The Friday Morning Listen: Jackson Browne – Running On Empty (1977)

I really love the first paragraph of this article

It’s happened to so many People Of A Certain Age — you wake up to Foghat’s “Slow Ride” blaring through your little clock radio, and you suddenly realize you’ve been listening to the same 100 classic rock songs over and over again for the last 25 years. If that’s not enough to make you pull the covers back over your head, I don’t know what will.

The post from Springsteen site Blogness On The Edge Of Town then goes on to make various recommendations of new music to old fogeys who are stuck in the past. Some of them kind of make sense (Gaslight Anthem), though others are pure head-scratchers — If you’re a Clash fan you should check out Frank Turner? Seriously?!

So all of those recommendations aside, this idea of not being able to move beyond your old musical loves got me to thinking about the power of nostalgia and our perceptions of old vs. new music. Specifically, do we love music more because it holds special significance for us? Before hitting some examples, I’m pure sure we have an answer: sort of.

At a very simplistic level, the connection between an album and some fun times does tend to put the music in a glowing light. Sure, I do remember driving around listening to Foghat Live at obscene levels. I also remember laying around in the bean bag chair listening to it on the ole’ Koss headphones, again at obscene volume. The Blogness piece had fun cracking wise about Foghat, but that can’t stop me from enjoying them. Now, do I think that record is better than, say, Metallica’s “black album”? No, because not only are they different pieces of music but they also have different memories attached.

I feel the same partial dichotomy when thinking about Jackson Browne’s Running On Empty vs. Greg Brown’s The Poet Game. With the former, much like Foghat, I was just a kid. I was learning how to deal with relationships and feelings that seemed uncontrollable. Attached to that record are listening sessions with friends, crushes that vaporized, and car trips with the whole crew singing “The Load Out” into “Stay.” That nostalgia brings weight…it was so long ago. But then there’s the (relatively speaking) more recent Poet Game. That album came to me in a period of tremendous transition. Later on, I introduced the music of Greg Brown to TheWife™. So there’s not much early nostalgia, but memories that were built up over time. I’d hate to have to choose between the two albums; both so different, but both so important to me.

So all of this business about not listening to anything new for decades? I just don’t understand it. Yes, there was great music back in “the day,” but that hasn’t changed. Great music is all around us…stuff even old fogeys can love.

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Mark Saleski

4 Comments

  1. While I still have a deep affection for the music I grew up with (mostly 1965 to 80) I too can’t stand it when someone says there is no good music today (although I will never understand the love for rap/hip-hop). People who feel this way are not really music fans they are fans of their youth and the constant misconception that life was always better when they were young and their music is just symbolic of that. There is wonderful and awful music in every decade and generation.

    • Mark Saleski says:

      yeah charlie, the vast majority of people i know from when i was a kid stopped caring about any new music after they were about 21. it’s kind of sad.

      as for hip-hop, i highly recommend seeking out the movie “Scratch.” it’s about the roots of turntablism. it may not turn you into a fan but at least you’ll be able to see where the music came from and _why_ it did as well.

  2. JC Mosquito says:

    Read I HATE NEW MUSIC: The Classic Rock Manifesto by Dave Thompson if you really want to get wound up about that. Or, ay least find online The Rolling Stone Readers’ Worst Bands of the 90s poll:

    http://www.rollingstone.com/music/pictures/readers-poll-the-ten-worst-bands-of-the-nineties-20130509/10-dave-matthews-band-0213234

    How did Dave Matthews and Nirvana both end up on the same list? All apologies, but ONE of those two groups doesn’t belong there.