Showing posts with label Smoke on the Water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smoke on the Water. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Jeff Tweedy's book World Within a Song

Jeff Tweedy:

World Within a Song

Here’s the description on Amazon of this book by Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy, full title World Within a Song: Music That Changed My Life and Life That Changed My Music: “An exciting and heartening mix of memories, music, and inspiration from Wilco front man and New York Times bestselling author Jeff Tweedy, sharing fifty songs that changed his life, the real-life experiences behind each one, as well as what he’s learned about how music and life intertwine and enhance each other.”

“What makes us fall in love with a song? What makes us want to write our own songs? Do songs help? Do songs help us live better lives? And do the lives we live help us write better songs?”

I’ve provided the list here of the 50 songs Tweedy writes about. They are not ranked or listed in chronological order. They are simply listed in the order in which they appear in the book. It should also be noted that these are not necessarily songs Tweedy loves. For example, he despites “I Will Always Love You” and “Wanted Dead or Alive.”

Click here to see other lists from critics and individuals and here to see other lists from publications and/or organizations.


Spotify Playlist:

You can listen to all these songs via the Spotify playlist World Within a Song.


  1. Deep Purple “Smoke on the Water” (1973)
  2. Leo Sayer “Long Tall Glasses (I Can Dance)” (1974)
  3. Bachman-Turner Overdrive “Takin’ Care of Business” (1974)
  4. Bob Dylan “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright” (1963)
  5. Paul McCartney & Wings “Mull of Kintyre” (1977)
  6. Aphrodite’s Child “Loud, Loud, Loud” (1972)
  7. Joni Mitchell “Both Sides Now” (1968)
  8. Lene Lovich “Lucky Number” (1978)
  9. Patti Smith “Gloria (In Excelsis Deo)” (1976)
  10. Slovenly “As if It Always Happens” (1987)

  11. Over the Rainbow” (1939)
  12. The Clash “Death or Glory” (1979)
  13. The Knack “My Sharona” (1979)
  14. Randy Newman “In Germany Before the War” (1977)
  15. Abba “Dancing Queen” (1976)
  16. Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five “The Message” (1982)
  17. Volcano Suns “Balancing Act” (1985)
  18. Suicide “Frankie Tearrdrop” (1977)
  19. 10cc “I’m Not in Love” (1975)
  20. The Rolling Stones “Connection” (1967)

  21. The Undertones “Forever Paradise” (1981)
  22. Uncle Tupelo “Satan, Your Kingdom Must Come Down” (1975)
  23. The Replacements “God Damn Job”
  24. The Allman Brothers Band “Ramblin’ Man” (1973)
  25. The Minutemen “History Lesson Part 2” (1984)
  26. Television “Little Johnny Jewel” (1975)
  27. John Cage “4:33” (1952)
  28. Michelle Shocked “Anchorage” (1988)
  29. Otis Redding “Sittin’ on the Dock of the Bay” (1968)
  30. Jimmie Davis “You Are My Sunshine” (1940)

  31. Dolly Parton “I Will Always Love You” (1974)
  32. Bon Jovi “Wanted Dead or Alive” (1986)
  33. Souled American “Before Tonight” (1996)
  34. Junior Walker & the All Stars “Shotgun” (1965)
  35. The Band “The Weight” (1968)
  36. The Shirelles “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” (1960)
  37. Lynyrd Skynrd “Free Bird” (1973)
  38. Francis Scott Key (words), John Stafford Smith (music) “The Star-Spangled Banner” (1814)
  39. R.E.M. “Radio Free Europe” (1981)
  40. Ramones “I’m Against It” (1978)

  41. RosalĂ­a “Bizcochito” (2022)
  42. The Beatles (no particular song noted)
  43. Arthur Russell “Close My Eyes” (2008)
  44. Patty S. Hill & Mildred J. Hill (songwriters) “Happy Birthday to You” (1893)
  45. Diane Izzo “Love Like a Wire” (2014?)
  46. Billie Eilish “I Love You” (2019)
  47. Velvet Underground “Who Loves the Sun” (1970)
  48. Herman’s Hermits “I’m into Something Good” (1964)
  49. Duke Ellington “I’m Beginning to See the Light” (1944)
  50. The Staple Singers “I’ll Take You There” (1972)

Resources/Related Links:


First posted 1/22/2024.

Saturday, May 26, 1973

Deep Purple “Smoke on the Water” charted

Smoke on the Water

Deep Purple

Writer(s): Ritchie Blackmore, Ian Gillan, Roger Glover, Jon Lord, Ian Paice (see lyrics here)


First Charted: May 26, 1973


Peak: 4 US, 3 CB, 11 GR, 2 HR, 1 CL, 21 UK, 2 CN, 54 AU, 1 DF (Click for codes to charts.)


Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, 0.4 UK


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, 221.23 video, 520.78 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

Ritchie Blackmore’s opening guitar riff may be “the most famous in rock history.” TB Total Guitar magazine ranked it the fourth greatest guitar riff ever. WK Keyboardist Jon Lord said the song’s working title was “‘Durh Durh Durh’ – a transliteration of the riff.” RS500 It has become “the classic air guitar song,” TC “painstakingly imitated by budding guitar players of many future generations, and also patiently taught to the younger set by Jack Black in the movie School of Rock.” UCR

Jeff Tweedy of Wilco said, “This riff is absolutely the first thing I ever played on guitar, back when I was seven or eight years old.” JT He said “this riff is so dunderheaded and massive it blots out the sun” JT but “I cannot deny its importance to me, and countless others, as a budding musician.” JT “By the time I was a full-blown teenager, this bong-bruised, coughed-up lung of a song had evolved…to signify a distinct type of danger to a sensitive boy like myself.” JT

The song came about in 1971 during Deep Purple’s visit to Montreux, Switzerland – home of the famed Montreux Jazz Festival. Ian Paice, the band’s drummer, said, “We were fed up with traditional recording studios…We had played the Casino earlier that year, and the space was ideal” MM for recording their sixth album, Machine Head. The band went to see Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention at the Casino and a concert-goer shot off a flare gun during the show. The place caught fire and destroyed the venue.

Lead singer Ian Gillan said the band went to a restaurant nearby and watched the Casino burn. MM Bassist Roger Glover came up with the title “Smoke on the Water” to describe what he called “probably the biggest fire I’d ever seen…in my life.” WK The lyrics, written by Gilland and Glover in about twenty minutes, MM offered up a scene-by-scene account of the debacle. UCR

With their recording studio gone, Paice explained that they adjusted to new digs at Le Pavillion, a grand theater nearby that was closed for the winter. The band had already rented the Rolling Stones mobile studio and parked it outside, set up their gear inside, MM and converted hallways and stairwells into a makeshift studio. WK The band were were rushed to finish and wrote much of the material on the spot. However, “Smoke on the Water” serves as “evidence that perhaps sponaeity was a very good thing.” UCR

The Machine Head album was released in March 1972 and supported by the release of the singles “Highway Star” and “Never Before.” Glover thought the latter would be the album’s big hit; DT in fact, none of the band anticipated “Smoke on the Water” being a hit. TB It wasn’t until more than a year later it was released as a single and went top 5 in the U.S. and Canada. WK With Gillan’s “banshee range” TC and Lord’s “pretensions towards classical music” TC they became a foundational band in the shaping of heavy metal.


Resources:


Last updated 4/29/2024.