A Guilty Pleasure beat, but can you dance to it?
Music to love in private, from stoner legends to a Vegemite sandwich
There are two kinds of music in the world: The albums you listen to with the car windows rolled down, and the ones you only enjoy when the windows are rolled up tight.
We present a few tributes to the latter. Billboard can keep its Top 40; we're sticking with our Hidden 12.
Not that there's any shame in loving these tunes. Many a talented artist appears on the list, though if Phish's Trey Anastasio is sitting around Googling himself one night, he might wonder how he ended up on the same page as Paula Abdul.
But if you're stuck in rush-hour traffic, and that hot convertible pulls up alongside you, bass a-pumpin', it's a safe bet you don't want to be caught bopping along to Britney's Pepsi jingle and turning the volume on that Neil Diamond CD to 11.
Phish
This band may be best known for two things: appearing on the medical-marijuana episode of "The Simpsons" ("If Phish don't see a prescription slip, we are outta here!") and having a Ben & Jerry's flavor named in their honor, presumably to combat the munchies. The prototypical Phish enthusiast — or "phan" — reeks of patchouli and is festooned with dreadlocks and hemp necklaces. Does their music have redeeming qualities for those who do not partake of the ganja? From the way friends taunt me when they see "A Live One" on my iPod, you wouldn't think so.
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Elektra / Wea |
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Capitol |
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass
It's probably a stretch to claim that the smooth near-Muzak of tunes like Herb Alpert's “A Taste of Honey” was ever quite hip. Alpert's faux-Mexican ballads probably resonated more in Ohio than Oaxaca. And let's not even talk about “Tijuana Sauerkraut.” None of it matters. Alpert always generated his own cloud of cool, even if I stumbled upon my Dad's old LPs a decade after the Brass' late-60s fame had waned. He was the kind of dude who could strike an unabashed pose in his vibrant caballero shirts, hold a trumpet like a deadly weapon and convince a scalding-hot babe to pose for an album cover in nothing but whipped cream. And that horn? Well, Alpert was a smooth master, an icon to us gawky teen brassmen who moaned about how clarinetists saw all the action. He took his fame and built A&M into a huge independent label. Nearly four decades later, Herb remains a big man in the music business. You could mock his music, and his style, but he was a trumpet king, and he got the girls. —Jon Bonné 
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