SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Fire of Unknown Origin (1981).
This was the first BOC album that I bought. The video for “Burnin’ for You” was all over MTV (although I don’t remember it at all, now). And I was an instant convert to BOC. I listened to this disc constantly.
It took going to college and meeting my roommate before I got any other BOC discs (he was a diehard fan). And while I like most of their releases, this one still ranks as number one for me. BOC had been getting poppier and lighter over the years, there’s no question. But this album perfected this mix, making for a supremely catchy recording that still exhibited all of their metal trademarks: wild guitar solos, bizarro futuristic lyrics (although there’s no weirdo titles on this one) and heavy heavy chords.
The opener, “Fire of Unknown Origin” is a wonderful rocking song. It sets the tone for the disc: keyboards, yes, but of the atmospheric/spooky variety, not the poppy/hit single variety. “Burnin’ for You” seems like an obvious single, and so it was. It also screams early 80s to me, which I guess isn’t necessarily a bad thing.
But the album’s wonderful weirdness kicks in with “Veteran of the psychic Wars” written by Michael Moorcock. It was featured in the movie Heavy Metal, and is weird and creepy, propelled by thunderous drums and a great guitar riff: a sci-fi masterpiece. “Sole Survivor” is in the same vein, Eric Blooms ragged voice and the awesome bass line really sell the song.
The middle track is “Heavy Metal (Black and Silver)” It is heavy heavy heavy and it rocks like all get out with a screaming feedback solo. It’s an awesome song that seems more than a little out of place on this rather light sounding disc (although even on their later discs, they have included an occasional heavy track).
“Vengeance (The Pact)” is a keyboard-fueled track. But the greatness is that it’s Lanier’s spooky keyboards. It also features an awesome middle section with heavy heavy guitars and dark lyrics. “After Dark” is another wonderfully creepy keyboard song. The underlying riff is sinister and cool, and the lyrics (and harmonies) meld the “band vocals” on some of their more “hit single” songs, with the oddness that keeps BOC interesting.
But by far the creepiest, most sinister and flat out weird song is “Joan Crawford.” When I first heard this song back in 1982, I had no idea who Joan Crawford was. Finding out later that she was a real person has messed with my head for my entire life. I have never seen a film with her in it and am just convinced that she’s a scary, scary woman (the whispered “Christina…mother’s home” really did me in). Interestingly, I don’t find the song spooky (although I do get chills if I’m paying attention), but I still find her spooky. It opens with a pseudo-classical piano riff and then bursts out with menacing metal chords. The chorus “Joan Crawford has risen from the grave!” complete with squeaky violins proceeds until and the break with sound effects that imply Crawford’s life, I assume: car crashes, race tracks, telephones, babies crying and the whispered “No.” And it’s all catchy as hell.
“Don’t Turn You Back” ends the disc as something of a mellowing out after Joan Crawford. It features a great solo and rather soothing choruses (despite the warning that you shouldn’t turn your back). And it features the ever confusing line: “You use that special option in your car” (what could that BE?).
Why on earth hasn’t this disc gotten a deluxe reissue from Columbia>?
[READ: March 3, 2010] Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
I received this book as a prepub Advanced Readers Copy and hoped to have it finished before the book actually came out, but I was shy of it by a couple of days (rats).
So Grahame-Smith wrote Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. His was pretty much the first in what has become an ever increasing series of literary mash-ups: using “classic” texts as a basis and inserting a seemingly random (usually horror) element. The genre is already close to jumping the shark, although realistically, you never know when a combination is going to work wonders.
I wasn’t really that interested in the follow up to P&P&Z: Sense & Sensibility & Sea Monsters. When I first heard of it I was intrigued, but watching the promotional video for the book actually turned me off of it. I’m intrigued that a new title: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls is written by a different author, but I have to assume that it will be all original as there’s no prequel to P&P itself. And I have to admit I like the title of the upcoming Jane Slayre (for Jane Eyre).
But the things about P&P&Z were that it kept the original text (mostly) intact, and there were a number of things in the original that actually led to inserting zombies into the text.
Plus, Grahame-Smith matched the tone of the original perfectly. The forthcoming mashups will have a lot to prove but I think some cream will definitely rise to the top.
So, Grahame-Smith’s new book Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is sort of a mashup. Unlike P&P&Z, there is no source text to blend. Rather, Seth Grahame-Smith, who is a character in the introduction of the book is given the “secret” diary of Abraham Lincoln, under provision that he write up the real story of our 16th president. The secret diary reveals not only that our country was plagued by vampires but that Lincoln himself was personally impacted by them. (more…)

SOUNDTRACK: MARTHA WAINWRIGHT-I Know You’re Married But I’ve Got Feelings Too (2008).
I’ve been a fan of Loudon for years. I also rather enjoy Rufus. So why not check out Rufus’ sister Martha and see how she stacks up in the family canon. Actually, it’s not fair to compare because she is an entity all to herself. And indeed, I feel that she sounds nothing like her family (maybe a weeeeee bit like Rufus, but not really).
SOUNDTRACK: BARENAKED LADIES-Snacktime (2008).
The Barenaked Ladies have always been like naughty kids. So, it seems almost too obvious for them to make a kids’ album. But almost as if they want to continue being naughty, this kids album is quite smart, not just a collection of cute kids songs.
SOUNDTRACK: FEIST-The Reminder (2007).
I came to Feist fairly late in the game. This disc had been out for well over a year before I heard it. And, like with her first disc, I’m really confused by the “indie” label that gets stamped on her.
SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Agents of Fortune (1976).
After the release of their first official live album On Your Feet or On Your Knees, it’s unsurprising that the band would put a concert photo on the back cover of this disc (On Your Feet…was their first Top 40 disc).
SOUNDTRACK: BLUE ÖYSTER CULT-Secret Treaties (1974).
With Secret Treaties, BOC moved into the stratosphere. The first three tracks are outstanding. “Career of Evil,” again cowritten by Patti Smith, sets the tone: heavier, louder, more guitars and yet, no less of Allen Lanier’s piano. “Dominance and Submission” is an absolutely classic heavy metal song (and live, it gets absurdly long).
SOUNDTRACK: CUPPA JOE-Busy Work EP (1993).
This EP was one of the first releases on the Dromedary label. It contains 3 songs. Whenever I think of cuppa joe, I think of them being a somewhat lightweight band; charming and fun, but lightweight.
And I think most of this is due to the lead singer’s voice. It’s quite delicate and veers towards, but never quite reaches whiny territory. Comparisons to They Might Be Giants are not unfounded.
[READ: February 18, 2010] “Vagabonds”
SOUNDTRACK: SAM COOKE-Portrait of a Legend 1951-1964 (2003).
After reviewing Colin Meloy Sings Sam Cooke, I decided to check out Sam Cooke himself, since I said I didn’t know anything about him. Well, it turns out that I was totally wrong about that. I checked out this disc from the library and was rather surprised to realize that I knew at least a dozen songs by Cooke. And not just that he sang songs which I knew–they were his versions that I knew.
SOUNDTRACK:CBC Radio 3
I listened to