Thursday, December 6, 2012

Liner Notes 2012

[originally posted on tumblr]


This is the ninth year that i've put together Trevor's Poor-Ass Christmas, and it'll be the third with extensive liner notes. You can check out the 2010 and 2011 liner notes by clicking those years right there.

So as you may already know, the Poor-Ass Christmas Collection (PAC) is a mix of the music that i've been listening to relentlessly between birthdays. I hand it out for free to all my friends at my birthday party each year. So if you're interested in why a specific track is on the disc and what it means to me, read on!

1. Wye Oak/Civilian
wyeoakmusic.com

Wye Oak's 2011 album Civilian landed the #1 spot on The Onion's list of best albums of the year, and that was the first i had heard of it. My friend and co-worker Mike, usually one to have his finger on the proverbial pulse of indie music, had also somehow missed them until that list came out, and fearing for his cred, immediately bought it. He shared it with me, and this song in particular shattered my brain. Even though i can't understand a lot of the lyrics, the guitars alone trigger emotional responses my android countenance isn't used to. I get chills every time i heard the whole band kick in after the intro.

2. Geri X - Work is the Wolf
gerixmusic.com

I saw Gainesville, Florida's Geri X twice in one weekend this summer. She's really a great performer and a really nice person. Work is the Wolf is the title track off of her new album, and the whole thing is great. I also seriously considered the song Fuck for the compilation this year, but chose this one. As it turns out, i've chosen a lot of title tracks this year, purely unintentionally...

3. A Place to Bury Strangers - Onwards Toward the Wall
aplacetoburystrangers.com

I've been following these guys for a few years. Formerly known as the loudest band in New York, now generally considered the loudest band in the world, they run their guitars through seven amplifiers and the bass through four. It's noisy metal shoegaze, and i love it. This is the title track from an EP they released early this year. I found a prerelease copy at a used record store in Indianapolis, which you can imagine made me very happy. A couple months later, A Place To Bury Strangers swung by Madison, opening for The Joy Formidable (who put on one of the absolute best live shows i've seen this year...i was less fond of their album, though). I ran into guitarist Oliver Ackermann after the show, he was completely fucking smashed, and i had him sign my prerelease EP. "Aaaaahhhh, you work at a radio station, huh!" "Nope, just found this at a used record store in Indianapolis..." "Aahhh those bastards! They're not supposed to sell these!!" He also didn't believe me when i told him i'd come for them, not for Joy Formidable.

4. Tegan & Sara - Walking With a Ghost
teganandsara.com

I was first introduced to Tegan & Sara two years ago, and that story is recounted in the 2010 liner notes. I had thought then that i'd be getting really into them and you'd be hearing them again on the 2011 PAC, but for some reason i didn't progress much into their catalog beyond Hell, the track on the 2010 CD. However, that changed this year. Even though i had copied all their CDs from the library to my computer, it took finding a copy of So Jealous on CD for a dollar at Half-Price Books to trigger my obsessive Tegan & Sara listening...i've since purchased most of their albums, as it should be. Some might argue that picking Walking With a Ghost to represent them on the PAC is wrong and not Trevor-like, since it is their most popular song, but really. Have you listened to this damn song?! It's SO GOOD. I've listened to it on repeat for hours and i learned to play it myself.

5. Biffy Clyro - 57
biffyclyro.com

Yep, Biffy again... One of the most popular rock bands in the world right now, they just can't seem to break into America for some reason. They've got a new album out this year, but it hasn't yet reached our shores, so i can't share any brand new material, unfortunately. But in the early part of the year, this song got stuck in my head randomly, and i ended up listening to it on repeat, just like Walking With a Ghost, over. (hey) And over. (hey) And over. (hey) And over.

6. Robots in Disguise - The Sex Has Made Me Stupid
robotsindisguise.co.uk

Here is a band that i was introduced to by my former co-worker Tammy. She thought they would be right up my alley, and as it turns out, my alley is not that darkly lit or mysterious. I guess my musical tastes are pretty transparent. I've been woefully unable to obtain anything by this band on CD, though. All i had was a shitty copy of this song that i ripped from YouTube until i stumbled across a nice torrent of the album randomly...if i can find a way to legally obtain a physical copy of this for less than $20, though, i'm gonna jump on it. Also check out the music video, it has robots fucking in it and is pretty hilarious. If you're into that sort of thing.

7. Sexy Ester and the Pretty Mama Sisters - Who Needs Loves Anyway
sexyester.com

Sexy Ester, formerly Sexy Ester and the Pretty Mama Sisters, is a Madison band with a powerful frontwoman who will outright destroy your face if you are too close while she is singing. No joke, i had a rhinoplasty after my first Sexy Ester show this summer. I've ended up seeing them about four times this year and featuring them on Wisconscene, and the aforementioned frontwoman Lyndsay Evans was one of the first people to recognize me in public as the Wisconscene guy, which felt pretty good. She also gave me their two EPs for free because of it, which is the greatest economic gain i've experienced from the show yet. This is my favorite song between the two EPs, though i think they've got much better songs. Here's my advice: see them live. Stand as close to the stage as you can. Here's a video i did of their song Holding On, live at the High Noon Saloon.

8. t.A.T.u. - Running Blind
tatu.ru

I love t.A.T.u.. I absolutely love them. This is not a universal feeling but i am probably going to continue to force them upon you forever. So anyway, i just managed to obtain a copy of their third and final album, Waste Management, in early November of last year (it was never released in the US), and even though i listened to it a lot right away, no particular song had grown on me soon enough to know what should have gone on last year's PAC. So i hastily added 220, largely because it was in Russian and i had a number of other non-English songs on the comp that year (two in Japanese and one in French). I don't regret it, 220 is still a really great song, but i really should have gone with White Robe. I didn't because it had been the lead single from the album, the only single to reach the States at all, and i wanted a deeper cut. I was wrong. White Robe is one of the greatest songs ever. You know what else is a great song? Running Blind. I listened to Waste Management almost every time i went to the gym from last November until about July, and Running Blind and White Robe were the two songs i looked forward to most. And the White Robe remix. God i love t.A.T.u..

9. La Roux - Bulletproof
laroux.co.uk

And when i forgot to bring my iPod to the gym, i was mostly exposed to horrible Top 40 radio. Katy Perry three times an hour. Guaranteed Nickelback. Fucking Ke$ha. In this sea of top shelf poop, there was one song i'd hear almost every day that didn't make me feel stabby, and the chorus went, "This time, baby, i'll be bulletproof." I had no idea what it was, but after a few months i turned to the Google Machine and found an answer, and subsequently wrote an entire blog post about Elly Jackson's teeth (side note: a comment on that blog post was how i was first exposed to Gotye. Weird how i missed that one for so long). Seriously, watch the music video, and once you get past the fact that it is somehow more 80s than anything that came out between 1980 and 1989, notice her teeth. They're so...normal. Maybe it's because she's British.

10. Beta Male - Are You Holden?
myspace.com/betamale

My friend Christina first introduced me to Beta Male, friends of hers from Indianapolis, in March. Again under the heading of "Trevor's musical tastes are horribly transparent," she knew which alley she was throwing that ball down, and wouldn't you know it, a strike. I can't say much more than that when we were next in Indianapolis a few months later and i got to see them at a small, packed bar, meet them afterward, and interview them for Wisconscene, i felt like may as well have been hanging out with The Beatles. Hearing them play this song live invoked such a strong emotional response in me that i almost lost my shit right there. Of course, it also helps that i'm a film nerd and this song includes quotes from On The Waterfront.

11. Screaming Females - Buried in the Nude
screamingfemales.com

Early this year i discovered No Idea Records, which is a big mail-order record label focused almost entirely on punk music. They deal in CDs and actual vinyl at very low prices. I had gone through and filled up my online shopping cart with every CD they were selling for one dollar or less (somewhere around 40 of them), but for whatever reason never finished the checkout process. They have two compilations available for free download, titled Pretend Record and Pretend Record 2. This song is on the first of those compilations, which i gleefully downloaded since, you know, they're free, and the first time i heard it, it hit me like a sledgehammer. This band is AWESOME. When i looked to see who it was, and saw the name of the band, i had one of those moments where i felt like the universe was pandering to me (see: Trevor's musical tastes are easy to predict). I listened to this song a lot for months, and when Screaming Females came through Madison, of course i jumped at it. At the show, i bought all of their albums, a T-shirt, buttons, stickers...pretty much everything i could get my hands on. Their albums are all great, but this song is still the one that resonated with me the hardest. I had posted on their Facebook Event page for the show, "I hope Buried in the Nude is on the setlist!" And it was! I have reason to believe they played it just for me, too, since i've stumbled across a few bootlegs from other stops on the tour, and it seems to be the same setlist, but with a cover of Sheryl Crow's If It Makes You Happy in place of Buried in the Nude. So yeah, winner!

12. Baristacide - Oars in Hands
baristacide.com

"Pop punk for people who hate pop punk," they call it. These guys are probably the most fun band in Madison. I first heard of them in January, we (damidol) had a bunch of bands drop off a bill we were setting up at the Wisco, all told five bands had agreed to play this three-band show and mysteriously backed out, so just a few days before the show i put up an ad on Craigslist, and Baristacide responded within half an hour. It ended up being just the two bands, but they made up for the lack of other act and then some. This show was also the infamous syrup incident, in which the Wisco and many of the people attending ended up covered in Mrs. Buttersworth. I didn't get the full story on how the hell this happened until about six months later, but i have seen Baristacide about ten times this year and they never fail to disappoint. Even Amanda has gotten really into them to the point of actually wanting to go to their shows, rather than just tolerating me bringing her out, and that's saying something. I don't know if Baristacide feels the same, but i consider this their signature song, and it will get stuck in your head for days.

On a side note, their song Hot Pot Unbeliever contains the lyric, "Don't forget i killed your dad," which frontman Educational Davis once locked eyes on me and pointed as he sang. This was a powerful moment for me, considering the current relationship i have with my father, which he had no way of knowing about. Just an interesting aside.

13. Venus in Furs - Death of Disco
venusinfursband.com

Venus in Furs and i go way back, to before they were a band. My friend Natalie plays bass for them, we've collaborated on a huge number of projects including damidol and like a hundred videos for the company she owns, which i work for. Including the music video for this song, which features a bunny. So, between working on this video and seeing them several times, i've listened to this song quite a bit this year, and that's probably not going to stop.

14. Helliphant - Rats Catsup
helliphant.com

Another of Madison's finest. Helliphant's been around for a long time, but they first hit my radar just a few years ago when my friend Mike brought their LP Another Glorious Exercise in Horror to work for me to copy, and i, like many before me, became somewhat obsessed with the song Bullshit. They released a new EP this year, Human Beast, which i picked up at the CD release party at Mr. Roberts, a venue i've become quite familiar with in the last twelve months, and have filmed many episodes of Wisconscene at. The chorus of this song is really catchy, and i find myself singing it softly to myself frequently.

15. Butt Trumpet - I'm Ugly and I Don't Know Why
myspace.com/thombone

I was casually searching for this album for years. Finding it for a dollar at a Half-Price Books in Indianapolis was one of the greatest moments of my bargain bin-diving life. Great album. This song in particular hooked me, probably because of, "Hey! That's my boyfriend! Why do you have my boyfriend's name written on all your pumpkin seeds? I'm gonna have to kick your fuckin' ass, bitch!"

16. Poopshovel - One Pass Away
myspace.com/poopy182

I was rummaging through the dollar shelf at a Half-Price books, as i am wont to do, and stumbled across an album by a band called Poopshovel. It was titled, I Came, I Saw, I Had a Hotdog. I said to myself, i don't know what this is, but it seems like something i should own. After posting this sentiment on Facebook, my friend Bobby commented that they were from Madison, and he knew at least one of them. Funny thing, that. The whole album's pretty good, but despite being uninterested in football, i latched on to this particular song about a particular Packer game and played the hell out of it. I later found out that the music video ran on MTV at least once in 1990.

17. t.A.T.u. - White Robe
tatu.ru

I think i covered everything i needed to say about this up there on track 8. Waste Management is simply the best dance pop album i have ever heard and it needed two tracks included on this year's PAC.

18. Metric - Speed the Collapse
ilovemetric.com

Metric's been one of my favorite bigger name bands recently, ever since the first time i heard Gold Guns Girls, and i think Synthetica may actually be the only major release i purchased this year. Oh wait, that and the new Black Light Burns. But those are the only ones. Anyway, by the time this album was released in June i had already noticed how many album title tracks were cropping up in my PAC playlist, but even so, i threw Synthetica in there. It's a really good song. After i'd had some time with the album, i added this one as well. In the end, it was a really hard choice between them, and Amanda had to break the tie. She picked this one without any discussion of title tracks at all. I'm happy with her choice. And i'm happy with the Synthetica album - i heartily recommend picking it up.

19. Moby - That's When I Reach For My Revolver
moby.com

Of course, the year that i christen the Mobyfort, there must be some Moby on the PAC. Maybe i should back up? You don't know about the Mobyfort? Well, in January, i finally got around to building new shelving for my CDs and getting them out of the moving boxes that most of them haven't left since my triumphant return to Madison in 2007. I had the 3000+ of them spread out in piles around the entire living room as i sorted and catalogued each and every one of them, and i discovered to my surprised that i own about 30 Moby CD singles. Why? For what purpose? I haven't a clue. I mean, i like Moby well enough, but do i like him enough that i need thirty separate 3 track CDs with a few non-album remixes? Do I? Probably not. I made a Facebook post proclaiming as much, and one of my friends suggested that i build a Moby fort. The name stuck. So, naturally, i got to thinking about Moby more and more and enjoying his work more and more, particularly the Animal Rights album. It's pretty different from the music that he's known for, as in, it's very guitar-based and very heavy. Also, i've recently learned that this song is a Mission of Burma cover. I've never listened to them. Perhaps i will.

20. I am Dragon - Get Out of the Corn Maze
iamdragon.webstarts.com

damidol played with I am Dragon and The Skintones at the High Noon Saloon in July of last year, one of our best shows and also one of our most poorly attended. This was the first i heard of them. At that show, i was chased by a plastic snowman, which i later wrecked, and have scars on my legs from. The next time we played with I am Dragon, their drummer, Andy, showed up wearing the remains of the lawn ornament, and the rest is history. damidol and I am Dragon, bros for life. Or some such thing. Whatever the kids these days are saying. Get off my lawn.

21. The White Stripes - Walking With a Ghost
whitestripes.com

The White Stripes need no introduction. They are the greatest rock band of my generation. They are our Beatles. That's not an opinion, it's a fact. So i think it's safe to say that Tegan & Sara have made the big time when the greatest rock band of a generation is covering them. I'm not entirely sure but i may have heard this cover before the original, actually. Anyway i picked up this random White Stripes single from, yeah, the dollar bin at Half-Price, and the song got its hooks in me and that was that. So yeah, both versions get to be on the CD.

22. Sons of Atom - Ice Road Truckers
reverbnation.com/sonsofatom

I'd heard of Madison's Sons of Atom a few times, but i first saw them when damidol played with them at The Frequency in May, a show which became the first episode of Wisconscene. They're a great local surf/punk band, they put on a good show. I've got a great story about their guitarist, Tim, at a different damidol show, but he probably wouldn't want me posting it on the internet. Anyway, the Ice Road Truckers are a bunch of fuckers.

23. Pink Razors - Geometric Park
myspace.com/pinkrazors

Here's another band from the No Idea Pretend Record. I don't really have anything profound to say about this one, i just really like the song. The chorus gets stuck in my head often.

24. Hinckley Design & Production Staff - Mad Rollin Dolls Remix (Reprise)
hinckleydesign.com

Hinckley Design & Production is the company i work for. We did this awesome roller derby commercial early this year and it needed a soundtrack, so we put this together. That's my voice you're hearing. This has since been adopted by some as the unofficial theme song for the Mad Rollin' Dolls, as it should be. The DJ has played it at a few of the bouts. It's so catchy and infectious, how can you not love it?!

Friday, November 16, 2012

Trevor's Poor-Ass Christmas 2012 Track List

1. Wye Oak - Civilian
2. Geri X - Work is the Wolf
3. A Place to Bury Strangers - Onwards Toward the Wall
4. Tegan and Sara - Walking With a Ghost
5. Biffy Clyro - 57
6. Robots in Disguise - The Sex Has Made Me Stupid
7. Sexy Ester - Who Needs Loves Anyway
8. t.A.T.u. - Running Blind
9. La Roux - Bulletproof
10. Beta Male - Are You Holden?
11. Screaming Females - Buried in the Nude
12. Baristacide - Oars in Hands (demo)
13. Venus in Furs - Death of Disco
14. Helliphant - Rats Catsup
15. Butt Trumpet - I'm Ugly and I Don't Know Why
16. Poopshovel - One Pass Away
17. t.A.T.u. - White Robe
18. Metric - Speed the Collapse
19. Moby - That's When I Reach for My Revolver
20. I am Dragon - Get Out of the Corn Maze
21. The White Stripes - Walking With a Ghost
22. Sons of Atom - Ice Road Truckers
23. Pink Razors - Geometric Park
24. Hinckley Design & Production Staff - Mad Rollin Dolls Remix (Reprise)

Friday, March 2, 2012

Liner Notes 2011


[Originally posted on Paradigm Pudding]

Update: So i was scurrying madly one day in November while working at the TV station to make sure i had this done and posted before i released PAC2011 at my birthday party...and then i completely forgot to come back and finish the last two tracks and publish it. So here it is, PAC2011 Liner Notes, four months late.



Given how much i enjoyed writing out last year's liner notes for the Trevor's Poor-Ass Christmas Collection, i thought i'd repeat that success this year. If you don't know what i'm talking about, clicky that linky-linky. Maybe you do that with fewer uses of the letter y. I won't judge you.

1. The Adults / Nothing to Lose
theadults.co.nz
Since one of the reasons i do this compilation every year is to get people into new music, i thought it might be helpful to provide links this year to the artists' web sites.

Unfortunately, The Adults' music is not yet available in America. They're a New Zealand band that hasn't gotten far across the pond yet, although i just heard today that they've been opening for Portishead in Austrailia. So that's pretty cool.

Anyway, a co-worker at the lab brought The Adults to my attention earlier this year by directing me to this music video, which i'm responsible for at least thirty views on. I had to rip the audio out of that video in order to get it on the comp, so here's hoping they release that CD in America sometime soon, so i can pay actual money to actually get it. Because i will. I do that sort of thing.

2. The Type / Same Sex Attraction
knowthetype.com
I've been following The Type since their very first show in 2005. We're friends. They played at my house once. And their new album, Sirens and Storms, is pretty consistently great. But this song is my favorite, if only for the line "Lost my shoes in a battle with God," which i'm pretty sure is one of the greatest lyrics of all time. Of all time! Also, i did a video for this song.

3. damidol / I Don't Care if You're Still Drunk
facebook.com/damidol
So we finally recorded a full length...

4. Red Bacteria Vacuum / San Francisco
red-bacteria.com
This Japanese girl band spent their summer opening for A Perfect Circle across America. It seems like a weird combination to me, but if they hadn't, i'd probably not have heard of them. Some friends went to see APC in August and ended up getting blown away by Red Bacteria Vacuum. After i wrote that last sentence, all i can think is, "It's Mega Maid, sir! She's gone from suck to blow!" But i digress, as usual. So they brought me some CDs, so i too could get in on the blowey-awayeyness. And it worked. This is the first of two Red Bacteria songs on the compilation. If you have trouble understanding the words, keep in mind that most of them are Japanese.

5. Fugazi / Waiting Room
dischord.com/band/fugazi
One of my teachers at MMI dumped me a bunch of music he thought i'd enjoy. Well, he was right.

6. Mclusky / To Hell With Good Intentions
myspace.com/mcluskyarefuckingdead
Same as above. I had a hard time choosing between Mclusky tracks for the comp, so you ended up with two of them. Enjoy!

7. cKy / Rats in the Infirmary
ckyalliance.com
cKy is a band that, as far as i knew several years ago, had that one song "Flesh Into Gear" on the radio breifly when i was in high school. Maybe a year or so later, i picked up their album Infiltrate - Destroy - Rebuild at a garage sale for fifty cents; i may have listened to it once or twice around then, but it quickly got lost in my collection, presumably never to be heard again. A few years later, maybe 2007, i finally gave in to the idea that mp3s would one day replace the CD, and i was damn lucky i wouldn't need to buy the new format like everyone did when vinyl, 8 tracks, cassettes and so forth died. So i started copying all my CDs into my computer. One day, i had my iPod on shuffle, and cKy's Frenetic Amnesic came on and i was suddenly blown away. I went back and listened to the whole CD again and came away from it a changed man. After that, i hunted down their other two albums, Volume 1 and An Answer Can Be Found, and played the shit out of that shit for months. cKy remains one of my all-time favorite bands to this day, and this year i scored a copy of their latest album, 2009's Carver City, from Half-Price Books. It's weird to me that i didn't know about this when it came out, but i suppose that's the price you pay for (a) not listening to the radio on a regular basis and (b) not having any radio stations in your area that play great music. Rats in the Infirmary is from Carver City. It's good stuff. If you enjoy heavy music at all, give cKy a shot.

8. t.A.T.u. / 220
tatu.ru
Yes, the pseudo-lesbian dance pop sensations of early this millenium are on my PAC this year. Yes, i love their music. No, it's not because they're hot and lesbians. I'm of the internet generation, if i need hot and lesbians, i'll Google "hot and lesbians." Anyway, i went on a t.A.T.u. kick for a couple days in October, listening to their first two albums at least once each per day for over a week, prompting my roommate David to ask if i had all of their albums. I had to respond in the negative, since their final album, Waste Management, was never released in America and so i never picked it up. But that prompted me to have a look at the East Bay Trading Company, where i scored the Russian release for cheap. I got a version that's got like eight bonus tracks on it; i could have easily included the English version of this song, but there are three other foreign language tracks on the comp this year so i thought i'd run with it. Besides, it's so much better in Russian. Also, fun fact for the haters: this is t.A.T.u.'s third PAC appearance.

9. Ladytron / Ghosts
ladytron.com
Ladytron popped up on my Pandora shuffle early on this year, i don't remember what i had it programmed for, but Ghosts and Deep Blue have both been in heavy rotation on my iTunes all year. I really had to go with Ghosts, which is in a way too bad; i could've continued the foreign language theme by including either Black Cat or Kletva, songs from the same album (Velocifero), which are both sung in Bulgerian.

10. The Noise FM / Simple Simone
thenoisefm.net
We drove down to Chicago twice this year to see Biffy Clyro, a Scottish band that we discovered whilest in New Zealand and have driven hundreds of miles to see four times now (once to Minneapolis and three times to Chicago). Well, after the third time we saw them we realized that every band we've ever seen them play with has sucked. So, the fourth time, we were expecting the same. But to our surprise, the opening band, The Noise FM, absolutely demolished the trend. I loved every song they played that night. After their set, i went back and talked to them for a bit, bought some merch, and got their contact info so i could get them to come to Madison. They're really great guys, too; even offered to buy me a beer. Then the next band went on, and we were back to terrible ridiculous emo trash. The Noise FM has made one Madison appearance since then, which was not of my doing. I had them booked to play my birthday show this year (also damidol's CD release event), but sadly, their bass player quit the band and they had to cancel the show. Better luck next time i guess.

11. Ouija Radio / Red Eye Fly
myspace.com/ouijaradio
A Minneapolis band who i'm sure has played in Madison a lot in the past. I picked up their album OH NO!...YES! YES! at the Half-Price Books for a dollar, simply because i recognized the name. Listening to it was one of the best choices i've ever made. This shit rocks. I can't wait for them to get back to Madison...i'm gonna have to keep a close eye on this band.

12. Tsunami Bomb / Count Me Out
myspace.com/tsunamibomb
I was into Tsunami Bomb back in High School, i grabbed a whole lot of their music off of the original Napster. But i never actually had their CDs until recently, so i've gotten really heavily back into Tsunami Bomb this year. This song is short, but also sweet. Listen to it three or four times if you're feeling unfulfilled.

13. Jeunesse Apatride / Destruction
jeunesse-apatride.org
A French Canadian band that Bob introduced me to just weeks before i put together the final track listing for the PAC. I chose this song almost at random, just because every one of their songs is as amazing as any other. Bob said they would be right up my alley; i'm starting to think he knows me too well and i should probably do something about that (either killing him or starting to listen to Michael Bolton...not sure which is the better choice there).

14. Secret Secretions / Wisconsin Way
facebook.com/Secret-Secretions
A band from Steven's Point that i bought off the dollar shelf at Half-Price Books based solely on the album art. It's hardcore punk at its best. And how could i not include a song called Wisconsin Way? Hell yeah.

15. Pennywise / Bro Hymn
pennywisdom.com
We listened to a lot of Pennywise on our enormous road trip that we took this summer, and this is probably my favorite song of theirs. It's about dead people. So it's perfect for a Christmas compilation.

16. NoFX / Don't Call Me White
nofxofficialwebsite.com
I've also gotten really into NoFX this year, having picked up eight of their albums at Half-Price Books. It was a toss-up between this song and Vanilla Sex for the PAC, but i decided that i liked the energy and message of this song better. Plus, not to detract from NoFX any, but i think i liked Rancid's cover of Vanilla Sex better than the original. Please don't throw any shoes at me.

17. Reggie Watts / Fuck Shit Stack
reggiewatts.com
A friend introduced me to the magic that is Waverly Films over the summer, and we spent a night paging through their YouTube channel and consuming every damn video they have made, which includes this amazing, amazing video for Reggie Watts's song Fuck Shit Stack. It's a brilliant satire on the state of current rap music. Rap used to mean something. It used to be about politics, and about social injustice, and about the common man. Nowadays it's about possessions and gold chains and money. Kind of like Republicans, now that i think about it. But anyway, based on that YouTube video, i bought Reggie's CD/DVD combo and have enjoyed it all thoroughly. Frankly, though, Fuck Shit Stack is probably the second best song on the album; i'd have included My History Thus Far if it weren't fifteen fucking minutes long.

18. Jem / Come On Closer
jem-music.net
Another discovery from Pandora, probably on the same playlist i got Ladytron from. Shortly after i first heard her on Pandora, i found her CD at Half-Price for a buck. How could i go wrong? A friend later gave me another copy of her CD, which i passed on to another interested party. It's pretty good stuff, if you're into great pop music with heavy distorted guitars low in the mix. I had a hard time choosing between this song and They. I went with this song because i love the guitar part so much, but i'm still not convinced i made the right choice. The song 24 is also really good.

19. Green Day / Peacemaker
greenday.com
Yeah yeah yeah, Green Day, i know. But this song is a hell of an earworm. Probably the only song off of 21st Century Breakdown that i actually liked. Also, possibly one of the most infectious bass lines ever. My co-worker Aimee takes great pleasure in sneaking up behind me and singing the, "Hey hey hey!" part, getting this song lodged in my head for the rest of the damn day. Sometimes i text her randomly, "Death to the girl at the end of the serenade!" just to get some revenge in the off hours.

20. Cage the Elephand / Ain't No Rest for the Wicked
cagetheelephant.com
I did not like this song when i first heard it. Did not like it at all. But then, Borderlands. This song plays through the opening credits and the whole introductory cutscene for that game, a game which thoroughly consumed my life for a while after my Indianian friends gave it to me for my birthday last year. The song compliments the game so nicely. I ended up going out and buying both of Cage the Elephant's albums this year, and they're both pretty great.

21. Foo Fighters featuring Bob Mould / Dear Rosemary
foofighters.com
I wasn't particularly fond of the new Foo Fighters album, Wasting Light. It's ok. But it's not great. This track, however, is. But i might be biased. It's totally because of Bob Mould. I do love me some Bob Mould. Husker Du, Sugar, his solo stuff. Beautiful. The guy has crafted so many great songs. Also of note: i hugged him once.

22. PJ Harvey / Bitter Branches
pjharvey.net
The only artist on this year's comp that was also on last year's. I actually didn't listen to PJ much this year, but she did release that new album of hers, Let England Shake, which has won a metric buttload of awards, including England's prestigious Mercury Prize, which i understand is their equivalent of a Grammy, except with 30% more integrity. PJ Harvey is the first artist to ever receive the Mercury Prize twice; she also won it in 2001 for Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea. So, i went out and bought it; i think it's one of only three new CDs i actually bought this year (the others being the aforementioned Cage the Elephant release Thank You Happy Birthday, and Wayne Static's solo debut Pighammer, which was a decent album, but gets my vote for Worst Album Art of the Year). It's an astounding piece of work; in general, i'd say it must be experienced as a complete album; separating tracks from the full work just doesn't do them justice. But i certainly couldn't put the entire album on the PAC, so this is what you get.

23. Veruca Salt / One More Page of Insincerity Please
verucasalt.com
I think it's safe to say Veruca Salt has broken up again; there hasn't been an update to their web site since November 2008. Which is sad. But anyway, i stumbled into a treasure trove of old Veruca Salt b-sides from their heyday in the 90s, i think it was at verucaslut.com but i can't quite remember and since i'm at work right now i'm not willing to type in that address and hit enter. But if you're into Veruca Salt, i highly reccommend heading over to that page and stripmining it. Otherwise, i reccommend buying the album American Thighs, and when you're done with that, Eight Arms to Hold You. The post-Nina stuff is ok too, but really, those two albums are where it's at.

24. Mclusky / Lightsabre Cocksucking Blues
myspace.com/mcluskyarefuckingdead
More Mclusky! God damn i enjoy this band.

25. Jack Off Jill / Fear of Dying
jackoffjill.com
The first time we were in Indy this year, i went through Shayne's CD and ripped about fifty of them, including Jack Off Jill. What can i say, dude's got good taste in music. I've grown quite fond of this band, and i think this was their best song. Too bad they're not around anymore. Also, when i was compiling the CD, the first time i heard this song immediately after Lightsabre Cocksucking Blues, i had thought it was still the same song until Jessicka Addams started singing there. Unfortunately, when i went to burn the CD, for whatever reason, it cut off the last fraction of a second of Lightsabre Cocksucking Blues, and, as the Jolly Green Giant put it, my mojo was thrown off. So i had to slip in about a half a second of silence between them; Lightsabre Cocksucking Blues was saved, but the paradigm between the two songs is now totally off and there is too much time between them. I wasn't willing to keep fucking around with fractions of seconds and wasting CDs trying to get it right, so sadly, the transition between these songs is not what i wanted. But still. Bygones.

26. Fuzzbubble / Out There
myspace.com/fuzzbubble
I have been searching for Fuzzbubble's album ever since i got the Godzilla soundtrack in 1999. No joke. This album is that hard to find. I'd trawl the internets about twice a year, spending a good hour or two fishing through eBay, Amazon, Half, Google, and what have you, trying to track down a copy of this. From that interval, you can probably guess that it wasn't a huge priority, but that's still a good amount of work for finding one album, especially an album by a band you know only one song by. Well, in the summer, while we were on our great American Nomads trip, i chanced upon it in a $2 bin at Half-Price Books in Greenwood, IN. As a friend said in a Facebook comment when i mentioned that my twelve year search was up, "Quest complete, now take it back to the quest giver and you'll get a pair of pink boots of Hobbit Smashing!" Well, after listening to the full album, i'm with him: i should take it back to somebody and get some pink boots, they'd be much more useful. It's not that the album is bad, it's just that it's the kind of thing i definitely would have appreciated more twelve years ago. But, this song is still fun, if only for the line "Devil ship from Mars."

27. Red Bacteria Vacuum / Enso Wa Tanoshi
red-bacteria.com
And here we have the second appearance by Red Bacteria Vacuum, the same song that closed out the Cincinnati show that my friends experienced a great away-blowing at. The title roughly translates to "We Like Playing For You," and the song lives up to its name by being appropriately fun.

Well, until next year!