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Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
Lets just slide right past Joe's ridiculous observation and onto Night on Earth. I've listened to this maybe 2-3 times in my life. The last time was quite possibly when we did this last LAL cycle, and I can't even remember. I have no impressions of this album. So here we go.
Back in the Good Old World (Gypsy): Hey, this song is pretty fun. Feels like it could nestle nicely on Black Rider. Typical Tom Waits gypsy carnival stomp (and I love that there is a typical Tom Waits version of that). This isn't a game changer song, but it was fun. Maybe this won't be so bad.
Los Angeles Mood (Chromium Descensions): Neat instrumental that slinks along in a cool way. Sounds like someone is playing an electric guitar with a saw. They probably are...
Los Angles Theme (Another Private Dick): These are excellent titles, as this has a noir Peter Gunn theme stomp going on
New York Theme (Hey, You can Have that Heart Attack Outside): There's a cool melodic discordance to all these instrumentals. This is a playful extension of the prior theme with some Jazz elements narrating some kind of club scene.
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
New York Mood (New Haircut and a Busted Lip): Another night time city instrumental - definitely of a piece with what's come before. He's playing around with 2-3 themes on this album, it feels like, mixing and matching a bit as he goes.
Baby, I'm Not a Baby Anymore (Beatrice Theme): Great character theme - these are really excellent pieces. Super evocative, full of attitude, knowingly self-important in a way the people they're about probably could never be. This is a really good soundtrack so far.
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
Good Old World (Waltz): As advertised
Carnival (Brunello Del Montalicino): After some more tightly focused songs drifting back towards the Black Rider/Eastern European junkyard sound. Fun insanity.
On the Other Side of the World: One of his desolate hobo numbers. Pretty good. 'And I drink champagne from your thin blue veins' is a great lyric
Good Old World (Gypsy): I like this one more than Good Old World. I guess I'm in the mood for gypsy Tom tonight
Paris Mood (un De Fromage): Excellent subtitles on this album. Sounds like a Paris waterfront cafe song
Dragging a Dead Priest: First song that maybe feels self-indulgent. Sounds like parts of this were recycled for 'What's He Building?'
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
Helsinki Mood: I don't know the album well enough to tell (and he does seem to be repeating themes, but I swear I already heard this song, or at least elements of it). is there a didgeridoo (sp?) in this?
Carnival Bob's Confessions: Shades of 'We're All Mad Here' from Alice
The Good Old World (Waltz): This is the song from Beautiful Maladies, I think. It went right past me when I used to listen to that album (it was my first TW album). Now that I've 'unlocked' him, this is pretty good. Fairly standard Tom Waits lament for the good old days.
On the Other Side of the World : More of the same, but the same is pretty good
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
I am not an instrumental guy, for the most part, but I really enjoyed this - relaxing and evocative and surprising (if you don't know Tom Waits) or comforting and familiar (if you do). Only three songs with vocals, and none are gonna light the world on fire, but I enjoyed them. I could definitely seem myself coming back to this.
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
Lets spend part of Father's Day listening to Bone Machine. This is a top3 TW album for me. It's never been 1, and tends to fluctuate with Blood Money. Looking forward to this
Earth Died Screaming: Amazing song title, and certainly a top 5 opener. I might just have Singapore and Tom Traubert's Blues ahead of it. The apocalyptic imagery is fun, and one of the things that makes this song work so well is that it doesn't take itself seriously. There's a vaguely 'here we go again' put upon quality to the lyrics and performance that help make this what it is. A 'put your backs into it/everybody' row kind of lament
Dirt in the Ground: Such a rainy, depressing, cold wet song. I love how the horns sound vaguely like miserable city traffic. That horn makes the song.
'Cause hell is boiling over And heaven is full We're chained to the world And we all gotta pull
is a great sequence.
Such a Scream: I love that he spent 7 years haunted by the idea of who/what the Eyeball kid is. I like this song fine, but it's not one I'm ever drawn to. Album filler, but good album filler. I kind of get a Tom Jones feel to this song for some reason
All Stripped Down: this song gets carried by the good will I have for this album. This doesn't really do anything for me, but I do find it slightly amusing. if it cut that 30 second warm up I might like it a little more. But this is a long album, and it doesn't really need to be here. Having said that, I love the lyric
Ain't nothin' in my heart but fire for you With my rainy hammer and a heat that's true
I don't know what a rainy hammer is, but I love it.
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
Who Are You: A Jersey Girl style boardwalk love song. This is better, though I think his best version of this song is Never Let Go on Orphans.
How do your pistol and your Bible and your sleeping pills go? Are you still jumping out of windows in expensive clothes? Well, I fell in love with your sailor's mouth and your wounded eyes
Is a solid sequence, but overall I do wish the overall lyrics were a little more striking.
The Ocean Doesn't Want Me: Maybe my favorite of the spoken word songs. This is a deeply unsettling song. Striking lyrics, and the core idea - that the guy is contemplating suicide and decides against it not because life is worth living, but because the world hasn't yet decided to claim him.
"A rip tide is raging And the life guard is away But the ocean doesn't want me today"
Jesus Gonna Be Here: Fun song, but given some of the other powerhouses on the record I'm kind of surprised this was one of the beautiful maladies choices. One of my favorite gospel Tom songs.
A Little Rain: This is an incredible song. The idea that he would write a gentle pseudo-lullaby from the perspective of a serial killer is insane. It's a gorgeous song, and then you realize what it's about, and it's horrifying. The final verse gets to me every time.
She was 15 years old And never seen the ocean She climbed into a van With a vagabond And the last thing she said Was, "I love you mom."
In the Colosseum: This is a bit of a low point on the album for me. I don't dislike it, but it's too long (longest song on the record), but it feels like it's somewhere between Earth Died Screaming and Murder in the Red Barn, and both of those songs are a lot better. I do like carnival barker Tom, but I feel like this song is still missing something.
Listening I just realized that I think this entire song is percussion. Maybe that's it. I do really like the lyrics, though. Evocative snapshots of a people eating themselves.
Now it's raining and it's pouring on the pillaging and goring The constable is swinging from the chains For the dead there is no story, no memory, no blame Their families shout blue murder but tomorrow it's the same
No justice here, no liberty, no reason, no blame There's no cause to taint the sweetest taste of blood And greetings from the nation as we shake the hands of time They're taking their ovations, the vultures stay behind
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
Goin' Out West -> Whistle Down the Wind is one of the strongest 4 song sequences in his whole catalog. Maybe the strongest? It might just edge out the Singapore -> Jockey Full of Bourbon run. I'll have to think about that.
Goin' Out West: Maybe his most bad ass song - made even more so by the fact that the guy singing it is a total loser completely oblivious to the fact. Great drunken bar boast of a song, especially knowing the guy is going home alone.
Murder in the Red Barn: I love this song. Tom does absurd rural small town dread so well.
Black Wings: This is the guy the character from Goin' Out West would be mouthing off, who would just silently sit there taking it until he killed him, paid the tab, and walked out into the night. Best song on the album.
Whistle Down the Wind: This song used to skate by me until Kevin Davis highlighted it for me. So glad he did. It's amazing. The hollow rust in his voice is incredible, and the way the singer doesn't stop dreaming after a life of disappointment. Great performance with the impossibly tactile music and just utterly rooted in place. I love the final verse
The sky is red And there world's on fire And the corn is taller than me And a dog is tied To a wagon of rain And the road is wet as the sea And sometimes the music from a dance Will carry across the plains And the places that I'm dreaming of Do they dream only of me?
I Don't Wanna Grow Up: One of the first TW songs I've heard. It's okay. A little brash and light after the incredible run of atmospheric songs. Seems like it should come earlier on the record.
Let me get Up On It: Completely pointless
That Feel: There's a pleasant hound dog moonshine feel to this, and it works as a closer, but it's just a little slight, especially coming out of the two songs that proceed it.
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
I don't know that Bone Machine has the best collection of songs in the catalog (probably not), but there isn't another album in his catalog (in anyone's?) with this much atmosphere. It makes everything feel so real - the sound creates shape and texture and color and smell and this incredible tangible feeling. Tom produced this. He did an incredible fucking job.
My issue with Bone Machine, such as it is, is that it builds this incredible atmosphere, but then interweaves them with song clangy, noisy songs that undercut the tension and sense of place. I could easily strip 5-6 songs from this album (Such a Scream, All Stripped Down, Who Are You, In the Colosseum, I Don't Wanna Grow Up, Let Me Get Up On I), some of which I like, and you're left with a mood that only gets more and more immersive as the album moves along until it gently eases you out with That Feel.
Still, incredible album. Is this his only Grammy? I know it was the first. Well deserved, regardless.
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
Bone Machine Ranking, probably.
Black Wings A Little Rain Goin Out West The Ocean Doesn't Want Me Murder in the Red Barn Whistle Down the Wind Earth Died Screaming Dirt in the Ground Jesus Gonna Be Here Who Are You That Feel I Don't Wanna Grow Up Such a Scream In the Colosseum All Stripped Down Let Me Get Up On It
Anything from Goin Out West through Whistle Down the Wind is basically tied
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm Posts: 39895
An updated ranking
1. Rain Dogs 2. Bone Machine 3. Heart Attack and Vine 4. Swordfishtrombones 5. Frank's Wild Years 6. Blue Valentines 7. Closing Time 8. Heart of Saturday Night 9. Night on Earth 10. One From The Heart 11. Small Chang 12. Foreign Affairs 13. Nighthawks at the Diner
9 more to go, with 5 of them outranking everything but Rain Dogs and Bone Machine.
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