The Rewind Button: John Lennon, Plastic Ono Band

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them.

John Lennon, Plastic Ono BandI don’t own this album, so I searched for it on Grooveshark to see if it was on there for me to listen to. However, I forgot the name of the album, and I ended up listening to some Yoko Ono solo album by accident for at least three songs. Surely, I thought to myself, this is not one of Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time. I finally figured out my mistake and left Yoko’s album in my memory.

John Lennon, Plastic Ono Band is a good album. Not great. If it was great, I’d be able to write thousands of words about it. If it was terrible, I’d be able to write thousands of words about it. It’s good, so I’m only able to muster a few hundred words.

Quickly, though, a question: Why does it sound like Cookie Monster saying “cookie” at about 6:45 into the album (during the song “Hold On”)?

“Working Class Hero” and “Love” are my favorite songs on the album, and I found myself listening to them over and over again. I don’t think I’ll listen to the album as much again as I’ve listened to it leading up to this review. Sure, if you come over and put it on, I’m not going to turn it off. But as with many solo albums from The Beatles, I’d rather listen to the band than their individual efforts.

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The Rewind Button: The Complete Recordings

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them.

Robert Johnson The Complete RecordingsLooking back, here’s what I know for sure
Looking in the past, here’s what I know for sure
It was Dallas, Texas, the place for recording
Looking back, that’s what I know for sure

The recording building was up for destroying
Yeah, the recording building was up for destroying
That is until its life was saved by a church
And nothing was down for destroying

Ya know, we must embrace history
I tell ya, we must embrace history
But we must embrace the essence more
Or we’ll lose all sense of history

These recordings capture rock’s soul
Yeah, these songs capture rock’s soul
Without them we’d have no one to roll with
Yeah, these songs capture rock’s soul

So, when you’re listening to them at night
Yeah, when you’re up late listening at night
Remember Johnson’s voice running from evil
And you won’t have to be afraid of the night

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The Rewind Button: The Great Twenty-Eight

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them.

Chuck Berry The Great Twenty EightI used to think I wanted to write professionally about music. The Rewind Button project helped me discover that I don’t want to do that. I’m enjoying this; however, I prefer listening to music rather than deconstructing it. The Great Twenty-Eight by Chuck Berry is a perfect example of this feeling.

Listening to this album makes me want to dance. It’s fun, and my foot can’t stop tapping. Sure, some of the songs have the same beat, but I don’t care, because its energy overwhelms any stagnation. The piano trills, that stand-up bass, those blues-based chord progressions…this is rock-in-roll to me. This album should be in the top 10 of Rolling Stone‘s list.

We’re halfway through our list, and I’m not going to stop reviewing the albums. But I am going to stop beating myself up for not offering an intellectual discussion of the albums. Some of these don’t warrant that. Some of them are pure emotion. The Great Twenty-Eight is one of those.

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Shakespeare and Lehrer

Jonah LehrerI’ll begin by declaring that I make no excuses for Jonah Lehrer’s actions nor justify his behavior. Frankly, I’m disappointed by what has happened. What I’m proposing here, though, is a clue to why things transpired as they did.

As a fan of his writing for many years, I’ve had the opportunity to interview him twice for the publication for which I work. It was me that prodded my organization to hire him to speak at our annual conference. After three years of pushing for him as a keynote speaker, he finally gave a well-received address to our association’s members in July. It was his last major speaking engagement before his fall from grace.

If you’re reading this and you have no idea who Jonah Lehrer is or what he did, then let me recap. He’s a neuroscientist and popular science writer with three books (two of them best sellers) under his belt, a heavy speaking engagement slate, and a New Yorker staff writer. Well, he was. He was all of these things until he admitted to misquoting  Bob Dylan in his recent book, Imagine: How Creativity Works. He resigned from the New Yorker, and now all his books are being thoroughly fact-checked for any other misquotes or fabrications.

Fact-checkers will determine in the coming weeks how far Lehrer has to climb out of his hole. In the meantime, I’d like to address the last chapter in Imagine, and the clues it offers as to what may have been going on in Lehrer’s mind as he wrote the book. I’m not a psychologist or doctor or anything of the sort. This is pure speculation, but something to consider when talking about Lehrer’s proposed sins.

In “The Shakespeare Paradox,” Lehrer begins by telling how Shakespeare was a genius at using others’ works and knitting them together to create is own “original” plays.

But Shakespeare didn’t just read these texts and imitate their best parts. He made them his own, seamlessly blending them together in his plays. Sometimes, this literary approach got Shakespeare into trouble. His peers repeatedly accused him of plagiarism, and he was often guilty, at least by contemporary standards. What these allegations failed to take into account, however, was that Shakespeare was pioneering a new creative method in which every conceivable source informed his art. For Shakespeare, the act of creation was inseparable from the act of connection.

Could it be that Lehrer was purposely misquoting Dylan in order to connect his ideas and his ideas to his audience? Four hundred years from now, will we be declaring Lehrer a genius, as we declare Shakespeare is?

It’s argued that the biggest difference is Shakespeare dealt in fiction. Plagiarism, though, doesn’t differentiate. I’m sure some of those playwrights and authors would love a slither of Shakespeare’s fame attached to them.

Lehrer, later in the chapter, discusses how copyrights and their continuous extensions stifle creativity.

The problem with these extensions is that they discourage innovation, preventing people from remixing and remaking old forms…And that his why we should always think of young William Shakespeare stealing from Marlowe and Holinshed and Kyd. (If Shakespeare were writing today, his plays would be the subject of endless lawsuits.) It doesn’t matter if it’s a hip-hop album made up of remixes and music samples or an engineer tweaking a gadget in a San Jose garage: we have to make sure that people can be inspired by the work of others, that the commons remains a rich source of creativity.

Lehrer is a huge Dylan fan. Was Dylan’s creative process of using others’ tunes to craft his own music an inspiration to Lehrer? Is the role of remixing (accomplished with quotes, too) a way of making something more clear, a way of bringing forth a universal truth?

So many questions, I know. As mentioned, I’m a fan of Lehrer, and this situation has me questioning him, his research, and the role of the writer in today’s society. Perhaps Lehrer’s book title inspired him.

…although the imagination is inspired by the everyday world–by its flaws and beauties–we are able to see beyond our sources, to imagine things that exist only in the mind. We notice an incompleteness and we can complete it; the cracks in things become a source of light. (From the “Coda” section)

If Lehrer misquoted/remixed Dylan (or maybe other sources), if he added lines to complete a thought to help us understand our minds a little better, is that a bad thing? Do you care if it’s truth or fiction if it helps you become a better person?

What I’m ultimately asking is: What’s the big deal? I can hear a lot of you gasping and saying, “Oh my, what gall!” Does Michael Moynihan’s discovery of the Dylan misquotes change the overall message of the book? The answer is no. Does knowing Shakespeare stole from others diminish your appreciation of his plays? Once again, the answer is no. Should Lehrer had been more upfront about how he created his work? Personally, I say yes, but as we’ve seen over time, artists and writers rarely acknowledge who or from what they’re cribbing. Before we draw and quarter these creators, perhaps we should all stop for a moment and examine the stories we tell ourselves in order to live a little more fully day after day. By doing so, we’ll soon find that we’re not that much different from Shakespeare, or Jonah Lehrer.

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Posted in <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/books/" rel="category tag">books</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/life/" rel="category tag">life</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/reading/" rel="category tag">reading</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/work/" rel="category tag">work</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/category/writing/" rel="category tag">writing</a> Tagged <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/bob-dylan/" rel="tag">Bob Dylan</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/creativity/" rel="tag">creativity</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/imagination/" rel="tag">imagination</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/jonah-lehrer/" rel="tag">Jonah Lehrer</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/lies/" rel="tag">lies</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/new-yorker/" rel="tag">New Yorker</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/plagiarism/" rel="tag">plagiarism</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/quotes/" rel="tag">quotes</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/remix/" rel="tag">remix</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/stories/" rel="tag">stories</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/william-shakespeare/" rel="tag">William Shakespeare</a>, <a href="http://www.pimplomat.com/tag/writing/" rel="tag">writing</a> 1 Comment

The Rewind Button: Thriller

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them.

Michael Jackson ThrillerMichael Jackson’s Thriller album brings up so many memories that an objective critique of it is impossible. So, instead of a proper review, I thought I’d list some of those memories.

I named my pet Siberian Husky dog Thriller, because of the album. He was a good dog who had a love of eating toads. I buried him in my backyard.

I begged my grandparents to buy me a faux red-leather Michael Jackson jacket (the kind he wore in the video for “Thriller”) at J.C. Penney. I wore it a handful of times, and it still hangs in a closet at my grandfather’s house.

I stayed glued to MTV to watch the “Thriller” video, the short movie version. It was an event that proved music videos could be much more than people standing around singing in a studio.

To this day, the moonwalk is one of my better (maybe only) dance moves. Though, I can do the leg shake thing kind of well, too.

“P.Y.T.” was a track that my friends Jonathan and Hank and I use to sing along to all the time in a field out behind my house.

My friend, Matt, played me Weird Al Yankovic’s parody “Eat It” for me on a blue cassette tape. You mean you can get blue cassette tapes?! My middle school mind was blown.

To this day, I still like to say “I’m a lover, not a fighter” from the single “The Girl is Mine.”

On my own Rolling Stone list, Thriller is a Top 10 album. Any album that can generate so many memories for you should always be in your top list.

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Waitresses Wearing Red Get Higher Tips

Waitress by Tim DobbelaereRed is attractive color. For example, those who drive red cars get pulled over more often than drivers of other car colors. It’s eye catching, and according to a new study published in the Journal of Hospitality and Tourism Research, it’s profitable, too.

“In their study of 272 restaurant customers, researchers Nicolas Guéguen and Céline Jacob found not only that male patrons gave higher tips than female patrons in general, but that men gave between 14.6 percent and 26.1 percent more to waitresses wearing red, while color had no effect on female patrons’ tipping behavior at all,” stated a press release from SAGE Publications. “The researchers explained that previous research has found that red increases the physical and sexual attractiveness of women.”

The researchers had 11 waitresses wear the same T-shirt in different colors in five restaurants on different days over a six-week period. They told all the waitresses to act as they normally would to all customers and to record how much they received as a tip from each customer.

“As red color has no negative effect on women customers, it could be in their interest to wear red clothes at work,” the researchers said.

And now I can’t get the song “The Lady in Red” out of my head.

(Image via Flickr: Tim Dobbelaere / Creative Commons)

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The Rewind Button: Astral Weeks

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them.

Van Morrison Astral WeeksThe air conditioning in my house is not working properly at the time of this review. It’s 105 degrees Fahrenheit outside and 90 degrees inside. This causes me great irritation.

Listening to Astral Weeks does not help. I think, and I’ll have to go back through these reviews, it may be the worse album I’ve listened to so far. Van Morrison’s vocals grate my ear drums. The music is better suited for wakes. Listening to the whole album is an exercise is patience. Saying that, I believe if “Beside You” would have been an instrumental, it would have saved this album from my personal trash heap.

As with anything that I don’t enjoy, I like to figure out why. Perhaps it’s the song lengths. I’m more pop, get in and get out. Maybe it’s the vocals. Actually, I’m sure it’s the vocals. Van Morrison’s vocal style reminds me of Eddie Vedder’s years later. I never cared for Vedder’s vocals either.

Astral Weeks may grow on me with age. That would mean, though, that I’d have to listen to it. Right now, I can barely stand to look at it.

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The Rewind Button: Born to Run

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them. There will be a new album and review each Thursday (or there about).

Born to Run by Bruce SpringsteenI’m a week behind in contributing to this review project. Not keeping up with it makes me a little anxious. I hate getting behind.

Behind is how I feel about Springsteen (do we even need to say his first name anymore?). It appears that “real music” lovers place him in the hall of gods. I’ve never felt that way, and that’s because I never really listen to his albums.

I remember when Born in the U.S.A. came out and it was cool to love America again. “Dancing in the Dark,” “Glory Days,” and “I’m On Fire” were instant classics. After that album, though, I never looked into hearing more Springsteen songs.

Now I’m listening to Born to Run (Springsteen really likes the word “born.”). It’s bombastic, swelling, and energetic. It makes me want to pump my fist in the air. I can hear why people gravitate to Springsteen’s songs. For most of them, they make you feel alive. You can hear the fun Springsteen is having in playing the songs. He’s not just singing to entertain you. He’s doing it because he knows no other way to live.

My favorite songs on the album are the title track and “Thunder Road.” In fact, I’ve listened to “Thunder Road” the most off this album, because I love its melody.

But does Born to Run make me want to listen to other albums by Springsteen? No. Even with its energizing properties, I’m happy to listen to just it, and at that, just a couple of songs. And that’s plenty enough to satisfy me.

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The Rewind Button: Nevermind

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them. There will be a new album and review each Thursday (or there about).

Nirvana NevermindI attended Tarleton State University in Stephenville, Texas, in 1991. As any red-blooded American male, I was away from home and on the make. It was a Saturday in October, and I had two options. Drive all the way to Dallas to see some show at Trees or stay in Stephenville and go to a party out in a field. Option one featured a long drive and a crowded venue. Option two featured free beer and the opportunity to meet girls. My friend and I debated the options, and since we only knew the teen spirit song by Nirvana, I talked my friend into staying and attending the party with me.

I didn’t get laid that night. In fact, the party was pretty much all guys. Guys in a field drinking beer. Come to find out, though, I missed one of the most notorious Nirvana shows of all time, one in which Kurt Cobain got in a fight with a bouncer. The show was a crazy mess, but one I’m sure I would have enjoyed more than free beer. I’m definitely sure I would have enjoyed it more. But that’s hindsight. At the time, the slight chance to meet a girl was greater than the latest rock music revolution.

One couldn’t ignore Nirvana very much that year. They were the defibrillation to an industry whose heart was clogged full of crap. And like any good change-makers, they altered fashion as well. There are still pictures out there somewhere with me in all my flannel glory.

I’ve noticed that flannel is making a comeback. I think that’s more to do with a wish for a new rock revolution. But I’m not sure if that’s possible now, because of technology. In 1991, society consumed products through a pipe, just as it was always done. Every now and then, though, someone would come along and either widen the pipe or shatter it all together. Today, the Internet, that “series of tubes,” helps spread consumption. There’s really nothing to break anymore, because if you want to do something revolutionary, you just create another pipe or site or tube for people to find you. And people like that. I know I do. But it doesn’t make very many people superstars, or if they are stars, they’re short-lived.

Kurt Cobain died in 1994, a year before commercialization of the Internet. By then, Nirvana was commercialized, too. The band thrived at an optimal time, because there is no way they would have had the same impact on culture if they came on the scene today.

I finally saw Nirvana in December 1993. It was a crowded show, but tame compared to what others witnessed at Trees two years earlier. I regret missing that specific show, but thanks to the Internet, we can all see it now. It’s not the same as being there. But Nevermind, too, isn’t the same as when released. Its edges have soften. Its spikes have dulled a bit. It’s still a great album and warrants higher placement than No. 17 on Rolling Stone‘s list. Still, listening to it fills me with regret at choices made, both personally and as part of society’s larger decisions. For all the good technology has brought us, I sometimes still long for the days when our gods weren’t so easily available or forgettable.

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The Rewind Button: Blood on the Tracks

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them. There will be a new album and review each Thursday (or there about).

Bob Dylan - Blood on the TracksI’m sick of Dylan. Specifically, I’m sick of Blood on the Tracks. It’s the first album of this project that I couldn’t wait for it to finish so I could listen to something more agreeable with me.

After multiple listens, I still find it tedious and plodding. It doesn’t move me, and I feel no connection to it. Perhaps it’s one of those albums that I’m not ready for in my life. That’s happened before. Ten years from now I may declare this the best album humankind has produced. I’m allowed to change. But for now, I’m going to switch this one off and listen to something else, something that inspires a creative impulse in me. Blood on the Tracks makes me want to shut down and shut out the world.

Maybe that’s what it’s meant to do.

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The Rewind Button: Are You Experienced

The Rewind Button is a group blogging project that I’m participating in. We’re taking on Rolling Stone‘s Top 40 albums of all time and writing our own reviews of them. There will be a new album and review each Thursday (or there about).

Are You Experienced by The Jimi Hendrix ExperienceAre You Experienced is another album in this series of reviews that I’ve heard so much that it’s become second nature to me. Without blinking, I can tell you where the guitar solos start, sing along to the lyrics, and play air drums like a pro. I guess I should thank my family for having such great music around as I grew up.

Still, there are some songs on Jimi Hendrix’s album that aren’t as memorable to me as such classics as “Hey Joe,” “Purple Haze,” or “Foxy Lady.” It’s not that these songs aren’t any good. I just haven’t given them the proper respect as others. I like the way “Love or Confusion” is balanced in its chaos by the mellow and soulful “May This be Love.” “Third Stone From the Sun” is the seductive lead-up to the carnality of “Foxy Lady.” Finally, “Red House” is the perfect closer to an album that makes you sweat and see visions over and over again. It holds you and says you’re back home, that all these songs come from the same root.

It’s a grod (halfway between great and good) album for me. I don’t normally reach for it to listen to for pleasure, but I don’t turn off the songs when they come on the radio, either. And most of the time, I’d rather hear The Cure’s cover of “Foxy Lady” if given the chance.

Please visit these other blogs participating in The Rewind Button project:

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I’m Sorry, Your Name Is…?

Hello My Name Is by Emily RoseI’ve taken improvisation lessons for more than two years now. While it has helped improve my listening skills, I still forget people’s names at times. And as someone who works in the meeting industry, forgetting names is often not a positive trait.

For the longest time, I thought it was my brain’s love of forgetfulness that it increasingly embraces every year. However, it’s not my mind’s mechanics that are at fault. It’s me. According to Richard Harris, a psychology professor at Kansas State University, your level of interest determines your brain’s ability to remember names.

“Some people, perhaps those who are more socially aware, are just more interested in people, more interested in relationships,” Harris said. “They would be more motivated to remember somebody’s name.”

Harris says that the more interest you show in a person, the more likely you’ll remember that person’s name. That’s common sense, but as with most common sense advice, it’s easily forgotten.

To help you remember names, try strategies such as mnemonic devices or saying the person’s name while you talk to the person. Or better yet, as Harris says, just show more interest in people.

(Image via Flickr: Emily Rose / Creative Commons)

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