Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Top Songs of 2015: 1-20

Apple Music Link

Spotify Link




20. "Take My Hand" by Rich Homie Quan (from Summer Sampler EP)
"She a Aquarius / she keep that mad in her / but I can't please her, no way / I'm tryin' but I can't"

The way RHQ loses interest in completing the words he raps sounds a bit like someone taking a belt sander to the English language. That, or that he got hit by a tranquilizer dart mid-song. (On Spotify, but not Apple Music.) 
19. "Endless Rhythm" by Baio (from The Names)
"I've never heard a lyric that I really liked / every lyric I've written is a lyric I despise"

Vampire Weekend's bassist made the list last year with a looping instrumental, so the fact that his debut solo album sounds more like his other band with Morissey-like vocals was a surprise. Vampire Weekend mixed with the Smiths probably sounds awful, of course, to the subset of people out there who pretentiously enjoy hating on both bands' perceived pretentiousness. 
18. "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" by Pops Staples (from Don't Lose This)
"Is a better home awaiting / in the sky, lord, in the sky?"

The 1960 Staples Singers version of this traditional hymn (back when they were a gospel act) was already a favorite. So a version  recorded shortly before Pops' death in 2000 and lovingly produced by Jeff Tweedy was bound to resonate. The shift into "I'll Fly Away" at the end is the cherry on top. RIP Pops.  
17. "Mine" by Phoebe Ryan (from Mine EP)
"I'll pull it together and fix myself eventually"

Our favorite pop song of the year.  

16. "I Can Be Afraid of Anything" by The World Is A Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid To Die (from Harmlessness)
"Being this age / always seemed so far away"

The emo-heavy first five minutes are a mix of Explosions in the Sky and Pinback's darker side ... and then it turns into a Blink-182 song for the last two minutes.   As to the Hemmingway-esque band title, unlike Morgan Freeman we agree with the first part... 

15. "So Allowed" by Beirut (from No No No)
"It was in every word / somehow / and I was in return / so allowed"

... and rarely more so than when listening to Beirut.   

14. "Rock & Roll is Cold" by Matthew E. White (from Fresh Blood)
"Rock and roll it don't have no soul / everyone knows that"

Would have sounded great 40 years ago. Will sound just as good in another 40. 

13. "Dreams" by Beck (single)
"Oh get a dog and pony for a judgement day"

Loses some karma points for being released as an "advance single" six freaking months ago.  The new album still doesn't have a release date or title. Cruel. 

12. "Wishing Well" by Screaming Females (from Rose Mountain)
"Yeah in the next life I'll be better"

We try to be somewhat equal opportunity with our music listening, but it consistently skews male. In the last five years, the top 12 have included only 1-2 female singers. So we're happy to see the Screaming Females kicks off a top 12 that is this close to 50/50 (and where the women are much tougher than the guys).  

11. "Deeper Than Love" by Colleen Green (from I Want to Grow Up)
"And the only best friends I ever made / were people I knew I didn't have to see every day"

After a few pleasant low-fi albums, I Want to Grow Up was a significant step forward for Colleen Green. The fear of intimacy on this track is balanced by the self-confidence of the other album highlight, "Whatever I Want". The comparisons to (early) Liz Phair are earned, even if the musical palette is more narrow.  
10. "The Legend of Chavo Guerrero" by The Mountain Goats (from Beat the Champ)
"He was my hero back when I was a kid / you let me down but Chavo never once did"

At some point John Darnielle will run out of bittersweet autobiographical material for his songs, but that day is not this day. We finally read Wolf in the White Van and it is predictably great, even if the occasional style excess is more easily forgiven in a three minute song than a short novel .   
9. "Sunday Candy" by Donnie Trumpet and the Social Experiment (from Surf)
"I like my love with a budget / I like my hugs with a scent / you smell like light, gas, water, electricity, rent"

Chance the Rapper with his second top 10 appearance, albeit under a different moniker.  The single-take video showcases both how lame and thrilling musical theater can be. 
8. "Kill vs. Maim" by Grimes (from Art Angels)
"You gave up being good when you declared a state of waaaaaar"

Grimes kept topping herself this year. In March, single "Entropy" looked poised to be an 81-100 song. Then "REALiTi (demo)" came out shortly after, landing in the middle of the list. Art Angels arrived at year end with "Flesh Without Blood" as lead single, cracking our top 40. Then we heard Claire Boucher growl "but they don't know me" on "Kill vs. Maim".   
7. "Getting Ready to Get Down" by Josh Ritter (from Sermon on the Rocks)
"Turn the other cheek / take no chances / Jesus hates your high school dances"

Pretty much a perfect song (with a great lyric video), as long as you don't linger on the fact that it is a 39-year old dude is telling very young ladies not to worry about sleeping around.  Strong album of Americana with "Where the Night Goes" and "A Big Enough Sky" worthy of top 20 placement as well. 
6. "Pedestrian at Best" by Courtney Barnett (from Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit)
"Daylight savings won't fix this mess"

Another very strong album. "Depreston" and "Elevator Operator" are both great in different ways, but the lead single just rocks.  Our favorite running song of the year. 
5. "Pretty Pimpin'" by Kurt Vile (from B'lieve I'm Goin Down)
"And then Saturday came around / and I said who's this stupid clown / blocking the bathroom sink? / (but he was sporting all my clothes)"

We've talked about Country music that isn't very good but is amusing (at #88). We've talked about good Country music (at #31). Now Kurt Vile comes with Country that is so good it probably isn't Country anymore.  
4. "Powerful Man" by Hop (from Painted Shut)
"I was the only other adult around / I was eighteen / you were eight / maybe / you were ten" 

The second Hop Along album brings stronger overall songs to Frances Quinlan's still awesome vocal work. 
3. "Nest" by Young Fathers  (from White Men Are Black Men Too)
<pause> "baby baby" 

Some movie is going to find the right way to use this song and it will be a fucking celebration. Until then, it is the song of choice for kitchen dancing with the little ones. "Shame" is also exceptional.  

2. "Should Have Known Better" by Sufjan Stevens (from Carrie & Lowell)
"My brother had a daughter / the beauty that she brings / illumination"

An impossible choice between this and "Fourth of July". The latter held this spot for most of the year and it is perhaps the most devastating song about a parent's death ever recorded ("Shall we look at the moon / my little loon / why do you cry?"). But, at the end of day, it is a much easier song to admire than to love listening to on repeat. There is a reason most people have seen only Schindler's List once. Of course, this song is still about little Sufjan being left at a video store by his mom, so, not really a workout track. 
1. "King Kunta" by Kendrick Lamar (from To Pimp a Butterfly)
"I'm mad / but I ain't stressing / true friends / one question / bitch where you when I was walking? "

Yep, Kendrick. Just like everybody else. The thing is, To Pimp A Butterfly would not have cracked a list of our ten favorite albums of the year. "Allright" is pretty good, but we prefer the single version of "i" to the darker rework on the album. And while "The Blacker the Berry" has a strong message, it's not something we enjoy as, you know, music. "King Kunta", though, is a beast. Its the kind of song you keep turning the volume up on every 30 seconds or so as it builds and unravels. Definitely the king this year. 


Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Top Songs of 2015: 21-40

Apple Music link

Spotify link



40. "Goldmine Junkie" by Big Grams (from Big Grams)
"And under the covers we make another 'Twawn"

Speakerboxx > (Big Boi + Phantograms = Big Grams) > Sir Lucious Left Foot. That's just math.
39. "Pray For Rain" by Pure Bathing Culture (from Pray For Rain)
"Are you cut in two / cut all the way through"

As a Californian, amen.  
38. "Tilted" by Christine & the Queens (from Christine & the Queens)
"I am naturally good / can't help it if we're tilted"

Tough to pick a single track from a very strong debut LP ("Night 52", "Narcissus is Back" and "Jonathan" are also quite good). Second song en franglais on this year's list.  
37. "Just Like We Never Said Goodbye" by SOPHIE (from Product)
"We were young / we had everything we wanted"

The PC Music collective and affiliated producers like SOPHIE excel at making dance music you can't dance to. 

36. "In the Morning (In the Evening)" by Twin Peaks (single)
"'When I tell you that it's over / got a black mark on my shoulder"

If Foxygen embodies the excesses of classic rock (e.g., 
psychedelic falsettos), Twin Peaks represents the more stripped down elements of the genre. Both of them, however, do a passable Velvet Underground impression. Placement of this track may be a bit inflated as penance for missing "Making Breakfast" last year. 

35. "Empty Threats" by CHVRCHES  (from Every Open Eye)
"To try and not forget / hoping that you'd never know"

According to Google, more people refer to CHVRCHES as "from Glasgow" than as "Glaswegian". That's just lame as "Glaswegian" is easily one of the top 100 words in the English language. Other contenders include "sycophant", "apothecary", "prophylactic" and "clustershow" (a portmanteau-ish word we give a friend credit for coining). The worst word, of course, is "moist".

34. "FourFiveSeconds" by Rihanna w/ Kanye West and Paul McCartney (single)
"See all of my kindness / mistaken for weakness"

It's nice to see Sir Paul back where he is comfortable, as the third-best member in a band.  

33. "Postcard #3" by Jens Lekman (single)
"Does this suit match the shade of purple on my face?"

Swedish folk hero Jens Lekman committed to release a song (a "postcard") per week during the year on his personal website. And he actually stuck to it. We are about 45 postcards behind in listening. Not on Spotify or Apple so stream here

32. "Waking Up" by Mr. Little Jeans (single)
"I don't want to have to wait / stay here"

Third appearance in a row for Monica Birkenes (aka Mrs. Mr. Little Jeans). Also, after a slow start that is now back-to-back Nordics on the list, getting them closer to quota. 

31. "On To Something Good" by Ashley Monroe (from The Blade)
"'I'm better dancing when I don't look down"

This is the elusive "good" Country we referenced at #88.
30. "Postcard" by Iron & Wine (from Archive Series Volume No. 1)
"We'll sing a song we've never heard / formed out of small forsaken words / and all the while that this occurs / we'll love you all (x3)"

The most exciting thing about this album of previously unreleased songs from the Creek Drank the Cradle era is the "Volume No. 1" part and what it implies. 
29. "Trap Queen (remix)" by Fetty Wap w/ Quavo and Gucci Mane (single)
"I'll be in the kitchen cooking pies with my baby"

Included over the original version because Gucci/Quavo are better rappers than Fetty (and because the original was actually first released in 2014). 
28. "Never Be the Same" by Built to Spill (from Untethered Moon)
"And that's the way it's gonna be / 'cause that's the way it's always been / and in another century / it's gonna be this way again"

Nice album, even if it was a bit of a letdown after the underrated There is No Enemy. Can we wait fewer than six years for the next one, please? 
27. "Beginners" by The Tallest Man on Earth (from Dark Bird is Home)
"Oh there will be a moment when I ask you to believe in love"

The 5th appearance in eight years from Kristian Mattson (a Swede! Now we are rolling). 
26. "Lemon Eyes" by Meg Myers (from Sorry)
"You're so bitter / bitter / bitter / yellow"

Pre-chorus of the year. 
25. "The Wrong Year" by Decemberists (from What a Terrible World, What a Beautiful World)
"The spirits willing / flesh is getting bored / speakers blaring out some long forgotten chord / some misbegotten, long forgotten chord"

Of the ~1,000 artists with multiples songs in our music library, only five have more 4-star songs than the Decemberists (The Clash, Iron & Wine, The Mountain Goats, Otis Redding, The Rolling Stones). Kanye is tied, at least until SWISH. 
24. "No Devil" by San Fermin (from Jackrabbit - deluxe edition)
"I'm having trouble / I'm not well / I got lost along the way" 

More proof that taste is subjective: Nothing from Jackrabbit  was set to make this list, until the deluxe version was released with "No Devil" as a bonus track. 
23. "Traveling Song" by Ryn Weaver (from The Fool)
"And I know what you'd say / you'd say on with the show / so on we go"

Ms. Weaver cracked the top 20 last year for for the perfect pop "Promises" and returned this year with her debut LP. Most of the album is similarly upbeat, but our highlight is this spare and lovely tribute to her late grandfather.
22. "Hollywood Dreams" by Miguel (from Wildheart)
"Still waiting for my big break / for fame's sake "

The next ten years of Miguel will include a half dozen songs that we'll love, and another fifty or so we'll be more than fine never hearing again.
21. "Rumble in the Park" by Catey Shaw (single)
"Jenny don't use that knife / someone's gonna lose their life"

Girl fight! 


Monday, January 4, 2016

Top Songs of 2015: 41-60

Apple Music link

Spotify link



60. "FF Bada" by Battles (from La Di Da Di)
<instrumental>

Battles' math rock perpetually sounds like the music of the future. The true music of the future is probably more Bieber and his "expensive sounding sounds."

59. "S.O.B." by Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats (from Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats)
"I'm gonna to cover myself with the ashes of you / and nobody's gonna give a damn"

We love a good gospel rave-up, even when it is of the "blue eyed soul" (i.e., white dude) variety.  
58. "Current Carry" by Vetiver (from Complete Strangers)
"I think we're on our way / finally out to sea"

Vetiver is a favorite for lazy days, though the drum machine is a bit much here. 
57. "<" by Waxahatchee (from Ivy Tripp)
"You're less than me / I am nothing"

We are in favor of math concepts as song titles. Not just the obvious better-than-cake song but maybe also a song about a make-believe friend called "√-1". 

56. "Dream Lover" by Destroyer (from Poison Season)
"All the signs are saying 'this way'"

Dan Bejar meets the E Street Band. 


55. "Times to Die" by Car Seat Headrest (from Teens of Style)
"And when they took him to the temple / oh, then they listened to his demos"

The debut compilation from Car Seat Headrest sounds like a half dozen of our favorite bands thrown into a blender (Beulah, Clap Your Hands, Wolf Parade, among others)

54. "Downtown" by Macklemore (single)
"If I only had one helmet I would give it to you"

Macklemore could have gone two ways after the criticism that followed the success of the The Heist. He could have tried to be more street/hard to change the minds of those who view him only as a novelty act. Or he could write an epic sounding song about mopeds. Good choice.  


53. "Louisa" by Lord Huron (from Strange Trails)
"I may have died / but your love it raised me"

Strange Trails would rank much higher on a list of top albums from 2015. Very strong track-to-track, even if the highs aren't as lofty as some other albums this year. 

52. "Coming Home" by Leon Bridges (from Coming Home)
"I wanna be around / girl"

Every year, a rising soul singer gets likened to the great Sam Cooke (our #2 soul singer of all time) , but across the 10 tracks of Coming Home, Leon Bridges makes a strong case as nearest his heir. Sam died 50 years ago last month, at 33. Fuck, the music we lost. This. 


51. "That's How You Know" by Nico & Vinz (from Cornerstone EP)
"Now Nico's unemplyed / and Vinz's love for coke destroyed him"

Norway makes an appearance. The list is awfully light on Scandinavian artists so far (MØ being the only other, by our count).

50. "Quiet Americans" by Shearwater (from Jet Plane and Oxbow)
"Piss on the world below / like a dog that knows his name"

Advance single from an January 2016 release that sounds like it will take Shearwater in a different musical direction (though Meiburg's soaring voice remains the same).  
49. "Continental Shelf" by Viet Cong (from Viet Cong)
"Fingertips in the fountain / fondle liquid gold / ice on the horizon / the skyline folding in"

Verses of noise building to a great chorus. 

48. "It's a Game" by EL VY (from Return to the Moon)
"Nickels on the dime / high all the time"

As big fans of Brent Knopf's production (Menomena, Ramona Falls, Lost Lander) we were very excited for EL VY, his collaboration with Matt Berninger of The National.  It's a bit odd, then, that our favorite track from Return to the Moon sounds mostly like a typical National track.

47. "One of a Kind" by Aer (from One of a Kind)
"The highway to my home among the pine trees / will be long and windy / search far and wide try and find me"

The catchiness overcomes the douchiness.

46. "The Shade" by Metrics  (from Pagans in Vegas)
"I want it all / I want it all / I want it all / I want it all"

Big year in music for Super Mario, between the jumping sounds here and the coin grabbing sample in D.R.A.M.'s Cha Cha.  Luigi, meanwhile, is still in rehab. 
45. "Lampshades on Fire" by Modest Mouse  (from Strangers to Ourselves)
"Shaved off my eyebrows when I fall to the ground / so I can't look surprised right now"

Though they've only had six studio albums, MM have now been around for over 20 years. Crap, we're old.  

44. "Lord Willin'" by Logic (from The Incredible True Story)
"Life ain't picture perfect / we use the negatives to develop"

The kneejerk reaction is to credit Logic for trying to revive the concept album, but the reality is that while the albums of the 70's (Pink Floyd, The Who, Bowie, etc.) are heralded as the classics of the genre, we'd put the 21st century's best (Tallahassee, Yoshimi, Hospice, American Idiot, Illinois, even The Suburbs) against all comers. 
43. "MariKKKopa" by Desaparecidos (from Payola)
"There's a lynching at home depot / of the last day laborer"

Conor Oberst (Bright Eyes) uses the Desaparecidos moniker to channel some righteous punk anger. The "round 'em up" message of this track is probably viewed non-ironically by some -- a certain billionaire launched his campaign very much on message 3 weeks after the release of Payola
42. "Bank Rolls (remix)" by Tate Kobang (single)
"I rep the struggle / I know that you hate me, fuck it, I love you"

The idiot yelling "club nation" and "reeeeeeeemiiiiiix" is about the only off note on a pretty promising debut from Baltimore.

41. "In For the Kill" by Shamir (from Ratchet)
"Well I know, I'm just a compromise / but still, there's life in my eyes"

Man, we love that first 20 seconds as it loops.