Paul Simon “Songs from The Capeman”
1990s, Pop, Classic, Solo Steve Collins 1990s, Pop, Classic, Solo Steve Collins

Paul Simon “Songs from The Capeman”

Was Paul Simon’s “Songs from The Capeman” a prescient vision of the coming of Lin Manuel Miranda? Was it the Doo-Wop Hamilton that no one could accept because it was written by a middle aged white guy? Or is it one of the great mid-career missteps? Spoiler alert: “The Capeman” is not really like “Hamilton” at all. It’s more like “West Side Story,” but with a long, boring reading section.

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Bill Withers “‘Bout Love”
1970s, R&B, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow 1970s, R&B, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow

Bill Withers “‘Bout Love”

Bill Withers wrote concise songs about simple ideas, added uncomplicated melodies and let his band do their jobs. He simply never wasted a note. By 1978, though, Withers was almost already done with it all. He still had enough cache to make one final record on his own terms. “‘Bout Love” sounds like an artist carefully packing up his desk for an early retirement.

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James Taylor “Never Die Young”
1980s, Pop, Classic, Folk, Solo Matty Wishnow 1980s, Pop, Classic, Folk, Solo Matty Wishnow

James Taylor “Never Die Young”

James Taylor is more opaque than Prince or Bob Dylan. Is he the genteel, humanist who invented Adult Contemporary music fifty years ago? Or is he an overly-sensitive, over-valued bar singer who succeeded by virtue of his good looks and birthright? By 1988s “Never Die Young,” Taylor had recently re-married and was still very much in the throes of a fledgling sobriety. It was a miracle he was alive, much less a viable recording artist. If ever there was a time reveal his true self, this was not it.

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Randy Newman “Land of Dreams”
1980s, Classic, Solo Matty Wishnow 1980s, Classic, Solo Matty Wishnow

Randy Newman “Land of Dreams”

By the mid-80s, with his soundtrack work increasing, it began to sound like Randy Newman was losing focus — writing and composing for all of the disparate ideas piling up on his mental desk. Some were his own. Some were others’. Some were political. Some were literary. All had characters. Most sounded “personal” but none sounded “autobiographical.” 1988s “Land of Dreams,” like all of his previous albums, is a record about People in America. Unlike his previous albums, however, one of the People on “Land of Dreams” seems to be Randy Newman himself.

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Hamilton Leithauser “The Loves of Your Life”
2000s, Indie, Solo Matty Wishnow 2000s, Indie, Solo Matty Wishnow

Hamilton Leithauser “The Loves of Your Life”

“The Rat” is the actual sound of Lower Manhattan in the early 21st century. Not The Strokes. That’s the cleaned up version. “The Rat,” by The Walkmen, is the secret, frustrated, smart and just a little dangerous New York. And for more than a decade, you got the feeling that the singer in that band was not content just making great music. No. Each time out, Hamilton Leithauser was going for “Like a Rolling Stone.” But, how do you balance that soaring ambition with middle-age, marriage and fatherhood? The answer lies where we find Hamilton Leithauser in 2020 on “The Loves of Your Life.”

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Al Green “Lay It Down”
2000s, R&B, Solo Matty Wishnow 2000s, R&B, Solo Matty Wishnow

Al Green “Lay It Down”

I have found it to be exceedingly difficult to write about Al Green, the singer, without wading into Al Green, the man. Who am I to write about Al Green, a man I have never met, when so much of his popular framing is steeped in racism? Is this essay unnecessary and frivolous? Probably. Is it poorly timed? No doubt. Will I make an earnest go at it anyway? Yes. Because I really want to talk about AI Green’s fairly spectacular 2008 collaboration with ?uestlove, “Lay it Down.” So, here goes.

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Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros “Global a Go-Go”
2000s, Alternative, Solo Matty Wishnow 2000s, Alternative, Solo Matty Wishnow

Joe Strummer and the Mescaleros “Global a Go-Go”

In 1982, he was the man at the front of “The Most Important Band In The World.” To see him then is to have seen someone intent on everything and capable of anything. But, just two years after that, The Clash would release a genuinely terrible final album. By his own account, Joe Strummer simply lost the ability to make The Most Important Music In The World. He kept busy. But, many wondered if their hero had lost the ability to be “Joe Strummer.”

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Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds “The Boatman’s Call”
1990s, Alternative, Indie, Solo, Band Matty Wishnow 1990s, Alternative, Indie, Solo, Band Matty Wishnow

Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds “The Boatman’s Call”

“The Boatman’s Call” is the album wherein Nick Cave ascends from Art Punk poet, to spiritual Folk singer. “Murder Ballads,” considered a career apex at the time, came in 1996. Then, like a drenching storm, “The Boatman’s Call” arrived one year later and the band no longer sounded like it was playing in a back country Aussie church. No -- they sounded like they were playing in Nick Cave’s living room, on Persian rugs, watching the ocean, singing directly to you.

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Mark Knopfler “Golden Heart”
1990s, Classic, Country, Solo Matty Wishnow 1990s, Classic, Country, Solo Matty Wishnow

Mark Knopfler “Golden Heart”

By 1996, at age forty-seven, Mark Knopfler had resolved to slow everything down. He just didn’t want to be a Rock star any more. It was all kind of an accident to begin with. So, he disbanded Dire Straits. He wanted a slower, simpler life, befitting his middle age. However, Knopfler had two major problems. The first was that fans and filmmakers still wanted his songs. The second was that songs just poured out from him. So, what do you do when your blessing has become your curse?

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Levon Helm “American Son”
1980s, Country, Classic, Solo Matty Wishnow 1980s, Country, Classic, Solo Matty Wishnow

Levon Helm “American Son”

Levon Helm already had a lot of miles on him by 1980. Over the ensuing thirty years, he would travel fewer miles, but the wear and tear would still be great. The man who could drum and sing like no other suffered physically, financially and personally. He battled cancer. He battled his bandmate. He settled in Woodstock. Lost in his rich and complex story is “American Son,” the out of print, raucous, joyous, flawed album that is hard to think about but so easy to feel.

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Elton John “The One”
1990s, Classic, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow 1990s, Classic, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow

Elton John “The One”

In 1992, Elton John was newly sober, pre-Lion King and still writing the preface to his second act. When I hear “The One” I wonder what would have happened if, that year, Sir Elton simply decided to be a songwriter and band leader. What if he wrote the great songs and led the band from his piano, but allowed his friends and admirers lend their voices and vigor? Because, here’s the thing about Reginald, Elton, Captain Fantastic and Sir Elton — they all wrote great songs. But, they just didn’t always know what to do with them.

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Lindsey Buckingham “Under the Skin”
2000s, Alternative, Pop, Solo Steve Collins 2000s, Alternative, Pop, Solo Steve Collins

Lindsey Buckingham “Under the Skin”

Lindsey Buckingham’s fourth solo album opens up in therapy, mid dream interpretation. Under his trademark finger-picking guitar style is a hushed confession about feeling unseen. It’s a great irony considering just how “seen” this musician has been. However, where his bandmate and one-time romantic partner Stevie Nicks conjured her great solo career with a witchy twist of the wrist, Buckingham had more trouble. There was something pent up in him. What was it?

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Donald Fagen “Morph the Cat”
2000s, Classic, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow 2000s, Classic, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow

Donald Fagen “Morph the Cat”

I had successfully avoided my Steely Dan reckoning for decades. But, every five years, there would be another drip. A friend would ask my position — pro or con? Another might ask if I’d heard Donald Fagen’s latest solo record. Drip. Drip. It was torture. And so, in 2020, I resolved to kind of, sort of, take on The Dan. I dipped a toe into the cool water of Fagen’s solo album “Morph the Cat.” Everything I feared and hoped for was right there.

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Darryl Hall “Three Hearts in the Happy Ending Machine”
1980s, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow 1980s, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow

Darryl Hall “Three Hearts in the Happy Ending Machine”

Darryl Hall was born to sing. By 1986, much of the world knew this. What we didn’t know is if he could produce hits without John Oates or if he could make a great solo album. That year, the charts were filled with Contemporary Soul and R&B -- Whitney Houston and Lionel Richie. The pop charts in 1986 were not the realm of the young. So, at forty years old, conditions were quite ripe for Darryl Hall’s solo record, “Three Hearts in the Happy Ending Machine.”

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Leonard Cohen “Various Positions”
1980s, Alternative, Classic, Folk, Solo Matty Wishnow 1980s, Alternative, Classic, Folk, Solo Matty Wishnow

Leonard Cohen “Various Positions”

In 1984 Leonard Cohen released “Various Positions.” It was his first album to substantially use the Casio keyboard. It is also the first wherein Jennifer Warnes is billed as “co-singer.” At fifty years old, with Cohen’s voice bottoming out, his soul sounded like it was one hundred. Plus, the curious new sound was greeted with cynicism by Cohen’s label. Turns out, the label was wrong. “Various Positions” not only gave us “Hallelujah,” it also crystallized the sound that would become the hallmark of Cohen’s extraordinary third act.

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John Mellencamp “Mr. Happy Go Lucky”
1990s, Classic, Solo Matty Wishnow 1990s, Classic, Solo Matty Wishnow

John Mellencamp “Mr. Happy Go Lucky”

He gave us so much. He gave us “Jack and Diane,” “Hurts So Good” and “Pink Houses.” But then, in 1994, he gave us all a little scare when his four pack a day habit caught up with him. He was forty three, had a hell of a run on the charts and married a super model. It seemed like it might be the end. But then, in 1996, stripped of bravado, Mellencamp returned to the heartland between Americana and what would eventually be the sound Matchbox 20.

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William Patrick Corgan “Ogilala”
2000s, Alternative, Solo Matty Wishnow 2000s, Alternative, Solo Matty Wishnow

William Patrick Corgan “Ogilala”

On “Ogilala,” Rick Rubin brings his rich, if familiar, bag of tricks to the middle-aged, curious and misunderstood singer and songwriter. The album is a prestige piece. It’s like when Annie Lebowitz shoots a movie star at fifty for Vanity Fair and shows their lines, their age, their greys and their natural beauty. In that very same way, this record is quite beautiful. But, also in that same way, it’s a lot of work. And its sum is probably greater than its parts.

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Willie Nelson “Always On My Mind”
1980s, Country, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow 1980s, Country, Pop, Solo Matty Wishnow

Willie Nelson “Always On My Mind”

Something happened with Willie in the 80s. It’s hard to know if it was a creative choice or exhaustion or age or a dry spell. Or none of the above. Maybe it was Reagan. Country music had gotten wind-swept into the realm of Adult Contemporary. The wind carried most everyone in this direction — Kenny Rogers, Dolly Parton, Eddie Rabbit and Conway Twitty all got nudged to the right by this wind. And, yes, so did Willie.

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Elvis Costello “Painted from Memory”
1990s, Alternative, Pop, Solo Steve Collins 1990s, Alternative, Pop, Solo Steve Collins

Elvis Costello “Painted from Memory”

He was a nerd’s hero -- a smarty-pants who somehow became cool despite the glasses. But intelligence can become a block from emotional connection. Seething is a young man’s game. Costello was reaching down into the tradition of popular song for fuel. Burt Bacharach came from the era when it was more of a job and less of a revolution. Costello had street cred more than hits. Bacharach had hits more than street cred. They both needed each other.

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Roger Daltrey “Under a Raging Moon”
1980s, Classic, Solo Matty Wishnow 1980s, Classic, Solo Matty Wishnow

Roger Daltrey “Under a Raging Moon”

Roger Daltrey didn’t write the songs. He didn’t need to play a lead instrument. He wasn’t going to make the mistake Rod Stewart made, thinking he was an artist just because he could sing. Pete was the artist and he was the front man. And it worked. Roger Daltrey stayed in his lane — at least until 1985. That year, Roger Daltrey released a solo album that I am certain is really the soundtrack to a straight to video, erotic action thriller. There’s no other logical explanation for at least half of this record.

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