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Untitled 1972 -- Truth Be Told

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Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Music Mercredi: Rolling Stone's Greatest 11-20

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With the help of our good friends at Megaupload (coded language), I got my hands on both The Sun Sessions by Elvis Presley and Born to Run, Bruce Springsteen’s breakthrough third record. Rolling Stone ranks them as two of the Top 20 greatest albums of all time, and I’d never heard either before in my life (though I’d, of course, heard of them). Before I cast judgment: numbers 11-20 of Rolling Stone magazine’s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time include

  1. The Sun Sessions, Elvis Presley
  2. Kind of Blue, Miles Davis
  3. Velvet Underground and Nico, The Velvet Underground
  4. Abbey Road, The Beatles
  5. Are You Experienced?, The Jimi Hendrix Experience
  6. Blood on the Tracks, Bob Dylan
  7. Nevermind, Nirvana
  8. Born to Run, Bruce Springsteen
  9. Astral Weeks, Van Morrison
  10. Thriller, Michael Jackson
I think this batch of discs has even more bang for your buck than RS‘s Top 10. Quincy Jones has said he plays Miles Davis’s Kind of Blue “every day; it’s my orange juice,” and if you held a gun to my head, I’d have to pick it as my absolute favorite album of all time. (Fellow critic Greg Tate’s favorite is Bitches Brew, which says a lot.) The first album—yes, vinyl—I ever paid for out of my own money was Davis’s My Funny Valentine, and I spent teenage high school daze riding buses through the Bronx with Get Up with It and Jack Johnson on my Walkman. But discovering Kind of Blue in college… I could whistle almost every solo on the album from memory, let’s leave it at that.

Thriller could easily have won this week, naturally. I might tie Abbey Road with MJ, and Velvet Underground and Nico brings up the rear like Amber Rose. There’s nothing like The Beatles’ three-part harmonizing on “Sun King” and “Because.” And “I Want You (She’s So Heavy)” drones on into the sunset something lovely approaching its eighth minute. For MJ, there’s nothing I can say about Thriller that I haven’t said before here. And though I admit to actually hearing Vanessa Paradis’s Lenny Kravitz-produced “I’m Waiting for the Man” before the Velvet Underground original, Maureen Tucker’s pounding drums are immeasurably hypnotic. “Femme Fatale” can’t be beat either, and “Heroin” is a favorite. “Sunday Morning”… the album deserves its spot. So does Nevermind, a record I loved from nearly the beginning (after I got over MTV ramming the “Smells Like Teen Spirit” video down my throat in 1992).

On the other hand. I’m by no means an Elvis hater, not anymore anyway, but I couldn’t get behind The Sun Sessions at all. One day I’ll read a book or see a doc on its vast historical significance, but for now, meh. Blood on the Tracks almost lost this week, but “Meet Me in the Morning” (a Dylan blues) is one of the greatest songs I’ve ever heard in my life. Born to Run almost lost this week, but at least it had the title track going for it, and “She’s the One” was actually a nice surprise. If I was a white blue-collar muggle in the 70s, I guess The Boss would’ve spoken to me. And I don’t have the heart to give the thumbs down to Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks; it definitely doesn’t belong in the Top 20, but the moody album evokes a nice vibe, and the jazzy players play.

And yes: Jimi’s “Third Stone from the Sun,” off Are You Experienced?, stands as my favorite Hendrix song of all time. (“And you’ll never hear surf music again…”)

Comments

Michael A. Gonzales at 4:53 AM on 04/19/10:

My Uncle Carl, the man that sort schooled me on jazz, loves Kind of Blue. But, like big daddy Greg, I prefer the electric joints. If I had to pick one, I’d say On the Corner.

MML at 1:54 AM on 04/23/10:

you know i love electric miles, mike. i’d say my favorite electric miles is probably ‘In a Silent Way.’

The Man From Kazakhstan at 3:56 PM on 05/14/10:

Ok, my comments are overdue, so first this and then 21-30.

After 20 records so far, what we get from this list is that:

- Electronic / Techno has no place in rock.

- Rap / Southern soul: Not relevant.

- Country / Folk: Never trust the original product.

- Best female singer in rock: Nico

- Ray Charles: The only explanation for his absence that I can come up is that somewhere there is a bootleg of his country recordings pre-Swingtime pre-Atlantic pre-everything where he makes jokes in the line of Blazing Saddles “Tell me, schatze, is it twue what they say about the way you people are… gifted” and a conservative radio jock is ready to publish it if Ray got any significant recognition in this list.

The Sun Sessions, Elvis Presley: Well, I had the same feeling that you had when I finally bought it (in a collection sponsored by Winston – “el auténtico sabor americano”, no less). I went there thinking it was going to be wilder than “Jailhouse Rock”, “Heartbreak Hotel”… and well, it was slower, tamer… Were these really the roots of a revolution? Was really Johnny Burnette & The Rock’n’Roll Trio what I was really looking for? And yet, little by little… well, what got me really got me. “Good Rocking Tonight” and “Mystery Train” were the ones that taught me how “roots” Elvis was but how much “the future is here” was embodied by him (that is encapsulated by “Milkcow Blues Boogie”, false start included). The echo, Scotty Moore’s guitar… without that, we would have never been talking about this music. My suggestion is to listen to it not as an album but what it really is: A succession of singles with additional contemporary material. So, I enjoy the music, but for me it is not an album. Try From Elvis In Memphis instead.

Kind Of Blue, Miles Davis: I have jazz albums that I listen more to (Kenny Burrell’s Midnight Blue, for starters… And John Coltrane’s Blue Trane), but definitively this is it. “So What” is definitive. And yes, I have noticed that the three albums mentioned have “Blue” in the title, two were published by the “Blue Note” label, and I have blue eyes… Shoot your best shot at me.

To cut a long story short, I agree with The Velvet Underground, Jimi Hendrix Experience and Nirvana. The Velvet pointed at the future, Jimi created something new from the past (and iconic: nobody dares to call anybody “the new Hendrix” anymore) and Nirvana might be dismissed as something that could only happen when it did, and that they were guilty of using the same production tricks as AOR… but, like Joy Division, they inhabit a “universal” world of their own.

[Surf Note: Dick Dale – king of the surf guitar – claims that the line “Then you’ll never hear surf music again.” was Hendrix’s way of encouraging Dick Dale while he was undergoing treatment for colon cancer. Any context you can provide, MMarshallL?]

As for Bob Dylan’s Blood On The Tracks, well, not top-20 material. If any, Subterranean Homesick Blues would be my choice here.

Abbey Road, The Beatles: At this point, if we need a British album here, it should be Never Mind The Bollocks by the Sex Pistols.

Thriller, Michael Jackson: It is a big / important album… but I want to declare that Off The Wall is better. “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough” is unstoppable. “Working Day And Night” is the best fusion of light percussion / Jimmy Nolan’s funk scratch guitar / contemporary horns à la Kool & The Gang / Brothers Johnson bass… And here is the clincher for you, MML: No Paul McCartney duet.

Born To Run, Bruce Springsteen: The River and Darkness On The Edge Of Town are better. “Born To Run” is a good epic, conjuring dreams and drama, and both “She’s The One” and “10th Avenue Freeze-Out” are fine, but that’s it. In any case, Bruce is not top-20.

Astral Weeks, Van Morrison: The most overrated piece of vinyl ever. 10 seconds of “Gloria” cut 100 listenings of that to shreds. Any further discussion with you on this will require a desolate place, early in the morning, and your choice of weapons.

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