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The Eric Hopkins Top 5
Brother EricHop presented me with an idea for a week-long blog series for me and my fellow Friends Recommends bloggers. The assignment to name our top-5 songs of all time and discuss them. Simple, right? Not so simple for me, but I don't have to post until Friday (thanks BrotherHop) so I have a little bit more time to think about it. Apparently TheChristopherMyers and Wardo think about this every morning when they wake up, so they should have no problem. Today we hear from idea originator Eric Hopkins, with his top-5 songs of all time. These are some great songs, and better late than never (my fault!), right?
Exciting note: I've received a Colmus list. It should go up next week after these top-5's conclude. From here on out you're hearing from Eric:
This is a little long. And if I was coming to this blog and saw a post this long, there is a chance I wouldn’t read it. Maybe you should come back each hour and read a paragraph. Here are what I think are my five favorite songs, in no particular order:
In the Aeroplane Over the Sea (Neutral Milk Hotel from In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, 1998)
The first time I heard this song was in Matt Davis’s car. He had a tape of the album playing when he picked me up on what, in my memory, was one of the first perfect days of spring. I immediately asked him what the song was. At the time I heard it, it was the song I always wanted to hear, and the title song introduced me to one of my favorite albums. All the instruments belong and contribute to the song. Even though one person wrote the song on guitar, the band parts don’t seem like a second thought created to accompany the song. NMH made me want every song to have a saw in it. To answer Adam’s question, best horn solo ever, man. The lyrics are straight from the soul and it just seems like a song that took as long to write as it takes to play, like it just unfolded out of Jeff Mangum’s mind as he strummed and sung it for the first time.
Sympathy for the Devil (The Rolling Stones from Beggars Banquet, 1968)
Only In Dreams (Weezer from Weezer “The Blue Album”, 1994)
A Sight for Sore Eyes (Tom Waits from Foreign Affairs, 1977)
Desolation Row (Bob Dylan from Highway 61 Revisited, 1965)
7 comments:
is sight for sore eyes the reason you chose to wear #5 this year?
these songs are not getting the respect they deserve. even if they are over 10 minutes long.
All strong picks here. I saw that Sympathy for the Devil movie. I thought it was quite the endurance test. The non-Stones stuff is way way weird.
All in all this is enjoyable. I might like Tom Waits if I found out he was a Muppet.
Bravo! Only In Dreams was a nice surprise and I was not familiar with that Tom Waits song so that's also exciting.
I think Chris is on to something here. I find it hard to believe that Tom Waits isn't Sweetums from Muppets.
http://muppet.wikia.com/wiki/Sweetums
Matt Hayes!
That's the guy!!!
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