|

1971
by Scott Miller
"Maggie May" - Rod Stewart
It's a little mysterious that this song has been such a universal big
deal since the starting gun, but there are some undeniably fetching
folk music turns, well-crafted storytelling, and some of the
best pop singing ever. I've always found it strongly engaging in my
life, although most likely as one of the earliest cases of a song I
was keenly aware of other people liking before feeling the same
keenness myself.
"Sway" - The Rolling Stones
The Stones' image in this period was its own remarkable work of art.
They were slightly androgenous, whisky-drinking libertines who styled
themselves as devils, demons, yet were somehow your friends—sort of
the same way all children start out loving pirates. Not entirely
obvious this is healthy, given a wide enough view, but perfect for
this kind of creation: one of those great, sloppy sleepers of this
era, kind of the "Dig a Pony" for people who wake up in unexpected
beds. I was attracted to the band Madder Rose for covering it in the
nineties.
"Day After Day" - Badfinger
In their time, Badfinger suffered under the judgment that they
perpetuated an earlier Beatles style from which the world had moved
on, rendering the likes of the bona fide George Harrison participation
here double-edged swords. Soon enough, two of the members killed
themselves. And now, hey, they're actually the band from this era who
sound fresh, like Big Star. There's a strange tragic weight to all of
that. Straight Up is their strongest album, and "Day After Day" was
their song that was the biggest part of my life at the time.
"Aqualung" - Jethro Tull
Now that is a riff worthy of a heavy metal Grammy. The liner notes
were surprisingly sharp. Aqualung was a bum "...and the Spirit that
did cause man to create his God lived on within all men: even within
Aqualung/8 And man saw it not/9 But for Christ's sake he'd better
start looking." That kind of smartalecky atheism I can get behind.
"Hope I'm Around" - Todd Rundgren
The earliest evidence that Todd could do a certain strain of
unrequited love song better than anyone else was the Nazz's "Gonna Cry
Today." "You know, as long as I can remember, nobody ever got anybody
back this way." There's a certain distinctly American humor and
directness there, of real value at the height of the British
domination of pop rock. This was the second major installment, with a
little dramatic irony of bringing someone in closer contact by way of
sharing confidential information, at the moment of separation: "You
better hope I'm around when you need me... No one told me what to do
when I needed you."
"Ella James" - The Move
Michael Lockwood of Aimee Mann's band circa 2000 expanded my exposure
to the Move to include Message From the Country (probably still
favorite, barely: Shazam). A highly listenable, maybe just slightly
ungainly brand of Lady Madonna art boogie at this late point in their
career, on the verge of splitting into the Electric Light Orchestra.
I want to complain about bad production, but have to admit I like
listening to this over and over, more so than conventional good
production. The drums are low, the bass is very trebly, the guitar is
way up—not unlike the apparent theory behind Underwater Moonlight
but done better. That Roy Wood fellow could really sing.
"Easy Now" - Eric Clapton
Eric Clapton was for two or three years one of the very best writers
of this kind of soaringly beautiful pop melody. As with successor to
this gift Alex Chilton, is seemed oddly unconscious, or unintentional,
and has an occasional element of sleaziness to it that's incongruous,
yet not strictly a mistake. I'm not sure how "making love against the
wall" finds its way into this kind of a project, but "Please remember
that I want you to come, too" seems gentlemanly under the
circumstances.
"When the Levee Breaks" - Led Zeppelin
I was 11 when "Stairway To Heaven" came out, which is when I started
playing guitar in bands; all teen bands played it, and I tried to play
it so many times it would be hard for me to say how much I actually
like it. One very bad sign is that I don't know what it means to
buy a stairway to heaven. Receptive as I am to there being a
cautionary tale in there, I feel I could still be repeating whatever
the error is; people could be saying, "Man, that guy—really buying
himself a stairway to heaven." On the other hand, I'm certain enough
that I consider everything about "When the Levee Breaks" awesome. I
find the harmonica far more complex and haunting than any guitar on
"Stairway." The drums are perhaps the biggest drums ever. Plant sounds
like he knows the blues, and as I think is the case with Dylan, it
connects with me to talk about implacable rising water.
"Fearless" - Pink Floyd
Before Pink Floyd's presentation took a Macy's Day Parade turn, it was
a sturdy little cottage industry: songs that showcased a single
undeniably bankable sonic innovation. I could not have been more
impressed. On "One Of These Days" it was the tape echo that fell on
the two count of a 3/4 beat, creating an automatic galloping rhythm. "Fearless" had possibly the best, which was a crowd singing "You'll
Never Walk Alone" at a football match up some accidental interval from
the key of the song so it sounds like some sort of Lydian chant music.
"Wild World - Cat Stevens
This is one of the catchiest choruses ever, and one of those
incredible fat, spare, acoustic Paul Samwell-Smith productions. I
believe I recall a big rock critic (Christgau?) giving this flak for a
condescending, sexist attitude toward the girl dumping Cat in the
song; besides the "what about all other songs?" factor of that
statement, it ignores that detail that it is a wild world and it
is hard to get by just upon a smile—I take the point to be that
there's a tendency to be naive inherent in the frame of mind of
commitment-breaking, not the frame of mind of being female.
"The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)" - The Doors
Here are the Doors at their Doorsiest: driving intensity, but with
awkward Kurt-Weill-like undercurrents and a willingness to believe in
a wild heart of culture, for which the metaphor here is radio
broadcasting outside of formatting restrictions. For me some of Jim's
most memorable incantation is here: "Soft-driven, slow, and mad, like
some new language," and, "They are saying 'forget the night, come live
with us in forests of azure/Out here on the perimeter there are no
stars'."
"Life On Mars?" - David Bowie
David Bowie is up there when it comes to people for whom the response
to writing them off as trite or pretentious should always be: not so
fast. The "sailors fighting in the dance hall" and the "law man
beating up the wrong guy" are knee-jerk enough images in isolation,
but in juxtaposition paint a coherent picture of mob mentality and
crowd-pleasing gone wrong ("wonder if he'll ever know he's in the
best-selling show"). The tune is a music-hall-descent-with-a-twist
pattern (see "Whiter Shade of Pale") that announces its proficiency
authoritatively with the "more" note of "lived it ten times or
more," and then delivers that all-over-the-map, big payoff chorus.
"Too Many People" - Paul and Linda McCartney
Ram is undervalued; I think the world was starting to get its story
together that John was the edgy, smart, free spirit good guy, and Paul
was the opposite of that. "Too Many People" would have been about the
third best song on Abbey Road, and one of many illustrations that
when you heard any edgy, smart, free spirit lead guitar in the
Beatles, chances are it was actually Paul playing it.
"Imagine" - John Lennon
When this came out, I remember it seeming likably little—not
reading as anthemic or populist at all, just nervy, and slightly
tossed-off. I don't think anyone puts "and no religion, too" in a
song when aiming for the widest audience ever. It's a good enough post-eclectic-era Lennon song, but the real power is leveraged from
Yoko's innovations in instructional poetry; if you only knew 1966
Beatles and Yoko Ono's "Grapefruit" from the time of their meeting, I
doubt you'd think "Imagine there's no heaven" was a more obvious
extension of the latter than the former.
"American Pie" - Don McLean
It may be the catchiest chorus in history. I've for whatever reason
always felt one inch away from outgrowing whatever this song is trying
to pull—yet never quite over the line. Like "Won't Get Fooled
Again," it's another of those summings up of the sixties, by my best
interpretation using a bargain-basement version of Lennon or Dylan
wordplay to indict the erosion of rock and roll innocence into a
modern version of Bacchanalian ritual. It feels odd to reach that far
and then add that to some limited extent, he probably has a point;
I've read enough rock journalists who are dead serious Nietzscheans to
realize there's a lot of thinking going on out there that isn't
anything like what Buddy Holly was thinking.
"Won't Get Fooled Again" - The Who
Until Exile On Main Street came along, the somewhat unexpected winner of new-best-band-now-that-the-Beatles-are-gone was the Who,
with Who's Next. In my version of the narrative, Townshend had
something of an epiphany on the way to articulating the youth
movement's revolution of the spirit, and that was that it was a
revolution to end all revolutions that ended all revolutions. In
other words, in some inevitable sense, more of the same. Much as I
love that narrative, it's hard not to point to the real deciding factor being Keith Moon. Moon, my favorite drummer bar none (a
position I learned from Joe Becker), is there giving every line a
magic emotional kick in a way that is somehow more special than
anything else going on—not to take a thing away from Townshend's inspired, forward-looking writing and arranging. Entwistle keeps
right up, and "My Wife" is his best effort. Daltrey, I have
discovered, tends not to translate to the next generation nearly as
well as, say, Ray Davies, but kids, do Uncle Scott a favor and fight
the ADD long enough to appreciate one of the great rock moments: when
the medium-sized "yeah" scream in the middle of the song is followed
by the big "yeah" scream at the end of the song. Fringe vests not
dead!
Archive
all content © the loud family, except where indicated.
photos of scott & anton by N.D. Koster.
|