Top 10 Songs of 2011: #5 Wye Oak - Civilian


At this point, a pattern has emerged. With St. Vincent and Florence + the Machines as predecessors (and Mates of State, if you want to pull in the Honorable Mentions), we're on our 3rd female fronted rock bands. This is also another song that fills that previously mentioned niche of starting out slow and quiet and slowly building until it breaks out.

The insane part of it, when you hear it break out, you have no idea that Wye Oak is a duo. The sound is so much bigger and fuller. The mix of this album is truly great, putting sounds and instruments in places that fill your ears and make them seem so sprawling.

The Onion A.V. Club named this album the best of the year, and I don't think that's a stretch. It's a really good record (there are a few more stellar tracks) and one that will probably get a lot more notoriety in 2012 when Wye Oak blow up.

Top 10 Songs of 2011: #6 Fountains of Wayne - The Summer Place


This song could have easily come out on Fountains of Wayne's self-titled debut album, on its follow up Utopia Parkway, or (with a bit more sheen) on Welcome, Interstate Managers. Which is to say, it would have fit in perfectly on three of the shiniest, most perfect pop albums of the last 15 years.

There are a few keys to a great Fountains of Wayne song:

  • Some pretty specific details (think "Radiation Vibe", "Stacy's Mom", "Red Dragon Tattoo")
  • A super hummable hook (everybody can still sing "Stacy's Mom", and I bet if you heard "Denise" once you'd know it for life)
  • Shiny guitars

"The Summer Place" has all three elements in spades.

Details

She's been afraid of the Cuisinart since 1977
Now when she opens up the house
Well, she won't set foot in the kitchen

Hummable Hook

M-i-i-ind

Shiny Guitars
The song starts out with about 20 seconds of danceable guitar riffs. What more do you want?

Sky Full of Holes was a really great return to form by Fountains of Wayne. There are probably 3 or 4 more songs I could have chosen off the album. It's worth the listen.

Top 10 Songs of 2011: #7 St. Vincent - Cruel


It's taken me a while to get on the bandwagon. I had sort of lumped St. Vincent (Annie Clark) in the Joanna Newsom category, the "I sing pretty and play unique orchestral music." Which is good, but tends not to be something that I really dig.

But, I was wrong. St. Vincent is a rock star. It wasn't until I listened to all of Strange Mercy that it clicked for me. If you strip away the music, it's a really pretty song. It could completely get by purely a cappella. Then you listen closer and realize that, while she's singing the chorus, it's not just a synth she's singing over, but also her guitar. The song is a rock song, and the first time it breaks into a reasonably unexpected guitar solo, your brain switches from "this song is pretty" to "Oh, I get it now!"

It's a 3 and a half minute rock song, with strings, pretty vocals, and some really good guitar. What's not to like?

Top 10 Songs of 2011: #8 Childish Gambino - Hold You Down

Warning, some unsafe lyrics in this track. Still good though


Donald Glover. It's really unfair.

Helped to write and starred in the hilarious Mystery Team.
Won an Emmy for writing on 30 Rock, including writing "Werewolf Bar Mitzvah".
Stars as Troy on Community, which may go down as one of the top 5 sitcoms of all time.

And he put out a surprisingly good hip hop album in 2011. What's unique and surprising about it (though, if you think about it, it shouldn't be surprising) is the witty wordplay and the flow. It's just different than most stuff you hear. It harkens back a bit to Jurassic 5's clever lyrics and overlapping flow, or maybe MF Doom's references.

I'm sure someone will say that it's perfect music for white people (which is probably true, though language-wise this is certainly not an album that everyone is going to feel comfortable with …). For me, I think there are two stretches of this track that showcase why I dig this one. They standout lyrically and for their message.

Dude you're not not racist cause The Wire's in your Netflix queue

This one is pretty much aimed directly at people like me (though, hopefully, not me). The idea, of course, is that just because you listen to rap or threw The Wire in your Netflix queue doesn't mean you aren't subtly racist in other ways.

This one kid said somethin' that was really bad
He said I wasn't really black because I had a dad
I think that's kinda sad
Mostly cause a lot of black kids think they should agree with that

That doesn't require a lot of explanation. And when that section of the song hits, it actually stings a bit. Which helps explain why this made my list at #8.

Top 10 Songs of 2011: #9 Florence + The Machine - Shake It Out


I really wanted to not like this song. I avoided it like the plague for weeks. "The Dog Days Are Over" was so catchy and so incredibly overplayed. And whereas the Florence + The Machine maniacs love her often off-pitch singing in her live performances, the live performances on Saturday Night Live made me like her songs less.

So how the hell did this song end up at #9? I don't know. I wish I did. I heard it on the radio and said "Hmm, that's not too bad." Then I'd hear it again and sing along. Then I'd listen to it on Spotify. Then I'd listen to the whole album and find another song or two that aren't too bad.

I don't think I'm ever going to be a huge fan of Florence, or her Machines. But, man, I like this song.

(I'm a complete sucker for songs that start quiet, then kick into a faster gear, drive forward for a bit, then break out; this song does that in the first 90 seconds.)

Top 10 Songs of 2011: #10 Fleet Foxes - Montezuma


Fleet Foxes - "Montezuma"
This is probably the first album by Fleet Foxes that couldn't have been made in the 60s. I don't mean that in any backhanded way, at all. They just make good, timeless music. No crazy instruments or synths. There's no gimmick here. A bunch of guys with their guitars, singing harmonies, and making good folk music.

There are, for lack of a better term, peppier songs on Helplessness Blues (including the song of the same name). But, I mean, seriously, this is why Fleet Foxes are awesome, right? The song is so simple and beautiful, and as it hits the last minute, it has a little breakdown, and then we basically go a cappella for 30 seconds (not quite, but close), and then we coast out.

It's just pretty.

Top 10 Songs of 2011: Honorable Mention

2011 was a weird year in music for me. There were a bunch of albums I loved, but going back through the music, I couldn't find songs that jumped out at me as being amazing. Most of these songs fit that description: the best track of a very good bunch, but with none jumping out at me as being the song.


The Decemberists - "This Is Why We Fight"
The King is Dead is such a great album of rootsy, country, folk rock. It's maybe a 45 degree change from their normal literate rock. Still literate, but much more focused on the music than the wordplay. This track, and "June Hymn" are a couple of the best. The only reason it probably didn't make my list this year is because it came out early in the year and I've heard these songs so many times that they've lost a bit of impact. Six months from now, I'll probably wonder what I was thinking not putting it on the list.

Mates of State - "Maracas"
Another strong album, one that split the difference between Mates of State's older stuff and their last album. This song is such a cool song, with the crazy synths opening the song, the hook that almost feels like it's played at the wrong speed, and the last third of the song the sort of turns into a more traditional Mates song. Great song, and was phenomenal live.

Mates of State

Surfer Blood - "I'm Not Ready"
I don't even know Surfer Blood that well, but the first time I heard this come on the radio I said "this has to be Surfer Blood." And it was. These guys are probably the new hope for power pop/surf pop. It's a more modern sound than your traditional pop; you can hear bits and pieces of The Shins bleeding through (which is crazy, since The Shins are all of ten years old or so).

Telekinesis - "Car Crash"
Here's your more traditional power pop. Straight up, fun ass power pop. A song you'll be humming all day, bopping along to it. Then, during one listen you'll pay attention to the lyrics and wonder how such a happy song can be so depressing.

We Were Promised Jetpacks - "Human Error"
Another song that fits in the "this was the best song off of a really good album" category. Nothing on WWPJ's new album reaches the heights of their last album, but it's another batch of strong songs. And, it's another album that let's the band be one of the best live acts around, as every song is anthemic.

WWPJ

Top 10 Songs of 2011

This is the fifth anniversary of me doing this list. So, I should be rocking this thing out, right?

Well, I've gotten a very late start on this year's top 10, so I'm going to probably blow through a bunch of tracks until I get caught up. This year, to save on the headache (and maybe make 25 cents), I'm going to use Amazon's little MP3 player. You won't get the full track, but you'll get a good chunk of it.

And, if you want to buy a song, you can just click the link and buy it from Amazon, and it'll show up in your iTunes.

The rules, as always, are simple:

  • The song had to have been released on an album in 2011
  • One song per artist

That's about it.

If you wanna get a taste of previous lists, here's the start of the list from 2010, 2009, 2008, and 2007.

Actually, I'll do a quick recap here because, quite frankly, I'm sort of interested to see what the last four lists have looked like. If you care about my pithy comments, go back and read through them.

2007

  1. Arcade Fire - Keep the Car Running
  2. Klaxons - Golden Skans
  3. Spoon - The Underdog
  4. Tokyo Police Club - Your English is Good (I cheated here)
  5. Band of Horses - Is There a Ghost?
  6. Dear Leader - Everything Looks Better in the Dark
  7. The New Pornographers - All the Old Showstoppers
  8. Hallelujah the Hills - Wave Backwards to Massachusetts
  9. The Shins - Australia
  10. Radiohead - Jigsaw Falling Into Place

2008

  1. Tokyo Police Club - Your English is Good
  2. Fleet Foxes - White Winter Hymnal
  3. Weezer - The Greatest Man That Ever Lived (Variations on a Shaker Hymn)
  4. Nada Surf - I Like What You Say
  5. Delta Spirit - Trashcan
  6. Violens - Violent Sensation Descends
  7. The Decemberists - Valerie Plame
  8. Ra Ra Riot - Ghosts Under Rocks
  9. Girls Guns and Glory - 667
  10. Lyrics Born - I Like It, I Love It

2009

  1. Phoenix - Lisztomania
  2. Camera Obscura - French Navy
  3. Metric - Gold Guns Girls
  4. Fanfarlo - I'm a Pilot
  5. Passion Pit - Moth's Wings
  6. Neko Case - This Tornado Loves You
  7. The Decemberists - The Rake's Song
  8. Dear Leader - Barbarians
  9. The Thermals - Now We Can See
  10. The Everyday Visuals - Florence Foster Jenkins

2010

  1. Arcade Fire - Ready to Start / Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)
  2. The Lonely Forest - Turn Off This Song and Go Outside
  3. Cee-Lo Green - Fuck You
  4. Klaxons - Echoes
  5. Broken Social Scene - World Sick
  6. Spoon - Written in Reverse
  7. Tokyo Police Club - Favourite Colour
  8. Vampire Weekend - Giving Up the Gun
  9. Belle and Sebastian - Write About Love
  10. Best Coast - Each & Everyday

ifttt.com + boxcar.io + Growl

After moving to iTunes Match (and not to get too navel gazey, but that post brought more traffic to my blog than I think I've gotten … ever), I've been trying to figure out ways to avoid having to ever plug my iPhone into my computer. There are two things that I still do via syncing with iTunes: getting photos off the phone and podcasts.

The getting photos off the phone part is sort of helped by Photo Stream, but not really. But that's also not what this is about.

The podcast bit can be managed really nicely through Instacast. Export your podcast subscriptions from iTunes, import 'em into Instacast, and it'll become your podcast player. It's very handy.

The only thing it doesn't do particularly well is let you know when to start it up and download new podcasts. (Actually, there's a cool feature in Instacast HD for the iPad that does just that, but I don't listen to podcasts on my iPad all that much.)

Screwing around one night, I was trying to come up with a solution, and I remembered that I had Boxcar installed, which gets me push notifications for Twitterrific (since it doesn't have them natively). I logged into Boxcar, noticed they had a "Push me a notification when there's a new entry in this feed" option, and thought "Hey, I'll plug in the podcast feeds and get push notifications whenever there's a new podcast!"

Amazing, right?

Except, it didn't work. I don't think Boxcar supports podcasts as a feed type or something, as it just seemed to ignore any new items that showed up.

But I was not discouraged.

There's another cool "send me a notice" website/tool out there called ifttt.com. Basically, it's an awesome little site that lets you plug things together and trigger actions. The premise is "If [this] then [that]" (hence ifttt.com). I'd been using it to send me emails before it's forecast to rain (can't forget that umbrella!).

It also lets you send notifications based off of RSS feeds. And it can send those notifications into Boxcar.

That opened up a whole world of possibilities.

First, I plugged in my podcasts. I turned my weather notifications from email to Boxcar push notifications.

Ifttt  Tasks

While dorking around inside these cool webapps, I noticed that Boxcar also ties into Growl (the Mac desktop notification system). "Awesome," I thought, "I can have my computer push stuff to my phone when scripts finish and stuff."

And that is entirely possible. You simply install the Boxcar Growl theme, configure a few easy settings, and boom, your computer can send your Growl notifications to your phone, straight through Boxcar. Mine is configured to only do so when my screen saver is on or I'm inactive. If I'm in a meeting, IMs will get shot to my phone so I can determine if something is urgent. Long backup jobs or scripts will let me know they've finished.

Tying all of this into growlnotify (the command line tool to let you send arbitrary stuff into Growl) means you can basically trigger almost anything into a push notification. It's an amazingly powerful toolset.

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