The Best of 2000
Ahhh, another great year of
music. What’s that, you say? All you do is complain about the sad
state of music. Well,
yes and no. I
complain about the sad state of radio, and what’s being
presented to the casual listener as the best new music.
There are loads of great records released every year.
It just becomes more difficult to find them.
But I always find a way.
The
Albums
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Aimee
Mann-Bachelor Number Two (SuperEgo).
Little Miss Wronged
assembles another staggering collection of
straight-to-the-point love gone wrong songs that make
even the casual listener wince.
And this one actually sold a few copies, thanks
to last winter’s plug from Magnolia.
All people should be so inspired after
marriage. It’s
usually the kiss of death.
Michael (Penn, her husband), whatever you’re
doing, keep doing it.
Favorite
Tracks: “Deathly,” “Driving Sideways,”
“Susan”
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Robbie
Williams-Sing When You’re Winning (Capitol).
Faith,
Part Deux, essentially.
An unashamedly British, unabashedly pop record.
Give Williams credit.
At least he knows his place.
He’ll never pull a Listen Without
Prejudice on us and demand that we take him
seriously. It’s
only pop, and I, for one, like it. Yes, I do.
Favorite
Tracks: “Kids,” “Singing For The Lonely,”
“By All Means Necessary”
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Travis-The
Man Who (Independiente/Sony)
Radiohead
for sissies, said some.
Oasis for sissies, said others.
Fine, they weren’t the most hard rocking band
to come out this year, but lead singer Fran Healy did
happen to write some incredibly good pop songs, some
that certainly must make Noel Gallagher jealous (man,
has he lost the plot or what?).
Didn’t get any airplay, but they did break
through better than most British bands these days.
What a relief.
- Favorite
Tracks: “Writing To Reach You,” “As You
Are,” “She’s So Strange”
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David
Gray-White Ladder (ATO/BMG)
Never, ever, ever saw this
album breaking out as big as it did.
Hands down the best success story of the year
for any of “my” bands, and proof that word of
mouth can sometimes be enough.
It’s also a great story too; a guy who was
scraping change together to record a deliberately lo-fi
album in his house after his label had written him
off. As
far as I’m concerned, releasing this album is the
best thing Dave Matthews has ever done.
Favorite
Tracks: “Please Forgive Me,” “This Year’s
Love,” “Say Hello Wave Goodbye”
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Radiohead-Kid
A (Capitol) Some
have accused Radiohead of manipulating the press by
hiding from them (“Oh, he’s going for that
anti-marketing dollar,” as Bill Hicks once said),
but let the music speak for itself.
Was there any point in releasing a single from
this album? No.
Making videos?
No. It’s
not that kind of record.
It’s meant to be taken in as a whole, however
difficult that may seem at first.
With patience come rewards, and this album paid
off faster than I expected it to.
Favorite
Tracks: “Idioteque,” “How to Disappear
Completely,” “National Anthem”
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Cowboy
Mouth-Easy (Atlantic)
How this record didn’t
become a major hit, I’ll never know.
Deb and I had the marketing scheme all worked
out. Send
“I Know It Shows” to modern rock; send “Mary
Ann” to AAA/Adult Alternative radio.
Repeat. LOADS
of potential hit singles contained here. And Jesus, don’t even get me started on their live shows.
You haven’t heard the last of these guys.
Favorite
Tracks: “Easy,” “All American Man, “ “Always
Leaving”
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Ween-White
Pepper (Elektra)
If you had told me three
years ago I’d be putting a Ween album in any top ten
list other than my top ten list of Worst Bands Ever,
I’d have laughed you out of the room.
And then they make this.
Fans of Jellyfish would approve.
But they already have the record by now, I’m
guessing.
Favorite
Tracks: “Exactly Where I’m At,” “Even If You
Don’t,” “Stay Forever”
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The
Jayhawks-Smile (Columbia)
What a comeback for the
Jayhawks. I was not at all pleased with Sound of Lies, their
last album (and first without founding member Mark
Olson). But co-founder Gary Louris circled the wagons and made one of
their best records yet.
Couldn’t have happened to a nicer guy.
Favorite
Tracks: “Smile,” “What Led Me To This Town,”
“A Break In The Clouds”
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Coldplay-Parachutes (Nettwerk/Parlophone)
Oft compared to Travis (fans
of this band view Travis with severe contempt, it
seems), but I see very little in common between them,
save maybe in the way that singers from both bands
borrow from Jeff Buckley.
Where Travis stole from Radiohead, Coldplay
looked to the Verve or Del Amitri.
It took a few spins, but this one is getting
better and better.
Favorite
Tracks: “Trouble,” “Shiver,” “Yellow”
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XTC-Wasp
Star: Apple Venus Vol. II (TVT)
The rocker cousin to last
year’s orchestral masterpiece Apple Venus Vol. I,
this one is also chock full ‘o killer songs about
evil, evil ex-wives (“And what made me think we’re
any better/And what made me think we’d last
forever/Was I so naïve?/Of course it all unweaves”)
and other assorted traumas. Messrs Partridge and Moulding, please don’t make us wait
another seven years for the next albums. Please.
Favorite
Tracks: “The Wheel and the Maypole,”
“Playground,” “Standing In For Joe”
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The
Singles
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This
is a misleading list, because by no means am I saying
that the albums these songs were taken from are
disappointments.
On the contrary, many of them are from
excellent records.
But I felt these songs were such stellar
moments that they deserved their own attention.
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“Moving,”
Supergrass (Island)
No
song popped up on my compilation CD’s this year more
than this one. They
may seem like cheeky monkeys, but these guys are
playing for keeps.
This song proves it.
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“Music,”
Madonna (Maverick) So
I’m at this volleyball contest in a big sports bar
here called North Beach.
They’re playing all kinds of pop music, no
big deal. This
song comes on, and the place just EXPLODES.
Everywhere I look, people are dancing, even the
ones who are playing volleyball.
This is just one of those songs that can pick a
crowd up and move them.
Love that stop-start drum track, too.
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“Beautiful
Day,”-U2 (Interscope) The
album does still not blow me away, but this is bar
none one of the best songs they’ve ever done.
And how about that video, with the planes
taking off juuuuuuust over their heads?
Pity the remixes suck.
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“How
He Wrote Elastica Man,” Elastica (Atlantic) These
guys were musically homeless upon release of their
second (and damn good) record The Menace.
Modern rock has forsaken them for the rap/rock
contingent, and the Mix stations aren’t aggressive
enough to play this.
Too bad, because this song must have the
B-52’s seething with jealousy.
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“Sunset
(Bird of Prey),” Fatboy Slim (Astralwerks A
mellower than average release for DJ Norman Cook, this
was a nifty piece that used a Jim Morrison loop for a
vocal and had a not-quite-big beat drum track that
skittered all over the place.
If only the rest of the record were this
enjoyable.
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“Waiting,”
Green Day (Warner Bros.) Warners
are idiots of they don’t release this song as a
single. It’s
the best song they’ve done since ‘Geek Stink
Breath.” After
a few years of losing their way, they remembered how
to write a good batch of tunes again.
This is their new album’s crown jewel.
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“Make
It Happen,” Electronic (Koch) Yes,
Electronic, remember them? After
a less than good second offering, Bernard Sumner and
Johnny Marr came back in a big way here, making a
lovely slice of now-I-guess-it’s-retro modern pop
that sounds like the Stone Roses remixed by the
Chemical Brothers.
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“Saltwater,”
Chicane (Xtravaganza/Columbia) I’m
not a big fan of house music, at all.
But I dig this. It has two things going for it.
One is a sense of structure that’s usually
missing from house music (most house, to me, is just
nine minutes of THUMP, THUMP, THUMP), the other is a
decidedly ambient, minor key feel.
Oh, and as a bonus, it’s sung by Clannad’s
Maire Brennan (based on their song “Harry’s
Game”)
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“Summer
Moved On”-A-ha (Warner Bros. import) The
teen pop bands of today may sell more records than
A-ha ever will, but let’s see how many of them are
releasing songs or albums of this quality fifteen
years after their debut.
I always thought A-ha were better than they
were ever given credit for, but even I didn’t think
they could put together something this good again.
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“Once
Around The Block,” Badly Drawn Boy (XL) Brainchild
of Damon Gough, BDB is a really difficult outfit to
peg. Some sounds like Belle & Sebastian crossed
with the Cardigans.
This song is more like Van Morrison crossed
with The Smiths.
A gorgeous “Moondance”-style waltz that Van
would love to call his own.
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Honorable
Mentions:
“Simple Kind of Life”-No
Doubt
“Pinch Me”-Barenaked
Ladies
“Do
It”-Knodel
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