My 2013 holiday mix is now (as of 30 minutes ago) ready for downloading (via dropbox) or streaming (via Spotify or Rdio).
It's called "Everything's Gonna Be Better Next Year" after this song by the Rescues. A lot of crummy things happened in 2013, but everything's gonna be better in 2014. Here's the tracklist.
XMAS 2013: EVERYTHING'S GONNA BE BETTER NEXT YEAR
01. Rock N Roll Christmas (The Connection)
02. Christmastime Again (Brandon Wilde)
03. A 55 Telecaster Under My Tree (Carlene Carter & John Jurgenson)
04. Gettin' Drunk for Christmas (Rich McCulley)
05. Chris Hillman Christmas (The Britannicas)
06. On a Day Like Christmas (Cliff Hillis)
07. The Holly & the Ivy (Wayfarer)
08. It's Christmas (Coconut Records)
09. Once a Year (Justin Kline)
10. Agnostic Christmas (Liar's Club)
11. Maybe Next Xmas (Matt Piucci)
12. The North Pole Express (Nick Lowe)
13. North St. Grande (Stackridge)
14. Grey Holiday (The Orange Peels)
15. Out Of Season (Bill Lloyd)
16. Christmas in the Pines (Anny Celsi)
17. Christmas Snow (Greg Pope)
18. Christmas Wish (She & Him)
19. Regina Caeli (Three O Clock)
20. Christmas Girl (Boston Spaceships)
21 Christmas For The Free (The Zombies)
22. This Will Be Our Year (Susanna Hoffs)
23. Undecimber (Agony Aunts)
24. Christmas With You (Victoria Vox)
25. Christians and Pagans (Dar Williams)
26. 2600 (Jonathan Coulton & John Roderick)
27. Everything's Gonna Be Better Next Year (The Rescues)
download
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Saturday, April 20, 2013
You Could Make It All Worthwhile
Scott Miller 1960-2013
That's a picture of Scott Miller onstage with the Loud Family that my friend Ana gave me in 1998 as a birthday/housewarming gift to hang on the wall at my new place (now my old place since I've lived here for fifteen years). It was a framed photo until two weekends ago, when the frame broke while I was cleaning and the picture fell. I know enlightened people are not supposed to believe in superstitions about black cats and broken picture frames and whatnot, but after the news came down this week that Scott Miller had died, my mind kept thinking about the broken picture frame. Probably just a coincidence.
Admiring papers on my wall
For the last fifteen years, that photo of Scott hung above a framed concert poster of Game Theory (Scott Miller's 80s band) playing with Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians and the Fillmore. This was a gift from another friend for letting her and her boyfriend (now husband) stay with me for a Loud Family August 1998 homecoming show at the Bottom of the Hill (as documented on the What If It Works? live album. This was the first Game Theory show I saw I saw and the one that turned me from casual fan to obsessive fanatic. The only show Scott Miller played at the Fillmore.

On my bedroom wall, there are three Loud Family promo posters on my wall (Plants, Interbabe, Days For Days), four Game Theory album covers (RN through Two Steps), and a setlist from a 1995 Loud Family show. Here's a photo of my 'Scott shrine'.

(are there any effects pedal settings besides "1" and "4"?).
That setlist is from a show in Santa Rosa that is important to me because it was the first time I ever had a long and deep conversation with Scott Miller. It was the first Loud Family show after the original band had more or less fallen apart, so it was a crossroads of his career, his first show with their new bass player, and the debut of a bunch of new songs from the album that would become Interbabe Concern.
The North Bay wasn't a hotbed of LF fandom so there were only a dozen or so people there, and I was the only SF Bay Area loud-fan who'd made the trip. At that time I knew Scott as a casual acquaintance, and had chatted before and after shows ("hi", "nice show", etc..), but he greeted me at the Santa Rosa show like a long lost friend. "Steve!, It's so great to see a familiar face". Hey, Scott Miller remembered my name!
I asked him how the new album was going with all the band upheaval. He said they he'd started recording by himself, and wanted to get everything right because "these are some of the best songs I've ever written". And they were.
I told him I liked the Hollies cover ("Look Through Any Window") that had recently come out, and Scott said they'd been asked to do a song for a Badfinger tribute and was looking for a good one to do. I suggested one of the later ones from Wish You Were Here or something from the post-Pete Ham era. We got on this long debate about the merits of post-Ham Badfinger (he didn't think there were many) and which obscure songs would be a good fit for Scott and the LF. In an interview a few months later, Scott described his core fanbase as "out-of-it pop obsessives who own every Badfinger record". "Out-of-it pop obsessives" like me!
The song the Loud Family ended up covering for the Badfinger tribute was "We're For The Dark", one of Pete's songs from the first album (Magic Christian Music was an Iveys album). I hadn't thought about that conver a few until someone posted the song to Facebook a few days ago.
"It's not enough to live, if you've gotta take then you have to give". Scott Miller singing Pete Ham.
Very poignant, very powerful, but something I did not need to hear this week.
I've been a dedicated fan and friend of Scott Miller for the past 25 years and all he's given me is a dozen albums with some of the best pop songs ever written, nearly a hundred live performances across the country that I've documented on many live tapes and discs (compact and mini), possible video stardom (cameos in the "Don't Respond" video and LF Live 2000 DVD), a title for this blog, and a bunch of longtime (and hopefully lifetime!) friends that I've met through the loud-fans mailing list.
Scott Miller has been an important piece of my life for a long time, and I feel like I've lost a member of my own family. So long Scott. You made it all worthwhile and your music endures forever.
(I don't update this blog very often so this might be my last post ever -- sh)
That's a picture of Scott Miller onstage with the Loud Family that my friend Ana gave me in 1998 as a birthday/housewarming gift to hang on the wall at my new place (now my old place since I've lived here for fifteen years). It was a framed photo until two weekends ago, when the frame broke while I was cleaning and the picture fell. I know enlightened people are not supposed to believe in superstitions about black cats and broken picture frames and whatnot, but after the news came down this week that Scott Miller had died, my mind kept thinking about the broken picture frame. Probably just a coincidence.
Admiring papers on my wall
For the last fifteen years, that photo of Scott hung above a framed concert poster of Game Theory (Scott Miller's 80s band) playing with Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians and the Fillmore. This was a gift from another friend for letting her and her boyfriend (now husband) stay with me for a Loud Family August 1998 homecoming show at the Bottom of the Hill (as documented on the What If It Works? live album. This was the first Game Theory show I saw I saw and the one that turned me from casual fan to obsessive fanatic. The only show Scott Miller played at the Fillmore.
On my bedroom wall, there are three Loud Family promo posters on my wall (Plants, Interbabe, Days For Days), four Game Theory album covers (RN through Two Steps), and a setlist from a 1995 Loud Family show. Here's a photo of my 'Scott shrine'.
(are there any effects pedal settings besides "1" and "4"?).
That setlist is from a show in Santa Rosa that is important to me because it was the first time I ever had a long and deep conversation with Scott Miller. It was the first Loud Family show after the original band had more or less fallen apart, so it was a crossroads of his career, his first show with their new bass player, and the debut of a bunch of new songs from the album that would become Interbabe Concern.
The North Bay wasn't a hotbed of LF fandom so there were only a dozen or so people there, and I was the only SF Bay Area loud-fan who'd made the trip. At that time I knew Scott as a casual acquaintance, and had chatted before and after shows ("hi", "nice show", etc..), but he greeted me at the Santa Rosa show like a long lost friend. "Steve!, It's so great to see a familiar face". Hey, Scott Miller remembered my name!
I asked him how the new album was going with all the band upheaval. He said they he'd started recording by himself, and wanted to get everything right because "these are some of the best songs I've ever written". And they were.
I told him I liked the Hollies cover ("Look Through Any Window") that had recently come out, and Scott said they'd been asked to do a song for a Badfinger tribute and was looking for a good one to do. I suggested one of the later ones from Wish You Were Here or something from the post-Pete Ham era. We got on this long debate about the merits of post-Ham Badfinger (he didn't think there were many) and which obscure songs would be a good fit for Scott and the LF. In an interview a few months later, Scott described his core fanbase as "out-of-it pop obsessives who own every Badfinger record". "Out-of-it pop obsessives" like me!
The song the Loud Family ended up covering for the Badfinger tribute was "We're For The Dark", one of Pete's songs from the first album (Magic Christian Music was an Iveys album). I hadn't thought about that conver a few until someone posted the song to Facebook a few days ago.
"It's not enough to live, if you've gotta take then you have to give". Scott Miller singing Pete Ham.
Very poignant, very powerful, but something I did not need to hear this week.
I've been a dedicated fan and friend of Scott Miller for the past 25 years and all he's given me is a dozen albums with some of the best pop songs ever written, nearly a hundred live performances across the country that I've documented on many live tapes and discs (compact and mini), possible video stardom (cameos in the "Don't Respond" video and LF Live 2000 DVD), a title for this blog, and a bunch of longtime (and hopefully lifetime!) friends that I've met through the loud-fans mailing list.
Scott Miller has been an important piece of my life for a long time, and I feel like I've lost a member of my own family. So long Scott. You made it all worthwhile and your music endures forever.
(I don't update this blog very often so this might be my last post ever -- sh)
Friday, January 4, 2013
Bait And Switch
Another of my 2012 favorites. The shortest song on any album is nearly always the best one.
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Another Ten Reasons
One of my musical thrills of 2012 was the Young Fresh Fellows releasing their 13th album on my birthday. Very few people realized that they made one this last year.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Twenty Twelve
Happy New Year! Here are 30 of my favorite songs from the last one,
streamable via spotify or downloadable via dropbox.
2012: TWENTY TWELVE
01. All Alone - fun.
02. Another Ten Reasons - Young Fresh Fellows
03. Bait And Switch - The Shins
04. Clear Eye Clouded Mind - Nada Surf
05. Don't Do Anything Tonight - Chris Richards + the Subtractions
06. Encyclopedia of Classic Takedowns - A.C. Newman
07. Feels Like We Only Go Backwards - Tame Impala
08. Got You Where He Wanted - David Myhr
09. Here in the Deadlights - Brendan Benson
10. (I Keep Thinking About) A New Thing - Field Music
11. I Thought You Knew - Shoes
12. Keep the Blue Skies - Cliff Hillis
13. Love Is A Cult - Stew & The Negro Problem
14. The Love You Love - The Walkmen
15. Metronome - Archie Powell & The Exports
16. No Matter What You Say - Imperial Teen
17. Nothing Can Stop Me Now - Shake Some Action!
18. One Man Show of Sorrow - Oberon Rose
19. Only In My Dreams - Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti
20. The Only Place - Best Coast
21. Presence of Mind - The Fresh & Onlys
22. Record Collection - Dan Miraldi
23. Remember (Falling Off The Sky) - The dB's
24. Soul On Fire - Translator
25. Sweetness In Her Spark - Lightships
26. Throw it to the Universe - Soundtrack of Our Lives
27. Unstoppable - Salim Nourallah
28. We Take Care Of Our Own - Bruce Springsteen
29. Wonderland - Allo Darlin'
30. You're the Gold - Ken Stringfellow
And the meek shall inherit the earth....
We've taken care of everything
The words your read, the songs you sing
The pictures that give pleasure to your eye
It's one for all, none for one
We work together common sons
Never need to wonder how or why
We are the priests of the temples of Syrinx
Our great computers fill the hallowed halls
We are the priests of the temples of Syrinx
All the gifts of life are held within our walls
streamable via spotify or downloadable via dropbox.
2012: TWENTY TWELVE
01. All Alone - fun.
02. Another Ten Reasons - Young Fresh Fellows
03. Bait And Switch - The Shins
04. Clear Eye Clouded Mind - Nada Surf
05. Don't Do Anything Tonight - Chris Richards + the Subtractions
06. Encyclopedia of Classic Takedowns - A.C. Newman
07. Feels Like We Only Go Backwards - Tame Impala
08. Got You Where He Wanted - David Myhr
09. Here in the Deadlights - Brendan Benson
10. (I Keep Thinking About) A New Thing - Field Music
11. I Thought You Knew - Shoes
12. Keep the Blue Skies - Cliff Hillis
13. Love Is A Cult - Stew & The Negro Problem
14. The Love You Love - The Walkmen
15. Metronome - Archie Powell & The Exports
16. No Matter What You Say - Imperial Teen
17. Nothing Can Stop Me Now - Shake Some Action!
18. One Man Show of Sorrow - Oberon Rose
19. Only In My Dreams - Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti
20. The Only Place - Best Coast
21. Presence of Mind - The Fresh & Onlys
22. Record Collection - Dan Miraldi
23. Remember (Falling Off The Sky) - The dB's
24. Soul On Fire - Translator
25. Sweetness In Her Spark - Lightships
26. Throw it to the Universe - Soundtrack of Our Lives
27. Unstoppable - Salim Nourallah
28. We Take Care Of Our Own - Bruce Springsteen
29. Wonderland - Allo Darlin'
30. You're the Gold - Ken Stringfellow
And the meek shall inherit the earth....
We've taken care of everything
The words your read, the songs you sing
The pictures that give pleasure to your eye
It's one for all, none for one
We work together common sons
Never need to wonder how or why
We are the priests of the temples of Syrinx
Our great computers fill the hallowed halls
We are the priests of the temples of Syrinx
All the gifts of life are held within our walls
Saturday, December 22, 2012
All I Want For Christmas Is You.
Last Christmas, I finally conceded that Mariah's "All I Want For Christmas Is You" had become a holiday standard, and (banal lyrics aside) a fairly decent one as holiday standards go.
Here are two of my favorite versions by two Scandinavian bands, who strip the song to its core without all the bombast.
The Figurines (from Denmark)
The Genuine Fakes (from Sweden)
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Christmas Sun
Reposted from last year.
If Badfinger had recorded a Christmas song in 1971, it would've sounded like this..
The song is titled "Christmas' Sun", but I think the apostrophe is unnecessary.
If Badfinger had recorded a Christmas song in 1971, it would've sounded like this..
The song is titled "Christmas' Sun", but I think the apostrophe is unnecessary.
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