Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Remembering Otis...

"Lighting Hangs before my eyes at the rage inside of me... And every color in the sky just needs to be seen... The crying of a baby, the dying of the sun... Today may be descending, but tonight has just begun..."- Doug Hopkins, "Cathedral City".


Upon the reflection of my own songwriting, there's one source of inspiration who's voice continues to shine through and resonate in my own work, and that is Doug Hopkins. The man most-famously known for penning "Hey Jealousy" and "Found Out About You".

It's no secret that I highly regard Doug Hopkins to by my favorite writer, and I don't mean that from a songwriting stand point. The lyrics in Doug's poetry paint a tale of one man's thoughts, struggles, and simple beauty he saw in the world. And what makes it really stick is that he told these stories in such a palatable and clever way.

If Doug only had his chance, he would have become the most prominent songwriter of his decade. Kurt Cobain, John Lennon- these men had nothing on Doug.


Like many others, I discovered Doug through the Gin Blossoms. I remember chancing upon "Found Out About You" when I was sixteen, and there was just something about that song that just shot itself right through me. The music bed was provocative in its longing for reclamation.

I didn't have to follow the lyrics to know that I was hearing something personal about heartbreak. As soon as I could, I scurried off to Music One in Greenbelt (Back when it was still respectable) and bought Outside Looking In: The Best of The Gin Blossoms. While I personally find it to be a weak representation of their music, it gave me the opportunity to follow and discover a band that has always been around me.

The more I listened, the more interested I became in Doug Hopkins. I wanted to know more about the man who penned these amazing songs. It took a couple years, but upon the discovery of songs like "Dream With You", "Keli Richards", "Angels Tonight", "100 Summers", "Lost Horizons", "Blue Eyes Bleeding", and "My Guardian Angel" did I really start to see the beauty in Doug's work.

He was the kind of songwriter who could see the beauty of the smallest things and write about. And again, what made his lyrics so meaningful was that he was able to describe with such simplicity.

I think back to "Hold Me Down" and that lyric, "I can't remember why I liked this feeling, when it always seems to let me down.". I just think its so brilliant. It's one of those things we all feel but can never somehow seem to place; and Doug, in his genius, constructed the best flow of words to perfectly describe that.

What set Doug's work apart from other songwriters was the edge he gave each song. No matter what it was; whether it was a rocker like "Slave Dealer's Daughter", a mid-tempo burst of power pop in "Hey Jealousy",
or a ballad like "Pieces of The Night" was the amount of natural power each song had.

You didn't have to distort it, you didn't
have to back it up with a mesh of guitars. The power in Doug's songs came purely from the music bed it was spawned from.

Doug was meticulous with the construction
of his songs. He was known take his time with songs, composing each aspect of its construction; from lyrics, to the changes in chords, and even as deep as the bass that would carry it and whatever jangle would accompany it to give it the mood and the aura it deserved.

Doug Hopkins was a songwriter's
songwriter, and I don't think I can stress that enough.

Take "Found Out About You"; the best example of Doug's songwriting. This song is a considerably adolescent take on heartbreak, but it resounds in such an intense way.

The lyrics are brutally visual. There are times when I listen to it and find myself imagining Doug passing through a bus stop and the house of his ex-girlfriend, with the trace of the song just forming inside his head.

What always gets to me each time I hear it is the final verse:
"Street lights blink on through the car window,
I get the time too often on am radio.
Well, you know it's all I think about-
I write your name, drive past your house.
You're boyfriend's over I watch the lights go out...".
Who wasn't been there and felt that?

All those visuals and the emotion they carry are translated further in the music. It's stance at mid-tempo captures the listener and strikes them into something romantic and painful. You don't know what it is, but as the song progresses and builds in this subtle storm of jangled guitars, a baseline that creeps itself up the back of the song, and a beat that mimics the fury of the storm.

It builds and builds until it explodes into this guitar solo that bursts itself through until it collects the song and draws it back in it's final moments. And as Robin Wilson sings deeper into the final verse, the song explodes one final time as if it had conceded to acceptance.

Doug Hopkins was perhaps the finest songwriter the world never got to know. And if I could use this as any avenue, I just want to thank him for all the amazing songs he wrote and the inspiration he provided to myself and many others; including indie rock giants, Jimmy Eat World.

Doug Hopkins is forever immortalized with the songs he wrote. And its a strengthening notion because in every moment, there always someone new who's about to chance upon his music.

RIP Doug Hopkins
1961-1993

Photos courtesy of Lost Horizons,
http://www.losthorizons.info/index.html

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Marshall Crenshaw Does It Again!

Whenever I come across new artists I like, I have the tendency to acquire as much of their music as humanly possible. But lately, I've noticed a trend in my ever-developing listening habit's, I pace.

Simply put, I take my time jumping from one album to another. I listen to one album, usually the something preceding whatever it is I wind up playing next, and I take my time with it. There's no rushing, it's just simply enjoying the music and whatever it is the artist I'm listening has to offer.

In short: Since I listen to nothing but music that was released before I was born, I take my time with album and in the process, I build up hype for the preceding album; anticipating whatever it was they did next.

That came a week ago through New Order's Low Life. And today, it came in the form of Marhsall Crenshaw's second album, Field Day and you know what, it pretty much met every expectation I had.

This album is just pure Marshall Crenshaw.

That's not said to discredit Marshall Crenshaw. Quite the contrary, Field Day is the perfect follow up to Crenshaw's self-titled debut released the previous year.


His lyrical adolescent charms and his hook for conjuring amazingly crisp and catchy melodies has gotten stronger, perhaps a bit more polished.

Just as his debut album opened with a punch of power-pop wonder in "There She Goes Again", Field Day opens up with "Whenever You're
On My Mind". Without a doubt, it's the strongest song on the album. It's such a wonderful song.

This is the kind of pop song that has to be studied by songwriters. It's simple, it's catchy, it's lyrics are boyishly endearing; the song's strength lies in its simplicity. And most importantly, for album-listeners, it completely sets the tone for the rest of the album.

In the past couple years, I could never quite an album I just want to hold and cherish. The kind of album you want to take with you everywhere just for the sake of having it, much like a security blanket.

I can honestly say I haven't really felt this way about an album since 2007, when waiting for me in a balikbayan box was The Replacements' Let It Be.

I think the reason for this is that hardly ever come across an album with an album with a strong, and highly melodic, opening track. That isn't to say that a good number of the albums I've listened to lately, far from it. There's they hardly any skeletal system in the track listings to many albums.

Most albums have their best song in the middle. It's almost like many artists and producers are worried that outside of the lead singles, the album's gonna suck so they bury the songs midway through instead of putting it at the top and having confidence in the piece of music their creating and sharing with the world.

The reason for that, I think, is this: Popular music, as a
whole, has always relied on strong singles. You think about the history of Popular music, and you find that hardly ever is there any emphasis at all in full-album listening and that's because for the longest time, many artists relied on singles, especially newer musicians who couldn't take the financial gamble to record a full length album.

Getting back on track, Marshall Crenshaw is among the few
masterminds pop music has ever seen and it's a crime that's almost completely ignored and under-looked. If the two album of his that I've listened to has anything to say, its Marshall Crenshaw is songsmith that utilizes pop music as his base. It's a piece of musical marble that he can work his way around because he knows it, and he understands its fundamentals.

Field Day stands as one of the best albums I've ever listened to and with that, it's setting a pretty tall expectation for Marshall Crenshaw's third album, 1985's Downtown. And with that, I expect to hear someone who's gotten better at being Marshall Crenshaw.

Radio Free Pop's Rating for Field Day: Four Vinyls & A Single out of Five (aka: 4.5/5)

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Meet The Vaselines


(Pictured Above
The Vaselines
Eugene Kelly and Frances McKee)

If there's anything this band is probably known for, it's Nirvana's covers of "Molly's Lips" and "Son Of A Gun" from Incesticide and "Jesus Don't Want Me For A Sunbeam" from their infamous, Mtv Unplugged From New York. The Scottish Duo garnered so much attention from Seattle Musicians during the late 80's, that thanks to Nirvana's input, famed Seattle power-label, bought their recordings and released them as single disc set entitled: The Way of The Vaselines: A Complete History in 1992.

While their nothing you'd expect to hear from Nirvana's covers, The Vaselines are a wonderful duo steeped in sixties folk-pop, punk, and post-new wave.
The Way of The Vaselin
es: A Complete History comprises of two EP's, Son of A Gun and Dying For It, and the band's only full length studio release, Dum-Dum.

For anyone looking into checking the Vaselines out, this album is the place to start. Everything you could possibly want, including a then-unreleased track
in the form of "Bitch" is available on this set.

Among anything else, what's prominent is their knack for creating well crafted pop songs. Every song is as catchy as the last and they have a lot of fun with their little creations. And it really shows in their melodies and in their lyrics. From the ever loved, "Son of A Gun", to the thoughtfully reinterpreted Christian folk of "Jesus Wants Me For A Sunbeam", the euphemism-driven tracks of "Rory Ride Me Raw" and "Monsterpussy", to the classic rock'n roll fun of "Teenage Superstars" and "Lovecraft"; the Vaselines know how to conjure a storm for the most dense listener.

In 2008, the band reunited and played along side Grunge heavyweights including the reunited, Green River (A band consisting of members of Mudhoney, Mother Love Bone, and Pearl Jam) for Sub Pop Records' 20th Anniversary SP20 festival.

The reunion led to a double reissue of The Way of The Vaselines, similar to that of Nirvana's Bleach, in the form of Enter The Vaselines, which features a plethora of demos and live tracks taken from gigs in Bristol and London.

With renewed interest in the band's material, the Vaselines are scheduled to release their second full length album, Sex With An X, next month under Sub Pop Records.


Kim Thayl At The One School???

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Age of Consent

If there's anything I care for right now, its nothing more than the wonderfully sublime and youthful escape of New Order's "Age of Consent". I wonder, as the song pumps through my ears on repeat, how it is that I could have gone my entire life knowing both New Order and Joy Division and never having found this song until the other night... At the end of Wayne's World 2, among all movies.

As Wayne Campbell chased through town, he was accompanied by a score that was comprised of the most romantic guitar riff I think I have ever heard. At one point, I had wondered if it was something by Paul Westerberg, or at the very least, an instrumental inspired by Paul Westerberg.


That riff led me to a hunt, a romantic chase (I stress the word "romantic" strictly in the classical sense)through the vast scape of cyberspace. My first stop was the Wayne's World 2 Soundtrack, which wasn't there. I finally settled on a list of all the songs that were used and referenced in the movie and previewed each song until I found it... It was called "Age of Consent", and it w
as a New Order Song.

Apparently, the producers of Wayne's World 2 had wasted so much money on Aerosmith that they couldn't afford the rights to the actual song. So instead, they did an instrumental cover that was just alternative enough to fit in with the times... No wonder it reminded me of Paul Westerberg!

"Age of Consent" itself is just so captivating. The moment you hear that opening riff and bass line, you fall in love. Its literally like falling in love for the first time and feeling a rush of all these different and wonderful and spellbinding emotions that just feel all too real.

The riff and bass line repeat and it provides much of the song's hook and its just addicting. Its supplied by an inspired guitar solo and two synthesizer solos that just add an ethereal atmosphere to the song's power.

The lyrics are certainly fitting as they deal with a young boy who's suddenly found himself falling for an older woman, who he's been obviously intimate with.

Every once in awhile, I come across a song that just takes me and that sound finds its own special spot on my heart and on my all time top-five. New Order's "Age of Consent" has become one of them.




Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Henry Rollins Tells It Like It Is!



Its no secret that one of the last voices of any amount of common sense left in this world belongs to Henry Rollins, who, as the front man for Black Flag, championed College and Alternative Rock in the eighties.

Now, a lot of people are going to disagree with me on this, but I completely agree with Henry Rollins. What's sad about this was that here he was, ten years ago, talking about these things, and here we are now, ten years later, and nothing's changed. If anything, things, musically, have just gotten worse.

If you appreciate good music; music made from years of practice and listening to acquire an understanding into what goes into crafting a good song, then I urge you to open your minds and give this a good listen.

It can be pretty mean, but if you're willing to allow yourself, you'll nod because this man makes a lot of sense.