Friday, September 7, 2018

McQ's Best Of 1977 Vol 3 - Her Majesty's Impudent Empire (Punk's Greatest Year Pt. 1)

1977 was such an amazing, formative year for punk, there was no way to contain all the highlights in a single 80 minute mix, so this first of our two volume sequence focuses only on those most punk of punk band's to emerge from the old British Empire.  If the bands were North American (Ramones, Television, Suicide, The Dead Boys, Mink DeVille), or continued to exhibit the slightest  bar band/new wave tendancies into 1977 (Wreckless Eric, Elvis Costello, Ian Dury, Graham Parker, Devo, The Talking Heads), off they went to our bar band mix or disc two of the punk series.

But what's amazing to me about the band's that are left is how each found a unique niche for themselves and a way to contribute something specifically their own to the exploding genre.

The Sex Pistols were the genre's anarchic soul and take no prisoners insulters in chief, The Damned its first out of the gate pioneers, The Buzzcocks its link to pop silliness, The Clash its unsparing political fervor, the Saints its jet engine roar, The Jam its link to rock and soul tradition, Radio Birdman its link with the cowboy frontier, The Stranglers its lounge lizard underbelly, and The Wire its arty brains. All of them, along with several others who contributed mighty tracks to Punk's first full and still greatest year, are represented here. Enjoy.


On The Songs:

1. Holiday In The Sun - Sex Pistols: Here's the funny thing about the Sex Pistols Never Mind The Bollocks, Here's The Sex Pistols.  Widely regarded as one of the most disruptive records/direction shifting moments in rock history, with The Beatles' Ed Sullivan Show appearance and Nirvana's Nevermind rounding out the obvious top three, most of the impact of these songs, including album opener Holiday In The Sun featured here, was actually delivered through the band's live performances and a few single releases in 1976 and 1977 prior to the album every coming out, as its late fall release made it one of the last of classic '77 British punk albums to hit record store shelves.  Only Wire's Pink Flag and The Jam's second 1977 release This is the Modern World came later.



2. Neat Neat Neat - The Damned: Keeping with the theme of release dates, it was actually the Damned who were first out of the gate amongst the British punk acts, both with the first punk single ever, 1976's New Rose, and the first punk full length, the awesome, irreverant Nick Lowe produce Damned Damned Damned.  And though, along with The Stranglers and The Jam's Paul Weller, the Damned would go on to have one of the longest and more consistently sustained careers of any of '77s breakout punk stars, Damned Damned Damned opener Neat Neat Neat, with its unstoppable bass-fueled intro, remains their most popular song.



3. I'm So Bored With The USA - The Clash: One of so many great, pointed songs from the Clash's self-titled UK debut (which was made even better in its 1979 American re-release), this song was actually first written by Mick Jones as a straight break-up/putdown song I'm So Bored With You. But, after touring England with the Pistols, Damned, and Buzzcocks throughout 76 and early 77, the band had become so turned off by the rampant Americanization of England they witnessed that the lyrical emphasis and the title of the song were changed.



4. Orgasm Addict - The Buzzcocks: The Buzzcocks would do most of their chart damage in the two years to follow, but their controversial first single here, even though banned by the BBC and now considered "embarassing" by lead singer Pete Shelley (mostly because it's about his own hyper-promiscous bi-sexual ways at the time of its release), remains one of their most legendary songs.



5. Ex Lion Tamer - Wire: Like the Clash's debut, Pink Flag, though the most challenging listen of all the early punk classics, is so loaded with great, provocative tunes that I just went with my personal favorites. Feel free to challenge my selections, but this song has always been number one on Pink Flag for me.



6. Art School - The Jam: Along with The Stranglers, the Paul Weller-led Jam are one of two bands associated with the early Punk outbreak that actually began their careers pursuing a different niche. The Stranglers started out as potent Graham Parker-styled pub rockers, but for The Jam, passionate fans of all things Who-ish and Kinks-ian, it was pure Mod revivalism, right down to the nifty suits and crisp haircuts they continued to sport on stage while neon mohawks and tatterred T-Shirts were popping up all around them.  This song, the opening track from the first of their two '77 releases, debut album In The City, isn't one of their biggest hits, but it's another personal favorite, and a song that clearly deliniates that love of all things Mod.



7. Love Lies Limp - Alternative TV: Though not quite a one hit wonder (this short-lived band, anchored around the songwriting of punk fanzine Sniffin' Glue fouding editor Mark Perry, would hang on to produce a few more modest British hits in 1978) Alternative TV never had another song that caught on like Love Lies Limp.



8. Your Generation - Generation X: Billy Idol's one great contribution to the fledgling punk movement before he would quickly shift to a more mainstream post-punk/new wave direction and become the MTV superstar we all come to know and... love?



9. Kissin' Cousins - The Saints: Here's the funny thing. (I'm) Stranded, possibly the hardest hitting of all the 1977 punks albums from one of Australia's all-time greatest bands, actually has a lot in common with Bon Iver's For Emma, Forever Ago. Both albums were basically just demo tapes that so impressed their label's executives on first listen that the decision was made to, aside from a few touch ups, skip a return to the recording studio and and release the demos as is. A part of me feels bad going with Kissin' Cousins, the album's lone cover, over one of the many excellent originals, but I just enjoy this song too much (and because the single (I'm) Stranded, like Anarchy In The UK, was a huge 1976 hit and thus left off this mix).



10. Peaches - The Stranglers: The Stranglers are basically the opportunists of this batch of punk pioneers.  Already a fairly established bar band in England, with a line-up of musicians who could actually play, the move to punk for them was mostly a  commerially driven decision rather than one of political ideology.  There was just one problem, lead singer Jet Black was a decade older than the rest of the band, already deep into his thirties - not  the frontman you want for an attack anchored around youthful rebellion. So the band sidestepped the issue, taking on punk's sonic pallette (though with a more keyboard-anchored styled than the others), but going light on the politics and social commentary and instead focusing on punk's crassness, casting Black as a creepy, aging, Jim Morrison-esque lothorio, out to denegrate the lives of everyone he encountered, especially the young ladies. Case in point, Peaches, their biggest hit of '77 from their debut album Rattus Norvegicus.



11. What's My Name - The Clash: This might be my favorite song from the original UK release. Just love how in-your-face it is.



12. In The City - The Jam: This title track from The Jam's debut was their first hit single.



13. Gary Gilmore's Eyes - The Adverts: One of the first punk bands to feature a women, bassist Gaye Black, in a prominent role, Gary Gilmore's Eyes, which riffed on the tabloid brouhahah of the moment that convicted murdered Gilmore had requested his eyes be donated to medical science after his execution, was the biggest hit of this husband and wife led act's short-lived career.



14. Strange - Wire: By the end of 1977 when Pink Flag dropped, punk was already on the verge of morphing into several less propulsive and moodier hybrids, and Pink Flag was one of the first punk albums to anticipate that, especially as presented here in the long, slow Strange, a song further popularized by REM a decade later on Document.



15. Descent Into The Maelstrom - Radio Birdman: So bummed I could only squeeze one track from Radio Appears, the debut album from Australia's other great punk band. If you get a chance, be sure to check out the album, especially tracks like Hand Of Law or Murder City Nights. More than any other punk act of the era, Radio Birdman presaged the Bobby Fuller-ish potential of melding Punk with Country and Western and Rockabilly sensibilities that would form the musical foundation for many prominent acts (X, Jon Spencer, Parquet Courts) in the decades to follow.


16. Pretty Vacant - Sex Pistols: With Johnny Rotten's bullying snarl, the bands unwavering energy and complete disregard for societal norms, has there ever been a band better assembled to deliver maximum insult and outrage. To that point, check out the way Rotten drags out and splits his pronunciation of "vacant" on the band's third lead single here, so it actually sounds like he's saying "va" followed by arguably the second most despised word in the English language, and was able to say this word repeatedly over British airways and television in 1977, as this song hit number 6 on the British charts and was the first of their songs not immediately banned.



17. Oh Bondage! Up Yours! - X-Ray Spex: Punk's first female-fronted act, the Polly Styrene-led Spex were intentional underachievers, only releasing five singles and one album over their brief careers, but this track remains one of the most celebrated punk songs of the era.



18. Lookin' After No. 1 - The Boomtown Rats: In truth, I almost didn't include this song here. Though the band's eponymous debut is a perfectly solid album well worth hearing, I felt there were better deep cuts to still explore from The Clash, No More Heroes, and Radio Appears. But in the end, a sense of inclusion won out, so the Bob Geldoff-led Rats gets Ireland's one entry in this mix.





19. No More Heroes - The Stranglers: The title track from The Stranglers even better follow-up to their debut Rattus Norvegicus finds the band make a rare slide into more socially oriented commentary.



20. Baby Baby - The Vibrators: A minor but enjoyable hit from one of the first wave's less well remembered bands off of their entertaining if a touch more generic debut Pure Mania.



21. I Fall - The Damned: One more track from Damned Damned Damned. This one is an absolute scorcher.



22. Mannequin - Wire: In addition to steering punk in an artier, more stylized direction, Pink Flag also embraced the idea of brevity to an even greater degree than any other of the notable '77 punk releases. Most of the album's twenty-two songs clock in at under two minutes, five under one, and while this song is actually one its most "bloated" tracks, clocking in at 2:37, it's still a great example of Wire's wonderful musical and lyrical economy.



23. All Around The World - The Jam: Another hit single for the Jam in 1977. And my apologies to fans of the band's second 1977 release This Is The Modern World, a fine album in its own right but it came down to an either/or choice betweenthis single or a track from the album. There wasn't room to squeeze in both.



24. Police And Thieves - The Clash: This excellent cover of the Junior Murvin reggae classic of the same year was never originally intended for the Clash's debut, but after all the other tracks were finished, the album still hadn't hit the minimum length required for an LP to go to print. And since reggae-legend Scatch "Lee" Perry was part of the album's production team, this is the solution they came up with.  Glad they did, cause it's one my favorite songs on the album.



25. Nights In Venice - The Saints: That allusion I made in the intro to The Saints being early punk's jet engine roar... this blazer from (I'm) Stranded is the song that best exemplifies it.


26. God Save The Queen - Sex Pistols: One of the most controversial singles ever, this Monarcy trashing ditty that scooped its title straight from the British National Anthem was banned everywhere and still hit number two on the British charts (with many to this day claiming it was only politically motivated manipulations in sales tracking that kept it from hitting number one). It felt like the obvious song with which to close our look at this brief but fantastic moment in British rock history. 





































Saturday, September 1, 2018

McQ's Best Of 1977 Vol 2 - Nancy's Favorites!

All right, the final rollout for this first week, the 1977 edition of the most popular of the three annually recurring mixes in these collections - Nancy's Favorites!

I'll go light on the comments on this one in the hope that Nancy steps in and adds some thoughts of her own, but I think it's safe to say her choices speak for themselves - enjoy, and have a great Labor Day weekend everybody.



And for those of you who want to look back on Nancy's previous selections, here are links to her other mixes through the years.

Nancy's Favorites 2016
Nancy's Favorites 2015
Nancy's Favorites 2014
Nancy's Favorites 2013
Nancy's Favorites 2012
Nancy's Favorites 2011
Nancy's Favorites 2010
Nancy's Favorites 2009
Nancy's Favorites 2008
Nancy's Favorites 2007
Nancy's Favorites 1967
Nancy's Favorites 1966

Now, About Those 1977 Songs:



1. Fantasy - Earth Wind & Fire: Fun bit of Wikipedia trivia about this huge hit from Earth Wind & Fire's 1977 release All 'N All. It took Maurice White over three months to write this song, and supposedly it wasn't until he caught Close Encounters Of The Third Kind that he was struck with a final burst of inspiration that allowed him to pull everything into place.



2. You Make Loving Fun - Fleetwood Mac: One of Rumours definite standouts, but I have to admit I'm surprised this is the track Nancy ended up grabbing, as I thought Dreams and Songbird were the locks.  Guess it goes to show even after twenty-five years of marriage, your loved ones can still surprise you.



3. Your Smiling Face - James Taylor: One of the kingpin of mid-seventies singer/songwriters' finest songs, released on his last album to make it in before punk and new wave pushed the genre back to the margins, the winning JT.



4. Nobody Does It Better - Carly Simon: Leave it to Nancy to  sequence Carly's theme song for 1977's James Bond installment The Spy Who Loved Me right after a song by her husband at that time.



5. It's So Easy - Linda Rondstadt: This is one of two tracks we'll be hitting from Rondstadt's appealing '77 full length Simple Dreams.



6. It's A Heartache - Bonnie Tyler: Believe it or not, It's a Heartache, though a huge hit for the Welsh Tyler at the time, never hit number one on the charts. But as the years have passed, its popularity has proven far more durable than the songs that charted ahead of it, to such an extent that it is now ranks as the second all-time highest selling single of 1977, ranking only behind Paul McCartney's Mull Of Kintyre.



7. Running On Empty - Jackson Browne: The popular lead track to Browne's 1977 live album of the same name, Running On Empty was inspired by Browne's tendancy to race to the studio a few miles away each morning on a near empty tank of gas while recording The Pretender, always thinking he could squeeze in one more trip before needing to fill up.



8. Let It Go, Let It Flow - Dave Mason: The quasi-title track and one of two big hits from Let It Flow, the biggest solo album of Mason's early post-Traffic career, Let It Go, Let It Flow reached #45 on the US charts the following year and remains a fan favorite to this day.



9. The Core - Eric Clapton: I've heard it said many times that up through Derek & The Domino's Layla, Eric Clapton's career was all about his guitar, and after that, it was all about his voice.  I think there's a core truth to this, but as this extended romp from 1977's Slowhand shows, Clapton wasn't done with his gunslinging ways just yet!



10. The Blues Had A Baby and They Named It Rock & Roll - Muddy Waters: More gnarly fun from Muddy's Hard Again, this track armed with what has to be one of the best song titles ever.



11. Three Little Birds - Bob Marley: Possibly Exodus's best track. Is there anyone out there who doesn't love this song?



12. (The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes - Elvis Costello: Another quick-hitting, punchy classic from Costello's debut My Aim Is True.



13. Misunderstood - Pete Townshend and Ronnie Lane: Classic angsty Towshend here, turning a positive, the sense his fans and friends see and understand him clearly, into a catastrophic personality flaw that has completely robbed him of cool. 



14. Little Darling (I Need You) - The Doobie Brothers: This cover of the 1966 Marvin Gaye song for the Doobie's 1977 full length Livin' On The Fault Line was a big hit for the band, and is arguably now the definitive version of the Holland-Dozier-Holland classic.



15. Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours - Peter Frampton: Yet another rock conversion of a Motown classic, and with all apologies to Stevie, this redo for Frampton's smash 1977 album I'm In You, which punches up the tempo and just about everything else on the song, really does supercede the original (though we still love that version, too).



16. Best Of My Love - The Emotions: Nancy's lone disco selection for this mix is one of 1977's best singles in the genre.



17. Smoke From A Distant Fire - Sanford & Townsend Band: The Nancy theft from my theme mixes that hurts the most, Sanford & Townsend may no longer be household names, but this is a fantastic bar band track.  



18. Easy - The Commodores: The mega-hit song that started the Commodore's shift in emphasis away from Walter Orange's funk barn burners to make more room for Lionel Richie's romantic balladry.



19. Feels So Good - Chuck Mangione: An unlikely jazz crossover hit in 1977, this has always been a song near and dear to Nancy's heart.


































Wednesday, August 29, 2018

McQ's Best Of 1977 Vol 1 - BEST OF THE BEST

1977.  What a year in music!

Or just like Muddy says in the song that opens this year's retrospective collection - "Oh, Yeah!"

After spending the last 13 months listening down to the best this pivotal year in rock's evolution has to offer, I think the quote that summarizes 1977 best actually came three-fourths of a century earlier, in Charles Dicken's A Tale Of Two Cities, that being...

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."

On the excitement front, punk and to a lesser degree new wave exploded in 1977, in what probably remains the single greatest year for the genre.  Reggae was smack dab in the middle of incredibly fruitful late 70s period. Fleetwood Mac proved that just because their rock was soft and accessible didn't mean it couldn't be great, and in bars and roadhouses and pubs around the world, bands were following Springsteen's lead in showing there was still plenty of gold to be mined from rock tradition. Disco, on the heels of the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, was enjoying one last year of peak popularity before its precipitous demise, and off in Europe, especially Berlin, the likes of David Bowie, Brian Eno, Iggy Pop, Kraftwerk, Jean Michael Jarre, Cerrone, and Giorgio Moroder were crafting a set of radically new sonic palettes that in the final analysis might have been 1977's most influential work of all.

On the downside, there was a seemingly bottomless supply of dreck in 1977 as well, most of it hugely popular at the time.

Prog rock had devolved from an already suspect start a decade earlier into an at times comically bad (but also in some way endearing) bastardized, Americanized AM form. Hard rock and Heavy Metal, while immensely popular and not without signature albums and classic singles during the year, was overall closing in on the bottom of the well as to just how dumb and juvenile music could be (and not in a good way like The Ramones).  And Pop, dear lord, Pop music completely lost its bounce in 1977, clearing the way for a barrage of cringe-inducing singer-songwriter ballads, cross-over country duds, and bland midtempo soft-rockers, every last one of them slathered in what just might be the worst guitar tone trends of any rock 'n' roll era from the 1950s to present day.

So yeah, I don't think there's another year in rock history that was so over-the-top loaded with both brilliance and cheese, vision and inanity, in such equal measure, and over the next fourteen volumes we'll take a listen to and celebrate it all.

But first, as always, before diving into the themed mixes, we start with a mix of tracks representing my very favorite singles and albums of the year.

So here we go, the 1977 edition of Best Of The Best....



On The Songs:



1. Mannish Boy - Muddy Waters: Like many of you, I've always loved this song, but I had no idea this iconic version was actually a late career redo of an earlier Chess recording. Taken from the fantastic, down and dirty, Johnny Winter-produced Hard Again, while not a song one normally associates with 1977, it just felt like the perfect collection opener.



2. Psycho Killer - Talking Heads: One can argue which version is better, the original here from the band's debut, or the ace live version recorded for Jonathan Demme's Stop Making Sense seven years later, but at the end of the day there is just no denying this early new wave classic, or the equally fantastic quirky gem of an album on which it arrived.



3. Sheep - Pink Floyd: I'm probably in the minority here, but the Roger Waters dominated riff on Orwell's Animal Farm that is Animals has always been my second favorite Floyd album after Dark Side Of The Moon.  It just works a little more consistently for me on a musical level than Floyd's other classics like Pipers, Wish You Were Here, or The Wall. As to why I choose Sheep over the equally excellent Dogs or Pigs, that's a secret only a select few of my best college friends will ever know.




4. Teenage Lobotomy - The Ramones: The Ramones 1976 self-titled debut usually lands higher in the all-time polls, but I've always felt the more tuneful and playful Rocket To Russia was the band's apex. Most of the songs on Rocket went on to form the soundtrack for the Roger Cormen cult classic Rock and Roll High School two years later, and amongst all the puerile greatness found on the album, with apologies to Sheena Is A PunkTeenage Lobotomy has always stood out to me as the band's single finest and most quintessential song, the ultimate musical personification of young male stupidity.



5. Brick House - The Commodores: Yeah, I know. The lyrical focus here ain't exactly a good fit with 2017.  But at the end of the day, with the possible exception of Parliament's Flashlight, was a better funk groove laid down to vinyl in 1977, with cooler funk vocals?  I think not.



6. Alison - Elvis Costello: My favorite comment I've ever read about Elvis Costello came in a Rolling Stone retrospective some years back, in which the writer opined that few rock artists have ever emerged so fully formed as Costello.  Armed with an innate mastery of just about every trick in the rock 'n' roll playbook, this album, which so dexterously straddle punk rock, new wave, pub rock, and trad rock was an instant classic, and in the bittersweet Alison, it's only ballad, produced one of the most timelessly romantic songs of the era, even though that romanticism is actually conveyed through the prism of a failed romance.



7. See No Evil - Television: Of all the punk acts to emerge in 1977, Television is without question the most unusual and atypical. Their songs were neither short nor particularly political or angry, and unlike most of the other punk acts of the day, they could flat-out play. They felt no disdain for the guitar solo either... hell, they jammed, leading many in the day to consider them the "Grateful Dead" of the New York punk scene. And yet, with their knotted, twisted, jazz-inflected guitar attack and twitchy, nasally vocals, there was still something decidedly punk about them.  The epic ten-minute title track has always been the cut historians latch onto from this landmark album, but for me, the highlight has always been the album's opener included here.  Along with Teenage Lobotomy and Alison and a pair of tracks to come later in this mix, See No Evil is one of my personal all-time top fifty songs.




8. Solsbury Hill - Peter Gabriel: The last song to make the cut on this mix, Solsbury Hill was the first single of Gabriel's solo career, released just a short time after leaving Genesis. Not surprisingly, given where Gabriel was at this moment, a sense of reflection, taking stock, and hope for the future dominates the song, and that sense struck a chord with listeners as well.  It would remain Gabriel's most popular song until the album So blew up the charts nine years later.




9. Submission - The Sex Pistols: "Submission over Anarchy?" you say. "Are you crazy?" No I am not. Not because Anarchy isn't the best song on this all-time classic that has aged way better than it has any right to, but because Anarchy was first released as a single midway through 1976, and is presently considered in consensus polls the #1 song of that year.  I will occasionally steal from the year prior for these mixes when the song actually peaked on the charts in the year under consideration, as I do on an upcoming disco mix with Disco Inferno and A Fifth Of Beethoven, but not the overall #1 song of a different year. That left a tight four way race between this track, Holiday In The Sun, God Save The Queen, and Pretty Vacant, and Submission just worked the best here.



10. Go Your Own Way - Fleetwood Mac: While possibly the finest song Lindsay Buckingham ever wrote for Fleetwood Mac, Go Your Own Way is just one of so many songs I could have gone with here to represent what has arguably proven over time to be the greatest and most enduring soft rock record ever.



11. Complete Control - The Clash: Though included on the 1979 American re-release of the Clash's self-titled debut, Complete Control was originally released as a single, which meant, in keeping with British tradition of the era, that it could not appear on the original UK release of the album. Regardless, this song is an awesome representation of the fierce political fire that hallmarked so many of the Clash's early recordings.



12. One Love / People Get Ready - Bob Marley And The Wailers: Damn, does this song come from one unbelievable reggae album - could Exodus be top three all-time in the genre along with The  Harder The Come soundtrack and the Wailers own earlier effort Burning? Maybe. But what's most interesting here is how much warmer the tone of this album is compared to that earlier Wailer efforts.  The political side still surfaces from time to time, but most of this album is focused on togetherness and community and celebration. Like Rumors, could've gone with so many tracks from this album, but this track so nails the album's open-armed, communal vibe that in the end I had to go with it.



13. Stayin' Alive - The Bee Gees: I'll be the first to admit I'm not the world's biggest disco fan, but excluding a cut from this album on 1977's Best Of The Best would be like excluding a track from Sgt. Pepper's or Thriller in their respective years, and of all the cuts on this soundtrack, as fun as so many are, and with the one possible exception of Disco Inferno, Stayin' Alive is the clear standout.



14. Annie - Pete Townshend and Ronnie Lane: The most underrated album of 1977. Easy call.  Pete Townshend and Ronnie Lane's Rough Mix. As the title implies, it's basically a grab bag of  Lane and Townshend songs with little interplay between the two artists, but despite the album's scattershot nature, it really hangs together. Many of the Townshend songs- Keep Me TurningMy Baby Gives It Away, the comical ditty Misunderstood, and the blazing instrumental title track - rank among his best solo efforts,  but it's the rustic, plaintive Lane ballads, built around his one-of-a-kind carnival barker voice, that really brings the magic, and of those tracks, Annie here is the most indelible of all, another one of my personal all-time top 50 songs.





15. Lust For Life - Iggy Pop: 1977 was the biggest year of Iggy Pop's post-Stooges career, the year in which he released not just his best solo effort ever, represented by the title track here, but also the second best album of his solo career, the aptly named, David Bowie produced The Idiot, which we'll visit in depth in a later mix.





16. Paradise By The Dashboard Light - Meat Loaf: Okay, maybe another controversial choice here, a song and album that has many detractors, but I stand the choice. I've always found this song to be one of the all-time camp classics, very much of a piece with the work on The Rocky Horror Picture Show Meat Loaf did a year or two earlier, and however silly some may find this song, I think the dynamics as it shifts from passage to passage, including legendary baseball announcer Phil Rizzuto's double-entendre call, which he claimed (falsely by most accounts) to not know how it would be used when he recorded it, are just exceptionally well executed.



17. Heroes - David Bowie: As with Iggy, 1977 was a monster year for Bowie, after retreating to Berlin with Brian Eno to produce a pair of incredibly influential half avant-garde pop/half instrumental  albums, Low and the follow up Heroes, that as alluded to above, pretty much created the "skronky" electronic vocabulary for so many electronic and synth acts to follow. Low is generally regarded in most circles as the edgier and better of the two albums, and it may be, but I've always preferred the slightly more accessible Heroes and it's staggeringly great title track, possibly the high point in the entirety of Bowie's massive catalog, and the last of my personal all-time top 50 tracks to land on this mix.






Sunday, February 25, 2018

McQ's #1 Album Of 2016 - TEENS OF DENIAL - Car Seat Headrest

Car Seat Headrest's Teens Of Denial is not a perfect album.

Ramshackle and hyperambitious, it stretches on for over seventy minutes that will surely test some listerner's patience.

The mix, while a huge step up from bandleader / songwriter Will Toledo's debut Teens Of Style and his early lo-fi band Bandcamp releases, is at places still ragged and raw.

Nothing the band does musically screams "originality." Everything feels rooted in the influences of obvious punk, indie and classic rock tropes from decades past.

And the album is so heavily front-loaded with its highest energy numbers that the album's second half can only pale by comparison.

But at the end of the day, what is here gels magically, making Teens Of Denial far and away my favorite release of 2016.

No other 2016 indie release rocked harder, no other 2016 album wowed me more lyrically, no other 2016 album made me laugh harder, and talk about an innate ability to slam home a chorus!  Most rock artists will go to their whole careers without writing one rousing sing-along crescendo as good as the "It doesn't have to be like this!" refrain that ends Drunk Drivers / Killer Whales.  Teens Of Denial serves up another five or six every bit as irrestible.

So yeah, I liked Teens Of Denial.

A lot.

Loosely organized around, but never restrained by, the struggles of Joe, a depressed, substance abusing, mostly alienated high school teen (and obvious Toledo stand-in), Teens Of Denial follows Joe through all manner of musings, bad trips, rants, beatings, fears of adulting, relationship anxieties, and social ups and downs and downs and downs.

But despite the defeatist nature of it all, the album is so sharp in its sociological observations and so hysterical in its presentation of its whiny "the world is against me " stance (in the bridge from stellar opener Fill In The Blank, Toledo sings "I get signs from the cops saying 'stay the fuck down.' / I get signs from the audience saying ' stay the fuck down' / I get signs from God saying 'stay the fuck down,'" and in another song, he compares his privileged but failed, unguided life to the Costo Concordia, the Spanish luxury liner that sank off the coast of Italy and was abandoned by its captain before evacuations were complete) that it's nearly impossible not to get sucked in to Joe's travails. And though unusual, Toledo's slow drawl of a voice feels like the perfect delivery vehicle for these words.  In timbre, he sounds like a sluggish Ray Davies, but the attitude is pure Modern Lovers / Jonathan Richmond.

And then there is the music itself.

It's been a long while since I've heard an artist with such a encyclopedic grasp of all the rock 'n' roll tricks employed by the generation that came before (Elvis Costello comes to mind here), or such a startling command of sudden dynamic shifts (maybe Sleater-Kinney on The Woods and No Cities To Love or Justin Vernon on his Bon Iver debut For Emma, Forever Ago, but that's about it). To jump on Toledo's roller coaster narrative from its blistering three song opening peak of Fill In The Blank, the unbelievably propulsive Vincent, and Destroyed By Hippie Powers through to the more reflective musical valleys that pepper the albums final two thirds is to thrill to one of the best musical rides in modern times, and everytime, just when you think things have finally gotten too loose, too slack, another dynamite passages surges forward with impeccable timing to power you through the album's next few minutes.

But to say any more is to ruin the fun of discovery every rock fan should experience for themselves.

Suffice it to say, this is any easy call for me as my favorite album of 2016, and unless this decade's last three years far out perform it's first seven, I struggle to imagine a scenario where this isn't one of my top ten albums of the decade as well.

Status: Highest Recommend

Cherry Picker's Best Bets: Fill In The Blank, Vincent, Destroyed By Hippie Powers, (Joe Gets Kicked Out Of School For Using) Drugs With Friends (But Says This Isn't A Problem), Drunk Drivers / Killer Whales, Unforgiving Girl (She's Not An), Connect The Dots (The Sage Of Frank Sinatra)



Track Listing:
1. Fill In The Blank -  10

2. Vincent - 10
3. Destroyed By Hippie Powers - 10
4. (Joe Gets Kicked Out Of School For Using) Drugs With Friends (But Says This Isn't A Problem) - 9
5. Not Just What I Needed - 8
6. Drunk Drivers / Killer Whales - 10
7. 1937 State Park - 8
8. Unforgiving Girl (She's Not An) - 9
9. Cosmic Hero - 8
10. The Ballad Of Costa Concordia - 8
11. Connect The Dots (The Saga Of Frank Sinatra) - 9
12. Joe Goes To School - 7
Intangibles - Very High

Here are the official videos for Fill In The Blank and Drunk Drivers / Killer Whales, and a KEXP live-in-the studio performance of Vincent.






Wednesday, September 6, 2017

McQ's Best Of 2016 Mix Collection

Hey Rock 'n' Roll Friends,

Boy, these things just keep coming out later and later each year.

But in fairness to myself, 2016 was particularly troublesome, in that this year's top 25 critical consensus albums was my least favorite batch of any year since I starting putting this annual collection together in 2004.

So what's a music geek to do?

Accept the reality that some year's just aren't as strong as others and put together a smaller mix collection. Right?

Wrong.

True-to-form, I dug deeper, listening down to more full-length releases and highly regarded songs for this year than ever before.  And as a result, I was able to get some awesome individual mixes out of it.  Three of the best this year -- Get Jangly, Finding Emo, and Get Southbound -- would have never come to fruition if I had just built from the top tier of the critical consensus lists as I typically do.

But, due to all that extra digging, there is now an overwhelming abundance of music presented here, 14 volumes, 20 hour.

For those of you that like these sorts of things more, shall we say, manageable, you have my apologies, but however little or however deeply you ultimately choose to dive in.... here's to the endless inspiration that comes from music.

Enjoy!


Each year's Best Of The Best has its own flavor, and this year’s mix, more than anything else, focuses solely on pure musicianship. Starting with my favorite two songs of the year – Michael Kiwanuka’s Cold Little Heart (which will be immediately recognizable to fans of HBO’s Big Little Lies) and Car Seat Headrest’s ultra-adrenalized, feedback-drenched Vincent, and then moving on thru Whitney’s delicate pop orchestrations, Plastic Plant’s explosive guitar tones, and Lazarus’s disturbing, mournful saxophones, it’s just one damn stunning instrumental moment or arrangement touch after another.




Rather than poach a dozen gems from me this year as she typically does, Nancy went full-on protest mode here. If you, like us, are not fond of the current presidential administration, you’re going to love this mix. If for some reason, you are still a supporter of our narcissist-buffoon of a president, prepare to be offended.




Probably my favorite of 2016’s themed mixes –zeroes in like a laser beam on that jangly guitar / rock–bottom bass sound that’s been with us since the mid-60s folk-rock days and has evolved through the years to define several genres, from shoegaze to C86 to indie-twee. Mostly lower profile artists here, but the songs synergize wonderfully.




Our annual electro-pop mix. Same stew of Madonna-esque girl pop, John Hughes soundtrack-ish stuff, and edgier electronic tunes.




Young (and a few older) white males whine their over-privileged hearts out in this punk-poppish collection of emo-focused tunes. Not sure why every emo lead singer has to sound just like Ted Leo of the Pharmacists, but no matter, with four tracks from Teens Of Denial leading the charge, this is the best rock mix of the 2016 collection.




This year’s Alt-Country mix, though lively in spurts, emphasizes a number of female singers with gorgeously breathy, after-hours voices, especially the fabulous Angel Olsen.





With Moderat, Underworld, Sterolab spinoff Cavern Of Anti-Matter, and Stranger Things soundtrack artists S U R V I V E leading the way, this year’s collection of ambient and cerebral electronic music might be the best we’ve ever done in this vein.





My 2016 favs in Hip-Hop and neo-soul get their due here. Please note, Beyonce would be all over this mix if she weren't the one artist whose 2016 release isn't available on Spotify. Standing in for the three tracks of hers I wanted to include (Daddy Lessons, Freedom, and All Night) are cuts by Young Thug, Maggie Rogers, YG, and Schoolboy Q.




Admittedly, a hodge podge. A dumping ground for songs I couln't let go of that got squeezed out of Volumes 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, and 11. That said, there’s a lot of sweet tunes here, especially in the mix’s stronger front half.




A lot of 2016's very best albums were serious downers, including two that were literally recorded on death beds in David Bowie’s Blackstar and Leonard Cohen’s You Want It Darker. Add in cuts from Nick Cave’s Skeleton Tree, recording just after his fifteen-year-old died in an accidental cliff fall at an national park, and Radiohead’s A Moon-Shaped Pool, recorded as Thom Yorke was separating from his girlfriend of over twenty-years, and it's clear we’re talking heavy, provocative, moving stuff here.  Swans, The Drone, Bat For Lashes, and ANOHNI also contribute to the artfully orchestrated malaise.




Nothing earth-shattering here, just a warm, agreeable check-in with a number of old musical friends, broken into separate retro-soul and classic/alt rock suites.




Our annual review of the little guys who made that calender year's Coachella Festival memorable. As always with this mix, the emphasis is on eclecticism.




If it’s mean, cynical, abrasive, bizarre, unlistenable, off-putting, experimental, metal or “post-anything,” it ended up here in this vicious double-length (two CD) mix. But despite being the roughest of all this year’s mixes, it is also definitely one of my favorites.




My eldest son Kevin, a huge contemporary rap fan, asked at the 11th hour if I would let him put together a mix for this year's collection, and who am I to deny my child a role in the family tradition, so here it is.



And For The Obsessives - The Next 100:

If, after all this listening, you are not completely exhausted, here, in no intentional order, are the last one hundred 2016 songs to miss the cut.