Wednesday, June 10, 2020

ThisSmallPlanet.com Corona Apocalypse Indie Music Playlist 5: Cool Stuff To Read and Listen To in Isolation (feat Lead Belly, Kurt Cobain, and Mark Lanegan)


                                                    "Blasphemer-in-Chief" by Jim Carrey


ThisSmallPlanet.com Corona Apocalypse Playlist 5 - 

Cool Stuff To Watch and Listen To in Isolation (June 2020):

Lead Belly, Kurt Cobain, Mark Lanegan, Renny Conti, Brendan Benson, John Fogerty, Anna Tivel, The Who, The Raconteurs, Paul Weller, Madeline Kenney, Weyes Blood, PJ Harvey, Brinsley Schwarz, Sharon Van Etten, LL Cool J, Bob Mould, Stone Rebel, Deerhoof, Juan Wauters, Norah Jones, Muzz, Woods, Bright Eyes, Keith Reif, Phil Ochs, Jim Carrey, Waxahatchee, Steve Earle, The 1975, Two Door Cinema Club, Run The Jewels, Josh Homme, Mavis Staples, The Coral, Machinegum, Manfred Mann, Tim Burgess, Badly Drawn Boy, Coriky, Jeff Rosenstock, Michael Bloomfield, George Orwell.





                      Jim Carrey Portrays Donald & Boris as The Twins from "The Shining"



ALBUMS


Renny Conti Figurines, Or: Streams of Thought from an Interminable Period of Identity Moratorium

Anna Tivel The Question (Live And Alone)

Brendan Benson Dear Life 


The Raconteurs Live At Electric Lady

Paul Weller On Sunset. Another recent 
release: In Another Room

Madeline Kenney Sucker's Lunch


Weyes Blood Titanic Rising. Natalie Mering performs as Weyes Blood. 


Stone Rebel Hole In The Sun


Deerhoof Future Teenage Cave Artists


Juan Wauters Mas Canciones de La Onda


Norah Jones Pick Me Up Off The Floor


Muzz Muzz


Woods Strange To Explain

  
Steve Earle Ghosts Of West Virginia

Two Door Cinema Club Lost Songs (Found).
John Lennon's "Isolation"

Run The Jewels RTJ4 "Pull The Pin" feat Josh Homme (Queens Of The Stone Age) & the legendary Mavis Staples


The Coral Lockdown Sessions


Machinegum Conduit


Tim Burgess I Love The New Sky


Badly Drawn Boy Banana Skin Shoes


Jeff Rosenstock No Dream


Highly Anticipated New Albums Coming Out Soon (June 19): Bob Dylan, Phoebe Bridgers







SINGLES


PJ Harvey "Steela-Na-Gig" (Demos for Dry and her other early albums will be released in the coming months)

Brinsley Schwarz & Sharon Van Etten Two versions of "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, And Understanding?". The first, the original feat Nick Lowe who wrote the song made famous by Elvis Costello. The second a new, slow version, a fresh take by Sharon, feat Josh Homme of Queens of The Stone Age.


Waxahatchee & Whitney "Take Me Home (Country Roads)", cover of the John Denver classic


Bright Eyes "One And Done". New album on the way from Conor Oberst & crew.


Coriky "Clean Kill'/"Too Many Husbands". New album/tour delayed by Corona, but coming soon. Ian MacKaye of (Minor Threat, Fugazi, The Evens) sings and guitars. Joe Lally (Fugazi) plays bass and sings, while Amy Farina (The Evens) sings and drums. MacKaye and Farina, besides being bandmates, are also married (to each other).


LL Cool J does a timely free style dedicated to George Floyd and addressing police violence and racial profiling:




The best single in the world right now: Bob Mould's "American Crisis":



Can't get this song out of my head: "People" by The 1975...





ARCHIVAL

Manfred Mann Down The Road A Piece - The Recordings 1963 - 1966


Keith Reif (The Yardbirds/Renaissance singer solo) All the Falling Angels: Solo Recordings & Collaborations 1965-1976


Phil Ochs The Best Of The Rest: Rare And Unreleased Recordings


John Fogerty Fogerty's Factory. Actually new takes on classics from Creedence Clearwater Revival feat Fogerty, who wrote the songs, playing with his children during Corona Isolation.


The Who Loud Vibration Land (Bootleg, Live Amsterdam Broadcast 1968), along with 1968's Live At The Fillmore East (33-minute "My Generation" encore!) really make you appreciate how powerful a band The Who had become by '68/'69, a band firing on all cylinders. 


 



BOOKS

George Orwell 1984. When was the last time you read it? Read it again. It all came true. #post-truth




David Dann Guitar King: Michael Bloomfield's Life In The Blues. Michael Bloomfield was one of the best guitarist of all time. He went electric with Bob Dylan at Newport and played guitar on Dylan's "Like A Rolling Stone". This is the biography he has always deserved.




Mark Lanegan Sing Backwards and Weep : A Memoir. 

The book has a companion album of songs, Straight Songs Of Sorrow.

Mark Lanegan, lead singer of Seattle's Screaming Trees, is someone I originally knew best from two movie soundtracks: "I Nearly Lost You" by The Screaming Trees from the Singles soundtrack, and "Man In The Long Black Coat" from the Bob Dylan film I'm Not There.

For the past few years, I've been listening to his solo releases and enjoying them very much. I wanted to read his memoir and I would highly recommend it, especially if you're interested in the Seattle music scene in the 90s and 2000's.


We learn that Mark has a lot of cool friends - Nirvana's Kurt Cobain, Josh Homme from Queens of The Stone Age, and Layne Staley of Alice In Chains... but we also learn that Mark and a lot of his friends are severe addicts - and many of them die before the end of the book.


The book, as I was reading it, took over my psyche for a bit. I couldn't help but think of addicts in my life, some of whom have passed, like my friend Clayton and my cousin Zach, and whose passing deeply affected those left behind.


                                                          Clayton Gross (1991 - 2018)

I've often thought that if only someone had been able to sit with Kurt on THAT NIGHT, and talk to him calmly, and help him see things in a different light, that he likely would have survived, at least for another day. As it turns out, Kurt called Mark three times on the day he died, looking to hang out but Lanegan didn't pick up, as he had drugs and money and didn't need to go score for Kurt. Lanegan also thought Courtney Love would be there (she wasn't - Kurt had escaped from rehab in California and was in Seattle alone). Lanegan was annoyed by Courtney's flirtations as well as the constant dysfunctional bickering between Kurt and Courtney. (Yet she paid for Lanegan to go to rehab years later.)








One of the most interesting aspects of the friendship between Kurt and Lanegan is their shared interest in old time music, especially the blues; specifically Lead Belly (1888 - 1949), the Black blues master who did hard prison time before moving to New York to record and perform.

Lead Belly songs such as "Goodnight Irene" (covered by Pete Seeger's Weavers), "Midnight Special" (Creedence), "Matchbox" (Carl Perkins), and "House Of The Rising Sun" (Dave Van Ronk, Bob Dylan, The Animals) were well-known to folk and rock fans in the 1950s and 60s, but more modern audiences might be forgiven for knowing Lead Belly almost exclusively through Nirvana's Kurt Cobain.

During the taping of Nirvana's MTV Unplugged in New York (1994), Kurt famously joked about wanting to ask David Geffen to buy him Lead Belly's guitar before singing Lead Belly's (who he called his "favorite performer") "Where Did You Sleep Last Night?", a song that Kurt hauntingly howled. It became the finale of the concert as well as the finale of both Nirvana and Kurt himself. Less than 5 months after recording "Where Did You Sleep Last Night?" for MTV Unplugged, Kurt was dead from suicide.



Early in their friendship, Kurt and Lanegan talked about working on some Lead Belly tunes for a new band The Jury. Nirvana's label Sub Pop enthusiastically encouraged the project, quickly booking studio time in August of 1989.




The project never really gelled (sadly), but Lanegan's version of "Where Did You Sleep Last Night?" landed up on his first solo album The Winding Sheet (1990) with Lanegan on vocals and Kurt on guitar. 




The other Lead Belly songs they recorded, "They Hung Him On A Cross", "Grey Goose", and "Ain't It A Shame",  didn't show up until the Nirvana boxset With The Lights Out in 2004.




In his memoir, Lanegan says Kurt asked him to sing "Where Did You Sleep Last Night?" with him at the MTV Unplugged gig, but that Lanegan declined. Kurt asked Lanegan if he could use the same arrangement Lanegan had used in 1989. We can only wonder what kind of performance a duet would have yielded, and what that would have meant for Lanegan's career.

Kurt's interest in Lead Belly and "unplugged" acoustic music also painted a roadmap for a post-punk, post-Nirvana solo career for Kurt. Toward the end of his life, Kurt often said he felt trapped by the demands of the band, the record company, the "stir-maker machinery". He spoke with R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe and others about leaving the band and persuing a solo career playing acoustic music. Again, we can only wonder... 





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ThisSmallPlanet.com Corona Apocalypse Playlist 4: Cool Stuff To Watch and Listen To in Isolation


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