Tag: lists (Page 5 of 5)

Notable Albums Of 2006

Since the explosion of the on-line music world in the late ’90s, I, like many, have moved away from being a consumer of entire albums towards collecting individual tracks by artists I enjoy. I’d rather buy through iTunes, or obtain via other means, the four or five best songs off of an album instead of dropping $16 to get those tracks plus seven or eight I don’t want. This year, though, I seemed to stockpile a few more albums than in recent years. My top 20 songs of 2006 list is coming either late this week or early next, but here, in no particular order, are some notable albums that were released this year.

Broken Boy Soldiers – The Raconteurs. This is a notable but also in some ways a disappointing album. From the moment I heard, back in mid-2005, that Jack White and Brendan Benson were working on an album together, I couldn’t wait to get my hands on it. When opening single “Steady As She Goes” leaked in February, I was pleased by what I heard. When the disk dropped in May, I was a little disappointed. And I think that’s because I expected too much. I expected the best rock and art sensibilities of White and the best pop craftsmanship of Benson to be present on each track. That hope ignored the most likely final product: those sensibilities would be evident, but the Detroit natives worked harder to forge a common and new sound. The result was unexpected, and perhaps because of that, a let down. But it’s a pretty solid album, full of 70s porn soundtrack overtones. Big, crunchy, and dirty. It could be the modern soundtrack for Detroit.

Putting the Days to Bed – The Long Winters. A fabulous album full of perfectly crafted power-pop masterpieces. It’s only failing may be that the band is in such a groove that the songs end up sounding the same after awhile. But in the age of shuffling, when a track from this album pops into your playlist, it shines.

You See Colours – Delays. This album will be lost behind many of the other British pop bands that ruled the American airwaves this year. That’s a shame because this is a far better album than many of those that got sucked into the ‘Grey’s Anatomy alterna-pop sampler’ genre.

The Information – Beck. It should say a lot that a Beck album makes my list. He’s always been a little too eclectic for my tastes. But this is a great album, full of equal parts edginess and power hooks. I now see why so many people are so into his music.
The Dust of Retreat – Margot and the Nuclear So & So’s. The first Indy band to make a national splash since I moved here, the Margos released this stunning debut album in 2005 and had it picked up and rereleased by a larger label in March. They are often compared to the Arcade Fire because there are about 1000 people in the band. But their sound, at least on disk, is much more refined than the Arcade Fire’s, and their pop roots are much more evident as well. Each song tells a story beautifully, both lyrically and musically.

The Crane Wife – The Decembrists. When a cult band signs a major label contract, there is always concern among the fans who stick with them (as opposed to those who cry “Sell out!” and part ways). They worry that the money and pressure will ruin what made the band great in their indie days. Death Cab for Cutie faced that pressure in 2005, and delivered a decent album but one that also was noticeably weaker than their final indie release. The Decembrists were this year’s test case, and unlike Death Cab, they exceeded every expectation. Not only did they live up to the hype, they did so while releasing a quasi-concept album. Much of The Crane Wife is based on a Japanese fable of the same name. The original story is heartbreaking, as is opening track “The Crane Wife 3.” The rest of the album is pure Decembrists, at times rollicking, always literate and challenging, and never boring.

Pearl Jam – Pearl Jam. I’ve written before about the grace music critics give established groups. No mainstream critic will ever say a Rolling Stones release sucks. U2 has moved into that sphere. So it is predictable when each album is hailed as a return to the glory years. There was no hyperbole or dishonesty when critics labeled Pearl Jam’s self-titled released as a return to form. Easily their best album in a decade, the band escaped much of the aimlessness that dominated their last two releases. They rocked as they hadn’t rocked since Vs. The album featured their strongest opening track since Vitology in “Life Wasted.” Their best single since “Given to Fly” in “World Wide Suicide.” And perhaps their greatest hook ever (wait for my singles list for that one). When I reviewed this album in May, I said I liked it a lot, but time would tell if it was truly a great album. The fact I’m still listening to the strongest tracks from it each week should say volumes. This was a great album, proving that they can still do it when motivated and focused. They’ve been missed; hopefully they can keep their muse in sight.

Fox Confessor Brings the Flood – Neko Case. A year ago, I barely knew who Neko Case was. I knew she was part of indie supergroup The New Pornographers, a band that brought me great joy in 2005. And I knew she was a solo artist, but had not heard any of her work sans Porno friends. When this album was released in March, it blew me away. She has a voice that could launch 1000 armies. That could sing Greek heroes into jagged rocks. That can soothe away all that ails you. It’s not a modern rock and roll voice, but something plucked from the era of classic country and early rock, when generes were blurred and singers just sang. This is one of those albums you want to buy ten copies of and send to all your friends because they MUST hear it.

Boys and Girls in America – The Hold Steady. The voice of a generation. Craig Finn sings of what kids today face. Not the kids who grow up happy and comfortable and secure with where their futures are taking them. But rather the kids who slip through the cracks, who clutch to things like music and drugs and their circle of friends to try to find meaning in life and the power to get through each day. There’s a significant part of that message that I can’t relate to. It isn’t how I felt when I was 18, nor the kind of life I live today. Despite whether the songs speak to your life or not, you can’t deny the power and passion and honesty that the carry with them. An album that demands to be heard and placed aside Born to Run as one of the great summations of the lives of those on the fringe.

Rabbit Fur Coat – Jenny Lewis With the Watson Twins. Jenny Lewis and Neko Case are often compared to each other. They both have wonderful voices, are prolific as both solo artists, members of groups, and drop-ins to numerous other side projects, and both have strong Americana/Country elements in their music. I grew up being forced to listen to country music by relatives who lived out in the rural parts of the Midwest, so I always say that I don’t like country music. And that’s largely true. It just doesn’t connect with me, something that was reinforced in the 90s when I worked at a place that kept the radio on the intercom all day, and at least twice a week was a country day. And yet, music like the songs on this album, some of Neko’s songs, and classic stuff like Johnny Cash resonates with me. I’ve never dug deep to see what the difference is, although in the modern stuff I would imagine that it is the fact that the songs aren’t pure country, but rather country-influenced, with at least one foot firmly planted in the pop/rock world.
Anyway, this is another fantastic album full of wonderful singing and lovely instrumentation. Jenny’s lyrics aren’t as deep as Neko’s, but that also makes them a little more accessible where Neko’s tend to be a little more artsy and vague. Her voice is also a notch below Neko’s in quality, but she deploys it expertly, avoiding and strains that would show her tiny weaknesses. Oh, and the Watson Twins are not unattractive, which helps when watching their videos or live performances.

Late addition:
The Alarmist – Dear Leader. I just purchased this album last week, so I can’t break it down yet, but it won’t qualify for next year’s list, so I had to say something about it. The band is fronted by Aaron Perrino, former lead singer of one of my favorite bands of the early 00s, The Sheila Divine. These songs a bit more complex than the Sheila’s straight-ahead alt-rock. More art, more depth, but the rock is still there. It remains to be seen if I’ll dig this effort as much as I dug the Sheilas, but it is definitely promising.

Top Ten Songs Of 2005

This is the one time of the year when I wish that I listened to whatever the radio mainstream is. Not because I find anything particularly attractive about the mainstream, but rather because I miss the way radio sounded during the holidays when I was a kid. As a Top 40 radio listener, I kept the radio on approximately 23 hours a day during Christmas break. The stations would play all the best music of the year, generally culminating in countdowns of the top 50, 75, or 100 songs of the year as New Year’s Eve got closer. Prince, Michael Jackson, Van Halen, The Police, Robert Plant, Hall & Oates. They all got played, for better or for worse, together. But I don’t listen to mainstream, pop music, so making my own year-end lists will have to do.

2005 was an outstanding year in music, in my most humble opinion. Where MP3 blogs and the iTunes Music Store changed the way people listened to and obtained music the past two years, 2005 was the year that podcasting became a prime source for discovering new music. Despite the fears of the idiots who run the recording industry, the Internet and its tools have made it much easier for music fans to discover new music, which ultimately means more money for bands and labels, even if there are a few illegally obtained tracks along the way.
Here is my top ten list, with a couple special wrinkles. You’ll understand the wrinkles as you work your way through the list, should you choose to accept that assignment.

10 – “My Doorbell” – The White Stripes. A bold offering from rock’s most dangerous band. Like nothing I’ve ever heard from the red, black, and white ones. Bouncy. Buoyant. Light-hearted. Fun, even. As I’ve said many times, I didn’t love everything on the Stripes’ latest album, but I loved the fact they took some tremendous chances. Bonus: “Spit It Out” – Brendan Benson. 70s AM rock, garage punk, and power pop combined into one marvelous, easy-to-digest package. I tremble with excitement to hear what Jack White and Benson have in store for us on their 2006 collaboration.
9 – “Jacksonville” – Sufjan Stevens. Another bold artist, Sufjan’s Illinois disk was loaded with smart, majestic, up-lifting tracks of shocking depth and meaning. It was tough to pick which one was my favorite, but “Jacksonville” fills that role nicely. Bonus: “Emily Kane” – Art Brut. Where Sufjan is dense and complex, Art Brut is raw and basic. But no less interesting or entertaining.
8 – “Sweet Troubled Soul” – Stellastarr*. They may not be critical darlings, but I dug their chili this year. “Forest Fire” – Athlete. A wonderful B-side that I played almost as much as any A-side this year.
7 – “Black and White Town” – Doves. A little “Motown by way of Joe Jackson” track that highlighted Doves’ most excellent disk Some Cities. Bonus: “Love Steals Us From Loneliness” – Idlewild. Another UK band that emerged right around 2000 and is still doing fine work.
6 – “Kissing Families” – Silversun Pickups. Full of staggering changes in tone, tempo, and feelings, a song that proves the alternative rock world is the best place to find emotionally raw music. Bonus: “California” – Low. Clearly we need more all-Mormon trios from Minnesota. This song sounds like a sunny, warm spring day.
5 – “Give It Up” – 8MM. The sexiest song of the year. Almost too sexy. Bonus Tracks: “Slayer” – Giant Drag. Second sexiest track of the year. “Rebellion” – The Arcade Fire. Technically a 2004 song, it was released as a single this year, earning it mention here. The best track off last year’s landmark disk Funeral.
4 – “16 Military Wives” – The Decembrists. The most enjoyable and entertaining anti-war song of all-time. The Decembrists lead a group of highly literate, indie bands that became the darlings of the blogosphere. Bonus tracks: “Gideon” – My Morning Jacket, “This Year” – The Mountain Goats, “The Skin of My Yellow Country Teeth” – Clap Your Hands Say Yeah.
3 – “7/4 (Shoreline)” – Broken Social Scene. A late-year discovery that I found completely astounding. Bonus: “The Bleeding Heart Show” – The New Pornographers. Two super-bands from Canada that put out two of the best songs of the year. How the hell does that happen? Come on, America! Get your act together!
2 – “I Turn My Camera On” – Spoon. The best song off of the amazing Gimme Fiction disk. Full of classic Prince-esque, bravado-laden falsetto. Fun and funky and fierce. Bonus tracks: “Spanish Teeth” – Robbers on High Street. They sound so much like Spoon that they were initially dismissed as horrible rip-off artists. Turns out they make some damn good music of their own. “Crazy All the Time” – 33Hz. More 1978 Prince repackaged for the modern ear.
1 – “Going Missing” – Maximo Park. My most listened to song of the year. When those guitars chime in before the chorus, you’re taken back to a summer when you lost a love of your own. Also, from a band that is known for offering up a healthy bit of cheek with their tunes, this was a lovely counter of seriousness. Bonus: “Test Transmission” – Kasabian. Maximo, Kasabian, and the Kaiser Chiefs are leading the way for a new British Invasion.

Honorable Mention (In No Particular Order):
“JackInABox” – Turin Brakes
“6 String Belief” – Son Volt
“Hoppipolla” – Sigur Ros
“Paul Simon” – The Russian Futurists
“Princeton Junction” – The Natural History
“Winter in the Hamptons” – Josh Rouse
“I’m Your Villain” – Franz Ferdinand
“It Grew On You” – Foreign Born
“Old Shit/New Shit” – Eels
“Blood” – The Editors
“Stormy Weather” – Echo & The Bunnymen
“Soon Enough” – The Constantines
“I Can’t Stand to Stand Beside You” – Brakes
“Like Eating Glass” – Bloc Party
“Let’s Get High” – Benjamin Diamond
“Sixty Lives” – Aberdeen City
“Verve” – The 101
Coming next week, my top 20 most played tracks of the year.

Essential Finn

My promised summary of some of my favorite Finn Brothers music.  I’m always a little surprised that I’ve become such a big  fan of Neil and Tim’s work over the years.  I’m generally not into the singer-songwriter thing very much, even when it leans to the alterna-pop side of the spectrum.  I guess I was entranced by the majesty of a certain song in the spring of 1986 and have never really gotten over it.  Rather than do mini-reviews of each Neil Finn product I own, which were turning out to be not-so-mini, I’ll share my top ten Neil Finn songs with you.  These are listed in chronological order, oldest to newest.

“I Got You”  Split Enz, 1979.  18 year-old Neil joined his brother
Tim’s band and immediately paid dividends, penning this New Wave
classic that proved to be the Splits’ biggest international success.
Neil’s pure pop sensibilities were already coming through, despite his
youth.  Interesting trivia note to music geeks: Neil had not yet
learned to play electric guitar when he joined the Splits….as their
lead guitarist.  Not sure if that’s a high level of trust from big
brother, or a case of throwing someone into the fire to see how they
react.

“Don’t Dream It’s Over” Crowded House, 1986.  Still my favorite song
from the 80s and one of my all-time favs as well, this was the first
single from the band Neil formed after Split Enz dissolved in 1984.
Unfortunately, it was their only big hit in America, relegating the
band to One Hit Wonder status despite their international success over
the next eight years.  A beautiful song full of conflicting emotions.
Is it triumphant or defeatist?  Hopeful or melancholy?  A little bit of
everything, this ambiguity adding to the genius of the track.

“Four Seasons in One Day” Crowded House, 1991.  Tim briefly joined
CH in 1991 and helped to create what was the band’s most critically
acclaimed disk, Woodface.  Much more mature and developed than their
work together in Split Enz, Woodface was both a brilliant apex for CH
and a sign of what was to come in future Finn brothers collaborations.
“Four Seasons” is an amazing work of simple harmonies and perfectly
restrained music.

“Distant Sun” Crowded House, 1993.  Most of Neil’s love songs have
an interesting twist somewhere along the way that keep them from being
songs that can be comfortably used in weddings.  There is always an
acknowledgment that partnerships are full of troubled times, wandering
eyes, and outright disloyalty.  Trust me, I listened long and hard
hoping to find a song we could use at our wedding.  This was the
closest I came; utterly gorgeous musically, but just a little too much
realism for me to ask a DJ to spin as S. and I started our lives
together.  “I don’t pretend to know what you want, but I offer love.”
More a song written for 30 somethings who have learned life isn’t
perfect but are still in love than fresh-faced newlyweds who still
believe in fairy tales (And yes, I know we were 30 something when we
got married!).

“Suffer Never” Finn Brothers, 1995.  The highlight track from the
brothers’ first album as a duo.  Dark and foreboding, it serves as a
nice balance to the brothers’ more buoyant works.

“She Will Have Her Way” Neil Finn, 1998.  From Neil’s first solo
album, Try Whistling This.  For most of the album he attempts to follow
his brother’s more experimental path.  This track, however, fulfills
Neil’s perfect pop song quota.

“There Is a Light That Never Goes Out”, “History Never Repeats” Neil
Finn & Friends, 2002.  In 2001, Neil invited several musicians
whose work he admired and had been influenced by to join him at his
home in New Zealand.  They would rehearse for a week, perform for seven
nights, and then break up the “band”, never to perform together again.
Joining him were Sebastian Steinberg of Soul Coughing, Ed O’Brien and
Phil Selway of Radiohead, Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam, Indiana’s own Lisa
Germano who performed with John Cougar Mellencamp for almost ten years,
his brother Tim, his son Liam’s band Betchadupa, and the genius Johnny
Marr of the Smiths.  The performances were documented on the tremendous
CD and DVD, Seven Worlds Collide.  In addition to classic Neil tunes,
the “group” covered songs of each participant as well.  Two of those
covers highlight the disks.
On “There Is a Light”, which happens
to be my favorite Smiths’ tune, Neil absolutely nails the lead vocal,
giving it a level of heartbreak that even Morrissey was unable to
reach.  The brilliance of the song lies in the combination of absolute
depression and disconnection to the world with finding absolute love
which gives life meaning.   One of the strangest love songs ever, the
chorus sums up that balance:

“And if a double decker bus, crashes into
us, to die by your side, is such a heavenly way to die.  And if a ten
ton truck, kills the both of us, to die by your side, well the
pleasure, the privilege is mine.”

Fairly sick stuff, yet both
Morrissey and Neil make it sound beautiful and heartwarming.  Where the
dark one from Manchester sang with a disaffection that put the emphasis
on the angst of the song, Neil offers a warmth that puts the focus on
love.   Musically, the cover isn’t much different than the original,
but that change in emphasis turns it into a totally different song.
Vedder
and Betchadupa performed two Splits songs most nights, “I See Red” and
“History”, both of which were fairly straight-forward in their original
form.  With 16 year old Liam and his band, which were heavily
influenced by Pearl Jam, rocking away in the background, Eddie glams it
up and turns both into neo-punk classics.

“Rest of the Day Off” Neil Finn, 2002.  From Neil’s second solo
album, One Nil globally and One All (in a remixed form) in the States.
A gorgeous ode to turning off the phone, ignoring work obligations, and
kicking it with someone you love on a sunny, warm afternoon.

“Disembodied Voices” Finn Brothers, 2004.  After making music
together periodically for almost 30 years, one would think the well
could be dry.  Yet the Finn Brothers’ 2004 release Everyone Is Here was
loaded with tracks that were quickly labeled classics by their fans.
This gorgeous song is one of remembrance to times when young brothers
lay in bed talking about the possibilities of life at night when they
should have been sleeping.

“Talking with my brother when the lights
went out.  Down the hallway, 40 years ago.  And what became much harder
was so easy then.  Open up and letting go…”

Happy downloading!

 

2004 Reading List

I’m not a big New Year’s Resolution guy, but I do normally write down a few goals for the coming year. One of my entries this time last year was to read 24-30 books in 2004. I passed the lower end of that threshold in May and was sitting at 36 books the day M. was born. Not a bad year, although it sure helped to travel to the West Coast on a regular basis for six months and to live with a woman who works 2-3 overnight shifts a week. I think my goal will be a little less ambitious this year, as I’ve discovered it’s pretty much impossible to knock off three books a week when you’ve got a little one. A couple observations:

This number is actually a little low from what I read in total, as I didn’t include the numerous baby and computer books I’ve read in a manner other than cover-to-cover. There are at least five baby books I read 90% of, as well as four other Mac books I’ve knocked 75-80% out of the way as I’ve taught myself how to use my new computing platform. However, since none were finished, I don’t count them.

Interesting that my year began and ended with the same book. I got Wolves of the Calla last Christmas and read it as soon as I completed the book I started in late ’03. With the release of the last two books in the Dark Tower series this year, I decided to start from book one before I knocked them off. I just closed the back cover of Wolves for the second time this morning.

Without a doubt my book of the year is Fortress of Solitude. Every year there are a few buzz novels that everyone seems to be reading. Fortress didn’t sell at the same level as The DiVinci Code, but it certainly garnered a lot of attention at its release. It’s one of my all-time favorite books. A fantastic tale. Language that is so beautiful to read it almost hurts. Absolute perfect spirit of the times translated to fiction. I spoke to a couple readers on my trip to Kansas City who are either reading it now, or had just finished it. I was glad to hear they agreed that it was a phenomenal work. My highest of high recommendations.

Next to Fortress, the book that moved me most was Season of Blood: A Rwandan Journey. Reasonable people can argue about any foreign policy action of the United States. There is no justification for not taking steps to end what is probably the purest example of genocide the modern world has seen. Stalin and Hitler were evil men who took great pains to kill efficiently. The evil doers in Rwanda were far worse, in my opinion, because they didn’t use gas, electricity, or other methods to kill large numbers of people with minimal effort. In Rwanda, young men were handed crude machetes made from scrap metals then paraded through villages hacking people’s heads open until no one was left living. It was medieval killing in modern times, and everyone in the West should be ashamed we allowed almost a million people to die in less than three months.

I’ve still got quite a list of books I’d like to read, and I add to it constantly. I’ve got roughly 1000 pages left in the Dark Tower saga, then I hope to add some more variety to the list in ’05. Hopefully you can find something here that interests you. If you need a synopsis or recommendations, let me know.

1 Wolves of the Calla – Stephen King
2 Milk It! – Jim DeRogatis
3 Imagining Argentina – Lawrence Thornton
4 Drinking, Smoking, & Screwing: Good Writers on Good Times
5 Out of Sight – Elmore Leonard
6 Joe College – Tom Perrotta
7 Sellevision – Augusten Burroughs
8 The Expectant Father – Armin Brott
9 Glamorama – Bret Easton Ellis
10 Rum Punch – Elmore Leonard
11 Shutter Island – Dennis Lehane
12 Plainclothes Naked – Jerry Stahl
13 In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz – Michela Wrong
14 Breakfast on Pluto – Patrick McCabe
15 Gun, With Occasional Music – Jonathan Letham
16 Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded – Simon Winchester
17 Little Green Men – Christopher Buckley
18 Season of Blood: A Rwandan Journey – Fergal Keane
19 Black Hawk Down – Mark Bowden
20 Nine Innings – Daniel Okrent
21 Moneyball – Michael Lewis
22 Foul Ball – Jim Bouton
23 Rotten: No Irish, No Blacks, No Dogs – John Lydon
24 Thieves in High Places – Jim Hightower
25 The Boys of Summer – Roger Kahn
26 Into the Wild – Jon Krakauer
27 The Catcher in the Rye – JD Salinger
28 Lies & The Lying Liars Who Tell Them – Al Franken
29 The Fortress of Solitude – Jonathan Letham
30 What’s the Matter With Kansas? – Thomas Frank
31 McCarthy’s Bar – Pete McCarthy
32 The Sweet Forever – George Pelecanos
33 The Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
34 Mac OS X for Windows Users – David Coursey
35 I Was Right On Time – Buck O’Neil
36 The White House Mess – Christopher Buckley
37 Sex, Drugs, & Cocoa Puffs – Chuck Klosterman
38 Wilco: Learning How to Die – Greg Kott
39 The Partly Cloudy Patriot – Sarah Vowell
40 The Gunslinger – Stephen King
41 The Drawing of the Three – Stephen King
42 The Wastelands – Stephen King
43 Wizard and Glass – Stephen King
44 Wolves of the Calla – Stephen King

 

The Year In Music

Another pretty good year is about to go into the books. This time last year, we were hiding the fact that S. was pregnant until we had sonogram #1 and were sure all was well. We spent our New Year’s trip to a cabin in southern Indiana swapping my empty beer bottles for hers under the table so our friends wouldn’t notice. M. arrived, and life changed forever, in July. We watched over a dozen friends welcome children to the world as well. I kissed the corporate world good-bye for the time being in September. We just about finished furnishing our home. I moved to a Mac and got an iPod. I spent time in Arizona, California, and sucked my company into sending me to Portland twice in six weeks. I also made four trips to Kansas City, with the obligatory visits to my favorite barbecue haunts. Not much to complain about, and a lot to be thankful for.

2005 is shaping up to be another year of changes, as I begin grad school in two weeks and search for a place in the non-profit world to supplement my academic pursuits. S. faces some major changes in her job in the coming year. M. will continue to grow like a weed (or a tick, more appropriately), and demonstrate new tricks every day. We’ve got a trip to Puerto Rico booked, hopefully a trip to Portland, and of course, a couple trips back to KC.

Along with reading, music is my biggest time filler. 2004 was an interesting year for several reasons. Alternative rock made a big comeback, although it’s not nearly as prevalent as during the 90s heyday. MP3 blogs sprang up left and right, opening a new world of music to those of us who lack a local station that plays quality music. In the months AM (After M.), my discovery of new music slowed way down, so my top ten songs of the year list is heavily weighted towards the first half of the month. Unlike recent years, though, I had no trouble coming up with a list.

10 – Neighborhood #3 – The Arcade Fire: Some songs you just don’t get at first, second, or even third listen. This was one of those songs, and it took awhile to get. But eventually it did made sense. The darlings of the indie music press, The Arcade Fire is a band I’ll be exploring in more detail in 2005.

9 – Vertigo – U2: Every time I look at my iPod, I think of this song. Mission accomplished, Bono.

8 – Won’t Give In – The Finn Brothers: A simply gorgeous song full of maturity and emotional strength.

7 – American Idiot – Green Day: I just got the single, rather than the whole album, so I can’t comment on the strength of the larger work. The single was a tremendous statement, though, full of power and fury that would have made the punk gods proud.

6 – Can’t Stand Me Now – The Libertines: The sound that sums up what it must feel like to be a drug-scene hipster in the UK.

5 – Portland, Oregon – Loretta Lynn: Stunning. Brilliant.

4 – Take Me Out – Franz Ferdinand: Ass shakin’ music for the new millennium.

3 – Jesus Walks – Kanye West: Taking hip-hop to a whole new level and direction. This was a song I totally got the first time I heard it.

2 – Spitting Games – Snow Patrol: Songs of unrequited, teenage love are always relevant. When they sound as good as this, they’ll last forever.

1 – Float On – Modest Mouse: One of the least likely hits in recent memory, this song would have been #1 on my list regardless of the personal angle. A song so ugly it’s pretty, the fits, starts, and shrieks combine to create a universal anthem to better times always being just around the corner. Even the song structure upholds that idea, with the bridge before the final reprise creating a false end before those four little guitar notes at the 2:34 mark lead back into the sing-along close. Every time I hear this, I’ll think of listening to it in my office on July 24, and hearing S. yell down that it was time to go to the hospital and have a baby.

Honorable Mention:
Handshake Drugs – Wilco
Irish Blood, English Heart – Morrissey
Death Cab for Cutie: They didn’t have any ’04 releases, but I found a couple of their CDs at the library and have become a big fan. (ED: Heck, I just used one of my iTunes gift certificates to grab another of their albums.)

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