Sunday, April 17, 2011

Sweet Soul Music: Top 15 Soul Singers


A couple of ground rules:

  • No groups, so acts like the Sam & Dave, the Staple Singers and Sly and the Family Stone, etc. aren't eligible.
  • Stevie Wonder was excluded as, unlike many below, his musical skill set extends well beyond both his singing and the soul genre itself. Otherwise he probably would have been #2.
A quick word on my #1. Not that it means anything to put a label on it, but to me the plane crash that killed Otis Redding is the most tragic music death of all time. The murders of Cooke and Gaye were terrible, but they got a chance to record their best music. Hendrix and Cobain were talented and had great music ahead of them, but they had a hand in their own demise. No one's career was cut short so early and so tragically, in my mind, as Otis's. He was only 26 and had recorded "Sitting on the Dock of the Bay" just three days previously. It is impossible to listen to the live studio sessions from that day (on the album "Remember Me" but not, unfortunately, on Grooveshark) and not wonder what was to come and what was lost over Lake Monona that night.
  1. Otis Redding
  2. Sam Cooke
  3. James Carr
  4. Marvin Gaye
  5. Solomon Burke
  6. Wilson Pickett
  7. Al Green
  8. Aretha Franklin
  9. James Brown
  10. Dusty Springfield
  11. Clarence Carter
  12. Ben E. King (post Drifters)
  13. Bobby Womack
  14. O.V. Wright
  15. William Bell
The Grooveshark playlist includes one of my favortie songs from each artist.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Mountain Goats Playlist: Ranking the Albums


John Darnielle and the Mountain Goats are a personal favorite and one the most interesting groups working today, especially for someone obsessed with lists. I have nearly 400 Mountain Goats songs across dozens of albums, EPs, and unreleased tracks. The list opportunities are endless (top "Going to..." songs, top non-Tallahassee Alpha Couple songs, top Panasonic rx-ft500 songs, top use of song titles that don't appear in the lyrics, etc.) but let's start with something simple: With the release of All Eternals Deck, please find below my personal ranking of the Mountain Goats long players, including The Extra (G)Len(n)s.

The rankings show that I am not firmly in either the pre-2002 or post-2002 camp. My favorite MG albums weight towards the more recent output, but so do the least compelling. I used the All Music Guide definition of his LPs (so Nine Black Poppies counts but Hail and Farewell, Gothenburg does not) and I have included the Shrimper compilations.

The playlist at the bottom has my favorite song from each album. The tracks on the playlist aren't necessarily the source of the quotes, as noted.

Top Mountain Goat Albums
  1. All Hail West Texas (2002)
    "900 cc's of raw whining power / no outstanding warrants for my arrest" (Jenny)
  2. Tallahassee (2002)
    "I am drowning / there is no sign of land / you are coming down with me / hand in unlovable hand" (No Children)
  3. Heretic Pride (2007)
    "And I feel proud to be alive / and I feel so proud when the reckoning arrives" (Heretic Pride)
  4. The Sunset Tree (2005)
    "On the day my lung collapses / it's not gonna be much different" (Song for Dennis Brown)
  5. We Shall All Be Healed (2004)
    "Drop your seeds there / let them go / let them all go" (Cotton)
  6. Bitter Melon Farm (1993-1996)
    "In the impossibly large office of the death-dealing physician" (The Bad Doctor)
  7. Sweden (1995)
    "And you tell me that Hercules died burning consumed by an article of his own clothing / that's something I'd rather not be reminded of" (Deianara Crush)
  8. Martial Arts Weekend (as The Extra Glenns) (2002)
    "Our love is like Jesus / but worse" (Going to Marrakesh)
  9. All Eternals Deck (2011)
    "It's so good to learn that from right here the view goes on forever" (Never Quite Free)
  10. Zopliote Machine (1994)
    "And I know that you're wearing a wire / but as the sun becomes a blazing orange ball of fire / I lose interest in this and other such inconsequential questions" (Orange Ball of Love)
  11. Undercard (as The Extra Lens) (2010)
    "And the last thing / I saw before falling unconscious / was your right hand / tracing a heart on my thigh / and I thought / my God, what an infantile gesture / and I thought / my God, what an indescribable high" (How I Left the Ministry)
  12. Full Force Galesburg (1997)
    "We knew we'd hit the mother lode" (Twin Human Highway Flares)
  13. Nine Black Poppies (1995)
    "Sun flashing red and then orange and then opting for secession" (I Know You've Come to Take My Toys Away)
  14. The Coroner's Gambit (1995)
    "And you gathered your hair behind your head / like god was gonna catch you by the pony tail" (There Will Be No Divorce)
  15. Ghana (1993-1996)
    "There are no pan-Asian supermarkets down in hell" (Golden Boy)
  16. Nothing For Juice (1996)
    "Die hard / die kicking / old habit of mine" (Waving at You)
  17. The Life of the World to Come (2009)
    "And I am witness / to your life and to its worth" (Matthew 25:21)
  18. Protein Source of the Future ... Now! (1993-1996)
    "I've got something I need to tell you / I can feel your smile burning through / and I am leaving you, and I am sorry" (Omega Blaster)
  19. Get Lonely (2006)
    "And I stood there like a businessman waiting for a train / and I got ready for the future to arrive" (Woke Up New)

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Rewind: Top 10 Songs of 1971



Continuing the march towards the best of 2011 (in 5 year increments), here are my top 10 songs of 1971. Because it was fun to compare in 1966, here were the Billboard top 5 of 1971:

     1) "Joy to the World" by Three Dog Night
     2) "Maggie May" by Rod Stewart
     3) "It's Too Late / I Feel the Earth move" by Carole King
     4) "One Bad Apple" by Osmonds
     5) "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart" by Bee Gees
1971 represented a pretty great mix of music as the original soul and rock sounds of the late 60's were still in full swing while the "classic rock" sound associated with the 70's was underway as well.  My list includes one of my 10 favorite songs of all time at #1 (one of the very few Stones songs without Keith) and a ridiculous string of amazing intros at #2 - #7 (from the classic hooks of "Bang a Gong" and "Mr Big Stuff" to the Wes-Anderson-evoking "Queen Bitch"). Also, two of the biggest one-hit soul wonders in King Floyd and Jean Knight.

Grooveshark playlist is at the bottom (without the John Lennon song).

Top 10 Songs of 1971
  1. "Moonlight Mile" / The Rolling Stones / Sticky Fingers
    "I am just living to be lying by your side""
  2. "Groove Me" / King Floyd / King Floyd
    "Uh / ohhh sookie sookie now"
  3. "Bang a Gong (Get it On)" / T. Rex / Electric Warrior
    "Well you're built like a car / you've got a hubcap diamond star halo"
  4. "Queen Bitch" / David Bowie / Hunky Dory
    "Ahhhhh yeah / oh yeah!"
  5. "Baba O'Riley" / The Who / Who's Next
    "I don't need to fight / to prove I'm right"
  6. "Mr. Big Stuff" / Jean Knight / Mr. Big Stuff
    "Who do you think you are?"
  7. "Ace of Spades" / O.V. Wright / A Nickel and a Nail and Ace of Spades
    "From the the nine to the ten / you just can't win"
  8. "Sweet Hitch Hiker" / Creedence Clearwater Revival / Hold On, I'm Coming
    "She was runnin yeah yama heada heah / do you wanna holler thinking would you care"
    (or something)
  9. "Oh Yoko" / John Lennon / Imagine
    "My love will turn you on"
  10. "Tiny Dancer" / Elton John / Madman Across the Water
    "When I say softly / slowly"