
A lot of people are arguing the merits of the real "I Kissed A Girl" by Jill Sobule verses the other, recent version. Well let me say it, again, Jill is the best songwriter working today. I never miss an opportunity to prove that. Now seems like a grand time to celebrate a hero to nerdy girls and guys everywhere.
She can take the saddest, most heart breaking idea and catch me off guard with her wicked sense of humor. To me, she is amazingly playful and positive. No matter how sad the song may be, I always feel so much better after listening to it.
So here are ten other songs of Jill's that you MUST hear:
10. "Nothing to Prove" (unreleased)
A screamingly funny song written by Jill while on morphine. She probably needed it as she wrote about the decline and fall of the record empire.
9. "Super Eight" (Happy Town 1997)
This is a vivid, touching look at a child's birthday party. Watching an old film of the seemingly happy party, Jill begins to recall what really happened.
8. "Big Shoes" (I Never Learned to Swim 2001)
Jill had to wear corrective shoes and leg braces for most of her childhood. Her feet are now perfect. Her heart? Not so much. She details the damage with such wit that it's only after the song is over and you stop laughing, that you think, "That would be hell."
7. "Jet Pack" (Underdog Victorious 2004)
Jill takes a comic image and then shows an outsider dreaming. That describes most of Jill's work. The song soars in rapture (flying to her lover in the good part of town). But then the song ends very much on the ground;
I don't have a jet pack.
I don't even have a car
I just have this token
And a head full of stars...
I can't think of any lines that describe Jill's magic as well as that.
6. "Rock Me to Sleep" (Pink Pearl 2000)
Not having someone to love can be hardest late, late at night. Lonely images swirl about Jill with such a real, yet poetic touch that you want to email her and ask; "Hey, are you okay?" A devastating adult lullaby.
5. "Karen By Night" (Jill Sobule 1995)
How this wasn't a hit song stuns me. It is such an infectious rocking song about a girl who follows her seemingly bland boss around to see what she REALLY does at night. And her boss isn't like the fat Marlon Brando...
4. "Strawberry Gloss" (Underdog Victorious 2004)
This song piles on images of teenage happiness. It perfectly captures a warm, innocent time. And then corrupts it with the reality of the situation. As Jill said, "Did ANYONE have a happy 7th grade?" She didn't.
3. "Mexican Wrestler" (Pink Pearl 2000)
This is a song about the person who you first fell in love with and they don't love you back. And you are screwed up to this day. It starts out very funny and quirky -- then swings around to the tragic. The effect is touching and beautiful.
2. "Houdini's Box" (Jill Sobule 1995)
The perfect song to listen to late at night. On one hand it is a dream about being trapped under water. On the other, it is about being in love. The song is hypnotic, comforting and frightening -- just like love.
1. "Somewhere in New Mexico" (Pink Pearl 2000)/"Palm Springs" (still untitled upcoming CD 2008.)
These songs will always hold a special place for me. I was feeling so lonely and awful riding a bus home from work through a black Minnesota winter. "Somewhere in New Mexico" played on my CD player. It changed me. It was the most beautiful song I'd ever heard. Perhaps only the Beach Boys' "Warmth of the Sun" comes close. It is a very holy song about not having faith. It is a very funny song about feeling so empty and alone.
I recently heard a live MP3 of "Palm Springs" and it is the next chapter in Jill's search for something more. These two songs go together like the first two chapters in a great novel. My favorite novel.
Jill's ability to weave images and complexed emotions is unsurpassed today. I really think only Dylan or Randy Newman in there prime were better at that kind of lyric writing -- although in the end, they are not as friendly -- not as endearing. You don't feel they are your BFF.
You can find Jill's CDs at
http://www.Jillsobule.com
or
http://www.amazon.com/Jill-Sobule/e/B000
- Location:Not Brooklyn
- Mood:
content - Music:Palm Springs





Comments
If I had to boil my own essential Jill listening list down to 10:
Thank Misery - this is SO true that we should not only be happy about the good things that have happened to us, but also the bad since they shape who we are (and may have led us to our respective loves)
Trains
Resistance Song - these two blend together for me, because I think of all those different people that "we" become on those trains and then listen to the resistance song and wonder if we HAVE been all those people (as well as Maurice and the other resistance fighters) in all our previous lives...
Clever - this is SO much like myself and also like a friend of mine that it's become a must to listen to...
Good Night My Love, Good Night - so sad and twisted and funny but so true to life. No matter how much you may love your significant other there are going to be times you are going to want to torture them in their sleep...
Don't Fuck With Me - a good motto to live by, and as a survivor of an emotionally abusive relationship, it's a lesson I've had to learn to speak up for myself this way.
Karen By Night
Mexican Wrestler - for the reasons you mention above for both of these
Claire - I love the little story songs that Jill tells and this is one of those (bitter)sweet ones, since though Claire may be suffering from altheimerz or other dementia you know that she led a colorful happy life and was a survivor.
Rainy Day Parade - first and foremost for the use of the tubular bells (yay Mike Oldfield!!) and secondly for another theme that runs through much of Jill's work: the joys and ups (and downs) of anti-depressants!!
And "Thank Misery", oh dear -- probably 11 on my list -- I couldn’t improve on what you said. Thanks.
And now Tubular Bells!
It mimics the kind of funky groove music you might find on a 70's porno film (or so I'm told -- hee, hee). On "The Jill and Richard Show" I have (New York 1998) Jill does sing it as Richard Barone prances around like the character in the song. She also does a couple of other almost never heard songs: "Odd Girl Out" and the really funny "Everybody's Queer." The entire cast of Bewitched? Queer! And both Sam's husbands were such Dicks.
"Yeah? Counselor this..."