After just four plays of the song, we had several complaints from listeners. They weren’t complaining about the song—they were complaining about the Dixie Chicks.
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PJ Harvey telling "Stories" in Amsterdam, Feb. 28, 2001.
(Frans Schellekens/Redferns/Getty Images)
Wednesday - September 11, 2019 Wed - 09/11/19
rantnrave:// This is the first song I heard at the first concert I saw after 9/11. Maybe a month later. The KNITTING FACTORY on Leonard Street. Three-quarters of a mile from where the WORLD TRADE CENTER had stood. There was still dust everywhere. The power went out right before he was supposed to play. He came out with his nylon-string guitar and played anyway. No mic, no PA, just JONATHAN RICHMAN and his guitar, singing a brand new song ."Springtime in New York, when it's May and the leaves are on the trees," he sang. "When demolishing a building brings the smell of 1890 through the breeze." "SPRINGTIME IN NEW YORK" was from his album HER MYSTERY NOT OF HIGH HEELS AND EYE SHADOW, released that October into a world that was much darker, much more threatening, than the one in which he wrote and recorded it. Between springtime and autumn of that particular year, the meaning of those lines could have, should have, changed. But he sang them that night with no added emphasis, no outward acknowledgment of where or what or when or anything. The smell of 1890 hung in the air and he just kept going, because that's what Jonathan does. In the balcony I cried and I smiled and I understood that that's what New York does, too. Springtime would indeed come... There are a number of albums I associate with that moment in New York, including RADIOHEAD's AMNESIAC, released in June 2001. Seeing Radiohead that August in New Jersey's Liberty State Park is one of my last concrete memories—a blissful one—from before 9/11, and was, I believe, the last time I saw the Statue of Liberty before Americans stopped agreeing on what it was there for. There were also WILCO's YANKEE HOTEL FOXTROT, widely leaked in the previous months (it's a war on war indeed); the COUP's politically incendiary and way ahead of its time PARTY MUSIC, which arrived amid turbulence and controversy a couple months afterward; and BOB DYLAN's LOVE AND THEFT and JAY-Z's THE BLUEPRINT, masterworks from two New York icons both released that horrible morning (as was SLAYER's on-the-nose GOD HATES US ALL). But the album that has stayed with me more than any other is PJ HARVEY's STORIES FROM THE CITY, STORIES FROM THE SEA, an album-length lullaby to New York City and to falling in love that had been out for a year at that point. It's an album about beautiful feelings and rooftops full of possibilities amid ominous clouds and long shadows. A pack of 21st century tarot cards, waiting to be interpreted (it won the prestigious MERCURY PRIZE on, of all days, Sept. 11, 2001). And a reminder, which I choose to never forget, that just as there can be darkness hidden in the beauty, there can also be beauty hidden in the darkness... RIP ROBERT FRANK.
- Matty Karas, curator
sky of blackness and sorrow
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