Friday, September 26, 2008

September 26, 2008 Earworm



While I'm having trouble believing in magic, Secession found enlightenment from a trick of "The Magician" and the result often led me to nirvana on various Baltimore dance floors. "The Magician" was the second record by this rather obscure Scottish dance act, the first being the decidedly different sounding "Touch (part 3)" from '84, to enter my 12 inch single hall of fame.

In their five years of existence they released only one album and eight singles, half of which I never knew existed. Until yesterday I had always assumed that they were a producer driven studio creation but it turns out that they were very much a real band consisting of consisted of Carole L. Branston, Charlie D. Kelly, J.L. Seenan, and fronted by primary songwriter Peter Thomson.

After Secession separated in 1988, Charlie Kelly and James Seenan joined The Vaselines, of which Charlie's brother, Eugene, was a founding member. The Vaselines, of course, reached their largest level of modest fame after being cited by Kurt Cobain as a major influence. I've no idea what happend to Carole Branston but it's been reported that Peter Thompson died sometime in the nineties. It's also been suggested that he is this guy: http://www.compassgallery.co.uk/cg-exhibitions-7.htm .
Regardless, this record has shown me the way and I am counting on it to get me to the top end of this day and on to the weekend.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

September 25, 2008 Earworm



After a conversion with Kmatt that started with her opinion of the recent Paul Weller concert and ended with conspiracy theories and other downtrodden reactions to the horrific state of US affairs, I turned back the hands of a seemingly more and more not so distant time and pulled out The Style Council's "Our Favorite Shoppe" to see if "Homebreakers" lyric was as currently relevant as I recalled.

It is.

So, what happens when clicking your heals together while saying "there's no place like home" no longer works? Not because you no longer believe in magic but because you no longer have a home.

I need to pull the covers over my head in an attempt to keep folks from trying to pull the wool over my eyes. Tomorrow will be better.

"Good morning, Day, and how do you do..."

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

September 24, 2008 Earworm



We here at beautiful the Hilltop Inn have been watching the television spin off of Del Shores' "Sordid Lives" on Logo and laughing ourselves silly over this "black comedy about white trash". Leslie Jordan as Brother Boy, a Tammy Wynette obsessed drag queen who has been confined to a mental health facility by his mother for more than two decades, is the absolute gem in this so wrong it's right comedy.

During a recent viewing I was asked if there was any female entertainer with whom I identified when I was younger. My first answer was no - but then I got to thinking...

I can not say what it was that left me fascinated by Tammi Terrell at the time, but I can vividly recall a pre-school/kindergarten age me sitting on my grandparents front porch with my Close 'N Play, belting out a special duet with her singing "Come On And See Me". I can't say that identified with her as Brother Boy does with Tammy Wynette but, with arms wide open and absolutely no embarrassment, for a few minutes I was that record, if not Tammi herself, and without any thought as to what the neighbors may have been thinking about the baby drag show that occurred.

As I got older, I was able to articulate that everything about "Come On And See Me" sounds like an arms wide open welcoming; the horns, the backing vocals, and Tammi's warm and smiling delivery pour out of the speakers like sun shining on a sandy beach. Naturally, I picked up copies of her albums with Marvin and her stitched together solo album to keep me company during the rare moments when there was not enough noise or as a welcome respite from when there was too much.

Eventually I found a friend who happened to have the same fondness for Tammi and after we became room mates, there was a mutual, if unspoken, understanding that she was one of the very few things that was off limits to criticism. Probably because the cold reality of the death of such warmth left us with little interest in pointing at flaws. Even the tracks on the final Marvin and Tammi album, "Easy", where rumors that Valerie Simpson was Tammi's stand in when Tammi was too ill to sing, were left unscathed when noted.

Along with Tammi, Kenny and I shared a love of duets - the cheesier, the better - and given enough alcoholic fuel, hairbrushes would be wielded to the amusement of ourselves and the horror of others. Nancy and Lee, Sonny and Cher, and, at our most surreal, Paul and Paula, were our favorite fodder. While there was never a conscious decision that I can recall, Kenny was always happy to drape anything that was handy over his head to slip into falsetto and it always worked out fine until someone played Marvin and Tammi's "Ain't No Mountain High Enough", which happened quite often at Allegro, our favorite no-one-will-bother-us-here bar. After a year or two of watching us slipping into our roles and doing our thing, a bartender leaned over the bar, pointed at me, and said, "Why is is that you slip out of Marvin and into Tammi every time she sings, 'my love is alive, deep down in my heart...'? I think there's a baby drag queen somewhere in there."

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

September 23, 2008 Earworm



Sure, The Chordettes usually bring to mind "Mr. Sandman" and "Lollipop": two records that make detractors cry of tooth decay and other malt shop crimes against humanity but lately I have been fascinated by "Born To Be With You", the big hit they had in 1957, right in the middle of their more commonly known calling cards. It's the same Chordettes yet utterly different and provides a link from their days as a folk act in the Weavers mold and the barber shop harmonies that made them famous.

The first time I heard this version - on a Varese Sarabande Vintage release, "The History of Cadence Records", "negro spiritual in Vegas" came to mind and, realizing the oddity of that thought, I had to play it again. And again. It's haunting in a way that I still can't describe and I've encountered some interesting reactions to it as I share it with others. A co-worker called it "creepy" and mentioned that someone may have a stalker on their hands. The better half dismissed it as "corny" but I caught him humming the melody later in the day. Sending it along to Kmatt, she replied that it was "a perfect pop record", then came back later to say that it conjured up the sounds of "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow" which completely flipped me out because around the same time that she was typing that message, I had it playing while I was showering and thought, "This would fit right in to the soundtrack of "O! Brother, Where Art Thou?". She then came back the next day with a message that she had a dream about the damn thing and finally thought of the other song of which it reminded her; Nick Drake's "All My Trials". And she's right, of course - I hear it as plain as day. Not to mention the seeds of Phil Spector's "kiss the mic" production of "To Know Him Is To Love Him" and "I Love How You Love Me" and, for reasons I can't explain, Dick and Dee Dee's "The Mountain's High". "Born To Be With You" is officially all that and probably anything else which may explain covers as diverse as Sonny James' country cover from 1968, Dave Edmonds' Spectorized version in '73, Spector's funeral in New Orleans production for Dion in '75, and a live version by Starsailor on their 2002 live dvd, "Love Is Here (Live)" which provides yet another Spector link. That's an impressive list and one of which writer Don Robertson should be proud.

So in the end, I think it's one of the most beautiful records I've ever heard and you just might, too. Give it a spin...

Monday, September 22, 2008

September 22, 2008 Earworm



From the magical thinking of "there's no place like home" file came the wish fulfillment of finally seeing the first two albums by The Nails coming to cd. This has allowed me to play "Home Of The Brave" - you thought I was going to say "88 Lines About 44 Women" weren't you - over and over. Nearly twenty five years since it was first released, I still get maximum joy from the lyric, "where the jukebox plays apocalyptic be-bop" and I still can't decide what the song is about. I'm sticking with dead soldiers until someone else comes up with an alternative.