Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Top Songs of 2015: 61-80

Apple Music link

Spotify link


80. "Hotline Bling" by Drake (single
"Ever since I left the city / you"

2015 was the year we learned to stop worrying and like Drake. The nonstop memes coming out of the video (pizza!, tennis!, Donald Trump not being an asshat!) didn't hurt.   
79. "Get Out" by Autre Ne Veut (from Age of Transparency)
"So you want to get out / and if there's one way to try to experience nothing"

Their second album doesn't hits highs anywhere close to "Play by Play" (#8 song of 2013), but the experimental soul/gospel hybrid of Arthur Ashin does its thing here.

78. "My Baby Don't Understand My Anymore" by Natalie Prass (from Natalie Prass)
"Our love is a long goodbye"

Joanna Newsom with brass instruments instead of the harp. And a better voice. 

77. "Disappointing" by John Grant (from Grey Tickles, Black Pressures)
"There's nothing more beautiful than your smile as it conquers your face"


There are many things that John Grant finds disappointing  compared to you. These include ballet dancers (regardless of their tights situation), the women of SNL, and Russia's most renowned musicians/writers. This does not, however, include bath salts. You are garbage compared to bath salts.

76. "Undone" by Cœur de Pirate (from Roses)
"And if there is a fight, you said / I won't face it alone"

Sometimes it's easy to get caught in the indie music echo chamber, so it's nice to find something that is neither top 40 nor part of the Pitchfork coverage universe (though Beatrice Martin is apparently huge in Quebec). 

75. "Let Go" by The Very Best (from Makes a King)
<in Chichewa>

With 3 proper albums and plenty of mixtapes, our favorite band from Malawi is getting close to earning its inevitably titled greatest hits album. 

74. "Never Ending Wave" by My Own Pet Radio (from Goodlum)
"Is this an early's 20's thing? / feels like an early 20's thing"


Side project of Ball Park Music frontman Sam Cromack. Yeah, we haven't heard of them either. Maybe we should fix that...

73. "Ever Had a Little Faith" by Belle & Sebastian (from Girls in Peacetime Want to Dance)
"Something good will come from nothing"

We finally got around to seeing Stuart Murdoch's directorial / screenwriting debut (God Help the Girl) and it is exactly as twee as eff as you'd expect. The music is good, of course.   


72. "Anna, Please Don't Go" by Life in Film (from Here it Comes)
"Your heart's in the right place"

Simple but effective.


71. "Scud Books" by Hudson Mohawke (from Lantern)
<instrumental>

Ironic that it is named after an airborne weapon, because -- to misquote Apocalypse Now -- it sounds like victory. (Kid #1 calls this "computer music" and has decided it is better than instrument music) 
70. "Let Your Heart Break" by Ark Life (from The Dream of You and Me)
"It's so tough to judge what is just enough"

These United States may be the band that got the most goodwill (and repeated CD purchases) from us due to a single song ("First Sight"), so it is nice to see their frontman with an interesting new outfit. Solid debut. 

69. "Queen's Speech 4" by Lady Leshurr (single)
"I got a dark-skinned friend that looks like Rachel Dolezal / and I got a light-skinned friend that looks like Rachel Dolezal"

Brush your teeth.   

68. "Catch" by Dresses (from The Let Down EP)
"This is a two way street / not a cul-de-sac"

A trifle, but a catch-y one. <elbows ribs>

67. "Nightclub Amnesia" by Ratatat (from Magnifique)
<instrumental>

Ratatat continues to sound a hell of a lot like Ratatat.  
66. "Water" by Ra Ra Riot & Rostam (from Need Your Light)
"Don't punish me for what I feel"

Vampire Weekend's Rostam and the Ra Ra Riot crew go back to their Discovery days (essential reworking of "I Want You Back" here), but we'd still rather see a solo album . Get on it Rostam! 

65. "Home" by Heems (from Eat Pray Thug)
"Shorty listen / quite your bitchin' / be my remix to ignition"

Clever album title, but we know you went to Wesleyan dude. And studied economics. (not on Spotify: youtube clip)
64. "Hello" by Adele (from 25)
"But it don't matter / it clearly / doesn't tear you apart any more"

It's wonderful that 10 million people tried to buy tickets for Adele's North American tour. She is a such a stiff and non-emotive performer, and yet there is no hotter ticket. It is a nice case of sheer talent winning out. 

63. "Bohemian Groove" by Nick Diamonds (from City of Quartz)
"You're on the way out / we're on the way in"

We're struggling to think of an artist whose solo work sounds any less different than their proper band (Nick leads ATHoM favorite Islands). Tom Petty, maybe? The Heartbreakers are such an afterthought most of them still play on his solo albums. 
62. "Teenage Talk" by St. Vincent (single)
"Never mind the albatross / smoldering on my shoulder"

If that is Annie Clark herself as a teenager, we are deeply disappointed by the non mesmerizing nature of her hair.  

61. "I Know There's Gonna Be (Good Times)" by Jamie XX (from In Colour)
<Basically, there is the song title, and then some unprintable stuff from Young Thug>

xx member Jamie Smith could have been a bit more creative in coming up with the band name for his side project. We'd have suggested "Superfluous Parenthetical" because 1) it's awesome and 2) what the hell is going on with the song title. You aren't Junior Walker, man. 


Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Top Songs of 2015: 81-100

We present the first batch of the top 100 songs of 2015, as determined by the editorial staff of ATHoM in close consultation with our staff writers and drawing on sentiment from our monthly reader poll...

Apple Music and Spotify accounts made it easier to discover new music this year, even if many of the old blog sources are drying up. We will provide an embedded Spotify widget and a link to an Apple Music playlist for each entry.  

Limit one appearance per artist, as per always. 

Apple Music

Spotify:


100. (tie) "Like a Rolling Stone (Take 11, Alternate Take)" by Bob Dylan  (from The Best of the Cutting Edge 1965-1966) / "Sweet Jane (Promotional Mono Version)" by The Velvet Underground (from Loaded: Re-Loaded 45th Anniversary)

We'll start at the bottom of our list with what would have easily been the two top songs this year if, you know, they didn't already exist in their original versions.  (Neither streaming service has the deluxe version of either album, so alternate alternate versions are in the Spotify playlist while Apple seems to be defaulting to the original versions)

99. "Nearly Forgot my Broken Heart" by Chris Cornell (from Higher Truth)
"And did me wrong / and it serves me right"

Spectre went with a mopey title track from Sam Smith, but would have done better with either the discarded Radiohead track or this song from the guy who recorded the theme to Casino Royale. Listen and you can picture the animated bullets and sultry ladies.  

98. "Rich" by Cosmo Sheldrake (from Pelicans We EP)
"If I want to have light by day / and fire by night"

Three lines of lyrics repeated over a ramshackle beat. Guest vocals (from Anndreyah Vargas) make it sound unlike the rest of Sheldrake's debut EP. 
97. "Turn Around" by Mikal Cronin (from MCIII)
"Who are we / so light and small and eager to be known"

We really like Mikal Cronin ("Weight" was the #20 song of 2013), and yet when his songs aren't playing we find them incredibly hard to remember. 


96. "Echoes in the Rain" by Enya (from Dark Sky Island)
"Alleluia ^ 
"

It sounds like no one else. We don't want to listen to her all the time, or even that much, but we're glad Enya exists to soundtrack Audi commercials and unicorn weddings. 



95. "Everday" by A$AP Rocky (from AT.LONG.LAST.A$AP)
"Adjusting to the motions and getting out all my emotions"


A$AP (who also made a pretty good acting debut this year in Dope) is joined on this track by two others further up the list (Hudson Mohawke, Miguel), one who just missed the cut (Mark Ronson) and -- making his first appearance -- Rod Stewart. 

94. "No Life for Me" by Wavves & Cloud Nothings (from No Life for Me)
"My energy is my long for you"

As musical team ups go, this pairing is probably shares too much DNA for its offspring not be at risk of a pig's tail. No Life For Me fares better than that, but doesn't reach the heights of either band's standalone work. 

93. "I Love You All the Time" by Florence + the Machine (charity single)
<Eagles of Death Metal cover>

Given the title, upbeat tone and verses in French, it is a pretty perfect cover choice in the wake of the Paris attacks. Tops anything on How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful, sadly. 
 


92. "Breaker" by Deerhunter (from Fading Frontier)
"I'm still alive, and that's something"

"Breaker" is here less as a standout single, and more as a worthy representative of the surprisingly low key and accessible Fading Frontier.   


91. "Too Original" by Major Lazer (from Peace is the Mission)
"Dance like a chicken / flap tiger wild"

Great to fuel a run or trip to gym. Can be like nails on a chalkboard during more relaxed moments, though. 

90. "Leaving the City" by Joanna Newsom (from Divers)
"Bleached the night / with dawn deleting"

It's weird that in the Samberg/Newsom household the stronger filmography belongs to Joanna (Inherent Vice) and not Andy. Weird, but maybe not really surprising. (not on Spotify or Apple, listen here)

89. "The Less I Know the Better" by Tame Impala (from Currents)
"She was holding hands with Trevor / not the greatest feeling ever"

We're always a sucker for a driving bass line. A shorter version of "Let it Happen" could have made this list instead, but the version on Currents is just too damned long. Solid album.  
88. "John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16" by Keith Urban (single)
"I'm a blue jean quarterback saying 'I love you' to the prom queen / in a Chevy"

We usually say we like just about all genres of music but Country, but there is actually some good Country out there. This, however, is not good Country. What it is, is so spectacularly and (one hopes) knowingly dumb that it earns enough amusement to ride its catchiness and string of Americana cliches onto the list. Use sparingly. 

87. "When I Look Around (Mix 3)" by Olivare (single)
...no idea

Last minute addition to the list (it bumped something you won't miss, we're sure). There is basically no information out there on this band. Not on Spotify or Apple Music, listen here

86. "When the Light Turn Out" by Twin Shadow (from Eclipse)
"You make something so right so wrong"

We know what to expect from now by Twin Shadow, and he consistently delivers the 80's power ballads we need.   

85. "Weak" by Wet (single)
"Baby / please don't leave me"

DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak will probably fall before we see a song title / band name / album title combo with fewer characters. Congratulations Wet!   

84. "My Cousin Greg" by Houndmouth (from Little Neon Limelight)
"Hey Greg / where'd one of your shoes go / he looked at me and said / 'that's not important'"

No idea what Greg's deal is, but we were charmed by this shambly little tune, and the rest of Houndmouth's sophomore effort. 
83. "Walking on a Wire" by Lost Lander (from Medallion)
"Hold on to that thread / we will not sleep until we're dead"

ATHoM favorite Brent Knopf received a lot of attention in 2015 for his pairing with Matt Berninger (of the National) to create El Vy. His other project this year was a second go round as producer for Portland's Lost Lander, with predictably lush results. 

82. "Kamikaze" by MØ (single)
"So come on / feed the meet to the tiger"

Both of MØ's songs with Diplo as producer have made this list (the other was "XXX 88" in 2013)
81. "Old Thing Back" by Matoma and the Notorious B.I.G. (single)
<mashup>

Matoma takes Biggie's verses from "One More Chance" and puts them behind a much more lively, Kygo-esque beat to great effect. As good as the James Brown + Tupac combo from Django Unchained was, Biggie is crushing him on overall posthumous mashup quality. 



Thursday, January 15, 2015

Top Songs of 2014: 1-20




20. "City Wrecker" by Moonface (from City Wrecker EP)
"It is 2000 and whatever / I am still a city wrecker / but a different kind of wrecker"

1) Spencer Krug update: 12th appearance in the top 20 in 10 years despite the one artist rule (Wolf Parade / Sunset Rubdown / Swan Lake were active simultaneously) 
2) The City Wrecker EP marks the first time in forever that new music from Krug doesn't represent a complete musical change as Julia With Blue Jeans On was also just a man and a piano
3) "Jenny Lee" is a metaphor for the Expos, right?
19. "Fight Night" by Migos (from No Label II)
"If you know me / know this ain't my feng shui / certified everywhere / ain't gotta print my resume"

Pro: Listening to this song while running will probably improve your pace by 10%-15%
Con: Improved velocity may be accompanied by some shadow boxing during the chorus which makes you look like a total jackhole.
18. "Promises" by Ryn Weaver (from Promises EP)
"Cross my heart and hope to die / unless I happen to lie"

A lot of pop on the list this year. Economy must be pretty good. 
17. "i" by Kenrick Lamar (single)
"They wanna say it's a war outside / and a bomb in the street / and a gun in the hood / and a mob of police / and a rock on the corner / and a line full of fiend / and a bottle full of lean / and model on a scheme / yup"

good kid, m.A.A.d city missed the list entirely, but Kendrick makes the list twice this year (including his guest verse highlight on "Collard Greens") as we find ourselves liking K-Dot a lot more with larger production and a less languid flow. We know that may be a minority view. 

16. "I Love My Dad" by Sun Kil Moon (from Benji)
"When I was five I came home from kindergarten crying 'cause they sat me next to an albino"

We love ourselves some Sun Kil Moon. A couple top five songs over the last decade and several more appearances on the list. And Benji was a triumph. But his juvenile and one-sided "fight" with the War on Drugs was pretty embarrassing. So we're slapping a 15-slot restraining order on Mark. That said, for its sheer randomness no lyric made us laugh harder than the quote above.  

15. "Warsaw" by White Sea  (from In Cold Blood)
""cause I'll steal your men / and I'll seduce your wives"

M83's vocalist/keyboardist Morgan Kibby's debut ended up getting a lot less attention than it may have deserved. Very cohesive album, with several highlights.   

14. "New York Morning" by Elbow (from The Takeoff and Landing of Everything)
"Oh my god New York can talk / somewhere in all that talk is all the answers"

Elbow’s NYC anthem wasn’t the most prominent of its kind this year, but in a single verse the lads from Lancashire succinctly captured the city’s unrivaled balance of bullshit and wonder. 

13. "Rent I Pay" by Spoon (from They Want My Soul)
"Out amongst the stars and the stones / every kind of fortune gets old / every kind of line is gonna come back to me just as I go"

"Inside Out" is the better song, for certain. But "R.I.P." has that roll-down-the-windows-push-the-sound-system-and-sing/scream-along sound that makes Spoon the best rock band of the last decade... 

12. "Happy Idiot" by TV on the Radio (from Seeds)
"I’m a happy idiot / waving at cars"

...unless, of course, TVotR is the best rock band of the last decade. And similarly, tough call here between "Quartz" (which shows their mastery of the slow building track 1), "Seeds" (great closer) and "Happy Idiot", which is so damned likable. 

11. "I Was Jesus" by Hello Saferide (from The Fox, the Hunter and Hello Saferide)
"And I was both black and woman / so it was two fights to fight / I was burned out / and well that was it"

Swede Annika Norlin is a master at pop folk songs that are a bit heavy behind their humor. "The Quiz" is one favorite. As is this take on the world's great leaders coming back as women and failing miserably, including Jesus (disciples get distracted by her wet clothes during the loaves and fishes), Gandhi ("you look nice now that you don't eat") and MLK (see quote above). The lyric video makes us want to open champagne exclusively with sabers. And is that the "Heroes" riff? 
10. "Pink Chalk" by Zookeeper (from Pink Chalk)
"Let us save you from that fate / let us help you to retrace / 'cause the mind can be amazed"

Zookeeper's last (and only) LP was released in 2007, had our second favorite song that year and was our #12 album of the entire decade. They've also appeared on both Baby CDs. So yeah, we were pretty excited in November when we learned that the long awaited follow-up had come out in October.   
9. "Jubel" by Klingande (single)
"Save me"

After a 20+ year winter, sax solos are showing up frequently all of a sudden, none better or more infectious than here.  
8. "Back in the Tall Grass" by Future Islands (from Singles)
"It feels like winter / but it's the heart of the summer / we can't go swimming / as long as we slumber"

Great to see so much love for Future Islands this year. But while "Seasons" is the consensus centerpiece from Singles (and provided the instrumental behind this year's #44) we'll go with a different track, albeit one where Sam Herring sounds just as heart-on-his-sleeve emotive.  Of course, we once chose one of their B-sides from a random single as our #1 song of the year (in 2012), so our taste's don't even align with the band's.  
7. "Mr. Noah" by Panda Bear (from Mr. Noah EP)
"But he burns like a blaze inside / hey hey hey"

Animal Collective and Panda Bear make amazing sounding music, but it is always a bit easier to admire than it is to hum or sing along to. “Mr. Noah” may not ultimately represent a major change in direction for Noah Lennox (we'll see after listening to ...Meets the Grim Reaper), but he and band mate Avery Tare (at #21) created some lasting earworms in 2014
6. "Philosophize In It! Chemicalize With It!" by Kishi Bashi (from Lighght)
"And if your body is a penny and I’m / ready to throw it in the fountain of my many memories"

K. Ishibashi makes the list for a third straight year with the highlight from what may be our favorite album of the year. "The Ballad of Mr. Steak" and "Carry On Phenomenon" could have easily been in the top 20 but for the "one song per artist" rule. Sounds a lot like the best of ELO, if ELO wrote songs giving human characteristics to protein
5. "Tomorrow" by The Roots (from ... And Then You Shoot Your Cousin)
"’Cause you sleep from eleven to seven / and work hard from nine to five"

The Roots are plenty good on their own, but some of their greatest tracks are when they get a great vocalist and evoke classic R&B. It worked on “The Seed 2.0” and it works here. Kevin Eubanks never made this list.  
4. "Nara" by Alt-J (from This is All Yours)
"In my youth / the greatest tide washed up my pride / you" 

Alt-J’s sophomore effort flirted with more overtly commercial fare (“Left Hand Free” and the Miley Cyrus sample on “Hunger of the Pine”) but it was ultimately just as weird and dense as An Awesome Wave.  We've never really understood the lack of critical acclaim (Mercury Prize, notwithstanding). 
3. "Transgender Dysphoria Blues" by Against Me!  (from Transgender Dysphoria Blues)
"you’ve got no c*nt in your strut / you’ve got no ass to shake / and you know it's obvious / but we can't choose how we're made"

Difficult to pick a top track from an insanely strong album. “Black Me Out” or “Fuckmylife666” could have landed a top slot. But it’s the album’s title track that make the most impassioned statement from Laura Jane Grace (who, until recently, was Thomas James Gabel)

2. "Blue Moon" by Beck (from Morning Phase)
"Cut me down to size / so I can fit inside / lies that will divide / us both in time"

In his review of Morning Phase, Grantland’s Hyden suggests that while you can appreciate both albums, every Beck fans is at their core either a Midnite Vulture person or a Sea Change person.  Now, we here at ATHOM like Vultures just fine, but Sea Change is a significant favorite. And Beck did well by that legacy with its 2014 sequel.
1. "In Reverse" by The War on Drugs (from Lost in the Dream)
"I don’t mind you disappearing / ‘cause I know you can be found"

The incredible thing about Lost in the Dream (which led Metacritic’s year-end poll of music critics) is that its partisans all cite different tracks as the album’s strongest. Even great albums frequently have 1-2 clear standout tracks, but no fewer than half of the album’s ten tracks have shown up on top song lists scattered around the web.  This, like the music itself, is a throwback to the great rock albums of the past. “In Reverse”, however is an easy choice here. While track listing is becoming an antiquated concept in the era of digital music, playlists and the shuffle button, we’ve always been drawn to the closing track. A proper closing track to a great album should be both weary and uplifting. “Moonlight Mile” from Sticky Fingers and “I Believe” from Talking Book are classic examples. “Sons and Daughters” from The Crane Wife and “Mr. November” from Alligator are more recent examples. “In Reverse” takes it time to build and wanders like its characters, but in a year that itself was intermittently both wearying and uplifting, it is our #1 song. 

I’ll be here or fade away
never cared about moving
never cared about now
not the notes I’m playing
is there room in the dark
in between in the changes
like a light that’s drifting
in reverse I’m moving

Thanks for reading and listening.