October 1, 2016
"October" performed by U2
"October Song" performed by Amy Winehouse
"Witches' Rave" performed by Jeff Buckley
"Devil Woman" performed by Cliff Richard
"Is There A Ghost?" performed by Band Of Horses
"Same Old Lie" performed by Jim James-WSPC PREMIERE
"Pudding" performed by Dash Hounds-WSPC PREMIERE
"Riding The Scree" performed by Genesis
"Thunder" performed by Prince
October 2, 2016
"Have You Looked At Me" performed by Thompson Springs-WSPC PREMIERE
"Love Is The Seventh Wave" performed by Sting
"Blue Sky Mine (Food On The Table Mix)" performed by Midnight Oil
"Spellbound" performed by Siouxsie and the Banshees
October 3, 2016
"The Anxious Battle For Sanity" performed by Antonio Sanchez
"TV Row" performed by Post Social
"I'm So Afraid" (live) performed by Fleetwood Mac
"Finest Worksong" (live in Holland 1987) performed by R.E.M.
"Love In Action" live Japan 1992) performed by Utopia
"Couldn't Stand The Weather" (live) performed by Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
October 6, 2016
"Doomsday Clock" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
"Ignoreland" performed by R.E.M.
"Summer '68" performed by Pink Floyd
"La Femme D'Argent" (live on Jimmy Kimmel October 2016) performed by Air
"Tea For One" performed by Led Zeppelin
October 7, 2016
"Cold Little Heart" performed by Michael Kiwanuka-WSPC PREMIERE
"Blended Family (What You Do For Love)" performed by Alicia Keys-WSPC PREMIERE
"Love Me Now" performed by John Legend-WSPC PREMIERE
"Red Window" performed by Electric Wire Hustle-WSPC PREMIERE
"A Minute To Breathe" performed by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross-WSPC REMIERE
"Lotus Flower" performed by Radiohead
October 8, 2016
"Fear" performed by Lenny Kravitz
"Phantom Living" performed by The Fixx
"Demons Dance" performed by Paul McCartney
"Scarecrow People" performed by XTC
"I'm Afraid Of Americans" performed by David Bowie with Trent Reznor
October 9, 2016
"You Are Here" performed by John Lennon
"Parachute" performed by Sean Lennon
"Had Enough" performed by The Who
October 10, 2016
"Hitler Day" performed by Public Enemy
"So Beautiful" performed by Robert Glasper
"34 Ghosts IV" performed by Nine Inch Nails
"Time Moves Slow" performed by BADBADNOTBOOD-WSPC PREMIERE
"Enjoy The Silence" performed by Vernon Reid and Masque
"1999/Diamonds And Pearls/Old Friends 4 Sale/People Pleaser/Ain't Gonna Miss U When U're Gone" performed by Prince with the New Power Generation and 3RDEYEGIRL
October 11, 2016
"Million Dollar Loan" performed by Death Cab For Cutie-WSPC PREMIERE
"Can't You Tell?" performed by Aimee Mann-WSPC PREMIERE
"Jesse" performed by Todd Rundgren
October 13, 2016
"Masters Of War" performed by Bob Dylan
October 16, 2016
"I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do" performed by ABBA
"I Believe (When I Fall In Love)" performed by Stevie Wonder
"I Do" performed by Lisa Loeb
"Luna" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
"I Do" performed by Fleetwood Mac
October 17, 2016
"Die Alone" performed by Slow Pulp-WSPC PREMIERE
"America" performed by Foxygen-WSPC PREMIERE
"Sweep Me Off My Feet" performed by Pond-WSPC PREMIERE
"Certainty" performed by Temples-WSPC PREMIERE
October 18, 2016
"When I Met You" performed by David Bowie-WSPC PREMIERE
"Are You Lost In The World Like Me?" performed by Moby and the Void Pacific Choir-WSPC PREMIERE
"World Leader Pretend" (live) performed by R.E.M.
"The Royal Scam" performed by Steely Dan
"Know Your Rights" performed by The Clash
"Forever Now" performed by Green Day-WSPC PREMIERE
October 19, 2016
"Runnin' With The Devil" performed by Van Halen
"Halloweenhead" performed by Ryan Adams
"Halloween" performed by Siouxsie and the Banshees
"Paranoid" performed by Black Sabbath
"Wicked Annabella" performed by The Kinks
"Nasty" performed by Janet Jackson
October 21, 2016
"The Boogie Monster" performed by Gnarls Barkley
"We Can Funk" (unreleased version) performed by Prince and the Revolution
"Never Catch Me" performed by Flying Lotus with Kendrick Lamar
"Miss Lucifer's Love" performed by Funkadelic
"Madness" performed by Miles Davis
"The Castle" performed by The Flaming Lips-WSPC PREMIERE
October 22, 2016
"The Abandoned Hospital Ship" (live) performed by The Flaming Lips
"Porch" (live 1992) performed by Pearl Jam
"I'm Designer" performed by Queens Of The Stone Age
"Talk Show Created The Fool" performed by Chuck D
"Home" performed by Common with Bilal-WSPC PREMIERE
October 23, 2016
"In Your Eyes" performed by BADBADNOTGOOD with Charlotte Day Wilson-WSPC PREMIERE
"New Person, Same Old Mistakes" performed by Tame Impala
"Alabaster" performed by Post Animal
"Messin'" performed by Dolores
"Where You Gonna Run" performed by Spooner
"What She Does To Me" performed by The Producers
"Words" performed by Missing Persons
October 24, 2016
"Blacula (The Stalkwalk)" performed by Gene Page
"Dracula Part 1" performed by The Jimmy Castor Bunch
"Creature Feature" performed by Billy Preston
"Born On Halloween" performed by Blue Magic
"Graveyard Theme" performed by Vince Guaraldi
October 25, 2016
"It's Nasty" performed by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five
"Evil Woman" performed by Electric Light Orchestra
"Night On Disco Mountain" performed by David Shire from "Saturday Night Fever"
"The Devil Went Down To Georgia" performed by The Charlie Daniels Band
"(Don't Fear) The Reaper" performed by Blue Oyster Cult
"Highway To Hell" performed by AC/DC
October 26, 2016
"Green Manalishi" performed by Fleetwood Mac
"Glass and the Ghost Children" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
"Season Of The Witch" performed by Donovan
"Philip Glass' Piano Etudes' Part One" (live) performed by Emili Earhart
"Love, Reign O'er Me" performed by The Who
October 27, 2016
"D.M.S.R." performed by Prince
"The Man Who Sailed Around His Soul" performed by XTC
"Stormy" performed by Santana
"Evil" performed by Steve Miller Band
"Keep On Running" performed by Stevie Wonder
October 29, 2016
"The Ballad Of Peter Pumpkinhead" performed by XTC
"Master Teacher" performed by Erykah Badu with Georgia Anne Muldrow
"Stand Or Fall" performed by The Fixx
"Freaks Come Out At Night" performed by Whodini
"Sister Midnight" performed by Iggy Pop
"Scary Monsters (and super creeps)" performed by David Bowie
"Monster" performed by The Bar-Kays
"Your Auntie Grizelda" performed by The Monkees
October 30, 2016
"Magic" performed by Olivia Newton-John
"The Ghost" performed by Fleetwood Mac
"Someone's In The Wolf" performed by Queens Of The Stone Age
"Witch Hunt" performed by Rush
"VOTE" performed by Andre Cymone
October 31, 2016
"Hells Bells" performed by AC/DC
"Zombie" performed by The Cranberries
"Dead Souls" performed by Nine Inch Nails
"Go To Hell" performed by Alice Cooper
"Almost Human" performed by KISS
"Thriller" performed by Michael Jackson
THE OFFICIAL BLOGSITE OF DJ SAVAGE SCOTT-HOST OF SAVAGE RADIO AS BROADCAST ON WVMO 98.7 FM-THE VOICE OF MONONA
Monday, October 31, 2016
Friday, October 28, 2016
SAVAGE RADIO PLAYLISTS OCTOBER 2016: WVMO-THE VOICE OF MONONA 98.7 FM
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #48-"An Evening With Post Social":
On Air Interview with Shannon Connor, Sam Galligan and Mitch Deitz
October 5, 2016
1. "Running On Fumes" performed by Post Social
2. "Green Hornet" performed by Post Social
3. "Eyes Closed" performed by Post Social
4. "Ugolino" performed by Post Social
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #49-OCTOBER 12, 2016
1. "Mama" performed by Genesis
2. "Juarez" performed by Tori Amos
3. "Gemini" performed by James Iha
4. "All You Had To Do Was Stay" performed by Ryan Adams
5. "Drawn" performed by De La Soul featuring Little Dragon
6. "Find You" performed by Robert Glasper Experiment
7. "The Wedding" performed by David Bowie
8. "Gunman" performed by Them Crooked Vultures
9. "Lemon Meringue" performed by Fishbone
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #50-OCTOBER 19, 2016
1. "Indian Summer" performed by The Dream Academy
2. "Lake Shore Drive" performed by The Innocence Mission
3. "Porcelina Of The Vast Oceans" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
4. "My Cosmic Autumn Rebellion" performed by The Flaming Lips
5. "Dreamboy" performed by Dash Hounds
6. "Sara" performed by Fleetwood Mac
7. "Mind" performed by Talking Heads
8. "The Devil's Eye" performed by The Go-Betweens
9. "Oscillate Wildly" performed by The Smiths
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #51: "BOO-THE HALLOWEEN EDITION"-October 26, 2016
1. "Every Day Is Halloween" performed by Ministry
2. "Came Back Haunted" performed by Nine Inch Nails
3. "Graveyard Girl" performed by M83
4. "Catwalk" performed by Siouxsie and the Banshees
5. "Phantom Living" performed by The Fixx
6. "We Suck Young Blood" performed by Radiohead
7. "Witches' Rave" performed by Jeff Buckley
8. "Witch's Wand" performed by Sloan
9. "Lockjaw" performed by Todd Rundgren
10."Full Moon" performed by The Kinks
On Air Interview with Shannon Connor, Sam Galligan and Mitch Deitz
October 5, 2016
1. "Running On Fumes" performed by Post Social
2. "Green Hornet" performed by Post Social
3. "Eyes Closed" performed by Post Social
4. "Ugolino" performed by Post Social
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #49-OCTOBER 12, 2016
1. "Mama" performed by Genesis
2. "Juarez" performed by Tori Amos
3. "Gemini" performed by James Iha
4. "All You Had To Do Was Stay" performed by Ryan Adams
5. "Drawn" performed by De La Soul featuring Little Dragon
6. "Find You" performed by Robert Glasper Experiment
7. "The Wedding" performed by David Bowie
8. "Gunman" performed by Them Crooked Vultures
9. "Lemon Meringue" performed by Fishbone
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #50-OCTOBER 19, 2016
1. "Indian Summer" performed by The Dream Academy
2. "Lake Shore Drive" performed by The Innocence Mission
3. "Porcelina Of The Vast Oceans" performed by The Smashing Pumpkins
4. "My Cosmic Autumn Rebellion" performed by The Flaming Lips
5. "Dreamboy" performed by Dash Hounds
6. "Sara" performed by Fleetwood Mac
7. "Mind" performed by Talking Heads
8. "The Devil's Eye" performed by The Go-Betweens
9. "Oscillate Wildly" performed by The Smiths
SAVAGE RADIO EPISODE #51: "BOO-THE HALLOWEEN EDITION"-October 26, 2016
1. "Every Day Is Halloween" performed by Ministry
2. "Came Back Haunted" performed by Nine Inch Nails
3. "Graveyard Girl" performed by M83
4. "Catwalk" performed by Siouxsie and the Banshees
5. "Phantom Living" performed by The Fixx
6. "We Suck Young Blood" performed by Radiohead
7. "Witches' Rave" performed by Jeff Buckley
8. "Witch's Wand" performed by Sloan
9. "Lockjaw" performed by Todd Rundgren
10."Full Moon" performed by The Kinks
NOW PLAYING IN THE SAVAGE JUKEBOX OCTOBER 2016
"LIGHT UPON THE LAKE"
WHITNEY
Released June 3, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: WSUM's Music Director Karolina Barej sent me here...
"Light Upon The Lake," the debut album from Whitney, the collective fronted by guitarist Max Kakacek and drummer/vocalist Julien Ehrlich (incidentally the former drummer of Unknown Mortal Orchestra), does nothing to re-invent the wheel but does everything to ensure that wheel continues to spin beautifully.
This album of 10 lovingly composed and performed and warmly produced songs feels almost like a collection of long-lost ballads that possess a sonic quality reminiscent of early 1970's era AM pop hits--kind of like a 21st century version of Bread. Blending rock, pop, country and soul, Whitney's "Light Upon The Lake" is tailor made for either a warm Spring day lying in a field of grass or a late autumnal afternoon to early evening watching a sunset. Rustic and earthy while simultaneously slick, one song after another achieves the magical effort of forging an instantaneous connection while also feeling like a reunion with a treasured old friend. The implied nostalgia is powerful.
Yes, Ehrlich's falsetto vocals do veer on the edge of Kermit here and there but when he goes into that priceless "la la la" chorus at the conclusion of "Golden Days," I guarantee you will be singing along with him immediately.
"LOVE & HATE"
MICHAEL KIWANUKA
Released July 15, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: The second album from the British singer/songwriter is unquestionably one of the year's most stirring, somber, sobering and undeniably soulful releases that I have heard.
Working in collaboration with Producer Danger Mouse, who has clearly taken everything he has amassed from his work with Gnarls Barkley, The Black Keys, Broken Bells and his own solo release "Rome" (released May 16, 2011) and utilized it to a powerfully orchestrated effect with "Live & Hare," Kiwanuka unfolds his song cycle of existence as a Black man in a 21st century world with the melodic grit of his vocals, the sting of his guitar work and the painful truths of his lyrics, all delivered in a world weary , all too knowing bluesy grit where the emotion and the experience is wholly palpable.
Opening with the nearly 10 minute "Cold Little Heart," on which Kiwanuka's guitar work often recalls David Gilmour's expressive and evocative work on Pink Floyd's "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" or "Marooned," the album takes the listener step-by-step in the shoes of people of color, most specifically Black males, with a skill that is devastatingly matter-of-fact as it is poetic a la Bill Withers or Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On" (released May 21, 1971).
Selections like "Black Man In A White World," "Falling," "Place I Belong," the album's title track and more are all beautifully realized compositions aided superbly by Danger Mouse's exquisite and empathetic production, which blurs the lines between the blues and the operatic. And as for Kiwanuka himself, his gravelly soulful vocals and graceful guitar work grows powerfully over the course of the album, almost conjuring the ghost of Eddie Hazel by the final selections, the seven minute "Father's Child" and the stunning, slow motion glory of "Final Frame."
Michael Kiwanuka's "Love & Hate" is a album of spiritual slow burns, a collection of songs that fully illustrate the anguish and perseverance of a people--or more specifically, the perseverance inside the anguish and the anguish housed so deeply inside the perseverance due to still having to fight battles that should have been long won by 2016.
"BLACK MAN IN AMERICA"
ANDRE CYMONE
Released September 30, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: Running in the same musically conceptual stratosphere as Michael Kiwanuka's album is this militant, ferocious 4 song EP from Prince's childhood friend/former musical collaborator-associate Andre Cymone.
While not adhering to the classic Minneapolis sound whatsoever, Cymone has crafted a release seemingly designed to sonically fit powerfully next to the classic soul/rock protest songs of the late 1960's in tone and spirit bridging the gaps between the blues, rock and roll, funk and even call and response gospel.
With sharp guitar strums and the martial snap of the drums augmented by an insistent piano, the EP begins with the roar of the title track, which is then followed by the equally urgent tale of rampant gun violence in "Hot Night In The Neighborhood," which cleverly quotes from Lovin' Spoonful's "Summer In The City." The EP's third track, "Black Lives Matter" brings the pace down if not the tension with its more acoustic, stripped down textures while Cymone's surprising rock guitar fueled cover of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah," brings the proceedings to a roof raising jewel of spiritual deliverance.
"...AND STAR POWER"
FOXYGEN
Released October 14, 2014
"HEAD CARRIER"
PIXIES
Released September 30, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: A new producer. A new bassist. A newfound sense of re-energized and rejuvenated force.
When we last left the alt-rock legends known as the Pixies, original bassist Kim Deal had abruptly departed the band before the group released their loudly swaggering (and unfairly maligned) return album "Indie Cindy" (released April 19, 2014). Two years on, the band has welcomed not only a new producer in Tom Delgety but a new bassist in alt-rock veteran Paz Lenchantin (A Perfect Circle, Zwan), who has now joined guitarist Joey Santiago, drummer David Lovering and band leader/songwriter/singer/guitarist Black Francis as an official member.
With "Head Carrier," the Pixies' status as a continuing, relevant musical force is more than confirmed with this rocketship of an album which blasts through indie rock guitars and power pop melodies in glorious fashion, and all in about 33 minutes. Where the monstrous roar of "Baal's Back" and "Um Chagga Lagga," firmly demonstrate that the Pixies have lost none of their rapacious bite, it is through the album's title track plus "Classic Masher," "Oona," "Talent," "Tenement Song," "Plaster Of Paris," and even more where the band brings the shimmering yet shaggy sheen to Francis' songs, which are all beautifully recorded, showcasing all of the band members in peak form.
And yet, the most graceful note arrives on the already much written about "All I Think About Now" (whose introductory riff undeniably recalls the band's classic "Where Is My Mind"), co-written and sung by Lenchantin and serves as a "thank you" to the departed Kim Deal--a poignant bridge to the past while serving as a gently defiant step into the future.
"IV"
BADBADNOTGOOD
Released July 8, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: WSUM brought me here and Post Social's Shannon Connor has also proclaimed this album as being his personal favorite of 2016 so far. That was more than enough reason for me to head to B-Side and pick u a copy of the fourth album by this Canadian band whose instrumental tracks somehow sound like the missing link between Tortoise, Dungen, Air, J Dilla and Madlib.
With a sonic palate that instantly suggests the 1970's jazz/fusion scene with its analog synths, warm keyboards, those richly dry drums and cymbals and most expressively, Leland Whitty's "Coltrane-esque" saxophone solos, the grit of soul and hip-hop is powerfully evident throughout, especially upon the vocal tracks "Time Moves Slow" and "In Your Eyes."
One of 2016's most pleasantly surprising albums!
"BEYOND NOW"
DONNY McCASLIN
Released October 14, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: While the sadly departed and eternally missed David Bowie certainly intended his final album "Blackstar" (released January 8, 2016) to serve as a gift to his generations of fans, it would not be a stretch of the imagination that he bequeathed to all of us yet another gift within that album by presenting his backing musicians and collaborators so grandly to the world...musicians the larger population may not ever have heard of otherwise.
With "Beyond Now," saxophonist Donny McCaslin and his team of superior bandmates have released their first post-Bowie work and it is clear that his influence has only continued to loom largely over the band as McCaslin's group provides stirring covers of nothing less than two of Bowie's more evocative and arcane works, "A Small Plot Of Land" from Bowie's "Outside" (released September 26, 1995) and "Warszawa" from "Low" (released January 14, 1977).
In addition to honoring David Bowie's legacy, "Beyond Now" provides a ferociously composed and performed collection from McCaslin and his bandmates, which I am certain will consistently thrill and leave listeners breathless due to their dexterity, agility and power...and most hopefully, inspire all of us to dig deeper into McCaslin's own extensive back catalog.
WHITNEY
Released June 3, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: WSUM's Music Director Karolina Barej sent me here...
"Light Upon The Lake," the debut album from Whitney, the collective fronted by guitarist Max Kakacek and drummer/vocalist Julien Ehrlich (incidentally the former drummer of Unknown Mortal Orchestra), does nothing to re-invent the wheel but does everything to ensure that wheel continues to spin beautifully.
This album of 10 lovingly composed and performed and warmly produced songs feels almost like a collection of long-lost ballads that possess a sonic quality reminiscent of early 1970's era AM pop hits--kind of like a 21st century version of Bread. Blending rock, pop, country and soul, Whitney's "Light Upon The Lake" is tailor made for either a warm Spring day lying in a field of grass or a late autumnal afternoon to early evening watching a sunset. Rustic and earthy while simultaneously slick, one song after another achieves the magical effort of forging an instantaneous connection while also feeling like a reunion with a treasured old friend. The implied nostalgia is powerful.
Yes, Ehrlich's falsetto vocals do veer on the edge of Kermit here and there but when he goes into that priceless "la la la" chorus at the conclusion of "Golden Days," I guarantee you will be singing along with him immediately.
MICHAEL KIWANUKA
Released July 15, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: The second album from the British singer/songwriter is unquestionably one of the year's most stirring, somber, sobering and undeniably soulful releases that I have heard.
Working in collaboration with Producer Danger Mouse, who has clearly taken everything he has amassed from his work with Gnarls Barkley, The Black Keys, Broken Bells and his own solo release "Rome" (released May 16, 2011) and utilized it to a powerfully orchestrated effect with "Live & Hare," Kiwanuka unfolds his song cycle of existence as a Black man in a 21st century world with the melodic grit of his vocals, the sting of his guitar work and the painful truths of his lyrics, all delivered in a world weary , all too knowing bluesy grit where the emotion and the experience is wholly palpable.
Opening with the nearly 10 minute "Cold Little Heart," on which Kiwanuka's guitar work often recalls David Gilmour's expressive and evocative work on Pink Floyd's "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" or "Marooned," the album takes the listener step-by-step in the shoes of people of color, most specifically Black males, with a skill that is devastatingly matter-of-fact as it is poetic a la Bill Withers or Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On" (released May 21, 1971).
Selections like "Black Man In A White World," "Falling," "Place I Belong," the album's title track and more are all beautifully realized compositions aided superbly by Danger Mouse's exquisite and empathetic production, which blurs the lines between the blues and the operatic. And as for Kiwanuka himself, his gravelly soulful vocals and graceful guitar work grows powerfully over the course of the album, almost conjuring the ghost of Eddie Hazel by the final selections, the seven minute "Father's Child" and the stunning, slow motion glory of "Final Frame."
Michael Kiwanuka's "Love & Hate" is a album of spiritual slow burns, a collection of songs that fully illustrate the anguish and perseverance of a people--or more specifically, the perseverance inside the anguish and the anguish housed so deeply inside the perseverance due to still having to fight battles that should have been long won by 2016.
"BLACK MAN IN AMERICA"
ANDRE CYMONE
Released September 30, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: Running in the same musically conceptual stratosphere as Michael Kiwanuka's album is this militant, ferocious 4 song EP from Prince's childhood friend/former musical collaborator-associate Andre Cymone.
While not adhering to the classic Minneapolis sound whatsoever, Cymone has crafted a release seemingly designed to sonically fit powerfully next to the classic soul/rock protest songs of the late 1960's in tone and spirit bridging the gaps between the blues, rock and roll, funk and even call and response gospel.
With sharp guitar strums and the martial snap of the drums augmented by an insistent piano, the EP begins with the roar of the title track, which is then followed by the equally urgent tale of rampant gun violence in "Hot Night In The Neighborhood," which cleverly quotes from Lovin' Spoonful's "Summer In The City." The EP's third track, "Black Lives Matter" brings the pace down if not the tension with its more acoustic, stripped down textures while Cymone's surprising rock guitar fueled cover of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah," brings the proceedings to a roof raising jewel of spiritual deliverance.
"...AND STAR POWER"
FOXYGEN
Released October 14, 2014
"HEAD CARRIER"
PIXIES
Released September 30, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: A new producer. A new bassist. A newfound sense of re-energized and rejuvenated force.
When we last left the alt-rock legends known as the Pixies, original bassist Kim Deal had abruptly departed the band before the group released their loudly swaggering (and unfairly maligned) return album "Indie Cindy" (released April 19, 2014). Two years on, the band has welcomed not only a new producer in Tom Delgety but a new bassist in alt-rock veteran Paz Lenchantin (A Perfect Circle, Zwan), who has now joined guitarist Joey Santiago, drummer David Lovering and band leader/songwriter/singer/guitarist Black Francis as an official member.
With "Head Carrier," the Pixies' status as a continuing, relevant musical force is more than confirmed with this rocketship of an album which blasts through indie rock guitars and power pop melodies in glorious fashion, and all in about 33 minutes. Where the monstrous roar of "Baal's Back" and "Um Chagga Lagga," firmly demonstrate that the Pixies have lost none of their rapacious bite, it is through the album's title track plus "Classic Masher," "Oona," "Talent," "Tenement Song," "Plaster Of Paris," and even more where the band brings the shimmering yet shaggy sheen to Francis' songs, which are all beautifully recorded, showcasing all of the band members in peak form.
And yet, the most graceful note arrives on the already much written about "All I Think About Now" (whose introductory riff undeniably recalls the band's classic "Where Is My Mind"), co-written and sung by Lenchantin and serves as a "thank you" to the departed Kim Deal--a poignant bridge to the past while serving as a gently defiant step into the future.
"IV"
BADBADNOTGOOD
Released July 8, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: WSUM brought me here and Post Social's Shannon Connor has also proclaimed this album as being his personal favorite of 2016 so far. That was more than enough reason for me to head to B-Side and pick u a copy of the fourth album by this Canadian band whose instrumental tracks somehow sound like the missing link between Tortoise, Dungen, Air, J Dilla and Madlib.
With a sonic palate that instantly suggests the 1970's jazz/fusion scene with its analog synths, warm keyboards, those richly dry drums and cymbals and most expressively, Leland Whitty's "Coltrane-esque" saxophone solos, the grit of soul and hip-hop is powerfully evident throughout, especially upon the vocal tracks "Time Moves Slow" and "In Your Eyes."
One of 2016's most pleasantly surprising albums!
"BEYOND NOW"
DONNY McCASLIN
Released October 14, 2016
NEW 2016 MUSIC: While the sadly departed and eternally missed David Bowie certainly intended his final album "Blackstar" (released January 8, 2016) to serve as a gift to his generations of fans, it would not be a stretch of the imagination that he bequeathed to all of us yet another gift within that album by presenting his backing musicians and collaborators so grandly to the world...musicians the larger population may not ever have heard of otherwise.
With "Beyond Now," saxophonist Donny McCaslin and his team of superior bandmates have released their first post-Bowie work and it is clear that his influence has only continued to loom largely over the band as McCaslin's group provides stirring covers of nothing less than two of Bowie's more evocative and arcane works, "A Small Plot Of Land" from Bowie's "Outside" (released September 26, 1995) and "Warszawa" from "Low" (released January 14, 1977).
In addition to honoring David Bowie's legacy, "Beyond Now" provides a ferociously composed and performed collection from McCaslin and his bandmates, which I am certain will consistently thrill and leave listeners breathless due to their dexterity, agility and power...and most hopefully, inspire all of us to dig deeper into McCaslin's own extensive back catalog.
Saturday, October 22, 2016
GOODBYE FREEDOM, HELLO FEAR: "PRESERVATION ACT 2" THE KINKS (1974) -SYNESTHESIA'S FAVORITE ALBUM SERIES
"PRESERVATION ACT 2" (1974)
THE KINKS
THE KINKS:
Ray Davies: Vocals, Acoustic Guitar
Dave Davies: Lead Guitar, Vocals
Mick Avory: Drums
John Dalton: Bass Guitar
John Gosling: Keyboards
with
Laurie Brown: Trumpet, Flute, Tenor Sax
John Beecham: Trombone, Tuba
Alan Holmes: Baritone Saxophone, Clarinet
Marianne Price: Co-Lead Vocals on "Nothing Lasts Forever" and "Scrapheap City"
Sue Brown, Krysia Kocjan, Lee Pavey, Pamela Travis: Additional Vocals
Stanley Mayers: String Arrangements
All music and lyrics by Ray Davies
Arranged and Produced by Ray Davies
Released May 8, 1974
We are a few short weeks away from what I hope will be the long awaited and exceedingly merciful conclusion to our nation's endless, nightmarish, through-the-looking-glass-funhouse-mirror version of an election cycle. I have no need to go through the litany of horrors unleashed upon the United States and the world at large via the improbably virile campaign from Donald Trump, whose specialized brand of open faced intolerance for anyone and anything that happens to not be a White male combined with an "Emperor's New Clothes" political agenda tinged with crucial dog-whistle language and coded calls to violence his base has willingly eaten up with a spoon.
More times than I wish to even recount, the lyrics to a selection from Pink Floyd's "The Wall" (released November 30, 1979) have popped to the forefront of my mind. The song is entitled "In The Flesh" (sans question mark) and occurs at a point in the story when our main protagonist, the alienated, drug addicted, mentally unstable rock star Pink, backstage before one of his own concerts, has re-imagined himself as a fascistic demagogue addressing his legion of skinhead followers. During a rally, Pink expresses the following:
"Are there any queers in the theater tonight?
Get 'em up against the wall
That one in the spotlight
He don't look right to me
Get him up against the wall
That one looks Jewish
And that one's a coon!
Who let all of this riff raff into the room?
There's one smoking a joint
And another with spots
If I had my way...
...I'd have all of you shot!"
While clearly mirroring the totalitarians of our past from Stalin to Mussolini and of course, Adolf Hitler who all housed variations of their "final solutions" for humankind, this song was clearly designed as a grim warning for us to not repeat what has already happened and nearly snuffed all of us out. And yet, with Donald Trump, with his overt racism, homophobia, Islamophobia, sexually predatory tendencies, and so much more and all sitting at the edges of his impossibly thin skin and hair trigger temperament, we find ourselves here again.
At this time, I wish to turn your attention to an album that I believe has been long forgotten and therefore relegated to the dark basement corners of rock and rock history yet it is a work that I find to be even more chilling, frightening and even prescient than anything within "The Wall." It is an album that I heard for the very first time just a few short years ago and has left me feeling emotionally shattered on each and every listen, And now, it exists as a work that feels to be too terrifyingly close to home. Dear readers and listeners, please allow me to present to you "Preservation Act 2" from the iconic British rock band, The Kinks.
For those of you who only know The Kinks' musical history solely through their iconic singles and albums from the 1960's as well as their material from their 1980's resurgence with "Come Dancing," "Don't Forget To Dance" and "Do It Again," The Kinks during the 1970's was a band that was as dangerously and deliriously inventive and innovative as they were restlessly prolific. Since t his was the '70s, concept albums were all the rage and with that aesthetic in mind, The Kinks' principal songwriter/bandleader/producer/guitarist/lead singer Ray Davies took it upon himself to compose a series of story driven albums that never seemed to receive any sort of critical praise but do trust me, as I graciously and passionately urge to you seek them out as they are a collection of wholly unique and idiosyncratic works that often feel like hefty books lined up upon a large bookshelf.
For all of the ribald, tongue in cheek high school stage play styled humor, Ray Davies utilized the concept album format to seriously explore a variety of themes including identity, with regards to the urgent necessity for individuality vs. the emptiness of anonymity and conformity, in addition to class warfare in England, the brutality of the British boarding school education (even Pink Floyd's Roger Waters would shudder), the ebb and flow of marriage, fears of humanity being overtaken by impersonal technology as well as the painful adolescent backstory of a character who would wreak havoc over England as a garishly charismatic villain in his adult years. With "Preservation Act 2," we are witness to the full wrath and comeuppance of said villain but it all arrives at a supreme cost to our collective sense of democracy, decency and humanity.
The Kinks' "Preservation Act 2" is the grim culmination of the band's musical odyssey which was introduced with the iconic, pastoral "The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society" (released November 22, 1968), began in earnest with "Preservation Act 1" (released November 16, 1973) and even double ended upon itself with a prequel with "Schoolboys In Disgrace" (released November 17, 1975), clearly the only other direction the Preservation saga could turn as "Preservation Act 2" essentially concludes with apocalypse.
But I am getting much too far head of myself.
Essentially, "The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society" is a beautiful collection of smartly written and wide open hearted collection of vignettes of centering around the lives and pursuits of the inhabitants of the mythical Village Green, which could be seen as a stand in for a more old-fashioned, traditional England or more metaphorically as a tranquil mental space where each of us may be able to travel that is far away from the noise of the world.
"Preservation Act 1" more or less continues within this vein of vignettes yet a more formal plot begins to creep into the proceedings. Selections like "There's A Change In The Weather," a song in which restless citizens begin to hold individual premonitions concerning potential dark times ahead.as well as "Money And Corruption/I Am Your Man," "Here Comes Flash" and "Demolition," all begin to set the full plot in motion as these tracks detail the arrival of the insidious gangster Mr. Flash, who cons the citizens of the Village Green, purchases the land and destroys the English greenery transforming it into what is eventually described as a "vulgar playground" which exists completely under Flash's control.
With the double album rock opera opus of "Preservation Act 2," The Kinks take us into political warfare, a battle for ultimate power and control between the garish Mr. Flash and Mr. Black, the conservative yet frighteningly duplicitous figure who volunteers himself to take down Flash but who also houses a secret and horrifying endgame for all of the citizens.
The album opens with impending chaos as one of the album's occasional news bulletin reports that a new "People's Army" formulated by Mr. Black has been rumored to have been formed in an attempt to overthrow Mr. Flash and his minions. "Introduction To Solution" depicts both villains in their separate quarters, plotting against each other as they each "debase life with crude ostentation" while "the poor cry for more." And in the eyes of the character known only as The Tramp, a stand-in for all of us listeners, the common people, the pawns in Flash and Black's political chess match, he sadly sighs, "I'm only standing here/Watching it all go on, and I'm watching it all go wrong/And it's painfully clear that the battle is near/And I wish I could just disappear."
Meanwhile, in an attic somewhere in suburbia (according to Ray Davies' own stage directions), we find Mr. Black in sinister soliloquy with the song "When A Solution Comes." Over a bed of warm acoustic guitars and electric piano yet pushed by plodding drums, Mr. Black reveals his fascistic ambitions over the unsuspecting Mr. Flash and the Village Green as a whole. He speaks of achieving "revolution" with his specialized "final solution."
"When a solution comes
It won't take sides with anyone
Regardless of race or creed
The whole wide world is gonna feel the squeeze
The red, black, yellow and white
And even the Arabs and the Israelites
They're all going to feel the bite...
...I have waited a long, long time
Biding my time and waiting on the sidelines
Watching it all go wrong
Witnessing the disintegration
Rubbing my hands in anticipation...
...Yeah, I'm gonna change the world
I'm gonna use a little manipulation
I'm gonna build a new civilization"
With a level of raw rock and roll sleaze that truly outdoes The Rolling Stones at their best, we arrive next with the raucous "Money Talks" where we find ourselves with Mr. Flash and his Spivs and floosies reveling in their amassed wealth and gleeful corruption. "Money can't breathe and money can't see," sings Flash. "But, when I pull out a fiver people listen to me." Yet, as a contrast to Flash overt vulgarity, Mr. Black and his growing army addresses the nation with a plea for a return to a certain conservatism with The Kinks' stab at Monty Python-esque satire in "Shepherds Of The Nation."
"Down with sex and sin
Down with pot, heroin
Down with pornography
Down with lust
Down with vice lechery and debauchery...
...Down with nudity
Breasts that are bare and pubic hair
We are here to cleanse humanity
From the man in the raincoat's
Pale faced glare
So sodomites beware
We are the New Centurians
Shepherds of the Nation
We'll keep on our guard
For sin and degradation
We are the nation guard
Against filth and depravity
Perversion and vulgarity
Homosexuality
Keep it clean"
And as expected, the people swallow the bait.
Yet, for Flash, we re-visit him and his gang through the Gilbert and Sullivan styled "Second-Hand Car Spiv," on which we explore the class warfare that produced figures like these and the sense of self-justification they feel towards themselves and their vicious reign of power. Even so, there is a Falstaff-esque tinge to the admissions from Flash in "Scum Of The Earth," on which he proclaims, "So don't put me down because I've done well.../we're your enemies and your brothers/And no man is a saint/And deep down we're all the same as one another."
The spectacular "He's Evil" could initially be seen as being directed toward the insidious Mr. Flash but upon further examination, I am feeling even more that this is a song designed as conceptual foreshadowing as well as a warning to the people over the true motives of Mr. Black, .
"He comes on smooth, cool and kind
But he wants your body and not your mind
He is just the devil in disguise
He'll drag you down and he will make you cry
And once you're in, there will be no getting out
So, look out..."
Even Mr. Flash, who has been seen to posses a certain dark charm is taken to task by his main squeeze Belle in he burlesque, New Orleans stomp of "Mirror Of Love," which showcases her attraction and love for Flash although he's a "mean and obscene lover."
At the album midpoint, another news bulletin informs us of Flash and Black's war taking to the streets in increased violence and fury with the people powerless to stop it. With the six and a half minute "Nobody Gives," The Tramp returns to the scene with a world weary lament that explores political, and therefore, human conflicts and tragedies of the past (most specifically, 1926 and 1939), which in turn provide parallels to the turbulence of the Village Green as caused by Flash and Black and the impending, inevitable genocide.
"Back in nineteen hundred and thirty nine
There were scores of German military waiting in a line
And the Fatherland wanted what the world wouldn't give
And then Hitler decided he could take what was his
So they all went to war and said
Kill all the left-wing intellectuals
Annihilate the Jews and wipe out their race
Eliminate the weak because they're ineffectual
And the fact of it is nobody gives anymore
I'm only sitting here watching it all go on
And listening to both sides
Yeah, why can't we talk it out
Why can't we sort it out
We'll work it out if we try
Why can't we sit down and work out a compromise?
Why not negotiate and try to be civilized?
I'll tell you why, because nobody gives a damn
Nobody listens and no one will understand"
As The Tramp continues to voice his pleas with the aching ballad "Oh Where Oh Where Is Love?," Mr. Flash is caught within his own crisis of conscience as he is confronted with the voice and being of his own soul in "Flash's Dream (The Final Elbow)," who takes him to extreme task for his evil-doing as well as provides him with the stern warning that his time is coming to a swift and unmerciful end...literally. Waking in fright, Flash voices his full repentance in the swirling darkness of "Flash's Confession," after which, he views his life with a newfound sense of resignation alongside Belle in the tender ballad "Nothing Lasts Forever," before he is soon overtaken by Mr. Black's forces, captured and delivered to Black's lair.
At this point, "Preservation Act 2" flies in to the surreal and nightmarish with the "Rocky Horror Picture Show" styled "Artificial Man," on which the fullness of Black's plans are revealed and Flash is his first victim. "I can't believe this is happening," Flash protests. "I just want to stay the way that I am/I don't want to live a lie in an artificial world." Mr. Black, however, gleefully continues to make Flash his test case as he murders his adversary, cleanses his brain and essentially creates a mindless robot who will forever be monitored and controlled by Black's new regime.
"Let's build an antiseptic world
Full of artificial people
Cure all diseases, conquer pain
And monitor the human brain
And see what thoughts you're thinking
Observe your feelings
Secret fears
Controlling everything you say and do
And we will build a Master Race
To live within our artificial world"
Feeling that he has finally discovered how to "improve upon God's creation" for upgrading the "outdated homo sapien," Black's plans for the downfall of humanity are complete as he slaughters his opponents and all those who conspire against or even question his authority. And even still, he doesn't stop there. On the country and western tinged "Scrapheap City," Belle, before she is also soon taken away to be transformed into an automaton, observes the destruction around her as the Village Green, and humanity itself, reaches it end.
"They say that good manners belong on a heap
They say they're outdated and they're obsolete
And now they're coming to take me away
To Scrapheap City
There's no quality
And there ain't no style
Just miles and miles
Of Scrapheap piles
There's no quality
And there's no purity
They're digging up all of the flowers because they look pretty
And erecting identical concrete monstrosities
They're killing off all of the animals too
The only ones left are the ones in the zoo
Now they're coming to take me away
To Scrapheap City"
"Preservation Act 2" concludes with a final news bulletin informing the public that remains of a new "State Of Emergency" that is indefinitely in place due to "government security." New curfews, fully enforced by Black's ironically named People's Army, are now in place as are rationing of food, gas, water, electricity and even operating businesses. Places of public entertainment and all television stations have been forced to close and the dissemination of news has now been filtered to one, solitary government run radio station on which blares Black's newly composed National Anthem entitled "Salvation Road."
"Goodbye youth, goodbye dreams
The good times and the friends I used to know
Goodbye freedom, hello fear
A brave new world has suddenly appeared...
...Yes, we'll all walk along
And we'll all sing a song
As we walk down Salvation Road"
And so, under Black merciless control, the human experiment concludes as does The Kinks' "Preservation Act 2."
As I stated at the outset of this posting, The Kinks' "Preservation Act 2," in my mind, is a bleaker and much more brutally uncompromising rock opera/concept album than many others that I have heard before, and that, again, includes Pink Floyd's "The Wall." Unlike the Floyd epic which concludes with the track "Outside The Wall," a song suggesting a greater sense of connection after intense isolation, and the possibilities of community after crippling solitude, The Kinks, by contrast, offer no such escape hatch. It is an album of darkness and despair throughout and over the course of its four sides, the level of dissolution and destruction only increases, all leading to the point where all sense of connection, community, and individuality itself, warts and all, have been snuffed out. There is no glimmer of hope. There is nothing within the work that even gives the listener something to cling onto by album's end. With this album, The Kinks have given us the end of the world which they race towards uncompromisingly and yet with the fullness of heart and anguish for the human race doomed to undo itself for nothing more than power, control and an unforgivable level of self-preservation for the self at the expense of all.
Now this is not to say that there is no fun, so to speak, to be had while listening to the album. Quite the contrary, the joyous pleasures of such a disturbing release as this one is are completely found within The Kinks' full throttle creative fearlessness as this particular decade was especially fruitful even if it was confounding for their fans, critics and the public at large. I do realize that the band completely marginalized themselves to a degree since not everyone enjoys double albums, concepts albums or rock operas, all three very uncool things that I do happen to enjoy tremendously for I love losing myself within an album--and if there are musical peaks and valleys and conceptual narrative to aid in the experience, then so be it.
And besides, it would be hard pressed to find a leader as adept as Ray Davies to steer the conceptual shift, one who wished to try his hand at being a rock and rock dramatist over and again, and as far as I am concerned, to a most provocative degree. Honestly, it seems as if the man worked himself to exhaustion and beyond during this era and on this album in particular. To craft a narrative would be well and good enough but one that contains actual songs than crossed boundaries from the intimate to the epic, that carried the banner for full-on rock and roll power but mixed with musical theater, near dixieland jazz, political blues and balladry that not only showcased his gifts for music, lyrics and melodic dynamism but for an overall human outreach that was precisely aware of how and where the human race could possibly be headed should we not attend to ourselves with extreme care. Davies, with The Kinks, created an album of the past, which pointed towards an impossibly dark future...but a future that is more than possible in 2016 for it truly has arrived.
As you may already know, I am based in Madison, WI, my adopted home for nearly 30 years and I first heard "Preservation Act 2" after the regime of Republican Governor Scott Walker began it tenure with an extremist ideology that has rolled back 100 years of Wisconsin based progressive politics and policies in a scant five years--and to such a degree I would imagine it would take decades to even try to right all of his extreme wrongs, which have included (but are not limited to) a disastrous amount of jobs steadily leaving the state, the slow decay and destruction of public education from preschool through college (I believe solely his revenge for not obtaining a college degree of his own after having been rumored to have been expelled), a complete disregard for women's equality (from his ending of the Equal Pay Act to government enforced trans-vaginal probes in order to shame women from choosing abortion), the dismantling of the non-partisan Government Accountability Board, the implementation of classict and racist Voter ID laws and even the illegal arrests of 1st Amendment protected citizens for SINGING protest songs within the State Capitol.
All of this plus the fact that he was the primary subject of a criminal probe for illegal campaigning acts but as he and his cronies have re-written laws, they have now legalized their own acts of criminality which they can now be no longer investigated for. To think, his career as Governor came to be not just through a miserable voter turnout by liberals (for liberals are often their own worst enemies) in 2010 but also through a carefully cultivated public image he crafted to a non-committed, uninformed public which presented him as a casual, clean cut, conservative God fearing figure with old fashioned Midwestern values who supposedly carried a brown bag lunch to work every day. Mr. Black indeed.
But now, our nation is overrun with figures just like Walker, many of whom are members of the Tea Party Obstructionist Congress who have ground our political discourse to a screeching halt due solely to their unabashed racism towards President Obama over these past eight years. And now, I look at the national stage and remain stunned that no one seems to remember our human history, eve one as RECENT as the Holocaust when I see the daily atrocities performed by Donald Trump, a figure the Republican party fully gave birth to and fully owns despite their efforts to run as fast and as far away from him as they are able. Yes, Adolf Hitler comparison are generally easy and lazy but watching Donald Trump and the rhetoric contained at his vicious, vitriolic and violent rallies have given me the greatest pauses of my life and honestly, I have never been more frightened than I am right now.
Within "Preservation Act 2," Mr. Black's schemes may seem to be fantastical or even a bit silly within this rock an roll context and the idea of changing humans to robotic Master Race but Ray Davies was truly onto something all the way back in 1974...something that is fully playing out to extremes in 2016. In fact, I cannot help but to wonder if Davies himself is looking at our political landscape these days and sadly shaking his head as he did know this was a distinct possibility for us all along.
We have been here before as a species and even though fights long fought are playing out passionately again, we must remain vigilant to the purity of ourselves, a message I wonder if "Preservation Act 2" is imploring of all of its listeners. Trump is a dangerous, despicable man. A figure who is so uninformed, so unrepentant in his overt sexism, racism, and criticism of any and all who do not fit into the greatness of himself which he has projected into his own cranium on an endless loop. A person with no moral compass or objectivity. No sense of logic, compassion or reason but so shockingly thin-skinned that he is prone to all imagined conspiracies that are unleashed after any slights towards him, no matter how small. As he has received endorsements of support from White supremacy groups, none of whom he has denounced, his stance to "Make America Great Again" and his pledge to become the "Law And Order President" in this age of Black Lives Matter and rampant Islamophobia are examples of coded language that has made me more afraid than ever for my personal safety for no other reason than the color of my skin. He is garish, crude, lewd and bombastic. He is the embodiment of uncontrollable White male, fear, entitlement and rage unleashed. He is Mr. Flash and Mr. Black all rolled into one. And as in the words of The Kinks' song itself, he's evil.
With about two weeks remaining before election day, I hope that the universe's pendulum of justice is able to swing in the way of humanity once more as these past few years, and this point in time crucially, The Kinks' 40 year plus old album have become so frighteningly prevalent. As Flash's soul speaks to him shortly before his demise, it explains profoundly, "Men like you will always come and go, but the people will go on forever."
I hope so.
THE KINKS
THE KINKS:
Ray Davies: Vocals, Acoustic Guitar
Dave Davies: Lead Guitar, Vocals
Mick Avory: Drums
John Dalton: Bass Guitar
John Gosling: Keyboards
with
Laurie Brown: Trumpet, Flute, Tenor Sax
John Beecham: Trombone, Tuba
Alan Holmes: Baritone Saxophone, Clarinet
Marianne Price: Co-Lead Vocals on "Nothing Lasts Forever" and "Scrapheap City"
Sue Brown, Krysia Kocjan, Lee Pavey, Pamela Travis: Additional Vocals
Stanley Mayers: String Arrangements
All music and lyrics by Ray Davies
Arranged and Produced by Ray Davies
Released May 8, 1974
We are a few short weeks away from what I hope will be the long awaited and exceedingly merciful conclusion to our nation's endless, nightmarish, through-the-looking-glass-funhouse-mirror version of an election cycle. I have no need to go through the litany of horrors unleashed upon the United States and the world at large via the improbably virile campaign from Donald Trump, whose specialized brand of open faced intolerance for anyone and anything that happens to not be a White male combined with an "Emperor's New Clothes" political agenda tinged with crucial dog-whistle language and coded calls to violence his base has willingly eaten up with a spoon.
More times than I wish to even recount, the lyrics to a selection from Pink Floyd's "The Wall" (released November 30, 1979) have popped to the forefront of my mind. The song is entitled "In The Flesh" (sans question mark) and occurs at a point in the story when our main protagonist, the alienated, drug addicted, mentally unstable rock star Pink, backstage before one of his own concerts, has re-imagined himself as a fascistic demagogue addressing his legion of skinhead followers. During a rally, Pink expresses the following:
"Are there any queers in the theater tonight?
Get 'em up against the wall
That one in the spotlight
He don't look right to me
Get him up against the wall
That one looks Jewish
And that one's a coon!
Who let all of this riff raff into the room?
There's one smoking a joint
And another with spots
If I had my way...
...I'd have all of you shot!"
While clearly mirroring the totalitarians of our past from Stalin to Mussolini and of course, Adolf Hitler who all housed variations of their "final solutions" for humankind, this song was clearly designed as a grim warning for us to not repeat what has already happened and nearly snuffed all of us out. And yet, with Donald Trump, with his overt racism, homophobia, Islamophobia, sexually predatory tendencies, and so much more and all sitting at the edges of his impossibly thin skin and hair trigger temperament, we find ourselves here again.
At this time, I wish to turn your attention to an album that I believe has been long forgotten and therefore relegated to the dark basement corners of rock and rock history yet it is a work that I find to be even more chilling, frightening and even prescient than anything within "The Wall." It is an album that I heard for the very first time just a few short years ago and has left me feeling emotionally shattered on each and every listen, And now, it exists as a work that feels to be too terrifyingly close to home. Dear readers and listeners, please allow me to present to you "Preservation Act 2" from the iconic British rock band, The Kinks.
For those of you who only know The Kinks' musical history solely through their iconic singles and albums from the 1960's as well as their material from their 1980's resurgence with "Come Dancing," "Don't Forget To Dance" and "Do It Again," The Kinks during the 1970's was a band that was as dangerously and deliriously inventive and innovative as they were restlessly prolific. Since t his was the '70s, concept albums were all the rage and with that aesthetic in mind, The Kinks' principal songwriter/bandleader/producer/guitarist/lead singer Ray Davies took it upon himself to compose a series of story driven albums that never seemed to receive any sort of critical praise but do trust me, as I graciously and passionately urge to you seek them out as they are a collection of wholly unique and idiosyncratic works that often feel like hefty books lined up upon a large bookshelf.
For all of the ribald, tongue in cheek high school stage play styled humor, Ray Davies utilized the concept album format to seriously explore a variety of themes including identity, with regards to the urgent necessity for individuality vs. the emptiness of anonymity and conformity, in addition to class warfare in England, the brutality of the British boarding school education (even Pink Floyd's Roger Waters would shudder), the ebb and flow of marriage, fears of humanity being overtaken by impersonal technology as well as the painful adolescent backstory of a character who would wreak havoc over England as a garishly charismatic villain in his adult years. With "Preservation Act 2," we are witness to the full wrath and comeuppance of said villain but it all arrives at a supreme cost to our collective sense of democracy, decency and humanity.
The Kinks' "Preservation Act 2" is the grim culmination of the band's musical odyssey which was introduced with the iconic, pastoral "The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society" (released November 22, 1968), began in earnest with "Preservation Act 1" (released November 16, 1973) and even double ended upon itself with a prequel with "Schoolboys In Disgrace" (released November 17, 1975), clearly the only other direction the Preservation saga could turn as "Preservation Act 2" essentially concludes with apocalypse.
But I am getting much too far head of myself.
Essentially, "The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society" is a beautiful collection of smartly written and wide open hearted collection of vignettes of centering around the lives and pursuits of the inhabitants of the mythical Village Green, which could be seen as a stand in for a more old-fashioned, traditional England or more metaphorically as a tranquil mental space where each of us may be able to travel that is far away from the noise of the world.
"Preservation Act 1" more or less continues within this vein of vignettes yet a more formal plot begins to creep into the proceedings. Selections like "There's A Change In The Weather," a song in which restless citizens begin to hold individual premonitions concerning potential dark times ahead.as well as "Money And Corruption/I Am Your Man," "Here Comes Flash" and "Demolition," all begin to set the full plot in motion as these tracks detail the arrival of the insidious gangster Mr. Flash, who cons the citizens of the Village Green, purchases the land and destroys the English greenery transforming it into what is eventually described as a "vulgar playground" which exists completely under Flash's control.
With the double album rock opera opus of "Preservation Act 2," The Kinks take us into political warfare, a battle for ultimate power and control between the garish Mr. Flash and Mr. Black, the conservative yet frighteningly duplicitous figure who volunteers himself to take down Flash but who also houses a secret and horrifying endgame for all of the citizens.
The album opens with impending chaos as one of the album's occasional news bulletin reports that a new "People's Army" formulated by Mr. Black has been rumored to have been formed in an attempt to overthrow Mr. Flash and his minions. "Introduction To Solution" depicts both villains in their separate quarters, plotting against each other as they each "debase life with crude ostentation" while "the poor cry for more." And in the eyes of the character known only as The Tramp, a stand-in for all of us listeners, the common people, the pawns in Flash and Black's political chess match, he sadly sighs, "I'm only standing here/Watching it all go on, and I'm watching it all go wrong/And it's painfully clear that the battle is near/And I wish I could just disappear."
Meanwhile, in an attic somewhere in suburbia (according to Ray Davies' own stage directions), we find Mr. Black in sinister soliloquy with the song "When A Solution Comes." Over a bed of warm acoustic guitars and electric piano yet pushed by plodding drums, Mr. Black reveals his fascistic ambitions over the unsuspecting Mr. Flash and the Village Green as a whole. He speaks of achieving "revolution" with his specialized "final solution."
"When a solution comes
It won't take sides with anyone
Regardless of race or creed
The whole wide world is gonna feel the squeeze
The red, black, yellow and white
And even the Arabs and the Israelites
They're all going to feel the bite...
...I have waited a long, long time
Biding my time and waiting on the sidelines
Watching it all go wrong
Witnessing the disintegration
Rubbing my hands in anticipation...
...Yeah, I'm gonna change the world
I'm gonna use a little manipulation
I'm gonna build a new civilization"
With a level of raw rock and roll sleaze that truly outdoes The Rolling Stones at their best, we arrive next with the raucous "Money Talks" where we find ourselves with Mr. Flash and his Spivs and floosies reveling in their amassed wealth and gleeful corruption. "Money can't breathe and money can't see," sings Flash. "But, when I pull out a fiver people listen to me." Yet, as a contrast to Flash overt vulgarity, Mr. Black and his growing army addresses the nation with a plea for a return to a certain conservatism with The Kinks' stab at Monty Python-esque satire in "Shepherds Of The Nation."
"Down with sex and sin
Down with pot, heroin
Down with pornography
Down with lust
Down with vice lechery and debauchery...
...Down with nudity
Breasts that are bare and pubic hair
We are here to cleanse humanity
From the man in the raincoat's
Pale faced glare
So sodomites beware
We are the New Centurians
Shepherds of the Nation
We'll keep on our guard
For sin and degradation
We are the nation guard
Against filth and depravity
Perversion and vulgarity
Homosexuality
Keep it clean"
And as expected, the people swallow the bait.
Yet, for Flash, we re-visit him and his gang through the Gilbert and Sullivan styled "Second-Hand Car Spiv," on which we explore the class warfare that produced figures like these and the sense of self-justification they feel towards themselves and their vicious reign of power. Even so, there is a Falstaff-esque tinge to the admissions from Flash in "Scum Of The Earth," on which he proclaims, "So don't put me down because I've done well.../we're your enemies and your brothers/And no man is a saint/And deep down we're all the same as one another."
The spectacular "He's Evil" could initially be seen as being directed toward the insidious Mr. Flash but upon further examination, I am feeling even more that this is a song designed as conceptual foreshadowing as well as a warning to the people over the true motives of Mr. Black, .
"He comes on smooth, cool and kind
But he wants your body and not your mind
He is just the devil in disguise
He'll drag you down and he will make you cry
And once you're in, there will be no getting out
So, look out..."
Even Mr. Flash, who has been seen to posses a certain dark charm is taken to task by his main squeeze Belle in he burlesque, New Orleans stomp of "Mirror Of Love," which showcases her attraction and love for Flash although he's a "mean and obscene lover."
At the album midpoint, another news bulletin informs us of Flash and Black's war taking to the streets in increased violence and fury with the people powerless to stop it. With the six and a half minute "Nobody Gives," The Tramp returns to the scene with a world weary lament that explores political, and therefore, human conflicts and tragedies of the past (most specifically, 1926 and 1939), which in turn provide parallels to the turbulence of the Village Green as caused by Flash and Black and the impending, inevitable genocide.
"Back in nineteen hundred and thirty nine
There were scores of German military waiting in a line
And the Fatherland wanted what the world wouldn't give
And then Hitler decided he could take what was his
So they all went to war and said
Kill all the left-wing intellectuals
Annihilate the Jews and wipe out their race
Eliminate the weak because they're ineffectual
And the fact of it is nobody gives anymore
I'm only sitting here watching it all go on
And listening to both sides
Yeah, why can't we talk it out
Why can't we sort it out
We'll work it out if we try
Why can't we sit down and work out a compromise?
Why not negotiate and try to be civilized?
I'll tell you why, because nobody gives a damn
Nobody listens and no one will understand"
As The Tramp continues to voice his pleas with the aching ballad "Oh Where Oh Where Is Love?," Mr. Flash is caught within his own crisis of conscience as he is confronted with the voice and being of his own soul in "Flash's Dream (The Final Elbow)," who takes him to extreme task for his evil-doing as well as provides him with the stern warning that his time is coming to a swift and unmerciful end...literally. Waking in fright, Flash voices his full repentance in the swirling darkness of "Flash's Confession," after which, he views his life with a newfound sense of resignation alongside Belle in the tender ballad "Nothing Lasts Forever," before he is soon overtaken by Mr. Black's forces, captured and delivered to Black's lair.
At this point, "Preservation Act 2" flies in to the surreal and nightmarish with the "Rocky Horror Picture Show" styled "Artificial Man," on which the fullness of Black's plans are revealed and Flash is his first victim. "I can't believe this is happening," Flash protests. "I just want to stay the way that I am/I don't want to live a lie in an artificial world." Mr. Black, however, gleefully continues to make Flash his test case as he murders his adversary, cleanses his brain and essentially creates a mindless robot who will forever be monitored and controlled by Black's new regime.
"Let's build an antiseptic world
Full of artificial people
Cure all diseases, conquer pain
And monitor the human brain
And see what thoughts you're thinking
Observe your feelings
Secret fears
Controlling everything you say and do
And we will build a Master Race
To live within our artificial world"
Feeling that he has finally discovered how to "improve upon God's creation" for upgrading the "outdated homo sapien," Black's plans for the downfall of humanity are complete as he slaughters his opponents and all those who conspire against or even question his authority. And even still, he doesn't stop there. On the country and western tinged "Scrapheap City," Belle, before she is also soon taken away to be transformed into an automaton, observes the destruction around her as the Village Green, and humanity itself, reaches it end.
"They say that good manners belong on a heap
They say they're outdated and they're obsolete
And now they're coming to take me away
To Scrapheap City
There's no quality
And there ain't no style
Just miles and miles
Of Scrapheap piles
There's no quality
And there's no purity
They're digging up all of the flowers because they look pretty
And erecting identical concrete monstrosities
They're killing off all of the animals too
The only ones left are the ones in the zoo
Now they're coming to take me away
To Scrapheap City"
"Preservation Act 2" concludes with a final news bulletin informing the public that remains of a new "State Of Emergency" that is indefinitely in place due to "government security." New curfews, fully enforced by Black's ironically named People's Army, are now in place as are rationing of food, gas, water, electricity and even operating businesses. Places of public entertainment and all television stations have been forced to close and the dissemination of news has now been filtered to one, solitary government run radio station on which blares Black's newly composed National Anthem entitled "Salvation Road."
"Goodbye youth, goodbye dreams
The good times and the friends I used to know
Goodbye freedom, hello fear
A brave new world has suddenly appeared...
...Yes, we'll all walk along
And we'll all sing a song
As we walk down Salvation Road"
And so, under Black merciless control, the human experiment concludes as does The Kinks' "Preservation Act 2."
As I stated at the outset of this posting, The Kinks' "Preservation Act 2," in my mind, is a bleaker and much more brutally uncompromising rock opera/concept album than many others that I have heard before, and that, again, includes Pink Floyd's "The Wall." Unlike the Floyd epic which concludes with the track "Outside The Wall," a song suggesting a greater sense of connection after intense isolation, and the possibilities of community after crippling solitude, The Kinks, by contrast, offer no such escape hatch. It is an album of darkness and despair throughout and over the course of its four sides, the level of dissolution and destruction only increases, all leading to the point where all sense of connection, community, and individuality itself, warts and all, have been snuffed out. There is no glimmer of hope. There is nothing within the work that even gives the listener something to cling onto by album's end. With this album, The Kinks have given us the end of the world which they race towards uncompromisingly and yet with the fullness of heart and anguish for the human race doomed to undo itself for nothing more than power, control and an unforgivable level of self-preservation for the self at the expense of all.
Now this is not to say that there is no fun, so to speak, to be had while listening to the album. Quite the contrary, the joyous pleasures of such a disturbing release as this one is are completely found within The Kinks' full throttle creative fearlessness as this particular decade was especially fruitful even if it was confounding for their fans, critics and the public at large. I do realize that the band completely marginalized themselves to a degree since not everyone enjoys double albums, concepts albums or rock operas, all three very uncool things that I do happen to enjoy tremendously for I love losing myself within an album--and if there are musical peaks and valleys and conceptual narrative to aid in the experience, then so be it.
And besides, it would be hard pressed to find a leader as adept as Ray Davies to steer the conceptual shift, one who wished to try his hand at being a rock and rock dramatist over and again, and as far as I am concerned, to a most provocative degree. Honestly, it seems as if the man worked himself to exhaustion and beyond during this era and on this album in particular. To craft a narrative would be well and good enough but one that contains actual songs than crossed boundaries from the intimate to the epic, that carried the banner for full-on rock and roll power but mixed with musical theater, near dixieland jazz, political blues and balladry that not only showcased his gifts for music, lyrics and melodic dynamism but for an overall human outreach that was precisely aware of how and where the human race could possibly be headed should we not attend to ourselves with extreme care. Davies, with The Kinks, created an album of the past, which pointed towards an impossibly dark future...but a future that is more than possible in 2016 for it truly has arrived.
As you may already know, I am based in Madison, WI, my adopted home for nearly 30 years and I first heard "Preservation Act 2" after the regime of Republican Governor Scott Walker began it tenure with an extremist ideology that has rolled back 100 years of Wisconsin based progressive politics and policies in a scant five years--and to such a degree I would imagine it would take decades to even try to right all of his extreme wrongs, which have included (but are not limited to) a disastrous amount of jobs steadily leaving the state, the slow decay and destruction of public education from preschool through college (I believe solely his revenge for not obtaining a college degree of his own after having been rumored to have been expelled), a complete disregard for women's equality (from his ending of the Equal Pay Act to government enforced trans-vaginal probes in order to shame women from choosing abortion), the dismantling of the non-partisan Government Accountability Board, the implementation of classict and racist Voter ID laws and even the illegal arrests of 1st Amendment protected citizens for SINGING protest songs within the State Capitol.
All of this plus the fact that he was the primary subject of a criminal probe for illegal campaigning acts but as he and his cronies have re-written laws, they have now legalized their own acts of criminality which they can now be no longer investigated for. To think, his career as Governor came to be not just through a miserable voter turnout by liberals (for liberals are often their own worst enemies) in 2010 but also through a carefully cultivated public image he crafted to a non-committed, uninformed public which presented him as a casual, clean cut, conservative God fearing figure with old fashioned Midwestern values who supposedly carried a brown bag lunch to work every day. Mr. Black indeed.
But now, our nation is overrun with figures just like Walker, many of whom are members of the Tea Party Obstructionist Congress who have ground our political discourse to a screeching halt due solely to their unabashed racism towards President Obama over these past eight years. And now, I look at the national stage and remain stunned that no one seems to remember our human history, eve one as RECENT as the Holocaust when I see the daily atrocities performed by Donald Trump, a figure the Republican party fully gave birth to and fully owns despite their efforts to run as fast and as far away from him as they are able. Yes, Adolf Hitler comparison are generally easy and lazy but watching Donald Trump and the rhetoric contained at his vicious, vitriolic and violent rallies have given me the greatest pauses of my life and honestly, I have never been more frightened than I am right now.
Within "Preservation Act 2," Mr. Black's schemes may seem to be fantastical or even a bit silly within this rock an roll context and the idea of changing humans to robotic Master Race but Ray Davies was truly onto something all the way back in 1974...something that is fully playing out to extremes in 2016. In fact, I cannot help but to wonder if Davies himself is looking at our political landscape these days and sadly shaking his head as he did know this was a distinct possibility for us all along.
We have been here before as a species and even though fights long fought are playing out passionately again, we must remain vigilant to the purity of ourselves, a message I wonder if "Preservation Act 2" is imploring of all of its listeners. Trump is a dangerous, despicable man. A figure who is so uninformed, so unrepentant in his overt sexism, racism, and criticism of any and all who do not fit into the greatness of himself which he has projected into his own cranium on an endless loop. A person with no moral compass or objectivity. No sense of logic, compassion or reason but so shockingly thin-skinned that he is prone to all imagined conspiracies that are unleashed after any slights towards him, no matter how small. As he has received endorsements of support from White supremacy groups, none of whom he has denounced, his stance to "Make America Great Again" and his pledge to become the "Law And Order President" in this age of Black Lives Matter and rampant Islamophobia are examples of coded language that has made me more afraid than ever for my personal safety for no other reason than the color of my skin. He is garish, crude, lewd and bombastic. He is the embodiment of uncontrollable White male, fear, entitlement and rage unleashed. He is Mr. Flash and Mr. Black all rolled into one. And as in the words of The Kinks' song itself, he's evil.
With about two weeks remaining before election day, I hope that the universe's pendulum of justice is able to swing in the way of humanity once more as these past few years, and this point in time crucially, The Kinks' 40 year plus old album have become so frighteningly prevalent. As Flash's soul speaks to him shortly before his demise, it explains profoundly, "Men like you will always come and go, but the people will go on forever."
I hope so.
Sunday, October 2, 2016
WSPC'S SESSION NOTES OCTOBER 2016: DO NOT DISTURB THIS GROOVE
FROM THE DJ's STUDIO DESK:
From time to time, I have wondered if WSPC should shut down its signal...
Yes, WSPC, my mythical radio station, the one that has been playing inside of my brain, heart and spirit for the entirety of my life, and will only truly cease to broadcast on the day I leave this mortal coil (which I hope is an infinity of time from now, but that's another posting altogether), is something that every once in a while. I ponder shutting down as it "exists" in the real world. WSPC is a pretend radio station that is culminated through song postings I place upon my Facebook page, and which I further compile and post by the conclusion of each month. Now that I have a home upon WVMO in the very real world with my weekly Savage Radio program, it has made me question if there is any use for WSPC anymore.
Over these last few months, I have been receiving some positive feedback about Savage Radio that has been encouraging and supportive to levels that I do not feel that I am sufficiently able to describe to you. Both radio veterans and legends, Tom Teuber and most especially Lindsay Wood Davis, the top brass of WVMO, the very ones w ho brought this little community radio station into existence in Monona, WI a hair over one year ago, have each given me words of praise. Yet, and also, in recent weeks, I have just begun to hear from actual listeners (i.e. people that are my friends and do not know whatsoever) and their feedback has sent me over the moon and back, as it seems a connection is being forged between what they enjoy listening to and the kind of broadcast that I am trying to weave each week.
Just last week, I attempted something unprecedented for the program. I conducted my first on-air interview with the Madison, WI based band Dash Hounds (featuring the talents of Alivia Kleinfeldt and Brendan Manley) as a means to give additional promotion to their debut EP "Eft" (released August 27, 2016). Hoping that all of my years listening to the syndicated "Rockline" program assisted me, the interview went off without any major hitches and I am now beginning to possibly have members of Post Social join me for an interview to help push their recently released third album "Casablanca" (released July 30, 2016).
From that one show, I have heard some nice words and surprisingly received a message from Matt Smith of the local band Throwing Springs--incidentally, someone else that I have not met or had previously heard of--who not only expressed some kind words for the Dash Hounds interview but also sent me his band's EP to listen to with the suggestion that perhaps I'd like to interview them on a future show! (Honestly, how did they even know about my show in the first place??? Maybe they are friends with Dash Hounds...I don't know.) WOW!!
Now...have faith, dear readers and listeners. I am not and will not get a big head about any of this. I just can't. Anything an change and it all could end tomorrow for any number of reasons. All I am able to do is to try my best each week and just let everything flow as naturally as possible. The very best word that I can utilize at this time is: "thankful." I am so very thankful to have been allowed to be in this position within the Madison radio and music community--so very thankful. So, it is imperative to remain humble and gracious. Yet, as far as WSPC is concerned, with my energies devoted to WVMO, I question if there even is a need for it anymore--not that my FB friends are just waiting with bated breath to see what songs I'm going to post on any given day (trust me, they aren't)--but for myself as any sort of a creative outlet.
Some days, I honestly do not feel terribly inspired. Some days, I just cannot think of anything to "play," so I either run to tried and true favorites or some days, there's nothing at all. Some days, even compiling the list feels like a bit of a self-imposed chore than something fun. And with all of that, I question if I should continue something that just might not be that much fun anymore. For if it is not fun, then what's the purpose?
But you know...those feelings are all part of the on-going ebb and flow of this entire music devotee's process. There have been times with Savage Radio that I have wondered if I have run out of music to play--even when I know that it completely far from reality considering my music collection. And then, I find myself re-inspired and I'm just bursting with ideas and excitement for future shows. It all comes and goes, the groove may be disturbed a bit here and there but the love always remains, returning me triumphantly back into the groove.
I am WSPC and WSPC is me. That's it and that's all. I wish that I didn't feel the twinges to just pack it in at times, but again, I keep realizing that this is all a part of the process. Ebb and flow...it comes and it goes and it will always come back again. Never has it failed, and of course, on October 1st, I was flooding with ideas and began posting faster than I could even listen to the songs themselves.
Hopefully, in the fantasy of WSPC and reality of WVMO, you are all able to sense my enthusiasm and deep, passionate love for music and for sharing that very music with anyone who chooses to hear it. WSPC is truthfully the full source of where all of the ideas come from, so how could I ever really shut something like that down?
All I can do is keep plugging away and give thanks to all of you--for I do thank all of you, so profusely.
Just keep listening, if not to me, then to whatever moves you powerfully...and as always...PLAY LOUD!!!!!!!!!!!!
From time to time, I have wondered if WSPC should shut down its signal...
Yes, WSPC, my mythical radio station, the one that has been playing inside of my brain, heart and spirit for the entirety of my life, and will only truly cease to broadcast on the day I leave this mortal coil (which I hope is an infinity of time from now, but that's another posting altogether), is something that every once in a while. I ponder shutting down as it "exists" in the real world. WSPC is a pretend radio station that is culminated through song postings I place upon my Facebook page, and which I further compile and post by the conclusion of each month. Now that I have a home upon WVMO in the very real world with my weekly Savage Radio program, it has made me question if there is any use for WSPC anymore.
Over these last few months, I have been receiving some positive feedback about Savage Radio that has been encouraging and supportive to levels that I do not feel that I am sufficiently able to describe to you. Both radio veterans and legends, Tom Teuber and most especially Lindsay Wood Davis, the top brass of WVMO, the very ones w ho brought this little community radio station into existence in Monona, WI a hair over one year ago, have each given me words of praise. Yet, and also, in recent weeks, I have just begun to hear from actual listeners (i.e. people that are my friends and do not know whatsoever) and their feedback has sent me over the moon and back, as it seems a connection is being forged between what they enjoy listening to and the kind of broadcast that I am trying to weave each week.
Just last week, I attempted something unprecedented for the program. I conducted my first on-air interview with the Madison, WI based band Dash Hounds (featuring the talents of Alivia Kleinfeldt and Brendan Manley) as a means to give additional promotion to their debut EP "Eft" (released August 27, 2016). Hoping that all of my years listening to the syndicated "Rockline" program assisted me, the interview went off without any major hitches and I am now beginning to possibly have members of Post Social join me for an interview to help push their recently released third album "Casablanca" (released July 30, 2016).
From that one show, I have heard some nice words and surprisingly received a message from Matt Smith of the local band Throwing Springs--incidentally, someone else that I have not met or had previously heard of--who not only expressed some kind words for the Dash Hounds interview but also sent me his band's EP to listen to with the suggestion that perhaps I'd like to interview them on a future show! (Honestly, how did they even know about my show in the first place??? Maybe they are friends with Dash Hounds...I don't know.) WOW!!
Now...have faith, dear readers and listeners. I am not and will not get a big head about any of this. I just can't. Anything an change and it all could end tomorrow for any number of reasons. All I am able to do is to try my best each week and just let everything flow as naturally as possible. The very best word that I can utilize at this time is: "thankful." I am so very thankful to have been allowed to be in this position within the Madison radio and music community--so very thankful. So, it is imperative to remain humble and gracious. Yet, as far as WSPC is concerned, with my energies devoted to WVMO, I question if there even is a need for it anymore--not that my FB friends are just waiting with bated breath to see what songs I'm going to post on any given day (trust me, they aren't)--but for myself as any sort of a creative outlet.
Some days, I honestly do not feel terribly inspired. Some days, I just cannot think of anything to "play," so I either run to tried and true favorites or some days, there's nothing at all. Some days, even compiling the list feels like a bit of a self-imposed chore than something fun. And with all of that, I question if I should continue something that just might not be that much fun anymore. For if it is not fun, then what's the purpose?
But you know...those feelings are all part of the on-going ebb and flow of this entire music devotee's process. There have been times with Savage Radio that I have wondered if I have run out of music to play--even when I know that it completely far from reality considering my music collection. And then, I find myself re-inspired and I'm just bursting with ideas and excitement for future shows. It all comes and goes, the groove may be disturbed a bit here and there but the love always remains, returning me triumphantly back into the groove.
I am WSPC and WSPC is me. That's it and that's all. I wish that I didn't feel the twinges to just pack it in at times, but again, I keep realizing that this is all a part of the process. Ebb and flow...it comes and it goes and it will always come back again. Never has it failed, and of course, on October 1st, I was flooding with ideas and began posting faster than I could even listen to the songs themselves.
Hopefully, in the fantasy of WSPC and reality of WVMO, you are all able to sense my enthusiasm and deep, passionate love for music and for sharing that very music with anyone who chooses to hear it. WSPC is truthfully the full source of where all of the ideas come from, so how could I ever really shut something like that down?
All I can do is keep plugging away and give thanks to all of you--for I do thank all of you, so profusely.
Just keep listening, if not to me, then to whatever moves you powerfully...and as always...PLAY LOUD!!!!!!!!!!!!
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