Inspiration is a wonderful thing. We know it when we see it and feel it. What inspires me may not inspire you. I can look at Edward Hopper’s painting Nighthawks and get lost in a good way. You might look at it and think you have seen it before. Nighthawks saved my butt a few times I know. Maybe I will write about that on, say, Day 49?
A song on the radio by “fill in the blank” might make your blood start pumping and I might find another radio station.
I don’t know what got me here but I thought about a song today and I could not wait to be able to sit down here tonight and write about it. Didn’t know what I was going to write, I just knew something was there to be forged. Then, things changed. Sometimes they do. We hope it is for the best.
John Lennon’s #9 Dream is the tune that was in my head today for some reason.
I have never been interested in looking into the origin of the interesting title (#9 Dream). Why get so analytical about music. I just like the song. It floats like few I have ever heard.
Today I went back and forth via email with my cousin Darrell in Mississippi. Maybe that was it. Darrell is a “few” years older than I am. He turns 57 in three days. He has assured me that 50 is a good place. I believe him. Anyway, when I was a kid visiting them I would look at Darrell’s record collection. He had some old Beatles albums. He understands. I also think he had Jimmy Buffett’s Son of a Son of a Sailor around 1978. My old friend Tim Krekel played on that album. Maybe I was dreaming of Darrell’s invite to join him in the press box at Forest High School where he is the game’s D.J. playing tunes for all. His son, Keith, is the head baseball coach. I could hear John Lennon singing that song.
So, when the evening started to settle, I came in here and grabbed Lennon off the shelf. I opened the case. It had not been opened in a long while.
On top of the Lennon disc was a homemade one I put together. I think it is the last “best of compilation” I have made. I made them all the time when I was young with the “dual cassette” players. It was made in 2008. I gave up looking for it some time ago.
There are 18 songs on it.
- Bruce Springsteen…Radio Nowhere. I like Bruce’s new stuff too. This is a great tune that my D.J. friend in Seymour, Robert Becker, played when others would not.
- Moving Pictures…What About Me. A Canadian group, this song was on WLS in Chicago when I was 15. I loved it. I still do. I feel for the guy. Never heard it on Louisville radio.
- Bob Seger…Traveling Man. Live Bullet baby. Great live album. It’s complement Beautiful Loser comes later on the disc. Have no idea why I did that.
- Johnny Cash…Hurt. My hat is off to Cash for singing when it was obviously ending for him. Wow.
- Bob Seger…Wait for Me. In 2006 Bob Seger got some airplay again with this song. Becker had sense enough to play the heck out of this one too.
- Bob Seger…Beautiful Loser. Crank it up!
- Tim Krekel…Everything’s Gonna Be Alright. Tim died in 2009. I still miss him and it is odd listening to him sing this. A great song that means more than you thought it could ten years ago. Tim wrote all his own songs.
- Jimmy Buffett…Pacing the Cage. Buffett did not write this song. I liked it in 1999 when it came out. I still do. That summer Carrie and I saw Buffett’s Beach House on the Moon Tour outside Indy at Deer Creek. He closed the show with this song and I still remember it well.
- The Moody Blues…What Child Is This. Yes, the tradition Christmas song. It was November and if you have noticed, The Moodies had not shown up yet. Great rendition.
- Paul McCartney and Wings…Maybe I’m Amazed. From Wings Over America, the first time my dear wife, Carrie, and I saw Sir Paul I thought she was going to faint when they started playing this. She made a sound like all the air had left her. Guess what? I don’t blame her.
- Bruce Springsteen…Girls in Their Summer Clothes. From Magic, the same album that gave us Radio Nowhere, this tune is filled with great images and sounds that take you back and bring you home.
- Emerson Lake and Plamer…I Believe in Father Christmas. Greg Lake wrote this one. There are a few versions but this one is the best for me. Bittersweet tune. I saw a video of him singing this with Church in England. Ian Anderson was there. A large choir sang along. It was moving.
- The Moody Blues…I Know You’re Out There Somewhere. Nothing better than a Justin Hayward song about looking back and looking forward. My Mom’s favorite Moodies song. They debuted this song in concert in July of 1988 at Kings Island’s Timberwolf Amphitheater. I was there.
- Don Henley…A Month of Sundays. I first heard this when I was a junior in high school. Used to place the headphones on and take this one in. Parts of the song reminded me of my Granddaddy Hines in Scott County, MS.
- The Moody Blues…Strange Times. Not a hit. Heard it in concert in 1997 two years before it made it to a new album. I was at that show in June with my friend Todd “Corner King” Lincoln. He died that August. Strange Times.
- Green Day…September. Only Green Day song I want to listen to. I don’t like strawberry ice cream either. But I look forward to this song. Every September 1st since it came out, Robert Becker plays it first thing in the morning. I emailed him this year after the tune was finished. I told him he never lets me down. He asked if he was that predictable? No, I told him, you are that good.
- The Moody Blues…December Snow. From their last studio release in 2003. It was a Christmas themed album called December. Had some great songs on it. Saw them debut this song live in concert in November 2003 at The Murat Theatre in Indy.
- Neil Diamond…I Dreamed a Dream. From his Hot August Night II live release in 1987…I think. I got wind of it in 1988 and played the daylights out of it. The song Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show is unreal stuff.
That was what I found in the John Lennon case. Now, I am going to do what I set out to do. I am going to sign off and listen to #9 Dream and retire for the evening.
Speaking the Rights…
Danny Johnson