29 August 2023

29 August 2023 - MC Hammer - U Can't Touch This

Why yes, that is a Rick James sample that dominates this song.  In fact, Rick James and Alonzo Miller - the original writers of "Super Freak" - are listed as co-writers of the song.  

But let's be clear.  This song was written and produced by MC Hammer.  

How big a hit was it?  Well, in the short term, it was a big, but not mega-big, hit.  It was the THIRD single from MC Hammer's 3rd album, 1990's Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em. This song, however, got airplay long before it was released as a single, and that drove album sales - to the point where it was the longtime best selling rap album of all time (it has since fallen to 5th on that list).  

The single itself was a top 10 hit on the pop charts - never making it to the top spot, though.  It was also a number 1 R&B hit, and a hit worldwide.  Moreover, it brought rap to a much broader audience, including many in my group of friends at the time.  

You know the song.  Now, it's Hammer time.  


One thing about MC Hammer... you probably know him for what he recorded.  His live performances were full of energy.  He was one of the most dynamic performers of his generation - which made him an excellent bridge from the old school sound that dominated the 1980s to the more in-your-face rap style of the 1990s.


Did I say "were"?  MC Hammer famously lost all his money from "U Can't Touch This" pretty quickly, which means he didn't get to just retire (although all indications seem to be that he recovered from that).   Twenty years after the song came out, he was still touring and still putting on a hell of a show. 


Here he is in 2018, STILL performing this song.  Yes, he's got other people doing his dancing, but he's still putting on a hell of a show.

28 August 2023

28 August 2023 - Nine Inch Nails - Only

Look, I know.  It hasn't been that long since we published our first Nine Inch Nails song.


Anyway, this is a different, not so loud song.  It's not quiet, mind you - but it's less in-your-face angry and more synth-pop-rock angry.  It's about Trent Reznor's job - as a musician, with real business pressures - and how that clashes with his desires - as a musical artist, and keeping his integrity.  

In 2005, this was the first single off of Nine Inch Nails's fourth album, With Teeth.  That's sixteen years after their - his? - debut, and six years since the previous album.  The video is almost completely CGI - no, Trent Reznor did not stick his face into a pinscreen repeatedly - and the only non-CGI pieces are the hand belonging to David Fincher, who directed the video, and the fuzzy cars you occasionally see in the background.  


As should be no shock, this has become a live performance favorite, and it hits so much louder and harder live.

25 August 2023

25 August 2023 - The Beatles - We Can Work it Out

So, this is a weird song in how it's constructed.  Let's breat it down.

Paul McCartney took the first stab at it, writing the lyrics - probably about a relationship he was having with British actress Jane Asher at the time.  She been happily married for forty years, so don't ask her.   He then took it to John Lennon, with whom he came up with the middle part ("Life is very short...")

But you might notice a tempo change in the middle.   That's more than a tempo change.  That's a change to 3/4 time - and that was the brainchild of the uncredited George Harrison.  It, by design, sounds like a waltz, in contrast to the pop-rock sound of the rest of the song.  

The song also goes from optimism in the verse and chorus to a slightly less optimistic and more philosophical tone in the middle.  It's quite interesting to listen to the song go thematically and muscally back and forth.  Paul took the lead vocal roles, with John joining with harmonies in the middle. 

"We Can Work It Out" was release in December 1965 as a double A-side single - along with "Day Tripper" - and quickly became a #1 hit,   It's worth noting that Stevie Wonder also had a hit with the song in the early 1970s with the song.  

24 August 2023

24 August 2023 - Charly Bliss - Capacity

"Weezer with Tommy Pickles as a lead singer"

I wrote about Charly Bliss a couple of years ago, and then, I promised to revisit them.  I didn't think it would take me this long - but I got really sick of their earlier stuff, which was very much like Weezer.

This 2019 single by Charly Bliss is possibly their best known song.  Written by the band, the song is sung by lead vocalist Eva Hendricks, and not E.G. Daily.  The lead single from their 2nd album, Young Enough, it's a lot poppier than their earlier work.  

It's an interesting song, about the power of saying no, because, well, you're at capacity.


If you're familiar with their earlier work, you know that Eva Hendricks plays guitar on top of her vocals. As you can see - and pointing to their move from rock to pop - she has moved to keyboard during live performances.  Also, I wish my dining room was this cool.

23 August 2023

23 August 2023 - Echosmith - Lonely Generation

"Echosmith Is Back, and Wants Us to Put Our Phones Down."

That's what the Billboard headline read.  

Of course, ignore the lyrics and this sounds like a chipper pop ditty.  You could be forgiven for hearing this as some bright pop song, like "Cool Kids". Lyrically, though - it's not chipper at all.  It's dark and sad, and really does encourage real connection.

The kicker here is that this song was written and released by Echosmith in 2019.... before the pandemic.  That made the lonely generation even lonlier - and makes this song more poignant. 


By the way, I'm not sure if I've said it before, but Echosmith is a sibling band - originally 4, but now 3.  How they fit all that musical talent in one family is a marvel.

Anyway, here they are performing the song live.

22 August 2023

22 August 2023 - Big Data ft. Joywave - Dangerous

Big Data is Alan Wilkis, a producer.  His music project is an electronic one.  This song is billed to him and billed as featuring Joywave.  

Wilkis co-wrote the song, but so did Daniel Armbruster, who used to be the other half of Big Data and was, at the time, the vocalist for a Rochester, NY band called Joywave, and its his voice and the band's music you hear in this version.  The song is super bass-heavy, which is cool as heck.

You knew I had to drop Rochester in there.  I lived there for 26 years, after all.  

It's kind of blurry who this should be billed to.  What isn't blurry is that this collaboration is both the biggest hit Big Data ever had, but also the biggest hit Joywave ever had.  

The video is violent and depicts the marketing of an athletic shoe that incites violence.  


The lyrics video took a different approach - showing the dangers of, well, big data.  An accompanying app - which seems to not work anymore - would make a video out of your Facebook timeline.  Seriously.



What also is not blurry is that Joywave doesn't perform with Big Data.  They are separate bands, with separate members.  The male vocalist (who's doing a lot of the electronic work as well) is Alan Wilkis. Not gonna lie, I like this version, too.   


(Update: 4 October 2023) Joywave actually didn't play this song live until 2021.  They chose their hometown of Rochester, NY to pull it out for the first time.  They also pulled out not one, not two, but THREE bass guitars to make sure you could hear that sound from space.

21 August 2023

21 August 2023 - Siouxsie & the Banshees - Kiss Them for Me

It took ten albums for Siouxsie & the Banshees to find commercial success in the United States, but they did it in 1991 - with this single.  Yes, it was a more mainstream pop move - some called it a sellout, but they already had a major label deal, so I don't think it was.   

The song took its title from a 1957 Jayne Manfield film - and the song was very much about Mansfield.  It's full of references to her, from the word "divoon" in the 2nd verse (a word Ms. Mansfield was known to use frequently) (notice that Siouxsie is in a heart-shaped swimming pool when she sang that lyric in the video, as that's one of the things the term was in reference to) to the third verse reference to the car crash that killed her (while sparing Mariska Hargitay for a future as Olivia Benson).


I am rarely surprised by my blog.  I knew Siouxie & the Banshees broke up in the 90's and, that was it for them, save for a brief reunion in the early 2000's/   What I did NOT know is that Siouxie Sioux herself is back to performing, after a long hiatus (although she did have a solo career as well), and headlined the Cruel World Festival in Pasadena, CA, this year.

The performance is in a different key than the original, but her stage presence is undeniable.