Interesting. I like Weird Al enough but I don't recognize most of those.
With my ninth pick in the Shelter-In-Place Album Draft, I select:
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Poodle Hat - "Weird Al" Yankovic (2003)
Track Listing:
1 Couch Potato
2 Hardware Store
3 Trash Day
4 Party at the Leper Colony
5 Angry White Boy Polka
6 Wanna B Ur Lovr
7 A Complicated Song
8 Why Does This Always Happen to Me?
9 Ode to a Superhero
10 Bob
11 Ebay
12 Genius in France
It just wouldn't be right sheltering in place without something to listen to that's just plain fun. I had really no choice but to select a Weird Al album, the only question was which? It's hard for me to say that I have a FAVORITE Weird Al album, but Poodle Hat at least comes in among the top. The opening track, "Couch Potato", is perhaps my favorite parody he has done, though I can't say who it's a parody of as the artist hasn't been picked yet (nor can I for the other four parodies on the album - so enough of those). I can point out that "Bob" is a Bob Dylan style parody (not a parody of a specific song) and the only song I know that dares to ask the question "May a moody baby doom a yam?" and then insists "Go hang a salami, I'm a lasagna hog!" (Yep, the whole thing is in palindromes.) "Hardware Store" always makes me think of my dad - if my dad was on hard-core amphetamines. And "Wanna B Ur Lovr" is the ultimate in bad pickup lines strung together for six minutes: "You're absolutely perfect/Don't speak now, you might spoil it/Your eyes are even bluer than the water in my toilet."
But the song that really pushed me over the edge to choose Poodle Hat was the closer, which is my kind of diss track, where Al spends almost 9 minutes going off on France while doing a frenetic style parody of - of another artist whose work hasn't yet been selected in this draft. "When I'm in Provence/I get free croissants/Yeah I'm the guy every French lady wants" - what more can you ask for?
(PM sent)
With my ninth pick in the Shelter-In-Place Album Draft, I select:
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Poodle Hat - "Weird Al" Yankovic (2003)
It just wouldn't be right sheltering in place without something to listen to that's just plain fun.
Of the singles I like them in that order. I was familiar with Green Day when this was released but not really a big fan beforehand and when Longview dropped it was such a breath of fresh air since thrash (which largely replaced punk/hardcore for me) had kind of died out and everyone was getting slow and introspective and boom here are these dudes blatantly aping the band I won't mention that they clearly aped and it was like I was in middle-school again except I was in college and they were playing a free show right before school started up and *spoiler alert* it did not end well.Welcome to Paradise is probably my favorite song off of this album, even though Longview and Basket Case got quite a bit more airplay.
Pretty sure you had more time than that, if you wanted to take it.This draft is moving at pace and has now overtaken my ability to plan...
Bearing the perhaps-inevitable title Dancing Queen, the tribute is swift and breezy, especially for a record that doesn't take liberties with the original arrangements. [The producer] peppers the album with vocoders and electronic beats but the intent and feel of Cher's interpretations are faithful to the original beloved hits. It's just enough of an update to feel fresh, yet familiar enough to be nothing but a dose of glitzy, cheerful nostalgia.
The album received acclaim from music critics, and was a success commercially, debuting at number three on the US Billboard 200 with first-week sales of 153,000 copies, becoming Cher's highest debut sales week for an album in the United States. Dancing Queen also debuted at number one on the US Top Album Sales chart with 150,000 pure copies, making it Cher's first number one album on that chart. The album also peaked within the top ten of charts in another 18 countries, with nine of those being top five entries.
Prior to our last draft, I foolishly thought of this band as a random one-hit wonder that exploded on the scene with a particularly catchy song, then faded into obscurity.
Padrino set me straight, formally, if indirectly, introducing me to the avant-garde art-rock band from Brooklyn that led an indie post-punk revival during the early aughts in the long shadow of 9/11.
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Return to Cookie Mountain - TV on the Radio (2006)
Of course, the song that garnered the attention of the mainstream and me was Wolf Like Me. And it's still a monster track of pulsing raw energy with a killer hook. Can rock this in mixed company any day at a party and earn some happy head-bobbing and smiles.
Yet, I don't find the hit single very representative of the rest of the album as a whole. The album is ... interestingly challenging, I suppose I might call it. There are a lot of falsetto voices mixed with walls of noise and, at times, unsettling sounds, layered with more traditional rock band conventions nearly relegated to the background. All of which of course was not at all what I was expecting with the lead in of Wolf Like Me.
And still I found it engaging, entrancing, and frankly beautiful. Take for example the other single from Return to Cookie Mountain, Province with backing vocals from David Bowie. To me, this more closely aligns with what one can expect from the album.
I am mystified by this album, and I'm excited to continue exploring its intricacies.
Also bonus points for referencing Super Mario World in the title.
Tracklist
* Note - I've never owned this album. I have only managed to experience it through online channels. I am confused when I see 4 extra songs listed as "US Bonus Tracks." I've never heard these, and wasn't considering them as part of the album I drafted, for better or worse.
- "I Was a Lover"
- "Hours"
- "Province"
- "Playhouses"
- "Wolf Like Me"
- "A Method"
- "Let the Devil In"
- "Dirtywhirl"
- "Blues from Down Here"
- "Tonight"
- "Wash the Day"
- "Untitled" (Ambient Audio)
- "Snakes and Martyrs"
- "Hours (El-P remix)"
- "Things You Can Do"
Believe me, if I had seen him in concert I'd already have this album on my list.View attachment 9718
Ropin' the Wind - Garth Brooks - 1991
Welp. Guess it's time I jumped on the 1991 bandwagon.
I love Garth Brooks. Virtually every playlist I've ever created has songs of his on it. There's no shortage of albums to choose from but this one contains what has to be among the best of the stereotypical country songs.
Great band! I have this on CD and it's actually 29 tracks long-- there's the 11 main songs then 14 tracks that are all nothing, then a short track of ambient noise, then the 3 bonus tracks. Not sure why they did that. Maybe the number 29 is significant to somebody (cribbage?). "Snakes and Martyrs" and "Things You Can Do" are decent B-Sides but I think the album flows better without them.
This performance on David Letterman is what me clued into the band. Tunde's got moves!
That’s kind of what I figured. Not sure why none of the online offerings included the “secret tracks” as they were. But I like the album fine without them.
Believe me, if I had seen him in concert I'd already have this album on my list.![]()
Modest Mouse - The Moon & Antarctica (2000):
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01 3rd Planet
02 Gravity Rides Everything
03 Dark Center of the Universe
04 Perfect Disguise
05 Tiny Cities Made of Ashes
06 A Different City
07 The Cold Part
08 Alone Down There
09 The Stars are Projectors
10 Wild Packs of Family Dogs
11 Paper Thin Walls
12 I Came as a Rat
13 Lives
14 Life Like Weeds
15 What People are Made of
Genre(s): Indie rock, space rock, psychedelic rock
Other participants in this draft have identified important years in music, and as I mentioned in the write-up for my previous pick, the year 2000 was a fantastic year for seminal albums. By this I mean that there were a handful of watershed albums that would go on to define the following two decades of music in fascinating and unexpected ways.
2000 was not necessarily a consistent year for music on the whole, but the best albums from that year were absolutely incredible and deeply influential. If I were to rank them as a top-5, it would go something like this:
1) [Artist yet to appear on the board - Album yet to be picked]
2) Ghostface Killah - Supreme Clientele (Picked by me)
3) At the Drive-In - Relationship of Command (Picked by @hrdboild)
4) [Artist already appeared on the board - Album yet to be picked]
5) Modest Mouse - The Moon & Antarctica (Picked by me)
I probably won't select my favorite album of the year, as I've selected it in a prior music draft, and I prefer to tread new ground. I may pick the #4 album if I'm feeling so inclined later in the draft (and if an enterprising drafter doesn't suss out which album it might be and pick it for themselves).
For now... The Moon & Antarctica. The title of Modest Mouse's third album was taken from a headline on the front page of the newspaper that Rick Deckard is reading when he is introduced in Ridley Scott's 1982 science fiction masterpiece Blade Runner (the full headline reads "Farming the Oceans, the Moon and Antarctica"). I did not know this when I fell in love with The Moon & Antarctica, which I encountered a few years before I became a Blade Runner obsessive.
This album is not necessarily "futuristic" in the classical sense. It's not reaching for sounds that represent a typical "vision of the future." However, it is without question Modest Mouse's most adventurous and experimental sonic outing, as the band finds all kinds of interesting opportunities to lift their sound through the atmosphere. And, lyrically, it is consumed with some of the same themes you'll find in works like Blade Runner. Alienation. Degradation of the human soul. Collapse of the environment.
The Moon and Antarctica can be effectively summed up by the opening verse of the album's opening track: "Everything that keeps us together is falling apart." It feels like an appropriate sentiment for our current moment, and The Moon & Antarctica is the perfect album for taking an hour-long vacation from this Earth, only to end up exactly where you were, a place that is unquestionably human.
There are just a few artists on my bucket list to see in concert. Cher is one of them. Garth Brooks is another.
When I was starting to compile my album wishlist, I made a list of all the bands/artists I have seen in concert over the years. I was mind-boggled to realize how much good music I had been exposed to. The sad part of the list was the number of bands who have broken up/artists who have passed.![]()
Silver Apples of the Moon - Morton Subotnick (1967)Silver Apples of the Moon is the first full length, electronic LP to be commissioned by a record label, and to this day nothing else sounds quite like it. It is still one of coolest sounding records and is one of my very favorites. One of the neat things about these early electronic records is they frequently come with in depth information about the music they contain. Here's an excerpt:
View attachment 9719
https://www.discogs.com/Morton-Subotnick-Silver-Apples-Of-The-Moon/release/60977
"The modular electronic music system (which is the core of my NYU studio) was built by Donald Buchla for Ramon Sender and myself at the San Francisco Tape Music Center. The Three of us worked together for more than a year to develop an electronic music 'machine' that would satisfy our needs as composers. The system generates sound and time configurations, which are predetermined by the composer through a series of 'patches' consisting of interconnecting various voltage-control devices. It is possible to produce a specific predetermined sound event . . . and it is also possible to produce sound events that are predetermined only in generalities . . this means one can 'tell' the machine what kind of event you want without deciding on the specific details of the event . . . and listen . . . and then make final decisions as to the details of the musical gesture. This gives flexibility to score sections of the piece in the traditional sense . . . and to mold other sections (from graphic and verbal notes) like a piece of sculpture." - Morton Subotnick
Tracklist
01 - Silver Apples Of The Moon (Part One)
02 - Silver Apples Of The Moon (Part Two)
I've become pretty convinced this one is safe so I keep skipping over it, but I think I've reached the point in the draft where most of my other picks are going to be safe.
Weezer - Weezer (1994) (The Blue Album)
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Back in 2008 I went with a different Weezer album, and I still think that one is superior in many ways but they ultimately make a perfect pair. And given the current times I'd rather have the pop album than the emo one.
Everybody knows the big singles, Undone - The Sweater Song, Say It Ain't So and of course the mega-popular Happy Days themed video for Buddy Holly.
Haters may say that video is the only reason anyone ever cared about Weezer but there truly is not a bad song in the bunch, my favorites are No One Else, Surf Wax America, and In the Garage which is my personal favorite of the bunch.
Incidentally this appears to be the first album I've picked where the CD running order is the default. Cool?
1. My Name Is Jonas
2. No One Else
3. The World Has Turned and Left Me Here
4. Buddy Holly
5. Undone – The Sweater Song
6. Surf Wax America
7. Say It Ain't So
8. In the Garage
9. Holiday
10. Only in Dreams
The story is that after the commercial & critical failure of the second, Rivers decided he'd never write from the heart again and now he keeps spreadsheets full of lyrical phrases and guitar riffs and just composes by mashing them together. I do not know how much truth there is to that but at least in theory Max Martin writes like he's a computer and owns contemporary pop radio so you would think it wouldn't have held Weezer back as much as it has?Regardless of what came after, those first two Weezer albums are fantastic!
I've become pretty convinced this one is safe so I keep skipping over it, but I think I've reached the point in the draft where most of my other picks are going to be safe.
Weezer - Weezer (1994) (The Blue Album)
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Back in 2008 I went with a different Weezer album, and I still think that one is superior in many ways but they ultimately make a perfect pair. And given the current times I'd rather have the pop album than the emo one.
I dunno, I really like "Only In Dreams"Well...I don't know if I'd say it was safe. I didn't intend to take it because I prefer the one you picked in 2008 (which I picked in the last album draft). But it was always there in the back of my mind, and maybe I'd have changed up and gone for it at any moment.
I'm pretty sure that 'Say It Ain't So" is the best song they've ever done, but aside from that the second half of the album (which is like a 7.5 instead of the 9.5 of the first half) drags it down a tiny bit for me. But "safe"? Heh.
There are just a few artists on my bucket list to see in concert. Cher is one of them. Garth Brooks is another.
When I was starting to compile my album wishlist, I made a list of all the bands/artists I have seen in concert over the years. I was mind-boggled to realize how much good music I had been exposed to. The sad part of the list was the number of bands who have broken up/artists who have passed.![]()