Tag: Song of the Week

  • Song of the Week: White Christmas

    The sun is shinning the grass is green. The cacti and palm trees sway…

    Not exactly how the song goes. But the Tucson iteration of Beverly Hills & LA is pretty close and as frustrated ex-Northerners bemoan the lack of snow in warmer climes it becomes ever clear that Christmas is upon us.

    With thoughts of home and snow fresh on the mind, the Pax Plena song of the week will be no stranger to the holiday musicphiles among us. Yet, the history of Irving Berlin’s White Christmas may well be relegated to the dusty box of family ornaments and the ghosts of Christmas past. What follows is a brief primer on America’s most popular Christmas song.

    Interestingly, White Christmas actually has an Arizona connection which had previously escaped me. According to legend, Irving Berlin wrote the song poolside at the Arizona Biltmore Resort and Spa just up the road from here in Phoenix. As the song hit airwaves in 1942, America was well into a period of deep uncertainty. In November, of the same year the U.S. Navy suffered heavy losses in the Battle of Guadalcanal and gasoline rationing began as a result on the order’s of President Franklin D. Roosevelt back home. Suffice it to say, the backdrop for the inaugural performance of White Christmas in the film Holiday Inn was anything but auspicious.

    But there was something special about the song. Berlin’s initial assessment of his work turned out to be quite prescient- it was indeed the best song he had ever written. White Christmas would strike uniquely at the core of the American psyche, bringing with it all the charm and romance of the Christmas season to a Nation in more perilous a position than ever it had been since its founding. Released (perhaps not serendipitously) during the height of World War II, the song became a smashing hit with the American Armed Forces stationed overseas. The lyrics easily bring images of hearth and home to mind some sixty-five years later. It is difficult to apprehend their effect on American servicemen stationed in North Africa and Guadalcanal as the song made its way over the Armed Forces Radio Network. Suffice it to say, its success was nigh instantaneous.

    By all accounts, the most famous version of the song remains the original rendition done by Bing Crosby in 1942. Its release then was actually just prior to the Christmas season and the song would go on to spend some 11 weeks atop the charts. It would return to the top twice more becoming the sole song in American history to make #1 three different times. The Guinness Book of World Records honors its as the number one Christmas song of all time.

    Notably, while the 1942 version of the song features (arguably) the grandfather of the crooner generation, it does not feature the initial stanza originally written by Irving Berlin in the early 1940s. Both on the recording and in the movie in which it was initially introduced to American audiences, Bing Crosby sings only the chorus and leaves out the initial stanza. To provide its full effect, the complete lyrics appear in below. Legend has it, the initial stanza was set to poke fun at displaced northerns living in SoCal, once again proving that it is never a bad thing to make fun of Californians.

    Even so, whether home for you is Los Angelas, Boston or Walters, please enjoy the 1942 version of Bing Crosby’s White Christmas courtesy of Songza.com.

    http://songza.com/e/listen

    White Christmas

    The sun is shining
    The grass is green
    The orange and palm trees sway.
    I’ve never seen such a day
    In Beverly Hills LA.
    But it’s December the 24th
    And I am longing to be up North.

    I’m dreaming of a white Christmas
    Just like the ones I used to know.
    Where the treetops glisten,
    And children listen
    To hear sleigh bells in the snow.
    I’m dreaming of a white Christmas
    With every Christmas card I write.
    May your days be merry and bright.
    And may all your Christmases be white.

  • Song of the Week: The Biggest Lie

    A thousand apologies for those who have written to complain about the absence of songs of the week. Blame it on finals. As an act of obeisance, let me say that this week’s song of the week will not disappoint.

    I rarely buy songs on iTunes. Although with “one-click” shopping and Apple so willing to store my credit card information, one might wonder why not. Even so, when I heard the song which follows I was utterly haunted and compelled to make the purchase.

    By all accounts, today’s featured artist Elliott Smith was a troubled person. Born and raised across the U.S. but primarily hailing from Portland, Smith’s life was shrouded in addiction and depression. In turn, his melancholic lyrics aptly reflect the tortured mind of a troubled soul. What makes his style of music so captivating is the clear high-tenor of Smith’s voice coupled with an almost wispy style of delivery. If one listens late enough, Smith’s singing can be mistaken for errant thoughts passing through the shadows of mind.

    By way of introduction, some of you may recall Smith’s music as featured in the Robin Williams’ film Good Will Hunting. The Pax Plena song of the week is taken from Smith’s self-titled, 1995 album- dubbed by critic Rob O’Connor as “one of the most understated and incredible albums to emerge from the indie-rock scene in the 1990s.”

    Please enjoy, Elliott Smith’s The Biggest Lie.

    The Biggest Lie

    I’m waiting for the train
    The subway that only goes one way
    The stupid thing that will come to pull us apart
    And make everybody late
    You spent everything you had
    Wanted everything to stop that bad
    And now i’m a crushed credit card registered to smith
    Not the name that you call me with
    You turned white like a saint
    I’m tired of dancing on a pot of gold flake paint
    Oh we’re so very precious, you and i
    And everything that you do makes me want to die
    Oh i just told the biggest lie
    I just told the biggest lie
    The biggest lie

  • Song of the Week: Tennessee Waltz

    My thoughts seem to be oddly turned toward Nashville this week. This afternoon, I stumbled upon an old favorite introduced to me during my erstwhile days at Dartmouth. Norah Jones with her smooth vocals and dexterous piano playing couldn’t have performed the rendition of the song any better.

    Without further ado the Pax Plena song of the week is none other than Redd Stewart and Pee Wee King’s 1947 hit, the Tennessee Waltz as performed by Norah Jones. Lyrics follow. Enjoy!

    (Note: The Tennessee Waltz is in no way intended to be confused with the Tennessee Waltz sting operation which sent several top Volunteer State Democrats to prison)

    Tennessee Waltz
    As Performed by Norah Jones

    I was dancin’ with my baby to the Tennessee Waltz
    When an old friend I just happened to see
    I introduced her to my loved one
    And while they were dancin’
    My friend stole my sweetheart from me

    I remember the night and the Tennessee Waltz
    And I knew just how much I had lost
    I have lost my little darlin’
    The night they were playing
    The beautiful Tennessee Waltz

    I remember the night and the Tennessee Waltz
    And I knew just how much I had lost
    I have lost my little darlin’
    The night they were playing
    The beautiful beautiful Tennessee Waltz
    The Tennessee Waltz

  • Song of the Week: There’s Your Trouble

    We had once a consistent song of the week here Pax Plena. The lapse is utterly my own. consider this the latest attempt to revive the practice. Today’s song of the week is a fun one for both the wistful and self deprecating alike. Courtesy of the Dixie Chicks- back when they were musicians rather than political activists; to wit, they have always been much better at the former than the latter- the song will surely be a blast from the past for country music fans out there. Without further ado, the Pax Plena song of the week is none other than the Dixie Chick’s There’s Your Trouble. Lyrics follow after the jump. http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=-2822071750978649608&hl=en There’s Your Trouble Should have been different, but It wasn’t different, was it Same old story Dear John and so long Should have fit like a glove Should have fit like a ring, Like a Diamond ring Token of true Love Should have all worked out but it didn’t She should be here now but she isn’t CHORUS There’s your trouble, there’s your trouble You keep seeing double with the wrong one You can’t see I love you You can’t see she doesn’t But you just keep holding on There’s your trouble So now you’re thinking ’bout All you’re missing how Deep you’re sinking Round and round dragging down Why don’t you cash in your chips Why don’t you call in a loss Not such a big loss Chalk it up better luck Could have been true love but it wasn’t It should all add up but it doesn’t REPEAT CHORUS Should of all worked out but it didn’t She should be here now but she isn’t REPEAT CHORUS [Link]

  • Song of the Week: Road To Rhode Island

    Some of you may recall that Pax Plena once had a weekly item where I featured a song of the week. Sadly, it took nary a month of law school before things went awry. Here’s hoping to right the wrong and get the Pax Plena song of the week back on track.

    Perhaps this selection is indicative of my present state, but the video below is definitely one of the funniest song/dance routines featured on Family Guy in my recent memory. Taken from the eponymous episode, Stewie Griffin and Brian the dog sing, “Road to Rhode Island.” Lyrics follow after the jump.

    http://www.metacafe.com/fplayer/685050/family_guy_road_to_rhode_island.swf
    Family Guy – Road To Rhode IslandThe funniest videos are a click away

    Road to Rhode Island

    (Both) We’re off on the road to Rhode Island
    We’re having the time of our lives.

    (Stewie) (Take it dog…)

    (Brian) We’re quite a pair of partners,
    Just Like Thelma and Louise.
    ‘cept you’re not six feet tall

    (Stewie) Yes, and your breasts don’t reach your knees.
    (Brian) (Give it time.)

    (Both) We’re off on the road to Rhode Island,
    We’re certainly going in style.

    (Brian) I’m with an intellectual, who craps inside his pants.
    (Stewie) How dare you. At least I don’t leave urine stains on all the household plants.
    (Brian) (Oh, pee jokes)

    (Both) We’ve traveled a bit and we’ve found,
    Like a masochist in Newport we’re Rhode Island bound.

    ((Brian) Crazy travel conditions, huh?
    (Stewie) First class or no class
    (Brian) Whoa, careful with that joke, it’s an antique)

    (Both) We’re off on the road to Rhode Island
    We’re not going to stop until we’re there
    (Brian) Maybe for a beer.

    (Brian) Whatever dangers we may face, we’ll never fear or cry
    (Stewie) That’s right, until we’re syndicated Fox will never let us die. (Please!)

    (Both) We’re off on the road to Rhode Island,
    The home of that old campus swing.

    (Brian) We may pick up some college girls, and picnic on the grass.
    (Stewie) We’d tell you more, but we’d have the censors on our ass.
    (Brian) (Yikes!)

    (Both) We’re off on the road to Rhode Island
    We certainly do get around.
    Like a bunch of renegade pilgrims
    Who are thrown out of Plymouth colony.
    We’re Rhode Island bound.
    Or like a group of college freshmen
    who were rejected by Harvard and forced to go to Brown!

    We’re Rhode Island Bound..

    (fade out)