Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Andres's avatar

Brilliant piece, as always. Ahh... the days when we could discover music by listening to records in the manner you described so well: inside the record store, with headphones on, and only an album cover as guidance (or lack thereof!). I used to do the same in Buenos Aires as a kid growing up in the nineties. I remember in some stores the headphones were too high for my height... so I had to stand on my tiptoes!

Back to your excellent piece, it's crazy how sometimes the universe puts you in front of a record without a lot of (or any) additional clues. You start listening, one verse, sometimes even one or two lines, or bars if instrumental, and you immediately feel a connection. The beautiful, magical, inexplicable power of music. Thank you for sharing this beautiful memory!

Expand full comment
Jt Smith's avatar

Yes, this is golden like album sales.

I recall hearing E aka Mark Oliver Everett from his melodic song, "Novocaine for the Soul" on my local alternative radio station X 107. What was that sublime sound? Who was E anyway? Oh he's a sensitive songwriter like Joseph Arthur, Dan Bern, or Joshua Radin. Yup, classic tunesmiths. The more I listened to the Eels, the less I was convinced this was a one-hit wonder. 'Beautiful Freak' was my introduction to E. I actually do not own an Eels music cd but I did read his memoir. In fact, I own his biography. It's included on my bookshelf I purchased from the defunct Pier 1 Imports. I miss modern music that cuts through the outer skin and penetrates the hidden heart. Eels was never gonna be too mainstream. It lies somewhere between alternative pop that is intelligent, quirky, and rhythmic with some strains of older artists too. Thanks for this perspective. I look forward to more music discoveries. How about an expose on Vic Chesnutt?

Expand full comment
8 more comments...

No posts