So just what do I think makes someone a singer/songwriter?. Well, my criteria are that the person writes both the words and music to a song, sings the song, and plays an instrument in the process. These are four separate skills and they do not always come together in the same person.
1. Bob Dylan
As I sit here, with a push of a mouse, I can listen to The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan from the early 60’s, to Modern Times of 2006 (including “A Hard Rain’s A’Gonna Fall” to “Thunder on the Mountain”), both albums being excellent collections of songs from the master himself, separated by over forty years. And what a wealth and richness in between! What an amazing career! So many of his songs speak to and touch me, and are so musically and lyrically interesting, that it is hard to know where to even start taking about his music. I will say this though: as much as I already liked Bob Dylan, it was buying The Times They Are a Changin’ a couple of years back that made the ultimate connection and pushed him to number one on my list. Specifically I think it was the “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carrol” that sealed it. Odd, after so many years with Bob Dylan as part of my life, it was that song that pushed away all competitors in my heart to him having the number one position.
2. Jackson Browne
What can I say. When my brother Mike gave me Jackson Brown, better known as Saturate Before Using, for my 17th birthday, a musical love affair began that has never abated. I will admit that I favor the older stuff, but I’m learning to love some of the newer stuff too. I wish he would get David Lindley back with him on an album. But I want to say this – the guy can still sing, he can still play, and he still has that winsome humor that make his concerts so delightful. When he played here a couple of years ago and started with “Looking into You” I thought I would cry, that being my first or second favorite of his songs. It was a magical night. No musician has dogged the ups and downs of my life like JB. To him I say “thank you for filling my life with your songs.” If you don’t know his music I might start with Late for the Sky.
3. Iris Dement
I first heard Iris Dement on Prairie Home Companion. I then illegally downloaded a bunch of her songs (which I don’t do anymore) and was hooked. I have all her CD’s now, so hey, I’m clean. Iris Dement sings with a high twangy voice that carries one over the other side of the other side of the hills, and yet, there is such a surreal beauty to her voice. Her songs are simple though clever, heartfelt though not indulgent, and so very real. she has struggled in her life. When I saw her at Cat’s Cradle there she was in all her, well, plainness, self deprecating, with that great slooooow drawl when she introduced her songs, almost the antithesis of charismatic, and yet the audience was absolutely transfixed. I can listen to Iris for weeks at a time without getting tired of her. For an intro to her music I might suggest My Life.
4. Bill Mallonee
Bill Mallonee is the best singer songwriter that no one has ever heard of. He used to front a band called The Vigilantes of Love, but even then he wrote all the songs, sang them, and played guitar. I have heard him with and without band. Hey, he is available for a house concert this month if anyone is interested. It would be one of the most memorable evenings of your life, I can promise you that. Bill Mallonee has written more good songs than most song writers could ever dream of writing. He speaks from a Christian worldview, but his songs are full of the realities of the fall, that is, the real world, and counts himself amongst those who need help from the outside. For a starter I might go with To the Roof of the Sky but they are all good.
5. Bruce Springsteen
With all due respect to the E-Street Band, which I think is fantastic, I still think of Bruce Springsteen as a simple singer/songwriter at heart. Again, we have a man who has had a long career, and who writes as well now as he ever did. I did not like Springsteen early on. He grated on me. That started to change with Tunnel of Love, then Nebraska, then The Ghost of Tom Joad, “Streets of Philadelphia,”, and then, finally, The Rising. The Rising really got under my skin. Parts of it, like “You’re Missing,” are almost too much to bear. I confess I am partial to the more mellow Springsteen, but either way, he writes as every man, and what man cannot connect to his lyrics.
6. Hank Williams
The very first LP I ever purchased was some sort of Best of Hank Williams, which I bought at a Roses store after I watched the George Hamilton movie Your Cheatin’ Heart about the life of Hank Williams on TV with my parents. Funny how he spoke to me as an older child. I have his whole collection now, and never cease to be amazed at the uncanny ability he had to put word and music together, and the pathos and humanity of his voice! “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” is maybe my favorite of his songs, but I’ll take him anyway I can get him! I love Norah Jones’ cover of “Cold Cold Heart.”
7. Johnny Cash
From “Folsom Prison Blues” to “Like the 309″ Johnny Cash is another artist who was creative and compelling over the course of decades. I am forever thankful to U2 and Rick Rubin for knowing that Johnny Cash had a lot left in him! On top of his incredible abilities as a songwriter, Johnny Cash could cover other people’s music in a way that brought new aspects of the song, not revealed in the original, and I am talking about many of the greatest songs ever written, such as “First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” my vote for the most beautiful popular song ever written in our language. Johnny Cash’s “When the Man Comes Around” gives me goose bumps, well, maybe because I believe with him, and anticipate the same terror and wonder and beauty of that day.
8. Keith Green
When I was a teenager, around the time I was first exposed to the Christian faith, I had the blessing of seeing Keith Green in concert several times. He had an “in” with a Christian music station in Columbia and they promoted him heavily. The concerts I saw were just Keith Green and his piano. His songs were not finely produced and slicked up – there was a raw power in the piano playing that matched the power of the lyrics – to convict, to draw, to delight, to terrorize. And he only got better and better until that fateful day in August 1982 when his plane went down and he died an untimely death. Of all overtly Christian artists he remains the one that “gets to me” the most. I would suggest No Compromise as a starter, if you can find it.
9. Van Morrison
Well, first of all, he is still writing great songs, even forty years later. I just have to respect this. I don’t have the time or money to have or know all of his music, but Astral Weeks, Moondance, Tupelo Honey, Saint Dominic’s Preview, Hymns to the Silence, and Back on Top are enough for now. But really, Astral Weeks and Moondance are enough. Moondance, I think, is my single favorite album ever. Astral weeks is a little too, well, odd, to be that high, but is so hauntingly and beautifully and wonderfuly odd I can only call it brilliant. It is like one long song, a symphony with movements. I t is hard to listen o without tears.
10. Lucinda Williams
I started listening to Lucinda Williams about the time she came out with Sweet Old World. I had seen her on Austin City Limits. It became a favorite right away, filled with pathos and affection for the world I inhabited. It took a while, but Car Wheels on a Gravel Road was perhaps even a better Cd. I would read accounts about how anal she was about the CD production, which explained the time it took to get new ones out. I lost touch for a while until I saw her in concert last year, which got me listening to her three newer records, and exploring her three older records before Sweet Old World. Her older records seem like more straight up well, maybe alt country. Great stuff. Her newer stuff is more, I don’t know, atmospheric almost. Lyrically simpler, but more musically evocative, more poetic. She grows on me more and more.
Others Receiving Votes
Carole King
Gordon Lightfoot
Joni Mitchell
Glenn Campbell
John Prine
Roberta Flack
Janice Ian
Sarah McLachlan
Neil Young
Norah Jone
John Mayer







2 responses so far ↓
1 CATHY // Jul 30, 2008 at 9:41 pm
Hey, Joel,
I stumbled across you in a weird way.
A couple of days ago, commuting to my job from Chapel Hill to Raleigh, I heard a song on the radio that I fell in love with. On WCNC. (Yes, I admit it is my favorite radio station, despite the fact that I have college-age kids of my own.) The song I heard was “Lonely Ain’t Easy,” and I scribbled down the time so I could find it on the KNC playlist. Tonight I found the group online and listened to the song, along with several others, and absolutely loved the music, loved the lyrics. In trying to find the album to download, I found you and a mention that your daughter played with the band . . . which led to this blog, and this list of favorite songwriters. (Excellent.)
May I ask you–where can I find the newest “American Acquarium” CD? It does not seem to be available on iTunes. (And is your daughter still in the group?) Thanks so much.
I love music that is simple–and at the same time not. And this music falls into that category.
Thanks for sharing your list as well. I agree with your choices, and found a couple names I did not know that I will check out.
May I suggest you check out the Silos, if you do not already know them? Great music, but excellent writing indeed. The best combination.
Thanks so much.
Best regards,
Cathy
P.S. Can’t believe you got to see George Carlin AND Richard Pryor at the same time–in ‘77. I grieved the recent passing of Carlin, a great writer as well as comedian. Enjoyed seeing this, as well as some of the other photos from the 70s, my college years.
2 joel // Aug 7, 2008 at 5:03 pm
Cathy,
My daughter is not in the band anymore - they have turned over most of the personnel since then. I assume BJ is still the singer/song-writer. He has a lot of talent and may well bubble to more recognition in time. But I don’t know about their music now, sorry.
Joel
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