- "I looked over Jordan, and what did I see, comin' for to carry me home, a band of angels comin' after me, comin' for to carry me home." "On the mountain my Lord spoke, out his mouth came fire and smoke, in the valley on my knees, asked my Lord have mercy please." All-American athlete, gifted scholar, renown linguist, celebrated actor, civil-rights pioneer-Paul Robeson was all that and the guy had one of the best voices of the 20th century to boot. "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot/Every Time I Feel the Spirit" comes from "The Power And The Glory" compilation of spirituals and folk songs. The highlight here is the gorgeous harmonies between Robeson and pianist Lawrence Brown on the chorus of "Every Time I Feel the Spirit". If this song doesn't make you feel the spirit than nothing will. Instead of wondering why I have "Negro" spirituals on my iPod you may want to ask yourself why you don't.
- "She want neo soul cause hip hop is old, she don't want no rock 'n' roll, she want' platinum and gold, she want a whole lot of something' to fold." "I push my seed in her bush for life, it's gonna work because I'm pushin' it right." The Roots feature Cody Chestnutt on "The Seed (2.0)" from the album "Phrenology". It makes sense as the song is a revamped version of his soul song "The Seed". The original track is a soulful/spiritual low-fi acoustic affair, sounding like something you might expect from Ben Harper. "The Seed (2.0)" is much more upbeat; a R&B/funk/rock number with a bit of thump. The remake also features lyrics from The Root's MC Black Thought interwoven between Chestnutt's original choruses. I bought Phrenology on vinyl when it came out, around a period of time where I was scooping up a lot of music. Hearing "The Seed (2.0)" makes me realize I need to give the album a few more rotations on the old turntable.
3. Waterfall- Gavin DeGraw
- "Live by me, stand next to me, you're lovely let nobody else see, and the tide is callin', shadows slowly fallin', waterfall, lovin' me." My iTunes library (and by association the music on my iPod) is a carefully combed distillation of my favorite music. For a handful of artists I'll put on an entire album even if there are a few songs that aren't top notch. I grew up listening to albums and resist the urge to always focus on select songs, versus an entire album. "Waterfall" comes from the lasted DeGraw album "Free". I'm not sure what Gavin was hoping to achieve with this song. There are a handful of very good moments on "Free" but this (for me) isn't one of them. The song structure and production are a little different from the typical Gavin song. I appreciate an artist not wanting every song to sound the same, but in this case Gavin should stick to the rivers and the lakes that he's used to.