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Jon Quijano

The website of St. Croix Valley photographer and storyteller Jon Quijano

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272. "Sliver" by Nirvana

In this short, poppy punk-grunge song, Kurt Cobain tells the story of being left at his grandparents' house for the evening, and how he violently resisted this, without success.

I have kids. When I tell them it's time to go to their grandparents' house, they nearly trample me on the way out to the car. What the hell was going on in Cobain's family that he would try to physically prevent himself from going over there?

Maybe he wanted to go to the show with his parents, maybe to see the show, maybe just to be with them. Maybe he didn't want to be where they left him. Maybe all of the above.

From what I understand, Cobain's parents were both extremely unstable, and they eventually divorced when he was young. His extended family, apparently, was not much better. I do know that his aunt played music, showed him how to record songs on her four-track recorder, and clearly served as a positive role model in the midst of his stunted upbringing in a remote logging town. But for the most part, Cobain's childhood seems to have been a lot of shuffling between imperfect hosts who would take him in for short periods.

In my experience with divorce, it can shred the minds of the children these families are responsible for. It can lead to exponential damage as time passes and circumstances compound. This is why a grown Kurt Cobain found himself writing about these memories years later, because he still felt those effects, emotional and situational, palpable to that current day.

Look at two key lines in this song.

There's the chorus line, repeated 43 times: "Grandma take me home."

The word "home" there, I believe, is more an ideal than a physical place. Where was home for this kid?

But the most bitter scream of the song erupts from the song's most important line: "I woke up in my mother's arms."

You could unpack the meaning of that line forever.

Let's just point out one more thing. Kurt Cobain almost never wrote songs that told coherent stories with identifiable people or events. He barely even used sentence grammar. He much more preferred abstract word collages or extremely opaque allusions. What would drive him, in "Sliver," to dispense with his trusted modus operandi and express himself with such clarity?

Where is he waking up?

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

271. "Sledgehammer" by Peter Gabriel

This one of the most creative songs ever written, yet I feel like it gets overshadowed by its equally creative music video. Consider this song Exhibit A supporting my decision to link to song audio and avoid the images sold along with it.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

270. "Since I've Been Loving You" by Led Zeppelin

Jimmy Page could play guitar.

Robert Plant could sing.

Led Zeppelin could write a song with a slow build to a big finale.

News flashes.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

268. "She Ossifies" by Trevor Dunn's Trio-Convulsant

Went to a crazy show once down at the Fineline downtown Minneapolis. Headliner was Fantômas, a heavy rock supergroup, quite fun if not the answer to all my prayers.

But the night lives on because of the opening act, a jazz-metal three-piece by the name of Trevor Dunn's Trio-Convulsant. They played completely vocal-free music of the most ugly, splintered variety I think I'd ever believed possible.

Three musicians: Trevor Dunn (best known as bassist for Mr. Bungle) played an upright bass. There was an effortless, lithe drummer named Ches Smith.

...and one of the most impressive guitarists I've ever witnessed in the flesh, Mary Halverson.

I quickly bought their album after the show. But I can say confidently that you had to really watch them perform this madness to appreciate the poise and intentionality of it. The recordings do not convey the agile physicality of it. Mary Halverson, especially, fully navigated the fretboard in a way that was almost disrespectful of the instrument as it is traditionally played but undeniable in its mastery. Things that seem like clicks and nicks on the recording, know that Mary is reaching for those sounds within a two-handed hail of simultaneous processes.

Listen to this one track, the way it builds on its central pulse, escalating and then regrouping, repeatedly finding its footing in this pattern. It's certainly metal-type music but also a sabotaging of metal-type music. Nearly five minutes in, the song hits ostensibly a rocking climax, and even this moment is littered with incongruous harmony and drumming that intentionally falls fractions shy all around the beat.

It is my love of ugly and heavy sound imagination incarnate.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

267. "Shape of My Heart" by Sting

Another of the sharply distinct songs off Sting's concept album Ten Summoner's Tales, this one is the tale of a gambler, explaining his life philosophy via the metaphors of his profession: A deck of cards and the silence of a poker face.

It's an excellently controlled conceit that pays off as the careful language choices continue to reach deep implications. It puts "Know When to Hold 'Em" into kindergarten class.

My favorite point, on that gambler's silence:

"Those who speak know nothing
And find out to their cost
Like those who curse their luck in too many places
And those who fear are lost"

The music is a lovely classical guitar in a descending minor key phrase, with a wonderfully textured final cadence sequence, plus a low-key but essential percussion section. The middle key change and harmonica solo bring in images of twilight plateaus on the old range. It's a rare, admirable key change down, as most key changes go for that uplifting effect. The mournful vocal is all we expect of Sting's range and underrated toughness.

It's a classic song that many don't realize as such but I believe will endure.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 
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