Tom Waits
Onu şimdi keşfetmiş olmak biliyorum çok utanç
verici ama bayıldımmm!!! Sigarayla özdeşleşmiş bu adam…Hakikaten fotoğraflarına
bakarken insanın canı sigara içmek ve onu bir plaktan dinlemek istiyor ya da
piyanosunun hemen yanında dikilip sadece onunla olmak…
Top 10 şarkısı açıklamalarıyla bir sitede buldum hepsini
dinlemelisin :D Yorgun ve dinlendirici şarkıları severim bilirsin J Ama benim favorim
burda yok.. hope i dont fall in love with you ve invitation to the blues..hep
jazzla bluesun arasındaki farkı merak ederdim onu da bu şarkıyla öğrenmiş oldum
J blues “blue devils”in
kısaltması yani anlamı melankoli ve hüzün…tam benlik J
Sesini şöyle tarif etmişler :
Sanki Bourbon viskiyle ıslatılmış, birkaç ay duman odasında
asılı bırakılmış, daha sonra dışarı çıkarılıp bir arabayla üstünden geçilmiş
gibi…
İşte bulduğum top 10 :
10. America (Closing Time)
[Single]
Here, Tom Waits collaborates with beat poetry legend Allen
Ginsburg. Ginsburg's rhythms and language are a natural match for the music of
Tom Waits, especially on this introspective, jazz-infused track.
9. All The World Is Green
from Blood Money
This Tom Waits tune feels on first listen like a sweet if
slightly hollow ballad, but within the context of the album it stands out as a
movingly ironic counterpoint to the obvious doom and gloom that pervades the
tragic plot of the story.
8. I Don't Wanna Grow Up
from Bone Machine
Tom Waits indulges in a brief Peter Pan reverie on this
tune. The weathered, world-weary, and even downtrodden nature of his vocal tone
makes the childish sentiments he expresses feel fresh and interesting.
7. The Piano Has Been Drinking
from Small Change
This snapshot of the world through a booze induced haze
gives us Tom Waits at his seediest.
6. Temptation
from Frank's Wild Years
Here, Tom Waits offers a passionate riff on, of all topics,
morality. This quirky, intense track is a standout on a highly conceptual album
that runs the genre gamut from rhumba to tin pan alley.
5. Lost In The Harbor
from Alice
Tom Waits released Alice as half of a double album with
Blood Money, and many critics and fans preferred the Carrol-inspired works.
This track in particular shows Tom Waits making the most of the legacy of
nonsense and insight that Carrol has left him to play with.
4. Martha
from Closing Time
With "Martha," Tom Waits turns in a
no-holds-barred love story. This inventive ballad takes the listener inside the
story of a pair of former lovers who have moved on, forged separate lives, but
cross paths again briefly in a late night phone call that catapults them back
into the past for a few moments.
3. Diamonds On My Windshield
from The Heart Of Saturday Night
This Tom Waits track is perhaps the flip side of his famous
Ol' 55, found in the number one spot. A jazzy spoken riff infused with the
urgency of an urban nighttime, "Diamonds On My Windshield" offers
plenty of poetry, and even hints at a genuinely tender love for the harsh
sights and sounds of the city and the highway.
2. Tom Traubert's Blues
from Small Change
This enigmatic ballad transcends pure logic and sense, and
in it Tom Waits creating a picture, a feeling, and an experience that is
instantly relatable, yet somehow slightly obscure. The song has been covered by
artists as diverse as Rod Stewart and The Pogues, and Tom Waits used it as the
final number for nearly all of his concerts throughout the 1970s and 1980s.
1. Ol' 55
from Closing Time
This Tom Waits tune has been covered by a variety of
artists, most notably The Eagles, but the songwriter's own version remains the
definitive one. Ol' 55 captures the unique feeling of rejoining the rhythms of
the world and of everyday life after a transcendent, private experience like
falling in love, or staying up all night. A true jewel in the Tom Waits oeuvre,
this perfectly crafted tune is simple enough that you can hum it after a single
listen, but complex enough to reward the audiophile who plays it again and
again.
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