[
that's the two-year-old me on the right, celebrating something with my sis in fine style - I think it was a cousin's birthday]
Two years ago today I started Fuel/Friends, mostly on a lark, to talk about my passion for music and all the other good things in this world. My how we've grown, and what fun we've had these last two years. I sincerely appreciate each of you guys who stop by each day to see what I have to say, and the attention that you pay to both my writing and my musical selections. It's pretty much the raddest thing in the world to get to do this, so thanks.
Following
the tradition I set last year, here are twenty great songs featured here during Year #2 that everyone needs to take a closer listen to. I know that keeping up with all the music I unearth for your listening pleasure is akin to drinking out of a firehose sometimes, so I've scrolled through my archives and picked some of my favorites that are worth another spin if you missed them the first time around.
TWENTY FROM YEAR TWOEmily - Stephen Fretwell
Oh, Emily, you slay me. This selection was from a mix sent my way by dear reader Chris in England, and I think I may have listened to this song more than any other this past year. This slowburn stunner is sublimely sad and slightly bitter, one of those bruised and rueful moments of clarity about someone you love(d). But somehow it sounds so winsome, I can't get enough.
One reviewer thought (and I echo), "
Emily was actually a great, bleak pop song and one of the most beautiful ‘f*ck you’s’ I’ve ever heard whispered on daytime radio." [
original post]
My Third House - Kings of LeonI was baptized into the KOL cult in May witnessing their live show in Denver. I was on the receiving end of a headbutt that drew the taste of blood into my mouth, and when I hear this relentless song, I think of that. Since then I have also noticed an eerie similarity in the lazy instrumental bridge with talking in the background - sounds like DMB's great song "Lie In Our Graves" to me. Take that for what it's worth. [
original post]
Your Favorite Thing - Sugar
From
my Love Is A Mix Tape mixtape, this song has become my favorite of the bunch because it distills perfectly that essence of the happy days of wholeheartedly loving music that are detailed in the story.
Lonely No More - MagnetStarting with a high and lonesome harmonica, combined unexpectedly with big band thumping drum-major beats, this one gets my attention from the start -- and then the perfect pop Buddy Holly melody sticks in my head for hours. I ♥ it with a vengeance. [
original post]
Lose Myself - Lauryn Hill
From the unlikely source of an animated movie about surfing penguins comes one of the finest Lauryn Hill tunes, oh pretty much
ever as far as I am concerned. Something about this introspective yet old-school funky song, I just cannot get enough of it. I find the skittery stop-start beat in particular to be irresistible. [
original post]
The End Of The World - AshHere's a soaring tune that I want to sing along with and be listening to if it is, indeed, the end of the world. Tinglingly good, I love the epic feel of the key changes (I am a sucker for those); for some reason this line gets me: "
Can't hardly see the stars, there's too much light pollution . . . That's the catch, it's such a beautiful confusion." [
original post]
Wings for Wheels (early Thunder Road) - Bruce SpringsteenPart of the
Memorable Moments In Music series I wrote on for WXPN, this legendary Springsteen show at Main Point in 1974 captures the nascent glory that is Thunder Road being performed for the first time. I could also read the corresponding Jon Landau piece about Springsteen in this era on a weekly basis and not tire of it. He says: "
But tonight there is someone I can write of the way I used to write, without reservations of any kind. Last Thursday, at the Harvard Square theatre, I saw my rock'n'roll past flash before my eyes. And I saw something else: I saw rock and roll future and its name is Bruce Springsteen. And on a night when I needed to feel young, he made me feel like I was hearing music for the very first time." [
original post]
Hardcore Days and Softcore Nights - AqueductI
completely missed this one when it first came around in 2005
(maybe because I don't watch
The O.C.) but when I heard it this past year, it hooked me instantaneously with its insane, thumping beats and I've listened to it since then on repeat.
A lot. You will love it -- and although the title sounds like it should be the definitive soundtrack to a porn flick, the lyrics are actually tame and a bit cryptic. That is to say I have no idea what he's talking about. [
original post]
Bring It On Home To Me - Sam CookeSomeone just bring it on home to Sam already, with
this post of cover versions that I had so much fun assembling. Because no one, no one comes close to tapping the power of the original for me, let's listen to it again. Even though it's self-flagellating sad sap fare, it always sounds like slow dancing barefoot on a dusty front porch somewhere. A flawless song.
You Got Yr. Cherry Bomb (alternate version) - SpoonSimilar to Britt Daniel's eerie, echoey contribution to the Bring It On Home post, this song sounds like it was recorded in a grain silo or a metal shed somewhere, a huge, vacuous, cold metal shed. Yet it's a cold, vacuous shed you wanna dance in because the beat here is shuffley, clappy cool. Combined with Britt Daniel's falsetto, it's my favorite Spoon song this year.
[
original post]
Electricity + Drums - The ApparitionsEvery once in a while out of the dozens of songs that kindly introduce themselves to my eardrumsto in a week, something stands out in a big way -- the sort of song that makes me stop what I am doing and say, "
What the heck IS that?!" This fantastic song from
The Apparitions [from Lexington, Kentucky and Washington D.C.] has been absolutely at the tip-top of my playlists for the week. It reminds me of a catchier version of "Rehab" without all the beehive hairdos, the overdoses, and the belligerent behavior.
[
original post]
Scar That Never Heals - Jeremy FisherDude, hand me a tambourine. The song that I heard raves about off this album from Canadian
Jeremy Fisher is track 3, "Cigarette," which boasts one of the best choruses of the summer. But
this song is the opening track, and is just so filled with infectious '60s/'70s pop goodness -- think Monkees meet Neil Diamond's "Cherry" in a modern and non-cheesy way that absolutely makes you want to sing along.
[
original post]
Take Care of Us - The Star SpanglesI've been a fan of
these gritty NYC rockers for about two years now [
previous post], but I've been out of the loop and their newest release
Dirty Bomb (2007, Tic Records) slipped right past me. The Westerberg-meets-Clash blend percolates to a perfect urgent richness on this newest effort -- it's addictive, catchy, rough-edged rock. The cascading backup harmonies are just the icing on the rocker cake. [
original post]
Sunday Morning - k-osAppropriate for the New Year's Day when I first posted it -- I wrote that this one's fun and fresh and feels like something you should dance around to (if you, unlike me, have any feist left in you after last night and especially -ugh- this morning). A slaptastic backbeat and repetitive lyrics that sound like they are droning at you from very far away, this is infectiously catchy. It's got the class of an old soul deal remixed with modern hip hop beats, from Trinidad-Canadian
k-os to help you start your year off right. [
original post]
Sister Christian Where Are You Now? - Jesse MalinThis is a b-side off Malin's new
Broken Radio single (UK), and has that same anthemic rock and roll sound as the rest of the excellent
Glitter In The Gutter album. Aside from some incongruous time-shifting in his lyrics here (he is alternately born in 1973, 1984, 1968, 1932) he also manages a few vivid couplets like, "
foolin' around in the dark / back from college with carnal knowledge" and talks a lot about rocking - keep on moving, keep on grooving. Brightly shimmering guitar riffs and a ferocious rhythm makes this the first anthem of my summer. [
original post]
The Devil Never Sleeps - Iron & WineThere are some songs from
Iron & Wine that just devastate me in the best way possible; I think Sam Beam is an amazing songwriter. I thought I
knew him, kinda had his sound pegged as the perfect soundtrack to activities like moping, looking out a window at the grey clouds, or falling asleep. So get ready for the sounds on the new album
Shepherd's Dog (Sub Pop) -- the songs are just as wonderful, but with a heck of a lot more spitfire and pluck. This one sounds like something from another time, floating out the window of a neighbor's house into the humid summer night. The devil never sleeps because he went down to Georgia and is dancing to this. [
original post]
I Am Trying To Break Your Heart (live 9/1/07) - WilcoAnd
ahhhh, this was the year I truly discovered Wilco for my own, and had my face personally melted by them in concert, by the original goodness and soul-wrenching virtuosity of their music. This was the second song of their first night in Denver (I've watched
the video of it about 15 times) and it was during this song that I realized I was really in for something special with them; I think it was right around the time he pointedly sang, "
I want to hold you in the Bible-black pre-dawn." Like whoa. [
original post]
We Will Become Silhouettes (Postal Service cover) - The Shins
This is one more from a guest post, this time a Chris from North Carolina instead of from England. He feels that this song is better than the Postal Service original, and I am inclined to agree that it is more enticing and crisp somehow. The bonus is that it also made me pull out my Postal Service CD again and it's been in my car ever since. So it's a win win win situation. [
original post]
Night Windows - The WeakerthansI have a penchant for sharp lyrics, and this is an area where Canada's The Weakerthans [
previous post] stand out. Their incisive, introspective feel will probably remind you a little bit of Death Cab For Cutie if you haven't listened to The Weakerthans before; they are a richly nuanced group that I really enjoy. This song could undeniably be the most perfect summer night driving song ever recorded. You can almost see the yellow lines flitting past, feel the warm summer wind rushing in the open windows. [
original post]
The Hustle - MarahI wrote that this tune had been comfortably been living on my iPod for a good two years or so without receiving my full unabashed love -- until now. At first I thought this urgent, perfectly ebullient song was maybe Westerberg because of the yowly crack to Dave Bielanko's voice, with delightfully jangly rock guitars. I now love the bright burn and swagger of this song, it's a new favorite. [
original post]
ZIP: TWENTY FROM YEAR #2Go ahead and sing along to that Marah line, "
I’m-a leave the hustle one day when I can’t do it no more good." That is also incidentally the theme song to this blog, when people ask me how long I'm in it for.
But ya know, I think I got some 'good-for-the-hustle' left in me, for quite a while longer yet.
Labels: anniversary post