Song of the Day #419: ‘Good Intentions’ – Lyle Lovett

largebandLyle Lovett and His Large Band was the album that introduced me to Lyle Lovett. It came to me by way of my brother-in-law, who learned of it from a college friend. You always hold a special place in your heart for the album that first acquaints you with a favorite artist, and Large Band is no exception.

Constructed as a mirror opposite of Pontiac, this album opens with the blues-jazz songs and closes with the country. All are wonderful, but side one is particularly special. Opening instrumental ‘The Blues Walk’ lets you know what you’re in for, putting all of the wonderful musicians through the paces for 2 1/2 minutes of pure swinging pleasure. That song segues into the hilarious ‘Here I Am,’ in which Lovett deadpans spoken-word verses between big shout-along choruses. Here’s my favorite:

Continue reading

Song of the Day #418: ‘L.A. County’ – Lyle Lovett

pontiacLovett’s second album, 1988’s Pontiac, expanded on the jazz influences he touched on in his debut. In fact, the album is split right down the middle between traditional country songs on the first side and the jazz/blues tunes on the second.

Which side you prefer probably depends on your fondness for country music. I know a certain country-averse commenter here will have a strong preference for side B. And certainly there’s a great case to be made for those songs.

Continue reading

Song of the Day #417: ‘An Acceptable Level of Ecstasy (The Wedding Song)’ – Lyle Lovett

lylelovettI’m bound to make my regular readers happy with this theme week, which will actually span two weeks and ten albums. I know my sister considers Lyle Lovett her ‘desert island’ artist (though where we’d get batteries for the CD player on this island, I don’t know — I love that moment in Season One of Lost where Hurley’s discman finally runs out on him).

I won’t go so far as to call Lovett my own desert island artist, but he’s definitely in the running. His combination of rootsy instrumentation, jazz flourishes and literate, humorous lyrics — not to mention that world-class voice — puts him in a league of his own. He doesn’t make it to my island because there’s a sameness in his work over the past 20+ years, but if you have to settle on a sound, he couldn’t have picked a better one.

Continue reading

Song of the Day #416: ‘Her Majesty’ – The Beatles

abbeyroadHaving started these Beatles Weekends with the first song on the band’s first album, I couldn’t resist following it up with the last song on their last album.

Now, as with all things Beatles, this isn’t as simple as it sounds. A strong argument could be made that Let it Be, not Abbey Road, is The Beatles’ final album. It was, in fact, the last album released by the band. However, I prefer to go by the last album The Beatles recorded, and that was quite definitively Abbey Road.

I suppose it’s easy for me to make that distinction, having discovered all of the band’s albums at once years after they were recorded and released. For somebody alive at the time, Let it Be must have felt newer than Abbey Road no matter when it was recorded simply by virtue of its release date. But time irons out those wrinkles.

Continue reading

Song of the Day #415: ‘I Saw Her Standing There’ – The Beatles

beatles-i-saw-her-standing-thereIt’s amazing how, nearly 40 years after they split, The Beatles remain extraordinarily relevant. Just in the past five years, their music has been showcased in a cult film beloved by teens and adults alike (Across the Universe), provided the inspiration for an elaborate Cirque du Soleil show and its accompanying soundtrack (Love) and served as the basis for a much anticipated Rock Band video game.

And now, as of last week, all of The Beatles’ album have been remastered and re-released for the first time since they showed up on CD 22 years ago. I gobbled those up when they first came out and at the time they sounded great (they were among the only CDs I owned). But when I listen to those CDs now, they stand out as far more muddied and far lower in volume than most of my music.

Continue reading