Sunday, July 10, 2011

Stuff I Heard This Weekend (Music for Mondays)


Yep, you read that title right. There is nothing more to this post, and nothing less. Some of these songs I heard in the house, or on the road. None of them were from an i-Pod or anything like that. Usually, I prefer to have music arrive to my ears by chance. Call me crazy. Oh, and this post is so long, I'm publishing it on Sunday night. Call it the Early Edition.

So that is what you have to look forward to from me today. No reasoned approach to the selection. No ulterior motive to the picks. But sometimes, and trust me I'm open to seeing things this way now, the songs just come unannounced and resonate with what is happening in the world of my faith and the new oxygen supply of my life. I speak of my love of the Church here, if you hadn't noticed that trait rearing it's head already.

It's a jumble of old and new, but only if "new" is used very loosely. New, as in "newer rock n' roll." Have a listen and see how these tunes tickled my puzzler this past weekend. Warning: The final song in the post is 24+ minutes long. LOL.

The Who, Can't Explain. I've said it before and I'll say it again: the subject of the Faith and the Church is so deep, and so wide, that it can never be exhausted in terms of ideas to write or blog about. Take this blog, for instance. From one author, to two, and then three, and back to one again, YIMCatholic has 1089 posts published on the books, all wrapped around the title statement and you now what? Webster and Allison are still out there writing posts too. See? She's like a rich vein in a mine whose surface has only just been scratched. Better yet, it's like what Our Lord says here,

the water that I will give to him will become in him a fountain of water, springing up into eternal life. —John 4:10

Other than that, my love for Christ and His Church is unexplainable except it must be Love. I saw this on the Facebook page of the Who and the first song of the set was chosen.



Bruce Springsteen, Tunnel of Love. Love is complex, multidimensional, and multifaceted. Of late I've been sharing thoughts around love as agape. Of course, love also is eros, philios, and storos. Modern culture seems to highlight eros, and maybe to you this song does that too. But real love encompasses all four types of love, and that even includes the love of one's faith. These are the thoughts I had when I heard this song in the car. It reminded me that setting unrealistic expectations for love will drown you in sorrow. Because love will make you laugh, make you cry, and even make you yodel sometimes. Just sayin'. This was written when Springsteen's marriage to Julianne Philips was unraveling. Remember that?


Bruce Springsteen - Tunnel Of Love by jpdc11

Kim Wilde, Keep Me Hanging On. Welcome to the "Big Eighties!" Big hair, big sound, and big, splashy, covers of older hits. Like this modern take on the song made famous by Diana Ross. I heard this right on the heels of Bruce's tune. Seriously though, whatever happened to Kim Wilde? Her version of this classic reminded me that often times in love, temptations will arise and attempt to lead you astray. You have to cut them away like wreckage from a boating accident, or it will act like an anchor and drag you to the bottom. You have to say "get out of my life" to that which threatens your relationship's health or threatens to lead you astray. Sing it Kim!



Jon Bon Jovi, You Give Love a Bad Name. More big hair, this time on a dude wearing cool looking rags. Ever met somebody that gives "love" a bad name? Some folks think I was giving love a bad name recently. Heh. I tend to default back to a lesson I learned a long time ago: leadership is by example. Those who hit me with "do as I say and not as I do" behavior leave me cold (thank God for the Sacrament of Reconciliation). And they give love a bad name. Christ never said, or did, such a thing.



Naked Eyes, Promises, Promises. This song, to me anyway, is YIMCatholic. Everything else is simply a string of broken promises. I've come to believe what W.J. Williams, G.K. Chesterton, and countless others have come to realize: the Catholic Church is the key that fits the complex lock of human nature. Every other approach is just empty promises that can't be kept, and that leave you playing solitaire in your jail cell.



The Fixx, Stand or Fall. Remember these guys? What a bunch of great tunes they made! Red Skies at Night, One Thing Leads to Another, Saved By Zero. Awesome stuff. And of course this tune, which issues something of a challenge. I've stated my piece. I choose to stand with the Church.



Rare Earth, Get Ready. How can you not love this song or this band? Not a recognizable "star" name among them. And yet, BAM! They rock the house. This is their 1969 cover of Smokey Robinson's classic. The boys took it to #4 in 1970. I heard a snippet of this one while sitting through the trailers in the theater before The Tree of Life started.

I've got a soft spot for any band whose drummer is the lead singer. You just don't see that very often. Here is their awesome loooooooong version, where every band member gets to do a solo. Because 3 minutes just isn't good enough, you know? This is YIMCatholic too. I never met a girl like the Church, the Bride of Christ. She's bringin' the world a multidimensional Love that's true. Now THAT is a rare earth! Are you ready?