Songs About the Devil & Opinions on Joanna Newsom

Songs About the Devil

With the spooky season creeping in, Jim and Greg are beginning to feel a little diabolical. In honor of Halloween, they share their favorite Songs About the Devil. Then, a more angelic sound from singer/songwriter and harpist  Joanna Newsom.

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Devil Songs for Halloween

Whether or not you agree rock ‘n’ roll is the devil's music, Lucifer sure is a major player in pop. From Robert Johnson to "Sympathy for the Devil," beelzebub gets name dropped as much as the latest hip-hop sensation. Here are Jim and Greg's favorites to get you in the Halloween mood:

Greg

  • Chuck Berry, "Downbound Train"
  • Lee "Scratch" Perry, "Disco Devil"
  • Diamanda Galas, "Let My People Go"
  • Black Sabbath, "Heaven and Hell"

Jim

  • Iron Maiden, "The Number of the Beast"
  • Charlie Daniels, "The Devil Went Down to Georgia"
  • Beth Orton, "Devil Song"
  • Mitch Ryder, "Devil with the Blue Dress On"

Plus listener suggestions:

  • Scott from Raleigh, NC: Laibach, "Sympathy for the Devil"
  • Miranda from Houston, TX: Cliff Richard, "Devil Woman"
  • WR from Tarboro, NC: Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, "The Green Manalishi (With the Two Prong Crown)"

Divers Joanna Newsom

Divers

Performing on a huge orchestral harp, singer/songwriter  Joanna Newsom has stood out since she arrived on the scene in the early 2000s. Divers is the fourth album of her career, and the first since the 2010 triple album  Have One On Me. Greg has always been intrigued by Newsom's work, viewing her as a complete original. But although he admired the musicianship on Have One On Me, he found it an exhausting listen. Divers, by contrast, is relatively accessible. She still peppers in obscure literary references, but lyrically she is much more direct in creating an emotional connection for the listener. For Greg, this is the album that Newsom's skeptics should dive into – he gives it a Buy It. Jim, however, is baffled. He scoffs at Newsom's faux-Shakespearean sentence constructions. He finds the album's lyrical concept, in which Newsom reflects on mortality after marrying comedian Andy Samberg, to be bloated. Jim is usually a big fan of pretentious prog rock, but musically he thinks Divers is sodden and lacking hooks. And he's extremely irritated by Newsom's voice, hearing it as the affected voice of an eleven-year-old girl. According to Jim, there's nothing at all to like here, so Divers gets a Trash It.

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