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Jon Quijano

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

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297. "That's What I Like" by Bruno Mars

Bruno Mars represents the re-musification of pop artists on mainstream radio. Along his progression from Hawaiian kid Elvis impersonator to backing band showman to session songwriter to finally breaking out with his own act, he has accumulated about every critical lesson of the musical old school to inform his current reign in the limiest limelight.

He's no song and dance guy, but he can song and dance. He can play every instrument expertly. He sings like a beast. His songwriting and producing skills are a mixture of lost old-school panache and the most modern current trends. 

But here is the turning point. He then covered over all the steeped musical substance with a macho-yet-feeling, confident-yet-strange persona that inexorably attracted a legion of mainstream admirers. The ascent of a talent like Bruno Mars is anything but likely.

I think his best song, so far, is "That's What I Like," a sex and possessions fantasy that is flagrant wish fulfillment, but may turn out to be far more satirical than anyone suspects. Whose wishes, after all, are being fulfilled in this song? Are these the wishes of a specific person he personally knows? I wouldn't be surprised if these were more the wishes of the singer himself, or at least the character he plays. What if, knowing his audience, he gambled and wrote a song that meshes with the wishes of his most profligate patrons? What does this say about them, or what he judges them to be?

Probably the best way to think about these lyrics is to stop thinking so damn much. It's sex by the fire! And diamonds! You have a problem with shopping trips in Paris? Everyone with a problem shopping in Paris, raise your hand! Bruno just wants to please. Put down your buckets of cold water.

Listen to this insanely cool production, the synth textures mixed with a sick funky bass line. Sharp changes and pinpoint staccato attack.

That "jump in the Cadillac" pre-chorus has just the gnarliest, snarliest close chord changes, busting with all the funky sevenths.

The choruses and bridge are these airy, silly over-dramatic exultations. He is intentionally, whimsically flying out of control, embracing a kind of meta-fun that more and more sneaks into what used to be such a stilted formula in pop radio (in a time where meta-fun has left what I hear on indie radio).

Any band that prides its funk (and its fun) needs to be able to reel out this song. If you've ever chopped a minor minor-7th chord over a funk bass line, "That's What I Like" is your new homework.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

296. "Thank You" by Led Zeppelin

You'd think they could've properly mic'd the acoustic guitar for the solo, but this was a time when perfection didn't mean perfection. We've gotten very fundamentally literal since those times.

No matter, this is the perfect Led Zeppelin ballad, so melodically inspired. I almost don't even notice its great creativity anymore because I've heard it so many times, but you really have to wonder at all the distinctly different sections in this song, starting with the full band instrumental opening to the verse vocals backed only by church organ, to the full-scale choruses, to the guitar solo played within a reprise of the instrumental opening, to the fade out/in organ solo ending.

Robert Plant got few chances to sing pure without needing to seem possessed by blues demons. He really could fill the church.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

295. "Tennessee" by Arrested Development

Imagine you get a big, nasty sliver in your finger. The discomfort imprints your entire consciousness, becoming as absorbing to you as an asteroid stabbing the sky, scoring the panorama from horizon to horizon. And that... is just a goddamned sliver.

Now imagine slavery was in your own personal past, not to mention its effects still right up in your present (for those who have to imagine).

And think of how that would stick in your mind, straight in the center of your daily, astronomically emotional banality.

And think, that someone took those overwhelming thoughts and ordered their feelings about them into such a breeze of evocative poetry as this song, "Tennessee."

This is one of the best songs, and one of the all-time meditations.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

294. "Teenage Dream" by Katy Perry

I think it's funny to have a song like this that staunch conservatives and staunch liberals judge harshly for their own supposedly unrelated reasons. 

What the puritans miss in the process is an incessantly fun pop song with enough guitar heft that it could easily be made into a heavy rock song, and the only thing out of place would be those sensual, objectifying lyrics.

Like any peak Katy Perry song, "Teenage Dream" is built on a single chord progression that receives a collection of melody, instrumentation, and dynamics updates to bring "development" to a song that really doesn't develop in terms of music theory. And here too, maybe the musical liberals and conservatives are also aghast. 

But that chord progression is voiced so excellently with its guitar, power chords on the pick-up notes over the square, sure beat.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 

293. “Technicolor Beat” by Oh Wonder

Just a song I heard on Spotify a few years back, and into a playlist it went. Many songs enter the playlist, last for a time, and eventually must be shown the door. 

This song, it’s a survivor, man. 

It’s an excellent mix of synthesized and organic sounds.

There is something I love about a male and female voice singing together not in harmony but in unison. It’s an oddly under-used idea. 

The choruses are so rich, with that piano. The melody repeats over changing chords, one of my favorite effects. For the last chorus, cool counter melodies join. The whining synth noise in the culmination is so well done. 

I keep cleaning house on my playlist, booting songs that use up their novelty. Some prove they never were novelty. They were honest all along.

Sunday 12.17.17
Posted by Jon Quijano
 
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