Last night my daughter posted a picture on Instagram with
the caption, “Thanks for being the only tolerable music on my mom’s ipod when I
was 5” over a picture of They Might Be Giants. We’d just returned from seeing
the band live at the Fillmore, and I was touched, because I thought there was
NOTHING on my ipod that she liked.
The remarkable thing wasn’t just that she loved the show,
but that her experience of seeing them live was so close to my first time
seeing them, at the Kennel Club, on Divisidero, in 1986. That time they wore —
and sold — fezzes during the song “Istanbul (Not Constantinople),” an
unexpected cover if ever there was one, and we fell down laughing during their
rendition of “The Sun is A Mass (Of Incandescent Gas),”a song lifted from an
insert in one of those Golden Book Encyclopedias which were the staple of all
our childhoods.
That sense of wonder, silliness, and charm was exactly what
I know my daughter felt during the Giants show at the Fillmore when, in the
middle of their set, they unexpectedly played the song “Bills Bills Bills” by
Destiny’s Child — that is, transforming and embracing a song that she
associates with being a little girl. By exhibiting it in this other incarnation,
through guys and guitars (her least favorite combination), they put music itself on
display as the actual magic trick that it really is.
note chandeliers |
They couldn’t have done
anything to please her more…I mean, until they did, by interjecting Sia’s
“Chandelier” into “Particle Man,” (an impromptu moment inspired, apparently, by
the actual chandeliers in the auditorium). It reminded me of so many deep
moments in my own past, of U2 folding “Alison” into “Bad,” or the Afghan Whigs
suddenly segueing from “Faded” into “The Boys of Summer,” of a mashup I once
heard of the Breeder’s “Cannonball” with the song “Wabash Cannonball.” Such
moments can be so uplifting; they send your brain
into some kind of Connect-4 slot machine of memories, to a place where music
can literally inhabit every pore of your past. At its best, a song by the
Giants can make the sonic experience into a sort of stream of consciousness novel, so that you go
from thinking about the band in front of you, to thinking about bands that
you’d seen on that stage before, to thinking about the meaning of life, and
finally, to how saxophones remind you of Lisa Simpson and Bruce Springsteen
and that one hit song by Gerry Rafferty, thus forcing you to recall what it
was like to hear music go from being in the hands of beard old British men and
into the hands of people like the Giants John Flansburgh and John Linnell, that were young and accessible and funny and authentic, that were
people that I actually knew.
Because that’s what happened. In the mid-1980s I lived in a
four story Victorian that was a little bit famous because it was the cover shot
of a coffee table book called ‘Painted Ladies.” The building was full of
shenanigans and rock bands, it featured a rotating cast of six roommates, and
we rented it from an older guy who was a singer in a Rolling Stones cover band
that, astonishingly, still plays around town today. Early in my tenure there a
guy named Bill knocked on my door for all the world like an old traveling
encyclopedia sales person, and handed me a record by a band called They Might
Be Giants.
In fact, he was a friend of a friend of my sister, and he’d
heard I wrote about music — which I did, two paragraphs a time for 10$ a pop,
for the Bay Guardian, where I also (hand me my cane, children!) typeset two
days a week.
Those were simpler times you see – so simple that I was able
to make rent on that little amount of work – and I played said record
instantly, not having yet been overrun with product by the six major labels
which would soon be sending me 24,000 new releases a year in cardboard mailers
that would end up making our recycling bin a huge problem every week. I loved
the record the minute I heard it, especially the song “Don’t Let Start,” which
it’s spelt out chorus: “do I need apostrophe T need this torture?”
From that time forward, They Might Be Giants became
connected to some of my favorite memories, like the time only a few years later, by which time
I was established as a real rock critic, and my friend Glenn pulled his car
over to the side of the road, in Hoboken, by the Hudson and made me
listen to the demo for the song “Birdhouse In Your Soul." We were on our way to
see a Butthole Surfers show at ABC No Rio, and to this day I can remember
sitting there listening by the side of the while the
sun set over Manhattan. Wait (I thought): did they just reference “Medea?” Did
they just rhyme “The Longines Symphonette?” Is this a song about an ambitious
nightlight that longs to be a lighthouse, so that it can illuminate more
things, or is it actually a metaphor for friendship, love and caution?
I voted for the latter. Now, as previously observed herein, no
band likes to be called quirky, a word that surely has been applied to TMBG
more than any other. But to me they aren’t; indeed, they aren’t even funny or
comic or nerdy, despite having an audience that can shout out the 14th
president of the United States without resorting to google. To me, they are
simply nonpareil. I am not joking when I say that I believe that “Birdhouse In
Your Soul” stands as one of the best songs of the 20th century,
alongside giants like “Will The Circle Be Unbroken,” “What A Wonderful World” and
“Summertime" and “Thunder Road.”
"I Like Fun" continues an impressive streak for a 30 plus year old band, as did their performance at the Fillmore, that is, by pleasing both my daughter and I. Have you ever thought that the reason so many bands have
slumps or get boring as they age is because they only have a certain amount of
words and notes and ideas to use, and they’ve used them up? They Might Be
Giants store of the same is seemingly unlimited. I mean, think about it. Most pop songs
are about love and loss, emo-y shit like that. But if you can write a song
about the eternal soul masquerading as a child’s nightlight, then you are
simply never going to run out of material.
yay giants!
ReplyDelete3 random thoughts as I catch up on your outstanding blog:
ReplyDelete1. I too saw the Fannies on the same recent tour (mine was in Brooklyn) and I concur with every word of your incandescent description. So glad I finally saw them -- also finally caught Wedding Present and Luna that year.
2. It's too bad your child has mostly divergent tastes. When you are the oldest person at a concert, a child is a handy drink-holder, leaning post but most of all enthusiasm-sharer. I'm blessed with a Mountain Goats/Dulli/Wrens fan myself. Yes, there are bands he can't get me to see, and some I can't drag him to, but not many.
3. On Civil War songs: Bishop Allen, late of Williamsburgh, had a great song called "The Monitor" which I recommend. It's both about the Civil War AND gentrification in Brooklyn. Really. Meanwhile, Dylan's "Blind Willie McTell" is a GREAT Civil War song and maybe one of his 5 best? Just putting it out there.
Thanks, Dave! I appreciate that! Will definitely check out "The Monitor." And although my daughter hates the Whigs, she doesn't have actual bad taste - it's just different from mine. I kind of feel like it's right and proper that she hate my music - plus, it's kind of fun to find out about the things she's interested in...even when they suck like that Poppy one.
ReplyDeleteI didn't call her taste bad! Just divergent. Someone I kind of trust just boosted No Vacation so maybe she is onto something.
ReplyDeleteYou should trust >>me<<<. I have good taste!
ReplyDelete