Posts Tagged ‘Bat Out Of Hell’

Cover Art, Liner Notes, iTunes and Zunes

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Earlier today, I was talking to a friend about the store that sells used CDs that’s on the way to my parents’ place. It is honestly, one of my favorite places there is. Then I came home and was catching up on Metal Excess, only to see that he’s summed up what I’ve always felt about buying music.

There’s something fascinating about having that physical object. To some degree, it’s like being a trophy hunter; filling that giant CD tower or the shelf of LPs with the best of your favorite bands is much like the fisherman putting the prize marlin above the fireplace. You went out, hunted successfully, and returned home with your trophy.

Like he said over at Metal Excess, buying it from iTunes doesn’t feel real. You can’t hold it in your hands, and reading liner notes (assuming you even get liner notes, which usually isn’t the case) on a computer monitor is not the same. One of my favorite sets of liner notes is in Richie Sambora’s Stranger in this Town. They’re full of gorgeous pictures of Richie, along with the lyrics to all of the songs. I can remember sticking that CD in the player and just listening to it, with the liner notes unfolded across the floor in front of me, following along and taking it all in. Try that with a computer monitor. It was part of the experience of that album–something I could hold in my hands. The acknowledgments that give a little window into the creation of the album, the ability to follow the lyrics, the opportunity to ogle some extra pix–all that is lost in a digital format.

Plus, in my case, I have a Zune. Now, I love the Zune interface, I find it to be intuitive and very easy to use, but forget about looking at cover art on the screen on that thing. It’s the size of a postage stamp, and the cover art display in the Zune software isn’t much bigger. Something like an iPod Touch and iTunes might be a bit better, but still not that good. It’s bad enough what the small format of CDs has done to cover art. Once bands start designing for the screens of MP3 players, it’s all over as far as cover art is concerned. At that point it’ll just turn into head shots. Bon Jovi would survive just fine in that world–after all, Jon Bon Jovi is about as photogenic as a band frontman gets. But what about guys like Meat Loaf, or Dio? They aren’t exactly pretty boys. But the cover art of their albums? Masterpieces. If I could find an LP of Bat Out Of Hell in good condition, I’d frame it and stick it up on the wall.

Personally, I think losing cover art is going to be a blow. I mean, look at the world that was created for Brutal Legend. All of that was inspired by cover art from heavy metal, but that kind of art probably won’t ever be created again. Cover art is going to end up being one of the shortest-lived forms of art there has ever been. Kind of like the stereotypical image of a rock star–live fast, die young. Someday they’ll exhibit album cover art at the Guggenheim–and mourn its early demise.

In the meantime though, I intend to continue expanding my music collection the old school way. Besides, if I buy used CDs, they’re still cheaper than iTunes.

Random Song: I Would Do Anything For Love

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Artist: Meat Loaf
Album: Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell

I have to confess: this was the song that ignited my interest in rock music. Up to this point my musical taste was quite different–a whole lot more pop-oriented. I’d also had a habit of listening to Broadway soundtracks. (This was long enough ago that the ‘Jukebox Musical’ had yet to come along. I don’t think I’ll say how long ago it was, seeing as how I saw a post over at Entertainment Weekly today that made me feel older than dirt.)

The thing about I Would Do Anything For Love was that the song brought together a pop sensibility with the bombast of a big Broadway number and the aesthetic of rock music. Basically, the perfect vehicle to introduce me to the possibilities of rock.

The other wonderful thing about this song is Meat Loaf’s distinctive voice. His voice is a signature–no one else is like it. A voice that wasn’t perfect was another novelty for me at the time. Remember, I’d been listening to pop music, and most of today’s pop is so processed that the singers are interchangeable. This was an introduction to someone with their own unique voice, and it was wonderful–someone imperfect had made it as a musician.

Also, and this is probably the lingering remains of the Broadway thing–I’m a sucker for big long songs, and like a lot of Meat Loaf’s songs, this one runs about three times longer than a song is ‘supposed to’. Sometimes, there are songs that just don’t fit into four minutes, and I personally love when they don’t. (I love, love, love Dry County. But that’s another post.)

So yes, without this song, this blog would not exist today.