Jeff Bridges Will Make You Sleepy

Jeff Bridges Album

Jeff Bridges has put together an album called Sleeping Tapes that is full of sounds to help you sleep. It appears, though, that the main purpose of the album is not because Bridges is so concerned about your sleep but because it is Super Bowl ad time and the album ties in with a promotion and Super Bowl commercial from Squarespace, a company that wants to help you build your websites.

Still, it is always fun to see Jeff Bridges being Jeff Bridges.  [2023 Update: The video is not currently available.]

If you wish to hear and/or order the album, head over to dreamingwithjeff.com.

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    Ryan Bingham: “Radio”

    Bingham Fear & Saturday Night

    Ryan Bingham, probably best known for his Oscar win for “The Weary Kind” from the Jeff Bridges movie Crazy Heart (2009), has a new album called Fear & Saturday Night. Most of the new album was recorded live, and the first single is “Radio,” a song about facing a darkness in one’s life.

    Below, Bingham performs “Radio” live in West Hollywood, California at the Filth Mart with Jam in the Van. Check it out.



    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Sometimes I Get a Strange Pain Inside: The Sad Story Behind the 1990’s Hit Song “Joey”

    One of the great songs of the early 1990s was Concrete Blonde‘s “Joey,” which appeared on the band’s album Bloodletting (1990). Like many great works of art, “Joey” came out of real anguish felt by its writer, Concrete Blonde lead singer Johnette Napolitano.

    Although you may have sung along with lyrics like “Joey I’m not angry anymore,” if you delve deeper into the words of the catchy tune you find great pain. The song captures the feeling of loving someone fighting their own demons, helplessly watching while you cannot do anything as your loved one struggles with addiction: “I just stand by and let you / Fight your secret war.”

    Napolitano wrote the song about her relationship with Marc Moreland of the band Wall Of Voodoo. Napolitano has explained in interviews and her book Rough Mix how painful it was for her to write and record the lyrics.

    Because of that pain, Napolitano kept the band waiting for the song. She initially wrote the music for the song and the band loved it. But Napolitano kept them waiting on the lyrics because she knew that her song about Moreland was going to be heart-wrenching to write. Eventually, the words came all at once to Napolitano, and she wrote them down in a cab on the way to the studio. “Joey” was the last song recorded for the album.
    Concrete Blonde Bloodletting

    And though I used to wonder why,
    I used to cry till I was dry;
    Still sometimes I get a strange pain inside;
    Oh Joey if you’re hurting so am I.

    The song became Concrete Blonde’s biggest hit, eventually hitting #19 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. After a couple of more albums, the band broke up in 1993, although it would reunite at several points.

    The song’s subject, Marc Moreland would eventually die of liver failure in 2002.

    And now you know the story behind the song.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Southside Johnny and Springsteen Don’t Wanna Go Home at Benefit

    Don't Wanna Go Home

    On January 17, 2015, Bruce Springsteen made his regular “surprise” appearance at the Light of Day Foundation charity event to raise money to fight Parkinson’s disease. The performance at the Paramount Theater in Asbury Park, New Jersey featured a number of deep cut Springsteen songs like “This Little Girl,” which was recorded by Gary U.S. Bonds.

    One of the highlights of the show featured an appearance by Southside Johnny, where the two New Jersey singers traded lines on Southside’s classic “I Don’t Want To Go Home,” backed by LaBamba’s Big Band. Check it out.

    Rolling Stone recently wrote about the top ten highlights from Springsteen’s performance at the charity event.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    We’re All Slowly Dying in Front of Computers

    Passenger Scare Away the Dark

    Today’s song of the day is “Scare Away the Dark” by Passenger. It is one of those songs featuring advice on how to live your life, which either can be annoying or uplifting. In this case, I think it falls in the latter category.

    The song recounts how we waste our lives when we should be out dancing in the woods. The singer tells us to sing at the top of our voices and to love without fear, because, “If we all light up we can scare away the dark.” Below is the official video for “Scare Away the Dark.”

    Although Passenger started out as a real band, after the group dissolved, English singer-songwriter Michael David Rosenberg kept the group name as his stage name. So, Passenger is really Rosenberg. For another version of “Scare Away the Dark,” here is Rosenberg performing live at the Wonder Ballroom in Portland on July 14, 2014.

    “Scare Away the Dark” is from Passenger’s fifth album Whispers (2014). While “Hearts on Fire” was the lead single from the album, I have grown most fond of “Scare Away the Dark.” Rosenberg also played the song while busking in Kings Square in Fremantle, Australia in December 2013.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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