Thursday, December 31, 2020

What’s the Alternative? IV – Part 1

When the ‘90s began, I was a pimply high school sophomore riding my bike around my small Long Island town getting into mischief with Toast. By decade’s end, I was a newly sworn-in Peace Corps Volunteer in Bulgaria shaking hands with President Clinton in Sofia (in November 1999). My memories of the ‘90s include making and listening to mixtapes; frequenting diners, movie theatres, and bowling alleys; and smoking disgusting cigarettes. During the ‘90s, I also obtained two college degrees and it was during those college years my musical tastes began to evolve from hardcore and punk music to indie/alternative (I even started buying and wearing cheap vintage clothing from the Salvation Army). 

Superchunk

After the Nirvana-led grunge explosion of the early ‘90s (which had its roots in the ‘80s underground music scene), “the scene” in America sputtered as bands and fans grew up, got jobs, and cashed in their chips before it got too late (though many could still be seen in recent years at pre-COVID-19 reunion and sing-along nostalgia concerts to which some even brought their kids). For me, indie/alternative stopped progressing sometime in the mid-‘90s (right around the time of the last Jawbreaker album) though, like any genre, many indie practitioners shred on some 40 years after the birth of R.E.M. (from Athens, GA). Here are some of my favorite indie/alternative songs featuring American artists (except for a couple of European acts turning in solid covers of two American classics). Enjoy- and Happy New Year! 

Superchunk

01. Jawbreaker – “Oyster” (1995)
02. American Music Club – “Johnny Mathis’ Feet” (1993)
03. Jawbreaker – “Bad Scene, Everyone’s Fault” (1995)
04. Greg Dulli – “Pussywillow” (2005)
05. R.E.M. – “(Don’t Go Back To) Rockville” (1984)
06. Jawbreaker – “Sluttering (May 4th)” (1995)
07. The Smashing Pumpkins – “Tonight Reprise (Version 1)” (1995)
08. Superchunk – “Here’s Where the Strings Come In” (1995)
09. Dinosaur Jr. – “Raisans” (1987)
10. Bat for Lashes – “The Boys of Summer (Live)” (2019)
11. Evan Dando – “The Same Thing You Thought Hard About Is the Same Part I Can Live Without” (2003)
12. Hüsker Dü – “Divide and Conquer” (1985)
13. Jawbreaker – “Chemistry” (1995)
14. Liz Phair – “Favorite” (2003)
15. Dinosaur Jr. – “Kracked” (1987) 
16. R.E.M. – “The Flowers of Guatemala” (1986)
17. The Magnetic Fields – “The Day the Politicians Died” (2020)
18. Bright Eyes – “Devil Town” (2004)
19. Violent Femmes – “Good Feeling” (1983)
20. Migala – “Moon River” (1997)

Jawbreaker 2017


President Clinton, Sofia, Bulgaria, 1999


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Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Christmas Faves IV

“And so this is Christmas,” John Lennon observed in his sole contribution to the Christmas music genre, “and what have you done? Another year over and a new one just begun.” I think we can all agree 2020 has overstayed its welcome and, wherever we are this Christmas, we should try to have some fun and usher in 2021 with a spirit of hope. That is what Christmas is, after all, the celebration of man’s hope fulfilled in God incarnate: eternal spirit, creator of the universe, born a babe in poverty surrounded by shepherds and animals; all-powerful Son of God, fully human and fully God; helpless, meek, and mild as a lamb; heavenly prince of peace, hidden from the wise and the learned but revealed to the childlike.

Mild He lays His glory by 
Born that man no more may die
Born to raise the sons of earth
Born to give them second birth
Hark! The herald angels sing 
“Glory to the new-born king!”

Here are some of my favorite Christmas songs. Enjoy- and Merry Christmas from the Caribbean!


01. Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert – “Can I Interest You in Hannukah?” (2008)
02. Ella Fitzgerald – “Frosty the Snowman” (1960)
03. Bing Crosby – “Mele Kalikimaka (Merry Christmas)” (1950) 
04. Frank Sinatra – “An Old Fashioned Christmas” (1964)
05. Frank Sinatra – “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” (1963)
06. Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra – “Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town”  (1959)
07. Elvis Presley – “Silver Bells” (1971)
08. Chet Baker Quartet – “Winter Wonderland” (1953)
09. Sarah McLachlan – “Silent Night” (2006)
10. Ella Fitzgerald – “O Holy Night” (1967)
11. Lea Michele – “Christmas in New York” (2019)
12. Jeff Goldblum – “Winter Wonderland” (2019)
13. Ramsey Lewis Trio – “Here Comes Santa Claus” (1961)
14. Perry Como – ‘Here We Come A-Caroling/We Wish You a Merry Christmas” (1959)
15. Lauren Daigle – “Light of the World” (2016)
16. Choir of Paisley Abbey – “The Holly and the Ivy” (1995)
17. Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra – “A Christmas Festival” (1959)
18. Bing Crosby – “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” (1943)
19. Bing Crosby – “O Holy Night” (1962)
20. Bing Crosby – “Do You Hear What I Hear?” (1963)
21. Sarah McLachlan – “Song for a Winter’s Night” (2006)
22. Carpenters – “(There’s No Place Like) Home for the Holidays” (1978)
23. Sarah McLachlan – “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” (2006)
24. Carpenters – “Merry Christmas Darling” (1970)
25. Duke Pearson – “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” (1969)

Sarah McLachlan


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Sunday, December 20, 2020

Folk-Rock Explosion! II

The Beatles (and George Martin) lit the fuse that set off the ‘60s folk-rock explosion that influenced popular music for the past 50 years. Folk-rock (I also like the term freedom rock) is a broad term encompassing ‘60s artists who dug the Beatles and Bob Dylan and who followed the new spirit of musical freedom wherever it led them (including to Laurel Canyon in Los Angeles). A forerunner of country rock and singer-songwriter music, folk-rock was a reflection of the times in both England and America. While as a movement folk-rock did not survive the decade, a few hardcore hippies like David Crosby have tried to keep it going (and Gen X musicians like Jakob Dylan look back in wonder at the golden age of folk-rock and wish they knew its secret formula). Here are some of my favorites. Enjoy! 

David Crosby

01. The Beatles – “I Feel Fine” (1964)
02. The Seekers – “I’ll Never Find Another You” (1964)
03. The Byrds – “She Don’t Care About Time (Single Version)” (1965)
04. The Beatles – “Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)” (1965)
05. The Byrds – “The Times They Are A-Changin’” (1965)
06. The Byrds – “5D (Fifth Dimension)” (1966)
07. The Seekers – “Georgy Girl” (1966)
08. The Gants – “I Wonder” (1966)
09. The Mamas and the Papas – “Dedicated to the One I Love” (1967)
10. The Byrds – “Lady Friend” (1967)
11. Judy Collins – “Since You Asked” (1967)
12. Leonard Cohen – “Suzanne” (1967)
13. The Byrds – “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere” (1968)
14. Jim Sullivan – “U.F.O.” (1969)
15. Michael Nesmith – “Joanne” (1970)
16. Grateful Dead – “Brokedown Palace” (1970)
17. David Crosby – “Music Is Love” (1971)
18. Crosby & Nash – “My Country ‘Tis of Thee” (2004)
19. David Crosby – “Woodstock” (2018)
20. Jakob Dylan and Jade Castrinos – “Go Where You Wanna Go” (2019)

David Crosby and Jakob Dylan

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Saturday, December 19, 2020

Channeling AM Pop II

40 years ago this month, while walking home with his wife to see their little boy, John Lennon was shot and killed in New York City. (October 9, 2020 would have marked Lennon’s 80th birthday). Like the other members of the Fab Four, Lennon’s ‘70s solo career was overshadowed by the Beatles’ musical legacy and, at the time of his murder, a new generation of artists- including punk and new wave (some of which Lennon reportedly liked)- were taking over the charts. While the new wave and its fans had little use for their parents’ Beatlemania, for kids like me it was AM radio that introduced us to the sounds of “older” artists like the Beatles, the Mamas and the Papas, Simon & Garfunkel, and even Frank Sinatra. 

John Lennon

Driving home with mom from some Long Island strip mall on a dreary Sunday afternoon and listening to AM radio, a song by the Beatles, the Mamas and the Papas, Simon and Garfunkel, or John Lennon might suddenly come on like a ray of sunlight shining down from heaven to make everyone feel alright. Not merely oldies, AM pop (which runs roughly from the birth of the Beatles to Lennon’s death) has a distinct sound and feel and includes music that a majority of Americans at the time agreed was the best pop music humanity had to offer up to that point. There was little debate and quite a bit of comfort in knowing that when you turned on a scratchy AM station- at least in New York- you were going to hear the soundtrack to your life- or, in my case, the lives of my parents. Here are some of my faves. Enjoy! 


01. Frank Sinatra – “I Would Be in Love (Anyway)” (1970)
02. The Mamas and the Papas – “Go Where You Wanna Go” (1966)
03. Simon & Garfunkel – “Mrs. Robinson” (1968)
04. Frank Sinatra – “Mrs. Robinson” (1969)
05. The Beatles – “Nowhere Man” (1965)
06. The Searchers – “Needles and Pins” (1964)
07. Don McLean – “Till Tomorrow” (1971)
08. John Lennon – “Imagine” (1971)
09. Carpenters – “Rainy Days and Mondays” (1971)
10. Don McLean – “American Pie” (1971)
11. Sly & the Family Stone – “Everyday People” (1968)
12. Simon & Garfunkel – “At the Zoo” (1968)
13. John Lennon – “Instant Karma! (We All Shine On) (2020 Remix)” (1970)
14. Paul Williams – “An Old Fashioned Love Song” (1971)
15. Paul Simon – “Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard” (1972)
16. Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass – “This Guy’s in Love with You” (1968)

Paul McCartney attending the March for Our Lives in New York City in 2018


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Thursday, December 17, 2020

In Search of Baroque Pop II

Some credit (who else?) Lennon and McCartney (and producer George Martin) with creating baroque pop, and- listening to the strings on “Yesterday”; the timeless “Eleanor Rigby” (which sounds like it could have been recorded 300 years ago- or yesterday); and the harpsichord sounding piano on “In My Life”- they might be right. Yet by the time baroque pop hit its peak in the latter half of the ‘60s, the Beatles had already moved on to new sounds and baroque pop as a musical fad did not survive the decade.


If you enjoy sweeping strings, soaring harmonies, introspection, reflection, dramatic intensity, oddball, eccentric dandies, European history, and moping around the house on weekends, then baroque pop may be just what the doctor ordered. For me, there is something comforting in baroque pop’s epic albeit faux majesty and grandeur. But instead of making fun of pre-disco Bee Gees for attempting grand and audacious albums like Odessa, Cucumber Castle, and Trafalgar, perhaps we should be asking why today’s artists are not attempting such bold feats. No talent? No imagination? Too expensive? 


In my continuing search for top shelf baroque pop, I have noticed certain themes emerge including childhood innocence, beautiful girls, otherworldly imagery, and unrequited love, all inspired perhaps by “Alice in Wonderland”. The Left Banke’s “Desirée” may be the first baroque garage song though by now I’ve learned trying to define musical genres like garage rock, psychedelic, folk-rock, baroque pop, and sunshine pop for ‘60s music is all a bit pointless given how many ‘60s artists incorporate all of the above (including the Beatles, the Monkees, the Turtles, the Mamas and the Papas, and the Association, not to mention lesser known artists such as Love, the Neon Philharmonic, Sagittarius, and the Left Banke). Here are some of my favorite baroque pop songs. Enjoy!


01. Honeybus – “(Do I Figure) In Your Life” (1967)
02. The Neon Philharmonic – “Morning Girl” (1969)
03. Sagittarius – “Song to the Magic Frog (Will You Ever Know)” (1968)
04. Bee Gees – “First of May” (1969)
05. Scott Walker – “Black Sheep Boy” (1968)
06. Bee Gees – “With All Nations (International Anthem)” (1969)
07. The Cyrkle – “Please Don’t Ever Leave Me” (1966)
08. The Neon Philharmonic – “Morning Girl, Later” (1969)
09. The Left Banke – “Desirée” (1967)
10. The Left Banke – “Pretty Ballerina” (1966)
11. The Mamas and the Papas – “Dancing Bear” (1966)
12. Bee Gees – “Sun in My Morning” (1969)
13. Classics IV – “Traces” (1969)
14. The Sunshine Company – “Back on the Street Again” (1967)
15. Scott Walker – “30 Century Man” (1969)
16. Bee Gees – “My Thing” (1970) 17. Bee Gees – “The Chance of Love” (1970)
18. Bee Gees – “Don’t Wanna Live Inside Myself” (1971)
19. The Mamas and the Papas – “Safe in My Garden” (1968)
20. Johnny Rivers – “Positively 4th Street” (1968)

Inside album photo from Bee Gees’ Trafalgar




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Sunday, December 13, 2020

Psychedelic Laundromat III

‘60s psychedelic music owed a great deal to Bob Dylan’s uninhibited and surrealistic lyrics as well as the Beatles’ sonic experimentation (after reportedly getting high while listening to the Fab Four’s songs on headphones, John Phillips of the Mamas and the Papas realized where popular music needed to go). But Dylan and the Beatles were also artists in every sense of the word and could not help but soak in and get inspiration from the sights and sounds around them. The Byrds, whose influences included Dylan and the Beatles (not to mention jazz and folk), returned the favor by inspiring Dylan to see there was more fun (and more money) in rock music; and Byrds albums impressed an inspired the Beatles

Bob Dylan

Whether it was the U.K. or the U.S.A., psychedelic sounds were for a short time the hip sound of popular music- at least for a new generation of listeners who were looking at reality in radically new ways (and LSD was legal in the United States until 1968). As Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead is said to have exclaimed after taking LSD for the first time, “I knew they weren’t telling us everything!” Here are some of my favorite psychedelic songs, including some of the biggest names in ‘60s music (though I caution both artists and listeners: drugs do not create anything- they merely lower inhibitions). Enjoy!


01. The Beatles – “Strawberry Fields Forever (Take 4)” (1966)
02. Bob Dylan – “Desolation Row” (1965)
03. Bob Dylan – “Subterranean Homesick Blues” (1965)
04. The Association – “P.F. Sloan” (1971)
05. The Monkees – “The Good Earth” (1969)
06. The Mamas and the Papas – “My Heart Stood Still” (1966)
07. The Beatles – “If I Needed Someone” (1965)
08. The Byrds – “Chimes of Freedom” (1965)
09. The Mamas and the Papas – “Look Through My Window” (1967)
10. The Zombies – “She’s Not There” (1964)
11. Bob Dylan – “Tombstone Blues” (1965)
12. The Beatles – “Eleanor Rigby” (1966)
13. The Kinks – “You Really Got Me” (1964)
14. Bob Dylan – “All Along the Watchtower” (1967)
15. The Beatles – “In My Life” (1965)


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Saturday, December 12, 2020

In Praise of Sunshine Pop III

Sunshine pop owes its existence to the Beatles whose early love songs and positive vibes transformed the planet and inspired a generation of imitators who- like the Fab Four- used new and exciting sounds to create groovy colors and feelings that defined ‘60s pop culture. Sunshine pop- which can make even heartache and disappointment seem like a warm shot of sunshine- didn’t survive the ‘70s but inspired legions of Gen X indie/alternative artists and the best of sunshine pop can still make today’s listeners feel the youthful optimism and empathy that ruled the airwaves for all too brief a time when peace and love were hip and actually seemed within reach. Here are some of my favorites. Enjoy the sunshine!    


01. Davy Jones – “Girl” (1971)
02. The Mamas and the Papas – “I Call Your Name” (1966)
03. Mercy – “Love (Can Make You Happy)” (1968)
04. The Clique – “Superman” (1969)
05. The Mamas and the Papas – “Once Was a Time I Thought” (1966)
06. The 5th Dimension – “(Last Night) I Didn’t Get to Sleep at All” (1972)
07. The Association – “Along Comes Mary” (1966)
08. The Monkees – “Daydream Believer” (1967)
09. The Peppermint Rainbow – “Don’t Wake Me Up in the Morning, Michael” (1969)
10. Harper and Rowe – “On the Roof Top” (1967)
11. The Association – “Rose Petals, Incense, and a Kitten” (1968)
12. The Rose Garden – “Next Plane to London” (1968)





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Monday, November 2, 2020

Belief in God II

For me the goal of apologetics is not to reason people to faith but to show them how my Catholic faith is reasonable. As stated in my previous posts, if I were going to explain my Christian faith to someone then I would start with the following three topics: faith and reason; spirit, matter, and the spirituality of the human soul; and proofs for the existence of God. Let us review.

I. Faith and Reason

The Catholic Church teaches- and has always taught- that although faith is superior to reason the two can never contradict since both come to us from God, who is all truth. Some people today say you must choose either faith or reason- you can’t have both- but this notion is a fallacy which ignores 2,000 years of Catholic teaching. For Catholics, the Bible is not a science book, nor is a science book Scripture. If I want to discuss the meaning of life and my purpose in it, then I will go to a priest. If I have a broken arm and need it mended, then I will go to a doctor (same goes for seeking advice during a pandemic).

Barack Obama and Pope Francis

Catholics do not read the Bible literally (most Catholics- including the Pope- accept the theory of evolution as fact) nor do we turn to science books to answer questions of faith and morality such as why are we here, why is there suffering, and what happens after death. My advice is don’t trust anyone who would make you choose between faith and reason since both are God’s gifts and should be cherished as well as protected from the misinformed, the ignorant, and the unscrupulous. The Catholic Church will never ask you to abandon or suspend your reason. While some of our Christian beliefs might seem fantastic at first, they are nonetheless reasonable beliefs that you can investigate for yourself.

Descent of the Holy Spirit by Jan Joest

II. Spirit, Matter, and the Spirituality of the Human Soul

Our universe consists of both material and immaterial objects. Our bodies are material but our ideas are immaterial. We know the source of our bodies- our parents- but what is the source of our ideas? The brain cannot be the source of our ideas since the brain is made of matter and only an immaterial faculty has the power to create immaterial objects that cannot be seen or measured. 

We call this immaterial faculty the soul. Every living organism has a soul but man is the only creature whose soul is made of spirit. Spirit is invisible. It has no shape and no parts. A spirit knows and loves. God is a spirit. Each person is a union of spirit and matter. Unlike matter, spirit cannot decompose; therefore, our spiritual souls will continue to exist after death. This idea is pretty scary for most people.

St. Thomas Aquinas by Francisco de Zurbarán 

III. Proof for the Existence of God

Saint Thomas Aquinas, the great 14th century Catholic priest, philosopher, and theologian, developed five proofs for the existence of God (although many people today- including college students- seem to be woefully ignorant of these proofs). Aquinas used reason- not faith- to demonstrate the existence of God. We can also use reason to see the truth of the following three statements about God:

1. There must be one God because there had to be one Ultimate Cause outside the material universe that caused everything else.
2. God must be a spirit because He exists outside the material universe which He created.
3. God must be infinite because He creates something out of absolutely nothing. (The gap between nothing and something, between a non-being and actual existence, is infinite. It takes an infinite power to bridge that infinite gap.) 

Belief in God is a rational response to the question of human existence, and no scientist or atheist can provide a better explanation as to the origin of why we are here. In fact, the more we learn about the material universe and our own existence, the more we see God must exist. 

Perhaps it’s because I was born into the faith but these three Catholic beliefs- the unity of faith and reason, the spirituality of the human soul, and the existence of God- all seem pretty reasonable to me and can be explained and understood through reason alone.

But what does it mean to say God exists and belief in God is reasonable? Is that it? Or can we as creatures use our reason to learn and say more about our Creator? The answer is yes and using reason to study and understand the attributes of God would be my next step in explaining my faith to someone and I would begin with a focus on time and space.

Pope Francis on Christmas Eve

IV. God is Eternal

A person’s belief in God is either inherited from his family- from whom this belief is passed down- or gained through some other experience. While reason alone does not usually compel a person to believe in God, reason can demonstrate to believers and non-believers alike that belief in God is not a wish or a delusion but a rational conclusion based on reason (which, like faith, is a gift from God).

Because God is infinite, it can be difficult- though not impossible- for finite beings to describe Him using words (I prefer paintings and statues). Yet as Catholics we believe the existence of God can be known through human reason- without the aid of revelation- and God loves us and wants us to know Him. So before we even open the Bible or start talking about religion, what can human reason alone- without faith- tell us about our Creator?

Nearly all scientists and serious thinkers- religious and non-religious alike- agree on two main points: 1) our universe had a beginning; and 2) something created the universe. I think these two ideas are a wonderful starting point when explaining our Christian belief in God because they do not require faith and can be understood through reason alone. 

Even most educated non-believers agree that “something” certainly created the universe though it is impossible for humans to know who or what it was. But Christians disagree. As Christians, we believe we can know a great deal about our creator not only from faith but through reason.

Since the universe had a beginning and was created, we know someone- or something- must have existed before the universe and then created it. Christians call this someone or something God.

There is no other explanation for our universe. Something created it from nothing. In order to have created the universe from nothing, this Ultimate Cause- God- must have certain attributes. If the Ultimate Cause does not possess all of these attributes, then it is not the Ultimate Cause- and not God.

God Creating the Sun, the Moon and the Stars by Jan Brueghel the Younger

Unlike everything else in our universe, God does not need a cause for His existence because God is existence itself and His existence explains the existence of all other things. Nothing existed before God except God who not only continues to exist but holds all things in existence.

If I were going to discuss the necessary attributes of God (ie. the Ultimate Cause of the universe) then I would start with something everyone knows (or thinks they know): time. Of course, time is immaterial and exists only as an abstract concept, a tool we use to measure change. If the universe has a beginning (which it does) then this means there was a time when the universe did not exist. So, what was there before the universe? If we say nothing existed before the universe, then what started the universe? Nothing cannot start something so that answer is insufficient. However, if we say something existed before the universe and this something started the universe, then we are on solid scientific and philosophical ground since we know everything has a cause and the cause of our universe has an explanation: something else caused it.

But then we are still left with the problem of how to explain the existence of the Ultimate Cause: where did it come from and how old is it? The answer is- and must be- it did not come from anywhere and is not subject to change (time) because it has always existed and continues to exist, unchanged, outside the limitations of what we call time.

Because the Ultimate Cause of the universe is uncaused and created what we call time and space, it could not be affected by those things and would thus be timeless and immaterial. Unlike our material universe, which had a beginning and continues to change and expand, the Ultimate Cause has always existed, is changeless, and is existence itself- the very existence in which we are living at this very moment. This is what we mean when we say the Ultimate Cause- God- is eternal. 

The Ultimate Cause of the universe- God- must be eternal because if He had a beginning then He would not be the primary cause of existence but a creature subject to change (time) and the result of some other previous cause. God must also be spirit because if He were material then- like all materials things- He would have limits and be subject to something else and not the Ultimate Cause of all things. God is not a creature, after all, but the Creator of all things.

We must concentrate upon the concept of eternity; it brings us deep into the meaning of God. You and I and all men are in time: which means that we are never at any moment the whole of ourself. What we were last year, what we will be next year, all belongs to our total being; but last year has gone and next year has not arrived. There never is a moment when we are all there. We possess our being, the philosophers say, successively. Not so God. All that He is, He possesses in one single act of being. Eternity does not mean everlasting time, time open at both ends, so that however far you go back into the past there is no beginning, however you far you go forward into the future there is no end. Eternity is not time at all. It is God’s total possession of Himself.

Infinity, omnipresence, eternity- these are rich and rewarding concepts, but we should not stay with them too long a time without returning to the Gospels to meet the living God. Christ is there for us, “Whom,” as St. John says at the opening of his first Epistle, “we have seen with our eyes, whom we have looked upon, whom our hands have handled.” The Infinite we are studying is the same Infinite whom we meet in the Gospels, the same Infinite we receive in the Blessed Eucharist. 1
The Last Supper by Joos van Cleve

V. Conclusion

To say our universe was self-created or just appeared from nowhere is contrary to science and perhaps the greatest wishful thinking there is. Like all material things, we know our universe had a beginning which means something created it (ie. ignited the spark that caused the Big Bang from which our universe continues to expand). It is self-evident that the Ultimate Cause of the universe must be outside it, not subject to it, and has therefore always existed. The Ultimate Cause, then, must be immaterial, or spiritual, which means it is not only without parts and limitations but also has the power to create something from nothing which means it can do anything (including turning water into wine).

Christianity (as well as Judaism and Islam) believes in an all-powerful, infinite spirit God, a belief that is in harmony with what science and reason tell us about what the Ultimate Cause of our universe must be. There is much more to say about this, of course (including why God created the universe as well as our part in the love story), but clearly Catholics’ belief in God is not contrary to reason for it reasonably explains without any delusion how and why we (and our universe) exist. What’s your explanation?

Pope John Paul II
____________________________
Frank Sheed, Theology for Beginners (Brooklyn, NY : Angelico Press, reprint edition 2011)



Friday, October 9, 2020

Rock Grab Bag IX

I know I’m growing older when the average age of my favorite rock songs is 45 years old! Through the years, rock has often served as my rock not only during tough and changing times but also when simply working, driving, and recreating. Good rock stands the test of time (is “Born to Be Wild” the greatest rock song ever or what?) though sadly I don’t think they are making any more of it so hold onto what you got, throw it in a bag, and rock on! Here are some of my favorite rock songs including classic rock, hard rock, lite rock, and singer-songwriter. It’s another rock grab bag, people (quarantine edition). Enjoy!

Van Halen

01. The Beatles – “Revolution” (1968)
02. Paul Simon – “Mother and Child Reunion” (1972)
03. Journey – "Lights" (1978)
04. Steppenwolf – “Born to Be Wild” (1968)
05. The Kinks – “You Really Got Me” (1964)
06. Classics IV – “Traces” (1969)
07. The Beatles – “Bad Boy” (1965)
08. Fleetwood Mac – “Landslide” (1975)
09. Elton John – “Little Jeannie” (1980)
10. Looking Glass – “Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl)” (1972)
11. Hinder – “Lips of an Angel” (2005)
12. The Beatles – “Let It Be” (1970)
13. Van Halen – “Hot for Teacher” (1984)
14. The Original Caste – “One Tin Soldier” (1969) 
15. Dr. Hook – “When You’re in Love with a Beautiful Woman” (1978)
16. Alice Cooper – “Caught in a Dream” (1971)
17. Bob Dylan – “Subterranean Homesick Blues” (1965)
18. Bread – “If” (1971)
19. Gordon Lightfoot – “Christian Island (Georgian Bay)” (1972)
20. Joan Osborne – “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go” (2017)



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Sunday, September 20, 2020

Alternative Grab Bag VII

Having just returned to the United States a few weeks ago after two years in the Middle East, my family and I are currently enjoying the cool September weather and lush greenery of Northern Virginia. Like other parts of the planet right now, things here are a bit strange due to the global pandemic (and I am still confused why America leads the world in COVID-19 deaths). While it feels like fall (my favorite season) is just around the corner, we will soon be on our way to the Caribbean and so will miss the changing of the leaves and Halloween. When feeling out of sorts or dealing with mixed emotions, I have often found alternative music can be just what the doctor ordered. Here are some of my alternative favorites including punk, new wave, baroque pop, emo/hardcore, and indie/alternative. Enjoy!

Lee Hazlewood

01. Sarah McLachlan – “Answer (Live)” (2003)
02. Jonathan Richman – “Vincent Van Gogh” (2004)
03. New Order – “Be a Rebel” (2020)
04. Scott Walker – “30 Century Man” (1969)
05. American Music Club – “Johnny Mathis’ Feet” (1993)
06. Scott Walker – “Montague Terrace (In Blue)” (1967)
07. Bat for Lashes – “The Boys of Summer (Live)” (2019)
08. Lou Reed – “The Day John Kennedy Died” (1982)
09. Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers – “New England” (1976)
10. Beck – “The Golden Age” (2002)
11. Scott Walker – “Mathilde” (1967)
12. John Cale – “Andalucia” (1973)
13. Lee Hazlewood – “Your Sweet Love” (1966)
14. The Divine Comedy – “Our Mutual Friend” (2004)
15. The Dead Milkmen – “Born to Love Volcanos” (1988)
16. Fugazi – “Burning Too” (1989)
17. Fugazi – “Do You Like Me” (1995)
18. The Divine Comedy – “When the Lights Go Out All Over Europe” (1994)
19. Haircut 100 – “Lemon Firebrigade” (1982)
20. Fugazi – “Public Witness Program” (1993)



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Saturday, September 12, 2020

Garage Freaks! III

The word “barbarian” comes to us from the ancient Greeks who used it disparagingly to describe foreigners whose languages to Greek ears sounded like gibberish (“bar bar bar bar bar”). While it’s easy to dismiss ‘60s garage rock as America’s primitive response to the British Invasion, there is much more to garage rock than just an aped, barbarian approach to music. There was, for example, a thin line between American garage rock and psychedelic music and in both forms one can hear the roots of hard rockpunkmetal, and hardcore. And while garage rock was mostly an American affair, let us not forget the outstanding contributions of the Troggs (from England) who gave the world “Wild Thing”.

Steppenwolf

What ‘60s garage rockers lacked in musical talent and sophistication they more than made up for with attitude and menace. There is nothing new under the sun. If you played for some bored teenagers in ancient Rome the first seven albums of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones and then gave them drums and electric guitars, the music those Latin teens would produce (toga rock?) would sound a lot like garage rock (and their parents would then complain about all the noise and long hair). Here are some of my favorite garage rock pioneers songs including some that straddle the thin, fuzzy line between garage rock and psychedelic music (but don't call these proto-punks hippies!) Enjoy!

The Gants

01. The Electric Prunes – “I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)” (1967)
02. Count Five – “Psychotic Reaction (Rarities Version)” (1966)
03. The Sonics – “Strychnine” (1965)
04. The Troggs – “Give It to Me” (1967)
05. The Balloon Farm – “A Question of Temperature” (1967)
06. The Seeds – “Pushin’ Too Hard” (1965)
07. Bob Seger and the Last Heard – “Heavy Music – Pt. 1” (1967)
08. The Chocolate Watchband – “Are You Gonna Be There (At the Love-In)” (1967)
09. Bob Seger and the Last Heard – “East Side Story” (1966)
10. The Chocolate Watchband – “Baby Blue” (1968)
11. Steppenwolf – “Born to Be Wild” (1968)
12. The Gants – “My Baby Don’t Care” (1965)
13. The Music Explosion – “Little Bit O’ Soul” (1967)
14. The Savage Resurrection – “Thing in E” (1968)
15. The Gants – “I Wonder” (1967)
16. Paul Revere & the Raiders – “Mr. Sun, Mr. Moon” (1969)
17. Los Bravos – “Bring a Little Lovin’” (1968)
18. The 13th Floor Elevators – “You’re Gonna Miss Me” (1966)
19. Love – “7 and 7 Is” (1966)
20. Love – “No Matter What You Do” (1966)
21. The Brogues – “I Ain’t No Miracle Worker” (1965)
22. Blues Magoos – “One by One” (1966)
23. The Chocolate Watchband – “I’m Not Like Everybody Else” (1968)
24. The Castaways - “Liar, Liar” (1965)
25. The Electric Prunes – “Get Me to the World on Time” (1967)



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Saturday, September 5, 2020

Bubblegum!

Though I was born during the tail end of the bubblegum music phenomenon, as a child I was well-schooled in bubblegum thanks to TV reruns. Whether it was live action made-for-TV bands like the Monkees, the Partridge Family, and the Brady Bunch, or cartoon bands like the Impossibles, Josie and the Pussycats, and the Groovie Goolies, I ate it all up like sugary breakfast cereal. Like junk food, bubblegum music was aimed at children and had no real value but sure was fun and wasn’t all bad. In fact, bubblegum helped ease preteens like me into so-called adult music and introduced us to grown up themes. The best of bubblegum knew how to grab its kid listeners and even got parents tapping their feet (and trying to get those catchy songs out of their heads). Here are some of my favorites. Enjoy!

The Monkees

01. The Monkees – “Sometime in the Morning” (1967)
02. The Monkees – “Shades of Gray” (1967)
03. The Monkees – “Daydream Believer” (1967)
04. The Royal Guardsmen – “Snoopy vs. the Red Baron” (1966)
05. The Archies – “Sugar, Sugar” (1969)
06. The Partridge Family – “I Woke Up in Love This Morning” (1971)
07. Paul Revere & the Raiders – “Just Like Me” (1965)
08. The Peppermint Rainbow – “And I’ll Be There” (1969)
09. Josie and the Pussycats – “Josie and the Pussycats” (1970)
10. The Jackson 5 – “ABC” (1970)
11. The Partridge Family – “Come on Get Happy” (1971)
12. Blue Swede – “Hooked on a Feeling” (1973)
13. The Monkees – “The Door into Summer (Live)” (2019)
14. Davy Jones – “Girl” (1971)





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