Vinyl for The People Radio Show – Love and Other 4 Letter Words – Episode 4

L-O-V-E.

This episode is what I find to be a soundtrack of the ups and downs of a relationship. What’s funny is I think we all can relate to the stages of a relationship. I chose the following songs to represent my understanding.  By the way, clicking the album covers will take you to Amazon to purchase the album.

 

Esperanza Spalding – Junjo, from the album of the same name and it immediately sets the tone for the 1st half of the show. They playful bass and the piano invoke the feelings of young love. It’s played loosely and fast-paced, but yields room for silence and quiet passages. Which demonstrate the periods of reflection one takes in the early days of a relationship, determining where it’s going.

John Coltrane – In A Sentimental Mood. It’s starting to get serious. There are profound moments and thoughts, and you start to wonder the staying power of your chosen partner in crime, but it seems pretty infallible. You’re making beautiful music.

Adele – Lovesong. If John Lennon doesn’t spell it out for you; you’re in love. The song does an excellent job professing the unyielding fealty that only a British singer could convey. If I had Lennon’s version on vinyl, it would have been on the show in place of Adele.

Isley Brothers – Hello It’s Me. Now that Love has filled the air, it can be a bit stifling. Growing pains from adapting to fit into the lives of one another, experimenting with new hobbies, foods, and people. The change isn’t why you were attracted, and the resentment of change can drive you apart. Ron Isley said it best, “don’t change, girl.” But guys should keep that in mind too.

Daft Punk – Nightvision. The introspective thoughts don’t go away, and you may wonder if you’re making the right decisions. This train of thought takes you to the second half of our show.

 

D-A-M-N.

Alabama Shakes – Miss You. Unfortunately for this couple, the uncertainty we left them in before the break ended the love affair. Now we reunite with them in denial. This song starts out slow but quickly ramps up the energy. There’s uncertainty in the lyrics and guitar, but the sentiment that I’m yours is made loud and clear. In the end, though, the fact of the matter is. I’m yours.

Miles Davis – So What. After the last track yielded no success, we move on to indifference, finding our subject in the heart of The Cool. Past love is just that, a fleeting memory we’ve carried on our journey to something better. Undergoing a period of self-dialogue and discovery; it’s an epiphany that our past doesn’t define our future. Cheers to new experiences.

The Weeknd – The Knowing. This track finds our subject inebriated on their favorite intoxicant. Drunk dialing. Sad, and indifferent in the midst of what could have been a good time. Melancholic memories drive the distressed guitar and pounding rhythm.

Maxwell – The Fall.  After that bender from the last track, the drunk dial yields a reply in the opening verse.  This is one of my favorite tracks on the album, and one that took a few listenings to appreciate all of the lyrics.  I find the vinyl version has a better mix than the digital, as a result, I don’t stream this album.  

Days go by slowly
I never know wholly
I see what you owe me
You never realize
That everything changes
And everything moves
And nothing is as it
Was when you lose

and our subject responds

Wait, wait, wait
Wait
Waiting for the…
Forgive me for waiting so long
For taking the time to rise and destroy
I was avoiding the thing that I…
I can’t feel you

And on that bombshell…we are right back where we started.

New/old Love…

Esperanza Spalding – One. Not lacking in love, nor haunted by its pain…our subject has discovered again that love is marvelous. That’s the great thing about love. It surrounds us, even in this time steeped in hatred, bigotry, and pretend. Love can be authentic if you let it.

I hope you enjoyed this episode of the show, and I look forward to sharing tunes with you every Monday night from 11 PM to 12 AM on 89.1 KNSJ here in San Diego, streaming at www.knsj.org, and available on your smart device using the Tune In App.

Leave your thoughts in the comments, and let me know what songs you would use to describe the phases of a relationship. I would love to read them.

Don’t forget to tune in to the show live on 89.1 FM KNSJ from 10 PM to 11 PM PST on Thursday.  You can stream the show at www.knsj.org or use the TuneIn App.

Show Recordings

 

 

 

Don’t forget to tune in to the show live on 89.1 FM KNSJ from 10 PM to 11 PM PST on Thursday.  You can stream the show at www.knsj.org or use the TuneIn App

As always keep spinning.

Tom

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Esperanza Spalding gave me the shirt off of her back (Watching Emily’s D+Evolution)

Esperanza’s shirt from the performance

In all honesty, I bought her shirt.  Rosetta and I went to see Esperanza Spalding three weeks go and got to enjoy her and the band perform Emily’s D+Evolution in its entirety.  I had the opportunity to see her perform the same album with the San Diego Orchestra in September of last year [the video below] (before it was released).

Left with baited breath, I listened to the rest of her catalog on repeat until the release of Emily’s D+Evolution in March of this year.  Gladly there was a single, One (my second favorite song on the album) and it holds a lot of significance for me and further affirmed my desire to pick up the album on vinyl.  Less than one week before I met my love; One was released on Tidal.  I was swiping on Tinder and was enticed by an afro and beautiful smile.

Forsahadowing what was to come

Rosetta and I reminisce over our first day from time to time, but I never told her about the song.  Specifically, when I heard the song my thoughts gravitated to her.  I frequently talk about how impactful music is in our lives, but little did I know how this album would be so tied to my life.

In Rosetta’s office is a tiny canvas on her bookshelf.  My best attempt at drawing; written on it, “I love you, unconditionally.”  Unconditional Love (Alternative Version) my favorite song on Emily’s D+Evolution isn’t on the LP.  Listening to this song for the first time caused my eyes to water.  The juxtaposition of the band and her voice move me every time I hear it.

If you have a turntable and haven’t picked up Emily’s D+Evolution, you are wrong.  Pick up your copy here.  Seeing Esperanza is a treat in and of itself. Sharing the experience with the One that I love Unconditionally; priceless.

Rosetta and I at the show
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