Song of the Week – Why Worry, Dire Straits

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I realized recently that I don’t feature many ballads, so today I’m switching up.

The SotW is “Why Worry” by Dire Straits, from the multi-platinum album Brothers in Arms (1985).

“Why Worry” has a perfect combination of music and lyrics.  The music has a beautiful melody that is reminiscent of an Everly Brothers style song.  (In fact, the Everly Brothers covered it!)  The music is proficiently played by Mark Knopfler and his band, with a little extra help from Tony Levin playing the bass part on his Chapman Stick.  (Levin had to be brought in when regular bassist John Illsley had a roller skating accident and sprained his wrist.)

It clocks in at over 8 minutes, which gives it room to breathe in the instrumental sections.  That is, unless you’re listening to the vinyl version that is abridged to 5:22 to avoid a “groove crowding” problem.

In the lyrics, sung in a near whisper, a friend or lover offers words of comfort to someone in need.

Baby, I see this world has made you sad
Some people can be bad
The things they do, the things they say

But baby, I’ll wipe away those bitter tears
I’ll chase away those restless fears
That turn your blue skies into gray

Why worry
There should be laughter after pain
There should be sunshine after rain
These things have always been the same
So why worry now
Why worry now

I found this terrific synopsis of “Why Worry” on the internet but can’t recall the attribution.

The (album) side ends on ‘Why Worry’ which is kind of the mirror image of the last song: instead of a bitter betrayal from a distance this is the warmth of a new relationship up close, with the narrator seeking to calm the fears of his loved one. Despite being the last and poorest selling of all the album’s singles, it’s probably the most covered song Knopfler’s ever written (Art Garfunkel does a great version of this song), despite the fact that no one else could have come up with the lovely extended opening which is born for Mark’s crystal clear guitar work. His vocal is up to speed now, too, and the equal of his fine lyrics about turning problems around (another common idea, sure, but well handled here: would that other songs providing comfort had the chorus line ‘there should be laughter after pain, there should be sunshine after rain, so why worry now?’) The one real love song on the album, its moving indeed, the aural equivalent of a blanket a hot water bottle and a box of chocolates, looking for positives in negatives. Interestingly this song is very similar in mood, theme and structure to Simon and Garfunkel’s ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’ – an album very close to ‘Brothers In Arms’ on the list of best-selling albums – suggesting that what a wannabe successful artist should record for their first album is a kind of warm audio hug; both songs are slow and ponderous but with enough going on to keep the excitement – perhaps more importantly both songs are closely rooted to gospel, although here the music is dominated not by an organ or piano but by Alan Clark’s subtle synthesiser work. Alas two things prevent this from becoming the highlight of the album: the mix of this song is awful; its much quieter than the songs either side of it (despite neither being particularly noisy) with Knopfler’s vocal, which should be the centrepoint of the song, ducked quieter than anything else in the mix; there’s also yet another extended ending which despite giving Knopfler’s guitar a good work out sounds more like a battle than act of comforting and undoes much of the atmosphere built up on the track’s first four minutes. Still, this is a lovely song even with all the ‘mistakes’ and it deserves its place in the pantheon of great AAA ‘covered’ songs.

Enjoy… until next week.

Song of the Week – I’m Still a Struggling Man, Edwin Starr

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Edwin Starr was a soul shouter that had a couple of minor hits on the Ric-Tic label in the mid-’60s – “Agent Double-O-Soul” and “Stop Her on Sight (S.O.S.)”.  When Berry Gordy bought out Ric-Tic and took their talent roster over to his Motown label, Starr scored big with “25 Miles” (#6) and “War” (#1), in 1969 and 1970, respectively.

In between, he released “I’m Still a Struggling Man”.  The SotW strives to bring attention to the lesser-known but deserved releases.

The song is a plea to his woman to be loyal in love to a man who isn’t financially secure and struggling to get by.

You better stop fooling if you want to get along with me
We grew up on the block and we know about poverty
So, tell all your high-falutin’ friends we just can’t compete
It’s only been a little while and I just got on my feet

And I’m still a struggling man
Doing the best that I can
I can only take it, girl, I can only make it, girl
Long as you, you understand that baby

“… Struggling Man” and Starr were both hits in the Northern Soul scene in the UK.  His popularity in the UK led him to move there permanently in 1983 where he stayed until his death from a heart attack at age 61, in 2003.

Enjoy… until next week.

Song of the Week – I Love My Shirt, Donovan

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Sometimes music is emotional.  Sometimes sophisticated.  Sometimes political.  But sometimes it’s just for pure, simple fun.

In that vein I offer “I Love My Shirt” by Donovan from the underappreciated Barabajagal (1969) album.

So there it is!  Don’t judge me.  That’s all I have to say except…

Enjoy… until next week.

D.C. PUNK ROCK in a museum

Fortunately, a digital online museum.

Though some of the links don’t work and I could not find any references to Steve Moyer’s not-DC but close band, the Forward Fashion Monkeys, this is well worth a look. It’s amazing how visceral the graphics and bandnames are. And the links that do work dig deeper and closer. And then there is the music, loud political hard not to mosh to:

Song of the Week – Mother of Earth, Gun Club

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The Gun Club was a pioneering punk rock band out of LA.  They separated themselves from the rest of the punk rock scene by incorporating blues and country influences into their sound, leading to the genre titles “psychobilly” and “cowpunk.”

They performed and recorded from 1979 to 1996 and the untimely death of their cofounder and leader, Jeffrey Lee Pierce.  His erratic behavior and stage antics made him a true rock and roll original.

Pierce was also a huge Blondie fan.  He rose to be the president of the LA chapter of the Blondie fan club.  That led to a relationship with Blondie’s Chris Stein and Deborah Harry.  The Gun Club’s 1982 album, Miami, was produced by Stein and included backing vocals by Harry under the pseudonym D.H. Laurence Jr.

Today’s SotW is “Mother of Earth” from Miami

The song has an interesting connection to Billy Idol as told here by Drew Wardel of Far Out:

Around the time The Gun Club released their second record, Miami, Billy Idol met up with Jeffery Pierce at a bar in L.A. and told him that his smash hit, ‘White Wedding’, was an attempt to emulate ‘Mother of Earth’. The song is a beautiful example of Pierce’s impeccable ability to mix rockabilly with Americana, and reverb-soaked cowpunk. It sounds like Johnny Cash on acid.

Pierce died at the age of 37 in Salt Lake City from a brain hemorrhage attributed to alcohol and drug abuse.  But his influence on rock music far exceeds the popularity of the Gun Club whose fans include Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, the White Stripes, and the Black Keys.

Enjoy… until next week.

Anton Fier is Dead.

A very sad and troubled obituary for the drummer Anton Fier, who lived a rocketship of a life full of celebrity and achievement but could not reach escape velocity from his own inner demons. Read it here.

I saw him live twice. He was backing the guitarist Tony Scherr in front of a crowd of maybe 30 15? people in the intimate and far from sold out Living Room on New York City’s Lower East Side. I was there because my friend Walker was a fan of Scherr, who played guitar on at least some of Norah Jones’ records. It turns out I wrote about Fier and the Golden Palominos here in 2014.

“He was playing drums because that’s what he does.” Here he is playing drums with Bill Laswell and Fred Frith in Japan in 1984, ferociously. Rest in peace.

Song of the Week – Rock Me on the Water, For Everyman & Before the Deluge; Jackson Browne

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Today’s post was written by frequent guest contributor, Michael Paquette.  I hope you like it!

There are three songs in the early lexicon of Jackson Browne’s work that speak to the angst of the seventies brought on by the loss of a generation that sought social change and instead had morphed into a “Me” generation that was more about personal reflection.

The first of these songs is “Rock Me on the Water” from his 1972 debut album.

The social movements of the sixties were still fresh when Jackson Browne released this material.  Like much of his material this song is a lament rather than a battle cry.  The song opens with “the signs are everywhere you’ve left it for somebody other than you to be the one to care.”  Then in the third verse, he entreats his listeners with the line, “people look around you, it’s there your hope must lie.”  He holds out hope that the “fires are still burning, hotter and hotter” and that we will “get down to the sea somehow” and the “sisters of the sun” will “rock me on the water.”  Through this, maybe, we will remember how to return to the sense of social awareness and action.

His second album took two years to write.  The title cut from the album is called “For Everyman.”

This song was written as a response to the escapist vision of David Crosby’s “Wooden Ships.”  This classic appeared on the first Crosby, Stills & Nash release (1969) and was covered by the Jefferson Airplane on their Volunteers album in the same year.  In the song, Crosby envisioned how he and his entourage would sail away on his boat if society broke down or there was a nuclear war.  Browne’s song poses the question, what about everyone who doesn’t have the resources to sail away?  The song opens with an acknowledgment that his friends are planning to leave society because:

They’ve seen the end coming down 

Long enough to believe

That they’ve heard their last warning

But Browne still holds onto the concern For Everyman.  His concept of social change is through collective action, and the song concludes with his message to the ones who are leaving.

I’m not trying to tell you

That I’ve seen the plan

Turn and walk away if you think I am

But don’t think too badly

Of one who’s left holding sand

He’s just another dreamer

Dreaming about Everyman

This song clings to hope against the loss of the ideals of the ‘60s generation.

The third song is from Browne’s third album Late for the SkyLftS was written in about six weeks in 1974 as the ‘60s were receding into memory at the height of the Watergate scandal.  It was a massive achievement for him as he emerged as one of the brightest singer/songwriters of the era alongside such titans as Joni Mitchell and Neil Young. The record featured the multi-talented artist David Lindley, who had been touring with Browne.  It is a spare and underproduced work.  It became his first gold record and reached #14 on the Billboard charts.  Much of it was written on a grand piano with his infant son crawling nearby on the floor.  The album concludes with the masterpiece “Before the Deluge.”

It opens with a reflection on the generation that was left behind.

Some of them were dreamers

And some of them were fools

Who were making plans and thinking of the future

With the energy of the innocent

They were gathering the tools 

They would need to make their journey back to nature

But much of the hope and idealism of this era are lost in a sudden rush to drugs and hedonism.  Many have forgotten and abandoned their values.  The generation that sought social change has turned inward for spiritual reflection, and many gave up trying to pursue change, except within.  

Some of them knew pleasure

And some of them knew pain

And for some of them it was only the moment that mattered

And on the brave and crazy wings of youth

They went flying around in the rain

And their feathers, once so fine, grew torn and tattered

And in the end they traded their tired wings

For the resignation that living brings

And exchanged love’s bright and fragile glow

For the glitter and the rouge

And in a moment they were swept before the deluge.

Browne also mentions that “some of them were angry” at the way the earth was abused but they have forsaken their call to arms and instead became preoccupied with their own lives.  This song still resonates with the loss of ideals, social change, and responsibility that is evident in recent years.  “Before the Deluge” offers less chance of renewal or escape, yet it does end with the idea that nature will reveal its secrets by and by.  Whether this will be a dark reveal or a light to the end of the tunnel remains to be seen.

Jackson Browne has always kept true to his values to use his music to speak out for causes of justice in society (antinuclear energy, antiwar in Central America, and support for Farm Aid and Amnesty International).

Enjoy… until next week.