The Crowe 100 (lyrics, singer, country, drum, house) - Music Banter Music Banter

Go Back   Music Banter > The Music Forums > General Music
Register Blogging Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read
Welcome to Music Banter Forum! Make sure to register - it's free and very quick! You have to register before you can post and participate in our discussions with over 70,000 other registered members. After you create your free account, you will be able to customize many options, you will have the full access to over 1,100,000 posts.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 08-19-2008, 05:15 PM   #51 (permalink)
Music Addict
 
Crowe's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 699
Default


60. Social Distortion - S/T (1990)
Somewhere in my mid-teens, a buddy of mine played me a mix cd that contained a compilation of punk rock cover songs. Among this somewhat shoddy tracklist was Social Distortion's cover of Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire". Sure enough, I heard it and fell in love. I was hooked. This album contains SD's most well known songs when it comes to the single value, but overall this isn't my favorite album as a cohesive unit (that belongs to White Light White Heat White Trash). However, this is another one of those albums that makes it onto the list for being a pretty big milestone in the growth of my musical tastes - as well as introducing me to SD and allowing me to discover some of their contemporaries. For being this high on my list, interestingly enough, this has probably received less play than some of the others... but the impact pushes Social Distortion's S/T all the way to number 60. Listen for the sounds that later, sh!te pop-punk groups would try to recreate.

Check out: Sick Boy, Ring of Fire, Story of my Life



59. Tom Waits - Bone Machine (1992)
I feel like if pirates of ye olde days past, The Earth Died Screaming would be their anthem. I mean, it's so much better than "Yo ho ho and a bottle of rum". The opening track grabs you right away - you have Tom Waits' voice chanting in this gruff, rough voice of his and it's absolutely haunting. Then, just to reiterate the fact that this album is called Bone Machine, the sounds of hollowed bones clacking together is the background percussion. This is an album driven by lyrics - at some point feeling like more of a spoken word piece. Spoken by dying men and/or zombies. For me, this was my Tom Waits introduction and I prefer it over other stellar Waits albums like Rain Dogs and Swordfishtrombones et al. I do love Orphans though, probably my second favorite. This minimalism effort from Waits is really just a shining example of what strong lyrical prowess can get you. Within the music you can garner some bluesy efforts out of the eclectic drumming - sounds like... elephants playing a saxophone and trumpet? A mutant playing a kazoo? Lyrical content mostly about really fun things like homicide and death.

Check out: The Earth Died Screaming, All Stripped Down, I Don't Wanna Grow Up, Murder in the Red Barn


58. Patti Smith - Horses (1975)
A guy on rateyourmusic said something that I couldn't articulate better, or would rather not try to. He wrote:
Quote:
"'Jesus died for somebody's sins.....but not mine.' Now that is how you open an album. If it was a cry for attention, it's one that wasn't really needed. I can't begin to imagine how alien this must have sounded back in 1975. Before punk and before glam, here was an apparently androgynous figure reciting impenetrable beat poetry over music more basic, primal, and melody-free than anything that had gone before (save for The Stooges)."
Primal is an understatement if it can be... I was introduced to Patti Smith in the winter of 2005, so not one of those lucky introductions in my child hood that I'm sure are becoming tiresome in my writeups, but anyway... I was in my Rock and Soul on the Radio class, another Chicago story, and my professor was showing us a clip of an old SNL skit starring Gilda Radner who was playing a character based on Patti. My professor goes onto talk about how important Patti Smith was, etc etc proto-punk etc etc... important album art bla bla... so I took it all in, not being a big fan of female voices in rock. Then I listened to Horses. And that guy is right... that opening line is a kick to the throat. It pulls you in. And you become aware of this cave-woman singing to you. This cave-woman is a poet, a real talented artist - it's the album that PJ Harvey probably listens to, hell any woman in rock or punk. And of course Horses appears on album lists all the time, so you are probably well aware of its important.

Check out: Gloria (better than the Van Morrison original JJJ!!!), Kimberly, Birdland, Redondo Beach


57. Low - I Could Live in Hope (1994)
I first heard low when their Things We Lost in the Fire LP dropped back in the early 00s. I also remember them being on a Spacemen 3 Tribute album I heard recently which is cool, because well.. the Spacemen 3 (also a sweet Mogwai cover and Arab Strap cover on that same album)... anyway. I decided to dig back in the catalog a little and I picked up Low's debut and was surprised how taken I was with this album. At the time I was really digging punk, so this was a little slower than I was used to. I think what got me was the great vocal harmonization between the husband and wife who head the group. The instruments are pretty minimal, rather simplistic all around - but it lends itself to the group nicely. Very solemn, sad... slow... beautiful without being pretentious like some groups who make this sort of music are wont to be. This was, in my own life, way before it's time when it came to my musical tastes - influenced a more informed me years later at the end of my teens.

Check out: Slide, Sunshine, Lullabye
__________________

Last edited by Crowe; 08-20-2008 at 09:31 AM.
Crowe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-19-2008, 10:55 PM   #52 (permalink)
Unrepentant Ass-Mod
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 3,921
Default

FYI, "Reach for the Sky" is on Sex, Love and Rock 'n' Roll, not their s/t. Easily my favorite Social D song, so I'd wager that I was right. =) God, I never realized how old Social D was. I knew they got their break with their s/t in 1990, but I never imagined the music predated the eighties. Mike Ness is an old motherf*cker...

Good picks though. Bone Machine is a favorite of mine (as well as Ethan <3). Horses is such an iconoclastic album (though it didn't predate glam rock), and Low are sick.
__________________
first.am
lucifer_sam is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2008, 04:04 AM   #53 (permalink)
Moodswings n' Roundabouts
 
Piss Me Off's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: At the corner of Dude and Catastrophe
Posts: 4,512
Default

Horses would be in my top 20, Bone Machines one of my favourite Tom Waits albums, so gritty and odd even for him.
__________________


Last FM
Rate Yr Music
Muxtape
Piss Me Off is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2008, 04:26 AM   #54 (permalink)
Fish in the percolator!
 
Seltzer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Hobbit Land NZ
Posts: 2,870
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JayJamJah View Post
Not finished, but probably like 10 started

Urban's, Ethan's, Mine, Coffeeshop, yours and a few more I think.

And by the way I love it, it was one of the next few on mine before I got pissed and scrapped it.
I've entertained the idea of doing a top 100, but I feel too inexperienced at this point... give it a few more years. Regardless, it would be annoying to complete a large portion of it and then discover loads more albums which I like.

Besides, I'm way too busy at the moment.

Quote:
Originally Posted by lucifer_sam View Post
Good picks though. Bone Machine is a favorite of mine (as well as Ethan <3).
Moi aussi. It was the first Waits album I ever heard.
__________________
Seltzer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2008, 04:27 AM   #55 (permalink)
Moodswings n' Roundabouts
 
Piss Me Off's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: At the corner of Dude and Catastrophe
Posts: 4,512
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Seltzer View Post
I've entertained the idea of doing a top 100, but I feel too inexperienced at this point... give it a few more years. Regardless, it would be annoying to complete a large portion of it and then discover loads more albums which I like.
I'm the same, i've still got many many many older artists to check out so any list made now would soon be outdated.
Plus it's bloody hard.
__________________


Last FM
Rate Yr Music
Muxtape
Piss Me Off is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-20-2008, 09:31 AM   #56 (permalink)
Music Addict
 
Crowe's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 699
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by lucifer_sam View Post
FYI, "Reach for the Sky" is on Sex, Love and Rock 'n' Roll, not their s/t..
Ah crap. Damn iTunes mislabeling crap >.<


Yeah, glam was definitely kickin' when Patti released Horses - the guy I quoted was a couple years late there. But the rest of the quote stands, imo!
__________________

Last edited by Crowe; 08-20-2008 at 09:36 AM.
Crowe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-22-2008, 12:06 PM   #57 (permalink)
Ba and Be.
 
jackhammer's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: This Is England
Posts: 17,331
Default

That quote from the RYM guy is a cut and paste job from somewhere else. Don't know exactly where but i have read it elsewhere. I'm pretty sure it's a journo's review.
__________________

“A cynic by experience, a romantic by inclination and now a hero by necessity.”
jackhammer is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-22-2008, 12:16 PM   #58 (permalink)
Reformed Jackass
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 3,964
Default

Dirt In The Ground is the best song on Bone Machine imo...What do you think of it?
ProggyMan is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-22-2008, 01:59 PM   #59 (permalink)
Moodswings n' Roundabouts
 
Piss Me Off's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: At the corner of Dude and Catastrophe
Posts: 4,512
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by ProggyMan View Post
Dirt In The Ground is the best song on Bone Machine imo...What do you think of it?
Really brilliant falsetto job on that, it's one of those songs which would probably be nothing without his voice.
__________________


Last FM
Rate Yr Music
Muxtape
Piss Me Off is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-22-2008, 02:15 PM   #60 (permalink)
killedmyraindog
 
TheBig3's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
Posts: 11,172
Default

like "jesus gone be here"
__________________
I've moved to a new address
TheBig3 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Similar Threads



© 2003-2024 Advameg, Inc.