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Lost Your Hair

As a child born at the end of 1962, I caught the dying gasp of the Beatles run as a band. My family bought a copy of the 45 RPM single Let it Be, released in 1970. I suppose by that time, the band was already a thing of the past, but my older brothers (by one and two years) and I sat in front of the family hi-fi and listened to it repeatedly. The flip side was You Know My Name (Look Up the Number), which, as a music obsessed adult, now strikes me as poorly executed filler, but as a child, it was simply weird, so we never flipped the record over for a break. We just listened to Let It Be and Let It Be and Let It Be.

For the next six years. I immersed myself in popular music. I latched onto the Beach Boys’ Endless Summer, Elton John’s Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, and much of the music that I heard on the radio, Sweet’s Ballroom Blitz, R. Dean Taylor’s Indiana Wants Me, Zeppelin’s Black Dog, etc. Like most young listeners, I gravitated towards whatever songs my preteen classmates played. During that period the Beatles music was everywhere.

For Christmas one year, my mother bought me what is colloquially known as the Beatles Red Album, the hits from 1962-1966. With that album as my launch pad, I sought out other early Beatles compilations, my favorite being Rock ‘n’ Roll Music which I listened to nonstop until my cassette tape stretched out and broke. My mother also bought my brother the Blue Album, hits from 1967-1970. This album spent as much time on the family stereo as the Red Album.

In ninth grade, I fell in with a group of stoners. We spent our afternoons smoking pot, quoting Monty Python, and listening to the Beatles. Being high, we preferred the band’s later, more psychedelic music. I purchased Revolver, Sgt. Pepper, Magical Mystery Tour, The White Album and Abbey Road. I spent countless hours closeted in my bedroom listening to those five albums. I can still, fifty years later, sing along with each LP from beginning to end. The songs on those five Beatles albums remain my favorite to this day.

I give this background as testimony to prove that I’m not a casual Beatles fan. By the end of high school, I identified as a Superfan. Over the decades, I’ve branched out and enjoy most musical genres, but the Beatles still show up annually on my Spotify list of top artists. So, what’s my favorite Beatles song? Don’t Pass Me By, written and sung by Ringo Starr on The White Album.

This morning, for the zillionth time, I read yet another ARTICLE trashing Ringo Starr in general and Don’t Pass Me By specifically. You might ask why Far Out Magazine, a UK pop culture website is reviewing a fifty-seven-year-old song, a song almost twice as old as half the people in the world. I’m not sure. People love to hate on this song. And it’s high time for me to speak up, cuz I’m f*cking sick of it.

Don’t Pass Me By is often cited for its simplicity, tucked in the middle of a double album exalted for its experimental tracks. But as a reminder, the Beatles made their name with simple songs like She Loves You Yeah, Yeah, Yeah? Yes, Don’t Pass Me By lacks the complexity, lyricalness, and depth of many Beatles songs, but it might very well be the most fun. No other song by the Beatles, or maybe any other band I know of, makes me want to sing along like Don’t Pass Me By.

The title of the article I read: “Is ‘you were in a car crash, and you lost your hair’ the worst lyric the Beatles ever wrote?” by Reuben Cross. It’s true, the song does include this unfortunate line:

I’m sorry that I doubted you, I was so unfair
You were in a car crash, and you lost your hair
You said that you would be late, about an hour or two
I said that’s alright, I’m waiting here, just waiting to hear from you

But the line isn’t the only complaint Cross has with the song. In his article, before he starts digging into this one lyric, he slams the backing track: “The honky-tonk piano and bluegrass violins are grating to say the least.” I disagree, Mr. Cross. The bluegrass flair is what makes the song amazing. In fact, as a one-time Beatles Superfan, it’s my opinion that those violins might be the most charming aspect of the entire White Album.

In the second to last paragraph, Cross briefly addresses the lost your hair line “at no other point does (Starr) mention the person he is pining over suffering from traumatic alopecia.” I don’t know if Cross is being willfully ignorant, trying to be funny, or is just stupid, but ‘lost your hair’ is clearly an idiom that was in usage when the song was written—much like ‘lost your mind’ or ‘lost your shit.’

Regardless, the White Album easily has worse lyrics. The very next song on the album goes like this (repeated three times, and that’s the whole song):

Why don’t we d-do it in the road?
Why don’t we do it in the road?
Why don’t we do it in the road? Hmm
Why don’t we do it in the road?
No one will be watching us
Why don’t we do it in the road?

Much better? Absolutely, people say, because the song was written by Paul McCartney. The hate directed towards Don’t Pass Me By is part of a snobbishness against Ringo Starr so many rock critics have embraced over the decades. Three of the Beatles were touched by the divine. George Harrison, McCartney and John Lennon all channeled something otherworldly during their stint with the Beatles. Ringo Starr, critics say lucked into the mix.

That’s bullshit. Starr was a solid drummer, and the fab four finally clicked when he joined the band. He just might be the mysterious force that corralled those three supernovas together into a cohesive unit that worked. Starr only wrote a couple of songs for the Beatles, and Don’t Pass Me By is easily the best. Give my song a break, before I lose my hair.  

Photo by Faizan on Unsplash

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Money Focused Freestyle

听过

神来之笔为第一句。

歌词

Money Focused Freestyle

作词: 耳鼻眼喉科 作曲: 耳鼻眼喉科 编曲: 耳鼻眼喉科

我在房间里洗个澡,

同时在思考中国有哪个 rapper能比我屌,

Money keep coming in,

我连银行账户余额都记不到,

我们站的高,

但目前我还嫌自己赚得少,

我和我兄弟还吃不饱,

不跟说唱歌手耍,

我不喜欢假装和平,

好嘛我耍的是 hiphop,

几爷子都要符合国情,

你们以为在耍人设,

结果你们的人设跨咯,

你以为在耍说唱,

结果遭自己婆娘耍了,

但 hiphop教我的常识,

永远是我们这儿弱肉强食,

在我字典里只有"狂"字,

车女人还有房子,

打扮得行市,

所有东西必须要跟上档次,

他们看到我们的样子,

估计他们都悔青肠子,

都说疫情赚钱好难,

我问了我 Digi的兄弟,

结果他们都感觉还好喃,

都感觉赚得不少喃,

这些小娃想蹭我,

可以理解我穷的时候也想过,

有哪个不想开敞篷,

然后可能再耍一个网红,

他们说我中专说唱,

所以你要认真学习,

不然真的会变得像我,

不然变得跟我一样火,

然后赚得跟我一样多,

不然你读完研的同学都想来跑过来给你放歌,

不然你老师以前喊你退学现在来找你要签名,

不然你学弟学妹天天把你当成学习的典型,

那些让你不守规矩的东西你们都应该远离,

不然对比太过鲜明你要稳住社会的天平,

来自小镇在城里面闯荡,

听到钢琴我感觉像朗朗,

说我赚钱不能太张扬,

他们仰望我眼带光芒,

我在欧 block录完首新歌,

看了下时间才三点整,

我再写两首情歌,

感觉我现在少了点饭圈粉,

我在房间里洗个澡,

同时在思考中国有哪个 rapper能比我屌,

Money keep coming in,

我连银行账户余额都记不到,

我们站的高,

但目前我还嫌自己赚得少,

我和我兄弟还吃不饱。

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我喜欢的音乐类型

每日写作提示
您最喜欢的音乐流派是什么?

——这个”每日写作提示“在很早前就保存了,草稿状态并没继续水下去,今晚把它水完。

在我的生活中,听歌这项算是不可或缺的部分。相比以前,现在听的确实少了许多,为人父的我歌单里也多了儿歌集合。这么多年来在某种程度上讲音乐是我的避风港和精神支柱,音乐是可以超越很多的存在,起码用在我身上能让我感觉到心情的静谧放松和心灵的治愈,让我能在浮躁焦虑或悲伤不快时得以平静,偶尔还能激发灵感。我非常喜欢听音乐,但仅限于听,对音乐的什么流派风格不懂,只知道我现在听的音乐风格应该是Jazz/Chill/Lofi Hip Hop之类会多一些,这种音乐风格满足了我对旋律和节奏的需求。

周杰伦、王力宏、蔡依林、陶喆等等…这些歌手几乎贯穿我的整个学生时代,学生嘛,懵懵懂懂情窦初开,情歌着实爱听。但不知何时自己慢慢变得怕听这些中文歌,因为听得懂更容易把自己带进去,怕悲伤怕难过,似乎是这样。之后听外文歌会相对更多一些,不是我有多装逼能听懂,恰恰相反的是我听不懂,所以更能让我专注于音乐旋律本身,这可能就是为什么会有人感觉外文歌会更好听的原因之一吧,至少我是如此。

喜欢的歌手和歌曲太多了,对我音乐喜好影响比较深的应该是有两方面。首先是很久以前的一位同事,初出社会没多久在厦门工作那会,有一位非常喜欢听英文流行歌曲同事,上班第一时间打开的是酷狗,下班也是塞上耳机就撤。他把歌单分享了给我,非常符合我当时的味口,歌单中也有我听了很久的歌曲。这些歌曲陪伴我非常长时间,从最初的酷狗到虾米,虾米停服后到网易云音乐,再到现在用的AppleMusic,每次搬家都会给这些歌单留一个位置并重新收集起来。以前算是当代流行,现在来说这些歌曲应该算是相当经典的英文“老歌”,百听不厌。

后街男孩《I Want It That Way》、邦乔维《It’s My Life》、Bobby Tinsley《I’m Missing U》、吹牛老爹Puff Daddy《I’ll Be Missing You》没错最近丑闻被捕的那位、Leona Lewis《Better In Time》、Coldplay《Viva La Vida》《Yellow》、奈利《Dilemma》、Shayen Ward《Until You》、Rachael Yamagata《Be Be Your Love》等等…,太多太多了!很多80后对这些歌应该大都耳熟能详,那会儿还非常喜欢听蓝调之父娃娃脸Babyface的歌曲,Rachael Yamagata会常来中国办现场,17年在广州办时去过。那时还会挑选喜欢的歌剪出高潮部分作为手机铃声。

再来是对爵士嘻哈这类音乐风格的偏爱,是因为一部日本动画片《混沌武士》。13年的某个无聊找动漫看的时刻,无意间找到了这部日本动画片。动画是我喜欢的类型,除此之外其独特的BGM实在是太棒了,爵士与嘻哈元素融合在一起,很上头。然后拼命的找这些原声,一切指向了Nujabes,并通过他知道了Shing02、Uyama Hiroto、Re:Plus(常来中国办现场,19年在深圳办时去过)、DJ Okawari、Haruka Nakamura等等…之后我喜欢的音乐风格增添了爵士嘻哈这一类型,尤其是日系爵士嘻哈。

特别讲一下Nujabes,本名濑叶淳,算得上是日系爵士嘻哈标志性人物。因《混沌武士》让我知道了他,让我知道了有这样一个音乐风格,并让我的音乐喜好发生了不小转变保持至今。他的音乐独特之处在于能把很多爵士经典精巧取样后融入自己另辟蹊径的音乐风格中,爵士乐的旋律与现代嘻哈的节奏融合在一起,不失节奏活力又能让我置身宁静的感觉,氛围温柔舒缓,很奇怪,我就这样喜欢上了,这应该就是Mellow Hip Hop的魅力。可惜的是这位音乐鬼才于2010年2月26日因车祸去世…

他与Shing02一同创作了《Luv(sic)》Part1-3并成为了经典,是我非常非常喜欢的系列。Nujabes逝世后,《Luv(sic)》后续章节Part4-6由Shing02完成,我想这是对Nujabes的致敬和延续。他的音乐影响了许多喜欢爵士嘻哈音乐爱好者,包括音乐创作人,成为他们无数作品的灵感来源。许多音乐人创作了充满他影子的歌曲,致敬永远的爵士嘻哈传奇Nujabes!

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