Rod Stewart-1 Playlist

Spotify playlist: https://spoti.fi/3UDNTt2

1. Gasoline Alley

2. It’s All Over Now

3. Rolling Stones – It’s All Over Now

4. Valentinos with Bobby Womack – It’s All Over Now

5. Only a Hobo

6. Bob Dylan – Only a Hobo

7. My Way of Giving

8. Small Faces – My Way of Giving

9. Country Comfort

10: Elton John – Country Comfort

11. Cut Across Shorty

12: Eddie Cochran – Cut Across Shorty

13. You’re My Girl (I Don’t Want to Discuss It)

14. Rhinoceros – You’re My Girl

15. Little Richard – I Don’t Want to Discuss It

16. Street Fighting Man

17. Rolling Stones – Street Fighting Man

18. Man of Constant Sorrow 

19. Stanley Brothers – I’m a Man of Constant Sorrow

20. Bob Dylan – Man of Constant Sorrow

21. Soggy Bottom Boys/Dan Tyminski – I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow

22. Handbags & Gladrags

23. Chris Farlowe-Handbags and Gladrags

24. An Old Raincoat Won’t Ever Let You Down

Morgan Wallen At Crypto.com

1

That’s rock and roll.

It was my first show back. I was on the fence, especially after Harold said he wouldn’t go, you see I’ve been soliciting opinions and consensus is if you’re a thinking person over the age of 60 you should refrain from going to a show indoors. And I was on that tip until I talked to my shrink, who doesn’t talk, even though he’s fully capable of doing so. I’m telling my story, about writing, how I live my life, and when the session was over it occurred to me I had to go to the show, for my mental health. He wouldn’t tell me what to do no matter what, but verbalizing my story made it all clear, that’s why you go to therapy.

Not that I wasn’t anxious. If for no other reason I’d be wearing a mask. Which I did, and I was the only person in the arena who was, other than some of the ushers. But no one gave me a hard time. And I’ve got to tell you, as great as the experience of going to the show was, just being out, there, hanging with the people, was even better. You need people, interaction to live.

I was met by Ebie McFarland, Morgan’s PR person. Who represents the creme de la creme of Nashville musicians. She was anything but in-your-face, I was more interested in her story than Morgan’s, how she came from a small town, went to Vanderbilt and worked her way up the food chain to her own company. Darius Rucker left the old company with her and she was on her way.

And then there was Seth England, the manager, who made his bones with Florida Georgia Line. He looked more like a northeast college graduate than a down home Tennessean. This was not your father’s country.

As for Greg Thompson… He’s the only link to what once was, we’ve known each other for decades. He survived the promo wars and ended up in a better place at Big Loud.

As for the agent… I could look up his name, I can’t remember it off the top of my head, you see it’s the first time I met him. That’s one thing that impressed me, this was a new generation. Not the usual suspects, not whatsoever. This young guy had his own agency, he was doing it himself, just like Big Loud, only Morgan is attached to a major label.

And then Morgan walked down the hall. They made a big point he wanted to meet me. Who knows, but these situations are always uncomfortable, I mean what do you say? There’s never enough time to go deep, it’s mostly hit and run, a pressing of the flesh, but not this time.

First and foremost, when he was introduced I thought to myself THIS IS THE GUY? I mean we’ve all seen the photos, I expected some large guy, not quite Trace Adkins size, but Morgan is a small wiry guy, more akin to someone you went to high school with than someone inhabiting a different atmosphere. I mean this is the guy the entire country is mad at? I’m not apologizing for him using the “N-word,” I can see how Black people might not be able to get over it, but if you think Morgan is some evil redneck you’d be wrong. First and foremost he’s smart. And believe me, not all of them are. Many can only do this one thing, write and play music, they’re savants, they can barely talk.

And talk we did. I didn’t want to push it but when he wasn’t shuffling off…

Was it true he didn’t go to his first concert until he was 21? To see Eric Church?

Yes. He grew up with violin lessons, at his own insistence. And piano lessons. He can read music, although he’s a bit rusty.

He got bored at school so his mother home-schooled him. He got an offer of a gospel recording contract when he was barely conscious, but his mother said no, she wanted him to have a childhood.

And he lived to play baseball, but when he got hurt, he started to focus on music. Not that he planned to be a star, his mother entered him in “The Voice,” he went along with it, had some success, got blown out, and then…

This was the opposite of the usual story. Someone who knew they wanted to be famous as a musician from a very young age and then was groomed for trajectory, cutting endless demos, getting in front of bigwigs, trying to get them to sign them and press the button.

Actually, Seth got in touch with Morgan on a tip. It’s not like there was a bidding war. He heard Morgan sing, and then put him in a writing session and the feedback was top-notch and the journey down the road began.

2

Now “Dangerous” is kind of quiet. It’s not bombastic. As for its thirty tracks… Morgan’s still in that phase where he’s bursting with things to say, and even though Seth told me that the rappers’ endless albums wasn’t really an influence, Morgan said it was. The path had been paved, why not go down it? There’d been nothing else to do during lockdown other than write, so why not go with it. Who knew the double album would be the biggest hit of the past two years, residing in the Top Ten for all these months. Drake, the usual suspects, came and went, but Morgan remained. Some might say it’s the yahoos keeping it there, but those “Let’s Go Brandon” cuts went up the chart and immediately fell, you can only sustain when you’ve got the songs, and that’s the secret sauce of “Dangerous,” the songs. Be northern blue elitist all you want, but if you checked out “Dangerous” you’d realize this. It’s basic, it all begins with the songs, the production just serves them. There’s melody, there’s changes. This is a return to what once was and always is, no wonder it was embraced by the public, not only do the songs resonate, YOU CAN SING THEM!

And I knew something was up when the warm-up music just before Morgan took the stage was Foghat and Zeppelin, then again the levee breaks down south.

And it’s a rock presentation. Endless guitars, four and sometimes with Morgan you got five. It’s Nashville keeping Fender and Gibson alive. Watching the show it was palpable, the center of real music has shifted to Nashville. It used to just be country, but when the popsters shifted to beats and the studio sessions dried up all the real players moved to Tennessee, it’s a hotbed of creativity. The label epicenter may be Los Angeles, but Nashville is no longer a backwater, it just might be the main stream.

So what’s it like to have the biggest album of the past two years?

EVERYBODY KNOWS YOUR SONGS!

I haven’t seen this since Taylor Swift. Then again, back when she was appealing to youngsters and there was a ton of production. That’s not what Morgan Wallen is selling. Ultimately there’s some cool screens, but the focus is first and foremost on the music. AND IT’S HEAVY!

If you listen to “Dangerous,” you’d expect a relatively quiet show, not something in-your-face, you know, where the singer occasionally takes a seat while they’re playing their acoustic guitar. That was not this.

So the audience…

L.A. is not a country town. However as you go east, towards San Bernardino, it is. I’ve been to country shows at the Crypt, when it was still Staples, it’s a different audience. People you don’t see at rock and pop shows, but not last night…

First and foremost, there were WOMEN! Two-thirds of the audience. You men hanging with your brethren complaining you can’t get laid are missing the point. First and foremost you have to go where the girls are, and they were in force last night. Short ones, tall ones, big ones, small ones. Because when you’re at the show, caught up in the music, the music makes you feel like a star, looks fade away, everybody becomes attractive when they’re singing along. AND THEY WERE!

And the guys who brought their girls because they wanted to go…they knew all the words too. I didn’t see a single person staring at their phone, they were all standing, grooving to the music.

Now it used to be different. Many concertgoers went to hear the hits, that was all they knew, people in attendance might not even own the album. But with streaming everything is available and if you’re interested…

And to know all these songs by heart… I realized these were not grazers, switching from hit to hit on the parade, rather they’d gone deep, they’d been hooked, it takes a lot of time and effort to know songs inside and out, you can’t sing them after hearing them once. Not after ten times even. And like I said, “Dangerous” has thirty songs!

Never mind some newly released numbers and what came before.

3

Not that every number was an assault. After opening with “Up Down,” off Morgan’s 2018 album “If I Know Me,” recorded with Florida Georgia Line and the title song of “Dangerous,” you heard that country road picking, you know with the windows down driving down the highway feeling like a million bucks, that’s what the beginning of “Still Goin Down” sounds like.

“The way I talk, I guess I got it from my pops

Product of some kneelin’ down

In a town where the doors don’t lock

And there’s a million other people like me

From a scene a little more podunk than pop

I didn’t choose being born in the sticks

And I’ll be damned if I sound like something I ain’t

For some folks a back road gets old

But for me, it just can’t”

This is autobiographical. His father is a preacher. You can’t choose where you’re born, why begrudge someone their background, the way they talk?

Another song that starts quietly, although not that quietly last night, is “Silverado for Sale,” which is nowhere near as hokey as the title might imply.

“Never thought I’d be calling you up today

Taking out an ad for this Chevrolet

But there’s a ring in the window just down the street

I wanna marry her, she wants to marry me

Money’s kinda tight but love don’t care

Me and this truck been everywhere”

But it’s the anthemic chorus that brings the song home. And I’m not going to quote it because you’ll think it’s just a truck song, but it’s not. First and foremost, it’s not solely hedonistic, at times it’s wistful. And naming the truck a Silverado roots you, you envision something big and rusted, something you get as a hand-me-down, but it gets you where you want to go. And if you listen to the record…close your eyes and you can see the girls swaying back and forth singing along last night.

The absolute highlight of the show was when Morgan sat alone at the keyboard and played and sang “Sand in My Boots”: 

“Yeah but now I’m dodging potholes in my sunburnt Silverado

Like a heart-broke desperado, headed right back to my roots

Somethin’ bout the way she kissed me tells me she’d love Eastern Tennessee

Yeah, but all I brought back with me was some sand in my boots”

What you don’t get if you don’t know the song is it too not only has a Silverado, but an anthemic chorus.

And I’m not going to mention each and every number, but it stunned me that unlike most new acts, Morgan Wallen does not have a dearth of material, he didn’t have to whip out a classic to fill out the set, if anything you were disappointed he didn’t play more of the songs from “Dangerous.”

But still I want to focus on a few more numbers.

“I found myself in this bar

Making mistakes and making new friends

I was growing up and nothing made sense

Buzzing all night like neon in the dark

I found myself in this…”

We’ve all been there, taking it fast, not slow, having a great, convivial time and finding out too late we’ve pushed it past the limit, it’s part of growing up.

The title of “More Than My Hometown” might sound a bit clichéd, but this is pure Morgan Wallen, irrelevant of the lyrics, the changes are so damn good and the chorus so damn catchy that you just can’t resist. And still…

“Girl our mamas are best friends and so are we

The whole town’s rooting for us like the home team

Most likely to settle down

Plant a few roots real deep and let ’em grow

But we can’t stop this real world from spinnin’ us

Your bright lights called, I don’t blame you for pickin’ up

Your big dream bags are all packed up and ready to go

But I just need you to know

That I love you more than a California sunset

More than a beer when you ain’t twenty-one yet

More than a Sunday morning Lord

Turnin’ some poor lost souls ’round, and hallelujah bound

Yeah I love you more than the feeling when the bass hits the hook

When the guy gets the girl at the end of the book

But baby, this might be the last time I get to lay you down

‘Cause I can’t love you more than my hometown”

Some can’t resist the bright lights and the big city, others just can’t move on, they need to stay where their roots are.

And I must mention “The Way I Talk”:

“It’s got a touch of the town where I grew up

Something in it them California girls love

Some people like to make a little fun of

The way I talk

It gets slower after three or four cold beers

And gets louder when I’m cheering on the Volunteers

Folks know I’m country when they hear

The way I talk”

This is the essence. If it weren’t for the way Morgan Wallen talks and sings last night would have been a rock show that all those people who pooh-pooh him would have loved. I’m not talking to the punks, not the jam band audience, but you know who you are, someone who might love those genres, but also knows the joy of a concise song you can sing along to at the top of your lungs, like so many of those classic rock hits of yore.

4

So I’m looking around the Crypt, and I can’t see anybody’s politics. I don’t agree we can’t hate people on the other side of the political fence, because if you hear from them like I do it’s hard not to. But at the end of the day we’re just people, we’ve got more in common than we don’t, we can get along with just about anybody with very little effort, and the music is the one thing that brings us together.

It’s not like there was a sign saying to leave your beliefs at the gate, it’s just last night they didn’t matter, and if you think it was populated solely by those on the red side of the divide, you were not there.

As for being there…

This is the power of a hit song, you can be nobody from nowhere with no CV whatsoever, but you still might write a hit song that brings thousands, millions, together. You’re more powerful than any businessman, any politician, this is the power of music. It infects people in their souls. It’s why we need shows. Records are good, but we need to see these acts live, to hear their music come alive and breathe. I’m not talking about the hard drive extravaganzas with their dance steps, the music should be able to stand alone. And it did last night.

And I’m standing there throwing my arms in the air, smiling that I’m right back where I belong. Sometimes you wonder if it’s passed you by, if you’ve changed, and then you’re smacked in the face and reminded that it’s the same as it ever was, and so are you.

There are those who grew up. Who sold out. Care what the WSJ says to wear. But you can’t bring your fancy car to the gig, your bank account doesn’t show, we’re all essentially naked, in thrall to the music, it brings us together and levels all of us to the same set point at the same time.

I mean outside the Crypt there’s a pecking order, but inside there was none.

You get to choose who you want to be. And I think of how much I gave up to get where I am now. Don’t own any real estate. Don’t have any children. But when I entered the Crypt people knew who I was.

Backstage.

But inside the bowl I was completely anonymous. It was just me and nearly twenty thousand listening to the music.

That’s another thing, Morgan sold out the Crypt’s upper deck, which is almost impossible to do, you need an oxygen mask up there, above the three levels of skyboxes. But the people up there were the lit up their phones en masse, they were standing and singing too, they just had to be there.

Being home is better than it ever was, the world is at your fingertips on your devices, you’ve got the flat screen, but the peaks just don’t equal those outside. It’s a risk. Especially in L.A. Public transportation is so inadequate almost nobody uses it. Traffic is hell. But when you’re standing there in the dark with your brethren listening to the music…

It’s everything.

Makes me throw off my mental chains, I’m still gonna wear my mask, I’m still uptight about restaurants, but I’m gonna go to shows, for the soul.

But not just any show. It matters who is on stage. Some people are just a cut above. They’ve got it in their fingertips, I mean backstage Morgan Wallen was a relatively quiet guy, no different from you and me, but on stage…

He was someone different. You’d think he’d be self-conscious, still wet behind the ears. But he was comfortable, delivering for an audience hanging on every note, every word.

And it just was every note and word. He was wearing the same clothes he was backstage. It was a throwback to what once was, something we thought we lost in the Kardashianization of music, where it’s all surface and selling out in pursuit of cash and lifestyle.

But last night we got back to the garden. We’re still stardust, we’re still golden, and just like Joni Mitchell urged us fifty years ago, we’ve finally returned. A new generation is carrying the torch. Just when you think it’s over, done, they pull you back in, but you don’t have to be in the Mafia, you don’t have to give anything up, you don’t have to do anything but come to the show to fix all your problems.

For the evening anyway.

Rod Stewart-1-This Week On SiriusXM

Tune in tomorrow, Saturday September 24th, to Faction Talk, channel 103, at 4 PM East, 1 PM West.

Trilogy-Lovin’ Me/To Make A Woman Feel Wanted/Peace Of Mind

Spotify playlist: https://spoti.fi/3Sa9aJc

1

“I want it all

I want it all

I want it all

AND I WANT IT NOW!”

I’ve been in a funk. It’s been this way since I came back from Colorado after Labor Day. It’s not like the time in Vail was a hedonistic romp, rather it was a working vacation. I was either in front of the computer or hiking, mostly, with a few diversions, like the time I was driving back from the outlet shops in Silverthorne and decided to get off I-70 at Copper and take the back way home, almost to Leadville and then hanging a right back through Minturn.

And I’d never been on this specific highway before. And I was surrounded by a bunch of 14’ers. Which are bald on top. And then I hit a ghost town and stopped and thinking about calling Felice about my delay in returning it hit me, no one would ever be out of touch anymore. That ship has sailed. Finding a pay phone to call the ‘rents. Getting told directions. History. Enough time has passed, mobile telephony is no longer new, it’s de rigueur.

Even worse is when the clouds started to cover the sky and my mood started to darken, I was reminded of driving mountain highways all over the west in my 2002 after graduating from college. My entire life was in front of me, not that I was excited, I was more anxious, and now it’s mostly behind me.

And people are dropping like flies. Did you see Hilary Mantel just passed, at 70, after a stroke? She was notoriously overweight, she wrote about it, but still…SEVENTY? And studying her a bit I found out she’s famous for criticizing Kate Middleton. She said the Prince’s wife was a “shop-window mannequin” and…DIDN’T APOLOGIZE FOR IT! In truth it was more a criticism of the monarchy, which I agree with. I mean I sat out all the QEII pomp and circumstance, after all she’s just a person. I mean close up shop now.

So in today’s world it’s hard to expand your reach. It’s even hard to get started, but I’ve accomplished that, I’ve got a base. And my shrink was reciting what a good space I was in, how things were actually pretty good for me. And I said back to him…

“I want it all

I want it all

I want it all

And I want it now”

Not necessarily now, but definitely before I die.

2

I love “I Want It All,” but I was shocked to just find out it’s on 1989’s “The Miracle.” You see Queen might have sustained in the rest of the world, but their success in the States was a small fraction of what it had been previously, you see the album before the band had switched from Elektra to Capitol. From greatness to lameville. Labels make a difference, at least they used to, back when there were more than three conglomerates, back when a band like Queen could get traction.

So after ending the virtual session, I pulled up “I Want It All” on Qobuz. Unfortunately, it was not in hi-res, but regular CD quality, and ANYBODY CAN HEAR THE DIFFERENCE!

And I know “I Want It All” from FM rock radio, but I know the entire “A Night at the Opera” album, from playing it over and over again, and I got a hankering to hear it, to relive my life in Utah.

“A Night at the Opera” was in hi-res, there was no longer a scrim between me and the music, I was positively involved…

Although I wasn’t. Instead of cherry-picking my favorites I started from the top, with “Death On Two Legs (Dedicated to…).” And it was good, but it wasn’t hitting the spot. “Lazing on a Sunday Afternoon” was even worse.

Then I hit the meat of the album, my favorites. “I’m in Love with My Car” doesn’t get enough acknowledgement, maybe because it’s a Roger Taylor song, but this is a great bookend to the SoCal car ditties of the early sixties. This is just the man and the machine, nothing else, and today the younger generations Uber instead of getting their license, driving and what kind of car you had used to be a big thing, it used to count, not only were you showing off, you were at one with your automobile, it felt so good as you mashed the accelerator and…

“You’re My Best Friend” was always my favorite from the album and still is. Softer and different from what the band did previously, it had heart that hadn’t been evidenced previously. How great is it? Let me count the ways.

I won’t. I’ll just say “’39” is my third favorite song on “A Night at the Opera.” It’s got an ancient feel, as if sung in an old pub for just a few.

And then I looked at the rest of “A Night at the Opera” and… I didn’t want to hear it. And this surprised me, wasn’t this my favorite Queen album? Did I only know the tracks because it was a different era and we played our records from start to finish, side by side, whereas today that’s not the case? They might make them that way, but very few people listen this way, in a time-challenged world of unlimited choice, people cherry-pick what they want to hear. Doubt me? Look at the stream numbers on Spotify.

As for “Bohemian Rhapsody”… It used to just be an innovative song, now it’s been canonized, I’m not sure I ever need to hear it again.

So I went back to the progenitor, the very first album, that got good press but had no impact. I bought it on the reviews and I dropped the needle and heard…

“Keep Yourself Alive.” Loved it then and still do. And the sound was incredible, the LP was in hi-res.

And then the album segued into “Doing Alright” and I thought how I’d never heard it this clear before, and how I hadn’t heard it in years. Sounded like it was cut in a cathedral.

And now I’m thinking about the band’s career. “Queen II” had some impact, but it was the third album, “Sheer Heart Attack,” that finally made inroads, that was played on the radio. In that summer of ’75 you heard “Killer Queen” on a regular basis, along with Gary Wright’s “My Love Is Alive” and Fleetwood Mac’s first album with Lindsey and Stevie, and all the antiwar trappings, the counterculture, had fallen away and now it was only music and if you were successful, you were a god, an icon, and with FM radio now in every hamlet and burg everybody knew you.

And then came “A Night at the Opera,” a bit different and fully embraced. And now Queen were stars. Who were a constant presence on the airwaves.

I really didn’t want to listen to “Queen II” or “Sheer Heart Attack,” so I jumped to “Fat Bottomed Girls” from “Jazz,” and looked at the track listing and decided to play “Bicycle Race” too, but then I jumped all the way to “The Game,” maybe I had to re-evaluate, maybe “The Game” was my favorite Queen album, the first time I heard “Crazy Little Thing Called Love” I went wild, couldn’t wait for the album to come out and buy it. It was the summer of 1980, this was an unexpected triumph, it didn’t sound like anything else on the radio, it stuck out in a good way, and was a harbinger of what was to come, most notably “Another One Bites the Dust,” which became a true classic, especially when remade by Weird Al as “Another One Rides the Bus,” as a matter of fact I remember that as being Weird Al’s breakthrough.

But I was weirded out. I thought these albums were playable throughout because they were so fantastic throughout, but was the truth that I thought every track was great because I’d listened to the albums so much?

And I didn’t think about it again until I got an e-mail from my nephew Blake this morning.

3

Blake took his mother, my sister, to the Hollywood Bowl last night to see Loggins & Messina. I’m still debating as to whether I should risk going to a show, and I’ve seen the band and…

I remember when they reunited in 2005 I thought it was already too late, that they’d left a lot of money on the table by not reuniting in the nineties, but I saw them, loved them, and saw them again and…

Kenny Loggins is the bigger star today. But you’ve got to know, he was always the lightweight, he needed Jim Messina to balance him out, to deflate the balloon and add some seriousness.

And I remember hearing “Same Old Wine” on SiriusXM after gassing up at the Shell station in the Palisades, and my mind sings “Vahevala” every once in a while and Blake told me for the first half it was Loggins & Messina and the second half was just Kenny himself, and even though he’d liked it, I felt less like I’d missed out until…

I checked the setlist. Some bands just play the same songs every night, others shuffle the numbers, but Loggins & Messina hadn’t played together since 2018, so I was curious as to what they sang and…

They played “Be Free,” from 1974’s “Mother Lode,” which was a commercial disappointment, but is my absolute favorite, maybe because I listened to it ad infinitum too fearful to change the cassette on the interstate in an absolute blizzard in Idaho.

I would have liked to hear “Vahevala,” which was one of the two encores, and the “Trilogy,” “Lovin’ Me/To Make a Woman Feel Wanted/Peace of Mind,” and I suddenly had a huge desire to listen to it right then, even though I needed to prepare for my radio show by listening to something else, so I pulled up the initial album, hoping it was in hi-res, since so much Columbia stuff is, but it was not, but I decided to listen anyway. 

And I’m listening to the “Trilogy” and looking at the track listing remembering the fall of ’71, when I bought the debut.

This was after Poco had splintered, when CSN and sometimes Y had fractured too, but we’d gotten all those solo albums, the soft rock sound was still legitimate, this was before the cognoscenti started to pooh-pooh it at the end of the decade.

And Messina had cred, not only from Poco, but from his tenure in Buffalo Springfield and his time behind the board, which is how he ended up producing Kenny Loggins in the first place, Jim wanted to be on the other side of the glass. But as they made the album… They decided to make it “with Jim Messina,” he was all over the final product and no one knew who Kenny Loggins was at this point.

4

Talk about album openers. You dropped the needle on “Sittin’ In,” as it was ultimately referred to, and you were immediately whisked away on a journey, “Nobody But You” was undeniable, with an anthemic chorus to boot.

After that came “Danny’s Song,” which has become a classic, but it was overshadowed by the rest of the album back when, who thought it would sustain, but it did.

The third cut is the aforementioned “Vahevala,” with that great, emphatic, Kenny Loggins intro:

“I’m thinking about when I was a sailor

Spent my time on the open seas”

And the track went on a tear, got fast and then slowed back down, like life itself.

Reggae was on the horizon, the American breakthrough with Johnny Nash’s “I Can See Clearly Now” didn’t come until 1972, and the Wailers really didn’t get true traction in the U.S. until the fall of ’76 with their live album and… “Vahevala” even has a steel drum solo and it’s got the island feel that Jimmy Buffett ultimately capitalized on, but this was before…

Oh, did I mention the band? I certainly read the credits, these guys were so good and tight, Merel Bregante, Al Garth, Larry Sims and Jon Clarke (with some sideman help, Milt Holland and Michael Omartian, before he became famous as a producer), this was professional MAGIC!

And then came the “Trilogy” finishing out the side.

As for side 2, it opened on a tear with “Back to Georgia,” not as classic as “Nobody But Me,” not a song for forever, but a song that sounded just great right now.

Then came Kenny’s other iconic number, “House at Pooh Corner,” which even seemed cheesy back then…

“Listen to a Country Song” is in the vein of “Back to Georgia,” a lightweight dance throwaway, but more than listenable and definitely enjoyable.

And then came “Same Old Wine,” which in retrospect is the one true masterpiece on the LP (assuming you’re not the type who idolizes “Danny’s Song).

In truth, the lyrics of “Same Old Wine” are a companion to those of another song released at the same time, the Who’s “Won’t Get Fooled Again.” Yes, it’s the same old wine in a brand new bottle.

“Well we give them the election

That keeps filling our heads full of lies

Can we trust in new directions

When their promises are in disguise

Well someday the truth will catch up

I just hope it don’t catch us all by surprise”

Messina goes on to sing about religion and the war and you don’t feel hammered over the head, we were all fatigued at this point, but we couldn’t get these thoughts out of our mind.

But “Same Old Wine” is over eight minutes long, which leaves time for a stinging guitar solo and so much more. Put it on when you’re alone in the house, you’ll fall in the groove, you’ll be stunned.

And the album ends with Kenny Loggins singing about being in a rock and roll mood, the one that covered the entire country back then, when you could be soft wistful and still be considered rock and roll, that was one of its features, it was a big tent, and the more you explored the more you were embraced.

5

Which brings us back to the “Trilogy.”

It’s starts off with Messina singing “Lovin’ Me,” a number he wrote with Murray MacLeod. It’s a slow waltz, it’s like a seventies movie, you’re thinking while you’re listening.

Then the song accelerates into “To Make a Woman Feel Wanted,” and then finishes up with “Peace of Mind,” which is classic Loggins & Messina, Jim wrote it and Kenny sings it, Jim balances Kenny’s saccharine instincts and Kenny adds his pure, meaningful voice.

And the whole thing lasts over eleven minutes, but it’s not a second too long, it’s a journey that you’re glad to go on, again and again.

And I’m listening and looking at “Sittin’ In”‘s track listing and I realize there’s no clunker amongst the nine tracks. No definite skip. In addition, there are more than a few, MANY highlights.

But the act’s entire rep has been undercut by the gigantic AM hit “Your Mama Don’t Dance” on the second LP. Despite the now legendary closing cut, “Angry Eyes,” this one track overshadowed everything else the band did, ever. The duo made beaucoup royalties when Poison covered the song and it hit again, but if I hear it I want to hit someone, which is why I never play it. Which is why so many ultimately overlooked the brilliance of “Mother Lode.”

But I was starting to realize… Loggins & Messina’s “Sittin In” is more consistent, maybe even more listenable than any of the Queen albums, there are no clunkers, every song has enough merit to stand on its own, it doesn’t need context to make us listen to it, but we did…listen to it, that is, the entire album.

Not that I never play it, but you can’t talk about it, because of the aforementioned hit and who Kenny Loggins became.

If someone released “Sittin In” today it would become legendary. Then again, there’s not enough money to get it right in the studio, no one wants to fund this kind of work, even though it has universal appeal, just ask Jimmy Buffett, who as David Letterman says, has ALL THE MONEY!

So revisit “Sittin’ In.” When you have time to relax, to set your mind free, or if you’re desirous of that.

Then again, Queen and Loggins & Messina are not mutually exclusive, as I said at the top, I WANT IT ALL!