Tag Archives: song

Audio: Listen to tUnE-yArDs New Song, ‘Water Fountain’

This is excellent, and quite timely here in California.

tUnE-yArDs third album, Nikki Nack, is out May 6, 2014 and here’s the first single “Water Fountain.”

– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –

Watch: Blondie’s Deborah Harry Joins Dum Dum Girls for ‘Dreaming’

Debbie Harry joins Dum Dum Girls at Spotify March 12, 2014 to sing Blondie’s “Dreaming.”

– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post –

Audio: Bob Dylan & Joan Baez on Rolling Thunder Revue Sing ‘Never Let Me Go’ & More

Photo via the Diamonds & Rust blog.

Bob Dylan and Joan Baez on the Rolling Thunder Revue sing the Johnny Ace song (written by Joseph Scott), “Never Let Me Go.”

It’s really beautiful.

Maple Leaf Gardens, Toronto, on Dec. 1, 1975.

“Never Let Me Go”:

Never Let Me Go (Joe C. Scott) by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

“Merle Travis’ “Dark As A Dungeon”:

Dark As A Dungeon (Merle Travis) by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

Plus a cool version of “When I Paint My Masterpiece”:

When I Paint My Masterpiece by Bob Dylan on Grooveshark

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Audio: New Panda Bear Track Surfaces – ‘Marijuana Makes My Day’

Photo via Panda Bear’s Facebook page.

New Panda Bear track, “Marijuana Makes My Day,” from a mixtape that Sonic Boom made, via Gorilla vs. Bear.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Watch: The Hold Steady Do ‘Spinners’ on ‘Late Night with Seth Meyers’

Last night The Hold Steady were on “Late Night with Seth Meyers” where they performed the first song, “Spinners,” off their new album, Tooth Dreams.

The album is out March 25, 2014.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Listen: Cool Elvis Costello Remix of Johnny Cash’s ‘She Used To Love Me A Lot’

I’ve previously posted about the ‘lost’ Johnny Cash album, Out Among the Stars, which will be released March 24, 2014.

Now we get an Elvis Costello remix of one of the songs on the album, “She Used To Love Me A Lot.”

The remix is the flip of the single that will be out as a 7″ on March 11; it will also be on the album.

And here’s the album version:

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Watch: Lykke Li’s First Video, First Song Off New LP – “Love Me Like I’m Not Made of Stone’

Today Lykke Li released the first video for a song off her upcoming album, I Never Learn, due out May 6, 2014.

The video was directed by Tarik Saleh and the song is “Love Me Like I’m Not Made of Stone.”

Lykke Li says about the album (via Pitchfork):

Every song on the album is a power ballad. Like one of those old radio stations. This is a slow dance; a slow burner.
I wrote [“No Rest for the Wicked”] in Sweden when I was packing up my shit, and I’d just gotten out of a relationship and it was a horrible time. I just had the hurt, shame, sadness, guilt, longing. In the verse, I’m referring to myself pleading guilty but I’m referring to all of us.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –

Listen: Conor Oberst’s New Song, ‘Hundreds of Ways’ & New Album Due Soon

Photo via Conor Oberst’s Facebook page.

Conor Oberst (Bright Eyes) debuts a new song today, “Hundreds of Ways.”

It’s off his new album, Upside Down Mountain, due May 20, 2014.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Watch: Beck Previews ‘Blue Moon’ Off New Album

Dig on this taste of “Blue Moon,” a song off Beck’s Morning Phase, which is due February 25, 2014.

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-

Revisiting John & Yoko’s ‘Merry Xmas (War Is Over)’

Back in 2000, when I was publishing the daily music blog prototype, Insiderone.net (which soon became Neumu.net), for Christmas I wrote this essay about John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Christmas classic, “Merry Xmas (War Is Over).” In reading it over the other day — I’m putting together a collection of my music writing and have been reviewing what I’ve written these past 30-plus years — it struck me as appropriate to reprint this year. I hope you enjoy it.

“So this is Christmas/ And what have you done/ Another year over/ A new one just begun.”

So begins John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s “Happy Xmas (War Is Over),” one of the great rock ‘n’ roll Christmas songs. Recorded and released in 1971, it was co-produced by John and Yoko and the legendary producer Phil Spector. (The other rock Christmas song that really means something to me is “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home),” produced by Spector in 1963 for his Christmas album, A Christmas Gift for You.)

When I was a kid, John Lennon was one of my idols; I always thought he was the coolest Beatle. When he paired up with the avant-garde artist Yoko Ono, I was one Beatle fan who thought it was a great move, and not just because he had found a soul mate.

Yoko opened John’s eyes to experimental art, and she also seemed to help him become conscious of social and political issues. And while his most political album, Some Time in New York City, is also mostly a failure, Ono’s positive influence was evident on both Plastic Ono Band and Imagine, as well as such singles as “Instant Karma.”

I thought John and Yoko’s bed-in for peace was awesome, an over-the-top, outrageous stunt — the perfect way for rock royalty to make a statement.

“Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” is a wonderful, heartfelt song set to a great sing-along melody, and more. That first line challenges the listener. John and Yoko are saying, in essence, “OK, year’s over, what did you do? Contribute anything worthwhile to the world?” Then they follow with “…And so this is Christmas/ I hope you have fun/ The near and the dear ones/ The old and the young.”

So you take stock of the year that has passed, but then you celebrate. The song, which weds classic Spector wall-of-sound production to a great Lennon lead vocal, offers hope for a new beginning in the chorus: “A very merry Xmas/ And a happy New Year/ Let’s hope it’s a good one/ Without any fear.”

According to Yoko, the song was written over breakfast one morning in a New York hotel room; it was recorded during the evening and morning of Oct. 28–29, 1971 at the Record Plant in New York.

In his book, “Out of His Head,” Richard Williams described the session: “Spector is already into the groove. He is thinking not just of sound, but of arrangement and drama — production. His weird little head is taking the simple guitar chords and modeling, blending, and transforming them — his old pattern. Well ahead of everyone, even Lennon, he imagines the sound coming out of a million, two-inch transistor speakers.”

The second verse of “Happy Xmas (War is Over)” finds John reaching out to all the peoples of the world: “And so this is Christmas/ For weak and for strong/ The rich and the poor ones/ The road is so long/ And so happy Xmas/ For black and for white/ For yellow and red ones/ Let’s stop all the fight.”

I don’t think it’s just because I grew up listening to the Beatles that John’s voice moves me so intensely. The current success of an album of old Beatles hits seems to prove that those records are timeless, and that they can touch a kid now in the same way that they touched me, back in the ’60s and early ’70s.

John and Yoko’s Christmas song ends with a wish for peace: “War is over/ If you want it,” they sing. “War is over, now/ Happy Xmas.”

Happy Xmas indeed!

-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-