The river’s muddy guts had backed up, exploded
Spillin’ out the facts, fast and a lot
Spillin’ out the facts of the city’s dirty secrets
Like a city surfacing from out of the brack
"It's Only Money Tyrone," Marah
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Marah is Nick Hornby’s favorite band, too (About A Boy, High Fidelity); you can trust him. Trust Sarah Vowell and Bruce Springsteen and Steve Earle. But most of all trust me. You missed something serious.1
Favorite has different manifestations these days. As a kid, I pinned pictures of my favorites to the bedroom wall. If the poster was nice, I caught the corners with the flat part of the tack, rather than poke a hole in the paper, a trick my decorator mother taught me. I clipped and collected articles about the bands from Creem and Circus and Trouser Press and any other magazine that featured them. I knew all the members’ names and what they looked like and all the lyrics to all the songs and owned all the records, including the Japanese bootlegs and the colored vinyls, which I bought at Howie’s Music Machine in Pikesville, where, it seemed, older hipsters spent the entire day in their leather jackets, leaning on the racks, listening to music no one else had ever heard of, where I spent the day when I became an older hipster, leaning, listening. If Ivan Kral had walked down any street, I’d have recognized him. No way could Lenny Kaye or Earl Slick or Julian Cope escape me.
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Part of the blame falls on a group that keeps breaking up and replacing its members. I asked the newest, guitarist Bruce Derr, why Marah frequently disbands. Hired three months ago for the tour, Derr’s not even on the latest record, Life is a Problem (which was released on vinyl and cassette). “It’s definitely not Dave,” he said. “Dave’s one of the six nicest people I’ve ever met in my life.”
My friend Kim and I don’t really believe him, partly because Dave's the one constant, and partly since Bielanco basically called us all douches when we didn’t clap at the end of one of the songs. I think we were awestruck. Honestly, even if we could tell the song was finished, the band immediately started the next without a pause, and then Dave mumbled a conversation with himself about our lack of applause.
Dave, we loved it. You are brilliant.
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I'd like to give the talented (keyboards, accordion, harmonica, vocals, coolness) Christine Smith a medal for sticking it out so long—“five and a half years—longer than anybody,” she said. Except Dave, the only original member of the band on this tour.
But that’s a small part of the story. Most of the blame lies with the digital download. It is bad enough wrestling with a CD’s shrink wrap, then trying to pry the too-sticky silver tape from the ends before getting the damned thing open, only to crack the door off the plastic case. Sometimes you get lyrics and photos inside, but, Sonny, I’m too old and tired and busy to get my magnifying glass to read that shit. And when it’s one of those fancy folding things, trying to refold it and squeeze it back into the slot of the front of the case when it’s suddenly expanded and puffed out, like a fucking map, is even more frustrating. And then—FUCK this CD, bitch! YOU listen to it.
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Who the hell is Marah? No wonder you missed them. But I didn’t. I didn’t miss one moment of their energy and power. I didn’t miss the chance to yell, “ONLY MONEY!” when it looked like Dave was trying to decide which last two songs to do, and I didn’t miss him say, “Yeah, let’s make this one count” to Bruce, who did make it count.
I didn’t miss the chance to hear my new number one favorite song of all time, live, like they meant it, like it's never been played before, ever, from my favorite band, Marah.
1You miss something serious when you miss Chuck Prophet, too.*
2”Thunder Road.”**
* I would say you’re missing something serious when you miss Bob Schneider, but I’m wishing a lot of you drunk fratboys and party girls would miss that show altogether and leave him to the drunk grownups.
**The Boys are Back in Town” is number 3.
7 caws:
I sooooooo00 miss vinyl...*sad sigh*
I might have missed being a teenager in vinyl's heyday, but my family always maintained a huge collection, so I still feel like I grew up on it. I thought the huge poster-sized inserts were so exotic and exciting. Plus, there's just some thing so tangible about the music that way. I even miss my CDs for that reason. I used to lend out my CDs, but not the inserts, particularly if they had photos and lyrics. I have an album of just the booklets and inserts somewhere.
"Thunder Road" is indisputably the best song ever, so I trust your judgment.
Funny that you mention this. Two weeks ago I sold my entire vinyl collection to a second hand record store for 50 bucks. My heart was bleeding. But frankly I haven't listened to any vinyl record in years, and my turntable isn't even connected to an amp anymore because I went completely digital and haven't owned a regular stereo set in years. The albums took up 3 ft of shelf space in my living room, and now that Joey is moving in we just need to make some more space for her stuff.
I still love the huge covers though. Album art these days is just not what it used to be.
the 8x10 (or Funk Box as I remember it) was my fave venue in your neck of the woods...
and now I feel crappy because I wasn't able to catch the band last night here in the 'burgh at Club Cafe
How much energy and passion you've captured, Leslie! And yes, Thunder Road, my gosh.
@MassTwinglesI was going to reply, but when I came to look, it was gone. Sorry!
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