"OVERJOYED" STEVIE WONDER (1985)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

Ballads, in general, often get a bad rep for a few reasons. They frequently possess really corny lyrics, are driven by contrived melodies and leave much to be desired instrumentally. Which is why “Overjoyed”, in contrast, is a treasure. For decades, this song has flown a bit under the radar. It’s not the first, second, third or fourth song you think of when you’re asked to name one of the best 80’s ballads. But maybe it should be.

It doesn’t take a musical genius to see that Stevie wrote an ambitious melody. But what’s less obvious for the casual fan is how unusual it was to use the chords that he did. “Overjoyed” is written mostly in E flat, moves up a step, then another half step and then back down to E flat. And in true Stevie Wonder fashion, it feels effortless. His ambition keeps up on the instrumental side as well. Just beyond the synthesizer and stringed arrangement sits what are collectively referred to as environmental percussion elements in the liner notes, including crickets, birds, ocean waves and crushing leaves.

“I've gone much too far for you now to say that I've got to throw my castle away.”

"LIVING FOR THE CITY" STEVIE WONDER (1973)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

I can’t think of another music artist in all of history that intermingled different genres better than Stevie Wonder. The thing that often occurs when artists attempt to fuse disparate styles is a sense of disjointedness. But that’s never been the case with Stevie’s music. All of his multi-genre compositions are highlighted by a sense of cohesion and unity. I love the Innervisions album because this was the recording where Stevie’s crossover tendencies were at their height. And “Living For the City” is my favorite example.

It starts with funk. Then it slides into R&B with a side of soul and a sprinkle of rock. As if that wasn’t ambitious enough, “Living For the City” then slips into a momentary jazz exploration before getting back into its funk grooves. Just before the song ends, Stevie crosses over one more time with a gospel choir-inspired harmony. While “Living For the City” chronicled the story of a Mississippi boy’s journey to New York City, the musical styles cleverly reflect back the city’s rich and diverse soundscape.

“This place is cruel, nowhere could be much colder. If we don't change, the world will soon be over. Living just enough, stop giving just enough for the city.”

"WE CAN WORK IT OUT" STEVIE WONDER (1970)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

By 1970, Wonder was already ten studio albums in. Signed, Sealed and Delivered had a mix of originals and covers, demonstrating Stevie Wonder’s versatility as a co-writer and an arranger. Few artists have demonstrated the level of craft in arranging other people’s songs that he has achieved for more than half of a century. In his cover of The Beatles’ “We Can Work it Out” I’m reminded that aside from the melody and the lyrics, Stevie always saw everything else as fair game.

Deconstructing this cover, it’s easy to understand why this is considered a masterpiece in its own right. It’s not just another version. Stevie reimagined the song from the get go, inserting a soulful, driving guitar riff for the first 8 seconds. It’s a far better intro than the original. But the best thing about the recording is the complexity of the arrangement, using horns, backing vocals and more three part harmonies to add vigor and life to this Beatles classic.

“Try to see things my way. Do I have to keep on talking till I can't go on while you see it your way. Run the risk of knowing that our love may soon be gone.”

"FOR ONCE IN MY LIFE" STEVIE WONDER (1968)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

Songwriting virtuoso. Crossover pioneer. One of the most talented musical arrangers of all time. It’s impossible to overhype the wonder of Stevie Wonder because few have made greatness look so easy. The genius of “For Once in My Life” may not be immediately noticeable, but there are several qualities that have made it a timeless and epic musical arrangement.

The fact that it has become a staple at wedding receptions for more than 50 years is first and foremost attributed to Stevie’s uptempo reimagination of a ballad. He transformed the song from a sleepy, romantic ode to a song that you can cut loose to on the dance floor — whether you’re an 8 year old or 80 years old. It effortlessly blends orchestral elements on a bed of R&B. And then there’s the bass playing. James Jamerson is considered by many to be the most influential bassist of all time. Hearing his approach to “For Once in My Life”, it’s not hard to see why. The entire line is improvised while complementing the melody from beginning to end like a true musical soul mate.

“For once I can say, "This is mine, you can't take it".
As long as I know I have love, I can make it.”

"FEEL YOU" MY MORNING JACKET (2020)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

My Morning Jacket is, by far, one of the most prolific bands of the 2000s. Other bands have come and gone. Some have fizzled out quickly. Some are barely hanging on a thread. But My Morning Jacket keeps going year after year. The Waterfall II were outtakes from the original Waterfall sessions. But these songs were so good, they resurfaced and were an equally strong collection of songs. Released during the pandemic, The Waterfall II came at a time when music played an even more important role in my life. It was during Covid that I first started Mental Jukebox — which was inspired by great songs like “Feel You”.

I don’t know what else to say about the amazing guitar riff on “Feel You”, except that it feels like a natural extension of Jim James’ vocals. The two parts blend effortlessly. Like my last entry, “Only Memories Remain”, there’s something transcendental about this song. Musically it sits somewhere softly in between the isolating vulnerability of Jeff Buckley and the accessible, but masterful songwriting of Elton John.

“Are we undercover? What's left to see?”

"ONLY MEMORIES REMAIN" MY MORNING JACKET (2015)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

The best music we have is often characterized by the ability to do one of these two things: help us live in the moment or transport us somewhere unforgettable. I think My Morning Jacket’s catalog is not only versatile in genre, they’re versatile in helping us to achieve both of these experiences. “Only Memories Remain” always brings me to another place without fail.

Atmospheric. Spellbinding. Immersive. These are the typical words that we use to describe a lot of good music these days. But “Only Memories Remain” is so much more. There’s something incarnational about it. Jim James’ lyrics are so down to earth that they can easily become our own words and thoughts. We’re not in his head. He’s not in ours. Because strangely they feel one and the same.

“Sometimes life has other ideas. And though we both know how much it meant, now only memories remain.”

"TOUCH ME I'M GOING TO SCREAM, PT. 2" MY MORNING JACKET (2008)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

Today I was thinking about the purpose of a morning jacket. Its name implies two characteristics: 1) something that keeps you warm, and 2) something that’s worn only during the early part of the day. It’s essentially an article of clothing that gives you the comfort and warmth you need to get you going for the rest of your day. In many ways, My Morning Jacket’s music has played that role for me, including this unique song from one of my favorite MMJ albums.

The aspects in “Touch Me I’m Going to Scream, Part 2” that get me going are both foundational and ornamental. At the foundation is a peculiar melody and song structure. It grooves early and then strangely fizzles out as if there’s a power shortage in the recording studio. On the peripheral is Jim James’s voice dancing seamlessly between high tenor and falsetto and a alien-like synth riff that sounds like it’s trying to communicate with us.

“It's been so long, since someone challenged me. And made me think, about the way things are. Made me think, about the way they could be.”

"OFF THE RECORD" MY MORNING JACKET (2005)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

Over the last twenty years, My Morning Jacket created a world of sounds that I intentionally avoided at first. This was a band that came highly recommended to me in the early 2000s. But the band name didn’t sound like a band name — and it even sounded a little corny. For me, it’s a lesson learned. Never, ever judge a book by its cover. My Morning Jacket is one of the steadiest, most prolific rock bands of the 2000s — and “Off the Record” is a fun, memorable chapter in their existence.

The album Z was a bit of a turning point for the band. New things were happening here, like more synth experiments and genre explorations. “Off the Record” sounds like My Morning Jacket on a holiday to Jamaica. The first three minutes is one part reggae, one part rock and in the spirit of other upbeat rock outfits like Spoon and Modest Mouse. Then the last two and a half minutes go into space rock mode with quiet and quirky synth jams — like the antithesis to Wilco’s cacophony interludes. Brilliant, but far from serious.

“Sorry bout the things that I had to say. And I'll make it up to you right now at the penny arcade.”

"(NOTHING BUT) FLOWERS" TALKING HEADS (1988)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

The album Naked, in one sense, represents the ongoing evolution of Talking Heads. It is far less poppier than their previous studio release True Stories. But in another sense, it’s a return back to the band’s early work that was influenced largely by world music. On “(Nothing But) Flowers”, the musical trajectory leans much closer to the aesthetic and structure of Paul Simon’s iconic Graceland album. And I just love it.

One of the instrumental delights on the track is the inclusion of Johnny Marr on lead guitar. Fresh off The Smiths’ breakup, Marr jumped in to lay down a track that sounded in lock step with the Talking Heads world beat approach. But it also interestingly sounded distinctly like Johnny Marr at the same time. The similarities to his signature riff on “Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now” are unmistakeable. With wide-ranging scales, “(Nothing But) Flowers” is also one of Byrne’s greatest vocal achievements with the band.

“This was a Pizza Hut. Now it's all covered with daisies.”

"STAY UP LATE" TALKING HEADS (1985)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

Little Creatures veered toward a more country rock feel, following the new wave expressions found on Speaking in Tongues. This was a happier, more whimsical record. It contains some of my favorite Talking Heads standalone songs, including the acapella-infused “Road to Nowhere”, the spunky “And She Was” and the helplessly silly “Stay Up Late”.

Lip rolls, pig snorts and baby talk. These are the kinds of elements that surface throughout “Stay Up Late” on a bed of deliberately simple piano chords and guitar twangs. There might be a metaphor here about man and woman. Or maybe it’s an observation of enjoying oneself at another’s expense. Or this song could really just be about a cute baby and wanting to keep him up late — and that’s it. “Stay Up Late” is a snapshot of the mundane. It’s everyday life. It’s relatable. And it’s the antithesis of rock & roll attitude, which I think is what I love most about this endearing Talking Heads anthem.

“Sister, sister, he's just a plaything. We want to make him stay up all night.”

"GIRLFRIEND IS BETTER" TALKING HEADS (1983)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

The entire Speaking in Tongues album is reflective of the band’s roots as design school friends. At RISD, they learned that art isn’t created in a vacuum. So much of it is seeking out inspiration from other forms and movements. Each track on the album has a unique expression. “Burning Down the House” brought on the power. “This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody)” brought on the hooks. And “Girlfriend is Better” brought on the funk.

True to the highly collaborative nature of Talking Heads, Jerry Harrison focused on guitars while bringing on longtime sideman Bernie Worrell to take the synth contributions to the next level. Harrison and Worrell are in complete lock step. It’s a beautiful thing to hear — and we get to see it with our eyes on the documentary Stop Making Sense. “Girlfriend is Better” is just one more example of the band’s ability to bend existing genres and put them into orbit around the idyllic, quirky world of Talking Heads. Not the other way around.

“We're being taken for a ride again.”

"TAKE ME TO THE RIVER" TALKING HEADS (1978)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

The biggest complement I can give about this track is that I thought it was a Talking Heads song all this time. I had no idea it was penned by Al Green. The original studio recording is really, really good. But what Talking Heads did was make it all their own. It’s one of my favorite songs from the band —not just because it’s so irresistibly catchy, but because it’s a foreshadowing of more great things to come.

In helping to shape the sound of new wave, “Take Me to the River” borrowed from blues, gospel and rock & roll. “Take Me to the River” was a blueprint for Talking Heads’ subsequent recordings and for other bands in the new wave genre. While certainly complementary, each instrument doesn’t bleed into the others. Instead, they each have their own moment. There’s a subtlety and use of restraint in Byrne’s vocals and Harrison’s synth creations, yet there’s so much character and power in every note. Meanwhile, Tina Weymouth’s bass lines are bold, muscular and playful, in stark contrast to another influential post punk era bassist: Peter Hook.

“Dip me in the river, drop me in the water. Washing me down, washing me down.”

"CEREMONY" JOY DIVISION (1980)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

As one of the last Joy Division songs written by Ian Curtis, “Ceremony” always felt less like a final statement to me, and more like an open-ended question: What if Curtis was still alive today? What if the Joy Division journey carried on? I believe “Ceremony” gives us a glimpse into what that world could’ve looked like, in all its raw, unpolished glory.

“Ceremony” started and ended heavy on the guitars. These were iconic, scorching riffs from Bernard Sumner, and definitely not indicative of the synth-led musical direction that would take shape in the form of New Order. But unlike a good portion of the Joy Division canon, the mood of the melody was in direct contrast with the theme of the lyrics — a dynamic that would later be adopted by The Smiths and other bands. Still atmospheric and edgy, it showed that post punk didn’t have to be characterized by a single emotion or mood. Just like life.

“Heaven knows, it's got to be this time.”

"LOVE WILL TEAR US APART" JOY DIVISION (1980)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

When I first started listening to Long Island’s WDRE, the band Joy Division was revered, adored and celebrated. They didn’t get the amount of airplay that other artists like The Smiths, The Cure or Depeche Mode achieved. But they certainly got more respect. They were, in many ways, viewed as the elder statesmen. They made a huge impact and helped shape the sound of many bands in their shortlived years. But this band wouldn’t have commanded the attention it deserved if it weren’t for “Love Will Tear Us Apart”. For critics and fans alike, this was the gateway song that introduced us to the rest of the Joy Division canon.

If you want to know the difference between punk and post punk, all you have to do is listen to “Love Will Tear Us Apart”. I think this one song helped define a new genre. Gone was the anger. Gone were the over-simplistic chord progressions. Gone was the rebellion. In came a flood of feelings — sadness, regret and misery — along with an instrumentation that was more atmospheric than sonic. The genius of “Love Will Tear Us Apart” isn’t that it’s simply a remarkable new sound. It also showed us a new way to express ourselves that no one else was doing with music.

“And we're changing our ways, taking different roads. Love, love will tear us apart again.”

"GLASS" JOY DIVISION (1978)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

In three years, Joy Division did more than what most bands accomplish over decades. Because the amount of recordings just isn’t much, it kind of forces listeners to pore through familiar tracks over and over again, discovering new wrinkles and things to admire about the band. One such exercise is exploring the lesser heralded Still album, a compilation of songs from the band’s beginnings to the death of Ian Curtis. “Glass”, in particular, is as close as you can get to a Joy Division deep cut without delving into some of those inaudible concert recordings that have been circulating.

For me, this is a song that has gotten better with time. It has all the markings of not just post punk, but striking resemblances to the post punk revival scene of the early 2000s. Interpol has often been cited as one such band largely influenced by Joy Division. After the dark torment of the lyrics and the eerie Ian Curtis-like baritone drone that we hear in Paul Banks’ voice, the similarities between the two bands end for the most part. But when I play “Glass” again, I hear Interpol all over it — from Kessler’s grating riffs to Fogarino’s rhythmic barrage. “Glass” is a window into one of New York City’s greatest music eras.

“Hearts fail. Young hearts fail.”

"SHE'S LOST CONTROL" JOY DIVISION (1979)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

The album title Unknown Pleasures is an appropriate one. The record is full of sounds and explorations never heard before. Ian Curtis, Bernard Sumner, Hooky and Stephen Morris all did things on it that were truly inventive and inspirational for bands and instrumentalists, even still today. One of the more well known tracks, “She’s Lost Control”, was infectious, but far from accessible — and that’s what I love most about it.

There’s something strangely addictive about the song. It starts with an unusual drum part from Stephen Morris, which feels deliberately industrial. In the film biopic Control, Morris is seen spraying an aerosol can into the mic to manufacture the signature sound. Then things get even weirder with Hooky’s mesmerizing bass line played way up high on the neck. The oddness continues as Curtis stumbles in singing about a woman who suffers from epileptic seizures — and it seems he’s having one himself as he sings it. This leaves us with Bernard Sumner who’s busy carving out a grating riff that’s lower than Hooky’s bass line. It’s a strange composition that I can’t seem to stop listening to once I start.

“And she gave away the secrets of her past and said ‘I've lost control again.’”

"LET IT CARRY YOU" JOSE GONZALEZ (2015)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

Vestiges & Claws is my favorite Jose Gonzalez album from beginning to end. On it, he continues to evolve his sound with new techniques and styles primarily driven by his acoustic guitar. But the album is still 100% Jose Gonzalez. On Vestiges & Claws, he never tries to shed his musical persona or attempt to be like anyone else. But yet he does things instrumentally that he hasn’t done before, like on “Let it Carry You”.

On the surface, this seems like a happier, less introspective Jose Gonzalez song. But it’s much more than that. “Let it Carry You” is like a musical inverse of the artist’s standard fare. In concert, he plays both the treble riffs and the bass simultaneously, just as he does with all of his songs in a live setting. But here he flips the emphasis on its head, making the bass the driving force and identity of the song, while the treble notes play a secondary role. It’s a brilliant move, because even with the inverse it still sounds just like Jose Gonzalez.

“And this song into the fall. All things near of things gone to remind of all restless souls of the beauty of being here.”

"STAY ALIVE" JOSE GONZALEZ (2013)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

In Jose Gonzalez’s limited, but impactful contributions to movie soundtracks, he has tended to venture beyond his comfort zone, opening up the musical possibilities and significantly expanding his instrumentation. What makes “Stay Alive” an unusual track is the song appears to be completely devoid of his trademark classical guitar sound — and that’s exactly what makes it so good.

From the get go, the song is driven by piano, not the acoustic guitar. In your first listen, you wait for the acoustic guitar to arrive, but it never does. Instead the song continues to evolve and expand beyond the piano with drums, electric guitar and synthesizers to supply a symphonic accompaniment. While it’s a significant departure instrumentally, there’s something about “Stay Alive” that seems to capture the essence of Jose Gonzalez. Perhaps it’s this, that even with a more sonic, fuller expression his signature soft vocal melody is still firmly intact.

“Dawn is coming. Open your eyes.”

"CYCLING TRIVIALITIES" JOSE GONZALEZ (2007)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

In my first #RockBlock selection for Jose Gonzalez, I briefly described the hyper-awareness with which his fans enjoy his music. Aside from his acoustic guitar and voice, there’s rarely anything else to distract us. So we are hyper attuned to those two elements. Of course, there are exceptions, particularly Jose’s work on movie soundtracks. But the stark, clean approach of his music is what’s most appealing. In many ways, “Cycling Trivialities” is a treatise of this approach to music.

Few bands break the 8 minute barrier, but those that do usually do so in a highly memorable way. Zeppelin. Dylan. Neil Young. Even The Stone Roses. But when Jose Gonzalez did it, the length came out of nowhere. It was unexpected. But in true fashion, the artist was trying to make a point. The entire In Our Nature album is about the human condition. And on “Cycling Trivialities”, he used the entire 8 minutes and 9 seconds to hammer home the theme of his song. It’s a brilliant listen and a transcendent experience live in concert.

“All this time you were chasing dreams. Without knowing what you wanted them to mean.”

"CROSSES" JOSE GONZALEZ (2003)

Pick four songs from any band and you can tell a lot about their sound. This summer, I’m featuring #RockBlocks, four picks from bands across various genres. They might be wildly different from each other, but what binds them together is the fact that they’re all a part of my life soundtrack.

For music fans, the world of Jose Gonzalez is one of hyper-awareness. A world where every single note created by Jose’s voice and acoustic guitar matters. Having seen him several times live, I can attest to the fact that his shows always felt different compared to other concerts. The crowd observes attentively and silently at every word muttered and every pluck of his intricate guitar work, which often play two parts at the same exact time. “Crosses” was one of the first few songs that brought me into this world, one which I continue to escape to every so often.

While “Heartbeats” was the front door to Jose Gonzalez’s music for many fans, “Crosses” is the foyer. It welcomes you and draws you in. The musical marvel of rhythmic guitar and bass being played at the same time on an acoustic guitar and Jose’s captivating vocal presence are like the spiral staircase and chandelier. We stand here in this space in full admiration and we can stay there for quite a while. But when the time’s right, we also want to explore the rest of the house and see what each room in this phenomenal musical catalog has to offer.

“We'll cast some light and you'll be alright.”