
Greetings from Laurel Canyon!
The water’s wide / And I cannot cross over / Nor do I / Have wings to fly / Build me a boat / That could carry two / And both shall row / My love & I
There is a ship / And she sails the sea / She’s burdened deep / As deep can be / But not as deep / As the love I’m in / And I know not if / I sink or swim
But love is gentle / And love is kind / As to a jewel / When first it’s new / But love grows old / And it fades with time / And it fades away / Like morning dew
Build me a boat / That could carry two / And both shall row / My love & I
“The Water is Wide” is my kind of soulful lyric. The song points to the challenges of love. At first glance, it’s a simple metaphor, but the longer you sing the tune, the deeper the meaning can go.
I gather that the song has been around for well over 100 years. It’s even older than my dear mom, who is visiting us this week for Jonah’s high school graduation.
Mom turned 90 last year. Elly, like all our family, seemed to get older this year. She likely doesn’t remember taking me to see a legendary Cat Stevens concert at Philharmonic Hall or the Sly & The Family Stone concert at Forrest Hills Tennis Stadium when I fell asleep in the bleachers and Sly pulled a no-show.






On the former album, Eno utilized a boldly original approach to recording that placed a high premium on happy accidents that were not really accidental; Eno very deliberately lined up a cast of studio musicians he felt would be incompatible with one another just to see what would happen. In his own words he organized the situation “with the knowledge that there might be accidents, accidents which will be more interesting than what I had intended.” He then doubled down on the oddness by “treating” instruments and doing a lot of heavy condensing and mixing of the recorded tracks, some of which ended up sounding nothing like what the musicians played in the studio.
After “What’s Up?” became an era-defining hit in 1993, Linda stepped behind the boards and wrote and produced some of the biggest songs in pop music: Christina Aguilera’s “Beautiful,” Pink’s “Get the Party Started,” Alicia Keys’ “Superwoman,” plus work with Dolly Parton, Adele, Miley Cyrus, Celine Dion, Ariana Grande, Joan Jett, and Courtney Love. She was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2015, and made history in 2019 as the first solo woman nominated in the Grammy’s Producer of the Year category in fifteen years.

WA | Invite Only: Why Are There So Few Women-Owned Record Stores in Washington? …For Rachel Gardner, her invitation into the world of music and record collecting was simply her entrance into the world: she was literally born in the back of her parents’ Port Townsend music store. And, with a jazz musician father and grandfather, her childhood continued to be steeped in music. “I remember playing with my Barbies under jazz club tables at 2 a.m.,” she recalls. Although her 20s were spent rejecting the family business and pursuing a life as a pro skier, Gardner always knew that she wanted to have a little shop of her own, selling either records or sporting equipment. “Since I am pretty removed from the action-sports world these days—my knees don’t do that anymore [laughs]—
St. Paul, MN | Urban Lights Music continues legacy as one of the Twin Cities’ last Black-owned record stores: For 32 years, Urban Lights Music has outlasted chain stores, streaming services and neighborhood disruption to remain one of the last Black-owned record stores in the Twin Cities. For more than three decades, music has filled the shelves and speakers inside Urban Lights Music, but owner Timothy Wilson says 


Such is the case with Talking Heads’ seminal 1980 LP, Remain in Light. When it came out, I couldn’t find enough good things to say about it; it was flawless, an unparalleled work of synthetic Afrocentric genius, and I would have sworn under oath to the 1981 hearings of the U.S. Senate Commission on Un-American Influences on Rock’n’Roll to that effect. Now it fails to move me as it once did, and I’m left feeling like Benedict Arnold—a traitor to an album I once would have set off firecrackers in my pants for.

Waxing autobiographical as a record reviewer can be a dangerous move (though rock scribes have often successfully flouted the “rule” against it), but in considering Two of a Kind’s saturation of personality it feels appropriate to plunge deep into the realm of the first-person. And so; allow me to confess that pre-rock pop vocalizing in the big band mode has never been my favorite scene, and has in fact persistently nagged around the edges of blind spot.
Chapel Hill, NC | In the Triangle, people are making media physical again: Michael Wilkerson uses a flip phone. That may not immediately strike anyone as strange until they find out that Wilkerson is a junior at UNC-Chapel Hill. He got his first phone in middle school, and it wasn’t until his first year in college that he realized: “I hate my phone.” …Wilkerson isn’t alone. A 2024 study by Pew Research Center found 95% of teens have access to a smartphone. About 4 in 10 teens said they spent too much time on their phones or social media. Roughly the same number reported having taken steps to reduce their screen time. Social media is rife with content about teens and young adults
Milltown, NJ | Revilla Grooves and Gear Interview (Vinyl Lives): The American dream lives in the small towns that dot the map between these monstrous metropolises. These communities work tirelessly as a unit to uphold their beloved towns, and Milltown, New Jersey, is no different. With a population of just over 7,000, Milltown is a slice of Americana, and every small town needs a cultural hub. Revilla Grooves and Gear stands as a testament to small-town America, proudly providing Milltown with a haven for music-obsessed residents. What started as a side stream of income has gone on to become a full brick-and-mortar, equipped with audio equipment, records, and unique vintage items. The one-stop shop for everything that populates a music nerd’s mind lines the shelves, along with enough space to host listening parties and other events that 












































