I was already into Pink Floyd a little bit by this time, and a casual fan of The Dark Side of the Moon, and Wish You Were Here. I don't remember how I ended up with Animals, but I had the CD and a portable CD player (kids: way back in 1990, before the advent of MP3 players, your parents carried around CD players which were very portable at around five pounds each. We also carried around ten or twenty CDs at a time, in a wallet sort of thing. And we listened to our CDs while we walked uphill both ways in the snow to get to school because we liked it.)
At this point in the story, I feel compelled to point out that, even though I love Pink Floyd and The Grateful Dead, I'm not a stoner, and never have been. Stoners bug the everlivingfuck out of me, and nothing makes me leave a party or event faster than a bunch of pot heads. I also feel compelled to point out that the so-called War on Drugs is an abject and total failure (much like the Bush adminstration) and I fully support changing a lot of our drug laws here, especially de-criminalizing marijuana, mmmkay? And I now feel further compelled to point out that I'm not casting judgement on stoners. I know plenty of stoners who I genuinely like a whole bunch; I just don't come out to play when they're sparking up.
Anyway, I had Animals on CD, and though I was initially turned off by Pigs on the Wing (part one), Dogs grabbed my attention, and by the time Pigs (three different ones) started, I was completely hooked. (After a few listens, I grew to love Pigs on the Wing (I & II) and even taught myself how to play it on the guitar. I can't imagine Animals without those beautiful and tender songs wrapping up the rest of the album.)
I clearly recall leaning back in this shitty chair with wobbly legs, my feet up on a standard-issue office furniture desk, eyes closed, and nearly falling over when Roger Waters sang,
Big man, pig man, ha ha, charade you are
You well heeled big wheel, ha ha, charade you are
I crossed a Rubicon. I don't know what it was about those lyrics (they're not even the lyrics that resonate strongest with me from that album, let alone the entire Floyd catalogue) but the music, the way he sang "ha ha, charade you are!" and the deep, dark, rich ominous weight of the whole thing spoke to me in exactly the right way. I guess it's kind of sad that, at 19, I was already deeply cynical and responsive to that, huh? After work that day, I went to the record store (kids: it's sort of like iTunes Music Store, but you walk into it and talk to people about what you want to buy, and occasionally disscover new and interesting music while you're there) and bought every Pink Floyd album they had.
i interviewed John Schneider a while ago and i asked him about a movie you two did called tthe farm, he said i was the first person ever to mention that to him. i know its not exactly a classic but i still get shivers when i think about the worms in the apple and the mother sewing herself.
http://www.ugo.com/channels/filmtv/features/fallTV2004/scifi/smallville.asp
Congrats on the "Geek" title.
Listen, I know you're busy but I have to ask-
I noticed you've been talking about music lately and I just started a new (unlaunched) podcast with my partner Linntate. So far we've interviewed Robin Guthrie (founding member of the Cocteau Twins) and Wanda Jackson (The Queen of Rockabilly, and girlfriend of Elvis).
Would you be at all interested in doing a quick, like 10-15 minute interview in which we talk about what you're listening to and music in general? The setup of the show is basically this: We gather songs from artist and label websites that are free downloads anyway, we put them in a folder and play a random song followed by an Ebert/Roper style review. It's called "Robot Record Party" and should be lots of fun.
Anyway, if you're at all interested my e-mail is sebastian6 at robot record party dot com.
Thanks for the recent music posts!
-S6