Friday, March 13, 2026

The Tempest - The Real McKenzies

The Tempest - The Real McKenzies
4:09
Westwinds, 2012
Written by the Real McKenzies

This song starts off with just bagpipes and a steady single drum beat. The pipes fade out a few seconds in, and the Paul McKenzie's vocals start with the metronome beat behind him, until the band kicks in.  The lyrics begin with a lift from Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Social Contract: "We are all born free but forever live in chains."  It's sung from the point of view of galley slaves, who sing to keep their spirits up while plotting escape: "We carry on the burden and we hide our grimace well / For the day will come for us to mutiny / But as long as we survive our hope and pride they can't deprive."  It's a perfect blend of Cletic punk, sea shanty, and modern swagger.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Too Much Time - Televisionaries

Too Much Time - Televisionaries
2:08
Mad About You, 2022
Written by Austin Lake, Brendan Lake, Trevor Lake, and Aaron Mika

A jangly, late 1960s-style power pop song, heavy on the guitar and showy percussion, with splashes of surf rock and Merseybeat.  The narrator bemoans the lack of love in his life, interspersed with lyrics that are shallow hippie-inspired ramblings "Every war that's waged makes me cry / Every bird that goes by gets me high").  So the Lake brothers aren't exactly poets, but this is a catchy retro rock that gets your toes tapping.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Take Back the Power - The Interrupters

Take Back the Power - The Interrupters
3:21
The Interrupters, 2014
Written by Aimee Allen, Tim Armstrong, Jesse Bivona, Justin Bivona, Kevin Bivona

No need to bemoan the lack of Rancid releases when the Interrupters are around!  Armstrong's Clash fixation is apparent in the second verse of this protest song: "Whatcha gonna do / When they show up in black suits / On your street in army boots? / And they're there to silence you / What ya gonna say / When they strip your rights away?"  The song has all the Rancid hallmarks: a pounding ska beat, a singalong catchy chorus on repeat, and anti-authoritarian lyrics.  I always question how much the band had to do with the writing of their songs; I envision a sort of Prince vis a vis The Time situation.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Politics - Hank Penny

Politics - Hank Penny
2:57
single, 1947
Written by Phil Rickie

This is a rapid-fire talking blues with a pattern akin to "A Boy Named Sue," except with a sung chorus: "Politics oh politics / You've gotta know just how to vote."  Penny advises that for expediency's sake one should change one's vote to please the boss, an idea probably rejected by most progressive individualists.  But here's some timeless analysis too: "It ain't what you do, it's who you know / It's the same old thing wherever you go / If you've got connections then you're all right."  Then he pivots and goes into a riff about how if you have no money, your wife will leave you.  I feel like he went a bit off-script there, into something personal, or maybe just a little hilarious general misogyny.  So, not really the incisive skewering of the political landscape of 1947 America I was hoping for,

Monday, March 9, 2026

Polk Salad Annie - Tony Joe White

Polk Salad Annie - Tony Joe White
3:43
Black And White, 1969
Written by Tony Joe White

This song is about the titular girl who lives down in Louisiana, collecting polk, or poke weed in a tote sack for a meager supper for her family.  Her mama ("a wretched, spiteful, straight-razor-totin' woman") was working on a chain gang, and her dad was lazy and no-count ("he claimed he had a bad back").  The song describes a very real life of poverty; White said in an interview, "My folks raised cotton and corn. There were lotsa times when there weren't too much to eat, and I ain't ashamed to admit that we've often whipped up a mess of poke sallet."  Despite the very real poverty, the song is leavened by some dark humor "gators got her Granny — chomp chomp chomp")  The song's intro is spoken, while the verses are sung, and lively horns punctuate the choruses.  It's a starnge but groovy hybrid of humorous novelty and true-to-life, blue-eyed-soul social justice song.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Party Lights - Claudine Clark

Party Lights - Claudine Clark
2:23
Party Lights, 1962
Written by Claudine Clark

This song is sung from the point of view of a teenage girl who sees the beautiful party lights (red and blue and green) across the street, but her mother won't let her "make the scene."  Clark lists all the dance crazes of the era: they're doing the fish, the twist, the Watusi, the bop, and the mashed potato — and she's missing out.  She sees the pary goers filing in: "I see Tommy and Joe, uh-oh, and Betty and Sue / Whoa-oh, uh-oh, there goes my boyfriend too."  It's not clear whether he's with some other girl and this will cause drama; the tone of the song is simple yearning for fun, with Clark's girlish voice occasionally reaching a pleading growl over a marching-band drum line and party chatter.

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Party Like You - Cadillac Three

Party Like You - Cadillac Three
3:05
Bury Me in My Boots, 2016
Written by Jeren Johnston, Jon Nite, and Jimmy Robbins

This is a fast-paced Southern country rocker, clearly influenced by the fusion stylings of the loathsome Kid Rock, a little slang taken from the hiphop community ("cut off blues like damn you know it").  The song is about a hard-drinking good old boy who finds a real hottie in a bar.  Is there a twist, or even a meet-cute resolution, like in Cory Branan's terrific "Prettiest Waitress in Memphis"?  No.  Simple minds, simple pleasures.  "Little bit of drink, little wink wink / Tell me what you think / I've been lookin' for a party like you / You get dancing, hearts get stolen / Love the way the night is goin'."  Still, the whiskey-soaked hick-rock-rap is a good time. 

Friday, March 6, 2026

Psycho - Eddie Noack

Psycho - Eddie Noack
3:36
single, 1968
Written by Leon Payne

This eerie song, with its taboo subject for the time and its spooky deadpan delivery, is a confession to the narrator's mama: "Don't you think I'm psycho, Mama? / You can pour me a cup / If you think I'm psycho, mama / Better let 'em lock me up."  The narrator relates how he killed and buried his ex and her new man, as well as a little girl in the park with a wrench.  It's the conversational tone that really gives the song its chilling effect.  At the beginning of the song, he warns that he might handle the puppy too roughly if she hands it to him, and in a later verse, casually mentions he just killed it.  Near the end, as his confession winds down, it's apparent that the mama he's talking to is also dead.  It's wild that this 60 year old, calm portrait of homicidal insanity is so much more vivid and disturbing than all the glossy, affected "shout at the devil" shock rock that would come later.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Royals Style Punk - Puddles Pity Party

Royals Style Punk - Puddles Pity Party 
3:06
single, 2020
Written by Lorde and Joel Little, 2013

It's Cover Time! 

Backed by a fairly basic rock band, Puddles tears through "Royals" in what is very much not a punk style (except maybe the exuberant drums), but certainly as an uptempo bar rocker. Puddles' mellifluous, operatic voice is of course one of the most expressive instruments in music today, but here he rushes, and doesn't give himself a chance to really belt.  He also has released versions of this song straight, and in a reggae version, but this one scratches an itch I have for faster songs, and it's a testament to how brilliant the original is that all his versions work.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Lola - The Raincoats

Lola - The Raincoats
4:04
The Raincoats, 1979
Written by Ray Davies, 1970

It's Cover Time! 

This is a faithful, yet ragged and off-kilter take with quiet, reedy vocals that packs a lot of charm.  The Raincoats bring their fierce folk-punk sensibility to the song, with female harmonies, offbeat drumming fills, and lyrics that become gender-flipped twice over by virtue of being sung by a woman.  The result is a familiar song that suddenly feels stranger, funnier, and a touch more subversive.

The Tempest - The Real McKenzies

The Tempest - The Real McKenzies 4:09 Westwinds , 2012 Written by the Real McKenzies This song starts off with just bagpipes and a steady s...