"SAX AND VIOLINS" TALKING HEADS (1991)

This month, the Mental Jukebox revisits the movie soundtracks of the nineties. The music I’m highlighting are some of my personal favorites. In many cases, the movies themselves were huge for me as well. But the focus will still be on the music – as always. Let’s bring on the throwback classics, the grunge, the gangsta rap, and the indie gems. #31DaysOf90sMovieSongs

Movie: Until The End Of The World

This was the last Talking Heads song ever written. In the context of modern rock history, it had a lot riding on it. And the band truly delivered. When they were asked to contribute a song for the movie Until The End Of The World, they were advised to create something that sounded like the near-future. Something that could fly for the year 2000. This was actually an ask for all the soundtrack contributors. But Talking Heads managed to accomplish the task, while staying true to their sound and to who they are.

“Sax and Violins” has Talking Heads written all over it. It has plenty of worldbeat undertones, with its complex rhythms and nuanced instrumentation that evolves throughout the song. It’s also cheeky as hell. Even with the song title. It’s. a twist of the phrase “sex and violence”. Every time I hear the song, I feel this sense of urgency to the experience. I wait with bated breath – with an anticipation that I’ll discover something new from it. Something that Byrne, Weymouth, Harrison and Frantz perhaps wanted to pass along to their fans. The last time I heard it, my ears were more attuned to the samples that appear throughout the song. I can’t even make out what they are. Shrieks? Machinery? Feedback? Maybe all of the above.

“Love keeps us together. And love will drive us insane.”

"THE MORNING FOG" KATE BUSH (1985)

It’s time to get back to my favorite decade. For the month of March, I’ll be looking back at some of my favorite jams from the 80s. These songs often came to me via MTV or the radio. NYC-area stations WDRE, WPLJ, WNEW, K-ROCK and Z100 introduced me to everything from irresistible pop confections to under-the-radar post-punk anthems. I would not be who I am today if it weren’t for the 80s. It was the decade when I discovered music can be a truly powerful thing. #31DaysOf80sSongs

In stark contrast to the U.K., the U.S. has always been slower to adopt alternative and progressive forms of music on any real mass scale. Alternative has been just that – the alternative. And progressive forms have been even more niche. It’s why Kate Bush is such an underrated talent here in the States, even though she was quite famous in the U.K. Critics have suggested that Bush would’ve been more successful had she made her appearance ten years later during the Lilith Fair years – among the very artists she inspired. And maybe that’s the greatest compliment we can give Kate Bush. That she was so far ahead of her time, paving the way, even if we didn’t understand the road she was creating until we looked back at it many years later. That’s the feeling I get when I hear the Hounds of Love album and its closing track, “The Morning Fog”.

“Cloudbusting” and “Running Up That Hill” are two of my other favorite tracks from the same album. But, even in the States, these songs got some due respect on college rock stations. But in this country, “The Morning Fog” flew completely under the radar. One of Bush’s more melodic tracks, the song contained pop expressions that manifested in un-pop instrumentation like classical guitar and a Slovakian flute known as the fujara. There’s a beauty and a sophistication to the way Bush strings together different sounds. But instruments aside, it’s the way that she sings that makes her so unique and distinct. She sings like an actress on a stage who’s capable of expressing a wide range of emotions.

“I am falling like a stone, like a storm. Being born again into the sweet morning fog.”

"WUTHERING HEIGHTS" KATE BUSH (1978)

For Women’s History Month, I’m selecting some of my favorite songs from some of the most talented and influential women in music. From frontwomen to singer-songwriters to iconic performers, I’m picking one song a day on Mental Jukebox until the end of March.

It’s not a pop song. Or a rock song. It’s just a brilliant work of art. The songwriting and instrumentation for “Wuthering Heights” are more akin to the storytelling approach and epic scale of a Broadway musical than anything else. It’s what was playing in Kate Bush’s head after reading the novel and film adaptation of the same name. At the age of 18, “Wuthering Heights” showed us Kate’s innate ability to surprise us and introduce us to different worlds.

“I'm coming back to his side to put it right. I'm coming home to wuthering, wuthering, Wuthering Heights.”

"MORE THAN THIS" ROXY MUSIC (1982)

Many bands have covered this song over the years. But one thing they haven’t been able to do is capture the unique sound of Roxy Music. This is a band that gave the music world an unusual, progressive rock tilt in the 70s, then elevated pop music in the 80s. “More Than This” was a prime example of the latter. You can’t copy Bryan Ferry’s vocals and you wouldn’t even try. And you can’t mimmic the intricate instrumentation because the soul of the song is Roxy Music, not just the melody.

“It was fun for a while. There was no way of knowing, like a dream in the night. Who can say where we're going. No care in the world, maybe I'm learning why the sea on the tide has no way of turning.”