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January 23, 2008

Village Voice poll crowns LCD Soundsystem, Winehouse

lcd soundsystem

With the release of the Village Voice's Pazz and Jop Poll today, there is even consensus among the consensus-builders. Like the Idolator Poll released last week, album of the year honors went to LCD Soundsystem's "Sound of Silver." (Now wouldn't that have been a much more fitting choice for Album of the Year Grammy than Herbie Hancock? Just a thought.)

Single of the year honors went to Amy Winehouse's "Rehab," edging out Idolator winner Rihanna's "Umbrella." My ballot is here and Newsday contributor J. Edward Keyes' ballot is here.

Complete list of albums winners [Village Voice]

Complete list of singles winners [Village Voice]

PHOTO: LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy by Jake Walters for Capitol Records. 

January 16, 2008

Idolator poll crowns LCD Soundsystem, Rihanna, Radiohead

lcd soundsystem

 It's consensus time! A few times a year, music critics, like Democrats worried that their bickering has gone too far, can reach something approaching agreement about what music was good. The Idolator poll, which tallied the votes of 451 critics this year, is out today and its voters awarded  best album to LCD Soundsystem's "Sound of Silver," best single to Rihanna's "Umbrella," and artist of the year to Radiohead. (My ballot is here, Backstage Pass pal and Newsday contributor J. Edward Keyes has his here. And you can check out the Backstage Pass 2007 recap here.)

PHOTO: LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy by Jake Walters for Capitol Records. 

January 1, 2008

BEST OF 2007: Backstage@Backstage #5-1 (Arcade Fire, Michael Stipe, Jay-Z, Aretha Franklin, John Mayer)

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5. Arcade Fire, Judson Memorial Church, 2.13.07: Though the dark-minded “Neon Bible” would never be as well-received as the more light-hearted breakthrough album “Funeral,” the Arcade Fire certainly introduced it as dramatically as possible, drumming up a monsoon of indie hype that it nearly lived up to.

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Backstage@Backstage #5-1 (Arcade Fire, Michael Stipe, Jay-Z, Aretha Franklin, John Mayer)" »

December 31, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Backstage@Backstage #10-6 (Taking Back Sunday, Amy Winehouse, Joseph Arthur, Public Enemy, Rage Against the Machine)

I ain’t even gonna front -- 2007 was a tough one here at the Backstage Pass for reasons that are best kept, well, backstage. That said, the year was still filled with too many amazing, memorable moments to list and that’s always a good reason to celebrate. (Shout out to my former boss and Backstage Passer Kevin Amorim: Dude, we miss you. BTW, we haven’t done a story on Westerberg or Pollard in months.) Hopefully, we will all be in for lots more in 2008.

Here are some of my favorites moments from last year:

tbsliveearth10. Taking Back Sunday, Giants Stadium, 7.7.07: After their rousing set as part of Live Earth, TBS’ Adam Lazzara, Fred Mascherino and Matt Rubano take to the press room to discuss environmental concerns and the meaning of the day with the world’s media. When they see me, however, the trio uses its place at the podium to get the world’s media to give me a big round of applause. The world’s media declines.

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Backstage@Backstage #10-6 (Taking Back Sunday, Amy Winehouse, Joseph Arthur, Public Enemy, Rage Against the Machine)" »

December 28, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #5-1 (Arcade Fire, Jay-Z, Alicia Keys, Justice, Rihanna)

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5. Arcade Fire, “Antichrist Television Blues” (Merge): A dark, depressing look into the world of stage parents and child stars that is cleverly disguised by the jangling guitar, the sweet backing vocals and Win Butler’s diabolically earnest delivery.

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #5-1 (Arcade Fire, Jay-Z, Alicia Keys, Justice, Rihanna)" »

December 27, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #10-6 (Bone Thugs N Harmony, Glen Hansard, Dan Le Sac vs. Scroobius Pip, Amy Winehouse, UGK)

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10. Bone Thugs N Harmony feat. Mariah Carey and Bow Wow, “Lil L.O.V.E.” (Full Surface/Interscope): Bone Thugs’ double-time, tongue-twisting rhymes play nicely against Carey’s silky, low-key singing on the refrain, creating a single as potent as “We Belong Together.”

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #10-6 (Bone Thugs N Harmony, Glen Hansard, Dan Le Sac vs. Scroobius Pip, Amy Winehouse, UGK)" »

December 26, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #15-11 (Against Me!, Glasvegas, Boys Like Girls, Los Campesinos, The Academy Is...)

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15. Avril Lavigne feat. Lil Mama, “Girlfriend (Remix)” (RCA): I admit it, I wasn’t crazy about the original version, but Lil Mama’s flashy rhymes and irresistible “B-R-double-O-K-lyn” style makes it all worthwhile.

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #15-11 (Against Me!, Glasvegas, Boys Like Girls, Los Campesinos, The Academy Is...)" »

December 25, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #20-16 (Against Me!, Glasvegas, Boys Like Girls, Los Campesinos, The Academy Is...)

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20. Against Me! feat. Tegan, “Borne on the FM Waves” (Warner Bros.): Of all the deliciously subversive anthems on Against Me!’s fine “New Wave” album, the sweetness that Tegan adds to the struggle pushes this one to the top.

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #20-16 (Against Me!, Glasvegas, Boys Like Girls, Los Campesinos, The Academy Is...)" »

December 24, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #25-21 (Envy on the Coast, Lily Allen, Keyshia Cole, M.I.A., Chamillionaire)

25. Envy on the Coast, “The Gift of Paralysis” (Photo Finish): The pride of Long Island offers rage and healing in the same catchy package.

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Singles #25-21 (Envy on the Coast, Lily Allen, Keyshia Cole, M.I.A., Chamillionaire)" »

December 21, 2007

Radiohead leads NPR listeners' list of Top 25 nearly all-white geek-rock albums of 2007

Radiohead In RainbowsNational Public Radio listeners today confirmed their reputation as bespectacled white geek-rockers who prefer not to actually rock by voting Radiohead's "In Rainbows" as the No. 1 album of 2007.

The listeners' Top 25 albums included only one rap album and one non-white artist: "Kala" by the Sri Lankan rapper M.I.A.

Five critics weighed in with similarly colored Top Ten lists, bringing the number of albums by non-white artists to three, including "Cornell 1964," a newly-released live recording by Charles Mingus, and "Twinight's Lunar Rotation," a collection of tracks from obscure funk-soul bands.

(The critic Will Hermes chose "Untrue," by the mysterious London producer Burial, which may or may not count: Burial has remained almost completely anonymous, making it hard to tell.)

Three critics also chose "In Rainbows" as No. 1.

Listeners picked Canadian acts Arcade Fire and Feist as No. 2 and 3, respectively, and rounded out their top ten with Wilco, The White Stripes, Spoon, Modest Mouse, The Shins, The National and Andrew Bird.

(Full disclosure: This writer's Top Ten list leads with The Fiery Furnaces' "Widow City.") 

BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #5-1 (The Academy Is..., Amy Winehouse, Bruce Springsteen, Stars, Jay-Z)

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5. The Academy Is..., “Santi” (Fueled by Ramen): Chicago’s The Academy Is... delivered one shiny pop single after another on “Santi,” from the stomping “We’ve Got a Big Mess on Our Hands” to the glam-tinged “Neighbors” to the current power ballad “Everything We Had.”

The Academy Is.., "Neighbors"

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #5-1 (The Academy Is..., Amy Winehouse, Bruce Springsteen, Stars, Jay-Z)" »

December 20, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #10-6 (Mavis Staples, Rufus Wainwright, Alicia Keys, Radiohead, Lily Allen)

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10. Mavis Staples, “We’ll Never Turn Back” (Anti-): Wrapping her gritty-pretty soulful voice around a moving set of civil rights protest songs was not enough for Mavis Staples. Using flecks of hip-hop, blues and folk, she turned them into something new.

Mavis Staples, "Eyes on the Prize"

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #10-6 (Mavis Staples, Rufus Wainwright, Alicia Keys, Radiohead, Lily Allen)" »

December 19, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #15-11 (Annie Lennox, Bishop Allen, Bjork, Envy on the Coast, Linkin Park)

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15. Annie Lennox, “Songs of Mass Destruction” (RCA): Though she spends most of her time outlining life’s heartbreaks and human failures on this album, Annie Lennox does it so beautifully in “Smithereens” or “Dark Road” it still seems positive.

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #15-11 (Annie Lennox, Bishop Allen, Bjork, Envy on the Coast, Linkin Park)" »

December 18, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #20-16 (Lucinda Williams, Chamillionaire, Patty Griffin, Joseph Arthur & The Lonely Astronauts, Arcade Fire)

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20. Lucinda Williams, “West” (Lost Highway): California’s calming effect is starting to take hold of Lucinda Williams, who lets grand songs “West” and “Mama You Sweet” leisurely unfold and even makes time for a political daydream (“What If.”)

Lucinda Williams, "What If"

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #20-16 (Lucinda Williams, Chamillionaire, Patty Griffin, Joseph Arthur & The Lonely Astronauts, Arcade Fire)" »

December 17, 2007

BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #25-21 (Macy Gray, Erasure, White Stripes, The Cribs, M.I.A.)

It’s countdown time here at the Backstage Pass. This week, it’s a list of the year’s best albums – five each day. Next week, we’ll tackle singles. And we’ll kick off 2008 by looking back at 2007's best Backstage moments.

25. Macy Gray, “Big” (Geffen): Murderous tales, working mom R&B anthems and Justin Timberlake. Who could ask for more?

Macy Gray, "Finally Made Me Happy"

Continue reading "BEST OF 2007: Top Albums #25-21 (Macy Gray, Erasure, White Stripes, The Cribs, M.I.A.)" »

January 5, 2007

The debut of Idolator's Jackin' Pop Critics Poll

tvotrSo much of being a music critic is solitary. You listen to the music alone. You write about the music alone. And, once your opinions are released, you defend them all by yourself.

That's what made the Village Voice's annual Pazz & Jop poll so important to me. It was about consensus, about hundreds of critics getting together and, through their votes, deciding on what was best about the previous year's music. It was about being part of something larger.

Despite the Voice's unceremonious booting last year of Robert Christgau, the dean of music critics and longtime caretaker of the poll, Pazz & Jop is scheduled to come out in a month or so. But the poll has been damaged, with many critics opting out, as a protest of the treatment of Christgau.

That's where Idolator's Jackin' Pop Critics Poll comes in, a new, protest-free option to create a consensus. This year, nearly 500 critics voted to crown TV on the Radio's "Return to Cookie Mountain" the top album and Gnarls Barkley's "Crazy" the top single of 2006.

Idolator's Jackin' Pop Critics Poll [Idolator]
'Voice' Music Poll Undermined by Internet [NPR]
My Jackin' Pop ballot

PHOTO: TV on the Radio by Roman Barrett/Interscope

December 29, 2006

2006: The year in review

jay.jpgLeave it to Jay-Z to create a catch phrase that summed up the country's mood.

After years of flash and hype selling as much in musical product as, you know, musical talent, 2006 was the year when the consumer demanded "show me what you got."

In music, as in politics, spin was no longer enough this year. Hype-dodging consumers wanted results, going for tried-and-true veterans such as Johnny Cash and Bob Dylan (who each had their first No. 1 album in decades this year) as opposed to buzzed-about newcomers Arctic Monkeys or gossipmongers Paris Hilton and Kevin Federline.

The album charts looked like they came from the '70s (Neil Young, Barry Manilow, Rod Stewart) or the '80s (Bruce Springsteen, Prince, Red Hot Chili Peppers), not 2006.

Continue reading "2006: The year in review" »

2006: Albums of the Year

nasdead.jpg1. Nas, “Hip Hop Is Dead” (Def Jam). Not only does Nas call out the hip-hoppers who rap about nothing and brag for the sake of bragging, he provides an album full of examples of what they're doing wrong. It's a history lesson and a manifesto, but it's also a thrill to listen to him work, rhyming and preaching over old-school soul (“Hold Down the Block”), hot new beats (“Money over --”) or even Nat King Cole's “Unforgettable” (“Can't Forget About You.”)

jlewis2. Jenny Lewis and The Watson Twins, “Rabbit Fur Coat” (Team Love). Stepping away from her band Rilo Kiley, Jenny Lewis mixes Laura Nyro soul, Lucinda Williams alt-country and Emmylou Harris sweetness for an impressive collection that provides dreamy idealism (“Happy”) one moment and studied protest (“Rise Up With Fists”) the next.

chixlong3. Dixie Chicks, “Taking the Long Way” (Open Wide/Sony). Once you get past the stunning statement of “Not Ready to Make Nice,” the sweeter, peaceful-easy-feelings come into focus - the Bonnie Raitt bluesiness of “I Like It,” the wistful “Favorite Year” and the gorgeous simplicity of “Lullaby.” Sure, the kiss-off “Bitter End” is fun (and deserved), but the Everywoman charms show The Chicks are uniters, not dividers.

tbslouder4. Taking Back Sunday, “Louder Now” (Warner Bros.). Bigger, broader and deeper than ever, Taking Back Sunday makes the leap to arena rock without losing its personal touch, offering more clever rock (“Miami,” “20/20 Surgery”) that fans can sing - or scream - along with. And once radio gets a load of TBS's softer side next year (“Divine Intervention,” “My Blue Heaven”), the band will find itself with a whole new legion of supporters.

dylan5. Bob Dylan, “Modern Times” (Columbia). Macroeconomic theory (“Workingman's Blues #2”), post-Katrina empathy (“The Levee's Gonna Break”) and an Alicia Keys shout-out (“Thunder on the Mountain”) come together for another classic from the master.


joearthur6. Joseph Arthur, “Nuclear Daydream” (Lonely Astronaut). A gorgeous, inviting album that swirls Joseph Arthur's avant garde songwriting with Rolling Stones-y blues and Neil Young folk to create irresistibly soulful rockers “Slide Away” and “Automatic Situation.” His palette of sounds is so warm and friendly that even condemnations of American excess (“Enough to Get Away”) sound upbeat.

twaits7. Tom Waits, “Orphans” (Anti-). Unexpected, craggy beauty leaps out of the shadows and creaky nobility stands tall in the daylight as Tom Waits tours country, blues, gospel and early rock on the three-disc set, subtitled “Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards.” The “Brawlers” will show you a good time (“Lie to Me”) and the storytelling on “Bastards” will keep your mind whirring (“Nirvana”), but the “Bawlers” will break your heart (“You Can Never Hold Back Spring”) over and over again.

mychem8. My Chemical Romance, “The Black Parade” (Warner Bros.). Fusing emo and glam rock to build an uplifting Broadway-styled musical about terminal illness never looked so easy. My Chemical Romance opens with a powerful anthem, the sprawling, ambitious “Welcome to the Black Parade,” and only gets better from there with the T. Rex-ish “Teenagers” and the dizzying “Dead!”

cashv9. Johnny Cash, “American V: A Hundred Highways” (American/Lost Highway). Unlike most posthumous albums that look for a quick payday, “American V” is worthy of the Johnny Cash catalog, lovingly completed by producer Rick Rubin and brimming with future country classics “God's
Gonna Cut You Down”
and poignant remakes of “Love's Been Good to Me.”

312110. Prince, “3121” (Universal Motown). Prince brought back the synth-funk that made him rock royalty in the '80s, with squiggly dance numbers “Black Sweat,” “Lolita” and “Love,” while showing off his soul singer side on the falsetto-filled “Satisfied.”

[Albums 11-30 on the jump]

Continue reading "2006: Albums of the Year" »

December 26, 2006

2006: Singles of the Year

gnarls.jpgMost of 2006 was dominated by dance singles, especially from Timbaland and collaborators Nelly Furtado and Justin Timberlake, and Mary J. Blige's R&B ballad "Be Without You" (Geffen), but there were still plenty of surprises in all sorts of genres. Here are some of the year's best:

1. Gnarls Barkley, "Crazy" (Downtown/Atlantic). With Cee-Lo's sweet soul vocals sliding smoothly over Danger Mouse's sleek, innovative beats, "Crazy" was simply bobbing head and brawny shoulders above the rest of the year's songs. A diverse group - from Furtado to Ray Lamontagne to Twilight Singers' Greg Dulli - was so captivated by the song that they all added it to their sets while the original still was climbing the charts, just because they wanted to sing it. Millions of music fans know exactly how they feel.

2. Twilight Singers, "Forty Dollars" (One Little Indian). No one sings about the dark end of the street better than Dulli, especially when he's got his con-man groove on, as he does here, boasting, "I've got love for sale. Come on, get some before it gets stale."

3. Dixie Chicks, "Not Ready to Make Nice" (Open Wide/Sony). It's a rallying cry for standing up for your beliefs, as well as a shot at their detractors, that is so well-crafted, it is nearly impossible to attack and almost just as impossible to resist.

4. Beyoncé, "Irreplaceable" (Columbia). We knew Beyoncé could be clever, but she's downright scheming on this song, a blunt kiss-off dolled up in acoustic guitars and sweet-sounding choruses designed to fake out casual listeners and boyfriends dumb enough to cheat on B.

5. Ghostface featuring Ne-Yo, "Back Like Dat" (Def Jam). It's "Irreplaceable" from the male perspective, with Ghostface rapping about how far is too far in a breakup over old-school R&B beats and Ne- Yo's wounded croon.

Continue reading "2006: Singles of the Year" »

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