Arts and Entertainment
Song of the Day 4/13: Eric Clapton, “Let It Rain”
Fort Lauderdale got two feet of rain in about 6 hours yesterday, so I think this should be the city’s new tourism song/slogan. Eric Clapton included this now-classic track on his first solo album in 1970. When released as a single until two years later, to promote his compilation LP “Eric Clapton at this Best,” […]
Song of the Day 4/12: Manic Street Preachers, “If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next”
Guest post by Nathan Arizona In times like these, you’d think there’d be more protest songs with lyrics about shooting fascists. You’d expect more songs with titles like “If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next,” though probably not as long. What we need is a band like the Manic Street Preachers, who stood […]
Song of the Day 4/11: Bob Dylan, “When I Paint My Masterpiece”
This song ran through my head after a visit to the Vermeer exhibition at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. The Dutch master was only 43 when he died in 1675 in Delft, and outside of official records very little is known of his life. He remained admired but obscure until the mid-18th century. He was popularized […]
Song of the Day 4/10: The Turtles, “Outside Chance”
Donald Trump has always skated beyond the law’s reach, and this has always been his motto: You don’t stand an outside chance, but you can try. They seem to be trying harder than ever. Stone walls surround me I’m surprised that you even found me Whatever you do girl You know that you can’t get […]
Song of the Day 4/9: The Swan Silvertones, “Oh Mary Don’t You Weep”
The Swan Silvertones were one of the seminal gospel groups of the 1940s and ’50s. “Oh Mary Don’t You Weep” dates from antebellum times, when slaves sang spirituals with coded messages of hope for freedom. Claude Jeter’s ad-lib, “I’ll be your bridge over deep water if you trust in my name,” inspired Paul Simon’s “Bridge […]
Song of the Day 4/7: Nathalie Merchant, “Tower of Babel”
With apologies to El Somnambulo, who’s in charge of new music here, Natalie Merchant is releasing a new album, “Keep Your Courage,” next week, her first in nine years. The normally publicity-shy singer even sat for an interview with the New Yorker to mark the occasion. This song, a comment on the state of the […]
Song of the Day 4/6: The Buckinghams, “Don’t You Care”
No crowd of supporters appeared in New York for Donald Trump’s arraignment. Television networks cut away from his whiny speech afterwards before he finished. People were leaving his Waco rally after half an hour. If he had a trace of self-awareness he’d be asking the question the Buckinghams set to music in 1967, when it […]
Song of the Day 4/5: Matthew Sweet, “Girlfriend”
Human-Shar Pei hybrid Rupert Murdoch, age 92, got engaged on St. Patrick’s Day to the woman who would have been his fifth wife. The timing didn’t bring him the luck of the Irish. This week the news broke that the wedding is off. He’s back on the market, gals! You could be his next girlfriend! […]
Song of the Day 4/4: Randy Rainbow, “Grumpy Trumpy Felon From Jamaica in Queens”
There was no way Trump was going to get indicted without Randy Rainbow having something to sing about it.
Song of the Day 4/3: Graham Parker, “You’ve Got to Be Kidding”
Graham Parker wrote a lot of songs with dismissive phrases for titles, which is what happens when you’re a misanthrope. For some reason, I think of all of them as directed at Marjorie Taylor Greene, who was normalized last night in a “60 Minutes” interview with Leslie Stahl. This one appeared on Parker’s debut LP, […]
Song of the Day 4/1: Led Zeppelin, “Fool in the Rain”
It’s April Fool’s Day, it’s raining — call me Mr. Literal, but it’s a good excuse to play one of my favorite Zep tunes. This one supposedly originated because John Paul Jones and Robert Plant heard so much samba music when they were watching the 1978 World Cup in Argentina. Plant and John Bonham turn […]
Song of the Day 3/31: Dewey Cox, “Guilty as Charged”
I’d like to see Donald Trump do this song when he appears in court. It’s one of the 33 tunes used in the 2007 movie “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story,” with John C. Reilly in the lead role. The film, a parody of the musician biopics that were so popular in the ’00s, didn’t […]
‘Bulo’s Fave Tunes: March 2023
A great month of musical discovery, best this year so far: Didn’t know how to alphabetize artists whose first digits are #’s. So, I just started with this one: Newsflash: The Beths. Still good: A roots stalwart working out the lower keys on the piano. He should’a been bigger: Discovering bands like this is why […]
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