Fantasy Songs, Slowdive & Opinions on Public Enemy
The fantasy powerhouse Game of Thrones is returning for its penultimate season. With dragons, knights, and magic on their minds, Jim and Greg play their favorite songs about fantasy worlds. Plus, a review of the latest from hip-hop stalwarts Public Enemy, and Neil Halstead of Slowdive shares the song that got him Hooked on Sonics.
Music News
Earlier this week, Jim published an in-depth piece on BuzzFeed about new allegations against R&B star R. Kelly that he is keeping women in controlling relationship and requiring them to sever communications with their families. The article details the allegations of two families who say their daughters have been "brainwashed" by Kelly and that he is controlling when they can eat, what clothes they can wear and who they can communicate with. Kelly, and at least one of the women in the piece, denies these allegations. Jim has reported on similar claims about Kelly going back to the year 2000.
Nothing is Quick in the Desert Public Enemy
Earlier this month, Hip-hop stalwarts Public Enemy released their 14th album, Nothing is Quick in the Desert. The release was available as a free download for only a limited time; but can still be listened to on YouTube.
Greg notes that the group has been around for thirty years, providing important, socially conscious rhymes on albums like 1988's It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back. This album attempts to continue that tradition.
Jim can do without Flavor Flav, but Greg disagrees saying that the emcee adds "comic relief" and "flavor" to what can be an otherwise "heavy" group. However, Jim adds that Chuck D provides insightful, politically charged lyrics.
Jim says that though half of the album is "as good as anything Public Enemy has given us", he can only give the record a Try It.
If you are looking for the old Public Enemy, according to Greg your best bet is to seek out "old Public Enemy" music. But, the group is still an arena-rap draw, he says; and the material on the album will play better on the stage. In that context, Greg gives the album a Try It, as well.
Fantasy Songs
Whether Mordor, Westeros, or a dystopian landscape, multiple artists have written songs that pay homage to their favorite fantasy worlds. This week, Jim and Greg share their inner nerdiness and pick their favorite prog rock and fantasy-inspired songs.
Greg
- Deltron 3030 - "3030"
- Procol Harum - "A Whiter Shade of Pale"
- Iced Earth - "Dystopia"
Jim
- Led Zeppelin- "Ramble On"
- Genesis - "Time Table"
- David Banner - "My Uzi"
David Weigel
Perhaps more than any other genre, Progressive Rock has a particular penchant for fantasy motifs. From Gensis, to Yes, to Rush, to King Crimson dystopian worlds, hobbits, and medieval imagery found a home within those sprawling 14-minute long songs. But why? Jim and Greg speak David Weigel, national correspondent for the Washington Post, and author The Show That Never Ends: The Rise And Fall Of Prog Rock. Weigel says that in the early 1970s as prog was making its rise, the works of J.R.R. Tolkien were not the blockbuster films we know today. Instead, they were much more a part of the counter-culture, like prog rock.
David’s 4 Favorite Prog Fantasy Records
- King Crimson - In The Court Of The Crimson King
- Bo Hansson - Music Inspired By Lord Of The Rings
- Genesis - The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
- Magma - Magma (AKA Kobaia)
Hooked On Sonics: Neil Halstead of Slowdive
Our latest installment of our Hooked on Sonics series features Neil Halstead – singer, songwriter, and guitarist of the English shoegaze band Slowdive. Slowdive recently reunited and released their first album since 1995. Halstead describes being blown away when he heard the leadoff track from an EP by a shoegaze progenitor: My Bloody Valentine's "You Made Me Realise." Combining Byrds-like harmonies with a sonic assault, the song forever changed his musical life.
Featured Songs
- Public Enemy, "Smash the Crowd," Nothing is Quick in the Desert, Self-Released, 2017
- Public Enemy, "Nothing is Quick in the Desert," Nothing is Quick in the Desert, Self-Released, 2017
- Public Enemy, "Yesterday Man," Nothing is Quick in the Desert, Self-Released, 2017
- Prophets of Rage, "Prophets of Rage," The Party's Over, Caroline, 2016
- Donovan, "Atlantis," Barabajagal, Epic, 1969
- Ramin Djawadi, "Main Title," Game of Thrones: Season 1 (soundtrack), Varèse Sarabande, 2011
- Led Zeppelin, "Ramble On," Led Zeppelin II, Atlantic, 1969
- Detron 3030, "3030," Deltron 3030, 75 Ark, 2000
- Genesis, "Time Table," Foxtrot, Charisma, 1972
- Yes, "Relayer," Relayer, Atlantic, 1974
- Yes, "Don't Kill The Whale," Tormato, Atlantic, 1978
- Utopia, "Singring And The Glass Guitar (An Electrified Fairytale)," Ra, Bearsville, 1977
- Magma, "Aïna," Magma, Philips, 1970
- Leonard Nimoy, "The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins," Two Sides of Leonard Nimoy, Dot, 1968
- Spinal Tap, "Stonehenge," This Is Spinal Tap, Polydor, 1984
- Procol Harum, "A Whiter Shade of Pale," A Whiter Shade of Pale (single), Deram, 1967
- David Banner, "My Uzi," The God Box, A Banner Vision, 2017
- Iced Earth, "Dystopia," Dystopia, Century Media, 2011
- Slowdive, "Sugar for the Pill," Slowdive, Dead Oceans, 2017
- My Bloody Valentine, "You Made Me Realise," You Made Me Realise, Creation, 1988
- The Byrds, "Eight Miles High," Fifth Dimension, Columbia, 1966
- Slowdive, "Beach Song," Beach Song (single), Sunday, 1992
- The Nerves, "Hanging on the Telephone," The Nerves, The Nerves, 1976
- Ramones, "Do You Wanna Dance," Rocket to Russia, Sire, 1977
- Talking Heads, "Psycho Killer," Talking Heads: 77, Sire , 1977
- Talking Heads, "Artists Only ," More Songs About Buildings and Food, Sire, 1978
- She-Devils, "You Don't Know (Live on Sound Opinions)," She-Devils, Secretly Canadian, 2017
- The Smiths, "Rusholme Ruffians," Meat Is Murder, Rough Trade, 1985
Dear Listeners,
For more than 15 years, Sound Opinions was a production of WBEZ, Chicago's public radio station. Now that the show is independent, we're inviting you to join the band and lend a hand! We need your support more than ever because now we have to do all the behind-the-scenes work that WBEZ handled before (like buying insurance and paying for podcast hosting, ugh). Plus, we have some exciting ideas we'd like to try now that there's no one to tell us no!