Thursday, September 9, 2010

No. 1

Sweet Child O'Mine - Guns N' Roses (1987) Video - I'm a sucker for a great riff and, in my opinion, there's none greater than this. I like it because it's all things. Bad boy rockers doing a love song that's not even close to selling out. No other song feels so much like a love song and hard rock at the same time. This is as good as it gets. Off their debut album, Appetite For Destruction, where there is nary a bad song. Definitely one of my 21 albums.

"She's got a smile that seems to me reminds me of childhood memories where everything was as grey as the bright blue sky. Now and then when I see her face, she takes me away to that special place where if I stay too long, I'll probably break down and cry.

Whooooooaaaa sweet child o'mine. Sweet love o'mine.

She's got eyes of the bluest skies that if they thought of rain, I'd hate to look into those eyes and see an ounce of pain. Her hair reminds of a warm safe place where as a child I'd hide and pray for the thunder and the rain to quietly pass me by.

Whooooooaaaa sweet child o'mine. Sweet love o'mine."

No. 2

Wish You Were Here - Pink Floyd (1975) Video - When I compiled my list of 21 original albums I'd leave my kids, they were the only group with two albums on the list. Wish You Were Here and Dark Side of the Moon. For non-Pink Floyd fans, Wish You Were Here is both a song and an album.

As with all Pink Floyd albums, it explores many themes, but most notably the mental decline of former frontman Syd Barrett. Syd had been the dominant creative force in their early work, but had lost his mind on drugs. He spent his remaining years living with his parents, rarely being seen, never giving interviews. During the recording of the album, Syd appeared at the studio where his bandmates failed to recognize him. It was a sad testament to the power of drugs to change people. The band had been successful beyond belief, but the man who defined their beginning was not there to experience the success and they wished he was there.




No. 3

Where the Streets Have No Name - U2 (1987)* Video - The opening track to one of 21 albums I'd leave my kids, 1987's Joshua Tree. The next 2 songs - With or Without You and I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For. It's also the intro song for my beloved Kansas Jayhawks. Having seen it performed live with 90,000 of my closest friends, I can attest to its power.

The meaning of the song can be traced to the streets of Belfast, based on the notion that you can identify a person's religion and income based upon what street they grew up.

"I wanna run, I want to hide. I want to tear down the walls that hold me inside. I want to reach out and touch the flame where the streets have no name."

No. 4

Ohio - Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young (1970) Video - The ultimate protest song about the Kent State shootings is the masterpiece of my favorite songwriter, Neil Young, who I will hopefully be seeing in concert in a few weeks.

"Tin soldiers and Nixon's coming, we're finally on our own. This summer I hear the drumming, four dead in Ohio. Gotta get down to it, soldier's are gunning us down. Should've been done long ago. What if you knew her and found her dead on the ground. How can you run when you know?"

Saturday, September 4, 2010

No. 5

Grace Is Gone - Dave Matthews Band (2002) Video - Well, here we are at the best kept secret on my entire list. The single from Busted Stuff that never registered on any chart, should've. I was a Dave Matthews Band fan for 2 years before I realized how great this song was. As far as I'm concerned there's no better breakup song, no song that encapsulates the spirit of missing one of the great ones. Most songs don't have one line on par with every line of the song.

"Neon shines through smoky eyes tonight. It's 2 a.m., I'm drunk again, it's heavy on my mind. I could never love again, so much as I love you. Where you end, where I begin, it's like a river going through. Take my eyes, take my heart 'cause I need them no more if never again they fall upon the one I so adore.

Excuse me please one more drink, could you make it strong 'cause I don't need to think, she broke my heart, my grace is gone, one more drink and I'll move on.

One drink to remember, then another to forget, how could I ever dream to find sweet love like you again. One drink to remember, and another to forget.

Excuse me please one more drink, could you make it strong 'cause I don't need to think, she broke my heart, my Grace is gone, one more drink and I'll move on.

You think of things impossible then the sun refused to shine, I woke with you beside me, your cold hand lay in mine.

Excuse me please one more drink, could you make it strong 'cause I don't need to think, she broke my heart, my Grace is gone, one more drink and I'll go.

Excuse me please one more drink, could you make it strong 'cause I don't need to think, she broke my heart, my Grace is gone, one more drink and I'll move on. One more drink and I'll be gone. One more drink my Grace is gone."

If you're keeping score at home, that's 14 drinks :)

Thursday, September 2, 2010

No. 6

Fire and Rain - James Taylor (1970) Video - A song about drug addiction, career failures, and the death of a friend, Fire and Rain is a sweet melody of which I never tire. Having been through some challenging times in the last couple of years, I enjoy the perspective of looking back from a calmer time, but never forgetting the road you've left behind.


Wednesday, August 25, 2010

No. 7

Sweet Caroline - Neil Diamond (1969)* Video - "Where it began, I can't begin to know when." The first line is exactly how I feel about this song. It seems as though I've always known it. It's as American as the Star Spangled Banner. Neil Diamond wrote the song for an 11-year-old Caroline Kennedy and sang it for her 50th birthday. It's also a Fenway Park staple, but perhaps the most telling sign of how huge this song is, when concert buddies Billy, Tasha, Dustin and I saw him live last year, Neil Diamond, with his catalogue of monstrous hits, sang Sweet Caroline TWICE!

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

No. 8

Me & Bobby McGee - Janis Joplin (1970) Video - Please excuse my wedding/honeymoon/moving/starting-a-new-job absence. My original plan was to finish up the top 100 on my wedding, August 1st. Obviously, that didn't take place. Hopefully, my new life status will lend a new, more mature slant to the blog.

The second posthumous no. 1 of all-time (Otis Redding's Sittin' on the Dock of the Bay), was recorded, although not originally, by Janis days before her death. If you listen closely, the track has a first-cut feel to it. This one's all about the story it tells:

"Busted flat in Baton Rouge, headed for the trains, feelin' nearly faded as my jeans. Bobby thumbed a diesel down just before it rained, took us all the way to New Orleans. Took my harpoon out of my dirty red bandana and was blowin' sad while Bobby sang the blues, with them windshield wipers slappin time and Bobby clappin' hands we finally sang up every song that driver knew.

Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose, and nothin' ain't worth nothin' if it ain't free. Feelin' good was easy, lord, when Bobby sang the blues, and buddy, that was good enough for me, good enough for me and my Bobby McGee.

From the coalmines of Kentucky to the California sun, Bobby shared the secrets of my soul, through all kinds of weather through everything that we done, yeah Bobby baby kept me from the cold. One day up near Salinas, Lord, I let him slip away. He's looking for that love and I hope he finds it, but I'd trade all my tomorrows for a single yesterday to be holding Bobby's body next to mine.

Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose, and nothin' ain't worth nothin' if it ain't free. Feelin' good was easy, lord, when Bobby sang the blues, and buddy, that was good enough for me, good enough for me and my Bobby McGee."

Epitaph.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

No. 9

Lights - Journey (1978)* Video - "When the lights go down in the city and the sun shines on LA." Steve Perry penned these words shortly before joining Journey, who was from San Francisco. He didn't quite like the lyrics, so he changed "LA" to "the Bay" and it became about San Francisco. Anyone who has spent a lot of time in either city would likely find the LA version puzzling as it's anything but beautiful. The Bay makes a whole lot more sense. Although Perry has moved on and been replaced by Filipino Arnel Pineda, "Lights" remains a concert favorite as I can attest.

Friday, July 23, 2010

No. 10

Tangled Up In Blue - Bob Dylan (1975) Video - In my conversation yesterday with Rich Young, he mentioned that he expected to know only half of my top 10. Scanning the list, I agreed with him that half was about right. Half of the songs, you would have to have avoided hearing music to not know them. The other half, you would have had to take a deep interest in music to know them. I put this song with the last group. It's not one of Dylan's best-known works, though certainly belongs in his top 10.

Back when I used an alarm clock, I had this song wake me up every day for a year and loved it every time. It's held up to the test of time as I seemingly can't wear it out. The thing I like most about it is that I can't really relate to it at all. It speaks of a lifetime of drifting, which is something that's always interested me, but I've never done. Song No. 8 on my list is the female and 60s equivalent.

"Early one morning the sun was shining, I was laying in bed, wondering if she'd changed at all if her hair was still red. Her folks they said our lives together sure was gonna be rough, they never did like Mama's homemade dress, Papa's bankbook wasn't big enough.

I was standing on the side of the road, rain falling on my shoes, heading out for the east coast, Lord knows I've paid some dues getting through, tangled up in blue.

She was married when we first met, soon to be divorced. I helped her out of a jam I guess, but I used a little too much force. We drove that car as far as we could abandoned it out west, split up on a dark side night, both agreeing it was best. She turned around to look at me as I was walking away, I heard her say over my shoulder, we'll meet again someday on the avenue. Tangled up in blue.

I had a job in the great north woods, working as a cook for a spell. But I never did like it all that much and one day the axe just fell. So I drifted down to New Orleans where I happened to be employed working for a while on a fishing boat right outside de la Croix but all the while I was alone the past was close behind, I seen a lot of women, but I never did change my mind and I just grew tangled up in blue.

She was working in a topless place and I stopped in for a beer. I just kept looking at the side of her face in the spotlight so clear. And later on the crowd thinned out I was just about to do the same. She was standing there in the back of my chair said to me, don't I know your name? I muttered something underneath my breath, she studied the lines on my face, I must admit I felt a little uneasy when she bent down to tie the laces of my shoe, tangled up in blue.

She lit a burner on the stove and offered me a pipe. I thought you'd never say hello she said, you look like the silent type. Then she opened up a book of poems and handed it to me, written by an Italian poet in the 13th century. And every one of them words rang true, pouring off of every page like it was written in my soul from me to you, tangled up in blue.

I lived with them on Montague street, in a basement down the stairs. There was music in the cafes at night and revolution in the air. Then he started into dealing with slaves and something inside of him died. She had to sell everything she owned and froze up inside and when finally the bottom fell out and I became withdrawn the only thing I knew how to do was to keep on keeping on like a bird that flew tangled up in blue.

So now I'm going back again, I got to get to her somehow. All the people we used to know they're an illusion to me now. Some are mathematicians, some are carpenters wives, don't know how it all got started, don't know what they do with their lives, but me I'm still on the road heading for another joint. We always did feel the same. We just saw it from a different point of view. Tangled up in blue."

Now THOSE are some lyrics!

Thursday, July 22, 2010

No. 11

Free Bird (Live) - Lynyrd Skynyrd (1973) Video - "What song is it you wanna hear? Free Bird!" A line that will live on long after every original member has departed. This is the closing song to every Skynyrd concert. The meaning is somewhat ambiguous, but the story I believe is that it was written as a tribute to Duane Allman. If it sounds like the guitar solos are way too rich, that's because 2 guitarists are playing the exact same notes in tandem. Also, if you're given the option of choosing the music for a lapdance, a crude friend of mine said to always choose Free Bird and insist on the live version as it runs over 14 minutes :)

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

No. 12

Thunderstruck (Live) - AC/DC (1990) Video - During my grade school years, I attended a 10-person parochial school where there were no sports or rock music. In the Fall of '98, I began attending the local public high school where I was introduced to weightlifting and THIS! Every single day, we kicked off our weight room session with this classic. I didn't become a professional bodybuilder, but I did become an elite air guitarist. Seriously though, this is the ultimate hype song, the best arena intro song, and as difficult to play as it sounds (Angus Young picks every note). I nearly swallowed the $90 entrance fee to see them live last winter in Orlando before picking the money back in my pocket and going to see a lousy cover band instead.

No. 13

Killing In The Name - Rage Against The Machine (1992) Video - In the Spring of 2002, I attended my first big concert, regrettably Linkin Park was the featured act. However, the silver lining was that before the first opening band started, the DJ played this song over the PA. It was early in the evening, most people hadn't arrived yet, and the place WENT NUTS! Typically concerts build little by little until the final encore is absolutely bonkers, but in this instance the crowd hit its highest level all night to a song with the house lights on and the band a thousand miles away. It's basically the insurrection theme song, the "We're Not Gonna Take It" of the 90s.
I'd been exposed to their Evil Empire and Battle of Los Angeles albums in high school, but this, their theme song protesting racism in security agencies had evaded me until it was 10 years old. Caution - there are explicit lyrics in spades on this track, but can you really write an insurrection song without them? I WON'T DO WHAT YOU TELL ME!

Monday, July 19, 2010

No. 14

Roadhouse Blues (Live) - The Doors (1970) Video - "Ladies and gentlemen, from Los Angeles, California, the Dooooorrrrsssss!!!!" This is the greatest intro in the history of live performances. In an odd coincidence, this starts off a set of 3 straight songs, known primarily for their performances.

No group leaves me feeling as conflicted as The Doors. They represented so much that I'm against, but they were tremendous musicians, poetic songwriters, unequaled performers, and featured the greatest frontman in the history of frontmen. I could've easily had Riders On The Storm, L.A. Woman, Love Me Two Times, The End, or Moonlight Drive on this list, but the highest point of any Doors record for me is the aforementioned intro. I don't know if any group ever had command of a crowd quite like Jim Morrison and The Doors.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

No. 15

Black Hole Sun - Soundgarden (1994) Video - One of the landmark alternative-grunge songs, "Black Hole Sun" was written by Chris Cornell, with the thought that the rest of the band wouldn't like it. Regardless, the public did as it became the hit of the Summer of '94. Its deep-seeming, dreamy lyrics are, according to Cornell, "probably the closest to me just playing with words for words' sake." In other words, don't try to attribute meaning to this song, it's just awesome. As is the video.

No. 16

Hey Hey What Can I Do - Led Zeppelin (1970) Video - Released as the B-side to another classic, "The Immigrant Song," "Hey Hey What Can I Do" is the only Zeppelin track to never be released on an album. It tells the story of a girl he adores, but who won't be faithful to him and the frustrations it causes him. In the 3rd verse, he elects to leave her where the guitars play. Hey, you gotta what you gotta do.

Friday, July 16, 2010

No. 17

Gimme Shelter - The Rolling Stones (1969) Video - The classic movie and the Scorsese film are both The Departed. What an awesome song, completely different from the previous Stones' song on this list. Vietnam-influenced, this is about apocalypse, the end of the world, at least as we know it.

"Oh, a storm is threat'n, my very life today.

If I don't get some shelter, eww yeah I'm gonna fade away.

War, children, it's just a shot away."

No. 18

Can't You Hear Me Knocking - The Rolling Stones (1971) Video - My No. 17 and No. 18 songs have 2 things in common, both were featured in the opening credits of classic films, both were featured in Martin Scorsese films, and both are by The Rolling Stones. Can't You Hear Me Knocking was featured in the opening credits of Blow and Scorsese's Casino. Not generally mentioned among the Stones' absolute best work, though it certainly is one of Keith Richards' best riffs. Rolling Stone named it the #25 best guitar song of all-time. Blow ranks among my top 10 favorite movies of all-time, partially due to the opening credit sequence with Keith Richards wailing away.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

No. 19

Hallelujah - Jeff Buckley (1994) Video - On the evening of May 29, 1997, Jeff Buckley went for an impromptu swim in Wolf River Harbor just outside of Memphis. He was stone sober, fully clothed, and singing Led Zeppelin's Whole Lotta Love. In the wake of a passing boat, he drowned. Neither he nor the public realized the musical genius they'd just lost. Although his only studio album, Grace, had been released, it had not yet achieved significant success. Posthumously, Jimmy Page called Grace "close to his favorite album of the decade." The masterpiece of the album is this cover of a 1984 Leonard Cohen song. Like Otis Redding, Jeff Buckley never had the chance to fully develop his substantial gifts.

No. 20

Cinnamon Girl - Neil Young (1969) Video - Another appearance by my favorite songwriter of all-time. The power chord just plain rocks, and the fact that this list is leading me up to marrying my own cinnamon girl helps its case.

No. 21

Dear Mr. Fantasy - Traffic (1967) Video - Steve Winwood is probably the greatest rock musician you've never heard of. He was similar to Eric Clapton in that they both bounced around between a lot of bands and both played together with Blind Faith. Of course, Steve Winwood never recorded one of the greatest Unplugged albums of all-time and never had a hit the magnitude of Layla, but he did record this.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

No. 22

Cryin' - Aerosmith (1993) Video - Alicia Silverstone standing on a bridge over a freeway, contemplating a jump - that's how the video begins. The 90s brought us only 2 new Aerosmith albums, but both Get A Grip (Cryin') and Nine Lives (Pink), in my opinion, rank among the best rock albums of all-time. Cryin' is a tortured love song about being lonely, finding love, only to lose it again.

Friday, July 9, 2010

No. 23

Jet Airliner - Steve Miller Band (1977)* Video - Paul Pena wrote this song in 1973 for his release on his new album, but due to conflicts with his label it remained unreleased until 2000, another sign that we need fewer lawyers in the music biz, and, in general. Steve Miller heard a bootleg of the song and recorded it for his own album.

The Steve Miller Band, best known today for The Joker, was not an immediate success. They had some success in the 70s, but were not extremely popular until they reunited in the early 80s, after the birth of "Classic Rock" on the airwaves. Steve Miller said they were dumbfounded by the crowds that showed up for their reunion tours because they'd never played to crowds that big during their heyday. The band continues to tour, I caught them last fall, one of the 3 best shows I've ever seen.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

No. 24

When The Levee Breaks - Led Zeppelin (1971) Video - Jimmy Page, John Bonham, Robert Plant, and John Paul Jones are all rock legends. Indeed, they may be the 2nd most important rock band of all-time, but the dirty little secret behind Led Zeppelin is that they're tremendous thieves because this song was written in 1929 by husband and wife Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie.

This is far from the only Zeppelin track where this is true. "Lemon Song" was ripped from Howlin' Wolf's "Killing Floor", "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You" was ripped from a song of the same name sung by Joan Baez, but at least the all-time No. 1 Rock Song "Stairway To Heaven" is original, errrr, Spirit's "Taurus", not as blatant, but certainly a strong influence. Mind you, this would've all been ok if Jimmy Page had secured rights, or at least given credit for the music, but instead, they sued the Beastie Boys for stealing their intro to "When The Levee Breaks", a song they stole to begin with. They might be the greatest rock band of all-time, but they're certainly the greatest rock thieves of all-time.

No. 25

Empire State of Mind - Jay-Z & Alicia Keys (2009) Video - I typically roll my eyes when someone having just returned from the theater immediately places the movie in his/her top 10. There's no way to have a historical perspective for something that just arrived, so it's with great difficulty that I rank this song.

Songs rarely impress me upon first listen, so I believe it's noteworthy that the first time I heard it, I KNEW it was great. It's a crossover hit, in fact, Jay-Z's first Billboard No.1. Bill Simmons said he thinks this was the only thing for Jay-Z to prove himself as an artist, to replace Frank Sinatra's New York, New York as the song played after New York sports victories. It's iconic, it holds up to MANY repeated listens, and will hold up well over time. I'm not ashamed to put this in my top 25.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

No. 26

Where Are You Going - Dave Matthews Band (2002)* Video - A story that only a Dave Matthews Band fan would find interesting - in 1999 and 2000, DMB worked with producer Steve Lillywhite on a new album. Dave was apparently hitting the bottle pretty hard and since he wrote all their music, what resulted was, in his words, "a lot of self-pity." The band wasn't pleased with their efforts and the whole project was scrapped. A year later, Dave Matthews wrote the entire Everyday album in a week, the band recorded it and it was released with much success. Concurrent with the launch of Everyday, a bootleg version of what fans would call The Lillywhite Sessions hit the Internet.

Many DMB fans who found Everyday too poppy found The Lillywhite Sessions right down their alley, more like the old albums. Based at least partially on the positive response to the bootleg album, DMB took the 9 original songs from The Lillywhite Sessions added "You Never Know" and "Where Are You Going" and called it Busted Stuff, which was released in 2002. So, if the record doesn't get stolen and downloaded and downloaded several million times, we might never have experienced "Where Are You Going" and we certainly wouldn't have my No. 5 song of all-time.

Monday, July 5, 2010

No. 27

The Pusher - Steppenwolf (1968) Video - The more I learn about the music I love, the more embarrassed I become at how little I know. I knew, of course, that The Pusher was featured in Easy Rider. I also knew that Steppenwolf recorded the song prior to it being featured in the movie. What I didn't know is that Steppenwolf didn't write the song. The song was actually written and recorded by a singer named Hoyt Axton, who didn't release his version until 1971. The fact remains that this is a cover, albeit a very famous one that details the difference between a "dealer" who sells you marijuana and a "pusher" who deals in hard drugs. If you haven't seen Easy Rider, watch it!

No. 28

The Ballad of Curtis Loew - Lynyrd Skynyrd (1974) Video - This may seem an odd choice as it's hardly one of the best-known Skynyrd songs, but it's on the list because it tells a story. It tells the story of an underappreciated black musician, something I've harped about several times in previous posts, and about a young boy being punished for listening to music his parents don't approve of, another theme of mine, most notably in Aerosmith's Pink. Before their ill-fated plane crash, Lynyrd Skynyrd performed this song only once live.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

No. 29

I Want You Back - Jackson 5 (1969) Video - In light of the events of a year ago, anything showing a young Michael Jackson seems incredibly depressing. Even through his last 20 screwed up years, there was always the hope that the next tour might bring him back to normalcy. Sadly, that day never came, and we're left only with his legacy of the greatest popstar of all-time and a troubled genius.

Friday, July 2, 2010

No. 30

Superstition - Stevie Wonder (1972) Video - You won't find this much funk outside of a George Clinton show. Interesting fact - Wonder performed this song live on Sesame Street in 1973. Man, kids these days are getting a raw deal. Their parents heard "Superstition" performed by Stevie Wonder, while they hear "I'm the map, I'm the map, I'm the map, I'm the map, I'm the..." performed by, well, does this really need to be answered?

Thursday, July 1, 2010

No. 31

Come What May - Ewan McGregor/Nicole Kidman (2001) Video - From my No. 1 Guilty Pleasure Movie of All-Time, Moulin Rouge, this song is fitting for this list leading up to the big wedding day as it will actually be sung at my wedding.

No. 32

Hard To Handle - Otis Redding (1968) Video - I'm not going to repeat what I said about Otis Redding's perpetual genius and untimely death in my post about the 25 songs that just missed my top 100, including his Nobody's Fault But Mine, but please check it out if you missed it. Just know this, a very respectably successful rock band, The Black Crowes, launched a career out of covering this song and adding nothing.

The bad part - most people think they wrote the song.

The worst part - Otis' recording came out after his death.

No. 33

It Was A Good Day - Ice Cube (1993) Video - This might shock you, but I don't know what it's like to live in South Central L.A. I once spent a scary 45 minutes waiting for a train at Rosa Parks Station one stop north of Compton dressed in my Banana Republic peacoat, but other than that, my impressions are formed primarily by Ice Cube-related media. Friday, Boyz N The Hood, Rodney King and O.J. Simpson trials, and this song laid the groundwork.

No. 34

Angie - Rolling Stones (1973) Video - In the fall of 2002, I was a sophomore in college with a Mustang GT and a growing rock 'n roll habit. I had just, on faith, purchased Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon at Best Buy, having no idea what I would find (no track names on the album cover). Having been handsomely rewarded with what is probably my No. 1 album of all-time, I sought to discover more of this drug called "classic rock". I knew the Stones were just a step behind the Beatles, but the only songs of theirs I knew were Satisfaction and Paint It Black. I made a life-changing trip to the Lincoln Public Library where I picked up some drivel, the Doors' Greatest Hits and Rolling Stones' Hot Rocks. Both albums would profoundly impact my musical choices to this day.

Whereas the Beatles had offered me the bubblegum antics of She Loves You Yeah Yeah Yeah, the Stones gave me hard-hitting Let's Spend the Night Together and Mother's Little Helper. Angie wasn't on Hot Rocks, but it was on their subsequent Greatest Hits album, Jump Back.

Monday, June 28, 2010

No. 35

Against The Wind - Bob Seger (1980) Video - Against The Wind is about looking back, looking ahead, and keeping your cool. It speaks of a wealth of experiences, both good and bad, that only a ramblin' life on the road could bring.

No. 36

All These Things That I've Done - The Killers (2004)* Video - I LOVE this song! Obviously this could be said of every song on the list, but this song has a special ability to produce positive emotions. While there are a lot of songs that are fun to yell, this one doesn't evoke any anger or negativity. It was written by lead singer Brandon Flowers, no, not THAT Brandon Flowers.

"I got a soul, but I'm not a soulja!"

No. 37

Angels - Robbie Williams (1997) Video - The song that revitalized Britain's Robbie Williams' career, and yes, another sappy song. Check out the video of his duet with the very lovely Joss Stone.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

No. 38

I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For - U2 (1987)* Video - The 2nd of 3 transcendent singles off one of the greatest albums of all time. U2's Joshua Tree is a work of art that has seldom been equalled. The 1st single was With or Without You, the 3rd single is further up my list, much further.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

No. 39

Old Man - Neil Young (1972) Video - Another appearance by my favorite songwriter of all-time. In 1971, Neil Young who was, in his words, "being a rich hippie for the first time," bought a place called Broken Arrow Ranch, not that one, I checked, this one is in Northern California. The place had a caretaker for whom Young penned these lyrics:

"Old man, look at my life, I'm a lot like you were. Old man, look at my life, 24 and there's so much more. Live alone in a paradise that makes me think of two.

Love lost, such a cost, give me things that don't get lost, like a coin that won't get tossed rolling home to you.

Old man take a look at my life, I'm a lot like you. I need someone to love me the whole day through, ah one look in my eyes and you can tell that's true.

Lullabies, look in your eyes, run around the same old town. Doesn't mean that much to me to mean that much to you.

I've been first and last, look at how the time goes past, but I'm all alone at last rolling home to you."

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

No. 40

Suspicious Minds - Elvis Presley (1969) Video - As we've hit the 40-days-until-the-wedding landmark, it's unfortunate that it fell upon a song about dysfunctional relationships. Hardly a bad omen as twisted relationships form prime fodder for hit songs. I first heard the 1992 country version by Dwight Yoakam, which was also good, but doesn't compare to the original.

Monday, June 21, 2010

No. 41

Out on the Tiles - Led Zeppelin (1970) Video - Finding a bad Led Zeppelin album is like finding an anorexic Samoan; it doesn't exist, but Led Zeppelin II and Led Zeppelin III are the ultimate hard rock band at their best. This song has flown a little bit under the radar in the Zeppelin catalogue, but when Jimmy Page got together with the Black Crowes to play both of their greatest hits, this is one of the songs he chose.

"Out on the Tiles" is apparently a British term for going out to the bars. Drummer John Bonham used to sing a ditty around the phrase like so, "I've had a pint of bitter and now I'm feeling better and I'm out on the tiles. We're going down the rubbers and we're going to pull some scrubbers because we're out on the tiles." These lyrics were considered too inappropriate, but Jimmy Page took the tune and made it into a riff, while Robert Plant penned new "appropriate" lyrics. Unfortunately, Bonham had one too many nights "Out on the Tiles", downing (4) quadruple vodkas prior to a recording session before aspirating to his death. An unfortunate end to the life of the greatest drummer in history.

No. 42

Cold Cold Heart - Norah Jones (2002) Video - Yet another cover, this one is more excusable because it's barely the same song as Hank Williams' 1951 country hit. Tony Bennett also recorded a cover shortly after its debut. Her Come Away With Me album will rank high on my top albums list.

Friday, June 18, 2010

No. 43

F*ckin' Up - Pearl Jam (1998) Video - TWO POSTS IN ONE DAY?! Yes, well battery-willing, there will be a 3rd as well. The reason is I'm not going to have internet access this weekend and this is the post for breaking rules. First of all, this is a cover. It's a Neil Young/Crazy Horse song through and through. Problem is, I don't care for their performance of the song. Here's how I live with myself including the cover - it was recorded on Pearl Jam's Live On Two Legs album.

Second rule I'm breaking, not only is there gratuitous cursing in the song, the title, you may have noticed, is also a curse word. Well, I'm sorry, but I can't pretend that this isn't one of guitarist Mike McCready's finest moments and just leave this track off my list! I love this song! I can't help it!

No. 44

Stay With Me - The Faces (1971) Video - Probably not a song that will endear you to your female coworkers, Rod Stewart penned an anthem most appropriate for Neil Patrick Harris' Barney Stinson character, though not necessarily an anthem appropriate for Neil Patrick Harris as we're led to believe that the character is a woman :) I don't know how this song has slipped through the cracks for so many, myself included, as I didn't learn of this song until Wedding Crashers' closing credits.

"In the morning, don't say you love me 'cause I'll only kick you out the door."

"Yeah, I'll pay your cab fare home, you can even use my best cologne, just don't be here in the morning when I wake up."

"Stay with me, stay with me, yeah tonight you better stay with me."

Thursday, June 17, 2010

No. 45

Boom Boom - John Lee Hooker (1961) Video - The quintessential blues-rock anthem, to which I was first exposed in The Blues Brothers. I don't care how cool you think you are, you're not as cool as John Lee Hooker. The Animals later did a very respectable, albeit inferior, cover.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

No. 46

Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain - Willie Nelson (1975) Video - Continuing a good run of songs that my dad gave to me is the last song Elvis Presley ever sang (at the piano in the music room at Graceland). Though Willie Nelson had previously been primarily known for his writing prowess, Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain was actually written in 1945 by Fred Rose. It doesn't get much simpler than this song, which is, I assert, country at its finest.

"In the twilight glow I see her, blue eyes crying in the rain. When we kissed goodbye and parted, I knew we'd never meet again. Love is like a dying ember and only memories remain and through the ages I'll remember blue eyes crying in the rain. Someday when we meet up yonder, we'll stroll hand in hand again in the land that knows no parting blue eyes crying in the rain."

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

No. 47

Blueberry Hill - Fats Domino (1956) Video - I owe my love for this song entirely to my dad. If not for him I likely would never have known anything of Fats Domino, the fun-spirited, piano-playing legend. You can't help but like Fats because he never does anything but sing and smile.

This quest to document my top 100 songs has helped me uncover a lot of things about music. To give you an idea how different the music industry was in 1940 (when the song was written), here's an example. Blueberry Hill was written in 1940 and published in a songbook, that's how the public was exposed to this classic. It was then recorded by 6 different artists in 1940 alone. Fats Domino, who is best known for the song, didn't record it for another 16 years, a year before Elvis also recorded it.

"I found my freedom on Blueberry Hill on Blueberry Hill when I found you. The moon stood still on Blueberry Hill and lingered until my dreams came true.

The wind in the willow played love's sweet melody, but all of the vows we made were never to be. Though we're apart, you're part of me still for you were my thrill on Blueberry Hill."

Monday, June 14, 2010

No. 48

I Cross My Heart - George Strait (1992) Video - This wraps up a stretch of 7 straight songs from the 90s. It's an unabashedly sappy love song and one of my favorite country songs ever. Liking this song doesn't make you a homo, but tearing up in the video does.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

No. 49

Mama, I'm Coming Home - Ozzy Osbourne (1991) Video - Contrary to what one might think, this song is about Ozzy's wife, Sharon, not his mother. In many ways, she was a mother to him, a mother keen on using her husband's talents to make them both wealthy. It was Sharon who slapped Ozzy out of his drug-induced post-Black Sabbath stupor, if not for her, we likely never experience his talents again. Thank you, Mama.

My experience with the Ozzman really began in college where my roommate C.J. had recently purchased his greatest hits. I was working until midnight one Sunday evening at my internship with my headphones on, listening to this song, when I realized there was no one else in the entire building. I began belting "Mama, mama I'm coooommmmiiinnnnggg hhhhhhooooooommmmmeeee!" After finishing up the project, I walked past the executive offices to see one of the vice presidents working away.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

No. 50

Yellow Ledbetter - Pearl Jam (1992) Video - Written for their Ten album, but released only as the B-side to the Jeremy single, Yellow Ledbetter is the lyrically-indecipherable story of Eddie Vedder's friend who received a yellow letter from the government notifying him that his brother had died in the Gulf War hence the line "I only hope he won't be coming home in a box or a bag." The song pays homage to Hendrix, most notably to Little Wing.

Friday, June 11, 2010

No. 51

Pink - Aerosmith (1998) Video - There are a small handful of songs that were responsible for completely changing the direction of my musical voyage. This is one of them. For a few months in the summer of '99 this was my favorite song in the world. As a result of this song, Aerosmith was my favorite band for the next several years. You know the feeling you have when a song is so catchy that you can't wait for it to end so you can begin it again? Pink gave me that feeling, only I didn't have the CD, and anyway I couldn't listen to it around my parents anyway.

Aerosmith's Nine Lives is an eternally underrated CD. When I got my grubby little hands on that album, it was, I would imagine, like the first time trying heroin. To quote Steve Martin in The Jerk, "if this out there, then what else must be?" Unfortunately the CD, which was borrowed, had a huge scratch in the middle of Pink so I could only listen to about the first 30 seconds before static set in. No matter, the opening harmonica is still one of my favorite moments of any song. Unfortunately, I made the mistake of leaving it in the CD player where my Dad would encounter it, rather than the Paul Harvey he was anticipating.

As I awoke, listened to the opening bars of the opening track, The Farm, which opens with a sarcastic line from Wizard of Oz and phases into a primal Steven Tyler scream, I suddenly realized what was about to happen. Suddenly I heard the sound of buttons being pulverized in an effort to remove the devil's music from his stereo. I sat bolt upright in bed, paralyzed by fear, both that the CD would be destroyed and that I might have the very large stereo hurled at me. As luck would have it, he found the right button and quickly became entranced with a Paul Harvey commercial, to which he so seamlessly fades. My brother's Queen and Dr. Dre CD's had not been as fortunate.

No. 52

Strawberry Wine - Deana Carter (1996) Video - In 1996, Deana Carter, the sexy and talented singer who only performed barefoot, seemed destined to be a country Sheryl Crow. Sadly Strawberry Wine would represent both the commencement and the peak of her fame, but it was a great song about a girl's first time to -ahem.

"He was working through college on my grandpa's farm, I was thirsting for knowledge and he had a car. I was lost somewhere between a woman and a child, one restless summer we found love growing wild on the banks of a river on a well-beaten path, it's funny how those memories they last, like strawberry wine, seventeen, hot July moon saw everything, my first taste of love, bittersweet, green on the vine, like strawberry wine."

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

No. 53

Corduroy - Pearl Jam (1994) Video - Off their extremely popular Vitalogy album, Corduroy managed to chart despite not being released as a single. I think I love it so much because it was the first track off Live On Two Legs, which is how I first began experiencing Pearl Jam. Thanks, Dustin

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

No. 54

Pretty Noose - Soundgarden (1996) Video - Although the band was together from 1984-1997, Soundgarden basically produced 3 well-known albums. 1991's Badmotorfinger, Superunknown in 1994, and finally Down On The Upside in 1996. After toiling in obscurity for many years, they hit their prime and quit. Listening to Down On The Upside, at no point does one think, "they're about out of material here, time for other pursuits." In actuality, they toured too much and broke up over creative disputes. That always sounds better than saying, "Chris Cornell got tired of Matt Cameron's snoring and leaving his clothes all over the bus.

Pretty Noose describes a situation that appears good at first, but turns out to be horrible. The band describes it as the classic bad-girlfriend experience. I think it could also apply to the plot of Hotel California.

"I caught the moon today, pick it up and throw it away. I got the perfect steal. A cleaner love with a dirty feel. Fall out and take the bait. Eat the fruit and kiss the snake goodnight.

Common ruse, dirty face. Pretty noose sells pretty hate. And I don't like what you got me hanging from."


Monday, June 7, 2010

No. 55

The Sad Cafe - The Eagles (1979) Video - An underrated song and album, their follow-up to 1976's Hotel California was the last #1 album of the 1970s, dethroning Led Zeppelin's In Through The Out Door. The album spawned 3 Top 10 hits, of which The Sad Cafe was not one, yet it made their greatest hits. I don't know how such a melancholy song makes me feel happy, but indeed it does.

"Out in the shiny night, the rain was softly falling. The tracks that ran down the boulevard had all been washed away. Out of the silver light, the past came softly calling and I remember the times we spent inside the sad cafe.

Oh, it seemed like a holy place, protected by amazing grace, and we would sing right out loud, the things we could not say. We thought we could this world with words like "love" and "freedom". We were part of the lonely crowd inside the sad cafe.

Oh, expecting to fly, we would meet on that beautiful shore in the sweet by and by. Some of their dreams came true, some just passed away, and some of them stayed behind inside the sad cafe.

The clouds rolled in and hid that shore, now that glory train, it don't stop here no more, now I look at the years gone by, and wonder at the powers that be. I don't know why fortune smiles on some, and let's the rest go free.

Maybe the time has drawn the faces I recall, but things in this life change very slowly, if they ever change at all. There's no use in asking why, it just turned out that way, so meet me at midnight baby inside the sad cafe. Why don't you meet me at midnight baby inside the sad cafe."

Sunday, June 6, 2010

No. 56

The River - Bruce Springsteen (1980) Video - I know many will think it odd that this track is 16 spots above Born to Run and Born in the U.S.A. didn't even make the list, but this isn't about what sold the most records, it's about the story it tells, the audience it speaks to, and how it relates to the listener. While it's not my story, it encapsulates so many others' stories that I can just imagine the feelings going through the construction worker as he hears his biggest idol sing about what it's like to be him. A lyrically-rich artist singing his best-written prose.

In this case, the river represents life and hope in one instance, but then serves as a reminder that his hopes and dreams have vanished in another. An interesting fact, of my Top 100 songs, 12 discuss water in some form or other, typically as a source of life (river) or a source of sadness (tears). Just thought that was interesting how closely water is tied to our emotions.

"I come from down in the valley where mister when you're young, they bring you up to do like your daddy done. Me and Mary we met in high school when she was just seventeen, wed ride out of that valley down to where the fields are green.

We'd go down to the river and into the river we'd dive, oh down to the river we'd ride.

Then I got Mary pregnant and man that was all she wrote. And for my nineteenth birthday, I got a union card and a wedding coat. We went down to the courthouse and the judge put it all to rest. No wedding day smiles, no walk down the aisles, no flowers, no wedding dress.

That night we went down to the river and into the river we'd dive on down to the river we did ride.

I got a job working construction for the Johnstown company, but lately there ain't been much work on account of the economy. Now all them things that seemed so important, well mister they vanished right into the air. Now I just act like I don't remember, Mary acts like she don't care.

But I remember us riding in my brother's car, her body tan and wet down at the reservoir. At night on them banks I'd lie awake and pull her close just to feel each breath she'd take, now those memories come back to haunt me, they haunt me like a curse. Is a dream a lie if it don't come true or is it something worse that sends me down to the river though I know the river is dry, my baby and I, oh down to the river we ride."

No. 57

Nothing Else Matters - Metallica (1992) Video - Guitarist James Hetfield wrote this song while on the phone with his girlfriend, literally holding the phone against his ear and strumming the chords. It talks about how close they were, despite the fact that he was out on tour and they rarely saw each other, not the usual Metallica fare.

"So close no matter how far, couldn't be much more from the heart. Forever trust in who we are and nothing else matters.

I never opened myself this way. Life is ours, we live it our way. All these words I don't just say, and nothing else matters.

Trust I seek and I find in you, everyday for us something new. Open mind for a different view and nothing else matters."

Saturday, June 5, 2010

No. 58

Fishin' In The Dark - Nitty Gritty Dirt Band (1987) Video - No song takes me back to summers growing up in Kansas quite like this one. The song is about plotting all winter to take a girl fishing all night. When it says, "It don't matter if we sit forever and the fish don't bite", I thought until I read the lyrics a few minutes ago that it said "Fall River" instead of "Forever" because I grew up on Fall River. Unapologetic country at its best. I love it! Though at age 5 when I first heard this song, I didn't have a girl to take and was just learning to fish, I could imagine that having both at the same time was just about as good as it could get.

"Lazy yellow moon coming up tonight shining through the trees, crickets are singing and the lightning bugs are floating on the breeze, baby get ready.

Across the field where the creek turns back by the old stone road, I'm going to take you to a special place that nobody knows, baby get ready.

You and me going fishing in the dark, lying on our backs and counting the stars where the cool grass grows. Down by the river in the full moonlight, we'll be falling in the middle of the night just moving slow. Staying the whole night through, feels so good to be with you.

Spring is almost over and the summer's come and the days are getting long, waited all winter for the time to be right just to take you along, baby get ready.

And it don't matter if we sit forever and the fish don't bite. Jump in the river and cool ourselves from the heat of the night, baby get ready.

You and me going fishing in the dark, lying on our backs and counting the stars where the cool grass grows. Down by the river in the full moonlight, we'll be falling in the middle of the night just moving slow. Staying the whole night through, feels so good to be with you. "

No. 59

Up Around The Bend - Creedence Clearwater Revival (1970) Video - There are at least 10-15 CCR songs that most people know ahead of this one, but I absolutely love the opening hook. As with all good CCR songs, this was written John Fogerty and inspires images of a traveling riverboat of fun.

Friday, June 4, 2010

No. 60

Sabotage - Beastie Boys (1994) Video - A song that scores extra cool points by having one of the baddest videos of all-time about a drug heist gone bad or something like that, you're never actually sure what's going on in the video, but there is a lot of action, no dialogue, loud music, and cops, sort of like a Michael Bay film.

No. 61

I Just Called To Say I Love You - Stevie Wonder (1984) Video - The song about how a day devoid of any other stimuli can be fantastic just by making a phone call to tell someone you love them. There's nothing else here, but it's a beautiful song and message.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

No. 62

Are The Good Times Really Over - Merle Haggard (1983) Video - I'll give a big shout-out to anyone reading this who knows this song or who is even familiar with Merle Haggard. At some point, probably about the mid-90s, it became very en vogue to answer the what-type-of-music-do-you-like question with, "anything but country." When Shania Twain was dominating the country charts with watered down pop, I think that was an entirely legitimate albeit lazy response. However, the pure country sounds of Hank Williams, Merle Haggard, George Strait, and early Garth Brooks stands up very well to the best music of the last half century.

Merle Haggard is a bit of a country Bruce Springsteen. He appeals to the working man, to traditional values, and to genre purists. By and large, country music today is pathetic. It's watered down pop with cheesy, redneck lyrics and "artists" who can't play their instruments. It's just not any good at all. Now, I will accept the fact that some people just don't like country music, but I think a closer examination of classic country will reveal a lyrically rich genre with some seriously beautiful music.

Merle Haggard was a small-time criminal who served 3 years in San Quentin where he observed 3 Johnny Cash concerts that encouraged him to turn his life around and continue performing. A few years later, he told Johnny how much he'd enjoyed one of those concerts. Cash said, "Merle, I don't remember you playing with us that day." Haggard said, "Johnny, I wasn't on the stage, I was in the audience."

While Haggard is a hardcore conservative with a bent for traditional values, he seems to spread blame and praise where it's due, regardless of party affiliation. Thanks Dad, I'd never have heard Merle if not for you. I think with a couple changes, this song would play even better today:

"I wish a buck was still silver and it was back when the country was strong, back before Elvis and the Vietnam War came along, before the Beatles and Yesterday when a man could still work and still would. Is the best of the free life behind us now and are the good times really over for good?

Are we rollin' downhill like a snowball headed for Hell? With no kind of chance for the flag or the Liberty Bell? I wish a Ford or a Chevy would still last 10 years like they should. Is the best of the free life behind us now and are the good times really over for good?

I wish Coke was still cola and the joint was a bad place to be. It was back before Nixon lied to us all on tv. Before microwave ovens when a girl could still cook and still would. Is the best of the free life behind us now and are the good times really over for good?

Stop rollin' down hill like a snowball headed for Hell. Stand up for the flag, and let's all ring the liberty bell. Let's make a Ford or a Chevy that'll still last 10 years like they should. The best of the free life is still yet to come and the good times ain't really over for good."

No. 63

Criminal - Fiona Apple (1997) Video - Fiona Apple has been a bad, bad girl as the song goes. This is made much clearer by the video that shows her waking up after a wild party looking super sultry. If you've never seen this video, you must. Based on the video alone, this song would be Top 3 on my list. In commenting on the video, Apple said, "I decided if I was going to be exploited, I would do the exploiting myself."

Not a natural beauty, Fiona Apple projects a raw sexuality that is equal parts tempting and terrifying. Another great example is her cover of Elvis Costello's I Want You. Do yourself a favor and drink it in.

No. 64

In My Life - The Beatles (1965) Video - This could've been any of about 20 songs by the Beatles, but the fact that it's not played as often as Yesterday, Let It Be, or Imagine has kept me from getting tired of it. The truth is, you could rank the remaining 64 songs as all Beatles songs and not have a bad one. In My Life and Eleanor Rigby are the only 2 Beatles songs that Lennon and McCartney disagree on. They both claim to have written the melodies.

Lennon penned the lyrics from childhood memories:

"There are places I remember all my life, though some have changed. Some forever not for better, some have gone and some remain. All these places have their moments, with lovers and friends I still can recall. Some are dead and some are living, in my life I've loved them all.

But of all those friends and lovers, there is no one compares with you and those memories lose their meaning when I think of love as something new. Though I know I'll never lose affection for people and things that went before I know I'll often stop and think about them, in my life I love you more."

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

No. 65

Rock Your Body - Justin Timberlake (2003) Video - As much as I like to rip on the popular artists of today, I have to admit I like JT's beats. 2 interesting things about this song - it was intended for Michael Jackson's 2001 album Invincible, which makes what happened with his sister Janet during this song at the Super Bowl even more interesting.

No. 66

Three More Days - Ray LaMontagne (2006) Video - Ok, so I did something last night that I promised myself I wouldn't. If you read my earlier posts, you know that I started this list with my iTunes library of 10,000 songs, rated the songs from 1-5, took the 500 5-stars and from that selected the Top 100, which were then organized into the list I've been unveiling.

I knew that upon finalizing the list I'd instantly have second thoughts about some of the songs, but planned to resist the urge to constantly reorganize and add/subtract from the list. That was until I came across 2 songs that belonged well up the list and 1 song that probably didn't belong on the list at all. The solution was to bump everything down and 2 songs off the list. Sorry for the incredibly detailed explanation, but just thought I should explain why you may not know this song, but will definitely know the next one when just yesterday I promised 3 songs in a row you wouldn't likely know.

Anyway, Ray LaMontagne has managed to fly under the radar, but he deserves to be known. Some of the sexiest music being made, but yet Chris Isaak gets to shoot videos with Victoria's Secret models. Not any longer, Chris!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

No. 67

Girl, I Wanna Lay You Down - Animal Liberation Orchestra (2004) Video - Known simply as ALO, these high school buddies used their lead singer's (Zach Gill) college friendship with Jack Johnson to launch their own music career. The video actually features Jack Johnson at the Kokua Music Festival. They now frequently tour and play together. Based on the success of this single, Jack signed them to his label, Brushfire Records.

The song is as chill and as sweet as any song on the list. In fact, barring a late veto, it will be played at my wedding in 2 months. This is the first of 3 straight songs that many people don't know. I'd encourage you to familiarize yourself with them. If you like the rest of the list, you'll probably like the unknowns as well.

"I come over, early in the morning. I'm like a heat wave without warning and when I touch you, my heart begins to flutter 'cause you're smooth and creamy like peanut butter.

Awww girl I wanna lay you down. I said girl I wanna lay you down.

I'm gonna flood you, like a love river, aww baby the postman is about to deliver. I cook you up some dinner, a little pasta. Listen to some music, a little rasta.

I said girl I wanna lay you down, I said girl I wanna lay you down, awww baby baby, don't you know I need you love?

So turn out the lights, bring out the candles, wrap your arms around my love handles. They say that passion does not always endure, but this feeling that I have for you is burning up my world."

No. 68

Time Bomb - Dave Matthews Band (2009) Video - Though most of my favorite Dave songs are ballads, my top 100 wouldn't be complete without this screaming number. Dave's 7th album, Big Whisky & the Groogrux King is dedicated to LeRoi Moore, their saxophonist who died in 2008. Time Bomb is supposedly written from the perspective of his sister's husband who shot Dave's sister and then himself. You feel the sense of desperation in his voice as he belts out, "I wanna believe in Jesus!"

No. 69

Lucille - Kenny Rogers (1977) Video - Ray Charles once said that the thing he loved about country music was the stories. Although this tune hadn't come out yet, it's precisely the type of song he envisioned. 3 characters - all with sympathetic and negative characteristics, it's a rich story:

"In a bar in Toledo, across from the depot, on a barstool she took off her ring. I thought I'd get closer so I walked on over. I sat down and asked her name. When the drinks finally hit her, she said, I'm no quitter, but I finally quit living on dreams. I'm hungry for laughter, here ever after, I'm after whatever the other life brings.

In the mirror I saw him and I closely watched him. I thought how he looked out of place. He came to the woman who sat there beside me. He had a strange look on his face. The big hands were calloused, he looked like a mountain, for a minute I thought he was dead, but he started shaking, his big heart was breaking, he turned to the woman and said,

You picked a fine time to leave, Lucille, with four hungry children and a crop in the field. I've had some bad times, lived through some sad times, but this time the hurting won't heal, you picked a fine time to leave me Lucille.

After he left us, I ordered more whisky, I thought how she made him look small. From the lights of the barroom to the rented hotel room, we walked without talking at all. She was a beauty, but when she came to me, she must have thought I'd lost my mind. I couldn't hold her, for the words that he told her kept coming back time after time.

You picked a fine time to leave, Lucille, with four hungry children and a crop in the field. I've had some bad times, lived through some sad times, but this time the hurting won't heal, you picked a fine time to leave me Lucille."

No. 70

Lola - The Kinks (1970) Video - My favorite song about a guy going out having a few drinks and bringing home a transvestite. The funny thing is that it's actually based on the true story of their band manager dancing all night with a "woman" that has stubble, but was too drunk to care. Be sure to check out the video where Ray Davies looks like Mr. McFly from Back to the Future.

"I met her in a club down in old Soho, where you drink champagne and it tastes just like Coca-Cola, C-O-L-A, Cola. She walked up to me and she asked me to dance. I asked her name and in a dark brown voice, she said Lola, L-O-L-A Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola.

Well I'm not the world's most physical guy, but when she squeezed me tight she nearly broke my spine, oh my Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola. Well I'm not dumb but I can't understand why we she walked like a woman and talked like a man, oh my Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola.

Well we drank champagne and danced all night, under electric candlelight. She picked me up and sat me on her knee and said dear boy won't you come home with me? Well I'm not the world's most passionate guy, but when I looked in her eyes, well I almost fell for my Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola.

I pushed her away, I walked to the door, I fell to the floor, I got down on my knees, then I looked at her and she at me.

Well that's the way that I want it to say, and I always want it to be that way for my Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola. Girls will be boys and boys will be girls. It's a mixed up, muddled up, shook up world except for Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola.

Well I left home just a week before and I'd never ever kissed a woman before, but Lola smiled took me by the hand, and said dear boy I'm gonna make you a man.

Well I'm not the world's most masculine man, but I know what I am and I'm glad a man and so's Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola."

No. 71

Remember When It Rained - Josh Groban (2003) Video - The most powerful display of his amazing voice.

No. 72

Born To Run - Bruce Springsteen (1975) Video - One of the greatest opening drum lines of all-time, this is one of many Springsteen greats. There aren't many rockers with the inspirational power of The Boss. His fans generally are working class, down on their luck, and he gives them hope. This album, and particularly this single, propelled him from a regional act to international superstar. Without Born to Run, there would be no Born in the U.S.A. The song took 6 months to record, a ridiculous length of time, glad it turned out better than Axl Rose's 15-years-in-the-making Chinese Democracy.

No. 73

Born To Be Wild - Steppenwolf (1968) Video - There's so much to say about this song that I'll have to be careful not to turn it into a novel.

"Get your motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, and whatever comes our way!"

First of all, there's no better road trip song. Secondly, no other song is tied so closely to a movie as this is to Easy Rider. If you consider yourself a film or music buff and haven't seen the movie, that should be your next rental, but only if you're by yourself because it's best appreciated in solitude, much like Basic Instinct but for entirely different reasons. The mind-blowing news is that this may not even be the best song in this movie (The Weight) or even the best Steppenwolf song in the movie (The Pusher). There's nothing more American than Road Trippin' and Rock 'n Roll, except that this song's actually Canadian, it was written and eventually performed by Canadian rockers Mars Bonfire.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

No. 74

I Will Survive - Cake (1996) Video - I am hesitant to include covers on the list, but some credit is in order for discovering that Gloria Gaynor's 1978 hit should've had an F-bomb. Seriously, this is a cover, but it's not just a reproduction, it changes gender, tone, and style. This is a masterpiece and my favorite song by one of my favorite bands. Even if you know the song, please check out the video - John McCrea working as a meter maid gives a pathetic, sarcastic slant to the song. Maybe he'll survive, but he definitely won't thrive, hence the F-bomb.

No. 75

Maggie May - Rod Stewart & the Faces (1971) Video - Rod Stewart has produced a TON of music, a lot of it poor, but the high points are gold. In my opinion, this is the best, but Reason to Believe, Do Ya Think I'm Sexy, Stay With Me, You Wear It Well, Rhythm of My Heart, You're In My Heart, and a cover of Badfinger's Day After Day are all favorites of mine. How many artists have 8 songs that I love?

For all the gay rumors that have followed his career, he's done about everything to disprove them. He was captain of the soccer team in high school and still plays in a senior soccer league. Additionally, he's dated or married an impressive lineup (Britt Ekland - Bond girl in Man With the Golden Gun, actress Alana Stewart, model Kelly Emberg, model Rachel Hunter, and in 2007 model Penny Lancaster-Stewart. Rod the Mod's still got it.

No. 76

These Thousand Hills - Third Day (2000) Video - A group that probably gets overlooked by mainstream music because they're Christian, Third Day is easily my favorite Christian group of all-time. There are several of their songs that could be in this spot, Thief, Consuming Fire to name a couple, but I like this underrated song as the only Christian entry on the list.

No. 77

Smells Like Teen Spirit - Nirvana (1991) Video - "Load up on guns and bring your friends" is how the Generation X anthem begins. This song will always represent rebellion in my mind because there's no way your parents were ok with this music. Even in '98, this was still the first song played at the bowling alley where all the kids congregated.

There are so many great stories about how this song came into existence, but I'll just share a couple. Kurt Cobain shared the opening chord with the band, which Krist Novoselic openly mocked, so Cobain made them play that chord for a solid 90 minutes until it turned into something. That's the kind of person Cobain was.

The title was given by Cobain's friend, punk rocker Kathleen Hanna, who wrote 'Kurt smells like teen spirit' - the brand of deodorant worn by his girlfriend. He interpreted this to have revolutionary meaning and used it as the song's title. He never realized that it was a deodorant brand until months after the single was released. The song was supposed to sound like the Pixies, a band Cobain admired greatly.

Friday, May 28, 2010

No. 78

Reelin' In The Years - Steely Dan* (1972) Video - Jimmy Page calls this the greatest guitar riff of all-time. That's high praise. The video I linked is more for the comedic value than anything, a young Bill Cosby introducing the group makes me laugh. Steely Dan, which (honestly) was named after a sex toy in a famous painting, still tours and retains a cult following. This song teased me for 5 years until Napster allowed me to learn the artist's name and download it.

No. 79

Rooster - Alice In Chains (1993) Video - Written as an homage to Jerry Cantrell's estranged father, Rooster actually helped to heal the rift. His father was a member of the 101st Airborne in Vietnam. They wore bald eagle patches on their shoulders, but the Vietnamese have no word for eagle, so the closest was the word for chicken or rooster. I imagine a romanticized view a young child might have of his father in battle as I listen to the lyrics.

In 2007, Cantrell's father joined him on-stage for a live performance of the song. The music video led his father to do a 45-minute interview talking about his experiences in Vietnam, which helped them to reconnect. Music that heals:

"Ain't found a way to kill me yet, eyes burn with stinging sweat, seems every path leads me to nowhere. Wife and kids, household pet, army green was no safe bet, the bullets scream to me from somewhere.

Here they come to snuff the rooster, aw yeah, yeah here come the rooster, you know he ain't gonna die.

Walkin' tall machine gun man, they spit on me in my homeland. Gloria sent me pictures of my boy. Got my pills 'gainst mosquito death, my buddy's breathin' his dyin' breath, oh God please won't you help me make it through?"

Thursday, May 27, 2010

No. 80

Big Empty - Stone Temple Pilots (1994) Video - As the sole STP entry on the list, it might seem odd that I selected one of their softer hits, but I much prefer the hard-soft variance (insert joke here) to the hard rock sound of Sex Type Thing or even Plush, though those two were very close to making the Top 100.

To sum up Early Alternative, you could take this, Pearl Jam's Jeremy, Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit, Radiohead's Creep, Soundgarden's Black Hole Sun, throw in some R.E.M. and Smashing Pumpkins and you'd have done a pretty decent job. Throw in my No. 79 song and you'd have done an awesome job (see what I did there, building suspense).

No. 81

Wild Horses - The Rolling Stones (1971) - Don't confuse this song for the inferior version they produced in 1995. I'm unable to find the original on YouTube. Often covered, the Alicia Keys Unplugged version w/Adam Levine (Maroon 5) changes it significantly, but is outstanding (Video). Fans love to theorize as to its origins, but according to Mick Jagger, the story was a fabrication but the influences were undoubtedly an amalgam of real-world emotions.

"Childhood living is easy to do, the things you wanted, I bought them for you. Graceless lady, you know who I am, you know I can't let you slide through my hands. Wild horses couldn't drag me away. Wild, wild horses couldn't drag me away.

I watched you suffer a dull, aching pain. Now you decided to show me the same. No sweeping exits or off-stage lines could make me feel bitter or treat you unkind. Wild horses couldn't drag me away. Wild, wild horses couldn't drag me away.

I know I've dreamed you a sin and a lie. I have my freedom, but I don't have much time. Faith has been broken, tears must be cried. Let's do some living after we die."

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

No. 82

I'll Be There - Jackson Five (1970) Video - This was a #1 hit for both the Jackson Five and Mariah Carey in 1992. At the time it was the most successful Motown record in the U.S.

No. 83

If It Makes You Happy - Sheryl Crow (1996) Video - One of the sexier videos on the list, featuring Crow in a museum, tiny outfits, and trippy contact lenses. Probably one of 3 artists on the list I'd go out with (insert gay joke here).

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

No. 84

Are You Gonna Go My Way - Lenny Kravitz (1993) Video - If this were a list of the best guitar riffs, this is easily top-1o. Seriously, this is a riff in the vein of Hendrix, Richards, Page, and Clapton. In fact, I thought it was Hendrix when I first heard it. The theory that I believe about it's meaning is that it's written from Jesus' point of view. Before you ridicule, read:

"I was born long ago, I am the chosen I'm the one. I have come to save the day and I won't leave until I'm done. So that's why you've got to try, you got to breathe and have some fun, though I'm not paid I play this game, and I won't stop until I'm done. But what I really want to know is, are you gonna go my way?....I don't know why we always cry. This we must leave and get undone. We must engage and rearrange and turn this planet back to one."

Yeah, so I know what I'm singing for special music next week!

No. 85

Nightrain - Guns n' Roses (1987) Video - Short of seeing Black Sabbath in their heyday or Rage Against the Machine in Mexico City, I can't imagine a wilder mosh pit than early Guns n' Roses. This is one of the wildest, a tribute to an infamous brand of California Red Wine, Night Train Express, which was extremely popular with the band during their early (and poor) days because of its low price and high alcohol content. And that's all you need to know about that.

Monday, May 24, 2010

No. 86

Cruisin' - Smokey Robinson (1979) Video - This is one of those songs that I can't ever remember not knowing. At some point I must've heard it for the first time, but it seems as though I've always known it. While a song like American Pie - Don McLean uses its 7 minutes to describe as many events as possible with confusing allegories and multiple interpretations, Cruisin' uses 4 minutes to describe a feeling to which every American boy can relate. Cruisin' with your girl, not a care in the world, "inch by inch we get closer and closer."

No. 87

We Will Rock You/We Are The Champions - Queen (1977) Video - From the 2nd I heard the entire version (Mighty Ducks closing credits) rather than just the chant from nighttime San Antonio Spurs broadcasts that somehow found their way to Eureka, Kansas, I loved this song. I didn't know Freddy Mercury was incredibly gay, I didn't even know what gay was. I just knew that this song rocked.

It served as the anthem for the 1994 World Cup and charted in France in 1998 when they won the World Cup, topping out at #10. Some other things you didn't know - Freddy Mercury was born in Zanzibar, went to school in India, and only acknowledged he had AIDS the day before his death. Even though you know the song, check out the video to see Borat playing the piano in awesome shorts.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

No. 88

Hotel California - The Eagles (1977) Video - The defining Eagles single and one of the best known rock songs of all-time probably would be in my top ten favorite songs had I not played it so much that I'm actually tired of it. I'm going to trust that anyone reading a music blog has heard the song or is a martian wondering what music is and skip the musical review. It's awe-inspiring to say the least. Because it got play on country stations, I got to listen to it at a much earlier age than most other songs on the list.

There are many marijuana-fueled blogs about the true meaning of the song, most of which involve some sort of tie-in with satanic rituals or cults. In my opinion, these are 100% false, with the exception of the very visible satanistic tenets of Hollywood and the music business (I'm not a preacher, I'm just sayin'). Essentially, the Eagles had just arrived in Southern California which seemed very appealing at first, seductive even, and they felt themselves getting trapped into a life that didn't produce happiness, but looked attractive on the surface. That's the whole song right there. Although I do drive by a Hotel California every day in Oakland that was owned by the church of Satan with which Don Henley was affiliated.............

No. 89

All Right Now - Free (1970) Video - While a lot of the songs on my list have many possible interpretations, multiple layers, and social symbolism, Free's All Right Now is a song about hooking up and ascertaining the other's intentions. That's it and that's all. Check out both verses:

"There she stood in the street, smiling from her head to her feet. I said, hey, what is this? Now baby, maybe she's in need of a kiss. I said, hey what's your name baby? Maybe we can see things the same. Now don't you wait or hesitate, let's move before they raise the parking rent.

I took her home to my place, watching every move on her face. She said, Look, what's your game baby, are you trying to put me in shame? I said, slow, don't go so fast. Don't you think that love can last? She said, love, Lord above, now you're trying to trick me in love?"

Lead singer Paul Rodgers' penned the lyrics and would go on to do the same for his next group's (Bad Company) Feel Like Makin' Love, where you can see a pattern emerging. Heavy riff, hookin' up. He would later step in to lead Queen after the death of Freddy Mercury. This won't make many Rolling Stones or VH1 most influential lists, but I like it, a lot.

Friday, May 21, 2010

No. 90

Get Together - The Youngbloods (1967) Video - A group you're probably not familiar with, but a song you'll most definitely recognize, Get Together was their only Top 40 hit. It's a song of peace and inclusion, perfectly befitting 1967's Summer of Love.

"Love is but the song we sing, fear's the way we die. You can make the mountains ring, or make the angels cry. Know the dove is on the wing, and you need not know why. C'mon people now, smile on your brother, everybody get together, try and love one another right now."

No. 91

Open Arms - Journey (1982)* Video - Unbelievably sappy, but undeniably awesome, Open Arms was not the type of song Journey was recording in 1982. The majority of the band was against it, but lead singer Steve Perry pushed it through. When it was finally performed live, the crowd went bananas and the other band members were sold.

"Lying beside you, here in the dark. Feeling your heart beat with mine. Softly you whisper, you're so sincere. How could our love be so blind? We sailed on together. We drifted apart and here you are by my side. So now I come to you with open arms, nothing to hide, believe what I say. So here I am with open arms, hoping you see what your love means to me, open arms."

Thursday, May 20, 2010

No. 92

Take It To The Limit - The Eagles (1975) - When the subject of the greatest bands of all-time comes up, The Beatles, Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, and Pink Floyd usually come up. They all obviously belong in the discussion, but there's a 5th entry that many omit. Whether it's because they weren't ever very controversial or that they didn't change the way music was played is irrelevant. The fact that shouldn't be ignored is the sheer volume of awesome music that the Eagles produced from 1971-1980.

Take It To The Limit is a song that gets lost in the shuffle of all the great tracks the Eagles laid down, but in my opinion, it's one of the 3 best. The thing that made the Eagles great was that there were 4 virtuosos in the group. Take It To The Limit was sung by bassist Randy Meisner, the first A-side sung by neither Don Henley nor Glenn Frey, though Joe Walsh would later sing lead on several songs. There didn't seem to be any drop-off in the musical quality, regardless of who was leading. Never has there existed a better collection of multi-talented musicians, not even the Beatles.

Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings made a very respectable cover in 1983 (Video).

"All alone at the end of the evening, all the bright lights have faded to blue. I was thinking about a woman who might have loved me and I never knew. You know I've always been a dreamer (spent my life running around) and it's so hard to change (can't seem to settle down) but the dreams I've seen lately keep on turning out and burning out and turning out the same. So put me on a highway and show me a sign and take it to the limit one more time. You can spend all your time making money, you can spend all your love making time, if it all fell to pieces tomorrow, would you still be mine?

No. 93

Down By The River - Neil Young (1969) Video - The story of a man catching his woman cheating on him, meets her by the river and shoots her, Neil Young wrote this while nursing 103-degree fever in the California desert. The song runs as short as 4 minutes and as long as 31 minutes live. The version I fell in love with ran about 9 minutes, but never seems to lag.

Probably my favorite songwriter of all-time, probably only equaled by Dylan, Neil Young makes up for his lack of vocal prowess (Neil Patrick Harris on How I Met Your Mother said it best, "I can't hear you talking with this old woman singing") by penning some of the most beautiful and poignant songs in rock history.

Having served as a major influence for many of today's top rock artists, Young has managed to stay in the public eye by performing intermittently with Dave Matthews Band and Pearl Jam (who refer to him as Uncle Neil). Additionally, he's been a proponent for alternative fuels, reengineering his 1959 Lincoln Continental to get 100 mpg (Letterman).

No. 94

The Distance - Cake (1996) Video - The eponymous single off their second album, Comfort Eagle, "The Distance" dominated alternative radio in 1996. It was written by guitarist Greg Brown, who left the group in 1998. John McCrea's dry, talk-sing style makes it sound as though he's mocking the previous artists such as their covers of Gloria Gaynor's "I Will Survive" and Black Sabbath's "War Pigs." I distinctly remember listening to the alternative station late at night so low that my parents couldn't hear it when "The Distance" came on. I remember thinking, this is something very different from anything I've heard before. I think I like this. And I always have.

The Sacramento-based group has since left 2 labels and formed their own, building a studio powered solely by solar panels, so that their next album, which coincidentally has been delayed 2 years, will be exclusively recorded with solar energy.