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The Super Late Best Music of 2012 Post

14 Feb

“Seriously? A music roundup in FEBRUARY?”

Hey, ya know, a big ass tree fell on our house during Super Bitch Sandy, so I’m a little behind with the posts. But you know the saying:

“Excuses are like assholes, but insurance companies are assholes.”

But look, I’m not bitter. No one was injured. The house is mostly fixed. It’s highly likely that some squirrels moved into our roof while it was smashed, providing them with probably the best winter they’ll ever have in their entire squirrel lives. I have to assume our roof is the squirrel equivalent of the Four Seasons. So you’re welcome, squirrels. Maybe take it down a notch with the scurrying at 3 AM.

And now, without further adieu, The Music That Made 2012 Just Barely Bearable:

Bonnie “Prince” Billy, “I See a Darkness”

Will Oldham is a guy who is probably responsible for a lot of carpal tunnel over at Pitchfork.com. I like this new version of his back catalog song–here it is in a weird video with lots of face warpy weirdness:

 

 

Frank Ocean, “There Will be Tears”

This is from his 2011 EP, “Nostalgia/Ultra”, so it technically shouldn’t be eligible, but I make the rules here. This song plus a few tracks from Channel Orange were pretty consistently pumped into my ear holes all year. Also, Frank Ocean is a brave young man who became something of a focal point for the national conversation around sexual orientation, so there’s that, too:

 

 

Lord Huron, “The Ghost on the Shore”

With somewhat disturbing regularity, bands emerge which were genetically engineered to take advantage of my abiding affection for mopey bedroom-rock sentimentality. Lord Huron is one of those bands:

 

 

Cody Chestnutt, “Chips Down (In No Landfill)”

“In a time of great cynicism, of natural, political and financial disaster, in a new gilded age of permanent war, near-universal desperation and brainless, irredeemable top 40 churned out by a morbidly ill music industry, this man deserves to be massively famous and successful.” –Lyrical, rollicking, destined-to-be-remembered-by-exactly-no-one Facebook post by Sean McEvoy about Cody Chestnutt

 

 

Father John Misty, “Only Son of the Ladies Man”

See: “Lord Huron”; “Staring Forlornly at Bedroom Ceiling”; “Heartbreak”; “Loss”; “Crushing Sadness”; “The Incomprehensible Void”. See also: “Special Purpose”:

 

 

Bruce Springsteen, “Death to My Hometown”

Bruce is 63. He’s a kazillionaire. Many reasonable people can’t stand him, think he’s all bombast and platitudes. He ain’t cool or punk rock or relevant. I don’t care a lick. First, I’m from The Great State of New Jersey, so we’re, like, brothers or whatever. Second, I saw him live for the first time this year. It was an ecstatic religious experience in the Holy Church of Rock ‘n Roll. Thirdmost, in a time when protest songs are desperately needed and nobody is writing protest songs, he made an album of unapologetic protest songs. THAT’S cool.

 

 

Icona Pop, “I Love It”

These two hipster ladies are comin’ straight outta Sweden. I will give you 50 American Dollars if they weren’t invited to New York Fashion Week this year. I like this song, it’s fun:

 

 

Alabama Shakes, “Hold On”

This song just plain old kicks ass, in my humble opinion.

 

 

The Shins, “Simple Song”

Okay so the video is some annoying ass Wes Anderson isht–the song is still a quality Shinsian Angst-o-rama:

 

 

Bad Religion, “True North”

Yup, this album by SoCal punk lifers Bad Religion totally came out this year, so it does not belong in this roundup–but I’m so G-Darn punk rock, I’m putting it in. Also, I’m going to see these guys at the Wellmont Theater on 3/23, and I expect to witness a mosh pit populated entirely by greybeard creative directors and paunchy Dads Who Blog. Ahem.

 

That’s what I’m workin’ with for best songs of 2012(ish) right now. It’s assured that I have left out some truly worthy contenders–perhaps you’ll be so kind as to include them in the comments!

Muuuuuussic Friiiiddaayyyy!!!!

16 Nov

It’s Music Friday, people! “What’s Music Friday?”, you ask? Music Friday is when, on Fridays, I will post some songs I’ve been listening to. I’m a bit of an obsessive repeater when a song gets its needly little claws into me, so when I say “listening to” I mean “listening to over and over again in sort of a creepy trance state, and probably if somebody walked in the room they’d stop suddenly and then start to back away slowly.”

Anyway, let’s get to the songs!

Sera Cahoone, Deer Creek Canyon

This is exactly the kind of lilting, gently-enveloping, pseudo-alt-country ballad I’m a total sucker for.

 

Listen. It is okay for me to love that song and this song. Last time I checked, this was America! Now, back to the lilting…

The Tallest Man on Earth, Wind and Walls

This li’l tiny Swede will folk you up.

 

The Mountain Goats, The Diaz Brothers

This song is based on two characters briefly referenced in Scarface. Mountain Goats frontman John Darnielle told Rolling Stone, “Frank tells Tony he has to respect the Diaz brothers, and Tony tells him to eff the Diaz Brothers, and by the time we do see them, they’re dead,” said Darnielle. “I’m obsessed with people we never got to know but who we know about, because you have a sense of who they were and what became of them since they died, but they’re essentially blocking characters in this story we all know. And we’re all basically blocking characters in life, when you think about it.”

Whatever that means, amen.

 

Ben Gibbard and Aimee Mann, Bigger Than Love

Ben Gibbard is very sad because he broke up with Zoey Deschanel. He is a human-sized, floppy haired, ‘frowny tear’ emoticon, roaming the lonely forests of the Pacific Northwest in vintage bespoke suits. But all that existential agony inspired a pretty good solo album, plus this duet with Aimee Mann.

 

The White Buffalo, BB Guns and Dirtbikes

Though I could accurately be described as “not totally comfortable” with BB guns OR dirtbikes as a kid, this song still manages to remind me of my somewhat free range childhood in New Jersey’s undiscovered central country.