The Five Best Valentine’s Day-Themed Songs

Despite our hard-boiled exteriors, we here at Shore Fire are unabashed romantics all. So with Valentine’s Day coming, I thought I’d round up some of my favorite songs to celebrate the occasion. These aren’t just love songs; that would be way too generic (and impossible). These songs so directly about February 14th, they include “Valentine” or “Valentine’s Day” right there in the title.

Outkast – Happy Valentine’s Day

While Big Boi was celebrating ghettomusick on Speakerboxxx, André 3000 delivered the sexy funk jams on The Love Below. This one even helps remind absent-minded boyfriends not forget the date: “Every day the 14th!”

Kina Grannis – Valentine

A poppy, cutesy love song made extra adorable by the flipbook animation.

Bruce Springsteen – Valentine’s Day

Much like his “Independence Day” a few years earlier, Springsteen’s “Valentine’s Day” doesn’t actually have much to do with the holiday that inspired the name. Not directly at least.

The Cocktail Slippers – St. Valentine’s Day Massacre

This one too has a Springsteen connection: it was produced by Steve Van Zandt. He nails his beloved Nuggets aesthetic on this barn-burner, with a slighted-girl-bites-back plot that could come from a Tarantino movie.

Tom Waits – Blue Valentines

There’s a huge sub-genre around this time of year: depressing Valentine’s Day songs. No one does maudlin better than Tom Waits, so what better to accompany a lonely Valentine’s Day than a healthy dose of self-pity?

A Real Star of the Jersey Shore

The real stars of the Jersey Shore aren’t Snooki and The Situation, they’re folks like the tremendously erudite and impossibly elegant NBC anchor Brian Williams, a Monmouth County homie of ours. Brian’s recent interview feature with Bruce was terrific, btw, both intelligent and fun.

Enjoying the autumn sunshine post-interview are me (Marilyn Laverty) and the awesome Mr. Brian Williams.

If you want to see the interview, here it is.

Moguls and Mavericks

The Toronto International Film Festival world premiere of The Promise: the Making of Darkness on the Edge of Town combined a visit to one of my favorite cities with the chance to do the red carpet ‘thang’ with two of my favorite people, brilliant manager Jon Landau and award-winning director Thom Zimny. The film is remarkable, btw, a rock’n'roll Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. It showed me I could take some lessons on being a ‘boss’ from the film’s hero. Bruce’s interaction with the band during challenging recording sessions is a model of patience and restraint. I could use a little more of that and will try harder, fellow ShoreFireians.

From left: Jon Landau, Marilyn Laverty, Thom Zimny, and TIFF’s extraordinary PR director Pamela Mollica (thanks for everything, Pam!)

You Always Remember Your First Time

You always remember your first time. The first time you drove a car, the first time you heard Sgt. Peppers, the first time you and that girl (or guy) went to the movies and well… you get it. So, here we have it, my first post on The Suite 16. It feels good. I’m feeling loose. Limber. So, what to write about? The question has been vexing me for oh, about 5 seconds. I’ll try and answer the most important question probably on everyone’s mind when someone new comes to Shore Fire, what do they listen to? Ok, maybe not the most important question, but it’s a question.

To begin, sometimes my jeans may be a little “tight” and you may hear some sort of random, fuzzed-out, lo-fi, chill-wave, no-fi, post-gaze whatever coming out of the speakers on my desk. But I’m no indie elitist. I believe Townes Van Zandt is one of the greatest songwriters that has ever lived. But I’m no fool either. Bob Dylan is almost always tops for me. Cliche? Too easy? Sure, say what you’d like, I’ll stick by Bob anytime. Except for Self Portrait. Not so much there.

My favorite record of the year so far is a tie between The Antlers Hospice and The Dirty Projectors Bitte Orca. Yes, I also happened to really love the debut from Those Darlins. Oh well.
Furthermore to whatever point I’m making, I love The Drive by Truckers immensely, but I also love anything the Numero Group puts out, especially the Eccentric Soul series. Levon Helm is my hero, and Rick Danko had a voice of gold, so did Richard. I’m not so much a Robbie fan. Read This Wheel’s on Fire, you’ll see.

My favorite youngster that no one ever writes about is Ezra Furman, and my favorite old timer that no one writes about is Sam Baker. Except for Geoff Himes, he’s the one who turned me onto him.

I could go on and on – as everyone else in the office can, but I won’t. Thanks for reading, and come by anytime. I’ll listen to you ramble if you listen to me ramble. Fair deal.