New Pop Rock Nation blogger, Jenny, throws her sombrero in the ring!
My name is Jenny and I’m the newest member of Pop Rock Nation’s esteemed blogging family. I’m an Army wife with very eclectic musical tastes and a passion for reading, writing, traveling, and hanging out with my husband and beagles. I was asked to contribute to Pop Rock Nation because I play a mean game of SongPop on Facebook and I have a long history of reviewing albums that cover a huge gamut of genres and artists. I am a true music nerd and I own that distinction with pride!
I love all kinds of music, both to listen to and perform. Though I was an English major in college, I’ve also studied voice on and off for years. Nowadays, my public performances are mostly confined to karaoke night or the piano bar, but there was a time when you might hear me sing an aria, a broadway tune, or an art song! Like I said, I love music… all kinds! I also have a very quirky and obscene sense of humor. A lot of people think I’m inappropriate and weird, but some folks just think I’m kinda funny!
I have a lot of great ideas for Pop Rock Nation. While I do plan to write about music by popular artists, I also want to highlight lesser known artists and I even already have a few ready and waiting to be interviewed! I will contribute music reviews, but it’s more likely that I’ll ruminate about quirky stuff including songs you’ve long forgotten about, fun musical apps for my iPhone, and any artists who catch my ear in some way. When my Internet is working properly, which is less of the time these days, I love watching YouTube. I have found several fun and upcoming musicians just by watching videos on the Internet. I have plans to interview at least one of my YouTube discoveries in the very near feature, so stay tuned!
Above all, I’m very excited to be part of the Pop Rock Nation team! I look forward to spreading my brand of irreverence and musical nonsense to the Pop Rock Nation site! See you around!
Artist:Beth Jeans Houghton and the Hooves of Destiny
Album:Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose
Beth Jeans Houghton writes elegant melodies that flip willingly from major to minor key and back. She sings them in a pure, trained-sounding voice with somewhat flute-like properties. She and her Hooves of Destiny accompany her songs on a wide range of instruments: the rock standards, but also frequent violin from Findlay MacAskill, and ukelele, piano, harpsichord, and a wide range of tuned percussion — vibraphone, glockenspiel, timpani, bells — from Houghton herself. At their humbler moments, they fit somewhere between pop-country ballads and the pastel late-Beatleisms of Sam Phillips (the female ex-Christian-scenester, not the man who discovered Elvis Presley). At their wilder ones, they remind me of the last couple of Maria McKee albums, and are civil but unhinged, in a way that’s either fun or unnerving.
Which is how I feel about the lyrics. As could fairly be guessed from the band name and album title, Beth Jeans Houghton‘s an interesting phrase-maker who’s not afraid to be cryptic. I think I can make out an adulterous narrative that won’t end well on the dulcet waltz Nightswimmer: “My darling wears his clothes to go swimming at night./ Me, I can only hope that he’ll go out with the tide./ You’re my only love, and I can’t keep my head/ above this ocean that you poured all over the bathroom”. I think there’s a song about parents and home in the sparse, haunting Barely Skinny Bone Tree, and I’m guessing it’s one in which blood is thicker than water but still is a liquid and known to make messes. Sweet Tooth Bird brags of killing a bird that spoke “words so sweet/ they would goddamn rot your teeth”. The jaunty fast piano-practice waltz Carousel is menacing: “Take off your shoes, hang up your coat/ witness my words as they jump down your throat…/ Fall through the door, and wait in the hall/ silence it permeates all sixteen walls/ It won’t happen again, so children take note/ It’s a funny feeling at that”.
Like I say: interesting phrases here. And a melodic, decorative, half-loopy pop music that’s certainly a sort of thing I enjoy. Still, for half the songs, I have little clue what she’s getting at, except my hunch they’d be bad wedding song choices. Plus, when Carousel ends and there’s some seconds of silence and then a brief hardcore punk song starts — like a double-speed Clash or a happy Dead Kennedys — it’s the punk song that I find myself humming later. I recommend Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose. Gladly! But — without implying that the quirks of my taste are important — maybe I’d recommend punk vibraphone and punk timpani even harder…
On the occasion of his 66th birthday earlier this week, David Bowie did something he hasn’t done in a really long time: he put out some new music. It came in the form of a song called “Where Are We Now?” (from a reported forthcoming album called The Next Day), with a music video directed by artist Tony Oursler. The video itself looks like the documentation of an interactive art installation: there’s a cluttered, static set with a slanted screen at the center of it displaying a slide show of various locales. Sitting in front of the screen are two conjoined teddy bear twins with a hole in the screen where their heads would be, and where people’s faces fit in: specifically Bowie’s face, uncomfortably mouthing the words to his song, and to his right, a silent, patient, female companion, both sort of occupying the spaces flashing by on the screen, while at the same time sitting still on a cluttered counter or shelf of some sort.
It’s an almost comically desolate song, with Bowie croak-singing verses about being in – and doing little more than being in – various places with German names, “walking the dead.” It’s as if he’s gone back to Berlin, the geographic source of his late 70s artistic renaissance – the place associated with what many consider his greatest work (particularly his albums Low, ‘Heroes’ and Lodger), but also the place where he committed his most self-destructive excesses – and, instead of the inspiration he may or may not have been looking for, he’s found an overgrown, little-visited, little-tended cemetery.
David Bowie “Where Are We Now?” (2013)
There’s a sad little joke in the title of the song “Where Are We Now?” Until about 10 years ago, David Bowie was one of the most persistently visible and fruitful rock artists of his generation. For forty years, he churned out album after album, rarely failing to dazzle and/or piss off old fans with each new unveiling. While his visits to the Top 40 were sporadic, Bowie was a pop music omnipresence – not only with his own music, but as an influence on others. He was in a different place every day, but he was also everywhere, every day. There would be no VH-1 “Where Are They Now?” specials about David Bowie.
But there was this: On Tuesday morning, I was listening to the local Triple A format radio station. There’s a feature on their morning show called Worst iPod Ever, where they play a snippet of some golden moldy – in this case, it was Benny Mardones’s “Into the Night” – and ask listeners to call in to say whether the DJs should go ahead and play the whole thing on the air. This particular artist and song was unique. Benny Mardones is a one hit wonder, but his one big song was a radio hit twice over – once during its original release in 1980, and then again, somewhat inexplicably, in 1988.
“Into the Night” wasn’t a song that suddenly had a resurgence due to its appearance on a movie soundtrack (like the Belle Stars’ “Iko Iko” or The Proclaimers’ “500 Miles”). Its second life just sort of happened. But, according to our local DJs, the story of its second life started with an L.A. morning radio show in the 80s and their own “Where Are They Now?” feature, where, in 1988, they asked the question, where’s Benny Mardones now? Shortly thereafter, the station added the then largely-forgotten eight-year-old song to its playlist, and from there, it apparently took off. Again. (A similar thing happened with another great early 80s one hit wonder, the Australian band Moving Pictures, and their song “What About Me?”)
Benny Mardones “Into the Night” (1980)
So there’s a little trivia, and there were a few jokes about how creepy that Benny Mardones song is (“sheeeeee’s just 16 years old,” sings the then-33-year-old Mardones in the song’s opening line), and how creepy its video is and ha ha ha; and then our friendly neighborhood morning radio hosts transition to the fact that, like Benny Mardones (who, it turns out, just turned 66 himself in November), David Bowie has long been absent, but he has a new song and a new video and a new album coming out. And while the male host relayed this news as an interesting factoid and pointed out that they would link to it on their page, etc., the female host sounded both underwhelmed and creeped out by what she had seen and heard, remarking that the 2013-model David Bowie might, in fact, be even creepier than Benny Mardones.
Let’s just set aside how disheartening it was to hear the careers of David Bowie and Benny Mardones discussed in terms of what they have in common. I still hadn’t seen the video for “Where Are We Now?” at this point, but it occurred to me that David Bowie was never not creepy on some level. That was always part of the fun. Some of my favorite David Bowie moments are his creepiest. I love the way, for instance, in a song that dates back to his Berlin period (though he wouldn’t record it himself until 1983), he murderously croons to his little China Girl “you shouldn’t mess with me, I’ll ruin everything you are,” thereby turning the expression of a physical longing into the threat of cultural imperialism: “I’ll give you television!” That a new David Bowie video would be creepy is almost prerequisite.
David Bowie “China Girl” (1983)
But I didn’t find “Where Are We Now?”, song or video, creepy. I found it small and barren. It made me think about what being 66 must feel like to David Bowie. I mean, it couldn’t have been a coincidence the song was released on his birthday, right? It’s a song that very much speaks to aging and mortality. And while 66 isn’t ancient, it is about the traditional age of retirement in most professions (and long past the age of relevance for most rock stars). 66 is like 18 in reverse. It’s both a beginning and an end, but at 18, the future looms larger than the past, and at 66 the past looms larger than the future. That’s certainly true of regular people, but when you’ve had the lasting fame, the lasting artistic achievement that David Bowie’s had, the past looms exponentially larger – it avalanches over decades and generations, dwarfing the present in a way that, I imagine, might subsume the person trying to live in that present.
Ziggy Stardust was a good album in 1973. It was a great album in 1983. By the 90s, it was well-regarded as a classic, but Bowie was long over it and ready to move on – sorta. In 1990, as he was setting out on his Sound + Vision tour, he made a promise that no rock star can really keep (and which Bowie didn’t) – that it would be the last time he played his classics live. This was his “greatest hits” tour. It coincided with the release of a 4-disc retrospective, and with an ambitious CD reissue campaign by Rykodisc Records, one of the first-ever big remaster campaigns of a catalogue that had already been released on CD. This was one of the first times any artist would implore his fan base to go out and re-buy an album they already owned on CD. And in the last 20-odd years, David Bowie has never stopped asking us to re-buy his albums in ever-expanding iterations (at ever-inflating price-points), to the point nearly 10 years ago where he essentially stopped asking us to buy (for the first time) his new music – he simply stopped releasing new music.
I own David Bowie’s last two studio albums Reality and Heathen (along with every other studio album he’s released since 1969). I recall those last two records as being fine, but I don’t ever really get the urge to listen to them. In my mind, their the audio equivalent of a bag of presumably stale pretzels that’s been sitting in the back of the pantry. Instead, I’m always going back to Let’s Dance and Scary Monsters and Hunky Dory. Ziggy Stardust never got and will never get old, but the man who created him will and is, and this new song feels like that realization. “The moment you know you know you know…”