Graffiti originally spotted on Bedford Ave., Williamsburg in 2002–soon followed by copycat crimes on Silverlake Blvd. and San Francisco's Mission District. Now playing at a Hot Topic near you. For spread-the-wealth reasons, this list was restricted to songs from albums that did not make the Top 50 cut. As for Christmas wish lists: let us all pray that “indie” is never again wielded as a malapropism. No arguments when this exists.
The Gothenberg, Sweden duo known as Air France call their balearic-suffused tropical pop, “Socialist roof-top music.” Indeed, there's something inescapably high about “No Way Down.” Not in a druggy way–though the track references the Happy Mondays–and it, plus a spliff and warm Carribbean waters, could make for an unbeatable combination. Nor does this perceived flight stem from the band's nomenclature. No, gravity is negated by the effervescence of its rhythms–the white sand synths, littoral hand drums and insouciant island whistling. As the track's elysian haze dissipates, a gentle refrain of “Hallulejuah” provides a fitting denoument. Air France make church music for atheists. They understand that when there's no way down, you have to figure out how to levitate. –Jeff Weiss
Beck-“Gamma Ray”
Chugging along with insistent Technicolor guitars, “Gamma Ray” was one of Beck's strongest singles in years. Like much of Modern Guilt–a seemingly tossed off collaboration with the ubiquitous Danger Mouse–this catchy slice of quasi-krautrock is markedly less opaque than much of Beck's prior output; the lyrics, referencing melting icecaps, hurricanes, smokestacks, and heat waves, are nothing less than a twisted pop reflection of 21st century pre-apocalyptic malaise. Danger Mouse's dense production finds room for surf guitars, gurgling synths, and chiming tambourines ornamented with Laurel-Canyon-style harmonies, but despite all the 60s signifiers, “Gamma Ray” sounds thoroughly modern. If Beck started out as a jokey, genre-hopping pop collagist, he's quickly maturing into a classicist songwriter, building one of the most consistently varied and interesting catalogues in pop. Looming apocalypse or no, that's no reason to feel guilty.–Patrick McKay
Black Mountain-“Wucan”
Black Mountain may wear their Quaalude-friendly influences (Floyd,
Zepp, Sabbath) prominently, but there's something inimitably
sinister–and original–to their projection of the dark side of the
hippie dream. Like Crowley-worshipping elder brothers of Brightblack
Morninglight, Black Mountain's “Wucan” might be stoner music, but it's
certainly not the laissez faire Harold and Kumar edition.*
Instead, it summons the malevolent spirits latent in every trip–vivid
hallucinations, tongue limp and listless as a log, pores oozing oil,
and a stomach like a cesspool. The moment when you're struck by the
sickening suspicion that you've ingested too much and need help.
Frontman Steven McBean mutters Mephistolean incantations: “The haunted
ones howlin' in your head/'yeah it's a broken scene'/that won't bring
you home.” Amber Webber chimes in with her ectoplasmic coo: “But we
could come together.” The video helps to explain: the band shrouded in
shadow, fascinated by the most atavistic elements–sky, mountains,
plants, desert, and ancient Indian drums. It's dualism at its most
stark: the manichean struggle between light and dark, heaven and earth,
life and death.
*That would be Wolf Mother
-Jeff Weiss
By
midnight on the final evening of SXSW last Spring, I had eaten a
fistful of mushrooms, drank a half dozen shiners and inhaled about
eight thumbnails of dirt weed from
a battie. Somehow, I'm not exactly sure as to the logistics, I found
myself inside Bourbon Rocks, watching a guy in a silk shirt, cowboy
boots and a bald penis-shaped head try to run Pick-Up Artist
game on a pair of blondes in front of me. Meanwhile, onstage, quite
possibly the shittiest band I've ever seen rocked a rapturous audience.
I wish I were exaggerating but I'm not. Here is The Matches' photo.
See what I mean.
For five minutes that felt like five hours, my outlook on humanity sank
to a nadir only matched during those two weeks when it looked like
Sarah Palin was going to become the next vice-president. Distraught and
heavily medicated, I staggered outside onto the patio area where
Parisian noise/electro outfit, Cheveu fortuitously unleashed a show so
powerful that all I can remember about it is that it felt like 50 mile
per hour gusts of wind were bowling me over. I was reasonably certain I
had stumbled onto the next greatest band. The world was temporarily
saved, good had defeated evil, I was free to employ the insanely
dubious logic that downing two Sparks consecutively was the only
logical option to stay drunk and wired.
When I got home and actually played Cheveu's enonymous album, I
realized that they weren't the French Stooges. Like Hansel realizing
that he'd been smoking peyote for six days and had actually never been
to Mt. Vesuvius, I understood that the drugs had helped embellish.
“Lola Langusta” is the exception, a thrashing, horn-filled,
psych-guitar workout that might be best lo-fi noise pop* song in a year
filled with strong competition. Plus, it's proof that I'm not
completely crazy.
* I mean, am I really supposed to use the phrase Shitgaze?
–Jeff Weiss
David Byrne/Brian Eno-“Strange Overtones “
Past rock heroes making Surprisingly Good new records is about as
boring as songs about songs, and this is one, but David Byrne, his
age-flattened voice the peculiar croon of an ex-neurotic (and his
gentle alienation still the mark of the mild autistic he probably is)
narrates the creation of “Strange Overtones” like it's a love note (to
Brian Eno, I guess). More importantly, Eno deserves it – like most of Everything That Happens Will Happen Today,
the track he provides is a rich, curious groove, atop which Byrne
floats and coos like the weirdo butterfly he's become. A dangerously
light song, yeah, barely there – but Byrne's always been halfway to
vanishing. The trick (Zeno's, I think) is making it a very long halfway.–Theon Weber
I suppose it's tantamount to being a lit critic and admitting you like Atlas Shrugged, but
I prefer Diplo when he's less adventurous. I don't need the Baltimore
club stuff, the Brazilian baile funk and [gasp], the early M.I.A.
material. Call me Bill Kristol all you want–I'll take this re-working
of A Tribe Called Quest's “Electric Relaxation,” and/or the Dub mixtape
with Santogold, any day.
Unveiled at the dawn of summer for the Roots BBQ in Philly, the
transplanted Illadelphian lifts Phife Dawg's, “I like 'em brown,
yellow, Puerto Rican and Haitian” line and blends it with the graceful
glide of original sample source, Ronnie Forster's “Mystic Brew.” Adding
some fierce, clapping drums and out of the crates comes, “Brew
Barrymore,” a track that only has one thing in common with its
namesakes: you want them both at your party.–Jeff Weiss
The Decemberists-“Valerie Plame” (Weber)
I've had it with this band. You should know that. I live in their
fucking city and I was at their fucking Obama rally (half a mile back,
delicately euthanizing a margarita) and for several months I dated a
girl whose roommate learned their songs meticulously, one at a time, on
the fucking ukelele. But we're not dating anymore. So loving the hook
of their love-troubled-by-espionage song (which by the way is like
their third one, for goodness' sakes) was a little like admiring our
fading President's shoe-dodging acumen earlier this week: a pithy,
surreal return, now the real danger's past, to a place I'd grown
humorless about. “Oh, Valerie Plame / If that really is your name” is
actually cathartic, eight years' disasters made a jaunty joke. Of
course it's confusing to love a spy – poor Joseph Wilson! Why didn't we
think of this at the time? Someone find a ukelele.–Theon Weber
Department of Eagles-“No One Does It LIke You”
“No One Does It You” is the kind of song that makes you feel stupid
writing about because even stripped down to its most simple parts (see
the video above), it's pretty much perfect. And nothing in life is
perfect, so how can a song be. And really, what a cliche. But it
is–along with Grizzly Bear's “While You Wait For the Others (see blurb
bel0w) and “Two Weeks,” Danniel Rossen has been a part of three perfect
songs in one year, more than many songwriters see in a lifetime.
According to my iTunes, this is the 20th time I've listened to, “No One
Does It Like You.” I still couldn't tell you what the song is about.
Probably love. It sounds like it. But why am I supposed to analyze
lyrics when you can feast for days on The Beatles-worthy harmonies
(yes), effortlessly breezy bounce and straight-out-of-the oven
keyboards. And the moment just after the 2:00 minute mark where the
song comes to an unnatural end, before exploding into even more
colorful constellations. Really, the only line you need to pay
attention to is the chorus: Nobody Does It Like You. Exactly. –Jeff Weiss
Perhaps its the rabidness of Dr. Dog's fan base that elicits such
fierce jabs from their detractors—like all of their records, Fate received drastically mixed reviews.
Of course, their weaknesses are out in the open: an all-too familiar
aesthetic that overly swipes from The Beatles, The Band and The Dead.
Lyrics occasionally capable of making Jim James' lesser work on Evil Urges look like Blood on the Tracks. But
that's missing the point. Like My Morning Jacket, the band that took
them on their first national tour, Dr. Dog are linchpins of the
Bonnaroo set, with jam band leanings, sometimes inconsistent studio
albums and a salient Muppet Show fascination.
All you hope for is a half-dozen strong songs to work into an already stacked setlist. Fulfilling those modest expectations, Fate delivered
“The Ark,”a tune making up for in atmosphere what it lacks in lyrical
acumen. Toby Leaman belts his great beards and burlap voice, backed by
cozy Fender Rhodes keys, crisp guitars, glowing organ lines and
three-party harmonies–the result is that few songs in 2008 made for
such rich comfort food. –Jeff Weiss
Fleet Foxes-“Mykonos”
Let's just get this out of the way now: There's nothing inherently
original about Fleet Foxes. They aren't prophetic, they aren't
cerebral, and surely aren't the most photogenic bunch. However, you
can't deny that these guys are sharp. Take “Mykonos” for example. It'd
be easy to classify this song as “laid-back,” but on closer inspection,
you can hear the force with which the band plays every instrument. The
harmonies are lovely, sure, but what are they trying to convey? This is
a song about brotherhood, about trust; the harmonies are epitomizing
the theme of togetherness that runs through the track's undercurrent
(“Brother you don't need to turn me away/I was waiting down at the
ancient gate”). These are not weighty themes, and lyricist Robin
Pecknold doesn't try to make them out to be. In a James Mercer-like
fashion, Pecknold merely abdicates to the tranquility of the music–the
words are merely to advance the story, but aren't the story in
themselves. No, “laid-back” isn't the right word. That would insinuate
that this song, and this band, is lazy. Perhaps a better word would be
“precise,” or better yet, “great.”–Andrew Casillas
Grizzly Bear-“While You Wait for the Others”
I admit to being unfamiliar with these guys aside from this song, so
maybe I shouldn't be surprised by the Spectorish atmosphere, but
Grizzly Bear use it for entirely different purposes than most of the
Wall of Sound-loving contemporaries – not for nostalgia or even for
emotional impact, but more to create a charged but sparsely populated
space within which the sighing chorus of “While You Wait for the
Others” suddenly smacks you upside the head. It's a protean song – you
could go walking in the rain to it, or indulge in some making out, or
drift off to sleep, and that subtle organ, the twisting guitar, and
whichever one of the Chrises is singing remains just as casually
devastating.–Ian Mathers
Los Campesinos-“We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed”
According to Gareth, this one is basically about the fact that even Los
Campesinos! know they won't be this good forever (you can't be the kind
of passionate fan he is and NOT realize how things burn out, no matter
what). There are so many great, and perfectly performed, half lyrics
here – “but they loathe me and I hate them,” “you say he's got his
teeth fixed, I'M GONNA BREAK THEM,” “Charlotte says it's more
productive than the one you did in Canada,” and of course the already
much remarked upon, mass chanted “Oh, we kid ourselves there's future
in the fucking, but there is no fucking future,” which is less
Significant than the more po-faced commenters would tell you, but
luckily is also much funnier too. And it ends perfectly, talking of
your own body breaking down with age and wear and care and then “I hope
my heart goes first, I HOPE MY HEART GOES FIRST!” For as long as they
do remain this good, it's that kind of damn-the-embarrassment
conviction that makes LC! truly great, and the fact that it comes
packaged, as on this song, with at least six separate hooks just seals
the deal.. –Ian Mathers
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