So I thought I'd include my own thoughts on my mix, why I included songs, how they ended up there etc. Truthfully, as I read this over, some of the choices are kind of puzzling I guess, but I do really like these mixes still. Part I of the mix was done up while drinking gin and tonic, while part II was put together while on Jack and Coke. I don't know if that's necessary information to have, but sometimes it helps.
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The Booze and the Drugs part I
1. 4th of July – Shooter Jennings – I don’t exactly remember when I first heard about Shooter, but he’s Waylon’s son I figured I had to check this out. I picked it up for cheap one day and was extremely pleased. The whole album has got a good, rollickin’ feel to it. There are about a half a dozen really great songs on the album, and I played the shit out of this on The Great Road Trip of 2004 when I moved out to Saskatoon. This song represents most basically what I love about music. It sounds great in the car on the road, out of the stereo when you’re having a couple of beers and then the song actually ends with the George Jones, saying “…wh-when we gonna get paid for this?..” so I thought it would be a good choice to kick off my mix. I could kid myself and choose something more emotive, with more authentic substance and grit, but I’d be fucking lying. This is the stuff that makes me move.
2. Still in Hollywood – Concrete Blonde – This might be the very first song I think I’d ever heard by this band which stand as one of my All Time Favourites. Johnette’s voice just dripped with a very dark sexuality, that was appealing and a little scary all at once. She tells stories and makes you want to sit next to her all night and listen. Maybe you’ll get to know her better, maybe you won’t. Their albums are a decent substitute for those of us who will never get to know her personally.
3. Peacock Suit – Paul Weller – I’m only a minor Jam fan, I actually only own only their Greatest Hits compilation (although I’m hoping to start collecting those nice reissues). I’m less a fan of Paul’s solo work, with Heavy Soul being the only Paul Weller album I have. Radcliffe said this is what he hates about 70s rock music, however, this groovy cut is what I love about it. It’s my only real KISS song (i.e. Gene/Paul) on this compilation and since KISS was pretty critical in my early musical life, I had to have something on there to acknowledge it without driving the reviewers crazy.
4. One Time Woman – J.D. Blackfoot – I downloaded JD’s album a little while before I started this mix. I’d vaguely heard of him and his The Ultimate Prophecy album before, but this track immediately appealed to me. This song reminded me of Credence and had a quality that made it necessary for inclusion on the mix. There’s no history here, obviously, but it just had that thing that made it imperative.
5. Weight on Me Mama – Junkhouse – I only have the debut album by this band called Strays. I’ve never been a real fan and actually shelved this album for the longest time. I pulled it out awhile back and it promptly stayed out for a long time. It’s a bluesy, rockin’ album that sounds great when you're (surprise, surprise) drinking! There’s a number of cuts that were in contention for this compilation, including ‘This Old Man is Too Drunk To Drive’. That song didn’t work in the sequencing. This one did. It’s got a nice, slightly menacing quality to it that I like. He’s got a great voice.
6. The Booze and the Drugs – The Broken Family Band – I first heard of this album from Dalen and KonstaninL, I believe, awhile back. It has kind of country feel to it, which I love, and the sentiment which gives this compilation its ultimate theme. I obviously like the booze and the drugs a lot and lyrically this song just brings it home “How long you gonna be in the bathroom, baby?” Great lyrics too. This song was a no brainer as a choice cut and the theme for the mix.
7. Time Gone By – Izzy Stradlin & the JuJu Hounds – I’m a huge Guns ‘n’ Roses fan, enough so that it was a thread about them on CMJ (someone was trashing them, I can’t remember who) that eventually transitioned me from lurker to poster. Something by them deserved inclusion based on their importance to my musical history. I seriously considered submitting a track by them, but none of them really felt right (I had three different existing mixes with other songs in place which eventually got nuked). Izzy was an extremely important member of Guns, and his absence probably signaled the beginning of the end for one of the most important bands of the last 25 years. This song makes me melancholy, but in a good way.
8. Looking for a Supergirl – the Makers – This is my Dolls/trash track. I love the Dolls, but didn’t want to put them on a mix like this. In lieu of the real thing, I always think of cut-away bands like The Makers. Especially this album (Rock Star God), with its great cover and perfect use of pianos (something that can completely fuck up a great track if not done with the greatest of care, see various tracks on Use Your Illusion).
9. You’re Gonna Lose – Royal Trux – I figured this is a good segue from the last track. I’m a minor Royal Trux fan, and this album has got sleaze all over it. I love the feel of this song. LooGAR would probably say he can smell her off the album. This is probably true.
10. I Wanna Holler (But the Town’s Too Small) – The Detroit Cobras – This is one of my favourite hand-clap songs. Rachel Nagy has an unbelievablly sexy voice, it's kind of low and purring and then it's just out there. I can pretty much listen to her all day. Her and Johnette need to get together and do stuff. And also, growing up in a really small town, I appreciate the sentiment.
11. Red House – Jimi Hendrix – I’m a huge Jimi Hendrix fan, particularly Are You Experienced. It was one of my favourite albums when I was 15. I remember hearing this and instantly loving it. Jimi’s protagonist lives in a Red House and loves to fuck around, unapologetically. This is also was something I identify with, as a person.
12. Fools on Parade – the Jayhawks – Never been a huge Jayhawks devotee, only owning a couple of albums. This is from the bonus disc of Rainy Day Music and I always thought it should have been a choice album cut. It rocks and rolls, and has everything I’m generally looking for in a song. Especially when the lyrics talk about smoking cigarettes and drinking Jack and coke. Winner all around.
13. She’s Just 14 – John Phillips – LooGAR hooked me up with Pay Pack and Follow and I immediately deloused my computer and my home after playing it. Truly disgusting stuff, so obviously I loved it immediately. This song, with Mick and Keith, is choice. And the fact that ‘She’s just 14’ reminds me of ‘Time to Run’ by the Forgotten Rebels. The Rebels were in contention for this mix, but didn’t make the quality pass. The Rebels were the most important band in the entire world to me when I was around 13 or 14. Anyway, this song is horrible and perfect all at once. Let’s face it, heroin is bad. It’s a terrible drug. But if you catch it at the right time, you can get some good art out of it. And by good, I mean awesome.
14. It Can’t Be Nashville Every Night – The Tragically Hip – My favourite band, so it’s an obvious inclusion here in a mix like this. From their second to last album In Between Evolution, it’s the Hip at their grandest. ‘With it's la la oh oh ohs, whoa-ohs and yeahs!’ Great chorus, great song, great band.
15. Wiser Time – the Black Crowes –I have a bunch of Black Crowes albums, but the one I really love is their debut. It reminds me of the tequila shot contest I had in 1990 (I won, but in contests like this, everyone wins). Shake Your Money Maker was the soundtrack to that particular event. I decided against a song from that album and picked this one from Amorica. This track reminds me of the highway, and I absolutely love the pedal steel in this. It always makes me want to hit the road.
16. So Long Bernie – The Lowest of the Low – I’d say I truly love this band, but the truth is I just really love their album Shakespeare My Butt. For me, it’s a true university classic, one that instantly takes me back to the early 90s when I was younger and lighter. There were literally a half dozen songs from it that warranted inclusion, but this one and one other made the cut. Is it the best one? Probably not, but it’s still great. “It’s like finding out Klaus Barbie is your neighbour, only weirder”. Songs about killers and alleged Nazi war criminals are always good.
17. Body of an American – the Pogues – There’s not a whole lot to say about this song. It’s the Pogues, from Rum, Sodomy and Lash. I love drinking and love listening to the Pogues when I’m drinking. I chose this one because of its great inclusion in The Wire. Truthfully, ‘Fairytale of New York’ would have been a better choice for the mix, but you could stick that anywhere and it would somehow work.
18. To Be a Millionaire – Spacehog – I don’t really like the band or the album it’s from, but this ‘hidden’ track is 1000x better than anything they ever did. Nobody has ever heard this song, because who the fuck is going to get to the hidden track on Resident Alien. It needed to get out and be heard. Here it is.
19. No Way Out – Dgeneration – Sleazy. I only have the one album, and I like it a lot. This fucker was immediate upon first pass. It leaps out at you and grabs you. It’s the sound of a lot of music I like. I don’t have any particular memory associated with it, other than it sounds great when you’re on the way to getting ripped.
20. Tweeter and the Monkey Man – Headstones – Fact: I love the Travelling Wilbury’s Volume I. The album is kind of MOR, yet I still do enjoy hearing these songs after nearly 20 years. This Headstones track is my choice to represent the Springsteen via Wilburys, and bad Canadian rock. The Headstones don’t really do a whole lot for me, but this is a great cover.
21. Louie Louie – Iggy Pop – If you don’t love this song, just kill yourself. Haha, seriously, Ig is just having fun with this one and I’m a little surprised at how many people really hated it. How can you hate ‘Louie, Louie’? Why do you hate music? This is Iggy Pop singing a modified version of ‘Louie, Louie’. You all realize that, right? Play this again, only louder and sing along. And knock over the nearest lamp, too.
The Booze and the Drugs part II
1. Guitar Town – Steve Earle – I’ve used this phrase before, but to me, this is what ALL music should sound like. It’s got everything, which is why it would rank pretty damn high rank in my Top 10 Songs Of All Time. It’s got it all, absolutely nothing gets close to this Steve Earle song. It’s so simple, yet completely memorable at the same time. A true classic.
2. Been Down Too Long – Scott H. Biram – I think I got this album from mcaputo. Don’t know a whole lot about the artist, but it just felt right here. Maybe it’s the religious imagery which made me want to acknowledge my lapsed beliefs. Can I get an amen?
3. Make Your Mama Proud – Fastball – I find it hard to believe that this was the first song I heard from this band. It's just surprising that they morphed into a latter Soul Asylum. The choice posed by Fastball in the chorus often requires careful thought. I just think this is a great rock and roll song.
4. Dollar Bill – Screaming Trees – Not really a fan of this band, actually. They’ve a couple of songs I like a lot, but there’s never been anything that has thrilled me. Except this song. Mark Lanegan’s voice is superb, it’s all whiskey and heartache.
5. Closing Time – Leonard Cohen – I love this song a lot. His show in ’92 ranks among the best I’ve ever seen. He played everything you’d want to hear, came on for three encores and left you wanting more. I love his voice, it’s hoarse and atonal, but it somehow works. This song has the whiff of alcohol, it’s not drunk, but you can smell booze.
6. Let it Ride – Ryan Adams – “I wasn’t ready to go, I’m never ready to go, let it ride…” This is the best Ryan Adams song on a really great double album. A complete road song. As I reflect on this, the mix easily could have represented road AND booze/drug songs. This also is a 3rd beer song.
7. Tangerine – Led Zeppelin – I’m a Zep fan. Not a fanatic. Let’s make that point clear. I can’t get truly riled up about this band, but there are a few songs that I really feel and which makes you believe the hype. The other I wanted to put on here was ‘That’s the Way’, also from III. Another, probably more apt choice would have been ‘Travelling Riverside Blues’, what I feel is their absolutely best song, but this one seemed to fit better here, despite the fact that when I’m juiced it’s the Zep song I most want to hear. I used to do a passable Robert Plant imitation when I was younger and considerably thinner. I kind of wish I put ‘Riverside’ on Disc 1, actually. Fuck …
8. Just About ‘The Only’ Blues – The Lowest of the Low – “Let's take a walk down to the Only, and drink until our kidneys fail, and you can tell me that you want me, and I can think about betrayal, you can leave me thinking, drinking all night, 'cause that's the sharpest nail….’ This album is obviously pretty crucial to my theme and I’ve already mentioned, it’s one of my favourite, throwing-back-booze albums. It’s partly nostalgic, to be clear. But overall, booze isn’t necessary to love this song or the album. I don’t know where the Low conjured this up, but I’m glad they did.
9. Tangled Up in Blue (Live) – Bob Dylan & the Rolling Thunder Review – I’m a Dylan fan, but only a few songs have honestly really touched me, with both lyrics, music and delivery. This particular version of ‘Tangled Up in Blue’ is probably my favourite Dylan song. I don’t exactly know why it appeals to me so much. I do remember watching a rock music special one time (I think it was Rolling Stone magazine’s 20 years of Rock and Roll or something like that, Dennis Hopper was the ‘host’) and they showed a clip of Dylan singing this particular version, all done up in that pancake make-up. The clip only showed him singing the first two verses but it was enough to make a me go out and start buying Dylan albums. And the harmonica freak-out at the end? That’s how a song should end.
10. 2,000 Man (Live) – Kiss – Okay, there HAD to be a KISS song here. They were my ‘All Time Favourite Band’ growing up. When I was a kid, this was the shit. I had the posters, the fake tattoos, everything. In retrospect, a lot of my continual love is probably wrapped up with nostalgia. No one could possibly love Dynasty or Unmasked, but I still do. Early KISS still rules, I don’t care. ‘Deuce’ is great rock and roll. So, yeah I had to put a KISS song on the mix and I always thought this unplugged version of ‘2000 Man’ is awesome. Ace’s solo album from 1978 was fantastic, as is this track, originally on Dynasty. He was an unrepentant drunk, so he achieves even higher marks with me.
11. Queen Bitch – David Bowie – My aunt gave me a vinyl copy of changesbowie when I was a kid and soon become completely became obsessed with Bowie. I saw him live when I was 13 on the how-could-it-be-anything-but-shitty ‘Glass Spider’ tour. He played a lot of old tracks on that tour, but not this one. This is something else. It was a few years after I started listening to Bowie that I first heard Hunky Dory and hearing this song was like hearing him again for the first time.
12. Driver’s Seat – Sniff ‘n’ the Tears – This is from the ‘Boogie Nights’ soundtrack, probably my favourite movie of all time (it often jockeys for first place with ‘Goodfellas’). The inclusion of this track is due to this movie, because as far as pairing music with cinematic images, it’s only rivaled by that Scorcese movie. When Floyd Gondolli rolls into Jack Horner’s New Year’s Eve party, this song is cued up, signaling the end of Jack’s film-making and heralding the beginning of the cheap, 80s cutout videotape porn. The song is awesome.
13. South Station Blues – The Joe Perry Project – I enjoy the old Aerosmith so I had to include it here. This technically isn’t Aerosmith, but Joe Perry’s drug induced side project when everyone became so incapacitated that this became a viable option. This song has an incredible groove. It’s actually horrifying to consider what this band became. Everyone should play this song (or something off of Rocks) and then consider “I Don’t Want to Miss A Thing”. This band was fucking great.
14. Sooner than Later – Pete Droge and the Sinners – I actually don’t really even know many Pete Droge songs outside of his Find a Door album. I love the beginning of this song ‘…Left that bottle of wine on the TV table…’ You just know that it isn’t good wine, you know? I also really dig his song ‘Beautiful Girl’ from the movie of the same name. It’s a great movie and song. I considered placing it here but it just didn’t segue well into the next one. I love Pete’s voice and think this is a great track.
15. Cordelia – The Tragically Hip – Obviously I’ve expressed my love of the Tragically Hip over and over. This song is my personal #1 by them. I really don’t know why, and I’m serious when I say that. But the second the song kicks in, I’m absolutely hooked. I don’t even know what the fuck the song is about. Gord screams a lot about ‘I’m NOT Cordelia’ and ‘tramping the boards, screaming out Macbeth’ but at the end of the day I don’t really care what he’s talking about. Sometimes the music and the delivery matter more.
16. Woman’s Intuition – Hunter-Ronson – I’m a big fan of Mott so I knew something either Ian or his former band ought to be on here. Radcliffe and I had a mix exchange and he actually sent me Ian’s first album and an assortment of other singles. The absolute second I heard this song I fell hard. This falls into the “why can’t all music sound like this?”
17. People Who Died – The Jim Carroll Band – What more can anyone say about this song? It’s so goddamn good it defies description. There are so many good moments within this track, but I always liked how he says “Hey it sure beats Ri-kerrss” I think anyone can get off on this song.
18. Caravan (Live) – Van Morrison and the Band – This song never really came alive until I heard it on The Last Waltz. The studio cut is great, but on this particular version, man, I don’t even know what to say about it. It’s got the incessant ‘la la la’s’, that’s one thing, but at the end of it, you’ve still got a great song, backed up by The Band, and sung by someone who is apparently hammered out of his tree while performing. What this lacks is the visual component from the film, because you can’t see the kicks, you can’t see the suit, you can’t see everything that makes this a perfect performance. But you can hear it here when he drops the mike and you hear Robbie say:
‘Van the Man!’
19. Nowhere Road – Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson – There’s really nothing I can say about these two guys that has not been said a thousand times before. I’d have preferred to have a couple of solo tracks on the mix, but this song just felt right as a send off. “There’s a road, in Oklahoma, straighter than a preacher, longer than a memory.” They sound fantastic on this track. When a song like this comes on during the beer drinking, I'm immediately about 1000x happier.
_________________ All I can say is, go on and bleed.
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