Cotton Mather/Oasis
Oh--You Mean Those Beatles
Cotton Mather: Kontiki (Deluxe Edition) (Star Apple Kingdom)
Pieced together in 1997 from impulsively conceived, doggedly recorded scraps of DAT and four-track by Austin mastermind Robert Harrison and a Memphis tape wizard who loved how Big Star the band was, Cotton Mather's second album caught the attention of some British Beatles fanatics d/b/a Oasis, who brought them over to open and even generated some U.K. sales. While allowing his vocal resemblance to "John Lennon with a Southern accent and a head cold," Harrison's extensive notes don't cite the Beatles much even though "My Before and After" resembles "Ticket to Ride" more than its supposed inspiration "(Reach Out) I'll Be There" and "Private Ruth" echoes "For No One" straight up. Harrison is no more a genius than Noel Gallagher, so though the lyrics aren't spaced-out gibberish or obvious pap, they're unequal to the music‑-which definitely beats, for instance, the last three songs on the first Big Star album, and even more remarkable, kind of makes you appreciate Oasis. (N.B.: I'm recommending the Deluxe because it's new and much cheaper, not because I expect ever to listen to its alternates and new ones for anything except the research I presume is now complete.) B PLUS
Oasis: Stop the Clocks (Sony BMG '06)
One of the many things I never got about this band was where the Beatles were. Where was the ebullience, the wit, the harmonies, God just the singing, and, uh, the songwriting? Cotton Mather made me understand that when Oasis say they love the Beatles they really mean they love the post-Help!, pre-Sgt. Pepper Beatles. Since that span encompasses Rubber Soul and Revolver, many would say tally ho, but (a) not me 'cause I love the Beatles start to finish and (b) only if you're writing songs as good as, uh, "We Can Work It Out." Instead Oasis, meaning loudmouth bro Noel Gallagher, write songs that resemble "We Can Work It Out" in thickened texture and momentum but not depth or charm, then add arena size in the swagger of the drums and the bigged-up vocals themselves. This band-selected best-of‑-two discs lasting 87 minutes, like an old-fashioned double-LP except it's only 18 tracks‑-capture their sonic moment as fully as any freelance music historian needs. A 2010 package repeats 11 of these songs and adds 16 others‑-too many, I say. Also, it omits the opening "Rock 'n' Roll Star." If ever there were guys whose message to the world is summed up by an opener called "Rock 'n' Roll Star," it's these bigheads. B PLUS
- The Velvet Underground: 'Candy Says'
- Arto Lindsay: 'Simply Beautiful'
- The Beatles: 'Here Comes the Sun'
- Al Green: 'Jesus Is Waiting'
- The Kinks: 'Waterloo Sunset'
- Sly & the Family Stone: 'Hot Fun in the Summertime'
- Derek & the Dominos: 'Thorn Tree in the Garden'
- Latin Playboys: 'Forever Night Shade Mary'
- Moby: 'Porcelain'
- Bob Dylan: 'Like a Rolling Stone'
- Michael Jackson: 'Human Nature'
- Fleetwood Mac: 'Second Hand News'
- Justin Timberlake '(Oh No) What You Got?'
- Kanye West: 'Gorgeous'
- Nicki Minaj: 'Blazin''
- Li'l' Wayne: 'Mrs. Officer'
- Frank Ocean: 'Novacane'
- LL Cool J: 'Around the Way Girl'
- Kings of Leon: 'Sex Is On Fire'
- Aretha Franklin: 'You and Me'
- Michael Jackson: 'The Girl Is Mine'
- Wussy: 'Don't Leave Right Now (Acoustic)'
- Paul Simon: 'Peace Like a River'
- Derek & the Dominos: 'I Am Yours'
- The Magnetic Fields: 'I Don't Believe in the Sun'
- The Rolling Stones: 'Sweet Virginia'
- Fleetwood Mac: 'You Make Loving Fun'
- Latin Playboys: 'If'
- Steely Dan: 'Any Major Dude Will Tell You'
- Rod Stewart: 'Every Picture Tells a Story'
- Kanye West: 'Late'
- John Lennon: 'Imagine'
- Drive-By Truckers: 'Outfit'
- The Indestructible Beat of Soweto: 'Indoda Yejazi Elimnyama'
Spotify playlist: http://goo.gl/aocFa (Warning: The Beatles song is weird! The Lindsay is, also, missing!)
Nick, do you mean pretty songs in general, or ones designed, to be played to a significant other (while having sex at a picnic)? I'm gonna go with just beautiful songs in general, if you don't mind!
Yuck, what am I doing here? Outing myself as a britcrit?
"supernal" Rave Mix
For all of you new-jacks who are getting loose with "neu-rave" on your iPizzy. Check out this "OG rave" mix circa 1992 from one of NYC's hardest working DJs - DJ DB. You might have heard of DB from his famed US DnB store Breakbeat Science or from his recent DnB mix CDs. But that is just a small slice of DBs prowess. He has been in the game since WAAAAAY back in the day. And this mixset is a great example of DB's sound back in the NASA days. Unlike most Old School mixes this is not just a collection of 140+ bpm CDs cut mixed together. Witness the sounds behind rave and the birth of drumandbass.
Speaking of which, After Murder Park is on my list of best records never reviewed by the Dean.
Nobody discusses Black Box Recorder without bringing in the Auteurs, and I wouldn't think of it. But after weeks of pondering why I'd A-listed New Wave, reaccessing the follow-up I once liked less, suffering through the bad Steve Albini product I'd missed
Yeah about the only thing that gets me all fist shakey at "you kids today" is the ease with which y'all can now acquire fu(ktons of media. Do you whippersnappers KNOW how long it took me to find that dang Payoff Mix? (3 years) Fortunately, by the time I heard about Big Star, that one-disc reissue of the first two records was already out.
But the feeling lasts about two nanoseconds when I remember all the nifty music Cam and Rod and the interwebs have brought us. And the fact that I no longer have anything burning on my want lists (movie or music).
Except...not exactly burning but what about DJ DB's Rave Mix, which Xgau mentioned in his original review of Journeys By DJ: Billy Nasty Mix? He said it was "soon to be commercially available in rather different form" which I assume became The History of Our World Part One: Breakbeat & Jungle Ultramix by DJ DB. Since the latter is the finest full-length from the heyday of electronica (and since Xgau Neithered it), I have doubts about this "supernal" Rave Mix. But I'd still like to hear History in rather different form. Anyone? (Watch. Cam has ten copies.) :)
if you wanted to make a mix tape for your significant other that could help produce and then accompany sweet sunshine picnic sex, what would you fill it up with (lol)?
I left out Wonderwall..I've never liked that song although I once knew a girl who tried to convince me that it was about the Weeping Wall of Jerusalem...
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Starting in 1967, Robert Christgau has covered popular music for The Village Voice, Esquire, Blender, Playboy, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. He teaches in New York University's Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music, maintains a comprehensive website at robertchristgau.com, and has published five books based on his journalism. He has written for MSN Music since 2006.
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