For Goodness' Sakes: The Altercation Music Lists
December 20, 2007 1:55 pm ET by Eric Alterman
We've got a new "Think Again" column called "Reporting on Warming, Dropping the Bali," here. I've got a new Nation column, "Bad For the Jews," here.
Also, here's a nice PW article called "We're Liberals, Damn It!" that rounds up all the coming liberal books this spring and a few from last fall.
1)
Bruce
Springsteen, Magic
2)
The
Arcade Fire, Neon
Bible
3)
Amy
Winehouse, Back to Black
4)
Neil
Young, Chrome Dreams II
5)
Steve
Earle, Washington Square Serenade
6)
Patty
Griffin, Children Running Through
7)
Various Artists, Instant Karma: The Amnesty International Campaign to Save Darfur
8)
Radiohead,
In Rainbows
9)
John
Fogerty, Revival
10)
Willie
Nelson, Merle Haggard, and Ray
Price, Lost Highway (also live on DVD)
11)
Lilly
Allen, Alright, Still
12)
Patti
Smith, Twelve
13)
Aretha Franklin, Rare and Unreleased Recordings from the Golden Reign of the Queen of Soul
14)
Loudon
Wainwright III, Strange Weirdos
15)
Sterling
Harrison, South of the Snooty Fox
16)
David
Bromberg, Try Me
One More Time
17)
Nick
Lowe, At My Age
18)
The
Eagles, Long Road out of Eden
19)
Robert
Plant and Alison Krauss, Raising Sand
20)
Fountains
of Wayne, Traffic and Weather
Don't have yet and, hence, can't judge: The National, Miranda Lambert, Jill Scott, Feist, Levon Helm.
Altercation's Top Eight Box Sets:
1)
Love
Is The Song We Sing: San Francisco
Nuggets 1965-1970
2)
John
Coltrane, Interplay
3)
Sly
and the Family Stone,
The Collection
4)
Waylon
Jennings, Nashville Rebel
5)
Donald
Fagen, The Nightfly Trilogy
6)
U2,
The Joshua Tree (Super Deluxe Edition)
7)
Radiohead,
Radiohead
8)
The
Traveling Wilburys (Complete)
Altercation's Top Eight Music DVDs:
1)
The
Johnny Cash Show
2)
Eric
Clapton, Crossroads Guitar Festival 2007
3)
The
Beatles, Help!
4)
Bob
Dylan, The Other Side of the Mirror: Live at the Newport Folk Festival
1963-1965
5)
Norman
Granz Presents Improvisation, featuring Charlie Parker, Coleman Hawkins, Lester
Young, Ella Fitzgerald,
Hank Jones and others
6)
Nirvana, Unplugged
in New York
7)
Paul
McCartney, The McCartney Years
8)
The
Ramones, It's Alive 1974-1996
Sal's Top Ten, in ascending order:
10. Fountains Of Wayne, Traffic and Weather
Many FOW fans found it disappointing. Not sure why. It was more of the same,
with some of the strongest songs yet.
9 Galactic, From The Corner To The Block
A fantastic live band who doesn't always hit the mark in the studio...until
now. Fun hip-hop, over live instrumentation and some kickin' New Orleans flavor.
8. Steve Earle, Washington Square Serenade
Strongest album yet from an American treasure. Check out the duets with Alison
Moorer. Perfect.
7. Bettye LaVette,
Scene Of The Crime
Southern soul from a lady who is finally getting her due, with help from the
Drive-By Truckers.
Packs some wallop.
6. Robert Plant & Alison
Krauss, Raising Sand
Who'd a thunk it? Works on every level. The biggest surprise -- Plant can harmonize. A beauty.
5. Southern Culture On The
Skids, Countrypolitan Favorites
Don't forget this killer collection of covers just because it came out earlier
in the year. Songs by Marc Bolan, John Fogerty, Roger McGuinn, Ray Davies, Pete
Townshend, and more,
get that SCOTS countrification. Brilliant.
4. Patty
Griffin, Children Running Through
Certainly Miss Griffin's strongest work to date. Pure emotion. Chilling and
beautiful.
3. Mavis Staples, We'll Never Turn Back
Mavis Staples hasn't sounded this alive since the 70s. Produced by Ry Cooder,
this CD will move you. Or it should.
2. John Doe, A Year In The Wilderness
Yet another artist who has released his strongest work to date. Beautiful songs
that rock! Includes my choice for 2nd best song of the year, "The Golden
State," a duet with Kathleen Edwards. Listen to it.
1. Bruce Springsteen, Magic
Yeah, yeah. On the bandwagon, I know. But so what? It's a killer, AND it has
THE best song of the year, "Girls In Their Summer Clothes." Not since
"The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" by The Walker Brothers has a song
moved me so much.
Pierce's Top Five Best Musical Moments of 2007
(Championship Vinyl Memorial Edition):
5) "Dear Mr. Fantasy" -- From The Crossroads Festival DVD -- I'd completely forgotten both a) what a great song this is, and b) what a great musician Steve Winwood is. A raw, lengthy workout, and a voice that remains the sui generis of white soul.
4) "Down In The Hole" -- Blind Boys of Alabama -- Berklee Performance Center, Boston -- In fact, the whole show, but this was a treat for fans of The Wire, and a burning edition that bestirred even the boring liberal fascis...er...hippies sitting around me.
3) "Washington Square Serenade" -- Steve Earle -- A quiet musical event. Earle always wrote great love songs -- it's his most underrated talent -- and now he has someone to aim them at. This record sounds like Dylan's first album would have sounded, if Dylan had been Hank Snow.
2) Any set by The Problem Child -- WWOZ-FM, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA -- The woman's voice is nearly as sweet and compelling as the music she spins.
1) "Girls In Their Summer Clothes" -- That Guy From Jersey, His Wife, And Their Band -- Move over, Sal. I'm aboard, too. Said it before. Will say it again. This is the track Bruce would have contributed to Rubber Soul.
Best Jazz of the year and decade; don't argue with me, argue with Fred.
Pitchfork's best 200 songs of the '60s; not a bad list here.
In the midst of the holiday spending and consumption frenzy, Bill Moyers interviews author Benjamin Barber about how capitalism isn't living up to its potential to serve society. "Capitalism is no longer manufacturing goods to meet real needs and human wants," says Barber. "It's manufacturing needs to sell us all the goods it's got to produce." Barber is the author of 17 books including international best-seller Jihad vs. McWorld and Consumed: How Markets Corrupt Children, Infantilize Adults, and Swallow Citizens Whole. Also on the program: is it time to rewrite the Constitution? Moyers gets perspective from the University of Texas Law School's Sanford Levinson, author of Our Undemocratic Constitution: Where the Constitution Goes Wrong (and How We the People Can Correct It). And an update on changes to media regulations voted on this week by the FCC.
Name: Byron R.
Mobley
Hometown: Memphis, TN
In regards to credit checks by employers -- depending on the employment being sought, a candidate's credit can be very important. A poor credit rating indicating a person is living beyond their means can be used to identify a person susceptible to bribery and a risky hire. This is not just in the law enforcement/intelligence community but also in the world of corporate espionage and trade secrets.
For better or worse, the private sector can pretty much decide what to base hiring decisions on -- be it drug use or credit. This is especially true in the "right to work" states of the South.
Name: Maureen
Holland
Hometown: South Venice Beach FL
Eric:
Gee, not to get too personal here, but your references to "young" Matt and "young" Ezra are upsetting my world view. In my world, you are "young" Eric. And when -- as today -- you channel my own thoughts (as re Time's decision process), this Florida old lady can say to herself, "Ah, see, even the 'young' ones see thru this nonsense."
Name: Reed Richardson
Hometown: Ridgewood, NJ
Eric,
Don't if you saw this, but the Regret the Error website recently published its always entertaining annual roundup of the year's best media errors and corrections, here.
Still, for my money, the all-time best mea culpa appeared in The New York Times last year on Nov. 16, 2006. In a refreshingly forthright "For the Record" item, the paper noted:
"An obituary on Monday and in some copies on Sunday about Isadore Barmash, a retired business reporter for The New York Times, rendered incorrectly the name of a department store that he wrote about frequently. It was Gimbels, not Gimbel's. Gimbels, which closed in 1986, has been referred to correctly in The Times more than 500 times since 1980 and incorrectly more than 120 times; this is the first time the error has been corrected."
I guess we'll have to wait for Jeff Gerth and Judy Miller's subsequent obits before we get a full accounting of their role in propagating the myths of Whitewater and Iraq's WMD. Thank goodness their shoddy reporting wasn't about something as consequential as a misplaced apostrophe...
Name: Tom Fischer
Hometown: Buffalo
I noticed missing from the list of things to thank Ralph for was being deprived of eight years of Vice President Joe Lieberman.
Eric replies: Good point, bub. Dick Cheney is a brilliant alternative, here in the real world ...











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