Loverboy

I’m not going to claim that they were artists, but I’ve always had a soft spot for the group Loverboy. They were one of the first groups that Jeff and I really liked. We bought all of their albums, knew all of their songs, and, at one point, we even tried to dress like Mike Reno (and here).

Mike Reno

To this day, I feel a rush when a Loverboy song comes on the radio. Just the other day I cranked the radio to:

Turn Me Loose
by Loverboy

I was born to run,
I was born to dream,

The craziest boy you ever seen,
I gotta do It my way,
Or no way at all.

And I was here to please,
I’m even on knees
Makin love to whoever I please,
I gotta do it my way,
Or no way at all.

And then you came around,
Tried to tie me down,
I was such a clown,
You had to have it your way,
Or no way at all.

Well I’ve had all I can take,
I can’t take it no more,
I’m gonna pack my bags and fly……baby,

Or no way at all.

So why don’t you turn me lose,
Turn me loose,
Turn me loose,
I gotta do it my way,
Or no way at all.

Why don’t you turn me lose,
Turn me loose,

Turn me loose,
I gotta do it my way,
I wanna fly.

I’m here to please,
I’m even on my knees,
Makin love to whoever I please,
I gotta do it my way,
I gotta do it my way,

And when you came around,
You Tried to tie me down,
I was such a clown,
You had to have it your way,
Well I’m sayin no way,

So why don’t you turn me lose,
Turn me loose,
Turn me loose,

I gotta do it my way,
Or no way at all.

Why don’t you turn me loose,
Turn me loose,
Turn me loose,
I gotta do it my way,
I wanna fly.

Repeat

Turn me loose,

Repeat.

The grammar error in this song grates on my nerves like you wouldn’t believe. I hate it. I’ve always hated it. Didn’t somebody during the production of this record have the sense to pull out Strunk and White? (I should point out that I don’t mind the colloquial “craziest boy you ever seen” — that doesn’t bother me for some reason.)

Comments


On 25 April 2003 (07:43 AM),
jeff said:

Grammar errors usually bother me, but I didn’t even notice the whoever/whomever error (until JD pointed it out to me). The lose/loose error is what I noticed (which JD is now changing).

The Loverboy song reminds me of an even better song by another Canadian band from the ’80s:

On The Loose by Saga

One day you feel quite stable
The next you’re comin’ off the wall
But I think you should warn me
If you start heading for a fall

I see the problem start
I watch the tension grow
I see you keeping it to yourself
And then instead of reaching conclusions
I see you reaching for something else

No one can stop you now
Tonight you’re on the loose
No one to tell you how
Tonight you’re on the loose

I see no harm or danger in escaping

If the method suits the style
We put the mind on idle
And let the others take it for awhile
When the pace is too fast
And I think I won’t last
You know where I’ll be found

I’ll be standing here beside myself
Getting ready for the final round

No one can stop you now
Tonight you’re on the loose
No one to tell you how

Tonight you’re on the loose

The time we feel most stable
Is the time we’re comin’ off the wall
And there’s every indication
We may be heading for a fall

So let the problems start
And let the tension grow
We’ll be keeping it to ourselves
And while they’re busy reaching their conclusions
We’ll be reaching for something else

No one can stop you now
Tonight you’re on the loose
No one to tell you how
Tonight you’re on the loose



On 28 April 2003 (10:07 AM),
Paul said:

J.D.,

Re: Grammar. Haven’t you noticed that poor grammar is ok in popular music? It’s the one place where double negatives are the norm. I bet that if we could “correct” these things it would ruin the song(s). I can’t think of any good examples but there are oodles.



On 28 April 2003 (10:49 AM),
Drew said:

get this guy off the top page!

Iris

About six years ago, Paul and Amy Jo loaned us an album by Iris Dement, a country singer of sorts. I say “of sorts” because Dement’s music is difficult to classify: it’s certainly folk or country or bluegrass or spiritual, yet it’s none of these. And all of them. Also, Dement’s singing voice has a distinctive nasal twang that can be off-putting at first. Kris and I didn’t know what to think when we first heard her. With time, Dement’s voice grew on us; it’s not polished or produced, but it’s authentic. (I’m reminded of hearing my grandmother and my cousins sing when I was a child.)

We saw Iris Dement in concert last night. The crowd was largely middle-aged: grey hair and bald heads abounded. Joel and Aimee might have been the youngest couple present. Though the crowd was old, it was plenty enthusiastic.

The show was great.

Dement’s voice is just as quirky and powerful in person as it is on record; her recorded sound can be described aptly as unproduced. Dement looks girlish, and she dressed in a plain dress. She took the stage alone, and alternated between a piano and an acoustic guitar, playing songs and chatting with the audience.

Dement writes many of her own songs, and her music and lyrics are deeply rooted in the country tradition, and in the hymns and spirituals her family sang when she was a child. She’s been influenced by the Carter family, by The Weavers, by Jimmie Rodgers. Her own music rests comfortably beside these country legends.

Many of Dement’s songs are bittersweet paeans to small towns, to family, to childhood. Hers is not music you’d want to listen to while feeling down; to do so would only exacerbate your blues. Not all of her songs are downers, though.

This song is an ode to her mother:

Mama’s Opry
by Iris Dement

She grew up plain and simple in a farming town.
Her daddy played the fiddle and
   used to do the calling when they had hoedowns.
She says the neighbors would come and
   they’d move all my grandma’s furniture ’round.
And there’d be twenty or more there
    on the old wooden floor dancin’ to a country sound.
The Carters and Jimmie Rodgers played
   her favourite songs.
And on Saturday nights there was a radio show and
   she would sing along.
And I’ll never forget her face when she revealed to me,
That she’d dreamed about singing at the Grand Ole Opry.

Her eyes, oh, how they sparkled when
   she sang those songs.
While she was hanging the clothes on the line,
   I was a kid just a hummin’ along.
Well, I’d be playing in the grass, to her,
   what might’ve seemed, obliviously,
But there ain’t no doubt about it:
   she sure made her mark on me.
An’ she played old gospel records on the phonograph.
She turned them up loud and we’d sing along,
   but those days have passed.
Just now that I am older it occurs to me,
That I was singing in the grandest opry.

And we sang Sweet Rose of Sharon, Abide With Me,
‘Til I ride The Gospel Ship to Heaven’s Jubilee.
And In That Great Triumphant Morning
   my soul will be free,
And My Burdens Will Be Lifted when
   my Saviour’s face I see.
So I Don’t Want to Get Adjusted to this world below,
But I know He’ll Pilot Me ’til it comes time to go.
Oh, nothing on this earth is half as dear to me,
As the sound of my Mama’s Opry

And we sang Sweet Rose of Sharon, Abide With Me,
‘Til I ride The Gospel Ship to Heaven’s Jubilee.
And In That Great Triumphant Morning
   my soul will be free,
And My Burdens Will Be Lifted when
   my Saviour’s face I see.
So I Don’t Want to Get Adjusted to This World below,
But I know He’ll Pilot Me ’til it comes time to go.
Oh, nothing on this earth is half as dear to me,
As the sound of my Mama’s Opry

“Mama’s Opry” is typical of Dement’s early songs. Her first two albums are touched with sweet nostalgia and gentle tempos. Her third album disappointed some people. It’s more rock-and-roll. It is less about personal introspection than her previous efforts. It embraces a traditional aggressive folk activism as typified by this song:

Wasteland of the Free
by Iris Dement

We got preachers dealin’ in politics and diamond mines
And their speech is growing increasingly unkind
They say they are Christ’s disciples
But they don’t look like Jesus to me
And it feels like I’m livin’ in the wasteland of the free

We got politicians runnin’ races on corporate cash
Now don’t tell me they don’t turn around and
   kiss them people’s ass
Now you may call me old-fashioned
But that don’t fit my picture of a true democracy
And it feels like I’m livin’ in the wasteland of the free

We got CEO’s makin’ 200 times the worker’s pay
But they’ll fight like hell against raisin’
   the minimum wage
And if you don’t like it Mister
They’ll ship your job to some third world country
   ‘cross the sea
And it feels like I’m livin’ in the wasteland of the free

Living in the wasteland of the free
Where the poor have now become the enemy
Let’s blame our troubles on the weak ones
Sounds like some kind of Hitler remedy
Living in the wasteland of the free

We got little kids with guns fightin’ inner city wars
So, what do we do, we put these little kids
   behind prison doors
And we call ourselves the advanced civilization
But that sounds like crap to me
And it feels like I’m livin’ in the wasteland of the free

We got high school kids runnin’ ’round in
   Calvin Klein and Guess
Who cannot pass a 6th grade reading test
But if you ask them, they can tell you
The name of every crotch on MTV
And it feels like I’m livin’ in the wasteland of the free

We kill for oil then we throw a party when we win
Some guy refuses to fight and we call that the sin
But he’s standin’ up for what he believes in
And that seems pretty damned American to me
And it feels like I’m livin’ in the wasteland of the free

Living in the wasteland of the free
Where the poor have now become the enemy
Let’s blame our troubles on the weak ones
Sounds like some kind of Hitler remedy
Living in the wasteland of the free

While we sit gloating in our greatness
Justice is sinking to the bottom of the sea
And it feels like I’m livin’ in the wasteland of the free

Yes, Dement can be bitter. Very bitter, as evidenced by her cover of “God May Forgive You” (right-click here to download an mp3 of the song — Mr. Record Company Executive, please don’t sue me: I’m trying to sell your music here):

God May Forgive You
by Harlan Howard and Bobby Braddock

You say that you’re born again,
Cleansed of your former sins
You want me to say “I forgive and forget”
But you’ve done too much to me
Don’t you be touching me,
Go back and touch all those women you’ve made

Ccause God may forgive you, but I won’t
Yes, Jesus loves you, but I don’t
They don’t have to live with you and neither do I
You say that you’re born again, well so am I
God may forgive you, but I won’t
And I won’t even try

Well, the kids had to cry for you
I had to try to do
Things that the Dad should do
Since you’ve been gone
Well, you really let us down
You may be Heaven ‘bound
But you’ve left one hell of a mess here at home

‘Cause God may forgive you, but I won’t
Yes, Jesus loves you, but I don’t
They don’t have to live with you and neither do I
You say that you’re born again, well so am I
God may forgive you, but I won’t
And I won’t even try

I won’t even try

Though Iris is a critical darling, she’s never enjoyed much mainstream success. Her voice is unique, and not well-suited to Big Media country radio. Many people were exposed to her (though they might not realize it) when her song “Our Town” was played at the end of the final episode of Northern Exposure.

Dement, the youngest of fourteen children, was born on 05 January 1961 in Paragould, Arkansas, just west of Missouri. Hard times for farmers forced her family to move to California when she was three-years-old. Even an hour from Los Angeles, her life was a rural one: her parents’ rural ways were deeply ingrained, and the family lived in a community filled with other transplants from Arkansas and Oklahoma. Music was an integral part to the Dement family.

Her family was also deeply religious — and this has influenced her music — but Iris left the organized religion when she was sixteen. She dropped out of school when she was seventeen. Iris moved around, performing odd jobs, and eventually obtained her GED. While taking a creative writing course, she decided that she could write songs. And she did.

She released her first album, “Infamous Angel”, on an independent label in 1992. A Warner Brothers executive heard the album and signed her. “Infamous Angel” was given a wider release, and Iris followed it with “My Life” in 1994, and “The Way I Should” in 1996. It has been seven years since Dement released a new album! Unfortunately, at last night’s concert, she revealed that she has no plans to release one any time soon.

For more information about Iris Dement, check out these pages:

What are you waiting for? Support a fantastic artist. Purchase Infamous Angel, My Life, or The Way I Should from Amazon! If you’re a fan of Mary-Chapin Carpenter, Nanci Griffith, Dar Williams (who has a new album due out soon), or the Indigo Girls, then you owe it to yourself to check out Iris Dement.

Comments


On 04 February 2003 (06:06 AM),
Paul said:

JD,

We saw her here in Alexandria right before Christmas. It was interesting to notice the crowd’s reaction to her; when everyone thought she was this harmless, plain-Jane in a flower print dress singing nostalgic, yet painful songs they were happy. But at the very end, for her encore I think, she said, “Well it’s Christmas and were going to have another war…I think we should call one of them off”. Then she sang “Wasteland of the Free”. You’d think she peed in their cornflakes the way some people reacted. Before she sang “Wasteland” the table next to us was on their feet cheering for an encore but afterward they were silent and indignant. It’s a different crowd here than you would see in Portland. I imagine there were people there that worked at the Pentagon, congressional staffers, military, etc. They thought they knew her. They thought she was “one of them” with her Christian allusions but she’s not.

I was very happy to see her. There were many times I was almost in tears because her songs are like old friends that I haven’t seen in years. You’re right her voice is unique. I think her voice is what I like most about her–it’s an acquired taste, it grows on you. I thought it too twangy at first but it is so honest you can’t ignore or dismiss it.



On 04 February 2003 (07:08 AM),
Amy Jo said:

I’ve seen Iris in concert three times, and every time I see her I like her more and more. It was good to see her in December, and like Paul said, I left feeling like I had visted a good friend whom I hadn’t seen in a long time. It was a good feeling. I was lucky to discover her shortly after Infamous Angel was released. She opened for Nanci Griffith at the Fox Theatre and played with Nanci throughout the evening. It was a strange venue to see her in. I had no idea who she was, but I was instantly taken by her plainspoken way of singing. I purchased the album shortly thereafter. The second time I saw her was with Paul at the WOW Hall in Eugene. The intimacy of that space fit her much better. It was also at a time when I was living at home and in the middle of multiple, overlapping family situations (I don’t know how to best describe this). My Life had recently been released and it seemed to speak to all the emotions that ruled my life at that moment, especially those tangled up with my feelings about my emerging adult relationship with my parents and siblings. It was a time of great sadness and for some reason, the sadness of that album comforted me. I didn’t feel so alone and I could cry when I listend to it.

Amy Jo



On 05 February 2003 (09:31 AM),
Kiffin said:

I have never heard of her until now, but after having checked out her homepage and listened to some of her music clips, I will be sure to check her out the next time she is in my part of the woods. Seems like quite a future famous star of sorts I would think…



On 25 March 2003 (09:53 PM),
Janice said:

I heard about Iris Dement through my boyfriend – he just loves her voice, lyrics to the songs – especially “wasteland of the free” – I started listening to Iris’ songs and really love them, and I enjoy her unique voice. We would love to see Iris in concert, and hope that she will be up in the Vancouver, B.C. area in the future



On 24 January 2004 (03:52 AM),
Charlie Blank said:

I loved her voice the very first time I heard it on Austin City Limits. I listened to all her songs I can find. When I’m sad Iris, John Prine, Eric Bogle and Kate Wolf make my spirit vibrate. Her songs and her voice at their best suggest the bitter sweet nature of life, love,loss and sadness,and a poignant sense of the power of nostalgia and memory to fightnobly against the inevitability time’s passage. But she is also funny, cute,naughty, a tease and a humane critic of the injustices of life and society. I think of her in the classic American country/folk tradition of say Sarah Carter, Hank Snow, Ernest Tubbs, Jimmy Rogers and John Prine. I have yet to see her in performance, but hope to do so. I am also in that oldster category you describe above (63). But I am more enthusiastic about her voice, her twang and her talent. She is a remakable artist with the rare gift of making the members of her audience connect with their own deep feelings and as one of the writers said above, makes many of us feel less alone in our moments of reflection or sadnees. She deserves the growing admiration and praise she is receiving from her peers and from a growing number of fans.



On 18 February 2004 (05:41 PM),
Thomas said:

I am house bound and dearly love to listen to Iris’s music while sitting here with my thoughts. Her music is a real blessing to me. For some it doesn’t take a lot to do Gods work and so many never know what part of His plan they are playing. God bless you Iris.

U2: A Love Story

I entered high school in the fall of 1983. My sixth period class, the last class of the day, was Speech Communications taught by Wilma Hicks. Mrs. Hicks had led Canby Union High School‘s speech team to glory for a quarter of a century, but I had no illusions of greatness. I just wanted to fulfill a requirement.

A few days into the year, Mrs. Hicks was diagnosed with cancer. She took an extended leave of absence, but was dead within a weeks. Meanwhile, Mr. Stegmeier served as our substitute teacher. I, and every other kid in the Canby school district, had known Mr. Stegmeier for years; he was a substitute teacher at all levels. He was a nice guy, but he didn�t act so much as a teacher he acted as a babysitter. Mr. Stegmeier was a pastor at a local church, and he spent his classtime preparing sermons.

(Throughout my high school career, Mr. Stegmeier called me “Jonathan”, which he knew bugged me. I don’t care what people call me. Except for “Jonathan”. My name isn’t “Jonathan”. In retaliation, I never called him Mr. Stegmeier, I called him “Willy”. Disrespectful, yes, but good-natured. We called each other �Jonathan� and �Willy� for four years, in speech and geometry and choir and chemistry and English and health and every other class but PE.)

While Mr. Stegmeier babysat our speech class, we lounged around the cavernous speech room in Lower B, which was part of a 75-year-old structure that made up a large portion of the school. B Wing was beautiful (though we didn’t appreciate it then), built of rich, dark hardwoods, with towering ceilings and wide corridors. It comprised two levels — Upper B and Lower B — and an ancient auditorium. The home-ec classes were held at one end of Lower B, the journalism and speech classes at the other end. Upper B housed English classes and various special ed and administrative areas.

My favorite part of B Wing was the “secret” rooms. These rooms weren’t really secret, just rarely visited. There were many doors throughout the hall, only some of which led to classrooms. Others led to a teachers’ lounge, the school store (which rarely operated), to the boiler room, to the theater’s control room, etc.

The best door led to the text book storage area, a hot, tight, dark room filled with aging textbooks. In my memory, there was only a single light-bulb, activated by a pull-chain, to light the entire room. It was musty. The boiler room was nearby, and the book room could become very hot. (It’s amazing the books never caught fire!) There were makeshift shelves along the walls, and spanning the center of the room. The school’s spare textbooks were kept here, and to a young bibliophile (yes, I loved books even at the age of fifteen) this room was like a candy store.

(B-Wing was torn down a decade ago and a new main wing was erected in its place. The new structure is a labyrinth of sterile corridors with cookie-cutter rooms and a fluorescent soaked library. It’s impersonal, lacks character, has no charm. B-Wing had its shortcomings (it was a fire trap), but it was a beautiful old building. It had personality.)

While Mr. Stegmeier babysat our speech communications class, the students lounged around the cavernous room in Lower B, earning a required credit just for taking up space. Most of the students were upperclassmen. One of them, Angela Something-Or-Other, became my first high school girlfriend, and was the reason that another upperclassmen beat the shit out of me one day (a story for another time). Another of the upperclassmen in the room was a guy that had just moved to Canby from Colorado. (I have no idea what his name was.)

One day this guy brought in a tape by a band I’d never heard of: U2. “Ha. What a funny name,” I told him. “Yeah,” he said, “but they’re really good.” He asked Mr. Stegmeier for a tape player. Mr. Stegmeier complied and we listened to an album called Under a Blood Red Sky.

I didn�t know whether to like the music or not. At the time I was listening to some Styx and Journey, but was most fond of the New Wave music that had recently swept the country. This band, U2, was straightforward rock-and-roll: drums and guitars and a lead singer with a distinctive voice. We listened to the album a couple of times over the course of a week. I decided I liked it.

That winter, KSKD began to play a song by U2 called “New Year’s Day”. I loved this song the moment I heard it. (But wait! you’re saying. Isn’t “New Year’s Day” on Under a Blood Red Sky? Why, yes it is. But I hadn’t noticed the song during speech class.) The next time we were at the Oregon City Fred Meyer (the source for all of our music in those days), I bought U2�s album War, which contained “New Year’s Day”. Jeff and I listened to this album for weeks on end. The music was fantastic. Rock-and-roll, yes, but rock-and-roll with a passion, with a unique style, with lyrics that resonated in our tiny teenaged hearts. War was the perfect album for a long winter: bleak and aching, with
promises of hope.

Sometime during this year, my friendship with Dave crumbled and Paul became my new best friend. He was also a U2 fan. Between Paul, Jeff, and myself, we soon owned every U2 album (which wasn’t difficult since there were only four of them).

In the fall of 1984, U2 released The Unforgettable Fire. Jeff and I bought the album at the Oregon City Fred Meyer again, this time on tape instead of vinyl. We listened to it constantly, as did Paul. It had a different style than the previous albums, ethereal and moody. “A Sort of Homecoming” is a typical song � full of hope and the expectation of things to come. (The whole album now reminds me of West Side Story’s “Something’s Coming”.) Paul and I listened to The Unforgettable Fire at soccer practice that fall: sun blazing, sweaty bodies, U2 playing at the edge of the field.

In the summer of 1985, U2 performed at Live Aid. I spent all day lying on the couch in the living room of the trailer house, sweating, watching the show. When U2 stepped onto the stage, I turned up the volume. They began to play and I was transported. Their unending version of “Bad” (Live Aid version here) was beautiful, moving, haunting. Bono pulled a young woman on-stage and danced with her. It was magical.

Paul and I began to acquire U2 obscuria. We bought biographies of the band (difficult to find in the mid-eighties) and early 45s, we tacked posters to our walls.

The Joshua Tree was released in mid-March 1987. Before the album was released, KGON played preview tracks. We taped them. My favorite was the dark and brooding “Exit”. “With or Without You” became the first single from the album and was played all over the radio. The previous U2 singles had all but been largely ignored, but this song was climbing the charts.

On the day of The Joshua Tree�s release, Paul approached me and asked me if I wanted to skip school to buy it. I was reluctant — I had only skipped one day prior to this — but agreed. Tower Records in Eastport Plaza had become our source for music (Fred Meyer didn’t carry the obscure New Wave and techno stuff that we’d grown to love), so we drove to Portland and bought the album on both vinyl and cassette. I also bought the “With or Without You” single, the first single that I had ever seen on cassette tape instead of on a 45. We left after break (10:00ish) and were back by lunch.

The Joshua Tree was my soundtrack for the Summer of 1987. In the fall I went to college, and still played the album constantly. There were many U2 fans in the dorm, people who had liked the band even longer than I had. One time I got into a conversation about U2 with a gorgeous young woman visiting from some other school. We played “Sweetest Thing�, a B-Side to “With or Without You”, and we sat in my room laughing. She left that evening and I never saw her again.

During my sophomore year at Willamette I was a DJ at KWU, the campus radio station. I didn�t really want to be a DJ, but I knew that the station got album releases before the stores. Further, I knew that U2 was releasing an album in October. My devious plan worked. When the station received its copy of Rattle and Hum, I was able to “borrow” it to tape it weeks before I could have bought the album.

That was the fall that I pledged Kappa Sigma. One evening a group of us pledges were sitting around being cool, smoking cigars and pipes and clove cigarettes at the fraternity house, when somebody noted that the film of Rattle and Hum was playing near the campus. We threw on jackets and tromped across the wet quad, smoking our cigars and our pipes and our clove cigarettes. We were the only people in the theater (which was good, because we were surrounded by an offensive miasma that could have killed stout livestock), and the sound was poor, but we loved the movie. Afterwards, we sloughed back to campus (smoking our cigars and our pipes and our clove cigarettes) and crowded into somebody’s room to listen to old U2 albums.

In the fall of 1991 I got a job selling Combined Insurance. (This, too, is a story for another time.) The highlight of my insurance selling career was the release of U2’s new album, Achtung Baby, in November. We were canvassing in Hood River at the time, and I had trouble locating a store that sold the album. When I did find it, I sat and listened to it in my brand-new Geo Storm, a quart of chocolate milk between my knees and a box of old-fashioned cake donuts by my side (I was in the process of ballooning from 160 pounds to 190 pounds). I didn’t know what to think. I listened to the album almost constantly for a week, but still didn’t know whether I liked it or not. The sound was new and different.

I grew to like Achtung Baby with time but for the rest of the decade U2’s music left me cold. Bono became a victim of his own hype, of his own smugness, of his own self-satisfaction. He was a parody of himself, an exact image of all that he claimed to despise. The band seemed to lose its focus. U2 became more of political organization than a rock-and-roll band.

Jeff gave me All That You Can’t Leave Behind for Christmas in 2000, and while I admit “Beautiful Day” is a great song in the old-style U2 tradition, I can’t embrace most of the album. It does herald a return to their old sound, but many of the lyrics are terrible. I’m anxious to see what they produce next.

Paul continued to collect their stuff and now has a substantial collection of U2 material. In fact, when I think of U2, I think of Paul. He follows them, always knows what their next project is. He’s a U2 encyclopedia.


Which U2 album was the turning point in the band’s career, the album that spurred them to fame and glory?

For my money, it’s the live Under a Blood Red Sky. This was the album that introduced many of us to U2, the album that caused us to become U2 evangelists. Without Under a Blood Red Sky, I think U2 would be just another Midnight Oil, a rock band with modest success and a cult following but without a fan base to support megapopularity. The live performance at Red Rocks was outstanding; it helped to build a cadre of loyal fans that spread the word about the band.

And the pivotal moment in their career? Without a doubt, it’s their performance at Live Aid. This was the first time U2 had wide exposure, and the band took advantage by staging the performance of a lifetime. Synnergy. Serendipity. Whatever. Their performance brought them to the attention of casual music-buyers that might have otherwise ignored them. From that moment on, they were superstars.

“There’s been a lot of talk about this next song, maybe too much talk. This song is not a rebel song. This song is ‘Sunday Blood Sunday.'”

Comments


On 22 March 2002 (12:57 PM),
Paul said:

JD,
I thought we saw Rattle and Hum together. I know I saw it twice the day of its release. Once in Eugene and the second in Salem.

My favorite is Wide Awake in America. Though it is not a full length ep, it captures the heart of The Unforgettable Fire ep with studio and live recordings. The singles from these releases extends their offering of the sound that they produced during this period of recording.

One of their strongest singles in my opinion is PLEASE. It is a diamond in an a caucophony of different sounds from their “electronic” recording period. It is this period that you believe that ego warps U2, but I believe it is their attempt at staying current and progressive that caused a misdirection of their sound. PLEASE reconfirmed their ability to stay relevant and construct a sound that is emotional and unique.

Your story is not a just a love of U2, but also a story of JD.



On 22 March 2002 (02:04 PM),
jdroth said:

You know, you were there for the Rattle and Hum viewing. It was always great to have you visit Willamette.

I’d love to hear more singles from your collection, actually. I borrowed a pile of them a couple of years ago, but mainly just took the stuff from the early nineties. Maybe their recent stuff will sound better to me now that I’m older.

Also, you’re right: Wide Awake in America is a fantastic piece of work, even though it comprises only four songs. The Live Aid version of “Bad” isn’t commercially available (is it?), but the live recording on Wide Awake is a suitable substitute.



On 26 March 2002 (01:24 PM),
Dagny said:

Ah B wing. That *did* have character, didn’t it? I always liked it too, for what it’s worth… more than anything I miss the womb of Lower B, the speech back room. I didn’t exactly “come of age” there in the sense that’s usually meant, but I felt at home. Plus I learned the word {carrion} from the bold assertion written in permanent black marker: JODI CARGILL IS CARRION. To this day, I don’t know who had such a vendetta against Jodi Cargill, but she must have done *something* to tick someone off.

Mega-props out to Mr. Stegmeier too.

It’s like a walk down amnesia lane.



On 24 May 2002 (06:15 PM),
wicket said:

I just wanted to let you know the tradition of bieng cool in front of k sig with the cigars and cloves lives on….
aekdb



On 01 April 2003 (07:17 PM),
Tiffany said:

This is off the subject and I am not all that into U2, but I just wanted to say that I am a memeber of the church the “Mr. Stegmeier” is pastor of although I refer to him as Bro. Stegmeier. He is a wonderful man, one of the kindest most giving people I have ever met in my life.



On 28 August 2003 (12:48 PM),
amy said:

I don’t know a single thing about U2, but I do have a few ‘B’ wing stories myself. Had my locker in lower B the year I got my driver’s license and dated David M. I sewed a large satin M & M in that home ec. department. Also learned how to make biscuits–my home ec teacher didn’t like me–I think because I was cuter than her… :) Anyway, I graduated from CUHS in 1984, the year you were a freshman. Mrs. Hicks was a legend at that school. And Mr. Stegmeier? Never saw him write a sermon during class, but do know that he was a kind man who loved the Lord. Thanks for the stroll down memory lane.



On 05 March 2004 (04:09 PM),
Lynn said:

Mr. Stegmeier…what a neat guy. He called all the boys “Jonathon” and all the girls “Sally.”



On 24 March 2004 (01:58 PM),
Peter Stathakos said:

Two years later, I found this blog entry and it sparks a memory with me. I blog about it here.

Thanks J.D.

Meteorological Spring

Meteorological spring starts tomorrow. Oregon’s North Willamette Valley has been basking in the sun intermittently for the past two weeks, and today is another clear, bright day. The sun is shining. The ground is dry. I want to hop on my bike, but have promised Kris that we’ll go to the gym together tonight. Maybe I’ll bike to work tomorrow.

As a child I was puzzled that Spring started at the end of March, Summer at the end of June, etc. It was only in college that I learned that the seasonal constructs are based on the Earth’s orbit around the sun; the Vernal Equinox is the traditional delineation between Winter and Spring for astronomical convenience. More recently I’ve learned that the meteorological seasons conform to the observed weather patterns. Meteorological Spring begins March 1st, meteorological Summer on June 1st, etc.

[Jeff, mowing with his beloved lawn tractor]

With the departure of Winter, Spring activities are beginning. At this moment, Jeff is out making love to his lawn tractor. Kris and Pam are making a trip to Al’s Fruit and Shrub on Saturday while Mac is at baseball practice and I am digging up arborvitae stumps in the yard. Meanwhile, the professional ball players have started Spring Training and the first games are tomorrow. The warm weather is an invitation to outdoor exercise. I’m ready to bike, maybe to hike. The lawn needs to be mowed. The crocuses and daffodils are up, and the daphne in our front yard can be smelled from a block away.

I’ve always said that Oregon’s weather doesn’t bother me; as a native, I’ve become accustomed to the rain, and often enjoy it. This year, though, Spring is especially welcome.

The phones at Custom Box Service have been quiet during the afternoon all week. The sunny weather must be appealing to other people as well…


Custom Box has been crippled by Big Money. Big Money is a web-based game similar to Tetris or Columns. We don’t play by the rules. We play to achieve the largest “coin combination”. The record so far is 121 coins.


With the demise of Napster, Morpheus had become my primary file-sharing tool. I tried Bearshare and was unimpressed. Morpheus is intuitive and convenient and widely used. The key to a good file-sharing system is many users sharing files.

Morpheus, and the other new file-sharing systems, have claimed that the music industry could not stop them, that they were decentralized by nature and therefore even if they were shut down the users would continue to share files because the decentralized network would persist.

Well.

On Monday night my connection to Morphues’ network vanished. I received an error indicating that my software needed to be upgraded. Trouble is, I already have the latest version of Morpheus.

It seems that Morpheus is not as decentralized as advertised. A software upgrade shut down the network, something that would not happen with true decentralization. If the recording industry can’t shut down Morpheus within a week, I’ll be surprised.


My cold continues to linger. All that remains is congestion, but it’s enough to be frustrating.


What songs make you think of Spring? “Walking on Sunshine” by Katrina and the Waves and “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” by Tears For Fears both evoke images of Spring in my mind.

We used to have a basketball hoop outside on the concrete pad in front of the shop. It wasn’t used often, but I remember playing basketball in the after school for a couple of weeks during the period in which “Walking on Sunshine” was popular. “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” reminds of Future Business Leaders of America, particularly the state convention during the Spring of my sophomore year of high school.

Nick and I were talking about music today, trying to decide what the best songs and albums and groups of each decade have been.

It seems certain that The Police’s “Every Breath You Take” is the best song of the 80s, but it’s hard to decide anything other than that. “Stairway to Heaven” by Led Zepplin might be the best song of the 70s, and Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon is probably the best album from that decade, but both could be argued.

Michael Jackson is probably the best artist from the 80s, though it might be Madonna. Personally, we think U2 was the best the 80s had to offer.

The 90s are difficult for us. Was there a stand-out song? Album? Artist? For me, the Indigo Girls were the best artist of the decade. But that’s me. They certainly weren’t the most popular group (though that’s not how we’re basing “best” in this case). We thought that maybe “Smells Like Teen Spirit” by Nirvana could be considered the best song of the 90s.

From our selections for “best song” you’d never guess that Nick prefers dance and techno music and that I like jazz and folk and bitchrock. (There’s a term that’ll get me into some trouble.)


I’ve been listening to my library of a capella mp3s today, sorting through the covers of 80s tunes so that I can make a mix for Paul. The playlist I have now is pretty darned good: strong performances of good songs.


Middlebury Dissipated Eight – Africa (Toto cover)
Arizona State Pitchforks – Secure Yourself (Indigo Girls cover)
Dartmouth Aires – Take on Me (aha cover)
Tufts University Beelzebubs – Rock This Town (Stray Cats cover)
Calabash – Policy of Truth (Depeche Mode cover)
Bobs – Particle Man (They Might Be Giants cover)
Stairwells- The Longest Time (Billy Joel cover)
UVA Academical Village People – Come On Eileen (Dexy’s Midnight Runners cover)
Dartmouth Cords – Friday I’m In Love (The Cure cover)
Tufts Jackson Jills – Our Lips Are Sealed (Go-Gos cover)
U Penn Off the Beat – Candy Everybody Wants (10,000 Maniacs cover)
BOCA ’99 – Don’t Stand So Close To Me (Police cover)
U of Michigan Amazin’ Blue – Innocent Man (Billy Joel cover)
UC Men’s Octet – Every Breath You Take (Police Cover)
Boca- Best Of College A Cappel – Everything She Wants (Wham cover)
Arizona State Pitchforks – Verdi Cries (10,000 Maniacs cover)
Brown Derbies – Break My Stride (Matthew Wilder cover)
Brown Derbies – Kyrie (Mr. Mister cover)
Brown Derbies – Somebody (Depeche Mode cover)
Brown Derbies – Walk Like an Egyptian (Bangles cover)
Cornell Class Notes – Sweet Dreams (Eurythmics cover)
Dartmouth Aires – Maneater (Hall and Oates cover)
Dartmouth Aires – Tainted Love (Soft Cell cover)
Dartmouth Aires – Hungry Like The Wolf (Duran Duran cover)
Dartmouth Decibelles – Walkin’ On Sunshine (Katrina and the Wave cover)
ASU Pitchforks – Need You Tonight (INXS cover)
Tufts Amalgamates – Just Like Heaven (The Cure cover)
Tufts Beelzebubs – Rio (Duran Duran cover)
Tufts Jackson Jills – We Belong (Pat Benetar cover)
U of Illinois Other Guys – Jesse’s Girl (Rick Sprinfield cover)
Dissipated Eight – Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes (Paul Simon cover)
The Flying Pickets – Only You (Yazoo cover)
Flying Pickets – She Drives Me Crazy (Fine Young Cannibal cover)
Flying Pickets – When Doves Cry (Prince cover)
The Flying Pickets – Purple Rain (Prince cover)
Pitchforks – In Your Eyes (Peter Gabriel cover)
Duke Out of the Blue – Mercy Street (Peter Gabriel cover)
The Dartmouth Aires – Father Figure (George Michael cover)
Tufts Amalgamates – True Colors (Cyndi Lauper cover)

Comments


On 01 March 2002 (08:46 AM),
Dane said:

The a capella mix sounds really keen and, frankly, there are a bunch of those songs I would like to have copies of.

I didn’t realize that you enjoyed a capella music. Dagny is a bigger fan of it than I am, but I also quite enjoy it. I’m going to e-mail you a copy of a cover of DMB’s “Ants Marching” done by Four Shadow that I think is pretty keen. Let me know if you like it…



On 01 March 2002 (08:46 AM),
said:

AUTHOR:
EMAIL:
IP:
URL:
DATE: 03/01/2002 08:46:18 AM



On 01 March 2002 (10:00 PM),
jdroth said:

I am a huge a capella fan. Arrangements with many voices (say 8+) and tight harmonization especially move me. Collegiate a capella actually seems to be of a higher quality than that produced by professional groups.

My a capella collection now includes 322 songs. Every couple of months I search for “a capella” with whichever file sharing client I’m using at the time. Also, I search for individual groups that have impressed me in the past (USC Sirens, Middlebury Dissipated Eight, MIT Logarhythms, Brown Derbies, Tufts Beelzebubs, U Penn Off the Beat).

My collection largely comprises “covers” — original a capella songs don’t appeal to me.

If some group would cover an Aimee Mann song, I’d be ecstatic.



On 16 September 2002 (06:43 PM),
Chelsea said:

Hi,
I’m in this a capella group from Clemson University. It’s an all-female group, and I’m looking for an arrangement of Pat Benatar’s “We Belong.” Is there any way I could get an MP3 version from you or, even better, the sheet music with the a capella arrangement? Also, some of the music sung by our guy’s a capella group called Tigeroar is posted on Morpheous, etc. I would highly recommend listening to it; although, it’s a lot of their older stuff. Now, they’re absolutely phenomenal.
Chelsea



On 01 December 2002 (01:25 PM),
Kristin said:

Hey~
I was wondering if you could find the sheet music for a song for me, or if you know where I could find it. I am looking for the song Under the Bridge a cappella sang by the brown derbies. If you know where I could find it, would you please email me back. Thank you so much for your time.
~Kristin



On 04 May 2003 (02:44 PM),
Scott said:

Hey there people, I couldn’t help but notice that you were interested in a cappella music and that you were looking for a good file sharing site.
Well, this is what I found for you even though you don’t know me. By the way, it’s good to meet you…
the service you are looking for is KaZaa Lite, and it just happens to have to the song that one of you is looking for.(Under the Bridge, Brown Derbies, under Red hot chili Peppers)
So, check it out….
Sincerely
Scott



On 05 October 2004 (09:36 PM),
Dee Dee said:

I am a former member of the ASU Pitchforks and I sing on both Secure Yourself and Verdi Cries. I, we, are flattered that you like our music. :-)

Thanks for listening!



On 31 January 2005 (07:25 PM),
Laura said:

hey
I am a member of a small choir dabbling in a capella, but the song we are looking for doesn’t want to be found. Do you know where I could find either sheet music, or a midi (not an mp3), of an a capella version of Billy Joel’s For The Longest Time? It probably gets annoying what with almost everyone asking you to find stuff, but I have been looking for weeks, with no result.
Thanks so much!
Laura