Thursday, December 24, 2009

The 40 Best Songs of 2009, pt. 3: #20-11

The third of four posts unveiling my favorite songs of the past year, with a few words to honor each. I'd love for you to post any of your own favorite songs in the "comments" section. Note that each song on my lists has a link to an MP3 download/stream option via Box.Net, a very user-friendly site. Please take advantage of this opportunity to experience their art, and if you like it, support the artists in turn by buying a full album or shelling out for their live show or merchandise. The countdown:



#20 Volcano Choir - Island, IS
Justin Vernon of Bon Iver has come out of hibernation and is releasing music at a maniacal pace. Following the success of 2008's For Emma, Forever Ago and this year's Blood Bank EP, he has teamed up with instrumentalists from Collections of Colonies of Bees to form Volcano Choir. "Island, IS" features a simple, twinkling melody and is completely possessed by Vernon's vocals. He paces himself here, crooning and howling by turns, and cooks up a mid-tempo swooner.





#19 Metric - Help I'm Alive
Metric's big breakthrough comes by following in the footsteps of one of the biggest songs of the aughts. Its predecessor in girl-power rock balladry, Kelly Clarkson's "Since U Been Gone", illustrated how to take quavering verses into exultant highs in the chorus and make no apologies. Metric jumps on board and charts a course for Rock Island, navigating the highs and lows with aplomb and daring you not to sing along.





#18 Passion Pit - Sleepyhead
Passion Pit has wound up squarely in the love 'em or hate 'em category, due to one thing - falsetto. It's the trademark vocal style in play on every song, and "Sleepyhead" cashes in. After a musical Valentine to his lady got rave reviews from his buddies and turned into the Chunk of Change EP, the full-length Manners peaked when Michael Angelakos nailed the mix of Everest-high hooks, synth squiggle and gentle percussion.





#17 Handsome Furs - All We Want, Baby, Is Everything
Wolf Parade, since the wild success of Apologies to the Queen Mary, keeps on spinning off in every direction. Which side project you will like the best is kind of a stylistic toss-up between the dancier Frog Eyes, the fanciful songcraft of Sunset Rubdown, the belated proto-punk bluster of Handsome Furs, and the undeniably proggy Swan Lake. Handsome Furs, the only one of the above to feature Dan Boeckner instead of Spencer Krug, went fishing and reeled in a big one. Why go crate-digging when you can take a hit like New Order's 1982 single "Temptation" and redirect it? Eschewing the obvious moments, Handsome Furs take the verse structure and twist each line in their own way, building their own chorus out of momentum and an incongruous but well-chosen element of twang.




#16 Miike Snow - Animal
Miike Snow's story, which I've referenced before (a Swedish production duo whose previous claim to fame was engineering Britney's Toxic) would make you think their own project would most likely veer in the direction of NERD or a Timbaland solo joint. Here, they prove again and again that they're quite content to craft modest electro-indie pop songs without a name-heavy list of guest contributors. "Animal" may in fact be so catchy because it's practically a children's song. Simple, fun lyrics that almost mean something, bouncy, and always worming its way back into your head, this is bubblegum laced with heroin. So if you give it to your kids, please have an exit strategy.




#15 A.C. Newman - Prophets
The New Pornographers are a big deal. They record wonderful pop and they all have very successful side projects. Neko Case's reverb-soaked alt-country jaunts are great. Dan Bejar's Destroyer is always one album and a couple of refinements away from a Kid A-level masterpiece that will spearhead rock's next big jump forward. A.C. Newman, however, has a problem. He makes power-pop that isn't really that different, stylistically speaking, from the New Pornographers. The problem, then, is that he's better. He's just plain better at making gorgeous power-pop ballads than the full-on supergroup (The Slow Wonder sadly embarrassed the NP's excellent first three albums). His songs consistently have every feature they need and not a single one they don't - streamlined nuggets of awesome. "Prophets" is the high point of 2009 release Get Guilty because no matter what you think a great pop song needs, you will find it here.




#14 Beach House - Norway
Teen Dream, their newest album, doesn't drop until January 26. "Norway" snuck out early and couldn't be denied, showing growth in all the right places (no, that's not sexual - I only want to marry Victoria Legrand for her voice). I didn't think "Norway" had a big, rousing chorus until it got stuck in my head more any other single for the entire month of November. And most of December. "Nooor-wayyyy aaaayeeeyay eh-eh-eh-eh-eh." Yeah-eh-ah, you should cop this.





#13 Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Zero
Moving farther away from traditional instrumentation somehow only emphasizes how easily Karen O can carry a song. Her backing for most of the song resembles nothing so much as a helicopter with appropriate melodic shifts. Which is pretty badass, so just get in and take a ride already.





#12 Joker - Psychedelic Runway
Joker is hot right now. He's only 20 and has been putting out a steady string of singles this year that will blow your mind. Fresh out of Bristol, he's being called grime and dubstep's "Next Big Thing" all over the blogosphere. "Stuck in the System" and "Purple City" have a case to make this list as well, but "Psychedelic Runway" is a blue-collar epic scratched out of deep bass, Detroit synths and 808's by hand. Uphill both ways. In the snow. Without any words.





#11 Florence And The Machine - You've Got The Love
This late-year surprise new artist has a big voice with enough soul to cut past Amy Winehouse and directly channel the divas of the 70's. "You've Got The Love" is half soul, half rock'n'roll, three quarters brilliant and 100% a sign that this girl is here to stay.

Monday, December 21, 2009

New Music Monday!

Every Monday I'll be bringing you a batch of fresh new tracks previewing upcoming and recent releases. Follow the links to stream/download anything that catches your eye. This week's selections:



Broken Bells - The High Road
Broken Bells is the brand new collaboration by frontman James Mercer of The Shins and DJ Danger Mouse (of Grey Album and Gnarls Barkley fame). The two did a pair of tracks together for the musical side of the recent Sparklehorse/David Lynch/Iggy Pop/Danger Mouse/Julian Casablancas/Wayne Coyne/Everyone Who Is Anyone high-concept art installation Dark Night of the Soul, including track #33 on my year-end Top 40, "Insane Lullaby." Full album from Broken Bells will drop March 9, 2010.



Vampire Weekend - White Sky
The third track we've heard from the upcoming Contra LP, after "Horchata" and "Cousins." Contra drops on January 12, 2010.



Massive Attack - Paradise Circus
From the upcoming Heligoland LP, due out February 9, 2010. The album will also recycle slow-burner "Pray For Rain" featuring vocals from Tunde Adebimpe of TV On The Radio, which appeared on their October 2009 EP Splitting the Atom. 


Portishead - Chase the Tear
I can't morally give you a link to download this one for free. Portishead recorded this track and gave it to Amnesty International as a fundraiser. Amnesty International is amazing, and you can spare 99 cents. The above link will take you to the 7digital website where Amnesty will profit from the sale.


Mos Def - 24 Hour Karate School
New Mos Def track, not available on this year's Ecstatic release.

Boat - We Want It! We Want It!
This little Seattlite band has been a favorite of Seattle/NY radio saviors KEXP and Northwest scene writers Three Imaginary Girls for several years now. Their newest track matches its title in sheer joy.


Ted Leo - Even Heroes Have To Die
The first studio track available from upcoming release and Matador debut The Brutalist Bricks, due out March 9, 2010.



Gucci Mane - Danger's Not A Stranger (Diplo Remix)
First track off the Free Gucci mixtape put togther by uber-producer Diplo.


Cee-Lo - Hello Miss (Armani XXXchange Remix)
From the free download ATL RMX album available in the Adult Swim music store, a remix of recent track by Dungeon Family and Gnarls Barkley alumnus Cee-Lo.
OJ Da Juiceman f/Gucci Mane - Good Night (Health Remix)
Another from the ATL RMX album, this time with a verse from the ubiquitous Gucci Mane and remixed by recent industrial indie darlings HEALTH.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

The 40 Best Songs of 2009, pt. 2: #30-21

The second of four posts unveiling my favorite songs of the past year, with a few words to honor each. I'd love for you to post any of your own favorite songs in the "comments" section. Note that each song on my lists has a link to an MP3 download/stream option via Box.Net, a very user-friendly site. Please take advantage of this opportunity to experience their art, and if you like it, support the artists in turn by buying a full album or shelling out for their live show or merchandise. With no further ado, the countdown continues:



#30 Discovery - So Insane
Discovery, a duo consisting of Rostam Batmanglij of Vampire Weekend and frontman Wes Miles of Ra Ra Riot, came together in 2005, before either of their respective bands had experienced success. The two reunited recently to finish the project, an album of guilty pleasures built on R&B and synth-pop. "So Insane" showcases their trademark high-pitched vocals and keyboards, deriving its unique flavor from wild tempo shifts.




#29 Grizzly Bear - While You Wait For The Others
Grizzy Bear's Veckatimest is a masterpiece of twists and turns, featuring vocal harmonies and indecisive yet emotive guitar lines. "While You Wait For The Others" epitomizes the sound of the album. A slow build-up milks stop-and-go percussion and guitarwork beneath calm vocals for a full minute before erupting into a chorus balancing opaque proclamations with gorgeous, wordless sighs, both of which feature heavily throughout the remainder of the track.




#28 Phoenix - 1901
Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix exploded this year, charting as a top 40 album in the US, Australia, and half of Northern Europe. "1901" appeared on their website as a free download in February and the song took off, hitting #7 on the Billboard Alternative charts and appearing in everything from soap operas to Cadillac commercials. Is it worth all the fuss? Guitars are buzzing and ringing through hook after hook, and the hollered vocals are just happy to be there, "twenty seconds 'til the last call," begging you to "lie down you know it's easy / like we did over summer long." And that's the key - why fight how easy is to give in to Phoenix and "1901"?



#27 Bibio - Fire Ant
"Fire Ant" is all about one element - groove. Bibio builds a beat and and atmosphere that sounds like the best of instrumental hip-hop, and then adds layers on top. As chopped up vocals meld to the beat and guitar lines run across the backdrop, the song builds into a full-on jam that can't be denied.




#26 Matt & Kim - Daylight
This track is pop heaven, matching a descending vocal hook with its keyboard counterpart to devastating effect. He could be singing about genocide and you'd be tempted to sing along, but instead the fun and comfort of daylight is the topic of exploration. Put this song on your iPod and use it as a shield against that pitch black stairwell up from the bus stop that always gives you the shivers - you'll feel like you're walking on sunshine (whoa-oh!).




#25 Bon Iver - Woods
Perhaps most closely related to Imogen Heap's The O.C. melodrama ballad "Hide and Seek", "Woods" is Justin Vernon's exploration of the powers of auto-tune. He eschews any element outside of his own voice here, wrapping layers of his own yearning voice into the backdrop for each successive verse of the song until it resembles nothing more than a pack of wolves howling back-up vocals for his gorgeous croon.




#24 Julian Casablancas - 11th Dimension
The Strokes' status as the Next Big Thing began to fade quickly after their first two albums unleashed a set of homogeneous but rawly melodic singles. Vanguard metrosexual frontman Julian Casablancas prepped for his forthcoming solo album by releasing "11th Dimension", in which he liberally drips charisma all over a classic Strokes guitar line and synth-pop accents.




#23 Modest Mouse - Satellite Skin
Few outside of the faithful noticed Modest Mouse dropped a new EP this year, entitled "No One's First and You're Next." Isaac Brock breaks out his trademark yelps over a pleasant and original melody that feels so Modest Mouse you could swear they've used it a hundred times before. Bonus points for most-fun-to-yell lyric of the year for "Well, happy fuckin' congratulations."




#22 Neon Indian - Terminally Chill
Neon Indian take some lo-fi guitar and synth squiggle and produce a home-recorded version of the MGMT sound, replete with an ADD, too-catchy melody. The vocals are few and far between, but appear to involve erotic dreams, as he labels apparitions by his bedside "callypigious" (having shapely buttocks).



#21 The Very Best - Warm Heart of Africa (f/Ezra Koenig)
2008's hip indie take on the world music scene revolved around M.I.A.'s omnipresence (see "Paper Planes" and Slumdog Millionaire), a surprisingly fun mixtape by The Very Best (Malawian singer Esau Mwamwaya meets British DJs Radioclit), and some Ivy League punks who decided Graceland wasn't the defining statement of the gentrified Afro-pop genre. After mashing up M.I.A. and Vampire Weekend tracks on last year's mixtape, The Very Best convinced Maya Arulpragasam and Vampire Weekend frontman Ezra Koenig to guest on this year's debut LP, Warm Heart of Africa. Koenig lays down a golden hook on the title track and The Very Best milk it, building the song around a piece of African melody you won't be able to get out of your head.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

The 40 Best Songs of 2009, pt. 1: #40-31


The first of four posts unveiling my favorite songs of the past year, with a few words to honor each. I'd love for you to post any of your own favorite songs in the "comments" section, as there's always more good music out there in the aether, waiting to be found.




#40 jj – are you still in vallda?
 A lightly strummed tune that goes beyond last summer's glo-fi/chill-wave trend by channeling every bit as much wistfulness (and half as many strings) as Stars' 2005 heartbreaker Set Yourself On Fire. Like the lost lover in vallda, your thoughts are sure to turn to jj and this song again each time you smell the sweet summer air.




#39 Basement Jaxx – Raindrops
 A vaguely Middle Eastern intro builds effortlessly into a propulsive rhythm, bringing in and casually discarding whirling classical strings, bits of auto-tune, and a sexily simple metaphor. Need to add some quirk and whimsy to your online dating profile? Looking For: "Someone who will feel so good upon my lips. Just like raindrops!" Thank me later.





#38 Bat For Lashes – Daniel
Maybe it's a result of being born in 1984 and growing up on early 90's Seattle grunge (which I have always maintained mercifully killed the eighties' attempts to linger), but I'm always skeptical of artists heading straight to the 80's for their inspiration. Natasha Khan, however, writes epic poetry that just happens to sound like it was a stroke of genius from two-plus decades ago. If I had a Delorean, I would go back to Marty McFly's teenage years and bring him this cassette to reassure him that his era will live forever. And if my reckless time travel brought on the apocalypse, perhaps someone would write of it "The smell of cinders and rain / perfumed almost everything."



#37 Mos Def – Casa Bey
Mos Def is way overdue on this one. While he's been monkeying around in Hollywood with a moderately successful acting career, he has failed to drop an album that comes close to rivaling his work and hunger on Black on Both Sides or the Talib Kweli collaboration Black Star. This year's The Ecstatic isn't a masterpiece, but we can safely call it a comeback. Closer "Casa Bey" grabs a South American funky hip hop line and chops it into party oblivion, giving Mos the spark he needs to lay it down right and correct.



#36 Clues – Perfect Fit
 The "other half" of early aughts indie phenoms The Unicorns won't match the prolific nature of the more well-known Islands, but "Perfect Fit" shows that they may be truer heirs to The Unicorns' schizophrenic songwriting style. Stick through the antsy intro and Clues will reward you with multiple crescendos, earning each crashing payoff with their attention to detail.





#35 Yo La Tengo – Here To Fall
Ira Kaplan has taken elder statesmen Yo La Tengo in many directions over the years. When he's decided it's time to write a song about being ready to go 'all in' on a relationship, and he orchestrates it with strings, a surprisingly significant bass rumble, and wah wah-ing guitars, it's worth taking notice. The world can always use more mixtape fodder that comes without extra cheese.


 

#34 Washed Out – Feel It All Around
A mildly electronic ambient groove, swelling and ebbing smoothly with distant, gauzy vocals. Even viewing it as a direct tribute to the Avalanches' "Since I Left You," it's a worthy inclusion on any list of the year's best songs. Put it on the headphones and you'll probably zone out, but you'll also play it again.





#33 Sparklehorse – Insane Lullaby (f/James Mercer)
Deconstructing pop music is a risky business. Kanye's 808's & Heartbreak was a favorite of this blogger, but "Bad News" (a track emulating a scratched and skipping CD) was still a constantly evolving and challenging listen. "Insane Lullaby" pits vocals no different than James Mercer's usual fare with the Shins against a backdrop of guitar so fuzzed out it's on the verge of disintegrating entirely throughout the song. Also, it's fucking gorgeous.




#32 Vitalic- Terminateur Benelux
The instrumental track of the year may not actually involve any instruments, but it's got a hell of a groove with a raspy bassline and layers of funk on top. A disembodied voice exclaims "ha ha" several times during this banger, and it's got a well-deserved a ring of achievement to it.






#31 Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Heads Will Roll
 Karen O is done apologizing and pleading. She's in full-out rock goddess mode here, going from sighing siren - "shut your eyes / realize " - to femme fatale - " off off off with your head / dance dance dance 'til you're dead" in mere moments. And in this case, resistance is highly overrated.



#'s 30-21 coming soon...

Sunday, December 13, 2009

The Top 15 Unoriginal Songs of 2009!


In a good way.


A great year for electro-indie artists remixing one another (and pretty much everyone else), as remix-only EPs sprouted left and right. Here are the best of the best, with kudos to remix guru Classixx and bedroom-pop auteur Passion Pit for double hardware in their trophy case.

Top 10 remixes of the year: 

The original was perhaps the understated peak of Vampire Weekend's ubiquitous debut, but Miike Snow (a Swedish production duo whose previous claim to fame was engineering Britney's Toxic) dropped an LP of catchy electro-pop this year and followed it up with this masterpiece. The blips and chops serve to draw out the surprising beauty in the melody, stretching it across a bed of its own making, to wonderful effect. 

Phoenix may be this year's Vampire Weekend. Yes, they have a track record dating back across the whole decade, impressing many of us when the lead singer landed Sofia Coppola and she let her main squeeze contribute to the gorgeous Lost In Translation soundtrack. However, their ascent to stardom, as measured by playing late-night network talk shows and breaking onto Clear Channel rock radio, was entirely a product of this year's Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix. How did they follow it up? That's right, they commissioned an entire album of remixes, landing indie heavyweights such as Animal Collective and Devendra Banhart. The pinnacle of Phoenix remixes this year was this airy, spacious take on Lisztomania, which wasn't even included on the remix album. For shame. 

The xx and Florence and the Machine both dropped recent albums that number among the year's best. This track served as my introduction to Florence, and The xx quietly veil her fiery soul voice with their downtempo r&b, resulting in a wistful gem. 

I thought we were lucky enough when masked madman/trailblazing rapper MF DOOM spent the decade seeking out and collaborating with producers like Madlib and Danger Mouse. The Mask definitely dropped an ill set of rhymes on the track Gazzillion Ear from his newest, Born Like This (under the DOOM moniker), but Thom Yorke's decision to showcase DOOM's rapidfire vocals over a spare, skittering beat and layers of Yorke's own distant howl serves up the rap remix of the year. 

Chairlift's 2008 debut served up notice that, well, they were an even more iPod-commercial ready version of MGMT. That's about it. Passion Pit also seems to have noticed how catchy their sell-out single was, and pulled some tricks out of Miike Snow's playbook in blipping the fuck outta this song. Again, stretching the melody out and giving it space to breathe lowers the kitsch factor and pulls you in for a second listen. Is that an extended electro-instrumental breakdown? Yes, yes it is. 

Classixx takes what already may have been the song of the summer and gives it their standard treatment. Sounds easy, but they have a knack for shifting and spacing an already-great pop song so that when you're done overplaying the original, you have an alternative that's more than worthy of inclusion on your next mixtape. 

Dragonette are some of new wave electro's less glamorous players, but this Buffetlibre remix nails the soft-loud dynamics and swooping rhythms exemplified by the best of Royksopp. 

Perhaps a bit of a cheat, as it was a rap remix/sequel track on the same charity compilation (Dark Was The Night) as the original, the 10-minute Sufjan electronic epic "You Are The Blood." Buck 65's atypical flow suits Sufjan's atonal composition and desperate voice, leaving everything unsettled. 

While it's one of Bristol dubstep/grime up-and-comer Joker's least impressive compositions this year, this remix's addition of his signature deep bass fleshes out Simian Mobile Disco's slick electro-pop nicely. 

Cheesy, yes. But still catchy, and a well-suited choice for falsetto romantic Passion Pit. 


BONUS SECTION - 5 FAVORITE COVERS OF THE YEAR


Saturday, December 12, 2009

Grand Opening

I am proud to officially kick off my music blog. 2009 has been a wonderful year in music and I will be working on my first year-end "Best Of" list over the next several days. I will attempt to keep this blog consistently updated with my thoughts on new (and old) music and links to listen to or download tracks you might enjoy.

For now, here are advance tracks from forthcoming new albums by four excellent artists:

Spoon - Transference (drops Jan 19)



Coming off of the wildly successful, impressively tight Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga LP, Spoon's new singles maintain a rough edge with Britt Daniel's charismatic snarl but bring an upbeat vibe and jangle that hearkens back to "Sister Jack" and "Rhythm and Soul" from 2005's eclectic Gimme Fiction.

Spoon - Got Nuffin
Spoon - Mystery Zone
Spoon - Written In Reverse


Hot Chip - One Life Stand (drops Feb 1)



Hot Chip have a way with monster singles, and over the years mega-dance jams such as "And I Was A Boy From School," "Over and Over," "Ready for the Floor" and "Shake A Fist" have overcome my white-boy aversion to dancing with little or no help from alcohol. Lead single "Take It In" has the slickness dial cranked up so high that Chromeo comes to mind, but repeated listens have me convinced that the new album will maintain their bouncy standard.

Hot Chip - Take It In
Hot Chip - One Life Stand


Beach House - Teen Dream (drops Jan 26 US, Jan 25 UK)
Their 2008 sophomore release, Devotion, contained a blissed-out dream pop vibe that was distinctive, but needed an injection of a bit more complexity and unpredictability in its songwriting. Since then, lead singer Victoria Legrand has been "palling around" with nuanced songwriting virtuosos Grizzly Bear and it seems to have paid off. Lead single "Norway" is fighting hard for a spot on my year-end "Best Tracks" list, despite the album's 2010 release date.

Beach House - Norway
Beach House - Silver Soul
Beach House - 10 Mile Stereo


Jonsi - Go (drops March 23)
The frontman of orchestral post-rock maestros Sigur Ros reportedly has been recording quiet, acoustic solo music for years, but you'd never know it from this track. Laced up with more bells & whistles than a Sufjan Stevens or Arcade Fire track, this gorgeous snippet offers hope for an Eraser-quality solo project.

Jonsi - Boy Lilikoi

Happy Chanukah!