An Interlude of Musical Analysis

In an attempt to find a different way to appreciate music during this time, I recalled The Charismatic Voice, which we looked at last year in a reaction video to a version of "You're a Mean one, Mr. Grinch." What I recalled about her videos was the clear joy she is capable of expressing through her facial expressions as she listens to music. I thought perhaps it would be helpful to see how she reacts to music that is sounding dull and uninteresting to me just now.

Sadly, for the most part her tastes in music and mine differ strongly enough that even her enviable example will not save many of these songs for me. 

There are exceptions. She has a couple of contemporary country artists who are worthy. There aren't many; most of contemporary country music is garbage. Nashville seems to have decided that it should breed its product together with hip-hop, which is a perfectly fine musical form on its own, but definitely an urban form that does not mesh well with the roots music that makes up country. That use of 'urban' is meant literally, not as an euphemism for 'black' as it is often used: blues music is a roots music that has strongly black roots, but which melds very well with country music. (Indeed, many great country and rockabilly songs are called '... Blues,' e.g. Hank William Sr.'s "Honky-Tonk Blues.") Likewise Nashville has embraced a lot of cultural influences that are foreign and hostile to the tradition; and even when it cleaves more closely to its heritage, it tends to produce the same kind of over-produced mess that pop music is all about these days. The great Dale Watson satirized this in a piece of his own a few years ago.

There are a few really good younger artists working around the edges, though. That probably deserves a post of its own: Sturgill Simpson is probably the best actual artist among them, though he's good enough as an artist that a lot of his work ventures beyond the boundaries of what you might call 'country'; Whitey Morgan and the 78s had the good sense to go back to Waylon Jennings' surviving band members and learn how they used to create a sound that bestrode the later 70s but was already lost by the 2000s. Whiskey Myers (which is a group, sadly not a man's name) is good, and Jamie Johnson.  Jesse Dayton is a little older but he's therefore old enough to have gotten to play with Johnny Cash and Waylon in his youth. Something similar can be said for Wayne "the Train" Hancock, who has produced good music and also helped to shepherd younger artists. 

And then there are these two that she chose to sample.




These aren't my favorite songs by either of these artists, and both of them are -- speaking of blues -- very bluesy numbers. She clearly enjoys them, though, and that is inspiring to see. In addition, her analysis of them is highly informative. There is a lot going on in these seemingly-simple numbers that is opaque to a non-musician who simply enjoys music.

UPDATE: In the second video, I'm deeply amused by the moment when she declares, "I don't really know this song. I've only heard it once before by, uh... the first guy who did it." What was that guy's name again?

7 comments:

Assistant Village Idiot said...

Nashville is a good example of "Be careful what you wish for." Country music was beloved by a lot of America (and Canada) but regarded as inferior and low by others. When the Grand Old Opry(s) grabbed a spot it was regarded as a victory, and it became a magnet for the genre. But it took over, pushing aside the Bakersfield sound, for example. It made itself the center and the authority. The outlaw sound (generally Austin) had a lot of trouble establishing itself at first.

Nashville attracted the best musicians, and then the best producers, studio engineers, PR men, etc. This seemed to lead, perhaps inevitably, first to a recognisable generic style of country rock, with the gospel, blues, Western, folk, etc elements already absorbed and digested. Next, the inexorable power of What Sells ate everything on the buffet table.

This has been fun to think about. I may grab some time to write a bit of non-expert observation on the history.

Anonymous said...

I think the growth of the commercial side of Nashville ("must sound like X to be sold as Country") can be seen in Ian Tyson's music. When he avoided Nashville, he wrote solid Western stuff that edged into Country on occasion. He also wrote some odd but not-too-bad things that were obviously experiments. His Nashville-pushed work? Pretty bland sounding and he didn't care for it.

Granted, he was Canadian, and had some different influences than most Country or Western musicians.

LittleRed1

J Melcher said...

She did such an inspiring review of Jonhny Cash's cover of "Hurt" I scoured local thrift stores for all the Cash CDs available.

Grim said...

I didn't watch that one on purpose. It's a great rendition by Johnny Cash, a masterful piece that captures his enduring strength even at a time in which his advanced age forced frailty upon him in many ways. I don't like to see or hear it, though.

Grim said...

On a completely separate topic, I'm pretty sure that statue in the background on the left side is Venger, the villain from the 1980s Dungeons & Dragons cartoon.

https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/Venger

Assistant Village Idiot said...

I think she likes masculine voices to be masculine, and I can't help but approve.

douglas said...

Oh AVI, that's interesting. Our culture has done a lot to make masculine voices not popular, or at least not heard as much.