11th July
Good Music

I don’t tend to write a lot about the music that I listen to/participate in, I have sort of obscure tastes by contemporary standards, and have been known to go on somewhat eccentrically. In any case, I wanted to write briefly about two different kinds of “good music:” the great song, and the “desert island album.”

Great songs are songs that I love to listen to on endless repeat. I’ve spent, literally days listening to a single song, they’re songs that I know most of the lyrics to (though interestingly the songs I like to sing with other people aren’t always the same “great songs.”) Here’s a tentative list, in no particular order:

  • Louis Killen’s singing of “The Leaving of Liverpool.”
  • Finest Kind’s singing of “The Rose in June” (My dad, by contrast hates this song because it’s too religious and it “takes him too long to drown,” I think it’s a good song in any case.)
  • Martin Simpson’s “Love Never Dies,” from the Righteousness and Humidity Album.
  • Joni Mitchell’s “Case of You” (though “For Free” is a close second).
  • Richard Thompson’s “Andalus/Radio Marrakesh” (The first tune on this list, and though I like a lot of tunes, this one is amazing.)
  • Rufus Wainwright’s “Hallelujah” (with due respects to Jeff Buckely, actually it’s a tie, and Wainright, very rightly cribs from Bukley.) This song shares a brain cell with Josh Ritter’s “Harrisburg,” thanks to an old roommate, and I think I might like this song more, but in any case.
  • Michelle Shocked’s “Come a Long Way,”
  • The Kippling/Bellamy (by anyone) “A Pilgrim’s Way”

Desert Island Albums are something completely different, Judy and some other people started playing around with the question “what’s the album you’d take to a desert island, if you could only take 1?” I think we decided that it couldn’t be done in less than three, but never the less, there are some albums which are just divine as complete entities in themselves, and this doesn’t necessarily overlap with the great song category very much. Here’s a tentative list of my desert island albums (order not important):

  • Nic Jones’ The Noah’s Arc Trap (this is Judy’s suggestion, and I agree completely.)
  • Eliza Carthy’s Rough Music (It’s her latest)
  • Jethro Tull’s Thick as A Brick
  • Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run
  • Martin Simpson’s The Bramble Briar
  • Brian McNeil’s Back of the North Wind
  • Fairport Convention’s What we did on our Holidays

I think the former category is more subjective than the later, albeit only slightly. Do you have any good suggestions that I might have left off.

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  1. Comment Here!
    Wow, someone who seems to have very similar taste to me. I have Nic Jones’ Penguin Eggs, and not the one you mention, but it is a great album, and I also own two Martin Simpson albums, but not the one you mention. Love Leaves of Life. And I just noticed I called them albums, not CD’s, even though that’s the format I use. Guess that’s showing my age and generation. I have to go check out some of the other music you mention - I know of Rough Music, just pulled out my only “Finest Kind” Cd (Shelley Posen used to perform solo at the old folk club I went to in St. John’s Newfoundland, a mere 40 years ago. And my absolute favorite performance of Hallelujah is from an old album of Leonard Cohen tributes sung by John Cale. The first time I heard it, I cried - it was so beautiful. Thanks for the memories. (Nigel)

    Comment by Nigel Pottle — 13 July 2008 @ 12:44 pm


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