SUPPORT ME ON PATREON\n\nWATCH MUSIC is not a GENRE VIDEOS and MORE\n\nLet\u2019s face it: we forget WAY more than we remember, both as individuals and as a society. That\u2019s no big revelation. But I\u2019ll go even further and say we MISremember far more than we recall accurately. We are all our own little life chroniclers, each with a unique story of the world. And unless some awesome sci-fi imaginings (such as Ted Chiang\u2019s \u201cThe Truth of Fact, The Truth of Feeling\u201d) come true, this will always be the case.\n\nWith music, you\u2019d think it would be easier to accurately remember a song. NOPE. The only thing that\u2019s easier is you can look it up and find out how on or off your memory is. That\u2019s what happened with this week\u2019s double album, 20 Rockin\u2019 Originals (Vol. 2). I listened through it while I was creating the above playlist, and my brain divided the songs into three categories: 1. Songs I have little to no memory of or interest in (e.g. \u201cA Rose and Baby Ruth\u201d); 2. Songs I remember vividly, whether I liked them (\u201cEarth Angel\u201d) or not (\u201cHey Paula\u201d); and 3. Songs I like and know well, but remember them very differently (\u201cSilhouettes\u201d).\n\nOf the 20 songs here, slightly more than half were in categories 1 & 3. Why? At base, the human memory function is highly subjective and faulty. On top of that, the time between an occurrence (such as hearing a song) and any point in the future is full of other occurrences that overwrite the original. Cover versions. Live versions. Versions that live in only in the memory. Even with corrective media like recordings & films & written accounts, we\u2019re fighting a losing battle. And that\u2019s totally okay.\n\nFor me, overwriting is huge. When I listened to \u201cWe Ain\u2019t Got Nothin\u2019 Yet\u201d, it sounded SORT OF RIGHT, but not quite. Once I (re)discovered that Deep Purple used the same riff in a song, I knew my memory of these two tunes had merged into one that only exists in my head. When I listened to \u201cSilhouettes\u201d, I had to seek out every cover version. There were MANY. Only problem: none of them sounded right. And that\u2019s because the version I have in my head is the one my dad sang hundreds (thousands?) of times at his gigs, one I\u2019d often join in on. I swear he used a minor IV for the second chord, and none of the recorded versions did that.\n\nOf course, I could be WRONG ABOUT ALL OF THIS. That\u2019s the whole point. Perfect example \u2013 I had to check my self-honesty after writing that I didn\u2019t like \u201cHey Paula\u201d. I don\u2019t particularly like it NOW, but I vaguely remember liking it when I was a kid. Memory is a slippery freakin\u2019 thing.\n\nOh and the music itself? It\u2019s a decent collection of mostly second tier doo wop songs, with some soundalike bands (The Hondells = The Beach Boys, Tommy Roe = Buddy Holly) and outliers (\u201cWalk Away, Renee\u201d, \u201cWe Ain\u2019t Got Nothin\u2019 Yet\u201d) thrown in. Volume 1 came out in 1973 (god all the 1970s nostalgia for the 1950s was INSANE) and was slightly stronger collection, though oddly also containing the Tommy Roe song (I smell payola). Doo wop was huge in my upbringing, not least because my dad was an early second/third tier rock n roll star himself, and sang it his whole life. I loved harmonizing with my dad (and my brother and friends), and still do. Harmonies have always been HUGE in my work. Too many songs to cite here, so I\u2019ll go with a new one. It ain\u2019t doo wop AT ALL, but the background vocals are vividly reminiscent:\n\nREC - \u201cFinal Call\u201d (from the album Sympathy for the Weird)\n\nHave you ever re-heard a song and thought that\u2019s not how you remember it sounding? Do you like old rock n roll, or did you get kinda burned out by it years ago like me? Discuss dammit!\n\n\n--- \n\nThis episode is sponsored by \n\xb7 Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app\n\nSupport this podcast: https://anchor.fm/musicisnotagenre/support\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices