Here's Richard Buckner, looking forlorn, which is one of the things he does best. Sounding glum, too. The guy is just one big ball of angst and despair.
Truth be told, I'm a relatively happy guy. Most days I even kinda like my life, which is one of those things that sensitive artistes are never supposed to admit. I can't help it. Sure, shit still happens, to me and to people I love. But I have a great wife, great kids, a decent job, good friends, and a God who loves me and is changing me for the better. Don't tell anybody. I wouldn't want to blow my cover.
Still, I like a song of abject misery as much as the next sorry sumbitch. Here are a few of my favorites, if "favorites" can still be used to describe music that makes me want to slit my wrists.
Joni Mitchell -- The Last Time I Saw Richard
Bob Dylan -- You're a Big Girl Now
Eels -- Elizabeth on the Bathroom Floor
Jacob Golden -- Out Come the Wolves
Nick Drake -- Place to Be
Red House Painters -- Katy Song
Strand of Oaks -- End in Flames
Richard Thompson -- God Loves a Drunk
Camera Obscura -- Dory Previn
Frightened Rabbit -- The Twist
Cat Power -- Lived in Bars
Scout Niblett -- Duke of Anxiety
Jackson Browne -- Your Bright Baby Blues
The Beach Boys -- Caroline, No
Derek and the Dominoes -- Have You Ever Loved a Woman?
Neil Young -- Tired Eyes
Loudon Wainwright III -- Motel Room
Uncle Tupelo -- Postcard
And yes, Richard Buckner, whose song "Lil Wallet Picture" is the sound of emotional collapse:
Damn this stretch of 99
That takes so many lives
One of 'em was mine
Indeed.
How about you? What's your soundtrack to misery?
The Midnight Organ Fight in its entirety, anything by Elliot Smith and/or For Emma, Forever Ago are all up there, but I think my favorite is Miles' soundtrack for Ascenseur pour l'échafaud.
ReplyDeleteBobby Bare Jr. "The Ending," The Felice Brothers "Sailor Song," Tom Waits "Fish and Whale," John Prine "All the Best," Any version (especially Big Medicine's)of "Red Rocking Chair," Joe Henry "Flag," Justin Townes Earle "Yuma," Uncle Tupelo "Fatal Wound" and "Wherever," Neil Young "Stringman"
ReplyDeleteAnything by Joy Division, The Cure, Godspeed You! Black Emperor.
ReplyDeleteAh, here'tis.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.sambquinn.com/
Bruce Springstein "Cover Me" and "Glory Days", Pink Floyd "Comfortably Numb", Edgar Winter "Autumn", The Allman Brothers' Band "Whipping Post", Los Lonely Boys "Heaven", Over the Rhine "Ohio", Spirit "When I Touch You", The Subdudes "Save Me", Van Morrison "When Will I Ever Learn to Live in God", Vigilantes of Love "V.O.L" (the whole CD), The Who "Love Reign O're Me".
ReplyDeleteI would add to "The Last Time I Saw Richard", "Blue" and "Down to You".
ReplyDelete-Bloomed by Richard Buckner
Bill Malonee can be pretty high on the list as well, though his work isn't nearly as absent of hope as some...well, sometimes at least. "Friendly Fire" is pretty rough.
-"Momentum" by Aimee Mann.
-Anything slow by the Tin Hat Trio.
-"Gypsy Girl" Katie Herzig
-"Racing Like a Pro" the National
-"I've Seen it All" from the Dancer in the Dark soundtrack.
-The Dead Man Walking sountrack.
-"How to Disappear Completely" Radiohead
-"In Germany Before the War" Randy Newman
-"Day is Done" and "Riverman" by Nick Drake
- I am a film score geek so The Thin Red Line, Atonement, Shine, The Constant Gardener, The Motorcycle Diaries, American Beauty and the Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind all have songs that I would add to the list.