One of my favourite things about writing here is finding a song/album/artist that has been a huge part of my life and digging deeper and learning more about how that music came to be. I was never obsessed with the stories behind the music growing up – good music has just always been there, taken for granted, life’s soundtrack that rarely took centre stage – and I’m fascinated now as I discover these backstories so many years later because they provide me with context and help shape the world I was growing up in, yet so unaware of.
It’s hard to imagine that time when information was not right at our fingertips; yet, if it wasn’t in the liner notes or I missed that one radio or MuchMusic interview, the stories behind the music disappeared into the ether and by the time they became accessible the music was already so deeply rooted into the fabric of my life that I didn’t think to even seek them out.
When I heard it had been 25 years and they were going to be reissuing the Singles soundtrack with new bonus material, to say I was excited would be an understatement.
I put Singles up there as one of the best soundtracks of all time.
Not only was the music more important than the movie, the Singles soundtrack was the early nineties. This movie was being made as the scene in Seattle was blowing up… Eddie Vedder was new to Pearl Jam when filming began, the movie’s sound was authentic and real and reflective of what was actually happening in the city almost a year before Nevermind woke the world up. Grunge was happening and this soundtrack wasn’t one that was cashing in on the movement, it was one that helped establish it.
Not that this was why I liked it so much. I liked it so much because it was just GOOD music.
Before I downloaded the new deluxe reissue this morning on iTunes I pulled out my tape, which still plays surprisingly well given that the words are faded on either side and that this was easily one of the most played cassettes in my collection throughout the 90’s. I had to rewind as it was halfway through Dyslexic Heart… that play/rewind push down combo that made Paul Westerberg, then Chris Cornell, turn into squeaky chipmunks-on-crack versions of themselves.
As Seasons started to play I was immediately brought back to my childhood bedroom, to a time before I would play this tape in my car, a time before I would hear it at high school parties… a time when I would lie down in my room (on a waterbed, no less) with the lights out, my Walkman on, and just let the music consume the night.
That Chris Cornell introduced Cameron Crowe to the music of Smashing Pumpkins is exactly the kind of detail that lifts this soundtrack up above a lot of the noise that gets passed off for art in today’s soundtracks. The labour of love that went into making this mix tape, making sure each track was just right, told a story and was put in the right order, overshadowed the movie itself, something Crowe has admitted wasn’t necessarily a bad thing in article with the AV Club (Update Feb 2025 – link no longer available).
“I have my problems with Singles. To me, Singles is the least successful of the movies I’ve been lucky enough to make. It was meant to be Manhattan, a movie I loved, set in Seattle. It stayed in the can for a year until the studio released it on the heels of the so-called “grunge explosion,” which created some problems of perception. But there were also some casting issues and some screenwriting problems I never quite solved.”
If you know Cameron Crowe and his movies, this next bit from the same interview doesn’t surprise you:
It starts with the music. Always. I hear the movie before I can ever write it. I would say that 80% of the time, that’s the successful stuff. It’s the other stuff I have to work for to get right, and sometimes it doesn’t work out, but the music is always the beginning.
Not surprising at all for the guy who wrote this scene:
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The reissue of Singles happening in the same week as Chris Cornell’s death is a 25-year-old echo we are only just now able to hear.
Andy Wood of Mother Love Bone died while Crowe was writing the script to Singles and the way the music community reacted in the city was a large inspiration for both the film and the soundtrack. A generation of musicians on the cusp of greatness, together on one album, in one city, at one place and time.
And Chris Cornell was front and centre of it all. Seasons was his first solo track ever and the reissue has a total of seven solo tracks from him. I have had Flutter Girl on repeat for the last hour in the background while writing this post.
While very few people would dispute Kurt Cobain and Nirvana as the leaders of the Grunge revolution, they were so far above a soundtrack like this that this snapshot in time of Seattle in the 90s doesn’t even mention them.
But Cornell, his influence is everywhere here. Writing the songs, performing in his band and solo, his voice acting almost as narrator. A voice we have all been eulogizing all week long. A voice that opened up Seattle to the world.
It’s easy to fall into the trap of nostalgia and over-sentimentalize what this album and Cornell’s contributions to it means, especially given the timing and circumstances of his death. It’s easy for any look-back to take on the air of memorializing for the sake of memorializing; drawing the conclusion that the album will serve as Cornell’s swan song, his last gift to us all before passing.
The hard part is to ask if, had Cornell not died this week, would people be writing the same things about the quarter-century milestone of this soundtrack?
Impossible to answer, but for those of us who knew then as it was happening (or learned later) how important a time in music this was, I’d like to think that these are exactly the kinds of things we would have been writing anyway.
Given the timing, this is an album release that, without ever having meant to, may also be able to offer some closure for those mourning Cornell’s passing. As Blackstar did for Bowie, the Singles reissue gives us a chance to say goodbye.
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Further Listening: Nothing Compares 2 U
This version of this incredible song gives me chills and while it might be a bit maudlin to frame it as a eulogy to Cornell himself, I think most fans of the man and his voice would forgive me.
Save Ferris – the 90’s Ska band with the 80’s throwback moniker – playing a show at Lee’s Palace, half a stumbling distance from my house. The horns, the energy, the jumping… this would be just what the doctor ordered to take care of some of the stress I’ve been feeling lately. A few drinks and a few tunes in and I would be transported to my secret happy bouncy dancing place.
And I was… more or less…
Here’s the thing: I’m going to keep the review of Save Ferris fairly short in adherence to that “… then say nothing at all…” golden rule. I’m not here to rip them… they looked amazing, the horns were KILLER and the energy was high for several songs. For me, Ska shows are like pizza… there’s no such thing as a bad one. I will bounce and grin like an idiot through pretty much anything because I just love the music.
Do I wish they hadn’t gotten so tired so quickly? Yes.
The stamina just wasn’t there and it showed itself in wheezy, lazy audience banter from Mo, an awkward as hell costume change and a general slowdown towards the end of the set that culminated in an encore that was more “Aw, do we hafta?” than it was “Thank you Toronto!”
To be doing this as long as they have, there has to be shows like this. They are SO talented and have kept it together for SO long that I really am convinced this was just an off night.
Again, grinning, dancing idiot me honestly couldn’t care less in the moment, but it would be untrue to review it as a tight set filled with energy from start to finish.
So, let’s get to the SHINE on the night.
Baby Baby.
The charm, the charisma, the style… this was the band I came to see that I didn’t know I came to see.
I’ve been listening to this song for days now; a love song to Atlanta but, as the lead singer Fontez Brooks said before playing it, “If you love your city, then this song is about your city, it’s about any city. It’s about loving your city”
Channeling the Beastie Boy’s silly irreverence and Andrew W.K.’s party-rockin’ spirit, Baby Baby blend their homemade Fun Rock songwriting with a hip-hop swagger and an emphasis on the live experience. Imagine if National Lampoon directed the next Legally Blond and you’ll start to get an idea of what BABY BABY is all about.
Baby Baby is a big, inclusive tent. There’s room under it for friends, foes, Nickleback fans, even haters; we all need someone to keep us in check, don’t we? All they ask is that you come ready to dance and make some new friends on the floor. They’ll take care of the rest.
More? Yes, you want some more.
Hang in there.
And lastly, this is making it to my cottage playlist: A Short Little Summer Love Song.
Baby Baby had us in the palm of their hands – laughing, dancing, singing along to songs we were hearing for the first time and they finished in absolute chaos with Fontez dancing in the crowd still jamming away on his guitar while other members of the band did the first ever Rock and Roll tallman.
All of this after the best (and only) conch solo I’ve ever seen.
They were mayhem and I loved them and will not miss a show should they ever come back.
It’s been a week now since I heard the words “Prince died” while away on vacation.
I had been determined to stay off of social media and the internet while away and was doing a good job of it. Reading books, swimming, drinking, relaxing… everything I needed to unplug from the world and recharge my batteries after a particularly gruelling last six weeks.
It was over beers when one of our group said it and there was a quiet that followed as we all took in what that meant.
For me, it wasn’t a question of what to say… I just didn’t have the words… any words. You see, unlike a number of music blogs I read where everyone professes to have been the hugest Prince fan yet quick searches of their site reveal they have never written anything about him before, I’m just… not a fan.
Now, let me clarify, pretty much everything I have heard from Prince – and that is a lot more in the last seven days – I love, so I guess I am becoming a Prince fan. I have just never made the effort to listen to him, to read up on him or to follow his random exploits until now. Prince to me was an artist who I knew I’d respect if given the time, I just never gave the time. Out of over 6500 songs in my iTunes library, there is only one Prince song – “Cream” – and that was likely off a compilation I burned off of CDs back when that was still a thing.
And then to read how Prince gets Chappelle back by putting his picture on the cover of the Breakfast Can Wait Single… honestly, he’s kind of the best.
From the Nextshark link above:
I have spent a good deal of time over the last week bringing myself up to speed on everything Prince and if ever there was a rabbit hole to dive into, man, this is it. The more you dig, the weirder the stories get and this whole time I am kicking myself for how much I have been missing out on. This whole post will reek of Johnny-Come-Lately if I share everything I’ve been reading (wait, he wrote “Manic Monday”???), and by now we’ve all seen the Jimmy Fallon and Questlove Prince Ping Pong story, but this other story by Questlove below I haven’t yet seen posted anywhere else. To be fired as a DJ and replaced by the movie Finding Nemo… you just can’t make this stuff up.
Honestly, if I ever were to do anything worthwhile that helped me attain the notoriety of a Prince, I would love to pull the same kind of stunts, just for the joy of absolutely messing with people and having them afterwards, for the rest of their lives, thinking… did that really happen?
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There is one other story worth sharing here…
Last August I went on a 60km trek across Iceland and saw some of the most beautiful landscape I have ever seen; it’s a trip I will remember for the rest of my life.
We arrived at our final campsite, many of us bruised and battered (I myself had done two thirds of the trek on a badly sprained ankle) but all of us in good spirits and just elated to have made it through the trek. Being Canadian, we asked if we could have a campfire; this was something we hadn’t yet had due to the lack of trees and burnable wood along the route we had taken.
Our guides knew of a secret stash of wood at this final campsite and there, as the sun set and drew long shadows under Eyjafjallajökull herself, we made a campfire.
The liquor flowed freely and we all started to sing and tell stories from the trip. All we needed to make the picture complete was a guitar.
Fortunately, there were a group of Icelandic hikers staying at the campsite as well, and as campfires were such an anomaly, they eventually wandered over to us and we invited them to join us. We were especially excited to see that one of them had a guitar. The Iceland folks sang a couple of national songs but then quickly moved onto a slew of campfire classics that had everyone singing along – Brown Eyes Girl, American Pie etc. We sang for some time before the guitar player keyed up one of the most unusual campfire tunes I’ve ever heard.
Purple Rain.
A song that everyone knows, even if they don’t know they know it. We sang at the top of our lungs.
It wasn’t until way later that night, after most people had gone to bed, that one of our guides told those of us still up that the guitar player was actually a member of Iceland’s Parliament. That made us love the night even more.
So, in summary, that time we sang Purple Rain to an acoustic guitar played by an Icelandic MP at a campfire at the base of a volcano ranks as one of my top travel moments of all time.
And from everything I’ve learned in the last week, that’s a story I think Prince would have appreciated.
I was driving to work this morning when the news came on the radio. Through the day I checked in on social media and it was all over my newsfeed… tweets, hashtags and unspoken competitions as to who could find the most obscure picture, video or reference of a man whose other-worldly physicality carried a career that spanned over 50 years.
I knew I was going to write tonight and it’s a funny thing, starting a music blog two days before David Bowie dies… it’s like starting to date someone a week before Valentine’s Day… you think you can ease into it and then, boom, you’re in it. Full on.
And wait, am I making this loss of an amazingly talented man all about me? I am, and that’s exactly my point tonight. We all are. And it’s okay.
Not all celebrity deaths are created equally… as callous as it is to say that, it’s true, and we all know it. Schnieder from One Day At A Time passed away last week and the over-35 Internetters gave a collective chuckle of fond rememberance before scrolling to the next news story without even clicking.
But when someone like Bowie dies, we stop. We remember. We personalize that loss and we take a minute, or longer, to establish and share our own connections with those who we have lost. They have meant something to us and all we want to do is share that with each other.
Today I remembered his stint on Extras and listened to my favourite Bowie song – Ziggy Stardsut (acoustic) – at least a half dozen times. I thought about this post, what I would write, how I could subtly work in the fact that the street I grew up on was called Bowie Ave.
And then I started to read more about the album he released just days ago.
And then I watched the videos.
And for a man who has had almost as many characters as he has albums, I find it extremely compelling that one of his most shocking, most achingly charismatic portrayals should be his last; a character who foreshadows the fate of the actor. Lazarus is beautiful and I won’t be the first to write it today, nor the last to say it, but in Lazarus, and in the backstory leading up to the album’s release, David Bowie has shocked us one last time and achieved something as close to immortality as any artist can hope for.
Watch the video below if you haven’t seen it already. I’m willing to bet that the actual number of people who have seen this is exactly half the number of YouTube of views. I know I’ve watched it twice today already myself.
Today we remembered an icon. An amazing oddity of an artist who never stopped showing us that life and art do not need to be separated; they can live, and die, together as one.
Further Listening – “The Terror Of Knowing” – My tribute playlist over at 8tracks