I can't really fault that opinion, xp. Weather Report is ridiculously uneven and that Joni Mingus album is, idk, I hate to say "bad" but it's not the most enjoyable listening.
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Thursday, 29 March 2018 19:17 (eight years ago)
yea it's not that great. the interludes are annoying too
― marcos, Thursday, 29 March 2018 19:24 (eight years ago)
don juan on the hand is a great record
*other
hmm I've tried. I like the title track and a couple others
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 29 March 2018 19:24 (eight years ago)
Aethetically Joni is a really odd pairing with Mingus's music, they're worlds apart.
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Thursday, 29 March 2018 19:52 (eight years ago)
I actually think Mingus is heavily underrated-- the two Joni originals (Boogie Man, Wolf That Lives In Lindsay) are all-time-- and the Mingus collaboration idea, like, the way she decided to go about it, is such a challenging proposition that it's amazing that the results work at all? And I hate to admit it but Dry Cleaner is one of my childhood faves and I prob still know all the words
― nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 29 March 2018 20:22 (eight years ago)
yeah, I owe Misses for introducing me to "Wolf That Lives In Lindsay" -- the guitar, god.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 29 March 2018 22:47 (eight years ago)
Was never that much of a Jaco fan, though some of the tracks incl. him work, but wonder what would have happened if she'd worked with Zawinul and Shorter, the WR core (JP was one of several passing Weather Reporters). Thinking of Shorter's solo on "Aja, " for instance, and Zawinul wrote the sturdy "Mercy Mercy Mercy," which got more radio play for Cannonball Adderly, and much more for the Buckinghams. Since the point of her playing with other musos was to get on the radio, I take it----and if it was also about creative recharging, like the Mingus project, then the duo could be good for that too (even if they talked her into recording the notorious "Birdland," mighta kinda worked---)Speaking as I did way upthread of my 60s take on her as a kind of one-woman Pentangle (with her own agenda lyrics-wise), would *most* like to have heard her with Pentangle bassist & drummer, Danny Thompson & Terry Cox. But some of her bands were pretty good.
― dow, Thursday, 29 March 2018 23:01 (eight years ago)
I thought I read she started playing with jazz dudes because nobody else could play her songs well enough or correctly or something
― brimstead, Thursday, 29 March 2018 23:27 (eight years ago)
Mingus maybe took me a few plays before I loved it, though I no longer remember what it felt like to not love it
― Milton Parker, Thursday, 29 March 2018 23:35 (eight years ago)
She's talked about it a few times over the years, and I think it's utterly fascinating, but Joni (perhaps instinctively) started gravitating toward using lots of suspended chords after Blue. Wayne Shorter pointed it out at first, that she was going from suspended chord to suspended chord, which wasn't typically "done"-- she herself had been calling those chords "chords of inquiry"
https://books.google.ca/books?id=eZegBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT128&lpg=PT128&dq=joni+mitchell+suspended+chords&source=bl&ots=zeA_YDnhfU&sig=-qj77TGFIl2rOzMbaxxqB2U9pwc&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi80a2czIXaAhUB8mMKHX7FAPAQ6AEISzAE#v=onepage&q=joni%20mitchell%20suspended%20chords&f=false
She would later begin to associate this compositional choice with femininity, describing suspended chords as inherently feminine. From a 2014 interview in MacLean's:
Q: Laws you felt needed to be broken. For example, your use of suspended chords in songs—which you say men cannot wrap their heads around. Why?
A: Men need resolution and suspended chords keep things open-ended. You go to a man if you have a problem and he tries to solve it. You go to a girlfriend and she’ll pat you on the back and say, “Oh yeah, I get it.” She doesn’t try and come up with some stupid solution.
― nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 29 March 2018 23:38 (eight years ago)
, but wonder what would have happened if she'd worked with Zawinul and Shorter, the WR core
she worked with shorter some, didn't she? he's on mingus, and i think they toured together a little, too.
― papa don't take no meth (stevie), Friday, 30 March 2018 17:45 (eight years ago)
whoa, that bit about suspended chords is fascinating, and I have to admit that I have had trouble "wrapping my head around" her compositional style, like I don't think I could imitate it, and it took me a long time to get used to it although now I love it so much.
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Friday, 30 March 2018 18:13 (eight years ago)
xpost had totally forgotten Shorter's on Mingus, and never knew they played live, will look for that. Thanks!Reminds me: this guy's got some good shows (inc. the often-designated-as-1966 Second Fret set, which might be/seems like prob. is '67, based on points made by some fans), also demos for Summer Lawns (these are the mp3s, but he has 'em in flacs too):http://www.ousterhout.net/mp3/jm.html Tons of other (gen. Joni-compatible) stuff too.
― dow, Friday, 30 March 2018 19:33 (eight years ago)
it took me 20+ years to internalize Joni's love of suspensions. it was worth it
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 30 March 2018 19:46 (eight years ago)
there's definitely interesting stuff about shorter in the [wait for it i'm about to plug it again] yaffa biog
― papa don't take no meth (stevie), Friday, 30 March 2018 19:48 (eight years ago)
the unresolved suspensions also give a lot of the songs a sense of shifting or uncertain tonality, so it's sort of doubly ambiguous.
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Friday, 30 March 2018 20:22 (eight years ago)
I really love discussions of the obscure feelings evoked by certain chords and cadences. My dream is that some day a music writer will reveal to me the secrets behind the rollercoaster of ambiguous emotions that is the Steely Dan "Glamor Profession" chord progression.
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Friday, 30 March 2018 20:26 (eight years ago)
haha, I have actually thought about that before too, there's definitely a very particular mood evoked by that song, upbeat in a drug-induced way and slightly demented
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Friday, 30 March 2018 20:31 (eight years ago)
every time i read about her use of suspended chords i think "oh yeah, of course, that's why so many joni records are bottomless"
"chords of inquiry" is the perfect name too i think bc they just sound like big question marks curving through the mix
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Friday, 30 March 2018 20:36 (eight years ago)
OTM about Glamour Profession, particularly the descending chords under the first line of the chorus.
― flappy bird, Friday, 30 March 2018 20:36 (eight years ago)
To me, it's like each chord change has this little emotional up or down that I can feel but can't quite name. It's very cinematic, music as montage.
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Friday, 30 March 2018 20:42 (eight years ago)
I always think about how in Janie Runaway the chord that holds on the verse sounds very "almost ok," like a guy just trying to seem chill and normal and not at all perverted, but then he starts to have trouble containing his perverse excitement when the chord changes on "Who makes the traffic interesting"
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Friday, 30 March 2018 20:50 (eight years ago)
Re: "Glamor Profession"-- I've never listened to it before, but I just listened to it now
If I were to guess, I think Mr. Dan is taking the piss, deliberately creating the most obfuscation-per-chord-move as possible. Right off the top, he's suspending a G over three different possibilities for "chords that contain a G"-- this was taught to me as being called a "mediant movement"? "common tone"? but who the fuck knows-- the idea is that a G is sustained through the first chord (am7) and the second chord (g-half-diminished-7 1st inv.) and the third chord (cm)-- note that the bass is rather hilariously ascending stepwise to make this really uncomfortable collection of chords go down easier-- this is the way that Brecht writes chord progressions.
Immediately I'm reminded of a similar "lol let's string together a tonne of ridiculously unrelated-or-only-somewhat-related chords and try and write a hook over top of it" and it's Blur's "Coffee And TV"-- maybe the "ambiguous emotions" Moodles is feeling are also felt in that song?
There's a lot of augmented chords here, there's a full on whole-tone slide down with them, lots of diminished chords and "let's just move this chord down a semitone ha ha ha" moves. idk there's nothing really going on here but "extreme chromaticism". Sounds like Brecht over a backbeat-- although Brecht is clevererer, he throws in some basic-bitch diatonic passages to soothe the ear once in a while, to make the bizarro moves really "count"
― nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 30 March 2018 21:10 (eight years ago)
Pardonnez-moi I smoked weed and had "On Suicide" in my head and was typing "Brecht" but I meant "Weill" Jesus Christ how embarrassing
― nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 30 March 2018 21:12 (eight years ago)
Sometimes I think Steely Dan sounds like music by dudes who learned all the jazz chords but none of the jazz chord progressions. In a good way.
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Friday, 30 March 2018 21:13 (eight years ago)
i think they've themselves said they were rock/r&b but with 'subversive' jazz chords or something
― brimstead, Friday, 30 March 2018 21:34 (eight years ago)
They took me a while too, especially coming to them as a jazz guy and hearing they were "heavily jazz influenced" or something and then listening to them I was like "Huh, these guys sound like they've never heard jazz and just had it described to them."
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Friday, 30 March 2018 21:45 (eight years ago)
Great points FGTI! I think it's all the augmented chords that give it this constant low-budget horror film monster reveal vibe, or perhaps it's soap opera shocking news.
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Friday, 30 March 2018 22:29 (eight years ago)
I am a forever dilettante on this front but Glamour Profession is about the modulations right? there are a bunch of them, but they're not super-woozy, just enough to force you to adjust between verse & BR1 & BR2 & chorus
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 30 March 2018 22:45 (eight years ago)
Jack and his radarstalking the dread moray eel
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 30 March 2018 22:46 (eight years ago)
I drove the ChryslerWatched from the darkness while they danced
― flappy bird, Saturday, 31 March 2018 00:20 (eight years ago)
"these guys sound like they've never heard jazz and just had it described to them."
would probably check out a new band described this way
― Paul Ponzi, Saturday, 31 March 2018 00:25 (eight years ago)
Sounds like a description of King Krule
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Saturday, 31 March 2018 00:32 (eight years ago)
accurate
― flappy bird, Saturday, 31 March 2018 01:07 (eight years ago)
Stevie, regarding that Yaffe biog, does it go into detail about the Morgellons disease?
― niels, Saturday, 31 March 2018 17:52 (eight years ago)
Not huge detail, but there is some stuff on it
― papa don't take no meth (stevie), Saturday, 31 March 2018 22:04 (eight years ago)
ok
is it... disconcerting?
― niels, Sunday, 1 April 2018 11:48 (eight years ago)
It should be.
― dow, Sunday, 1 April 2018 15:44 (eight years ago)
I’m most interested in the weird period after Hejira, eg Don Juan.
― licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Sunday, 1 April 2018 17:08 (eight years ago)
I love the way she sings “false alarm” in Amelia. Had that bit stuck in my head for days now.
― that's not my post, Monday, 23 April 2018 05:30 (eight years ago)
me too!
― flappy bird, Monday, 23 April 2018 05:45 (eight years ago)
more excited than I should be about Hejira coming in the post today. one of those records i've been meaning to buy for avout 20 years
― thomasintrouble, Monday, 23 April 2018 09:22 (eight years ago)
There is a nice anecdote from Joni in a Jaco documentary currently on Netflix. She was instructing a different bassist to play a G, and the bassist refused, saying "that's not even in the chord," and she replied, "well it WILL be, once you PLAY it."
― ad homineminem (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 23 April 2018 10:16 (eight years ago)
lol
― calstars, Monday, 23 April 2018 13:30 (eight years ago)
Song for Sharon has got to be my favorite
― calstars, Saturday, 28 April 2018 03:51 (eight years ago)
me too, or hejira
― flappy bird, Saturday, 28 April 2018 03:55 (eight years ago)
Don Juan's is now my favourite album by her and I'll believe anything I want to.
― brand new universal harvester (dog latin), Saturday, 28 April 2018 15:34 (eight years ago)
Would love to read about that period.
― licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Saturday, 28 April 2018 16:43 (eight years ago)