Category Archives: Music

Top Songs of 2005: Part 3

(I thought up two more ways to analyze my music-listening habbits (via iTunes [my iPod may tell a totally different story…]. Enjoy!)

Five-Star Songs Discovered in 2005

  • “Try Again” by Aaliyah from Romeo Must Die
  • “Until the End of the World” by Apoptygma Berzerk from Harmonizer
  • “The Woodlands National Anthem” by the Arcade Fire from the Arcade Fire EP
  • “Electricity” (Dr. Rockit’s Dirty Kiss) by The Avalanches from the “Electricity” single
  • “You Were the Last High” by the Dandy Warhols from Welcome to the Monkey House
  • “Happy Together” by Danny Chung from the Happy Together soundtrack
  • “Soul Auctioneer” by Death in Vegas from The Contino Sessions
  • “Waltz #2 (Xo)” by Elliott Smith from XO
  • “The Conductor” (Thin White Duke remix) by The Faint from Danse Macabre Remixes
  • “Insomnia” (Monster mix) by Faithless from the “Insomnia” single
  • “Get Get” by Fiona Apple from When the Pawn…
  • “Can’t Get You Out Of My Head” (KEXP version) by the Flaming Lips from the “Fight Test” EP
  • “Buggin'” by the Flaming Lips from The Soft Bulletin
  • “Do You Realize??” by the Flaming Lips from Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots
  • “All We Have Is Now” by the Flaming Lips from Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots
  • “Auf Achse” by Franz Ferdinand from Franz Ferdinand
  • “Michael” by Franz Ferdinand from Franz Ferdinand
  • “Strict Machine” by Goldfrapp from Black Cherry
  • “Chartsengrafs” by Grandaddy from The Sophtware Slump
  • “Summer Here Kids” by Grandaddy from Under the Western Freeway
  • “Shake the Disease” (cover of the Depeche Mode song) by Hooverphonic from For the Masses
  • “Little Kids” (Ladytron Fruits of the Forest remix) by Kings of Convenience from Versus
  • “Deceptacon” by Le Tigre from Le Tigre
  • “Phanta” by Le Tigre from Le Tigre
  • “Much Finer” (The Flaxdatass mix) by Le Tigre from Remix
  • “Violet Tree” by M83 from M83
  • “Personal Jesus” (cover of the Depeche Mode song) by Marilyn Manson from Lest We Forget
  • “Mogwai Fear Satan” by Mogwai from Young Team
  • “She Wants to Move” (DFA remix) by N*E*R*D* from the “She Wants to Move” single
  • “Waiting for the Night” (cover of the Depeche Mode song) by Rabbit in the Moon from For the Masses
  • “I Need Your Love” by the Rapture from Echoes
  • “Wild Horses” by the Rolling Stones from Sticky Fingers
  • “Polonaise” by Shigeru Umebayash from the 2046 soundtrack
  • 2046 Main Theme (with percussion, Train remix) by Shigeru Umebayash from the 2046 soundtrack
  • “In a State” (DFA remix) by UNKLE from Inside Out
  • “Hash Pipe” by Weezer from Weezer a.k.a. The Green Album

Most-Played Songs in 2005

  • “Love is Blue” by Paul Mauriat (34 times — due to a night of drunken depression and having the song on repeat… I discovered this song from an episode of Millennium called “A Room With No View”)
  • “DARE” by Gorillaz (27 times)
  • “O Green World” by Gorillaz (25 times)
  • “Destroy Everything You Touch” by Ladytron (25 times)
  • “Can’t Get You Out Of My Head” (KEXP version) by the Flaming Lips (24 times)
  • “All We Have Is Now” by the Flaming Lips (24 times)
  • “Feel Good Inc.” by Gorillaz (23 times)
  • “All Alone” by Gorillaz (23 times)
  • “Talk” by Coldplay (21 times)
  • “Last Living Souls” by Gorillaz (21 times)
  • “El Manana” by Gorillaz (21 times)
  • “Every Planet We Reach Is Dead” by Gorillaz (21 times)
  • “Demon Days” by Gorillaz (21 times)
  • “Happy Together” by Danny Chung (20 times)
  • “Dirty Harry” by Gorillaz (20 times)
  • “Don’t Get Lost In Heaven” by Gorillaz (20 times)
  • “Chartsengrafs” by Grandaddy (20 times)
  • “Hallelujah” by Rufus Wainwright (20 times — due to a friend who liked listening to this song wayyyy too much)
  • “Buggin'” by The Flaming Lips (19 times)
  • “Happy Landfill” by Gorillaz (19 times)

… I must say that the most-played list is pretty lame. Obviously I played Demon Days on repeat about 20 times or so, and that fact is reflected in the list. Of note, I think, is “Destroy Everything You Touch,” which came out in November and managed to get so high in my list within less than two months. Demon Days came out in May and had some time to work it’s way up to the top.

Top Songs of 2005: Part 2

(Okay, so I didn’t get this finished before Pitchfork’s Top 50 Singles of 2005 [which inspired this list], nor did I get it finished before the end of 2005, but oh well. Also see part 1 of my list.)

The List (cont.)

  • “DARE” by Gorillaz from Demon Days
    I don’t know what more I can say about this song. Just thinking about it makes me excited. It is, by far, the poppiest song that Gorillaz have done. There is very little hip-hop influence here. Before Demon Days was released, someone at work had the album on their iTunes share. This song hooked me then, and it hasn’t stopped pleasing me since.
  • “Diamonds from Sierra Leone” by Kanye West from Late Registration
    I love any song that samples, and since I am somewhat familiar with the Shirley Bassey original, I appreciate this song more. As for Kanye’s own touches, it contains his signature (I think?) brass orchestration. The only thing I could lose is the obvious rip-off of OutKast’s “forever-ever, and ever-ever,” which he obviously ganked from “Ms. Jackson.”
  • “Hey Mama” by Kanye West from Late Registration
    I can’t put my finger on what makes this song great, but I think it has to do with the fact that it just feels thoughtful and heartfelt. It’s nice to see that sometimes from musicians.
  • “Destroy Everything You Touch” by Ladytron from The Witching Hour
    I consider this to be Ladytron’s “dark” song. It has a bit of darkness to it that really isn’t present in their previous work — sure, “Seventeen” is sorta pedophilic and sexual and “Playgirl” contains a sense of longing, but “Destroy Everything You Touch” brings the group to new levels. Lyrics like, “Anything that may desert you / So it cannot hurt you” and “Everything you touch you don’t feel / Do not know what you steal” really pack some emotional bitterness and depth — it’s nice to see Ladytron evolve from one of the poster children for “electroclash” and move more toward musical maturity. I think “Destroy Everything You Touch” (which, thankfully, is a single — so hopefully more people will be exposed to it) is a great bridge to Ladytron’s new sound.
  • “International Dateline” by Ladytron from The Witching Hour
    The fact that this song follows “Destroy Everything You Touch” cannot be an accident. The two songs go perfect together, and if I were a DJ I would create a mix that combines the two songs somehow. Like “Destroy,” “International Dateline” showcases Ladytron’s new darkness. It’s a total breakup song — the International Date Line is where the breakup happens — an abstract idea about crossing time and mapping a relationship to the idea of travel. “Let’s end it here…”
  • “All The Way…” by Ladytron from The Witching Hour
    Initially, this was the song from The Witching Hour that I feel in love with. It reminded me of Slowdive or M83 with it’s dreaminess. Again, Ladytron is moving in a new direction and I love that fact.
  • “Tribulations” by LCD Soundsystem from LCD Soundsystem
    Forget about “Daft Punk” and the various versions of “Yeah,” this is a great (and engaging — not too long!) LCD Soundsystem song. As much as I love the group (and their DFA remixes), sometimes the songs are a little too abstract and go on a bit too long. Not “Tribulations” — this song (should) keeps your excitement the whole way through.
  • “Hung Up” by Madonna from Confessions on a Dancefloor
    What can I say about this song that I haven’t said before? Well, I can say that despite the fact that the song came out about two months ago, I still love it. That the remixes are great, too. That the song has not made me love ABBA (which is a good thing, right?). It’s a great, fun song. Enough said.
  • “We Run This” by Missy Elliott from The Cookbook
    I’m not sure what I like best about this track — the fact that it’s one of the faster tracks from The Cookbook or the old school-sounding background or the brass accompaniment a la “Crazy In Love.” Either way, Missy “runs this shit” on “We Run This,” and I’m all the more thankful.
  • “Click Clack” by Missy Elliott from The Cookbook
    I swear, the line “Click-Clack, cock back / Semi-automatic track / Drink a lot of Similac, Shorty better fall back” comes from something, but I cannot figure out what (50 Cent maybe??) — either via direct sampling or some sort of play on an original lyric. This song sounds like Missy trying to be all gangsta, which she doesn’t do all too often, and, I must say, she’s pretty damn convincing.
  • “God Bless and Goodnight” by Morcheeba from The Antidote
    Pretty much every review I’ve read about The Antidote mourns the departure of Skye Davis from the band. While the album is overall disappointing, “God Bless and Goodnight” is a stand-out track. It’s filled with such passion and energy and almost makes an atheist like me want to say my prayers before bed.
  • “I Told You So” by New Order from Waiting for the Sirens’ Call
    As I am listening to this song again to write a bit about it, I am realizing that there isn’t really anything all that extraordinary about this song — it’s just a great, catchy song. And I love the lyric, “I told you so / It’s a crazy world / For a mixed up guy / And a no good girl” — though, I wish on the second repetition of it, they switched the gender so that it read “mixed up girl / and a no good guy,” but oh well.
  • “All The Love In the World” by Nine Inch Nails from With Teeth
    This sure isn’t the Nine Inch Nails that I loved back in high school — it’s no “Last” or “Wish” or “March of the Pigs” or “Ruiner” (my favorite NIN song) — it’s mostly a quiet, contemplative piece, more along the lines of “Hurt” or (in my opinion) the entire The Fragile album. But then about 3:45 into the song, it starts picking up and rocks out for the last minute or so. I guess that makes it a good song?
  • “Only This Moment” by Röyksopp from The Understanding
    I wasn’t particularly fond of this song until I heard it remixed (particularly the “Röyksopp Forsiktige Massasje” remix) — then I started to hear the beauty of it. I cannot think of a time prior to “Only This Moment” when a remix of a song sort of retroactively made me appreciate the original more. It’s a cool phenomenon, and since I became obsessed with remixes within the past year (see my forthcoming “Top Remixes of 2005” post) it’s happened a lot more. I’m glad “Only This Moment” gave me the opportunity to realize this new aspect of remixes.
  • “What Else Is There?” by Röyksopp from The Understanding
    This is the only song from The Understanding that reminds me of Röyksopp’s masterpiece, break-through, killer, etc. etc. album Melody A.M. — and even “What Else Is There?” is a little fast for that comparison.
  • “Someone Like Me” by Röyksopp from The Understanding
    When I first picked up The Understanding, I was rather disappointed. It’s hard to follow-up and album like Melody A.M. And while, now that it’s been a while, I’ve learned to love The Understanding, it took some time. And it took some realization that this Röyksopp is different from the old Röyksopp. “Someone Like Me” was the first song that made me realize this and helped me ease into their latest work. The song has it’s slow, Melody A.M.-like moments, but it also has some faster, more lounge-like moments. It’s a great transition song and also gives us a chance to hear what those Röyksopp guys sound like (since all of the vocals, as far as I know, on Melody A.M. were other people — most notably Erlend Øye).
  • “Just Like Me” (Will.I.Am Of Black Eyed Peas Mix) by Sarah McLachlan and Run DMC from Bloom
    The thing is, there is something about the song “Cat’s in the Cradle” by Harry Chapin that is just amazing. It’s both melancholy and whimsical at the same time. I haven’t met a person who doesn’t love this song. I’m still a little unclear where this remake (retiled as “Just Like Me”) came from — did DMC (Run DMC) cover it, then Sarah and Will.I.Am remixed it? And where is the original? I guess there is mystery, for me, surrounding this version of the song, which probably makes it more enticing. It’s better than most covers since, via hip-hop, it reimagines the song.
  • “Baby Boy” by Thea from the Unleashed soundtrack
    I have no idea who Thea is and this song didn’t even appear in Unleashed, but it makes a great contribution (as a bonus track to the U.S. edition) to the soundtrack. The song is soothing and serves as a perfect coda to a moody and at-times violent soundtrack. My favorite part is when the strange underwater-sounding singing comes in, about a minute before the song ends. “Baby Boy” brings hope to an otherwise depressing soundtrack.

Songs I Found Out About After I Started This List

  • “Beautiful” by Goldfrapp from the “Number 1” single
    I have no idea why this is a B-side and isn’t on the Supernature album (out now in the U.K., coming out in the states in March). It’s far better than “Number 1” (of which it is a B-side to). Prior to purchasing the single, I only knew of Goldfrapp via the song “Horse Tears” from Felt Mountain — I didn’t know about Black Cherry and their turn to glam and glitz. This track shocked me, and I fell in love with it. Not quite as catchy as “Strict Machine,” but it’s close!
  • “Give Me Every Little Thing” by The Juan Maclean from Less Than Human
    I first heard two versions of this song on the November-released DFA Records Holiday Mix 2005 (of which I am one of the few lucky owners of an actual physical copy of — mostly it was available online only via iTunes or whatever). Between the thumping and the synths and the grunting of “give me every little thing,” this song hooks you and doesn’t let go. Even when it isn’t remixed, it’s great.
  • “Avalon” by Juliet from Random Order
    Leading up to Madonna’s Hung Up album, I went through a bit of an obsession with producer/co-writer Stuart Price a.k.a. Thin White Duke a.k.a. Jacques Lu Cont. I downloaded or hunted down nearly every remix he did (my favorites: “The Conductor” by The Faint and “It’s My Life” by Gwen Stefani), including “Avalon” by some chick named Juliet. I did some more research and found out that Hung Up wasn’t the first album that he co-created, but that earlier in the year he had collaborated with this Juliet person on an album called Random Order. I eventually came across it (after buying the single at Tower Records), and while the album itself isn’t a masterpiece, “Avalon” is great.
  • “Don’t Save Us From The Flames” by M83 from Before the Dawn Heals Us
    This song takes the best of My Bloody Valentine (“wall of guitar”) and blends it with banshee-like screaming, drums, and electronic beats. While everyone (i.e. critics) seem to think the Superpitcher remix is better than the original (it may be?), the source material is worth coming back to, here. The remixes don’t fix a broken song, they build on an already great song.
  • “Starts Off With a Bang” by the Mobius Band from City vs. Country
    The was a Salon.com Audiofile download of the week on May 5, 2005 and I just happened to download it at work without really listening to it. Then one day my coworker and I were playing a game where whenever a song played on the iTunes party shuffle, whoever managed to guess the name and artist got a point. (Considering the fact that it was my mp3 collection, the game was a little unfair — but fun nonetheless.) When “Starts off With a Bang” by Mobius Band came on, I had no idea who sang it, but I knew I loved it. That’s how it came into my music collection.

So since this post is mostly just an elaborate list, I feel the need to make some sense of it. Pretend these are awards or something and I have created arbitrary categories as such:

Best Single

This is also somewhat of a prediction (for Pitchfork and other places), but I really cannot see how Madonna’s “Hung Up” isn’t hands-down the best single of the year. It’s so damn catchy, there was a huge amount of hype preceding it, it was release don iTunes way before physical album release… if the mysterious “best single” award isn’t made for Madonna, then I don’t know what deserves such a title.

Best Single #2

Since Madonna’s “Hung Up” really makes this category unfair, I had to add a #2 so that Gorillaz’s “Feel Good, Inc.” could get some recognition, too. The song is catchy and cross-genre (electronic + hip-hop + rock) and, as I recall, did pretty well on the radio, MTV, etc. It’s not quite the blitz that “Hung Up” is, but it’s probably a better song and more technically advanced.

My Favorite Song

A few years ago back when I was a freshman in college, I found the Chemical Brother’s song “Out of Control.” I created my AOL Instant Messenger name based on the song titled, tracked down rare remixes of the song, and even named my previous web site/blog after it. Needless to say, “Out of Control” was my favorite song. Key word: was. Now Gorillaz’s “DARE” takes that title. So, of course, since it came out in 2005, it’s also my favorite song from 2005. I love the falsetto parts of the song (which seem to be sung by Noodle, according to the “DARE” music video. As an added bonus (and maybe I can elaborate on this if I do indeed do a “Top Remixes of 2005” list), the DFA did an awesome remix of “DARE” that I managed to hunt down with LimeWire. I wish I could say that the lyrics really meant something to me or that it samples some really obscure and hip old record from the 70s, but neither is the case. This is just one of those songs that catches your ear for whatever reason and gets you hooked.

Four-Star Runner-Ups

I felt the need to mention these four-star songs that were really good, too:

  • “Positive Tension” by the Bloc Party from Silent Alarm
  • “Chromakey Dreamcoat” by Boards of Canada from The Campfire Headphase
  • “Dirty Harry” by Gorillaz from Demon Days
  • “Lose Control” by Missy Elliott from The Cookbook
  • “Chicago” by Sufjan Stevens from Come On Feel the Illinoise

The Biggest Surprise

Although I have been a fan of Ladytron for a few years (and really like “Playgirl” and “Ladybird”), I was surprised that three of the songs from their latest album, The Witching Hour, made it into my top songs. I will discuss the album in much more detail on the “Top Albums of 2005” post, but the group went in a somewhat new direction with The Witching Hour and the results really paid off. “Destroy Everything You Touch” and “International Dateline” are more poppy-electro-type songs, while “All The Way…” is a slow, ambient number. I just didn’t expect to fall this hard for Ladytron songs, and was quite surprised.

Guiltiest Pleasure

I would be lying if I said I didn’t love The Pussycat Girls‘ song “Don’t Cha,” but I do love it and that is what this “Guiltiest Pleasure” section is for. I will admit, however, that if I hadn’t gone out clubbing as much as I did during the past year, I probably wouldn’t love the song quite as much. But there is something about hearing the lyrics “Don’t cha wish your boyfriend was hot like me?” at a gay club that creates a perfect marriage (or threesome, rather) of lyrical brilliance (or simplicity?), irony, and situation/environment that forces me to laugh and smile and feel a little devious every time I hear this song. Image a bunch of gay boys singing this to each other on the dancefloor or thinking about it whenever we encounter a really hot guy with his girlfriend. It’s totally awesome.

In the same vein of guilty pleasures, if I had to pick a runner-up to “Don’t Cha,” it would definitely be Kelly Clarkson‘s “Since U Been Gone.” Although I like “SUBG” (as my friend Troy has called it on occasion) better than “Don’t Cha,” it lacks the irony and fun so it’s not as “acceptable” of a guilty pleasure.

Another New Order “Best Of”

New Order is nuts. Don’t get me wrong — I love the band (and have quite a few albums), but it seems as if they have released yet another best of/singles/greatest hits: Singles. Already there has been Substance (which, until this new one, is pretty much considered to be the definitive New Order compilation), The Best of New Order, The Rest of New Order (remixes), International, and Retro (a four-disc box set with remixes, live versions, etc.).

I’m not quite sure what to make of all of these New Order releases. Following the latest two albums (Get Ready and Waiting for the Siren’s Call) there has been a new compilation. If New Order ends up doing another album in the next couple of years, the cynic in me wonders if it will also be followed by another greatest hits compilation or something.

I guess this is what happens when you have a song like “Blue Monday,” which is still the best-selling 12″ in British history — you (or your record label or whatever) feels the need to milk that song for the rest of your career.

Top Songs of 2005: Part 1

Last year Pitchfork did a Top 50 Singles of 2004 list that I thought was just awesome. When they released it in late December, I scrambled to make sure I was familiar with as many listed as possible (i.e. downloaded them via the internet in one way or another…). And thanks to that list, I ended up buying great albums by groups/musicians such as Annie, LCD Soundsystem, Franz Ferdinand, and The Go! Team. Checking out Pitchfork list really did broaden my musical interests.

So this year I am going to do my own “Top Singles of 2005” list. And actually, these aren’t singles, but rather songs from albums that came out in 2005 (and I do intended to do a “Top Albums of 2005” and I am considering a “Top Remixes of 2005”) that I rated 5 stars on iTunes. To be honest, there isn’t anything too interesting about this list. Most of the songs are from fairly high-profile albums, so it’s not like I’m revealing any hidden gems. Nonetheless, it’s cool to look back on the new songs that I thought were cool.

At this point, it doesn’t look like there are albums coming out within the next month that I am interested in, so I am pretty confident that this list is final. I may have missed a few songs that I liked, and there may be some four-star songs that really should be five-star songs (and likewise, five-star songs that should be four-star songs).

The List

  • “Anniemal” by Annie from Anniemal
    While I still like “Heartbeat” and “Chewing Gum” better, “Anniemal” is the third-best song on Annie’s debut American album, which came out this year. I like the weird synth-sounding “da da da da da” or whatever goes on in the chorus.
  • “Hell Yes” by Beck from Guereo
    Molly re-introduced me to Beck, and pointed me in the direction of the 8-bit “Ghettochip Malfunction” remix of “Hell Yes,” which really endeared me to this song.
  • “She’s Hearing Voices” by the Bloc Party from Silent Alarm
    This is one of the few “alternative” or “indie” songs that have made it onto my “Gym Songs” playlist. The fast beat certainly helps keep me focused on the treadmill. Otherwise, I love the (I think it is safe to assume?) Matrix reference during the “red pill/blue pill” chorus. Plus the reverb on the guitar totally rocks. What the song is about, I’m not so sure, and why she gets to hear voices I’m not sure of either. I’m jealous, nonetheless.
  • “Luno” (Bloc Party vs. Death From Above 1979) by The Bloc Party from Silent Alarm Remixed
    I’m still not sure whether this is a cover or what exactly Death From Above 1979’s involvement with the song is, but this version is much faster and harsher sounding than the original, which I probably wouldn’t always like. Funny story: when I first heard this remix, I thought it was a remix by the DFA and that the DFA and Death from Above 1979 were the same thing. No no no. Not the case. The fact that this isn’t one of the DFA remixes makes me like it a little less, but it’s still one of the best songs from 2005.
  • “Close Your Eyes” by the Chemical Brothers from Push the Button
    The lyrics on this song are so beautiful — both aurally and lyrically. I love the phrase, “In your eyes I can see that you’re cracking up / In your eyes I can see that you’ve had enough.” I loved the song so much that I bought the Magic Numbers’ self-titled album (they did the vocals for “Close Your Eyes.”) Unfortunately, The Magic Numbers wasn’t my thing, but I still like the song.
  • “Talk” by Coldplay from X&Y
    I’m surprised that this hasn’t been released as a single. It’s far better, I think, than “Speed of Sound,” though it is somewhat similar to their award-winning “Clocks” (my favorite song from A Rush of Blood to the Head). The song is also great for sampling Kraftwerk’s “Computer Love.” If you like the sound of this song, checkout the Kraftwerk original.
  • “Human After All” by Daft Punk from Human After All
    My favorite part of this song is how, toward the end, it deteriorates into a chaotic repetition of “human after all.”
  • “John The Revelator” by Depeche Mode from Playing the Angel
    I pretty much like any contemporary song that redoes or reimagines any sort of old or “traditional” song from the past. Although I’m not familiar with the original version of this song, the dark Depeche Mode version is an interesting listen.
  • “Nothing’s Impossible” by Depeche Mode from Playing the Angel
    This is the most haunting song on Playing the Angel and therefore my favorite. Plus, I tend to hold to the theory that “nothing’s impossible,” especially when it comes to dark, brooding relationships that Depeche Mode loves so much.
  • “Get Him Back” by Fiona Apple from Extraordinary Machine
    This song was my immediate favorite from the “bootlegged” version of Extraordinary Machine that leaked last summer. While I don’t like the more produced-sounding version on the official release, the song is still great. I love the lyrics, “I’m going to get him back / and he won’t have a back to scratch.”
  • “Tymps (The Sick in the Head Song)” by Fiona Apple from Extraordinary Machine
    By far, this song was the biggest surprise from Extraordinary Machine. It was released on the bootleg under the title “Oh Well,” and that’s pretty much how I felt about it back then. The official version is a bit faster and adds more quirky instruments and a very dramatic movement in the middle. Lyrically, “The red isn’t red we painted it just rust” (complete with Fiona’s dramatic pauses) stands out the most for me. It’s like when you want to paint something all bright and red and exciting, but it comes out dull and aged. For me, that lyric represents the idea of having the best intentions for something (i.e. a relationship) and then having things turn out totally different and a bit disappointing. Or that despite making an effort to start things fresh and new, they return to the same, old rusty ways.
  • “Feel Good, Inc.” by Gorillaz from Demon Days
    Not only was this a killer single, but it’s also a killer song. How could this song not make you feel good? Like most of the songs on Demon Days (and I’ll give you a hint: if this isn’t my #1 album of 2005, be very, very surprised), the song goes from one genre to another. In a way, “Feel Good Inc.” is three songs in one: a poppy alternative skeleton, a shoegazing “windmill windmill on the ground…,” and a slamming rap by De La Soul.
  • “O Green World” by Gorillaz from Demon Days
    This song reminds me of the summer, reading Mysterious Skin and waiting in line at SIFF movies. More than the lyrics, I like the sounds in “O Green World,” including that grating scream in the background.
  • “All Alone” by Gorillaz from Demon Days
    For the “May I” mix CD I made some friends in May, I wrote the following about this song: “I think one of the reasons I love this song is its randomness — it’s almost like three or four songs all in one. My favorite part is the change that takes place about 2:00 into the song and then at 2:29 when the speed picks up a little bit. For some reason this sound haunts me and touches me. It also reminds me of the book Mysterious Skin which I read at the time I got the CD.” Pardon the second reference to Mysterious Skin in relation to a song from Demon Days. For me, the two are inextricably linked in my head.

… do not fear, Part Two of my “Top Songs of 2005” will be coming soon. In addition to the conclusion of the big list of songs, I also have more extended thoughts on what I think is the best single, the guiltiest pleasure song, etc. Stay tuned!

You Were The Last High

Dandy Warhols, BJM, and 9 Songs
I remember when The Dandy Warhols‘ song “Not If You Were the Last Junkie On Earth” came out. I was in high school. I remember thinking, “Wow, this is a good song.” But then I saw the video and the song became (relatively) big and I basically wrote-off the band as sell-outs and copycats and the like. I also remember people (who these “people” were I cannot remember — DJs, journalists, whatever?) suggesting that the song was inspired by Kurt Cobain’s drug use. (Does anyone else remember when every alt. rock song was inspired by Cobain’s suicide? I’m thinking of “Mighty K.C.” by the For Squirrels and one or more songs by Imperial Teen.)

After watching Dig! — easily the best music-oriented documentary I’ve ever watched — I am certain that the song was not written about Kurt Cobain, but that it is most likely about Anton Newcombe and/or his band The Brian Jonestown Massacre.

For some stupid reason I opted not to see this movie at SIFF last spring (mostly because I thought I still hated the Dandy Warhols), but now that I’ve seen it on DVD, as I said above, it is an amazing music documentary. I’m not sure how they did it, but the creators of the film basically followed both the Dandy Warhols and the Brian Jonestown Massacre (BJM) from their inception to present day. (Although I guess the film only followed BJM through 1997.) In the beginning, the bands were great friends and inspired each other, but then once the Dandy Warhols sold-out by signing to Capitol Records, BJM decided that the two bands should feud a la the feud between Blur and Oasis. So once the bands break ties with each other, the film follows the divergent paths of the two bands.

The film raises a lot of interesting questions about what it means to be an artist/musician, whether “selling out” is really selling out, how the record industry markets bands, etc. The documentary makes it pretty clear that, for the most part, Anton and BJM are the music geniuses and that the Dandy Warhols, while talented, are basically just another rock band that makes good music and tries to be successful doing so. Toward the end, when I felt like the filmmakers were endorsing that decision, Anton gets another chance to speak and it totally shifts the message.

One of the things that the Dandy Warhols said a few times that really bothered me was that they were a “functional” band and that all of the band members’ parents were still married and that, by 2004 or whenever the film was made, all of the members were married and that the BJM were a bunch of dysfunctional “fourteen year-olds” from broken families living in the ghetto. The whole statement seemed rather arrogant and privileged, but in a way where that privilege wasn’t acknowledged, really, or that the privilege was being taken advantage of by the members of the Dandy Warhols.

Enough about Dig!, though, because I also want to mention two other things:

First, the reason I watched Dig! was because I recently realized that I might actually like the Dandy Warhols. I first downloaded the song “Bohemian Like You” a few months ago when my friend Troy heard it on the Six Feet Under soundtrack and asked me to find out what the song was and download it. I must admit, the song was catchy and I didn’t delete it after I played it for him. Apparently the song was really famous from some television commercial, but I wasn’t aware of that. Then, after watching 9 Songs last weekend and downloading the Dandy Warhols’ song from there, “You Were the Last High,” I figured the band might be cool. I read about Dig! and decided I had to watch it.

Second, 9 Songs was an interesting movie. The reviewers who have called it soft-core porn are not wrong. Although the title is 9 Songs, the songs play a relatively minor part in the film. 9 Songs is about a couple exploring their sexuality and having fun (lots of fun) doing it. Interspersed with the sex are live music performances by groups I love such as Franz Ferdinand and Primal Scream (and, apparently, the Dandy Warhols). I tried to find thematic connections between the music and the sex/state of the couple’s relationship, but the only song that seemed to struck a chord in me was the Dandy Warhols’ “You Were the Last High.” The song is quite melancholy and, as I recall, played during one of the more tender sex moments or during/before/after a fight.

In addition to “You Were the Last High,” I also loved the live performance of “Slow Life” by the Super Furry Animals. As for the non-life music, when the couple plays Franz Ferdinand’s “Michael” in the car it’s totally awesome, and Goldfrapp’s “Horse Tears” comes at a particularly touching moment, as well.

In comparison with other sex-based movies I’ve watched, this is one of the better ones. I think the live music performances really help, as they give the characters another interest besides sex. A common theme seems to be self-destruction/lack of care for the outside world/retreating into a two-person life of sex, and 9 Songs breaks that mold, a little. In the end, however, as can probably be predicted, things don’t work out. But unlike other movies, I really don’t think the sex is what destroys the couple. Nor do I think “destroy” is the right word, in the first place. The romance fizzles out, which, I think, is much more accurate than the dramatic and traumatic endings most erotic movies fall prey to.

Where does this leave us? I think both Dig! and 9 Songs attempt to break the mold of very formulaic film genres. Most band documentaries either follow bands to success or destruction. Dig! shows us both and challenges the typical definitions of “success” and “destruction” when it comes to art. Likewise, 9 Songs takes the typical sex-based erotic “artcore” movie, adds some music, and makes the characters less self-absorbed. In 9 Songs, sex is fun — it’s not some artistic expression or brutal exploration of the soul or something.

What’s Yr Take On Cassavetes

We’ve talked about it in letters
And we’ve talked about it on the phone
But how you really feel about it
I don’t really know
What’s Yr Take on Cassavetes?

I honestly know very little about John Cassavetes. What I do know is that he was in Rosemary’s Baby. Ever since hearing Le Tigre‘s song “What’s Yr Take On Cassavetes,” however, I’ve felt a need to have a take on him.

Okay. Not really, but the song is great and Le Tigre is quickly becoming one of my new favorite bands.

Back during high school when I was really into the whole riot grrrl band movement, I had a few Bikini Kill albums. Compared to the other “riot-grrrl” bands I was into, most notably Babes in Toyland, Bikini Kill was quite hardcore. I remember loving the perversity of the introduction to the song “Carnival”: “This is a song about the seedy underbelly of the carnival / The part that only the kids know about / This is a song about 16 year old girls giving carnies head / for free rides and hits of pot.” For me, all of Bikini Kill’s songs captured pure punk rawness without succumbing to the violence that most male-oriented punk groups seemed to exhibit.

That said, I grew out of Bikini Kill rather quickly and ended up selling the albums sometime during college. Now, as I listen to politically and lyrically tame electronic and whatnot music, I cannot imagine listening to such music.

Nonetheless, I’ve missed the idea of Kathleen Hannah and her politically-charged lyrics. That’s why finding Le Tigre has been so great.

Unlike Bikini Kill, Le Tigre is more pop/electronic oriented (including keyboards and sampling!) so their music is much easier to listen to. Whether “being easy to listen to” is a good criterion for music is probably a ripe place for debate, but either way, Le Tigre is fun to listen to and they have political lyrics. It seems, to me, like a good situation.

The first Le Tigre album I owned wasn’t actually a real album — it was a remix album creatively called Remix. I fell in love with the DFA remix of “Deceptacon.” I also loved the lyric from “Much Finer” that went: “Do you wanna stay in bed all day? (yeah!) / Do you remember feeling any other way? (no!).”

After Remix, I felt the need to get more Le Tigre as soon as possible. Lucky for me, I stumbled across the self-titled Le Tigre shortly thereafter. Hearing the original version of “Deceptacon” only convinced me further that I loved Le Tigre.

Beyond Le Tigre and Remix, I have yet to get more Le Tigre albums. I’ve seen This Island in the used bin at the CD store a few times, so I figure I’ll grab it eventually. Until then, I’ll just have to ponder my take on Cassavetes… (“Misogynist? Genius? Misogynist? Genius? … Alcoholic? Messiah? Alcoholic? Messiah?”)

Plastic Pitchfork

Plastic Constellations on Pitchfork
Time for a shout-out to The Plastic Constellations for making it on to the front page of Pitchfork. They already made it to the track reviews for their song “We Came to Play,” but this time they are the #1 and have a picture for the track review of their song “Sancho Panza.”

I knew these guys back in high school (the drummer is my mom’s best friend’s son and we used to be really good friends, as well), so it’s great to see them doing so well.

Now if only they would do a West coast tour…

Hung Up

Madonna's 'Hung Up' single
Following Paulo’s lead, I guess it’s time to comment on the fact that I am totally loving Madonna‘s new song “Hung Up.” I’ve had the track since iTunes made it available back in mid-October.

I first heard it at the club on Halloween weekend, and I have to say that hearing it while dancing and drinking and being around people only made it better. Since then, I’ve managed to download six versions (radio edit, album version, Tracy Young‘s Get Up and Dance Groove remix, SDP [a.k.a Stuart Price]‘s extended dub), SDP’s vocal mix, “Blueyender Tech” remix). I’ve also downloaded the video.

I may even be so bold as to say that this is Madonna’s best song since “Music” or “Ray of Light” — mostly due to the fact that it sort of reinvents her yet again. (Although I really liked “American Music,” it wasn’t as exciting or danceable.) And for those who complain that she is just “stealing” from ABBA — it’s called sampling and had I listened to “Gimme Gimme Gimme” before hearing “Hung Up,” I wouldn’t have been very impressed. Now, however, I think the song is kind of cool, and the part that Madonna sampled is even more exciting in the ABBA original.

I like the song so much, even, that I used some of the lyrics during a philosophical conversation last night. My friend was talking about how all these goals she has and that she just wants to have them right away and I said it sounded like she spend most of her life waiting for the future. Then I said, “Time goes by so slowly for those who wait.” How obnoxious is that???

Nonetheless, I cannot wait for Confessions from the Dancefloor next week. Here’s hoping the album is as good as the lead single.

Forgotten Five-Stars

After I got my new iPod I assigned myself the fun (though tedious) task of taking all of my CDs that wouldn’t fit on my first iPod and putting them on my computer since my new iPod held 3x as much music. This meant putting on a lot of albums that weren’t really in the front of my head and that, quite often, I hadn’t listened to since high school or college.

All in all, it ended up being 2270 songs = 8.5 days of music.

While I definitely increased the amount of “filler” songs on my iPod/computer, there were definitely some gems among the bunch. Although I haven’t had a chance to come close to listening to all of them, so far I have rated (and I don’t rate all songs I listen to — maybe only 1/3 or 1/2 of them) 208 songs. Of those 208, 22 have been rated with five stars, which means I absolutely love them.

I wanted to share those five-star songs (ordered alphabetically by artist):

  • “Super-Connected” by Belly from the album King
  • “King” by Belly from the album King
  • “Dancing Gold” by Belly from the Slow Dust EP
  • “Dusted” by Belly from the album Star
  • “Resigned” by Blur from the album Modern Life Is Rubbish
  • “Does This Hurt?” by the Boo Radleys from the album Everything’s Alright Forever
  • “Saints” (live version) by the Breeders from the Live in Stockholm EP (this one sort of doesn’t count since the original version, from Last Splash has always been a five-star song)
  • “Hallo Spaceboy” by David Bowie from Outside
  • “Stem/Long Stem/Transmission 2” by DJ Shadow from Entroducing…
  • “Popcorn” by Gershon Kingsley from At Home With the Groovebox (a groovebox-created cover of the original ’70s hit)
  • “Tick Tock” by the Kelley Deal 6000 from Go to the Sugar Altar
  • “Mr. Goodnight” by the Kelley Deal 6000 from Go to the Sugar Altar
  • “If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next” by the Manic Street Preachers from This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours
  • “South Side” by Moby from the “South Side” single (the version featuring Gwen Stefani)
  • “Aneurysm” by Nirvana from Incesticide
  • “Much Ado About Nothing Left” by Orbital from The Altogether
  • “Special K” by Placebo from Black Market Music
  • “Allergic (To Thoughts of Mother Earth)” by Placebo from Without You I’m Nothing
  • “Every You Every Me” by Placebo from Without You I’m Nothing
  • “New Patterns” by Q-Burns Abstract Message from Feng Shui
  • “Tegan” by Sing-Sing from The Joy of Sing-Sing
  • “Say Goodbye” by the Throwing Muses from The Real Ramona

Of all those, I have to say that the real “lost treasure” was “King” by Belly. I always knew that “Super-Connected” was a great song, but I forgot how much I loved “King.” It’s too bad that King (the album) tanked so bad and the group broke up.

Stuff like this is what I wanted a 60GB iPod for. I love rediscovering music I may have forgotten about. If all I had was my old 20G, I wouldn’t have gone through my old CDs and I wouldn’t have remembered how much I missed some of these songs.

Velvet Mourning

Kate Moss
Poor Kate Moss — and I am serious. I do feel bad for her. She was recently featured on the cover of the British tabloid The Daily Mirror doing lines of cocaine. After the image appeared, Moss lost her modeling contracts with numerous agencies, and it appears to be the end of her modeling career.

My interest in Kate Moss started in college when my friend Alicia made a comment about how when it came to models, Kate Moss was the only one she liked. I, of course, didn’t know who Kate Moss was, so we did a Google Images search for Kate Moss and eventually found the picture to the right. I’ve always loved that picture.

Then in summer 2003, one of my favorite bands, Primal Scream released Evil Heat. On Evil Heat Kate Moss joined the band to cover the old Nancy Sinatra/Lee Hazelwood duet, “Some Velvet Morning.” Hearing Kate Moss sing one of my favorite songs only cemented my love of her.

(In addition to Primal Scream covering the song, another one of my favorite bands, Slowdive covered the song on their Souvlaki album. In addition to all of that, Art Bell loves Nancy Sinatra, and “Some Velvet Morning” in particular, and often uses it as bumper music on Coast to Coast AM. The song is beautiful, and I highly recommend finding some version of it and studying up on the Greek mythology surrounding Phaedra.)

Along with the cool picture and her work with Primal Scream, Kate Moss also ushered in that rail-thin, junkie supermodel look, which, as much as I hate to admit it, I really am a huge fan of. I know that these anorexic-looking (and often anorexic) models are extremely dangerous when it comes to perpetuating unrealistic body images and cause all sorts of body image dysmorphia, but I cannot help finding that look attractive. Maybe it has to do with growing up in the ’90s and liking grunge and goth-type music for a long time or maybe there are all sorts of other personal reasons, but nonetheless, I like it… and I admire (???) Kate Moss for starting that trend.

So when she got in trouble the other week, I was a bit sad. But that was about it.

Then Salon.com (as they always do) had a great article about Kate Moss and her legacy that I highly recommend checking out: “The rise and fall of Kate Moss.”

As always, the media (with the exception of places like Salon) are focusing on the fact that drugs ruined Moss’ life and career and that drugs are bad and what is the fashion industry thinking promoting such unrealistic body image types. Yeah yeah. We all know that. But obviously there is something else going on here — otherwise that “heroin chic” would have starved itself years ago. Instead, Kate Moss is even considered “not that thin” compared to contemporary models. I smell some hypocrisy… and so does Rebecca Traister at Salon:

Now, 15 years later, in a set of circumstances that have exposed the hypocrisy and sanctimony of everyone involved, Moss and the fashion industry are becoming accidental and unwilling poster children for a new anti-drug message.

As Traister notes,

News that models do blow is akin to news that rock stars have casual sex: not news at all… The fashion companies’ professions of surprise are hard to believe. Would it be more embarrassing for them to admit they hired a model who they knew had done drugs than it is for them to admit to never having picked up a paper?

So if we know it is such a big deal already — and most of the agencies that she had contracts with could pretty easily assume that Moss was doing drugs often — why is it that when confronted with “proof” we are forced to change our minds. To me, this is an extremely reactive decision — and reactive decisions tend to be made in haste in order to save face rather than really address root issues.

The big hoopla going on in the news, then, is not about Moss’ drug problems, but:

Moss’ real error was in getting caught on tape

Again, the drugs and Moss’ waif, abused body is not of concern to people. Traister rightly points out:

the body that is appealing to designers — and thus to consumers — is a body that looks like it has been ravaged by drugs. In order to stay employed, models must maintain this shape; to maintain the shape they must do something besides eat right and exercise regularly. Whether it’s cocaine or speed or heroin or caffeine or cigarettes or anorexia or bulimia or some combination of the above, most adult women cannot get bodies that look like Moss’ healthily, because hers is not a healthy body.

In addition to Salon.com, Slate also considers Moss’ predicament. In “Kate Moss: The ironies of her downfall,” Amanda Fortini makes similar observations.

Fortini’s more interesting observation demonstrates why people like me seem to be fascinated with Moss:

The irony is that the rumors of bad behavior, the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle, have always been part of Moss’ allure. For years, the fashion world has courted, and profited from, her edgy, bad-girl image and her gaunt, post-hangover looks.

I’m not sure where all of this leaves us with Kate Moss as a person. She has, essentially, like many women (and it tends to be women — Lyndie England, Terri Schiavo, etc.) who have issues/ideas/criticism projected onto them. It’s like their bodies become empty shells in which the rest of us dump our cultural problems so we can hold these women up as non-human things and deprive them of their personhood.

Now, Kate Moss has become a symbol of the dangers of drug use and the vixen who brought us the trendy emaciated model.