“CROWING” TOAD THE WET SPROCKET (1994)

I started Mental Jukebox nearly three years ago at the beginning of the pandemic. During this time, I’ve discovered new music, rediscovered old favorites and I’ve met passionate music fans around the world. And when things opened up, I kept on blogging. This month, the jukebox goes deeper. The term “deep cut” has multiple meanings. It can refer to lesser known album tracks from well-known artists. It can also refer to tracks from lesser known artists. This month, I’ll be featuring both types. #DeepCutsFeb

Toad the Wet Sprocket started to build momentum with the release of Pale. Then when Fear was released, the band practically became a household name overnight. The follow-up, Dulcinea, went platinum, but somehow seemed to be a lesser celebrated album. But it’s my favorite of theirs. Listening back to it nearly 30 years later (!), I’m impressed by Toad’s resolve to do their own thing and stay the course when many other acts at the time were being influenced by grunge. Dulcinea builds off the musicality and songwriting of Fear, never veering, and in doing so, they establish a more mature, reflective output. My deep cut pick from the album is “Crowing”.

“Crowing” drew me in immediately when I first heard it. It is a prime example of the band’s strength: the perfect marriage of Glen Phillips’ lyrics and the melody. They are inseparable and made for each other. “Fly From Heaven”, “Something’s Always Wrong” and “Fall Down” all contain great moments on the guitar. But “Crowing” relies solely on the earnestness of the sung words, which has given it a sort of timeless quality untainted by chart positions and streaming stats.  

“You’d give yourself to anybody who would cross that line.”

"ALL I WANT" TOAD THE WET SPROCKET (1991)

I generally gravitate to the music first before the lyrics. But as a writer, I still marvel at well-spun verses and choruses. This month, I’m joining the music Twitter community in #31DaySongLyricChallenge

Day 14

As I continue to highlight some of my favorite song lyrics this month, I feel inevitably drawn to songs that I often sing along to. Because they just might be the songs with the most powerful lyrics. In 1991, Toad The Wet Sprocket released Fear, an album where I wasn’t just a listener. I was invited in as a participant. The lyrics of “All I Want” are invigorating and liberating with every syllable from the first verse to the end chorus.

“Nothing's so loud as hearing when we lie. The truth is not kind. And you've said neither am I. But the air outside so soft is saying everything. Everything.”

"NIGHTINGALE SONG" TOAD THE WET SPROCKET (1991)

One of the most powerful things about music is that it is the soundtrack of our lives. Fellow music fanatic Sharon Hepworth started a music challenge on Twitter for the month of July. Each day, fans around the world will select a song from their life and describe what it means to us. These are my songs. #SoundtrackToYourLife

Day 12

Fond memories of freshman year at college play vividly in my mind when I listen to the Fear album. Blasting the tracks in the halls of Duchesne Hall East at Boston College and hearing them live at Boston’s Paradise Club with the band members less than six feet away from us. Mainstreamers were familiar with “All I Want” and “Walk on the Ocean”, but TTWS fans counted “Nightingale Song” as one of their favorites with its tambourine pulse and signature melody.

“Nightingale Song” chooses a steady and repetitive rhythm guitar sequence over flashy solos or memorable riffs. It keeps pace together with the tambourine and hand claps. The melody unfolds into a beautiful three-part harmony. It’s rather simple. A song where the verses seem to bleed into the chorus and you can barely delineate between the two components of the song’s structure. Its power and appeal lie in its invitation to the listener. An appeal to sing our own refrain into the night like the nightingale.

“We might be different, but our hearts won't lie.”

"CRAZY LIFE" TOAD THE WET SPROCKET (1995)

Each day in November, I’m revisiting a song from the 90’s — a decade that was a sorta coming of age for me. In that span, I experienced high school, college and my time as a young single guy in New York City. It was a decade of ups and downs, and the music never stopped playing during that span. It was always there with me. #30DaysOf90sSongs

When I first discovered the music of Toad the Wet Sprocket during college, I also met a very down-to-earth group of musicians. We were literally five feet away from the band in a near-empty Paradise Rock Club in Boston. They weren’t even the headliners. But, up until that point, they were the coolest, nicest guys I’d met in the music business. Pale and Fear were on heavy rotation in our dorm rooms, and eventually I discovered Dulcinea and this gem from the Empire Records soundtrack after graduation.

I played that album incessantly after college in my parent’s house. With those songs came fantasies of making it on my own and having an apartment in the city. This was the crazy life for me. Somehow it seemed to match the demeanor of the band. Laid back, and actually the furthest thing from crazy. Toad the Wet Sprocket is a down-to-earth, no-fanfare, mid-tempo band that’s probably more comfortable playing in pubs than arenas, although they got pretty big at one point. “Crazy Life”, to me, is the quintessential TTWS anthem. Jangly in its riffs, subtle in its harmonies and mid-tempo in its rhythm. I can put this song on repeat and forget about life for a while.

“Anyway now, it don't seem right. He is in there and you're on the outside.”

"NIGHTINGALE SONG" TOAD THE WET SPROCKET (1991)

Fond memories of freshman year at college play vividly in my mind when I listen to the Fear album. Blasting the tracks in the halls of Duchesne Hall East and hearing them live at Boston’s Paradise Club. Mainstreamers were familiar with “All I Want” and “Walk on the Ocean”, but TTWS fans counted “Nightingale Song” as one of their favorites with its tambourine pulse and signature melody.

“We sing the nightingale song alive. We might be different, but our hearts won't lie.”