SOUNDTRACK: RHEOSTATICS-Whale Music (1992).
The Rheostatics are from Etobicoke Canada. Their second album was called Melville (named after a town in Saskatchewan, but it has a whale on the cover so…). Their third album (this one) is called Whale Music (inspired by the novel by Paul Quarrington). When they made a film of Whale Music, the Rheostatics were asked to make the soundtrack for it, which they released as Whale Music. So, the band have 2 albums called Whale Music and one called Melville. Perfect soundtrack to Moby-Dick.
The album is chock full of all kinds of music: country tracks, folky tracks, metal tracks, and hooks galore. And it’s all wrapped up in the oddity that is the Rheostatics. This album features guest spots by the Barenaked Ladies and Neil Peart as well as horns, strings, spoken word parts, and “power tools”.
“Self Serve Gas Station” is a great opening. It begins with swirling guitars and a beautiful solo (Rheostatics guitar lines sound so elemental as to seem like they’ve always been around). But just as the vocals begin, the song becomes a sort of country track: a folkie song about adolescnece. But it returns to a good rocking (and falsetto fueled) rock track.
“California Dreamline” is a wonderfully weird track, with more gorgeous guitar melodies. It also has a disjointed section with squealing guitars. While “Rain, Rain, Rain” opens with a lengthy percussion section (played by Neil Peart of Rush) with a weird time signature. It’s a fun singalong. “Queer” meanwhile has some great chugga guitars that turn into a rocking tale of an ostracized brother (and features the great line: “But I wish you were there to see it/When I scored a hat-trick on the team/That called you a fucking queer.”
“King of the Past” is another great track, with a wondrous string sound near the end. It’s a gorgeous song with (again) different sections conveying shanties and jigs (and you can dance to it). Like Moby from last week, Rheostatics, also bust out a fast metal track, but this one works well: “RDA (Rock Death America)” has a major hook and name checks everyone from The Beatles to The Replacements.
“Legal Age Life at Variety Store” is a great folky singalong (and features the piercing harmonies of Martin Tielli). “What’s Going On Around Here?” is the most traditional song of the bunch, a poppy little ditty which avoids complacency with a rocking coda.
“Shaved Head” is a moody piece, wonderful for its roller coaster sensibilities, which is followed by the beautiful Tim Vesely sung ballad “Palomar.” This track is followed by the humorous (but serious) shouted-word piece “Guns” which also features Neil Peart.
“Sickening Song” is an accordion based shanty song. Followed by another pretty, poppy-sounding track, “Soul Glue.” Drummer Dave Clark sings “Beerbash,” an upbeat song. And tye final track is the epic, “Dope Fiends and Boozehounds.” It opens with a beautiful acoustic intro and a wonderfully catchy wheedling guitar solo. It ends delightfully: “Where the dope fiends laugh And say it’s too soon, They all go home and listen to
The Dark Side of the Moon.”
I had been listening to the band live a lot recently, and they play these songs a lot. So it was quite a treat to go back and hear the original with all its full instrumentation.
[READ: Week of June 14, 2010] Moby-Dick [Chapters 62-86]
I never thought I’d ever say this, but I really enjoyed Moby-Dick this week. So far, these twentysome chapters have been my favorite (even the gruesome whale sections), there weren’t any chapters that I thought really dragged. So, good for me!
This week’s read begins with Ishmael stating that harpooners should not have to paddle and then be expected to harpoon as well. They should save their strength for that last, all important act. And that seems logical to me, although one also expects that the harpooners would feel kind of bad while everyone else is paddling. (more…)

SOUNDTRACK: MOBY-Everything is Wrong (1995).
I suppose that everyone knows that Moby (the musician) is Herman Melville’s great- great- great- grandnephew. And that’s why he has the middle name Melville and had the nickname Moby.
SOUNDTRACK: MOBY GRAPE-Moby Grape (1967).
Moby Grape is one of those bands that I’ve always heard of but had never heard. I know, their debut is 43 years old and yet I’d never heard it. Well, thanks to the internet (lala.com, RIP as of today), I was able to listen to what I assumed was their Greatest Hits. If only I had done a modicum of research. The disc I chose was Legendary Grape, which it turns out is not a greatest hits at all, but is actually some weird pesudo-Moby Grape record released in 1989 under a different band name due to legal protractions, but then reissued as Moby Grape. It was rather uninspired and nothing at all what I thought it would sound like. Nothing dreadful, just nothing worth thinking that this band “legendary.”
So, with a little research, I learned that their first album is what I should have been checking out. Moby Grape is the eponymous release and it sounds much more like what I assumed this psychedelic era-band would sound like. This disc is pretty much in keeping with what a band that produced an album cover like this would sound like.
SOUNDTRACK: LED ZEPPELIN-The Song Remains the Same (1978).
I don’t normally try to have my soundtracks correspond to the book. But since Andrew
SOUNDTRACK: THE FLAMING LIPS & STARDEATH AND WHITE DWARFS featuring HENRY ROLLINS and PEACHES doing The Dark Side of the Moon (2010).
You’ve got to have balls to cover the most popular album of all time. Everyone knows Dark Side of the Moon, according to Billboard charts everyone probably owns a copy of Dark Side of the Moon. So, you’re taking on a pretty big task here. But the Flaming Lips aren’t called The Fearless Freaks for nothing.
SOUNDTRACK: FUGAZI-Steady Diet of Nothing (1991).
Jangly noisy guitars open the track (and then a lengthy silence after a minute or so). And this loud/soft dynamic is pretty dramatic on this disc.
SOUNDTRACK: BEN FOLDS-University A Capella (2009).
The story goes that Ben Folds heard some a capella bands and decided to give them some airtime. So he had them record a bunch of his songs.