From Blew Hour to Rad Mobile

There weren’t any delusions about what was next. We lived in a small city in Western Massachusetts and we were fourteen. I think there was one all-ages club in our town that put on local bands, but we had no idea how to get from Ryan’s basement to that stage.

This was circa 1998/1999 when Green Day was the hottest shit around, Nimrod was my latest musical Bible, and while brainstorming band names we thought, instead of Green it’ll be Blue (but we’d spell it “Blew” in reference to the opening track on Nirvana’s Bleach, the same track I presented in an eighth-grade music class assignment to explain “grunge”). And instead of a Day it will be an Hour. It’s the kind of clever that only fourteen-year-olds can aspire to, and Blew Hour was born. 

We practiced all the time at Ryan’s, our lead guitarist’s house. His dad was a professional musician who idolized Stevie Ray Vaughan and played in blues bar bands across New England, so by default, Ryan was the one who had the extra gear, or at least, could get it. Blew Hour only played one real show, in the dead of New England winter at my high school’s annual talent showcase. We were freshmen and my favorite teacher, our English teacher, (she let me use Nirvana’s “Milk It” in a project meant to learn about iambic pentameter, so I knew she was cool), was heading up the audition process.

We auditioned after school, just me, Ryan, our new friend and bass player Jeff, a crash cymbal, and a microphone. We went in with a pitiful rendition of Nirvana’s “Polly,” one of the band’s most dynamic—and easiest to learn—songs. We went for the stripped-down version rather than the punk-infused New Wave rendition, considering we hadn’t yet recruited Brandon, our future drummer (who was actually an eighth-grader—at the time, the middle schools were undergoing massive renovations so the eighth-graders wound up attending our high school. I’m sure this made for some wild formative experiences, in retrospect). 

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Cruel, Cruel Summer

Hope everyone enjoyed their Independence Day holiday — or “Friday” for those outside of the US. 4th of July weekend always reminds me that we’re in the midst of summer — if the whole summer was a day, 4th of July weekend is when the sun is highest in the sky — so I thought I’d make a fun playlist on Spotify that you can cruise and bruise hearts to.

Summer always strikes me as a unique time of the year. The nice weather seems to bring with it a chance for new beginnings; I think it stems back to when we were kids and summer vacation would hit. The year was over and there were months of freedom ahead. Chances for new and fleeting romances, fun adventures, and lack of responsibility. It’s a romantic notion, summer, and as romance can often be, is quite cruel.

I tried to capture the excitement, optimism, and bittersweet endings that come with the summer time within a one hour playlist. Roll down your windows and enjoy.

Top 25 Nirvana Songs

It’s always a sad, strange thing to remember somebody on the day that they died. Of course it’s impossible for memories to replace a living, breathing human being, but at least the fans will always have something just as real: the music.

Today marks 20 years since the world lost Kurt Cobain, so I decided to figure out my 25 favorite Nirvana songs — songs that undoubtedly shaped my life in so many indescribable ways. Nirvana’s music means more to me than any other piece of art.

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So I’ve listed my 25 favorites and the record they first appeared on — though for the Spotify links I’ve included my favorite versions, from  live albums and what have you. And just as I did on my Top 25 Nine Inch Nails list, there are no cover songs present.

There’s also a complete Joey’s Top 25 Nirvana Songs Playlist you can subscribe to:

Here we go:

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Top 25 Nine Inch Nails Songs

This week marks the release of Hesitation Marks, the first Nine Inch Nails record since 2008’s The Slip — which we all assumed was the last hurrah for Trent Reznor in his NIN incarnation. Thankfully, that isn’t the case, and here we are! I’ve been listening to the new record for the past week and it doesn’t disappoint. Production-wise, it calls back to The Downward Spiral while making a significant step forward for the evolving sound of Nine Inch Nails (just take a listen to “Everything,” a song that wears its Joy Division love on its sleeve).

To celebrate Hesitation Marks, I decided to do the impossible task of ranking my top 25 NIN songs. A couple of qualifications: no covers (so “Physical” and “Dead Souls” are absent, I’m afraid), no remixes, and nothing from Ghosts (simply because that record is basically a symphony and should be consumed as a whole).

Here we go!

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