Arts and Entertainment

Song of the Day 5/6: Chicago Transit Authority, “I’m a Man”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on May 6, 2019 2 Comments

Chicago Transit Authority, or Chicago as the band became known after the real CTA threatened a lawsuit, is remembered mostly as a soft-rock purveyor of sappy adult-contemporary material, because that’s all the band had left after the death of guitarist Terry Kath in 1978. On their early albums, Kath’s searing guitar gave Chicago a hard-rock […]

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Song of the Day 5/5: Trout Fishing in America, “Pico de Gallo”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on May 5, 2019 2 Comments

I chose this song for today because it mentions Cinco de Mayo, but I was just looking for an excuse. I’ve loved it ever since I heard it on WXPN’s “Kids’ Corner” in the early ’90s — not just for its humor, which I appreciated after listening to years of uninspired kids’ music, but because […]

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Song of the Day 5/4: Pete Seeger, “Turn! Turn! Turn!”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on May 4, 2019 2 Comments

H/t to RE Vanella, who pointed out that yesterday would have been Pete Seeger’s 100th birthday. In addition to playing a key role in the 20th century folk music revival, the Seeger composition that has aged best is his adaptation of a passage in Ecclesiastes set to a simple, plaintive melody. Most of Seeger’s overtly […]

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Song of the Day 5/3: Johnny Winter And, “Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on May 3, 2019 7 Comments

Everybody knows the various Rick Derringer versions of his rock standard, but its first appearance on vinyl (that’s all we had back then, kids) came on “Johnny Winter And,” the original name of which was “Johnny Winter and the McCoys,” the band Derringer (then Rick Zehringer, his birth name) fronted in its “Hang on Sloopy” […]

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Song of the Day 5/2: Buffalo Springfield, “For What It’s Worth/Mr. Soul”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on May 2, 2019 1 Comment

Back in the ’60s it took a long time for the older generation to realize that rock and roll was, as the saying goes, here to stay. As late as 1967, when this “Hollywood Palace” show was recorded, TV was still treating the new music as a passing fad. Those crazy kids with their shaggy […]

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Song of the Day 5/1: The Hold Steady, “Sequestered in Memphis”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on May 1, 2019 1 Comment

In El Somnambulo’s roundup of his favorite tunes from April, he wondered if Craig Finn was the Raymond Carver of songwriters. I’m not sure about that. I might go with John Samson of the Weakerthans for that sobriquet. He’s an actual professor of English Lit and writes the kind of lyrics that come from slightly […]

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‘Bulo’s Fave Tunes: April, 2019

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

Before we dip into this month’s sonic cornucopia, just a reminder that the amazing The Suitcase Junket is coming to the Arden Gild Hall on Friday, May 10. Let me know if you’re coming, and I’ll reserve the tickets in your name.  Or you can buy ’em online. Or buy ’em at Between Books in […]

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Song of the Day 4/30: The Click Five, “Just the Girl”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on April 30, 2019 1 Comment

The Click Five was a power pop band founded in the mid-aughts in Boston, where most of them attended the Berklee School of Music. They scored a hit right out of the box with this tune penned by Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne. Power pop isn’t a cool genre to begin with, but the […]

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Song of the Day 4/29: Wildwood Kin, “Talkin’ Bout a Revolution”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on April 29, 2019 8 Comments

I love covers that expand the original. I love harmonizing girl groups. And I love Tracy Chapman’s “Talkin’ ‘Bout a Revolution” as deconstructed and re-imagined by British indie folk-pop trio Wildwood Kin. They really are kin — sisters Beth and Emillie Key and their cousin Meghann Loney. Most of their material is original, and normally […]

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Song of the Day 4/28: The Wood Brothers, “I Got Loaded”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on April 28, 2019 3 Comments

Another video by the New Orleans outfit that put musicians in the back of mule-drawn carriages in the French Quarter for acoustic sets on wheels. This time it’s the Wood Brothers with the perfect tune for a Sunday morning, or maybe early afternoon, canter down Royal Street. Bassist Chris Wood is the same guy who […]

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Song of the Day 4/27: Hurray for the Riff Raff, “Look Out Mama”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on April 27, 2019 3 Comments

I don’t know what Our Man in New Orleans has on his agenda, but he’d be a fool to pass up a chance to see this homegrown Crescent City band fronted by a Puerto Rican singer and guitarist from the Bronx. Alynda Segarra grew up a punk kid but, as you can hear, New Orleans […]

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Song of the Day 4/26: Van Morrison, “Real Real Gone”

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

This is Van Morrison’s best soul rave-up since “Jackie Wilson Says.” It was originally recorded in 1980 but wasn’t released until Van re-recorded it for 1990’s “Enlightenment.” At this tempo the song is worthy of all those soul greats he quotes in the outro. The slower original version was released on “The Philosopher’s Stone” in […]

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Song of the Day 4/25: Buddy Holly, “Oh, Boy!”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment by on April 25, 2019 6 Comments

I was reading about Ed Sullivan the other day and came across a tidbit I never heard before. I knew the legendary variety show host was known for holding grudges against performers who angered him, including Bo Diddley and the Doors, but I never realized he also feuded with Buddy Holly. When Holly and the […]

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