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Which alb is 'It's All Over Now Baby Blue' on? 'Cos that's one of the greatest Dylan covers of all time.
Best Elevators cover version - Television doing 'Fire Engine'.― Andrew L, Friday, July 27, 2001 8:00 PM (twenty-one years ago) bookmarkflaglink
Still think Vince Gillian dropped the ball and should have used that floor the Breaking Bad finale.
― Western® with Bacon Flavor, Friday, 29 July 2022 15:52 (one year ago) link
They play the "yonder stands your orphan" chords over nearly the entire song, it's maddening! A waste of a nice, evocative arrangement.
― Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 30 July 2022 13:00 (one year ago) link
Yeah I've never been bothered by the liberties they take with the chords on "Baby Blue". Anyway the "yonder stands your orphan" bit of the original chord progression (ii IV I, I believe) is my favorite part of it, so I dig that they "zoomed in" on that part.
Anyway I'd just like to mention how amazing "Postures (Leave Your Body Behind)" is. I guess on the album with "Slip Inside This House", "Postures" has to be considered the "other epic" but it's such a soulful, uplifting song about surrendering your mind to the psychedelic void. That whole album is utter perfection imo
― J. Sam, Saturday, 30 July 2022 19:46 (one year ago) link
Oh yeah, soulfulness could seep in at any tyme, if you held on through tumult---also in some I mentioned on the xpost main Roky thread:
..the relatively mellow songs on 90s collections All That May Do My Rhyme and Never Say Goodbye, and the 2010 True Love Cast Out All Evil, with material spanning 40 years, and, wiki notes, "members of Okkervil River on most songs as Erickson's backing band"
Of this last, Michael Cochran says in piece linked above:
In 2010, Erickson made his first album in a decade and a half, backed by Austin indie-rock darlings Okkervil River. It seemed an odd musical coupling at first- Austin's mystical madman and its articulate Pitchfork band. Erickson’s triumphant return to performing was based on his ability to rock hard on such setlist exclamations as "Don’t Slander Me," "Two-Headed Dog" and "Slip Inside This House," so it was assumed that his comeback album would be one of screeching vocals and big sonic strokes.But producer Will Sheff, the Okkervil River guide, had a different idea. True Love Cast Out All Evil (Anti Records) was a record of tattered little songs that had practically been abandoned, brought back in a spiritual whirl of dust and hope.
"I obsessively listened to about 60 songs that Roky had written, that were either never recorded or minimally released," Sheff said. Although he's a fan of Erickson's "horror rock" material, Sheff found himself drawn more to the songs of simple grace. "Roky was in a prison for two years and he had to come to terms with the thought that his musical career could be over," said Sheff. Such freshly recorded songs as the title track, the delicately moving "Forever," the haunting "Goodbye Sweet Dreams" and the album's hinge "Please Judge" were the soundtrack to the years when he went from Austin's golden child to its most notorious recluse. “These songs were written to serve the immediate purpose of keeping him sane,” said Sheff. “They're so powerful."
"Roky's one of the greatest rock 'n' roll singers of all time and a completely unique guitar player,” said Sheff, who earned a Grammy nomination for his liner notes. “But I think the way I've most been influenced by working with him is in his lyrics, the way he puts words together in a totally jarring way. He's created his own private vocabulary.”
https://michaelcorcoran.substack.com/p/rokys-return-to-the-river-of-goldenNot everybody dug it, but "a spiritual whirl of dust and hope" sounds right.
― dow, Saturday, 30 July 2022 20:50 (one year ago) link