2005 Top 10

The Fake Fictions at Cleary’s on Clark

Probably the defining live moment for me in 2005 came towards the end, at this modestly-attended show in December. I’d spent a year performing very little, and watching the FFs fling their short and sweet tunes with such vigor made me check off a resolution to have the kind of fun they were having a little more often in the oh-six.

Bloc Party, Silent Alarm

I’m thinking maybe I fall in love with the same number of albums each year as I did when I was a teenager, in spite of the fact that I “consume” so many more as I get older, as my dispensable income swells along with the available technology. This shakes out to roughly 3 to 6 albums, and in 2005, Silent Alarm was one of them. At first I bristled at the post-punk-isms, the revived “angular” guitars we’ve been flooded with since the Strokes and/or Interpol. But then, after about three listens, the songs started outweighing the mere sounds, and they were distinct, adventurous and passionate. After a certain point in the listening continuum, analysis dripped away, as it always does with these few records. What I heard ceased to be a kind of great music and became just great music.

Re-discovering Swans
In all seriousness, I was looking for a CD to cheer myself up. At the local shop, there was the re-release of Children of God, an album I remember really liking in high school. I took it home, gave it a close listen, and found that, to my delight (again, seriously), it totally holds up. In fact, I’d say that, heard from the far side of a decade-plus spent actually paying my own rent, it sounds better than it even could have in ’88. I snapped up a couple earlier, more “brutal” albums, as well as the Gira-compiled 2-disc set from their later, more acoustic stuff. Then, of course, what we know as Swans ended their recorded output with the sound-collage-smeared double album, Soundtracks for the Blind. I can’t say it’s all brilliant, but it’s amazing how such a bleak approach, always on the brink of breaking under its own weight, instead mutated into this wide and ultimately enriching array of sounds. And now, even after a 2005 spent re-tracing Swans’ crooked line, I’m still dumbfounded by the finished drawing.

“I’m Pretty Sure I Can See Molecules” by Troubled Hubble, “Ageless Beauty” by Stars, “Helena” by My Chemical Romance, “Apply Some Pressure” by Maximo Park, “Daft Punk is Playing at My House” by LCD Soundsystem, and “Paul Simon” by the Russian Futurists
I was way more selective about my singles this year; I flicked things off the iPod quite swiftly. As my old friend JJ used to say, “life is too short for music that’s just okay.” These little songs, just a few minutes each, took over city-blocks in my head almost immediately. They made it their business to make my heart beat faster–every one, every time.

Buttercup, Sick Yellow Flower
A fiend of a friend who lives in San Antonio has this band. I’d been privy to their demos for 3 or 4 years and was always impressed with the songs—state-of-the-art indie rock, soulfully jittery singing and a radio-sized hook rationed out on about every third song. At the beginning of the year, these guys finally released their debut CD, and they went for broke in the best possible sense. To my ears, there’s a concept at work–travel, or at least the disconnected sense sometimes associated with it. The mood swings from confused to giddy, from perfectly still to bursting-all-surfaces, but never once stops being pop music.

The music at my wedding
It was a great day, with music to match. During the ceremony, my declaration was made via my brother’s performance of a song I’d written for Amy during the summer we’d fallen in love. Later, my friends John and Tom sang Ron Sexsmith’s “God Loves Everyone,” possibly the song I most wish I’d written, and definitely the one where Amy’s and my sometimes-at-odds spiritual lives find a joyous common ground….and invite everyone in. We first-danced to the Beatles’ version of “Til There Was You,” and we all danced into the night to songs since cemented in my heart as in one way or another “ours:” Men at Work’s “Everything I Need,” Wilco’s “I Got You (At the End of the Century),” Stevie Wonder, Edith Piaf. Oh, and we also played “Hey Ya,” but maybe that goes without saying.

Hearing “Seventeen” by Ladytron at a loft party populated mostly by people well below the age of 30
I’ve come to like this song quite a bit, but at the time I first heard it, in all its anonymously-80′s bloopy-bleepiness, I felt woefully out-of touch. “So,” I thought, “the kids have started ripping off Berlin.” And if at “21 you’re no fun,” then what are you at 34? I shuddered to think, but have since stopped.

Mini-Hootenanny at the baby shower for Tom and Casey
It was at our apartment, with the performers backed into the corner with the plants. I played a couple baby/family songs, and so did three other friends, as well as Tom himself. The show was put on for the lucky couple, but hearing the talent and love of my friends made me feel pretty blessed, too.

Sun Kil Moon, Ghosts of the Great Highway
It doesn’t happen often, maybe once every few years, but when it does, it’s downright scary. Someone drops a CD in your hand and says something like, “you might like these guys.” You take it home and find that not only do you like it, but it’s as though someone had been reading your mind. Dropping the second person, let me say that it’s like God peeked under the rind of my skull, saw that I was recently obsessed with the Band, Nick Drake, and the louder bits of Uncle Tupelo, and decided with a crash of lightening to create this album just for me. At first, the sensation was so total that I wasn’t even sure I liked—that I could like—Ghosts of the Great Highway. Of course that proved silly, and I’ve since grown to love all these songs—but to me they still sound almost unnaturally perfect, and so I’m very far from done with them.

“16 Military Wives” video and song by The Decemberists
Song of the year for me, video of the decade so far. I loved the Decemberists anyway, but to have them penning this shockingly-rare political protest song, brilliantly framing it in a hilarious and even-more-pointed video was a revelation. This from people who usually croon about mariners and barrow-boys. We need more of this.

Embrace and the writing of Nick Southall
I didn’t know much about Embrace except that their first album was compared to Oasis, and what little I’d heard of their music (a promo copy of “All You Good Good People”) bore this out. Then, early this year I read a piece on them by a Stylus writer named Nick Southall. I say that casually, but this wasn’t just a story about a young Brit’s favorite band. It was a glorious reclamation of what it means to have a favorite band, to let a band into your life like you would a lover, or maybe in the way people I don’t understand do with sports teams. The article came around just as I was reaching a crisis point with music myself, just as it seemed everyone who wrote or talked about music—myself included—had somehow lost the thread in this file-trading, blog-scouring, culture-devouring anti-boom. Mr. Southall’s unabashed emotion helped to quell my consumerist paranoia, and Embrace’s singles collection, being so triumphant-sounding (like Oasis, but more celebratory than sneering in its massiveness) made it easy for me to re-connect with the triumph of music generally.

2002 Top 10

Opening Salvo

So Greg asked me why I didn’t do a top ten, why I might not get around to it this year. “Even I posted a top ten,” he cajoled. Well, yeah, Greg, but you didn’t put any damn comments on it! No reviews, no why’s or wherefores. How’s a cracker supposed to know? Y’suck, man! Y’suck!

But then I had to ask myself if I was entirely proud of all the purple prose I’d spilled in the “editorial sections” of top tens posted in years past. I had to admit it was not so. Ultimately, I had to admire letting a list speak for itself; who needs the jibba-jabba?

But I am a writer, and a nerdy nerd on the topic of pop music who likes the sound of his own printed voice. So I had to reach a compromise, and here ’tis: I’ve limited myself to 10 words about each of the 10 albums in this, my top 10 for 2002. Please notice that hyphenated expressions count as one word, and that I didn’t stick with sentence form, resulting in some of the entry-descriptions having a delightful haiku-like quality.

I’m also drunk.

(One caveat here: I’ve no right, really, to do this list because I fell in absolute love with Spoon’s “Girls Can Tell” album this year, but that was put out in 2001, and I’ve not heard their 2002 release, “Kill the Moonlight.” You go, Spoon!)

The Ten

1. Desparecidos, Learn Music / Speak Spanish
punkish half-hour concept album
passionately deriding urban sprawl
STORYTELLING!
INTEGRITY!

2. Interpol, Turn on the Bright Lights
spiky new-age coating
with a fuzzy shoegazing center
GOD DAMN!

3. Wilco, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
not-that-difficult
bloopy/bleepy folk
still breaking hearts
(like mine)

4. Oasis, Heathen Chemistry
tuneful rock stars
become tuneful again–
YOU KNOW YOU’RE RIGHT!

5. Sleater-Kinney, One Beat
protest songs at zeppelin level–
aging gracefully
an institution now

6. Weezer, Maladroit
actually riding the guilty-or-not pleasure line
better than
number seven

7. Andrew W.K., I Get Wet
i’ll buy the walk
since he certainly
talks the talk

8. Beck, Sea Change
uneven, but
some songs actually
as good/sad
as hank, cash

9. The Hives, Veni Vici Vicious
what is garage?
i’ve no idea.
this kicks my ass!

10. Rhett Miller, The Instigator
Whiskeytown bang meets
Matthew Sweet buck–
pop songwriter’s songwriter!

2001 Top 10

Old and Out of Touch: A 2001 Top 10 List
by Dan ZP

1. Jimmy Eat World, Bleed American
This isn’t just my number one album of the year; it’s what I’m all about. I’m all about: large recording dollars gone to making shit sound HUGE, good singing with harmonies, hooks the size of Florida–and unbelievably positive vibes. To wit: “Just try your best / Do anything you can / And don’t you worry what their bitter hearts / Are gonna say.” Is this the new U2? Here’s where emo “sells out”, I guess, but I see that as a good thing. How else is a sub-genre supposed to become simply, finally, kick-ass rock music?

2. The Emily Rock Group, Pop and Fade
This is the last album by Cleveland-area post-punk holdouts formerly known as Emily. Rhythmically tight like the Jesus Lizard, sans the abrasion-for-its-own sake ethos. Somehow, these three guys pile on a beautiful racket, and the impressionistic, rushing-outside-the-car-window lyrics are the icing on the gravy. Think Sebadoh circa Bakesale, with the ugly/pretty songs smooshed together more finely. A better half hour you will not find, aurally speaking. Bonus: They’re obscure!

3. Rainer Maria, A Better Version of Me
The previous album from these guys—1999′s “Look Now, Look Again”–made me feel kinda old. Such young players, such bleeding hearts–quite convinced that heartache matters. Thematically, “A Better Version of Me” isn’t quite as whiney as its predecessor, and the sound is more confident, too—gigantic shoegazing outroes, heftier hooks, tighter rhythms. So, quite a fitting title here. This is your basic emo music, but prettier and more expansive than you could imagine. Meanwhile, the lyrics retain a wide-eyed quality, while gaining an occasional toughness: “I’ve got to fight / Just not in the way I once thought right.” And by the way, they sing much better now. Well–she does, anyways.

4. The Strokes, Is This It
The CD got to my apartment before the hype did. I consider myself lucky, ‘coz this is simply wonderful–and wonderfully simple. It’s been a long time since I’ve been this happy about not knowing what the hell a singer’s going on about. Rock and roll.

5. Goner, Dollar Movie
Yes, I used to play with these guys. What are they? They are more emo than what is currently called that. They are solid songwriters, exquisite arrangers, and emotional dynamos. They rock quite fucking hard–which you know if you’ve ever seen them live. But the end of this record also has what is maybe the most purely bittersweet song this nerd has ever heard–”Lifer’s Lament,” a chin-up for anyone who leads The Creative Life. It’s kinda like if R.E.M.’s “Daysleeper” just spat it out: “In a room full of past-due bills / No, you don’t exactly feel blessed / But just give it time, you will.” Especially with bands like Goner nudging us along.

6. Whiskeytown, Pneumonia
What a surprise and yet no more than a reminder when I heard this one. After Heartbreaker, my opinion of the man was quite diminished (despite the 3 1/2 brilliant songs on that disc). But hey–Ryan Adams used to be in a band. And Whiskeytown didn’t just keep Ryan’s emotional flourishes in check–they pinned the music down, too: Caitlin played fiddle and sang better than a truckload of “guest stars,” and Jay (I think that’s his name) played the most tasteful guitar to be found anywhere in “y’allternative” music. This is easily their best album, and sadly, their last.

7. Dashboard Confessional, The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most
Rainer Maria would write lines like this if they didn’t check themselves: “The bottle is waiting / The cap is twisted, begging to be used / and so are you.” But Chris C’s not-checking is what you gotta love about him. Or hate, I guess. I can feel this album teetering towards something gross, like Sarah McLaughlin–it’s not as sincerely “confessional” sounding as the extremely minimal “Swiss Army Romance” from I think last year. But I can also feel where the hype is justified–Dashboard is like a misery-seeking missile. It will find it in you, and it will blow it up.

8. Weezer, “The Green Album”
If some band you’d never heard of came out with an album whose ten songs contained 8 completely unbelievably catchy-as-hell songs that were about nothing in particular, you could be into it, right? Well, just pretend that this is that band, that Rivers Cuomo never got all upset and made the stellar (and, yes, far superior) Pinkerton. And while you’re at it, recognize that “Hash Pipe” is one of the best “unlikely” singles of the past several years, and that it makes you wanna throw goats and do the nasty and all that shit Lester Bangs would have us do. Yeah.

9. Radiohead, Amnesiac
Whether or not or to what degree this music is “experimental” or “weird” or “obscure” is a matter of taste. The only reason people sweat Radiohead in regards to these qualities is that, amazingly, they sell records. All I know is that Radiohead channel and broadcast a music and a mood that is, to me, indescribably present-tense. That’s it.
10. The Rosenbergs, Mission: You
Often hailed for their staunch independence as a band, The Rosenburgs sport a sound that’s as cheerful and forthright as their views on the industry are dim and doubtful. At times, this album makes Weezer sound like Tad–it’s just that bubbly. Cars, Cheap Trick, The Knack all come to mind–with a new-millennium digital sheen and sweet harmonies. (I mean both old and new meanings of sweet, btw.) It was just getting warm last April when I got this, and I just swallowed it hook, line and sinker: “Summer’s here / And you appear / I’ll be fast asleep.” Awesome.

Also enjoyed…
Sigur Ros, Grandaddy, Centro-Matic, Dismemberment Plan, Belle and Sebastian (no more loud-mouth jokes from me in 2002), Nelly Furtado, Jeff Mangum, Jay Farrar, Oasis, Macy Gray, Five-Eight, Beachwood Sparks, the re-released full-length Johnny Cash prison albums, the Ride box set, Feelies, Kinks, Big Star–OH, THE SWEET AUTUMNAL MEMORIES!

“Enjoy the night.”
–Ronald Thomas Clontle

2000 Top 10

1. Radiohead, Kid A
No doubt!  But seriously, this was pretty much it.  Not just the idea of this album, but the goods themselves, the sad longing in “How to Disappear Completely” and the creeping paranoia (which I personally think topped the creeping paranoia of OK Computer) in “Idioteque” and “The National Anthem.”  Eventually even the semi-instrumental “filler” songs seemed to serve the wallop of the “real” ones.  A music geek treat, to be sure—but also kick-ass in a simpler way.   But maybe that’s just me.

2. Sleater-Kinney, All Hands on the Bad One
I only had this for a couple weeks, then lost it.  But I remember being very happy with it.  It’s been good to hear this band get…uh…”mature,” I guess.  It’s possible to get refined and tricky without losing intensity, and these guys deserve props for this.  “Youth Decay” and “Was It a Lie” don’t just make me tense—they make me want to sing.  Which is a far heavier thing.

3. The Put-Outs, Sing the Hits
This ruined Jets to Brazil for me.  It’s basically pop-punk, I guess.  Tommy Stinson produced it, and the guy sings in that rough way about drinking and not getting laid.  Like Social Distortion or the Replacements or that one good Goo Goo Dolls album (yeah, there was one).  Totally the kind of record I didn’t think anyone made any more.  Very visceral and just awesomely rawking.  Must be heard very loud.

4. Crooked Fingers, Crooked Fingers
Eric Bachman kicks it down a notch.  That’s where the Archers were going, anyways—but who would have ever thought bitterness could get as poignant as “Broken Man” or “A New Drink for the Old Drunk”?  Keyboards fatten and clean guitars strum, and it’s all sad as hell, consistently so.  And the songs are oddly rootsy in their simplicity, giving this a sort of “instant classic” quality.  Beautiful.

5. Catatonia, Equally Cursed and Blessed
This sounds pop to American ears, including mine.  But only in the UK would something so shimmery also be so rock solid.  These songs are unbelievably catchy with booming guitar, good beats and sneering, bored-but-tough-chick lyrics.  In “Londoninium,” Cerys Matthews gets four syllables out of “endlessly” and sounds like she does not give a single fuck.  Or how about: “Joan of Arc / come kiss my art / leave a charcoal mark”?  American version comes with “Road Rage” and “Mulder and Scully,” without which this album wouldn’t have made it, probably.  So very worth the four dollars I paid for it.

6. Jurassic 5, Quality Control
Some kid who’d just been fired left this behind at work.  I picked it up and proceeded to get completely blown away by just how old school it is.  Like the first Jungle Brothers album, this is all about funkiness and mind-blowingly good rhymes.  The kind of thing that gives you shivers or makes you groan involuntarily.  Hopefully not in front of anyone–though that can be difficult.

7. At the Drive-In, Relationship of Command
The most recently-appreciated album on the list, so I may live to regret this.  But I’m so amazed that I even like this at all, I gotta throw it up here.  There’s music in this, you know–not just very good shouting and guitars.  Quite a workout, but I’d venture to say that in its alternately slow and quick burning, it has more in common with Jane’s Addiction than Rage Against the Machine.  Which in my book is a good thing.

8. OutKast, Stankonia
“B.O.B.” is just about the best song this year, and the rest of this is pretty amazing, too.  I’d put this higher if it wasn’t so damn schizo, though.  Stankonia doesn’t quite hit all of its targets, but the very idea of throwing something like “Toilet Tisha” or “I’ll Call Before I Come” out there is, in the current hip-hop climate, just ballsy beyond belief.

9. Primal Scream, Xtrmntr
They have Mani from the Stone Roses and Kevin Shields from My Bloody Valentine now, you know.  How could they go wrong?  Well, they could, of course.  Just that they haven’t; not with this.  This is so full of sound.  It makes Boston sound like Songs:Ohia or something.  And it’s brutal and electronic and screeching.  In that way, it’s sort of like this year’s other Kid A.  A Kid A that makes you shake your ass a little.  It’s nothing at all like Screamadelica, by the way.  Very good for long rides on filthy trains.

10. Sunny Day Real Estate, The Rising Tide
Like with Fugazi, I always preferred the idea of SDRE over the reality.  Respect over enjoyment, you might say–until this album.  For whatever reason, The Rising Tide has won me over to the Sunny Day cause; the intricacies of the music compliment the flowery lyrics rather than slowing things down.  “Killed by an Angel” is the first song, and it sounds exactly like its title.  The rest of the songs are either delicate or roaring or both, but always…”rich” is the word I’d use.  Oddly, it reminds me of Led Zeppelin.  Good for listening to while looking through falling snow up at tall buildings.

Man, Were These Close
Badly Drawn Boy, The Hour of Bewilderbeast
The Roots, The Roots Come Alive
Deanna Varagona, Tangled Messages
Clem Snide, Your Favorite Music
Ryan Adams, Heartbreaker
T. Griffin, Tortuga
Elastica, The Menace
Yo La Tengo, And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out
Steve Earle, Transcendental Blues
Open Mike: A Tribute to the Songs of Mike Merz

Top Three Guilty Pleasures
1. “Come on Over Baby” by Christina Aguilera
2. “Break Stuff” by Limp Bizkit
3. “Wait and Bleed” by Slipknot

Post Script
There’s always stuff you didn’t hear:  Sigur Ros, Granddaddy, The Glands, LeTigre, just to name a few  friends’ picks and press raves.  Some would say if you didn’t hear everything in a given year, you shouldn’t make a top ten.  But hey—it’s not like I’m getting paid for this.  It’s all in the name of fun.  Plus, it’s really quite inspiring to comb over the last year and realize how fruitful it’s been–how sweet it is to be a music fan.  The older I get, the easier it is to blow off songs, albums, bands–even whole genres. To quote my number one underrated artist of all time, “I don’t wanna be like that.”  And so, geeky shit like making top tens keeps that nasty temptation at bay.  Hope you agree, hope you liked–let me know what you thought.

“A lot of opinions out there…”
–Ronald Thomas Clontle