or more likely, Knopfler doesn’t seem like an artist comfortable at that level. I think it all got too big.
Van Morrison: anything from the mid-1990’s on. Even into the 1980’s, Van Morrison was making challenging, vital music with depth (if you haven’t, it is worthwhile to delve into Van’s 80’s material). I chose to list Van here, because take your pick, record after record of cruise control, non-descript, mid-tempo R&B influenced product. Somewhere Morrison ceased to be an artist and became just an entertainer. Other artists who completely had me but took a turn like Morrison: Sting post-Soul Cages, U2 post-Zooropa and ZZ Top post-Afterburner.
What about you? Records you love by artists you otherwise dislike, or records you hate by artists you otherwise love?
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3 comments:
Good post Dez!
I for one love Billy Joel, call his song cheesy if you want, but I love them!
As for albums (or songs) by artists I hate, I would probably come up short in that department. Mainly because 1) I know what I like, and I like what I know (get the reference!) in terms of my musical tastes. But I will give it a shot:
-Peace Sells by Megadeth: Love the opening riff (which was used by MTV for their news program) and the song's message. Very classic heavy metal. As for the rest of Megadeth, I am not a fan of thrash metal (can not stand the vocals; looking at you Metallica!) and Dave Mustaine has some very bad conservative political views that border on conspiracy and Donald Trump alt-right supporters.
-True to Your Heart-98 Degrees: Cheating on this one since this is a guilty pleasure of mine. Used to like the boy band/lolita pop craze of Backstreet Boys and Brittany Spears when I was 9 or 10 (I was born in 1990). This song was from the underrated Disney film Mulan, and the Disney Channel used to play the music video a lot when the movie was out. It has a great message and good guest vocals from Stevie Wonder.
-Shania Twain: Come On Over: Loved this album as a kid, mainly because it rocked and did not sound like a country album. But you can say that about anything Shania has done in her career.
As for artists that I love, but records I do not like??? Well, can not really give you an answer on that simply because I grew up with iTunes and digital downloading, so I just slowly venture through an artist's album and catalog (I am doing that right now with Prince).
But I do agree with you on some of your picks (i.e. Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen; along with U2).
But I feel I should not leave you hanging. Here are artists and genres that I do not love, no matter how many times the critics want me to like them:
-Rage Against the Machine: I get it your left wing, edgy, and hate free markets, but come on do not knock the system that allows you to flourish you think a socialist/communist system would allow to speak out against injustice! Also Tom Morello, glad you are on the Rock Hall Nominating committee getting hard rock and heavy metal snubs on the ballot, but you are wrong in thinking that all music is 100% political even when there is no political message. People use some music for escape to help them get better!
-Nirvana and the whole grunge movement: I know you know my reason for this Dez, but it bears repeating: it made rock boring and look ordinary. My new theory as to why pop music is stealing rock's spotlight! Come on young rock bands, put on some makeup and be AOR!!!!!
-Rap/Hip-Hop: Respect the art form and music, but not a big fan.
-"Let It Go" the most annoying song I have ever heard! I know you have two daughters who love this song and the movie Frozen, but you have to admit it lost its' charm when it was being played everywhere all the time! Yes Prince helped to right its' iconic final line, but the melody and song structure should've been more like John Lennon's God. A personal reflection on a newfound path in life.
-Country music: Will say this: all the guys sound the same and the songs blend together!
-Today's rock and pop: see the Nirvana and grunge description
I have given you a lot to chew on, take your time. I will enjoy what you have to say.
George
Interesting response. Not a whole lot to add, mainly because haven't really listened to Megadeth, 98 Degrees or Twain to have a strong opinion.
We've discussed Nirvana, never listened to Rage that much.
I do have a soft spot for Let It Go because of my kids, but even they are over it by now.
Interesting thing you say about itunes generation and not thinking in terms of albums. Totally different mentality between the generations. I still can't divorce songs in my mind frombtheir parent albums.
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