I do not have a picture of my first car, a Bimini Blue Metallic 1993 two-door Ford Tempo, for blog purposes because that was so long ago, kidz, you couldn’t take a picture of your first car with your phone. Your parents, maybe, could take a photo of it with their Canon, but you, yourself, could only take it with a disposable Kodak camera from Walgreens, if, that is, you wanted to pay for one rather than use that money to buy the Jagged Little Pill compact disc. (The photo above of a 1993 Ford Tempo interior is pulled from Google.) Somewhere, yes, there are a few photos of my nominal Tenacious Tempo, including one of it parked in front of the Rose Bowl a quarter-century ago this year, but those are tucked away in an old school photo envelope. Back then, you had to be there to be there. Anyway.
My first car returned to my mind a few weeks ago when I listened to the most recent episode of Rob Harvilla’s Ringer podcast where he explores seminal 90s and 00s songs. In this one, his subject was Bush’s “Glycerine,” framed through the lens of songs you listened to specifically on the radio while aimlessly tooling around in your car but more specifically than that, the first ten seconds of those songs. “You internalize the first ten seconds of hundreds of alternative rock songs,” Harvilla explained, “and you create subconsciously, or consciously, a taxonomy, a hierarchy, an emotional ranking of all these ten second opening salvos.” Oh, I created one, Rob, believe me, I did. Mine, however, is not ranked. Because they are all number one.
What’s the Frequency, Kenneth? R.E.M. Harvilla was specifically talking about alternative rock stations and the truth is, I was less interested in alternative rock of the era than my peers were and more likely to be listening to – ye gods – pop radio. (Or my rap cassettes. Truthfully, no first ten seconds of any song elicits a Pavlovian response of being in my first car more than the horns of “Steve Biko (Stir It Up)” by Tribe Called Quest, but as per Harvilla’s rules, this post is strictly limited to songs I also heard on the radio.) But if any alternative rock song could have been said to perk my ears up, it was this one. Peter Buck’s guitar sound is generally described as jangly, but to me, it will always be about this monster riff.
Creep, TLC. “Waterfalls” was a bigger hit and the one I remember on the radio most, but the radio version often excised Left Eye’s rap, cutting the song’s heart right out, and I always liked “Creep” just a little bit more anyway. And so, any time one song on Q-102 ended and “Creep’s” opening horn samples appeared, I felt like Mike Pace had just read my numbers in the Iowa Powerball lottery.
If It Makes You Happy, Sheryl Crow. Central Iowans of a certain age who doubled as “Seinfeld” fans will recall there was this local TV personality who would always talk over the end credit scenes during “Seinfeld” re-runs on KDSM-17, may god have mercy on her soul, just as it always seemed to me that radio dee-jays talked over the opening riff to “If It Makes You Happy.” I hated this, but at the same time, it turned the opening ten seconds into this low rumble just underneath the standard-issue patter about nobody-cares-what, like some dumb tourist you just met at Old Faithful still jabbering while you can feel the geyser getting ready to unleash, innately communicating that in just a moment, in just ten blessed seconds, life was about to be soooooo good for four-and-a-half minutes more.
Just A Girl, No Doubt. I mean, hey, man, this riff changed my life. And no, I don’t want to talk about Gwen Stefani in the year of our lord, 2026, that’s got nothing to do with this.
All You Wanted, Michelle Branch. This was late-era Tempo, after the Phoenix summer had nearly killed it, just sort of eking out its final days back in central Iowa as I was just sort of grasping at the straws of life. And though the opening salvo to this one is not thunderous, that’s what I liked about it, how the first ten seconds seemed to clear the sky in advance, leaving a figurative rainbow glittering just outside my windshield as I ratcheted up the volume and then the thunder crashed and I sang along (so long as no one else was in the car with me).
Wonder, Natalie Merchant. She’s been gone from the pop scene for so long that sometimes I forget how big a Natalie Merchant fan I was back in the 90s, and though she did not frequently compose the kind of songs that would immediately reach out and grab you, on this one, she did. Indeed, in an industry where guitar gods are too often just that, gods, testosterone-addled gods, I always liked that when Merchant broke away from the 10,000 Maniacs and went solo, she had a woman, Jennifer Turner, slinging the axe. I don’t know enough to know what Turner is doing in that opening riff to “Wonder.” It’s like a sunnier, more understated version of shredding, or something. It didn’t knock me sideways, this opening, it instantly infused my heart with euphoria. And in the course of researching this post, I discovered a Merchant performance of this one on David Letterman’s Late Show in 1996 with Turner over her right shoulder and going to proverbial town on her chosen instrument, I have watched it, like, 46 times, and despite everything happening these days, truly, the world never stops being full of wonder.










