Ohmygod! The Top 300, Revised
[Note from the Beagle Man: Once a year we move doggie matters
to the back burner and turn to my other obsession, rock-and-roll. (Oh, yeah, there’s sports, too, of course. That’s pretty much it . . . that’s my life. A bit narrow, maybe . . . but works for me.) What follows is the “pre-read” for the new-and-improved Top 300 that was distributed Labor Day weekend to the live audience at Herman Beach in Amagansett — our old friends Leslie and Mike plus twelve young dudes who did a helluva job celebrating Robby’s 22nd birthday. The new list will be revealed in its entirety in this blog over the next few days . . .]
Never say never.
This is one of the truest aphorisms ever coined — but it seems I have to keep relearning it. When I released my first Top 100 back in 2012, and friends asked if I planned to revise it as the years went by, I said “NEVER!” I said I went with my gut, and I’m gonna stick with it. I said I was sure my list would hold up over time.
It didn’t.
I’ve been living with that original playlist — as well as its 2013 and 2014 successors (101-200 and 201-300) — for a few years now. Those compilations have been the soundtrack for three cross-country road trips, and countless Montauk weekends. And there were some selections, some positions, that were just . . . WRONG.
Here are some of the factors that induced me to revise my Top 300:
• I went overboard on stuff that was currently popular the first time around. Too much Lady Gaga, Adele ranked too high, etc.
• I allowed peer pressure and fan reaction to keep me from putting some truly great songs (Patti Smith’s “Gloria,” for one) near the top, where they belong
• I felt compelled to represent certain genres (e.g. soul/Motown) that I once loved but that just don’t do it for me anymore
• Likewise, I didn’t want to overlook some favorites from my rock-and-roll youth, but finally realized they should stay in my rock-and-roll youth (Del Shannon’s “Runaway”; Bobby Darin’s “Dream Lover”) Ditto for some tunes I was devoted to from more recent times (Keith Carradine’s “I’m Easy”).
So this time around I went in fresh. And I put the songs where they deserved to be. For me. Didn’t matter where I ranked ’em last time. As a result, some songs fell off the earth. Others made quantum leaps to the top 25 . . . even the top 10.
I’m not gonna say I’ll never update the latest version of My Favorite 300. It might still be flawed. Maybe Patty Smyth & Scandal got the halo effect from their concert a couple of weeks ago at the Talkhouse, where Patty dedicated not one, not two, but three songs to our table after I’d emailed her that Matt used to air-guitar and lip-sync to “Goodbye To You” on MTV when he was 2 years old. Also: It’s an open secret that I’m in love with Trish Murphy, the silver-throated Austin singer-songwriter who played a private concert for Carol’s Big Birthday Bash. Did her music get over-represented because of this? Who knows.
All right. About Mt. Rushmore.
The illustrations were done by Robby’s friend, the one-and-only Colin O’Shea, who also designed Kemba’s logo for The Duck Dog Speaks. The idea came from my ultra-imaginative oldest son Matt, best known as Creative Director of Greg & Kelly’s wedding (#KellygotHerMan). Matt and I were listening to my original Top 300 this past April on LA/XC-4 as we cruised through Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, and North Dakota, and that prompted him to ask who’d be on my rock-and-roll Mt. Rushmore. I knew right off the bat that The Boss, the Stones, and Tom Petty were in, but who was the fourth face? Neil Young? John Mellencamp? John Fogerty? Ohmygod . . . could it be Taylor Swift?
So I went back over my 2014 rankings and calculated, by number of songs in the Top 300, that there was a four-way tie for fourth among the names I just mentioned. When I re-did the list for the new presentation, though, Neil Young pulled to the head of the pack with 8 songs. BUT . . . that includes two of his songs with Crosby Stills Nash & Young, and I’m not sure if that’s kosher. T-Swift has 7, so if you take away those 2 CSN&Y from Neil, that puts Taylor ahead, 7 to 6. Hmmm . . . The truth of the matter is that I was still fine-tuning the list until minutes before the “reveal” — so I had Colin prepare the 4 different versions of Rushmore you see in this post. We’ll resolve this controversy once and for all later in the week . . .
Two final notes:
1. Everyone knows that for the last several years I’ve been heavily into country. A lot of followers complain that country gets way too much love on my list. Some of them even say country’s a whole separate genre, and shouldn’t even be considered. Here’s the thing, though: It’s my list, and country’s still rock-and-roll to me. So deal with it.
2. As I say every year at this time (yes, you knew this was coming): If you don’t like my choices, make your own damn list!
LOOK FOR A NEW BEAGLE MAN POST EVERY THURSDAY. OR PRETTY CLOSE TO THURSDAY. COULD BE WEDNESDAY. OR FRIDAY. LET’S NOT GET TOO OBSESSIVE HERE . . . OH, AND BTW, YOU CAN ALSO FOLLOW ME ON FACEBOOK, TWITTER, AND INSTAGRAM.
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Subscribe
Search
Archives
Recent Comments
- Hank on BIG GAME HUNTING
- L Mccorvie on BIG GAME HUNTING
- Hank Herman on BIG GAME HUNTING
- Mary on BIG GAME HUNTING
- Hank on BIG GAME HUNTING
Leave a Reply