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Post by Pea on Mar 25, 2011 11:18:15 GMT -8
Since he was just inducted into the Rock & Roll hall of fame, I think this would be a great time to discuss one of the greatest musicians and all around artists in recent history. Once a year or so I go through a phase where I listen to nothing but his entire discography front to back, and no matter how many times I hear his music I still get chills.
What are your favorite albums of his? Heart of Saturday Night is one of my all time favorite albums, followed closely by Closing Time. Rain Dogs and Bone Machine probably fall after those two and then everything else is pretty interchangeable for me. Heart Attack & Vine would almost make it into my top albums of his just for Jersey Girl, which I find to be one of the most mesmerizing songs ever written.
Here's a great video from the induction with Neil Young inducting him:
Also...
"Songs are really just interesting things to be doing with the air."
Probably the greatest quote of all time.
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Post by Horned Gramma on Mar 25, 2011 11:30:22 GMT -8
Tom Waits was one of my most powerful obsessions before I got into The Residents. I have every album he's ever released, and there is something special and unique about all of them.
Rain Dogs is the classic by most standards, and it is just about flawless. The early to mid 80's were the best part of his career -- once he started writing songs with his wife and really started beating the bones, his music became otherworldly. But his greatest records are scattered all over his forty year career: Mule Variations was a page turned and has some of his best songs on it, as well as performances by Les Claypool and some exceptionally beautiful ballads. Swordfishtrombones is probably my favorite; the best examples of his skeletal, subterranean boogie are in there, including the title track and "Shore Leave".
Heart Attack and Vine is the best of his material from the 70's, but as much as I used to love "Jersey Girl" it's kind of the low point of that record for me now. It's an amazing song, but in the middle of all the whiskey grooves it ends up sounding kinda schmaltzy.
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Post by Horned Gramma on Mar 25, 2011 11:33:30 GMT -8
Oh man, and Real Gone came at just the right time. "Hoist That Rag" is so fucking cool.
I remember when Blood Money and Alice were released on the same day and I was kind of overwhelmed by it. Blood Money sounded kind of self-conscious and Alice was a real slow burn. Still great songs on both, though.
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Post by stamper on Mar 25, 2011 11:43:04 GMT -8
I loved him in Mystery Men.
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Post by StormyPinkness on Mar 25, 2011 11:45:13 GMT -8
And Dracula.
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Post by Horned Gramma on Mar 25, 2011 11:45:14 GMT -8
Oh man yeah, he has such a great screen presence as well. He's the best part of any film he's in, even if it's a real turd like Bram Stoker's Dracula.
In Mystery Men, he was just icing on the cake.
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Post by J. Walter Weatherman on Mar 25, 2011 11:46:33 GMT -8
He also had a pretty awesome turn as an angel in Wristcutters.
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Post by Pea on Mar 25, 2011 11:49:33 GMT -8
For some reason I avoided this album the longest. Bad mistake. Oh, and if any of you haven't seen The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, Tom Waits plays the devil in that movie and is absolutely fantastic. Overall it's a pretty stunning movie and definitely worth watching.
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Post by J. Walter Weatherman on Mar 25, 2011 12:07:04 GMT -8
Has anyone listened to Scarlett Johannson's Tom Waits covers album? I've heard its not very good.
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Post by Horned Gramma on Mar 25, 2011 12:10:49 GMT -8
It's the most fucking soulless thing I've ever heard. How arrogant must that girl be to think she can even do that?
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Post by Pea on Mar 25, 2011 12:14:06 GMT -8
Didn't David Sitek produce it too? From what I heard it did sound pretty awful. On the contrary, her album with Pete Yorn is a really enjoyable listen.
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Post by Horned Gramma on Mar 25, 2011 12:16:29 GMT -8
I've got a disc in my collection that is collaboration between a British composer named Gavin Bryars and Tom Waits. It's called Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet, and it's pretty remarkable.
Bryars had made a recording of an unknown homeless man singing these lines: Jesus' blood never failed me yet Never failed my yet There's one thing I know That he loves me so
He looped just that brief verse and was playing it in his studio, and then decided to write a piece of music around it, starting with just some strings matching the old man with a simple chord progression. Over about 70 minutes, he slowly adds more strings and some horns and other instruments, and in the final section Tom Waits joins in for a duet with the recording of the homeless man.
It's very simple and beautiful, and if you can get into the rhythm of it (which can be difficult sometimes), it's a very zen-like listening experience.
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Post by J. Walter Weatherman on Mar 25, 2011 12:19:42 GMT -8
That reminds me of Charles Spearin's 'Happiness Project'.
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Post by Lump on Mar 25, 2011 15:03:55 GMT -8
I loved him in Coffee and Cigarettes
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Post by Friendly Destroyer on Mar 25, 2011 15:05:33 GMT -8
Whoa. I haven't read this thread yet, but oh my fuck yes!
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Post by Friendly Destroyer on Mar 25, 2011 15:10:45 GMT -8
I've posted this before, but now it has a true home.
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Post by Friendly Destroyer on Mar 25, 2011 15:23:11 GMT -8
Swordfish, Rain Dogs and Frank's Wild Years is one of the best album streaks ever. They aren't all that different stylistically from one another, yet are totally their own things. Frank's Wild Years is so fucked and wonderful.
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Post by Drew on Mar 25, 2011 17:15:18 GMT -8
"I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy." -Tom Waits
HG, the poet H.L. Hix got me into that song/album. He was obsessed with it for a long time, still sort of is. He'd listen to it every day. He also has over 3000 poems memorized in their entirety, so he's sort of a freak.
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Post by know ID yuh on Mar 25, 2011 17:37:00 GMT -8
I bought Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers, and Bastards, the day it came out. I remember how excited I was at work all day to get three new Tom Waits albums. I listened to them in order most nights for almost two months. It was winter of course. Tom Waits is winter music.
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Post by Friendly Destroyer on Mar 25, 2011 17:45:44 GMT -8
I have a hard time associating Tom with any familiar terrestrial images or feelings. It's all alternate reality for me.
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