- "And if the cloud bursts, thunder in your ear, you shout and no one seems to hear, and if the band you're in starts playing different tunes, I'll see you on the dark side of the moon." I'm pretty sure Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" album spent more time on the charts than any other LP in history. Songs like "Money", "Time" and "Brain Damage" help explain why. I'm not the type to smoke drugs, but if I did this would be a pretty great album for enhancing the experience. For me not many lyrics can top, "the lunatic is in my head". If you play acoustic guitar you know that some songs never sound quite as good as the record whereas some sound just right. Some even have specific chords/moments that sound perfect. The C7 in the bridge to "Different Drum" is an example and in this case the G7 in the verse of "Brain Damage". If you don't play guitar it's never to late to pick one up and get frustrated.
2. Gone Away From Me- Ray LaMontagne
- "For a while I sat there staring at the photograph, for a while I cried and tried not to make a scene, there was a time when we were young, but life is long, my love has gone away from me." If you like feeling depressed (I know I do) then "Gone Away From Me" is right in your wheelhouse. The intro to "Gone Away From Me", with it's mellow acoustic guitar and horns has a Gram Parsons/"Cant Always Get What You Want" feel. Lyrically it's the stuff of slitting your wrists ala James Taylor's "You've Got a Friend" and R.E.M.'s "Everybody Hurts". All jokes aside, "Gone Away From Me" is quite gorgeous. This past week I was talking to a friend about the pleasures of being a working stiff. I recalled Ray LaMontagne's comments from his Live at Abbey Road studio performance. I paraphrased then but I'll quote here- "you go to work, you do your robot bit for the day, you come home turn the TV on, you hypnotize yourself for 4, 5,6 hours and then you go to bed and get up and do the same thing. It's just a crazy world." Amen.
- "One day you'll wake up to find, the world is full of things you left behind, babies crying steal you from your sleep, the love you feel is now twice as deep." What a timely selection. Mason Jennings released "Live at First Ave" this past Tuesday. It features three new songs including "Lonely Computer Screen". The album largely focuses on material from Jennings's last studio effort "Blood of Man"; 9 of that album's 11 songs are represented here. "Blood of Man" threw me for a loop when it came out last fall. It's mostly built around electric guitars and is much louder and darker than Mason's previous work. As an example the "your scripture won't save you when my gun's in your mouth" lyric from "Black Wind Blowing" comes to mind. Once the record sank in I realized how many great songs it featured "Live at First Ave" drives that point home. "Lonely Computer Screen" isn't destined to be one of my favorites but "Live at First Ave" does a great job capturing the feel of a live Mason Jennings show.