April 2017 (in music)

  • I remembered the Flaming Lips made more than two good records (’Clouds Taste Metallic’)
  • New Big Theif is nearly perfect
  • Low key, ‘Ghost Stories’ might be Coldplay’s strongest album
  • If you haven’t heard the new White Reaper album, then your life is a shame and a lie
  • Now that the press cycle is finally over, I’m not embarrassed to say that the new Father John Misty album is good
  • Favorite song I heard while in Spain: Josh Rouse’s “El Otro Lado”
  • Kendrick’s “LOVE.” >>>>>>
  • I rediscovered my love for the Beatles, and did you know that “This Boy” is actually devastating and perfect?
  • And “What If We’re Wrong” is one of Ryan Adams’ strongest B-sides yet (and he’s one of the stronger B-side artists)

http://open.spotify.com/user/121696701/playlist/1n7SCFCrCnmSJnTibO2LDj

Untitled

(via The Who – “Much Too Much”)

Year: 1965

Album: My Generation

It’s fun listening to the debut albums of famous bands and hearing what works and what doesn’t. With the blessing, or curse, of hindsight, I can look back on a first album and keep the standouts while laughing off the forgivable throwaways. The Beatles, Radiohead, and many more GOAT-worthy bands have had shaky debuts that might have sounded great when they came out but are now measuring yards to judge how far they’ve come.

The Who’s debut release, My Generation, gave us the famous title track, still the definitive Who statement, and the also excellent “The Kids Are Alright.” But what about the other ten songs? What if I was alive in 1965 and picked up this record? Would I have cared enough about “Much Too Much,” “The Good’s Gone,” or “La-La-La-Lies” to keep my tabs on Pete Townsend and company? I say yes in 2016, but I can’t trust my bias of growing up in a culture where I’ve only known The Who as one of the greatest rock ‘n’ roll bands of all time.

I guess the old saying is true: Time heals most bad songs. (“Much Too Much” is not a bad song)

Playlist: The 60s – Peace, Love, and Dylan

Playlist: The 60s – Peace, Love, and Dylan

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I made for y’all a Spotify playlist of my greatest hits of the 60s, which include Aretha Franklin, The Byrds, James Brown, Jimi Hendrix, The Kinks, Otis Redding, The Rolling Stones, Simon & Garfunkel, Sly & The Family Stone, The Velvet Underground, The Who, and many more. I’ve also included some deeper tracks from the likes of The Bobby Fuller Four, John Leyton, The Zombies, and more. And yes,…

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Double Feature: Smokey Robinson’s “The Tracks Of My Tears” Inspired The Who’s “Substitute”

Double Feature: Smokey Robinson’s “The Tracks Of My Tears” Inspired The Who’s “Substitute”

“Smokey Robinson sang the word ‘substitute’ so perfectly…I decided to celebrate the word itself with a song of its own.” – Pete Townshend, 1987

Also, Townshend claimed to have stolen his guitar riff from Robb Storme & The Whispers’ 1965 single “Where Is My Girl”.

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