Writing sixth grade progress reports is tedious. No news there. Four times each year, I whip up a large batch of hummus, buy crackers and other dippables and sequester myself for a whole Sunday with the laptop, student work samples, attendence reports and my Spanish-English dictionary (Sandra) to write. What really happens behind the closed bedroom door? Not what you might think! Instead, I suddenly remember all the side writing projects I've been wanting to do for months and the windows fly open. I have nine currently open on the desktop. Except for this one, they are all Word, and only one is related to the upcoming parent teacher conferences.
People are obsessed with "top 10" lists. They're fun and entertaining. They provide fodder for water cooler conversation. They are never universal, and can be fiercely debated by opinionated people of all ages and walks of life. New Document 7 on the desktop wound up being a list with justifications of the 11 (take that, top 10!) albums that have most influenced me through the years. I wrote this somewhere between m and R in the alphabetical list of students. These are not necessarily my favorite collections of songs, to the exclusion of other masterpieces by Ani Di Franco, Pink Floyd and the rest, and I would never be so brash as to declare them "the best discs ever" or anything like that. They simply are the pieces that have spoken most directly to me as I've grown and changed, that have informed my own views, personality, songs and musical aspirations.
Below is the list for your reading enjoyment. Take that, charla reports!
Moody Blues – Every Good Boy Deserves Favour
An essential and oft overlooked album, this is a perennial favorite. I danced and danced to this album with my brother, mother and father in the earliest days. The music gave me my first glimpses of mysticism, and the song “The Story in your eyes” was the first poem I ever really connected to.
Stevie Wonder – Songs in the Key of Life
Interestingly, the song “Black Man” was my favorite song to dance to when I was three years old. This album has inspired so many others, and has helped me through some of the best and worst times of my life. Stevie provided the soundtrack to my formative years, and “I Wish” is still one of my favorite all time songs.
Michael Franti and Spearhead – Everyone Deserves Music
The marriage of protest, unity, hope and song is as old as human society, and no one does it better in this day and age than Michael Franti. Yellfire is a close second, as “On and On” is a gorgeous tune, but this disc has made me feel so close to those who forego personal wealth in favor of the struggle for justice and peace. “Power to the peaceful” resonates in my soul and creates a chord that defies the miles between us.
Zap mama – Seven
One spring we set out, thoroughly unprepared, and drove straight through to New Orleans for Jazz Fest. It rained buckets, and almost no one braved the drenching to see Zap Mama on the world stage. Their mics shorted out during the first song, but it was still one of the most powerful, amazing shows I’ve ever seen. Such energy, such harmony, truly music of the heart.
Ozomatli – Ozomatli
Back in 1998, I went to see the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies in concert in Phoenix. Their show was terrible, but the two opening bands, whom I’d never heard before that night, have since become two of my favorites: Los Fabulosos Cadillacs and Ozomatli. While the Ozo guys have produced many of my favorite discs, this first effort with Cut Chemist and Chali 2na is a sheer masterpiece of hybrid musicality, lyricism, social justice and heart.
Metallica – Master of Puppets
So many angstful summers trying desperately to figure out who I was spent walking the beach in Southern Maine with a boom box and this disc. It never got old. It channeled anger and sadness like no school rampage ever could. I never understood the lyrics, but it was so empowering to shout out “Fuck it all and fuckin’ no regrets” in public. Now that I come back to it, the title song is still one of the most powerful sets of lyrics I’ve ever encountered.
Wynton Marsallis – Blood on the Fields
This three disc jazz opera took me out of time and out of body the first time I heard it. It’s not just that the main character is named Jesse, it’s not just that the truths within the love story transcend the exploration of humanity’s waltz with power and glory – it’s that intricate, technically spellbinding ragtime jazz has been able to bring so many to tears centuries after slavery, and centuries before we forget the divisions of race and class.
Indigo Girls – Self Titled
This is not even the Indigo Girls’ best work, but the songs on this album have unified so many of my generation around campfires, in coffee houses, and is one of the few albums (along with the Beastie Boys’ License to Ill, interestingly enough) that can stop conversation at parties in favor of singing)
The Roots – Things Fall Apart
Game Theory is my favorite disc by Tariq and crew, but this work stays in the mind and gut, churning and soothing in equally dominant waves. The story is alive and subtle. Each song flows into the next, making it impossible to listen to the disc in pieces, though it is itself a collection of shards that collectively provide a window into the soul of this gifted group, blessed with a flow like no other.
Outback – Dance the Devil Away
This album, the only by this particular combination of French, Senegalese and Australian musicians speaks volumes about rhythm, harmony and spirit without singing a word. I would have never imagined that the mix of guitar, djembe, didgeridoo and fiddle could be so emotive and perfect.
Manu Chao – Proxima Estacion, Esperanza
Manu Chao’s musically minimalistic, but potent sensibilities have the power to erase borders and culture lines like no other. It is world music in the true sense of the genre. French, Spanish, Arabic, English and Portuguese mix easily to a backdrop of reggae, ska and pop, inciting unity and bringing people together as few other musicians since Bob Marley have been able to.
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