Todd Snider's Top 5 Favorite Performers Of All Time
Many people list Todd Snider as one of their favorite singers of all time, but the musical storyteller has heroes of his own. In celebration his new live double-disc album titled "The Storyteller," Snider carefully wrote interesting musings about his favorite five writers and performers that shaped his career.
1. Bob Dylan
Todd Snider: "For me, when it comes to being a fan of a troubadour, I have to laugh with you before I'll cry with you, simply because most troubadours expect you to cry over their journal entries with them. Most troubadours are awful people. Bob, however, is not. I think he's America's finest contribution to the world, of any kind. He does not have a song I don't like, and while he doesn't talk much on stage, when he does, it's precise, funny, wise and everything else. There really is no point in anyone else doing this troubadour thing. Hell, I once paid for a tape of Bob arguing on the phone.....and I thought it was a great album."
2. Bill Hicks
Todd Snider: "While Bill might not be as funny as Bob Dylan, he does take on subjects that Bob abandoned as a young man, and through the use of humor he gives legs to these topics that Bob Dylan couldn't. I have to admit that Bill never quite figured out how his music and lyrics meshed, but he sure tried. He played guitar on all his albums and often referred to himself as a rock musician...I wonder sometimes if he knew what talking blues were, because he loved talking and loved the blues but never combined them. I sometimes tell Elvis, my tour manager, that we are taking up where Bill left off, like I'm Bill Hicks if he'd a been a Ramblin' Jack Elliott fan."
3. Michael Stipe
Todd Snider: "Sexy physical humor is generally regarded as impossible, but with his dancing and striptease clothing act, Michael Stipe is about the only singer I've ever seen pull this off on a regular basis. Guys are laughing, girls are drooling...he's in on all of it. Magic, and even comically ironic considering his sexual orientation. Iggy Pop is close in this regard, but for me...no cigar. People don't always get Michael's humor, but did you ever see the video where he outs his band as straight? Hysterical. And I know he mumbles a lot of lyrics, but when you dig into them they can be topical and funny. Ramblin' Michael Stipe: Troubadour. I have always been amazed at all the levels his performance could be taken on. Is that Andy Kauffman or Mick Jagger or Hunter S. Thompson? The answer is yes."
4. Mitch Hedberg
Todd Snider: "He reminds me of Michael Stipe a little in the way he juxtaposes his position as an artist. His stage stance was almost like Jim Morrison's.....like imagine Jim doing "The End" hanging off the mic with his "aloof rocker who wont even look at the crowd" riff going. You know the "I'm just gonna stand here behind my sexy" vibe.....Except when he opens his mouth, what he says is hysterical and smart (not "ride the blue snake," thank God). Hedberg's another guy who was supposedly a comedian but actually considered himself a musician...and acted like one too. An admirable stoner-slash-junkie wearing great shades. One of the things I dig about him and Bill Hicks is that you really could put drums to his tracks. A drummer would not be lost trying to overdub to these concerts because they move with rhythm. The last thing he ever wrote down was "Do you believe in gosh?"
5. Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Todd Snider: "The father of them all.......Only wrote one song in his life and yet brought us everyone from Dylan to Jerry Jeff Walker. One thing I love about Ramblin' Jack, Bob Dylan, and Jerry Jeff Walker is that those are not their real names. Any troubadour worth his salt invents himself out of nothing. It gave me the courage to just become the tipsy gypsy one day (high school varsity letters and republican parents be damned). We're not who our parents say we are. We're who we say we are. Right dad? And I'm Ramblin' Jack Elliot?...Wait....I got confused there. Not sure what my point was....uh....I'll tell you this though.......I saw Ramblin' Jack at Jerry Jeff's birthday party in 1986, and he played his only song. It's called "912 Greens." The song is about 15 seconds long and only has two lines in it: "Did you ever see a river that made you want to shiver.' But the story that precedes the song is 45 minutes long..."
1. Bob Dylan
Todd Snider: "For me, when it comes to being a fan of a troubadour, I have to laugh with you before I'll cry with you, simply because most troubadours expect you to cry over their journal entries with them. Most troubadours are awful people. Bob, however, is not. I think he's America's finest contribution to the world, of any kind. He does not have a song I don't like, and while he doesn't talk much on stage, when he does, it's precise, funny, wise and everything else. There really is no point in anyone else doing this troubadour thing. Hell, I once paid for a tape of Bob arguing on the phone.....and I thought it was a great album."
2. Bill Hicks
Todd Snider: "While Bill might not be as funny as Bob Dylan, he does take on subjects that Bob abandoned as a young man, and through the use of humor he gives legs to these topics that Bob Dylan couldn't. I have to admit that Bill never quite figured out how his music and lyrics meshed, but he sure tried. He played guitar on all his albums and often referred to himself as a rock musician...I wonder sometimes if he knew what talking blues were, because he loved talking and loved the blues but never combined them. I sometimes tell Elvis, my tour manager, that we are taking up where Bill left off, like I'm Bill Hicks if he'd a been a Ramblin' Jack Elliott fan."
3. Michael Stipe
Todd Snider: "Sexy physical humor is generally regarded as impossible, but with his dancing and striptease clothing act, Michael Stipe is about the only singer I've ever seen pull this off on a regular basis. Guys are laughing, girls are drooling...he's in on all of it. Magic, and even comically ironic considering his sexual orientation. Iggy Pop is close in this regard, but for me...no cigar. People don't always get Michael's humor, but did you ever see the video where he outs his band as straight? Hysterical. And I know he mumbles a lot of lyrics, but when you dig into them they can be topical and funny. Ramblin' Michael Stipe: Troubadour. I have always been amazed at all the levels his performance could be taken on. Is that Andy Kauffman or Mick Jagger or Hunter S. Thompson? The answer is yes."
4. Mitch Hedberg
Todd Snider: "He reminds me of Michael Stipe a little in the way he juxtaposes his position as an artist. His stage stance was almost like Jim Morrison's.....like imagine Jim doing "The End" hanging off the mic with his "aloof rocker who wont even look at the crowd" riff going. You know the "I'm just gonna stand here behind my sexy" vibe.....Except when he opens his mouth, what he says is hysterical and smart (not "ride the blue snake," thank God). Hedberg's another guy who was supposedly a comedian but actually considered himself a musician...and acted like one too. An admirable stoner-slash-junkie wearing great shades. One of the things I dig about him and Bill Hicks is that you really could put drums to his tracks. A drummer would not be lost trying to overdub to these concerts because they move with rhythm. The last thing he ever wrote down was "Do you believe in gosh?"
5. Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Todd Snider: "The father of them all.......Only wrote one song in his life and yet brought us everyone from Dylan to Jerry Jeff Walker. One thing I love about Ramblin' Jack, Bob Dylan, and Jerry Jeff Walker is that those are not their real names. Any troubadour worth his salt invents himself out of nothing. It gave me the courage to just become the tipsy gypsy one day (high school varsity letters and republican parents be damned). We're not who our parents say we are. We're who we say we are. Right dad? And I'm Ramblin' Jack Elliot?...Wait....I got confused there. Not sure what my point was....uh....I'll tell you this though.......I saw Ramblin' Jack at Jerry Jeff's birthday party in 1986, and he played his only song. It's called "912 Greens." The song is about 15 seconds long and only has two lines in it: "Did you ever see a river that made you want to shiver.' But the story that precedes the song is 45 minutes long..."
Todd Snider never fails to disappoint, and the singer-songwriter's words about his favorite writers and performers of all time are both interesting and insightful. Snider's new 2-disc album "The Storyteller" will drop February 1, 2011. Don't miss it.