Brian Culbertson - “Always Remember”
from Bringing Back the Funk

I love funk music. I have always liked funk music (how could you not?), but the love blossomed in high school and early in college, first when my high school marching band added Earth, Wind & Fire to the football-game repertoire, and then when I started pep band in college. If you’ve ever been to a college basketball game, you have probably heard lots and lots of funk and soul music. Well, the musicians hear it more, and either you learn to love it or you learn to hate it. Me, I fell in love.

In 2008, I discovered Brian Culbertson when I discovered Jimmy Sommers, because the first Sommers cut I heard was “Kickin’ It” from Sunset Collective, and Culbertson played keys and brass on that track. But because I was knee-deep in other kinds of music, I put Culbertson (and Norman Brown and Raphael Saadiq and the phalanx of other guest artists Sommers has had on his albums) on the back burner.

This past weekend, I was knee-deep in a bunch of smooth jazz, using it to compensate for listening to horrible Christmas music at work, and I probably listened to “Kickin’ It” about 49 times before I finally went looking around for something of Culbertson’s. I found, among other things, Bringing Back the Funk. And in it, I found joy.

It’s groovy, it’s funky, it’s upbeat, and it’s a blast. It sounds like authentic funk music (the presence of Parliament-Funkadelic’s own Bootsy Collins on the opening track helps set the mood in that regard), but it also sounds modern. And Culbertson is one hell of a pianist, which I think this particular cut demonstrates quite nicely, but truth be told, there’s not a snoozer on the album. I think it’s the most fun I’ve had listening to an album for the first time, ever.

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

somesongsconsidered:

“The Yankee Flipper” – The Baseball Project
(Words/music: Scott McCaughey, available on The Baseball Project, Vol. 1: Frozen Ropes and Dying Quails, Yep Roc 2008)

I’m the first to admit that I take baseball for granted.  I don’t watch as many games as some of my friends, yet I’m always sad when there isn’t a game to watch.  I guess at this point in my life it’s one of those things that makes me happy just knowing that it’s there.  If I don’t always watch a game (and this year, watching Mets games wasn’t always a relaxing decision), I still like seeing Baseball Tonight or catching scores on the radio.  Even if I’m not actively watching games every night, I feel better knowing that somewhere a baseball game is going on.

So when I heard that Scott McCaughey, Steve Wynn, and Peter Buck (among others) collaborated on an album of baseball themed songs, I immediately wanted to hear it.  These songs lace together the type of power pop Wynn and McCaughey usually create with stories pulled from baseball lore.  In particular, “The Yankee Flipper” immediately stuck out because I remember watching Jack McDowell pitch for the White Sox and Yankees in the 1990s.  It turns out that the night before McDowell’s infamous incident where he flipped off Yankee fans, he was out drinking with McCaughey, R.E.M.’s Mike Mills, and Dennis Diken from the Smithereens.  McCaughey claims that the story is true, and given McDowell’s own musical pursuits it’s entirely believable.  It’s also one of the few instances on The Baseball Project, an album culled from recalled moments of fandom, where the fans in question had an influence on the game itself.  Sure, it was ultimately McDowell’s lousy performance (and short fuse) that led to his back page infamy, but it’s also an instance where some diehard fans felt partly responsible.  I’m sure that the rock boys felt bad that their friend experienced the backlash (just imagine what that would have been like in the YouTube era!), yet McCaughey feels responsible without ever feeling remorse.  After all, it makes him a part of one of our era’s more colorful footnotes.

So tonight, as the Yankees appear on the verge of putting baseball to bed for the winter, consider this a salute (not necessarily the same salute as Black Jack, unless you’re a Philly / Boston fan) to baseball and a reminder that spring training can’t come soon enough.

More on The Baseball Project: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

For my slightly irritated friends this morning.

Cite Arrow reblogged from somesongsconsidered

Fonseca - “Arroyito”
from Gratitud