July 30, 2020 by Paul Debraski

SOUNDTRACK: A moment of silence (July 30, 2020).
[READ: July 30, 2020] “Together, You Can Redeem the Soul of Our Nation”
Congressman John Lewis is one of the most important civil rights leaders of the 20th and 21st century. His graphic novels March are required reading.
Lewis died on July 17. He had the presence of mind to write this essay shortly before his death and asked The New York Times to publish it on the day of his funeral.
I am presenting it here in full because it is so full of hope, so full of love and so meaningful, that everyone should read it.
~~~~
While my time here has now come to an end, I want you to know that in the last days and hours of my life you inspired me. You filled me with hope about the next chapter of the great American story when you used your power to make a difference in our society. Millions of people motivated simply by human compassion laid down the burdens of division. Around the country and the world you set aside race, class, age, language and nationality to demand respect for human dignity.
That is why I had to visit Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington, though I was admitted to the hospital the following day. I just had to see and feel it for myself that, after many years of silent witness, the truth is still marching on.
Emmett Till was my George Floyd. He was my Rayshard Brooks, Sandra Bland and Breonna Taylor. He was 14 when he was killed, and I was only 15 years old at the time. I will never ever forget the moment when it became so clear that he could easily have been me. In those days, fear constrained us like an imaginary prison, and troubling thoughts of potential brutality committed for no understandable reason were the bars.
Though I was surrounded by two loving parents, plenty of brothers, sisters and cousins, their love could not protect me from the unholy oppression waiting just outside that family circle. Unchecked, unrestrained violence and government-sanctioned terror had the power to turn a simple stroll to the store for some Skittles or an innocent morning jog down a lonesome country road into a nightmare. If we are to survive as one unified nation, we must discover what so readily takes root in our hearts that could rob Mother Emanuel Church in South Carolina of her brightest and best, shoot unwitting concertgoers in Las Vegas and choke to death the hopes and dreams of a gifted violinist like Elijah McClain.
Like so many young people today, I was searching for a way out, or some might say a way in, and then I heard the voice of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on an old radio. He was talking about the philosophy and discipline of nonviolence. He said we are all complicit when we tolerate injustice. He said it is not enough to say it will get better by and by. He said each of us has a moral obligation to stand up, speak up and speak out. When you see something that is not right, you must say something. You must do something. Democracy is not a state. It is an act, and each generation must do its part to help build what we called the Beloved Community, a nation and world society at peace with itself.
Ordinary people with extraordinary vision can redeem the soul of America by getting in what I call good trouble, necessary trouble. Voting and participating in the democratic process are key. The vote is the most powerful nonviolent change agent you have in a democratic society. You must use it because it is not guaranteed. You can lose it.
You must also study and learn the lessons of history because humanity has been involved in this soul-wrenching, existential struggle for a very long time. People on every continent have stood in your shoes, through decades and centuries before you. The truth does not change, and that is why the answers worked out long ago can help you find solutions to the challenges of our time. Continue to build union between movements stretching across the globe because we must put away our willingness to profit from the exploitation of others.
Though I may not be here with you, I urge you to answer the highest calling of your heart and stand up for what you truly believe. In my life I have done all I can to demonstrate that the way of peace, the way of love and nonviolence is the more excellent way. Now it is your turn to let freedom ring.
When historians pick up their pens to write the story of the 21st century, let them say that it was your generation who laid down the heavy burdens of hate at last and that peace finally triumphed over violence, aggression and war. So I say to you, walk with the wind, brothers and sisters, and let the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide.
Posted in Black Lives Matter, History, John Lewis, Martin Luther King, Racism, The Future, Violence | Leave a Comment »
July 29, 2020 by Paul Debraski
SOUNDTRACK: RunHideFight-The Key Studio Sessions (August 23, 2018).
I listened to the single from RunHideFight and then found this live-in-studio session from 2018. This session is about 20 minutes long with 9 wonderful garage rocking songs.
Lead singer Geeta Dalal Simons is the driving force behind this band. She writes the songs and she plays a double neck 12 string guitar/12 string sitar.
Geeta Dalal Simons singer for RunHideFight grew up in West Virginia. She says, “As a first gen, Indian American woman; I was busting up all kinds of cultural/gender norms by not finishing a pre-med track, having a green Mohawk and tattoos, playing in punk bands at skate parks, openly dating before marriage. I was so angry and I desperately wanted to be heard and seen by a world which resisted that.”
Music was her outlet, continuing through her move to Philadelphia and her immersion in its indie community during the 90s and early 00s, when she played with Khyber regulars Swisher, Los Angeles, and Rockula. She stepped back from the scene for about a decade when she had children, but returned last year with a vengeance to form RunHideFight, a project born out of Simons’ heartache at her mother’s passing, her frustration at Donald Trump’s election, and the generally frayed-nerve state of the world.
“He’s A Jerk” sounds even better live than it does on record. “Big Muff Pie” has a great slow bass line from Christine Weiser (who has a terrific bass sound all through this recording). “Because I Love You” sounds even more raw than the recorded version. “Get Lost” keeps the original songs rocking in this garagey sound.
The “Send Me a Postcard” cover (original by Shocking Blue) has a weird (funny?) intro from John Terlesky. It’s a catchy cover and has a nice moment for drummer Jon Kois to get a (very) little solo.
“Eat My Heart Out” has another cool moment for Kois when the toms almost overpower the song.
Geeta introduces “What Are You Talking” over a fantastic bass intro from Weiser. It’s simple, but it sounds great. She says, “I’m gonna sing you a little song about what it was like growing up in West Virginia, looking like me.”
Simons’ family is of Desi heritage, and she grew up in a region that is — to put it bluntly — kind of blindingly white. And not the most tolerant, either. The racism she experienced as a young person was once again out in the open, and on the aforementioned “What Are You Talking?,” Simons directly confronts her own experience — culminating in a howling recollection of a classmate bullying her over her brown skin, saying “hey girl, how are you ever gonna wash all that dirt off your hands?” In the song’s cathartic conclusion, the taunt is screamed to a hammering rhythm: “that’s not mud / it’s just you.”
It’s a fantastic song.
“Mom of the Year” has an abrupt ending which segues into the final song, a cover of The Saints’ “Lost and Found.” which even gives Terlesky a chance to sing. And at four minutes it’s the longest song of the set.
The most recent update on the band that I can find is from June of last year. Perhaps they’re on a long hiatus. I’d definitely see them live if t hey played out again.
[READ: July 1, 2020] Cinderella Liberator
Rebecca Solnit rewrites the Cinderella story in this fantastic book for children and adults.
I love the introduction of the stepmother. She made Cinderella do all the work because
even though there was plenty for everyone, and plentty of people to do the work, her stepmother believed there was not enough for everyone. And she wants the most for her own two daughters.
On the plus side, because Cinderella has to do everything, including the shopping, she grew strong and capable and she became friendly with everyone in the marketplace.
Then comes news that the king’s son–Prince Nevermind–is holding a ball (“which is what they called dance parties in those days”). The sisters get all dolled up for the ball but Cinderella was not invited (“there is nothing worse than not being invited”). When she finished helping them, she said I wish someone would help me. And there was a knock at the door and a little blue woman was standing there. Continue Reading »
Posted in Arthur Rackham, Children's Books, Children's Fable, Feminism, Kara Walker, Los Angeles, Rebecca Solnit, Rockula, RunHideFight, Sexism, Shocking Blue, Swisher, The Key Studio Sessions, The Saints, WXPN 88.5 FM--Philadelphia, PA | Leave a Comment »
July 28, 2020 by Paul Debraski
SOUNDTRACK: RunHideFight-“He’s a Jerk”/”Because I Love You” (2018).
RunHideFight is (was?) a Philly band which features author Christine Weiser on bass. This is their only available single and I love that the cover features lead singer Geeta Dalal Simons holding her double neck 12-string guitar (which is in fact a custom 12 electric neck / 12 electric sitar neck).
“He’s a Jerk” is a two minute blast of garage rock fun. The song has lots of fuzz and a simple riff that sounds like “All Day and All of the Night” but isn’t. Lead singer Geeta Dalal Simons has a great rough, unpolished scream of a voice. And the chorus is really catchy. There’s even time for a guitar solo from John Terlesky.
“Because I Love You” slows things down with a nifty sitar line. I really like the start-stop nature of the main riff. The intertwining backing vocals really flesh this song out. It clocks in at 2 and a half minutes, but really fits in a lot of different musical moments.
This seems to be the band’s only release and it was from two years ago, so maybe they are no longer. Which is a shame, these two songs are pretty great and although I listened because if Weiser, I want to hear more from Geeta Dalal Simons.
[READ: July 25, 2020] Broad Street
I saw Christine Weiser play bass in Suffacox a few months ago. When she was introduced, it was mentioned that she was a writer. I found this book, her first novel, and decided to check it out.
Weiser has been in a number of bands. One in particular was Mae Pang (if you don’t know the origins of that name, do look it up–I had no idea). Mae Pang was an all-girl garage rock band based in Philly. As far as I can tell, they didn’t release any music.
However, Weiser has mined her experiences with Mae Pang for the basis of this book. She has chosen the far superior band name of Broad Street for the book.
Kit Greene is a proofreader for a medical publishing house. It’s the kind of job where an errant decimal point can be deadly (literally–it could effect the dosage of medicine). It’s high stress and her boss doesn’t make it any easier. Continue Reading »
Posted in Books about music, Christine Weiser, Drinking, Drugs, Dudes, Fears, Feminism, Geeta Dalal Simons, Kurt Cobain, Mae Pang, Philadelphia, PA, RunHideFight, Sex, Sexism, Suffacox (Mach 2), Yuck! | Leave a Comment »
July 27, 2020 by Paul Debraski
SOUNDTRACK: NILÜFER YANYA-Tiny Desk (Home) Concert #54 (July 22, 2020).
Nilüfer Yanya is a pretty mesmerizing singer. I feel lucky to have seen her live and would like to see her again.
In the meantime, this Tiny Desk (Home) Concert will have to do.
There’s something unique about the way Yanya constructs songs. And her singing voice is really unlike anyone else’s that I’ve heard.
For this Tiny Desk (Home) Concert, she plays four songs. Three from her 2019 album and one new one. All four are different from when she played Tiny Desk last year.
In her previous Tiny Desk Concert and when I saw her live, she had a full band. But for this one, it’s just her guitar and her voice.
For “Heat Rises,” she plays spare guitar lines and quiet chords as she sings in her unique style. As the song moves along she adds high notes to the chords–fleshing things out in a subtle but effective way.
After performing “Heat Rises,” Nilüfer Yanya pauses to say a few things about herself, something we’ve been asking artists to do for these Tiny Desk (home) concerts.
“One of the things that’s been on my mind a lot is the racism and violence and injustice going on towards Black people and people of color, not only in America but here in the U.K. and all over the world. As a person of mixed heritage” — Nilüfer’s father is Turkish and her mother is of Irish and Barbadian descent — “this issue is something close to my heart.” Nilüfer urges us all to see the hurt being done. It’s the only way forward.
She then plays “Paralyzed,” a song that she says relates to the issue. She’s never played it live before. The song has a cool four note chord progression followed by a sinister feeling five note riff.
Bob Boilen writes: “I hear these words so differently now:”
I hear strained screams from Heaven singin’
“save me”
This can’t be okay
Shadow’s lyin’ here
And it’s blocking out the light
(I am paralyzed)
The above part of the song turns musically bright as she sings those dark lyrics.
“Day 7” is the new song. She sings in a similar style to the one she uses on “Baby Luv” where she sings with an accent or inflection that is impossible to place but is very compelling. This song also features a simple but unusual riff as she builds the song using all of the neck of her guitar (the chords she plays during the “go go” section are so interesting).
She ends the set with the final track from her album, “Heavyweight Champion of the Year.” This is the only song from this set that she played when I saw her. I was blown away by the song when I saw her live because the song mixed quiet and range perfectly. It’s more subtle here and demands that you listen closely to the words.
[READ: July 20, 2020] “Nobody’s Business”
I’ve wanted to read more from Jhumpa Lahiri for years–she’s yet another writer who I feel like I need more stories from. And I really liked this story a lot.
The story is written in the third person. It’s about a woman named Sang. She is living in Boston, having just dropped out of a graduate program from Harvard. Sang has two roommates, Paul and Heather.
What was so interesting about the way that it was written is that it seems to be Sang’s story. She is, after all, the person with all the action. But by the end of the story it becomes more about Paul. I thought that shift of perspective was quite engaging.
Sang is Bengali and every so often she would receive a call from a Bengali man who was courting her. These men had heard that she was pretty and smart and unmarried at thirty, so they were trying to arrange something with her. Sang was never rude to these men. She even met some of them. But Sang was very serious about her boyfriend, Farouk, who was presently in Cairo. That’s not a ruse, she is really dating him. Continue Reading »
Posted in Arranged Marriage, Coronavirus, Jhumpa Lahiri, John Hancock, New Yorker, Nilüfer Yanya, Quarantine, Racism, Romance, Short Story, Tiny Desk (Home) Concerts, Tiny Desk Concert, Violence | Leave a Comment »
July 26, 2020 by Paul Debraski
SOUNDTRACK: TOM ADAMS-Tiny Desk (Home) Concert #53 (July 21, 2020).
I had heard of Tom Adams from Bob Boilen, but I guess I hadn’t actually heard him before. This performance is otherworldly. It reminds me in some ways of Sigur Rós, although only in the ethereal moments.
Tom’s 2017 album Silence features Tom singing and playing minimal piano. But here
what we have is Tom Adams at his home in Cornwall, England, playing four brand-new songs with minimal electric guitar and an enthralling mix of tech-altered sounds.
For the basis of this performance Adams is playing a subdued and lovely electric guitar (finger-picked). He sings some fairly simple folk melodies, but it’s when he starts “oohing” and crooning high notes that things transcend the familiar. Because even though his singing voice is fairly deep, he has an amazing falsetto. And it’ s that falsetto that he manipulates in fascinating way.
That box with all the wires in the foreground is a Eurorack modular synthesizer which, in real time, processes his majestic voice in ways unpredictable even to Tom. He wrote to tell me that, “Once the system is set in motion, you never know exactly what will happen next… I like to think of it as being a bit like the waves on the beach; to some extent, they are all predictable, yet each wave is still unique.”
“The Turning Of The Year” is a delightful folk ballad with delightful lyrics
What a day / What a day / to share with these good friends
We sing the songs we always sing until / we’ve sung them all
and through the evening our voices ring / in the rafters of the hall.
But when the Eurorack takes over, that simple trip with friends feels very different.
“A Flower Disappearing” is a slower song with a deeper guitar sound. It’s easy to forget about his falsetto and the electronics until he throws them briefly in after the verses.
I wondered though if all of the songs would be manipulated–would his regular voice hav a chance to shine? It does on “If My Love Was A Guitar.” He sings some delightful ooohing without any electronics. His songs and vocal style reminds of Nick Drake, and this song in particular fits that bill (except for the falsetto, of course).
If my love was a guitar / it wouldn’t matter where you are
you could just take me in your arms / and hear the music in my heart
…playing gently
And if I was a melody / then you could take me when you leave
and anytime you felt a need / you could just sing along with me
…in perfect harmony
His amusing reaction at being out of tune is a nice moment of levity in this otherwise mellow performance. “Postcards From The Road” features an entire section in beautiful unaltered falsetto.
all the friends you still miss / you kept in touch but cast adrift / you walked away but now you’re looking back
all the stories left behind / but when you read the final lines / turn a page and start to write something new
because all the choices that you make / these are not regrets to take / with you they’re just postcards from the road.
I love the cool effects that the Eurorack provides, but it’s great to hear him sing without it as well–his voice is really great.
[READ: July 24, 2020] “The Ethicist”
This is a Shouts and Murmurs piece that is a series of questions. Typically I think this style works better than trying o stretch out a joke to a full page.
So in this one, people are writing in to The Ethicist with their problems. The Ethicist is a real column in The New York Times Magazine and people write in with serious ethical issues. Some people really like reading this column. It was started in 1999 by a humorist, Randy Cohen, who did take the ethical questions seriously. he stepped down in 2011 and others have run the column in his stead.
So this piece was written after the column had been around for two years or so.
Martin is his delightfully absurd self with his questions: Continue Reading »
Posted in Coronavirus, Food, Funny (ha ha), New Yorker, Quarantine, Sex, Sexism, Sigur Rós, Steve Martin, The New York Times Magazine, Tiny Desk (Home) Concerts, Tiny Desk Concert, Tom Adams, Unfunny | Leave a Comment »
July 25, 2020 by Paul Debraski
SOUNDTRACK: LENNY KRAVITZ-Tiny Desk (Home) Concert #52 (July 20, 2020).
Few people are as cool as Lenny Kravitz. Look at how amazing this room in the Bahamas looks. Listen to how good his voice sounds (both when he’s singing and when he’s speaking). When he speaks between songs he sounds otherworldly.
This Brooklyn-raised bohemian rock icon brings us to his home and tropical paradise in Eleuthera in the Bahamas for this visually alluring Tiny Desk (home) concert.
The set begins with the wonderful “Thinking Of You.” The guitar sound(s) of this song are just amazing. Between Craig Ross’s acoustic echoing notes and Lenny’s strums the room fills with warm echoing guitars. Midway through the song Bahamian native Yianni Giannakopoulos plays a chill lead guitar with expressive wah wah. I hadn’t heard this song before, and it’s really terrific.
After wrapping an evocative rendition of “Thinking of You,” a touching song he penned in 1998 about his late mother, Lenny Kravitz imparts what’s really weighing on him during this historic time. “In the midst of all that’s transpiring on our planet right now,” he says, “it’s a blessed time for introspection, more importantly action. … What side of history are you standing on?”
For “What Did I Do With My Life?”, Lenny and Craig step outside (under palm trees) to play this questioning ballad. Ross gets a really good electric guitar sound out of his acoustic guitar. Over the course of the song as Lenny asks the title question, it grows more intense with him searching for an answer.
And it’s only fitting that he ended with “We Can Get It All Together,” a message about the power of unity and oneness.
For this final song, all three players are back, this time in front of an expansive (stormy?) sky. Once again Craig’s acoustic guitar sounds huge. And this time Yianni’s electric guitar has a Middle Eastern twang to it.
I often forget how much I like Lenny’s music. This was a great reminder.
[READ: July 20, 2020] How to be an Antiracist
This book has been on the top of everyone’s recommended lists for being proactive about understanding systemic racism.
There’s a lot of reasons people might have for not reading this book. I’m not talking about people who are racist and simply would never read a book like this, but about decent people who think they are doing their part. Maybe they’re afraid of being preached at or of being told they’re doing things wrong. Or maybe they feel that they can’t handle a book that seems especially intense.
I had some of these concerns myself before reading this book. But I can say that if you have those fears or concerns about reading this book, put them aside and jump in.
Ibram X. Kendi is not writing this to make you feel bad about yourself. He is not here to tell you that you are bad and should be ashamed of yourself.
He is writing to tell his story–his realization that racism is a cancer that is eating away at the country and that we can all work together to change things.
He is also writing to talk about antiracism. Antiracism is a fairly simple idea, but it is very hard to achieve. Indeed, his first point is to undo accepted ideas of racism. Continue Reading »
Posted in Activism, Antiracism, Bahamas, Cancer as plot device, Coronavirus, Gomes de Zurara, Ibram X. Kendi, Lenny Kravitz, LGBTQ, Marriage (Happy), NPR/PRI/PBS, Quarantine, Queer, Racism, Set at School, Sexism, Tiny Desk (Home) Concerts, Tiny Desk Concert, Universities, Violence | Leave a Comment »
July 24, 2020 by Paul Debraski
[POSTPONED: July 24, 2020] Kim Gordon
Kim Gordon was a founding member of Sonic Youth (duh). I never got to see Sonic Youth while they were together (how could I have missed them??).
I recently saw Thurston Moore solo and it was fantastic. Kim Gordon’s solo output is a bit more esoteric, but I’d love to be able to see her live at least once.
I was really looking forward to this show. But then on May 6, Kim Gordon announced
I hope she can come back around when things are better.

Posted in Coronavirus, Kim Gordon, Philadelphia, PA, Postponed, Quarantine, Sonic Youth, Union Transfer | Leave a Comment »
July 24, 2020 by Paul Debraski
SOUNDTRACK: DIANA GORDON-Tiny Desk (Home) Concert #51 (July 15, 2020).
I was immediately attracted to this Tiny Desk (Home) Concert because I (still) have the exact same neon green iBook. I don’t know how old Gordon is, but I have to wonder if it’s original.
I don’t know anything about Diana Gordon. That’s probably logical since although she’s been in the music world for a while, it was mostly a s songwriter and under a different name.
After years of writing hits for others and releasing music under the moniker Wynter Gordon, the Queens, N.Y., native has awakened new aspects of her artistry in recent years that she’s finally ready to share under her given name.
So if she wrote hits, her music must be poppy, right? Not exactly
But while her earlier work routed through the pop and dance worlds, Wasted Youth balances influences of Whitney Houston, Alanis Morissette and The Cranberries’ Dolores O’Riordan.
I actually hear a lot of Natalie Merchant in her quieter singing–especially with the gorgeous acoustic guitar of her masked-up guitarist, Davin Givhan.
Like the workplace props that flank her, [folders, boxes and a Curb Your Enthusiasm mug and check out that phone!] Gordon’s latest EP, 2020’s Wasted Youth, feels so fitting for these unprecedented times.
Starting with “Rollin,” you can hear “Gordon’s nihilistic invincibility” in a song that name checks Nirvana. It starts with a great deep guitar riff (it even sounds bad ass on the acoustic guitar). She adds a raspy vocal intro before singing with a cool (dis)affected 90’s alt rock vocal style. I really dig it (the record version has a more thumping bass sound making it more danceable but also more distorted).
When the song is over she demonstrates a yodeling sound that underpins her singing in “Rollin.”
“Wolverine” is a quiet ballad that showcases her “forlorn lilting yodel.” It’s a more traditional song with her Natalie Merchant-esque delivery. This is a pretty song from one of her earlier EPs.
The blurb describes “Wasted Youth” as “a sonic eyeroll-shrug,” but I feel it’s more of an intense song of pain. Although not to be prudish but I wish there wasn’t quite so much cursing in it. I mean every instance if the phrase “wasted youth” (several times per chorus) is preceded by “fuckin.” It would be effective once, but just gets worn out for an entire song. It’s a really good song otherwise.
“Once A Friend” is another ballad. This one features her “tear-jerking honesty.” The record version sounds much the same–acoustic guitar, straightforward vocals and a gut punch of a lyric–all in less than two minutes.
I’m definitely going to have to listen to her some more.
[READ: July 20, 2020] “The American Persuasion”
This was a New Yorker Shouts & Murmurs. These pieces are usually one page, but this one was three. It’s also labelled “Part 1: The Scent of Liberty.” I can’t decide if that means there are actually more parts or if that is part of the joke (there’s no part two in a future issue).
The premise of this piece is amusing, it is even more amusing reading it after Hamilton has come out because it also deals with the founding fathers in an unusual way.
The piece starts with George Washington trying to impress the Marquis–the man who would “be known as the noble Lafayette.” Washington is a dandy, admiring himself in the mirror with fragrance dabbed behind his ears. He “understood the power of his beauty, and he was not above using it now.” Lafayette finds him hard to resist.
Washington was assisted in his Revolutionary quest by “noted voluptuaries and lovers of pleasure” Paul Revere, John Hancock and the Adamses. Continue Reading »
Posted in Alanis Morissette, Alexander Hamilton, Anachronisms, Benjamin Franklin, Coronavirus, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Diana Gordon, Ethan Allen, Funny (ha ha), George Washington, Hamilton, History, Huh?, Ian Frazier, John Hancock, Marquis de Lafayette, New Yorker, Paul Revere, Quarantine, The Cranberries, Tiny Desk (Home) Concerts, Tiny Desk Concert, Unfunny, Wynter Gordon | Leave a Comment »
July 23, 2020 by Paul Debraski
SOUNDTRACK: BENNY SINGS-Tiny Desk (Home) Concert #50 (July 14, 2020).
I watched a Benny Sings Tiny Desk Concert back in 2016. I wasn’t that impressed. I thought it sounded fine, describing him as a slower Elton John. Since then, he has apparently gone on to bigger things (and must have many fans).
I’ve never come across a moderate Benny Sings fan. The Dutch singer-songwriter and producer has maintained a cult following for over 15 years and performed in the United States for the very first time at the Tiny Desk back in 2016.
Benny and his band play three songs.
Recorded at his studio in Amsterdam, the set list reads like an inventory of quarantine essentials, opening with “Apartment” from last year’s Free Nationals LP (shout out to Anderson .Paak).
As with all of the songs, the music is lightly R&B with some disco flavors. Each song has a loud low end from Bram Wassink’s bass and crisp drums from Colin Lee. The songs are gentle and catchy. “Apartment” is less than three minutes long.
“Sunny Afternoon” was written with PJ Morton and is a bit catchier (and sweeter). There’s a nice backing vocal “oooh” solo from June Fermie while Adam Bar Pereg play s anice piano solo.
The set ends with “Music.” Honestly I can’t imagine a worse title for a song than “Music,” but it is about music. And the blurb admires the sentiment:
The hook reminds me that I’m not the only one who continues to seek refuge in song. He sings, “Music help me through this / I can’t do this on my own / But music help me through this / Whenever I’m down.”
I will not be an immoderate Benny Sings fan. His music is pleasant, but forgettable. Although he seems like a very nice fella.
[READ: July 20, 2020] “The Dinner”
As the United States roils with protests about institutional racism and out immoral leaders conduct illegal schemes of violence against citizens, it was an very charged time to read this story about racism in Ireland.
As Roddy Doyle stories tend to do, this story has a lot of heart and humor in it. It begins by introducing Larry Linnane and his family. He loves his family. He loves his girls (he and his wife have four) and his son.
But he especially loved hearing his intelligent girls as they talked about everything at the dinner table. And, as usual, Doyle’s ear for dialogue is spot on. Larry is a pretty open minded guy, he doesn’t even mind hearing his daughters talking about their love lives. Nothing they said or did ever shocked him.
Until Stephanie brought home the black fella. Continue Reading »
Posted in Anderson .Paak, Anderson .Paak & The Free Nationals, Benny Sings, Coronavirus, Funny (ha ha), Irish Writer, New Yorker, Nigeria, Parenting, Quarantine, Racism, Roddy Doyle, Sex, Short Story, Thin Lizzy, Tiny Desk (Home) Concerts, Tiny Desk Concert, Violence, War | Leave a Comment »
July 22, 2020 by Paul Debraski
SOUNDTRACK: TOM MISCH AND YUSSEF DAYES-Tiny Desk (Home) Concert #49 (July 13, 2020).
Tom Misch and Yussef Dayes play a light jazz with lots of interesting elements floating around the songs. The blurb says the music “evokes a dreamy utopia, blending live electronica, psychedelia and avant-garde jazz.”
I didn’t realize that Misch was British until the chorus–the way he sings “the dash.” Actually I first realized when he spoke after the song, but then it was obvious when he sang.
Producer/guitarist Tom Misch and drummer Yussef Dayes released a surprising and stunning collaborative album earlier this year called What Kinda Music,. This Tiny Desk (home) concert — recorded across six different musicians’ homes — features two songs from that album, “Nightrider” and “Tidal Wave.”
“Nightrider” has cool echoing slow guitars and fantastically complex drumming. But the focus of this song seems to be the wonderfully busy five string bass from Tom Driessler. Jordan Rakei provides backing vocals and
special guest John Mayer provides a closing solo, just as he did at last year’s Crossroads Guitar Festival.
It’s weird the way Mayer stares at the camera at the end though.
“Tidal Wave” has a different cast. It features Rocco Palladino on bass, which is not as complex. Although Yussef’s drumming is fantastic once again.
There’s a nice lead guitar line before the vocals kick in. I almost wish the song were an instrumental until Joel Culpepper adds his wonderful high backing vocals.
This is some good chill out music.
[READ: July 10, 2020] “Calling”
I know I’ve read Richard Ford stories before, but this stories was so fascinating to me–it felt very different from so many other stories that I read.
Set around Christmas in 1961, the narrator’s father has left him and his mother in New Orleans while he has moved to St. Louis to be with a male doctor.
His mother, meanwhile, had begun a singing career, which essentially meant that she was sleeping with her African American singing coach.
What’s fascinating about the story (aside from how trasnsgressive his parents seem in 1961) is that the narrator is telling the story from the present:
They are all dead now. My father. My mother. Dr. Carter. The black accompanist, Dubinion.
These interjections of the present allow for some reflections on this tumultuous period in his life. Continue Reading »
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