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About Jon Chaisson

Author, blogger, music collector, cat wrangler. May contain trace amounts of sugar and caffeine. Books available at Smashwords!

Streaming: Amazon Music

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Believe it or not, I’ve tried numerous streaming apps and sites, and I’ve pretty much found them all wanting.

I know, I know…I’m picky about what I listen to if it’s not my own music collection.  I’m not including streaming radio stations here, like those provided by Sirius XM or the numerous terrestrial stations out there that offer the ‘listen live!’ button at their website.  I’m talking about sites and apps that are built for streaming music: Spotify, Groove Music, Tidal, and so on.  I mean, they’re just fine for what they do best, and they have their own fans, but they’re not for me.

I know exactly why: my tastes and listening habits tend to vary widely, and most of these places just don’t offer enough music that would capture my interest.  I’ve tried many, and with each of them I find myself constantly hitting the ‘next track’ button.  [And even worse, if I have the low-end or free subscription, I have to wade through commercials every five or six songs.  Don’t get me wrong — I grew up with terrestrial radio on every waking moment of my youth, so I’m used to the ads.  It’s just that getting them after skipping too many songs pretty makes me like the app or site even less.]

Recently, however, I signed onto Amazon Music, and I think I finally found what I’ve been looking for.  It’s essentially a rebooted, much more refined version of Amazon Prime’s music streaming, and it’s well worth it.  It features streams of numerous complete albums available digitally at Amazon’s website (and where I buy most of my mp3s nowadays), across numerous labels and distributors.  I get to listen to the entire album before deciding if I want to download it.  It also offers curated playlists if I’m so inclined.  I’m not one for listening to a randomly generated playlist — for that I can just listen to a regular radio station — so this really works out well for me.

The price isn’t that bad, either.  It’s $9.99 a month ($7.99 for those already signed up for Amazon Prime), about the same as most streaming apps and sites.

Yes, yes, I know…giving more money to The Man by signing up with Amazon, but when the product provides exactly what I’ve been looking for and wanting, it does feel kind of silly to not use it on principle.  [Noted, I’m a frequent visitor of local brick and mortar stores for all kinds of things, enough that I rarely use Amazon for ordering things on the regular.  I also use other music downloading sites for my collecting.  So I don’t necessarily feel guilty for using Amazon for this sort of thing.]

Has anyone else used it yet?  What do you think?

Classic Rock: Zebra

I was a huge fan of Zebra when I was in junior high.  I remember hearing “Who’s Behind the Door?” on WAAF — and seeing the video on MTV — and being totally blown away by the music.  I loved the sound of synthesizers back then, especially if they used the strings setting.  [I’d later get into Giuffria a year or so later for the same reason.]  I even got to see them live, when they opened up for Loverboy at the Worcester Centrum — my very first big arena concert.

I bought the cassette of the self-titled debut album right about the same time, and I nearly wore it out within a year.

Decades later, and I’m listening to it on mp3, and it suddenly dawns on me — this album sounds almost exactly like a Porcupine Tree album.

Think about it:  both lead singers are guitar virtuosos who write beautiful and complex melodies.  Sure, one sings in falsetto half the time, but never mind.  Plus the keyboards play a strong and vital part in the music, giving it a darker ambience.  There are a few shorter pop songs here and there, but there are also some lengthy prog-jam pieces in there as well.  It’s no wonder that I became such a huge PT fan in the late 90s.

I still pull out this album every now and again and give it a listen.  I’ll listen to album two, No Tellin’ Lies, every now and again as well, but this first album will always be a particular favorite of mine.

Fly-by: On break for a few weeks

spirited-away

Hey gang! Sorry to let you down, but both blogs are going on a brief vacation for a few weeks. This next week is probably going to busy, between Day Job stuff and preparing for an actual trip (we’re heading back to New England to visit friends and family).

We’ll be back fresh and ready to go in November! Until then, don’t eat too much Halloween candy!

See you soon!

I need to make a new mixtape.

I usually make a good handful of mixtapes/compilations every year, but I’m falling behind.  The last one I made was late July, just before we headed out on our last vacation.  Considering we’ll be heading out on another one in a few weeks, perhaps it’s time to make another one.

Here’s a few favorite tracks of mine that have been getting some serious play lately that may just end up on my new mixtapes!

Beware of…Being Out of Practice

 

One of the things I’m looking forward to on the Blogging the Beatles 2 series is listening to George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass album, because it’s one of his best.  It’s at least four or five years’ worth of tracks that were nixed for Beatle work.  Indeed, after awhile he just decided not to offer and kept them for himself.

One of my favorite tracks from the album is “Beware of Darkness” which is a perfect example of George’s best songwriting.  It’s got a hauntingly beautiful melody, but it also showcases his penchant for using slightly off-kilter chord progressions.  They made sense and blended quite nicely, but they weren’t the chords you were expecting.  It often felt like he was trying to bypass the tried-and-true pop motifs of the day, and yet write a song that still contained a musical flow that was pleasant to the ears.  [I often think of Blur’s “Coffee & TV” as a similar example of unexpected-yet-logical chord progressions.  There were a lot of alternative songs in the 90s that took this strange route, much to my delight.]

And as before, I plan on trying to play along on my guitar while I’m relistening an relearning these songs.  Suffice it to say, I still feel like I’m extremely out of practice.  It’s not a good sign that a few of my guitars sometimes have a fine layer of dust on them.  And if George is going to tempt me with his B-A-G7-G#m-C#m (there’s a lot of wacky barre chords in there, folks), then there’s a hell of a lot more I need to learn.  Especially if I want to try it with my acoustics.

This is going to be an interesting exercise, to say the least.

On a final note, here’s an excellent cover of the same track by Concrete Blonde, from their debut self-titled album.  It’s a bluesier, heavier version, but it retains the dark hints of tension found in the original, and it’s one of my favorite covers.

 

Coming Soon: When We Was Fab — Blogging the Beatles Solo Years

Others have commented: it’s going to be the Beatles’ solo years next!  This one’s gonna be a long series, so I’m pretty sure I’ll be featuring it on specific days…maybe offering it every other Wednesday or something.  We shall see.  This may take some time for me to build up a backlog, as there are quite a few releases to plow through — and I’m not going to include the multiple reissues that have taken place over the years.  One last note: I’ve already decided this is going to be chronological, just like the previous series, so this means we’ll be visiting all four solo discographies at the same time.  I will also be featuring multiple releases per post, or else I’ll be posting until 2019!

Until then, I’ll be providing the usual music posts on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Thanks for joining in!

HMV: When My Music Collection Expanded Exponentially

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Not the one I worked at, but very similar in size and shape.

As of 23rd of last month, it’ll have been twenty years since I started that job at HMV Records at the Solomon Pond Mall down in Marlborough.  How do I know the exact date?  Simple:  I had a one-day training day at their Harvard Square store and the very first thing they had me do is price and security-tag a few hundred copies of Weezer’s Pinkerton and Sheryl Crow’s self-titled album, which was being released the next day.

That would end up being my primary responsibility (not including the occasional register jockeying) for nearly four years until I left in autumn 2000.  I’d also go to various shows in the Boston area, go to a few band meet-and-greets, and my music collection would expand to the point that I’d have to move it downstairs due to its size.

My music purchasing during my days in Boston were quite scattershot, as I would rarely have the money, but somehow I managed to dig through the used record shops on a consistent basis.  I’d buy a lot old albums in dollar bins, pick up cheap promo cassettes, and find good deals on new and used cds.  I’d borrow albums from friends and dub them onto cassette, just like I did in the late 80s.  My knowledge of releases was pretty much based on what I heard on the radio and read in the Boston Phoenix.

But when I was hired in September of 1996 to HMV, all that changed.  I was hired as the lone shipping/receiving clerk, partly because I was the oldest of the hires (I was 25 at the time, and everyone else was at least five or six years younger), and partly because I was such a huge music nerd.  I’m convinced I was hired because they could count on me to provide good customer service and upsell like no tomorrow.

The music of those four years influenced and inspired me deeply, as this was when I’d started taking my writing seriously.  A lot of what I listened to between late 1996 and late 2000 would end up being part of the soundtrack to The Phoenix Effect and later on the trilogy.

One of the things that I’d set off to do early on in the job was to listen to as much music as I could. I didn’t exactly need to buy the albums…I would open up a cd and play it in the back room, or borrow one of the store promo copies and give it a listen.  I’d also scour all the music magazines we sold.  That way when I was on the sales floor, I’d be able to help customers quickly and easily.  Each week I’d make a list of all the new and upcoming releases on a whiteboard near the door so all my coworkers would know what to expect.


My listening habits expanded to include all kinds of genres, ones I hadn’t paid much attention to in the past.  I still listened mainly to alternative rock, but I also listened to everything from electronica to classical to new age to prog rock and everything in between.



I also immersed myself in a hell of a lot of imports, as there were quite a few bands out there who weren’t getting any attention stateside but I thought were phenomenal.



I don’t think I have an actual count, but between 1996 and 2000, I’m pretty sure my music collection went from maybe a hundred cds, a few hundred tapes and about five hundred or so vinyl records to maybe around five thousand titles by the time I left the store.  [This was accumulated all over the place, really — the store as well as new and used bins elsewhere.]

And that’s not counting the years after that, when I made it a habit to stop at Newbury Comics in Amherst every Wednesday (alongside my comic book run, which I’d started during my HMV years), which expanded my music collection even further.

It’s been twenty years and my music collection is still growing.  I’m still checking out new music and different styles to this day.  As of this posting, the number of mp3s I own is in six digits.  [This is single songs, mind you, not full albums.  And there’s also A’s collection in there as well.]  That’s about thirty-five years of collecting, borrowing, ripping, and downloading.  I try to keep myself under control and set a decent cap on how much to spend (and reminding myself I don’t necessarily need to buy everything on its drop date), and I usually do pretty good with it.

But yeah…if it wasn’t for that job, one that I loved and still think about from time to time, my collection would probably be a bit smaller.

Probably not by much, though.

Which band should I blog about next?

johnny-marr

The always excellent Johnny Marr, who I’ll be seeing in October!

I’ve been tempted to do another “blogging a band” series like I did with the Beatles a while back.  The original one was a lot of fun, as I was not only able to give the songs and albums a good solid listen, I was able to better understand their place in musical history — both their own, and within the larger scene.  And as a bonus, I was also able to learn a lot of new songs on my guitar!

I probably don’t know any band nearly as well as I know the Beatles, but I do own a lot of complete (or nearly complete) discographies of plenty of bands, or they’re easily available for streaming somewhere if I don’t.  I’ll be relearning their oeuvre right alongside you!

So, what do you think?  Here’s a shortlist so far of favorite 80s/90s bands I could possibly do:

–U2
–The Smiths
–The Cure
–Wire
–Blur
–Depeche Mode (continuing the by-the-decade theme)

I was also thinking of maybe continuing the Beatles theme by going through their solo output, either separately or all together chronologically.

Any votes/suggestions?

Is That Freedom Rock, Man?

Somehow I fell down another retro rabbit hole and have been listening to the Sirius XM Classic Rock Party station over the last few days.  I’m fifteen again and listening to WAAF and WAQY in my messy bedroom, cranking up the 80s stylings of Twisted Sister, Billy Idol and Whitesnake alongside the classic 60s/70s hits of the Stones, Yes, and BROOOCE.

This was the music I grew up with.  I was too young to understand punk and post-punk back in the early 80s (at least not until that fateful evening in early 1986), and as much as I enjoyed the pop of American Top 40 and American Bandstand, it was the music of rock stations that stuck with me most. I was a nerdy, spotty kid that was completely obsessed with music and radio and would be just as happy sitting alone in front of my boombox as I would be outside roaming the neighborhood on my BMX with my buddies.  This was Diver Down and Pyromania playing on my sister’s boombox while we played touch football in the backyard.  This was me completely blown away by 90125 and Synchronicity and So.  This was my growing obsessions with other bands aside from the Beatles.  This was our state capital’s own honored rockers in the forms of Aerosmith, the J Geils Band and Boston.  This was where I learned to appreciate bands before my time like Jimi Hendrix and Cream and The Rolling Stones.

Decades later and here I am, hitting middle age and living on the opposite coast, listening to the still-epic “Born to Run”, still impressed by the guitar solo freakout of the back half of “Freebird”, still feel that “Layla” is a decent song but is about 3 minutes too long.  Living in a city where Janis and Jerry lived, where Steve Miller recorded the sound of the foghorn going past the Marina for the opening of his Sailor album, where the classic Frampton Comes Alive! was recorded just three miles away at a long-departed ballroom in Japantown.  Where Journey the Doobies and the Dead and the Airplane lived and recorded and became local heroes.

The playlist has its moments of amusing embarrassment.  All that LA glam metal of the 80s is still goofy, doofy, simplistic fun, just like I remember it.  All the prog rock of the 70s is still full of nerdy math and fantastical imagery.  All the arena rock bands are still full of that bombast.  Some of it’s kind of corny now, but you can’t help but have fun listening to it.  The playlist is also going to be a lot of the same heavy-rotation classics that you can’t escape, even after all these years.  It may even have its share of “oh, that song!” moments.

Sure, most of it’s a good three or four decades old now, but it’s still a hell of a lot of fun to listen to.