The Morning News

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Currently: "I am old-fashioned and think that reading books is the most glorious pastime that humankind has yet devised." http://tmne.ws/14845
1 day ago

Listening Ram On

Settling Scores

According to McCartney, only two lines on Ram were aimed at John Lennon: "Too many people preaching practices" and "You took your lucky break and broke it in two." [via]
As anyone who’s been to the movies recently, or listened to a radio, or watched another stale episode of supposedly edgy satire (SNL? Family Guy? Fill in the blank?) has surely noticed, our cultural arts could now persist for eons untold in a state of half-wakefulness, cannibalizing the more salient aspects of previous human endeavors to continually replicate something new out of something cherished. A self-selecting mash-up, an autochthonous reinterpretation, a covers album. The pertinent question being, yeah, so what? Where’s the problem?

Out of Los Angeles comes a particularly strong argument for putting our creative efforts on auto-pilot: a loose collection of Angeleno musicians covering Paul McCartney’s second (and best) solo album, Ram, has been curated by the folks over at Aquarium Drunkard, with requests for donations to No More Landmines. The original work (recorded, it bears snarky mentioning, in NYC) proved definitively that McCartney could not only succeed but shine following the break-up of the Beatles (a break-up that some of us late-twenty-somethings are still just coming to terms with). The new interpretation, Ram On L.A., cobbled from many disparate voices, speaks to the pop brilliance of the original, but of course casts each track in its own distinctly distorted light.

Though Earlimart’s contribution on “Too Many People” is stellar, I’m finding myself more strongly drawn to Secretly Canadian-signed Bodies of Water’s take on “Dear Boy.” This track, as well as their previous work, is well worth a listen. —

» Listen to "Dear Boy" at Aquarium Drunkard

SHARE THISEMAIL THIS • FILE UNDER: Bodies of Water, Earlimart, No More Landmines, Paul McCartney, Secretly Canadian, the Beatles

Listening Gold, Tan, Peach, and Grey

I rarely find music I (wrongly) assume to be indie rock so stirring and spirited. Said the Gramophone find that in “Gold, Tan, Peach, and Grey,” wherein Bodies of Water “…starts shouting the colors and I can see them right there. I kind of listen to this music the same way I listen to really evocative opera.” It is just that sort of prog drama that unfolds, it’s something begging to be performed outdoors, telling of a tribal conflict that over the years turned to fun fare. How they can start an album at such a pace is something I, a law-abiding citizen, won’t know until it is released on July 22. I really like it that way; I like not having any idea which direction the album will take, eager to know whether the rest of the album can be painted with so much color. —

» Listen to “Gold, Tan, Peach, and Grey” at Rcrd Lbl

SHARE THISEMAIL THIS • FILE UNDER: Bodies of Water

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