"Wichita Lineman": sucks or love it?
Fine blue-collar meditation. But IMO, that was the era where Glen Campbell did no wrong.
Zoe ,'Serenity'
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
"Wichita Lineman": sucks or love it?
Fine blue-collar meditation. But IMO, that was the era where Glen Campbell did no wrong.
"Wichita Lineman": sucks or love it?
For me, there is nothing but love for Jimmy Webb songs.
Except "MacArthur Park."
And Newsradio utterly ruled. Wish I'd watched it more.
I'm bored again (and posting once more). Here's my afternoon timekiller: A Hurricane Katrina mix.
That's as far as I've gotten. They're pretty obvious.
"Wichita Lineman": sucks or love it?
Love it. Unironically. Webb's best song, classic production and performance. The very zenith of late sixties / early seventies non-rock pop.
I once described it as having the existential angst of a housewife in curlers, smoking a Pall Mall and staring fretfully out the back window on the dirt backyard of her unfinished subdivision. There might have been something about her wearing a canary yellow sleeveless knit top too, I think.
That's as far as I've gotten. They're pretty obvious.
Ah, you missed two of the ones I referenced up thread: "After the Flood" - Lone Justice; "3 Feet High and Rising" - Johnny Cash (also sampled by De La Soul).
Webb's best song, classic production and performance.
Maybe his best song, but I've always been partial to "Galveston." That song, to me, is what I think AM rock/pop radio sounds like. Only on an AM station could that bass line sound so ghostly.
And it's a war protest song that was #1 on the country charts at the high-water mark of the protest movement.
"3 Feet High and Rising"
Aaah. Should have had that one.
The sound of a distant AM station coming in late at night and right on the edge of reception is just amazing. It is ghostly. I remember it so clearly. I even remember listening to station like this on the old tube radio my father listened to. I believe they still have that radio in San Diego, I need to get it from them.
It's amazing how far AM broadcasts will travel when the conditions are just right.
LOVE Witchita Lineman. Pretty and intimate and wistful as hell, all at the same time.
Wichita Lineman is totally one of those songs that sounds best on AM radio. It also reminds me of a Joan Didion essay where she was having a nervous breakdown (as she often is in her early essays) and that song was deepening her sense of dread.
My TV list:
Twin Peaks
X-Files 1-5
Buffy 2-3 (maybe 4)
Angel 2-3
Sports Night
Twitch City