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Showing posts with label irma thomas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label irma thomas. Show all posts

Saturday, 25 October 2025

Soundtrack Saturday

Since writing about Tom Waits a week ago I've listened to Rain Dogs more times than at any point since buying it in the late 80s. I've been dipping my toes into other Waits albums too and think I may continue down this route for some time. Rain Dogs also took me back to Jim Jarmusch and his 1986 film Down By Law, a film that had Waits in a starring role and came sandwiched between Jarmusch's Stranger Than Paradise (1984) and Mystery Train (1989, already covered in this series). 

Down By Law is classic Jarmusch, written and directed by himself and shot in grainy black and white, the first he made with Wim Wenders' cinematographer Robby Muller. The film follows the story of three convicts who escape from a New Orleans jail- Waits, John Lurie (also on the soundtrack) and Roberto Benigni.

Waits' music and slow tracking shots of the city of New Orleans feature heavily. The films follows the jailbreak, discussions about the men's crimes, the interactions between the three convicts and their escape through the swamp to house in the forest occupied by Nicoletta Braschi. It's a neo- noir character study as much as an escape film. 

Tom Wait's song Jockey Full Of Bourbon plays repeatedly as the camera. The song was also on Rain Dogs. Marc Ribot's guitar twangs away, the clanking railway rhythm clatters away and waits mutters about being on the run with another man's wife and being on the corner in the pouring rain

Jockey Full Of Bourbon

As with Mystery Train John Lurie provides the incidental score but much of the film is music free, the naturalistic sound of voices and ambient noise very startling and close up. As in this famous scene...


Tango Til They're Sore, also from Rain Dogs, appears and a pair of early 60s hits, Irma Thomas' It's Raining and Roy Orbison's Crying (the lines said by Waits just before he is stopped by the police while driving). Irma Thomas playing on the jukebox soundtracks this scene, Banigni and Braschi dancing while Waits and Lurie sit at the table watching. Jarmusch uses of music as part of the plot rather than a permanent feature playing behind the action, something that marks Down By Law out very different to many other films both at the time and since. 





Sunday, 13 October 2013

Sunday


Here I am, a few hours later than usual for a Sunday and with a slightly sore head. Last night was a blast, even though someone did bring The Birdie Song and expect it to be played. I suspect there could be people all over Sheffield this morning thinking 'he didn't play my record last night' but everyone seemed to have a good time. The charity shops of south Yorkshire have sold out of 7" singles. The Cramps cleared the floor completely, whoosh, everyone scattered. And I have a pile of singles that could be labelled 'extremely camp'.

I need something mellow and soothing before I have to lug all the gear back to the loft and start to put my records away. This is Chris Helme's cover version of Irma Thomas' Anyone Who Knows What Love (Will Understand), both mellow and soothing.



Something a bit odd is going on- my readership and page view stats have quadrupled over the last two days with no obvious reason. Can't see where all these extra readers have come from. But Hello anyway, whoever you all are.

Friday, 27 September 2013

Slowlene



A while back this caused a brief spike in internet traffic and Twitter buzz- Dolly Parton's Jolene slowed down from 45rpm to 33. It is really rather good.

Mediafire continues to cause problems- they don't send a message or anything, just slap a big letter C for Copyright Protected on the file at my end so it can't be downloaded. The Prisonaires last Friday and Wendy and Lisa got hit straight away but the Orb didn't. I don't know how they do it or what qualifies. I'm hoping this one might get through but can't guarantee it- Irma Thomas's Breakaway at 33, all bluesy and gravelly.

Breakaway (33rpm)

Thursday, 12 January 2012

Anyone Reprise




A while back I posted a youtube link to Jessica Brown Findlay singing Irma Thomas' Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand) from Charlie Brooker's excellent TV series Black Mirror (technology and its attendant madness was the overall theme). Jessica's beautifully sung cover version was the centrepiece of episode 2, 15 Million Merits. A different youtube uploader (Paulosham2) has since put together a cleaned up version- no voices from the show, intro and fade out sorted neatly, very nice job.

Does anyone fancy an mp3?
Does anyone fancy JBF?

Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)

Sunday, 18 December 2011

Anyone




If you've been enjoying Charlie Brooker's Black Mirror series on Sunday nights you might want to go over to this youtube page where someone has uploaded actress Jessica Brown Findlay singing on last week's 15 Million Merits episode. I'd be quick as well, as Channel 4 have shut down other youtube pages with the song on. Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand) was originally recorded by Irma Thomas and as such is close to untouchable but Jessica gives it a rather good go.

Wednesday, 8 September 2010

I Have Learned What My Lips Are For


It's hard to resist any song that starts off...

'Tonight for the first time
I have learned what my lips are for
And darling, now that I've kissed you
I'm craving to kiss you more'

...especially when it's a up tempo blast of Northern Soul, like this from Irma Thomas in 1964.

18 Long After Tonight Is All Over.wma