The Sweetness I Need: New Soft Rock and Power Pop Records

Nashville Tears by Rumer (2020)Cooking Vinyl. Long Overdue by Librarians With Hickeys (2020) Big Stir Records.

In these dark times, we need a little sweetness in our life. New records by Rumer and Librarians With Hickeys revive two music genres – soft rock and power pop – that give us that sweetness we so desperately need right now.

Rumer is a British singer who brings back the soft rock sound of the late 1960s and first half of the 1970. That smooth sound combined strong melodies with sophisticated, lush orchestrations.The Carpenters may be the most famous and one of the best examples of soft rock. I lapped it up back then. Soft rock was powerful, emotional stuff for 15-year-old me. I can’t tell you how many hours I spent alone in my room mooning over my unrequited crush and listening to Barry Manilow sing “Could It Be Magic.”

All the edges are sanded off soft rock music, resulting in a smooth, delicious sweetness that is comforting and easy to listen to. For me, soft rock is like a rich chocolate truffle: a little bit makes you happy; too much has you reaching for your insulin shot.

I put together a playlist of classic soft rock from the late 60s and early 70s. If you were around and listening to the radio then, you will recognize the songs, though you may not remember the groups (Firefall? Poco? England Dan and John Ford Coley?). And if you weren’t around then, you can catch up on what you missed. I cheated a bit and put three post-1970s, soft rock artists on the playlist, including Alison Kraus who I think of as Flatt and Scruggs crossed with Seals and Crofts. Take a listen to the playlist. You might find the sweetness gives you the comfort you need in this dark time.

The second sweet record here is by Librarians with Hickeys, a group from Akron, Ohio that just released their first album. I cannot get enough of the lead off song on the album “Until There Was You” with its chiming guitars and catchy melody.

The Librarians recall the glory days of power pop, a genre that combines sweet melodies and strong guitar chords. The genre has roots in the 1960s British guitar bands in British bands like The Who and The Kinks. Power pop thrived in the 1970s and revived in the 1990s. Power pop combines the strong, catchy melodies of soft rock and bubblegum with hard rock guitar. Check out this playlist of classic power pop.

The great Los Angeles Indie Label Big Stir Records is the home for great power pop music today. Big Stir holds concerts in Burbank (or at least they did before the pandemic), publishes a journal, puts out great collections of Power Pop singles, and also releases albums, including the new release from Librarians With Hickeys. They are run by a husband and wife team who also make up the band The Armoires. If you order CDs or vinyl from them, your music comes with a nice handwritten note from one of the two of them. I highly recommend ordering one or all of the CDs from their Big Stir Singles series. This playlist features songs by Big Stir artists, along with a song by the Rookies from my other favorite indie label Bloodshot Records.

I find power pop irresistible, unlike soft rock whose unalloyed sweetness is too much for me in large doses. I am hooked by the sweetness of the melodies of power pop, and I am sustained by the power of its guitars.

The two genres – soft rock and power pop – have a clear affinity in their sweetness. They came together in the 1990s, when indie power pop artists covered classic soft rock songs. Check out “If I Were A Carpenter, ” featuring covers of The Carpenters’ songs by indie bands, and Me First and the Gimme Gimmes, featuring covers of songs like Leaving on a Jet Plane and Country Roads. Almost nothing makes me happier than listening to Shonen Knife’s cover of “Top of the World” or Me First’s cover of Loggins and Messina’s “Danny’s Song.”.

On the Great Cuban Folk Singer Silvio Rodriguez and My Time Working for the Revolutionary Movement in El Salvador

June 25, 2020 – Para La Espera by Silvio Rodriquez (2020) Spotify

Silvio Rodríguez has a new album out, his first since 2015. If you know Silvio’s music, stop reading and go listen right now and then come back afterwards for the tale of my time in El Salvador working for the FMLN revolutionary movement. If you are not familiar with the legendary Cuban folk singer-songwriter and poet, let me tell you about him.

Silvio Rodríguez was 13 years old when the Cuban Revolution happened, too young to take up arms, but old enough to be swept up in the dreams and aspirations of the early revolutionary period. He was one of a group of Cuban musicians, also including the great Pablo Milanés, who combined revolutionary dreams with poetic intimacy in lyrics and indigenous folk sounds with pop and rock influences in music.

Their music was called Nueva Trova (“New Troubadours”) and was initially suppressed by the Cuban authorities, not because of its lyrics, but because of the foreign influences in its music. But ultimately, Rodríguez’s songs became beloved, not just in Cuba but throughout the Spanish-speaking world, where his music is widely listened to and covered by other artists.

Silvio can be compared to Bob Dylan in terms of his impact in Cuba and beyond. Like Dylan, Silvio combines folk and rock, the personal and the political. Like Dylan, he is a symbol of hope and change. Like Dylan, he has not stopped making music and has a new album in 2020. Silvio’s music is political in the way that Blowing in the Wind and Imagine are political: his songs are not tied to a specific political moment or issue but convey a deep sadness at injustice and an equally deep yearning for a more just world. But unlike Bob Dylan, Silvio has a beautiful, delicate voice. Imagine the songwriting of Bob Dylan combined with the voice of Aaron Neville.

Silvio’s Music

From La Maza:

What would the mason’s hammer be without the stone
A figurehead of the traitorous applause
A serving of the old in a new cup
A making eternal of a declining god
Exaltation boiled with rags and sequins
 
Que cosa fuera la maza sin cantera
Un testaferro del traidor de los aplausos
Un servidor de pasado en copa nueva
Un eternizador de dioses del ocaso
Jubilo hervido con trapo y lentejuela

From: Ojalá:

May your constant gaze fade away
The precise word, the perfect smile
May something happen soon to erase you
A blinding light, a shot of snow.
May at least death take me
So that I won’t see you so often, so that I won’t see you always
In every second, in every vision
May I not be able to touch you, even in song
              
Ojalá se te acabe la mirada constante,
La palabra precisa, la sonrisa perfecta.
Ojalá pase algo que te borre de pronto:
Una luz cegadora, un disparo de nieve.
Ojalá por lo menos que me lleve la muerte,
Para no verte tanto, para no verte siempre
En todos los segundos, en todas las visiones:
Ojalá que no pueda tocarte ni en canciones

The lyrics sound much better, more poetic in Spanish, but even in the awkward English translations the urgent sense of yearning for a different, better world comes through. Even if you don’t understand a word of Spanish the yearning comes through clearly in Silvio’s singing. You can hear a playlist of my favorite Silvio Rodríguez songs.

The new record, Para La Espera, is probably not his best record ever, but it is very, very good, one of my favorite records of the year so far. The instrumentation is simple, mostly acoustic guitar. The lyrics are poetic and moving as always. If none of the songs are quite as urgent and catchy as his best classic songs, there also isn’t a weak song on the record. The song Noche Sin Fe y Mar is really moving, and Viene la Cosa has a catchy, halting rhythm and an almost bluesy touch.

I first heard Silvio’s music when David Byrne’s label Luaka Bop released a collection of his music in 1991, the first time his music was readily available in the United States. But I didn’t really get to know and love Silvio’s music until I started living in El Salvador in 1992, where his songs were everywhere: sung at rallies, sold in bootleg cassettes at every marketplace, listened to at parties and during romantic moments. If I hadn’t known he was from Cuba, I would have thought Silvio was a beloved Salvadoran singer.

Working for The El Salvador FMLN Revolutionary Movement

In 1992, I had been doing neighborhood organizing in Boston for six years. I liked the work and had had some organizing victories, but I was frustrated that the impact of my work was not bigger. I got into organizing out of a desire for big transformational change, the kind of change alluded to in Blowing in the Wind, Imagine, and Silvio’s Ojalá, but I was only winning a few dozen units of affordable housing and space for community gardens – good things but hardly revolutionary.

When my then-girlfriend had a chance to become the staff person in El Salvador for CISPES, the largest U.S/El Salvador solidarity group, I jumped at the chance to move to El Salvador with her and learn from that country’s movement for change.

When I moved there, El Salvador was in the middle of a year-long period of transition from a 12-year civil war that killed 75,000 civilians to a permanent peace. I went to work for the FMLN, the left political-military force in the civil war that was transitioning to become a political party. Not surprisingly, the FMLN was less interested in my organizing skills – not so useful when I didn’t know the culture and could barely speak Spanish – than they were in my computer skills, which were no greater than an average knowledgeable computer user in the U.S. but rare in El Salvador. While the FMLN soldiers were still in transition camps turning over their weapons to UN observers, I began teaching word processing to union activists.

The war was essentially over and things were mostly safe at this time, but a union office I was teaching in was riddled with gunfire only a few hours after I left. The shooting was a bit of a fluke — it appeared that the rightwing thugs had meant to present a fearful threat without violence, but things got out of hand. A union security guard died, and I was lucky that I missed the shooting.

The cease-fire period ended in December of 1992, and I used a forged press pass to attend the ceremony marking the permanent peace. I heard speeches by a bunch of dignitaries, including Dan Quail (then just finishing his term as U.S. Vice President) and Daniel Ortega (the once and future President of Nicaragua, then a figure of inspiration and today just another brutal, autocratic ruler). Not the two best Dans in human history.

I soon joined the FMLN electoral commission, preparing for the first-ever fair election in El Salvador where the left could participate. I was at the first meeting of the FMLN electoral commission. There were five or so of us, all Salvadoran but me. I was the only one there who had ever voted or had any electoral organizing experience. The FMLN’s only electoral experience was in burning ballot boxes during the war.

Again, the FMLN was more interested in my computer experience – which in the U.S. would have been considered merely adequate for everyday use – then my organizing experience without the command of the culture or language. I created a spreadsheet of past election results, and I began to learn how to program databases so we could find fraud in the voter rolls and track whether all the FMLN candidates’ requirements were met.

My one organizing contribution was providing training to FMLN activists in door-to-door canvassing. Of course, the FMLN was clandestine during the civil war and could not openly go knocking on doors. The only experience they had with canvassing was when a Jehovah’s witness came to their doors. I helped organize a day of canvassing in San Salvador with all five FMLN factions participating. The five FMLN factions did not come together like this often.

You could tell which faction canvassers were from by how they canvassed. A Salvadoran Communist Party canvasser would talk for half an hour straight at each door and then hand the person at the door a 300-page manifesto written by Communist Party leader Schafik Handal. The poor person at the door did not get in a single word during the canvass visit. The Communist Party canvassers were not receptive to my repeated suggestions that this was perhaps not the best way to reach new voters – I guess everyone has to learn for themselves.

Election Day was in March 1994. On election day, I was running eight Novell computer networks spread across the country in an effort to create an alternative vote count that could help prevent the election from being stolen. I was not qualified to do this, of course, but it all worked out OK. The FMLN won significant representation in the legislative assembly but alas lost the presidency to the right-wing ARENA party. While there was sporadic violence and intimidation in the election, overall it was pretty fair, certainly fairer than 2020 elections in U.S. states like Georgia, Texas, and Wisconsin.

Working in El Salvador for two-years with the revolutionary movement was one of the best things I have ever done. It was not always easy being away from home in a country where I did not know the language or how to do the most basic things like buying something in a store or crossing the street. But in El Salvador, I was asked to do things no one would ever ask me to do, like program a database or set up and run multiple Novell computer networks. After all, a handful of Salvadoran activists with a handgun went into hills and formed the FLMN and only a few years later had a huge political/military movement that fought the U.S.-backed Salvadoran Army to a draw. They were used to doing what they needed to do without prior experience. That was a nice learning for me.

I came back home with more confidence in myself and a deeper understanding of what immigrants go through trying to make a life in a new country. I had a hard enough time in El Salvador even though I had legal papers to be there and many more resources to ease my way than undocumented immigrants typically have in the United States. This deeper understanding of the immigrant experience has had a huge influence on my organizing work.

I also learned how the Salvadoran popular movement incorporates political analysis and popular education in their organizing work, although I still struggle to incorporate this into my own organizing work in the States.

I felt a part of something big and historic in El Salvador. I was living out the aspirations of the words of the Silvio Rodríguez songs I stumbled to sing along with at Salvadoran rallies (why couldn’t Ojalá have a chorus that was easier to sing along with?). I am still trying to live out those aspirations today.

My Secret Shame: Why I Don’t Like the song Purple Rain

May 14, 2020 – Prince and the Revolution: Live 1985 (2020) Youtube

The Prince estate is streaming this complete concert from 1985 through Sunday night, May 17. It is free to watch, but they ask for donations to the United Nations World Health Organization’s COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund. If you read this in time, go watch this concert now while you have the chance.

The concert is amazing. Prince is at the height of his powers. It is like watching Michael Jordan in the early 1990s. Prince’s singing, piano playing, and guitar playing are all great; the band is so well-rehearsed and tight; Prince’s energy seems inexhaustible; the costumes, lighting, and choreography are all elaborate – it is really a show. There are so many high points in this concert, but if I had to choose just one, I pick the nearly endless, high energy performance of Baby I’m a Star, which closes the concert before the final encore of Purple Rain. Prince is having an amazing time during this song, running back and forth, calling out directions to the band, dancing with Jerome and members of the Time (I think). He is joined by Shiela E. on percussion, Eric Leeds on sax, and Apolonia Six on backing vocals. It is Prince at his most energetic, danceable and infectious.

I now must admit something I have never shared with anyone. But first I have to establish my bona fides. I am a big fan of Prince. I have seen him many times in concert, in giant arenas, medium-sized theaters and small clubs. I have bought every Prince album the day it came out, including The Rainbow Children. I know who Jamie Starr is, and I have listened to albums by The Family, Mazarati, and Madhouse – all produced by Prince. I have even seen the Prince movie Under the Cherry Moon. I may not be as big a Prince fan as my friend Eric Greene – who may have seen all 21 of Prince’s concerts in the Los Angeles Forum in April and May of 2011 when I only saw one of those shows – but I am in the top 1% of Prince fans for sure.

So, with my Prince fan credentials established, I can sheepishly admit to you that I don’t like the song Purple Rain. I recognize this is everyone’s favorite Prince song. It closed the Prince tribute concert on CBS in April, as it closed the live concert in 1985 that is streaming now. I know I should like Purple Rain, but I find the song turgid and obvious. The melody of Purple Rain is moving, yes, but what exactly is the song about? What is this “purple rain” that Prince is talking about? I guess the song is an apology to a lover that Prince hurt, but the song lacks all specificity. Purple Rain is a power ballad, and I have always hated power ballads and all anthemic songs that seem aimed at the last row of the stadium. The song’s production is overblown and manipulative. Purple Rain requires you to waive your arm over your head in a slow back and forth motion. I don’t want to do as directed – when everyone moves in unison on the orders of one person, I feel like I am in a Fascist rally being filmed by Leni Riefenstahl.

Prince has real moments of vulnerability that I find genuinely moving. My two favorite moving, vulnerable Prince moments are How Come U Don’t Call Me Anymore, which was the B-side of the single 1999, and Sometimes it Snows in April from the album Parade. To me, the song Purple Rain is not a moving, vulnerable Prince movement; it is a moment of heavy-handed manipulation.

Consistently Great Soul Music for More than Forty Years

May 11, 2020 – Betty Wright Playlist (2020) Spotify

The great soul singer, songwriter, and producer Betty Wright passed away this week. She was 66 years old. If all you know of her music is the great 1971 hit song Clean Up Woman, then you might think of Wright as a one-hit wonder. But Wright has been making consistently great soul music for more than forty years, including her last two albums Betty Wright: The Movie (2011, with The Roots) and Living Love Lies (2014). Wright formed her own record label in 1985 and became the first female artist to have a gold album on her own label with the great Mother Wit. She also was a Grammy-nominated producer who worked with Joss Stone, Tom Jones, Gloria Estefan, and others. This playlist features some of my favorite Betty Wright songs, as well as a handful of songs she produced.

Unclear Leftwing Politics

May 3, 2020 – Reds (1981) Kanopy

It was nice to show Henry this classic film. Reds’ power is undiminished 29 years later. The movie is still a compelling love story of true-life radical journalists/activists John Reed and Louise Bryant, set against the backdrop of radical politics in the U.S. and the Russian revolution. It is a long movie – over 3 hours – but it holds your interest the whole time (though we did watch it over two nights). The cast is great, including the leads Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton and the supporting cast Jack Nicholson (Eugene O’Neil), Maureen Stapleton (Emma Goldman), Jerzy Kosinski (Russian bureaucrat Grigory Zinoviev), and many more. This was a movie that all three of us liked a lot.

I was most interested this time in watching how Reds talked about radical politics. The film name-checks a lot of true-life figures and events, without much explanation of what they mean. I wanted to know more: what was the trajectory of the Socialist Party in the U.S. that lead them to support WWI; how did the two different U.S. communist parties created in the movie feed into the U.S. Communist Party led by Gus Hall in the 1980s; what was the relationship between the International Workers of the World (IWW) and the U.S. Socialist and Communist parties? If you know nothing about the history of left-wing politics in the United States before you watch Reds, you won’t come away knowing much more afterwards.

The politics of the movie itself are unclear. While Reed and Bryan, and to a lesser degree Emma Goldman, are sympathetic figures in the movie, their support for the Soviet Union and their larger politics come off as misguided. The movie does not clearly show that after the promise of the Russian Revolution was betrayed, left activism continued because it was always based on something more than what was happening in the Soviet Union. A fervent right-winger watching Reds may be uncomfortable with the idolization of Reed and Bryant, but they will come out satisfied with the message in the end that left-wingers are power-hungry, unprincipled, petty, or naive (or all four) and left-wing politics are doomed to end in failure and totalitarianism.

Don’t Fence Me In

May 6, 2020 – Take Me Back to the Range: Selections from Western Jubilee Recording Company(2020) Smithsonian Folkways Recordings

I find myself listening to more cowboy music than I have ever listened to before. I find it so comforting. Cowboy music retains some of the authenticity of bluegrass or honky-tonk or other kinds of hard country music that I love but without the edge that those musics have. Cowboy music just kind of rolls along. It evokes wide-open spaces that are unavailable to us as we shelter in our houses. Who isn’t longing for the lonesome prairie? Who doesn’t relate to the sentiment “Don’t Fence Me In”? My new infatuation with cowboy music started with this great new collection and continued with cowboy songs from Michael Martin Murphy, who appears on that collection.

So come join me, riding on the range, with nothing but a horse, the big sky, and those li’l dogies for company.

He Belonged to Me

April 21, 2020 – Let’s Go Crazy: The Grammy Salute to Prince (2020) CBS

Prince Rogers Nelson died 4 years ago today. He was the first music superstar my age that I followed and loved. I discovered Prince in 1981, six months or so after the release of Dirty Mind, his third album. I loved Dirty Mind — it is still probably my favorite Prince album — it was vital, rocking, soulful, funky and very, very sexy. He played all the instruments on the album. I became a devoted fan, buying his next album Controversy the day it came out and sitting 12th row at Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor. The intimate auditorium was electric — everyone thrilled to the concert, and it still is one of the best shows I have ever seen. The Time opened for Prince, and they may have been even better that night than Prince and his band. I also skipped class to go alone to the first showing of Prince’s first and best movie Purple Rain, a 10:00 am matinee.

I have followed Prince through the years, buying his records and seeing him when a could, at venues large — sitting in the last row of the Worcester Centrum for the Lovesexy tour — and small — standing behind Ron Wood and his 25-year-old girlfriend, 8 feet from Prince and his Jimi-Hendrix-syle power rock trio in the Conga Room, a small club in Los Angeles. Prince was my age — or so I thought when I discovered him, it turned out his publicists shaved a couple of years off his age. My other favorite musicians are all substantially older than me. I always felt Prince belonged to me in a way that other favorites didn’t because we grew up together, because I watched him become a star.

This concert tribute special was filmed in January. The weakest performances in this concert are the ones that most closely mimicked the original Prince songs — and even these performances are not bad. H.E.R. was a revelation — trading guitar licks with Gary Clark Jr. on Let’s Go Crazy and playing piano and singing her heart out on The Beautiful Ones. Other strong performances included Clark doing The Cross, Beck doing Raspberry Beret, St. Vincent doing Controversy, and Miguel doing I Will Die 4 U. Sheila E. presided over the whole thing. My favorite moment of the night was the reunion of the original members of The Time, including Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, doing a medley of their hits. They were a great band then, and they are a great band now.

The Prince tribute special airs again, this Saturday night, April 25th. Don’t miss it.

In Search of the Clark Sisters

April 11 2020 – The Clark Sisters: First Ladies of Gospel (2020) Lifetime

I didn’t expect a Lifetime movie to show up in this blog diary, but I have been looking forward to this movie for weeks. We pass a billboard for the Clark Sisters movie on San Vicente when I am out driving with Henry practicing for that eventual day when the DMV resumes giving out driving tests. Henry makes fun of me because I get so excited about the movie every time we pass the billboard. I have loved the Clark Sisters – a great Gospel music group from Detroit – for a long time, ever since 1983 when I first heard their crossover hit “You Brought the Sunshine” in a dance club in Ann Arbor. Pam Kisch and I once went on a search for the Clark Sisters in Detroit which brought us to an African-American church in Detroit because we were told incorrectly by a clerk in a Gospel record shop that they were going to sing there. Pam and I were ashamed to be in jeans and t-shirts when everyone else in the church was in fancy suits and dresses, but the people in the church couldn’t have been nicer or more welcoming. I did later see the Clark Sisters in concert with the Winans in Boston in the 1990s, and they did not disappoint — unlike the movie, which was truly awful, moving quickly through emotional confrontations between family members and wedding proposals without build-up, repercussions or any character development at all. The musical performances in the movie were great though, a nice recreation of the Clark Sisters sound. Still, if you want an introduction to the Clark Sisters, I suggest watching this live concert clip instead of the Lifetime movie.

Too Long (To Stop Now)

March 27, 2020 – The Monterrey Pop Outtakes (1968) Criterion Channel

I recently watched the Monterrey Pop, the film of the famous concert, directed by D.A. Pennebaker, one of the better concert films I have seen.  The Criterion Channel has a bunch of outtakes from this movie, featuring performances of songs that didn’t make it into the movie. Today, I watched Otis Redding’s entire set, backed by Booker T and the MGs. It was one of the last sets he performed before he died, and it was amazing throughout.  I also watched songs sung by Buffalo Springfield (with David Crosby replacing Neil Young), The Byrds, Simon and Garfunkel, The Who, and the sadly underrated Laura Nyro, who reached The-Fugitive-Kind-levels of intensity.