Tom Waits

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Real Gone is outstanding.


Bone Machine and Swordfishtrombones still reign as my favorites, but Tom Waits has yet to put out a bad album since Rain Dogs.
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You're not hopeless...



Originally Posted by Holden Pike
I just scooped-up tickets to see Tom in concert, a week from tomorrow in Seattle!

Fu*kin' A! Can't believe I'm finally getting to see him live!!!
I'll have to wait until next year when he does a more extensive US tour... which he will do, I hope.



Originally Posted by Garrett
I'll have to wait until next year when he does a more extensive US tour... which he will do, I hope.
Doubtful. He hasn't done a big U.S. tour since the '80s. That's why I am so happy to finally get the opportunity to see him.
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"Film is a disease. When it infects your bloodstream it takes over as the number one hormone. It bosses the enzymes, directs the pineal gland, plays Iago to your psyche. As with heroin, the antidote to Film is more Film." - Frank Capra



I am having a nervous breakdance
I love this "song"...

What's he building in there?
What the hell is he building in there?
He has subscriptions to those magazines
Never waves when he goes by
He's hiding something from the rest of us
He's all to himself, I think I know why
He took down the tire swing from the Peppertree
He has no children of his own you see
He has no dog, he has no friends and
His lawn is dying
What about all those packages he sends
What's he building in there?
With that hook light on the stairs
What's he building in there?
I'll tell you one thing
He's not building a playhouse for the children
What's he building in there?

Now what's that sound from underneath the door?
He's pounding nails into a hardwood floor
I swear to God I heard someone moaning low
And I keep seeing the blue light of a T.V. show
He has a router and a table saw
And you won't believe what Mr. Sticha saw
There's poison underneath the sink of course
There's also enough formaldehyde to choke a horse
What's he building in there?
What the hell is he building in there?
I heard he has an ex-wife in some place called Mayors Income, Tennessee
And he used to have a consulting business in Indonesia
But what's he building in there?

He has no friends but he gets a lot of mail
I'll bet he spent a little time in jail
I heard he was up on the roof last night signaling with a flashlight
What's that tune he's always whistling?
What's he building in there?
What's he building in there?

We have a right to know...


__________________
The novelist does not long to see the lion eat grass. He realizes that one and the same God created the wolf and the lamb, then smiled, "seeing that his work was good".

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They had temporarily escaped the factories, the warehouses, the slaughterhouses, the car washes - they'd be back in captivity the next day but
now they were out - they were wild with freedom. They weren't thinking about the slavery of poverty. Or the slavery of welfare and food stamps. The rest of us would be all right until the poor learned how to make atom bombs in their basements.



I got for good luck my black tooth.
Originally Posted by Henry The Kid
Real Gone is outstanding.


Bone Machine and Swordfishtrombones still reign as my favorites, but Tom Waits has yet to put out a bad album since Rain Dogs.
You think Rain Dogs is bad? Sheesh!
__________________
"Like all dreamers, Steven mistook disenchantment for truth."



Originally Posted by Strummer521
You think Rain Dogs is bad? Sheesh!
No, Rain Dogs heralded in a new era of Tom Waits.... sort of. Some of his stuff before it was mediocre. It started his string of phenomenal albums.



I got for good luck my black tooth.
Originally Posted by Henry The Kid
No, Rain Dogs heralded in a new era of Tom Waits.... sort of. Some of his stuff before it was mediocre. It started his string of phenomenal albums.
Oh I get it now. Sorry I just misunderstood you. It might be fair to say that swordfishtrombones was the beginning of the new era though.



Originally Posted by Strummer521
Oh I get it now. Sorry I just misunderstood you. It might be fair to say that swordfishtrombones was the beginning of the new era though.
Yeah, I actually agree with that. But, it was a while ago, my mind was not on straight at the time I imagine.



The Definitive Ranking of Tom Waits’ 5 Horcruxes


Tom Waits was born in the back of a boxcar in 1890, the son of a feral dog and a haunted phonograph. He has survived for over a century by splitting fragments of his vagabond spirit into horcruxes, enchanted objects that will keep him immortal unless they are destroyed beyond repair. These are the five horcruxes we know of, and here’s their definitive ranking.

5. A Jukebox Serving Three Life Sentences for Homicide
A Wurlitzer 1015 Jukebox from the 1940s that was found guilty of murder in the first degree. On a cold winter night in 1967, the Jukebox attacked and killed a truck driver who had been flirting with a truck stop waitress that the Jukebox was fond of. In a jealous rage the Jukebox lost all control and accidentally murdered the waitress as well. Originally sentenced to death by hanging, the Jukebox’s sentence was instead commuted to a triple life sentence since the Jukebox could not be hanged as it didn’t have a neck. The only albums in the Jukebox’s catalog are multiple 7” singles of Roger Miller’s hit single “King Of The Road.”

4. A Coffin Fashioned From the Wood of a Hangin’ Tree
This box was built from a mahogany tree that was used in at least three murders committed by hanging. The tree originally held a tire swing until the tire was severed so that its rope could be used to carry out each of the hangings. The killer was never caught and the family who owned the property that the tree was planted on eventually cut it down. Facing hard times during the Great Depression, they sold the tree to the local lumber mill. The tree was then used to build a coffin, though no one knows where it ended up beyond the general consensus that it’s now somewhere in the cold, cold ground.

3. Filipino Box Spring Hog
Full disclosure, we don’t know what the **** this one is. We just know that it’s definitely one of Tom Waits’ horcruxes. There’s speculation that it’s a mattress burned down to the springs for the purpose of barbecuing a pig that’s known the horrors of war, but your guess is honestly as good as ours on this one.

2. A Laser Disc Copy of Bram Stoker’s Dracula
Tom Waits is an actor in addition to his work as a homeless street musician, and has appeared in a number of films that a lot of people have probably never bothered to watch. This Francis Ford Coppola adaptation of the famous vampire novel may have been one of the more popular films Waits has appeared in, but it’s a safe bet that nobody still owns this on Laser Disc So good luck destroying a horcrux that nobody has in their possession.

1. An Out of Tune Player Piano Whose “Money Is No Good Here”
This Steinway player piano from the early 1920s only plays the folk song “Old Gray Mare,” but out of tune and very poorly. Believed to be the actual piano from Waits’ song “The Piano Has Been Drinking (Not Me),” this self-playing instrument has been cut off and refused service at nearly every bar along the east coast. The few bars that will still allow the piano on the premises don’t allow it to keep a tab running anymore, demanding payment up front for each and every drink served.


There could be other horcruxes, we just don’t know. Tom Waits is up to something in that derelict shack on the hill. There’s always strange noises, and we know he’s got a router and a table saw. So what’s he building in there? Probably more horcruxes.
https://thehardtimes.net/blog/the-de...s-5-horcruxes/