Old mix: Run on for a long time

I previously posted about the sister mix to this one, Duckin’ and Dodgin’, and so a lot of the context for this mix tape can be found there. But there are a few other things I didn’t talk about.

Starting in 1997, I had begun making double-length mix tapes, with parts 1 and 2. It was fun to explore that much music, and great for long car trips, but it was also exhausting, and I had the idea that I should try to reduce the sprawl just a little bit. I couldn’t fully let the double tape format go, though, and there were a number of touchpoints that connect this tape to the prior one.

Most notable, of course, is the title track. I remember when I first listened to the Moby Play album, how impressed I was with the depth of the gospel and blues material he had tapped and how fresh sounding (at the time) he had made it. Then I found a copy of There Will Be No Sweeter Sound: The Columbia Okeh Post War Gospel Story, a really fantastic 2-CD compilation that came out in February 1998, and listened to the original that he had drawn “Run On” from, Bill Landford and the Landfordaires’ “Run On for a Long Time.” I was considerably less impressed with his work after that. As opposed to a transformative composition, “Run On” proves itself to be a more or less straight remix of the Landfordaires original, and going back to the 1949 recording you find all the charming irregularities and brilliant vocal performances that are flattened out in Moby’s version. (I find myself wondering whether Moby dug up the 78 of “Run On For a Long Time” or if he just nicked the song from the compilation, but that’s a different story.)

There were other things of note on this mix. Morphine’s “The Night” was a somber opener but I was feeling somber about the death of Mark Sandman on an Italian concert stage the prior year. The Night, the band’s posthumous final album, was a bittersweet gift, a nearly perfect summation of their “low rock” sound. Pairing it with my college friend Justin Rosolino’s “Legacy,” an again near perfect combination of acoustic guitar brilliance and vocal excitement (that “everything and everything” part gets me every time), puts some hope back into the atmosphere after “The Night.”

A lot of my playlist construction could be traced to the CDs I had bought in the preceding months. Pulp’s This is Hardcore, the R.E.M. odds and sods collection Dead Letter Office, and the latest Sleater-Kinney all play a pretty big role in this compilation, as did the Flaming Lips and Beck’s Midnite Vultures (many of which already appeared on the prior compilation). I also had picked up my first Elliott Smith album, Figure 8, a few months prior when it came out, and the uncharacteristically simple “Somebody That I Used to Know” made it on here. A few other songs owed their inclusion to my finding them on long car trips. Such was the case with Willie Nelson’s “Somebody Pick Up My Pieces” off his Daniel Lanois produced album Teatro, which is for some reason controversial (I loved it), which I listened to a lot on a drive down to the Outer Banks.

And such was the case with Nat “King” Cole’s “Save the Bones for Henry Jones,” which Lisa and I listened to for the first time disbelievingly on WKCR in what must have been hour 7 of a normally five hour drive up to see her parents in Lakewood, on a night that turned into a blizzard. Released in 1947, this was a duet with Johnny Mercer that inevitably cracks both of us up when we hear it today, and we’ve passed it on to our kids as well.

The end of the mix has one of the most emotional one-two punches I’ve put on a mix tape, the part where our impending move to Boston was really kicking in: the Flaming Lips’ “Feeling Yourself Disintegrate” and Sleater-Kinney’s “Leave You Behind.” Due to the limitations of the tape format, I only managed to capture part of the last song; it cuts off partway into the bridge as the band sings “There’s nothing left for you to lose,” leaving the song tantalizingly unfinished, which is appropriate for how I felt about my departure from Virginia.

  1. The NightMorphine (The Night)
  2. LegacyJustin Rosolino (Music: The Live Recordings)
  3. Wolves, LowerR.E.M. (Dead Letter Office)
  4. Ballad of a LadymanSleater-Kinney (All Hands on the Bad One)
  5. DishesPulp (This is Hardcore)
  6. Get Real PaidBeck (Midnite Vultures)
  7. A Spoonful Weighs a TonThe Flaming Lips (The Soft Bulletin)
  8. Somebody That I Used to KnowElliott Smith (Figure 8)
  9. Fight Against Drug Abuse (Public Service Announcement)James Brown (Funk Power 1970: Brand New Thing)
  10. Save the Bones for Henry JonesNat “King” Cole (Jazz Encounters)
  11. Somebody Pick Up My PiecesWillie Nelson (Teatro)
  12. Cursed MalePorno for Pyros (Porno for Pyros)
  13. The First Time (Reprise)Daniel Lanois & MDH (Million Dollar Hotel (Soundtrack))
  14. I Know It’s OverThe Smiths (The Queen Is Dead)
  15. The Big FellahBlack 47 (Home of the Brave)
  16. I Will FollowU2 (Boy)
  17. Run On For a Long TimeBill Landford and the Landfordaires (There Will Be No Sweeter Sound)
  18. PonyTom Waits (Mule Variations)
  19. Hollywood FreaksBeck (Midnite Vultures)
  20. Couldn’t Cause Me HarmBeth Orton (Central Reservation)
  21. Jealous GuyJohn Lennon (Imagine)
  22. GiganticThe Pixies (Surfer Rosa)
  23. Nevermind (What Was It Anyway)Sonic Youth (NYC Ghosts & Flowers)
  24. Feeling Yourself DisintegrateFlaming Lips (The Soft Bulletin)
  25. Leave You BehindSleater-Kinney (All Hands on the Bad One)

You can listen to (most of) this playlist in Apple Music (inexplicably not including “Run On For a Long Time”):

Old mix: We have no heads

Sometimes my early mixes are what might charitably be described as “all over the place.” (Heck, sometimes my late mixes are too.) This one, which was assembled sometime around May of 1993, definitely fits that description.

There comes a time in every young music head’s life when they discover Tom Waits. For me, that was clearly happening right about the time this mix was made. It was fortuitous that Apollo 18 by They Might Be Giants had come out about six months previously, as the frenetic energy of the opening track plays nicely with “Goin’ Out West.” (Side note: because I bought a lot of my CDs through music clubs at this stage in my life, I was almost always late to the party when a new album was released. If I recall correctly, it could be a few months before a new release was available in the mail order catalog. —And yes, mail order catalog, because this was right before the Internet began to eat that business model.)

Between those two tracks is “Frelon Brun,” from Filles de Kilimanjaro. I had just picked up this CD, having fallen in love with the title track, which appeared on Miles’ The Columbia Years anthology (another box set I snagged at a discount). “Frelon Brun” is probably the most rock-oriented of the performances on that album; for one, it’s the only track that is under 6 minutes long. It’s funky and powerful and fun. On this album it punctuates the ferocious energy of the tracks on either side.

Side 2 opens with Ayub Ogada’s “Obiero,” a track that appears in slightly different forms on both his own En Mana Kuoyo and Peter Gabriel’s Plus from Us anthology; it’s the latter that appears here (and coincidentally helps to date the mix, since Plus from Us was released on May 16, 1993). That’s followed by “Rain” by An Emotional Fish, which was on the Spew 2 promotional compilation (which I’ve since lost), alongside King Missile’s dryly hilarious “Detachable Penis” (which also appears on this mixtape). And then comes “Traditional Irish Folk Song,” from Denis Leary’s comedy album No Cure for Cancer. Like I said, charitably described as all over the place.

This mixtape also memorializes the beginning of my interest in PJ Harvey, having picked up Dry based on word of mouth from the crew in the basement of Peabody Hall, i.e. the publications staffs of the Declaration and The Yellow Journal. I was still digesting the Talking Heads, having picked up the Sand in the Vaseline compilation earlier that year. And, having bought Neneh Cherry’s great Homebrew on a whim earlier that spring, I discovered the seductive pleasures of “Peace in Mind” by blasting the album out my Monroe Hill window one Sunday afternoon as we played an impromptu volleyball game.

  1. Dig My GraveThey Might Be Giants (Apollo 18)
  2. Frelon Brun (Brown Hornet)Miles Davis (Filles De Kilimanjaro)
  3. Goin’ Out WestTom Waits (Bone Machine)
  4. Ten PercenterFrank Black (Frank Black)
  5. The Unbreakable ChainDaniel Lanois (For The Beauty Of Wynona)
  6. Cain & AbelBranford Marsalis Trio (The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born)
  7. I Want To LiveTalking Heads (Sand In The Vaseline Popular Favorites 1976-1992)
  8. Plants And RagsPJ Harvey (Dry)
  9. Summertime RollsJane’s Addiction (Nothing’s Shocking)
  10. Don’t Worry About the GovernmentTalking Heads (Talking Heads: 77)
  11. Heavy Cloud No RainSting (Ten Summoner’s Tales)
  12. TroutNeneh Cherry (Homebrew)
  13. ObieroAyub Ogada (Plus From Us)
  14. ButterfliesToad the Wet Sprocket (Fear)
  15. Traditional Irish Folk SongDenis Leary (No Cure For Cancer)
  16. RainAn Emotional Fish (Junk Puppets)
  17. I Wish You Wouldn’t Say ThatTalking Heads (Talking Heads: 77)
  18. Who Are YouTom Waits (Bone Machine)
  19. PetsPorno For Pyros (Porno for Pyros)
  20. Detachable PenisKing Missile (Happy Hour)
  21. Brackish BoyFrank Black (Frank Black)
  22. Happy And BleedingPJ Harvey (Dry)
  23. I Don’t Wanna Grow UpTom Waits (Bone Machine)
  24. Peace In MindNeneh Cherry (Homebrew)
  25. Epilogue (Nothing ‘Bout Me)Sting (Ten Summoner’s Tales)

You can listen to (most of) the mix via Apple Music here: