I love to drive. Always have. And there is no better driving than nights like these—warm summer nights with a cool breeze. I love the feeling of immersing myself completely in the night air, and isolating myself in it—the breeze a barrier between myself and the rest of the world. Then the night is mine, and I feel freer than I do any other time of day.
Well, for those of you who love to drive, and need a good some good tunes, I believe I have found the ultimate CD. It is the soundtrack of Elizabethtown. Now, Elizabethtown’s producers seem to have made two such CDs, but I’m talking about the one entitled Elizabethtown: Music from the Motion Picture. It’s got a red cover; it’s not the one with a “Vol. 2” label, with (beautiful) Orlando Bloom on the front.
In the movie, Orlando Bloom’s character, Drew, receives a homemade CD with many of these songs from his love interest, Claire (Kristen Dunst), along with directions and a detailed, personalized map, to take him on the road trip he tells her he’s never been on. “I want you to get into the deep beautiful melancholy of everything that's happened,” she tells him.
So . . . enjoy!
1. 60B (Etown Theme) - Nancy Wilson
I generally don’t enjoy purely instrumental songs as much those with lyrics, but this song is an exception. Sweet guitar melodies are intertwined to create a song that can’t not make you envision someone on a journey.
2. It’ll All Work Out - Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
I love this song’s opening lyrics: “She wore faded jeans/and soft black leather/ She had eyes so blues they looked like weather/ When she needed me I wasn’t ‘round/ That’s the way it goes/ It’ll all work out.” In about six lines, a whole bittersweet romance is chronicled, and the song only gets better. With its mostly-guitar background, it incorporates an instrumental backdrop that sounds almost Japanese; strangely, it mixes in perfectly with this almost-country ballad.
3. My Father’s Gun - Elton John
A song that feels like the epitome of old southern America. It tells the story of a fallen father/soldier during the Civil War, Elton asserting “It wouldn’t do to bury him where any Yankee stands.” He cries “I’d like to know where the riverboat sails tonight .” It’s impossible to not get completely wrapped up in the sorrow and pride that said narrator feels for his Confederacy, even if you are a northerner through and through.
4. Io (This Time Around) - Helen Stellar
A song that could be soundtrack to any emotional scene in any movie. Really, any. The lyrics are simple, concise, but words that anyone wants to relate to: “ You can be anyone/ This time around.”
5. Come Pick Me Up - Ryan Adams
A song that lives up to the hype about Ryan Adams. He weaves harmonica riffs amongst melancholy lyrics about a confused, insomniac, and lonely life to create a truly modern blues song.
6. Where to Begin - My Morning Jacket
In short, a quiet song. For a few seconds, the singer’s voice almost seems to echo a blues-y Elvis. Lyrics are free for interpretation.
7. Long Ride Home - Patty Griffin
Patty Griffin does wonderful things with words and acoustic guitar in this song—the story a sad, but upbeat (somehow) ballad about a woman’s dead husband, and her thoughts on the long ride home from his funeral. She reminds us that anything can happen when you aren’t expecting it.
8. Sugar Blue - Jeff Finlin
The opening chords suggest a song with a harder edge, but the lyrics which follow are those of a wanderer, in love perhaps—the song softening quickly. “The raven’s song, it breaks the night/ And I rise from me through broken hues” he sings.
9. Don’t I Hold You - Wheat
A song about the sometimes futility of love. The song is fairly fast-paced (for a song about lost love), tinged by desperation.
10. Shut Us Down - Lindsey Buckinham
A different style of vocals, but laced with the same acoustic guitar in most of the CD. The words pick up pace as the song progresses, becoming more and more urgent, more and more frantic. “Oh, I won’t shut us down/ No I will stay around/ As long as I can” he tries to reassure his lover.
11. Let It Out (Let it All Hang Out) - Los Hombres
A fun, upbeat song, ideal for day driving in the country. To enjoy this song, just find a two-lane highway cutting through farm fields, roll down the windows, and, most importantly, lay on the accelerator.
12. Hard Times - eastmountainsouth
The song on the CD that sounds like a campfire song, reminiscent in some moments, of the campfire classic “Linger. “Hard times come again no more,” female vocalists harmonize.
13. Jesus Was a Crossmaker - The Hollies
Elizabethtown features several versions of this song. This one begins with tame church hymn-sounding vocals and progresses to a spirited gospel version.
14. Square One - Tom Petty
Just one more mellow, something-of-a-love-song song. In some verses, he seems to mimic Cat Steven’s quiet melodies and story-telling style. “Square one, my slate is clear/Rest your head on me my dear/It took a world of trouble, it took a world of tears/It took a long time to get back here” he sings.
15. Same In Any Language - I Nine
The movie features various version of this song . . . which is great. The acoustic riffs and lyrics tell the story of a wanderer, her unquenchable wanderlust, and her realization that brotherhood and camaraderie are universal—“The same in any language/ Wherever you go.”
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Thursday, July 16, 2009
A Surprisingly Listenable Playlist (by Evan)
Dear Moxie Readers,
It looks as though I've been suckered into creating a playlist for you people. I only like quality music, so you should enjoy it (provided you enjoy quality music).
1. Lights Out - Santigold
A surprising add for me, I must admit, but the wicked cool video and catchy chorus caught my attention. You may have heard this song on the new Budweiser Lime commercials.
2. Lover in the Snow - Rivers Cuomo
Ah yes, a simple rock song from the prolific Rivers. You may know him best as the lead singer from Weezer. This song is off his album Alone - The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo, an album he recorded at home while he was . . . well, who knows what he was doing . . . Anyways, it's simple and catchy and the rough guitar just reeks of angst.
3. Variation On Commemorative Transfiguration and Communion at Magruder Park - Sufjan Stevens
No one can drag out a title like Sufjan. This song is a beautiful tribute to John Fahey, a prolific guitarist. WARNING there is HYMN content! So all atheists are strongly advised to plug their ears and hum loudly. My favorite part is the third theme.
4. Head Over Heels (In This Life) - Switchfoot
A great Switchfoot song; not much more I can say here.
5. Walk Away - Ben Harper
Ahhhh, such a great song. Filled with an abundance of adages and aphorisms. "And it's so hard to do and so easy to say, but sometimes - sometimes, you just have to walk away." Ben Harper's rusty voice combined with the sound of gently plucked guitar strings always makes for an incredibly calming and dynamic atmosphere.
6. This Modern Love - Bloc Party
A wonderful ballad that is done in a style that only Bloc Party could achieve.
7. Lakes of Canada - Innocence Mission (Sufjan Stevens)
This is a beautiful song that I have only recently discovered. The original is good, but I personally prefer Sufjan's cover on the roof of Cincinnati's Memorial Hall (which I have linked you to).
8. Wake Up - The Ditty Bops
I don't think you could fit more clichés into a song if you tried.
9. 20 Years of Snow - Regina Spektor
This song is trippy beyond belief, but oh-so-good. I love the piano during the line "he's a dying breed."
10. On Ice - Chris Thile
This song is from one of Chris Thile's (mandolin extraordinaire of Nickel Creek) solo albums Deceiver. In this song we get the treat of hearing what a distorted electric mandolin sounds like (or so I want to believe).
11. There There - Radiohead
Very Radiohead, my favorite part is the "there's someone on your shoulder," line; it makes me smile.
So there you have it, I didn't really pay any attention to see if the songs would sound coherent together . . . but you can't have everything, can you?
It looks as though I've been suckered into creating a playlist for you people. I only like quality music, so you should enjoy it (provided you enjoy quality music).
1. Lights Out - Santigold
A surprising add for me, I must admit, but the wicked cool video and catchy chorus caught my attention. You may have heard this song on the new Budweiser Lime commercials.
2. Lover in the Snow - Rivers Cuomo
Ah yes, a simple rock song from the prolific Rivers. You may know him best as the lead singer from Weezer. This song is off his album Alone - The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo, an album he recorded at home while he was . . . well, who knows what he was doing . . . Anyways, it's simple and catchy and the rough guitar just reeks of angst.
3. Variation On Commemorative Transfiguration and Communion at Magruder Park - Sufjan Stevens
No one can drag out a title like Sufjan. This song is a beautiful tribute to John Fahey, a prolific guitarist. WARNING there is HYMN content! So all atheists are strongly advised to plug their ears and hum loudly. My favorite part is the third theme.
4. Head Over Heels (In This Life) - Switchfoot
A great Switchfoot song; not much more I can say here.
5. Walk Away - Ben Harper
Ahhhh, such a great song. Filled with an abundance of adages and aphorisms. "And it's so hard to do and so easy to say, but sometimes - sometimes, you just have to walk away." Ben Harper's rusty voice combined with the sound of gently plucked guitar strings always makes for an incredibly calming and dynamic atmosphere.
6. This Modern Love - Bloc Party
A wonderful ballad that is done in a style that only Bloc Party could achieve.
7. Lakes of Canada - Innocence Mission (Sufjan Stevens)
This is a beautiful song that I have only recently discovered. The original is good, but I personally prefer Sufjan's cover on the roof of Cincinnati's Memorial Hall (which I have linked you to).
8. Wake Up - The Ditty Bops
I don't think you could fit more clichés into a song if you tried.
9. 20 Years of Snow - Regina Spektor
This song is trippy beyond belief, but oh-so-good. I love the piano during the line "he's a dying breed."
10. On Ice - Chris Thile
This song is from one of Chris Thile's (mandolin extraordinaire of Nickel Creek) solo albums Deceiver. In this song we get the treat of hearing what a distorted electric mandolin sounds like (or so I want to believe).
11. There There - Radiohead
Very Radiohead, my favorite part is the "there's someone on your shoulder," line; it makes me smile.
So there you have it, I didn't really pay any attention to see if the songs would sound coherent together . . . but you can't have everything, can you?
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Music You're a Moron If You're Not Listening To (by Preston)
Blowing in from Newfoundland (it's in Canada), is a Celtic/Punk/Pop/Folk force known as Great Big Sea. Lead by a pair of talented vocalists, Sean McCann and Alan Doyle, Great Big Sea plays a blend of energetic original songs, as well as songs based on the Irish, English and French heritage that their region is known for. And while I dig the original stuff, they truly shine in these more traditional songs. Unlike some of their Celtic compatriots, they stay close to the oringal intent of the songs, leaving electric guitars out of it. (Sorry, Dropkick Murphys, I love you anyway . . . ?) With more than sixteen years worth of albums, there's no shortage of great music to dig up, but I highly recommend tracks like "The Mermaid", "Straight to Hell", "Captain Kidd", and "The Old Black Rum". For a little slower fare, "England" is a can't miss. They've even got a great cover of REM's hit "It's the End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)". In short, if you don't give this band a shot, you don't deserve your ears.
Note from Ellie: Thanks for the article, Preston. Sorry this was posted late! I was at the midnight showing for Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince. 'Nuff said.
Note from Ellie: Thanks for the article, Preston. Sorry this was posted late! I was at the midnight showing for Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince. 'Nuff said.
Friday, July 10, 2009
Weekend Shenanigans (by Ellie)
This week I've decided to treat you all to a Friday Double Feature instead of your typical Thursday/Saturday playlists. Which is my sugar-coated way of saying I was too busy to do more than one playlist this weekend. But you still get the same amount of new stuff, so who's complaining? Here are 22 tracks that are perfect for dancing, driving, chilling, jamming, going out, staying in, and everything in between. Enjoy!
1. I Gotta Feeling - Black Eyed Peas
The parties at my college are totally this crazy/fun/raunchy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMxASjxRk1w [I'd warn all of you younger readers of my blog to not watch this music video, but who am I kidding, you've all read Twilight. It's really not too much dirtier.]
2. Ice Cream - New Young Pony Club
3. Dance Anthem of the 80's - Regina Spektor
4. Fascination - Alphabeat
5. The Night Starts Here - Stars
6. We're Here to Save the Day (feat. Asher Roth) - Constellations
7. Friday Night - Lily Allen
8. Saturday Nite Riot - Pink Spiders
9. No You Girls - Franz Ferdinand
10. The Future Freaks Me Out - Motion City Soundtrack
11. Combination Pizza Hut and Taco Bell (Wallpaper Remix) - Das Racist
This is quite possibly the most awful yet charmingly ridiculous song I've heard in a while.
12. So Insane - Discovery
So it turns out that Discovery is the side project of Vampire Weekend keyboardist/producer Rostam Batmanglij and Ra Ra Riot singer Wes Miles. I kid you not. Look it up. I know, right?!
13. I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor - Arctic Monkeys
Here's the video from when they played Glastonbury (sorta like the British version of Woodstock) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onJud5Jb5nQ
14. Bad Fever - Asteroids Galaxy Tour
15. Creator - Santigold
16. One, Two, Three, GO! - Belanova
17. Kill the Director - The Wombats
18. Pumpkin Soup - Kate Nash
19. Alcohol - CSS
20. Cobrastyle - Teddybears Stockholm
21. Short Skirt/Long Jacket - Cake
I found a video of random people on the street listening to and telling researchers what they think about this song. Funniest thing ever: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vd34vJohGXc
22. Love Today - MIKA
1. I Gotta Feeling - Black Eyed Peas
The parties at my college are totally this crazy/fun/raunchy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMxASjxRk1w [I'd warn all of you younger readers of my blog to not watch this music video, but who am I kidding, you've all read Twilight. It's really not too much dirtier.]
2. Ice Cream - New Young Pony Club
3. Dance Anthem of the 80's - Regina Spektor
4. Fascination - Alphabeat
5. The Night Starts Here - Stars
6. We're Here to Save the Day (feat. Asher Roth) - Constellations
7. Friday Night - Lily Allen
8. Saturday Nite Riot - Pink Spiders
9. No You Girls - Franz Ferdinand
10. The Future Freaks Me Out - Motion City Soundtrack
11. Combination Pizza Hut and Taco Bell (Wallpaper Remix) - Das Racist
This is quite possibly the most awful yet charmingly ridiculous song I've heard in a while.
12. So Insane - Discovery
So it turns out that Discovery is the side project of Vampire Weekend keyboardist/producer Rostam Batmanglij and Ra Ra Riot singer Wes Miles. I kid you not. Look it up. I know, right?!
13. I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor - Arctic Monkeys
Here's the video from when they played Glastonbury (sorta like the British version of Woodstock) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onJud5Jb5nQ
14. Bad Fever - Asteroids Galaxy Tour
15. Creator - Santigold
16. One, Two, Three, GO! - Belanova
17. Kill the Director - The Wombats
18. Pumpkin Soup - Kate Nash
19. Alcohol - CSS
20. Cobrastyle - Teddybears Stockholm
21. Short Skirt/Long Jacket - Cake
I found a video of random people on the street listening to and telling researchers what they think about this song. Funniest thing ever: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vd34vJohGXc
22. Love Today - MIKA
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
COMING SOON
Saturday, July 4, 2009
As American as Apple Pie and Twinkies (by Ellie)
1. Volunteers - Jefferson Airplane
2. For What It's Worth - Buffalo Springfield
3. Moonlight Serenade - Glenn Miller
4. I am a Man of Constant Sorrow - O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack
5. California Dreamin' - The Mamas & The Papas
6. Johnny B. Goode - Chuck Berry
7. Subterranean Homesick Blues - Bob Dylan
8. The Liberty Bell - John Philip Sousa [this is also the title credits music for Monty Python's Flying Circus]
9. Devil in Disguise - Elvis Presley
10. Land of 1000 Dances - Wilson Pickett
11. Bad Moon Rising - Creedence Clearwater Revival
2. For What It's Worth - Buffalo Springfield
3. Moonlight Serenade - Glenn Miller
4. I am a Man of Constant Sorrow - O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack
5. California Dreamin' - The Mamas & The Papas
6. Johnny B. Goode - Chuck Berry
7. Subterranean Homesick Blues - Bob Dylan
8. The Liberty Bell - John Philip Sousa [this is also the title credits music for Monty Python's Flying Circus]
9. Devil in Disguise - Elvis Presley
10. Land of 1000 Dances - Wilson Pickett
11. Bad Moon Rising - Creedence Clearwater Revival
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Alexi Murdoch: Give him some ear time! (by Eryn)
I must admit that I am a huge fan of NBC’s show The Office, and therefore a huge fan of John Krasinski, but who isn’t? His new movie Away We Go promises to be a combination of excellent plot, great chemistry between himself and Maya Rudolph, and of course, an amazing soundtrack featuring none other than Alexi Murdoch. It is definitely worth your while to give him a listening to before going to see this flick. He is reminiscent of Nick Drake, another great indie musician, but definitely has his own flavor. His new album Towards the Sun dropped at the beginning of last month. His melodic vibe and mellow voice together are just the right kind of music to relax to on a warm summer night. Not to mention he is a brilliant lyricist.
Here are a few links to check out regarding Alexi Murdoch:
http://www.aleximurdoch.com/index_site.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgsT-klFnXY (live version of “All My Days” one of my favorite songs of his)
Here are a few links to check out regarding Alexi Murdoch:
http://www.aleximurdoch.com/index_site.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgsT-klFnXY (live version of “All My Days” one of my favorite songs of his)
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