Arts and Entertainment

Song of the Day 7/18: MGMT/Earth, Wind & Fire, “Kids/September”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on July 18, 2020 1 Comment

I’m rather unforgiving about mash-ups. I think most of them try too hard at melding disparate songs whether they really blend well or not, because the editing tools people use allow for that. They only work for me when the beats align perfectly, and they do on this one. It’s rather crude — the music […]

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Song of the Day 7/17: Hildegard von Blingin’, “Pumped Up Kicks”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on July 17, 2020 5 Comments

I probably spend too much time on YouTube, which is how I stumbled across music’s hottest new trend: Bardcore, in which modern songs are played on flutes, drums and various medieval stringed instruments. It started in April, when someone going by the name Cornelius Link made a version of a tune called “Astronomia” with medieval […]

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Song of the Day 7/16: Hüsker Dü, “Makes No Sense At All”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, National by on July 16, 2020 1 Comment

Our man-baby president punked the media yesterday by calling a news conference and instead vomiting forth a rally speech that was incomprehensible even for him. Hence this Bob Mould song, the first and only single from “Flip Your Wig,” the 1985 LP Mould considers the band’s best. He still sings this one today. The B-side […]

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Song of the Day 7/15: Sheila E. and Ringo Starr, “Come Together/Revolution”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on July 15, 2020 0 Comments

I just caught up with last week’s online concert to celebrate Ringo Starr’s 80th birthday. Not only does the show, viewable in full on YouTube, contain lots of great tunes, it’s a testament to the progress being made in production values for this new Covid Concert format. The entire show is worth the hour of […]

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Song of the Day 7/14: Paul Henreid and the cast of “Casablanca,” “La Marseillaise”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, National by on July 14, 2020 5 Comments

It’s not just a great national anthem, it’s a great Nazi-fighting anthem. And Paul Henreid, forever to be known as “Casablanca” Nazi-fighter Victor Laszlo, was the right man to sing it — the Austrian was so ardently anti-Nazi he was declared an official enemy of the Third Reich. Born in Trieste and trained in Vienna, […]

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Song of the Day 7/13: Willie Watson, “Dancing on My Own”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, National by on July 13, 2020 0 Comments

Willie Watson, a founding member of Old Crow Medicine Show who went solo in 2011, has always concentrated on old-time music, so it’s not so surprising that his new-ish single, released three months ago, is a cover. What’s surprising is who he covered: Swedish disco chanteuse Robyn. “Dancing on My Own” was a top 10 […]

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Song of the Day 7/11: Garnet Mimms & the Enchanters, “Cry Baby”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, National by on July 11, 2020 0 Comments

Diaper Donny is still blubbering like a toddler over his own fuck-ups, so here’s another number for his whine-athon. Janis Joplin’s 1970 cover is the version most Boomers are familiar with, but Garnet Mimms had a No. 4 hit with the original in 1963. His backup singers on the song aren’t actually the Enchanters — […]

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Song of the Day 7/10: The Beatles, “Cry Baby Cry”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, National by on July 10, 2020 0 Comments

This one’s for President Whiny Little Bitch. What’s wrong with the brains of people who listen to this crybaby and hear strength? John Lennon had the chorus to this one months before he finished it in India, and he wasn’t happy with the final result, describing it years later as “a piece of rubbish.” That’s […]

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Song of the Day 7/9: Randy Rainbow, “Poor Deplorable Troll”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on July 9, 2020 0 Comments

I noticed that a lot of Randy’s recent parodies have used Disney tunes, and then I remembered that half of Broadway’s musicals these days originated as the mouse house’s animated feature films. For those who didn’t watch those movies over and over when their kids were young, this one uses “Poor Unfortunate Souls” from “The […]

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Song of the Day 7/8: Styx, “Come Sail Away”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on July 8, 2020 0 Comments

This one’s for Allan Loudell, who loved to tell the story of Styx playing at his high school prom in the early ’70s, back when the band was a popular Chicago-based regional act. The members had been together a decade at that point, but didn’t achieve wider popularity until the mid-70s. Between then and 1983, […]

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Song of the Day 7/6: Cast of “Hamilton” featuring Phillipa Soo, with Jimmy Fallon and the Roots, “Helpless”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on July 6, 2020 10 Comments

I don’t know what the weekend was like for the rest of you shut-ins — was it just my neighborhood, or did it sound like the civil war had broken out on the night of July 4? — but at my house we celebrated the Founding Father without a father by watching the filmed version […]

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Song of the Day 7/4: Madisen Hallberg and Emmanuel Henreid, “The Star-Spangled Banner”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on July 4, 2020 3 Comments

I’m no fan of “The Star-Spangled Banner” — IMHO the national anthem should be “America the Beautiful” as sung by Ray Charles — but this rendition is special. Madisen Hallberg, a graduate student at Portland State University, was recording the song for an online graduation ceremony, when passing professional singer Emmanuel Henreid heard her and […]

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Song of the Day 7/2: Randy Newman, “Jolly Coppers on Parade”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, National by on July 2, 2020 1 Comment

Critics were lukewarm toward Randy Newman’s “Little Criminals” LP when it came out in 1977, but thanks to the surprise success of his controversial hit “Short People,” it became his best-selling album. This song, its title taken from a Swedish mystery novel, got little notice then or since, probably because most people didn’t and don’t […]

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