Tuesday, December 13, 2011

just close my eyes and post


I just need to stop thinking about this--'tis late. Sorry I am not writing as beautifully as the rest of you!

  1. Wilco, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
  2. MeShell Ndegeocello, Bitter
  3. Brandi Carlile, The Story
  4. Swell Season, Strict Joy
  5. Ray LaMontagne, Gossip in the Grain
  6. Sufjan Stevens, Seven Swans
  7. Robyn, Body Talk
  8. Kanye West, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
  9. Krystle Warren, Circles
  10. Michael Franti, Stay Human


Runners Up

  1. Hedwig and the Angry Inch (do soundtracks count?)
  2. Lauren Hill, The Miseducation of Lauren Hill
  3. Spoon, Ga, Ga, Ga, Ga, Ga
  4. Sade, Lovers Rock
  5. Bon Iver, For Emma, Forever Ago
  6. Magnetic Fields, 69 Love Songs
  7. Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings, I learned the Hard Way
  8. The Gossip, Standing in the Way of Control
  9. Rufus Wainwright, Poses
  10. Dawes, North Hills

Thursday, November 17, 2011

  1. Blink 182: Enema of the state

Grew on me. Lead singers bratty voice really irritated me when I first heard Blink, and now I like it. Tunes are a little punk, but very catchy.

  1. The Eastman Wind Ensemble: Danzante

I’m a huge Copeland fan. I thought this album did a great job of capturing an ‘old west’ feel. I can be fooled into thinking many songs here are lost tracks for The Good The Bad and the Ugly. They do Ewazen right. I’m constantly on the search for good, America themed classical music.

  1. Penguin Cafe Orchestra: Preludes Airs and Yodels

Nice sound. They have an updated Philip Glass feel to them.

  1. Jay Brannon: Goddamned

Cynical Gay man. One guy and a guitar (mostly). I think he has an incredibly compelling voice.

  1. TMBG: Science is real

Because we listen to a lot of kids music, and it is supremely satisfying to have your children quote science facts randomly.

  1. Green Day: American Idiot

Just listened to this again yesterday. Love it.

  1. The Postal Service: Give up

My newest alternative liking. They even dare to have some tracks in which vocals are absent.

  1. Jane Eyre Broadway musical

Few musicals of the past decade stuck with me as much as Jane Eyre. The story is a little treacle, but I think the songs are singable and emotionally packed.

  1. Decemberists: Crane Wife

Hard for me to pick an album here because I usually listen to them by artist name. More songs on this album appealed to me.

  1. Patty Griffin: living with ghosts

Again, hard for me to choose because I listen to Patty Griffin by artist, not album. 1000 kisses was right here too, but I think there are more excellent songs on Living with Ghosts.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

DM'99

Putting together this list was a learning experience for me. Mostly I now realize how much of the music I listen to was made in 1997 or by REM in the '80s. Not that I was cool enough to have been listening to any of it back then. Petra anyone?


1. Ben Folds Five: The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner
Funny and sad, quiet and rockin'.

2. The Black Angels: Passover
A gorgeous unity of rock. Plus, no one uses a drone machine better.

3. Iron and Wine: Our Endless Numbered Days
The most beautiful album I know.

4. Radiohead: In Rainbows
Less rock, more strange, but just as catchy.

5. Brian Jonestown Massacre: Who Killed Sgt. Pepper?
Let's go F%#*ing mental.

6. HEM: Eveningland
Yes, I get my music from npr. This was our background for family dinner for about a year.

7. Sufjan Stevens: Songs for Christmastime
Not only the only Christmas music I love, but also the only Christmas music I don't hate.
8. Dandy Warhols: Thirteen Tales from Urban Bohemia
Probably a drug album, but I don't catch those sorts of references until too late. First fifteen minutes are seamless; crank it up. But not in church.

9. Tom Waits: Mule Variations
Dammit, Nate. I have to find another 9th place.

10. Ani Difranco: Revelling: Reckoning
Not as angry as she used to be.


Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Nate's Ten

OK, here are mine.

The New Pornographers, Together (2010)

The Pr0ns went from quirky geek-rock to quirky earnest power-pop, and it was a given that one of their albums should occupy a spot on a list celebrating music of the Aughts. Right around this time in their career they were due for either their more-of-the-same album that fell flat, or their out-of-left-field experimentation that left people feeling kinda cold. Instead they turned out their best album ever. As usual, Neko Case is their muse and guiding angel, transforming and elevating decent songs into sublime ones. The other secret ingredient on Together is the Wall o' Cello -- who knew?

Green Day, American Idiot (2004)

No doubt many of the popular choices in this contest will involve a hefty dose of jaded sophistication. Ironic detachment. Cleverness. I myself am jaded, sophisticated, often detached, and, on my better days, a little clever. And yet in my aging years I find myself often drawn to something else in music -- to the proverbial punch in the gut. The barbaric yawp. The unironic power chord.

After some middling work in the 90s, Green Day came out with this operatic post-9/11 gem. The lyrics are best absorbed indirectly, without listening too closely. The second and penultimate tracks are rambling, multi-stage epics in the best tradition of their idols, The Who. Have your air guitar handy while you listen, and a clear space on the floor around you to flail your limbs.

Tom Waits, Mule Variations (1999)

I dreamed once that Tom Waits had died and that only afterward did the world realize that he was the second coming of Jesus, and we had missed it. In waking hours I don't actually believe that to be true, but there is no denying that Waits' gritty world of the down-and-out is the one Jesus walked in and would walk in again were he around these days, and that something in his gravelly voice, at its best, pierces the veil and connects with the divine. Doubters are directed to tracks #5 and #8, but this album also has plenty of Waits' junkyard-band oddities as well.

Arcade Fire, Funeral (2004)

Like the Pr0ns, it was a given that something from Arcade Fire would have a place here -- they are lush without being twee, walking that fine line, pushing up against being too overwrought, but somehow always staying just wrought enough. The harder choice was settling on an album -- Neon Bible has some incredible tracks, and Suburbs is thematically tight and plugged right into the zeitgeist. But their first offering is still the one you can listen to front-to-back and feel that nothing in it is misplaced, and so it gets the nod.

The Decemberists, The King Is Dead (2011)

I resisted these guys for some time -- see my thoughts on "cleverness," above. Sure, their lyrics were super-smart and all literary and stuff, but my musical tastes have always tilted to the actual music, with lyrics often ignored and, if weak, easily forgiven. So it makes no sense at all that the album that broke the ice for me, Decemberists-wise, is the one they infuse with, of all things, a country twang. Because I don't particularly like country twang. Maybe the frequent nods to R.E.M. helped it go down easier. Or maybe it's that, twang and all, this album is more about turning out a series of well-crafted pop songs, and not some meandering thought-piece. Whatever the case, it made me go back and appreciate a lot of their other stuff, though this album still takes the prize.

The White Stripes, Elephant (2003)

The documentary It Might Get Loud features Jack White, The Edge, and Jimmy Page. All are great guitarists. But coming away from the movie you realize that only one of them can make a guitar out of random farm implements. Only one of them plays until his fingers bleed because of a hunger burning inside him that cannot be appeased. That is Jack White, Jack White is (let's be honest here) The White Stripes, and this was their best album.

The Killers, Hot Fuss (2004)

When we listened to synth-based pop in the Eighties we imagined it was like this. It wasn't -- most of it was much worse -- and it took a couple decades for someone to come along and do that thing but do it so much better.

New Year's Eve, 2007, Siam Reap, Cambodia. The main drag is choked with people, equal parts locals and tourists. Everybody's out celebrating, and one particular bar has set up their speakers facing out, trying to get a little dance party going at their doorstep. It doesn't really catch on until a couple tipsy Americans (Nate and Sarah) start in while their spouses (Suanna and Matt) cool their heels at another bar down the way. Their enthusiasm is infectious and the dance party builds, and builds. Sarah is swarmed with guys trying to get her attention. Nate drags shy Korean tourists out onto the improvised dance floor. Eventually the dance party covers the whole road -- if you're a person trying to get by you can try to squeeze around it but you're better off just barreling through, and if you're a car, forget it. And just when it seems like it couldn't get any bigger, The Killers' "Mr. Brightside" comes on, and it is the perfect song at the perfect moment, and this crowd in a remote part of the world, people from all corners of the globe, achieve some sort of sublime kinetic union at the eve of the new year.

Then the poor speakers blow, and the dance party dissipates. But that Killers song was the capstone of the experience. And the best thing you can say about this album is that any number of other songs on it could have been played in Brightside's place and achieved exactly the same effect.

Radiohead, OK Computer (1997)

Not really sure how this one scooted in to the allowable picks, but since it's allowed I can't very well not nominate it. The best album from the most genius band in the world -- which is not the same as a band whose music is fun to listen to. But this album was, and is.

J. Roddy Walston and the Business, Hail Mega Boys (2007)

Somewhat indulgent pick #1: this may qualify as a local band. At any rate they haven't achieved a great deal of national exposure. They appeal to the same part of me that digs Green Day. One part southern roots rock, one part Queen, one part whiskey neat, this is the band you want playing when you get to the epic bar fight scene in the soundtrack of the movie of your life.

The Pernice Brothers, The World Won't End (2001)

Somewhat indulgent pick #2: they aren't local but they're not as well known, it's true. But if you ask Colin Meloy or Win Butler or Carl Newman about Joe Pernice, they will speak of him in the most glowing and reverent of tones, and probably use the word "influence." This album and the one preceding it are their high point. They are also for me the soundtrack of Common Grounds coffee shop in Clarendon, Virginia, which for a few bright shining years was everything you could ever want your coffee shop hangout to be.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Deadlines!

Let's get the music submitted by the end of November. To help encourage this, early submission is the first tie-breaker.

Updated List of Participants*

--Eric Arnoys
--Rob Rozema
--Sara Z
--Herb
--Nate
--Suanna
--DAG
--Steg
--Anne
--Eric Everman
--TRH Matt

I think Hapaki might also have been interested, and I have invited a few more friends.

*defined as: those who thought this might be fun, as opposed to those who are participating

Monday, August 29, 2011

My Ten



Okay, here's mine, in non-dramatic fashion.



1. Cibo Matto--Stereotype A (1999). 

Unlike anything else out there. Tight beats a trombone solos with Japanese rapping over the top of it all. Why can't they get back together?



2. U2--All That You Can't Leave Behind (2000). 

U2's return to earnest rock-n-roll after the po-mo mess of Pop. There's a reason why these guys are the biggest band in the world.

 Arena sound with an intimate touch.

3. Vampire Weekend--Contra (2010).

 Love the complexity and musicality of this group. Witty, wistful lyrics too. 

Any band that writes a song about the Oxford comma is okay by me.

4. DJ Dangermouse--The Grey Album (2004)

. The best mashup/remix out there. Dangermouse has been behind some of the most innovative stuff of the past decade (Gnarles Barkley, Broken Bells).

 Beatles' White Album + Jay Z's Black Album = great music.

5. Kanye West--808s and Heartbreak (2008). 

So what if the guy is, in the words of the President, a "jackass." He has a melodic sensibility that is absent from other hip-hop artists. What's cool about this album is that West uses old 808 symthesizers from the 1980s for a kind of retro sound.



6. Regina Spektor--Begin to Hope (2006)
. Regina Spektor writes beautiful music, sings in a range of vocal styles, and explores some big questions.



7. Postal Service--Give Up (2003). 
Minimalistic synthpop in the style of Yaz, with Deathcab frontman Ben Gibbard. If you've watched television within the past five years, you've heard Postal Service tunes, especially in the advertisements. 



8. Arcade Fire--The Suburbs. I'm going to grab this one before anyone else does (since Eric took "Funeral"). This band manages to critique and romanticize life in the suburbs at the same time. If you grew up in the burbs during the 70s, this album is pure nostalgia. 



9. Adele--21. (2011). I am a recent convert to Adele, making me pretty late to the party. But I can't stop listening to 21, now my favorite breakup album. Adele has an amazingly expressive voice, both sorrowful and buoyant, like the blues itself. She had me with her cover of the Cure's "Lovesong."



10. The Strokes--Is This It? (2001)
. Put it on. Turn it up. Three chords never sounded so good.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Let's get this party started


It appears as if Death Match '99 isn't going to write itself. While we wait for a few others to decide if they're in or out, why don't we post some music?

Here is my tentative list*:

  1. Sufjan Stevens "Seven Swans"
  2. The Weakerthans "Left and Leaving"
  3. Massive Attack "Mezzanine"
  4. Low "Things We Lost in the Fire"
  5. Gorillaz "Demon Days"
  6. Moby "Play"
  7. Arcade Fire "Funeral"
  8. Radiohead "OK Computer"
  9. TV on the Radio "Dear Science"
  10. Pedro the Lion "Winners Never Quit"

Other albums that I may still be pondering (not meant to be exhaustive): Cat Power, "You Are Free"; The Decemberists, "Picaresque"; Regina Spektor, "Begin to Hope"; Ben and Bruno, "100 Grim Reapers"

Some of these are sentimental. Many are albums that I had to buy after hearing them once (if Jason ever joins, he can relate).

"Seven Swans" --despite Nate's intense hatred of this album**, it is glorious...my favorite Sufjan. He made it before many of the hipsters knew him, and that may have helped.

"Left and Leaving" -- I've heard them called punk folk. Sounds about right. What I like best, though, are the lyrics. John K. Sampson is a modern day Carl Sandburg***.

"Things We Lost in the Fire" -- Do I love it because it's so dark? Maybe.

"Demon Days" -- don't question...just listen

"OK Computer" -- Since it came out in '98, I'm using an exception, unless I find that you're not having any of it.

"Winners Never Quit" -- I take back what I said about "Things We Lost in the Fire." This one is dark.

"100 Grim Reapers" -- this one may creep into my top 10. It's from Peter Brant, who used to be local and now seems to have a crazy following. One of the songs on here ("Pack of Light Blue Birds") is in my top 10 songs of all time.



*I reserve the right to make some changes while awaiting the completion of submissions. You may also reserve the same right, provided you recognize that once it's on, it's on.
**Nate has never bothered to listen to it, though he hates it all the same. Nate is the poorer for it.
***If Carl Sandburg were actually a good poet, still worth reading.



It's Death Match '99.



Now it's your turn.


Friday, July 8, 2011

Participants

Please leave a comment if you plan to participate. You'll have time to assemble your top 10 once we've finalized the rules.

Rules (for discussion)

Following discussions online and at the Cabins, I propose the following rules:
  1. many albums enter, but only one survives
  2. reviewers must listen to each album in its entirety in their match up at least once
  3. reviewers must post a review in which it is clear who won, though the content of the review is up to the reviewer (here is the other place where I've participated, though you may want to avoid the most recent epic reviews to focus on those from earlier: http://musicdeathmatch2011.blogspot.com/)
  4. in the early rounds, each matchup will be decided by only person; lobbying is allowed, though it can backfire; in later rounds, more than one person will be assigned to a matchup
  5. each participant enters a list of top 10 albums; the order matters, as it will determine which albums make the cut as well as final seedings
  6. any new album that would have been eligible for the '99 Grammy Awards (or later) is eligible (no re-issues)
  7. (this one is especially up for discussion) I'd like to reserve the 16 seeds and perhaps the 15 seeds for albums that few people in the group have heard of; this would allow us to rank our albums honestly while also ensuring that we can gain entry for some good bands we'd like to share
  8. all participants are encouraged to comment on others' lists and reviewers, provided that there is some love to be found
Am I missing anything? What do you think?