bironic: Neil Perry gazing out a window at night (Default)
[personal profile] bironic
I was going to write tonight. Instead, here is some music for you by one of my favorite folk/rock/country singer-songwriters, Richard Shindell. This is the kind of stuff you're most likely to find in my CD/media player on any given day. His voice may not be to everyone's liking, being somewhat nasal along the lines of Gordon Lightfoot, but he's a damn clever songwriter, an excellent guitar player, and a sweet, humble, funny guy. Seriously, if you like any of this, go buy some of his albums; he's releasing them by himself these days, and could surely use the support.

.zip file (33MB) contains:

- "Fenario" (Vuelta) – A breathtakingly beautiful song. The last verse is taken directly from a John Donne poem; Shindell modeled his own earlier verses after Donne's style. That's Lucy Kaplansky harmonizing. They and Dar Williams used to have a band together.

- "Waist Deep in the Big Muddy" (Vuelta) – The first song of his that I heard, and the one that made me rush out and buy this album when it was new (followed quickly by Courier and Somewhere Near Paterson). This is a cover of a Pete Seeger protest song, still frighteningly relevant today, and with some added zing at the end.

- "There Goes Mavis" (Vuelta) – Again, just a lovely, lovely song, this time with Spanish flavor. Shindell is originally from Long Island, NY, but he lives with his wife and daughter now in Argentina, and you can certainly hear the influence in his music here.

- "You Stay Here" (Somewhere Near Paterson) – I probably should have included the epic-parody "Transit" as the representative song from this album, but this one's my favorite, so here you go. I love the guitar—redundant when it comes to him—as well as the story he's telling and the way the song builds.

- "Fishing" (Courier) – So damn clever, this song. An illegal immigrant, an officer, and an extended metaphor.

- "Born in the U.S.A." (south of delia) – south of delia just came out, an album exclusively of covers. This track is the most accomplished of them all. I never paid close attention to Bruce Springsteen's song, and figured, probably like many of you, that it was all bluster and patriotism. NOT SO. Listening to this version, you will have a whole new appreciation of what the song's actually about—it's not pride that made Springsteen shout, but anger, and irony. The lyrics are the same; it's the emphasis that's different here, and that makes it seem like a completely different song. The riff gets a new rhythm, and the chorus reflects the entire song's more subdued tone. Pretty much it's Springsteen done as a Shindell song. Heh – the album came out right around Remix Redux, and this track in particular made me think about how what we were doing was very much like writing song covers; maintaining or teasing out or taking a different angle on something key in the original, while making it ours.

- "Texas Rangers" (south of delia) – For the Richard Thompson fans; he plays guitar on this track.

- "Are You Happy Now?" (Courier) – For [livejournal.com profile] synn, who laughs when this comes on the radio. The narrator's angry with his ex on Halloween. That's Lucy Kaplansky singing harmony again.

And plenty more where these came from, if this post goes over well.

Note: These files all came out as .wma instead of .mp3 (except "Fishing") because I wasn't paying attention and am too lazy to redo them. Let me know if you want to listen and can't open them in that format.

~ ~ ~

Randomly, here's a pair of songs by a rock band called The Exit off their CD "Home for an Island." If I were making a John Sheppard fanmix, these would be on the playlist. I'm not making a fanmix, though, because these would be the only songs on the playlist.

.zip file (10MB) contains:

- "Home for an Island." The lyric, "I'm not your hero, I only know how to survive," is what made me think of Sheppard.
- "Warm Summer Days." I like the heavy, urgent tone of this one a lot. Form and function, kids. Form and function.

The bridges of both of these are noisier than I prefer, but the rest more than makes up for it, IMO.

ETA: Re-uploaded as mp3's with somewhat higher quality. These don't sound as good in my computer headphones as they do in my car, where I've been listening to them. *shrug*

~ ~ ~

You don't have to comment if you're downloading, but I'd very much like to know what you think of anything you listen to.



P.S. At long last, this journal now has the design I like in "front" and the plain Verdana-font layout on the "inside." That was on purpose, in case you're wondering. I've been getting itchy with the way the text got squished and crowded, especially for stories and poems. When you're reading your own journal in ?format=light, it's time to do something. :)

Date: Jul. 9th, 2007 05:26 pm (UTC)
bell: rory gilmore running in the snow in a fancy dress (Default)
From: [personal profile] bell
Oh, Richard Shindell. :D I knew him from Cry, Cry, Cry but never bothered to look up his other stuff. This should be interesting~.

Date: Jul. 9th, 2007 05:36 pm (UTC)
ext_2047: (Default)
From: [identity profile] bironic.livejournal.com
Oh, yay, a taker. I hope the links haven't expired.

Date: Jul. 9th, 2007 05:59 pm (UTC)
bell: rory gilmore running in the snow in a fancy dress (Default)
From: [personal profile] bell
No, the downloads are available still.

Date: Jul. 9th, 2007 06:44 pm (UTC)
ext_2047: (Default)
From: [identity profile] bironic.livejournal.com
Eeeexcellent. I hope you like some of them. I keep meaning to check out his earlier stuff with Dar W. and Lucy K. but... dunno, just keep forgetting.

Date: Jul. 9th, 2007 09:31 pm (UTC)
bell: rory gilmore running in the snow in a fancy dress (Default)
From: [personal profile] bell
It's funny seeing someone come the opposite direction, since I'm all "Dar! Dar! Dar! ...I should get around to listening to Richard Shindell." If you like, I can upload his songs from the Cry, Cry, Cry album. :D

Date: Jul. 9th, 2007 11:09 pm (UTC)
ext_2047: (Default)
From: [identity profile] bironic.livejournal.com
Ooh, that'd be great, if you have the time.

Date: Jul. 9th, 2007 11:49 pm (UTC)
bell: rory gilmore running in the snow in a fancy dress (Default)
From: [personal profile] bell
login/pw: nyahnyah/blahblahs0up

Shades of Grey: A whole, complete story. I never sat down and listened to it carefully from beginning to end, so it took years to realize that there *was* a narrative to this. And then it broke my heart.

Cold Missouri Waters: Based on the real event of Mann Gulch fire. Also breaks my heart. I labelled it "Dar" but Richard is the main singer.

Fall on Me: Okay, so this one is sung by Dar, but it's off the same album and has much of the same feel. A cover of the REM song, I find it drop-dead gorgeous and inspiring.

Am really enjoying the Richard Shindell songs up put up. ♥

Date: Jul. 10th, 2007 02:37 am (UTC)
ext_2047: (Default)
From: [identity profile] bironic.livejournal.com
Yay. *snags* I listened to two seconds of "Shades of Grey" just now and already suspect I'm going to love it. I only know a couple of Dar Williams' songs, but I think they're fantastic. "When I was a Boy"? Genius.

Date: Jul. 10th, 2007 02:40 am (UTC)
ext_2047: (Default)
From: [identity profile] bironic.livejournal.com
Oh, ha, it was "Cold Missouri Waters" I heard the opening chords to -- and naturally, it's Richard's song. :)

Date: Jul. 11th, 2007 12:57 pm (UTC)
ext_2047: (Default)
From: [identity profile] bironic.livejournal.com
"Cold Missouri Waters" and "Shades of Gray" are both gorgeous -- thank you! I played them for my mom last night (she plays guitar and sings folk & rock) and she loved them too. Dar's voice is lovely on "Fall on Me," although I'm having trouble sitting through the whole thing.

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