Waking Ear
We have a pact, you and I. I write down what song I had in my head when I woke up in the morning. And, maybe, why.
You click on "What's in your waking ear?" and tell me what's in your head right now. We discover new music and maybe learn something about how our minds work. Yeah?
Wednesday, July 31, 2002
Blur/"Coffee and TV" -- "Do you feel like a chainstore?" What a great line.
I'll forever associate this song with the video, y'know, with the little milk carton walking around trying not to get smushed. Remember those Jimmy the Cab Driver
promos on
MTV? I'll do my best to recall what Jimmy said here: "You know what's so great about the MTV? You might have a movie in your brain about a song or something, y'know, a movie about your mom or whatever, and what the MTV is does for you is it says you're all wrong, hahahaha y'know? It tells you the movie, it tells you what you're supposed to be thinking, it's easy for me."
To be fair, MTV didn't play this video that much. Which is too bad, because it's a great
pop song. It took me a long time to figure out that pop could be art. I'm not talking about pop art, Warhol-esque stuff. I'm talking about actually making a song that can be enjoyed almost universally, at least until it's played too many times by your local Clear Channel station. That's a talent.
I dreamt last night that there were squirrels in my house. Two. I was talking to my roommate in the kitchen, and these squirrels came in through a pipe that was connected to the outside of the house. One of them crawled right up on my shoulder, and I remember being concerned about
rabies. Anyway, we chased them back into the pipe, and then my roommate stuck his entire head in the pipe. Don't know what to make of that one.
Tuesday, July 30, 2002
More on
Prefuse 73 from my favorite review site. Highly recommended. I haven't checked out any of Scott Herron's other stuff, but it sounds promising. Oh, and
Aesop Rock guests on
Vocal Studies & Uprock Narratives.
Prefuse 73/"Back In Time" -- This was playing in my car on the way home this morning. It's from
this album, one of the best
CDs I've bought recently. Mellow hip-hop
sliced and diced to perfection, with enough
surprises to keep you guessing.
Monday, July 29, 2002
White Stripes/"Fell In Love With a Girl" -- Yesterday I was listening to
De Stijl, the 'Stripes second
album. It's actually better than
White Blood Cells in some ways, but I still like the latter's lo-fi, fuzzed-out guitar sound more. And "Fell In Love With a Girl," which is even getting airplay on crappy
radio stations, is one of the greatest songs I've heard in a
long time.
I went to see
the Vines last night. Not my cup of
tea. Pretty generic, but the lead singer did have some spark. Anyway, I started thinking -- this current crop of bands that critics have
lumped together is kind of like another movement we saw early in the last
decade. Which, despite some of the
mimicry going around, really excites me. We could be in for some good music.
Sunday, July 28, 2002
"I Like It Like That" -- I have no idea why. I'm referring to the
mambo song with the guy going, "I got soul, I got soul." I can't tell if there's a seminal recording of it out there. I don't even really like the song that much. But I do got
soul.
By the way, visitors to the site: feel free to tell me what song you have in your head in the morning, or, hell, right now. Expand my horizons.
Saturday, July 27, 2002
Tori Amos/"Space Dog" -- She's underrated, folks. I downloaded a copy of the six-song promotional disc for her new album, which comes out end of October. A little more poppy than I'm used to, but it's growing on me. You have to let Tori simmer. A friend in high school -- actually a girl that I wanted to
date really bad -- got a copy of
Under the Pink, and I didn't like it. It actually bored me a little bit. But
Boys for Pele really turned me on to her phrasing and her psychology. I went back, and Under the Pink was a different experience.
I woke up from a fucked up dream. I dreamt I was watching TV, like,
CNN or something, and they were showing this horrible tragedy.
John Sayles had been found floating in the ocean, his body cut up beyond repair. In fact, they only found the upper half of his body. It turned out he had fallen into the
propeller of the boat or something like that. Then I wake up, my heart pounding, and
"Space Dog" is in my head. What the hell does that mean? Any theories out there?
Friday, July 26, 2002
You can hear some of Ms. Akre's last album
here. Wasn't too impressed with the MP3s, but a couple of the other songs held promise. And, really, the voice is nice and theatrical.
Carrie Akre/"Catch Me If You Can" -- I woke up to the
radio this morning, thanks to
my alarm clock, and this woman's voice immediately caught my attention. Apparently she's been around Seattle forever, and she even did a
side project with
Mike McCready. It's basically her husky, pouting voice over some electronic bombast, somewhere in between Nikka Costa and Portishead. This song intrigued me enough to look for other stuff.
I had a dream last night that everybody else had cleaned their room except me. That's because everybody I know really has cleaned their room except me.
Thursday, July 25, 2002
Nelly/"Hot in Herre" -- That's not a typo. The name is officially, inexplicably misspelled. I mean, I know it's hip-hop to misspell, but that one doesn't make any type of sense whatsoever. It looks
German. (Warning: turn down your volume if you're at work.)
This is the song where Nelly, he of the kind-of-annoying Southern-esque St. Louis sound, remarks at how hot it is in the club and suggests that his ladyfriend (or any female present) take off all her clothes. To which a sultry female voice replies,
"I am getting so hot/ I wanna take my clothes off." This is a great summer song, and I love imagining the hot, sweaty club and the naked bodies grinding away.
Yes, I'm a little, er, lonely right now. My girlfriend's been out of town all week. Gets back Saturday, thank Jesus.
Wednesday, July 24, 2002
This is what I was going to say. I was going to say that the particular part of this song that I had in my head was the cheesy '80s keyboard minor key refrain, kind of Scooby Doo music. I really like it. Also, I like
this lyric: "And then silence... it was a whole new day/ I thought, huh, I wasn't scared of him anyway/ But then I saw those rips in my sheets/ And that was proof that there had been a nightmare -- on my street!" We should've all known Will Smith would be a successful actor. The guy could deliver a line back in the day.
Oh, and who can forget this classic line: "I'm your DJ now, Princie."
DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince/"Nightmare on My Street" -- I still haven't quite figured out this BlogSpot thing, I guess. I just wrote a whole long post and got it erased. Fuck. Oh well. This will be shorter because I have to get to work. I guess it's apropos that I had a song ostensibly about nightmares as my first waking-ear post. I have no idea why. Perhaps the song went through my head as I was thinking about names for this site. I had thought of several titles -- Radiohead's "Morning Bell" was taken -- and I think I thought of "nightmare" songs at some point. Maybe that's it.
I did have a nightmare, sort of, last night, which I described in great detail when I tried to post before. But now it's lost in the ether. Sorry.
So, yeah, you can see the basic description. But again, what I'm trying to do here is this -- I always have a song in my head in the morning. Some days it's something I listened to the day before, some days it's totally out of the blue. Some days it's a great song, some days it's hideous. So I'm going to -- on as close to a daily basis as I can -- write down what's in my head each morning. That should reveal something about me, and, if other people look at my site, maybe they'll be able to shed some light. And they can share their morning head-songs, and all that. So that's the idea. We'll see how it goes.
Basically, I just wanted to do a blog. All the cool people are doing it. I wanted to come up with an original idea, and I think this is one. So we'll see if it works.
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