As we were driving across Pennsylvania, I'd periodically solicit suggestions from the band when I got stuck. At one point Jon Braun, in the back reading the autobiography of Levon Helm, piped up "write a song called 'AM Gold!'" And so I did. Jon got to do the whistling on the track, too.
I've been accused of being stuck in the '70s. To me, that misses the point. I've never tried to recreate a sound from the past. I just think the theory of recording in the '70s -- real instruments, well recorded, and played by good musicians, and pop songs that had more to say than just one melody or three chords -- is what sounds best. If you compare cheesy pop music of the '70s to cheesy pop music today, there's one huge difference: real people played the music, and it was by and large less predictable than it is today. People would throw in weird jazz chords (particularly with soul music), there would be harmonies, there would be melody. There would be a groove from a real drummer. Look, I just think that way is better. That's the sound I like. That's the sound I have ALWAYS liked.
I also think, much like I believe talk radio has ruined America, American Idol has ruined music. I actually shouldn't pin it entirely on American Idol...I think Mariah Carey got the ball rolling. People are actually being judged and rated on the basis of how many notes they can technically cram into a song. People...that has nothing to do with serving the song, it has nothing to do with conveying an emotion. That is entirely about the singer's ego, and about training the audience that subtlely doesn't matter. If you want to get on American Idol, you better not sing like Willie Nelson (bad pitch, quavery delivery), Frank Sinatra (limited range and technique) or Otis Redding (too restrained). You better sing like Michael Bolton. And that, we are told, is what constitutes good singing.
It makes me feel sad and old.
lyrics
AM gold, AM gold
Makes me feel sad and old
Wood on skin, wood on wire
Hair on denim, now retired
AM gold, AM gold
Major sevens, loud and bold
One hit wonder wonderland
Came to Boston, then got banned
AM gold, AM gold
Robot music left me cold
Let it roll and let it be
Not American idolatry
AM gold, AM gold
Eric Carmen is Ben Folds
Raspberries to your disconnect
It don't deserve your disrespect
AM gold, my old friend
Making me feel good again
Jesus is just alright with me
If Moses is Shaun Cassidy
credits
from Hello Cleveland,
released January 9, 2010
Adam - lead vocal, guitar
Teresa Cowles - bass, vocals
Jon Braun - drums, vocals, whistle
Charlie Zayleskie - keyboards, vocals
Bill Stone - vocals
Adam Marsland's long career has included stints as a singer/songwriter, touring troubadour, producer, and multi-
instrumentalist/sideman. He has made 11 albums as a solo artist and as leader of '90s power pop combo Cockeyed Ghost, and toured the country 22 times as a DIY performer. He has worked with artists as diverse as The Standells, 2008 Tony Award Winner Stew, and members of the Beach Boys....more
Super tough hard rock with spoken word interludes and an experimental bent featuring members of San Francisco's early punk band Crime. Bandcamp New & Notable Oct 27, 2017
Don't believe the name of their latest album; jangle-pop hooks and stacked grunge guitars are two of the Bay Area band's greatest gifts. Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 16, 2023
Norwegian power pop outfit founded by members of black n' roll heavyweights Kvelertak strike a perfect balance between catchy and caustic. Bandcamp New & Notable Mar 9, 2022