Best Indie Rock Songs of 2009, Vol. I: Animal Collective, Bon Iver, 1900s, East Hundred, Odawas and More

You’ve probably already come across oodles of “best music” lists of 2009. No list is right or wrong (theoretically) , and they vary between the big media music sites and the popular blogs.  The songs we have chosen are not strictly our favorites, but are often also the same songs all of you have responded to the most (and why we started the Top Ten of the Week series) throughout the year. The Favorite Indie and Alternative Songs of 2009 series will be a 12-part series.

To avoid the madness of categorizing songs from “the top down,” or “best to good,” we’ve decided to break up the list into 12 playlist, starting with January 2009 based on the date we posted the songs, not necessarily the actual release date.

In addition, we’ll be posting – for some time to come – 2009 songs and albums that we “missed” or forgot about, as well as the continuing In Dee Mail Special Edition 2009 series. There is no great pressure to automatically stop posting notable 2009 songs because a lot of people are still searching for 2009 music, which is fairly typical – we’ve found over the years – in the first two months of a new year.

After that, 2009 will inevitably give way to a spike of interest, and releases, of 2010 music. We already have a bunch of new 2010 in the pipeline (especially each Tuesday for new releases), with occasional flashbacks to other years in music history for special playlists and mixes (like the Ears To The Music or The Great Unknowns series).

You may also want to browse through the archives for 2009 – and before then – during which time you’re likely to discover music you really like – even love – that you otherwise would never know about, or remember to seek out. More than half of the music we feature on IRC is from talented unsigned and relatively unknown artists and bands, but we’re not going to turn away from great music that fits into what some might call “mainstream indie” and alternative rock (i.e., Animal Collective, Radiohead, Vampire Weekend).

These playlist mixes are not necessarily represented of all of our favorite songs of 2009; some of the MP3 links provided by labels, bands and others have since expired, and so have not been included in this compendium of 2009 music. And, of course, we have lots of great 2010 music to share with you in coming months, and throughout the year. If 2010 is as good as 2009 for indie and alternative music new releases, it’ll be a busy year.

Let’s get started with songs originally posted in January of 2009.

January 2009

“My Girls”Animal Collective from Merriweather Post Pavilion

“Titus Andronicus” –Titus Andronicus from The Airing of Grievances

“Blood Bank”Bon Iver from Blood Bank EP

“Actors”In-Flight Safety from We Are an Empire, My Dear

“Work Day” – It Hugs Back from Inside Your Guitar

“The Box”1900s from Kicks

“Rich Doors”New Villager from Rich Doors 7″

“End in Flames”Strand of Oaks from Leave Ruin

“Slow Burning Crimes”East Hundred from Passengers

“Get Yr Sh*t Together” Friendly Foes from Born Radical

“Harmless Lover’s Discourse”Odawas from The Blue Depths

“Blood Red Sentimental Blues”Cotton Jones from Paranoid Cocoon

“Turn Cold”Cut Off Your Hands from You & I

“The Shaded Forests”Deastro from Moondagger

“Submarines of Stockholm”A.C. Newman from Get Guilty

“Call and Response”Or, The Whale from Light Poles and Pines

Don’t forget: We will still post songs from 2009 that we either didn’t have time to post or have just learned about, most of them will be assembled in the on-going In Dee Mail Special Edition, Singer/Songwriter, One Man Bands and other such playlists in the next couple of months, as well as new 2010 music as it comes in.

Volume Two of this series will be published next week and cover favorite songs posted in February of 2009.

More Indie & Alt. Rock Christmas Songs, Vol III: The White Stripes, Mark Kozelek, My Morning Jacket, The Flaming Lips

The White Stripes‘ “Candy Cane Children” leads of this third volume of ‘More Indie & Alternative Rock Christmas Songs,’ a supplement to our web famous ‘Best Indie and Alternative Rock Christmas Songs’ playlist mix series.

[zbplayer]

“Candy Cane Children”The White Stripes

“White Christmas”Mark Kozelek

“White Christmas (Demo for Tom Waits)”The Flaming Lips

“Christmas Time is Here Again” (Live on WFPK) – My Morning Jacket

“Snoopy’s Christmas”The Royal Guardsmen

“Xmas Song”Fireflies

“Queuing for Christmas”The Keys

Check out more than 200 additional Christmas and holiday songs – perfect for making your own playlists to play for family and friends this holiday season.

After Kanye West’s mention, IRC gets loved

Almost two weeks ago we posted about Florida’s electronic unsigned duo artists called Blind Man’s Colour.

The posting received a lot of attention!

So much so that even big-time hip-hop musician Kanye West, in a post titled “Some Dope Shit for My Apartment” (why was he living in an apartment?) on his Kayne Universe City blog, linked to our review of Blind Man’s Colour.

Kinda cool, huh? Getting some love from Mr. West? In addition, indie blogs Gorilla Vs. Bear and I Guess I’m Floating wrote about Kayne’s post and the IRC discovery. Then more high visiblity blogs jumped on the BMC-IRC-West love wagon – although they conveniently failed (decided not to) to give the original attribution to us. That’s not cool in journalism or music journalism.

In his post, West also posted a link to our announcement of the lineup for this year’s Coachella fest.

Anyways, the latest word from Blind Man Colour’s is that the guys have been getting calls from record labels and a huge number of new friend requests on MySpace since our review posted.

EW’s Top 25 Indie Albums; Does Radiohead Really Deserve No.1 Spot?

Entertainment Weekly’s editors feature the ‘Indie Rock 25’, profiling albums from 1984 (apparently the ‘beginning of indie’) to present, including classics from The Hold Steady, The Replacements, Yo La Tengo, The Pixies, Spoon, Pavement, Built to Spill, and The White Stripes to name a few.

Some of the choices are questionable, not for being selected, but for their position in the ranking. For example, why is Radiohead’s In Rainbows given the No.1 spot on the list? (Modest Mouse’s stunning Lonesome Crowded West release is buried in the list at No. 12, just to name one aberration).

Afterall, Radiohead’s In Rainbows has been out less than six months, the band pissed off a lot of fans back in October for what was considered a dubious ‘first release’ and there are many other albums on this list that are well-oiled classics – truly landmark albums that have etched themselves in to the history of ‘indie rock’ – and beyond – to a greater degree than In Rainbows has or ever can.

Lastly, Radiohead has become so commercialized as an entity in the past year that I would argue they no longer fit into the ‘indie rock’ genre to begin with.

Nevertheless, there are still some good choices on this list, just their position on the list is highly question, even head-scratching.

1 – Radiohead – In Rainbows (2007) Stream: Radiohead’s MySpace page

2 – Spoon – Ga Ga Ga (2007) – MP3: Eddie’s Ragga

3 – The Hold Steady – Boys and Girls in America (2006) MP3: Stuck Between Stations (Live)

4 – Bright Eyes – I’m Wide Awake, It’s Morning (2005) MP3: Lua

5 – Arcade Fire – Funeral (2004) MP3: Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)

6 – The White Stripes – Elephant (2003) Stream White Stripes

7 – Interpol – Turn On The Bright Lights (2003) MP3: Obstacle 1

8 – The Shins – Oh, Inverted World (2001) MySpace: Turn Me On

9 – Yo La Tengo – And then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out (2000) MP3: None from this album, but there are eight free MP3s from Yo La Tengo

10 – Sleater-Kinney – The Hot Rock (1990) MP3: Get Up

Here’s the entire ‘Top 25 indie albums’ list from EW’s website.

Check back to the site later today or tomorrow (3/31) for a zip file of the MP3s above, including some bonus tracks.

Lollapalooza 2008: Lineup Rumors Abound, First Indications from Lolla Boards and Six Months Ago

Over the next couple of days, IRC will publish complete updates on the latest news for 2008 music festivals, including Bonnaroo, SXSW, Coachella, Rothbury, Bamboozle, Sziget, Glastonbury, Austin City Limits, Virgin Festival and many others.

Next month, a comprehensive guide will be published and feature all of 2008’s indie-relevant music festivals including the latest news, ticket info, line-ups, artist profiles, discussions, photos, MP3s and videos of past performances.

Lollapalooza (August 1-3, 2008) – While ticket sale dates and the line-up for Lollapalooza 2008 have yet to be announced (as of 2/26/08), rumors are flying everywhere about which artists and groups might be playing at this year’s Lolllapalooza.

If the lineup is anything like last year’s (see flashback to 07 below), there will be more lolla than looza.

The following artists are rumored to be set for Lollapalooza, according to the official website’s board moderator sixtimes:

The rumor mill seems to be favoring the following artists as headliners: The Smashing Pumpkins (not a SP reunion, so it’s really Billy Corgan and the band), Radiohead (who wouldn’t love that, especially since In Rainbows is crazy popular in and of itself with a whole new generation), Wilco, Bjork, The National, Tom Petty and The Police.

Rumor mongering is dangerous, so let’s just say that as soon as the line-up is announced, it will be published here (got folks in the mix but they are staying mum right now).

In the meantime, let’s warp back to six months go for a memory fest of 2007’s killer lineup:

Headlining Lollapalooza 2007 was an eclectic mix of popular alternative, indie, rock, mainstream and electronica artists like Pearl Jam, Daft Punk, Modest Mouse, Ben Harper, Muse, Interpol, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Patti Smith, The Roots, Amy Winehouse, LCD Soundsystem, Spoon, The Black Keys, Kings of Leon and others.

The headliners did not come at the expense of ‘second-bill’ artists and groups Tokyo Police Club, !!!, My Morning Jacket, Yo La Tengo, Ted Leo and Pharmacists, Snow Patrol, CSS, Annuals, Blue October and many other indie artists who rocked Grant Park.

Where is Lollapalooza? The annual event is held in Chicago’s Grant Park on the shores Lake Michigan right off the Miracle Mile. Here’s a map of last year’s festival grounds.

Last year, festival goers endured blistering heat and suffocating humidity (as did festival attendees at the Austin City Limits fest in Austin).

Some folks may not realize this, but it’s a fact that festival organizers deliberately schedule such outdoor summer events during the ‘doggiest’ days of summer. Why? They sell more drinks at ridiculous prices.

Now, in fairness to event organizers, there are tremendous costs to put events like popular music festivals together. Still, don’t shed a tear for the organizers, corporate sponsors and vendors, they are raking in money.

The other point is that most music festivals are attended by students – whether college age or under – who obviously have the most free time during the summer months.

Cat Power’s Newest Release "Jukebox", MP3s, Concert Dates and Videos

Have Cat Power fans been let down by the band’s newest release, Jukebox? Some have been, but the honest music critic has to appreciate the bold step, especially since, in my opinion, the final result is that it’s another step-up in the career of the mysterious Chan Marshall (aka Cat Power).

For starters, Jukebox, officially released on Jan. 28, 2008, is a bland title for such an inspiration work, but it makes sense in the end because the tracks represent a cross-section and blend of music genres from blues to jazz and soul to country.

The feel of the album is much more like a tour de musique of Americana than the hauntingly anguished sound that made Chan (pronounced “Shawn”) so beloved in the alternative and indie music community. Moreso, Jukebox demonstrates Chan’s maturation musically, lyrically and spiritually.

With a set of songs ready to go, Chan marshaled together some of the finest musicians in soul, blues, jazz and country music, coralling folks like Jim White, drummer for The Dirty Dozen, Matt Sweeney of Chavez, Judah Bauer of Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, members of the Dirty Delta Blues Band, and others.

The biggest question of all may have been answered when Gregg Foreman, who played piano and organ on Jukebox with Chan, and is currently on tour with Cat Power, was asked by the Philadelphia City Paper to shed some light on the “grittiness” of the sound on Jukebox compared to their previous works.

Foreman acknowledged a shift in sound from the brilliant release MoonPix – an album filled with hearting-wrenching, melancholic songs of failed love – and put it this way:

Yeah, well, we’ve had a few complaints from fans that want to hear [more of the sound found on Moon Pix]…It’ll take time.”

As for Chan’s feelings about the “new” sound, Foreman said:

“She’s happy. There hasn’t been one show where she’s left the stage. She’s smiling. The “old sad Chan” is nowhere to be found. And this album’s the biggest-selling CD in Matador history. She’s blessed.”

Download, listen and upload to any MP3 player the following free and legal MP3s off of Jukebox, curiousity of the great Matador Records:

MP3: Cat Power – “Song to Bobby”
MP3: Cat Power – “Metal Heart”

Cat Power’s official website (I think this is the official site)
Matador Record’s Cat Power profile
All Music Guide’s profile of Cat Power

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IRC’s Getting A Total Makeover

Hey Everyone:

You may have already noticed that Indie Rock Cafe is getting a total redesign. Hopefully, you like it more than the old design; if you haven’t seen it yet, check out and let me know.

Advancements will also include more information and access to the newest releases, indie and alt rock news, venue and cafe locations, concert and festival listings, and more MP3s, streams, podcasts and music videos from the greatest and latest independent (with some mainstream sprinkled about) and alternative rock artists and groups.

Check out the new site design and content (still on-going but mostly all is good).

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Radiohead’s Mass Distribution of In Rainbows Continues to Fuel Its Historic Success

With the #1 album in the U.S. and other markets around the globe, Radiohead has probably received more attention from the mainstream music press and the music blogs worldwide than any other band in the past six months. And it was no accident.

Radiohead broke out and totally embraced rock fans in a revolutionary way, initially having released their classic album In Rainbows on the Internet last fall and allowing fans to decide how much they were willing to pay for and download it. (However, now you have to buy the album, but it is arguably worth it.)

Through such innovative marketing and distribution techniques, like free and name-your-price offerings of its music, specially packaged disc sets by the band members (and not a major label) and live webcasts (such as last evening’s London webcast at radiohead.tv).

In addition, by setting up and regularly updating pages on various social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace, Radiohead has made In Rainbows not just one of the most important albums of 2007 and 2008, but perhaps one of the decade’s best albums of all.

Not only is the band still relevant 15 or so years after rising to fame with releases like Creep, The Bends and OK Computer, band members Thom Yorke (vocals, guitar), Ed O’Brien (guitar, vocals), Jonny Greenwood (guitar), Colin Greenwood (bass), and Phil Selway (drums) are pursuing all kinds of multimedia projects using the Internet and pushing the envelope in ways to reach fans and attract new fans as well.

But at the end of the day, the evidence is in the music. If In Rainbows sucked, it wouldn’t have mattered how much the band and their two new labels promoted it. The band decided to sign on with TBD and XL Records, ditching EMI after a failed reunion with their former label.

Thom was so enraged by “lies” about what went on ‘behind the scenes’ that led to the rift with Radiohead and EMI, and wrote this semi-rant on the band’s blog right after Christmas (left all of Thom’s own writing style):

we did not ask for a load of cash from our old record label EMI to re- sign. that is a L I E.
The Times in the UK should check its facts
before it prints such dirt.

whAT we WANTED WAS some control over OUR WOrK and how it was used in the future by them-that seemed REASONAblE to us, as we cared about it a great deal.

Mr Hands was not interested. So neither were we.

We made the sign of the cross and walked away. Sadly.

We are extremely upset that this crap is being spread about.

To bedigging up such bullshit, or more politely airing yer dirty laundry in public,
seems a very strange way for the head of an international record label to be proceeding.

On a happier note we took no ‘BRead-HEAd’ advances at all from both independent labels XL and TBD for our new record.

So judge for yourself.

AND we are really excited to be working with them. SHock!

AT least they do not behave like confused bulls in a china shop.

much love – Thom

However, the release is historic – on the level that The Bends was – and not only put Radiohead back on the rock map, it also has made their music available to a new generation of fans around the world.

It seems like every other day the band is releasing some new material, reworked and remastered recordings, announcements of concerts, alerts of new videos and live webcasts, such as the one the band performed last evening.

There was some confusion from fans in London who showed up at the Liverpool area Rough Trade shop for live, first-come, first-serve performance only to find that the location had been moved next door to the venue 93 Feet East.

Here’s what Thom wrote on the RH blog about the change:

On the advice of the police and the local council, it was decided to change the venue to the larger one in the interests of public safety and due to the size of the crowd that turned up for the event. Rough Trade and the band apologise for any inconvenience caused.

While there is no official word yet on whether the webcast from last evening will be replayed, or available in full anywhere on the web, here are some great links to RH music, videos, news and more. As soon as we find the webcast, you will too. If you’re not subscribed via a feed reader, choose one now or pick the ATOM or RSS plain feed.

Also, news is coming up soon about Radiohead’s 2008 concert and festival tours. While no specific dates have been set, some of the 20 or so U.S. cities include Chicago, Boston and New York and San Francisco. (really!?!)

More Radiohead Links:

Contest: Contribute to Radiohead’s BuzzNet rainbow and enter to win a special edition of
In Rainbows.

Watch: Radiohead play In Rainbows via the AT&T BlueRoom concert and festival series.

Visit: In Rainbows website put together by Radiohead and their new official TBD Records label

Coming Soon: Music Choice will be airing the Best of Radiohead on cable from January 21 to February 3, 2008 in a tribute to the band. For more information on how to tune in, check out the Music Choice website.

Watch: Check out this YouTube clip of “Videotape” from the recent Scotch Mist performances.

 

The Triangle’s Mid-January Indie Rock Shows Low-Down; Save Your Money?

There are always plenty of shows to see in Durham-Raleigh-Chapel Hill, North Carolina area, commonly called “The Triangle.”

Upcoming performances include shows from Eberhardt, Butane Variations, Leon Russell, Lotus, Big Head Todd and the Monsters and Yeasayer.

Despite their relative popularity right now in the ‘underground’ music world, Tri-Cities music critic Grayson Currin isn’t expecting much from Yeasayer (who made many best indie songs of 2007 blog lists with the release of All Hour Cymbals):

Sonically, Yeasayer isn’t far removed from the Technicolor melodic phases of TV on the Radio or the hard rhythm-versus-smeared sound technique of Animal Collective, but its apocalyptic images emerge from its sonic mess without much punch.

(What do you really think!?)

And if that wasn’t enough, the tell-it-like-it-is (TILIS), Yeasayer-naysayer Currin also slams the venue owners of MGMT @ Local 506 for booking Yeasayer:

New York nothings with major-label moneys who fall in the same why-does-this-matter genus. Chapel Hill’s Soft Company is the better band on the bill

Currin has the raw wit and unapologetic sting of a good music critic, especially considering there is so much music available nowadays.

In the same set of pre-show reviews, Currin also dismissed aging alternative ‘rockers’ Big Head Todd and The Monsters with a grapefruit-sized slingshot to the head, attacking the band members’ lack of progress as musicians over the last two decades by reverting to “overly cared-for guitars and recycled riffs,” adding that “one can only hope” that the band’s upcoming release, All the Love You Need, is “more inventive.” Currin, surprisingly, isn’t optimistic: “Your odds would be better if you’d just learn poker

Currin’s less-than-positive critiques surely piss-off some of the artists, labels and local venue managers, but if it saves a college student from wasting $20 or more on a show, he’s doing his job in more ways than just one.

And so do the other writers of the staff, who also need to be recognized for keeping a pulse on the local scene. On an up note, Currin does like Butane Variations, deeming it as a “great band with a bright future.”

MP3: Angels – Butane Variations
MP3: Golden Hawn – Butane Variations

Read more show announcements and reviews for “The Triangle” by checking out the “Hearing Aid Guide.”

Other artists from The Triangle area:

– Pressure Boys
– Superchunk
– Flat Duo Jets
– Southern Culture on the Skids.
– Polvo
– Squirrel Nut Zippers
– Ben Folds Five
– Archers of Loaf
– Corrosion of Conformity

Best Indie and Alternative Rock Christmas Songs, Mix X: Gary Glitter, Sex Pistols, The Ramones, The Killers and Guster

This mix, the tenth installment of the Christmas playlists series, offers Xmas songs from punk legends Sex Pistols and The Ramones and modern-day popular artists like Arcade Fire, Yo La Tengo, The Killers, Something Corporate and Stars.

Personal favorite track on this playlist is Guster‘s “Donde Esta Santa Claus.” It’s different, upbeat and infectious.

[zbplayer]

Donde Esta Santa ClausGuster

Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight)The Ramones

Jinglebell RockArcade Fire

It’s Christmas TimeYo La Tengo

I Took Some Time For Christmas (Live)Belle and Sebastian

Another Rock and Roll Christmas Gary Glitter

HallelujahJeff Buckley

Silent Night (Live)Belle and Sebastian

Punk Rock ChristmasSex Pistols

Christmas PigletThe Presidents of the United States

Christmas Time Is HereGatsby’s American Dream

December ClichéBeneath Her Parachute

December Slow Aerospace

Blue ChristmasBanjo or Freakout

Festive Friends (Forever)Parenthetical Girls

Forget DecemberSomething Corporate

Have a Punky Christmas EveryoneThe Mangkuks

It’s Christmas So We’ll StopFrightened Rabbit

All I Want For Christmas is YouCountdown

Anorak Christmas (Club Mix)Sally Shapiro

Last Christmas (Part Two)Parenthetical Girls

Santa ClausWild Billy Childish and The Musicians

Santa Claus (Live)Belle and Sebastian

Santa Claus is Coming to TownBobby Baby

Santa Claus is Coming…To Get YouDas Wanderlust

Silent NightNullsleep

The WoodsStars

Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want to Fight Tonight)Joey Ramone