Mal: You tell me right now, little Kaylee, you really think you can do this? Kaylee: Sure. Yeah. I think so. 'Sides, if I mess up, not like you'll be able to yell at me.

'Bushwhacked'


Buffista Music II: Wrath of Chaka Khan  

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.


DavidS - Mar 08, 2004 10:54:15 am PST #1395 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Btw, did you all know that Sandie Shaw covered Led Zeppelin's "Your Time Is Gonna Come"? She sounds exactly like Robert Plant. I'll just file this next to Tina Turner's "Whole Lotta Love" on the odd Zep covers shelf.

Also, Outkast is on the cover of RS, and Andre says he wrote "Hey Ya" (five years ago) after some friends of his turned him onto The Ramones and The Smiths. This amuses me.


joe boucher - Mar 08, 2004 11:00:10 am PST #1396 of 10003
I knew that topless lady had something up her sleeve. - John Prine

It's a little like Charlie Haden or John McLaughlin joining the Flying Burrito Brothers in 1970.

In 1970 McLaughlin was recording Jack Johnson with Miles & rocking way harder than the Burritos ever did, not that rocking out was really their shtick (signed, "The Heretic who still doesn't really get the Gram Parsons fuss"). In 1970 Charlie Haden was leading the original Liberation Music Orchestra - I assume the version Nels Cline was in was one of Haden's/Carla Bley's periodic reformings of the group - and while he never joined the Burritos he did make a couple albums with Cream's Ginger Baker 25 years later. Going Back Home, which also features Bill Frisell, is really great.


tina f. - Mar 08, 2004 11:01:03 am PST #1397 of 10003

I don't find it stylistically strange

Not stylistically - but from everything I've read and after seeing I am Trying to Break Your Heart (the movie about the making of YHF) it seems to me that Jeff Tweedy is kinda crazy. Brilliant and crazy, while not an unusual combo for a band leader, isn't someone I'd want for a boss if I could help it. And Wilco is a band which has had many a member leave over the last few years. And - Cline seems like he was having a fine career on his own with the occassional collaboration. It's hard to tell how long his commitment to Wilco will be - but he is along for the whole of the tour to support their new album - which will be a big one, I would presume.

So - he just seems too mature and successful to want to do the crazy dramatic rock band thing - but - I'm not complaining - I just think it's odd. I can't wait to see them - like Hayden - imagining what he could do with some of their songs is pretty exciting.


cathy - Mar 08, 2004 11:03:15 am PST #1398 of 10003
"Why do the facts hate America?" - Jon Stewart

I too am excited about the new Wilco lineup.

Another question, does anyone happen to know what song was played at the beginning and end of last night’s episode of the Sopranos?

They use music wonderfully on that show, yet give it no space in the credits. I hate that.


Jon B. - Mar 08, 2004 11:08:35 am PST #1399 of 10003
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

So - he just seems too mature and successful to want to do the crazy dramatic rock band thing

Ah. That makes sense with the not making sense thing.


DavidS - Mar 08, 2004 11:09:43 am PST #1400 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

In 1970 McLaughlin was recording Jack Johnson with Miles & rocking way harder than the Burritos ever did, not that rocking out was really their shtick (signed, "The Heretic who still doesn't really get the Gram Parsons fuss"). In 1970 Charlie Haden was leading the original Liberation Music Orchestra - I assume the version Nels Cline was in was one of Haden's/Carla Bley's periodic reformings of the group - and while he never joined the Burritos he did make a couple albums with Cream's Ginger Baker 25 years later. Going Back Home, which also features Bill Frisell, is really great.

Well, I tried to pick people that could conceivably have played with the Burritos, knowing Charlie's country music background, and figuring McLaughlin's fluid, melodic style would've worked better than...say, Sonny Sharrock.


DavidS - Mar 08, 2004 11:12:23 am PST #1401 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Joe, I'm listening to a compilation titled Jazz and Cinema and its got Miles tracks from Ascenseur Pour L'echafaud and Art Blakey from Des Femmes Disparaissent and Mal Waldron/Dizzy from Cool World and Duke Jordan/Art Blakey from Les Liaisons Dangereuses and Coleman Hawkins and Oscar Peterson from Les Tricheur.

Not bad for $4 in the cut out bin. It's oh so existential.


Steph L. - Mar 08, 2004 11:13:23 am PST #1402 of 10003
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

Joe, I'm listening to a compilation titled Jazz and Cinema and its got Miles tracks from Ascenseur Pour L'echafaud and Art Blakey from Des Femmes Disparaissent and Mal Waldron/Dizzy from Cool World and Duke Jordan/Art Blakey from Les Liaisons Dangereuses and Coleman Hawkins and Oscar Peterson from Les Tricheur.

Want. Really really a lot.

t edit Though I'm not Joe.


DavidS - Mar 08, 2004 11:17:15 am PST #1403 of 10003
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Want. Really really a lot.

Gee, if only I could burn it...

adds Teppy to the list of promised mixes and burns, which will be receiving some attention now that the ding dang book is done.


Steph L. - Mar 08, 2004 11:19:57 am PST #1404 of 10003
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

No big.

Still not Joe.