Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Chex Mix

Back before it got homogenized by its corporate progenitor, chex mix was a homemade snack made from scratch with various tasty elements. The recipes for the various mixes always varied, but they generally included an assortment of Chex cereals, chips, hard bread sticks, pretzels, nuts or whatever else was popular at the time. Essentially, there was something for everyone, so chex mix was always a safe bet for a party pleasing snack. While each home made recipe is unique and may include the occasional outlier element, chex mix takes generally takes no chances nor does it break any no new ground. It's meant to please the most amount of people. 

So, in the spirit of homemade chex mix, I'm giving you a mix that is tasty enough to please a wide variety of people yet has some individual elements of deliciousness to please even the most discerning of musical connoisseurs.

Number Of Tracks: 22
Approximate Runtime: 1 hour, 24 minutes

Side 1:

  • All For You - Sister Hazel
  • Gramercy Park Hotel - Edwin McCain
  • Rolling In The Deep - Adele
  • Crazy Bitch - Buckcherry
  • You're The World To Me - David Grey
  • Make You Crazy - Brett Dennen
  • Her Diamonds - Rob Thomas
  • The Fixer - Pearl Jam
  • I Don't Feel Like Dancing - Scissor Sisters
  • Music Is My Hot Hot Sex - Cansei De Sexy
  • Pumped Up Kicks - Foster The People

Side 2:
  • Fireflies - Owl City
  • Tonight Tonight - Hot Chelle Rae
  • If I Die Young - The Band Perry
  • Substitution - Silversun Pickups
  • Stars - Switchfoot
  • Summer Rain - Matthew Morrison
  • Keep Your Head Up - Andy Grammer
  • Short Skirt/Long Jacket - Cake
  • Diamonds On The Inside - Ben Harper
  • Run Chicken Run - The Felice Brothers
  • Steal My Sunshine - Len

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Billy Joel's Greatest Hits Volume I & II

Back in 1985, Billy Joel had established himself as one of the world's premier musicians. At the time, he had a 14 year career spanning 10 studio albums behind him. This made him long overdue for a greatest hits album. So, the release of Billy Joel's Greatest Hits Volume I and Volume II was a blind buy for me at the time. In fact, I believe it was the first CD that I spent my hard earned money on. What lies underneath the cover of this compilation is a masterpiece of music that, if I were so inclined, would make the perfect Billy Joel mix tape. While the focus of this compilation is somewhat heavy on Joel's "top hits", there's also a good sprinkling of some lesser known songs and two brand new ones that seem to have been added at the expense of some more commercially viable offerings such as "Keeping The Faith". The songs on this compilation were seemingly put in an order in which they would sound good together rather than in chronological release order which is something I applauded at the time. That is what made it feel more like a mix tape than a greatest hits album.

One other interesting thing to note about this album is that a number of songs were edited for time. These songs are "The Stranger", "Just The Way You Are", "My Life", "Big Shot", "She's Got A Way" and "Pressure". In most cases, the cuts actually work. For example, I don't miss the verse "Don't go trying/Some new fashion/Don't change the color of your hair/You always have my/Unspoken passion/Although I might not seem to care" and had always found it to be very jarring in the original version of the song. The one glaring exception is the removal of the piano interlude in "My Life". That's a travesty.

Two live songs were substituted for their studio versions in the release of this compilation.  "Say Goodbye To Hollywood" is the live version from Songs In The Attic rather than the studio version from Turnstiles. Likewise, "She's Got A Way" is a live version rather than the studio version from Cold Spring Harbor. The live version of "Say Goodbye To Hollywood" is the superior version because of its raw energy and harder edge. Due to the mis-mastering of Cold Spring Harbor at a higher pitch than normal, the studio version of "She's Got A Way" was simply not releasable.

All in all, the 1985 release of Billy Joel's Greatest Hits Volume I and II is a masterpiece which, like a Persian rug, has one flaw: the aforementioned cutting of "My Life". The problem is, in 1998, the album was remastered and re-released with a number of questionable tweaks. All songs that had been shortened on the 1985 version were restored to their original versions.  The live version of "Say Goodbye To Hollywood" was replaced with the studio version from Turnstiles and the live version of "She's Got A Way" was replaced by the studio version which had been re-mastered at the correct pitch. It's like giving the Mona Lisa a boob job. Sure, it looks better, but one tends to miss the original. They were unnecessary changes. The powers that be should have just released a completely different compilation with a different mix of songs.

So, for me, I'm just going to stick to my bulky clam-shelled version of Billy Joel's Greatest Hits Volume I and II and pretend that the re-master never existed.