A Song Per Day
"A great song mutates, makes quantum leaps, turns up again like the prodigal son. It crosses genres. Could be punk rock, ragtime, folk-rock, or zydeco, and can be played in a lot of different styles, multiple styles... A great song is the sum of all things." - Bob Dylan
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Hello Angel - Sandie Shaw
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Harmony Hall - Vampire Weekend
This song is a shape-shifter, constantly reconfiguring itself without ever losing momentum. It begins in bright, crisp indie pop, all clean lines and forward motion, before loosening into a sunlit, almost loping country-rock groove. By the time the baroque touches of piano flourishes arrive, the song has quietly expanded into something more ornate. Thus it keeps sparking my interest despite the length. There's a clear lineage back to Paul Simon in the melodic phrasing and rhythmic buoyancy, but Vampire Weekend keep it restless; it never drags, each structural turn refreshing the ear. As is often the case with Simon's best work, lyrical cynicism hides under the brightness here as well: "Anger wants a voice, voices wanna sing / Singers harmonize 'til they can't hear anything / I thought that I was free from all that questionin' / But every time a problem ends, another one begins."
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Honey - Drugdealer
Monday, April 27, 2026
Hot Burrito #1 - The Flying Burrito Brothers
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Hallo Bimmelbahn - Nighttrain
Saturday, April 25, 2026
I Killed Sally's Lover - The Avett Brothers
Friday, April 24, 2026
Dying Crapshooter's Blues - Blind Willie McTell
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Fixin' To Die Blues - Bukka White
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
I Don't Intend To Die In Egyptland - Josh White
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
I Feel Like I'm Fixin' To Die Rag - Country Joe and the Fish
Songs Of Opposition, 1965
Okay, first, I always assumed, probably like many other people, that the Fish was the backing band, like the E Street Band. Well, it's actually meant to be one guy, Barry "The Fish" Melton, the guitarist. This version of the famous protest rag isn't the one most often played, the live version preceded by "The Fish Cheer." It's an earlier, more folky version, released before the band even recorded their first album. Well, this is a fantastic protest song, and I can't believe I never sat down and gave it a proper listen over the decades. It summarizes the jingoistic industrial-military-Wall Street complex that got the United States mired in Vietnam, encapsulates the nihilistic bleakness of the era ("Whoopie, we're all gonna die!"), with black humor and dark irony. "Come on fathers don't hesitate / Send your sons off before it's too late / And you can be the first one on your block / To have your boy come home in a box." Now that the enlistment age has been raised to 42, this song's even more applicable today.
Hello Angel - Sandie Shaw
Hello Angel - Sandie Shaw 3:20 Hello Angel , 1988 Written by Sandie Shaw and Chris Andrews The title track of Shaw's "comeback...
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No Weather - Brian Fallon 2:39 The Revival Tour 2011 Collections , 2011 Written by Brian Fallon Fallon, the vocalist for the excellent band...
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If Ever I Stray - Frank Turner 2:54 England Keep My Bones , 2011 Written by Frank Turner and Nigel Powell In this rousing rocker, found on ...
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You Can't Divorce My Heart - Lefty Frizzell 2:54 single, 1955 Written by Chuck Rogers Despite the poor-lonesome-me sentiment of the lyr...