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.

Monday, January 12, 2015

Top Songs of 2014: 21-40




40. "Just One of the Guys" by Jenny Lewis (from The Voyager)
"I'm just another / lady without a baby"

Nice little jaunt of a song until you start listening to the depressing lyrics.
39. "No Tears" by Jeezy (from Seen It All: The Autobiography)
"They say you lose all your friends when you finally start winning"

Wait, Young Jeezy and Jeezy are the same person? This is also Future's second appearance on the list, which is not intentional. 
38. "Parade" by The Antlers (from Familiars)
"But then when the streets get flooded / we know what proximity's worth / 'cause where already here / in the same place when our phones don't work"

With apologies to the great John Darnielle, we don't know of anyone that writes lyrics more literary than Peter Silberman. 
37. "Black" by The-Dream (single)
"Enough pain can make a whole race bitter / they say the right amount of love can heal us"

This was released as a response to the Donald Sterling incident. If only that was the most divisive racial moment of the year. 

36. "All Ways, Always" by JJ (from V)
"'Cause I'm the one that made your boyfriend high / and now he made you cry"

After a stunning sophomore effort, expectations for JJ began to fall after a drab No 3 and the fading novelty of gently singing rap lyrics on subsequent singles.  But V is solid straight through. “Dynasti” is probably the strongest “classic” JJ song on the album, but the surprising electric guitar licks (their first?) that lead off closing track “All Ways, Always” signal a playfulness that has been missing and makes us excited for what comes next.. 


35. "Close Your Eyes (and Count to Fuck)" by Run the Jewels  (from Run the Jewels 2)
"We killin' them for freedom / 'cause they tortured us for boredom"

Killer Mike and El-P are excellent MCs, but this song is so reminiscent of Public Enemy that it hard not to imagine how amazing it would be with Chuck D behind the mic. 

34. "Queen" by Perfume Genius (from Too Bright)
"No family's safe / when I sashay"

Following two gorgeous albums of being the victim, Michael Hadreas sounds ready to fight back. 

33. "Real Thing" by tUnE-yArDs (from nikki nack)
"I come from the land of slaves / let's go Redskins / let's go Braves"

Hate writing that band name. 

32. "Beyond Illusion" by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah (from Only Run)
"We were born to ride alone"

Somehow, only the fourth album in CYHSY's very strange career.

31. "Trippy Gum" by Deers (single)
"'Cause we were like ooo oooo ooooo oooo ooo"

It may not be best for their career, but we'd enjoy hearing more from these incredibly lo-fi Spaniards in their native language.
30. "On the Rocks" by The Rural Alberta Advantage (from Mended with Gold)
"Our hearts they were strong / never made a sound"

Among the more consistent bands out there, song to song, album to album.  
29. "Gunshot" by Lykke Li (from I Never Learn)
"I am longing for your poison"

After Li appeared on the Fleetwood Mac cover album a few years back it is hard not to hear a lot of Stevie Nicks in her voice. 
28. "To The Top" by Twin Shadow (single)
"Stay / life can be long"

Three appearances in three years, despite only releasing one album to date.  Never underestimate 80's nostalgia. 
27. "You Tell Me Where" by The New Pornographers (from Brill Bruisers)
"The joy's addictive / although restrictive"

The NPs typically have a relatively clear separation between singers on each song. This is probably the best interplay between Neko and A.C. since, ever? Too bad they couldn't work Dan in there. 
26. "Jennifer Kills the Giant (Once a Week)" by Evil Arrows (from EP 1)
"Papa is a government man / she isn't a fan"

S3's favorite song, probably because she enjoys imagining her mother as a (semi-semi-monthly) monster slayer. 
25. "Hard to Hold" by RAC w/ Tegan and Sara (from Strangers)
"If you don't want me / baby, you don't deserve me"

What is this, four straight pure pop songs in a row? Where is the angry dissafected youth? Let's fix this. 
24. "I'm Not a Part of Me" by Cloud Nothings (from Here and Nowhere Else)
"You're the thought that's haunting me" 

In a year where Paul Westerberg and the Replacements got back together, their driving punk-pop legacy lives on.
23. "Forever" by Painted Palms (from Forever)
"Oh my head feels like the weather"

Released almost exactly a year ago, this song christened our original 2014 folder in iTunes.  Very Beatles-ish. 
22. "Wonderful Unknown" by Ingrid Michaelson (from Lights Out)
"Oh, we make bread on Sundays and the little ones are climbing up the walls (up the walls) / oh, nothing lasts forever but the sound of love astounds me every time that it calls "

Pretty simple and maybe a bit saccharine, but lovely enough to pierce our candy shell of cynicism.
21. "Little Fang" by Avery Tare's Slasher Flicks (from Enter the Slasher House)
"If there are doubts then we will groove it out"

The song is weird. The video is fucking insane. 


Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Top Songs of 2014: 41-60




60. "7:30 am" by Slothrust (from Of Course You Do)
"You're gonna walk right out that door / I'm gonna watch you walk away"

Aided by being the theme song to You're the Worst, which started slowly but became one of the better TV shows of the year.

59. "Moving to the Left" by Woods (from With Light and With Love)
"It feels strange / it feels the same"

Woods has released 5 albums in 6 years and has made this list each time. Each release is never any less than pleasant, but rarely much more than that.  
58. "Plymouth" by Strand of Oaks (from HEAL)
"Comfort doesn't mean you're better off"

So weary. We like weary. 
57. "Do It Again" by Röyksopp & Robyn (from Do It Again EP)
<nope>

Every year we allow ourselves one mulligan for lyrics that we just don't feel like spotlighting. By coincidence, last year it was the #57 song as well. 


56. "Riptide" by Vance Joy (from Dream Your Life Away)
"I got a lump in my throat because / you're gonna sing the words wrong"

There is a fine line between multi-instrument folk(ish) acts that we like unreservedly (Beirut, Fanfarlo) and those that we find a bit derivative/dull (Lumineers, Of Monsters and Men). This is the Mumford line, and Vance Joy just set up shop right on top of it. 


55. "Never Work for Free" by Tennis (from Ritual in Repeat)
"I can't live on metaphors"

Wonderfully classic girl group sound to the chorus, even if Tennis is a one woman (and one husband) show. 

54. "Pascualita" by The Derevoltions (single)
"I switching prose like the button on the sink in your kitchen"

Still waiting on a full album from these guys; the Soundcloud posts will have to be enough in the interim. Not on Spotify, so use the Soundcloud link. 


53. "Tough Love" by Jessie Ware (from Tough Love)
"So you want to be a man about it / do you have to?"

Ware's debut placed a song in our top 20 in 2012, but Tough Love is a stronger album overall. 

52. "Collard Greens" by Schoolboy Q w/ Kendrick Lamar (from Oxymoron)
"Sword in my hand I'll fight like this / and I'm more than a man, I'm a GOD / bitch, touche en garde"

Oxymoron needs more Menomena samples.


51. "I Need You" by M83 (from Divergent OS)
"We are cold and see-through"

It’s hard not to lose sight of the music and want to dock this one a bit for being the musical accompaniment to the lamest scene in an already not very good movie.

50. "Torrent" by Ásgeir (from In the Silence)
"Gods of iron clashing, wind in battle through the night"

Even a casual listen to the In the Silence makes it pretty obvious that the album was translated somewhat literally (rather than artfully) from Icelandic. Really, its jarring how ill suited the English lyrics seem (see above). But the music + voice make this a pretty decent Bon Iver clone.  
49. "Bone Digger" by Bear Hands (from Distraction)
"I'm flipping through noble burials now"

This is about as much as we can like a song and still have almost no interest in learning any more about the band and/or their music.

48. "Simple and Sure" by Pains of Being Pure at Heart (from Days of Abandon)
"She's in love with a complicated man"

A bit of a comedown after "Belong" was the #3 song of 2011.

47. "Chorus" by Moonbabies (single)
"No one will see my laugh 'til its funny"

Aptly titled, as the song's strengths are in the layered vocals of the chorus. Downloaded on Dec 8, this is the last song added to the list this year.

46. "Johnny and Mary" by Todd Terje w/ Bryan Ferry  (from It's Album Time)
<Robert Palmer cover>

Typically it is more of a negative when our favorite song sounds absolutely nothing like the rest of the album.  But the techno disco of the rest album is pretty good, albeit requiring a certain mood.
45. "Hero" by Frank Ocean / Diplo / Mick Jones and Paul Simonon (single)
"I'm a bad boy / I'm a punk / I'm a black man / I can dunk"

We should focus on the positives of this track, which combines the strengths of its 3 contributors better than any of Converse's 3 Artists. One Song releases to date. But hearing what may be first new track featuring two key members of The Clash in nearly 30 years, it is also a reminder how fucking depressing it is that Strummer died so young. 

44. "Honest Season" by The Hood Internet (single)
<Future vs. Future Islands mashup>

For purposes of the One Artist rule, this is a Future song , leaving Future Islands free to appear again (foreshadowing!). Track is not on Spotify, so stream/download here. Also: Onions!
43. "Awake" by Tycho (from Awake)
<Instrumental>

No lyrics to decipher!
42. "XO" by Beyoncé (from Beyoncé)
"Baby love me lights out"

Since everyone seems cool about ignoring the fact that this came out in very late 2013.  Not our favorite genre of song by a long shot, but a pretty top notch example of it.

41. "Berlin Story" by Nicholas Scribner (from Wroclaw)
"And I still wear it / the one you gave me under the wall"

Just another track we almost certainly would not have heard without the consistently excellent Music for Ants blog, where Taylor is as close to a musical-taste-doppleganger as we've been able to find. Not on Spotify, see link above.