Posts Tagged “tom waits”

That's What I Was Thinking

I’ve never met Rickie Lee Jones, have never seen her in concert, don’t recall having read an interview with her. But, I’ve heard the story that she walked offstage in a huff once, angry that something wasn’t to her liking. The teller of the story mentioned that it happened at [gasp!] a charity concert! Have you ever…? Since that time, I’m held in my mind that Rickie Lee Jones is “difficult” and “full of herself”.

Interesting, isn’t it, that I would make such a judgment based on the hearsay of someone else with no immediate experience of my own and, really, with no direct knowledge of RLJ? It’s like looking at a picture of a model in a magazine and saying, “she’s beautiful,” when, in fact, all I know is that she takes a beautiful picture.

(Oh yeah: what if she is full of herself? So am I — and I can’t sing or write songs.)

Rickie Lee Jones – Jolie Jolie

I’ve been going through a rough patch in my life. Some of my confidants point to the grave condition of the world economy and suggest I’m not the only one. True enough, but what fears I have around my wallet probably run deeper than that. Nothing inspires introspection more than financial struggles (and then I get to see what the fear really is all about).

Jimmie Dale Gilmore – My Mind Has A Mind of It’s Own

I sometimes see a picture of Tom Waits in my mind, in a dusty old house with dirt floors and newspapers over the windows, wearing a Mule Variations t-shirt and a porkpie hat, counting $100 bills out of a worn suitcase. Above his head is a cartoon balloon of him saying: “Mule variations my ass. I bang on a tin pipe, give it a title and these suckers buy it every time.”

Tom Waits – Big In Japan

At other times, I think he’s a genius.

Tom Waits – Picture In A Frame

My 10-year old pointed out this morning that “these guys sound like Trampled By Turtles…”. Well, something like that.

The Byrds – You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere

If I could be someone else — and I have to admit, there are times when I’d really like to be someone else — I think I’d like to be Junior Brown. Because Junior is a human being he likely has his own bag of hammers that he carries around with him, ball peens he can use to pound out his own brand of existential problems. But, all things being equal beyond that, I wish I could play guitar like him. My kids, operating on a much less emotionally twisted level, simply think this is a fun song.

Junior Brown – Highway Patrol

Namaste all you sentient beings. Namaste.
_/\_
Music Junkie

The picture above was drawn by my 6-year old daughter. I call it That’s What I Was Thinking. I don’t know what she calls it…

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Mama asked the boys to put the shoes back on the shelf. This is what she got. My 8-year old asked me to take a picture and “write an article about it”. I think it speaks for itself.

Paul Simon – Diamonds On The Soles of Her Shoes
Carl Perkins – Blue Suede Shoes
Lyle Lovett – Flyin’ Shoes
Chuck Willis – Hang Up My Rock and Roll Shoes
Joe Ely – Baby Needs A New Pair of Shoes
xygshhsh1766shKirsty MacColl – In These Shoes

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Recorded in dirty distorted stereo at The Buddha Barn, Wednesday night, June 27, 2007

  • Stealer’s Wheel – Star (Ferguslie Park, A and M, 1973)
  • Tom Waits – Cold Cold Ground (Big Time, Island, 1988)
  • George Jones – Lifetime to Regret (Sings the Songs of Leon Payne, Musicor, 1971)
  • Loggins and Messina – Back to Georgia (On Stage, Columbia, 1974)
  • The Doobie Brothers – Double Dealin’ Floor Flusher (Stampede, Warner Bros., 1975)
  • Willie Nelson – Unchained Melody (Stardust, Columbia, 1978)
  • Hank Williams – Cold Cold Heart (Single, MGM, 1951)
  • Dave Mason – Pearly Queen (Headkeeper, Blue Thumb, 1972)
  • Bob Dylan – The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll (The Times They Are A-Changin’, Columbia, 1964)
  • Mark-Almond – Song For You (Mark-Almond, Blue Thumb, 1971)
  • Lynn Anderson – No Love At All (No Love At All, Columbia, 1970)
  • Pearls Before Swine – Uncle John (One Nation Underground, ESP, 1967)

Fusion 45, No. 33 – The Cat’s Still Away (And I Miss her)

Corrections:

  • Blue Thumb wasn’t Leon Russell’s label. Russell’s label was Shelter.
  • Song For You was written by Roger Sutton not Leon Russell.
  • Pearls Before Swine was on the ESP label not the Esperanto label, though there is something written in Esperanto on the back cover. (And the album actually sold over 1/4-million copies).

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