MGT PLAYLIST NEWS

Music creates order out of chaos: for rhythm
imposes unanimity upon the divergent, melody
imposes continuity upon the disjointed, and
harmony imposes compatibility upon the
incongruous.
Yehudi Menuhin
Time for Music 101 class… Do you think my Jukebox/playlist might be slightly eclectic? Really? I thought so. Music has been so important to me. The value we place on the sounds of music defines our character.
Music is intended to entertain, soothe, rabble rouse, spread loving feelings, and to connect to your vast body of emotions and at times your intellectual thought/emotional mood or state of mind. Music amplifies your own feelings.
Mainly it is about
Empathy:
1. understanding of another's feelings: the ability to identify with and understand somebody else's feelings or difficulties
2. attribution of feelings to an object: the transfer of somebody's own feelings and emotions to an object such as a painting
We live in some hellacious times don’t we? We need some order in the midst of all this chaos. Music can provide this order for you. You can use music to lift you right up and out of the doldrums, or some music can put you to sleep. Why does everyone have such differing tastes for various musical styles? Well, that depends on what turns on the pheromones in your brain.
It also depends on the quantity of exposure to a particular song or a particular music genre. That means your environment. Your immediate circle of friends and family can influence your musical bent. It is also your own magnetic draw to a certain emotion or lyric.
Did you ever stop to think why you like what you like? If I were to interview you and ask what are your three favorite songs and why, could you answer me without a little time to pause and think?
When I first heard “My Generation” by The Who, I was working at a gas station a bit north of downtown Detroit. I was driving home listening to the radio when this song came on. I had to pull the car on to the shoulder of the freeway, as I was mesmerized and slack-jawed awe stricken. Who in the hell were these guys? Sounded like The Who to me. Yeah, probably is….Wow!
When their insane drummer Keith Moon explodes in the last two verses I went nuts. I slapped the steering wheel in time and screamed, shouted and whoo-hooed like a madman. A song from heaven was just sent to me personally.
That is the key. That song was written just for me in my mind. The future of drumming in rock had just arrived. No more “Just play the pocket Dennis” crap ever again for me. I was reborn that night. The sky was now the limit.
That is how good music should work for you too. A song that connects so well, that you wish to personally own it. The song is an extension of you, your feelings, and your entire persona. You get it!
When I first heard the Jimi Hendrix Experience’s first album I was high on some great Thai Stick weed and I got it immediately. This band was from another planet. My home planet, wherever that is—I forget. I played guitar with a broomstick for 5 hours listening to every tune over and over and over again. The rest of the guys got quite a kick out of my broom performance because when they walked in on me I just kept playin’ that broom. Whoo-hoo!
When I first heard the song “Afro Blue” and the album, “Meditations” by the John Coltrane Quartet, I lost it again. These f**kers were downright dangerous! I also immediately realized that my drumming was woefully inadequate compared to this master drummer by the name of Elvin Jones. I have studied him all my life. The same for Keith Moon and Mitch Mitchell.
I became time for me to hit the woodshed for the rest of my life.
Now when I first heard Barry Manilow, I was unaffected at all. He had no energy, no lust for life, no juice.
When I was a young tot I heard “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” and I fell in love with that tune. I fell in love with “Quarter to Three”, by Gary U.S. Bonds. The same for the Contours. “Do You Love Me?” The same for the Beatles “She Loves You” and the Stones’ “Satisfaction.”
The point of all this is why my Jukebox/Playlist is all over the map. A good song is a good song and will stand the test of time no matter the artist. The music lives on forever. I imagine they are just starting to hear Kick Out the Jams on a planet in the Alpha Centauri system. This system is closest to our solar system. I wonder if the Centaurian people like it?
Love what you love and take no prisoners. What does it for you may not do it for the next person. So what? Be yourself, always. You are as unique as each snow flake in a snowstorm. I like a lot of different music and that’s the way it is.
Pure and simple.
MGT
SEND US YOUR TOP 3 FAVORITE SONGS!













17 comments:
Perfectly said. I think Third Eye Blind summed it up very well in their phrase from "Semi-Charmed Life": "the four right chords can make me cry." That's exactly how I feel about it.
Hmmm...top three....
1. Sympathy for the Devil
2. Folsom Prison Blues
3. Birth School Work Death
MGT - I'm a long time MC5 fanatic and drummer from the Pittsburgh area. Talked to you on the phone about 12 years ago when I was in Ypsi on a business trip but we weren't able to hook up. We talked drums (Elvin, Billy Cobham), MC5, and math/physics. I've been digging your blog and intend to email you at length - thanks for continuing to be an inspiration!".
Only three? In the spirit of punk rock I'm gonna push for five, nyah! for music that both assuages and inspires.
-"Rite of Spring" by Stravinsky. which started its own punk rock riot the night it debuted. Poor Nijinsky, who choreographed the accompanying ballet, had to leap into the orchestra pit to bang out the rhythm to the musicians, who couldn't hear one another over the ruckus. Plus it's both long and complex, perfect for limited favorite song lists. And it's weird, according to actual classical musicians.
-"Anarchy In The U.K." by the Sex Pistols. I feel wonderful and renewed every time I hear it, like some people react to Chuck Berry, or like your best friend just walked in the door.
-"Search And Destroy" by Iggy & The Stooges. I love the whole Stooges' canon particularly the first two releases, but this one rips and claws its way to the top.
-"River Deep Mountain High" by Ike & Tina Turner, a sonic orgasm!
-"Jumping Jack Flash" by the Stones for primeval weirdness.
It's Great to come here and and write whatever I want, thanks. Well, I have to admit I like that Billie Jean song by Michael Jackson - it's pretty exciting watching him do that Moonwalk and all the little girls scream- pretty POP.
It's not as exciting as I remember seeing the MC5 LIVE - probably the most exciting explosive I ever seen Live!!! believe me!!! The videos are fun but don't do the MC5 any Justice..... It Takes 5 seconds to realize ....Michael Jackson may be the King of Kiddie POP but the MC5 where KINGS of LIVE ROCK !!!! I've seen Bob Seger , Rolling Stones, Tom Petty, Traffic , Ten Years After and I like em all , some may have more talent , more songs etc... BUT LIVE, NOTHIN BEAT MC5 in there prime- EACH SHOW WAS KILLER REVOLTION ROCK!!!!!!!!!!! ENTERTAINMENT AT IT'S BEST!!!! Mr Zug Island Blues.
Top three
1 - Gimmie Shelter, The Rolling Stones - alltime #1
Rounding out this week's top three:
2 - Waiting World, New Christs
3 - I Don't Know What I Want, The D4.
Three? Seriously? Been reading up on the Council of Nicea, catching up on Johnny Burnette, or what?
Your playlist here is almost 50 times that long (and non-static and very, very good).
OK, at the risk of blaspheming the blogging gods here's 3/day (hey, it's a Fibonacci number anyhow):
Monday
Stormy Monday (Allman Brothers)
Trapped Again (Southside Johnny)
Free Money (Patti Smith)
Tuesday
Journey to the Center of the Mind
(Amboy Dukes)
St. Stephen/The Eleven (The Dead)
Memo from Turner (Jagger)
Wednesday
Daybreak (The McCoys)
Gone Dead Train (Randy Newman)
I Got to Ramble (Link Wray)
Thursday
We Don't Need No Education
(Pink Floyd w/ Cyndi Lauper)
Back on the Chain Gang (Pretenders)
Sweet Jane (Rock and Roll Animal)
Friday
The Fool (Quicksilver Mess. Svc.)
Life During Wartime (Talking Heads)
Manic Depression (Hendrix)
Saturday
Bloodshot Beholder
(Great Speckled Bird w/Ian+Sylvia)
Horses (Patti Smith)
Take It Inside (Southside Johnny)
Sunday
Neat Neat Neat (The Damned)
Train Kept A-Rollin (J. Burnette)
Slaughter on 10th Ave. (Ventures)
These are the ones that, when they came on the radio (yes,back then), you'd stop the conversation and, if necessary, tell your companion, "Oh, you've gotta hear this one!"
Finally, "Barney" by Ian Tyson is the definitive Saying Goodbye to an Animal Friend song, but if there's one someone likes better, I'll give it a listen.
Would I be able to answer without hesitation? No, probably not. I could give you the top three hundred off the top of my head, but the top three? It's like that scene in High Fidelity where he was trying to make a list of his top five all-time songs. It's nearly impossible.
Three from the top three hundred for today:
Skunk (Sonically Speaking) -- (I'm pretty sure everyone here knows who this one's by)
White Light, White Heat -- Velvet Underground
The Day The World Went Away -- Nine Inch Nails
@ DEAR BETH
THE FOUR RIGHT CHORDS CAN GIVE YOU AN ORGASM TOO!
MGT
@ DEAR MIKE,
I REMEMBER THAT PHONE CALL. I LOVE TALKING ABOUT PHILOSOPHY, MATH (THE UNIVERSAL LANGUGE), AND PHYSICS. PLEASE DO EMAIL ME AND THROW SOME THOUGHT PROVOKING GOODIES IN IT. LEARN ON MY BROTHER!
MGT
@ THE DOGS,
I'LL STICK ANARCHY IN THE UK & JUMPIN JACK FLASH AT THE TOP OF MY PLAYLIST JUST FOR YOUSE GUYS.
MGT
@ ZUG ISLAND BLUES,
GOOD GOD. THANK YOU MIKE. I AM HUMBLED.
MGT
@ EARL,
THREE GREAT TUNES SIR.
MGT
@ DEAR INFANNTYRONE,
THANKS FOR THE LIST. I'LL POST SOME OF THESE WHEN I GET A FREE MOMENT TO PLAY!
MGT
@ TWITTER NOVEL,
GREAT TUNES ALL. KEEP 'EM COMIN'. I KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN. KIM ASKED ME FOR MY THREE FAVE SONGS AND I SAID, "YOU GOTTA BE KIDDIN ME!"
LIKE YOU I CAN THINK OF TWENTY RIGHT OUTTA THE GATE BUT THREE? TOUGH...
MGT
NOTE FROM MGT.
THANKS EVERYONE. YOU JUST HELPED ME REPOPULATE THE PLAYLIST. THIS PLAYLIST BELONGS TO YOU READERS AND NOT TO ME. LET US ROCK ON MATES!
MGT
For today:
"Suspect Device" -- The Stiff Little Fingers
"Digital" -- Joy Division
"Six Sixty Six" -- Frank Black and the Catholics
OK to disregard this, keep it to yourself, edit, or publish as is.
If you haven't heard her, she's worth a listen to see if she + her group will hit your 4 magic chords (pick a chord, son...any chord...)
I'm about your age...saw Janis in Austin, summer of 1970 at a birthday party for her mentor, saw Grace Slick, Patti Smith, Laurie Anderson, Rickie Lee Jones, never saw Maddy Prior :(, long >> short: she can sing with da best of them.
On *most* clips on Youtube her only traditional instrumentation is a piano, and it's barely there.
Interesting to me is that the costumes range from French minimalism (black sack dress) to something that makes me think of MC5's flash couture crossed with, oh, maybe The Tubes?
If you like the sound, the lyrics are worth getting. I tried putting them in, but ran into a 4K character limit.
*********************************
Yesterday it was 3 x 7 days.
Today 3 x 1 performer (OK,+ group):
W/o further ado, adieu...Infanttyrone
1) Gospel With No Lord
link to a youtube live clip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxxV05p11lc
2) Money Note
link to a youtube live clip
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cp304RD15H8
link to a MTV-like non-live clip
http://www.slack-time.com/music-video-5137-Camille-Money-Note
3) Ta Douleur
link to a youtube live clip
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bIwhA6N5XGg
Hey Dennis - just an old Ann Arbor guy out here in Oregon. The Davis tribe is just. . . "down the road, down the road, down the road a piece" too :
@ TWITTWERNOVEL
I AM UNAWARE OF THESE DITTIES AND SHALL CHECK THEM OUT.
MGT
@ INFANTTYRONE
THANKS FOR THE TUNES. ONCE AGAIN I WILL LISTEN TO THEM AND SEE WHICH MERITS THE JUKEBOX, OKAY?
MGT
@ RICKENBASSER,
MICHAEL TELLS ME IT IS GORGEOUS OUT THERE. AHH, GRATITUDE...
MGT
Shit..that's a tough one, depends on my mood. Spent about 5 minutes thinking about this, don't think I can answer this one, but right now I'm listening to some bar room blues boogie courtesy of Gary Holton and Casino Steel, no political statements just good old honest rock'n'roll, wait... they're doing Ruby (don't take your love to town)
How about Little Wing by whoever your favorite interpreter might be?
I'm not going to provoke any controversies. Go to Youtube, play as many as you like, and choose *your* favorite 3 versions.
Jimi
Stevie Ray Vaughn
Steve Vai
Sting
Clapton solo
Clapton w/Sheryl Crow
Clapton w/the Dominoes
Clapton w/Allman Bros
Clapton w/Winwood
Tibor Tatrai
(who? Hungarian whiz most folks wouldn't find w/o Youtube...
his band, Magyar Atom, does other Hendrix material + he's played with B.B. King, if you need prof. references before you listen)
All on the first 3 pages on YT;
but wait...page 4 gets you:
1) an excellent Norwegian, and,
2) a "Korean girl" version that ignites a controversy as to whether she's covering Hendrix or Vaughn (well, all agree), and,
3)...wait for it...the winner of Best Vocal Performance in a Video at the 2008 Ukulele Underground forum (?), which is scary good, both vocally + instrumentally,but..
on the Related Videos slide bar is "Little Wing (Ukulele): Live at Malibu Inn 2-28-08" which, depending on your taste, may be instrumentally even better...
OK, class, your homework is page 5.
Sure thing. Some help finding them:
Suspect Device: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RBYoNYuUVk0
Digital: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vYnqh0dZ3A
Six Sixty Six:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cx8mxzXWzjg
And, long as I'm here, three for today. . .
"Galvanize" -- The Chemical Brothers: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2hzVV2Nwfs
"Satday Night In The City of the Dead" -- Ultravox! : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fn98yNUqDsE
"Blockhead" -- Devo: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPTCiRNeZeU
Would you be interested in a slight twist from the 3 favorite songs that many of us are having trouble with?
How about the most interesting but somewhat obscure concert that you couldn't get to or could have gone to but just didn't go ?
("The Stones, Who, LedZep, or XYZ supergroup were in town but sold out before I could get to the box office" is a sad story, but not often very interesting.)
If you're interested, here's mine:
I lived in Austin from '72 to '77 and at some point a local group, Greezy Wheels, with a woman fiddler named Mary Hattersley were playing at the Armadillo World Headquarters.
I had never seen them and had always intended to catch one of their shows, but that night, for some reason, I said "Next time..."
Zappa was in town for one night playing at a larger venue and was featuring Jean Luc Ponty.
I had seen Zappa quite a few times in New York during college, and I said "Not this time..."
Read in the paper a couple of days later that after his big hall gig, Zappa dragged Ponty to the 'Dillo and they wound up playing with Mary on her signature crowd-buster, Orange Blossom Special... Ponty playing furiously fiddle-to-fiddle with Mary, while Zappa played rhythm (sic) guitar behind them.
If someone reading this DID go (!) they might provide a recollection of it for us...and if they had the ingenuity to tape the show (!!), they could do even more. Dreams...
Street Hassle (Lou Reed - Take No Prisoners LP version)
Pipeline (Johnny Thunders)
Loose (The Stooges)
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