
SOUNDTRACK: DR. DOG-Tiny Desk Concert #7 (October 20, 2008).

I have been hearing a lot about Dr. Dog lately (they are from Philly and the radio station we listen to is from Philly, so that makes sense). But I had assumed they were a new band. So imagine my surprise to see that they were the 7th Tiny Desk Concert and the first full band to play the Tiny Desk. (Their first album came out in 2005!).
It’s fun to watch a five piece band squeeze into the Tiny Desk (the drummer is playing a small pink suitcase) and the fifth member of the band is playing some various percussions (I wonder if he does more in the band). It’s also funny when one of the guitars breaks a string and the singer says “son of a bitch.”
Dr. Dog proves to be quite interesting. Their first song is “The Beach.” It’s a rocking awesome track–the guitar is great and bassist Toby Leaman’s move is raspy and powerful. I really like this song a lot. The second song is quite different, it’s a bouncy boppy song that sounds a bit like a more rocking Grateful Dead (that bass). This song has a different singer–Scott McMicken, who plays lead guitar on “The Beach,” but acoustic guitar here. (The other guitarist, Frank McElroy played acoustic on The Beach and electric on this one).
After a lengthy discussion they play the third song (in a different version from the record) “How Dare.” This song opens with their great harmonies (a wonderful feature of the band). It also has a jam band quality (Toby’s back on vocals but less raspy and powerful, and more bluesy)/on this track.
The band seemed to think they were only to play two songs, and frankly it’s a shame they only play 3. At 12 minutes it one of the shorter Tiny Desk concerts. But I am a convert to Dr. Dog, and I need to hear more from them.
[READ: November 10, 2013] “Reunion”
After listening to Richard Ford in yesterday’s podcast, I decided I wanted to read his take on the Cheever story “Reunion.” And while I can definitely see that it was inspired by a kernel of an idea in Cheever’s story, I probably never would have put the two together had I not known.
Ford’s story opens the same way as Cheever’s with someone waiting in Grand Central Station. It turns out that the person is Mack Bolger. Bolger is waiting intently for someone. We quickly learn that the narrator who spies Bolger had had an affair with Bolger’s wife, Beth about a year and a half prior to this meeting. It ended abruptly when Mack confronted them in their hotel room (in St. Louis). Mack (who is a large man) boxed the narrator’s ears a bit and sent him running from the room in varying stages of dress (and without a precious scarf which his mother had given him).
He had not seen Mack again, although he did see Beth on one final instance–a sort of final closure. They met in a bar and tied up loose ends, and that was that.
So when the narrator sees Mack he gets this sudden urge to speak to him:
just as you might speak to anyone you casually knew and had unexpectedly but not unhappily encountered. And not to impart anything, or to set in motion any particular action (to clarify history, for instance, or make amends), but just to speak and create an event where before there was none. (more…)










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.
