Sunday, March 8, 2015

In the Beginning pt.1



Do I Wanna Know?
Arctic Monkeys -AM

This song has been played almost to death, in part because gets airplay on pop, rock AND indie stations. While it's nice to see a masterful song getting it's just desserts, it makes me sad to see that most of this track's exposure has been in single form, cut off from the rest of the album (which, if you've heard it, is one of the more cohesive ventures in recent history). But even in light of this ubiquity, "Do I Wanna Know" is brilliant. Decriers have branded it as a Black Key's ripoff, an easy mistake to make when you are a rock-and-roll surface dweller who thinks that the Black Key's invented the concept of the isolated guitar riff (they didn't). If "Do I Wanna Know" is anything, it's an loving homage to the Tommy Iommi-era of Black Sabbath; a sludgy, sexy, footstomping jam based around a single riff. The Monkeys are admitted fans and they often break into War Pigs during the live performances of Arabella. Combine that minimalistic English metal with Alex Turner's cabaret-smooth vocals and you have yourself a album opener that will last the ages. And that bass drum at the beginning...



Everything In It's Right Place -
Radiohead - Kid A

Thom Yorke and company probably took a freshman psych class at the University of Exeter. They know the secret of sequence learning; the easiest parts to remember in a set of data are the beginning and the end. Any one of their albums could qualify for this list on musical merit alone, but I chose the opener from Kid A because of it's broad impact on the music scene at the time of its release Radiohead, up to that point, had perfected brit-rock. Pablo Honey wasn't excellent but it set a great tone and yielded a few hits. With The Bends, they ironed out all the kinks and turned out a masterpiece of melancholy, guitar driven complaint rock that provided a template for Coldplay's debut, the much less groundbreaking yet much more far-reaching Parachutes. OK Computer is an undisputed modern classic and a fantastic embodiment of the collective, post-industrial revolution British guilt that has been a reoccurring key component of British art (especially horror movies, oddly enough). Kid A is where things change; it is the extremely divisive point in Radiohead history at which Thom fully embraced his electronic ambitions, to the chagrin of "rock purists" and the delight of those who saw Aphex Twin, not Blur or Oasis, as the new prophet of British music. Like every song on this list, it sets the tone for the rest of the album within seconds. The deep, resonant glissando of the opening synth is a watershed moment for music, and the fact that Radiohead pulled it off without a hitch is a testament to their constant ability to identify and impact the musical zeitgeist.








Friday, February 13, 2015

Deal or No Deal or Kim Deal?

I  am in bed right now staring out my window and trying to fall asleep because I have to go to work at 5:30 tomorrow morning. I have a song stuck in my head. Well, actually it's just the bass line of a song. And it's a bassline that only has, like, four notes over and over and over. Imagine that your little brother/sister/niece/child is sitting at a piano, and they only know the first two notes to Fur Elise, and then imagine that you are trying to focus on ANYTHING else with that happening, really loud, right in your ear.

It doesn't help that I don't even want to go to bed. Because several of my friends are at The Radler right now, probably eating this really good cheese & crackers app that they have and drinking the bar's eponymous beverage, a mixture of grapefruit soda and hefeweizen. And my girlfriend is on a farm probably eating smores or reading Wendell Berry by a roaring fire. And I am laying on a cold mattress that is about a six-feet-even when I am six-foot-five, and I have to get up at five thirty and trudge across a cold urban expanse to stock                                                                             shelves at a glorified 7-11.

Kim Deal is probably my favorite bassist evr. She does this thing where she writes a bass riff based on two or three notes in a verrry simple progression and then plays the rift REALLY loud, loud enough to make the strings my that clattering sound against the neck of the guitar. Then Pixies put her at the forefront of their music and you suddenly have this catalogue of songs that are immediately identifiable by the bass riff, even though the riffs are basic enough to be played expertly by a bass novice. Most of her riffs are just sequential quarter notes, too. Not a lot of syncopation, scales, or "groovin," going on.

Because there are other songs that are very easily recognized by their bass riffs. She's Not There, by the Zombies. Soul to Squeeze by RHCP. Ramble On, by Led Zeppelin. Far From Me by ol' Nicky Cave. All excellent bass lines that are very recognizable outside of the context of their songs.

BUT KIM IS DIFFERENT.

Even if the only Kim you're familiar with is the one who brought her crying brat to a fashion show yesterday, you've probably heard Pixies via this movie. And that song is a great example of Kim's brilliance, to be sure, but it's also a song that has been burned into our collective consciousness through a clever bit of conditioning by David Fincher (gritty, visually arresting film -> legendary plot reveal -> flood of catharsis for the protagonist and the viewer -> iconic closing statement/visual image....cue music). For a song devoid of pop culture addendums, listen to anything off of the album Doolittle, especially Debaser  or This Monkey's Gone To Heaven. Also, have you seen this commercial?  This song features Kim's magnum opus about a magnum phallus, Gigantic. Sounds even cooler on a stand-up bass.

Kurt Cobain was a big Pixies fan, and Kurt Novoselic of Nirvana did some cool things with Kim's bass methodology (he also wrote some pretty groovy, complicated riffs that were very uniquely Nirvana). Hey, listen to this Kim Deal Inspired Bass Riff Playlist and let it lull you to sleep.

Ranging from "Obviously Inspired" to "Loosely Inspired," descending order:

I Bleed - Pixies
Sliver - Nirvana
Only in Dreams - Weezer
Evil - Interpol
Apartment Story - The National
Cannonball - The Breeders (Kim Deal's band after Pixies)
Fun - Speedy Ortiz
Are You Okay - Dum Dum Girls
Afraid of Heights - Wavves
Coast to Coast - Waxahatchee
Tiny Cities Made of Ashes -  Modest Mouse
Here Comes Your Man - Pixies

Spotify link, out of order.