Showing posts with label Todd Snider. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Todd Snider. Show all posts

Friday, June 4, 2021

Music Friday: "D.B. Cooper"

Todd Snider has a new album out this year, First Agnostic Church of Hope and Wonder. I recently acquired it, but I've only listened to it a couple of times so far since I haven't been on my computer a lot lately. 

Regardless, here's an old, great tune from his catalog. 

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Random Notes from a Crank

A recent column in The Washington Post has an interesting take on why Biden will win the Democratic nomination: he's more likable. The columnist Max Boot applies Occam's razor to Biden's candidacy in "The No. 1 Reason Biden Is Likely to Beat Trump." 

Knock on wood...

I recently got a subscription to The Athletic. I'm enjoying it because they have people doing some strong long-form sports journalism. In fact, the articles about the Premier League teams I like ~ Tottenham Hotspur and the Wolves ~ are excellent. 

I recently reminded myself of Todd Snider's book: I Never Met A Story I Didn't Like. I may have some people read essays from that book this summer. And probably from Amy Schumer's book too. 

With coronavirus now being rightly called a pandemic, The Washington Post also has a good article on how the virus seems to be sparing kids: "Coronavirus Is Mysteriously Sparing Kids and Killing the Elderly. Understanding Why May Help Defeat the Virus." 

Friday, April 5, 2019

Music Friday: "The Blues on Banjo"

I am a bit behind on keeping up with new music, so yesterday I bought three new albums: 
  • Union by Son Volt
  • Sunshine Rock by Bob Mould
  • Cash Cabin Sessions, Vol. 3 by Todd Snider
The tune I'm featuring today is from the last of those three albums: "The Blues on Banjo." 

In times like these, we need to listen to Todd Snider. 

Friday, June 10, 2016

Music Friday: "Purple Mountain Jamboree" & "Straight to Hell"

I'm a big fan of Todd Snider. 

Now his super-band of sorts put out a second album. This time instead of covers, which is what the first album was full of, they are original songs. 


The first song is from the new album, and the second is from the first. 


Have a good weekend, folks. 




Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Stay Positive: I Never Heard a Story I Didn't Like

If you're looking for an excellent read, I highly recommend Todd Snider's I Never Met a Story I Didn't Like: Mostly True Tall Tales

The folk singer is known for his concerts where he tells insightful, entertaining stories in between songs. From what I can gather, many of the chapters are versions of his stories, his creative non-fiction, that he recounts before he plays certain tunes. He's a witty dude. 

Some of my favorite chapters are the where he talks about his friend Moondawg (of the song "Moondawg's Tavern"), his encounter with Slash of Gun-n-Roses in a hotel bar, the chapter about his friend Skip (who inspired "Play a Train Song"), and the chapter about Kris Kristofferson.

Snider's a raconteur. And the book has all kinds of playful moments where he calls attention to the fact that he's writing a book and that sometimes the stories he says onstage are not exactly what happened.  

To give you a taste of his wit and wisdom, here are some selected passages from the book:
  • There's always a loophole. All you have to do is stare at the loop long enough and you'll find the hole.
  • There they were, the football team. And I don't mean to disparage any of the other kids. I'm just saying that it could be argued that they looked like a bunch of dirty sheep standing around in a field, waiting to push a grown, screaming man on a padded sled. 
  • He [Skip] said, "Never go straight, always go forward." He said, "Don't apologize, I don't care enough." And when he answered the phone, he said, "I'll play your silly little game." 
  • …when it comes to slogans and fashions and bands, I like to be what I call "post-hip, pre-retro." That sweet spot, right when something isn't cool anymore and before it becomes cool in an ironic way. The cutting edge of uncool.
  • Contentment, not rejection, is the enemy.
  • …if someone asks you what a song is about and you don't have an answer, you might be in possession of a song that's not really about anything. 
  • You may occasionally have gotten the ideas from these pages that I am a little hard on sports. But baseball's not a sport. It's an art. I will not argue this point. If you try to argue with me, I will reply with a fart. 
  • Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a night. Set a man on fire, he'll be warm of the rest of his life. 

Friday, February 7, 2014

Music Friday: "Ballad of the Devil's Backbone Tavern"

My mom died Wednesday morning. On the drive up to Iowa yesterday, I listened to CDs in an attempt to get my mind on other things. 

When listening to Todd Snider's Happy To Be Here, I realized one of my favorite songs by Snider reminds me of my mom because the advice Miss Virgie provides sounds like something my mom would say. 

So the song today is a sort of a tribute to my mom. Lyrics are below the video. 





Ballad of the Devil's Backbone Tavern
By Todd Snider

Old Miss Virgy tended bar at this shack out in the hills.
It never made her any money boys but paid of all her bills.
Now she must have been 80 years old, 

but her heart was warm, and her beer was cold.
She gave away more than she ever sold,
smiling all the time.
I used to sing off in the corner every Friday night

to a loud crowd of cowboys, bikers, and bar room fights.
They were drinking beer, carrying on, not a one of them listening to one of my songs.
But old Miss Virgy sang along.
She said she knew 'em all by heart.


And then one night after closing she poured me another beer
She said "Come on over and sit down you little shit.
I got something you need to hear"
She said "Life ain't easy getting through. Everybody's gonna make things tough on you,
But I can tell you right now if you dig what you do, they will never get you down."
She said life's too short to worry.
Life's too long to wait.
Too short not to love everybody,
Life's too long to hate
I meet a lot of men who haggle and finagle all the time,
trying to save a nickel or make a dime.
Not me, no sireee, I ain't got the time.


Now I ain't seen Ol' Virgy in must have been about ten years.
I've been bumming around this country singing my songs for tips and beers.

Now the nights are long.
The driving's tough.
Hotels stink, and the pay sucks.
But I can't dig what I do enough, so it never gets me down.
I say life's too short to worry
Life's too long to wait.
Too short not to love everybody,
Life's too long to hate.
I meet a lot of men who haggle and finagle all the time,
trying to save a nickel or make a dime.
Not me, no sireee, I ain't got the time.

Friday, January 24, 2014

Music Friday: "In the Beginning"

This week an album came out by a band called the Hard Working Americans. It's a supergroup of sorts. Most noted of the band is lead singer Todd Snider.

I've also been listening to the Snider's Agnostic Hymns & Stoner Fables this week. 

One of my favorite songs on that album is track 1, "In the Beginning." So here it is. 

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Random Notes from a Crank

If you're interested in how brains react to music, check out "Why Music Makes Our Brain Sing" in the New York Times. The bottom-line is that music we like releases dopamine in the reptilian part of our brains, and as the researchers relate, "Composers and performers intuitively understand this: they manipulate these prediction mechanisms to give us what we want — or to surprise us, perhaps even with something better." That point reminds me of why I like Todd Snider's "Big Finish" so much. 



I recently finished Kurt Spellmeyer's Buddha at the Apocalypse. It's a good book, but he covers ground I've gone over previously through other Buddhist texts, Deep Ecology thinkers, and various social critics, especially those discussing environmental issues. Here's a few quotations to consider though: 
  • "We we call knowledge might actually be another example of the images of order we've mistaken for the real."
  • "The future can't undo what we do here -- not even with the best technology. Our only hope is acting mindfully today."
  • "From the polemical perspective of Zen, living for the future isn't living skillfully. In fact it's destructive in many ways that we ignore at our detriment." 
Below is a short video, a precis, of his book.



Now I'm on to Daniel Kahneman's Thinking, Fast and Slow and various other books from my on-deck shelf

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Top Ten/Twenty Albums of 2012

It's that time of the year again. 

As I did in 2010 and 2011, I'm providing my top twenty albums that came out this year. In contrast to the other two lists, I've changed the honorable mention category to come after the twentieth album. 

If there are any albums that you feel are worthy of my top ten/twenty list, feel free to provide 'em in the comments section. I look forward to your recommendations. 

1. Soundgarden, King Animal




It's only been, what, sixteen years since the these fine fellows from Seattle put out their last album. They're back, and now the drummer has to split his time between two hard rock icons, Soundgarden and Pearl Jam. This album reminds me of Superunknown though it seems a bit harder. King Animal is forcefully consistent as though the years between albums never happened. And that, for this listener is a very good thing. Favorite songs: "Non-State Actor," "Blood on the Valley Floor," "Attrition," and "Rowing." 



2. Langhorne Slim & the Law, The Way We Move




Though I don't have any of his other albums, I was a little familiar with Mr. Slim before I bought The Way We Move this year. The album is certainly one I've listened to a lot, which is how I pretty much rank these albums. If you're not familiar with this guy's work, he plays what I would describe as garage folk, and he has a distinctive voice. The album puts me in a good mood, its fare is mainly uptempo songs with interesting lyrics. Favorite songs: "Fire," "Great Divide," "Wild Soul," and "Coffee Cups." 


3. Jay Farrar (Son Volt), Anders Parker, Will Johnson (Centro-matic), and Yim Yames (My Morning Jacket), New Multitudes




I highly recommend purchasing the deluxe edition because the two albums are worth it. The first disc features all four of those dudes, but the second disc only has Farrar and Parker singing. The story of the project is that Farrar spent some time researching Woody Guthrie's notebooks and sketchbooks, and other artists became interested. So what the album provides is a group of talented musicians playing 23 previously unrecorded songs by Guthrie. It's wonderful stuff, and the album inspired me to read Joe Klein's Woody Guthrie: A Life, which is the definitive biography of the man. Favorite songs: "My Revolutionary Mind," "V.D. City," "Angel's Blues," "No Fear," "Whereabouts Can I Hide," "I Was a Goner," and "San Antone Meat House." 


4. Punch Brothers, Who's Feeling Young Now?




It's clear as I survey the first four albums and the one that's coming next, the first five could be ranked in any order really. What I'm saying is that any of the top five albums could be number one depending on my mood. 

Regardless, this release by the Brothers de Punch is outstanding because it provides a balance of uptempo, midtempo, and slower tunes that range from traditional bluegrass to "alternative," however that may be defined. There are a couple of solid instrumentals, "Flippen (The Flip)" and "Kid A" (a cover), and the other offerings are excellent all around. I might like this even better than Antifogmatic, and I'm looking forward to going to their show in St. Louis in late January. Favorite songs: "Who's Feeling Young Now?," "Clara," "New York City," and "Don't Get Married Without Me." 


 5. Todd Snider, Agnostic Hymns & Stoner Fables



Mr. Snider got all kinds of love in the music press for this release, and it's warranted. This album provides some of the best lines of the year. The chorus of "New Yorker Banker is "Good things happen to bad people." In "Too Soon to Tell," Snider opines, "They say that 'living well is the best revenge.' I say, bullshit. The best revenge is revenge." And in the middle of "Big Finish" there's this darkly humorous nugget: "It ain't the despair that'll get you. It's the hope." Snider explores the invention of religion, takes on the bank bailout, gives you the perspective of an unemployed person, among other personas, topics, and issues. In addition, the incredibly talented Amanda Shires plays fiddle and provides backing vocals on most of the tunes. Favorite songs: "In the Beginning," "New York Banker," "In Between Jobs," and "Too Soon to Tell." 


6. Patterson Hood, Heat Lightning Rumbles in the Distance




The frontman of the Drive-By Truckers created a fabulous solo album this year. It's thematically consistent. Listeners used to his DBT tunes will find a different m.o. on this album. I mean, there's a cello on some songs, so it's not your in-your-face rock-n-roll. The lyrics are reflective and personal -- like confessional poetry. Favorite Songs: "Disappear," "Better Off Without," "After the Damage," and "Depression Era." 


7. Bela Fleck & The Marcus Roberts Trio, Across the Imaginary Divide




I suppose the "imaginary divide" the title refers to is the perception that the banjo shouldn't be used in jazz music. If that's the case, this collaboration between the best banjo player on the planet and one of the best jazz trios out there destroys that perception. It works, and the album is fine music. Favorite songs: "Some Roads Lead Home," "Across the Imaginary Divide," "Petunia," and "That Ragtime Feeling." 


8. Craig Finn, Clear Heart Full Eyes



Like Hood of DBT, the frontman of The Hold Steady decided to make a solo record this year. The album is not the guitar-oriented fare of THS; Finn's vocals are the focal point. Songs explicate the tactics of womanizer, contemplate mortality, recount hard living, and other interesting narratives. "No Future," in particular, has a great line about the persona seeing the devil at the "riverside Perkins." Favorite songs: "When No One's Watching," "No Future," "Jackson," and "Balcony." 


9. Joe Pug, The Great Despiser



This fellow, who at one time was going to school to be a playwright if I remember right, has his stuff together. He's probably a guy who gets labeled with the singer-songwriter moniker. He writes damn fine songs and arrangements. The title track for this album is probably one of my favorite songs of the year. It's a fairly simple song lyrically speaking, but the affective dimension is just right. Then there is "Ours": "So we took what we inherited,/ and we dug a hole to bury it,/ all our property and marriages./ All we wanted was a narrative/ that was ours." Favorite songs: "The Great Despiser," "Ours," "Neither Do I Need a Witness," and "Deep Dark Wells." 


10. Brandi Carlile, Bear Creek




Where the hell have I been that I didn't know about Brandi Carlile? What's wrong with me? If last year was the year I discovered the wonderful Amanda Shires, one of the discoveries of 2012 was Ms. Carlile. A mix of folk and rock supported by an incredible voice, I'm hooked. Favorite songs: "Long Way Home," "Raise Hell," "Keep Your Heart Young," and "Rise Again." 


11. Gary Clark Jr., Blak and Blu




On the opening track of the album, "Ain't Messin' Around," Clark sings, "I don't believe in competition./ Ain't nobody else like me around." This year marked his first major full length album, which includes revised versions of a few songs he had on his EP last year. And there aren't many people like Gary Clark Jr. around these parts. While there are a couple of songs I skip over on the album when listening to it, he shows his range on his debut. From a old school blues number of "When My Train Pulls In" to the R&B "Blak and Blu," from the Chuck Berry-like "Travis County" to the Hendrix homage of "Third Stone from the Sun/If You Love Me Like You Say," Clark delivers. I prefer the bluesier and rock-focused affairs, but this album is a solid effort, one that makes me want much more. Favorite songs: "When My Train Pulls In," "Glitter Ain't Gold," "Ain't Messin' Around," and "Next Door Neighbor Blues." 



12. Bruce Springsteen, Wrecking Ball



Springsteen's sparse albums seem to get all kinds of critical acclaim -- Nebraska, The Ghost of Tom Joad, and Devils & Dust. I like those albums, don't get me wrong, but I tend to be a bigger fan of albums like Born to Run, Darkness on the Edge of Town, and The Rising. So Wrecking Ball works well for me: anthem rock. I played this album a lot in my car because my kids enjoy the Celtic-inflected tunes on the disc. "American Land" is tattooed on my brain. Favorite songs: "Jack of All Trades," "Death to My Hometown," "Wrecking Ball," and "You've Got It." 


13. Shovels & Rope, O' Be Joyful



I read about the duo of Carrie Ann Hearst and Micheal Trent on Hear*Ya this year, listened to some videos on YouTube, and promptly bought this album. As far as a genre of music, I guess it's Americana because it's a mix of country and rock with a folk do-it-yourself sensibility. I bet they're a lot of fun watching live -- just those two having fun and playing tunes. Favorite songs: "Birmingham," "O' Be Joyful," "Hail Hail," and "Shank Hill Street." 



14. Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Live from Alabama


  

It was really difficult for me to not put this album in the top ten because I'm a huge fan of Isbell & the 400 Unit. This release distills songs from performances in the Birmingham and the Shoals this year. It's a great album, but because I'm a connoisseur of  his work, I'm thinking about the songs I want on Live from Alabama Part II. I want more, so I might as well get it out of my system. Here's my fantasy Live from Alabama Part II track list: 

  • "The Day John Henry Died"
  • "Never Gonna Change"
  • "Chicago Promenade"
  • "Grown"
  • "Seven-Mile Island"
  • "Good"
  • "However Long"
  • "Soliders Get Strange"
  • "Streetlights"
  • "We've Met"
  • "Codeine"
  • "Stopping By"
  • "Never Could Believe"
  • "Sitting on the Dock of the Bay" (cover)
Favorite songs on Part I: "Goddamn Lonely Love," "In a Razor Town," "Outfit," "TVA," and "The Blue."


15. Heartless Bastards, Arrow 




What a great name for a band. And what a distinctive voice the lead singer has with a fully charged band. Just wonderful. When you listen to "Marathon," you're bound to get reflective when you hear the lead singer say, "on this long road home..." I got intrigued about the band when I saw them play "Gotta Have Rock and Roll" on Letterman. Indeed, mofos. Favorite songs: "Parted Ways," "Only For You," "Skin and Bone," and "Late in the Night." 


16. Regina Spektor, What We Saw from the Cheap Seats



I like an excellent pianist. Regina Spektor fills that role, and she's a damn fine singer.  "Firewood," in particular, provides a powerful bundle of pathos, especially if you've ever visited someone in a hospital.  And she's gets all wonderfully beat-boxy and surreal on "All The Rowboats." Then there's the lyric of "Work it. Work it, baby. Work it round that room." on "Ballad of a Politician." Brilliant work. Favorite songs: "All The Rowboats," "Firewood," "Ballad of a Politician," and "The Party." 


17. Bob Mould, Silver Age




This year Mould got back to voicing his barbaric yawp over the rooftops of the world. If you're looking for ballads, look elsewhere. Easy listening? Move along. This album reminds me more of his work in Husker Du than Workbook and Black Sheets of Rain, which are two very fine albums by the way. It's a great album to listen to when you're working out. Favorite songs: "Star Machine," "Fugue State," "Keep Believing," and "Silver Age."


18. The Lumineers, self-titled




Most people will recognize these folks by "Hey Ho" because it was used for some commercial, but overall it's a solid debut album. Whether they're part of this "roots revival" or whatever, this is a fun listen. Favorite songs: "Classy Girls," "Submarine," "Big Parade," and "Flapper Girl."


19. Truckstop Darlin', Hope & the Heart It Breaks




These fine fellows churned out a second album quickly. At least it doesn't seem that long ago that their debut came out. They do seem like an unlikely band to come out of Portland though. TD is pure alt-country, like the early albums from Lucero. I would imagine the best venue to hear this band's music is in a bar after a few good whiskey drinks. Favorite songs: "Southern Ghosts," "Sad Sweet Songs," "Dead Roses," and "They Don't Mind." 


20. Trampled By Turtles, Stars and Satellites




TbT albums have a tendency to grow on me. I'll listen to one a couple of times, and I'll think, "Eh, it's all right." Then I listen to it a few more times, and I think, "I'm liking this more for some reason." And so on. The same goes for Stars and Satellites. Favorite songs: "Alone," "Risk," "Beautiful," and "The Calm and the Crying Wind." 


Below is the Honorable Mention category. I've provided an extra ten albums (in alpha iTunes order) that I enjoyed quite a bit, but they didn't make the top twenty. I only provided the albums with image -- no commentary. 

Honorable Mention: 

Avett Brothers, The Carpenter





The Bad Plus, Made Possible





Baroness, Yellow & Green



The Barr Brothers, self-titled





Calexico, Algiers




Caroline Herring, Camilla





Gaslight Anthem, Handwritten




Horse Feathers, Cynic's New Year





Justin Townes Earle, Nothing's Gonna Change the Way You Feel About Me Now





Sara Watkins, Sun Midnight Sun

Friday, March 9, 2012

Music Friday: "D.B. Cooper" & "Precious Little Miracles"

This Tuesday Todd Snider's new album, Agnostic Hymns & Stoner Fables, came out. I'm sure it'll be good. His stuff always is.

To commemorate the release of the new work, I offer one of my favorite songs of his, "D.B. Cooper," which is on the Happy To Be Here album.





And then here's a song off the new album.





His interview in Salon is worth a read too.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Music Friday: "Drunken Poet's Dream," "Bad Liver and a Broken Heart," "KMAG YOYO," & "She Left Me for Jesus"

I mentioned the fine music of Hayes Carll a couple of weeks ago in "Music, Pabst Blue Ribbon, and Leaky Analogies," so I thought I'd offer you a quartet of his songs.

Carll reminds of Todd Snider in a number of ways. Both artists should be considered Americana musicians, and they both have a country twang to 'em even though Snider is originally from Portland, Oregon. And they both have good senses of humor.

First up is the slightly lascivious "Drunken Poet's Dream."



And if the song title of "Bad Liver and a Broken Heart" doesn't sound like good ole traditional country music, I don't know what does. The commentary about Texas before he plays the song is good stuff although I don't care for the pot-shots about Arkansas. He has a mission though.

This tune is a way slowed down version of the song compared to the version on his first album Trouble in Mind.



And then next up is "Kmag Yoyo," which is described in the post I referred to at the start of today's post. It's more rollicking than the first two videos.



And finally, time for some cornpone with "She Left Me for Jesus." This is the music video for the song.



"If I ever find Jesus, I'm kicking his ass."

I wonder if that guy's girlfriend's name is Mary Magdalene.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Music Friday: "Just Like Old Times"

If you were to do a keyword search of this blog using "Todd Snider," you're going to find four different Music Fridays, and today is the day for number five.

"Just Like Old Times" is one of strangest love songs I've ever listened to, if you can truly call it a love song--a meeting between old friends, a pool player and a prostitute, in a hotel room.

Click HERE to watch Snider.

"Living out a different kind of American dream,
Old times,
Your goal always was the same as mine.
You didn't want to throw fishing line
In that old main stream."

Friday, June 12, 2009

Music Friday: "America's Favorite Pastime" & "Talkin' Seattle Grunge Rock Blues"

It's another week, and another great musician put out a new album. The incomparable Todd Snider released The Excitement Plan.

Click HERE to watch Snider play a track from his new album, titled "America's Favorite Pastime," in some hotel room with Don Was nodding along with the song. The tune recounts Dock Ellis's no-hitter in 1970 for the Pirates, a no-hitter he threw under the influence of LSD, which he admitted to doing in 1984.

And for more fun, click HERE to watch Snider talk about an encounter with Slash and sing one of the songs he's more famous for.

Since it's baseball season and the first song is about baseball, as Ernie Banks was fond of saying, "Let's play two."

Friday, January 9, 2009

Music Friday: "This Land is Our Land"


The image above is the album cover to Todd Snider's new ep, Peace Queer.

But click HERE for a performance by Todd Snider from the mid-90s.

The song is from his first album, Songs for the Daily Planet.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Music Friday: "Ballad of Devil's Backbone Tavern"

I bring you Todd Snider once again.

Click HERE for a performance in Huntsville. The "Ballad of Devil's Backbone Tavern" is a song about singing in a tavern run by Miss Virgy.

"Life's too short to worry. 
Life's too long to wait.
It's too short to not to love everybody
And life's too long to hate."

Friday, May 16, 2008

Music Friday: "Statistician's Blues"

To help you begin the weekend, I humbly offer you Todd Snider and his "Statistician's Blues."