Subscribe for 1 or 2 emails a week with new content

Mental Jewelry - Live (1991)

90s Intermezzo - some 90s albums I loved in the 90s

One of my little obsessions is first albums. There’s a frequent whiplash of cognitive dissonance because that first album got recorded and released because you’re new and exciting and different from what’s out there. Then, after that first album is successful, your job changes. You’ve now suddenly become part of the music industry machine. Your job is no longer to stand out and do new things. Your job is now to create music that generates listens, that sells units, that fits into what’s already here. And, by the way, you need to figure this out in about 18 months because that’s when the label will want to hear album #2.

Pennsylvania’s Live didn’t make the most original or iconoclastic first record you’ve ever heard. But I think they’re notable because this first album is a very coherent statement of what they wanted to do, and in contrast they were able to follow it up by pivoting to the more commercial sound that was demanded of them and find success with that as well.

Mental Jewelry is an inventive mix of a lot of elements swirling around late-80s American underground rock: REM-style indie country, wiry funk, acoustic balladry, and nervous post-punk. Being produced by the Talking Heads’ Jerry Harrison might have helped it fit into that music scene but you have to give the band credit as well for mature concepts and well-built songs.

Early Live lyrics are concerned with the state of the world with a focus on eastern religion and philosophy. To be honest, this album’s somewhat sophomoric musings about impermanence, phenomenology, and the value of immediate experience were some of my first encounters with Buddhist and Hindu concepts. It was Live’s music, probably more than anything else, that landed me on a track of learning about and attempting to live by Buddhist principles for a good chunk of my life. There’s a much longer piece about this that I’ll work into this pub at some point.

So as you might have figured out, this is an album that sends me off thinking in a million directions. But it’s also a pretty bitchin’ little rock record.

Tracks I Liked

Operation Spirit - One of my favorite frank examinations of salvation, grace, and how distant it can seem

Waterboy - I like to think that the original cut of Adam Sandler’s football farce had this as a title song, but that’s just me.

Good Pain - “makin weapons of peace for the defense of the bloodstains on our peaceful sidewalks”

10,000 Years - “Mr. President I hereby pardon you for your crimes / for they are just as much mine / Selfishness and separation have led me to believe that the world is not my problem / I am the world”

Recent
Featured

Railroad Man
Hank Snow
a lot of songs about trains

By The Throat
Eyedea & Abilities
Exciting talent, gone in a flash

Gentlemen
Afghan Whigs
sleek alt rock with some serious pathos

Soul Cages
Sting
CD player literature

Cover Story
Russ Taff
the state of man in 11 covers

Night Reign
Arooj Aftab
gorgeous and fulfilling

Brothers In Arms
Dire Straits
fancy notes on a blue guitar

The Doors
The Doors
in which the gang breaks on through

Under Between
Dialect
a sonic painting

Calming Signals
Rich Ruth
a wild, jazzy space trip

Wind, Again
Sary Moussa
structure, sign, and play

Release
Cop Shoot Cop
hidden industrial gem

Even In Arcadia
Sleep Token
auditory rorschach test

Tomorrow Was The Golden Age
Bing & Ruth
masterfully ambient classical

Cenotes
Giant Squid
love this thing

Glory
Perfume Genius
emphasis on "genius"

Rhythm Revolution
Ferry Djimmy
African funk lost classic

Daughter Of A Temple
Ganavya
the spirit of devotion

Cicada Waves
Ben Seretan
piano in the rainstorm

Convex
Nym
eco-chill

Atlas of Green
Dialect
A delightful shot of meta-nostalgia

The Mountain
Haken
prog metal masterpiece

Oh No
OK Go
more than just videos

New Heaven
Inter Arma
Everything But The Kitchen Sink-core

Superunknown
Soundgarden
a stoner-y, grunge-y classic

Reconciled
The Call
The best 80s album nobody's heard of

August
Still Lost Bird Music
classic poetry set to bluegrassy music

Lungs
Florence + The Machine
Not calling you a liar.

My Favorite Things
John Coltrane
it actually is one of them.

Kick
INXS
get kicked

Dusk
The The
brainy alt rock classic

The '59 Sound
Gaslight Anthem
A solid slab of pathos

3
Blood Sweat And Tears
better than it has any right to be

2112
Rush
air drum central

Ask The Ages
Sonny Sharrock
Sharrock's Magnum Opus

Machinarium Soundtrack
Tomáš Dvořák
a delightful soundtrack to a fun game

Floodplain
Kronos Quartet
music from the cradle of civilization

Sorceress
Opeth
a kick in the head

Wild Light
65daysofstatic
a post rock tour de force

Happy Child
Carmen Jaci
whimsical electronic

My 21st Century Blues
Raye
a journeyman becoming a master

Mingus Ah Um
Charles Mingus
Get hit in your soul

Safe In The Steep Cliffs
Emancipator
an explosion of calm and lucidity in my brain

Good Kid m.A.A.D City
Kendrick Lamar
A short film by Kendrick Lamar

The Great Awakening
Shearwater
Shearwater returns with another great one

¡Ay!
Lucrecia Dalt
Excellent, beautiful, and a little creepy

Descendants of Cain
Ka
A lyrical masterclass

Bolts
Hagop Tchaparian
an electric shock of techno-y house goodness

Loma
Loma
a dark, beautiful gem

Biscuits For Cerberus
Flipiron
weird, literate, and weirdly literate

Muchacho
Phosphorescent
literate, grandiose modern country-rock

Hellfire
Black Midi
The sound of your brain bleeding out at the end of the world.

Aura
Hatis Noit
A mind-bending, mind-mending journey

LOGGERHEAD
Wu-lu
Abstract hip hop, hardcore, and so much more.

None Shall Pass
Aesop Rock
A tragially under-known MC

Horses
Patti Smith
we are not worthy

Bronco
Orville Peck
the new country

Lifeforms
Future Sound Of London
outstanding 90s IDM and ambient

Oh Mercy
Bob Dylan
The *first* late-era classic

Copper Blue
Sugar
top notch alt-rock

Singing Saw
Kevin Morby
no srsly. it's morbin' time

The OOZ
King Krule
only sounds lazy and disjointed at first

Alive
Hiromi
an under-recognized genius

Glass Cage
Bruce Brubaker
20th century modernist piano

Tissues
Pan Daijing
take the time to get into this one

From This Place
Pat Metheny
yet another Metheny masterpiece with a fantastic band

Voodoo
D'Angelo
if you haven't heard it, get after it.

Slightly Less Recent