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Jeg vil skrive bloggen på både engelsk og dansk. Hvis du kan ikke forstå ordene, fortæl mig, og jeg vil forsøge at oversætte. Hvis du er dansk, vil jeg gerne fortælle dig, jeg endnu er ved at lære sproget, og mit dansk er ikke særlig godt. Hvis du gerne vil hjælpe mig med ordene, det er rart og tak for det. Min email er somedayashtrays@gmail.com.

This blog will be written in both English and Danish. If you, as a reader, have trouble with one of those languages and would like a translation, please let me know, and I will do my best to oblige. If you are a Danish reader, please know that I am just learning, and my Danish is far from perfect. If you would like to suggest corrections please do so. Email me at somedayashtrays@gmail.com.

16 December 2008

Yndlinge sange af 2008

First, a few things to keep in mind:

I don’t listen to a lot of new music, and what I do listen to is not very diverse. These are probably not the best of the year; they are my favorites of the year. Also, unlike many other blogs/websites, I will not repeat artists -- otherwise these lists would be even more homogenous.

Even with all the rules I set for myself, I had a terrible time narrowing this list down to ten, and then, once I’d finally managed that (actually, as you can see, I didn’t), I had just as much trouble putting it into order. The numbers -- 1-10 -- really don’t mean a whole lot.

These are my ten favorite songs that didn’t appear on one of my ten favorite albums:

Except I have two honorable mentions:

12. 7-11 (from the album By-The-Numbers) – the Postmarks
7-11 is a cover of a song by the Ramones, but it sounds like the Shangri-Las. That should be recommendation enough. To be honest, I don’t know why I’m so attracted to this. I was never a huge fan of girl groups, and this sounds, from the ooh-ooh-las to the string instrumentation, exactly like a sixties girl group song; everything is spot-on. My inability to pinpoint just what it is that I like is probably the reason this is an honorable mention instead of being on the list proper. But then again, maybe that uncertainty is what makes me like it.
By the way, if I ever hear the original Ramones version of this song, I will probably have some kind of a seizure. I can’t even begin to imagine what it must sound like.
(stream full album)

11. In the New Year (from the album You & Me) – the Walkmen
The first time I heard this song, I had already pretty much decided on my top ten songs -- but this is so good I decided to tack it on at the last minute. Lately especially, I’ve gotten to really like year songs -- and this, lyrically like many of the others I know -- is bittersweet; looking forward, but tinged with unhappy memories. Even with all its competition, In the New Year probably wins best lyrics of 2008 for me; I would love to quote them all. And sonically, it’s fascinating. I don’t know what those instruments are -- maybe just a really awesome organ? -- but wow. The song starts out like an electric Bob Dylan ballad and retains touches of that sound throughout, but it quickly grows into a tortured yet soaring, crashing, almost anthemic thing. It’s almost off balance, but it hits just right.
(stream)

Now, the actual ten:

10. Travel as I Wait (from the album The Anger) – Tomas Halberstad
I can’t quite place what I like about this one, either. It doesn’t sound much like the other songs on my top ten. I think what I like best is the sound. This is just one guy, but the vocals are layered on thick (and the voice and lyrics go together well) and there are so many little hints of different instruments, many of which you rarely hear elsewhere (by which I mean in other music). This strikes me as a very Swedish song, but it’s also very unique.
(mp3 -- also available at tomashalberstad.wordpress.com)

9. Godzilla vs the Island of Manhattan (with You and I Somewhere In Between) (from the album I Worked on the Ships) – ballboy
This is a silly love song that’s serious. It could mean so many things. Every time I listen to it, I think of a new one.
(stream full album)

8. Two Skylights (from the album Hurry Up and Thrill Me) – Southern Belle
I did a fantastic write-up for Hurry Up and Thrill Me, and then realized the entire thing was about Two Skylights. Not only is this my favorite Southern Belle song (unfortunately, it sounds very little like the rest of their album; I’m reminded more of Ross McLeron’s solo work), but it’s also one of the most appropriate songs I’ve heard in a long time. Even the name -- which doesn’t appear anywhere in the lyrics -- is very fitting. I first heard Two Skylights this spring, and it’s a good spring song -- a bit morose, but also hopeful -- or even a summer song -- uncomplicated and, dare I say it, somehow very pure. You can hear their youth.

7. How Did We Forget (from the album From the Valley to the Stars) – El Perro del Mar
This is such an old-sounding song. My grandmother would love it. I love it, too. The first time I heard it, I knew -- this song was made for vinyl. I can imagine it most, in fact, as a scratchy record with a skip in it, the same loop playing over and over. Of course, I’d keep my record in pristine condition, if I had one, but this is one of those songs that would still sound terrific with a bit of dust and a few scratches. To add character, though it has plenty of that already. Yes it’s slow and yes it’s repetitive and yes it’s true it doesn’t really go anywhere, but something about it is -- God -- just gorgeous.
(stream)

6. Arrows (from the EP Favors and Fields) – Einar Stray
This is a really pretty song -- layered, beautifully orchestrated; delicate; soothing. Instrumental for nearly the first two minutes, Arrows has that Icelandic sound -- think Seabear, think Múm -- despite Einar Stray’s being from Norway. I don’t know much about Norwegian music, but if the rest of it sounds anything like this, I’ll be listening a lot more.
And I will refrain from being jealous because this is so good it’s beyond me. Yeah, jealous -- because this guy (not band -- one guy) is eighteen. I’m amazed.
(mp3 -- also available at nrk.no)

5. I’m a Lady (feat Trouble Andrew) (from the album Santogold) – Santogold
I didn’t like Santogold at first, and once I started liking her, I still didn’t like this song for quite a while. It’s different from my usual fare; poppier somehow (though I have no idea what genre this belongs to). And, of course, it’s catchy as hell. I appreciate it, though, especially the changes in pitch and inflection. The production is good, too. Not to sound too technical, though -- I’m a Lady is (in my opinion, at least) a perfectly executed fuck-you. And it’s a versatile one -- it could go so many ways. That kind of thing is hard to come by.

4. Lucky (B-side from the single Neo Violence) – the Tough Alliance
The lyrics (which are not the Tough Alliance’s own; it’s a cover) are not the most brilliant. I don’t really know what this song is about. Listening, I pay more attention to the sound. It’s floaty and ethereal and, as I wrote before, “sounding as if they’re shouted down a long tunnel, the vocals are echo-y, far away, perhaps almost all the way gone… To me, it sounds kinda like a memory.” That’s still what I’m most likely to think of with this song -- a memory, a lost childhood, or maybe just a dream from a childhood I never had. Definite melancholia.
(mp3 via Pitchfork)

3. Lovesong (B-side from the single Weekender) – Oliver North Boy Choir
I wrote about this one before, too – “It’s the right kind of love song -- one for the broken-hearted. I guess nearly all (good) love songs are somewhat broken-hearted, but this one seems even more so. It’s perhaps what happens when you’re still in love, but don’t want to be, kind of; the lie that you need to tell yourself, even though you know it’s not true.” There’s only one thing I’d like to add to that. It’s slow and delicate and lovely enough, instrumentally, but it’s the lyrics that really kill. Once I tried to listen to this ironically and it just didn’t work. It doesn’t want to be, but this song is totally a lie. And that makes it even more painful, and even more real, and an even better song.
(stream)

2. Oh! You Pretty Things (from the album Life Beyond Mars: Bowie Covered) – Au Revoir Simone
Au Revoir Simone made my list last year, with their sophomore album The Bird of Music. They released a remix album this year, but I didn’t like it. What I did -- do -- like is Oh! You Pretty Things, a weird, vastly slowed-down cover from an even weirder tribute album. My favorite part, I think, is the last minute and a quarter or so, which is instrumental and sounds like a lullaby, but I really don’t know what it is about this song that makes me so like it. Perhaps it’s something about the slightly fuzzy organs, the echo, the three-part vocal harmonies… I don’t know. I do know that it’s good, though. And, even as much as I like David Bowie, Au Revoir Simone have got him beat on this one.
(stream)

1. In a Jar (from the album Best of Bakers at Dawn) – Bakers at Dawn
If I were asked to choose a favorite new artist for the year, it would easily be Bakers at Dawn. In a Jar is only one of my favorite of his songs (and its not even one of the ones where he sounds exactly like Elliott Smith!). It’s short and demo-y, very raw. The lyrics aren’t terrific (although, admittedly, the voice pretty much is), and the guitar isn’t all that special. Two other instruments appear briefly, though, and while they’re oftentimes background, almost indistinguishable from the guitar, both lend the song an interesting texture, and all of it fits together perfectly. It sounds good -- really good.
Other songs may be catchy, may appeal to some fleeting sensation or resonate only among a select few, may hit and then fade quickly away. It’s rare that a song comes along that doesn’t do any of those things, but is instead simply and in its own right a good song. In a Jar, I think, does that. This song is gonna last.

--DL--
Travel as I Wait (Tomas Halberstad)
Arrows (Einar Stray)
Lucky (the Tough Alliance)

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