72 episodes

Featuring acoustic guitar and vocal covers performed the way my favorite artists play them.

Heart Banter by David Gittlin David Gittlin

    • Arts

Featuring acoustic guitar and vocal covers performed the way my favorite artists play them.

    Hard Headed Woman

    Hard Headed Woman

    "Hard Headed Woman" celebrates an empowering and life-affirming love. The artist envisions an enriching and fulfilling relationship in which each partner contributes to the other's growth and happiness. The song reminds us of the importance of finding someone who complements and strengthens us rather than a companion who fits a pre-determined, superficial mold.

    • 3 min
    All The Best

    All The Best

    This John Prine song has been lauded as, "One of the best breakup songs ever written." Here's my cover of Prine's "All The Best."

    • 3 min
    John Prine Encore: My Cover of "Day Is Done"

    John Prine Encore: My Cover of "Day Is Done"

    "Day Is Done" is a simple song about a clandestine relationship. Since very little has been written about the song, it is difficult to pinpoint the exact subject matter. It could be about two married adults having an illicit affair. The lyrics and tone, however, indicate a relationship between two adolescents forbidden by parents or society.

    The drawings on the album cover of "Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings" tend to support the theory of a prohibited young love.

    In "Day is Done," Prine has written a charming little song with universal implications. Many of his songs deal with the intricacies of human relationships and are laced with Prine's subtle sense of humor. Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings was John's fourteenth album. Released in 1995, it is another example of the artist's exploration of the human condition.

    From humble beginnings, John Prine came a long way in his fifty-year career. He won Grammy Awards and was posthumously inducted into the Country and Folk Music Hall of Fame. What struck me, however, is this early recollection of John's career. It is taken directly from Prine's official website:

    "Prine still remembers the first three songs he performed on any stage: Sam Stone, Hello in There, and Paradise. With humility, he recalls, “I sang those three songs and people just sat there and looked at me. I thought, ‘Wow, those are really bad.’ They wouldn’t even applaud.'”

    Things changed dramatically when a young journalist named Roger Ebert dropped into a Chicago folk club for a beer while John was on stage. Ebert wrote a glowing review of Prine's performance in the Chicago Sun-Times which essentially launched John's career.

    Here's my cover of "Day Is Done."

    • 3 min
    John Prine: I Remember Everything

    John Prine: I Remember Everything

    John Prine began his professional career as a mailman in Illinois. He went on to become one of America's most beloved singers and songwriters. If you are a fan of Folk and Country Music, then you know John Prine. His music was a blend of humorous lyrics about love, life, current events, and songs recounting melancholy tales from his life. Prine was active as a composer, recording artist, live performer, and occasional actor from the early 1970s until his death in 1917 from complications of COVID-19.
    "I Remember Everything" was the last song John wrote. Published posthumously, it's a simple yet moving song looking back on a life well-lived.
    Prine may have had a premonition that his life was coming to an end. If that is the case, then "I Remember Everything" is John's epitaph, which he characteristically wrote himself. Here's my cover.

    • 2 min
    Dylan Cover: Mr. Tambourine Man

    Dylan Cover: Mr. Tambourine Man

    Bob Dylan wrote and recorded the original version of "Mr. Tambourine Man," but The Byrds' electrified folk-rock version shot it to #1 on both the US and UK charts. The song hadn't been released when The Byrds learned it from a demo Dylan gave to their manager, Jim Dickson.

    Dylan released Tambourine Man in March 1965 on his Bringing It All Back Home album.

    What is "Mr. Tambourine Man" about? On the surface, this tambourine man is a wandering musician whose music has captured Dylan under its spell. The song is considered by many to be about drug experiences, with lines like "Take me for a trip upon your magic swirling ship" and "Take me disappearin' through the smoke rings of my mind." Phrases like these suggest a marijuana or LSD trip. Dylan is famously close-lipped about explaining his songs, but in his 1985 Biograph compilation album, he revealed that "Mr. Tambourine Man" is not about drugs. Instead, he said the song was inspired by a backup folk musician named Bruce Langhorne, who played a large tambourine in one of Dylan's recording sessions.

    To me, the song's poetic images are like impressionist paintings. The melody is haunting and mesmerizing. The song stands alone as a true work of art. Here's my version.

     

    • 6 min
    Dylan Cover: My Back Pages

    Dylan Cover: My Back Pages

    “Ah, but I was so much older then, I’m younger than that now.”
    These lyrics and the refrain popped into my head a few mornings ago. This sort of thing has been happening to me frequently these days: Long-forgotten songs resurfacing. It may be a function of the aging process, or it might be the universe talking to me. I kind of hope it’s the latter.
    In the 1970s, a group called the Bryds covered a few Bob Dylan songs. They made songs like Mr. Tambourine Man and this one popular. The Bryds’ cover of Mr.Tambourine Man went to number one on the US charts, and their cover of My Back Pages went to thirty. I may have never listened to My Back Pages had it not been for The Byrds. By the way, Roger McGuinn and The Byrds are credited with starting the Folk Rock Revolution. And they inspired Bob Dylan to go electric.
    In 1964, Dylan released his fourth album, “Another Side of Life.” Around this time, he began to distance himself from his earlier songs. He claimed his earlier work was not about politics, but universal themes rather than individual political issues. In “My Back Pages,” Dylan lambasts himself for his authoritarianism and arrogance.
    Moving forward, Dylan’s music focused more on individual consciousness and personal freedom. He is remembered more for his music from 1965-1970 than his earlier work.
    To me, the lyrics at the top infer that we tend to think we know it all at a young age. I know that I did. As we age, we gain more wisdom and realize that we know less than we thought we did. This understanding opens us to learning more when we admit that we know little in comparison to what is out there. To be open to learning without imposing pre-existing ideas is to become more pliable and, therefore, young.
    Here’s my cover of this powerful song.

    • 3 min

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