3.23.2010

Top Ten Albums: Everybody Knows This is Nowhere

In lieu of climbing, I've decided to compile and review my top ten favorite albums in an effort to figure out why I like them so much. As they're finished I'll post them here, in no particular order. First up is Neil Young's classic, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere.


Originally released in 1969, this album is one of the oldest on my list, but it sure doesn't sound that way. The production value is high, the vocals are clear, and the individual instruments are well separated in the mix. But there are still rough edges: the guitars are harsh on the higer notes, the bass gets muffled under the drums, and the cymbals wash out at points, and that's what gives the album authenticity. It feels like it was made by a band in a room, not, say, Billy Corgan by himself in a isolation chamber. Also, the album starts with Cinnamon Girl, which is one of the best songs ever written.

Everybody Knows alternates between being very tight and focused, as in the aforementioned Cinnamon Girl or the title track, and being loose and free, such as Down By The River or Cowgirl In The Sand. The latter two songs reach dangerously close to "jam territory," but the band never succumbs to full-on Phishdom. Instead of some idiots trading out extended, non-melodic solos, the band stays firm in the song's groove while Neil adds tasteful (side note: yes, sometimes Neil goes overboard with the whole one-note-solo thing, but whatever, I like it) noodling on the guitar. The point is that, even when jamming, the band keeps it simple and doesn't over-complicate the song. Nothing sounds busy because the band sits back and lets the song dictate where to go. The prime example of this is Cowgirl. The round, heavy bass line, full of pauses and breaths, counteracts the sharply accented rhythm guitar, while the drums keep the song moving forward at a steady pace. The guitars and bass bounce all over the place during the verses, but once the vocals come in for the chorus the whole band snaps back into rigid time, delivering a poppy, concise moment amidst the otherwise loose jam.

The album is stylistically diverse, with heavy, long jams (River, Cowgirl), straight-forward rockers (Cinnamon Girl), and even country-tinged front-porch jams (The Losing End, Everybody Knows). Even the slower, ballad-y songs (Round and Round, Running Dry), which usually put me to sleep, work to vary the pace of the album. And while those latter songs I don't cue up individually, I don't skip over them when I listen to the full album, which says something of their necessity to Everybody Knows.

As an added bonus, the record makes a great soundtrack for evening treks westward on I-70. Like to Joe's Valley, where I'm going Friday. Trent's Mom awaits...

3 comments:

  1. OMFGD (D is for Dood).

    Really?!?!?

    A POST AT A TIME?!?!

    Just give up all 10 and let us judge...

    oh...and judge we WILL!!!!

    Psyched on your postingness.

    -M@

    ReplyDelete
  2. P.S.

    Send trent's mom!!!!!

    It's Due.

    -Matt

    ReplyDelete
  3. but if i string it out you'll have more opportunities to waste time...

    ReplyDelete