Bunch o' carrots and little sweet peas

UPDATED with links and Video!

Time for another CD Mix Exchange. This being the seventh of these done by Stennie and the Gang, it's been dubbed "007: License to Mix. But for some reason, I had to really work to keep it from being License to Twang. I’m usually ambivalent about including alternates, but I’m providing them here so you can see just how many twangy bullets were dodged.


1. Kick-ass cover—of a song someone else has used in a previous mix.
“Stand by Your Man” – Lyle Lovett

(Covering Tammy Wynette’s classic, which Stennie used as a “favorite song you completely disagree with,” on CD Mix 1)

This category kicked my ass. My initial problem was twofold: everybody (else) who does these mixes A) uses a lot of kick-ass covers and B) chooses original songs for which there are no covers. But then I received River Selkie’s mix, including an entire disc of covers, which pretty much called bullshit on the second prong of my argument. Fortunately, I remembered I had this great little chestnut. What it lacks in opening-track energy, it more than makes up for in smirking irony.

Alternates:
“(We’re Not) The Jet Set” – John Prine and Iris Dement
“Every Day” – James Taylor (Mike’s “song he liked when he was 5” [Buddy Holly original] from Mix #1)

“Ragg Mopp” – Lionel Hampton (Bet’s spelling song on Mix 5)


2. Song that gives you goose bumps.
"Have a Little Faith in Me" - John Hiatt

A testament to the power of simplicity. I’m consistently blown away by how few elements there are here. It’s not particularly melodic, just a piano and a voice, but what a voice. Not the prettiest, but easily one of the most expressive and affecting.

Alternates:
“Hallelujah” – Jeff Buckley
“Miami 2017” (Seen the Lights Go Out on Broadway)” – Billy Joel


3. Song about the state you live in.
“Lone Start State of Mind” – Nanci Griffith

Given that JT's ode to the Old North State was my only alternative (not bad, but not as interesting--though NC is vastly superior to TX, IMO), and this was the album that introduced me Nanci Griffith, I decided on a more conceptual direction. For what it's worth, I may have been alone in Denver sipping a California wine at some point.

Alternates:
Carolina in my Mind” - James Taylor


4. Parenthetical—a favorite song with parentheses in the title, such as “(Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes.”

“Desafinado (Slightly Out of Tune)” – Ella Fitzgerald

Alternates:
“(I’m Gonna) Love, Love, Love You” The Derailers
“I Don’t Care (Just As Long As You Love Me)” – Buck Owens and His Buckaroos
“(Let’s Do It) Let’s Fall in Love” – Ella Fitzgerald
“Ruby (Don’t Take Your Love To Town)” – Kenny Rogers and the First Edition
“I am Weary (Let Me Rest) – The Cox Family
“Forever Young (The Wild Ones)” – The BoDeans

5. Therefore I Am: song about thinking
“Let the Mystery Be” – Iris Dement

Iris's voice tends to elicit a love-it-or-hate-it response from most people. I'm completely enraptured by it. Hope y'all are, too.

Alternates:
“What Was I Thinkin’?” – Deirks Bentley
“Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” – Bob Dylan


6. Alliteration—song with alliteration in the title, that is, the words start with the same letter, like “Lonesome Loser.” (Remember the Little River Band? Sure you do!)

“Spiral Staircase” – Kings of Leon

I love the pure unadulterated filth of the guitars on this. Anybody else get a little whiff of Bon Scott from the vocals?

Alternates:
“Readin’, Rightin’, Rt. 23” – Dwight Yoakam
Hillbilly Highway” – Steve Earle


7. Favorite song from year you were born.
“It’s Not Unusual” – Tom Jones

How pathetic is it that to satisfy the category I suggested, I have to go buy songs off iTunes? That’s what I get for going all literal a couple mixes ago and using “Tiger by the Tail” as song that should have been playing when I was born. Honestly, I have no trouble rationalizing the $1.98 I spent, given my big, shameless soft spot for Tom Jones. I actually saw him perform live in Vegas (where else?) in the early ‘90s. It was 90 minutes of every Tom Jones in Vegas cliché you can imagine. In other words, perfection. It purged any questions of him being past his prime. Apparently, he’s still on the road, going (relatively) strong.

Alternates:
“What’s New, Pussycat?” – Tom Jones
“Flowers on the Wall “ – The Statler Brothers
“A Very Good Year” – Frank Sinatra


8. Song about an animal
“Maybe Sparrow” – Neko Case

My main criterion here was to avoid using a “kids music” song. This one is definitely not for the ears of innocents. Mean ol’ hawks. Go pick on some pigeons why dontcha?

Alternates:
“Sheep” – Zoe Lewis
“Dolphin Dance” – Herbie Hancock


9. Song performed by non-traditional musician—such as an actor, athlete, weatherman, plumber.

“Harriet!” – Mike Myers

I’ve made my affection for “So I Married an Axe Murderer” plain many times in this space. This was too irresistible. Also, any song that uses the lyric “hard-hearted harbinger of haggis” automatically goes to the front of the queue.

Alternates:
“Ringo” Lorne Greene
“Teddy Bear” – Hank Hill (Mike Judge)


10. Grammatically Incorrect
“Ain’t Found Nobody” – The Mavericks

I’ve been wanting to include a Mavericks or Raul Malo song for a while now; I was determined to get one on this mix. I had originally planned to use “What a Crying Shame” for the Why So Sad category, but I thought this was a better showcase of Señor Malo’s toffee-coated tenor. Plus, I just love the arrangement with the plinking honky-tonk piano and the fiddle. This could easily have been a country-politan hit in the ‘60s.

Alternates:

“Ain’t Even Done with the Night” – John Cougar
“The Salt in my Tears” – Martin Briley
“It Don’t Mean a Thing (If it Ain’t Got That Swing)” – Duke Ellington


11. Song with your favorite guitar or instrumental solo.
“La Lola” – Café Quijano

I considered lots of obvious guitar-hero anthems from the usual suspects (AC/DC, Aerosmith, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, Van Halen), but found them all a bit predictable, honestly, lacking sufficient “wow” factor. I ended up aqui because the slide guitar is so . . . lurid. Like a musical version of Chris Kattan doing Antonio Banderas on SNL: “Es hote in here, no?”

“Walk this Way” – Aerosmith
“The Waiting” – Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
“The Breakdown” – Los Lobos
“I Need More Love” – Robert Randolph and the Family Band (Lap steel + Hammond B3)
Beaujolais” – The BoDeans (Accordion)


12. War! What is it good for? Song about war. Good God, y’all!
“Generals and Majors” – XTC

I hope this isn’t one of the XTC songs Bet finds pretentious. I think it’s a ton of fun. The guitar riff is hypnotic.

Alternates:
“Sink the Bismarck” – Johnny Horton
“The Battle of New Orleans” – Johnny Horton
“Sunday, Bloody Sunday” – U2
“Brothers in Arms” – Dire Straits
“Sam Stone” – John Prine

13. Song about Sex
“Anything Can Happen” – Was (Not Was)

Back when I was the very model of a modern major West Wing fan—before Aaron Sorkin became* insufferable with the meta-narcissism—there was an episode with a running gag about Gilbert & Sullivan. Ainsely Hays, unable to recall the name of a particular G&S operetta, refers to it as “the one about duty.” To which several other characters in turn respond, “They’re all about duty.” That’s what I thought when I first saw this category: what rock and roll song isn’t about sex, having sex, trying to have sex, or lamenting the lack of sex being had? The genre owes its existence—and its name—to physical act of love, as Gen. Ripper put it. Still, it was fun to find one that was overtly about gettin’ some.

*It might very well be the case that he was always insufferable, but I failed to find him so until halfway into the first (and blessedly only) season of Studio 60. I almost dread re-watching my DVDs of TWW for fear of finding that’s the case.

Alternates:
“Red Morning Light” – Kings of Leon (At least I think it’s about sex. Does “giving all your cinnamon away” mean what I think it means?)=

“The Wheel and the Maypole” – XTC (“I’ve got the plow if you’ve got the furrow/I’ve got the rabbit if you’ve his burrow home”? Doesn’t take Fellini to figure that one out.)

“Memphisto” – John Prine (not exclusively about sex, but it any song that includes the lyric “they humped each other like they had no shame” merits consideration.)

“Hotter than Mojave in my Heart” – Iris Dement
“I Need a Lover” – John Cougar


14. Song about Drugs
“Sam Stone” – John Prine

Let me ask you something: once you know what this song is about, how many words into do you get before you find yourself emotionally obliterated? I’m pretty much done by the time he gets to “home” in the opening line. Would also have made a good song about war, I think. (“Good” as in “apt”; not as in “Yay, war.”)

Alternates:
“The Wildwood Flower” – Jim Stafford (“I didn’t know what happened, but I knew it beat the hell outta sniffin’ burlap”)
“Out of Habit” – BR-549


15. Song about Rock ‘n’ Roll
“Play That Funky Music White Boy” – Wild Cherry

A lifelong favorite that turned out to be just the right funkalicious palate cleanser to follow “Sam Stone.” The guitar solo in this one is no slouch, either. (Say, does anyone know where I can score a sweet bell-bottom unitard like the keyboard player is rockin' here? Also, is it just me or is that a young Bill Lumberg on rhythm guitar at about 3:45?)

Alternates:
“American Band” – Grand Funk


16. Why so sad? Song about the blues, a broken heart, crying, etc.

“The Salt in my Tears” – Martin Briley

A longtime favorite, going all the way back to the TBS / poor man’s version of MTV (Night tracks? Super tracks?) show. Not surprisingly, it also has a pretty kick-ass guitar solo. I especially like how he refuses to give the heartbreaking tramp the satisfaction. You go, Marty.

Alternates:
[redacted]

17. Bonus/hidden track
“Maybe Everything” – The Silos

A bonus track on the CD version of “Cuba,” an album I bought when dinosaurs walked the earth and vinyl was still an option.

Alternates:
[redacted]
18. Perchance to Dream: song about dreams/dreaming
“Dark Angel” – Blue Rodeo

Another band I’ve been trying to get onto a mix. My wife (my very own dark angel--awww) and I saw these guys play at the Tractor Tavern in Ballard, the Seattle neighborhood name-checked by Mike’s #3 Song. How’s that for synchronicity?

Alternates:
[redacted]

19. Famous title—song with the same title as a famous book or movie.
“Husbands and Wives” – Roger Miller

I’m going to assume it’s supposed to be a coincidentally common title; that the song has nothing to do with the movie or book. For some reason I felt it was important to choose a song that was the artistic equivalent of the movie or book, but a million miles from it in terms of genre and style. Renaissance Man cred, I reckon. Look at me and my world-class eclecticism: I appreciate Woody Allen and Roger Miller.

Alternates:
[redacted]


20. Amnesty song—as with past mixes, this is for any song that you wanted to use in this or a previous mix but couldn’t find room for.

“Hotter than Mojave in my Heart” – Iris Dement

I’ve decided that a song has to be at least a two-fer to be granted amnesty. I may repeal that by the next mix. This one could have worked as number 6 or 13.

Alternates:
[redacted]

21. Bonus Amnesty song
“(Let’s Do It) Let’s Fall In Love” – Ella Fitzgerald

Maybe the sexiest use of parentheses evah.

22. Bonus Encore Two-fer Video:

The Mavericks doing a kick-ass cover of a song that was a hit the year Raul Malo was born.

6 comments:

The Honourable Husband said...

Superb musical taste.

Funny you should choose a Was Not Was sng about sex. They're among the few musical groups who do great work that's not about sex.

Eleven Miles an Hour
Elvis' Rolls Royce
Shadow and Jimmy
I blew up the United States


And everyone's fave:

I'm in Jail!

Snag said...

Anybody who doesn't like Iris Dement; well, there just aren't words for that sort of perfidy.

Anonymous said...

Still wading thru your mix, but some comments off the cuff...

#5, #21 - Maybe it's unconventional, but her voice sounds fine to me.

#7 - Any of the four listed would have been good choices.

#8 - No Itsy Bitsy Spider? Damn. But I tip my cap to you for Neko Case.

#10 and 11 - These are new to me, and definitely good choices.

#15 - My favorite cut from a childhood favorite K-Tel album.

#17 - A great choice. Worth wrangling triceratops for.

Bet said...

Finally! The Track Listing!

I loved your mix, once again. And as for Iris, my overriding question is, with a voice like that, why wasn't she a major country star? My only answer is that she was born too late. In the 50s, she would have been HUGE.

I've been paying lots of attention to the year of birth songs, and I have to admit that when the opening strains of "It's Not Unusual" started up, I grinned like a possum. (a real one, not George Jones.)

Ditto with "Play that Funky Music."

And I'd never heard "Same Stone." Woweee. I thought it was Steve Earle at first.

Fun, fun, fun, and yes, it's the same Steve Goodman, he of "Lincoln Park Pirates," "Chicken Cordon Bleus," "The 21st Century is Almost Over," "Videotape," a million others, and "You Never Even Called Me By My Name."

Mr. Middlebrow said...

HB8: "Say hi to mom...from JAIL!"
I'd have to add "Spy in the House of Love" to the list of great, non-libidinous WNW songs. And "Earth to Doris" to the candidates for this mix. Maybe it's time I branched out from "What Up, Dog."

Snag:
I think you've just described pretty much the entire "American Idol" audience. Pearls before swine, I tell you what.

Patrick:
I'm going to lobby for a kids music category on the next mix, just so I can bust out some, well, it'll be a surprise.

Upon reflection, I think just about any Neko song would have satisfied the criterion for #2. I clearly have a thing for interesting female vocalists. Thanks for your great mix.

Bet:
See my comment to Snag, above. I think audiences get the artists they deserve. Mainstream country, especially.

I'd worry about anyone who didn't grin like a possum at Tom Jones. Having seen him live, I can attest that he is...wait for it...the consummate showman.

I'm sure Steve Earle would be flattered by the mistake. I have to confess that I first heard the song on "Souvenirs," a John Prine greatest hits CD of sorts--where he actually re-recorded a bunch of his old songs. Sam Stone is apparently from his very first album back in, like, '71. Supposedly he's never topped it.

Adorable Girlfriend said...

Play that funky music?

I love you!!!

And OMG. Say hi to mom?!!

Have my babies!!!