Month: December 2020 (Page 1 of 2)

Good Riddance

Welp, it’s almost over. The worst year ever has but a few hours left. And then everything will magically get better at midnight, right?

If only…

2021 has to be better. Vaccines are being administered and research continues to find more ways to fight Covid–19. It may take months, but the tide is turning.

While Covid is our biggest issue, there are plenty of other issues for which there are no vaccines. And even if there were vaccines for racism and hate and greed and lack of empathy and people focused on obtaining/maintaining power by finding ways to divide us, well, let’s be honest, most of those fools wouldn’t take it.

There are lots of reasons to be pessimistic about the future. Rolling the calendar over to a new year won’t fix that. That doesn’t mean we can’t take a moment to celebrate putting 2020 in our rearview mirrors.

Happy New Year, be safe.

And fuck you, 2020.

Reaching for the Stars, Vol. 52

Chart Week: December 22, 1984
Song: “Bruce” – Rick Springfield
Chart Position: #33, 6th week on the chart. Peaked at #27 for a week in January.

As artists move through their careers they often jump from one record company to another. This can lead to uncomfortable situations when the artists break through and their previous employers attempt to capitalize.

Rick Springfield was about as big of a second-tier pop star as there was in the early 1980s. He never quite reached the heights of the giants of the era: Hall & Oates, Prince, Madonna, or Michael Jackson. But he was a consistent hit-maker in the first half of the decade. After some minor hits in the 1970s, his ‘80s run began with the classic “Jesse’s Girl,” which hit #1 in 1981. Over the rest of the decade he had 14 more Top 40 hits and four Top 10’s, including the #2 “Don’t Talk to Strangers.” He sold out concerts. He had a major role on the wildly popular soap opera General Hospital. And he was one of the biggest male sex symbols of the era.

By many measures, he was a bigger star than Bruce Springsteen.

Until the Boss broke through with Born in the USA in 1984, Springsteen had been more of a critical darling than commercial star. Sure, he had a wildly devoted following and sold out arenas. But his songs were never mainstays on the pop charts the way Springfield’s were. Only 1980’s “Hungry Heart,” which peaked at #5, made a real dent in the public consciousness.

Born in the USA changed that. “Dancing in the Dark” made it to #2 and began a run of eight-straight top 10 hits over the next two years. Bruce added two more top tens from the Tunnel of Love album before the decade was over. Springsteen became one of the biggest acts in music, a spot he’s maintained for over 30 years despite massive changes in the music industry.

With Springsteen’s success came an effort by record companies to push artists similar to him. John Cougar Mellencamp and Bryan Adams were touted as Springsteen-like. John Cafferty sounded a whole hell of a lot like Bruce, and in 1984 catapulted from the clubs of Rhode Island to the pop charts. Billy Vera and the Beaters got some run for their Springsteen-light vibe.

Rick Springfield didn’t sound a thing like Bruce Springsteen. But apparently some folks got their names confused. Which kind of makes sense. They were born a month apart, struggled through the ‘70s before breaking through in the ‘80s, both had dark hair, and both had last names that began with ‘Spring…’.

This had apparently been a problem dating to before the men became stars. For his 1978 album Beautiful Feelings, Springfield recorded this track, a humorous account of getting confused for another young singer. A woman calls out “Bruce” name during sex with Rick. An autograph seeker tells him he loved “Born to Run.” It’s light-hearted, fun, and weightless. I don’t think Springfield was trying to piggyback on Springsteen’s success, since there wasn’t much to piggyback on at that point. It was just him sharing a funny story of life as a struggling artist.

With Springsteen’s ascension in 1984, Springfield’s former label, Mercury Records, pounced. They held the rights to Beautiful Feelings. Without any input or involvement from Springfield, Mercury re-recorded the music for the album, slapped his original vocals over these new tracks, and re-released Beautiful Feelings with “Bruce” as its lead single.

It worked. Kind of. Despite the combined Springfield/Springsteen mojo, it could only climb to #27. The album could only make it as high as 78 on the Billboard 100 album chart.

I can’t find any comments from Springfield related to the song or album. I would bet he wasn’t thrilled. His Hard to Hold album, released by RCA, was still on the charts, spawning three top 20 singles. A fourth single did not quite reach the Top 40, but its lack of success may be more because it was a B-side than because “Bruce” was taking away airplay and sales.

I was also unable to dig up any comments from Springsteen. I’m guessing he realized the song was from a different time and totally harmless.

I wonder if Bruce and Rick ever talked about the song, and swapped stories from those early days when they were both trying to carve out identities for themselves.

This video features the original backing music tracks. Below is a Spotify link to the 1984 single version.

Beatles Songs, Ranked

“Favorite Songs by Artist X” lists are a dime a dozen when it comes to certain bands. They are click-baity and unnecessary, as they’ve been done and done and done again. Still, as a music fan I will almost always read them and listen to the songs they cover if it is a band I care about.

I think that is why it took Steven Hyden so long to get to the Beatles. After doing Springsteen, Petty, U2, and the White Stripes, he finally got to the Fab Five just before Christmas.

The great thing about a Beatles list is you can get through it so quickly. I started listening to this one evening and finished it early the next afternoon. Compare that to his Springsteen list, which took me several days to get through.

If you need a time waster in this week between, pull up this list and get to reading and listening.

The Best Beatles Songs, Ranked

A Christmas Unlike Any Other

Christmas, 2020.

Like most folks, we were trying to have a semi-normal Christmas in the safest manner possible. Most years we end up having several big family gatherings of varying sizes. Last year was a banner year: four get-togethers greatly aided by temperatures in the 60s most of the week. Two days we were in the front yard hitting golf balls.

We could have used that weather this year. Christmas Eve, the windchill was down in the low teens. I made a quick run to the grocery store first thing and did not enjoy the 30 seconds I had to be outside. There would be no hitting golf balls this year! Or eating outside, as we did back on Thanksgiving.

We hosted the single family gathering of the week, a dinner on Christmas Eve. We kept it fairly brief, and a couple households dropped out because of sick kids. Still, I won’t lie and say I wasn’t nervous about bringing 15 folks together for a couple hours.

Christmas morning was just us and the in-laws. S had to round on babies for the first time in several years, so I actually got to sleep in a little. Well, I heard her leave and got up at 7:00 to have a few moments of peace and quiet. It had snowed overnight – less than an inch – but the ground was white for the first time in three Christmases. I started waking the girls up at 8:15 which might be a new Christmas morning record.

Each girl had a theme to their gifts this year. M asked for clothes. C, things to decorate her room. L, stuff for her gaming.

M got those clothes and some pink Chuck Taylors. C got a mirror, floating shelves, and some wall organizing stuff from Ikea. L got new headphones, a microphone stand, and a macro control deck. They all seemed pleased.

No Christmas morning brunch or afternoon dessert gathering for the entire family. I still made two breakfast casseroles but with only us, my in-laws, and my mother-in-law’s two daughters eating them I’m still working on leftovers Monday morning.

From there it was a quiet Christmas weekend. I watched several movies and finished a good book. S and her step-mother watched most of Bridgerton. The girls chilled in their rooms with their own devices.

It was kind of boring, to be honest. Although there is a part of me that dreads all the Christmas gatherings and all the stresses and inevitable sibling bickering that comes with them,[1] this Christmas felt a little empty without them. Once the presents were opened and the breakfast eaten, it was just another cold, winter weekend. I’m already wishing for April and the early warmth of spring.

Hopefully this is a one-year diversion from the standards of the season, and when the 2021 holidays roll around, we can get back to normal.


  1. From siblings young and old.  ↩

Timeless

We’ve lost so much this year, but proving that there is some light in the world, Darlene Love is still with us. For years and years she appeared on David Letterman’s program to sing her signature song just before Christmas. I did not know she moved that over to The View after The Late Show ended. Even Covid couldn’t keep Ms. Love from sharing a little Christmas cheer with the world.

That reminded me of this article I’ve kept tucked away for several years.

» Christmas, Baby Please Come Home:

Clearly written in a different time, I was struck by this closing paragraph. Or at least the part of it that suggests that even if this holiday season is forcing us to be more isolated than in the past, her song still speaks to the moment.

And if you’re not — if you’re stuck indoors, or you’re not going anywhere in particular, or you’re just going to grab some Chinese food and see The Hobbit on Thursday, don’t worry. This song is perfect for that, too.

Merry Christmas, everyone!

Revisiting Classic Gifts

I was digging through the blog archives last night and came across this post, from December 2004. It is an accounting of the best Christmas gifts I received as a kid, which was about as “typical 2004 personal blog post” as you could get.

I had two thoughts as I read it:

1 – If I re-did the list today I would add one adult gift: when S got me the first iPhone in 2007. That is the greatest gift I ever received. I hadn’t asked for it, didn’t expect it, and thought I was unwrapping a new cologne because of the size of the box. We haven’t purchased gifts for each other for years, generally because we both buy whatever we want/need on our own. But I think some of it is because she ruined Christmas with that gift: it could never be topped. Since she’s not super into Christmas, maybe that was her plan!

2 – Our girls are all pretty much out of that window when you get cool stuff. L is just barely in it, and she’s definitely getting the coolest gifts this year. But her sisters are both firmly in the asking for clothes and things to decorate with teenage phase. To be honest, that phase is a lot more logical. The clothes and things for their rooms they will be getting on Friday are a lot more practical and will get a lot more use that the cool toys they wanted ten years ago. But toys make Christmas mornings a lot more fun than getting a new outfit or artwork for your walls.

Classic Christmas Gifts

Friday Playlist

Christmas vacation, or what counts for it in 2020, is nigh. My in-laws have arrived, the girls have about four more hours of class, and by early afternoon we will be in the final countdown for Christmas.

For this year’s Blog Christmas Playlist, I’ve chosen to focus on songs you probably won’t hear on your local Christmas music station. Use them as a break from the normal holiday fare.

“Christmas Time” – The dB’s
“Mr. Hankey the Christmas Poo”
“Nutmeg” – John Legend
“Little Red Radio” – Pas/Cal
“Christmas with You is the Best” – Jonathan Coulton and John Roderick
“Back Door Santa” – Clarence Carter
“Toy Jackpot” – Professor Break Speed
“The Twelve Days of Christmas” – Bob & Doug McKenzie
“Santa Claus and His Old Lady” – Cheech & Chong
“Christmas Celebration” – Weezer
“Let Me Hang My Stockings in Your Christmas Tree” – Roosevelt Sykes
“Yellow Bike” – Pedro the Lion
“It’s Christmas So We’ll Stop” – Frightened Rabbit
“Someday At Christmas” – Pearl Jam
“Soulful Christmas” – James Brown
“Merry F**king Christmas”

The Office Christmas Episodes, Ranked

My Wednesday activity, other than preparing for my in-laws to arrive tonight, was watching all of The Office Christmas episodes. As you can imagine, this was an extremely good way to spend time, especially on a very cold, snowy night.

As I watched I thought, “I should put together some kind of rudimentary list, ranking them in order of my preference.” Then I looked and saw there are approximately 8000 of these lists. And, you know, The Office hasn’t had a new episode in seven years, sooooo not exactly relevant.

However, given the show’s continuing popularity, how this has become a bit of a holiday tradition for me (based on two years), and since the show is going from the highly available Netflix to the much more restricted Peacock platform next month, I figured I should do a quick ranking in hopes of nudging some of you to tackle them over the next couple weeks.

1 – Season 3, Episode 10: “Benihana Christmas”
Offensive in sooooo many ways, but generally harmless and always hilarious. And sooooo many classic moments. Michael photoshopping himself into his girlfriend’s family photo and sending it out as a Christmas card. The lunch at Benihana’s. Pam and Karen joining forces to launch an office party rivaling Angela’s. Michael and Andy bringing replacement level waitresses back to the office. The eventual melding of the parties. It gets bonus points for the ending, when Michael finally gets a mystery woman on the phone to agree to go to Sandals Jamaica with him. It is, of course, his boss Jan Levinson, which gave the series treeeeemendous material to work with going forward, including the series’ best ever episode, “The Dinner Party,” in season four.

2 – Season 2, Episode 10: “Christmas Party”
This set down the rules for which all future episodes followed, mostly Michael doing his best to ruin the party for everyone. Plus it shows how “Yankee Swap” rules only work if people are drinking and having fun. The Bob Vance introduction is low key one of the greatest moments ever. “So, what line of work are you in, Bob?”

3 – Season 5, Episode 11: “Moroccan Christmas”
The next three could drop in about any order. And I love the common thread of Phyllis becoming such a big part of the parties. Here she chooses a Moroccan theme to spice things up, forcing Angela to do her biding to keep quiet about Angela and Dwight’s affair. Phyllis dropping the bomb at the end gives this one the nod.

4 – Season 7, Episode 11: “Classy Christmas”
Michael’s old flame Holly returns to fill in for Toby, who is off to serve on the Scranton Strangler jury. In preparation, Michael trashes the planned party for a “classy” one. Michael in his classy Santa hat just makes me laugh.

5 – Season 6, Episode 13: “Secret Santa”
Phyllis as Santa, Kevin sitting on Michael’s lap then not knowing what to talk about, and Andy sending Erin the list from “The 12 Days of Christmas.” are highlights. Also an episode that ends on a warm note.

6 – Season 9, Episode 9: “Dwight Christmas”
Belsnickle always knows if you’ve been impish or admirable.

7 – Season 8, Episode 10: “Christmas Wishes”
The first Christmas without Michael Scott and it showed. By far the weakest of the list. Dwight getting back at Jim for years of pranks comes off as mean rather than cathartic and funny. And I’m not convinced Andy could ever have a girlfriend that looked like Jessica.

Reader’s Notebook, 12/16/20

Pretty good run of books.


Lucky Supreme – Jeff Johnson
The trick to writing a good crime novel, when approximately eight billion of them have been written, is to find a new angle and/or place the story in an unusual situation. Johnson did that quite well with this book.

Darby Holland owns a tattoo parlor in Portland. He’s kind of the CEO of his little neighborhood, a grimy street in the old industrial part of town that is filled with clubs, ethnic restaurants, and prostitutes. Through both goodwill and sheer power, Holland keeps things running smoothly.

He receives word that a former employee who stole some art from his walls has been spotted in California. He sets off to find the dirtbag and, hopefully, recover his property. This leads him into a confrontation with a much more powerful criminal.

Holland does his best to outsmart his new rival, and does so brilliantly at times. For all this cleverness, though, he still lands in a trap from two sides, from which it takes a pretty fun series of events to escape from.

Johnson takes a lot of elements of classic Noir and puts them in a great new setting. His characters are memorable and rich. This is a solid book, but not my favorite thriller of the month.


A Christmas Story – Jean Shepherd
My 13th annual reading of the classic collection the movie is based on.


Two Girls Down – Louisa Luna
Thriller number two of the month.

It is centered on the disappearance of two young sisters in Pennsylvania. Their family hires a California investigator who has earned acclaim for finding disappeared children when the local authorities couldn’t. She, in turn, hires on a local investigator to assist her. He is a former cop who resigned in disgrace after a suspect being held in custody died on his watch. Now he chases cheating spouses and the occasional bail jumper.

They are an odd match with different approaches and often butt heads. But they begin finding breaks where the police can’t. Their struggle to figure each other out is nearly as compelling as their search for the girls.

Luna surrounds this duo with fantastic secondary characters, and provides just enough horror in the case’s resolution to make the reader squirm. As the father of girls, my heart was beating a little extra hard while reading the pages that determined the sisters’ fates.

As soon as I finished this book, I put several more of Luna’s on my reading list.


Bluebird, Bluebird – Attica Locke
And then I closed this stretch of books with this, which is the best of the bunch. It has a long list of accolades stamped on its cover, and they are all well-deserved.

Darren Matthews is a rarity: an African-American Texas Ranger. He has a drinking problem, is separated from his wife, has disappointed the uncle who raised him with his career choice, and begins the book testifying before a grand jury regarding whether he has aided a man accused of murder.

His badge revoked, he is sent to a small East Texas town by an old buddy in the FBI, asked to look into the murder of a Black man. That murder turns into two – the second of a white woman – and soon Matthews has his Ranger status back in order to dig into the murders.

His investigation puts him on the bad side of pretty much everyone in the small community. The local sheriff, who resents his presence and struggles to accept that a Black man can be a Ranger. The white community, who are either latent racists or members of the Aryan Nation. Even the Black community, who despite his efforts to gain their trust, view him as an outsider first rather than an ally.

Again, the mystery part of the book is fairly straightforward. It’s the extras that Locke adds that make the book really shine. Most of those extras are based on race. Particularly when she dives into how, when people of different races live amongst each other for a long time, what seem like distinct lines between the communities are actually a lot more fluid than outsiders realize. Those blurred lines can make the tragic even more heartbreaking. She also explores the uncomfortable truths that acts that seem suspicious by one group can seem justified for survival by another.

Locke throws in a very nice neutron bomb of a twist in the book’s final two pages, one that blows apart any chance for a nice, tight resolution. I see she’s written a second book centered on Matthews, which I’m excited to read to see how she builds on those final pages.

Favorite Songs of 2020

My pre-list State of Music comments are pretty simple this year: 2020 felt like a weak musical year. I don’t know whether to blame that on Covid, me getting older and having to fight changing tastes harder, or that it was just a rough year for good tunes. There are some high quality tracks in this list, but I’m not sure there are many that I will go back to over-and-over in the future. Videos for each song are embedded in the list, with a Spotify playlist of all 22 tracks at the end of this post.

We begin with a couple bonus tracks. These are two 2019 songs that I discovered and fell in love with too late to make last year’s list.

“Fading Out” – Wintersleep
I wish I knew the story on this song. It was released at least three times over the past 18 months in various formats. I don’t know when I first heard it and how I should slot it in. Because of that confusion, I’ll add it as a bonus track. Regardless, another really good entry in the Wintersleep catalog.

“What It Is” – Angel Olsen
I missed this song last year, mostly because I only gave Olsen’s All Mirrors album a single listen and then moved on to other things. Thank goodness some of the DJs at SiriusXM put it into high rotation in the early part of 2020 and I was able to give Olsen’s genius the props it deserves.

20 – “Streelight Blues” – Squirrel Flower
This track perfectly captures that melancholy feeling when something great is about to end. I hear the last night of summer. But it could also be the end of a romance, the end of a period in your life, the death of the American experiment with democracy, or anything really.

19 – “I’ll Be The Death of You” – I Break Horses
I don’t know if this qualifies as an electronic song, but it is certainly electronic-ish, proving if you have the right mix of synths and beats, you can still make your way into my year-end list. I just love the layers this track is built upon. It is epic, mysterious, and sensual.

18 – “Kyoto” – Phoebe Bridgers
So many of Bridgers’ songs are emotionally punishing tracks that leave you drained if you give yourself over to them in full. Yes, there is heaviness in this song – it is Bridgers beating herself up for struggling to relax and enjoy special moments that she has longed for – but there is also a lovely brightness that makes it stand out.

17 – “The Garden” – Briston Maroney
Maroney released his Miracle EP in late 2019, and two songs from it were in contention for the 2020 list. This got the nod since it was released as a single in 2020. I love the unexpected path it takes. It is quirky and jerky and builds to a nice stretch of loud, cathartic noise.

16 – “Berlin” – Fenne Lily
Fenne wrote this about learning to live on her own during a month spent in Berlin. 2020 was a year we all had to learn to be on our own a little more than normal, and this was an ideal summation of that experience.

15 – “Alien With a Sleep Mask On” – Ratboys
A true banger. My first favorite song of the year. Life was much simpler last January.

14 – “Never Destination” – Pearl Jam
Some folks thought PJ’s latest album, Gigaton, was one of the best of their career. While I liked it more than any of their albums since 2006’s Pearl Jam, I wasn’t as all-in as those folks.

But this track crackled with an energy reminiscent of their earliest, best days. It just lacks the brooding darkness of the ’90s that made those songs so special and leaves this one as merely “pretty good.” Which, you know, is still pretty good!

13 – “Sweeter” – Leon Bridges featuring Terrace Martin
The most impactful song of the year. Inspired by the death of George Floyd, Bridges dropped a modern classic that can stand next to songs like “A Change Is Gonna Come.” The big difference, though, is that for all the pain in Sam Cooke’s voice on “Change,” he was sure that the pain would be worth it as better, more just times were ahead. Bridges, on the other hand, insists that while he hopes for a brighter future, reality keeps telling him that is impossible. His disappointment and sadness are devastating.

12 – “Overseas” – Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Goddamn, Isbell can write a great song. I don’t always love them; I rarely connect with his more country-tinged tunes. But when he rocks, his music pulls me in so I can appreciate his lyrics. And they always shine.

11 – “Rock & Roll” – Trace Mountains
Take a lot of mid–00’s Belle and Sebastian and add a healthy dose of The War on Drugs, and you get this ripper.

10 – “Noonday Devil” – Cartalk
There was a glut of great new music at the beginning of the year. This fell right in the midst of that, when it looked like 2020 would be a great year for music. And then Covid ruined everything. This is just a lovely, dreamy track that has a strong connection to the alt rock of the mid–1990s.

9 – “Smoke” – Jess Williamson
This fits right in that sweet spot where indie rock meets folk meets country, which, as long as it doesn’t get too twangy, suits my ears just fine.

It also features my favorite couplet of the year:

Every couple months, I like to be bad
Tell me what you want, I’ll put it on my tab

Awww yeahhhh…

8 – “Pure Shores” – Eliza Shaddad
For years I refused to include covers in my year end lists. I’m sure I had some argument for that policy that seemed reasonable at the time. I dropped that stupid rule a few years back. Thank goodness I came to my senses, because that would have prevented this stunning track by the amazing Shaddad from getting recognized.

I had never heard the original, performed by All Saints for the soundtrack for the Leonardo DiCaprio movie The Beach 20 years ago, but apparently it struck a nerve with Shaddad, who was absolutely giddy to cover it. She covered the hell out of it, too, taking a very New Millennium pop track and shifting it to her distinctive, cinematic sound to make it truly epic.

7 – “Cameo” – Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever
Bear with me here, because I’m going to take a very long streeeetch to connect this with another classic Australian song.

Fran Keaney said he wrote these lyrics one night after failing to connect with a person he was interested in. On his walk home he imagined an alternate reality where things had worked out and they spent their lives together.

Believe it or not, that story makes me think of the Little River Band’s 1978 hit “Reminiscing”. Purely from a thematic standpoint, obviously; they don’t sound anything alike. I’m probably nuts but I like to think that, somehow, LRB was in the back of Keaney’s head on that fateful night, and helped to provide the emotional highpoint for the excellent Sideways to New Italy album.

6 – “Carousels” – Doves
Rare is the band that can step away for a lengthy stretch and then return sounding as strong as ever. Doves pulled off that trick this year. Arriving after an 11-year hiatus, their The Universal Want was one of my favorite albums of the year. And this track captured all that was great about their original sound while throwing in a few new angles.

5 – “Cheap Regrets” – The Districts
Here’s what The Districts singer and guitarist Rob Grote said about this song:

““Cheap Regrets” is some late capitalist nihilism channeled into a Districts dance party. It’s about the extremes of American culture constantly reinforcing the self. The mirror reconfirms you. It’s all iPhone, selfies, and mirrors. Sell yourself baby. The consumer gets consumed. I wanted people to dance together to a song about alienation to find some collective transcendence in that.”

I don’t know about all that, but I do know that this is an absolute JAM. It sounds like it could be from 1982, 1994, 2004, or right now. Baby.

4 – “Ghosts” – Bruce Springsteen
A totally triumphant return by Bruce, his finest song since at least 2002’s “The Rising,” and quite possibly since back to his 1980s prime. It’s classic Bruce: massive, made to be played to the back rows, and filled with showcases for the E. Street Band. Those gorgeous, ringing, open chords are exactly the sound of joy and community we needed this year.

3 – “On the Floor” – Perfume Genius
Michael Hadreas has built a career making painfully honest songs. Songs that despite their critical praise, have never fit my tastes.

Until I heard this incredible track. The swagger and liquid buoyancy that carries it drew me in. And then I heard Hadreas’ voice, which is brimming with the confidence of someone who is sure he has found the love he has been seeking.

Yet that confidence gets broken down and you hear the uncertainty and anguish inherent to a relationship based more on lust than love. A “he loves me, he loves me not,” for the modern era. Or, more correctly, “Should I love him, or should I not love him?”

2 – “Walk in the Woods” – Snarls
Ahh, what’s better than teenage love? Teenage love that is filled with drama, of course!

This song, by a bunch of Columbus kids just barely or not yet 20, bored into my head with its simple honesty and emotion.

When Chlo White shouts “I’M WAITING ONNNNN YOUUUUU, TO MAKE IT WOOOOORTH THE WHILE…” in the final chorus, it sounds the climactic scene of a 1980s teen romance.

1 – “Can’t Do Much” – Waxahatchee
Katie Crutchfield has been making glorious music for years. But it took a toll. After taking a break to get sober, she returned with her strongest collection of music so far, the wonderful Saint Cloud album. It arrived just as the world was shutting down in March, which was perfect timing. Not that it is an album about the end of the world, but rather because it is filled with light and warmth. It served as a counter to all the craziness that was taking over the world as we slipped into quarantine. This song, and Katie’s story, was a reminder that even when things are at their worst, they will eventually get better.

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