Darby Strong

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A.M. in the P.M.

In a slightly weird twist of fate, I am listening to Neil Young’s epic After the Goldrush whilst I am sitting down to the keyboard all inpired by Wilco and their first studio album, A.M.

But that is just the thing. Listening and seeing (albeit on tha TEE VEE) Wilco on a Saturday night is so good that I find myself going and listening to great albums of masters past well into late Sunday evening. And like all great music, it helps me to realize and appreciate other great music. I am by no means a music afficienado nor expert…I leave that to some of my other friends…yet, this isn’t about all that. This is more about how Wilco inspires me, and then, potentially, how they inspire you…

So let’s get to it, shall we? (right now, Neil sings “Only Love Can Break Your Heart”…temporarily reminiscent of “Should’ve Been in Love”…temporarily…)

A.M., released in 1994, twangs me into some part of my nostalgiac, somewhat sad, broken-hearted period of loves past from the first note, and even more so while Tweedy sings “Should’ve Been in Love.” Ghosts of relationships past provide perfect and lovely muses for all songwriters, and didn’t Vonnegut say to only ever write about love, god, and politics, cuz that’s all there is, anyway? (I think that reference is hazy and will have to look into a bit more later…it might’ve been Dylan…)

The title of this album is perfect, and as a musically obsessed, VERY young child, the A.M. stations of my youth served up some great 70’s fare. Bands like America, Seals and Crofts, and Buffalo Springfield were presenting L.A’s (Laurel Canyon) music scene to the midwest and beyond. Wilco’s A.M. has layers of that, too, as I am sure the entire band also soaked up those A.M. tunes while staring out the back of their parents car as I did, a couple of states over. Tweedy and Wilco make it their own, though, and while they soaked it up, they haven’t wrung it out into this plastic groove.

Somewhere, too, is the feeling of a road trip of that era, as if the listener begins her travels from the present day alt-Nashville, then up to Detroit for the forward bluesy rock of “Casino Queen” on track 2. Along the way, it seems the car spent a little longer than expected in Athens, GA and soaked up some R.E.M. It’s subtle, but in there. (Interestingly, Wilco will play with Minus 5, a Peter Buck side project, many years later…)

I am a sucker for the Pedal Steel, too, and there is plenty of that weaved through this album. Tracks like “I Thought I Held You” are made around it, and I can see the hula girl on the front of a ’75 Cutlass Olds Supreme swiveling her hips to the hawaain beat and gently picked banjo as I write.

Jeff Tweedy’s voice is young on this album, but doesn’t sound all THAT different than it does now. Having never really dissected Wilco like I am now, I am seeing all kinds of things, like how John Stirrat’s lyric’s and delivery on “It’s Just That Simple” are very reminiscent of how Woody Guthrie writes a song. Only then, as perhaps comic relief from the heavier “…Simple”, the drunken appreciation of a sober, car owning friend on “Passenger Side” is just what the listener needs. (and what I surely appreciated, too, as a young, um, drinker).

Can you take me to the store and then the bank
I’ve got 5 dollars we can put in the tank
I’ve got a court date comin’ this June
I’ll be drivin’ soon
passenger, Si-ide…
don’t like ridin’, on the passenger side

“Dash 7”, the albums 11th track, must have inspired Red House Painters and Mark Kozelek somewhat. This song sounds like the pre-cursor to the entire Old Ramon album. And with all this talk of other people and other people’s music, cuz that’s the only way I know how to talk about music (I am a total amateur, see? I told ya so…), I forgot to mention the troubled beauty, raw authentic yet sophisticated stylings, and clear window into the next 13 years of what Wilco would be sharing with us. Or, that’s what I thaught i knew at the time, at least.

I am gonna make myself pick a favorite song, which goes against everthing I believe in, but I am gonna try it and see what happens.

Track 9: Should’ve Been in Love

Inspiration Week: Wilco

wilco23.jpg

Treating your audience like thieves is absurd. Anyone who chooses to listen to our music becomes a collaborator. People who look at music as commerce don’t understand that. They are talking about pieces of plastic they want to sell, packages of intellectual property. I’m not interested in selling pieces of plastic. -Jeff Tweedy, in a Wired interview

Having just watched Austin City Limits tonight, which featured (dare I say, the best American rock band presently playing) Wilco, I am inspired, again, and moved, as always.

Sky Blue Sky, their most recent album that came out in mid-May, makes me laugh, sometimes weep, and always swoon. It fully engages me, that creative masterpiece of an album.

In the spirit of inspiration, music, pursuit of passion and doing what you love, I announce a Wilco appreciation week. With 6 studio albums under their belt*, I think I will look at one album a day. The weekend can serve as, perhaps, a Wilco-inspired, art producing collective – open to all that care to produce art and share it – inspired by Wilco. Or something…

The present members of Wilco are:

(The 2 original members)
Jeff Tweedy – lead singer and guitarist
John Stirratt – bassist

(and the gloriously talented additions)
Nels Cline – guitarist
Glenn Kotche – percussion
Pat Sansone – multi-instrumentalist
Mikael Jorgensen – pianist

and YOU, the listener

*not including their live album, and Mermaid Avenue’s collaborations w/ Billy Bragg, collaboration w/ minus 5, and various EP’s.

‘We’ – The Generosity of Artists

I was wondering what was happening with Ms. Arundhati Roy of late, because I adore her storytelling, commend her brave activism and eloquence, celebrate her beauty and truth, and hadn’t heard much about her lately. So, intending to find out, the intertubes delivered much more than I anticipated.

do1_big_arundhati.jpg

First, Roy is the award-winning author of The God of Small Things, one of the most poetic novels ever written. I had read somewhere that she ruminated on the story and wrote one page a day, never revising it after that page was written. Ever. Crazy, huh? And this prose…I tell you…’tis glorious. I remember, too, reading a Q&A with Ms. Roy which gave the impression that she may never write another book. I am delighted to discover she has recently announced the beginnings of her second novel.

And the news just kept getting better, more mysterious, and intriguing, as Google served up more tidbits relating to Ms. Roy as I searched. Sometime in 2006, the webmaster of resistinc.org, Geoff, received a film with an anonymous note that read:

Feel free to pass this on to others who you know will be interested in its relatively unique content and perspectives (either by copying this DVD, dubbing to VHS, by dissemination through internet download, holding private screenings etc). Using the technology of this information age you have the freedom to be as imaginative as you like in the different ways which you can choose to make this accessible to others.

Geoff said that, “after seeing the film, we felt it was very important, cool, and overall just a fantastic piece of work. So a couple months ago, weroy.org was created to assist the efforts that others put forth in getting this free documentary seen by the citizens of the world.”

The film is described* as “this…unusual kind of underground production. An anonymous sympathiser has edited a video recording of Roy’s speech over 64 minutes, interspersing an impressive array of archival footage to illustrate themes and specific historical events. Contemporary music overlaid throughout the piece shifts the mood and quickens the pace. The result is a visual essay rather than a traditional documentary, perfectly suited to its creator’s intentions, which is to spread the anti-imperialist, social justice politics of Arundhati Roy everywhere.”

It is a free documentary, created by the anonymous filmmaker named “Anon”. He speaks of his inspirations of the film beyond Arundhati Roy’s speeches and his process, among other very human, emotional, and intellectual topics. His statement, “News is now really only a business – and that means big trouble for everyone,” pretty much sums it up, if a complex and engrossing film like ‘We” is only to be summed up. You can view ‘We’ through many different providers. I encourage you to do so. It is outstanding, poignant, and important. Long live truth, passion, activism, and the people’s use of the intertubes.

*on the weroy.org site, no credit was provided of the speaker

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