HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Okay, am I old? I mean,
I'm not old. I worked for Rolling Stone Magazine in the 70's, and yes it was
the political unit, not the music unit, but hey, I knew ALL about music. At that
time, I swore I would always stay current with the latest "hits" (are
they still called that?) But alas, that did not happen.
We
just got a new car, and the salesperson said--let me pre-set your radio
stations. What stations do you listen to?
I said, uh, well, NPR, whatever that is. And uh, um, well. (Jonathan and
don't really listen to the radio, we talk to each other. When I'm driving by
myself, I look at it as a time to think in silence. I didn't tell the
salesperson that.).
No problem, she said. Here's your satellite
radio. What music programs do you want? Um, I said. Is there a Paul Simon
Station?
Then
she said--there's a wonderful station with music from the forties.
Ah.
Oh dear.
So
the other night we were watching the Grammys. Some of it was terrific, even
though I'd never heard a lot of the songs before--are they still called songs?
Talent is talent, and there was a lot of that there.
Questions
I have: Was Pink actually singing while she was doing that act? Was Beyonce
actually singing while she was doing that act? Taylor Swift's dress was
fabulous, but can she sing without doing that with her hair? How come the men
all had on lots of clothes, but the women didn't?
I
confess we turned it off to watch Downton Abbey, then turned back at 11 (in
time to see the robots and the guy in the hat) because we knew we'd fall asleep
in Sherlock and will watch that today.
::Shaking
head.:: Something's happening here, what
it is ain't exactly clear... (Please
tell me you get that allusion.)
How
about you, Reds? Music? Grammys? Radio?
HALLIE EPHRON: Oh, Hank, I am so happy to hear you say this. Pink??? I do know who
Beyonce is. Ditto Taylor Swift. But that's how big they have to be to penetrate
my consciousness.
Our
radio is tuned to 3 NPR stations -- 2 that are mostly talk and news and
wonderful weekend game shows (Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me!) and the other one is
classical music. That is IT. When, in desperation and I need something to
listen to, I find a country and western station or even folk. I never know who
I'm listening to but I love bopping around in the driver's seat.
SUSAN ELIA MACNEAL: Am I the only Red who listens to Pandora radio? That's how I
discover great new stuff. And you can choose any "station" -- so it's
Pink for the gym, Tom Waits for brooding, Cole Porter for cooking dinner....
What's
great about Pandora is they use an algorithm from songs you like/don't like to
play songs from new artists or artists you might not otherwise know. That's how
I first heard my current musical obsession, Sara Bariles -- who was at this
year's Grammy Awards.
Highly
recommend, and if you pay a small fee, you can rid yourself of the commercials.
HANK:
Oh, Susan, we have Pandora in the house! We love it. We have Paul Simon station,
and Judy Collins station, and Cole Porter station, and one I named Lido
Shuffle. And lots more. That'd be good for the car! Wonder how we could make a "stuff I
should know about" station?
JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: I do Spotify when I listen on my computer. My thirteen-year-old recommended it, so either I'm even hipper than you Pandora folks, or I'm hopelessly mired in something only middle-schoolers use. Don't tell anyone, but my playlist is 90% Kings College Choir.
Our car radio is a real amalgam of stations and styles: NPR, of course, and Ross's sports-talk station ("The Big JAB!") and Youngest's two pop and hip-hop stations. Also WBACH, for my classical music, one country and one oldies. Ross and I don't have Sirius - like you, Hank, we generally prefer to talk to each other or, when I'm alone, to have silence - but we've enjoyed having it in rental cars over the years.
One trip that stands out in family lore was the time we got upgraded to a very posh SUV (we have to fit five, remember) that not only had some sort of super-Sirius system, it was VOICE ACTIVATED. Once the teens discovered that, it was all over. One would ask for "urban hip-hip" only to be immediately overruled by another shouting "modern jazz!" Evidently, too many voice commands confused the machine, because when Ross finally got them quieted down and asked Sirius for "Local sports" the machine responded, "Seeking...Detroit Metal Crunk." Then blasting the most godawful stuff you could imagine. We went back to poking its buttons after that.
RHYS: I'm a Pandora fan too--often it's the SPA selection and therefore relaxing when
I'm rushing around. But here in Phoenix there is a great radio station called
KAHM (as in calm) and they play all soothing background music. So it's either that or NPR.
On
long trips I play selections from my iPhone... Mama Mia or the Beatles when I
need to stay awake and can sing along, comedy to make me laugh, or even audio
books.
I'm
sounding like an old fuddy duddy but pop music for the past ten years or more
has left me cold. It's boring, repetitive and I hate the screeching that is now
applauded as singing.
HANK:
Yeah, and I often agree, Rhys, but what worries me is that's what my mother
used to say about the Beatles. Just saying.
DEBORAH CROMBIE: I put Downton and Sherlock on
record and watch the entire Grammy show, which I thought was fabulous.
(Although I do agree I'm getting tired of female singers as pole-dancers
costumes. And the Beyonce and Jay-Z
opening number was definitely not my fave.
So funny--Rick didn't bat an eye at Beyonce in her skimpy-dominatrix
outfit, but later on, when she was wearing the white sort of see-through dress,
he kept saying, "Wow, she looks great." Sometimes less is not more,
girls.
Because
for the last couple of years I've been writing about a character (Andy Monahan)
who is a rock guitarist, and is now in a duo with a female singer, I do try to
keep up with the music scene. And
although I am not a big fan of hip-hop or heavy metal, there is a lot that I
LOVE. I do like Daft Punk (the robots)
by the way--they crack me up. And I
think Lorde is very weird and interesting. And Pharrell Williams, in spite of
the weird Lone Ranger hat, is really talented.
At
least one of my favorite performances from the Grammys was Miranda Lambert and
Billy Joe Armstrong's tribute to the Everly Brothers. Here's the link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qmkZCSK3YOM
(In
case you don't have any idea who they are, Miranda Lambert is a huge country
star and is married to Blake Shelton, and Billy Joe Armstrong is the lead
singer for Greenday.)
I
do listen to Pandora, but also lots of my own CDs or downloads. Funnily enough, I don't usually listen to
music when I drive, because I find it too distracting in our heavy Dallas
traffic.
But
for those of you who think music has gone to the dogs since 1965, you might
want to expand your horizons:-)
HANK:
Debs, whoa. You are so hip! Maybe you can do a blog on what we should hear? Our
own personal Pandora! And yeah, I agree
The Everly Brothers tribute was not the best--so sad, because they had some
amazing songs.
LUCY BURDETTE: Yeah, not only is Debs hip, she's scolding us old
farts LOL. I'm with the Paul Simon and NPR fans, plus I love the music on the
TV show Nashville. Have bought all the CD's. We listen to that and music by
Teddy Thompson and Alison Kraus on the way down to Florida. It's funny, I don't
like to listen to the radio much when riding with John, but I like the company
when alone.
HANK: Wait, wait, don’t tell me. Reds readers, can you be our Pandoras?
(In a radio way, not a “letting all the bad stuff out” way.) What should we be
listening to?
(And because we're all about audio--I'll give the fabulous Macmillan audio version (on CD) of THE WRONG GIRL to one lucky commenter!)