Y’know when you read the author’s introduction to a book and all you can think is “wow this guy comes off as an egomaniacal prick / stop trying to sell me on this story before I’ve even started reading it my / desire to do so is actually dwindling as we speak”?  And then you finally finish the book and dislike it a lot.  Yup.  Ender’s Game.  Not into it.  Too much endless meaningless play by play from the battle room.  Too much showing/too little telling in the Peter and Valentine subplot.  I’ve just started reading criticism of the novel on moral grounds which opens up a whole additional fun series of issues to gripe about - but even taking this story on its own terms, all I have is a big fat MEH.  Additional reading on Creating the Innocent Killer here, though!

I started out not particularly liking The Hunger Games trilogy - the first book struck me as a watered-down imitation of Battle Royale, and I was in no particular hurry to finish the series.  However, I’m happy I did, as the change in tone from the first to the second and third is rather startling.  Spoilers about all three books behind the link…

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I wasn’t in my dream last night, just experienced it from a third-person limited omniscient perspective. There was this girl who was dog-sitting at someone’s house for the summer, only they were there a lot, a husband and wife and their baby. The girl was taking some kind of class at a school, and at the end of the semester the teacher ate all the students alive, then went to a staff meeting with red-stained teeth and a protruding belly. I was less alarmed by the content of the dream than by the realization that I’ve definitely had the exact same one before, maybe multiple times.

I didn’t intend to spend the whole day today sitting around in my pajamas and reading, but that’s what happened. After finishing You Deserve Nothing I started and finished Never Let Me Go, which was quite excellent. I don’t want to divulge too much about the plot because this is definitely one of those cases where going in blind is best, but I will say that this really satisfied my love of dystopias and boarding school stories. Also, the pacing was so, so perfect. Slow and backpedaling and meandering at times, but all with the point of not having one big reveal, of leaking out the truth of these characters’ lives bit by bit.

So I maybe should’ve made it my new year’s resolution to stop reading books that I know there’s a good chance will make me angry. Take You Deserve Nothing, for instance; I was intrigued by the cover and description when I saw it in Barnes & Noble, then read the Amazon reviews and got familiar with the surrounding controversy. After the long slog through 1Q84 with only the most minimal emotional payoff I was like fuck this I need to read something next that will get to me immediately, which this did, although not necessarily in a good way. Dear Alexander Maksik, you can beg me via text to feel as sorry for you as you want, you can portray yourself as so despondent, so downtrodden, so full of excuses but I still think you’re pathetic. And the fact that you’re trying to pass off this (by all accounts mostly true) tale as fiction, like you want everyone to say oh you did nothing wrong, but don’t have the guts to own up to it… so much cringing! Halfway through reading this it started to make the news that a teacher had a two year affair with a student in the highschool of my hometown; hearing the backlash against the girl, the support for the teacher, has been incredibly frustrating. I’m tired of hearing excuses for teachers who make shitty life decisions. Also, I need to read something less emotionally loaded next.

Favorite Albums of 2011

The usual caveat applies: these are not the best albums of the year. I don’t know what the best albums of the year are, because I have a very hard time being objective about music. No, these are my favorites, the ones that hit a nerve for whatever reason, or that I listened to on repeat endlessly, critical reviews or lack thereof be damned. I sometimes try to write about why albums are my favorites but that well seems to have run pretty dry right now, so instead of explanations I’m writing short stream of consciousness-style impressions for each.

Additionally, I have twin ongoing playlists of favorite songs of 2011 in progress here on Spotify and here on last.fm that I’ll continue to add to over the next few days and/or until I feel they’re done, which is probably never.


1. EMA - Past Life Martyred Saints
Raw, immediate, and vital are the first three adjectives that spring to mind when I hear this album. At first EMA reminded me of early Hole or PJ Harvey; now she just reminds me of herself. Tales of small town ennui and dysfunction, psychic pain taken out on skin, still managing to be hopeful sometimes even though you feel like you’re losing your mind, all in a perfectly honest, no bullshit voice, all ring true. In one sense it’s captivating because I’ve been through it but there’s others out there like me, sure, and this album proves it.


2. tUnE-YaRdS - w h o k i l l
Merrill Garbus has my vote for lady musician role model. Her music is the perfect extension of herself: unique, uncompromising, important, and amazing. I saw tUnE-YaRdS live this year on the night people were saying the world was going to end. I went in expecting an apocalyptic dance party and went out feeling life-affirmed.


3. M83 - Hurry Up We’re Dreaming
Epic cinematic technicolor musical dreams.


4. Austra - Feel it Break
Katie Stelmanis’s operatic voice finds the perfect accompaniment, sounding over a pallet of synths and electronic blips. If these songs had colors, they’d be rich jewel tones glazed in frost. An album of immediate visceral thrills, instantly danceable, in constant rotation on car rides with friends or whenever I needed energy.


5. Wye Oak - Civilian
A powerful undercurrent, hidden depths. These songs quietly gather momentum as you listen to them, never seeming to hit any explicit highs or lows but still pulling you back in for more and more. One of the first albums I fell in love with this year, and still one of my favorites.


6. Laura Stevenson and the Cans - Sit Resist
I happened randomly upon this album near the end of the year and couldn’t understand why I hadn’t heard it’s praises being sung everywhere. Laura Stevenson’s delightfully quirky voice is so charming, her lyrics are so honest and heartfelt without being sappy, and the music is a perfect balance of extra instrumentation like accordion and glockenspiel with guitar, none of it overblown. Some albums I like for a brief period of time and then put away; they’re playing on a trend or whatever the current sound is, and if I listened to them a few years later they wouldn’t have the same impact. Sit Resist is the exact opposite: it has the makings of a true classic. I expect to return to it for years to come, and I hope other people discover it too, because it’s too good to go unnoticed.


7. Youth Lagoon - The Year of Hibernation
From my favorite shows of 2011 write-up: “Claustrophobic lyrics brimming with adolescent anxiety are rarely accompanied by music so tuneful and catchy” The Year of Hibernation is so remarkable because while anxiety is palpable everywhere in these songs, you can still nod your head to them.


8. St. Vincent - Strange Mercy
Strange Mercy finds Annie Clark at her most vulnerable and most weird. The title track is a rare instance when the perfect porcelain facade seems to slip, just for a moment, and it’s doubly fascinating taken alongside the prickly edges of her guitar work that hold the listener at bay, keeping an emotional distance.


9. Destroyer - Kaputt
If 2011 was the year of the saxophone, no one put it to better use than Dan Bejar. His lyrics are just as evocative and inscrutable as ever, now backed by music that transports them someplace entirely separate from anything he’s done before. Quasi-easy listening done right.


10. PJ Harvey - Let England Shake
The personal is the political, the political, personal. I like PJ Harvey best when she’s tackling sexual politics and shrieking, but this rumination on war is devastating in an entirely different way.


11. Eleanor Friedberger - Last Summer
Stream of consciousness summertime nostalgia and yearning in familiar locales.


12. Bon Iver - Bon Iver, Bon Iver
Out of the cabin and into the heartland. Quietly affecting.


13. Anna Calvi - Anna Calvi
Like if Jeff Buckley were reincarnated as a lady. A smoldering, passionate lady who can shred on guitar.


14. The Mountain Goats - All Eternals Deck
Less The Mountain Goats as John Darnielle and more The Mountain Goats as a band, greater than the sum of their parts. Yet another exemplary collection of songs from the endlessly prolific unit.


15. Zola Jesus - Conatus
Zola Jesus does epic bright just as well as epic dark.


16. The Antlers - Burst Apart
I knew I’d never love another Antlers album the way I love Hospice, with all of it’s intense personal emotional connections. And if this album were trying to be Hospice pt II, I probably would’ve been disappointed. Instead it goes off in a different direction, taking the hugeness of their live sound, expanding on it. The lyrics are still potent without the storyline, only they’re tauter, they say more with less.


17. Son Lux - We Are Rising
Recorded over the course of a mere month but sounds like it took much longer, and I mean that in a good way - this album is an intricately crafted collage of sound and rewards repeat listens.


18. Other Lives - Tamer Animals
There’s a wide range of sound here, ranging from the pastoral to nearly akin to Radiohead, all blending together to wrap you in a harmonic cocoon.


19. Widowspeak - Widowspeak
The dreamiest thing since Mazzy Star. Molly Hamilton’s lulling, lilting coo washes over you for the duration of this album, punctuated by spare, spiky guitars, before rising into a high keen in closer Ghost Boy.


20. Active Child - You Are All I See
This album is just sexy. Pat Rossi’s smooth, soulful voice over a crescendo of plucked harp strings sometimes dances close to cheeseball territory, but it’s unselfconscious and sincere, so it never truly gets silly.


Honorable Mention: Parenthetical Girls - Privilege pt III & IV: Mend & Make Do / Sympathy for Spastics
Clever lyrics of dysfunction, depression, and angst; sometimes you can even dance to them.

Favorite Shows of 2011

My final tally for 2011 in live music comes to just under 120 shows attended, and over 300 bands seen, many multiple times. I started with the intention of making my usual list of 10 favorites plus a few honorable mentions, but had to swell it to a top 20 - truly, I was lucky enough to see and photograph a bunch of incredible shows this year. The list, and links to more photos for almost all of them, below! Please note: this list is excessively wordy, superlative-ridden, and un-proofread, because that’s how I roll.


1. Sufjan Stevens, My Brightest Diamond @ Celebrate Brooklyn (August 2)
Sufjan Stevens brought out the neon for two final epic Age of Adz shows at Prospect Park this summer. 180 degrees removed from his usual introverted folk, the Adz material is, in my opinion, his strongest, and the accompanying show is a masterwork, a celebration of the body electric with lights and dancers and giant inflatable balls soaring into the audience. Take Impossible Soul, an epic length song spanning 25 minutes and incorporating a dizzying array of moods and styles, that still manages to gel together as a cohesive unit. Drop aforementioned inflatable balls into the crowd during the song’s climax. Cue a breakout of dancing, of faces split wide in ecstatic grins, a rush of positive energy. That would be the whole evening in a nutshell, where not only the music, but the showmanship, the whole spectacle, was amazing, which is what made this my very favorite show of the year.
More photos here on BrooklynVegan.


2. Wild Flag, Yellow Fever @ Rock Shop (March 5) (+ October 18 @ Bowery Ballroom w/Eleanor Friedberger, Hospitality)
One of my favorite live music moments ever took place at this show. It went as follows: I was standing against the small, low stage at the Rock Shop, right in front of Carrie Brownstein. This in and of itself is a cause for eye-bulging glee, as Carrie is incredible and an idol of mine going back to the days of Sleater-Kinney, who I never was able to see live. Then, as I crouched down to get a particular angle to take pictures from, Carrie leaned over me and started rocking out on her guitar right in front of my face. My memory at this point stops following a linear timeline and jumps to exclamation points of ecstatic bliss. This tiny Brooklyn show was Wild Flag’s first in NYC and it was incredibly exciting; while their debut album doesn’t always do it for me, their live show is raring and ready to go.
More photos from this show here and of their Bowery show here on BrooklynVegan.


3. Our Concert Could Be Your Life @ Bowery Ballroom w/Ted Leo, St. Vincent, Dirty Projectors, Dan Deacon, Titus Andronicus, tUnE-YaRdS, Wye Oak, Callers, Buke and Gass, Citay, Delicate Steve, Grooms, White Hills, Yellow Ostrich (May 22)
Any show with this many bands slated to perform short sets is almost guaranteed to have some delays and organizational snafus, but from my vantage point at the stage this went down basically without a hitch. Bringing together an excellent and eclectic group of current musicians, including many of my favorites, to cover classic bands from Michael Azerrad’s book Our Band Could Be Your Life, this tribute show either looked like the greatest thing ever or a travesty, depending on your point of view - not that I needed much convincing, but at the end I was firmly in team greatest thing ever. Special guests and exciting moments were in plenty, but the number one highlight of the night was definitely Annie Clark covering Big Black. With her trademark shock of curls slicked back, Annie looked as sharp as a knife, and she attacked those covers with an animal ferocity. Major highlight number two was a medley of Nirvana covers performed by an assortment of band members, particularly Merrill Garbus’s perfect (to my ears) cover of Lithium. Then, lots of people crowdsurfed. It was really refreshing to me to see the inclusion of so many lady-fronted bands, especially considering the source material was sort of lacking in that department - hopefully this is an indicator that the landscape is shifting, that rock is becoming less of a boy’s club.
More photos here on BrooklynVegan.


4. Jeff Mangum, A Hawk and a Hacksaw @ Paramount Theater (October 3) (+ ATP I’ll Be Your Mirror w/Portishead, Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Battles, The Horrors, Oneida, Public Enemy, Deerhoof, Anika, DD/MM/YYYY @ Asbury Park Convention Center, September 30-October 2)
I’d only been to Asbury Park once before this year-at 15, my friend Doreen and I went down to the Convention Center to see Blink 182 and Silverchair (I know, right?). Waiting in line outside on that chilly day in autumn I remember looking around at the desolate ocean and dilapidated, seedy buildings and my imagination instantly being captured. I was therefore happy to have an excuse to take a trip back down, particularly to attend my first ATP event. I’ve always enjoyed reading accounts of people’s experiences at All Tomorrow’s Parties, reportedly a haven/fantasy camp for real music lovers, but the lineups of the previous New York evens skewed mostly a little too noisy, a little too experimental for my tastes (yes I’m boring, whatever). This year the promise of performances by Jeff Mangum and Portishead were enough to get me to buy a ticket. Of course I took advantage of the opportunity to see Mangum twice, once on the first night of ATP and again at a separate but still ATP-affiliated show the Monday after. The Monday show was the really perfect one for me, which found Jeff chatty and asking us to sing along, and members of A Hawk and A Hacksaw coming out to join him for a rendition of The Fool like I’d only ever heard on record before. Traveling down to Asbury Park by train, a trip that takes over two hours for me, felt a little like a religious pilgrimage, also a little ridiculous, but isn’t an experience I would trade for anything. Then there was the point during ATP proper when I spotted Jeff in the crowd while Public Enemy was soundchecking. He was standing with some people just minding his own business in his usual plaid shirt and hat, and I walked over and kind of circled the whole group a few times trying to work up the nerve to say hi. Finally I darted in, whispered thank you, and darted away again-but not before he shook my hand and patted his chest above his heart. Cue Amanda melting on the spot.
Otherwise ATP was a mixed bag for me musically, but a really fun time in general. I saw Portishead on Saturday night right at the front and watched in awe as Beth Gibbons crowdsurfed and ran along the barricade giving hugs and touching hands. Some of the noisier bands I could only take in small portions, and left wondering what enjoyment people really got out of them aside from the deluge of painful, punishing volume. Wandering around the autumn beach, running into people I knew everywhere, and sitting by a bonfire were nonmusical atmospheric highlights, as well as the many entertaining opportunities for people-watching.


5. Sharon Van Etten @ Bowery Ballroom (January 8) (+ April 16 @ Music Hall of Williamsburg w/Megafaun, She Keeps Bees)
I had a good feeling that after selling out Mercury Lounge and The Rock Shop, Sharon Van Etten’s next step would be to headline and sell out Bowery Ballroom. This slow-burning but steady rise to success, which has now gained considerable momentum, couldn’t have happened to a more deserving person: Sharon is one of the sweetest, most genuine and gracious music type person I’ve had the pleasure of meeting, and that’s aside from her gorgeous, heartrending songs. This evening at Bowery Ballroom felt like a celebration of her success, with lots of vocal friends and family in the audience, and few eyes remaining entirely dry. The ending cover of Strange Currencies was just the icing on the cake of a perfect night.
More photos here on A Heart is a Spade.


6. PJ Harvey @ Terminal 5 (April 19)
PJ Harvey doesn’t come to New York very often, so hearing she’d be playing one of my least favorite venues didn’t stop me from desperately wanting to go. I’ve been listening to the enigmatic Polly Jean since I was a teenager and had never seen her live. For the sake of nostalgia I would’ve loved for her to be in full guitar goddess mode, but PJ Harvey wouldn’t be herself if she didn’t constantly defy expectations and do her own thing. Terminal 5 can be a miserable place to see and hear a show, but from the vantage point of the VIP balcony and the thrilling proximity of the photo pit (where, I confess, I maybe almost started hyperventilating at being omg so close to PJ Harvey omg!) her quiet but commanding voice and presence were captivating. The Let England Shake material is incredible and her strongest in years, but the highlight of the night for me came in the encore during Angelene (also, the first PJ song I ever heard).
More photos here on BrooklynVegan.


7. SXSW Backyard BBQ w/Erland and the Carnival, Great Lake Swimmers, Josh T. Pearson, Lost in the Trees, One Hundred Flowers, Strand of Oaks, The Loom, The Luyas, Yellow Ostrich (March 18)
I went to SXSW for the first time this year and was unprepared for the amount of activity concentrated around Sixth Street, where it seems that out of every other building you pass you get a blast of music bowling you over on the sidewalk, all mixing together into a cacophony under the sun. It’s probably not surprising, then, that the highlight of my week took place three miles north of the bulk of the maddening crowd, chilling in a backyard with a treehouse and bbq and a bunch of bands I know and love playing, organized by Muzzle of Bees and the lovely folks from The Loom. The Luyas were joined on violin by Sarah Neufeld of Arcade Fire, which augmented their sound appreciably. During Lost in the Trees I climbed up into the treehouse and shot the band from between the branches, feeling very clever and probably suffering from a certain degree of heat-stroke, but that’s okay. Last to play was Josh T. Pearson, and the setting couldn’t have been more perfect. After some good-humored sniping with a heckler (seriously Josh T. Pearson is unexpectedly hilarious apart from the somber nature of his songs) the crowd grew so quiet that the only audible accompaniments to Josh’s gentle finger-picked guitar and gravelly, emotive voice were crickets and the chirping of birds. A perfect transcendent moment as the sun began to descend and the air began to finally cool.
More photos here on BrooklynVegan.


8. The Antlers @ Knitting Factory (May 6) (+ May 19 @ Music Hall of Williamsburg, May 20 @ Bowery Ballroom w/Little Scream, December 10 @ Webster Hall w/Suuns)
It was difficult to choose which of the four times I saw The Antlers play this year was the best. They’ve easily become one of my favorite bands live and on record, and because they’re from Brooklyn we’re lucky enough to see them multiple times in a year as they return home from tours. The December Webster Hall show was particularly exciting as it was the largest space the band had headlined and sold out in New York, and they totally owned the large space, sounding huger than ever. Both the Music Hall and Bowery shows mid-May with the delightful Little Scream opening were great as well. But my pick has to go to the free, 1 am show at Knitting Factory, where I heard The Antlers play their new album Burst Apart for the first time, followed by the perfect emotional punch in the gut encore of Two and Wake, aka also my two favorite songs off Hospice, aka sobfest all the time. I deliberately chose not to listen to any of the leaks or streams of Burst Apart beforehand and let this show be my first experience with the songs, and was really happy I did - The Antlers sound great on record, but live they’re enormous and enveloping, to the point where on Rolled Together, while totally sober, I started freaking out about how absolutely amazing it sounded.
So many Antlers photos this year! Webster Hall show, Music Hall of Williamsburg show, and Knitting Factory show photos on BrooklynVegan, and Bowery Ballroom show photos on A Heart is a Spade.


9. The Weakerthans (performing Left & Leaving), Dinosaur Bones @ Bowery Ballroom (December 8)
The Weakerthans are one of my favorite bands ever so I was incredibly excited when they announced a run of four shows at my favorite venue, Bowery Ballroom, playing each of their albums from beginning to end plus a collection of other favorites. My first instinct was to go to all four shows, but the week in December when they were scheduled was already a busy one so I knew I’d have to settle for just one (me and my first world problems). Left & Leaving edges out slightly ahead of Reconstruction Site for the title of my favorite Weakerthans album; in my opinion, Reconstruction Site marks the point where more character-driven, less personal songs start making an appearance. Which isn’t a bad thing, but Left & Leaving, taken as a whole, is still their most personally resonant collection of songs, for me. So it was obviously a delight to stand in the middle of a crowd of fervent fans, singing along to every word like they’d done on headphones and in their bedrooms countless times. What set The Weakerthans apart for me is the strength of their lyrics; while they touch on familiar themes of loneliness, dysfunctional relationships, and transitions, they always leave off on a hopeful note, which is perhaps what makes their songs so anthemic for a certain sort of sad-tending person (like me).
More photos here on BrooklynVegan.


10. Zola Jesus, Panopticon @ Le Poisson Rouge (October 19)
With the release of Conatus, Zola Jesus traded her mop of black hair and drape of black clothes for bleach-blonde and white, but lost none of her intensity. Under kaleidoscope lights she paced back and forth across the stage, belting and moaning, all the while holding the audience spellbound. It’s unusual for me to see such a memorable single performance amidst the noise and activity of CMJ, but this show was so good that while it ended fairly early, with plenty of time to head down to the Lower East Side and cram myself against more little stages in the sweaty dark, I chose to call it a night instead and let my elation sink in.
More photos here on BrooklynVegan.


11. St. Vincent, Cate le Bon @ Webster Hall (November 3)
There’s always been something a little cool, a little removed about Annie Clark. She shreds away at her guitar with eye-widening technical skill but behind that porcelain skin and those red lips you can feel something being held back, a set of sharp teeth waiting to devour you if you get too close. There’s undeniable power in the dichotomy between appearance and the maelstrom of sound and noise that sometimes issues from that guitar, and Annie certainly exploits that well, but I’d never really seen her cut lose. Until, that is, in the climax of her Webster Hall show she flung herself from the stage during Your Lips are Red, crowd-surfed with her guitar, then returned to her feet to sing “your skin’s so fair it’s not fair,” cool as can be as if nothing out of the ordinary had happened. Is it any wonder we’re all so fascinated by her?
More photos here on BrooklynVegan.


12. CSS, MEN, EMA @ Webster Hall (October 22)
By Saturday, the final night of CMJ, I was fading fast and questioning whether I had the stamina necessary to make it through a high energy set from CSS. Pushing your body to its limits is just what you do at a music marathon, though, and I reasoned that escape to the balcony was always an option if getting caught up in the dancing throng up front proved too exhausting. A short but powerful set from EMA kicked off the night, and I was happy I hadn’t wimped out of coming for nothing else than being there to witness it. At the end of a hectic string of CMJ performances herself, Erica M Anderson still brought her set to an epic climax with an extended version of Butterfly Knife, taking the aggression a self-injurer would unleash upon her skin and attacking her guitar with it instead, holding it out for a girl in the front to touch. It was an extremely emotionally resonant thing to me, as many of her songs are, but not something I feel I can explain much better than that - if you know, you know. MEN were energetic and fun and thought-provoking as ever-seriously, their set led to me having a conversation with the ladies next to me, strangers, about trans-identity politics which is certainly not a conversation you usually have with strangers at a show, but I digress! Then CSS came out and blew us all away. Lovefoxxx is one of the most supremely confident performers I’ve had the pleasure of witnessing, belting out slightly off-kilter party anthems for weirdos between cartwheels, tumbles, and splits. It’s impossible not to be caught up in the spectacle, and all previous thoughts of tiredness and early escapes upstairs were put aside.
More photos here on BrooklynVegan.


13. Lykke Li, Grimes @ Webster Hall (May 18) (+ November 17 @ Wellmont Theatre)
Lykke Li is a mesmerizing performer, and one who understands the value of bright and dramatic stage lights, much to my great glee as a photographer. I shot two of her shows this year and both were totally visually thrilling, as well as sounding amazing. The Webster Hall show with Grimes opening was perhaps a bit more energetic, but later in the year at Wellmont Theatre I saw the lovely ladies of First Aid Kit join Lykke Li onstage to sing Silent My Song together and almost exploded from squealing with joy. The moral of the story is see Lykke Li whenever you get the opportunity, and prepare to dance.
More photos from the Webster Hall show here, and the Wellmont Theatre show here on BrooklynVegan.


14. Rock & Roll Circus w/Ariel Pink, Amazing Baby, Saint Motel, Aska @ Damrosch Park Bandshell (January 4) (+ January 3 w/Japanther, The Pharmacy, Voxhaul Broadcast, The So So Glos, Electric Tickle Machine)
January is typically quiet for shows, but I started my year in live music off with a bang in 2010 with back-to-back nights at the Rock & Roll Circus. Held under the big top at Damrosch Park Bandshell in Lincoln Center, the Rock & Roll Circus was an utterly unique and unfortunately unsuited venue for this assortment of bands and fans, but there’s undeniable entertainment value in a good shitshow, which this certainly was. Night 1 was free and found bands like The So So Glos and Japanther urging a thin but enthusiastic crowd out of their seats and into the ring, much to the chagrin of security, who I doubt knew what to make of the scene. Accusations of rioting were tossed around but that’s an overstatement by far, just the usual moshing and rowdiness that accompanies loud bands at small DIY shows, now moved to a location where reasonable expectations for behavior were totally at odds with the aforementioned status-quo. Night 2 started off much more calmly, with paid tickets and bands kids were less likely to come lose their shit for. Kind of boring, actually, but for the circus setting and the presence between sets of circus performers. Aska was accompanied by both Nick Zinner of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and a troupe of contortionists, a woman flew on silks, and the highlight of the night happened when a herd of white ponies trotted around the ring to a soundtrack of Keith Urban. Ponies, you guys! Then Ariel Pink came out and did a bizarre, half-assed karaoke caricature of a performance while two girls hula-hooped in the ring. He walked through the crowd, climbed some scaffolding, and after a half hour or so just walked out and didn’t come back. It may seem strange that given all the weirdness and poor organization I’m ranking these shows in my top 20 of the year, but they were really two of the most amusing show-going nights I’ve had all year, albeit not always in a good way. Also, ponies!
More pictures from night 1 and night 2 here on BrooklynVegan.


15. Wye Oak, Callers, Caveman @ Bowery Ballroom (April 14)
With the release of the amazing Civilian this year, Wye Oak graduated from being a band you catch and are intrigued by in opening spots tons of times to a band that sells out Bowery Ballroom, aka my favorite venue in the city, and sounds absolutely sublime doing so. It’s easy to lose focus of everything but Jenn Wasner as her hair billows about with the force of her guitar playing, but it’d be criminal to ignore Andy Stack doing some truly masterful multitasking, to the tune of simultaneous drum and keyboard playing.
More pictures here on A Heart is a Spade, also, pictures from Wye Oak’s Rock Shop show here on BrooklynVegan.


16. BrooklynVegan Holiday Party w/Anna Calvi, Eleanor Friedberger, New Moods @ Music Hall of Williamsburg (December 13)
The first of three BrooklynVegan Holiday Party shows, two of which I went to, was definitely my favorite. New Moods were one of the bands I caught for a few hurried minutes of shooting at SXSW and filed away as uninterested, but they were quite good this time around, when I caught their full set. My fourth time seeing Eleanor Friedberger was not much different than the first three, but every time I’m charmed by her perfect stream of consciousness pop songs and quirky fashion sense. Then a powerhouse performance by Anna Calvi, who I was slightly underwhelmed by when I saw her earlier in the year at Bowery Ballroom. Some time on the road appears to have given her much more confidence onstage, because now she melts hearts and weakens knees as she smolders and shreds away at her guitar. Hello, I’m a little bit smitten.
More pictures here on BrooklynVegan.


17. Yann Tiersen, Breathe Owl Breathe @ Highline Ballroom (February 19)
I remember waiting in line outside Highline Ballroom for this show on a terribly cold evening in February with lots of Francophiles, and how the moon was full and shone through a bare tree branch when I looked up. Breathe Owl Breathe played us some of their enchanting folk-pop, at times with props including a wolf mask and hand-puppets, to open the night; then Yann Tiersen delivered a set of strange and beautiful music from violin and electronics, mostly without words, worlds away from the whimsical fare that soundtracks Amelie. Then, turned out into the cold again, the moon still shining down on our heads, diminishing otherworldly reverberations echoing in our ears.
More pictures here on BrooklynVegan.


18. The Raincoats, Grass Widow, No Bra @ Warsaw (September 16)
Most of the time when I think of nostalgia or reunion acts I think of aging dudes playing songs that, whatever their importance in years passed, whatever new sounds they heralded or new bands they inspired, are irrelevant to me, now. Not so with The Raincoats! So many feminist friendly folks flocked to The Warsaw, which is strongly reminiscent of a highschool gymnasium, to see proof that older ladies can still rock out. Oddly, and sadly, it’s one of the only true examples of that I’ve seen in my prolific show-going.
I shot this show for BrooklynVegan but sadly the pictures have yet to make a post, so if you’d like to see them, bug BV about it!


19. Youth Lagoon, Young Magic @ Mercury Lounge (September 12)
I first saw Youth Lagoon after hearing only a couple of his tracks off Bandcamp, but I knew right away he was something special. Claustrophobic lyrics brimming with adolescent anxiety are rarely accompanied by music so tuneful and catchy, and Trevor Powers charmed the crowd at his sold-out NYC debut from the get-go.
More pictures here on BrooklynVegan.


20. Puro Instinct, John Maus, Geneva Jacuzzi @ Mercury Lounge (June 29)
The most entertaining evening I’ve ever had at Mercury Lounge started off with an old woman called Amazing Amy doing yoga poses onstage. Then Geneva Jacuzzi, a young woman dressed as a mime, paced back and forth and performed a variety of theatrical hand gestures over an iPod backing track. These were both amusing spectacles, but they had nothing on watching John Maus. He also sings over a backing track, although when I say sing, I really mean an assortment of shouts and strangled yells. I was standing at the front of the stage, directly below Maus, and was treated to a shower of spit as he yelled in fury, clutched at and pounded his chest like a man in agony, jumped up and down, sometimes on chairs, and stared out at us all with the wide-eyed gaze of a madman. I was a little afraid that he’d take a swing at me, crouched down beneath him, but mostly I was riveted to the spot. It’s a bit of a schtick on repeat viewings but you definitely need to see it once. Puro Instinct was a letdown after all that intensity, but this show still ranks as one of the most amusing nights I experienced all summer.
More pictures here on BrooklynVegan.

SXSW 2011 Recap

(archiving selected content from my old Wordpress blog!)

After spending the past few years enviously following along as hordes of music media types, photographers, and fans made their annual pilgrimage down to Austin for a whirlwind week of bands and beer, this year I was determined, to hell with my anxiety over flying, to join them. I thought that spending the past couple of years covering CMJ would constitute adequate preparation, but that was before I arrived in downtown Austin. Walking down Sixth Street on my first afternoon in town amidst throngs of hipsters and to the soundtrack of competing blasts of music from a dozen adjacent venues, I felt threatened with complete sensory overload. That feeling never left me entirely over the course of the week and as a result I spent less time out and about and more time at the hotel recharging my internal social batteries then I’d hoped to. Still, even as someone who’s less interested in being in the middle of some huge maelstrom of activity and more interested in finding interesting pockets of quiet on the sides, I had a great time, and I’m looking forward to doing it again next year. Below are some photo highlights and assorted thoughts a week later. A whole bunch more photos from the various showcases and day parties I went to are here there and everywhere on BrooklynVegan.

Scenes from 6th St | SXSW 2011

Velveeta Room | SXSW 2011

I got into Austin late Tuesday afternoon, before the music portion of SXSW officially kicked off, and spent most of the evening wandering downtown, trying to get my bearings, and people-watching.

I35 | SXSW 2011

Cheer Up Charlie's | SXSW 2011

Wednesday started off at the French Legation Museum for the Bella Union/Yours Truly Day Party, with a number of bands I was really looking forward to catching for the first time. French Legation is so lovely, with rolling hills and flowers and trees, and it was a slightly overcast breezy day which made shooting outdoors an absolute joy.

Lanterns on the Lake | SXSW 2011
Lanterns on the Lake

BOBBY | SXSW 2011
BOBBY

I stood in line waiting for some free tacos after Lanterns on the Lake but gave up on that in favor of the granola bar in my camera bag and seeing BOBBY. Totally worthwhile decision, as BOBBY sounded sublime, so much so that I went up to Amelia, who also sings in Mountain Man, and told her so (please note I’m pretty shy and don’t normally do this, but sometimes you just have to). One of my favorite bands of the week, for sure.

French Legation Museum | SXSW 2011

Alessi's Ark | SXSW 2011
Alessi’s Ark

French Legation Museum | SXSW 2011

I saw a lot of people with foxtails hanging from belt loops or bag straps over the course of the week. Apparently that’s a thing?

Marques Toliver | SXSW 2011
Marques Toliver

I got psyched for Marques Toliver’s set as I saw him soundchecking - with an autoharp, a violin, and a glockenspiel. Then he started to sing in his huge, soulful voice, and I was basically blown away. Another favorite from the week, I just don’t understand how I’d never heard of this guy before.

Still Corners | SXSW 2011
Still Corners

Normally Still Corners plays in darkness or near enough, with just projectors, so I was so, so happy to be able to photograph them in daylight.

Lady Lamb the Beekeeper | SXSW 2011
Lady Lamb the Beekeeper

Next up on Wednesday night was the official BrooklynVegan showcase at Swan Dive, with a bunch of my favorites, and hangtime with some photographer buddies, so overall just a lovefest. Swan Dive is a lovely venue with great sound, but I vastly preferred it in the daytime with natural light streaming in through the curtains behind the stage, to at night, with minimal lighting coming up from the floor, casting all kinds of weird shadows on the performers’ faces.

Sam Amidon | SXSW 2011
Sam Amidon

Sam is so charming. The highlight of his set, of course, was when he did a cover of Walking on Sunshine with Ólöf Arnalds guesting on violin.

Sharon Van Etten | SXSW 2011
Sharon Van Etten

I’ve seen Sharon Van Etten sooooo many time but that never stops me from seeing her again whenever the opportunity arises. She is one of the sweetest, most sincere people ever, and I loved seeing the venue packed to the brim with people hanging onto her every note for her set.

Savoir Adore | SXSW 2011
Savoir Adore

I spent Thursday afternoon at the BV Day Party, spread out across 3 stages at the interconnecting Swan Dive, Barbarella Patio, and Barbarella. Going back and forth from one to the next all day sort of gave me whiplash from the widely disparate shooting conditions: dark with magenta LEDs inside Barbarella, harsh sunlight on the patio, and nice filtered backlighting at Swan Dive. Then there was fighting the crowds. My normal strategy for venues without a photo pit is to show up early, stake out a spot, and stay there, but when dealing with simultaneous bands on 3 stages that simply isn’t an option. Instead there’s a lot of going back and forth, apologizing to people as you wend your way up to the stage for a song or two, crouching down as to minimize how much you’re in anyone’s way, and wiggling back out again. So certainly not an ideal way to experience live music, all fragmented, but some bands stand out even amidst all the chaos.

Pete and the Pirates | SXSW 2011
Pete and the Pirates

Pete and the Pirates are really fun! I had a dream once that they were playing Mercury Lounge opening for Lykke Li, randomly, but I’d never actually seen them before.

Inside Barbarella | SXSW 2011

This was what the lighting inside Barbarella looked like on the bright end; it only got worse from here!

Rural Alberta Advantage | SXSW 2011
Rural Alberta Advantage

Even though I’d seen Rural Alberta Advantage less than a week before SXSW, I had to catch a few minutes of their set anyway, love them!

Memoryhouse | SXSW 2011
Memoryhouse

I was unfamiliar with Memoryhouse going in but I really enjoyed the couple of songs I caught from them. Also photographically speaking the violet light worked really really well for them, upped the dreamy factor a notch. I wanted to grab them for a quick portrait but I chickened out, which, seriously, I need to stop doing.

Memoryhouse | SXSW 2011
Memoryhouse

Menomena | SXSW 2011
Menomena

Screaming Females | SXSW 2011
Screaming Females

Marissa Paternoster is a force of nature. I wish I’d gotten more/better photos from their set but short of breaking out a flash there wasn’t a lot to be done with the lighting inside Barbarella.

MellowHype | SXSW 2011
MellowHype

Generally I’m not interested in competing with a zillion other photographers and their cameras to get the same pictures from the same angles of the really buzzy bands, but when the spectacle is going on right in front of you you can’t help but be compelled. I had the idea that I was going to wade into the crowd up to the front for MellowHype, which fortunately I was unable to - close interaction with crowd-surfers usually ends with me getting my glasses kicked off my face. Instead I found a bench to the side to stand on and shoot out over the crowd, which had limited potential for angles but at least let me get a straight shot of some crowd-surfing action while not being in physical danger.

Rooftop at Sunset | SXSW 2011

After the BV Party I met Rachel and we headed for Cheers Shot Bar, where Sea of Bees would be playing. I started to cringe as we walked through the dark narrow bar but was delighted to find that the stage was actually set up on an elevated patio in open air, and the setting sun was making everything look super dreamy. A couple of fairly forgettable bands played and I took sneaky crowd shots.

Rooftop at Sunset | SXSW 2011

Rooftop at Sunset | SXSW 2011

Sea of Bees | SXSW 2011
Sea of Bees

By the time Sea of Bees played the sun had just about set, turning the sky lilac, and it was so unbelievably pretty. The moral of the story here, clearly, is that more bands should play on rooftops at sunset, because it’s basically the best thing ever. (Also Sea of Bees are wonderful)

Backyard BBQ | SXSW 2011

Friday during the day was stacked with amazing party options, but I wound up going with my first instinct and heading up from downtown to the Muzzle of Bees Backyard BBQ, where quite a few bands I’ve seen before and love would be playing. Unfortunately I underestimated how far up it was, and wound up walking the nearly three miles in the noon heat, which was a pretty poor decision. Even with some serious heat exhaustion, though, this was still one of the highlights of my week.

Yellow Ostrich | SXSW 2011
Yellow Ostrich

Yellow Ostrich | SXSW 2011
Yellow Ostrich

The Luyas | SXSW 2011
The Luyas

The Luyas brought along Sarah Neufeld of Arcade Fire to play violin, which brought an awesome extra layer to their sound - I’ve seen them numerous times, but never with the violin. Also Jessie’s moodswinger, not pictured here, is basically the coolest instrument ever.

Backyard BBQ | SXSW 2011

Backyard BBQ | SXSW 2011

The Loom | SXSW 2011
The Loom

Lost in the Trees | SXSW 2011
Lost in the Trees

As soon as I saw the treehouse in the backyard I knew I had to climb up in it and it felt perfectly appropriate to do so for Lost in the Trees. I know, sooo corny, but I was just so tickled by the idea of photographing Lost in the Trees from up in a tree through the branches. Also if there’s a tree around that can be climbed I’m probably going to wind up climbing it, it’s just how I am - and finally, like I said, the heat was getting to me.

Lost in the Trees | SXSW 2011
Lost in the Trees

Josh T. Pearson | SXSW 2011
Josh T. Pearson

I had caught a few minutes of Josh T. Pearson’s set at the BV Day Party the previous day, but I didn’t have the time to spend to really listen or enjoy so it was a treat to be able to find a seat in the grass and listen at leisure. Josh is way funnier than you would ever expect given the somber nature of his songs, and dealt with a heckler with perfectly calm good humor, cracking jokes in his mellow voice. It loses something taken out of context, but my favorite comment was, “Y’know what’s better than a man with a beard? Two men with beards.” When Josh got down to playing it got so quiet that all you could hear was his voice and guitar and birds chirping.

Jonny Corndawg | SXSW 2011
Jonny Corndawg

After the BBQ I was so exhausted I went back to the hotel, collapsed asleep, and was dead to the world for a while. At least that meant I was well rested for an early start on Saturday, another marathon day across three stages at the final BV Day Party, this time paired up with M for Montreal, and a truly killer lineup. I started off even before that, though, with an invite to a brunch with Jonny Corndawg playing.

Misteur Valaire | SXSW 2011
Misteur Valaire

Oh Land | SXSW 2011
Oh Land

!!! | SXSW 2011
!!!

Austra | SXSW 2011
Austra

Austra was another of my favorite new discoveries of the week. Katie Stelmanis is amazing. Once again, I wished I had more time to linger and enjoy their set.

Little Scream | SXSW 2011
Little Scream

Owen Pallett | SXSW 2011
Owen Pallett

Braids | SXSW 2011
Braids

Scenes from 6th St | SXSW 2011

Scenes from 6th St | SXSW 2011

Favorite Albums & Songs of 2010

(archiving selected content from my old Wordpress blog!)

Copypasting last year’s caveat, as it still applies:
I’m always hesitant to make lists of the best albums, in particular, in a given year because I never listen to as many new releases as I want/plan to. Those I do listen to take time to grow on me, be digested, and oftentimes it won’t be until months later that I decide, hey, this __ album is really freaking awesome, why was I not loving it a year ago? In the same fashion, an album I loved at first listen can sour or get boring quickly on subsequent ones, or become inextricably associated with unpleasant memories. Finally, the albums and songs I really loved this year, again, just like any year, are almost certainly not the objective best in a sea of releases, but they’re the ones I loved the most, that I made some sort of personal connection with or that remind me of people, places, times. Frankly, I’m the wrong person to ask which were the “best,” anyway; I couldn’t tell you. So instead I call this a list of my favorites and have done with it.

I made a concentrated effort to listen to more, and a wider variety of new releases this year than in year’s past, but there were still many many albums that I just didn’t spend the time with, even though if I had I probably would’ve come to love them. However, as the last few hours of 2010 are upon us, it’s now or never for listmaking, so I finalized my decisions.

1. Lost in the Trees - All Alone in an Empty House
TRACKS: Fireplace, A Room Where Your Paintings Hang
This album came along at just the right time in my life for me to clutch to like like a drowning man to a life raft. My mother had broken her hip and I was living alone in our apartment for the longest extended period ever, thrust back into the caregiving role that I thought I’d finished with when my father died. These songs were my constant companions on walks to and from work and visiting my mother in rehab, walks through the woods with my camera trying to sort out the tangle of my emotions over what my life was now vs five years ago vs fifteen. Overly personal associations aside, it’s a beautiful album, full of stirring string arrangements and cathartic lyrics that stray to the near embarrassing at times, but in the best possible way.

2. Beach House - Teen Dream
TRACKS: Take Care, Silver Soul
The most perfect dreamy pop songs, evocative of melancholy beaches on overcast days, bonfires as the sun goes down, pervasive wistfulness, mellow sunshine fragmented in a crystal splaying rainbows on a wall that you only see for a minute passing by.

3. Sufjan Stevens - The Age of Adz
TRACKS: I Want to be Well, Impossible Soul
Last year I saw Sufjan at Bowery Ballroom. His set was dualistic in nature; he would either play one of his lovely gentle folk songs, or the sketch of something brimming with noise and electronics and instrumentation that sounded like nothing of his I had heard on record, except for hints of in You Are the Blood on 2009’s Dark Was the Night compilation. You know the rest - this year saw, surprise!, not one but two releases from Sufjan, the All Delighted People EP and The Age of Adz. I really feel like Adz is the best thing he’s ever recorded. I Want to be Well is such a fantastic stylistic romp-around, ending up in Radiohead territory, who would have guessed? And to pull off something like Impossible Soul should be impossible, 25 minutes long, how self indulgent can you get, but instead it’s captivating. All I can say is well played, Sufjan, and I’m really sorry I missed your Beacon Theatre shows.

4. Sharon Van Etten - Epic
TRACK: Don’t Do It
Short and sweet and with a sucker punch to the gut. You listen to Sharon’s beautiful voice and it’s lovely and you lose yourself in it, and then you listen to the lyrics, and really listen, and you never know how much they’re affecting you until you’re out walking on a windy day and there are tears in your eyes but you listen over and over and over again anyway. This album was part two in my had it on repeat all summer long series.

5. Arcade Fire - The Suburbs
TRACKS: We Used to Wait, Rococo
It took me some time to get into this album. It doesn’t come on with the initial brilliant intensity and bombast of Funeral or Neon Bible, but I had been looking forward so much to a new Arcade Fire album, so I kept at it. Little by little, I got it. How Rococo is not annoying at all and is in fact pretty freaking brilliant, how We Used to Wait is on par with any of their best anthemic songs. The more I listened to it on headphones walking around the suburban town where I grew up, restless and discontent, the more it fell into place. I wish I could’ve heard this for the first time when I was fifteen, I probably would’ve thought it a totally spot on social commentary.

6. Owen Pallett - Heartland
TRACKS: Lewis Takes Off His Shirt, E is for Estranged
Owen Pallett’s precisely lush strings and incisive lyrics in the form of an ambitious concept album years in the making? Yes, please. Everything about this is amazing, climaxing in what’s probably my favorite musical moment of the year in Lewis Takes Off His Shirt. The refrain of “I’m never gonna give it to you,” repeated, growing ever stronger, against those trilling violins, is a kind of defiant bliss.

7. Joanna Newsom - Have One On Me
A rich layered epic that demands you lose yourself for hours in it, and rewards you with some new detail each time. Ambitious and immaculately executed. I haven’t spent enough time with Have One On Me as I would’ve liked to, and it’s certainly an album that demands time and attention, but already after a few listens I can tell there are murky depths and pristine heights yet to uncover.

8. Villagers - Becoming a Jackal
TRACKS: Home, Pieces
I have a love/hate relationship with singer-songwriters. When they’re good I totally adore them but sometimes I’ll encounter some male musician singing alone with his acoustic guitar and something in the lyrics will totally turn my stomach, I can’t even explain it. Villagers, happily, falls very neatly into the first category. This album reminds me of Lifted-era Bright Eyes. It has that certain indescribable quality that I will now attempt to put into words: the lyrics are simple but not stupid, the mood is melancholy but not self indulgently maudlin, the music is rich and stirring without being overblown.

9. Janelle Monae - The ArchAndroid
Hugely ambitious concept albums are totally relevant to my interests, regardless of what loose musical genre they may fall under. Stylistically this is so here, there, and everywhere anyway, and the most amazing thing is Monae pulls it all off like she isn’t even breaking a sweat. Had I been trying to make a list of the objective best albums of the year rather than personal favorites, this one would’ve been at the very top. It’s lower here because I simply didn’t spend a lot of time listening to it; I was so blown away at first that I barely felt the need to.

10. Phantogram - Eyelid Movies
TRACKS: Mouthful of Diamonds, When I’m Small
Electronic music at its very best, tempered and augmented by Sarah Barthel’s crystalline vocals. You could never guess that they made all this glorious racket in pastoral upstate New York, far from the thrum of city life; perhaps that’s why it sounds so refreshing.

11. The National - High Violet
TRACKS: Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks, Runaway
This is an album by The National. It isn’t a departure, or a new direction, but a continuation of the things the band does well, anxiety-ridden little portraits of songs narrated in Matt Berninger’s distinctive tenor. And that’s enough; The National aren’t really a band I look to for sonic experimentations coming out of left field. I look to them for good, deeply affecting songs, and they consistently deliver.

12. Perfume Genius - Learning
There’s little in the pretty piano melodies to the soften the blow of the stark, blunt lyrics in Learning, but alongside the pain lives hope. Copypasting from my live writeup, “there’s (…) something cathartic about laying bare such painful and personal things in front of a roomful of people. Abuse thrives on secrecy and shame; sometimes telling true stories to strangers is one of the most powerful things you can do to strike out against it.” I’m not positive if that’s what this album was intended as, but I’m pretty sure it is, and that’s why I love it, even if I don’t necessarily listen to it every day.

13. Shout Out Louds - Work
TRACKS: Walls, Show Me Something New
My feel good, anthemic album of the year. I read a lot of criticism of Work, how it doesn’t live up to Shout Out Louds’ previous releases. I honestly hadn’t listened to them really before this, so maybe my opinion counts for less, but at face value this is a damn fine collection of songs, infectious and catchy and infinitely listenable.

14. Dark Dark Dark - Wild Go
TRACK: Daydreaming
Gorgeous haunting multi-instrumental folk music rarely sounds so sweet. Another case where I happened upon the band live, loved them, got the album, and loved it even more.

15. Broken Bells - Broken Bells
TRACKS: The Mall & Misery, Sailing to Nowhere
This collaboration from James Mercer and Dangermouse whets my appetite for new Shins material while sounding totally unlike my old beloved Shins albums, Oh Inverted World and Chutes too Narrow. It’s a nice difference. I can listen to this over and over without getting tired of it, which is generally a good sign. This little review makes me sound pretty ambivalent about the album, but I really just don’t have much to say about it; it’s pretty solid and doesn’t require much explanation.

16. Land of Talk - Cloak and Cipher
TRACKS: Color Me Badd, Quarry Hymns
Lizzie Powell’s abstract lyrics, distinctive voice, and fierce guitar shredding are in fine form here. Color Me Badd’s plaintive, dissociated refrain of, “where did my body go, where did I leave it?” is particularly lovely.

17. Anais Mitchell - Hadestown
I love ambitious concept albums. I love mythology. This album should’ve been a top five shoe-in for me, but I just haven’t felt like returning to it often, as excellent as it is. Anais Mitchell enlists a whole host of guests for her Orpheus retelling, gets in some keen historic and current economic insight, and just generally kicks ass all over the place. If I have one complaint it’s with Ani DiFranco’s Persephone. I’m pretty attached to the Persephone myth, but having listened to Ani DiFranco so much as a teenager hearing her voice there is totally jarring and takes me right out of it. Which isn’t to say that she doesn’t do a good job, but I just can’t make the association.

18. Holly Miranda - The Magician’s Private Library
TRACK: Slow Burn Treason
To me this is a mood piece, sensual and meandering with no particular destination, but it sounds so, so good in the process. Holly Miranda’s voice is divine (and even better live - wow!) and dueting with Kyp Malone sounds pretty much too good to handle.

19. Allo Darlin’ - Allo Darlin’
TRACKS: The Polaroid Song, Kiss Your Lips, If Loneliness Was Art
So silly and delightful and buoyant, I loved these guys live, and they’re almost as much fun on record. How can you resist a song about polaroids, or one that unselfconsciously quotes Weezer, all punctuated by joyful “sha na na”s and ukulele strumming? If this sounds all too twee for you, oh, it is, but that’s precisely the point. My interest wanes a bit during the slower numbers, but all in all this band and their songs are just far too much fun.

20. CocoRosie - Grey Oceans
CocoRosie are one of those bands that you love or hate, which is easy enough to understand; there’s less simple sonic enjoyment and more layers of lyrics and sounds and meanings, a little girl’s collage of feminine artifacts laid out in a closet full of dust mites or some muddy field. I feel like CocoRosie have interesting things to say, and I’m interested in how they say them, but it’s certainly not something I listen to if I want to dance or sing along. Still, there’s a lot that’s worthwhile here, if it’s to your taste and you have the patience for it.

Some more favorite songs, from albums not listed here:

Avi Buffalo - What’s In It For?
Broken Social Scene - World Sick, All to All
Laura Marling - Goodbye England (Covered in Snow), Hope in the Air
Los Campesinos! - The Sea is a Good Place to Think of the Future
The New Pornographers - Sweet Talk, Sweet Talk
Ra Ra Riot - You and I Know
Spoon - Trouble Comes Running
Stars - Wasted Daylight, The Passenger

You can also find most of these songs in a last.fm playlist I’ve been making.