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katallison ([personal profile] katallison) wrote2005-03-26 07:54 am
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Kat's Big Ginormous Amazingly Long Music Poll!

In which you, dear readers, get to advise me extensively and lift me from the crevasse of cultural ignoramushood. The Poll So Big, It Comes In Parts! And On Cutaway!



So, this part of the poll is: Imagine that you have been charged with enlightening someone who has lived in a cave since the mid-70s about the music of the past 30 years.

[Background: The living-in-a-cave part is not much of an exaggeration. I more or less stopped listening to popular music about the time vinyl went out, due to a combination of changing tastes and amazing lack of income. Most of my music collection of the late 70s through the late 90s grew out of a very primitive form of piracy, consisting of:
(1) Go to the library and check out LPs (almost exclusively classical or older jazz);
(2) Dupe them onto cassette tapes;
(3 Return LPs to library, listen to cassette tapes on crappy tape player.

When CDs came to the fore, I looked at them, thought, "Huh. Boy, *those* are pricey," contemplated my amazing lack of income, and passed them by. I also didn't have a car, so the input mode of driving around listening to random shit on the radio wasn't happening. And so, with one thing and another, I basically had no connection with any music that hit the airwaves between, say, 1975 and the present day.]

But now that I have the amazing resources of Our Glorious Intrawebs (in the form of a Rhapsody subscription--Rhapsody rocks!--as well as iTunes et al.), and even some actual income, I am taking on the project of actually trying to listen to current music (for a broad definition of "current") and figure out what I like. So your question is:

What five albums/artists (random number, feel free to contract or expand it) are essential for me to check out, representing music without which Jeezus Keerist, Kat, your life has been a barren wasteland spent in a cave!? (Note: this is just a reply-in-comments kind of poll, devoid of ticky-boxes, because the limitations of LJ's Poll Creator for text boxes frustrates me.)

Part II: So, When/Where/How Do You Listen to Music, Anyway?

[Background: OK, this will sound funny and pathetic to most of you, but one of the things that hinders my plunge back into the realm of music appreciation is that I've simply gotten out of the habit of having music on. Driving around in the car is about it, but I don't drive much, and the rest of my life is basically background-music-free. So really, I'm just curious about how everyone else manages to work this into their lives.]

[Poll #462147]

ETA: Thanks so much for all the great ideas so far!
And although, as noted in the comments, part of my intent was to not restrict your suggestions within the framework of my pre-existing preferences, still I realize a few directional markers might be helpful. So, just a short list of some of the (very few) CDs I have actually purchased and dug:
David Bowie, Ziggy Stardust
Dylan, Blood on the Tracks, Blonde on Blonde
Liz Phair, Exile in Guyville
Cowboy Junkies, Trinity Sessions
Talking Heads, Stop Making Sense
REM, Automatic for the People
Rolling Stones, Exile on Main Street
The Donnas, Spend the Night
Bonnie Raitt, Luck of the Draw
...to the extent that this provides any help whatsoever. *g*
heresluck: (music)

[personal profile] heresluck 2005-03-26 07:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Can I just make you a mix? Or, like, a small boxed set of mixes?

Let's see. I second [livejournal.com profile] renenet's recommendations, and also [livejournal.com profile] tzikeh's rec of Death Cab for Cutie's Transatlanticism.

A five-to-start-with:
Bettie Serveert, Private Suit
The Frames, For The Birds
Lauryn Hill, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (about which a lot of people say "I don't like hip-hop but I like this CD")
Peter Mulvey, Kitchen Radio
Sleater-Kinney, All Hands on the Bad One

And a few more things I've been listening to in the last fifteen years, with emphasis on relatively recent stuff:

Erykah Badu, Baduizm
The Blue Aeroplanes, Swagger
Coldplay, A Rush of Blood to the Head
The Connells, anything; Weird Food and Devastation is probably a good starting point
Kris Delmhorst, Songs for a Hurricane
Jeffrey Foucault, Stripping Cane
Fountains of Wayne, Welcome Interstate Managers
Emmylou Harris, Wrecking Ball
Hem, Rabbit Songs
Angelique Kidjo, Oremi
Laura Love, Shum Ticky
Madder Rose, Tragic Magic
Matt Pond PA, The Nature of Maps or Emblems
Mos Def, Black on Both Sides (see above re: Lauryn Hill)
Nada Surf, Let Go
New Order, Substance
The Replacements, anything; Don't Tell A Soul is a good place to start
Josh Ritter, Hello Starling
Josh Rouse, Home
Garrison Starr, Airstreams and Satellites

...and see also my posts on CDs I got in 2003.
heresluck: (music)

[personal profile] heresluck 2005-03-26 07:14 pm (UTC)(link)
..."mentioned IT," I meant. ::facepalm::
luminosity: (despair!)

[personal profile] luminosity 2005-03-26 07:45 pm (UTC)(link)
I knew what you meant. :) And yes! The majority of the songs on there are viddable. Remember how I said I wanted to vid Ecstasy to Farscape? Well, after having *seen* Farscape, I want to vid Drum Trip AND Ecstasy as one big, long, living room vid. I think it would be...interesting.
rhi: Egyptian Papyrus, a petition to Bast. (papyrus by lanning)

[personal profile] rhi 2005-03-26 08:12 pm (UTC)(link)
A couple I just haven't seen mentioned anywhere --

Afro Celt Sound System: Seed

Pete Townsend: White City

Tori Amos: Little Earthquakes

Red Shoe Diaries (soundtrack)

Forever Knight (soundtrack; the first one, not the second)

Music I love, and music I love to write to. Do I even need to mention Jim Byrnes' "That River" album, though?

And thanks for posting this -- I'm enjoying seeing what stuff other people recommend.
minim_calibre: (Default)

[personal profile] minim_calibre 2005-03-26 08:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Einsturzende Neubauten appears on their available artists list. Which kind of shocked me, but there you have it.

I totally second the Pogues rec. (Actually, all of Bas's suggestions are good.)

[identity profile] serialkarma.livejournal.com 2005-03-26 08:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Several of the CDs I would have recommended you actually already own, so...here are a few albums that I have and can listen to over and over, which is not something I often do:

The Clash - London Calling
Jeff Buckley - Grace (this has his version of Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah, which rarely fails to make me cry)
Rufus Wainwright - Poses
The Pixies - Doolittle
The Cars - The Cars
Green Day - Dookie
Ok Go - Ok Go (because they have a lot of fun with words)
David Gray - White Ladder (if you like Dylan)
Jason Mraz - Waiting for my Rocket
John Mellencamp - Trouble No More
Moby - Play
Portishead - Dummy
Nirvana - MTV Unplugged in New York (acoustic versions of their songs and a spectacular cover of Bowie's Man Who Sold the World)
Ryan Adams - Heartbreaker
Van Morrison - Moondance (I have no idea when this came out, now that I think about it, but it's one of my top five albums of all time)


...er, yeah. I think that's enough for now.

[identity profile] flambeau.livejournal.com 2005-03-26 09:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I feel a deep urge to make you mix CDs. (If you feel I'm trustworthy, you can always send me your addy...) Also, I will get back to this post when I'm home and have my music within reach, because my memory is lousy. :)
lapillus: (Default)

[personal profile] lapillus 2005-03-26 09:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Tuesday, after they gym, stop in and we'll go through my collection and I'll hand you things :-) It's simpler than typing in titles.
lapillus: (Default)

[personal profile] lapillus 2005-03-26 09:11 pm (UTC)(link)
It looks like I have a stack of about thirty, some of which are mentioned in other comments.

radio me

[identity profile] evenfers.livejournal.com 2005-03-26 09:31 pm (UTC)(link)
flipping thru friends-friends...planning to shamelessly listen in on these suggestions, so here's some from me.

Biggest specific way I listen to music now is not by album. Never really liked to do that, so I have a lot of soundtrack CD's.

Too much of one flavor at once, and suddenly you're sick of it. Now CD's get ripped to disk right away and either listened to in the shuffle or if I really love them, end up on a mix cd in the car cd collection.

Artist and favorite song(s) of the moment:

Ani Difranco: (To the Teeth album) Cloud Blood, Carry you around, Back Back Back, Wish I may
Beck: Diamond Dogs, Nobody's fault but my own
Belle and Sebastian: Sleep the clock around
Bjork: (Selmasounds album) 107 steps, I've seen it all, New world
Cake: I will survive, Building a religion, Rock and roll lifestyle
Chris Isaak: Blue hotel
Crowded House: Sister Madly, Always take the weather with you
Elisa: Luce(tramonti a nord est, Rock your soul, Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen cover, and he's gotta be included too, but he started by the 70's at least. Ditto Elvis Costello, David Bowie, Harry Nilsson, Cat Stephens, etc)
Eurythmics: I saved the world today
Jason Mraz: 0% interest, Sing glory
Joan Jett: Cherry bomb, Hit me with your best shot
Joan Osborne: Man in the long black coat (Dylan cover), Spooky, St.Theresa
Kate rusby: Let the cold wind blow
Magnetic Fields: All the umbrellas in london
Manu Chao: Bongo Bong, Je ne t'aime plus, Trapped by love, Que hora son mi corazon
moe.: Plane Crash, Captain America, New York City
Morphine: Top floor, bottom buzzer, pulled over the car
Prince: (ymmv, these tracks have stood the test of time for me, though some I used to like, haven't) Anna Stesia, Thieves in the temple, Starfish and coffee
Sara Bareilles: Fairytale (no major label album yet, but you can buy her album at http://www.sarabmusic.com, more than worth it IMO.)
Sinead O'Connor: Daddy I'm fine, The last day of our acquaintance, The emperor's new clothes, Sacrifice (Elton John cover)
Sublime: Scarlet begonias, Early in the morning
Talking Heads: Sugar on my tongue, Nothing but flowers
Willy Mason: What's so bad about being bad, Our town, Where the humans eat, Sold my soul

[identity profile] lifeinwords.livejournal.com 2005-03-26 09:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I second most of [livejournal.com profile] heres_luck's recs, and will add a few of my own:

Afghan Whigs, '1969.'
Cat Power, 'You Are Free.'
Counting Crows, 'August and Everything After.'
The Decemberists, 'Castaways & Cutouts.'
The Faint, 'Danse Macabre.'
Gillian Welch, 'Soul Journey.'
The Gossip, 'Arkansas Heat.'
Guided by Voices, 'Do the Collapse.
Ida, 'Will You Find Me.'
The Innocence Mission, 'Befriended.'
Interpol, 'Turn on the Bright Lights.'
Iron & Wine, 'The Creek Drank the Cradle.'
Jeff Buckley, 'Grace.'
Radiohead, 'The Bends' to start and anything after.
Sleater-Kinney, 'One Beat.'

Okay, now I will stop before I go through my entire iTunes collection. But I'm more than happy to send you some mixes as well, if you like. Let me know.

[identity profile] renenet.livejournal.com 2005-03-26 10:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Can I just make you a mix? Or, like, a small boxed set of mixes?

I think you must. For it is your calling and the fate of all humankind may hang in the balance.

(What??! She hasn't been listening to new music in thirty years!

[identity profile] umbo.livejournal.com 2005-03-26 10:27 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm going to name five bands rather than five cds, 'k?

The Tragically Hip
REM (looks like you're already at least a little familiar with them)
Great Big Sea
Paula Cole
Rickie Lee Jones

[identity profile] sinensiss.livejournal.com 2005-03-26 11:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I second many of the recs listed above, and because I don't think he's been mentioned, I'm going to add Elvis Costello. He has a large catalogue, but a good starting place is The Best of Elvis Costello and The Attractions. Smart, funny, lovelorn, angry--he covers the block, and writes great songs. Equally brilliant at lyrics and melody, which is unusual--kind of a Cole Porter of modern punk pop. I think he might be someone you'd enjoy.

(and also, Prince--has anyone mentioned Prince? if you want to shake your ass and dance, there's no one finer.)

eta: sorry! fixed the link.
copracat: dreamwidth vera (Default)

[personal profile] copracat 2005-03-27 12:14 am (UTC)(link)
Hee! No, I'm just old - I heard all this on the radio when it came out.

I use it for writing to

[identity profile] nagasvoice.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 12:24 am (UTC)(link)

I've always wanted to see a vid done to Chris Isaac's song 29 Palms--sorry, dunno which album it was on. I'm not sure what fandom it deserves, or how you'd use it to comment ironically on a particular series (maybe an ep that happens to be set in SoCal, I'm not sure), but it has such an intriguing tone. And yes, that's exactly what it's like out there in that part of the desert, or was 20 years ago.
But all his stuff that I've heard (his earlier mostly) sounds to me like it belongs in a vampire series soundtrack. Or Vampyre, if you prefer. Very reverb pedal, echoing, distant, so cool it has freezerburn.
If anybody's mentioned John Fogarty's latest stuff here, I missed seeing it. I'm rather fond of his whole album Blue Moon Swamp, which won a Grammy as Best Rock Album, but is more country/bluesy sounding to me--gutbucket rock, perhaps. Those songs all sound viddable to me, but I ain't an expert neither. If somebody hasn't used Walking in a Hurricane for a vid already then they ought to. (Told you I wasn't an expert.) I can't help but think Rattlesnake Highway could be turned into something fun and ironic and wierd, though it isn't a fun song.
Second the motion on Tom Waits, too. Behind the Red Barn, In the Colisseum are more one-shots, not daily listening, but impressive impact. Not easy to listen to. Come away with your head changed...
Since I like to listen to music to set the tone in my head when I'm writing, as in, "this is for movin' along briskly" (Forgarty's good for that) and "this is for thinking slowly and clearly" (I tend toward Mozart for that)--the Waits is about dealing straight-on with really tough stuff.
I also rather like most of the soundtrack to Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, parts of which were performed by the cello player Yoyo Ma, and I've been thinking about tracking down more of Tan Dun's compositions. It's a little on the sentimental side sometimes for me, since I tend to listen to that on mp3 player while at work, which isn't a good venue for sentimentality, but it does ground me back into my whole, real life and out of the clouds of paperwork, which is helpful.




[identity profile] farwing.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 12:56 am (UTC)(link)
Richard Thompson- Action Packed (It's sort of a mini 'best of' album. He's one of my favorite musicians of all time. So amazingly talented, plus he's a guitar god.)

Thea Gilmore- Rules for Jokers (She's a really talented British singer-song writer. I end up loving everything she does.)

The Chills - Submarine Bells (Nevermind that I don't, for some strange reason, actually own this album myself. It's really amazingly good.)

The Magnetic Fields - 69 Love Songs (Which is actually a three-disk set and not to be missed. Really brilliant.)

Garmarna - Vedergällningen (It's like Celtic music, only Swedish. Darker and quite lovely.)
rhi: A candle-lit labyrinth with a person just entering. (new moon from lanning)

Re: I use it for writing to

[personal profile] rhi 2005-03-27 01:47 am (UTC)(link)
Did Chris Isaak cover 29 Palms? The only version I ever heard was Robert Plant...? (Man, this has been fun to read.)

[identity profile] moosesal.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 02:13 am (UTC)(link)
I'm a big fan of greatest hits/essentials type collections for building a library, especially when they're two cd sets. You get a bit more for less money and you get all the best tunes. I had my car stolen just over a year ago and I lost tons of music. Since then I've been rebuilding my collection and in some cases getting compilations instead of replacing everything.

Here's my list of cds I would die without:
The Who - Tommy; Then & Now (1964 - 2004)
The Clash - The Essential Clash
Bob Dylan - The Essential Bob Dylan
Queen - Live at Wembley Stadium
Alison Krauss & Union Station - anything and everything
A.F.I. - Sing the Sorrow

Others that I just love:
Kim Richey - Rise
David Bowie - Best of Bowie (2-disc set)
Badly Drawn Boy - The Hour of the Bewilderbeast
Rancid - And Out Come the Wolves
Indigo Girls - 1200 Curfews

[identity profile] thepouncer.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 03:52 am (UTC)(link)
My marooned on a desert island must have CDs:

1) The Pixies, Doolittle
2) Fiona Apple, When the Pawn
3) The Libertines, The Libertines
4) The White Stripes, Elephant
5) Sarah McLachlan, Mirrorball

[identity profile] cherryice.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 04:07 am (UTC)(link)
The first and second times I tried to post this, it had all sorts of neat side notes and explanatory tangents. LJ, apparently, didn't like that fact. This version is a bit more stripped down.

This stuff tends to be a bit more recent, because I'm 19 and most anything before 97 or so is viewed through the filters of elementary school. I'm jumping genres quite a bit here, to try to give a variety of options. Most of these guys also have other strong albums, though these days I mainly listen to mix CDs I've made for myself.

Collaborations/Greatest Hits:
- Red Hot Chili Peppers: Greatest Hits
- Smashing Pumpkins: Greatest Hits (I personally prefer the Machina... album, but this is more comprehensive.)
- Sarah McLachlan: Mirrorball
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer -- The Album
- Big Shiny 90s

Old Standards, More Mainstream
- Our Lady Peace: Clumsy and/or Happiness is Not a Fish That You Can Catch
- Tragically Hip: Trouble at the Henhouse
- Liz Phair: White Chocolate Space Egg
- Tori Amos: Under the Pink
- Queens of the Stone Age: Songs for the Deaf
- Foo Fighters: One by One and/or There Is Nothing Left To Lose (You're probably getting all sorts of recommendations for Nirvana, but to be honest, I've always preferred the Foo Fighters. Dave Grohl, Nirvana's drummer, is the lead singer and guitarist for FF.)

A Little More Off-Beat
- The Whitlams: Eternal Nightcap and/or Torch the Moon
- Yeah Yeah Yeahs: Fever to Tell
- Interpol: Antics
- Brand New: Deja Entendu
- John Butler Trio: Three

Icebergradio.com is a great place to find new music. They have steaming channels for pretty much any taste. I'm particularly fond of the Canadian Indie Rock and Cool Britannia stations, but they have pretty much anything you could want, even time capsules.

[identity profile] sprat.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 05:19 am (UTC)(link)
CD's I think are sort of representative of big changes that went on in music since I started paying attention (I think some of these have been mentioned already...if so, I second them!)

U2--Joshua Tree
The Pixies--Doolittle
Beck--Odelay (Mutations is better, though, imo)
Sleater-Kinney--Dig Me Out
Radiohead--Kid A

Bonus recs (because c'mon--five? That's inhuman.):

The Weakerthans
The Tragically Hip
Wilco
PJ Harvey
Elliot Smith
Rufus Wainwright
Ron Sexsmith
Sarah Harmer
Ted Leo and the Pharmacists
Any project featuring Will Oldham (Palace Brothers, Palace Music...he changed band names a lot)
Broken Social Scene
And Gentleman Reg! Because there are two of his songs on Wilby Wonderful! Eee! :)

[identity profile] molly-o.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 07:17 am (UTC)(link)
Hey there,

You don't really know me, but this is the kind of thing I can't resist. There are so many great recs here already, these are just a few I haven't seen listed yet:

The Beta Band, Hot Shots II
Macy Gray, [either of her albums, I can't remember the titles]
The Smiths, The Singles
Introducing ... the Outkast
Madonna's Immaculate Collection

I'd also recommend soundtrack albums as a way to sample a variety of artists: Grosse Point Blank I and II are wonderful for Brit-influenced '80s music; High Fidelity also has a great soundtrack. I like the Trainspotting soundtracks as well.

I have music on constant shuffle at work, but that's stuff that's been loaded from CDs, so it's music I've already found. For a while there, I had kinda stagnated -- picking up recommendations here and there from friends, but mostly listening to stuff I already knew -- and then I started watching VH-1's top 20 videos (airing Saturday and Sunday mornings), and it's been a wonderful way to get a sense of What The Kids Are Listening To. There's plenty of stuff that's not to my taste, but I've also found some things I really enjoy.


[identity profile] katallison.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 12:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I've never even *heard* of Pulp, but you and Ms. Popfantastic both mention them, so they're going up high on the "check it out" list. I've actually heard a couple of Depeche Mode songs in vids, and have liked them, and shall explore further. The others are all unfamiliar to me, and I'll give them a listen. Thanks again!

[identity profile] katallison.livejournal.com 2005-03-27 12:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay! Thanks! You know, I don't think I've ever actually listened to Lyle Lovett, so I'll investigate, and will also check out the other names you mention (well, I know Paul Simon, of course, but haven't really heard his more recent stuff). Thanks again!

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