The one hundred seventy-fifth album: #175 Creedence Clearwater Revival - Cosmo's Factory

Cosmo's Factory is a clear throwback, an album of old style rockers before the experiments that psychedelic rock brought in, before the Beatles did their thing and before it diversified. The blues elements are in here, the instruments are standard and it doesn't try to do things different. The songs are quite tightly crafted, with some good rock ballads in here and some good solo pieces. It sounds good, fulfilling its purpose well, which is what it does best fo rthe most part.


The four hundred and seventy-fifth song: Non-Alignment Pact - Pere Ubu

This song starts with a high-pitched squeal that becomes off putting quickly and feels like an odd contrast with the punk Pere Ubu plays. They mix in some other sounds, but as experimental as the punk is sometimes, it is a basic song with some odd sounds rather than fully embracing it - a decent experiment, but not much more.

The four hundred and seventy-sixth song: Blue Valentines - Tom Waits

There's something quite bluesy about this track, a darkly voiced song with some sparse guitar playing that comes through in some soft soloes, but mostly underscore the story Tom Waits is telling of an ill-fated relationship. It's quite effective as the emotion of the track is open in his voice, telling its own, raw story.

The four hundred and seventy-seventh song: Heart of Glass - Blondie

For a band that was known for their punk outlook, it sounds like this shift to disco was quite a departure, full of electronic music and a full-on production while Debbie Harry's voice almost sits on top, feeling minimal in there. It's a lovely sound, that works incredibly well here, and feels like another step to a more modern pop rock feel.

The four hundred and seventy-eighth song: Ever Fallen in Love… (with Someone You Shouldn’t’ve) - Buzzcocks

While it feels like punk has very much falling into a specific sound, with related riffs and usually more aggressive lyrics, Ever Fallen In Love turns that around, with the tenor vocals having more musicality and variation that continues to sound quite good through here. It draws on pop rock, with a catchy riff and chorus that keeps feeling delightful to listen to and could easily get stuck in your head.

The four hundred and seventy-ninth song: Le Freak - Chic

It feels like we're alternating punk and disco for a bit - and Le Freak really feels like the quintessential disco song. The lyrics are mostly about dancing and going out partying, there are extended dance sequences (which do drag), and it embodies the aesthetic through and through (and it's no wonder it's been used on RuPaul's Drag Race). It's catchy and infectious and feels like a perfect example of the genre.

The four hundred and eightieth song: Milk and Alcohol - Dr. Feelgood

Milk and Alcohol feels like a throwback to garage rock and proto pink, hard guitars playing while the vocals are growled on top. The protagonist isn't having a good time, living on milk and alcohol, and the song seems to cover a meaningless life that you need to drudge through. It's an aggressively angry song about a personal problem and the problems that inspired these genres of rock years ago are still around, with the anger still there.

The four hundred and eighty-first song: Don’t Stop Me Now - Queen

There's something very personal about this song, at a very odd level - more than anything, this describes Freddie Mercury's lifestyle at the time. It's celebratory, gloriously indulgent and the energy feels quite infectious, while at times referencing the danger of it as well. It's a hedonistic anthem and it keeps rolling forward no matter what. It's perfectly put together, with the right breaks and solos to keep up that energy.

The four hundred and eighty-second song: Teenage Kicks - The Undertones

There is something quite simple in the guitar line of this song, still keeping the song firmly in punk territory, with a more conventional rock solo, but the vocals make this feel somewhat different - the younger punk voice mixing in with something rougher to create a short, upbeat song that's enough punk to work, but is close enough to pop to stay listenable.

The four hundred and eighty-third song: You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real) - Sylvester

We finish the first third of 1978 with some disco, with a gay anthem of sorts that stays away from the repetition other disco songs provide, instead moving through far more sounds in a big production that keeps building through the song. It's effective to listen to and sounds like a good disco song throughout.


The one hundred twenty-third TV show: #650 Arrested Development

Back when this list was made, the first three seasons were the only ones that existed. The fourth season is a mess that came together okay at the end of the season, but needs a rewatch to make sense, while the fifth had a weak start, but was fine at the end - with some cast issues that meant it didn't work. I'm writing this after we finished that season, but it feels off to a point that it doesn't count.

Arrested Development thrives on long-running setups and jokes, both benefiting from repeating and building on them, but also gaining from things set up episodes earlier that pays off half a season later. Ron Howard's narration adds to it, contradicting what people say and explaining further, often to the point of additional jokes (sometimes quite meta jokes as the narration is wrong too). The "next week in Arrested Development" segments add to that - showing things that don't happen in the next episode, but are canonical to the point where you need to have seen them to understand the later episodes.

It requires you to keep track of a lot more than most sitcoms, which probably explains why it was never as much of a success, but it works in this era of binge watching when watching multiple episodes at the time makes sense and going back and forth is possible. Aside from the clever scripts and smart editing, the acting helps a great deal. Jessica Walters slowly changes Lucille Bluth as she knows more about the sinister dealings, Tony Hale makes a comedic character more poignant and Alia Shawkat as Maebe Funke is criminally underused early on - something resolved in the later seasons. It didn't get a chance to resolve itself until much later, but it's a great set of seasons that stand out as an amazing TV show even now.


The one hundred seventy-fourth album: #174 Frank Zappa - Hot Rats

Hot Rats consists mostly of lengthy jam sessions, with some more carefully arranged tunes. Most of them are purely instrumental, with only a Willie the Pimp featuring a more noticeable vocal performance. There's a psychedelic feel to how some of the songs are set up, the lack of vocals inviting that further, and while the lengthy jam sessions drag, they all create a soundscape that is incredibly appealing - I didn't get bored, I just got pulled into a mindset that was quite effective. Considering who Zappa worked with, I was worried about what we'd get, but while this isn't grounded, it's quite a lovely tune that worked marvelously here.

And with that, I finish the sixties. On to the next decade! The songs has shown me how that decade really upped the variety of music, so I'm looking forward for what comes.


The one hundred seventy-third album: #173 Alexander Spence - Oar

Oar is a folk rock album mostly written in a mental hospital. There are elements of country in here, but on the whole the album features a bunch of songs with, at times, odd lyrics, not always sung clearly enough to make out in the first place. As the album progresses, it introduces more psychedelic elements, all in all creating a journey into the mind of a man who was clearly struggling and making sense of the world.

As much as I can't quite make sense of all parts of the album, the result drifts from mellow and relaxing to unsettling.When it's country or folk rock, the songs are fine, competent but not amazing. When it shifts from there, though, there's something special about the album, all put together by one man and creating an odd experience that I haven't seen replicated quite like this - psychedelic, but without needing drugs, using this man's troubles instead.


The seventy-ninth book: #68 Michael Kohlhaas - Heinrich von Kleist

Today's book made for a nice change of pace. A fictionalized account of a possible real story, it tells the tale of Michael Kohlhaas (originally Hans Kohlhase), who starts a rebellion against the German nobility at the time in response to injustices that led to the horses he was trading being stolen from him. There's a feeling of indignation throughout, where he was clearly wronged and is taking revenge - excessive revenge, but one with popular support by commoner while the nobility gets scared. It's well written and engaging, with less interpersonal drama, but also a throughline that was easier to follow. It's a nice break from the romance drama I had and that I know I'll get more of. Instead, the wheeling and dealing, and broadly drawn, but realistic characters keep this engaging as a character study and action story.


The seventy-eighth book: #67 Elective Affinities - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Known for his drama, I wasn't expecting Elective Affinities to be what Goethe wrote. The thesis, about how chemical elements have preferences in what they combine with, extends to a love sotry where a husband and wife have two friends live with them for a while, and how it changes the relationships and how they interact. The couple end up splitting up and get involved with their friends, as they turn out to be their better partners.

This is foreshadowed early in the book, as part of a scientific discussion, but comes back as the plot of the novel - something that makes there be a point to the story, and an exploration of the concept. It does create a 19th century romance novel after that, that doesn't necessarily always kept my interest (with a translation that didn't feel the most engaging), but works well to get to the point - it's a good novel, but I felt a bit out of touch with its setting.


The seventy-seventh book: #66 Rameau's Nephew - Denis Diderot

Like the book itself, I feel this post can be short. Rather than a novel with a story, this is a philosophical dialogue between, supposedly, the writer and the (I assume) fictional nephew of composer Rameau. It talks about life and art and the philosophy surrounding it and it's all, to be honest, somewhat boring. It doesn't really register and while I pick up on some points, for the most part there's not enough of a line through that works to explain it. Luckily there aren't too many of these for a while, but yeah, this isn't worth noting.


The one hundred seventy-second album: #172 The Stooges - The Stooges

We're seeing punk approach as one of the genres that follows 60s rock. The Stooges live in this era, taking off the route the Stones took, mixing in garage rock and generally have a raw, dirty sound. Iggy Pop's clear vocals sit on top of it, creating a contrast that works especially well in We Will Fall, a darker number that has dark vocals and very constrained guitars playing as Iggy Pop performs over it. It's all a lot more focused and prepared than the looser style from punk and garage rock and it creates something with more of a vision through that. It may sound wrong to some, but this level of polish is the way I prefer my (proto) punk to sound.


The seventy-sixth book: #65 Henry Von Ofterdingen - Novalis

Every once in a while, I wonder whether the different translations I get for these are really the best - often the Gutenberg edition comes along as the most accessible, but then there are others that aren't on there and have a different source. Novalis' Henry Von Ofterdingen seems to be marred by this, with a story I didn't really track much of and an explosion of words that didn't lead anywhere for me. It seemed like I wasn't the only person to struggle with following this and I think it's probably good this just flew me by.