In what has become an annual tradition, I join with my friend, Willy Snook, in offering our opinions on the best musical recordings of 2007. Its not as easy as it used to be. The music industry is a mess. CD's are dying as a delivery format. Download services like iTunes are in a state of uncertain transition. Its harder for independent artists to achieve a wide audience as record companies and radio stations play it safe with Justin Timberlake, Beyonce, Jay-Z and the like. At the same time, if you're willing to hunt around a bit, there are relatively undiscovered gems out there, waiting to be unearthed on MySpace or streaming internet radio stations like Radio Paradise.
DON'S ALBUM OF THE YEAR -
Wilco ~ "Sky Blue Sky"
By a nose, my winner for 2007. I've been keeping my eye on this band for past decade or so. While I've usually liked what I heard from them, there was work to be done to achieve an elite review. In the past, I felt they were a bit too sloppy and quirky. This record, their sixth studio album, changes that. They deliver a California-smooth sound with beautiful melodies and interesting lyrics of both hope and desperation. A varied mix of acoustic and electric textures, Wilco recalls the influence of John Lennon, Jerry Garcia, Ray Davies and The Allman Brothers. Frontman Jeff Tweedy is in fine vocal and songwriting form, and new lead guitarist Nels Cline adds a valuable punch to the arrangements. These songs hooked me, and I found myself appreciating them more with each listen. I somewhat consider Wilco to be the American "Radiohead". They are one-of-a-kind, and this time, they deliver their best work to date.
Honorable Mention -
My runners-up are certainly well-worth your attention, as really, either of them could have been the winner for 2007. It sort of depended on which recording I had listened to most recently.
Iron & Wine ~ "The Shepherds Dog"
Samuel Beam delivers his third and best album yet. More produced than his earlier folky efforts, it has the sound of a talented musician and songwriter coming of age. You've heard Iron & Wine on movie and TV show soundtracks, but they deserve a closer listen.
Radiohead ~ "In Rainbows"
Radiohead receives brownie points for their novel "pay-what-you-want-to" approach on the album's release, but the music lives up to the hype. This band is arguably the leading alt/rock band around these days, and this recording serves to enhance that reputation. Creative with a capital "C"... in a good way.
– Don Woodward
WILLY'S ALBUM OF THE YEAR -
Bruce Springsteen ~ "Magic"
These are tumultuous times. Times for expressive, creative thinkers to focus. Magic, Bruce Springsteen's most recent release, masterfully shines a light that helps us all see a little more clearly. Victoria Segal of the Times Online reviewed it beautifully: "A new Bruce Springsteen album is always an event, and Magic, his first with the E Street Band since The Rising, is no exception. It’s not, of course, the kind of event that you would dress up for: best instead you pull on something checked and work-worn and listen to songs that ring with a hard-earned truth.
After We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions and The Rising’s meditations on 9/11, if Springsteen was any more elder statesmanlike he would be off signing the Treaty of Versailles. Admittedly, Magic can be a little obvious: diner waitresses, long journeys home by the glow of the radio’s dial and men called Sal all appear. Yet there is a grandeur and intensity here that strikes home immediately, Springsteen’s lyrics carried along by the tidal instincts of musicians who have worked together for decades. Springsteen could make a drive to the dry cleaners sound like the Great American Road Trip. Sure enough, Magic begins with Radio Nowhere and a man lost in the dark of the “American night”. “Driving through the misty rain/ Searchin’ for a mystery train/ Tryin’ to make a connection to you,” he sings, and Magic is all about these missed connections and missed chances, the sense of dislocation that comes when love and morality spin out of control.
His manager, Jon Landau, has said that this is not a political record – aside from Devil’s Arcade, a lament from a soldier’s wife – but Springsteen is drawn to express the heart’s turmoil in terms of global chaos. Last to Die uses the fiery language of regime change to discuss domestic meltdown; Long Walk Home, fueled by Clarence Clemons’s saxophone, sounds like classic small-town angst, but there is an odd ambiguity to the courthouse flag and the neighbors on the street. Elsewhere, Girls in Their Summer Clothes is a masterpiece of regret, while I’ll Work For Your Love mixes the sacred and profane like a whiskey sour.
You could bite these songs as though you were testing a coin – not one feels counterfeit. As he sings on Radio Nowhere, he is “spinning round a dead dial, just searching for a world with some soul”. It is a lot to ask but once again, Springsteen does his best to fill that void."
It's my Album of the Year 2007. It's Boss.
Honorable Mentions -
Herbie Hancock ~ "River - The Joni Letters"
A very special, unique record in the contemporary jazz genre, this recording received the Grammy album of the year award. Deservedly so. If you enjoy this genre, and like me, you recognize the work of Joni Mitchell as genius, you will be challenged and moved by this collection. Check it out.
Original Soundtrack ~ "Once"
I went to see the movie. No clue about its storyline, just strong credible urgings from musical friends. At the movie's end, I was stunned, shaken, unprepared for the impact of the film "Once". A breath of fresh air in the world of predictable Hollywood crank-it-outs, "Once" is a fabulous movie. The heart of the film is the spare, earnest, original music. Glen Hansard, lead singer and writer for the Irish band The Frames, stars in the movie. Through his music, he lets us into his intimate, fragile world. Rent the movie, buy the soundtrack.
Eddie Vedder ~ Original Soundtrack ~ "Into The Wild"
Sean Penn asked Eddie Vedder to compose an original musical score to his film Into The Wild. Boy, did he. It is a very moving collection of acoustic songs together with a visually powerful film. Creative stuff from Eddie who played all of the many instruments on the project. Vedder gets bedder and bedder.
– Willy Snook
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One more thing. I don't know Wilco nor Iron & Wine, so I'll take your word for it. I did download (for free) Radiohead's "In Rainbows," mainly because of the unique (as in I'm a cheapskate) payment scheme. The music leaves me a bit depressed. It can be creative (Reckoner, Weird Fishes), but the overall message is a downer, especially Videotape (of your own suicide). Yech. So, musically, it's got merit, but count me somewhat disappointed (maybe that's also a function of the fact I didn't pay any money, and because I listen to it on my phone, so the experience is only so-so).
Which brings me to a quick question: what are your thoughts about music on your cell phone, i.e., all or most of your collection with you at all times? I ask because I'm working on a market research report on the subject, and I have data and all that, but wanted a real musician's view on the whole notion. Any thoughts you're willing to share (I won't be quoting you directly, or anything like that), just wanted to hear another point of view...the artist's if you will.
Back to music music: You're probably sick to death (or not) of The Shins, since they hail from Portland. I can't say I know them well at all. But Tim (my son) has played a few tunes, and I can see why people like their music. But again, similar to Radiohead, I'm not enthralled but not totally turned off either. Is it just me? Am I missing something? My age? Which brings me to another observation that I can't quite put into words (and you alluded to this in the first paragraph of Album of the Year - 2007, "music industry is a mess"): I only catch a single track from an artist here and there, mainly when Tim says, "Dad, check this out." He's on the computer, or his iPod, and he shares a cool new song, or an old favorite from U2, or Led Zep. So, I know it's a function of the way I don't listen to music much anymore (nor do I buy much of it). I'm just too busy, lack the time, and I get distracted with other things. So, I agree that "undiscovered gems" are out there, but if they don't invade my lifestyle, then they go unnoticed. It takes work to discover them. So, part of this is my age (I don't listen to radio like I used to), and part of it is the digital music world we live in: artists come and go so quickly, and the Timberlake, Jay-Z, Beyonce stuff that gets pushed to me just don't resonate. And "albums" of yore, where you get a 10 or 12 song hit from a band's work have kind of vanished (though CD sales are still relatively strong, though declining), with single downloads at 99 cents being the cool way to buy music. You're on to something with "industry is a mess." And I don't know what it all means, nor where it will lead.
Finally, I did "discover" a great singer last year, but it was more just great reporting (or it was planted by network TV PR folks doing a good job in getting me, the middle-aged oaf, to wander outside my comfort zone). A piece in the Wall Street Journal last spring alerted me to how a young artist gets discovered in the MySpace era: She posts her music on MySpace and then some producers for Grey's Anatomy make her a minor (rising?) star. They choose her song, "Keep Breathing," for the closing of the season finale. I watched the show for the first (and so far only) time, and loved the song. I went to her site, and listened to some of her other tracks, but haven't downloaded a single one. Though I did consider going to see her live in concert, but never got around to it. Her name: Ingrid Michaelson.
I ramble. Thanks for letting me do so.
Neil Strother
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