Posts Tagged ‘Gary Allan’

Song-Off Jr.: Wrecking Balls

wrecking-ball

When I conceived this post, I had actually planned to broaden the category to “Demolition” so I could include classics like AC/DC’s “TNT” and the Talking Heads’ “Burning Down the House.”  The only two songs I knew of that were about wrecking balls were the ones by Neil Young and Creeper Lagoon.  I had stumbled across a few more – when I mentioned a “crowded field” last week I was aware of maybe five additional songs – but nothing had me prepared for the overwhelming number of songs musicians have recorded about this iconic piece of construction equipment. I mean, it’s not like the category was “love” or “war.”  So how many songs did I find?

Twenty-five songs.  TWENTY-FIVE SONGS!  And most of them are original songs.  And there’s plenty more that I found out about but I wasn’t able to track down the mp3’s.  There’s all kinds – some are indie tunes from recent years, there’s a few alt-country entries, there’s even one from a collection of National Socialist Black Metal bands (see if you can guess which one!  I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised…).  Since there’s so many songs, I’ve changed the voting a bit – you can vote for three different songs, and we’ll see who comes out on top.

Viva Voce – “Wrecking Ball”

Cranes and Crows – “Wrecking Ball”

Kate Schutt – “Wrecking Ball”

Mother Mother – “Wrecking Ball”

Creeper Lagoon – “Wrecking Ball”

Joachim Garraud – “Wrecking Ball”

Interpol – “Wrecking Ball”

Gary Allan – “Wrecking Ball”

Harvey Danger – “Wrecking Ball”

Talon – “Wrecking Ball”

Crooked Fingers – “Wrecking Ball”

Twinemen – “Wrecking Ball”

Nekromantix – “Struck by a Wrecking Ball”

Neil Young – “Wrecking Ball”

Spirit of the West – “The Wrecking Ball”

Gillian Welch (with Old Crow Medicine Show) – “Wrecking Ball”

Grace Slick – “Wrecking Ball”

Much the Same – “Wrecking Ball”

Beth Nielsen Chapman – “Heads Up for the Wrecking Ball”

H8MACHINE – “Wrecking Ball”

Davenport Cabinet – “Kiss of a Wrecking Ball”

Bud Light Real American Heroes – “Mr. Wrecking Ball Operator”

Vixen – “Wrecking Ball”

Crash Anthem – “Wrecking Ball”

Emmylou Harris – “Wrecking Ball” (cover)

Who is going to rock your house right down to the ground?

View Results

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Last week, Mark Knopfler and Dire Straits came from behind to finish with 44% of the votes, beating Buffalo Tom’s 33% and Metallica’s 22%.  Next week we’ll dip back into Delilah’s well as we tackle the subject of Biblical Wives. If there’s anything you’re absolutely dying to see included, leave a note in the comments.

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Boys Must Be Strong

A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away lived a kid who hadn’t a care in the world. In the small Indiana town he called home, he had a ton of friends and spent his summers riding bikes around the neighborhood, building makeshift ramps out of scrap pieces of wood, and giving the stay-at-home moms (of which there were many in those days) around the neighborhood minor heart attacks with stunts that would give Evel Knievel pause.

Then one day his own mother told him the grandfather he loved more than anything was dying of leukemia. The family would move to Michigan as his dad had agreed to step in and run the auto parts stores his grandfather had turned into a thriving business.

His first day of school in Michigan would set the tone for the remainder of his childhood. One of the kids took him aside and told him that if anyone tried to beat him up, he’d protect him. Why anyone would beat him up was such a foreign concept. Back in Indiana, there’d been no cliques, no bullies, and no reason to need one of the bigger kids to protect him.

Unable to reconcile such idiocy in his mind, he retreated into his own world and found solace in the music that blasted from his stereo. It became his most trusted friend when others failed him. It understood him when others couldn’t be bothered to try. When his grandfather passed away – having beaten the cancer, but being too weak to stave off the pneumonia that followed – he lost the one human who never judged him harshly, who’d always believed in his every dream as if it were his own. This was a man who’d been told by a teacher that he’d never amount to anything. Years later, after having become a successful business owner, he was visited by this same teacher, who’d come into the store for the express purpose of saying he was wrong. The kid always remembered this when someone told him that he too would never amount to anything. (more…)