SOUNDTRACK: THE MOUNTAIN GOATS-Tiny Desk Concert #41 (January 3, 2010).
I have talked about Tiny Desk Concerts off an on (more than 100, if I’m counting right), but I never really made a concerted effort to do them all. So now I’ve decided to make the effort. My plan is to post two old concerts a week and also mention new ones when they pop up. Since there are nearly 450 concerts, this will take ages and ages. But I’ve been really enjoying the bands I like and it’s been fun listening to the bands I didn’t know. And two a week seems reasonable enough.
I know the Mountain Goats, although I don’t know them all that well–I keep meaning to listen to them more. So this is a good place to start. It’s just John Darnielle and his guitar.
These four songs are simple enough and yet they have s much passion and inventiveness. Darnielle is known primarily for his lyrics, but he throws a good melody over his songs too.
He plays two (then) new songs, the quiet “Hebrews 11:40” and the loud “Pslams 40:2.” His voice is instantly recognizable in either song–it more or less just sounds like him singing louder, and yet there’s something slightly different in his rollicking singing voice–a bigger intensity, perhaps.
He also plays two old songs. The slow “Color in Your Cheeks” and the rollicking “Going to Georgia” (which he starts and then interrupts and then starts again).
While his lyrics are serious, his between song banter is charming and funny (“I am permanently a young man, no matter how old I get”). I just saw that the Mountain Goats were on Seth Meyers’s show, I’ll have to check that out too.
Watch the Tiny Desk Concert here.
[READ: April 21, 2015] “Learning to Fly Part 1”
I was going to let my Popular Mechanics subscription lapse. I enjoy it a bit, but don’t really read it all that much. But this issue has some good articles and the start of this four part essay by an author I really like. Who knew that authors wrote for such unlikely places?
I suspect that Popular Mechanics readers probably aren’t used to long form essays, because this first part, called “Takeoff” is only four pages long–this is not a Harper’s essay we’re looking at, here. But the writing is still really good.
Ferris talks about the two things that contributed to his decision to take flying lessons. The first was the death of his father and the second was his absolute fear of flying. (more…)


