1. “Roc Boys” Jay-Z
2. “A Few Words in Defense of Our Country” Randy Newman
3. “Umbrella” Rihanna
4. “D.A.N.C.E.” Justice
5. “Four Winds” Bright Eyes
6. “Dough Is What I Got” Lil Wayne
7. “Rehab” Amy Winehouse
8. “Long Walk Home” Bruce Springsteen
9. “Boyz” M.I.A.
10. “Int’l Player’s Anthem” UGK
Category: Music
Rehab
Don’t you hate it when you can’t get a song out of your head?
“Rehab,” Amy Winehouse, nominated for the Grammy for Record of the Year.
Record Industry Goes After Personal Use
In legal documents in its federal case against Jeffrey Howell, a Scottsdale, Ariz., man who kept a collection of about 2,000 music recordings on his personal computer, the industry maintains that it is illegal for someone who has legally purchased a CD to transfer that music into his computer.
The industry’s lawyer in the case, Ira Schwartz, argues in a brief filed earlier this month that the MP3 files Howell made on his computer from legally bought CDs are “unauthorized copies” of copyrighted recordings.
As the Post notes:
They’re not kidding. In October, after a trial in Minnesota — the first time the industry has made its case before a federal jury — Jammie Thomas was ordered to pay $220,000 to the big record companies. That’s $9,250 for each of 24 songs she was accused of sharing online.
The only sensible reaction would be for every consumer of music to refuse to make even a single purchase (CD or digital) until the industry backed off to a practical and reasonable position on fair use. I’m in. Anyone else?
O Tannenbaum
From the best Christmas album ever, Vince Guaraldi, A Charlie Brown Christmas.
A review that makes me want to hear the song
From the playlist of short-story author Jack Pendarvis:
8 ) God Moves On the Water, Blind Willie Johnson. I don’t care if you’re the most committed liberal secular humanist in the world, I don’t care if you’re Christopher Hitchens or Richard Dawkins, Blind Willie Johnson will make you afraid of God. He will also make you afraid of Blind Willie Johnson. There are dozens of recorded songs about the Titanic disaster and what it means. This one is the best.
Update: Here’s part of what All Music has to say about Johnson:
If you’ve never heard Blind Willie Johnson, you are in for one of the great, bone-chilling treats in music. Johnson played slide guitar and sang in a rasping, false bass that could freeze the blood. But no bluesman was he; this was gospel music of the highest order, full of emotion and heartfelt commitment. Of all the guitar-playing evangelists, Blind Willie Johnson may have been the very best. … Not for the faint of heart, but hey, the good stuff never is.
Some say
… this is the best track on the best album of 2007.
M.I.A. from the album Kala with “Paper Planes.”
I fly like paper, get high like planes
If you catch me at the border I got visas in my name
If you come around here, I make ’em all day
I get one down in a second if you wait
All I wanna do is (BANG BANG BANG BANG!)
And (KKKAAAA CHING!)
And take your money
Hark the Herald Angels Sing
No wait, this is a different Gloria.
Link via Crooks and Liars.
Singin’ ’bout December
A selection of popular songs with “December” in their lyrics. Can you match the lyrics with the artist and title?
Christmas music from a century ago
The Antique Christmas Lights Museum has lots of information about the evolution of Christmas lights, but hidden among its goodies is a page of Vintage Christmas Recordings. The 18 recordings were made 1908-1914 and reproduced on a 1908 Edison Home cylinder player for conversion to mp3 files.
Best summing up line of the day, so far
“Tina is aware that Ike passed away earlier today. She has not had any contact with him in 35 years. No further comment will be made.”
RIP Ike Turner
How about some Keren Ann this morning?
Eisner blames Jobs, and Radiohead cleans up
In an interview former Disney CEO Michael Eisner blamed Apple’s Steve Jobs (and iTunes) for writers’ low pay on digital distribution.
Strange then, that this same day, we also get a story about how Radiohead is doing with their online distribution deal. You’ll remember that they passed on iTunes to distribute their music themselves, and now we’re hearing that, after all is said and done, Radiohead earned an average of $2.26 per album by asking listeners to download the album for free and pay them whatever they thought it was worth. “$2.26 per album?” you say. “They got screwed! iTunes charges $10!”
Ah yes, but apparently Radiohead would have made about $1 per album if they’d gone through traditional channels. So actually, the creators doubled their income per sale. Eisner’s crazy– Jobs isn’t to blame for this strike, it’s content distributors who don’t pay content creators enough for digital distribution. But given that Radiohead is cashing in (and gaining public goodwill to boot), maybe the Writers Guild have a lesson to learn here as well.
Update: See The WGA strike — what it’s about.
Living With Music
An intriguing and eclectic music playlist by Peter Robinson the mystery writer (Inspector Banks). I sampled several of these at the iTunes Store. Much to like.
My college wasn’t like this
In 1932, the maverick Australian-born composer-pianist Percy Grainger was teaching a music course at New York University, and one day he said to his class, “The greatest composers who ever lived are Bach, Delius, and Duke Ellington. Unfortunately Bach is dead, Delius is very ill, but we are happy to have with us today the Duke.” And Ellington and his band came in to play.
Story told by Alex Ross in the first installment of a dialogue the classical music critic of The New Yorker is having with Ben Ratliff, the jazz critic of the Times — Alex Ross and Ben Ratliff discuss jazz, classical, and pop.
12,000 and other idle chatter
NewMexiKen has 11,999 songs (tracks) in my iTunes library. And while I have more CDs to import, I thought I should celebrate by getting something special from the iTunes store for number 12,000. Any ideas?
I spilled a lot of bird feed yesterday and this morning the film crew for the remake of Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds is sizing up my backyard — a dozen mourning doves, sparrows, finches, a partridge or two, scrub jays.
Apple stock rose more than 8 percent in the first hour this morning on yesterday’s earnings report of $1.01 a share. I keep thinking it’s peaked and “now” would be a bad time to buy — and it’s up nearly 30% in a month. As Jimmy Jones sang:
Oh you need timin’
A tick a tick a tick of good timin’
Timin’ timin’ timin’ timin’
Timin’ is the thing it’s true
Good timin’ brought me to you
Big fuss because J.K. Rowling told an audience Dumbledore was gay. That’s a surprise? Didn’t people read the books?
The Cleveland Indians logo, Chief Wahoo, has got to go. Can you imagine them getting away with that type of a caricature with African or Asian-Americans or Hispanics (think of the fuss over Sambo or the Frito Bandito)?
Overnight Annie and SnoLepard added some interesting pairs in the comments to the Whom would you rather be? list.
Early iTunes store
And we think downloading music is sooo modern.
Even 80 or 90 years ago they brought music to your door.
Photo from The American Experience.
Best line of the day, so far
“A verdict of $222,000.00, for infringement of 24 song files worth a total of $23.76?”
Amazon.com MP3 Downloads
Amazon has MP3 downloads, many at 89¢. They’ll work in any software including iTunes, and play on any player.
Files are DRM free and some are recorded at as much as 256kbps. The excerpts certainly sound great.
September 23rd
It’s the birthday of John Coltrane (1926), Ray Charles (1930) and Bruce Springsteen (1949).
It ought to be a damn holiday.
Oh, and four-time Oscar nominee Mickey Rooney is 87, Julio Iglesias is 64, Emmy winner Mary Kay Place is 60, and seven-time Emmy nominee Jason Alexander is 48.
“My music,” John Coltrane said, “is the spiritual expression of what I am — my faith, my knowledge, my being…” The grandson of ministers, he began his career in the blues clubs of Philadelphia, and throughout his career combined the sacred and the secular in the intense, earnest sound of his saxophone. His musical sermons, by turns somber and ecstatic, radiated his undying faith in music’s power to heal.
Coltrane fell under the spell of Charlie Parker at age 18 and dedicated himself to a practice regime that sometimes found him asleep, fingers still ghosting the keys. He first gained fame as a member of Miles Davis’s classic quintet in 1955, worked with Thelonious Monk, then took the lessons he’d learned from those masters and became a leader in his own right — and the most admired, most influential and most adventurous saxophonist of the 1960s.
“There is never any end,” Coltrane said. “There are always new sounds to imagine; new feelings to get at. And always, there is the need to keep purifying these feelings and sounds so that … we can give … the best of what we are.” (Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame)
Many musicians possess elements of genius, but only one — the great Ray Charles — so completely embodies the term that it’s been bestowed upon him as a nickname. Charles displayed his genius by combining elements of gospel and blues into a fervid, exuberant style that would come to be known as soul music. While recording for Atlantic Records during the Fifties, the innovative singer, pianist and bandleader broke down the barriers between sacred and secular music. The gospel sound he’d heard growing up in the church found its way into the music he made as an adult. In his own words, he fostered “a crossover between gospel music and the rhythm patterns of the blues.” But he didn’t stop there: over the decades, elements of country & western and big-band jazz have infused his music as well. He is as complete and well-rounded a musical talent as this century has produced. (Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)
Bruce Springsteen ranks alongside such rock and roll figureheads as Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, the Beatles and Bob Dylan. Just as those artists shaped popular music, Springsteen served as a pivotal figure in its evolution with his rise to prominence in the mid-Seventies. Early on, he was touted as one of several heirs to Bob Dylan’s mantle. All of these would-be “new Dylans”-who also included Loudon Wainwright, John Prine and Elliott Murphy-rose above the hype, but Springsteen soared highest, catapulting himself to fame on the unrestrained energy of his live shows, the evocative power of his songwriting, and the direct connection he forged with his listeners.
Springsteen lifted rock and roll from its early Seventies doldrums, providing continuity and renewal at a point when it was sorely in need of both. During a decade in which disco, glam-rock, heavy-metal and arena-rock provided different forms of escape into fantasy, Springsteen restored a note of urgency and realism to the rock and roll landscape. (Rock and Roll Hall of Fame)
I had a friend was a big baseball player
Back in high school
He could throw that speedball by you
Make you look like a fool boy
Saw him the other night at this roadside bar
I was walking in, he was walking out
We went back inside sat down had a few drinks
But all he kept talking about was
Glory days well they’ll pass you by
Glory days in the wink of a young girl’s eye
Glory days, glory days
Handy Safari Add-on (and more)
A Safari plug-in that adds the following:
– Open tabs with a double click on the tab bar.
– Open new tabs with the URL in the clipboard.
– Close tabs by middle-clicking.
A neat, free piece of software that helps you build fantastic playlists from the music stored on your Mac. It’s like a musical assistant who knows exactly which songs will fit together and which songs won’t.
Best line of the day, so far
“It’s amazing how many Republicans call me for support. And then they go, ‘You’re a Republican right?’ And you go, ‘Well I’m actually a lifetime Democrat.'”
Toby Keith, who also says:
“Some sorority chick called my daughter a — said she shouldn’t be in the sorority cause she’s just white trash with money,” Keith said. “And she laughed. And my wife was all upset. But I thought it was a great album title.”
Thanks to Functional Ambivalent for the link.
Hey Good Lookin’
Hiram Williams was born on this date 84 years ago. We know him as Hank.
Hank Williams is an inductee of both the Country Music and Rock and Roll halls of fame.
Hank Williams’s legend has long overtaken the rather frail and painfully introverted man who spawned it. Almost singlehandedly, Williams set the agenda for contemporary country songcraft, but his appeal rests as much in the myth that even now surrounds his short life. His is the standard by which success is measured in country music on every level, even self-destruction.
The words and music of Hank Williams echo across the decades with a timelessness that transcends genre. He brought country music into the modern era, and his influence spilled over into the folk and rock arenas as well. Artists ranging from Gram Parsons and John Fogerty (who recorded an entire album of Williams’ songs after leaving Creedence Clearwater Revival) to the Georgia Satellites and Uncle Tupelo have adapted elements of Williams’ persona, especially the aura of emotional forthrightness and bruised idealism communicated in his songs. Some of Williams’ more upbeat country and blues-flavored numbers, on the other hand, anticipated the playful abandon of rockabilly.
Hank Williams died in the back seat of his Cadillac. He was found and declared dead on New Year’s Day 1953. He was 29.
Riley B. King
… is 82 today. Should be a freakin’ national holiday if you ask me. Many more B.B. Many more.
Elsewhere, Lauren Bacall is 83. Miss Bacall was nominated for best actress in a supporting role for her performance in The Mirror Has Two Faces.
Elgin Baylor is 73.
Had Elgin Baylor been born 25 years later, his acrobatic moves would have been captured on video, his name emblazoned on sneakers, and his face plastered on cereal boxes. But he played before the days of widespread television exposure, so among the only records of his prowess that remain are the words of those who saw one of the greatest ever to play.
Robin Yount is 52.
Robin Yount was a productive hitter who excelled in the field at two of baseball’s most challenging positions – shortstop and center field. Playing his entire 20-year career with the Milwaukee Brewers, he collected more hits in the 1980s than any other player and finished with an impressive career total of 3,142. An every day major leaguer at age 18, Yount earned MVP awards at two positions and his 1982 MVP campaign carried the Brewers to the World Series.
Mickey Rourke is 51.
Jennifer Tilly is 49. Tilly received an Oscar nomination as best supporting actress for Bullets Over Broadway. Better yet she was the voice of Celia, Mike’s love interest, in Monsters, Inc.
Marc Anthony is 38.
To Infinity — And Beyond
NewMexiKen has written about the Voyager spacecraft and the Golden Record here, here and here. But I failed in the past few weeks to note the 30th anniversary of their launches in 1977. Voyager 2 was launched on August 20, 1977 and Voyager 1 on September 5, 1977.
Both spacecraft — now in interstellar space, outside the area where our Sun dominates the environment — continue to send back data. Voyager 1 is further from Earth than any other manmade object and leaving us behind at 38,000 miles per hour.
NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory have a site devoted to Voyager.
And there is a site with the recordings on the Voyager Golden Record: Sounds and Music of Earth.
Thanks to John for the last link and the reminder.