Showing posts with label Bobby Womack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bobby Womack. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Not Namesakes Tuesday: To Kill A Mockingbird


As George and Ernie are both out on manoeuvres, and because last week's bumper edition nearly finished me off, we're having a rest from Namesakes this week. All being well, it will return to bore you next Tuesday.

At the weekend, Louise and I went to see the new stage adaptation of To Kill A Mockingbird. It was excellent. I've long been a fan of Aaron Sorkin's sparky, snappy dialogue, and he found some excellent ways to use the themes of the novel to say important (if ultimately futile) things about the state of America today. If it comes to your neck of the woods, I'd highly recommend going along to see it.

Here are some tunes related, in one way or another, to Harper Lee's famous novel...












Wednesday, 29 November 2023

Self-Help For Cynics #15: Perfect

It's got to be perfect
It's got to be worth it, yeah
Too many people take second best
But I won't take anything less
It's got to be, yeah
Perfect

Fairground Attraction - Perfect

I hate dealing with car repairs and mechanics. I always feel like they’re going to be patronising, supercilious and out to rip me off every chance they get. Unfortunately, due to the amount of mileage I do these days, my dealings with car repair “specialists” have increased… and any such encounter I can drive away from without a hole in my pocket or a bigger hole in my ego gives me cause for cheer. Actual turn up the radio, thump the steering wheel, whoop for joy jubilation. Survived another one! Got out with my wallet and my dignity (mostly) intact!  

There were bad times when my tank was running dry
And my machine couldn't shift into its gears
And on cold days it would stall
So I almost junked it all

The Good Rats - Mr. Mechanic

In her book Don’t Feed The Monkey Mind, Jennifer Shannon identifies three “assumptions” which our stressed out amygdala loves to accentuate. Last week I talked about Fear of Uncertainty… this week: Perfectionism.

The Orchids - Striving For The Lazy Perfection

I don’t think of myself as a perfectionist. I'm too lazy. Of Dr. Shannon’s three assumptions, this was the one I'd almost ruled out from the start. Until I read the chapter and realised that perfectionism goes hand in hand with something else which I am extremely familiar with: fear of failure. The expert explains…

While others find motivation from challenge, a higher purpose, a promised prize, or simply the joy of doing the thing itself, if you are a perfectionist, your motivation is fear of failing. Your mantra is: don’t screw it up! Only when you’ve completed the social interaction or task without making any mistakes will you be able to relax.

Skinny - Failure

This explains the whoop of joy I let out on escaping the maw of the mechanic, unscathed.

This also explains why I never asked a girl out in my teens, and only really stumbled into relationships in my 20s when the green light was showing and the welcome mat was thrown at my feet.

Chad & Jeremy - Teenage Failure

As I’ve grown older, I have learned to take more risks, step outside my comfort zone, force myself to flirt with danger if the prize was really worth having. That’s how I managed to get out of my old job… but I had to be backed into a corner by the firing squad to do it.

And this is the place where failure goes
If your dreams won't die
This is where all your hopes survive
If they're not a lie
This is where all the might-have-beens
Triumph and forgive
This is where all the star-crossed loves
Have the chance to live

Rupert Holmes - The Place Where Failure Goes

Dr. Shannon continues…

Perfectionists hedge their bets, only doing things they know they’ll be good at. If you do get saddled with something you aren’t good at, you may just put it off until the last minute, where you’ll have an excuse – not enough time – to be less than perfect.

Sound familiar? Or is it just me again?

Chip Taylor - Fuck All The Perfect People

The argument goes that really successful people achieve their goals because they’re unafraid of failure. They fall off the horse... then they get back on and try again. Eventually they get where they want to be. I’ve often argued that the reason I didn’t make it as a professional writer is that I didn’t push myself enough. Every rejection letter was a kick in the teeth. Many of my contemporaries who did succeed in that field lost all their teeth but just kept growing new ones. I don’t believe they were better writers than me. They were just better at recovering from a kicking, or as Jennifer Shannon puts it…

…relatively few high achievers expect perfectionism from themselves.

Just everyday problems
Find a way of bringin' you down
But if you want it bad enough
Find a way of turning it around
You find a way of turning it around

There's one thing that'll beat failing
That's trying
If anybody tells you different
They gotta be lying

Bobby Womack - There's One Thing That Beats Failing

A former colleague (notably more successful than me in most aspects of her life, but also a major screw-up in certain areas) used to swear by a popular self-help book of the late 80s / early 90s called Feel The Fear & Do It Anyway. She adopted the book’s title as her mantra and it appeared to serve her well. Cynical moi used to pour scorn on the very notion, but the more I read about the way our brain works against us, the more I’m coming to accept the wisdom in that mantra. 

Oh baby, here comes the fear again, oh-oh
The end is near again, oh-oh
A monkey's built a house on your back
You can't get anyone to come in the sack
And here comes another panic attack, oh
Here we go again

Pulp - The Fear

One final word from the good doctor…

When we allow for some risk, we give ourselves more choices and we prepare ourselves for when things go wrong. If we deny ourselves the privilege of being wrong or failing, we’ll be unable to take the risks that are necessary for meeting our personal goals. This is why, in addition to anxiety, perfectionism is associated with depression, procrastination, addiction and low self-esteem.

Failure hurts though. It’s not just a metaphorical kicking, it can feel as painful, as brutal, as any physical assault. I remember when I was applying for my current job. There was a moment when an obstacle was placed in my way which seemed insurmountable. All the hope I’d placed in this one opportunity, this lifeline escape from the mental misery of The Bad Place… and now it looked like it was all a pipe dream. I actually collapsed on the floor like I’d been punched in the stomach. I remember sitting there in abject despair… feeling actual physical pain.

I get knocked down... but I get up again

Chumbawamba - Tubthumping

Somehow though, I managed to pick myself up and try to find a solution. I still don’t know where I found that impetus. It doesn’t come naturally. Maybe for some people, you only get it when you hit rock bottom.

Failure is always the best way to learn,
Retracing your steps until you know,
Have no fear, your wounds will heal.



Sunday, 1 January 2023

Snapshots #273: A Top Ten Numbered Street Songs


Farewell also to Vivienne Westwood. You might argue she's not taking a snapshot in this picture... but she is driving a tank to David Cameron's house, so I think she wins.

Here are this week's answers... I would have said all the numbered streets were from New York, but at least one of them (Charles Wright's street) is from L.A. I checked, so you don't have to.


10. The Stones in 'Nam.

Hanoi Rocks - 11th Street Kidzz

9. Blokes curse.

Men Swear!

Menswear - 125 West 3rd Street

8. Heavily associated with management.

Don't mess with The Boss's wife.

Patti Scialfa - 23rd Street Lullaby

7. Sounds like he's still vain.

I always get him mixed up with David Sylvian. Except David Sylvian doesn't rhyme with "still vain".

Sylvain Sylvain - 14th Street Beat

6. The King isn't wrong when he questions this week's connection.

King Charles is Right when he asks What... well, you get the idea.

Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band - The 103rd St. Theme

5. Law-breaking clowns.

Fun Lovin' Criminals - 10th Street

4. She: is a ninja!

"Is a ninja" is an anagram.

Janis Ian - 42nd St Psycho Blues

3. Where Weezer meets the Hurricanes.

The lead singer of Weezer is called Rivers Cuomo. If he met Johnny & The Hurricanes, we might be left with...

Johnny Rivers - Positively 4th Street

A Dylan song, obviously, but Bob appears here often enough.

2. Old Cricketer's a right weirdo.


Roy Harper sang about an old cricketer

Harper's Bizarre - 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)

A Simon & Garfunkel song, obviously, but Paul appears here often enough. Also, this was the version that made the UK Top 40 back in 1967. With a very young Boris Johnson in the band...

1. Bomb, by Wacko.


Anagram!


Happy New Year, everyone. Thanks for playing.


Monday, 6 April 2020

My Top Ten Bill Withers Songs


If you asked me to name my favourite post-60s soul singer, Bill Withers would come top of the list. I first became aware of Bill some time after his retirement when his music returned to the charts in the late 80s, even though Bill himself didn't come with it. He'd chosen to leave the music industry behind a couple of years earlier and resisted all subsequent temptations to return and cash in, preferring instead to live a quiet life as a "regular guy".

His legacy includes many truly timeless pop songs - so timeless in fact, that this Top Ten pretty much wrote itself, because the big hits just had to be there... along with a couple of lesser-known favourites. The only difficulty I had was putting them in order.

Thanks to Lynchie for pointing us in the direction of Bill's duet with Bobby Womack on It's All Over Now, "the best ever version" of that particular tune.



10. Harlem

An audio time capsule. Close your eyes and you're actually there with him.

9. Who Is He And What Is He To You?

Jealousy and infidelity has rarely sounded sweeter.

8. I Can't Write Left-Handed

An anti-war song... but really, it's a song about sacrifice. The live intro is essential.

7. Just The Two Of Us

Written by Bill, but recorded as a duet with saxophonist Grover Washington who took top billing... long before Will Smith... or even Eminem... got their hands on it.

6. Grandma's Hands

His favourite song... listen to the live introduction and he explains why. Get to the end without filling up and you've got a heart of stone.

5. Lovely Day

One of those pop songs that's so ubiquitous it verges on Beatles territory... and yet I never grow tired of it. Plus, listen to how he holds those notes in the chorus!

4. Better Off Dead

The song that convinced me Bill was more than just another soul singer. The ultimate suicide anthem - the singer even shoots himself dead at the end. Beat that, Morrissey!

3. Ain't No Sunshine

His debut hit, released when he was 33 years old. Even when it struck gold, he refused to quit his on a production line because he thought the music industry was "a fickle business".

2. Lean On Me

There's a simplicity to Bill's best tunes that makes them truly timeless. Here's the perfect example of that, with lyrics we all really need right now...

Sometimes in our lives we all have pain
We all have sorrow
But if we are wise
We know that there's always tomorrow

1. Use Me

Perhaps a surprising choice for number one given the household name tunes above, but this is the first track I thought of when I heard the news of Bill's passing, and I've listened to it most of the weekend. The keyboard bassline is one of the most addictive substances known to man.




RIP, Bill. Wherever you are, I hope it's a lovely day.


Sunday, 29 December 2019

Saturday Snapshots #116 - The Answers


What is Saturday Snapshots?

Portraits hung in empty halls
Frameless heads on nameless walls
With eyes that watch the world and can't forget
Like the strangers that you've met...

Fortunately, they need be strangers no longer, because here are this week's answers...


10. Get Snake or MacReady to scan the fetus.


You scan the fetus with an ultrasound.

MacReady and Snake Pliskin were characters played by Kurt Russell.

Apologies for the obscure b-side side, but... what a tune!

Ultrasound - Kurt Russell

9. Contemporary Leg Joint Company.


Knee-Co?

Contemporary = these days.

Nico - These Days

(I think she was going out with Jackson Browne at the time she decided to record his tune.)

8. ...a foundling offers self-help?


"The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling" is the full title of Henry Fielding's novel Tom Jones.

Self help? Help yourself!

Tom Jones - Help Yourself

7. Sweet lady's latest issue.


New Edition - Candy Girl

6. Not Gwen Stefani. You hit that on the head!


That ain't (the lead singer of) No Doubt. You hit the NAIL on the head.

Jimmy Nail - Ain't No Doubt

(She's lying.)

5. Cher greets ten p, catches a Clodoald double-decker.


"Cher greets ten p" is an anagram.

Google "Clodoald" and you'll learn he was also known as Saint Cloud.

Gretchen Peters - On A Bus To St. Cloud

4. Get to the other side of CX Avenue without Cecil or Linda.


CX Avenue would be 110th Street in Roman numerals.

Cecil & Linda were Womack & Womack. But it's not them...

Bobby Womack - Across 110th Street

3. Elvis: born in the 70s.


Elvis was the king rocker.

If you were born in the 70s, you were Generation X.

Generation X - King Rocker

2. Reins? Smoke rings.


Reins are bands on horses.

Cigarettes are smokes; rings are wedding bands.

Band of Horses - Cigarettes, Wedding Bands

1. There's a ding dong when skins split... but Travis is outside to take you home.


Banana skins. Banana split. Rama lama ding dong.

Travis Bickle was a Taxi Driver played by...



They would not listen, they're not listening still
Perhaps they never will

But if they change their mind, Saturday Snapshots will be back next week...

Wednesday, 13 February 2019

My Top Ten I'm vs. I'm Not Songs


Let's do another one of these, pitting I'm... songs against I'm Not songs. Will the ayes have it, or the nays?



10. The Blue Room - I'm Afraid vs. Skunk Anansie - I'm Not Afraid

The Blue Room song comes from the soundtrack to Ferris Bueller's Day Off, which wins it enormous points. But I'm too afraid of Skin from Skunk Anansie to tell her she's a loser, so...

9. Van Halen - I'm The One vs. The Cars - I'm Not The One

Somebody get Eddie some plasters for his fingers. And a pat on the back too: I think he beats Mr. Ocasek here.

8. The Artistics - I'm Gonna Miss You vs. Glen Campbell - I'm Not Gonna Miss You

Lost Northern Soul belter versus late period Glen. I am going to miss you, Mr. Campbell, sir.

7. Hothouse Flowers - I'm Sorry vs. Morrissey - I'm Not Sorry

I'm Sorry, Moz... this one goes to the Flowers. Never mind, you'll get another chance in a moment.

Of course, the big problem with Morrissey is right there in the title of this song. He's not sorry. He's never sorry. If only he could be, just once...

6. Bobby Womack - I'm In Love vs. 10cc - I'm Not In Love

Listen to Bobby Womack's voice here!

Apologies to Stockport's finest, but big boys don't cry...

(Although that may be disputed later on in this countdown.)

5. The Beatles - I'm Down vs. The Clash - I'm Not Down

Tough one. Normally I'd let The Clash beat The Beatles because Phoney Beatlemania has bitten the dust... but I have a soft spot for early Lennon when he's prepared to shred his vocal chords as he does here. The Fabs take it.

4. Alice Cooper - I'm So Angry vs. Elvis Costello - I'm Not Angry

Bill Bixby used to tell us not to make him angry... we wouldn't like him when he's angry. We like Alice when he gets angry though... and I guess he's going to be angry at losing out to Elvis here, but it takes a lot to beat My Aim Is True.

3. Madonna - (Now) I'm Following You vs. Edwyn Collins - I'm Not Following You

There was a time when I'd have welcomed being followed by Aunty Madge... these days, I'd be quick to get a restraining order. (Warren Beatty duets with her here... he probably thought this song was about him.)

Edwyn, on the other hand, can follow me any time he likes.

2. Pulp - I'm A Man vs. Morrissey - I'm Not A Man

Manly Jarvis trumps wimpy Moz, providing his second beating of the day. It's enough to make a grown man cry! Speaking of which...

1. Tom Petty - I'm Crying vs. Flight of the Conchords - I'm Not Crying

No wonder Tom's crying - he's just been beaten by a couple of Kiwi comics...

And if I am crying
It's not because of you
It's because I'm thinking about a friend of mine who you don't know who is dying
That's right, dying

These aren't tears of sadness because you're leaving me
I've just been cutting onions
I'm making a lasagna

For one!



For your information there's an inflammation in my tear gland...



I'm waiting for your suggestions...

Friday, 10 May 2013

My Top Ten Reflection Songs


Sometimes these Top Tens are a challenge... but worth the effort if you stick with them.



10. Marilyn Manson - No Reflection


I'm not the world's biggest Marilyn Manson fan, but I like the fact that his real name is Brian... and he's made a career out of our #3 artist's old socks.

9. The Selecter - Red Reflections

Pauline Black thinks that if loneliness were a colour, it'd be all white... so why is she seeing red reflections in her mirror tonight?

8. MGMT - Future Reflections

No idea.

Still, pretty groovy.

7. Donovan - Summer Day Reflection

Sick of this long, cold winter? Close your eyes and listen to this.(This is an indication of how long ago I wrote this particular post. Still, no one reads these bits so I'm not going to change it now.)

6. Spider-Man - Rock Reflections of a Super-Hero

OK, it's not actually by Spider-Man. Most of this record was recorded by a little known US rock band called Crack The Sky. The LP was released by Marvel (and Lifesong Records) back in 1975, a full rock opera narrated by Stan 'The Man' Lee himself (natch).

So it predates the woeful Turn Off The Dark musical by a good 30 years... and better yet, Bono and The Edge had absolutely nothing to do with it. 

5. Half Man Half Biscuit - Reflections In A Flat

A love story told through a rhyme scheme that doesn't quite work. Another slice of HMHB genius.
Oh darling sugar honey
When it was nice and sunny
And when I had some money
We would go and see Echo And The Bunny
…men
4. Bobby Womack featuring Lana Del Rey - Dayglo Reflection

From last year's all-conquering album that bestowed upon its creator the title of "coolest man" alive... until the next one comes along. Nice collaboration, anyway.

3. Sisters of Mercy - Lucretia, My Reflection

The older I get, the more hilarious I find Andrew Eldritch.

2. Diana Ross & The Supremes - Reflections

It was a close call for Number One and you'll probably say I chose the wrong one. Whatever, they're both damn fine records.

1. The Marmalade - Reflections Of My Life

Another classic 60s hit that still sounds fresh - and when the harmony vocal comes in repeating, "all my crying" and "all my sorrow", the hairs on the back of my neck always stand up. The Marmalade (the 'The' is apparently optional) are still touring today... I doubt they would have been if they'd stuck with their original name, "The Gaylords".

I have a very special fondness for Kevin Rowland's heartbreakingly camp showtune version too. Though perhaps not the outfit he wore on the album cover. 




Which one is staring a back at you from your pop mirror?
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