John Prine’s Touching Posthumous Single: “I Remember Everything”

John Prine recorded “I Remember Everything” not long before he died, and the posthumous release gave him his first number one song.

John Prine I Remember

John Prine recently scored his first number one song on the Billboard charts with “I Remember Everything.” Prine wrote the song with Pat McLaughlin. And he recorded it in his living room, his final song before he died of complications from Covid-19 on April 7, 2020.

Prine fans will not be surprised that he is still capable of bringing a smile and a tear to our eyes even after he passed away.

The song is about missing someone (“How I miss you in the morning light /
Like roses miss the dew”). But it also functions as someone looking back on life.

I’ve been down this road before,
Alone as I can be;
Careful not to let my past,
Go sneaking up on me;
Got no future in my happiness,
Though regrets are very few;
Sometimes a little tenderness,
Was the best that I could do
.

Check out the video below of John Prine singing “I Remember Everything” in his living room.

Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Lucinda Williams: “Good Souls Better Angels” (album review)

    Lucinda Williams Good Souls

    The new album from Lucinda Williams — Good Souls Better Angels (2020)– is a far cry from her 1992 album Sweet Old World. Of course, the world has changed a lot since 1992 and so has Williams. But her new album, veering at times more toward punk music and blues than country, still reflects her great talent.

    Recorded in Nashville with Williams’s band Buick 6, the album Good Souls Better Angels is from a powerful singer and strong person asserting herself amidst a crazy world. In the opening blues track, Williams proclaims, “You Can’t Rule Me,” and you believe her.

    Her energy comes through on such songs as “Wakin’ Up,” about an abusive relationship, and “Man Without a Soul” (“You bring nothing good to this world”) about Donald Trump.

    But she also reveals softer moments in some of the highlights of the album, including “Big Black Train” and the closing track “Good Souls.”

    Many reviewers love the new album. Pitchfork calls it an “unsparing new album” with “some of the heaviest, most inspiring music of [Williams’s] career.” Others have compared it unfavorably with her best work. AllMusic reports that Good Souls Better Angels is “full of fierce, engrossing music from a great band with a mesmerizing frontwoman, but as fine as that is, it comes from someone who is capable of better work.”

    I’m still listening to the album more and more. And although at this moment I do not yet know if it will become my favorite Lucinda Williams album, it is the album for our current era. Williams captures the anger, insanity, and, yes, beauty, of our times in a powerful album. And I’m not sure you can ask for more than that.

    What do you think of Good Souls Better Angels? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Picture Show Online Tribute to John Prine

    Picture Show John Prine

    There was a lot of love going around in last night’s tribute to John Prine called Pictire Show: Tribute to John Prine. Singers, performers, and friends appearing with stories and songs included Bonnie Raitt , Todd Snider, Sturgill Simpson, Brandi Carlile, Eric Church, Bill Murray, Kevin Bacon, Rita Wilson, and many others.

    Throughout the tribute, Prine’s wife Fiona Prine makes several appearances to introduce artists. It is a loving tribute with great stories and music.

    The full tribute is available for a limited time through Sunday, June 14. So, for now, check it out below. [Update: The full show is no longer online.]

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Some Live Sturgill Simpson Bluegrass for Charity

    Sturgill Simpson Ryman

    Sturgill Simpson provided us with a musical treat during the coronavirus pandemic. To raise money for charity, Simpson and his band gave us some bluegrass performed live at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium. Due to the pandemic, there was no audience beyond those watching online.

    In the video that was live-streamed on June 5, 2010, Simpson explains how the one-night show was the result of an Instagram joke. His posts about “Dick Daddy Survival School” developed into an effort to raise money for charity. Thus, his fundraising efforts benefit the Special Forces Foundation, the Equity Alliance, and the MusiCares COVID-19 Relief Fund.

    So, sit back and relax and enjoy some wonderful bluegrass versions of some Sturgill Simpson songs like “Long White Line.” Check it out.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Living Colour: “American Skin (41 Shots)” (Cover of the Day)

    Living Colour 41 Shots

    When Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band were closing out their 1999-2000 reunion tour with the E Street Band, Springsteen introduced a powerful new song, “American Skin (41 Shots).” The song, about an incident of police brutality, has prompted a few covers, none as powerful as one by Living Colour during the Montreux Jazz Festival on July 20, 2001.

    Springsteen had debuted the song in Atlanta on June 4, 2000. And before the band closed the tour at Madison Square Garden, some called for a boycott of the concerts or called Springsteen names because of the song. Springsteen wrote “American Skin (41 Shots)” about NYPD officers killing Amadou Diallo in February 1999.

    The police officers stopped Diallo at his front door because they thought he resembled a suspect. The immigrant from Guinea reached for his wallet and the four officers fired 41 shots, hitting Diallo 19 times and killing him. A year later, the officers were acquitted of second-degree murder and reckless endangerment.

    Although officers, the New York City mayor, and others criticized Springsteen for the song, time has been kinder to the writer than to the critics. The compassionate song was not vilifying anyone but highlighting the racism in society that has led to so many other killings just since Diallo’s.

    41 shots, Lena gets her son ready for school
    She says, “On these streets, Charles
    You’ve got to understand the rules
    If an officer stops you, promise me you’ll always be polite
    And that you’ll never ever run away
    Promise Mama you’ll keep your hands in sight”

    Springsteen’s live performances of the song are powerful, often bringing up each member of the band one-at-a-time for the repeated refrain of “41 shots.” Others have covered the song, including Jackson Browne.

    Living Colour performed “American Skin (41 Shots)” live at the Montreux Jazz Festival around one year after Springsteen had debuted the song. The band’s version is both powerful and heartbreaking, all the more painful because of its continuing relevance today with the deaths of those such as Breonna Taylor and George Floyd.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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