It's time to wrap
this up. Well, I do intend to revisit the Bowie issue, but I am
not technically considering that part of this series. That will either launch
me down a different musical road, or I might take a break from writing about
music. Some of the things I have to say might be better later.
For now, I thought
it would make sense to put some music together for someone who might be
wondering where to start, and create a Spotify playlist. It won't be definitive
or conclusive, which is not even possible. It is somewhat chronological, but
not strictly. So really, it is just a departure point, but it comes from hours
of listening and writing.
If you have been
following along, I have written about many of this before, so sometimes I will
not put a lot of detail. We have songs from the Rolling Stone list, songs from
the Stereogum comments, and songs from my disagreements, sometimes more
strenuously than others.
We start out with Django
Reinhardt with "Minor Swing". There were many good song candidates,
but I thought this was a good example of his style, and it focuses on the
guitar a bit more perhaps, where many of the combo pieces focus on violin or
bass.
Next up is Robert
Johnson, "Believe I'll Dust My Broom". This is for the boogie bass
line, taking something previously belonging to pianos and now standard in
guitar, making it perhaps the most appropriate song for representing his
influence on guitar.
"Ain't That
Just Like A Woman", by Louis Jordan, is really boogie piano, like the
music from which Robert Johnson borrowed that bass line, but with Carl Hogan on
guitar it gives us that famous riff, after which we jump a couple of decades
and get it amplified and electrified in Chuck Berry's "Johnny B
Goode".
There is a sound to
that guitar, beyond the notes, that seems to lead into Dick Dale and the
Surfaris, and a lot of instrumental music, but I am going to go with
"Rumble" by Link Wray next, because I think it hints at some of the
aggression and societal unrest that is so relevant to rock.
It does have room
to get funkier though, and shouldn't forget its blues roots, so this is where
I'd like to bring in "Green Onions" by Booker T. & the MG's,
which gets us into the '60s.
That's kind of all
I want to do from the '60s. It's easy to put in Beatles, Stones, and Hendrix,
but they are on all the lists, and we already know what they sound like. I was
tempted to put in "Born To Be Wild" by Steppenwolf, but I feel like
it would drag things down. Therefore, I am going straight to 1976, with the
release of The Ramones and "Blitzkrieg Bop", followed by
"Shot By Both Sides" by Magazine.
Despite yesterday's
debate on whether "Blitzkrieg Bop" is their best, it is definitely a
good song, and it is really early for them. They are brand new here, and they
must have been a revelation. They never got as much play as they could have,
but for those who were listening, this must have been a breath of fresh air.
That also may be how the original list settled on "London's Calling",
off of The Clash, two self-titled debuts by two great bands. So I get
that, but I am going to go with a different track on the same record,
"White Riot".
"Shot By Both
Sides" is just a cool song that I had never heard of before. Also, right
around here is the time for "Crazy On You" by Heart.
It would be
completely reasonable to put Van Halen's "Eruption" in here, but it
sounds like Eddie Van Halen was not happy with the recording, so for
mind-blowing instrumental I am going with Joe Satriani's "Surfing With The
Alien". Yes, that is a Silver Surfer reference. This recording session did
not go exactly as planned either, but I still think it came out very well, and
it's pretty amazing. On one level it reminds me of Bach's Toccata and Fugue in
D Minor (Captain Nemo music. Don't overthink it.)
And now we are into
the '80s, my old stomping grounds. "Beat's So Lonely" by Charlie
Sexton makes it in, but so does The Knack's "My Sharona". I was
thinking about putting in some Kinks for earlier, and nothing felt right, but I
always feel like this song has some affinity with the Kinks, and so that sound
is still kind of represented.
It is a harder
sound, and a bit longer, but Metallica's "Master Of Puppets" needs to
be here, because it shows some mastery of composition here, with the ground
they cover and they way it builds. We will then relax a little with Quiet
Riot's "Cum On Feel The Noize".
Two songs I feel
awful about excluding, but they are not on Spotify, are "Take It
Easy" by Andy Taylor (1986) and "Saturday Night" by the Misfits
(1999). And they don't have "I Love Rock N Roll" as performed by Joan
Jett and the Blackhearts! The '80s are already well-represented, but I am
afraid I am going to give short shrift to the '90s. This is where I started to
pull away from contemporary music, as I didn't care for grunge, or for the
direction rap was heading. My band was the Gin Blossoms, but I'm going to hold
on to them for right now. Our '90s songs will be "Dammit" (Blink-182)
and "Basket Case" (Green Day).
Actually, I think
of "Island In The Sun" (Weezer) and "The Middle" (Jimmy Eat
World) as the '90s, but they were post 2000, brining us into the new century,
and this is possibly where we are going more into things that I specifically
love, rather than songs I learned about from this project, and now it feels
weirder to write out the full song and band names, because I just mentioned all
of them yesterday. However, I'll try not to start coasting.
I picked on one
comment for suggesting what was basically a coffee shop duo type song for the
greatest guitar songs list, and for greatest, it doesn't work. For a sampler,
though, where we are just trying to remember what guitar can do, and why we
like it, that makes sense. So we are including The Weepies here, with
"World Spins Madly On". This is from 2006, though I only discovered
it a couple of years ago.
Similarly,
"Mercy Me", by the Alkaline Trio, is from 2005, but I only found it
this year. Perhaps this is why my Fall Out Boy selection is "A Little Less
Sixteen Candles, A Little More Touch Me": I am always late.
And then it is
totally time for "Triumph Of Venus" by Torche. Actually, of the songs
remaining, I think I have expressed my love for them so frequently and clearly,
that I don't know that a lot of comment is necessary. We are getting "Summertime",
"Great Expectations", "Fast & Slow" and I think I am
going to throw in "Bulletproof Heart", though I had not originally
intended too.
However, the one I
really want to talk about a little is "Don't Change For Me" by the
Gin Blossoms. As important as they were to me in the '90s, and as much as I
still love those songs, it was really important to me to find that they were
still around. That song is great for me specifically, but also, just still
having them here, and for a while I didn't know how they were.
The distribution
system for music has changed greatly, and it's easy to miss stuff, and not even
think that there is anything out there for you. You have to look harder, or at
least differently, but there is rich, vibrant, glorious music popping up all
over. I think about it a lot for the new bands I review, and for the older
bands I still love. If the occasional blog post or playlist helps, I'll do my
part. Long live rock and roll.
You can find these
songs on Spotify as the creatively named "Guitar Sampler" play list
for Gina Harris.
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