There are many different things I look for when i listen to music. In some cases, songs or bands I like are for very specific reasons … ZZ Top is perhaps a good example here. If you're drinking beer with your on a sunny Sunday afternoon, and you need some high energy tunes to crank up on the stereo, you can do a lot worse than ZZ Top. Every song they recorded is hard fast-paced, tight, bluesy pap with enough variation to be mildly interesting, but enough sameness to be perfect background music. Listen closely to 3 or 4 ZZ Top hits and you'll quickly realize they recorded the same song a few dozen times with small changes to lyric and rhythm.
But occasionally, you find a band that appeals to all senses, as I like to say, and Moxy Fruvous is one such band. I bring this up today because I recently blogged on a current project of one of the former members, Jian Ghomeshi, and I wanted to comment a bit on a couple of the songs I like of theirs. First of all, there's no way you can say they recorded the same song over and over … the variation of theme, of genre, of instrumentation, of rhythm, across just the 2 albums I own (Bargainville and Wood) is remarkable for any group of musicians, and it shows a grasp of music and theory that goes well beyond the norm these days.
There is one specific song that I think has always been my favorite of theirs, though I suspect it may not be the one most people would pick. Its a rather strange little tune from the album Wood called The Present Tense Tureen. Musically, its a very folksy tune, light and fun, and at first glance the lyrics seem light and playful as well, but a close listen shows some extra layers, IMO. Catching a line in a song like "Not a fictional device, we sail ravines, and give advice" coming from a real live Elf standing in a boat leads you into a lovely fun house of recursive reference. When the song ends with the Elf making a tureen (go ahead and look it up … I had to the first time I heard the song, lol) of soup for answers, its equally wonderful.
Then he giggled in french - that's what he did Like a kid at Christmas, as he opened the lid "Help yourself" he beamed with pride But there was no sweet soup inside.
The other song I wanted to highlight was "Horseshoes" also from Wood, oddly enough. I'm not gonna wax poetic much on this one, but the chorus represents an excellent way to view life and the world, IMO.
Look straight at the coming disaster Realize what you've lost You keep handing out horseshoes Horseshoes have gotta be tossed.
Be careful who you hand out horseshoes too … they WILL be tossed.
Just wanted to share my thoughts with you … I hadn't thought much about them as a band until I saw Jian on The Hour awhile back with his new series, and I realized that although they likely didn't get the commercial success they deserved, they definitely deserve a place in music history, IMO.
Filed under: Jian Ghomeshi, Media, Moxy Fruvous, Music, The Hour, View From The Edge, cbc, steeletech
Well let me tell you, always great to find other fruheads. I have no problems saying that moxy fruvous was (sadly was) the greatest band i ever had the pleasuer of listening to. If you ever got to saw them live, you’d know what i mean. They could play for 4, 5 hours, improvise, cover, create new songs, take pauses and talk politics, joke around. They loved what they did and showed it.
if you get the chance…listen to all their albums.
Yes-great to find another fruhead online. Really, really miss seeing/enjoying their shows. We need to get them back-how do we do it? Their albums just don’t do justice to their live shows. Missing Moxy in New Jersey.
Moxy fruvous? God I HATE THEM!
EDITORS NOTE: lol … to each their own … Fruvous is still one of my favorite bands, and one of the “smartest” bands, lyrically speaking, I’ve EVER heard … but all arts are highly subjective, so not everyone will like the same thing. Still, its hard for me to find fault with either their musical ability, or their lyrical literacy …