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Welcome back, my friends, to the "Battle" that never ends.
We're so glad you could attend. Come inside! Come inside!
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This is 'BATTLE OF THE BANDS' ('BOTB') where you listen to different recordings and vote for the one you like best. A new Battle gets posted on the 1st of each month and on the 7th, I place my own vote, tally 'em all up and announce the winner.
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Friend? Foe? Stranger? No matter, ALL are welcome. So pull up a chair, pour yourself 24 oz. of DOG BITE High Gravity Lager (or the poison of your choice) and turn it up to Eleven!
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[NOTE: Links to the first year of 'BOTB' (#1 - #24) can be found at the very bottom of this page.]

Saturday, April 21, 2018

BOTB RESULTS: 2018, APRIL 15 (Or, WARREN ZEVON VERSUS JACKSON BROWNE)

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My April 15th BATTLE OF THE BANDS (BOTB) installment took place [link> HERE. It was the latest in my "Battle For Los Angeles" theme and featured Warren Zevon's zong 'Carmelita' versus Jackson Brown's 'Boulevard(or, The Pioneer Chicken Stand versus The Gold Cup Coffee Shop).
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The first thing I want to do is extend my sincere gratitude to every single one of you who voted. I was exceedingly pleased with the terrific turnout this time. (I believe the Email I sent out to remind some folks of the existence of my newest Battle may have had something to do with the better turnout. It's something I now intend to continue doing in the future, so keep an eye on your InBox, peoples!)
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I really enjoyed the heck outta this Battle and I felt especially inspired in responding to y'all in the comment section. I feel like I was in a good, creative place. (Many of my favorite BOTB installments are those that have free-flowing back & forth exchanges in the comment sections! This was no exception.) 
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This Battle was really close for quite awhile. With 6 votes in, it was tied 3 to 3. With 10 votes in, it was tied 5 to 5. Then Jackson Browne got three consecutive votes, giving him an 8 to 5 lead. But... that was it for Browne. The final 7 votes (including mine) all went to Warren Zevon:
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Warren Zevon = 12 votes
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Jackson Browne = 8 votes
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The Amazing Sixwell and I both guessed wrong on this contest. I knew it would be a tight race but figured the uptempo hit by Jackson would beat Warren's mostly unknown ballad by perhaps 2 or 3 votes. WRONG! And this means that in "The Battle Within The Battle", the Magic 8-Ball takes a 2-0 lead over Sixwell. (Bringing in a little competition sure seems to have put the "magic" back into the 8-Ball. Suddenly, that dog can hunt!)
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'Carmelita' is one of my very, very favorite Warren Zevon zongs. A person might ask, "WHY do you like a song about a heroin addict?" Well, there are a few reasons. 
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Musically-speaking, I think it's an extremely catchy song. In fact, to me, it even has an "earworm" quality about it. I find myself singing or humming it often. But I concede that at first blush it doesn't appear to have a strong "earworm melody" to it. I believe it takes multiple listenings before that melody starts to worm its way into one's mind.
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I also really like that Spanish guitar sound in 'Carmelita'. So, I think the song stands on its own, musically. But then there are also a number of elements to the song that very strongly resonate with me on a real personal level.
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As a person, Warren Zevon left much to be desired. He had some good qualities, too, naturally, but he was certainly self-destructive and too often put his own self-interests ahead of others. But as a songwriter, the guy had an undeniable knack for reaching down deep and expressing feelings that many of us "Glass Half-Empty" folks share. Zevon had a dark sense of humor, and so do I. Therefore, the themes of some of his songs, and certain lyrics in some of his songs, have almost become a part of who I am because they express my feelings and attitudes every bit as well as I myself could. Honestly, I suspect that only a person who's a wee bit "twisted" could really appreciate these, but here's just a small sampling:
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I'm going to hurl myself against the wall, 'cause I'd rather feel bad than not feel anything at all.
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I'll sleep when I'm dead.
(Zevon's version of "Carpe Diem".)
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I appreciate the best but I'm settling for less. I'm looking for the next-best thing.
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Back in the 1980s, my buddy Pooh and I nearly wore this one completely out:
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It ain't that pretty at all!
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How are you and your girlfriend doing?
"It ain't that pretty at all!"
Did you pick-up your paycheck?
"Yeah. It ain't that pretty at all!"
How's your hangover?
"It ain't that pretty at all!"
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And then there's what I think may be the truest thing ever said in a song -- a line I have repeated a godzillion and two times:
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There's a sadness in the heart of things.
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In 'Carmelita', the storyteller is having problems with heroin. But to me, it could be anything. Alcohol. Relationships. Bad luck. General depression. The bottom line is simply that for whatever reason, one is down 'n' out and feeling a strong longing for something that's out-of-reach. I can't relate to being strung-out on heroin, but I CAN relate to feeling down 'n' out and longing greatly for something that seems very far away -- unobtainable.
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So that's why I love the song 'Carmelita' in general. But there are also explicitly personal reasons: Contrary to what Warren Zevon may have believed, there REALLY WAS a Pioneer Chicken stand on Alvarado Street in L.A. It was only 4 or 5 blocks from Echo Park, between Reservoir Boulevard and Scott Avenue. My beloved Grandfather, Floyd (R.I.P.), used to drive us right past it on the way to Dodger games:
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My friend, Pooh, standing near the former location of "the Pioneer Chicken stand" on Alvarado Street.
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And, finally, there's that opening verse in 'Carmelita'...
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I hear Mariachi static on my radio 
And the tubes, they glow in the dark 
And I'm there with her in Ensenada 
And I'm here in Echo Park
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That paints a vivid mental picture for me. I remember when I first started really getting into music at the age of about 15. While simultaneously exploring my teen-aged feelings, I would lie in the dark staring at the orange glowing tubes inside my radio while listening to the songs coming out of it.
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And later, from about 1983 to '85, I used to listen to a radio station, 69 XTRA Gold, broadcasting from Mexico (Tijuana, not Ensenada -- where I once spent a night in jail. Uhp! I was an idiot!!). I fell in love with the beautiful Mexican woman -- whom I never saw -- who would periodically mention the station's call letters. I thought she had the perfect feminine voice, and I longed to meet her.
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Over the decades, I had completely forgotten all about that mysterious woman in Tijuana -- my personal "Carmelita" -- who used to speak to me from Mexico through my radio in Santa Monica, California. But on Saturday, March 24th of this year, I was listening to an old cassette of things I had recorded from my radio back in 1985. Suddenly, "Carmelita's" voice came through the speaker saying the call letters in Spanish.
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It was an incredibly intense feeling! Too bizarre to understand, let alone to try explaining. But in a moment, I remembered that "woman in my radio" and I had a kind of "Somewhere In Time" experience. I felt like I had been immediately pulled back to the 1980s and I re-fell in love with that woman, my Carmelita, in a single instant! In that same hour, I knew that Warren Zevon's song, 'Carmelita', would be used in my very next BOTB "Battle For Los Angeles" installment.
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If anybody is interested, you can find an article about the old radio station 69 XTRA Gold HERE. That article even includes an old audio file which has "Carmelita" saying the station call letters in Spanish. (I'm still in love with her, and wish I could find a way to go back in time and locate her. ...I wonder if she looked as pretty as her voice sounded.)
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Again, I thank you all for showing up and I hope you'll do so again, when I present my next Battle Of The Bands contest here on May 1st.
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~ Stephen T. McCarthy
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20 comments:

  1. Lots of good and "ain't pretty" memories of your wild days Saint Mac. You still have cassette tapes? And can listen to them? Man, you are nostalgic.

    Have a great weekend.

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    1. WILD THING, I hope you're having a great weekend, too. The first half of mine was... wild. (I didn't know "wild" could still exist for me after November 25, 2017.) But I even surprised myself.

      Thanks, Donna, for reading and commenting. Muy appreciato. (I feel confident in THAT translation!)
      [;^D

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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    2. POSTSCRIPT:
      Nostalgic? Me? Oh, you have NO IDEA how deep that goes!

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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  2. Yet another fantastic sharing intro on your previous post and fantastic sharing "outro" nowtro on your summary post.

    In other words, Warren Zevon is more popular than Jackson Browne. That speaks for itself.

    I know Jackson Browne isn't popular but I appreciate his on-the-margins-I-don't-care-if-I'm-popular artistry.

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    1. Thanks for your first-rate participation, McDogG.

      Well, I think hits and record sales probably prove that, in general, Jackson Browne is more popular than Warren.

      I was having a textversation with a good friend the other day. He and I were both surprised that Warren was going to win this Battle.

      I wrote to him:

      "There may be some truth in the idea that MY readers are not a good sampling of the norm. I mean, I'm hardly a "conventional" sort of person, so it stands to reason that most of the people who are at all interested in reading what I write are somewhat unconventional, too."

      I'm sure a Browne / Zevon Preference polling of people in our age group would end with Browne well ahead of Zevon. As I said in this post, I think any really strong interest in Zevon's music requires a twisted personality.

      But then again, you ARE using Tony Clifton as your avatar, and if THAT doesn't indicate someone with a "twist" in their personality, I don't know what would.

      So... what do I know? I'm just winging it. I'm not REALLY a psychiatrist... and I NEVER played one on TV, either!! :o)

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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  3. Warren Zevon was an incredible songwriter.

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    1. Yeah, MIKE, he really was. I think he went a bit overboard at times, but the stuffs of his that I dig (and there's plenty of it) really hits me where I live.

      As far as lyricists go, relatively speaking, I think there is really only a small handful of them who stand out / stood out as exceptional. Zevon would definitely be on my short list.

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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  4. Those glowing radio tubes used to fascinate me as well. I've been a radio fan since way back in the sixties when my parents bought me a bedside clock radio.

    This turned up unexpectedly for me as well. I was sure that Jackson's more well known song would win this one.

    Your outcome was very similar to mine. I wish some of your voters would come vote and my battles and some of mine would vote on your Battles as well as those of the other participants.

    Good Battle for sure. See you at the next one on May Day.

    Arlee Bird
    Tossing It Out

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    1. Yeah, LEE, when looking way back at our childhood / youth, it's sometimes really interesting to see which seemingly very small details and brief moments get retained in the mind decade after decade.

      The glowing light of tubes in a radio... that's at least three of us (you, Zevon, and I) who had that image burned into the mind for God Only Knows what reason.

      Yes, it's kind of sad that there's not more crossover voting in BOTB. Of course we ALL get the votes of fellow participants, but there are so many non-BOTBers who never seem to wander over to check out other BOTB competitions.

      Yep, see ya in the next BOTB round, Buddy Bird.

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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    2. I can recall when just about every supermarket had a tube testing machine at the front of the store. I never used them, but I think they also sold the tubes if yours didn't test as good.

      Arlee Bird
      Tossing It Out

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    3. I don't actually recall THAT. But it could have to do with the different parts of the country we were living in back then. The USA wasn't so homogenized, pasteurized, and nationalized back then.

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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  5. Well, my guy didn't win. But as they say - It's all good in the 'hood.

    Both were pretty decent contenders. I think I may have tossed my vote to Jackson Browne simply because it had been a few minutes since I last listened to him.

    I had a fairly decent turnout for my battle, and I managed to not piss off anyone this time. Next battle though... someone is bound to be offended.

    ~M

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    1. Ha!-Ha! A WHOLE 'Battle Of The Bands' installment without pissing off a single person? MARY, you're slipping!
      [;^D

      Gosh, I hope I'm one of the offended ones next time! It's like getting a BOTB Bonus! You get to vote AND go away mad. It just doesn't get any better'n that!

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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  6. Hi Reno!

    Good battle! They're both terrific lyricists. Had you used a peppier song like, say, "Werewolves of London"...who knows? I'm sticking with Jackson Browne ;-)

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    1. Howdy, dIEDRE ~

      There's a pretty good chance that 'WEREWOLVES OF LONDON' will eventually find its way into one of my "BOTB: Battle For Los Angeles" installments.

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Ferret-Faced Fascist Friends

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    2. I wonder how the 8-Ball and Sixwell will predict on THAT one? Since Zevon is unbeatable with your unique readers, they'd be dumb to predict against him. If Zevon is involved - even singing "Red Sails In The Sunset" - BET ON HIM.

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    3. SHEBOYGANBOY ~

      You may well be onto something there. Perhaps the majority of my readers are nearly as sick in the head as I am. [;^D

      To my recollection, I used ZEVON just once before (my 6th BOTB contest back in 2013) and he beat Linda Ronstadt on his self-penned song 'POOR, POOR, PITIFUL ME'.

      What's especially notable about that is A) as everyone from our generation knows, Ronstadt's cover of the song was a Top 40 hit, and B) Linda Ronstadt was/is hugely popular.

      As you know, ordinarily, putting a hit song up against a mostly unknown version is like committing BOTB Suicide. But Warren had no trouble beating Linda over the head with his own song.

      So... yeah... this blog o' mine just might be "Zevon Nation".

      And aside from 'Werewolves...', I have one other Zevon zong in mind that I expect to eventually use in BOTB. It wasn't a hit though, so Warren may have to work harder in THAT Battle.

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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    4. Ronstadt? How is that even a battle? Of course, put her up against Pam Tillis and she'd still lose.

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    5. dIEDRE ~

      Ha! Methinks we has a Linda Ronstadt non-fan in our midst. (Tsk!-Tsk! And with you being a Tucson homegirl? Where's that hometown spirit? :^)

      I have never listened to the Pam Tillis version, but I shall endeavor to do so!

      ~ D-FensDogG
      Stephen T. McCarthy Reviews...

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    6. Ew. I'd forgotten about THAT song. I was referring more to one-hit wonders - which Zevon is not ;-)
      Small towns, big hearts, long memories...

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