I’m so glad I came
But I can’t wait to leave
The soundtrack for the fourth season of the FX television series The Bear features two variants of St. Vincent’s “Slow Disco,” which was released in 2017 on her Masseduction album.
The 2000-odd records that I’ve featured on my wildly successful little blog include representatives of just about every musical genre you can think of – pop, rock, jazz, country, blues, punk, metal, hip-hop, Broadway, etc. But the typical 2 or 3 lines post features a record that I first heard on the radio in the sixties or seventies.
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St. Vincent’s Masseduction album |
I’m still listening to that music half a century later. Prospecting for worthwhile new music is hard work, and I’ve always been pretty lazy. It’s soooo much easier to just listen to the old familiar stuff.
If I do feature a newer record on 2 or 3 lines, there’s a good chance that I became acquainted with it because it was on the soundtrack of a TV series I watched – for example, The Bear.
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I’ve heard of the artist known as St. Vincent – her real name is Annie Clark – but I don’t think I had ever heard her music before watching the third episode of the fourth season of The Bear a few days ago.
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St. Vincent on stage |
St. Vincent is kind of a big deal. Three of her albums have won the Grammy for Best Alternative Music Album – tying Beck and the White Stripes for the most wins in that category – and the critics have gone gaga over her. (Masseduction was described as “an album that defies explanation and critique, rendering the critic a dead weight in the dust of its ever-accelerating sucker-punch of ideas,” “nothing less than an absolutely towering achievement,” and “a genuine masterpiece: complex, funny, sexy, bleak, uplifting, inspiring and enthralling from start to finish.”)
Of course, St. Vincent is not even close to being the biggest recording artist whose music I know next to nothing about. That title probably belongs to either Taylor Swift (who is a good friend of St. Vincent’s) or Phish.
A number of years ago, I featured one Taylor Swift record on 2 or 3 lines – but my knowledge of her music is very limited. (Honestly, my five-year-old granddaughter would be a better source for info about Tay Tay’s records than I would be.)
But I know infinitely more about Swift’s music than I know about Phish’s oeuvre. I think it would be impossible to know any less about Phish than I do because I’ve never heard a single note of Phish’s music – hard to believe, but true.
The New Yorker recently ran a long piece about Phish that called into question all my preconceived notions about that group. So I’m going to add “Phish Radio” – Sirius/XM channel 29 – to my car’s presets and dive in. I’ll let you know how that goes in a future 2 or 3 lines.
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I occasionally get obsessed with a record that doesn’t fit into any of my usual categories.
I’m talking about records like “Guided By Angels” by Amyl and the Sniffers, “Chaise Longue” by Wet Leg, or “Charleston Girl” by Tyler Childers.
But I’m mostly talking about “Fade Into You” by Mazzy Star, a slowcore/dream pop masterpiece that has a curare-like effect on me whenever I allow myself to listen to it.
“Slow Disco (Piano Version)” may become my new “Fade Into You.” Time will tell, but it’s off to a good start.
Click here to listen to “Slow Disco (Piano Version),” which is featured in the soundtrack of episode three of season four of The Bear.
Click here to listen to just the piano part of “Slow Disco (Piano Version).”
Click here to buy “Slow Disco (Piano Version)” from Amazon.