Tom Waits - Small Change

Tom Waits: Small Change

Album #221 - September 1976

Episode date - March 18, 2026

The Alternative Top 40
    0:00
    0:00

    By the time “Small Change” hit the streets, Tom Waits had already been around for a while, honing his craft and sharpening his persona. We all knew that he was a character, but we had yet to learn that he could be his own panoply.

    His previous three releases were all excellent introductions to a stunningly original new talent who had an ear to the street, but none of them displayed his full range. On “Small Change,” Waits doesn’t sing about his characters so much as he embodies them. Rather than observe and report, or sing as if narrating from the eye of the hurricane, he plunges head first into the storm.

    No longer satisfied with simple streetwise observations, he creates a veritable full color document of street life, with dozens of fully formed characters providing the narration. Without compromise, “Small Change” captures bohemian street life (as opposed to simply portraying it), complete with humor, sadness, sex, loneliness, drunken nights and painful mornings in cheap diners.

    The effect and after-effect of steady boozing provides continuity throughout the album. Alcohol informs every word and every note. Just like real life would be for a drunkard, it is alternately funny and then jarringly sad, with the stinging bite of desperation hiding around every corner, especially transparent in the deflective humor. Each song is a different perspective on skid row, with stories told by those who hit rock bottom and then answered by those who are riding a greased pole in that same direction. Moods shift drastically, depending on whether the character is fully lit or descending into hung-over melancholy. 

    Rock bottom is where the album opens. “Tom Traubert’s Blues” is a desperate tale of absolute loss and surrender, milking ‘Waltzing Matilda” for every ounce of inebriated pathos suggested by the World War I tune, as the character melts pathetically into the gutter and the wee hours give way to sunrise. “Step Right Up” could be the sound of a street hawker working the same alley on the following morning. “Jitterbug Boy” is a return to the pathetic side, portraying an old man’s bragging lament for a life that by implication is seeing much less action these days.

    This is how the album moves, flipping its way through both sides of the same coin, with no forward progress. It’s an album of contradictions, with varied characters, all of whom seem incapable of catching a break even if it fell into their lap. Underneath the braggadocio and humor, there lies a self-awareness that perhaps it’s a bit too late to cash in on opportunity anyway.

    On each track, there’s an implicit understanding that any lack of luck may be self-induced, and a bit of ‘small change’ may be the best that you can hope for. As Waits sings on “Jitterbug Boy”, “If it’s heads I’ll go to Tennessee, tales I’ll buy a drink. If it lands on the edge, I’ll keep talking to you.” Like a buffalo nickel spinning on its side, “Small Change” is an album of hard luck tales told from the edge. 

    Featured Tracks:

    Tom Traubert's Blues (Four Sheets to the Wind in Cophenhagen)

    Step Right Up

    Jitterbug Boy

    I Wish I Was in New Orleans (In The Ninth Ward)

    The Piano Has Been Drinking (Not Me)

    Invitation to the Blues

    Pasties and a G-String (At the Two O'Clock Club)

    Bad Liver and a Broken Heart (In Lowell)

    The One That Got Away

    Small Change (Got Rained on with His Own .38)

    I Can't Wait to Get Off Work (And See My Baby om Montgomery Avenue)

    September 1976 - Billboard Charted #89

    Related Shows

    Townes Van Zandt

    Townes Van Zandt: Townes Van Zandt

    Album #115 - September 1969

      0:00
      0:00
      Nick Drake - Five Leaves Left

      Nick Drake: Five Leaves Left

      Album #114 - September 1969

        0:00
        0:00
        The Stooges - We Will Fall

        The Stooges: The Stooges

        Album #113- August 1969

          0:00
          0:00
          Miles Davis - In A Silent Way

          Miles Davis: In a Silent Way

          Album #112 - July 1969

            0:00
            0:00
            Captain Beefheart - Trout Mask Replica

            Captain Beefheart: Trout Mask Replica (Part 2)

            Album #111 - June 1969

              0:00
              0:00
              Captain Beefheart - Trout Mask Replica

              Captain Beefheart: Trout Mask Replica (Part 1)

              Album #111 - June 1969

                0:00
                0:00
                The Shaggs - Philosophy of the World

                The Shaggs

                Album #110 - June 1969

                  0:00
                  0:00
                  The Meters - The Meters

                  The Meters - The Meters

                  Album #109- May 1969

                    0:00
                    0:00
                    The Sir Douglas Quintet: Mendocino

                    The Sir Douglas Quintet: Mendocino

                    Album #108 - April 1969

                      0:00
                      0:00
                      The Velvet Underground: The Velvet Underground

                      The Velvet Underground: The Velvet Underground

                      Album #107 - March 1969

                        0:00
                        0:00
                        DUSTY SPRINGFIELD

                        Dusty Springfield: Dusty in Memphis

                        Album #106- March 1969

                          0:00
                          0:00
                          The Flying Burrito Bros. -The Gilded Palace of Sin

                          The Flying Burrito Bros.: The Gilded Palace of Sin

                          Album #105 - February 1969

                            0:00
                            0:00