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1969
by Scott Miller
"Long Time Gone" - Crosby, Stills, and Nash
1969 was the cresting of culture as universally conceivable by Western
youth: the moon landing, the last Beatles album, Woodstock. My
experience of Woodstock was seeing the movie. As aerial shots assess
the scope of the engineering project, CSN assess the scope of the
task of reversing social injustice in the bluesy verse, then lay those
angelic harmonies on us for "it appears to be a long, long time before
the dawn." Very powerful.
"The Dust Blows Forward and the Dust Blows Back" - Captain Beefheart and
His Magic Band
Not very representative of Trout Mask Replica, which mostly sounds
like Howlin' Wolf singing over what figure to be composed sections of
free jazz, "The Dust" is an a capella piece apparently recorded line
by line as it was composed, using a portable tape recorder. The
rustic characterization and intensely tactile and visual rendering
make a deep, immediate impression, and provide the easiest way I know
to make the case for the dotty, irascible Captain being an exotically
gifted communicator.
"Something" - The Beatles
"Something" could be the song most globally accepted as
surpassingly beautiful; I certainly vote that way. The first thought
it occurs to me to add is to note Ringo's highly imaginative,
fill-based drumming, which can only be described as majestic.
"I Want To Take You Higher" [edit] - Sly and the Family Stone
The singalong from this was a key Woodstock moment, and for the first
part of the seventies, with its hard rock riff, it was on the A-list
of songs it occurred to teen bands to cover (normally non-singing
members didn't need much selling on the idea of getting to do some "boom shaka lakas").
"Cymbaline" - Pink Floyd
For some reason I fretted this inclusion; I came very close to
replacing it with: "21st Century Schizoid Man," "Can't Find My Way
Home," "Hello Suzie," "Doing That Scrapyard Thing," and "Dog Breath,
In the Year of the Plague" (Zappa is very hard for me to commit unreservedly to). But I think despite some painful lyrics
(really—"butterfly with broken wings"—really?), this has the most
specialness to it. The chorus really is very catchy, and trusty Rick
Wright seals the deal with a nice major seventh piano chord in said
chorus as well as that other-worldly organ drone ending. I'm also
tempted to call this the first important David Gilmour vocal success.
"Forget All About It" - The Nazz
The singer is Paul "Stewkey" Antoni, but the occasion here is the
dropping of the first major Todd Rundgren bomb ("Open My Eyes"
is... okay). He's really bringing the art rock, too; it's very hard
to follow along to that drum intro part—it must be good. The verse and chorus
and guitar solo are all winners, but the epicenter of Toddness here is
the bridge, with all the soul chords and especially the ur-Todd aside, "But that's just one of my own personal crusades."
"Goodbye" - Mary Hopkin
This is a Paul McCartney give-away, and despite being decidedly
non-rock, sounds noticeably less phoned-in than any of his material
from Abbey Road to me. The horns on this are cheesy, but everything
else sounds big and fat and good. Those first guitar notes are some
of the biggest, fattest, 10:1 compressed old notes you could ask for.
"Candy Says" - The Velvet Underground
The third VU album has always been my favorite, although I feel I
should say I don't have any dislike for their loud, crazy side; "I
Heard Her Call My Name" is amazing. Almost all the songs on the third
record are phenomenal, and deeply musical in a conventionally
recognizable way. Something about the Doug Yule sung "Candy Says"
strikes just the right note of emotional complexity: "I've come to
hate my body and all that it requires" is unexpectedly direct and
believable, especially balanced with the wistful but equally
believable "I'm going to watch the bluebirds fly over my shoulder/I'm
going to watch them pass me by/Maybe when I'm older..."
"Christmas" - The Who
I remember as a nine-year-old being thrilled to pieces with the idea
of Tommy as a "rock opera," where the songs were part of a story.
About a year into knowing about it—it was my first knowledge of the
Who, too—it occurred to me I pretty much didn't know what was going
on at any point whatsoever of the plot. He had a feeling '21 was
going to be a good year; he's deaf, dumb, and blind; he is a pinball
wizard; listening to him, someone climbs the mountain, or vice versa.
Good! Like it!
"Frank Mills" - Shelley Plimpton, "Hair" Original Cast Recording
Considering my devotion to Tommy, it's a little odd I've remained so
ignorant of Hair, but somewhere along the line I discovered and fell
in love with this monumentally endearing little piece. I wouldn't
like my chances of pulling off sung free verse, and this charms you
into not only not noticing the lack of rhymes, but accepting it as a
hook. It's hard not to smile just thinking of the exactly right
delivery of lines like, "I love him, but it embarrasses me to walk down
the street with him," and, "Tell him Angela and I don't want the two
dollars back, just him."
"Whole Lotta Love" - Led Zeppelin
This is where Zeppelin bought themselves their reputation among some
rock critics for being thuddy and bombastic, which they aren't at all;
everything about the considerable power of this track is well-earned,
well-crafted, and well-educated. This is a good place to start
appreciating Robert Plant. It's one thing to write lyrics that are
among the best—Zeppelin don't do that; it's another thing, learned
from blues, to make a recording where simple things are all you need
to say to connect strongly.
"Je T'Aime... Moi Non Plus" - Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin
After years recording plenty-respectable jazz, loose cannon par
excellence Serge Gainsbourg turned to pop, and was alarmingly good at
it, if apparently motivated almost exclusively to provoke scandal. "Je T'Aime" is a sublimely affecting pop instrumental over which Jane
sings and acts whispered ecstasies, and a blase Serge delivers
dismissive asides as if off-camera, one infers for comic effect. It's
mildly amusing on the intended level, yet so indifferent to good taste
the greater achievement is a sort of elevated pathos, as if
demonstrating that earnest emotions define their own universe which endures the parallel presence of cynicism.
"Come and Get It" - Badfinger
This was the signature song from a now Peter Sellers (and Ringo
Starr!) comedy called The Magic Christian. I liked it quite a bit,
and loved this song, which is effectively a Paul McCartney record.
"Gimme Shelter" - The Rolling Stones
There were plenty of dark aspects to 1969, pretty well captured by the
Stones with this song, particularly with its associations with the
Altamont free concert that resulted in a fatal melee involving the
Hell's Angels, who the film portrayed as being hired as security.
1969 was also the year of the Manson murders, which became unwittingly
associated with the Beatles' "Helter Skelter," and the
what-the-hell Paul Is Dead rumor. Supposing you're the Stones in
'69 trying to corner the dark market, you could have been considering
it tough to catch a break.
"Venus" - Shocking Blue
They were actually a very solid group, not one-hit wonders: excellent
drums, excellent guitar. "Send Me a Postcard" from the previous year
was another high point, as was "Love Buzz," the original of the first
Nirvana single. But the goddess on the mountain top, burning like a
silver flame, was "Venus." Man, this song knocked me out when I was a
kid, and still does. The most inspired of the numerous uses I've seen
over the years was for the scene of Marcia stepping out in a Brady
remake.
"Fortunate Son" - Creedence Clearwater Revival
One of the San Francisco bay area's proudest moments was this cry from
the El Cerrito bayou. The guitar comes on here low, lean, and
understated; nothing starts out sounding like it's getting ready to
dust the competition. But it sort of does. That little two-note
answer from a second guitar at the end of the riff somehow summons a
lot of momentum. Fogerty takes it from there. I'm not sure the house
looking like a rummage sale is damning evidence of class hypocrisy,
but just about every other salvo in this song is right on target: the
draft is an abomination to begin with, but to some extent it manifests
a more general potential for oppression. "When the band plays 'hail
to the chief', ooh, they point the cannon at you." Talk about nailing
it.
"Victoria" - The Kinks
Here's an incredibly enjoyable song, and a reminder of how good Dave
Davies was: the varied riffing, that great little walk down and then
slide up on the extended chorus near the end. Ray gives an
interesting put-on of a vocal; you're not exactly sure how much irony
is there at any given time, be it celebrating "croquet lawns" or
Victoria battling the world into submission.
"Something Better" - Marianne Faithfull
This was a huge find for me: another writing triumph from Carole King
and Gerry Goffin, produced by Mick and Keith, with gorgeous slide
guitar from Keith. With its 5/4 section—and is that a piccolo
trumpet?—we have my kind of prog-out going on here. Marianne
Faithfull's talent is no longer a secret after Broken English, and
this is the number one from the past to revisit. It's mysteriously
and almost aphoristically engaging with "Nothing can compare to
something that's almost there," and "Smile on your jailers until they
grow weak." Then come beautiful vocal harmonies on the elegantly
dissolute chorus: "Say, hey, have you heard, blue whiskey's the
rage?/I'll send you a jug in the morning."
"Down By the River" [edit] - Neil Young
No doubt about it, this one gets the dark side of 1969 right, too.
This is one great chorus attached to one creepy song. "Be on my side,
I'll be on your side" is a chilling way to start a murder ballad;
throughout the song it's as if half of the singer's mind is reckoning
with the enormity of the situation and half isn't, the latter half is
just bugged by people giving him grief and making too much of things
and so forth. I'm using poetic license here of course; I think I
heard that Neil even said this isn't a literal murder ballad, just that the
singer shot his chances with is baby. Whatever the claim: yeesh!
"Come Together" - The Beatles
It's fantastic. The way it melds with a section of one's life to
share its flavor between the two is uncanny. Is it the coolest groove
ever? It's doubly amazing how that's pulled off with no breath in the
low end; it's solid bass with no rests—usually a formula for muddy,
cotton-head sound. Here it just works as the libidinous undertones of
the Rhodes. Why do the lyrics work so well? "He shoot Coca Cola";
"Got to be good lookin' 'cause he's so hard to see"; "He say one and
one and one is three." What is even good about any of that? What
does "Come Together right now over me" even mean? But good it is;
better than.
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photos of scott & anton by N.D. Koster.
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