Arts and Entertainment

Song of the Day 9/5: Neil Young, “Like a Hurricane”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on September 5, 2019 0 Comments

Yeah, Dorian is just a flimsy excuse to play one of my favorite Neil Young songs. It was written in 1975, recorded for “American Stars and Bars” for release in 1977, and has been part of virtually every Neil Young concert ever since. Not many people have covered the tune, perhaps because it’s such a […]

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Song of the Day 9/4: Zedd and Aloe Blacc, “Candyman”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on September 4, 2019 0 Comments

Gene Wilder died last weekthree years ago last week, which sent me to YouTube for his greatest film clips, which led to “Candy Man” by Sammy Davis Jr., which led me to this modern remake. It gained wide play as an M&Ms commercial, which, given my lack of TV viewing, left it entirely new to […]

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Song of the Day 9/3: Sheer Mag, “Hardly to Blame”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on September 3, 2019 2 Comments

It’s been just about a year since I first featured this Philly band in Song of the Day, and they just released a new album, “A Distant Call,” that tops the Rolling Stone September Quick Hits list of “albums you need to know about now.” This one’s better produced — not slick, but not as […]

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Song of the Day 9/2: Bruce Springsteen, “Joe Hill”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on September 2, 2019 0 Comments
Song of the Day 9/2: Bruce Springsteen, “Joe Hill”

I was watching the PBS series about Reconstruction recently and heard a bunch of historians lament how that part of American history is so little studied and poorly understood. That’s true, but an even bigger piece of American history has nearly been wiped from collective memory — the history of capitalism’s war on the labor […]

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‘Bulo’s Fave Tunes: August, 2019

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on September 2, 2019 0 Comments

A strong final week rescued what otherwise would have been a relatively weak month for new music.  Thanks to that final week, it’s weak no more. Not even close: More proof that Bon Iver is a national treasure: Someone wrote on a blog somewhere, “What appeared to be a comeback record was in fact a […]

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Song of the Day 8/31: The Beach Boys, “All Summer Long”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on August 31, 2019 0 Comments

The title track to the Beach Boys’ 1964 LP was never released as a single in the U.S., so most people didn’t hear it much until George Lucas used it at the end credit music for his breakout hit “American Graffiti, which might be why most people never noticed the anachronism — the film is […]

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Song of the Day 8/30: Iris DeMent, “Wasteland of the Free”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on August 30, 2019 2 Comments

Another song for the “Nothing Has Changed” playlist. Folk/country artist Iris DeMent is probably best known for her song “Our Town” and her duets with John Prine, but back in 1996 she released this protest song on her third album. The song and album both went over poorly with the conservative crowd that listens to […]

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Song of the Day 8/29: R.E.M., “Nightswimming”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on August 29, 2019 1 Comment

This tune, initially recorded during sessions for the band’s breakthrough “Out of Time” album, saw release on the band’s 1992 “Automatic for the People” LP. Most REM songs started with the music, but Michael Stipe wrote these lyrics first and then asked guitarist Peter Buck and bassist Mike Mills if they had anything that would […]

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Song of the Day 8/28: The Rembrandts, “Just the Way It Is, Baby”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on August 28, 2019 0 Comments

The Rembrandts were just two guitarists, Danny Wilde (lead vocals) and Phil Solem (lead guitar), who hit the Top 20 with this catchy kiss-off in 1990. They are, unfortunately, remembered mainly for the theme song to “Friends,” a tune despised by just about every fan of the band and millions of others besides.

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Song of the Day 8/26: Elvis Costello, “Watch Your Step”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on August 26, 2019 1 Comment

“Trust,” released in 1981, is one of Elvis Costello’s under-appreciated efforts, mostly remembered only for “Clubland.” I always liked this track, with its understated air of menace, Costello’s vague but witty wordplay and Steve Nieve’s soulful organ fills. If you have any idea what the lyrics actually refer to, drop a line in the comments. […]

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Song of the Day 8/25: Edwin Hawkins Singers, “Oh Happy Day”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on August 25, 2019 5 Comments

Back in the day, the Top 40 included all sorts of music, even gospel, as evidenced by this song hitting No. 4 in the country in 1969. Edwin Hawkins, director of the Northern California State Youth Choir at Ephesian Church of God in Christ in Berkeley, California, recorded it for an LP intended as a […]

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Song of the Day 8/23: Primitive Radio Gods, “Standing Outside a Broken Phone Booth With Money in My Hand”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on August 23, 2019 0 Comments

Another one-hit wonder from the ’90s, “Phone Booth” traveled a long road to No. 1 on the modern rock chart in 1996. It started several years earlier, when songwriter Chris O’Connor was fronting a band called the I-Rails in southern California. They recorded four albums to little attention and O’Connor was recording material for a […]

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Song of the Day 8/22: Fastball, “The Way”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on August 22, 2019 1 Comment

Fastball is a band out of Austin, Texas, that formed in 1995 and scored a massive modern-rock hit in 1998 with this rockabilly-flavored tale of a road trip with no destination. Technically they’re not a one-hit wonder — a couple of other songs from the same LP reached the charts, and they were nominated for […]

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