EPISODE 016 | Goin’ Solo
This week on Six Picks Music Club, Geoff, Russ, and Dave explore the phenomenon of band members launching epic solo careers. They'll dissect the legacies of three iconic groups: Traffic, Red Rider, and Million Dead. Prepare to hear about the impact of each band and how their frontmen, Steve Winwood, Tom Cochrane, and Frank Turner, respectively, went on to achieve solo stardom. But wait, there's more! The guys take a hilarious detour to investigate the subculture of men who call other men, men? Strap in for Goin’ Solo.
Spotify Playliist
YouTube Playlist
Transcript
1
00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:04,980
Welcome to Six Picks Music Club, a music podcast for people who know that edging
2
00:00:04,980 --> 00:00:08,800
isn't just part of mowing the lawn.
3
00:00:08,800 --> 00:00:21,920
Hey hey hey, I'm your host Dave and with me are my favorite cohorts. Fuck. Alright,
4
00:00:21,920 --> 00:00:30,360
let's try this again. My favorite cohort. What's up? What's up everybody? I'm your
5
00:00:30,360 --> 00:00:35,440
host Dave and with me are my two favorite co-hosts of all time. First off, we have the
6
00:00:35,440 --> 00:00:44,560
sea lion falling from a helicopter, Geoffro. And last but not least, the dude who
7
00:00:44,560 --> 00:00:49,600
won't stop you from drinking, cooking, sharing at his engagement party, Russ. Hey guys.
8
00:00:49,600 --> 00:00:55,000
What up? What up? How's everybody doing this week? Good. Doing fine this week. Hey
9
00:00:55,000 --> 00:01:01,440
listener, how are you? Great. Awesome. Thanks. Well we are Six Picks Music Club,
10
00:01:01,440 --> 00:01:04,920
the music podcast where we three each pick two songs around a central theme
11
00:01:04,920 --> 00:01:09,720
and discuss. This week on the F, our topic revolves around artists going solo, where
12
00:01:09,720 --> 00:01:14,600
we pick a song from their early group work and later solo projects. But yeah,
13
00:01:14,600 --> 00:01:17,640
before we do anything, we got to get this week's password to get into the
14
00:01:17,640 --> 00:01:23,720
clubhouse. Who has the password? Geoffro, is it you again? Here I go again on my own.
15
00:01:23,720 --> 00:01:38,360
Is the password. Okay. And yeah, I guess that one checks out. We're in. Okay, come on in
16
00:01:38,360 --> 00:01:46,120
everybody. Find your space. It's Whitesnake. Okay. Yeah. How is that? I'm missing.
17
00:01:46,120 --> 00:01:52,640
Dude, this episode is about somebody being in a band and then going solo. Here I go again on my
18
00:01:52,640 --> 00:01:58,080
own. Yeah, okay. Now I get it. Good one. Good one. Am I the only one that's trying?
19
00:01:58,080 --> 00:02:07,640
I was getting caught up on just stupid TV that I used to watch. I didn't watch the Hard Knock
20
00:02:07,640 --> 00:02:13,000
show, the football show they do on HBO or whatever. What is with every football coach addressing their
21
00:02:13,000 --> 00:02:18,440
team as men? We already know that you're strong and endure a lot of physical pain and whatnot for
22
00:02:18,440 --> 00:02:24,600
our enjoyment, gambling addictions and whatnot. But is that necessary? Would you prefer that they
23
00:02:24,600 --> 00:02:30,640
refer to them as little women? That's not what I'm saying. It's just like Louisa May Alcott level.
24
00:02:30,640 --> 00:02:35,800
It's like they're addressing them because it's like, "Hey, I respect you and all of these other
25
00:02:35,800 --> 00:02:41,240
guys are just not professional football players." It just seems way too formal for a bunch of dudes
26
00:02:41,240 --> 00:02:46,360
that are sitting around all stinky in their jocks and towels and whatnot. Right? It's the difference
27
00:02:46,360 --> 00:02:53,240
between empire and post-empire. Mike McDaniel, the young coach of the Miami Dolphins, he's not
28
00:02:53,240 --> 00:03:00,360
going up and saying, "Listen, man," because he's like the cool, the innovative young coach.
29
00:03:00,360 --> 00:03:10,200
But I bet Andy Reid calls his players men because he's like 75 years old. Yeah.
30
00:03:11,080 --> 00:03:17,240
Vrable, he's definitely calling the guys men kind of guy. It's like, "I respect you too much to say
31
00:03:17,240 --> 00:03:23,880
guys." Dan Campbell of the Lions, I bet he calls his players men. "This is some strong men in here.
32
00:03:23,880 --> 00:03:31,240
We're men. Oh, well, you other people, you're not men." It's emasculating. I don't know. It's kind
33
00:03:31,240 --> 00:03:35,880
of weird. Does anybody else want to go eat a quad shot Americano cup right now?
34
00:03:38,200 --> 00:03:44,520
Dude, honestly, I'd rather just drink it, but- I guess if I got to eat it too, it's weird. I
35
00:03:44,520 --> 00:03:49,480
just think it's weird, but maybe that's just me. It's because you've been indoctrinated by your
36
00:03:49,480 --> 00:03:55,800
household of women that you live in. You're starting to give over to their way of thinking
37
00:03:55,800 --> 00:04:01,000
so hard that you don't even understand why a man would call another man a man anymore.
38
00:04:01,000 --> 00:04:07,400
You've lost the ability to see it. No. I mean, I think men calling another man, "Hey, man,
39
00:04:07,400 --> 00:04:14,680
what a man calling man is still fine, but man calling men is not... That's weird."
40
00:04:14,680 --> 00:04:21,960
Yeah. I don't mind if a man calls a man a man. I don't mind if a man calls men men. I do not like
41
00:04:21,960 --> 00:04:29,320
that. A group of men, men, in this formal like, "You're better than everybody." It's just, I don't
42
00:04:29,320 --> 00:04:35,880
know. Men. They're all going to die when they're 38. It's just like, "What are we...?" Oh, here we go.
43
00:04:37,240 --> 00:04:43,560
Death has reared its ugly head for the first time. Since you were talking to men, calling men men,
44
00:04:43,560 --> 00:04:50,520
which I think we can file under the heading of Dave's issues with masculinity, here's another one.
45
00:04:50,520 --> 00:04:59,160
Guys, some of their approaches to fatherhood are, "They blow my fucking mind." Because they'll be
46
00:04:59,160 --> 00:05:05,400
like, "There are just some guys out there that think that babies and kids are a woman thing,
47
00:05:06,440 --> 00:05:12,440
and they just are like, "I'll just make more kids, and then all the women will deal with them, and I
48
00:05:12,440 --> 00:05:19,560
am a free agent." They just live their whole lives like that. That shit is crazy town to me. I cannot
49
00:05:19,560 --> 00:05:26,120
even imagine thinking that. I love that he has never said anything about this, but he's had a
50
00:05:26,120 --> 00:05:33,800
daughter for three weeks, and here we go. Shit, my little baby girl really changed me in my way of
51
00:05:33,800 --> 00:05:38,120
thinking about the world. We've all been thinking that for, what, 10 years, 11 years now, right,
52
00:05:38,120 --> 00:05:45,880
Russ? Yeah. Well, okay. I heard this stat the other day. It was like 73% or 78% of millennials
53
00:05:45,880 --> 00:05:51,320
believe that they're better parents than their parents, which I think is right. Yeah, it is
54
00:05:51,320 --> 00:05:56,440
right. We're having kids later. We have internet, so we go looking to see if there's a better way
55
00:05:56,440 --> 00:06:01,720
than just beating the shit out of them. What? Let me beat the shit out of you. Okay, cool.
56
00:06:01,720 --> 00:06:07,720
Go get a switch. I'm going to whip your ass with it. Oh my God. That's the generation that I came
57
00:06:07,720 --> 00:06:17,480
from. We got hit. Get a cloth and a gallon of water. I'm going to waterboard you. Oh, lord.
58
00:06:17,480 --> 00:06:26,920
Oh my God, dad. It works. It works. There are no more Legos on the floor. I didn't say shit the
59
00:06:26,920 --> 00:06:38,600
rest of the day. Great. And it thwarted a couple of terrorist attacks that I was planning.
60
00:06:38,600 --> 00:06:50,520
I'm happy now to transition into the music portion of the podcast,
61
00:06:50,520 --> 00:06:56,360
Dave. Good, good. I'm happy too. Russ, when we thought about this topic, I know you're big on
62
00:06:56,360 --> 00:07:00,280
the, let's see, two sides of the coin thing. Tell me what you were thinking of when you started making
63
00:07:00,280 --> 00:07:05,560
your picks this week. My first pick is looking at the world around you, essentially. Okay. And the
64
00:07:05,560 --> 00:07:16,040
second pick is looking at your world. And so I took a younger post hardcore punky band who was
65
00:07:16,040 --> 00:07:21,720
kind of angry and then took it to a more introspective place from Frank Turner, who left the
66
00:07:21,720 --> 00:07:26,920
band to go solo and frankly has had a bigger career because of it. Oh, nice. Right on.
67
00:07:26,920 --> 00:07:37,960
I'll say that Russ definitely imputed a lot into the topic that I hadn't imputed. And so I just
68
00:07:37,960 --> 00:07:44,360
chose a guy that was in one band that did a song that I know and then he did another song by himself.
69
00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:55,000
Well, dang, Geoff, you want to fire us off tonight? What's the first one you want to talk about?
70
00:07:55,000 --> 00:08:02,360
Yeah, since obviously mine's the simplest. I think we've already established that. So I'll establish
71
00:08:02,360 --> 00:08:08,840
the premise. Is he on ramp a little bit? Yeah. And later we're going 115 miles per hour on the
72
00:08:08,840 --> 00:08:15,000
Autobahn doing Russ's picks, but mine are just like... Student driver. Yeah. So it is very
73
00:08:15,000 --> 00:08:22,200
simplistic, which is I was telling Russ while you, Dave, were having technological problems for 45
74
00:08:22,200 --> 00:08:25,800
minutes when we were trying to sign onto this thing. Yeah, it was a bit of a beating. And then
75
00:08:25,800 --> 00:08:30,360
you came in and ruined the call and then we all had problems and then we figured it out just to
76
00:08:30,360 --> 00:08:39,480
go back over it. But in that period of time, I was talking to Russ about, dude, I have a favorite
77
00:08:39,480 --> 00:08:44,120
new channel on Canada TV. That's what I call it. I don't even know what it is. I don't know how we
78
00:08:44,120 --> 00:08:49,480
get it. I don't know any... There's so many channels. I don't know what any of them mean. So I have a
79
00:08:49,480 --> 00:08:54,360
channel that's just called... I don't know what the channel's called, but the program that's always on
80
00:08:54,360 --> 00:09:02,040
it is called Please Rewind. And it's just old music videos. Anyway, I was tuned in, just watching music
81
00:09:02,040 --> 00:09:10,040
videos, doing some homework or whatever. And the video for Red Riders' Lunatic Fringe came on.
82
00:09:10,040 --> 00:09:17,720
Lunatic Fringe, I know you're out there. Which is a really weird 80s song. It's genre bending.
83
00:09:17,720 --> 00:09:23,480
And I was looking at the guys and there were a bunch of weird, stiff looking guys and it's a bit
84
00:09:23,480 --> 00:09:29,880
of a dark video, but in a fun way with neon lights and stuff. And then it comes down on this
85
00:09:29,880 --> 00:09:36,280
arrhythmic white guy that's singing. And I was like, who is this guy? And then it dawned on me
86
00:09:36,280 --> 00:09:44,600
in that moment. Boom. That's a younger Tom Cochrane, the Canadian artist that would later go solo.
87
00:09:44,600 --> 00:09:50,680
And I was like, dude, I didn't know he did that shit. When you hear the song, everybody's heard
88
00:09:50,680 --> 00:09:57,400
this song and it's because it peaked at number 11 on the Billboard charts in the US in like 1981.
89
00:09:57,400 --> 00:10:02,280
And a lot of people thought it was in reference to John Lennon's murder, but he actually written
90
00:10:02,280 --> 00:10:07,080
it before that. Anyway, song is Red Rider Lunatic Fringe.
91
00:10:07,720 --> 00:10:23,400
Lunatic Fringe, I know you're out there. You're in hiding. In your home, you're in your city.
92
00:10:23,400 --> 00:10:33,480
I can hear you coming. No, what's your answer?
93
00:10:33,480 --> 00:10:39,640
End it. Maybe end it a little bit faster.
94
00:10:39,640 --> 00:10:45,560
He gets on to Ross's favorite parts, the solos.
95
00:10:45,560 --> 00:10:54,520
So the great font of factual information Wikipedia claims that he wrote this song about
96
00:10:54,520 --> 00:11:00,040
anti-Semitism in the United States in the 1970s.
97
00:11:00,040 --> 00:11:03,640
Yeah. Nazism and racial discrimination, right?
98
00:11:03,640 --> 00:11:11,240
Yeah. But he decided to record this song on the evening of John Lennon's murder.
99
00:11:11,240 --> 00:11:11,720
Who?
100
00:11:11,720 --> 00:11:14,280
So that's why there was a connection to John Lennon.
101
00:11:14,280 --> 00:11:18,760
What do you guys think about this song? Well, you've heard it, right?
102
00:11:18,760 --> 00:11:20,040
Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah.
103
00:11:20,040 --> 00:11:24,280
Yeah, I wouldn't say I've heard this song a lot in my life, but I've always been intrigued by it
104
00:11:24,280 --> 00:11:29,480
because I was trying to place it and I was like, "When did this song happen?"
105
00:11:30,200 --> 00:11:34,600
I know I've heard it a number of times here and there. It's like a classic rock song.
106
00:11:34,600 --> 00:11:39,400
Right. I used to play on the radio all the time, but I've never looked at the lyrics before now.
107
00:11:39,400 --> 00:11:41,320
I'm like, "What is going on with this song?"
108
00:11:41,320 --> 00:11:46,280
I know. It's fascinating lyrics. It's about the lunatic fringe, the crazy people. It's almost
109
00:11:46,280 --> 00:11:52,200
like in some ways predicting 30 or 40 years after it came out with the internet and everything.
110
00:11:52,200 --> 00:11:54,600
Yeah, absolutely.
111
00:11:55,160 --> 00:12:00,360
So it's kind of prescient in a way, but I've never known anything about it at all.
112
00:12:00,360 --> 00:12:05,800
And it's because it's by a one-hit wonder, Red Ryder. You've never heard of them. You know the
113
00:12:05,800 --> 00:12:13,000
song. It's on my playlist, but I had no idea until I saw this music video that it's Tom Cochrane
114
00:12:13,000 --> 00:12:18,120
is the lead singer of Red Ryder, which is a big deal for me for a couple of reasons. One,
115
00:12:18,120 --> 00:12:21,960
I now live in Toronto and he is Toronto born rock and roller.
116
00:12:22,600 --> 00:12:29,560
That has traveled the world and he's a good human. He's won awards, but he's also promoted
117
00:12:29,560 --> 00:12:33,800
peace and et cetera. He's a good dude.
118
00:12:33,800 --> 00:12:38,040
No, he's known for Philanthropic. Philanthropic? That's not right.
119
00:12:38,040 --> 00:12:41,240
Philanthropic is the lead singer of Pantera, right?
120
00:12:41,240 --> 00:12:49,320
But yeah, his philanthropic work, he's known for that.
121
00:12:49,320 --> 00:12:54,200
The reason that all this comes together in my life is because 10 years after this song,
122
00:12:54,200 --> 00:13:01,480
I would have been eight years old. My number one song in the world was Tom Cochrane's "Life is a Highway."
123
00:13:01,480 --> 00:13:11,640
[Music]
124
00:13:11,640 --> 00:13:32,120
[Music]
125
00:13:32,120 --> 00:13:37,560
I think for a while people just thought that songs had to last five minutes.
126
00:13:37,560 --> 00:13:38,440
Oh yeah.
127
00:13:38,440 --> 00:13:44,760
I love and will defend the song to you guys shortly, but it would be a great three and
128
00:13:44,760 --> 00:13:48,600
a half minute song and it is a five and a half minute song.
129
00:13:48,600 --> 00:13:55,400
I feel like there's so many songs that should be like that. 98% of the Foo Fighters catalog should
130
00:13:55,400 --> 00:13:57,640
be three and a half minute songs.
131
00:13:57,640 --> 00:14:03,080
Yeah, I guess the thinking is that it's kind of an earworm song when you get the chorus in your head,
132
00:14:03,080 --> 00:14:07,080
you just are repeating it over and over. That's kind of what the song is doing. The song is
133
00:14:07,080 --> 00:14:12,120
really giving you a lot of that chorus after a while. It's like, "Here it's coming again."
134
00:14:12,120 --> 00:14:18,840
[Singing]
135
00:14:18,840 --> 00:14:24,520
Mr. Big was heavy in the rotation for me during that era as well. For a while,
136
00:14:24,520 --> 00:14:25,960
I thought they were the same band.
137
00:14:25,960 --> 00:14:29,080
Oh, what was that song called? The Mr. Big song?
138
00:14:29,080 --> 00:14:30,200
To Be With You.
139
00:14:30,200 --> 00:14:30,920
Yeah.
140
00:14:30,920 --> 00:14:37,240
I'm the one who wants to be with you. Be with you.
141
00:14:37,240 --> 00:14:37,560
Yeah.
142
00:14:37,560 --> 00:14:38,280
Right. So-
143
00:14:38,280 --> 00:14:41,320
You thought that was Red Ryder?
144
00:14:41,320 --> 00:14:44,360
Right, because I didn't have MTV growing up. We only saw
145
00:14:44,360 --> 00:14:49,000
videos when we were at Little Caesars or whatever, some pizza place.
146
00:14:49,000 --> 00:14:49,880
[Laughter]
147
00:14:49,880 --> 00:14:55,720
That sucks so much. You had to just do a little- you had to listen to the radio
148
00:14:55,720 --> 00:14:57,640
and make little sock puppet videos.
149
00:14:57,640 --> 00:14:59,800
[Laughter]
150
00:14:59,800 --> 00:15:00,920
Fucking cousins.
151
00:15:00,920 --> 00:15:04,520
[Laughter]
152
00:15:04,520 --> 00:15:08,360
K love my oldies, baby. It was a real deal.
153
00:15:08,360 --> 00:15:09,320
Different upbringing.
154
00:15:09,320 --> 00:15:10,440
Well-
155
00:15:10,440 --> 00:15:14,760
That's why you try so hard about music, and I'm just cool about it.
156
00:15:14,760 --> 00:15:19,960
[Laughter]
157
00:15:19,960 --> 00:15:20,200
Yep.
158
00:15:20,200 --> 00:15:21,240
[Laughter]
159
00:15:21,240 --> 00:15:25,720
Just kidding, dude. Anyway, what were you saying about Life is a Highway? You thought it was a
160
00:15:25,720 --> 00:15:31,160
Mr. Big song. In my age of innocence, I thought these were the same band, but they're not.
161
00:15:31,160 --> 00:15:36,520
And I appreciate you picking it and reaffirming that for me, because with Red Ryder, it's like
162
00:15:36,520 --> 00:15:41,160
you said with the one-hit wonder thing. I knew that song, but I didn't know that band.
163
00:15:41,160 --> 00:15:41,560
Yep.
164
00:15:41,560 --> 00:15:43,720
Great with the Tom Cochrane pick there.
165
00:15:43,720 --> 00:15:47,960
Thanks. I really love Life is a Highway. It's a positive message about traveling the world,
166
00:15:47,960 --> 00:15:55,400
which Tom Cochrane is also- he's a philanthropist and world traveler. And in 2016, Manitoba,
167
00:15:56,040 --> 00:16:02,840
named a section of the Provincial Road 391, Tom Cochrane's Life is a Highway.
168
00:16:02,840 --> 00:16:05,080
So, he's got that guy.
169
00:16:05,080 --> 00:16:05,640
That's awesome for him.
170
00:16:05,640 --> 00:16:10,280
I guess it's Tom Cochrane's Life is a Highway.
171
00:16:10,280 --> 00:16:12,760
Oh, that's funny.
172
00:16:12,760 --> 00:16:17,400
Yeah, Tonight Life got it. Great. Didn't he win like eight- what is the Canadian
173
00:16:17,400 --> 00:16:18,360
award for music?
174
00:16:18,360 --> 00:16:23,480
Yeah, I just call him Canada Things. I just- he won eight Canada things.
175
00:16:23,480 --> 00:16:24,280
[Laughter]
176
00:16:24,280 --> 00:16:27,880
A Juno award winner.
177
00:16:27,880 --> 00:16:31,640
I just got- I still haven't updated about that. I just call him Canada Things.
178
00:16:31,640 --> 00:16:39,960
Russ, I would love to hear from you about your picks this week. Coming with our post-punk picks
179
00:16:39,960 --> 00:16:42,520
for the pod. What do you got? There's so many P's. Jesus.
180
00:16:42,520 --> 00:16:43,720
Yeah, love P's.
181
00:16:43,720 --> 00:16:47,560
That was like you wrote it and then said it bad.
182
00:16:47,560 --> 00:16:50,680
[Laughter]
183
00:16:50,680 --> 00:16:53,880
I wish I could say I wrote it. I just said it bad.
184
00:16:54,840 --> 00:16:55,160
Yeah.
185
00:16:55,160 --> 00:17:01,080
So, as I was saying earlier, I took a band, Million Dead, which is kind of a
186
00:17:01,080 --> 00:17:05,960
post-hardcore, high energy band who was commenting on the world around them.
187
00:17:05,960 --> 00:17:10,840
And this particular song is called Charlie and the Propaganda Myth Machine
188
00:17:10,840 --> 00:17:14,440
off of their 2003 debut album, A Song to Ruin.
189
00:17:14,440 --> 00:17:21,160
Walt Disney is pushing social and sexual hierarchy.
190
00:17:21,880 --> 00:17:48,280
[Music]
191
00:17:48,280 --> 00:17:50,200
May I make a bold statement?
192
00:17:50,200 --> 00:17:50,920
Sure.
193
00:17:50,920 --> 00:17:56,360
You've given us 30 picks by now, Russ, in all of our recordings.
194
00:17:56,360 --> 00:17:57,080
Yep.
195
00:17:57,080 --> 00:17:59,560
That one for me would be number one so far.
196
00:17:59,560 --> 00:18:02,920
It hangs out in that timeline where most of your picks come from.
197
00:18:02,920 --> 00:18:07,080
Yeah. I can hear that, the '90s. Is that what you're trying to say?
198
00:18:07,080 --> 00:18:08,680
I went to my grandpa file of-
199
00:18:08,680 --> 00:18:13,720
No, I'm just saying it kind of fits in there. It's like, I mean, because it kind of give off-
200
00:18:13,720 --> 00:18:15,560
It's like 2003, right?
201
00:18:15,560 --> 00:18:17,080
Yeah, at the drive-in vibes.
202
00:18:17,080 --> 00:18:17,560
Yeah.
203
00:18:17,560 --> 00:18:20,120
Stripped down and a little more raw, probably.
204
00:18:20,120 --> 00:18:21,720
Is it before or after them?
205
00:18:21,720 --> 00:18:22,920
After, yeah, for sure.
206
00:18:22,920 --> 00:18:25,880
I was going to say that it sounded like at the drive-in for sure,
207
00:18:25,880 --> 00:18:27,320
with all the tempo changes and stuff.
208
00:18:27,320 --> 00:18:32,840
It's like at the drive-in and Rage got together and just kind of had too much whiskey and then
209
00:18:32,840 --> 00:18:34,760
had this child.
210
00:18:34,760 --> 00:18:39,240
Yeah, and like, "Oh, I'm going to try to squeeze neoliberalism into the lyrics here.
211
00:18:39,240 --> 00:18:40,200
I think I can do it."
212
00:18:40,200 --> 00:18:43,720
Yeah, they definitely did.
213
00:18:43,720 --> 00:18:47,960
If you think about it, Willy Wonka had a monopoly on chocolate and candy, right?
214
00:18:47,960 --> 00:18:52,600
And in that story, and neoliberals love wealthy entrepreneurs.
215
00:18:52,600 --> 00:18:57,400
And while Charlie may have been the story's hero, everybody loves Willy Wonka.
216
00:18:57,400 --> 00:18:58,360
Yeah, yeah.
217
00:18:58,360 --> 00:19:01,480
Right? He's like the best part of the story.
218
00:19:01,480 --> 00:19:01,880
Yeah.
219
00:19:01,880 --> 00:19:06,280
♪ Neoliberals and McDonald's and sandwiches ♪
220
00:19:06,280 --> 00:19:10,920
I love that he just starts off like getting right into Walt Disney.
221
00:19:10,920 --> 00:19:15,880
It's just like, "Oh, man. This song is about corporations."
222
00:19:17,080 --> 00:19:18,200
Man, right?
223
00:19:18,200 --> 00:19:21,160
Social and sexual hierarchy coming from Walt.
224
00:19:21,160 --> 00:19:21,800
It's just like...
225
00:19:21,800 --> 00:19:25,400
♪ Social and sexual hierarchy is coming to me down ♪
226
00:19:25,400 --> 00:19:30,600
They're going after the commercialization that starts at the beginning of our lives.
227
00:19:30,600 --> 00:19:34,280
Like as we're children, like this, where they get us and they take us the whole way, right?
228
00:19:34,280 --> 00:19:34,680
Yeah.
229
00:19:34,680 --> 00:19:38,360
I feel like the band just comes out and they just like, they grab you by the balls, right?
230
00:19:38,360 --> 00:19:40,440
And they're like, "Listen, here we go."
231
00:19:40,440 --> 00:19:41,480
Which is kind of fun.
232
00:19:41,480 --> 00:19:47,560
You got Frank Turner who is just wailing above the mix, just emoting during his screams.
233
00:19:47,560 --> 00:19:51,160
And he's also melodic and versatile within that, which is cool.
234
00:19:51,160 --> 00:19:53,480
And then he's got a pretty good singing voice too.
235
00:19:53,480 --> 00:19:57,800
So we said earlier, the song is about the commercialization of our lives,
236
00:19:57,800 --> 00:19:58,760
starting when we're children.
237
00:19:58,760 --> 00:20:05,560
And they come out, they fire shots at Cadbury, McDonald's, and specifically Roald Dahl, right?
238
00:20:05,560 --> 00:20:10,120
The song is a play on Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
239
00:20:10,120 --> 00:20:13,800
Dude, I've long thought Cadbury needs to get it.
240
00:20:13,800 --> 00:20:18,120
They've been on your hit list for a while.
241
00:20:18,120 --> 00:20:23,400
Yeah, dude, they just, here's more eggs and I'm all like, "Fuck eggs, Cadbury."
242
00:20:23,400 --> 00:20:27,400
I'm moving on to omelets, you son of a bitch.
243
00:20:27,400 --> 00:20:32,920
I mean, you've always known that about me, Dave, that Cadbury just, in all of its abuses.
244
00:20:32,920 --> 00:20:36,280
Well, here's one thing, they're disrespectful to bunnies.
245
00:20:36,280 --> 00:20:37,160
That's true.
246
00:20:37,160 --> 00:20:39,560
It's like bunny blackface, chocolate bunnies.
247
00:20:40,440 --> 00:20:41,240
It's not okay.
248
00:20:41,240 --> 00:20:43,240
Oh, no.
249
00:20:43,240 --> 00:20:44,840
How have they not been canceled yet?
250
00:20:44,840 --> 00:20:45,560
That's just like-
251
00:20:45,560 --> 00:20:47,320
Are they getting bunny consent?
252
00:20:47,320 --> 00:20:48,280
Certainly not.
253
00:20:48,280 --> 00:20:53,560
And did they get the copyright infringement issue worked out with the image of that first bunny?
254
00:20:53,560 --> 00:20:54,200
No.
255
00:20:54,200 --> 00:21:00,200
That bunny that's on every one of their molds, never got any kickbacks, nothing.
256
00:21:00,200 --> 00:21:04,200
The family is destitute, it's unbelievable.
257
00:21:04,200 --> 00:21:06,760
They're living under a bridge right now.
258
00:21:06,760 --> 00:21:08,440
And you should be a billionaire.
259
00:21:08,440 --> 00:21:11,480
Whole family, all 58 of them, fucking Cadbury.
260
00:21:11,480 --> 00:21:18,040
And then there's at the end, it's like, "Hold out the arm and quiet the voice."
261
00:21:18,040 --> 00:21:22,280
This is going back to what Geoff was saying when we were talking about kids and parenting and stuff
262
00:21:22,280 --> 00:21:23,160
these days.
263
00:21:23,160 --> 00:21:26,840
And the older generations believed that children should be seen and not heard,
264
00:21:26,840 --> 00:21:32,360
and that the youth's voice and ideas, they should be silenced and just do what they're told.
265
00:21:32,360 --> 00:21:37,160
Just be formed into the person that current society wants them to be,
266
00:21:37,160 --> 00:21:39,080
apathetic and unquestioning followers.
267
00:21:39,080 --> 00:21:46,440
And I think maybe because we are spending more time with our children and treating them as people
268
00:21:46,440 --> 00:21:52,840
more so and not farm hands or whatever, you hear how Gen Z's constantly being considered more
269
00:21:52,840 --> 00:21:55,160
empathetic and kind toward each other.
270
00:21:55,160 --> 00:22:00,440
And I think it's because their parents are the ones who started this.
271
00:22:00,440 --> 00:22:00,920
Okay.
272
00:22:00,920 --> 00:22:06,760
I was going to agree with Russ that while we were all children listening to Green Day's
273
00:22:06,760 --> 00:22:11,320
Liquid Dookie record, we were coming up with better ways to be parents.
274
00:22:11,320 --> 00:22:15,400
That we were going to unleash on the world when it was time.
275
00:22:15,400 --> 00:22:17,320
Yeah, they had a plan all along.
276
00:22:17,320 --> 00:22:22,440
In 2005, Million Dead broke up and Frank Turner has gone on record just talking about how
277
00:22:22,440 --> 00:22:26,520
at the end, everybody wanted to kill each other and they were just riding around in this van.
278
00:22:26,520 --> 00:22:31,960
And he was proud of the music they made, but that band had to break up.
279
00:22:31,960 --> 00:22:37,080
So he broke out and has turned it into a very successful solo career.
280
00:22:37,080 --> 00:22:44,520
And the solo song that I'm picking tonight is called Four Simple Words off of his tape deck heart album.
281
00:22:44,520 --> 00:22:54,520
[Music]
282
00:22:54,520 --> 00:23:20,520
[Music]
283
00:23:20,520 --> 00:23:21,800
I like the way that song starts.
284
00:23:21,800 --> 00:23:24,360
I feel like this dude, he's making good music.
285
00:23:24,360 --> 00:23:25,480
It's interesting.
286
00:23:25,480 --> 00:23:27,160
It's kind of strange.
287
00:23:27,160 --> 00:23:31,560
That stylistic variation genre shift that they do where it's like he just repeats it again,
288
00:23:31,560 --> 00:23:33,560
but in a totally different style.
289
00:23:33,560 --> 00:23:34,280
That's fun.
290
00:23:34,280 --> 00:23:34,760
Yeah.
291
00:23:34,760 --> 00:23:36,600
He calls this his queen song.
292
00:23:36,600 --> 00:23:37,560
Yeah, I could see that.
293
00:23:37,560 --> 00:23:38,440
Yeah, I picked that up.
294
00:23:38,440 --> 00:23:40,520
Structure kind of like Bohemian Rhapsody.
295
00:23:40,520 --> 00:23:41,640
Yeah, definitely.
296
00:23:41,640 --> 00:23:46,200
So Frank Turner's Four Simple Words, it speaks to me on many levels.
297
00:23:46,200 --> 00:23:50,280
One of the opening lyrics is, "Colleagues and friends condescend with a smile,
298
00:23:50,280 --> 00:23:51,400
but this is my culture.
299
00:23:51,400 --> 00:23:52,520
This is my home."
300
00:23:52,520 --> 00:23:53,400
And I get that.
301
00:23:53,400 --> 00:23:55,480
I feel like he's talking about the punk rock scene.
302
00:23:55,480 --> 00:23:55,880
Yeah.
303
00:23:55,880 --> 00:23:58,680
And I feel like I deal with that every week with you guys.
304
00:23:58,680 --> 00:23:59,160
Right?
305
00:23:59,160 --> 00:24:01,320
He's like, "Oh, yeah, great.
306
00:24:01,320 --> 00:24:02,120
Cool.
307
00:24:02,120 --> 00:24:02,600
Nice one.
308
00:24:02,600 --> 00:24:03,080
Good one.
309
00:24:03,080 --> 00:24:04,120
Okay, moving on.
310
00:24:04,120 --> 00:24:05,960
Let's get to the music that we do like."
311
00:24:05,960 --> 00:24:07,960
Let's cut him off a lot and just see what happens.
312
00:24:07,960 --> 00:24:11,160
Yeah, we only have him here for our own enjoyment.
313
00:24:11,160 --> 00:24:16,680
So he's talking about the punk rock scene and pretty much the shows he's at or he goes to with
314
00:24:16,680 --> 00:24:19,880
like-minded people who just are there to have a good time, which I think is cool.
315
00:24:19,880 --> 00:24:20,360
Right.
316
00:24:20,360 --> 00:24:21,800
I think we all understand that.
317
00:24:21,800 --> 00:24:25,160
There's just some lines in here where I'm like, "Man," and I feel like it's where I'm at.
318
00:24:25,160 --> 00:24:29,640
There's the one where he's talking about he wants bands that work really hard and that they drive
319
00:24:29,640 --> 00:24:35,080
a thousand miles on no sleep and then they show it up to play super hard and then they
320
00:24:35,080 --> 00:24:40,760
move on to the next one and that whole mentality of just being a hardworking band.
321
00:24:40,760 --> 00:24:43,080
And I feel like, you know how I feel about hard work.
322
00:24:43,080 --> 00:24:43,320
Yeah.
323
00:24:43,320 --> 00:24:47,560
You think that it's equally important to kindness and helpfulness?
324
00:24:47,560 --> 00:24:48,840
Corvav, use.
325
00:24:49,800 --> 00:24:49,960
Yeah.
326
00:24:49,960 --> 00:24:50,680
Yeah.
327
00:24:50,680 --> 00:24:56,600
But I think to see a band that you know is just traveling that isn't, especially living luxury,
328
00:24:56,600 --> 00:25:00,760
and they're going out there and they're just killing it night after night, just putting on
329
00:25:00,760 --> 00:25:01,480
electric shows.
330
00:25:01,480 --> 00:25:02,040
Yeah.
331
00:25:02,040 --> 00:25:03,560
That band wants to be there.
332
00:25:03,560 --> 00:25:09,720
You cannot fake putting on a crazy energetic show bouncing around all night.
333
00:25:09,720 --> 00:25:12,040
I think you just get burned out if you weren't into it.
334
00:25:12,040 --> 00:25:15,320
Yeah, I think that's where punk rock, they're the real ones.
335
00:25:15,320 --> 00:25:17,080
You can't fake that.
336
00:25:17,080 --> 00:25:18,600
That's a real thing.
337
00:25:18,600 --> 00:25:22,360
Sometimes I go see legacy artists, I say legacy, I don't know.
338
00:25:22,360 --> 00:25:26,520
And then you're just like, "Man, they're getting paid a shit ton of money."
339
00:25:26,520 --> 00:25:28,600
And you're like, "You got to put a little more effort into that."
340
00:25:28,600 --> 00:25:30,200
I tend to stay away from-
341
00:25:30,200 --> 00:25:33,400
So you got your Neil Young and Crazy Horse tickets is what you're telling me?
342
00:25:33,400 --> 00:25:37,640
Dude, he'll go up there and he'll still grind his axe, man.
343
00:25:37,640 --> 00:25:42,200
Neil Young will impress you for an 80-year-old man.
344
00:25:42,200 --> 00:25:44,760
Envy his energy for sure.
345
00:25:44,760 --> 00:25:45,400
That's awesome.
346
00:25:45,400 --> 00:25:45,640
Yeah.
347
00:25:45,640 --> 00:25:48,120
And I think that's the band I want to see.
348
00:25:48,120 --> 00:25:48,520
Yeah.
349
00:25:48,520 --> 00:25:52,920
So earlier, Geoff said that, he said, "Man, nobody goes to opening bands."
350
00:25:52,920 --> 00:25:55,000
But I fucking go to see the opening band.
351
00:25:55,000 --> 00:25:55,960
That's where I go see, right?
352
00:25:55,960 --> 00:25:56,440
Yeah.
353
00:25:56,440 --> 00:26:00,760
Toward the end of the song, he's talking about how somebody told him that guitars were going
354
00:26:00,760 --> 00:26:05,080
out of fashion and he's like, "Man, that shit wasn't fashionable when I fell in love with it."
355
00:26:05,080 --> 00:26:09,720
And then my favorite line of the whole song is, "If the hipsters move on, why should I give a fuck?"
356
00:26:09,720 --> 00:26:11,000
Which I'm like, "Man, that's great."
357
00:26:11,000 --> 00:26:15,720
That's the mentality or the attitude, which is cool because I feel like Rock and Roll has been
358
00:26:15,720 --> 00:26:19,800
dying ever since I've been listening to it. But what does it mean, right? It's dying because you
359
00:26:19,800 --> 00:26:24,760
can't go to a club and grind to it or that it doesn't attract millions and millions of listeners
360
00:26:24,760 --> 00:26:31,240
and pack 96,000 people into a stadium. I mean, I'm not denying that. I guess several bands have
361
00:26:31,240 --> 00:26:35,720
traded in their guitars for synths, wouldn't you say? And I think that's fine if that's what they
362
00:26:35,720 --> 00:26:36,360
want to do.
363
00:26:36,360 --> 00:26:40,920
But I'm glad you brought this up, Russ, because when Rock and Roll was hegemonic, when it was the
364
00:26:40,920 --> 00:26:46,760
number one thing, which has now been surpassed by hip hop, hip hop is way more popular.
365
00:26:46,760 --> 00:26:47,800
Yeah, for sure.
366
00:26:47,800 --> 00:26:53,400
And so it was like whatever you would call Taylor Swift. That's the big stuff now and that's
367
00:26:53,400 --> 00:27:00,840
what it is. But when Rock was the number one thing, it sucked. It was horrible. It was like
368
00:27:00,840 --> 00:27:07,880
fucking Skid Row and Motley Crue and shit. That's what we were treated to when Rock was
369
00:27:09,080 --> 00:27:10,680
the greatest thing.
370
00:27:10,680 --> 00:27:12,440
Oh, no, I hear it. Yeah.
371
00:27:12,440 --> 00:27:18,680
So maybe it's better that Rock is kind of like in the resistance. It's underground a little bit.
372
00:27:18,680 --> 00:27:23,400
That's a really good point. I like that. I think you're probably right. Maybe it is good that Rock
373
00:27:23,400 --> 00:27:25,960
is fighting to stay alive in its own way.
374
00:27:25,960 --> 00:27:29,800
Yeah. You ever hear that expression, you fall in love and you get fat? I feel like that happened
375
00:27:29,800 --> 00:27:32,520
to rock music. People fell in love with it and then it just like...
376
00:27:32,520 --> 00:27:34,440
Love makes you fat.
377
00:27:35,160 --> 00:27:41,560
Love makes you fat, totally. I don't hold a lot of affinity for some of the hair metal bands of
378
00:27:41,560 --> 00:27:45,640
that era, certainly. I was listening to Amy Grant at that time.
379
00:27:45,640 --> 00:27:51,640
Baby, baby, I love you like my father.
380
00:27:51,640 --> 00:28:02,840
I want you to take me to the mall and get some leather stuff for me.
381
00:28:02,840 --> 00:28:04,200
Wait, what?
382
00:28:04,200 --> 00:28:05,480
What are you over at?
383
00:28:05,480 --> 00:28:08,040
You want me to take you to get leather?
384
00:28:08,040 --> 00:28:17,320
I will say that if you get injured, the best person to have around is Dave. Honestly,
385
00:28:17,320 --> 00:28:23,400
I know this from experience, we used to work as stage hands together at a performing art center.
386
00:28:23,400 --> 00:28:29,560
We were putting the seating element together. A bar came down and hit Karen directly on top of
387
00:28:29,560 --> 00:28:34,120
the head and it was like a big metal bar. It was the equivalent of she basically got hit in the
388
00:28:34,120 --> 00:28:37,640
head with a bat, like a Louisville slugger to the skull.
389
00:28:37,640 --> 00:28:39,720
Jeez, man.
390
00:28:39,720 --> 00:28:47,320
She falls down on the ground and I was just simply processing the series of events. I was
391
00:28:47,320 --> 00:28:51,960
sitting here looking at her like, "Oh man, you just got fucking cranked in the head by that
392
00:28:51,960 --> 00:28:58,200
seating element. Oh, are you okay?" She was dazed and obviously bleeding. I was just trying to
393
00:28:58,200 --> 00:29:06,680
communicate with her and Dave meanwhile was ripping his undershirt into to make a skull cap for her.
394
00:29:06,680 --> 00:29:12,840
This is true by the time I was even processing what was up and then he scooped her up and got
395
00:29:12,840 --> 00:29:20,120
her to the hospital somehow, all in what felt like five seconds and it was incredible.
396
00:29:20,120 --> 00:29:26,600
I was just like, "Anyways, do you think we're still going to go get coffee later or are you hurt?"
397
00:29:26,600 --> 00:29:28,600
[laughter]
398
00:29:28,600 --> 00:29:30,440
That's Boy Scout training, huh, Dave?
399
00:29:30,440 --> 00:29:35,800
Yeah, Boy Scouts grew up with all that and everything, Eagle Scout and such, but that's
400
00:29:35,800 --> 00:29:40,520
first aid stuff that we learn or whatever. I actually did do the Heimlich maneuver one time
401
00:29:40,520 --> 00:29:47,880
at work years later in 2012. I was working at an apartment store out in California. I ran
402
00:29:47,880 --> 00:29:48,760
restaurants for them.
403
00:29:48,760 --> 00:29:51,480
That sounded like the beginning of a story from a Westerner.
404
00:29:51,480 --> 00:30:02,280
I was working at an old diner in the stage coach era just on the other side where the '49s first
405
00:30:02,280 --> 00:30:10,520
pissed the tits. Wait, what? When did you do that?
406
00:30:10,520 --> 00:30:19,880
One of my coworkers was eating lunch and started choking and I had to do the Heimlich maneuver.
407
00:30:20,440 --> 00:30:23,400
I was like, "Hey, I put my hands in my throat. Are you choking?"
408
00:30:23,400 --> 00:30:29,800
They're like, "I couldn't breathe or whatever." They were doing the choking motion. I was like,
409
00:30:29,800 --> 00:30:33,160
"Okay, cool." I went around and I said, "I'm going to do the Heimlich. Is that okay?"
410
00:30:33,160 --> 00:30:40,680
They're like, "Whatever." I got around there and I gave it a jerk and it didn't come out.
411
00:30:40,680 --> 00:30:45,560
I was like, "I've repositioned and got my back into it and out of game." Then it was like,
412
00:30:45,560 --> 00:30:50,040
I don't know, it happened in 30 seconds. People were all just looking around and saying,
413
00:30:50,040 --> 00:30:54,040
"What happened just there? Are you okay?"
414
00:30:54,040 --> 00:30:59,480
Did they think that you were making a move on her like a humpback gorilla?
415
00:30:59,480 --> 00:31:06,200
I just caught feelings like in the middle of lunch.
416
00:31:06,200 --> 00:31:14,120
Jesus. We're just trying to have a sandwich, dude.
417
00:31:17,960 --> 00:31:22,200
It's one of the reasons why they don't recommend having an erection when you perform the Heimlich.
418
00:31:22,200 --> 00:31:34,520
Conk to me, it's my turn to go. Unlike Geoff, I went with some actual cool songs that are good.
419
00:31:34,520 --> 00:31:43,080
Dom Delouise laughed at that, but Jesus.
420
00:31:43,960 --> 00:31:48,440
It's a little British band in 1967 by the band Traffic.
421
00:31:48,440 --> 00:31:49,240
Oh, yeah.
422
00:31:49,240 --> 00:31:52,920
The song that I'm picking first is Dear Mr. Fantasy.
423
00:31:52,920 --> 00:31:57,880
[music]
424
00:31:57,880 --> 00:32:02,840
[music]
425
00:32:02,840 --> 00:32:10,840
[music]
426
00:32:10,840 --> 00:32:18,840
[music]
427
00:32:18,840 --> 00:32:24,840
[music]
428
00:32:24,840 --> 00:32:30,840
[music]
429
00:32:30,840 --> 00:32:37,800
Yeah, man. It's a psych rock song from the late '60s. Mid to late, was it '67?
430
00:32:37,800 --> 00:32:41,320
While Steve Winwood didn't actually write that song, he did the music.
431
00:32:41,320 --> 00:32:45,160
I am going to focus a little bit on the Steve Winwood element here.
432
00:32:45,160 --> 00:32:51,320
But yeah, I like that song a lot. It's one of those that has kind of come back into the pop
433
00:32:51,320 --> 00:32:57,640
culture world as it was used in the Avengers Endgame movie when Tony Stark is looking at
434
00:32:57,640 --> 00:33:03,400
old pictures and stuff. It is a psych rock classic and been covered by a bunch of bands like Grateful
435
00:33:03,400 --> 00:33:10,440
Dead, Crosby Stills, and Nash. It's a long one. Their live performances of it go 10 minutes long.
436
00:33:10,440 --> 00:33:13,800
Did they fade out with the solo going?
437
00:33:13,800 --> 00:33:18,040
Yeah, yeah. The engineer was just like, "That's enough."
438
00:33:19,000 --> 00:33:22,760
[laughter]
439
00:33:22,760 --> 00:33:27,960
There's a lot of late '60s drug references in there and talking about getting to a higher
440
00:33:27,960 --> 00:33:32,600
plane and that flute solo is a real trippy kind of feel to it.
441
00:33:32,600 --> 00:33:35,720
Dave's always been a sucker for flute solos.
442
00:33:35,720 --> 00:33:40,280
I love a good flute. The lady I took to Senior Prom, she was in the band and she played the flute.
443
00:33:40,280 --> 00:33:41,720
So maybe there is something there.
444
00:33:41,720 --> 00:33:43,480
The skin flute? I bet she did.
445
00:33:43,480 --> 00:33:45,080
[laughter]
446
00:33:45,080 --> 00:33:52,840
I did not say that. She played the instrument of the flute, not the coddly guys killing me.
447
00:33:52,840 --> 00:33:59,000
But yeah, so this was the titular single off of their debut record.
448
00:33:59,000 --> 00:34:00,200
Half titular.
449
00:34:00,200 --> 00:34:06,760
Dear Mr. Fantasy is the name of the record as well as, oh, is it just Mr. Fantasy, the album?
450
00:34:06,760 --> 00:34:09,800
Please don't be discovering an insignificant--
451
00:34:09,800 --> 00:34:13,160
Oh, the album is just titled Mr. Fantasy.
452
00:34:14,040 --> 00:34:16,520
So it's a half titular song. Yeah.
453
00:34:16,520 --> 00:34:17,880
Great band, great song.
454
00:34:17,880 --> 00:34:24,200
Love it. But unexplained departure, Steve Winwood never really says a clear explanation,
455
00:34:24,200 --> 00:34:30,200
but rumor has it that there was a little bit of a disagreement between guitars, Dave Mason,
456
00:34:30,200 --> 00:34:35,640
and he left the band. And then the other three just kind of wanted to pursue more bluesy,
457
00:34:35,640 --> 00:34:39,000
more folk sound. And so they all went separate ways.
458
00:34:39,000 --> 00:34:43,560
And Stevie Wynwood's like, "Okay, cool. I'm going to go dominate the airwaves for a while.
459
00:34:43,560 --> 00:34:44,600
You chumps."
460
00:34:44,600 --> 00:34:49,000
Good luck. Good luck making your solo Dave Mason record turd.
461
00:34:49,000 --> 00:34:54,280
You know, it was a little bit of a change in direction this next song that I've got,
462
00:34:54,280 --> 00:34:59,480
but it is Steve Winwood's "Higher Love" that is my solo pick.
463
00:34:59,480 --> 00:35:11,400
[music]
464
00:35:11,400 --> 00:35:30,680
[music]
465
00:35:30,680 --> 00:35:34,120
It's just another one that's like, let's make a three and a half minute song,
466
00:35:34,120 --> 00:35:36,520
five minute song. It's happening again.
467
00:35:36,520 --> 00:35:40,280
Something about the 80s. Yeah.
468
00:35:40,280 --> 00:35:41,720
That's almost a six minute song.
469
00:35:41,720 --> 00:35:46,200
Got some average male penis length there.
470
00:35:46,200 --> 00:35:48,840
What's the higher love that he's been waiting for?
471
00:35:48,840 --> 00:35:49,960
What are we talking about?
472
00:35:49,960 --> 00:35:54,920
Well, so they do talk a little bit about transcending beyond a romantic love,
473
00:35:54,920 --> 00:35:59,800
but they were like a spiritual thing. So with a partner or with God,
474
00:35:59,800 --> 00:36:02,040
what are we talking about?
475
00:36:02,040 --> 00:36:04,840
It could be whatever you want it to be.
476
00:36:04,840 --> 00:36:06,120
Is it on an airplane?
477
00:36:09,160 --> 00:36:13,480
So back before we had text messages, artists would get together and they would record songs
478
00:36:13,480 --> 00:36:18,680
to each other to kind of like send dick pics. And this is like, "Hey, do you want to go on a plane
479
00:36:18,680 --> 00:36:21,560
and get higher love?" Is that what we're thinking?
480
00:36:21,560 --> 00:36:24,280
What year did you say the traffic song came out?
481
00:36:24,280 --> 00:36:26,920
'67, I think is what I said.
482
00:36:26,920 --> 00:36:27,880
What year did this come out?
483
00:36:27,880 --> 00:36:29,640
This was in '86.
484
00:36:29,640 --> 00:36:30,920
So 19 years?
485
00:36:30,920 --> 00:36:35,640
19 years. So he wrote that song when he was 19 years old and he wrote this song,
486
00:36:35,640 --> 00:36:39,080
or he wrote the music for that song when he was 19 years old and he wrote this song
487
00:36:39,080 --> 00:36:43,960
with... He worked with James Horner to write the lyrics for this song. He wrote
488
00:36:43,960 --> 00:36:49,000
"My Heart Will Go On." So it's like, it's kind of maybe where the contribution for like a
489
00:36:49,000 --> 00:36:55,240
introspective yearning nature of the lyrics comes from. But James Horner's got his touch on it.
490
00:36:55,240 --> 00:36:56,600
Yeah, that's cool.
491
00:36:56,600 --> 00:37:01,080
But no, it's just a fun song. It's like, you know, easy breezy, beautiful cover girl,
492
00:37:01,080 --> 00:37:05,640
if you know what I mean. So I heard more of the new Beyonce record and I feel like
493
00:37:05,640 --> 00:37:09,240
she just heard a Lumineers record and was like, "I can clap stomp."
494
00:37:09,240 --> 00:37:17,240
That's hilarious. Clap stomp, clap stomp, clap, clap stomp.
495
00:37:17,240 --> 00:37:23,000
I know. Oh, and they yell, "Hey, hey, ho!"
496
00:37:23,000 --> 00:37:29,480
I love that she's fucking with country music and I love the whole project of it.
497
00:37:29,480 --> 00:37:33,640
But do you think that Beyonce's "Jolene" is as good as the original "Jolene"?
498
00:37:33,640 --> 00:37:36,680
I think it's an interesting take. I really appreciate where she's coming from.
499
00:37:36,680 --> 00:37:43,800
That is such a horse ass dude. Listen, I think Beyonce's awesome. It's not about her.
500
00:37:43,800 --> 00:37:44,840
I'm just saying.
501
00:37:44,840 --> 00:37:48,840
Hey, we are not going to become the pod that says like Beyonce is not awesome.
502
00:37:48,840 --> 00:37:50,440
So get your fucking shit in line.
503
00:37:50,440 --> 00:37:53,240
That's exactly what I didn't say.
504
00:37:53,240 --> 00:38:00,360
There are five million people that are going to come and kill you. They're called the Beehive.
505
00:38:00,360 --> 00:38:05,000
I would say one of the best concerts I've ever been to was Beyonce's "Superdome."
506
00:38:05,000 --> 00:38:11,160
Like I've seen her play and it's amazing. She's incredible. And I love Destiny's Child.
507
00:38:11,160 --> 00:38:15,480
But this country record is not good, is what I'm saying.
508
00:38:15,480 --> 00:38:18,360
It's a great Beyonce record. It's not supposed to be a-
509
00:38:18,360 --> 00:38:20,280
Well, it's being billed as a country record.
510
00:38:20,280 --> 00:38:24,520
That's just to get her a whole second group of people to buy albums.
511
00:38:24,520 --> 00:38:27,400
Yeah, she needs some different awards, right?
512
00:38:27,400 --> 00:38:30,120
Why are we arguing about something we agree about?
513
00:38:30,120 --> 00:38:31,240
It doesn't make any sense.
514
00:38:31,240 --> 00:38:33,800
What the hell's wrong with you?
515
00:38:33,800 --> 00:38:36,280
It's so late. It's so late.
516
00:38:36,280 --> 00:38:38,920
That's going to do it for us today here at Sixpix Music Club.
517
00:38:38,920 --> 00:38:41,000
Thank you, listeners, always for joining us.
518
00:38:41,000 --> 00:38:45,240
If you have any solo artists that you think are better than ours,
519
00:38:45,240 --> 00:38:49,080
go ahead and shoot us an email at the website, sixpixmusic.club,
520
00:38:49,080 --> 00:38:52,280
or comment on the YouTube @sixpixmusic.
521
00:38:52,280 --> 00:38:56,600
Thanks again. I'm Dave, and we will see you next time here at Sixpix Music Club.
522
00:38:57,240 --> 00:39:01,240
This episode of Sixpix Music Club was produced by Finn Gomias.
523
00:39:01,240 --> 00:39:06,920
Edited by Isaac D. Snuts.
524
00:39:06,920 --> 00:39:10,440
With special thanks as always to Dixie Rex.
525
00:39:10,440 --> 00:39:20,440
[MUSIC]