Red Shoes by the Drugstore - Blue Valentine [057]

And the conversation started so well... this week on Song by Song, Martin, Sam, Caspar and Elizabeth begin by debating the new musical arrangement that arrives in Red Shoes By The Drugstore, the second track from Blue Valentine, before swiftly getting derailed by rants about David Bowie, the loss of religion, Harrison Ford's sexiest screen performances (in or out of a bathroom) and Elizabeth's sax addiction. I think we broke the format on this one guys...

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Red Shoes by the Drugstore, Blue Valentine, Tom Waits (1978)

Love Theme - from Blade Runner, Blade Runner, Vangelis (1982/1994)

Let’s Dance, Let’s Dance, David Bowie (1983)

The Ballet of the Red Shoes, from The Red Shoes (Powell and Pressburger, 1948)

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Somewhere (from West Side Story) - Blue Valentine [056]

We're back! Sam and Martin return for another album from the Tom Waits back-catalogue, this season listening to and discussing his sixth release Blue Valentine. Joining us for the first tracks are Elizabeth Sankey and Caspar Salmon from the Highbrow Lowbrow podcast, discussing the many different levels of the song Somewhere (from West Side Story), the performance styles of both Waits and the original productions, and... potatoes. Another classic metaphor for music, only available from Song by Song.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Somewhere (from West Side Story), Blue Valentine, Tom Waits (1978)

Somewhere, West Side Story Motion Picture Soundtrack, Jim Bryant & Marni Nixon [w. Leonard Bernstein & Stephen Sondheim] (1961)

Somewhere (Ballet), West Side Story (Original Broadway Production), Max Goberman & West Side Story Ensemble [w. Leonard Bernstein & Stephen Sondheim] (1957)

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Season Six Teaser - Blue Valentine [055a]

Welcome back to Song by Song - we've had to take another couple of weeks between seasons to get some episodes in the can before Sam heads up to sunny Scotland for panto season (playing "Bewhiskered Victorian Gentleman #3" in Scrooge! at Pitlochry Festival Theatre; a mere 7 hours by train from London! Come one, come all...). But in the meantime, feast your ears on our upcoming guests. Season six on Blue Valentine will commence 16 November 2016. We'll see you there...

Foreign Affairs - a wrap-up

 No episode this week, while we get our romance warmed up for Blue Valentine... or cooled down... whichever floats your boat. But in the meantime we thought it was worth having a look back at season five. 

Having gone into the album with mixed feelings and various ideas about its inspiration, I think it's fair to say that we emerged with some attitudes changed. While neither of us became the greatest fans of Foreign Affairs, it's clear that Waits has begun experimenting with form and style earlier than we initially thought. Tracks like Muriel and I Never Talk To Strangers are strong examples of his style thus far, but Potter's Field and Burma-Shave (and even Cinny's Waltz to a degree) show the beginnings of a development which, as fans of his 80s work know, will bear very interesting fruit in the coming albums.

Our attempts to follow through on Bones Howe's assertion that Foreign Affairs was a film noir tribute album were... perhaps less than successful. While we enjoyed the diversion from the standard interval tracks into the work of Nicholas Ray and Sam Fuller, our pitch that a broad ideology spans all nine tracks didn't quite come together. The film parallels do stand up for certain tracks, and his interest in film both as an inspiration as well as a performance medium will continue through his career. But the grand narrative for this album... not so much.

One thing that we did enjoy this season was expanding our scope to include more than one guest at a time - Simon Renshaw and Sam Clements contributed immeasurably, and going into Blue Valentine we plan to have more duos as guests (y'gettit? Couples are like Valentines?)

But more than anything, I think we're starting to get to some of the reasons we wanted to do this podcast in general. Great as the 70s albums are, showing an artist emerging almost fully-formed, confident and capable, they can't illustrate the breadth and scope of his abilities as an artist. Only now, as we move towards his first creative shift, are we starting to see the beginnings of Waits's true genius, his talent for reinvention and reinterpretation, and the synthesis of his various interests.

So thanks to you all for jumping on the podcast with us, and for staying with it this far. We're both fully committed to seeing the project through, and we hope you'll stick with us. As always, any thoughts on upcoming tracks, let us know at all the usual places. 

Sam & Martin

Foreign Affair - Foreign Affairs [055]

Coming to the end of another season, Martin, Simon and the Sams discuss the resolution (or lack thereof) in the "concept" of this film-inspired album, as well as some of the charm and experimentation in the individual tracks on Foreign Affairs. With a certain amount of struggle to keep our shit together at the end of this very long, very hot recording session, the conversation breaks down for a while, but there's still some worthwhile… oh, forget it, we totally fall apart at the end here. Sorry folks, sorry. See you next season…

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Foreign Affair, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

Wherever I Lay My Hat (That's My Home), That Stubborn Kinda' Fella, Marvin Gaye (1963)

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Barber Shop - Foreign Affairs [054]

As Foreign Affairs edges towards its conclusion, Sam and Simon rejoin Sam and Martin for a quick haircut and an upbeat tune, as well as some confrontational discussion about the energy, technicality and commitment of four-part harmony as compared to the music of Tom Waits (who else?). With a bunch of diversions into the films of Alex Proyas, the music of “Weird Al” Yankovic and the beauty of glassblowing (it was very hot, so so hot, we got very distracted and hot, sorry), we deliver an enthusiastic (if slightly distracted) penultimate episode for season 5 of Song by Song.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Barber Shop, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day), That Lucky Old Sun, Crossroads/Beasley Smith & Haven Gillespie (2010/1949)

… or to watch them sing it live..

… and for silly fun…
Word Crimes, Mandatory Fun, “Weird Al” Yankovic (2014)


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Burma-Shave - Foreign Affairs [053]

Sam and Simon return to Song by Song for more film-inspired musical discussion as Tom Waits sings of doomed love on the dusty roads of America, heading to (or trapped in) a little town called Burma Shave. The physical appeal of Farley Granger and Cathy O'Donnell, the early successes and failures of Nicholas Ray's debut film They Live By Night and the roadside rhyming stylings of the Burma Shave adverts all feature in this week's episode.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Burma-Shave, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

They Live By Night (film), directed by Nicholas Ray (1948)


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Potter's Field - Foreign Affairs [052]

Out on the edge of Potter’s Field, Martin and Sam congregate with their latest guests to discuss film, music, storytelling and Communism. Sam Clements and Simon Henshaw of the Picturehouse Podcast weigh in on this track and the film that inspired it, Pickup On South Street. The musical stylings of film noir, the clarity (or lack thereof) of Waits’s storytelling and the dramatic performance of Thelma Ritter all feature as part of the discussion this week on Song by Song.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Potter’s Field, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

Pickup On South Street (film), directed by Samuel Fuller (1953)


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A Sight For Sore Eyes - Foreign Affairs [051]

More debates this week around the use of borrowed musical themes and unique personal songwriting, as Martin and Sam explore Tom Waits’s nostalgic return to a bar and it’s denizens in A Sight For Sore Eyes. With some disagreement over the value of specificity and generalising, and Sam’s inability to name Beatles, Song by Song returns for another track from Foreign Affairs.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
A Sight For Sore Eyes, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

Those Were The Days, Single, Mary Hopkin (1968)

Auld Lang Syne, The Sound of The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, The Royal Scots Dragoon Guards (2013)

Lullaby (Wiegelied, Op. 49, No. 4), Songs from the Arc of Life, Johannes Brahms/Yo-Yo Ma/Kathryn Stott (2015)

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Medley: Jack & Neal/California, Here I Come - Foreign Affairs [050]

Song by Song turns 50! Ignore the fact that we forgot and didn't mention on the podcast itself, it's a milestone episode! And to celebrate, Martin and Sam discuss a song... neither of them really enjoy. Yay? With a step back to a style already explored and defined in earlier tracks, a nod to a world that seems very different to the tone of the rest of the album, and some unusual lyrical choices, there are harsh assessments of this fourth track from Foreign Affairs.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Medley: Jack & Neal/California, Here I Come, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

California, Here I Come, The Best Of Al Jolson, Al Jolson (1921/2002)

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I Never Talk To Strangers - Foreign Affairs [049]

Martin and Sam continue by their lonesomes, but Waits welcomes a guest-host of his own as Bette Midler joins him for this episode of Song by Song. As Foreign Affairs moves into more noir-esque tones, we discuss some of the technical choices in Midler's voice and production, the impact on the world that creates, and whether that helps or hinders a song as a whole.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
I Never Talk to Strangers, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits/Bette Midler (1977)

Yellow Beach Umbrella, Broken Blossom, Bette Midler (1977)

I Never Talk To Strangers (Live), BBC recording, Tom Waits (1979)

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Muriel - Foreign Affairs [048]

This week on Song by Song, Sam and Martin take a look at the mournful yearning ballad, as well as one of its most successful reversals. Inevitably inviting comparisons with other "name of a girl" songs, Muriel is discussed in terms of Martha, Rosie, Maria and Jolene, but it ends up being the presence of Edie that has the greatest effect...

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Muriel, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

Jolene, Jolene, Dolly Parton (1973)

Muriel Cigar Advert, Edie Adams & Stan Getz (1965)

Alabama Song (Whiskey Bar), The Doors, The Doors (1967) Wikipedia information found here

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Cinny’s Waltz - Foreign Affairs [047]

The seemingly endless project continues! With only a bell-tree, a trumpet player and a sense of cinematic mystery to guide them, Martin and Sam return to Tom Waits to discuss his fifth album, Foreign Affairs, beginning with the instrumental track Cinny's Waltz. How the song functions as an opening track, the tone Waits is aiming for, as well as the ideology of the album as a whole are all discussed this week on Song by Song.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Cinny’s Waltz, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

Closing Time, Closing Time, Tom Waits (1973)

Theme from “To Kill a Dead Man”, B-side of “Sour Times”, Portishead (1994)

To Kill a Dead Man (short film), Portishead (1994)
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Inter-Season break - Foreign Affairs and Film Noir

Welcome back to Song by Song - we're taking a couple of weeks out before starting our fifth season on Foreign Affairs to listen to some music, watch some films, and argue about eggs. You're welcome to do the same, but please rejoin us later in August for more Tom Waits and sparkling repartee.

(Specifically, we'll be watching Pickup on South Street and They Live by Night - influences on Potter's Field and Burma Shave respectively, and available from all good film retailers)

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Cinny’s Waltz, Foreign Affairs, Tom Waits (1977)

Log into the Spotify web player to hear this track.

I Can't Wait to Get Off Work (And See My Baby on Montgomery Avenue) - Small Change [046]

Welcome to the conclusion of Season four! Martin, Sam and Callum conclude their observations on Tom Waits’s Small Change with a look at this quiet, calmer and more accepting song, discussing the opposition raised by this track between work and art, as well as the way it puts the feel of the album as a whole in context. Thanks to all our guests; Jeffrey Cranor, Lucy Dallas and Callum Hughes, and we hope you’ll join us later in August for season five of Song by Song!

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
I Can't Wait to Get Off Work (And See My Baby on Montgomery Avenue), Small Change, Tom Waits (1976)

Frankly, Mr. Shankly, The Queen Is Dead, The Smiths (1986)

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Small Change (Got Rained on with His Own .38) - Small Change [045]

Heading into the final tracks of Small Change, Song by Song joins the bystanders watching the death of Small Change, in the title track Small Change... gets his money's worth from a phrase, that Tom Waits... This week Martin, Sam and Callum discuss some of the pejorative impact of choice of language in lyrics, as well as the relationship between improvisational virtuoso and precision storyteller.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Small Change (Got Rained on with His Own .38), Small Change, Tom Waits (1976)

Be-Bop, The Rites of Pan, Lew Tabackin (1978/2009)

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The One That Got Away - Small Change [044]

As we approach the end of Small Change, Tom Waits shifts up a gear by telling not one but eight short stories in a single song, prompting Martin, Sam and Callum to discuss the dexterity and flair of his language, the push towards and against traditional images of loss, and the traumatic life and work of Judy Garland - all in a day's work for Song by Song. 

 

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
The One That Got Away, Small Change, Tom Waits (1976)

The Man That Got Away - Live at Great American Music Hall, Mystery White Boy, Jeff Buckley (2000)

The Man That Got Away, from A Star Is Born (via YouTube), Judy Garland (1954)

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Bad Liver and a Broken Heart (In Lowell) - Small Change [043]

Song by Song returns to the bar as Tom Waits examines the state of his own internal organs, telling the story of another lost woman and another endless spiral into drunken sorrow. New guest host Callum Hughes joins Sam and Martin to discuss the finer points of 1940s cinema, the genetic predisposition of men and women's eye colour and, naturally, Callum's ability to make a daiquiri.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Bad Liver and a Broken Heart (In Lowell), Small Change, Tom Waits (1976)

Old Red Eyes Is Back, 0898 Beautiful South, The Beautiful South (1992)

Play It Sam… Play "As Time Goes By", Casablanca Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Ingrid Bergman/Dooley Wilson/Humphrey Bogart (1997/2013)

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Pasties and a G-String - Small Change [042]

Leaving the diner of Invitation To The Blues and following Waits to a much seedier location, Sam, Martin and Lucy all stare awkwardly at the floor, handing over their singles with polite thankyous and well-dones... but nonetheless go on to debate the levels of acceptance and condemnation in Waits's narratives, the relationship between voice and rhythm and most importantly... Eggs. Again. Always Eggs.

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Pasties and a G-String (At the Two O'Clock Club), Small Change, Tom Waits (1976)

Artistry In Percussion, Early Masterpieces 1941-1946, Stan Kenton (1944/2011)

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Invitation To The Blues - Small Change [041]

Eggs. No matter how far into the discography of Tom Waits Song by Song gets, we can never get away from Martin Zaltz Austwick's obsession with Eggs. Whether they're smooth and marble, over-easy or scrambled, there they are, always lurking in the background. So that's what we're talking about today. (and songwriting and Sting and intimacy and truth in performance and various other things, sure, sometimes...)

Music extracts used for illustrative/review purposes include:
Invitation To The Blues, Small Change, Tom Waits (1976)

Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic, Ghost In The Machine, The Police (1981)

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