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From December 28, 2004:
The Best Songs of 2004
Listen to the best songs:
Real Audio | Windows Media
Below are the 20 most mentioned songs from both listeners and reviewers with randomly selected comments from some of those who picked them.
The year's best music:
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"A cappella meandering but not barbershop - 'I will be your ambulance if you will be my accident' and beautiful lyrics about longing and love; this song gives you something new but never asks too much of you."
-- Kevin (listener) in Oregon (KLCC)
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20. "Ambulance"
Artist: TV On the Radio
CD: Desperate Youth and Bloodthirsty Babes
Label: Touch and Go
Released: March 9, 2004
Listen to "Ambulance"
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"With On the Cobbles, John Martyn returned to the form that made him such a lauded - if minor - artist in the 1970s. 'My Creator' captures the spirit of his very best work. It's jazzy, movingly spiritual, a gentle trip through a dark blue night. The perfect balance of mature, considered, and emotional."
-- NPR reviewer and author of The NPR Curious Listener's Guide To World Music Chris Nickson
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19. "My Creator"
Artist: John Martyn
CD: On the Cobbles
Label: Independiente UK
Released: April 26, 2004
Listen to "My Creator"
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"John Adams was asked to write a new piece for the New York Philharmonic to play on the one-year anniversary of September 11. This 25-minute piece for orchestra, chorus, and tape was premiered in 2002, but just came out on CD this year. It is a moving elegy for those who died, but also a searing meditation on loss, anger, and renewal for those who survive. It begins quietly with the everyday sounds of New York: footsteps on the sidewalk, street noise, voices. But you soon realize that the voices are saying phrases from final phone calls out of the World Trade Center, simple memorial notes from the living for the dead, and even the famous last words from a cell phone from Flight 11 shortly before the end. There are flashes of fury in this music, but even the lengthy quiet is chilling. Listening once is cathartic, listening again and again uncovers the subtle musical brilliance of the work."
-- NPR Performance Today host Fred Child
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18. "On the Transmigration of Souls"
Artist: John Adams
CD: On the Transmigration of Souls
Label: Nonesuch
Released: August 31, 2004
Listen to "On the Transmigration of Souls" (excerpt)
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"The bright sound. I don't know, I just love it!"
-- Jason (listener) in Washington, DC (WAMU)
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17. "Miracle Drug"
Artist: A.C. Newmman
CD: The Slow Wonder
Label: Matador
Released: June 8, 2004
Listen to "Miracle Drug"
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"Ray's voice is unique, incorporating the styles of other known artists and coming up with one that is suited to his music. He reminds me of Leo Sayer's rendition of known ballads like 'Let it Be.' The words in this song are quite 'troubling.' How else could one describe it?"
-- Ramon (listener) in Massachusetts (WBUR)
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16. "Trouble"
Artist: Ray LaMontagne
CD: Trouble
Label: RCA
Released: September 14, 2004
Listen to "Trouble"
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"For some reason, the fact that this song is a huge hit and mentions Jesus isn't the big deal for me. The fact that it is giant in scope and is still a 3-minute radio hit is. It takes the essential factor of a good pop song - conflict in the verses, resolution in the chorus - and uses it as a mirror for life with and without faith. When those high choral voices go from minor to major chords halfway through the song, it almost converts me. Almost."
-- David (listener) in Minnesota (KNOW)
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15. "Jesus Walks"
Artist: Kanye West
CD: The College Dropout
Label: Anti
Released: February 10, 2004
Listen to "Jesus Walks"
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"This bouncy electro-dancehall rap by British Sri Lankan M.I.A. (aka Maya Arulpragasam) was co-written with Justine Frischmann of the British post-punk band Elastica and was a huge hit this year in England. The rhythm track sounds like a video game took over a DJ booth, while the rhymes alternate between playground gibberish ('boys say 'wa'/girls say 'wawa') and randomly menacing imagery ('shotgun-get doooown!'). Together they make for a life-during-wartime party anthem that sounds completely post-national; you could as easily imagine it rocking a Jamaican nightclub or scoring an exceptionally street-wise Bollywood musical."
-- NPR reviewer and contributing editor to Spin magazine, Will Hermes
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14. "Galang"
Artist: M.I.A.
CD: Galang (single)
Label: Beggars
Released: September 28, 2004
Listen to "Galang"
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"'Dearly Departed,' the wrenching, wistful ballad from Denver's tiny Eastern
Bloc rock quartet Devotchka, is simply one of the saddest, most beautiful songs
ever written. Somewhere between a mariachi sunrise and a gypsy sunset, the
naked, soaring croon of front man Nick Urata pleads and begs and wails over a
lovely piano arpeggio accented by a haunting string section. The man has clearly
seen some dark days and lived to sing about them. It's not for the faint of
heart. It's the sort of thing that makes you think, makes you brood, makes you
want to lock your doors and windows and sit quietly in the fray (if you're
into that sort of thing). Some songs are about reflection and some filled with
wisdom, hope and conclusions. This song sits among the most tender flesh of your
deepest wound, begging you to let it fester just awhile longer - if only to linger
momentarily in the simple beauty of such aching sadness.
-- NPR reviewer and Filter magazine managing editor Mikel Jollett
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13. "Dearly Departed"
Artist: Devotchka
CD: How it Ends
Label: Cicero Recordings
Released: October 25, 2004
Listen to "Dearly Departed"
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"Guy Davis is on a lifelong crusade to get more black music fans into the blues, which has long had a predominantly white audience. Here he sets out to convince a generation of kids growing up on rap and hip-hop that the blues is their heritage, their history. After all, rap is a sort of talking blues, a candid and sometimes brutal account of real life. He starts with his 13-year-old son Martial, and it's a hard sell. The two men have a spirited argument on this song, provocatively titled 'Uncle Tom's Dead.' Guy Davis makes a compelling argument for the blues, but his son is not persuaded."
-- NPR reviewer Meredith Ochs
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12. "Uncle Tom's Dead"
Artist Guy Davis
CD: Legacy
Label: Red House
Released: August 24, 2004
Listen to "Uncle Tom's Dead"
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"Made me happy every time I heard it, which is a rare accomplishment."
Matthew (listener) in Virginia
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11. "Hold Me"
Artist: The Polyphonic Spree
CD: Together We Are Heavy
Label: Hollywood Records
Released: July 13, 2004
Listen to "Hold Me"
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"Majestic and epic like a Zeppelin song."
Thomas (listener) in New Jersey (WNYC)
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10. "Portland, Oregon"
Artist: Loretta Lynn (with Jack White)
CD: Van Lear Rose
Label: Interscope
Released: April 27, 2004
Listen to "Portland, Oregon"
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"Handel's defining genius was melody and 'Ombra mai fu' is one of his most radiant. Lorraine Hunt Lieberson's exquisite phrasing shows how a great artist can still bring something personal to music as well-known as this."
NPR reviewer Tom Manoff
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9. "Ombra mai fu"
Artist: Lorraine Hunt Lieberson
CD: Handel Arias
Label: Avie
Released: August 10, 2004
Listen to "Ombra mai fu"
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"Here, in all its ragged unkempt glory, is an answer to the face-saving oddity-erasing vocal 'perfection' of radio pop. A scarifying wail from some kind of delusional mutineer sad sack, this good old fashioned mess is set to a medium-slow son montuno pulse, and features Waits in a bleat so imprecise it's impossible to tell precisely which pitches he's singing. Sometimes it could even be all 12 at once. Hard to tell which ones he's leaving out."
NPR reviewer and music writer for The Philadelphia Inquirer Tom Moon
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8. "Hoist That Rag"
Artist: Tom Waits
CD: Real Gone
Label: Epitaph
Released: October 25, 2004
Listen to "Hoist That Rag"
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"I Love this song, not just for the hand claps but for the soulful lyrics,
catchy chorus and originality. It has everything a 'song of the year' should have... including hand claps..."
-- NPR member station KEXP morning music host John Richards
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7. "Bullet and a Target"
Artist: Citizen Cope
CD: The Clarence Greenwood Recordings
Label: RCA
Released: September 14, 2004
Listen to "Bullet and a Target"
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"This song is absolutely rousing. The lyrics are so well executed and it is the perfect combination of angst sadness and the idea of seizing the moment and not wasting any time that was given to you on this earth. The Arcade Fire are completely and transcendently original."
-- Agricola (listener) in Pennsylvania (WDUQ)
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6. "Rebellion (Lies)"
Artist: Arcade Fire
CD: Funeral
Label: Merge
Released: September 14, 2004
Listen to "Rebellion (Lies)"
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"It as a retro feel that makes you just want to get up and dance."
-- Heather (listener) in Florida (WUFT)
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5. "Take Me Out"
Artist: Franz Ferdinand
CD: Franz Ferdinand
Label: Epic
Released: April 20, 2004
Listen to "Take Me Out"
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"This songs infectious groove is as addictive as its lyrics are hopeful. That's a tough combo to beat."
-- Caleb (listener) in South Carolina (WRJA)
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4. "Float On"
Artist: Modest Mouse
CD: Good News for People Who Love Bad News
Label: Epic
Released: April 6, 2004
Listen to "Float On"
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"The centerpiece of Smile and one of Brian's best songs -- Leonard Bernstein called it 'an important contribution to 20th century American music.' But this new rendition, released 33 years after the previous Beach Boys version, reveals the pathos in Van Dyke Park's lyrics, and Wilson's voice is now perfect for this saga of decline and renewal."
-- NPR reviewer Jim Fusilli
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3. "Surf's Up"
Artist: Brian Wilson
CD: Smile
Label: Nonesuch
Released: September 28, 2004
Listen to "Surf's Up"
Hear Brian Wilson perform Smile live at Carnegie Hall.
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"I always have trouble picking a best song, but this year both of my favorite songs came from Omaha Nebraska. 'Take it Easy (Love Nothing)' is from Bright Eyes (Conor Oberst) and my runner up was 'Fell Down the Stairs' by Tilly and the Wall, from an album co-produced by Conor Oberst.
You can't easily sum up the new sounds from Omaha, but the contagious music that has now permanently etched its way in my brain is upbeat, amusing but not saccharine.
If you've not yet heard Bright Eyes or any music by Conor Oberst you should know that he's a prolific, smart songwriter. You'll hear it over and over that he's the best songwriter of his generation (born in 1980) from fans and music writers. He helped get a small label, Saddle Creek Records, off the ground and his dedication to making independent music from his hometown is unwavering. This song 'Take it Easy (Love Nothing)' comes from a four-song disc of the same name. But just a few weeks into 2005, this song will be on one of two full length CDs he will release. Digital Ash in a Digital Urn is the more electric record while I'm Wide Awake It's Morning is the more personal of the two. 2005 will introduce many to Bright Eyes, and may shift music's focal point from the coasts to Omaha."
-- All Songs Considered host Bob Boilen
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2. "Take it Easy (Love Nothing)"
Artist: Bright Eyes
CD: Take it Easy (Love Nothing) EP
Label: Saddle Creek
Released: October 26, 2004
Listen to "Take it Easy (Love Nothing)"
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"No doubt, there were a lot of wonderful songs in 2004; but this was the only one to really floor me. It just skips along innocently for the first few minutes (it clocks in at nearly 11 minutes total) with a friendly little beat that belies the approaching chaos. At precisely four minutes in, it bursts suddenly, beautifully, into some of the most soulful musical mania you'll ever hear."
-- All Songs Considered's Robin Hilton
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1. "Spiders (Kidsmoke)"
Artist: Wilco
CD: A Ghost is Born
Label: Nonesuch
Released: June 22, 2004
Listen to "Spiders (Kidsmoke)"
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Copyright
, NPR
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