My Top Five Lists, by Steve the hoodlum

Steve’s Top Fives

Steve Wiley - Professional HoodlumI must note for the record that doing this is a lot of fun.  If I had more time, I could have made up fifty more.  I believe with all my heart that music and movies are an amazing thing - and that they are good for my soul.

If you do too… or you want to debate the lists… or you have some lists of your own… come down to the store and we’ll chat.  Thanks for reading.  Steve

Music


“You don’t have this?” albums (like Jack Black’s comment on Blonde on Blonde).

Beatles - Abbey Road
Van Morrison - Moondance
Rolling Stones - Let it Bleed
Pink Floyd - Wish You Were Here
Steely Dan - Countdown to Ecstasy

“Watch me sell this” albums (like Cusack about Beta Band).

Paul Pena - New Train
Les McCann and Eddie Harris - Live at Montreaux
Howlin’ Wolf and Muddy Waters - Muddy and the Wolf
Budos Band - Budo Band II
Breakestra - Hit the Floor


Albums that used to be considered Metal in my high school years.

Judas Priest - Hell Bent for Leather
Led Zeppelin - Houses of the Holy
AC/DC - Powerage
Def Leppard - High n’ Dry
Rush - 2112

Artists I didn’t like at first – but love now.

Bob Dylan
Joni Mitchell
Television
Radiohead
Elvis Costello

Groups that critics hate – but I still love.

REO Speedwagon (pre High Infidelity)
Nazareth (Hair of the Dog and prior)
April Wine (up to Nature of the Beast… not including “Just Between You and Me”)
Boston (first two albums only)
Journey (”Journey” through the non-puppy stuff of “Escape”).

Albums critics love – but I still don’t get no matter how hard I try (I’m still trying)

Nirvana - Nevermind
Miles Davis - Bitches Brew
John Coltrane - Ascension
Jeff Buckley - Grace
Captain Beefheart - Trout Fish Replica

Jazz that Always Sells When you play it in the store

Grant Green - Any
Miles Davis - Anything non-”scroncky”
John Coltrane - Ditto
Jimmy Smith - Any
Diana Krall - Live in Paris

Albums to listen to on the road

Wes Montgomery - Talkin’ Verve
The The - Dusk
Bobby “Blue” Bland - Touch of the Blues
Barenaked Ladies - Gordon
Anything that jams… cause there just isn’t time to kenny on the road.

Songs about the Music or Movie Industry

Barenaked Ladies - “Box Set” (as witty as any song I’ve ever heard)
Joni Mitchell - “Free Man in Paris”
Eagles - “King of Hollywood”
Van Morrison - “Big Time Operators”
John Cougar - “Cheap Shot” (any song that starts with “Well the record company’s going out of business… they price their records too damn high)

Note: Could I have used Frank Zappa - Joe’s Garage?  “A guy from a company we can’t name…”

Jazz albums to recommend to a jazz rookie

Miles Davis - Kind of Blue
Dave Brubeck - Time Out
Charles Mingus - Ah Umm
Ella Fitzgerald and Louie Armstrong - Ella and Louis
John Coltrane - Blue Trane

Blues albums to recommend to a blues rookie

Willie Dixon - I Am the Blues
Howlin’ Wolf - The London Sesssions
Paul Butterfield Blues Band - Self Titled
Muddy Waters - At Newport
Etta James - At Last

World music albums to spark up your party.

Various Artists - Sabroso! The Afro-Latin Groove
Various Artists - Viva Cubop 2 (or 3… they are both good)
Los Amigos Invisibles - Arepa 3000: A Venezuelan Journey Into Space
Manu Chao - La Radiolina
Mongo Santamaria - Skin on Skin/Anthology

Jam Band albums

Widespread Panic - Space Wrangler
God Street Wine - 1.99 Romances
Allman Brothers - Live at Fillmore
Big Head Todd and the Monsters - Midnight Radio
Derek and the Dominoes - Live at the Fillmore

Politically-motivated musicians

Michael Franti
Frank Zappa
Carlos Santana
Crosby, Stills, and Nash
Gil Scott-Heron

Note: There are many more… amen and hoka hey to those musicians that fight the power and the corporatocracy!!

Beyond-obvious Jamming Rock Guitar Albums

Michael Schenker Band - Built to Destroy
Pat Travers Band - Makin’ Magic
Blind Melon - Blind Melon
Robin Trower - Bridge of Sighs
Riot - Fire Down Under

Albums for my hippie-chick sister.

Josh Rouse - 1972
Traffic - Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys
Faces - Ooh La La
James Hunter - People Gonna Talk
India.Arie - Acoustic Soul

Wicked Guitar Jazz Albums

Mel Brown - Chicken Fat
Grant Green - Live at the Lighthouse
George Benson - New Boss Guitar
Boogaloo Joe Jones - Legends of Acid Jazz
Gabor Szabo - The Sorcerer

Albums I discovered at the ASU Hoodlums

Michael Franti - Everyone Deserves Music (and Stay Human… both are great)
Paul Pena - New Train
Wayne Shorter - Adam’s Apple
Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson - It’s Your World
Taj Mahal - Taj Mahal

Albums discovered at the new Hoodlums

Meters - Fire on the Bayou
Roy Hargrove - Earfood
Albert King - Born Under a Bad Sign
Kings of Leon - Only By the Night
Bud Powell - The Amazing Bud Powell, Vol. 1

Vintage albums that I have only discovered recently

Patti Smith - Horses
Laura Nyro - Eli and the 13th Confession
Quicksilver Messenger Service - Happy Trails
James Gang - Rides Again
Faces - Every album!

Great current artists for middle-aged cats who still explore music

Spoon
Kings of Leon
Shins
My Morning Jacket
Band of Bees

Sunday-morning albums

Joni Mitchell - Court and Spark
Bebel Gilberto - Tanto Tempo
Doobie Brothers - What Were Once Vices
Zero 7 - Simple Things
John Coltrane - Love Supreme

Classic albums my kids love the most

Crosby, Stills, and Nash - Self-titled
Wings - Band on the Run
Have a Nice Decade - The 70’s Pop Culture Box
Beatles - Revolver
Steve Miller Band - Greatest Hits: 74-78

Steve’s Movies

Movie sequels

T2: Terminator 2
Godfather 2
Aliens
Star Trek 2: Search for Spock
Toy Story 2

Movies you’ve probably never seen

Lonestar
Cookie’s Fortune
The Player
Big Picture
Best Seller

Teenage flicks

10 Things I Hate About You
16 Candles
Breakfast Club
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
Porkys

Most resembling real-life high school (in my experience)

Over the Edge
Dazed and Confused (except for the hazing crap)
Juno
Some Kind of Wonderful
Valley Girl

Concert Videos

Led Zepplin - 2-DVD set
The Band - Last Waltz
Rolling Stones - Ladies and Gentlemen… the Rolling Stones
Pink Floyd - Delicate Sound of Thunder
Ray Charles - O’Genio: Live in Brazil

Animated movies that I still love as an adult

Toy Story
Finding Nemo
The Incredibles
The Aristocats
Who Framed Roger Rabbit

Note: I just watched Wall-E last night…pretty impressive.

Movies that blew me away at the theater

The Thing
Terminator 2
The Matrix
Die Hard
Lord of the Rings

Movies that left me thinking for days

Broadcast News
The Matrix
Bulworth
Seven
What the Bleep?

Westerns

Outlaw Josie Wales
The Unforgiven
Silverado
Tombstone
Lonesome Dove (although the book is still better)

Movies that actually scared me

The Shining
The Excorcist
Silence of the Lambs
Friday the 13th
The Omen

Comic-book movies

Batman Begins
Sin City
Spiderman
Superman (the original)
Flash Gordon

R-Rated action/adventure I am excited to show my kids when they are ready

Boondock Saints
Terminator
Escape from New York
The Warriors
Escape from New York

R-Rated comedy I am excited to show my kids when they are ready

Animal House
Vacation
Office Space
Stripes
Caddyshack

Mainly kid-friendly movies/TV shows I’ve shared with my ten-year old.

The Princess Bride
Weird Science
Star Wars (although number three is pretty heavy)
Short Circuit
Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure

Misc.

Things the music industry could do to get its head out of its butt

Lower prices on CD and vinyl
Eliminate Loss-leading at the corporate joints
Eliminate exclusives
Scrap the “Special Editions” and give us all the good stuff for a fair price
Stop re-issuing things over and over and over.

Reasons vinyl is better than CD

Better Artwork
Fuller sound (depending on quality of Vinyl and year of CD pressing)
Funner to search for
Lots of stuff not on CD
Cheaper (used vinyl only)

Reasons CD is better than vinyl

More durable
Easy to skip songs
Takes up less space
Can be transferred to digital without hassle
Sound quality (depending on quality of vinyl and year of CD pressing)

Shows I have attended since moving to the Phoenix Area

Pink Floyd - Phoenix Municipal Stadium - 1988
Horde Tour - Compton Terrace (w/Allmans, Big Head, Blues Traveler…) - not sure what year
Paul McCartney - Sun Devil Stadium - 1989
Steve Winwood - Union Hall - 1997?
Lindsay Buckingham - The Roxy

Shows I have attended since in outside of the Phoenix Area

Boston - Bismarck Civic Center - 1978
Van Halen - Winnipeg Arena - 1984
AC/DC with Fastway - St. Paul Civic Center - 1985?
Roy Hargrove - Village Vanguard NYC - 2004
Pearl Jam - Easy Street Records - 2005

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3 Responses to “My Top Five Lists, by Steve the hoodlum”

  1. Lloyd Says:

    Not bad at all…some really great picks on there. I feel like I measure up pretty well to some of the lists, on the music side anyway. On Wicked Jazz Guitar albums, love to see Grant Green and Mel Brown show up there, and you’ve got one Benson album but “Giblets & Gravy” jams pretty hard too. I like Budos Band too (really cool). I just love lists in general - they help me find new stuff. I don’t know who Paul Pena is, but I’m sure I’ll be picking up a copy when I come to town next time.

    It’s a long way from “it’s blues, it’s rock, it’s blues-rock”…

  2. sari Says:

    Sari’s Top Five Hayao Miyazaki Family movies.

    As a friend of Hoodlums and a mom, I gave Steve a bunch of family film recommendations when he and Kristian were setting the store back up. I also rib Steve that the family section is too small - there are plenty of parents out there who want good movies for their kids. GOOD movies, movies we want to see as well.

    Well, Steve gave me a tiny hint that he had a BUNCH of movies still in the store that SOMEONE had recommended. I told him that maybe those movies needed a little bit of promotion and he invited me to step up and take the job.

    So here I am.

    My favorite family movies are Hayao Miyazaki movies. I think they’re the best kept secrets around. Some of them are very much for older kids (starting at around 8 or 10) and not younger kids (I’d say 5-7) but they all are beautifully made and worth having at home.

    Miyazaki movies (like Pixar movies) are movies that I will buy no questions asked, they are all that good.

    In honor of Top Five at Hoodlums, these are my top five Miyazaki films (not in order):

    My Neighbor Totoro. Satsuki and Mei move to the country with their father. Their mother is ill in the hospital, and they think the fresh air of the country will help her recover. The girls meet Totoro - a giant creature who lives in a huge tree near their home and that only children can see. I have to say that not a lot happens in this movie but it’s one of my favorites because it’s the one I saw first. There’s such beauty and quietness in this film, every minute of it is a treat. Suitable for all ages. I must say I have the video and not the DVD on this one because they redid it with new voices on DVD and I like the one I had first.

    Howl’s Moving Castle. Sophie works in a hat shop. She thinks she’s not pretty or special, and while she’s out one day visiting her sister in town, she meets Howl, a famous wizard, who helps Sophie out of a jam and then disappears. Howl is also famous for being fickle and breaking hearts. A mean witch puts a spell on Sophie and turns her into an old woman because she thinks Sophie is Howl’s girlfriend. Part of the spell is that Sophie can’t tell anyone what’s happened, so Sophie leaves her home and tries to find the witch to have the spell removed. Along the way, she takes a job as a cleaning lady in Howl’s castle, which is loaded full of incredible inventions and all kinds of crazy magic. Sophie learns that Howl has a spell on himself as well. Can they both get the spells removed? This one is my very favorite. It’s based on the book by Diana Wynne Jones. This one is probably not for the littlest kids - there are some war scenes in it that may be a little scary.

    3. Spirited Away. Chihiro and her parents are moving to a new town and stop for a rest. They walk through a dark tunnel and end up at a little town with a fancy restaurant, full of food but with no employees. Chihiro’s parents start eating all the food and turn into pigs. The only way Chihiro can save them is to work in a local bath house for spirits and earn the right to fight for them back from the sorceress that owns it. I know this sounds bizarre but it is a great movie. I’m constantly amazed at the goodheartedness of the characters in Miyazaki’s movies, and this one is no exception. Chihiro is selfless and works for the good of others. Can she save her parents or will they be stuck as pigs forever? This one does have some scary moments and is probably for kids that are a little bit older.

    Castle in the Sky. A boy named Pazu finds a girl named Sheeta floating down from the sky, wearing a glowing pendant necklace. Together they try to keep the pendant from falling into the hands of the army and also a band of crazy sky pirates who are bent upon stealing it from Sheeta. The pendant has something to do with the lost floating city of Laputa but Pazu and Sheeta have to figure out how before everyone else does.

    Kiki’s Delivery Service. Kiki is a witch who has just turned 13. All witches must move away for one year on their 13th birthday to work as apprentices and sharpen their skills and Kiki is no exception. The problem is, she has no skills. She takes up as a flying delivery girl but has to learn that she does have value before she loses faith in herself and loses her flying ability as well.

    There are two other amazing Miyazaki movies - Princess Mononoke and Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind - but they are both not for all kids so I am listing them separately. I would recommend watching them first yourself to see if your kids would like them. My ten year old loves them both but you need to see them for yourself to decide if your kids are ready for them. My husband Dirk loves Porco Rosso but I haven’t seen that one yet so while I can personally say as a Miyazaki film I know I would like it, I haven’t watched it to tell you anything about that one.

    I’ll end with a final thought from Dirk: All Miyazaki movies are beautiful to look at. They are animated by hand. Miyazaki didn’t start using CGI until later films and still only used it at a minimum. Also, don’t let the fact that these films are animated fool you into thinking they are only for kids. They are well written, intelligent, unpredictable, and not like anything you may have seen in American animated features.

    PS I think I’m going for “Longest Comment Ever”.

  3. Mark McKeever Says:

    I was also at this show.

    Pink Floyd - Phoenix Municipal Stadium - 1988

    I don’t know if it was a particularly good or bad show as Pink Floyd goes but I enjoyed it. It was the only concert I ever saw at Phoenix Muni.

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