Saturday, February 13, 2016

Maybe I'm amazed at how this all started



If 1996 represented the blooming of my love for music, then 1982 is when those seeds were sown.

I don't remember much from my childhood. However, the memories I do have always centered around music. Granted, it was my parents' music, but their fantastic taste in music would pave a path that would represent my life.
Like I said, I don't remember much being a little kid, but my first memory is with my Dad. We were driving in his brown Buick LeSabre around Chicago, probably to get some groceries or something for the house. The specifics escape me – I was two after all – but one song blared through the radio that would become the central song that would become the basis of my musical taste – Paul McCartney's Maybe I'm Amazed.
My father was a huge Beatles fan, however, he never owned any post-Beatles music. The older I get, the weirder I find this fact, but maybe he wasn't that big of a post-Beatles fan that I would end up becoming. Or maybe he was wrapped up with life to the point where he couldn't dive into their discography like I would 40 years later from these releases. He did, after all, work two or three jobs in the 1970s, had a new wife and was trying to keep things together. 
However, Dad absolutely loved Maybe I'm Amazed, and would always blast this song as loud as he could whenever it would come on the radio.
I don't know what it was about this song when I was two, maybe it was the sweet, warm, loving sounds of McCartney's piano playing, the George Harrison-esque guitar playing, or the incredible vocals, but this song touched me at a young age.
This song holds such a special place in my heart that I always flash back to being a kid whenever this song is being played. I can still see life through those 2-year-old eyes driving through Chicago and hearing that ending, remembering those oooos and yeah yeah yeahs at the end of the song. 
But most importantly, I remember how this song built a bridge between my father and I, one that would be connected through the world of music.
Many songs and albums would end up becoming a part of the soundtrack of my life, but only one could say they were the first. And I am extremely grateful that Maybe I'm Amazed could lay claim to honor.
And it is all because of my father.
Thank you, Dad.
‪#‎20YearsofMusic‬

20 years of music

I don't know the exact date, but it was anywhere from Feb. 9 to Feb. 16, 1996 when I put on Q101 for the first time. Three songs would change my life for the better, giving me a purpose that was missing for a very long time.
I was 15 years old, a sophomore in high school, when Cumbersome from Seven Mary Three, Big Me from Foo Fighters and Wonderwall from Oasis came blaring through my speakers. That moment literally saved my life, as I was going down a really dark and dangerous road of depression.
Those three songs brought pure magic into my heart, causing me to burst at the wonder that would become my new life. Those first three songs played on Q101 opened a new world to me, giving me the guidance and a life path that I had no idea existed.
I am grateful for those three songs playing on Q101 in succession. I am grateful for getting the itch to put Q101 on my radio that day. I am grateful for listening to my Quigley friends and finally listening to what was alternative music.
I am grateful for the past 20 years filled with incredible music. 
And mostly, I am extremely grateful for those three songs saving my life.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Manchester Orchestra - Simple Math

As School House Rock taught us when we were a little kid, “Three, it’s the magic number.”

It definitely is the case for Manchester Orchestra.

The Georgia-based band perfected its sound after two inconsistent albums that saw lead singer Andy Hull trying to find musical direction. Manchester Orchestra’s 2006 debut album I’m Like a Virgin Losing a Child and their 2009 sophomore release Mean Everything to Nothing had Hull looking inside his inner Bright Eyes to 1990s alternative rock. While the band’s third album, Simple Math, still goes all over the musical map, the album is to the point and a tighter affair from the previous two with driving rhythms and powerful build-ups.

From the opening “Deer” to the album's second to last song, listeners are taken on an epic journey, as Hull described Simple Math in interviews as a concept album about a 23-year old who questions everything from marriage to love to religion to sex.

Simple Math is a fundamental view of an imperfect man wondering his purpose in life. This album should resonate to all of us, as we all go through this numbing journey numerous times in our life. We question things every day, where we have been, how did we get here and what it all means. Granted, some of us haven’t gone through life’s aches and pains like Hull, but we do know how he feels when he sings “I don’t know where I’ve been, what I’ve done.”


WATCH MANCHESTER ORCHESTRA'S "APRIL FOOLS"


Standout Tracks: Deer, Mighty, Pensacola, April Fools, Pale Black Eye, Simple Math.

The album’s opener, “Deer” is almost like a letter to friends, family members and even to the band’s fans (Dear everyone that I ever really knew/ I acted like an asshole so I could keep my edge on you; Dear everybody that has ever seen my band/it's still confusing, we'll never understand/I acted like an asshole so my albums would never burn). The opening track transitions perfectly into the second track, “Mighty.” This song has the best line in the entire album (It's not like I was lost for a purpose, I lost purpose and purposefully froze). You can feel the lost purpose and confusion as Hull’s voice and string arrangement crescendos at the end of the song.

The true gem belongs to “Simple Math.” The lead single sums up Hull’s journey, which is an agonizing searching of the soul for answers of his questions about life and his marriage while wondering if it’s really worth believing in god. This is the band’s finest moment.

Complaints: After going on a whirlwind ride during the first nine songs, you feel a bit let down when you get to the album's closer, "Leaky Breaks." The song is plodder and could have killed the momentum built on the previous nine songs. However, the strengths of those songs cast a shadow over the closer, even if it longs in at a painful seven minutes.

Pass or Keep: A keeper – run out to your local music store, or head to iTunes and buy this album. This was my album of 2011 and the album keeps getting better with every listen. Manchester Orchestra continues to go on a musical rollercoaster, but it works to perfection on the band’s third try. The 25-year-old Hull has to be considered one of the best songwriters out there right now.

WATCH MANCHESTER ORCHESTRA'S SIMPLE MATH

Friday, February 24, 2012

Video Playlist for Feb. 24, 2012 - Snow's All Around Us

After Mother Nature gave us a day's worth of rain, I woke up to see the grass covered in white. While we didn't get the six to nine inches of snow that was anticipated, it was enough to leave a nice reminder that winter is still here despite the 40-degree weather we've had in what was supposed to be the coldest months of the year.

So in honor of the rain-inspired playlist posted yesterday, here is a playlist dedicated to songs that have the word snow in it (minus one exception). And yes, there will not be any Christmas songs involved in this list.

Also, isn't it funny that songs about snow are more upbeat than songs about rain?


1. STARS - What the Snowman Learned About Love
2. Doves - Snowden
3. Sloan - Snowsuit Sound
4. Joel Plaskett - Snowed In
5. Simon and Garfunkel - A Hazy Shade of Winter
6. Regina Spketor - 20 Years of Snow
7. Grateful Dead - Cold Rain and Snow
8. The Leisure Society - The Last of the Melting Snow
9. Stompin Tom Connors - Snowmobile Song
10. Steppenwolf - Snowblind Friend
11. XTC - Snowman
12. Black Sabbath - Snowblind

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Video playlist for Feb. 23, 2012 - Rain, Rain Go Away

Usually when it rains, the first thing I think of is staying home and finding something to do while letting Mother Nature have her fun.

Reading a book, watching something on the TV or playing some King of Colosseum II on the PlayStation 2 most likely will fill my day, but music will always blare in my room. It's one of the reasons why I love putting together playlists.

So in honor of the rain that hit my hometown the past two days, I put together, with the help of my friends, a playlist of songs with the word rain in the title. Granted, the rain turned into snow, so that could only mean a playlist involving snow will be just around the corner.

Enjoy these 21 songs involving rain and hopefully it will turn out to be the perfect soundtrack for one of your rainy days. And plenty of thanks go out to my friends who gave suggestions for songs to be included in this playlist.



1. Jimi Hendrix - Rainy Day, Dream Away
2. Eddie Kendricks - Date With the Rain
3. Led Zeppelin - Fool in the Rain
4. Blind Melon - No Rain
5. Grateful Dead - Box of Rain
6. Eddie Rabbitt - I Love a Rainy Night
7. The Beatles - Rain
8. The Cascades - Rhythm of the Rain
9. Travis - Why Does It Always Rain on Me
10. Eric Clapton - Let It Rain
11. Led Zeppelin - The Rain Song
12. The Beta Band - Dry the Rain
13. Grateful Dead - Looks Like Rain (Live version)
14. B.J. Thomas - Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head
15. The Temptations - I Wish It Would Rain
16. Lovin' Spoonful - Rain on the Roof
17. Garbage - I'm Only Happy When It Rains
18. Creedance Clearwater Revival - Who'll Stop the Rain
19. Jimi Hendrix - One Rainy Wish
20. The Who - Love Reign O'er Me
21. Prince - Purple Rain

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Video Playlist for Feb. 22, 2012



1. Dan Auerbach - Heartbroken, In Disrepair
2. Beck - Think I'm In Love
3. Nine Black Alps - Cosmopolitan
4. Them Crooked Vultures - Mind Eraser, No Chaser
5. Ocean Colour Scene - Mile High City
6. The Whitest Boy Alive - Promise Less or Do More
7. Interpol - PDA
8. Sleigh Bells - Infinity Guitars
9. Eddie Kendricks - Date With the Rain
10. Nicky Hopkins - Livin', Lovin' Wreck
11. Dirty Pretty Things - Wondering
12. Packy Lundholm - King Solomon's Marbles (Grateful Dead Cover)

This is a pretty weird selection of songs, but they are all solid nonetheless. The first three songs are all over the place. Dan Auerbach sings about heartbreak which then transitions into Beck's "I Think I'm In Love" which then goes into Nine Black Alps' "Cosmopolitan," a teenage anthem for insecurities.

Standout tracks, in my view, have to be Ocean Colour Scene's "Mile High City," one of the epic songs of the Britpop era; Eddie Kendrick's "Date With the Rain," and Packy Lundholm's Grateful Dead cover, "King Solomon's Marbles." But hopefully you will enjoy all 12 tracks.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Baby Huey – Living Legend



When you stumble upon an album titled Living Legend, you think said album will either be one of the best you have ever heard or the person is full of him/herself.

Baby Huey’s Living Legend definitely lives up to its name.

James Ramey’s one and only album as Baby Huey showcases what late 60s, early 70s soul/funk was all about. From the blood-curdling vocals in “Hard Times,” the trippy space odyssey spoken words in Ramey's cover of the Sam Cooke-penned “A Change is Gonna Come” to the numerous instrumental jams, Living Legend is the ultimate glimpse as to what Jimi Hendrix was aiming to accomplish when he ventured into the Band of Gypsys. Unfortunately, Ramey died as a result of a heart attack in 1970 while recording his debut album, leaving this classic, released in 1971, worthy of its Living Legend name.

The Curtis Mayfield-produced album is shockingly underrated and unknown, yet those who have stumbled upon this album continue to sing its praise, and rightfully so. All eight tracks are psychedelic epics, and have provided a blueprint for future hip hop artists.

“Hard Times,” “Listen to Me” and “Mighty Mighty” have been sampled by numerous hip hop legends, including Ice Cube (“The Birth”), A Tribe Called Quest (“Can I Kick It?”), Eric B. and Rakim (“Follow the Leader”) and numerous others, while John Legend and The Roots covered “Hard Times” for the 2010 Wake Up! album.

Living Legend features five songs with Ramey’s soul-crunching vocals, but his backing band shines on three instrumental tracks, including the four-minute classic “Mama Get Yourself Together.” Other instrumental masterpieces include the flute-tinged “California Dreamin’” and the beautiful - and perfect - album closer "One Dragon Two Dragon."

In a perfect world, Ramey, who died at the age of 26, would have teamed up with Hendrix to provide the perfect combination of psychedelic soul. But alas, we can only imagine what type of music they are making in the afterlife while eating Oreos and drinking Thunderbird. The closest song to such a pairing would be “Running,” which has Ramey feeling like he’s being an educated fool about his love, who has him blowing his cool but he is willing to accept she might be with another man. Yet, he’s still going to run to her despite not knowing how much longer he can take it. Think Hendrix's "Love or Confusion," but a little funkier.

WATCH BABY HUEY'S "HARD TIMES"


STANDOUT TRACKS: A case can be made for every single track. However, the best tracks belong to "Listen to Me" (maybe one of the finest first tracks off a debut album), "A Change is Gonna Come", "Hard Times," "Running" and a killer instrumental cover of The Mamas and the Papas’ "California Dreamin'."

COMPLAINTS: This album logs in at eight tracks, which could be seen as a minor disappointment. Ramey didn't write any of the lyrics on Living Legend but did compose two instrumentals, "Mama Get Yourself Together" and "One Dragon Two Dragon." The lack of Ramey-written songs is easy to overlook when you have a songwriter like Mayfield in your corner coupled with the fact that two of the strongest songs on this album are Ramey-composed instrumentals.

PASS OR KEEP: A definite keeper. Living Legend is an essential album in anyone’s collection, from the hip hop fan to soul/R&B enthusiast to the indie hipster. Every track on this album is unreal and is a showcase of the strengths of every member of the Babysitters, Baby Huey's backing band. How this album isn’t more well-known is mind-boggling, as Living Legend has to be considered one of the greatest ever made.

WATCH BABY HUEY'S "RUNNING"