29 August 2008
tell your friends...
Words by Sean Moeller // Illustration by Johnnie Cluney // Sound engineering by Patrick Stolley
This morning didn’t start off slowly, but the New York Times still isn’t in the house, so that’s a problem. It would be a problem for Ben Sollee too. A morning would be a slow one without the word-laden pile of newsprint that’s all fit to print. From the tones of his latest record — Learning To Bend – excluding those that his cello makes, the 24-year-old troubadour from Kentucky was in front of the television last night, enraptured by the speeches given and the history made at the Democratic National Convention in Denver. He was soaking up all the words and the good feelings coming from President Bill Clinton (he still does all of the quirky things that Phil Hartman exaggerated back in the day), Joe Biden and Biden’s son as they laid out their positions to a big room of adoring people. … [Story Continues Below]
First song
A Change Is Gonna Come (Ben Sollee) [4.32MB] [1304 downloads]
– original version appears on Learning To Bend
There are people out there still that feel the way Sam did when he wrote “A Change is Gonna Come.” They are fighting our wars. They are working at minimum wage to feed families of five. I believe Sam’s song is only about race within the local perspective. Globally, it communicates profound optimism in the human spirit. As a 24 year-old white boy from Kentucky I’ll be the first to admit that I may not be able to entirely empathize with what Sam was feeling as a black man in the 60’s, but I am passionate about finding a peaceful existence in this world for all of us.
Second song
A Few Honest Words (Ben Sollee) [4.07MB] [1265 downloads]
— original version appears on Learning To Bend
Our news media has come to rely heavily on the visual image and so to has the branding of our policy makers: the suit and tie, the hair, the handshakes, and the physical setting of speeches. Unfortunately, the substance of their words seems to have diminished. Brevity and false assurance make for better sound bites, taking precedent over clarity and un-sweetened truth. I hope that the culture of our politicians can un-tie itself from the spectacle of the media and begin again to have honest discourse with the people that elect them.
Third song
How to See the Sunrise (Ben Sollee) [3.42MB] [1270 downloads]
— original version appears on Learning To Bend
There was nothing to be done; she did not feel about me the way I did about her. The emotions that brimmed over in me were placid waters in her.
Fourth song
Prettiest Tree on the Mountain (Ben Sollee) [2.11MB] [1323 downloads]
— original version appears on Learning To Bend
The fall is my favorite season in Kentucky. We have a mix of hardwoods that put on quite a show. At the leading edge of fall there are certain trees that will turn first. Maybe there’s a whole mountain side of green save one tree that looks like paint spilled all over it. Its singularity gives way to a crowd of other loud trees, but, eventually, it will be the first to lose its leaves. She was beautiful, but we got lost in the crowd.
He probably found himself choking up a little when Biden addressed his charming as all hell, 91-year-old mother in the stands, detailing the story of his childhood stutter when she’d tell him how handsome he was and that his stutter was only there because, as she said, “Joey, you’re just so bright that you can’t get your thoughts out fast enough.” He’d choke up because he’s a dad too and it might have even happened when Biden’s son called his dad his hero for saying, “Delaware can get another senator, but my boys can’t get another daddy,” following the tragic car accident that took his first wife and a child. It was all moving stuff and the kinds of frank words that Sollee – even though he’s “just a songwriter” was inspired by. There’s no telling if the young man is a Democrat, but when he sings, “If you’re gonna lead my country/If you’re gonna say it’s free/I’m gonna need a little honesty/Just a few honest words/It shouldn’t be that hard,” in his song “A Few Honest Words,” he admonishes politicians who just give the highlights and reports that are softening the harsh realities with false optimism and words that they think people can swallow more smoothly. It sounds like he’s talking tough about the current occupant, as Garrison Keillor calls President George W. Sollee is consumed with his opinions of the American Dream, just as Biden still is, his own dreams and the crumbling of a great nation is something that he likely follows, with down-turned eyes and ears, in the New York Times, Newsweek, Time and Atlantic Monthly. He might even have subscriptions and these ideas of worry, these ideas of substantial concern, that the world is becoming a place that isn’t going to be suited for his children, worries him even more – though he wants a good and proud country to call his own too. It’s always a dicey affair to bring political views into the innocent world of music, but Sollee does it in the most tasteful way imaginable, sliding it in there as if it were part of a kiss, part of the juice of an exotic fruit. It doesn’t feel pained, bitter or angst-y. It actually, always feels as if it belongs where it is. It feels like it’s coming from a young man who hasn’t completely given up the ship, thrown his hands up and started contemplating packing all of his possessions into storage somewhere and just moving he and his family to Europe to ride out the dismantling. It sounds like it is coming from a guy who genuinely believes that the American Dream is going to make a resurgence, against all odds. He fills his sails with this sort of booming hope. He jokingly suggests that they’re going to bury us with our cars and he shuffles out a gorgeous rendition of the Sam Cooke song “A Change Is Gonna Come” – which has as much to do with now, the Democratic National Convention as it did with the civil rights movement and whites-only water fountains, hotels and restaurants. He applies his own cool-water sexiness to his messages, a sexiness that has nothing to do with sex, just a lot to do with an unwavering passion and songwriting chops that are going to make Sollee into a gamer.
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I was recently wondering if anyone could do a really original interpretation of Sam Cooke’s “A Change Gonna Come,” and this answered my question. I had heard Otis Reddings version (similar to Cooke’s) and Arcade Fire’s which was great too. This one was very new, very unexpected. Loving the other tunes to. I’m gonna have to seek out some more of his music.
the cello has never been sexier. i really really enjoy this
Love the Cooke cover
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this is AMAZING!! thanks so much! I got into Ben’s music this summer.
daytrotter rocks.