Showing posts with label Guest List Week 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest List Week 2012. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Guest List ... Year: Val's Top 15
[January 2013 Contenders Mix will be available on Thursday (and will have at least 30 songs), but before then we've got time for one more guest list, from my Family Dog Rescue comrade Valerie. She may be the last person on Earth who still likes that Alex Clare song after seeing the Internet Explorer commercial six hundred million times.]
15. Norah Jones - "Happy Pills"
Light and catchy. Perfect when you are almost ridiculously happy about being over someone.
14. Neon Trees - "Everybody Talks"
Fun and lively song! Like candy.
13. Tegan and Sara - "Closer"
Super infatuated with Tegan and Sara after watching the documentary in mid-2012. I was excited for their new album but honestly this song has a little bit too much polish and I miss the older Tegan and Sara music where the sound was more raw and the lyrics more awkwardly painful.
12. Alex Clare - "Too Close"
It's all about the lyrics. Very very sweet, sad, and unexpected lyrics. I feel like Birdy should do a cover of the song.
11. Best Coast - "No One Like You"
Underplayed and overlooked. Best Coast at their almost best.
10. Lana Del Rey - "Video Games"
Sad and messed up lyrics. Evokes rainy nights feeling slightly crazy with longing. A guilty pleasure, for sure.
9. Ellie Goulding - "Anything Can Happen"
My favorite of all her songs so far. Great for running!
8. The Shins - "It's Only Life"
7. The Shins - "Simple Song"
Great new songs from one of my favorite bands ever. Not so indie/sub-pop anymore but still really wonderful. However, I do miss the days of "Know Your Onion" and the entire Chutes Too Narrow album.
6. Santigold - "Disparate Youth"
This song came out at the exact time I was looking for a song to motivate me through twice daily workouts at the gym. I think I shadowboxed to this song more than any other during the late spring and early summer months.
5. Muse - "Madness"
The song's flow is a bit awkward at times but I love the lyrics and the motivation behind the song. Not only is the girlfriend right, her boyfriend lets her know it by writing her a song.
4. Alabama Shakes - "You Ain't Alone"
3. Alabama Shakes - "Heartbreaker"
2. Alabama Shakes - "Hold On"
"Hold On" is fun and upbeat while the latter two are chilling in how much emotion is being expressed. Lovely songs.
1. The Lumineers - "Hey Ho"
Before this song became associated with the Giants. It was my song of summer dedicated in secret to my big crush. It was everything I would have written if I could write a song...
Friday, December 21, 2012
Guest List Week: Carl's Top 15
[Guest List Week comes to its thrilling conclusion with my friend and co-worker Carl. Though constantly locked in a tense battle to be seen as "Guy at the Office Who Loves Robyn the Most," we remain on good terms.]
I thought it would be harder to pick which track to make “number one.” Not this year. I like everything about this song, but maybe most of all how it makes me look forward to more music. I want to hear the CHVRCHES album in 2013.
It’s not easy to know what to make of these guys. I expected more from their first album. But on the other hand, here they are with one of the strongest tracks of the year. Many others did less with more.
I heard an interview where one of the members said (roughly) the band wanted to make a traditional punk rock album about twenty-somethings living through America’s lost decade. Great idea! The album has a few near misses and this bull’s-eye. If I were 25, I would be so angry – angrier than this, for sure.
Lucky for me I’m not 25, so I can listen to Swedish electro-pop dance hits without being a traitor to my generation. Woooo!
Her falsetto baby-doll voice doesn’t work for me except when it is saying something pretty dark. And this is dark stuff: like, I’m lonely and vulnerable, and I know that, rather than do anything to help, you are more likely to jump me when I’m walking after dark and break my neck. Compelling, too.
Singer Chloe Chaidez is very talented and absurdly young. She seems to have that “we don’t want to be labeled” thing going on. Do you admire her new band for choosing the search-engine-nightmare name “Kitten,” or is it just annoying?
This year Japandroids released the most Hold Steady-like album they could. Aaron is ecstatic, the rest of us perhaps less so. Still, there’s no denying this strong anthem-rock lives up to high expectations.
Someone said that genius is making really difficult tasks appear simple, or something like that. It is really difficult to make a song this good, and if you think it sounds like it was simple, you might as well say you think it was genius. Which would probably give the band a good laugh. On the other hand: “I saw this show on TV / these two girls wanted this guy / and he couldn’t choose between them / I wish that would happen to me / I can’t believe that’s anyone’s problem.” Genius!
This is my favorite 2012-list-eligible track from Shrines.
Aaron is right about Sweden. As evidence of this year’s shortage of Swedish electro-pop exports, consider that “Good For You” is the third-best track on an EP and I can’t name ten better songs from 2012. We need more songs from Sweden, not just more songs from Brooklyn. If you know someone in Sweden, please tell them to get to a recording studio and make an album next year.
A good Mountain Goats album this year. Not sure this is the best track from what is an old-fashioned LP record, but it seems to stick in my head slightly more than others.
A. C. Newman released a whole album of songs that sound like A.C. Newman. Maybe this track sounds more like New Pornographers than the others – that’s a compliment.
Yes, this one is embarrassing. If you used to like Adele but are sick of the overexposure, check this out. Otherwise, just move along.
This is an obscure band that will never rise out of obscurity. Like, ever. Apparently they broke up while working on their first album and posted what they had on bandcamp.com.
I used to make mixtapes. This is the kind of song you wanted as the last song on a mixtape.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Guest List Week: Gene's Top 15
[Guest List Week continues with my concert-going buddy and former co-worker Gene, a man who may have out-obscure-Swede-ed me with this Speedmarket Avenue song.]
These guys have been around forever, but I came to them only recently, after Brent Knopf left to start his compellingly oddball spin-off Ramona Falls. This year, I fell in love with this gloomy anthem, which plods along for a couple minutes before building to a stunning full-band crescendo of angsty moping. A great winter song.
One of my all-time favorite popsters had a bit of an off year, putting out a B-minusy album and not seeming to give much of a shit about it on tour. (Maybe I caught him on an off night.) "Keep Me," the best song off What Kind of World, is a reminder of how fucking good he is when he's focused on churning out flawless two-and-a-half-minute gems.
Saw Tilly with Aaron at Great American Music Hall last month, and we were both surprised at the 2/3-empty room that greeted the tap-dancing stalwarts. They gamely showed the small crowd a good time, though the uneven new songs brought the vibe down a little ("Love Riot" is just a mistake all-around); "Heavy Mood" is probably my favorite of that bunch, a goofy, pulsating dance-rock number that's a ton of fun live (HUH!).
I started listening to Grandaddy in preparation for Outside Lands this year, and I really dig them; Lytle's solo album is indistinguishable from his Grandaddy stuff, and consistently good, with this bizarro sing-a-long the highlight.
Can't think of a more welcome musical turn-of-events recently than Gossip's turn toward full-on 80s-style electropop. Joyful Noise is one of my two or three favorite albums of the year even though nearly every song is theoretically "the same," with Beth Ditto's incredible (but totally un-show-offy) vocals laying an ace upbeat melody over her band's meticulous, propulsive beats. Had trouble choosing between this and "Get a Job" for the list.
Fred Thomas is a stone-cold genius who all too rarely uses his powers for good. A new album is allegedly on the way in the spring; meanwhile, "Sunglasses" brought me back to when I first discovered these guys and listened to Lift Me Up on repeat for a good three months. Irresistible.
This song is here almost entirely on the strength of that "Dee-da-daa-da-dum" chorus, which is my favorite thing at the moment, but more generally, you should check out these talented, perenially under-the-radar indie-rockers from Maine.
"Life's a Beach" is great too, but I just adore the precise harmonies over the super-simple guitar riff here, perfect shutting your office door and having a quick dance party. Probably the most deserving mainstream break-out of 2012 (bite me, fun.).
A little confused about why this stunning, off-kilter, piano-driven number didn't get more play, since it makes both Gotye and Passion Pit instantly irrelevant.
The worst song to be caught singing under your breath. Not totally sure what the difference is between Marina and La Roux, but almost every song on Electra Heart is ridiculously catchy, and "Sex Yeah" is the catchiest (and the most hilarously political!).
I'm more of a movie guy than a music guy overall, but no artist has meant more to me in my adult life than Carl Newman: I became interested in music thanks to The New Pornographers (more particularly, after hearing "The Laws Have Changed"); have seen the NPs or Newman solo over twenty times; have gotten through countless finals and all-nighters and other tough times with his songs in my ears. After six albums of mostly inscrutable nonsense (but what nonsense!) it's kind of heartbreaking to suddenly hear a song this direct and straightforward. And gorgeous, natch.
Don't have much to say about this one other than that it's just amazingly pretty -- a dead-on, straight-ahead, once-in-a-lifetime melody. And I don't even really care about this band otherwise.
Amazed to hear this used at Obama rallies; either someone in the campaign misplaced his sense of irony, or was convinced that we've all misplaced ours. You almost don't even need to parse the lyrics to tell that this is no sort of rah-rah-America number -- Springsteen's vocals are pleading, questioning, mournful even as the violins soar and the hand-claps and foot-stomps try to get people out of their seats. This is brilliant songwriting.
These guys have never made it out of the Swedish pop ghetto stateside, which is a shame, 'cause they could find a hook deaf, blind, and muzzled. This is the opener to their new album, the short and very good Goodbye, and I listened to and sang it for a month non-stop.
My personal big discovery of 2012. Based on prior experience, I had written off Metric as I-get-why-people-like-this-but-it's-not-for-me, and then proceeded to be completely blown away by Synthetica, and in particular by this staggering closer, which contains two of my favorite minutes in all of pop music, period. (It's the last two.) Seeing them live is now very high on my bucket list.
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Guest List Week: Curt's Best of 2012
[Guest List Week continues with my oldest friend in the world, Mr. Curt Trnka. A former columnist for the La Crosse Tribune (who wasn't afraid to tackle the Big Issues) Curt has since taken his equally-formidable graphic design talents elsewhere.
In today's episode of Guest List Week, Curt runs down his favorites from 2012, then tosses in a gem from 2003 for good measure. This is how you know Curt has the true heart of a music blogger - it obviously bothers him that maybe someone out there hasn't heard "Grace" by Supergrass. This is how I feel all the time. (And he's right - the song is awesome.)]
Easily my favorite song of the year. It's a dance song that you can run to that you can wash dishes to that you can wake up to. It's perfect.
Greg Laswell – "Landline"
Take your pick on which song is your favorite uptempo or slow, but this is what he does best in my opinion. Songs that pair his "Life leaves me so wanting" voice with great female singers are usually among his best.
Not a great album, but an awesome song to run to. It's almost as though the song were built for little bursts of speed.
"Chapel Song" is the better of the two, but I'm unsure if it's technically from 2012, so enter the single of "Headlong Into the Abyss." Great music either way.
I assume they aren't on your year end list because you are punishing me for taking away your likes on Facebook. Fine. Be that way. These songs are still worth a few plays.
They remind me of a Band of Horses on this song. I'm likely losing my mind, but still, you should listen to this just to check.
Not a single song of his made the list? Hmmm... Did I miss something? Is this album actually bad and only my ears like it? "Smoke and Mirrors" wasn't overplayed in the Midwest, so I still enjoy it quite a bit.
You either don't like this band or you keep getting tricked into thinking, "This album will be like their first two!" Fooled again.
Pretty much the exact same feeling that Linkin Park gives me.
Album came out in 2011, but the single was released in 2012, so I'm throwing it on here. I'd say check out their whole catalog. Fun stuff. ("16" and "It's Not My Problem" are both catchy songs from their 2009 album.)
Soulful. Sharp. Powerful. Just plain good. I was thrilled "Home by Five" was on the list, and this reminds me of that awesome song.
Did I miss these on a contenders list? I have "God Help This Divorce" but not these. I enjoyed the piano on these two.
This could have been their song "Only For You." It's not. But it could have been.
If this song isn't up your alley, I have no idea what is.
Running song? Check. Cruising song? Check. Awesome song? Double check.
Hated this song to start. How it grew on me is unknown, but it's sleep lyrics live in my head now.
A guy covering a Patsy Cline song like this is something I hadn't come across before. Never fun juxtaposition.
Curt Trnka = homer. I like this song. I'm not sure I should, but I can't shake it. The lyrics are a bit weak, but that sound… Damn, I love the Stones.
Here's my Man Card. I clearly won't be needing it anymore.
This song came on and I actually stopped working on my homework to go find out all I could about the song and band. Love this sound and emotion.
In my quest to get 50 songs on this list, Zulu Winter is making it onto the list. Not sure it needs to be here, but since I already wrote this, I'm not removing it.
Ooh-e-oh! Ooh-e-oh! Ooh-e-oh! You'll be doing that soon enough.
If a song could be a black & tan, this would be it. Tonally, it shifts back and forth between light and dark. The heavy bass with the hand claps with the airy female singer ... great mix.
The only pseudo duet I can think of that I'd label as a fantastic slow burn.
I hear this on "Suits" and had to go buy it. But it wasn't available. Needless to say, I was pissed and started a quest to track it down.
After telling my parents that I was going to leave the Tribune, I drove to tell my boss I was putting in my two weeks and this song came on. It may just have been that that moment in time was powerful for me, but this song always gets me.
Seasonal playlists are a thing I'm trying out; this is the latest addition to "Sounds like Fall."
I must have listened to this song a dozen times before I realized where I knew it from.
In 2009, Hoge released this song, and I loved it. Turns out I still love it, but I oddly like the Eli version, too.
I love this song. It's from 2003, but I couldn't resist putting it on here in case you hadn't heard it already.
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Guest List Week: Jamie's Top 50
[Up next on Guest List Week, it's my friend Jamie, who sends me a link to a new and interesting song pretty much every day.]
When Aaron asked if I'd want to throw together my top 50 songs of the year I was excited and terrified. Is opening my list of favorites up for judgment tantamount to a car owner plastering a "Got Nickelback?" sticker on his car, getting a mall kiosk attendant to make a "Chad Kroeger" license plate frame, and waiting in line at the DMV to register for a NCKLBK vanity plate?
When Aaron asked if I'd want to throw together my top 50 songs of the year I was excited and terrified. Is opening my list of favorites up for judgment tantamount to a car owner plastering a "Got Nickelback?" sticker on his car, getting a mall kiosk attendant to make a "Chad Kroeger" license plate frame, and waiting in line at the DMV to register for a NCKLBK vanity plate?
If you asked me in 5th grade I'd have filled my mixed tape with my impeccable taste in female vocalists like Toni Braxton, Annie Lennox, Tracy Chapman and Desiree. While I still dig a good vocal and respect an album that can capture my attention from start to finish, my musical tastes are now more analogous to my television habits. I spend a good chunk of time hopping around blogs to find new tracks . . . channel surfing.
Sometimes this develops into shameless full blown obsession (Degrassi = Clock Opera), other times I just want to revisit a certain episode (Walker Texas Ranger "Medieval Crimes" = ANR "It's Around You"). But if I am honest with myself, I end up DVRing the Lifetime Movie Network and "Extreme Couponing" more than a 28 year old should admit. So, similarly, despite my internal claim that each track fills a distinctly different mood and I like ALL music, my musically inclined friends have teased out some common threads in my musical predilections which are pretty apparent in my Top 50 mix. Surprisingly they still let me send them links. So thanks:
-Aaron for making me aware of my unwitting obsession for all songs that involve gratuitous whistling
-Ilana, who was an early victim of my Brit Electro Pop obsession (I subjected her to Track 12: "Sussudio" on my "Best of Phil Collins" CD almost as many times as I forced her to watch "Cable Guy")
-Jason for pointing out that I am sucker for "funky bass"
-Ben and Philippe for continuing to send me some of your favorite off-beat, brooding tracks to tamp my otherwise electro-pop heavy tendencies
SONG OF THE YEAR:
AND 49 OTHER GREAT ONES:
Active Child - "Hanging On"
Alt-J - "Breezeblocks"
Nite Jewel - "One Second of Love"
Noosa - "Walk on By"
On and On - "Ghosts"
Alt-J - "Breezeblocks"
Atlas Genius - "Back Seat"
Black Light Dinner Party - "Gold Chain"
Capital Cities - "Nothing Compares 2 U"
Cherub - "Doses and Mimosas"
Citizens! - "True Romance"
The Concept - "Gimme Twice"
Dan Croll - "From Nowhere"
Electric Guest - "American Daydream"
Electric Guest - "This Head I Hold"
Foxes - "Youth" (Adventure Club Remix)
Ghost Beach - "Bones"
Giovanni James - "The Shining"
HAIM - "Better Off"
Halona King - "War Ground"
The Kill Van Kulls - "Shame & Pride"
Mister Lies - "False Astronomy"
MØ - "Pilgrim"
MSMR - "Hurricane"
The Neighborhood - "Female Robbery"
Niki & The Dove - "All This Youth"
Niki & The Dove - "The Fox"Black Light Dinner Party - "Gold Chain"
Capital Cities - "Nothing Compares 2 U"
Cherub - "Doses and Mimosas"
Citizens! - "True Romance"
The Concept - "Gimme Twice"
Dan Croll - "From Nowhere"
Electric Guest - "American Daydream"
Electric Guest - "This Head I Hold"
Foxes - "Youth" (Adventure Club Remix)
Ghost Beach - "Bones"
Giovanni James - "The Shining"
HAIM - "Better Off"
Halona King - "War Ground"
The Kill Van Kulls - "Shame & Pride"
Mister Lies - "False Astronomy"
MØ - "Pilgrim"
MSMR - "Hurricane"
The Neighborhood - "Female Robbery"
Niki & The Dove - "All This Youth"
Nite Jewel - "One Second of Love"
Noosa - "Walk on By"
On and On - "Ghosts"
Monday, December 17, 2012
Guest List Week: Ilana's Top 15
Ilana’s Top 15 Songs for 2012
It's Guest List Week! You've seen my Top 100, but I'm just one guy with a blog (read by literally dozens of people!) and a disproportionate love of Swedish pop music. What did the rest of the world listen to and love in 2012? Well, who better to start with than everyone's favorite honeymoon blogger, my wonderful wife Ilana! Take it away, Seahorse ...
Despite the fact that I’m not an angsty teenage girl getting over a bad break-up, this is my favorite song of the year. I loved it from the first time I listened to it, played it on repeat for an embarrassingly large number of times in a row, and think that the music video is brilliant. As if I wasn’t convinced enough already, this song reinforced my unyielding desire to be reincarnated as a Swedish pop songwriter.
When I first heard the song, I thought that Carly Rae Jepsen was a preteen pop star from Canada like Robin Sparkles. When I found out that Ms. Jepsen is actually only one year younger than I am, I must admit that it made me like the song much less, but it was still so damn catchy. I also think the reason why Aaron and I aren’t as sick of it as most of our friends is because we were out of the country for most of May.
I truly don’t like this band. I’ve seen them in concert twice, and both times I couldn’t wait for the show to be over. So how did the Japandroids nearly top my list? Because this song is awesome. I have no clue how they pulled it off, but this could easily be the best song of the year… except for the fact that I think their other songs are garbage.
Even though a misused apostrophe would normally disqualify any band from my top 15 songs list, this track just makes me incredibly happy. I liked it even more when they played it before one of the NLCS games at AT&T Park.
Lead singer Brian Fallon looks like Cody Smith if he was from New Jersey and had tattoos everywhere, and this song is great. It’s even better live. We went to two Gaslight Anthem concerts this year alone and both were wonderful.
All I have to say is that this song should be in TV commercials for every teen show on the CW. (I’m considering that to be a massive compliment.)
Woofs! This is one of the only songs that I’ve ever heard before Aaron did. Bonus points that the band is from Iceland and that my brother says that they’re all very tall and nice.
Here’s another song that I listened to on repeat for waaaay too many times after I heard it for the first time.
(9) The Lumineers – “Hey Ho”**
This song makes me think of two great things: 1) Becky Feren, and 2) Shannon and Eric’s movie-preview-quality wedding highlights video.
This song makes me think of two great things: 1) Becky Feren, and 2) Shannon and Eric’s movie-preview-quality wedding highlights video.
UNH! Although this song took awhile for me to warm up to it, I quickly learned to love it. It appeals to both Aaron’s fondness for female British pop and my love of dancing in cars while sitting in traffic. (Also, the radio version is way better because it doesn’t have Astro’s annoying rap midway through the song. The kid is 16 years old, but he ain’t no Lil’ Bow Wow, that’s for sure.)
I’m just glad that the Scissor Sisters appreciate SLO as much as I do. This song makes me feel like I’m on a vacation.
A.K.A. The “Holy Pup” Song. I don’t love the slow part in the middle of the song, but the rest is great. Next time Foxy Shazam comes to your city, you need to see them play live. Yes, NEEEEEEED.
When we saw fun. in concert a few months ago, I think that I was the only person there who didn’t know all of the words to this song. It was like being at a campfire sing-a-long without knowing any of the lyrics. Despite the awful auto-tune portion at the end of the song, it’s still really catchy and, well, fun. (Booooooooo!)
Aaron and I wanted Ellie to play at our wedding… and then Prince William and Kate Middleton beat us to it. Those sneaky Brits! The Duchess and I have so much in common… probably.
For some reason I thought that this band was from San Jose, so that made me like this song a lot. Always good to support the local guys, right? Well, when I found out that they’re actually from Las Vegas, I decided that I could still like the song anyway.
** Remember, these are my top 15 songs of 2012, not my top 15 songs of December 17, 2012. I’ve now heard these particular songs far too many times to really love them the way that I did when I first heard them, and chances are that you think they’re overplayed, too.
Check back for a new guest list every day this week!
Check back for a new guest list every day this week!
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