Tag Archives: The Beta Band

So Hot Right Now: March 2013 (by Claire)

Frank Zappa, my spirit animal

A long February weekend in San Diego was all day-glow smoothies, hefty breakfast burritos, and Fleetwood Mac, maybe in that order.  It’s not a beach vacation if you don’t listen to Rumours at least twice, preferably while accumulating sand in the tiny crevices of your toes, or chugging down the main drag with the windows down. And it’s not Rumours if it’s not stuck in your head for at least another three weeks, conjuring the smell of melting sunscreen and coconut surf wax as the wind cuts clean and cold against your cheeks.  Summer is months away, but when it comes, listen to “Never Going Back Again” while tracing the edge of the ocean with your bare feet.

I wore my “Happy Songs” playlist down to the bone months ago, and I’ve needed a set of musical uppers ever since. “I’ll Come Running to Tie Your Shoes” by Brian Eno and “Swimming Pool” by Toy Love both do the trick, as does old favorite “Day Dreaming” by Aretha Franklin. My nerves have been fried and scattered like some strange delicacy lately; music puts them back on the mend. (Wasn’t it Frank Zappa, my spirit animal right now, who said “Without music to decorate it, time is just a bunch of boring production deadlines or dates by which bills must be paid”?)

Misheard lyrics abound—“Medicine Wheel” spun circles between my ears for a month at least, and I always thought the chorus was “Are you salmon, baby/under the bridge” instead of “Are you saddened baby/under the bridge.” “Dry the Rain” played a similar trick for years, when I turned it up and was convinced that they were saying, over and over again, “You will be all right” because I needed to hear that. “I will be your light” is still good though, maybe better. If we’re talking about the how and when of consuming songs, I recommend taking a long walk up big hills in San Francisco, and timing this six minute gem just right so that you reach the crescendo of your walk, peer out at the city, as the Beta Band chants “I will be your light.”

Remember when I made fun of Bob Dylan’s, well, Dylanyness this week? I felt bad. I contracted Bob Dylan guilt. Do you, Dylan, and I’ll promise to never see you in concert again and keep listening to you and half-heartedly defending you to haters. In the meantime, haters and non-haters, “Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here With You” is one of my favorite Dylan songs. It’s sunny and lovely and always reminds me to watch High Fidelity again if its been too long. It also pairs well with “Help Me Make It Through the Night” by Johnny Cash and June Carter.

Sometimes you’re sitting at your desk, rattled and riddled with racing thoughts, and the right song comes on. The right song, one you’ve never heard, one you absolutely needed. It’s a rare gift from the universe. Celebrate it.  Cheers to The Belle Brigade’s “Loser” (which I had heard once or twice, but only paid a fraction of my attention to it each time), which appeared and filled my speakers when I needed it most.

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Top 5 Rainy Day Songs (by Claire)

San Francisco, I thought we had a deal: I fork over the astronomical rent and sit through more conversations about militant veganism than I would like. You, in return, provide me with year round sun dappled sweater weather, the kind that makes my East Coast friends contemplate growing third arms just so they can flick me off thrice.

So what’s with this dark rainy stuff, huh? I saw a child wearing mittens today. MITTENS.  The handful of serotonin that I still have woke up this morning, threw open the curtains, and said “Nope!”

But, there is a bright side: Rainy day songs!  In honor of this terrible-no-good-very-bad-weather, here are my top five rainy day songs.

“And It Stoned Me” by Van Morrison

A rainy day song list wouldn’t be complete without Van Morrison. “And It Stoned Me” is a classic, full of awe and childlike wonder. If you need a solid empowerment slogan, I say skip all the over-Tumblered quotes and write “Oh the water/Get it myself from the mountain stream” on your mirror.

You know those comedians who could read you a phone book and you would laugh? Their jokes are impossible for other comedians, who lack magical, inexplicably humorous voices. Van Morrison could sing me the latest Bieber trifle, or even his grocery list, and I’m sure it would glue me to the spot, widen my eyes and fill my thoughts with vastness and strange joy.

“Shipbuilding” by Elvis Costello

“Shipbuilding” is about the Falklands War of 1982 and the prosperity that it brought to shipbuilding towns, who then had to send their sons to war on the ships they built. It’s slow and rich, with sparse luscious stretches of piano and cymbals and Chet Baker on jazz trumpet. I didn’t know what this song was about until I started writing this, but that didn’t make it less haunting, particularly the lines “With all the will in the world/Diving for dear life/When we could be diving for pearls.” Something about it has always reminded me of driving in the rain.

“Dry the Rain” by the Beta Band

I found this song the way most people did: through the moment in High Fidelity when Rob turns it on with the promise that merely playing it will sell five copies of The Three EPs by The Beta Band. It’s a nice nod at the earnestness inherent in music obsessives like myself. We’re not always snobs, sometimes we’re not snobs at all, but we are people who hold the delusional belief that if we play you a song, you’ll understand everything we want you to understand. You’ll hear it just like we will and together we’ll embrace the best kind of empathy: the kind that comes with a soundtrack.

I wish we could stand in a record shop together and listen to this while drinking a plastic cup of cheap red from a bottle stashed behind the register.  We would listen to this song that starts with so much sadness and vulnerability, then becomes something joyful and overwhelmingly comforting. How perfect is that for a rainy day?

“Cigarettes and Coffee” by Otis Redding

I think my brief smoking career really ended when I couldn’t smoke in 24 hour diners any more. If that treat still existed, I don’t know that I could consistently ignore the siren song of cigarettes, black coffee, and the promise of late night pancakes. Otis sums up the end of one of those nights so perfectly—when the cups are empty, the pack is almost over, and dawn is around the corner. Where will you go? Will you go to sleep, or will you stay awake and savor the twinkling promise of adventure that exists when the day is long over and you’re running on adrenaline?   Wherever you end up, know this: If it’s late and raining, make sure you’re listening to Otis Redding.

“Cherry Wine” by Nas and Amy Winehouse

Hide out from the rain and curl up with someone who knows you so well, just coming home to him or her proves that “Life is good.” This was one of my favorite new songs this year; it’s so charming and full of genuine affection. And it brought Amy Winehouse back, if only for a few minutes.

Smile, dance around, fall in love a little—the rain isn’t all bad. Pour some cherry wine. Let Amy Winehouse and Nas cheer you up.

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