home / subscribe / donate / tower / books / archives / search / links / feedback / events / faq
|
STEPHEN GREEN reports on the real motivations behind Israel's MISSILE STRIKE on SYRIA. PETER MONTAGUE on the NUCLEAR RENAISSANCE or How the Nuke Industry is using Gore's Prize and Global Warming to Plot Its Big Comeback. WILLIAM BLUM on the DEVALUING of "ANTI-SEMITE" or How to Make a Term Meaningless. Get your copy today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Remember contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now
|
|
October 20 / 21, 2007 Alexander
Cockburn October 19, 2007 John
Ross Sheldon
Rampton Rahul
Mahajan Devra
Davis Christopher
Brauchli Wadner
Pierre Bill
Quigley Website
of the Day
October 18, 2007 Saree
Makdisi Meg
Dwyer Alevtina
Rea Norman
Solomon Kristoffer
Larsson Harvey
Wasserman Website
of the Day
October 17, 2007 Steve
Niva Andy
Worthington Alan
Farago Russell
Mokhiber Sharon
Smith Mike
Whitney Robert
Fantina Chris
Irwin Website
of the Day October 16, 2007 Peter
Linebaugh Paul
Findley Robert
Bryce Uri
Avnery Paul
Craig Roberts Ray
McGovern Norman
Solomon Martha
Rosenberg William
S. Lind Joel
S. Hirschborn Website
of the Day
October 15, 2007 Gary
Leupp Andy
Worthington Heather
Gray John
Walsh Joshua
Frank Dave
Lindorff Matt
Vidal Ali
Khan Sen.
Russ Feingold Johnny
Barber Website
of the Day October 13 / 14, 2007 Alexander
Cockburn Wajahat
Ali Jeffrey
St. Clair Ralph
Nader David Heleniak Laura Carlsen Brian Cloughley Richard Rhames Ron Jacobs Fred Gardner John Ross Russell Hoffman Missy Beattie Poets' Basement Website of the Day
Cindy
Sheehan Brendan
Cooney Alan
Farago Jan
Oberg M.
Shahid Alam David
Macaray Julia
Kendlbacher Peter
Rost, MD Website
of the Day
Al
Giordano Saul
Landau Jacob
G. Hornberger William
S. Lind Joshua
Frank Josh
Mahan Pat
Williams
October 10, 2007 Michael
Yates Gary
Leupp David
Macaray Alan
Farago Tom
Clifford Col.
Douglas MacGregor Sunsara
Taylor George
Wuerthner Roxanne
Dunbar-Ortiz Michael
Dickinson Website
of the Day
October 9, 2007 Paul
Craig Roberts Andy
Worthington Alan
Farago Brian
Eno David
Rovics Farzana
Versey Andrew
Buncombe Website
of the Day
October 8, 2007 David
Macaray Jeff
Ballinger Brian
Eno Christopher
Brauchli Louay
Safi Matt
Reichel Dave
Lindorff Thomas
P. Healy Martha
Rosenberg Richard
Rhames Website
of the Day
October 6 / 7, 2007 Alexander
Cockburn Norman
Finkelstein James
Bovard Patrick
Cockburn Jeffrey
St. Clair Ralph
Nader Ray
McGovern Saul
Landau Ben
Tripp Terry
Lodge Seth
Sandronsky Kevin
Funk / Steve Fake Missy
Beattie Website
of the Weekend
October 5, 2007 Andy
Worthington David
Macaray Lee
Sustar Dan
La Botz Aaron
Hess William
A. Cook Website
of the Day
October 4, 2007 Uri
Avnery Dave
Marsh Valerio
Volpi Cecilie
Surasky Dave
Lindorff Norman
Solomon Laura
Carlsen Walter
Brasch Ben
Terrall William
S. Lind Website
of the Day
October 3, 2007 Vijay
Prashad Anita
Sinha Winslow
T. Wheeler Sharon
Smith Jeff
Leys Sen.
Russ Feingold Mohamad
Bazzi Brenda
Norrell Robert
Weissman Website
of the Day
October 2, 2007 Ibrahim
Warde Gary
Leupp David
Macaray Conn
Hallinan John
Ross Alan
Farago Sonja
Karkar Niranjan
Ramakrishnan Website
of the Day
October 1, 2007 Al
Giordano Paul
Craig Roberts Moshe Adler Ingmar Lee John V. Walsh Norman Solomon Roger Burbach Ramzy Baroud Stephen Lendman Susie Day Website of the Day
September 29 / 30, 2007 Alexander
Cockburn Uri
Avnery Andrew
Cockburn Jeffrey
St. Clair Wajahat
Ali Andy
Worthington Don
Santina Ralph
Nader Fred
Gardner Seth
Sandronsky Gideon
Levy William
S. Lind Reza
Fiyouzat Richard
Rhames David
Michael Green Zach
Mason Poets'
Basement Website
of the Weekend
September 28, 2007 Kathleen
and Bill Christison Roberto
J. González / Saul
Landau Tom
Clifford Christopher
Brauchli Martha
Rosenberg Dave
Zirin Laray
Polk Binoy
Kampmark James
McEnteer Website
of the Day
September 27, 2007 Alan
Farago Andy
Worthington Jonathan
Cook William
Hughes Ray
McGovern Ron
Jacobs Dave
Lindorff Joshua
Frank Anne
Dachel Website
of the Day
Bill
Quigley Paul
Craig Roberts Jeff
Kisseloff China
Hand Behzad
Yaghmaian Sonja
Karkar Mike
Ferner Col.
Dan Smith Clifton
Ross Brenda
Norrell Website
of the Day
September 25, 2007 Nicole
Colson Uri
Avnery Brendan
Cooney Harry
Browne Marjorie
Cohn David
Macaray Ralph
Nader Dan
Bacher Anthony
Papa Christopher
Ketcham Website
of the Day
September 24, 2007 George
Ciccariello-Maher Saree Makdisi David
Keen Sherwood
Ross Ron
Jacobs Donna
Saggia Mike
Ferner Malini
Johar Schueller Monique
Dols Website
of the Day
Alexander
Cockburn Jennifer
Loewenstein Linn
Washington, Jr. Jeffrey
St. Clair Alan
Farago Brian
Cloughley Robert
Fantina Roxanne
Dunbar-Ortiz Jason
Hribal David
Rosen Mike
Whitney John
V. Walsh Dave
Lindorff David
Michael Green Fred
Gardner Cassandra
Jones Roger
van Zwanenberg Poets'
Basement Website
of the Weekend
September 21, 2007 Karim
Makdisi M.
Shahid Alam Alan
Farago Joshua
Frank Dave
Zirin Kenneth
Couesbouc Dr.
Steffie Woolhandler and Dr. David Himmelstein Ben
Terrall Steve
Fournier Frederico
Fuentes, et al Website
of the Day
September 20, 2007 Kathleen
Christison Zoltan
Grossman Paul
Craig Roberts Stan
Cox Russell
Mokhiber Charles
Modiano Raymond
J. Lawrence Brendan
Cooney Website
of the Day
September 19, 2007 Paul
Craig Roberts Paul
Krassner Sgt.
Martin Smith Seth
Sandronsky Claud
Cockburn Victoria
Buch Robert
Weissman Mike
Ferner Dan
Bacher Website
of the Day
September 18, 2007 Mike
Whitney Alan
Farago John
Ross Ron
Jacobs Alex
Doherty September 17, 2007 Marjorie
Cohn Paul
Craig Roberts Ricardo
Alarcón Marc
Levy Eva
Liddell Website
of the Day Sept. 15-16, 2007 Alexander
Cockburn Vicente
Navarro Mike
Whitney Herman
Mindshaftgap Ellen
Cantarow Jordan
Flaherty Zachary
Hurwitz September 14, 2007 Debbie
Nathan Franklin
Lamb Patrick
Cockburn Farzana
Versey Alan
Farago Hank
Edson September 13, 2007 Patrick
Cockburn Scott
Vest, former Air Force Captain at Minot Andy
Worthington Michael
Baney Dr.
Susan Block September 12, 2007 Paul
Craig Roberts Stan
Goff William
Blum Manuel
Garcia Debbie
Nathan
![]()
![]()
Subscribe Online
|
Weekend
Edition Play It As It LaysPatti Scialfa's Passionate GambleBy DANIEL WOLFF You know how, when you first put on new music, you don't really pay attention to the words, or even the shape of the songs? You just listen to what it sounds like: get the general feel. When I first put on Patti Scialfa's new one, Play It As It Lays, what registered was this catchy, in-the-groove rock&roll and the voice of a woman with something to say. As the songs churned by, the band was clearly having a great time slipping from rhythm to rhythm, finding the hooks, remembering old tricks and inventing new ones. And the voice -- throaty, determined--kept insisting there was a story to tell, and it mattered. What the story was, I had no idea. And I wasn't particularly anxious to find out. I liked the heft of the music, the purposefulness. Meaning could come later. You know how, when you play new music a second time, parts of it jump out? Like landmarks, they locate where you are, even if it isn't totally clear how you got there or where you're going. On the opening cut, Scialfa's singing about looking for Elvis, looking for inspiration; I got that much from the chorus. The tune slips forward like a kind of modernized country blues, dense with echoing voices. The slide guitar, the harmonica, put you on a backcountry dirt road, but the slinky beat makes it sound like the interstate isn't far off. "Work a little harder," she's calling by the song's bridge, "if you want my trust." Who's she talking to? And why does it sound like she's found her man, but that's just a beginning? It was on the second cut that I got my bearings: actually, at one specific moment. Starts with a nice, laid-back beat; then that sweet but cutting lead voice; and then a big female chorus comes in -- "cry, cry, cry"--and Scialfa sings what almost seems like an aside: "Like any women would." And just before she finishes saying that, the chorus behind her goes: "doo-lang doo-lang doo-lang." Yea, that doo-lang: right off the old Chiffons' hit, "He's So Fine." It's a straight quote, clear
as day, calling up the whole early-sixties girl-group mix of
tender and tough. Stops you right in your tracks, and you listen
for it when the chorus comes round again. In the space of a line,
the song travels from big, declarative, soul music sadness--"cry
cry cry"--to that sigh of recognition: "Like any woman
would." But when that's followed by the Chiffons with all
its memories and associations, it carves out a whole other turf:
Scialfa's own. This is music that You know how you try to clear a little space once music has grabbed your attention? Never mind the lyric sheet just yet, or who's playing what. But it's earned a closer listen. You start separating out individual cuts and the details within those cuts. So, the break on the doo-lang song is sung by a bluesy voice, not Scialfa's, that sounds like it comes from an era before rock&roll. As if we were on a search, and it was taking us back in time. And the song ends with the repeated circling of a needle on an old vinyl record. How do lovers make each other cry? Over and over again. Seems that backcountry dirt road leads to a town called Heartbreak. On the next cut, anyway, that's where the singer says she's living. The tune's got this "Heard-It-Through-the-Grapevine" groove thanks to a rhythm section so deep I had to sneak a look at the credits: producer Steve Jordan on drums, Clifford Carter on keyboards, and the unbelievable Willie Weeks on bass. Their laid-back pocket perfectly matches Scialfa's slurred voice, giving her time to talk about stuff she's now saying goes all the way back to Eve and Adam. Then, modulating up, she mentions this dream she's been having: a guy swinging a sledge hammer against cold stone. She doesn't have to say any more; the dark beat does that. If we wonder what he's breaking, we just got to remember the name of her town. You know how part of you doesn't want to work a little harder? I mean, to figure out how to be with someone: the fights, the tears, the late night talks. But also when you're listening to music: you just want to float with it. Scialfa gets that. Little conga beat, light organ riff (almost a calliope), and we're into a Latin shuffle. If her man doesn't want to work for her trust, that's fine. Play around with other women, she sings; play at being tough; play at some high-wire circus drama. Just don't bet on her staying. She'll slide out of the picture, thanks, quick and free as that conga. You want the pleasures of the surface? The cut after "Play Around" kicks off with this piercing electric guitar. (I sneak another look: Nils Lofgren.) And suddenly we're into a soul grind: a strut so thick with sex it sounds sticky. Again, Scialfa acknowledges where she's learned her moves: Stax horns morphing into electronica and a tip to that old Archie Bell song, "Tighten Up." But this time she invents her own "doo-lang." She has the back-up singers break down the glories of the bedroom into simple, hilarious shorthand: "sugar sugar sugar baby bang bang touch." You know how certain records have a through-line? Maybe you don't. These days, we do a lot of the sequencing ourselves: download a single -- put it on a mix tape with some others, or hit "random" -- and get jazzed by the changes. We're the dj, the author. Scialfa's songs have enough great hooks and beats that you could pull them and use them that way. But at some point, I realized this wasn't about singles. Or being single, for that matter. It's more about making connections. Connections between people and between songs. That's the land she's traveling through, and we probably should have known it from that first Chiffons' quote: a land where the past hooks up with the present, where lovers hook up (or try to), where one song hooks up with the next. That means you start listening differently. So, when a cut opens with an acoustic guitar, and Scialfa sings, "Oh -- such an ordinary start," it comes as a kind of confirmation when the slap beat kicks in, and the extended rhyme turns out to be: "for a day that ends with its intent to break your heart." The song's called "The Word," and she paraphrases "You Win Again," the Hank Williams country blues: "The word is out//I've been defeated." Then for the centerpiece, she lifts stanza and melody from that weird, girl-group tune that sounded like an old English ballad, "Sally Go Round the Roses." We're in a garden of haunted guitars. Scialfa's twenty-first century voice promises, "There's nothing in those roses that can hurt you now," and some ancient voice echoes in agreement. But it's as if each picked note drew blood. In a funny way, you could call Play It As It Lays a resistance record. A grown woman tries to resist caring so much. The band falls into a slow groove and just lets it go for a while. Enter Scialfa, sounding a little older, maybe even wiser: "I could have had it bad for you// and that's not good." It's not good to pay this much attention. Better to do that shuffle-off, or that sex-strut, than to get into all the hard work of loving. Once you hear the record as a kind of spiral, circling into its subject, connections begin to grow on their own. The soil's so fertilized--so harrowed back and forth with old songs and new--that Scialfa barely has to plant the seed, and great needy blossoms appear. "It's just that your bed looked so pretty," she begins--and never finishes the thought. "All right," she sings, "all right. It's understood." By then, even an up-tempo tribute to a woman racecar driver--all innocent fun like a Beach Boys song--had me waiting for the pay-off. "Run run run" goes the chorus, the beat banging along, and then the singer points out that a great driver gets great not by luck, of course, but through "miles of sweat, hard labor, and skill." There we are! Back on that same track, circling. And if you want to see the victory flag, you gotta work a little harder; stand and deliver. The cd climaxes with the title track. As author Joan Didion copped the title of her novel, "Play It As It Lays," out of the casinos--leave my bet where it is, thanks--Scialfa steals it back. "Sad song on the radio," she starts, and after putting us on an empty road (maybe that first dirt road?), she adds: "you know the one." We do. It's the one--the thousand and one--she's been referring to all along. And this cut, from the familiar thump of its first beat to the straining tone of her voice, is that song on the radio. It's almost like she's singing along to some famous and unknown ballad. "Play It As It Lays" doesn't try to resolve the hurt that couples do to each other. "You surrender// You confess// You make amends// You get undressed// And call it a night." The shudder of Scialfa's voice on the last note sounds both forgiveness and horror at the routines we fall into. The heart breaks; the wheel keeps spinning. To play it as it lays is to stick with your bet -- and it isn't play at all. After the grand title song, Scialfa adds a coda. It has the simple melody of a nursery rhyme. "I've been down your black ladder// I've been down your dark stairs// Tell me that our love matters// Tell me that you care." Barely two minutes, it lasts just long enough to circle back and reverse roles. So, the last line becomes: "I'll tell you darlin' that I still care." It's a kind of pledge of allegiance, sad and strong. You know how some music seems to call on you to dig a little deeper, to listen again? On the last cut, the singer half-whispers, "Tell me all my work is done." But she knows it isn't. And by now, so do we. Because that, finally, is what this rich, compelling music insists on: that human beings never quite get it right, and continue to need each other, and that it matters. Turns out that, yea, Play It As It Lays could be called a resistance record. But it doesn't resist caring too much; it resists giving up. Daniel Wolff is a poet and author of the excellent biography of the great Sam Cooke, You Send Me, as well as the recent collection of Ernest Withers' photographs The Memphis Blues Again. Wolff's Grammy-nominated essay on Sam Cooke and the Soul Stirrers is one of the highlights of CounterPunch's collection on art, music and sex: Serpents in the Garden. Wolff also wrote the text for the collection of Ernest Wither's photographs in Negro League Baseball. His latest book is 4th of July/Asbury Park: A History of the Promised Land (Bloomsbury USA) For the past year, he and director Jonathan Demme have been working on a documentary about post-Katrina New Orleans. He can be reached at: ziwolff@optonline.net
![]()
|
How the Press Led the US into War ![]() Buy End Times Now! CounterPunch Books of the Crossroads: HOW THE IRISH INVENTED SLANG By Daniel Cassidy AMERICAN BOOK AWARD! ![]() Click Here to Buy! Click Here for Dates & Venues Michael Neumann's Devastating Rebuttal of Alan Dershowitz ![]() Click Here to Buy! Saul Landau's Bush and Botox World with a Foreword by Gore Vidal ![]() Click Here to Order! How They Made a Killing on the War on Terrorism ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The Occupation by Patrick Cockburn ![]() ![]() ![]() Humanitarian Imperialism By Jean Bricmont ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() CITY BEAUTIFUL By Tennessee Reed ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Bruce Springsteen On Tour By Dave Marsh ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |