Monday, May 14, 2012

Earworms From Class

So, this entire blog project is actually an assignment from my Rhetoric of Music Blogs class at the University of Texas. One of my favorite parts of this class was discovering new music through the other students blogs and from our discussion of major music blogs in class. Ever since we watched these videos together as a class, I haven't been able to stop listening to these songs:

"Low Shoulder" by Toro Y Moi


"Bombay" by El Guincho (Not a huge fan of this video--it has some cool shots at least. Mostly I just love the steel drums used in the song.) 


"You Da One" cover by Pentatonix acapella group (Watch the two guys on the bottom--the bass and the beatboxer. I was totally transfixed by how much two guys could add to a song without singing any of the lyrics/melody. Wow.)




Recent Earfulls of Catchy Goodness

These are some of the most recent songs I've been obsessively listening to:

"Midnight City" by M83
Love the catchy synth sound that repeats and the 80s influence that's very apparent in the sound and the vocals. I danced to a remix of this in a club a few weekends ago and it was wonderful.


"Helena Beat" by Foster the People
Sadly, I didn't really start to think of them as more than a one-hit wonder until I heard this all over the radio. Since then, I've listened to the full-length album and it's actually packed with hit-worthy songs. This one is still my favorite, though.



"Simple Song" by The Shins
I've never been a big Shins fan until I heard this. My ex-roommate loved them to death but I was more of a Broken Bells fan. But I've heard this being played a lot lately and I fell in love. I looked up the lyrics and they're so sweet and poetic. I played it in my car on repeat one day and each time I heard it it made me happier and happier. Definitely a feel-good song that's fun to sing.


90s music

I am a 90s kid. I lived, loved, and laughed with all of the Nickelodeon greats of my era: All That, Doug, Legends of the Hidden Temple, etc. Needless to say, I grew up on 90s music. This genre gets a lot of shit for being really unbelievably bad, but I don't see it that way. Sure, a lot of the lyrics were nonsensical and made people go "wtf?" but, again, like 80s music, it's still FUN music, which makes it great. Sure, I'm biased because every time I hear a popular 90s song I get all nostalgic, but I thought is was awesomely fun then and I think it's awesomely fun now, regardless of the quality. Here are some highlights from my childhood:

"Two Princes" by Spin Doctors


"Every Morning" by Sugar Ray (My favorite song when I was eight.)


"The Way" by Fastball (My favorite song when I was seven. Saw them in concert with Sugar Ray.)


"Never Let You Go" by Third Eye Blind


"Barely Breathing" by Duncan Sheik



"One Headlight" by The Wallflowers


"Name" by the Goo Goo Dolls




Earworms That I Hate

In my original post, I mentioned the "bad" kind of earworm--the songs that you hate but they're so catchy they invade your mind anyway and you can't stop singing it/thinking about it. So here are some of my personal worst earworms.

More recently, "Animal" by Neon Trees. Gross. Nothing about this song sounds unique or cool to me. Just overly-typical, trying to make a hit by being stereotypically catchy kind of thing. It was ALL over the radio and haunted me for months.


"California" by MetroStation
While I really enjoyed dancing and jamming out to the ever-catchy "Shake It" by the same band, this one is so repetitive and cheery in a childish way that it's painful.



And don't forget most of the music by Britney Spears. She can't sing. She just can't. The only songs of hers I like are recent, super dance-y ones where the producers have made the music so cool that it makes up for her terrible, over-produced voice. This one definitely tries to hard. Bad bad lyrics. 



"Mickey"
Waaaay too upbeat in a cutsie way for my taste. Sadly, I have danced to this, but only to make fun of how annoying it is. 



And last, but DEFINITELY not least, "Barbie Girl." I don't know how many times this got played when I was at some stupid girl's slumber party when I was little, but I'm surprised my ears didn't bleed. I can't stand how chipper it is. Blech. 




Best Cover Song

I'm one of those people that enjoys a good cover, especially if the artist making the cover can find a new way of spinning the original song and making it their own. So here are some of the coolest ones I've found:

"Posession"

Originally by the 90s goddess, Sarah McLachlan, it was remade by one of my all-time favorite rock bands, Evans Blue. I know that any sort of heavier punk/screamo music has faded from its former glory/popularity, but I still love this band and I still listen to their first two albums. Sometimes, I just like heavier music, depending on my mood. But I was really struck by this one cover of theirs. I think it's one of the only recorded covers they've done on an album and I just thought it was so odd that they, a hardcore rock band, would choose to cover her  of all people. I didn't even know they knew who she was, let alone that they must have listened to this song of hers at some point, sat down, and said, "Hey, this is pretty good, I think we could make a sweetass cover of it." 


"Crossroads"

Originally a country blues song by the legendary Robert Johnson, it has been covered over and over.
Here's a popular one by guitar legend, Eric Clapton.
And here's another, more recent one, by a rising guitar god, John Mayer. 

BUT, even though these are excellent remakes that succeed at giving new life to older songs, nothing, nothing can rival my all time favorite cover: Sara Bareilles singing "Take On Me." The once lively, super upbeat 80s pop hit has been slowed down, almost totally revamped into a chill, almost acoustic version. She is really able to show off her voice in it. If I wasn't paying close attention when listening, I don't think I ever would have realized that these are the same song:

Original "Take On Me"

"Take On Me" cover



The Police/Sting

Okay, so my last post covered catchy pop hits of the 80s. While I was searching for songs I wanted to post, I thought of The Police, but knew that I couldn't just pick one song of theirs. I am a HUGE Police fan, and even more than that, a huge Sting fan. My mom and her sister played his music all the time when I was little, so it's one of those things I just picked up because I was around it so often. That and Sheryl Crow.

My very first concert was a Sting concert. I was five and am very proud of the fact that I 1)have seen Sting in concert and 2)started going to concerts as early as age five. True, I only really went to see him sing "Englishman in New York" because that was the one I really liked and I thought the lyrics were "I'm and alien, I'm an evil alien" instead of "legal alien," but I still listen to him to this day. His music still makes me happy and calm. AND as I got older, I realized how literary his music is (he used to be an English teacher before he hit it big). As an English major, I really appreciate that aspect of the lyrics.

So here's my post devoted to Sting and The Police:

"Roxanne"

I think we all know this one. Or at least, most of us still do. Super popular. Super catchy. Oh, and they did an excellent remake of it for Moulin Rouge.

"Don't Stand So Close to Me"
Creepy, but, in typical Sting fashion, it makes a political/social statement about the boundaries between students and teachers and, more generally, children and adults.

"Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic"

Still remember dancing to this when I was little. This one, more than any other Police song, caught my attention at an early age. The music just sounds so fun and uplifting. Happy song, happy subject about love and the special feelings one person has for another.

"Sister Moon"

The title of this album (... Nothing Like the Sun) is also a line used in this song. It's from Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 which I highly recommend. It's one of my favorites. I really like how jazzy and slow and calm this song is, but the instrumentation will totally get stuck in your head, despite the chillness of the song. Really beautiful lyrics and instrumentation.

"Enlishman In New York"

This was the one I was in love with when I was five, and it's off of the same album as above. Today, the lyrics really make me laugh. It's basically just this really quirky song about what it's like for him to be a British person living in a huge American city and odd little comparisons he notices between cultures. Every once in awhile, though, he uses some sort of interlude where he sprinkles in some very profound words, the most heavily emphasized of which is, "be yourself no matter what they say."

"Mad About You"

This is one of my all-time faves. But it was actually a recent re-discovery. Every once in awhile, I'll hear some random 90s song that I had forgotten I knew, but I will immediately recognize the melody and have this weird "I know I know this song, but I have absolutely no memory of it" moment. It's one of the weirdest feelings. I recently uploaded almost all of Sting's albums to my iPod and was just flipping through them to see what I had. After listening to the lyrics, coupled with the beautiful instrumentation, I was in love. And I still am.




80s Music

I am a huge fan of 80s music. Seeing as I'm currently twenty-one and was born in 1990, I get weird looks when I tell people this.Yes, I, unlike the airhead girls on an episode of Tosh.0, do actually know the words to Paula Abdul's 80s hit, Straight Up.

The number one complaint I hear when trying to defend 80s music is that "it's terrible." And okay, I will admit to that. But it's also FUN. So many 80s songs are super catchy, whether or not we actually think of them as "good" music. Plus, synth sounds totally came back into style recently. So here are some of the 80s songs that I've always found to be fun and catchy, even as a little kid in the early 90s that heard them on the radio all the time.

"Take On Me" by A-Ha
I love this song and especially love the way they did the music video. Such cool animation. Terrible hair, pretty terrible clothes, but the idea here is pretty timeless--who hasn't dreamed about crossing over into comic book world? AND they totally made a parody of it on Family Guy. Sweet.


"I Can't Wait" by Nu Shooz

Okay, this is one of the ones I'll admit is pretty bad. Weird music video. Kind of cheesy lyrics. But that pop-y synth sound is SO COOL. The thing that hooks you here is definitely the weird synth noises. And it's always been one I enjoy singing.

"Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" by Wham
I think we can all remember this from watching Zoolander. It's definitely very high-energy and it's hard for me to resist singing and/or dancing whenever I hear it. Somehow, without consciously deciding to do this, I learned all of the words, and I mean ALL of the words, which surprised me when my best friend played it in the car and I just sang all the way through it. It was weird. According to my mom, who was a big music fan in the 80s, this was hugely popular and I can see why. Most people my age still know this song. 

"Dance Hall Days" by Wang-Chung
This is one that I specifically remember hearing on the radio when I was riding in the car as a kid. I couldn't make out any of the lyrics, as kids often can't, but I thought the beat and rhythm made the song very dance-y and fun. 

And of course, because I already mentioned it in the beginning of this post, "Straight Up" by Paula Abdul.
Typical "girl-shows-off-dance-moves-and-cool-wardrobe" kind of thing. But it will get stuck in your head after hearing the slightest bit so beware. I remember liking this one as a kid before I connected the girl in the video with the woman on American Idol that fights with Simon Cowell. Now, it wouldn't be my first choice if I was in an 80s mood, but I'd still listen to it. 

Oh, and anything by Madonna for sure, even though "Lucky Star" is a super annoyingly addictive kind of earworm and I never want to hear that song for fear it will lodge itself in my brain and I won't be able to get it out.