🎵 Monthly Song Challenge 🎵

Day 16: A song that you recently added to a playlist

“I like order, I like answers
Wrapped in ribbon and twine
I grab hold of unknown outcomes
'Til my knuckles are white
I am trying to be kinder
To this body of mine
'Cause it keeps me alive
Like it's supposed to

I rush the future, I cling to the past
I'm terrified the present will not last
I see the irony, I get the fact
It's already gone
By the time that the thought
Has passed
I am working on it
Give me some grace
I like empty pages
I like Mondays”

Taylor Bickett - I Like Mondays

Listened to this a few times through. I lived with a perfectionist, so I understand this way too well. Unfortunately, I lived with a perfectionist who never learned this part:

"I like New Year's, I like Mondays, I like firsts of the month
Notebook paper, wet cement, the moment's never been touched
I like knowing that there's something that I haven't messed up
'Cause I will, and I do, and I'm supposed to"

It is the last four words that elevates this. Not knowing that screwing up is inevitable, but rather that it is required. That is where growth comes from.

Thank you, Princess. I like this.
 
Day 17: A song with a state in the name

So along comes this prompt asking me to name a specific state and I'm like yeah, whatever
ab1a76acd03bb1a484218d4a36868a1b.png


Liam Lynch - United States of Whatever

 
Last edited:
Day 17: A song with a state (or county for non US?) in the name or lyrics

This song is based on a legend, and one that happens to be verifiable. On February 13th, 2000, a coyote hopped onto an airport bound Max Light Rail train and took his seat. He didn't pay, but that made him just like about 70% of the people on MAX.

32bbad32b65ce299c6f9e29afca079db.427x400x1.jpg

This ended up in the local newspaper, and another Stumptown legend was born.

Enter Sleater-Kinney. Corin Tucker, Carrie Brownstein, and Janet Weiss were one of the Northwest's premiere punk bands, and one of the originators of the Riot Grrrl movement. One Beat, their sixth album, was the first they recorded in Portland, and their first post-9/11 output. It is a remarkable album, and is stridently political and deeply feminist, as is most of Sleater-Kinney's music. But right in the middle of it is this dark, somewhat bitter love song to the city and the coyote, framed with some kids taking their parents' car to the city.

"Water, building, and sin
Big Oregon city draws you in
A promise fulfilled or not
Just hang on until the summer, it’s hot"

(Apropos of nothing, it is hot -- currently 85 degrees at 10 PM as I work on this.)

I love this song so much. Corin's riff is huge, the lyrics are sharp, and I can tell you just about what every lyric is about, from Powell's books, to Quality Pie, Satyericon, Pine Street Theater, Mary's Club, and every grimy treasure along Burnside that made Portland what it was. Hell, Laurelhurst's statue of Joan of Arc even gets a shout-out. I grew up in this mess, a Southwest suburban kid spending weekends hanging around and getting into trouble. This song feels like being a teenager again, "thankful for the things I left behind." Oh, dirty river, take us all in -- you, me, and Coyote.

"Light Rail Coyote," Sleater-Kinney


(I have a lot in common with Coyote...)
 
Last edited:
Day 17: A song with a state in the name or lyrics.


It's all about the South
Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Carolina
Don't you wanna get down and dirty? 'Cause, Florida I'm thirsty
Hit me with your Tennessee whiskey and crank it up loud
Laid back, crazy old timer, sweet magnolia, dive bars and diners, oh yeah
Oh, and even if you're up North, c'mon down, c'mon down
Oh, it's all about the South
All about the South
 

Day 17
Manic Street Preachers - South Yorkshire Mass Murderer

Not the greatest Manics song if you think about it in terms of lyrics or melody but it's an important one nonetheless as it helped to shine a light on the truth about the Hillsborough disaster, the 97 people wrongfully killed by the failures of the police, and the subsequent campaign of blame towards those victims by the media
 

Day 17
Manic Street Preachers - South Yorkshire Mass Murderer

Not the greatest Manics song if you think about it in terms of lyrics or melody but it's an important one nonetheless as it helped to shine a light on the truth about the Hillsborough disaster, the 97 people wrongfully killed by the failures of the police, and the subsequent campaign of blame towards those victims by the media
Great song. Studied Hillsborough as part of a previous job. Still traumatised by it.
 
Back
Top