Fifty Second Week
And Farewell to 2009

This is Fifty Second Week, and what a year it’s been.

For those unfamiliar with the concept, here’s what Fifty Second Week is all about. I started this annual feature in 2005, as a way to clear my backlog at the end of a year. There’s just so much music that comes out in a given year – in 2009, for example, I bought close to 275 new albums, not counting reissues – that I simply can’t devote a full review to everything I hear, or even everything I like. That’s one of the reasons I started the blog this year. But even that hasn’t helped much.

So at the end of each year now, I make a list of the records I bought and didn’t review, and I run through them here, in the 52nd weekly column. But here’s the catch: I give myself 50 seconds to review each one. I have a timer set up to buzz me out when 50 seconds elapses, and even if I’m in the middle of a word, I stop writing. 50 seconds. That’s it. Theoretically, this column should take about an hour each year to complete. (Logistically, it takes a bit longer, but not much.)

Hopefully, the result is fun to read as well. I’ve received some nice feedback on Fifty Second Week through the years, enough to convince me that people enjoy reading it as much as I enjoy writing it. As usual, we have 52 albums this year to burn through, none of which were granted a full review on the main site. (I did do first listen reviews of a few of them on the blog.) After this, my top shelf will be bare, and ready for 2010 to fill it up again.

Ready? In alphabetical order, then. This is Fifty Second Week.

The Airborne Toxic Event

I saw this band live at Lollapalooza this year, and they knocked me out. Their album is pretty weak, though, and the lyrics especially betray its origins as Mikel Jollett’s failed novel. This is standard Nickelback-style rock that thinks its clever.

Arctic Monkeys, At The Apollo

Live album and DVD from this frenetic British band shows off just how good they are. Not much more to say about this – if you like the Arctic Monkeys, this is those songs played louder and faster, and if you don’t, well, this won’t change your mind. The DVD is nice, though.

Arctic Monkeys, Humbug

This might, though. The Monkeys’ third album was produced by Queen of the Stone Age Josh Homme, and is slower and slinkier than their other stuff. None of the songs jump out and announce themselves, but some of them are among the best ones Alex Turner has written. They’re still a band to watch.

Assjack

Hell. Yes. This is Hank Williams III’s thrash metal band, and it just stomps. There’s no hint of the country-rock Hank is known for – he plays just about all the instruments on this album, and the style is hard, relentless, killer metal. Good shit, for what it is.

Dan Auerbach, Keep It Hid

Solo album from the guitar-vocal half of the Black Keys. This sticks largely to the blues-rock that band is known for, but some tracks are wildly diverse, showcasing the direction Auerbach may be leading the band in. This is nice, though.

The Bad Plus, For All I Care

On this album, the venerable jazz trio picks up a vocalist, Wendy Lewis, which turns out to be a tragic mistake. The BP’s instrumental covers of pop songs like “Tom Sawyer” are awesome, but here, Lewis sings “Comfortably Numb” and others, turning them into loungy jokes.

Bleu, A Watched Pot

Extremely disappointing third album from this Boston wunderkind. Bleu normally writes hooky, quirky pop songs, but here, he streamlines himself, sticking to slow, radio-ready ballads, all glossed up with strings. There’s just nothing here that shows what a good writer he is, though the voice is in fine form.

Brakes, Touchdown

Yeah, I’m just going to take a little nap here while you guys bang out your basic, boring three-chord rock. You don’t mind, right? Just wake me up when you’re done. Thanks.

Built to Spill, There Is No Enemy

You know, this is a decent enough little Built to Spill record, and probably deserved a full review. Although, I can’t think of anything remarkable to say about it. Doug Martsch once again writes some full-blooded indie rock songs, and performs them with tremendous skill on guitar. It’s good.

Camera Obscura, My Maudlin Career

Scottish twee-pop in that Belle and Sebastian vein, this time practically drowned in strings and horns. None of these songs stick in my head, although Tracyanne Campbell’s voice is quite nice. This is essentially pretty wallpaper, and I haven’t thought about it much since buying it.

Julian Casablancas, Phrazes for the Young

The singer for the Strokes goes solo, and picks up a bunch of synthesizers on the way to the studio. This sounds pretty much exactly as you’d expect, and no better. Some of these songs made me want to grind glass into my ears, but some had me head-bobbing along.

Cheap Trick, The Latest

Surprise! This is the long-running Illinois power-pop band’s best record in probably 20 years. That doesn’t mean it’s top-notch Cheap Trick, but it is pretty damn good, especially rave-up rockers like “Sick Man of Europe.” I hope they can keep this up.

Cheap Trick, Sgt. Pepper Live

For those who bought the Beatles box set and just can’t get enough of these songs, here are very, very faithful run-throughs of every song on the Fab Four’s best album. Plus you get a medley of other Beatles songs at the end. It’s nice, but not essential, and more like a cherry on Cheap Trick’s sweet year.

Collective Soul

Also known as Rabbit, because of the white chocolate rabbit on the cover. Why? Who knows. I could swear I listened to this, more than once. But I can’t remember a single song right now, which kind of illustrates my point: Collective Soul makes faceless, forgettable rock. And yet I keep buying.

Shawn Colvin, Live

It takes Shawn Colvin forever to make a new album. It’s been three years, so to fill the gap, we get this lovely acoustic live album. Just the woman and her guitar, singing her sweet and sad songs. There’s absolutely nothing wrong with this, although some might consider it background music. I quite like it, but I wish she’d hurry up with that new studio LP.

The Drawing Room

This wonderful side project from one of the members of Thousand Foot Krutch flew under the radar, but it shouldn’t have. Mostly acoustic guitars and electronics, the songs on this record sparkle, and there’s even a very good, respectful cover of Sting’s “The Hounds of Winter.” Worth tracking down.

Jeremy Enigk, OK Bear

Enigk’s return to heavy, widescreen rock also went largely unnoticed this year, even by me, but this is his finest solo album. The amps are turned up, but so are the melodies, and Enigk’s unique, remarkable voice is always amazing.

Liam Finn and Eliza-Jane, Champagne in Seashells

Fine second effort (a five-song EP) from the son of Neil Finn, but it suffers from the same malady as his debut album, I’ll Be Lightning: the songs drag, stick to simple melodies, and never really take off. I hope he pulls out his dad’s records and gives them a thorough listen before his next effort.

Girls, Album

This is my “I don’t get it” album for 2009. Girls drew acclaim from virtually all corners this year, and all for an album I find amateur and boring in the extreme. I was expecting some good melodic pop from the reviews, but what I got is a guy who is just learning how to write songs. Give him three albums, maybe, but this is blah.

Girlyman, Everything’s Easy

The two girls and one man in Girlyman are slowly expanding their sonic palette – this is their most fully-produced effort. But the focus is still on the three intertwining voices, and the simple folk songs they write together. Worth it for the studio version of the great “Somewhere Different Now.”

Great White, Rising

Yes, this ‘80s blues-metal band is still going. No, they haven’t changed much at all. This is more power-blues, sung by Jack Russell, one of Robert Plant’s biggest acolytes. It’s nice, if you like Great White. I have a soft spot for them, and probably always will.

Guilt Machine, On This Perfect Day

Swedish musician Arjen Lucassen is the man behind Ayreon, the ridiculous space-opera project that seemingly came to an end last year. His new project is very different – slow, creeping metal soundscapes that build and build. If you like this style, this is really good.

Heaven and Hell, The Devil You Know

Oh wow. This is much better than I expected from the reunion of the Dio-era Black Sabbath. This is all slow, creepy, scary metal. It never quickens its pace, but the crawling menace just oozes out of every pore. This is terrific.

The Hold Steady, A Positive Rage

This live document emphasizes the rawk side of this band, as opposed to the epic Springsteen side, which is to its detriment, I think. The Hold Steady are very good when they are trying to be the new E Street Band. When they are trying to make amped-up noise, they are less successful. There’s a pretty fun DVD with it, though.

Bruce Hornsby and the Noisemakers, Levitate

Remember when people thought Hornsby would be making soft-rock hits for the rest of his life? He turned out to be a much more interesting musician than anyone could have guessed, and Levitate is another mix of jazz, pop and weird-ass show tunes that proves it.

Chris Isaak, Mr. Lucky

May Chris Isaak never change. This is another slab of ‘50s pop and surf-rock from a guy who should be more of a household name than he is. Of course, the down side of never changing is that this sounds exactly like his last album, and the one before that, and the one before that. Whether that’s a bad thing is up to you.

Jars of Clay, The Long Fall Back to Earth

I should have reviewed this one. This is Jars’ best and most consistent album… well, ever, I think. It’s more keyboard-driven, has some new wave influences, but is buoyed by some of the band’s best songs ever. And unlike every other album they’ve made, it doesn’t fall apart by the end. The last songs are the best.

Living Colour, The Chair in the Doorway

Damn! The always-inconsistent Living Colour finally pull it off. This is a really good rock-and-soul album, careening from one style to another, but held together tightly by the wailing guitar of Vernon Reid and the extraordinary voice of Corey Glover.

Manchester Orchestra, Mean Everything to Nothing

Andy Hull clearly Means Every Word of this record. It is big and earnest and widescreen and all those adjectives, but it’s also unfortunately a little boring. The guitars and vocals pump with big wide hearts, but the songs are lacking, and the sentiments a little too upfront.

mewithoutYou, It’s All Crazy! It’s All False! It’s all a dream! It’s alright

Man, I wanted to like this. Emo band mewithoutYou branch out into world-pop, but they do so while becoming repetitive, and the vocals just become screechy and irritating as the songs wind on and on behind them. Next time, guys. I’ll still be here listening.

Modest Mouse, No One’s First and You’re Next

An EP collecting b-sides and other things from the last few years. This is pretty good, although nothing has the zip and panache of the last couple of studio albums. I love the title of “History Sticks to Your Feet,” but the song is just average. This is a stopgap, though, so what do you want?

Nirvana, Live at Reading

You know what? Nirvana sucked. They sucked in the studio, and they really sucked live, which this messy, scrappy, loud document proves. It’s chock full of wrong notes and missed beats and sloppy playing and the Voice of a Generation sounding like the naked emperor.

Om, God is Good

This bass-and-drums duo writes long, long dirges, and plays them as if they have buzzing guitars in the mix. It’s an interesting stoner-metal minimalism sound, and they add several other instruments here to fill it out. It’s kind of awesome, in its way.

Our Lady Peace, Burn Burn

I really used to like this band. But on their seventh album, they surgically remove everything I liked, leaving nothing but bland, faceless, radio-ready rock. Only “Monkey Brains” rises above the static. This is pants.

Pain of Salvation, The Second Death of Pain of Salvation

I’m not sure what the title means either, but the album is two discs of live PoS goodness. This Swedish band plays in a dozen different styles, from prog-rock to disco, and they are excellent live. I can even forgive another version of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah,” especially one this good.

Grant-Lee Phillips, Little Moon

This is a sweet little album from a man with a voice that should be everywhere. For the second time in a row, he’s turned in a full-sounding pop record, with good solid songs and some nice lyrics. If only that were enough anymore.

Q-Tip, Kamaal the Abstract

Wow, this is finally out. I first heard about the shelved Kamaal probably 10 years ago, and it was rumored to be a jazz-rap-fusion weird-o-rama. And guess what, it is. It steps into Miles Davis territory here and there, but always springs back to the jazz-fueled rap Tip is known for. Weird as its reputation…

Rain Machine

Kyp Malone from TV on the Radio branches out on his own. The result isn’t at all what you’d expect – it’s organic and acoustic, and very, very long. But it’s heartfelt, something I can’t say about much of TV on the Radio’s stuff. The first Malone album I’ve liked?

Hope Sandoval and the Warm Inventions, Through the Devil Softly

Remember Mazzy Star? They were wonderful. Singer Hope Sandoval has carried that sound on to her solo work with the Warm Inventions, and quite why it takes her so long to make these albums, I don’t know. The sound hasn’t significantly changed, and her voice still sends chills down the spine, in a good way.

Bryan Scary and the Shredding Tears, Mad Valentines

An EP from Mr. Scary, one that showcases his band’s phenomenal talent. Just listen to “Andromeda’s Eyes.” Yes, it really is that fast. This is Queen-inspired, Supertramp-on-Jolt-Cola, piano-pounding pop goodness.

Sepultura, A-Lex

One of the world’s best metal bands had some stiff competition this year, but came back strong with this tight, awesome record. It’s a concept album based on A Clockwork Orange, and that alone should make it suck, but it doesn’t, at all. The band is tight and fast and loud and terrific as always.

Superdrag, Industry Giants

The surprise reunion of the year sees newly-Christian John Davis putting the band back together after two faith-filled solo discs. Too bad he forgot to write any great songs. There are hardly any good ones, either, and Davis just sounds tired and worn out here. Too bad.

Tegan and Sara, Sainthood

If there’s anything on this list I wish had been given a full review, it’s this. Sainthood is one-end-to-the-other ass-kicking rock, and the melodies sparkle and shine. I love this album, particularly “Hell,” one of the year’s best little rock tunes. This deserved better from me.

They Might Be Giants, Here Comes Science

TMBG’s fourth children’s album is as wonderful as the other three. It starts with a sidelong glance at creationism, then moves on to photosynthesis, shooting stars, the scientific method, and a recasting of classic “Why Does the Sun Shine” with proper science. The tunes are awesome as always.

Volcano Choir, Unmap

A side project from Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon, this odd little record spends much of its time setting mood and atmosphere, with acoustic guitars folded, spindled and mutilated electronically. There are a couple of songs here, but this is mainly instrumental soundscape music. Pretty good, though.

Rufus Wainwright, Milwaukee at Last!!!

Three exclamation points, and it earns every one. This is a live album and DVD from Wainwright, captured on his lavish Release the Stars tour. The so-so material from that album comes alive on stage, and the whole thing is drenched in wondrous excess. Now, where’s the new record, Rufus?

We Shot the Moon, A Silver Lining

Second album from these piano-playing pop-punkers sounds just like the first, although the songs are tighter here. There’s nothing here that’s going to set the world on fire, but these are nice little songs, played well. I’m not sure We Shot the Moon will ever give us anything else.

We Were Promised Jetpacks, These Four Walls

Great band name, mediocre album. These Scottish rockers write large songs with little melodies, and play them with lots of energy. But there’s little here that turned my head, and even less I remember, several months on.

White Lies, To Lose My Life

Man, that sounds emo. In reality, this band is new-wave-influenced rock, and fairly boring at that. They’re trying to be Joy Division, like every other band of this style, and falling far short. Like every other band of this style, as if that needed to be said.

White Rabbits, It’s Frightening

Britt Daniel of Spoon produced this, and you can tell. White Rabbits write really neat little pop songs, and here they perform them minimally, giving just enough to sketch the outline of each song. Opener “Percussion Gun” is amazing, though.

Robbie Williams, Reality Killed the Video Star

Trevor Horn produced this one, hence the title, but instead of the quirk-filled pop this British star often gives us, Reality is a maudlin and serious collection of ballads and sun-splashed epics. It’s okay, but nothing special, and sometimes really chessy.

Yim Yames, Tribute To

Yim Yames is Jim James of My Morning Jacket, and his little EP is the perfect grace note to end this column on. James plays sweet versions of six George Harrison songs, performing them with all the respect and reverence they deserve. This is beautiful, beautiful stuff.

And that’s it, I’m afraid. I have several more from 2009 that I shamefully haven’t listened to yet, but that (mostly) clears the decks of albums I’ve heard. And that also brings Year Nine to a close. As always, it’s a pleasure and a privilege to write this column for all of you, and I appreciate, deeply, all of the friends I’ve made through it, and all of the support I’ve been given from people I know, and people I don’t. You’re all reasons to keep going, every one of you.

And keep going I will. I’m taking next week off for vacation, but when I come back on January 11, it will be to kick off Year Ten. The 10th anniversary of my silly music column. Who’d have thunk it?

Thank you, again and again, from the bottom of my heart. This is me, signing off for another year.

See you in line Tuesday morning.

The Wanting Comes in Waves
The 2009 Top 10 List

Well, here we are.

2009 was a random and chaotic year for me, one that made me feel older and less accomplished than ever. My job nearly went down in flames, as the mighty Sun-Times almost collapsed under the weight of its own debt. I watched my father get re-married. I saw several of my close friends tie the knot themselves, while several others had kids. I wrote some amazing stories, made as many friends as I lost, and came out the other side hopefully a little wiser.

But honestly, I’m pretty glad this year is over. I spent a lot of 2009 just hanging on for the ride, and I hope to spend 2010 forging my own direction a little more. Even if there’s no outward evidence that I am different, I feel different than I did 12 months ago. It’s time to shake things up.

The music of 2009 was equally random and chaotic. I said this last week, in my honorable mentions column, but the music I’ve chosen for my top 10 list this year is almost relentlessly serious-minded. I did a lot of soul-searching and reconsidering in 2009, and I think the artists who did the same ended up resonating with me more than the goofy-fun pop I generally tend to like. There is no Click Five-style pop record on this year’s list. (Not even Tinted Windows, which came closest.)

Instead, there is an awful lot of death, and confusion, and loss of faith, and painful redefinition. One of my top albums this year is entirely about watching someone die, and dealing with guilt and shame. One of them is entirely about breaking up with the god you once held dear, and feeling the tectonic plates beneath your feet shift. Yet another is entirely about the ways in which love tears everyone apart, but in the end, as the waves come in and fill your lungs, it’s all worth it. The artists on this year’s list don’t just address topics like these, they wrestle with them, defining their own points of view before our ears.

Less dramatically, I think the album-as-complete-statement went through a rebirth this year. Consider this: a major multimillion-selling band, a highly respected indie outfit, and a brand-new group of songsmiths making their debut all decided this year to craft full-blown rock operas, all with tremendous results. (The multimillion-selling band even divided theirs into three acts.) The idea of the album as a complete thought, an unbroken thematic whole, extended to all corners this year. Hell, Beyonce even made a concept record of sorts.

This, of course, fills me with joy and hope. I’ve been an albums guy for as long as I’ve been listening to music, and the creeping death march of iTunes and the singles-driven download-only market has found me lamenting the loss of the album as an art form. But 2009 showed me that it’s still alive and well, and I felt it was important to celebrate that, to latch onto those conceptual album-length pieces and laud them whenever possible. It helps, of course, that many of them are excellent, and several are amazing. In addition to the three rock operas in my top five, this year’s list contains at least two other concept records, and depending on your definition, perhaps more.

And I love that records like these are coming out in the heart of the download storm.

The rules for my top 10 list are simple, yet constantly under scrutiny. I’m thinking about changing a couple for 2010, but for now, they remain straightforward: only new original full-length studio albums are considered, and only those released on CD this year. That means no greatest-hits albums, no live records, no covers albums, and no records that revisit old material, no matter how radical the reinterpretations. (Sorry, Marillion.) That also means no albums that were released for download only. I need to be able to hold it in my hand to consider it. (This is a rule I am thinking about changing, but happily, I don’t have to this year. Perhaps next year.)

Within that framework, though, I’ve found 10 records that move me, thrill me, and make me think. To my mind, this is one of the strongest lineups in years, although I know I’ll be out on a limb with some of them. But this year’s list is a celebration of good old-fashioned songwriting, and of the album as complete statement, and I couldn’t be happier to present it to you.

Here it is, the 2009 top 10 list.

#10. Harper Simon.

Paul Simon’s son waited until he was 37 to release his debut, and it sounds lived-in, and thoroughly considered. I was initially hesitant to sign on for Harper’s album, since these progeny projects never seem to hold up. But this one is remarkable. Harper Simon gets help from a lot of friends in high places (friends he probably would not have made had his last name not been Simon), including a crack Nashville band for the more country-fied numbers. And yes, his dad steps in to co-write a few tracks. But the core of this album is the songs, and they are wonderful. “Wishes and Stars,” “The Audit,” “The Shine,” “Shooting Star,” “Ha Ha” – these are all fully-formed things of beauty, and among the year’s best. This isn’t a case of famous band members propping up an offspring vanity project. This is the sound of a terrific songwriter and artist finding his voice.

#9. David Bazan, Curse Your Branches.

In which the former Pedro the Lion singer finally breaks up with God. Those of us following his career to this point saw Curse Your Branches coming. What we didn’t expect is that it would hurt so much, or would be so tremendous an album. Bazan spends the lion’s share (sorry) of Branches expressing the doubts that brought him to this crossroad, often calling out God to his face for hypocrisy. He spends the rest wallowing in his own self-abuse – imagining his daughter following in his alcoholic footsteps, detailing painful fights with his wife. Only on “Bearing Witness” does he embrace the life he lives. That the music here is so jaunty and memorable is a testament to Bazan’s skill. Curse Your Branches is a difficult, divisive, powerful piece of work from a man unafraid to lay himself and his struggles bare. It is his finest album, because it hurts so very much.

#8. Mutemath, Armistice.

It took me a while to warm up to Mutemath’s second album. For one thing, I am still rapturously enamored with their first, and this new one is very different. It’s a more streamlined, much glossier affair, with strings and horns and half a dozen radio-ready singles. And it contains “Burden,” a poorly-arranged epic I still haven’t connected with. But seeing the band play these new tunes live drove it home for me: the rest of the songs on this album are terrific. I can’t count the number of times I’ve had “Backfire,” or “Electrify,” or “Goodbye,” or even “Odds” stuck in my head this year, and for an album that went through such a difficult birth (see: every lyric about confusion and doubt), Armistice just zips right by in a blur. It’s a sleeker Mutemath, but no less a remarkable one.

#7. David Mead, Almost and Always.

2009’s prettiest album comes from this criminally overlooked songwriter – I only know who he is thanks to Dr. Tony Shore. In a way, Mead’s own artistic restlessness has worked against him. He’s never sounded the same from one album to the next, and this one’s as radical a departure as any. It’s a drumless record of lovely ballads and ageless-sounding pop, full of songs that would have inspired the young Paul McCartney, back when he was covering “Till There Was You.” Mead is at the absolute height of his powers here, penning beautiful gems like “Blackberry Winters” and “Sleeping In Saturday,” but it’s with “Last Train Home” that he taps into that deep well of song, and writes something timeless. This is one to put on while watching the snow fall – it’s the sound of a gifted songwriter marshalling all his forces to make something as beautiful as he can.

#6. Imogen Heap, Ellipse.

Before I talk about how great the songs are on Imogen Heap’s third album, let me just wax ecstatic about the production. Heap is responsible for nearly every note and every knob-twiddle here, and she’s crafted the year’s most sonically detailed pop record. I hear something new every time I listen, and given that I’ve been listening to this regularly since it was released in August, that’s saying something. But now, the songs – they are utterly marvelous. Heap can write charming pop tunes like “First Train Home,” widescreen epics like “Wait It Out,” and a cappella wonderamas like “Earth” with equal aplomb, and she sequences them next to each other as if everyone had her range. Her songs skip about, from tales of loneliness to environmental warnings to fun romps about body issues, but Ellipse is consistently excellent from first note to last.

#5. The Antlers, Hospice.

The first of our rock operas, although Hospice is more of a sonic novel than anything else. The Antlers came out of nowhere this year, and their first time out of the gate, they moved me so much I cried. Hospice is a unified work about losing someone close, and about the feelings of guilt and helplessness that rise up to crush the living. It builds slowly – the opening tracks are at times almost inaudible – and tells its story with gentle sounds and soaring melodies. But by the time you get to “Wake,” the emotional centerpiece, the album has taken on a cumulative force. I am amazed that this is leader Peter Silberman’s first album, so completely does he succeed in weaving his tale. It feels bigger than him, somehow, and bigger than the two main characters and their small story. Hospice is a grand ode to loss and shame, and while it will never be named the feel-good record of the year, it is certainly one of the best.

#4. Bat for Lashes, Two Suns.

Okay, it’s not really a concept album. But Natasha Khan’s full-length exploration of the two sides of her personality is riveting, dramatic, and stunning stuff. The conceit is that Khan plays her dark-haired self and light-haired Pearl throughout the album, switching up points of view. It’s an interesting idea, but it’s the music itself that will keep you coming back to Two Suns. Khan has fully immersed herself in her fascination with Kate Bush here, and the songs live and die by their swooping, immense melodies. Every single song works, and the whole thing sounds wonderfully otherworldly. Kate Bush isn’t making albums like this any more. Thankfully, Natasha Khan is.

#3. Green Day, 21st Century Breakdown.

Here’s something to try: listen to Dookie and 21st Century Breakdown back to back. I’m astounded that the same band who used to write songs about being too bored to masturbate have managed this extraordinary, wide-ranging concept album. It’s their second concept piece, after American Idiot, but 21st Century is everything its predecessor should have been, and wasn’t. The album is the story of two kids in love, and how they stay together while the world burns around them. It’s sharp, angry, political and incisive, but it keeps its romantic focus to the last, and that’s what makes the difference. That, and the wildly diverse and well-crafted music the band has written, leaping from rockabilly to klezmer to epic balladry to the band’s trademark three-chord stompers. This is Green Day’s attempt to write a punk rock opera for the ages, and from my vantage point, they’ve done it.

#2. Quiet Company, Everyone You Love Will Be Happy Soon.

Even with all of the tremendous songwriters on this list, an unknown from Texas named Taylor Muse has outdone virtually all of them. I don’t say this lightly: this is the best set of pop songs I heard this year. On his second Quiet Company album, Muse writes about faith, love, hope, his marriage, his family, and the certainty that the sun will always rise. It’s a massive, triumphant record, one that wrestles with God and life throughout, but comes out smiling, with hard-earned optimism. It’s also a record of indelible, incredible melodies, and songs that live and breathe and grow before your ears. Muse doesn’t put a foot wrong once, not once in 15 songs, and his joy and confidence are infectious. It’s a crime that only a handful of people have heard this record, but you can help put that right by going to their site and checking it out. You won’t be disappointed.

So what could top an album of the year’s best songs? How about our third and final rock opera, a brash and bold (and somewhat crazy) experiment unlike anything else out there right now? How about a single, hour-long, grand and eloquent piece of music that stands head and shoulders above what anyone else even tried this year?

#1. The Decemberists, The Hazards of Love.

I don’t know what kind of band the Decemberists are. Describing them seems futile. Leader Colin Meloy is obsessed with centuries-old folk songs, and he’s fashioned his band as a traveling minstrel show, a band of roving bards who spin tales and songs partially to keep the traditions alive. But they are also a powerhouse rock band, able to play with the force of any of their contemporaries. They’re unique – the closest analogue might be Jethro Tull, but they are oceans apart in sound and personality.

And yet, Meloy has been embracing his inner prog-rocker for some time now, an evolution that reaches its full flower on The Hazards of Love. It’s the story of a woman named Margaret who falls in love with a shape-changing faun named William. When she becomes pregnant, she ventures into the woods to find him, angering his mother the Queen, who then hires a man who killed his own children to kidnap Margaret. And then there is the magic river, and the ghostly return of the dead kids, all leading up to the tragic and beautiful ending.

Hazards is as much a sonic novel as Hospice, but it’s more like an epic folk tale, passed down from generation to generation. It is a single unified piece – the CD is divided into 17 tracks, but there are no breaks, and Hazards is meant to be heard all at once. And the music! Meloy has carefully crafted this thing, establishing themes to pay them off later, reprising moments (even just in the backing vocals) for thematic resonance, and tying everything up in the end with amazing grace.

If all of that makes it sound like work, then you should know this: Hazards rocks, thunderously, like no Decemberists album before it. Like most stories of this type, it starts softly and peacefully, but it picks up momentum, and by the end, the sheer force of the narrative carries you along like a river. The final few tracks are creepy, tragic and heartbreaking, as William and Margaret resign themselves to their fates, and by the time you get there, you’ll be captivated. This is musical storytelling at its finest.

Meloy plays several parts here, including William and the Rake, but his wisest move was hiring Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond and Becky Stark of Lavender Diamond to play the Queen and Margaret, respectively. I can’t overstate what they bring to this album, Stark with her high and lovely voice and Worden with her powerful, soulful pipes. It plays like an ensemble piece, rather than a narrated story, and that makes all the difference.

So why this very strange record about shapeshifters and wicked queens and undead children? Why put this piece of music on the top of the heap? A couple of reasons. First, it’s brilliant – nothing about it should work as well as it does. Second, it takes a mighty stand for the album as unified, conceptual statement. You can’t excerpt The Hazards of Love and get the full effect, and most of these songs are parts of a whole, unable to stand on their own. The band hammered home their intentions by performing the entire piece in sequence live this year, which was a wonder to behold.

But mostly, this record moves me and fills me with joy like no other this year. Every time through, I’m captivated anew with the wonder of this music. You can’t explain this album, and you couldn’t pitch it to a record company. You just have to hear it. And each time I hear it, I end up loving it more. I am caught up in the rushing waves of the story, a story that in the end is about the ways love tears us all apart. The Hazards of Love could have been written hundreds of years ago – it sounds out of time, its theme as old as the stars. That it also sounds fresh and new and unlike anything I’ve ever heard sets it atop this list. I can’t imagine naming anything else the best album of 2009.

And there you have it. Next week is Fifty Second Week, and then I’m taking seven days off, to put my feet up and relax. And then? Year Ten. Seriously. I feel like I’m just getting warmed up. Thanks for reading. Leave a comment on my blog at tm3am.blogspot.com. Follow my infrequent twitterings at www.twitter.com/tm3am.

See you in line Tuesday morning.

The Honor is All Theirs
2009's Honorable Mentions, and Final Two Releases

I have never quite understood the Flaming Lips.

I’ve been a fan as long as I’ve been aware of them. I’ve liked some albums (The Soft Bulletin, Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots) more than others (At War With the Mystics, the new Embryonic). I’ve liked, at least a little bit, everything I’ve heard from them, and I’ve long admired Wayne Coyne for sticking to his individual, nutball vision for his band. There is no other act like them.

But I’ve never really felt like I was quite on the train. Other people would talk about Lips music as a transformative experience, and I just wouldn’t get there. I had no idea how this strange group of freakish lads from Oklahoma had affected so many people so deeply. And now I realize that at least part of my bewilderment came from never having seen them live.

Friday night was my first Flaming Lips show. How can I describe the experience? I’ll start by saying it had very little to do with the actual music being played on stage. The band was in fine form, their soaring anthems clashing somewhat against the darker psychedelic tones of the new material, but the tight, swirling musicianship holding it all together. Absent everything but the music, it would have still been a good show.

But in a way, the music was just the backdrop. I’ve been reliably informed that the Lips do this rainbow-colored carnival act at every show, and I’d seen video footage of it, but nothing prepared me for the thrill of being part of it. The show kicked off with “Race for the Prize,” and Coyne began the evening inside a giant inflatable clear plastic ball. He edged it off the stage and into the waiting arms of the audience, and then tried to stay upright while being passed around, hand to hand. All the while, two massive cannons on either side of the stage fired confetti over everyone, and the band loosed roughly 40 enormous balloons into the crowd, urging us to keep them aloft.

There were people in costume – the giant catfish, whom Coyne referred to as “Mr. Giant Catfish,” was a highlight. There were streamers, and tiny sparkling fireworks. Before “Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots Pt. 1,” stagehands carried a couch on stage, and Coyne invited several audience members to come on up, sit and sing with him. There was a massive LED screen showing flurries of images, most appearing and disappearing so quickly you couldn’t register them. It was sensory overload.

And in the end, there was a tremendous, joyous sense of community and love. I can’t explain it any better than that. There was a palpable sense of childlike, innocent wonder to the whole thing, like Coyne had somehow found a way to remain eternally ageless, and it involved confetti cannons and people dressed as caterpillars. The show ended with “Do You Realize,” a song that seems to tap into a deep well of inborn spiritual optimism – some audience members were nearly crying as they sang along. And the final encore was “White Christmas,” of all things, complete with sparkly fake snow, and it worked. We all left walking 10 feet off the ground.

Needless to say, seeing the Flaming Lips live has colored how I listen to them now, and I’m hearing these songs afresh. I still don’t think I fully understand this band, but I’m one step closer, and my heart is still singing.

* * * * *

Stick a fork in 2009, it’s all done.

The final few new releases have all trickled out, and I don’t expect anything major until mid-January. But those final few records have sent the year out with a bang. It’s always a pleasant surprise when decent music hits in December, and 2009 has certainly been a year of surprises.

Start with Blakroc, a project I honestly didn’t expect to like very much. I figured I’d just buy it because it’s the Black Keys – I have long been a fan of this Ohio blues-rock duo, and have followed them through their fascinating evolution. But Blakroc is the Keys’ hip-hop project, a record made with a veritable who’s-who of a music I generally don’t like very much. I can count the number of rap records I bought this year on one hand. (Kid Cudi, Eminem, Q-Tip and this.)

I tell you this so that you can put it in context when I say I really like the Blakroc album. Perhaps the most fascinating part of it is that Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney didn’t just write a Black Keys album and get some rappers to verbalize over it. They wrote a hip-hop album, which they then performed on real instruments. It’s like the Roots, in a way, with a few more wailing guitar parts. The grooves are deep and bluesy, but the sound is pure hip-hop, in a good way.

There’s an all-star cast on this thing, and the variety does it immeasurable good. Mos Def is dynamite on “On the Vista,” the RZA makes several appearances, and Q-Tip takes a verse on “Hope You’re Happy.” The Keys even uphold what is now apparently a rap tradition, including a verse from a dead guy: Ol’ Dirty Bastard duets with Ludacris from beyond the grave on opening sex romp “Coochie.” But the real star of this thing is Nicole Wray, whose soulful tones show up on three tracks. She takes golden gem “Why Can’t I Forget Him” solo, and it’s one of the record’s best tracks.

Behind all of that, Auerbach and Carney lay down one slinky groove after another. This sounds like it was a blast to record, and it’s a lot of fun to listen to. Credit to the Black Keys for doing the near-impossible: making a rap record I enjoy from start to finish.

The other new release is an EP from Animal Collective, called Fall Be Kind. It’s not quite the follow-up to this year’s extraordinary Merriweather Post Pavilion, since it spans only five songs and runs a scant 27 minutes. But it will do for now. Sometime in the last two years, Animal Collective stopped trying to make ugly noise and started aiming for ethereal, whacked-out gracefulness. And they’ve hit the bullseye again on this EP.

I won’t be able to adequately describe the odd going-over-the-cliff feeling of the first track, “Graze,” particularly the second half. It starts off as an ambient wash of sound and harmony, slowly building up, and then the beat starts, and you’re thinking the pulsing dancehall section of the song is about to start. And then, the pan flute sample starts. Yes, it’s Zamfir, master of the pan flute, and his appearance turns the song into a hoedown. It’s crazy, and it thoroughly breaks the mood, but it works wonderfully.

The best track is next, however. Grateful Dead fans will recognize the Phil Lesh sample from “Unbroken Chain” that provides the backbone of “What Would I Want? Sky,” a six-minute excursion through a strange and wondrous galaxy. The EP never leaps that high again, but the rest of it is of a piece with Merriweather, if not a bit more sedate, and the seven-minute “I Think I Can” picks up the pace somewhat to bring it home.

For years, the music of Animal Collective eluded me, and part of the problem was Avey Tare and Panda Bear’s tendency to slather everything with grating, formless noise. I couldn’t hear the melody, the otherworldly beauty submerged beneath the electro-slop. They’re still just as weird on Merriweather and Fall Be Kind, but they’ve allowed their music to breathe, to simply be, and it’s been a nearly miraculous change. This EP is less of a holding pattern and more of a further exploration of a sound that suits this band incredibly well.

* * * * *

Next week, I will unveil the 2009 top 10 list.

The 10 records I selected shouldn’t be any big surprise to those of you who have been following along. But I’ll tell you one thing that surprised me: the deadly serious nature of most of the list. Of the 129 songs represented, only a handful could be called genuinely fun. Three of the top five albums are sonic novels, concept albums that deal with love and death and the state of the world, with no room for lighter considerations. Most of the others follow suit, tackling weighty topics with weightier music.

It wasn’t intentional, of course. These are just the 10 albums that moved me most. But my stack of honorable mentions this year is a lot more fun than the actual top 10 list, and if you turn to music solely for entertainment and escape, well, this is where your favorites will be found. I was taken aback, too, and really considered moving one of my Number 11s up, but in the end, the 10 albums I picked are, I feel, the best ones I heard this year. And this from the guy who put Phantom Planet and the Click Five in previous lists.

So here are the honorable mentions for 2009. Before we get to those, a special note for the most worthy ineligible record of the year: Marillion’s Less is More. It was disqualified for being a collection of older material, but this album can stand proud alongside some of this long-running band’s best work. It’s easy to make a lousy, half-assed acoustic album, but Marillion decided instead to reinvent these songs, taking on some of their trickiest material and tackling it from new angles. It’s a mesmerizing set, and I wish I could put it among the 10 best of the year, where it belongs. Go to marillion.com and check it out.

Okay, the honorable mentions. First up is the aforementioned Animal Collective, whose Merriweather Post Pavilion staked its claim early – it was released on January 6, and instantly picked up Best of the Year accolades. Merriweather is just wonderful, a more streamlined (but no less odd) collection of off-kilter pop songs practically bursting with melody. Between this and Fall Be Kind, this band is on a roll, and I hope they can keep it up.

Duncan Sheik also released an early favorite on January 27 with Whisper House. The soundtrack to his second musical, these songs tell the story of a young boy and a haunted lighthouse, and they’re perfect little Sheik gems. He’s a highly underrated songwriter, and this is further proof. That same day, Greg Kurstin and Inara George released Ray Guns are Not Just the Future, their second album as The Bird and the Bee. This thing is simply gorgeous – imagine Portishead as a lounge act, and you have the idea – and it contains “Diamond Dave,” a lovely and hilarious tribute to David Lee Roth that stands as one of the year’s best tunes.

Muse took their Queen-inspired heavy prog-rock one giant leap further with The Resistance, a typically schizophrenic and musically mindblowing effort. The eight more standard songs that open the disc are great, but it’s the three-part, fully orchestrated “Exogenesis Symphony” that makes this an extraordinary album. Speaking of musically mindblowing, there’s The Great Misdirect, the fifth and finest album from Between the Buried and Me. This thing gallops from lightning-fast shredding to jazz interludes to pretty acoustic sections, never sitting still for a second. It eclipses Dream Theater’s superb Black Clouds and Silver Linings as the most frighteningly proficient piece of music this year.

On the exact other end of the spectrum, there is Owl City. Adam Young’s breakthrough album, Ocean Eyes, was unfairly compared to the Postal Service all year, critics apparently missing the childlike joy that emanates from every groove of this record. It’s the silliest great album of the year. Richard Swift made a more serious, but no less wonderful effort with The Atlantic Ocean, his finest work. This one combines Tin Pan Alley songwriting with bizarre synths, and it works beautifully.

I’ve never been the world’s biggest Jack White fan, but with the Dead Weather, he assembled what I think is his best band. Featuring members of the Kills, Queens of the Stone Age and the Greenhorns, the Dead Weather plays slinky and dirty, and their debut album, Horehound, is a thick and grimy slab of super-fun blues rock. I’ve also never been a huge fan of British Sea Power, but with their Man of Aran project, they surprised me. Man of Aran is a 1934 film depicting life on one of the rocky islands off the coast of Ireland, and the band created a new score for the movie that sharpens and deepens it. The music is pretty great on its own as well.

And now for the silly pop portion of our program. I remember first reading the lineup of Tinted Windows, the supergroup featuring Taylor Hanson, Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne, James Iha of the Smashing Pumpkins, and Bun E. Carlos of Cheap Trick. I could scarcely believe this band was real, but their self-titled debut is wall-to-wall power pop goodness. And the Yeah You’s nearly made me rethink my top 10 list – I discovered their debut, Looking Through You, just last month. This insanely catchy record is sometimes too cheesy for its own good, but those harmonies, stacked impossibly high on every track, carry the day.

Which brings us to my Number 11 this year, Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix. I’m appalled that I never gave this record a full review on this site, so I hope I can make up for that now. French band Phoenix’ fourth album was their breakthrough, led by a pair of singles so tight and so dazzling they all but demanded the attention they got. I first heard “Lisztomania” when I stumbled on the unofficial ‘80s movie video, and fell in love. But “1901” may be even better, its “falling, falling, falling” refrain sounding indelible to these ears.

Phoenix plays dance-pop, yes, but it’s awesome dance-pop, and even though Wolfgang never rises to the dizzying heights of its opening one-two punch again, it’s all good stuff. I’ve even grown to like “Love Like a Sunset,” the seven-minute near-instrumental that divides the album, although I still think they should have sequenced it at the end. The more I listen to Wolfgang, the more I like it.

And there’s another reason Phoenix is on my mind this week – I saw them live, kind of, on Friday, just before the Flaming Lips took the stage. Phoenix was scheduled as the second headliner, but their drummer had a family emergency and had to fly back to France. Rather than cancel, though, the other members of Phoenix performed a short acoustic set, graciously thanking and apologizing to their audience. And you know what? It was a treat to hear these songs in this form. “1901” especially worked well on acoustic guitars, and the band’s graceful gesture, playing what they could instead of packing it in, made me respect them even more. I hope we hear more from them in the coming years, because if the fun-fun-fun Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix is anything to go by, their future is so bright I gotta wear shades.

That’s it for the honorables. Next week, the 2009 top 10 list. See you in seven. Leave a comment on my blog at tm3am.blogspot.com. Follow my infrequent twitterings at www.twitter.com/tm3am.

See you in line Tuesday morning.

Three Live Crews
Two Toms and a Paul Take to the Stage

So I’m not going to do a Best of the Decade list.

I know, I know. I’m no fun. I’ve had a lot of people ask me about it, and it’s really tempting, but it’s also an awful lot of work. You’d figure it would be something as simple as ranking my 10 number one albums of the year, but not really. A top album in a bad year (say, The Marshall Mathers LP) might not even rate an honorable mention in a good year, so it’s more a matter of ranking my top 100 albums of the decade, and even then, I’d be adding in things I missed, and agonizing over the order for weeks, and… yeah. It’s a lot of pressure.

So I won’t be doing one. Probably. Maybe.

Although next year is also the 10th anniversary of Tuesday Morning 3 A.M., in its current form. (I wrote it for about two years at Face Magazine before launching this site.) So that makes it even more tempting, honestly. But do I really think I’ve heard enough of the music of the Aughts to definitively say which is the best? It’s a different proposition than a year-end top 10 list. I only have 12 months to hear as much as I can each year, and the deadline is the last column in December. But for a Best of the Decade list, I’ve had 10 years to explore the forgotten nooks and crannies, to try to hear everything I can.

Still, it would be nice to counterpoint some of the bizarre choices I’ve seen on these lists lately. Pitchfork led the way by naming Radiohead’s Kid A the best of the 2000s. Longtime readers will already know what I think about that. It’s an album I’ve grown to appreciate over the years, but I will never love its mechanical, tuneless, icy landscapes. An important record? Yeah, probably. A good one? Not really. Then the Onion A.V. Club, ordinarily a bastion of good taste, picked the White Stripes’ White Blood Cells. I mean, holy crap. That’s not even the best White Stripes album, to my mind. That felt like the resurgence of the same people who called Nevermind the best album of the ‘90s. I simply don’t understand that.

So yeah, it would be nice to send a different message out there, I suppose. But no, I’m not doing such a list. Really, I’m not. And you won’t be able to talk me into it. So there.

Probably.

* * * * *

As I said before, 2010 is the 10th anniversary of Tuesday Morning 3 A.M. I’m grateful I’ve been able to do this for as long as I have, and doubly grateful that people are still reading it. Thank you, one and all.

Next year’s release schedule is actually starting off pretty well. There’s the requisite four Tuesdays without anything interesting, of course, starting on December 15. (This week at least had an Animal Collective EP, which I’ll review in the next column.) But on January 12, things start getting interesting. We’ve got the second album from Vampire Weekend, called Contra, and I don’t think I’ve been as interested in the sound and direction of a follow-up since Keane’s Under the Iron Sea.

We’ve also got the third album from OK Go, this one a collaboration with Flaming Lips producer Dave Fridmann. It comes with the decidedly un-OK Go title Of the Blue Colour of the Sky. We will also see new ones from Freedy Johnston and Final Fantasy, who is Owen Pallett, violinist for the Arcade Fire. The week after that will bring us new ones from Spoon (Transference) and Eels (End Times). Chances are they will both sound exactly like you think they will, but hell. New Spoon! New Eels!

January 26 is the most fascinating new release Tuesday of the month, however. First, we get the new Magnetic Fields album, called Realism. It’s reportedly the sparse, chamber-folk twin of 2008’s great Distortion. Stephin Merritt’s never let me down, and I don’t expect he will here.

But the other release is really interesting: it’s called Scratch My Back, and it’s a covers album from Peter Gabriel. As if providing me with a segue, he covers the Magnetic Fields, but he also delivers versions of songs by Radiohead, Randy Newman, Paul Simon, Elbow, Arcade Fire, the Kinks, David Bowie and Bon Iver, to name a few. I like that the list includes legends and contemporaries, as well as young punks. If I were Justin Vernon of Bon Iver, I’d be over the moon that someone like Gabriel had covered one of my songs.

February and March will bring us new things from Massive Attack, Frightened Rabbit, Liars, Jonsi of Sigur Ros, Hammock, Shearwater, and probably a bunch of things I don’t know about yet. Also, on February 16, we finally get the stateside release of Jason Falkner’s I’m OK, You’re OK. That probably won’t mean much to most of you, but I can name four people off the top of my head who just punched the air and shouted, “Yes!”

* * * * *

I like live albums.

I haven’t counted, but I would bet a full 25 percent of my collection is made up of live records. As committed as I am to the idea of the studio album as a complete and lasting statement, I think there is no greater test of your band’s mettle than a live performance. If you can work your magic without a net, in front of a live and discerning audience, well, that’s a special class of skill all by itself, and one worth praising.

And there are some bands, like Phish and Dream Theater, who take their music someplace entirely different on stage. The Dave Matthews Band has rarely thrilled me in the studio, but live, they’re a remarkably adventurous and dazzling outfit, and it’s no wonder they release so many concert documents. They’ve yet to capture that energy in the studio – Before These Crowded Streets came closest, I think. If you really want to hear DMB in all their glory, you’ve got to hear them live.

I know people who can’t stand live albums, and I get where they’re coming from. Most of them are pretty inconsequential. I own probably 50 Marillion live discs, and while I like them all, I wouldn’t call most of them essential. You likely only need one or two of them to get the point: Marillion is amazing live. And even those would sound, to the casual listener, like the studio versions with crowd noise.

When do you absolutely need a live album? That’s a difficult question to answer. To me, every gig is different, and while I didn’t go out and buy every one of those Pearl Jam live discs from 10 years or so ago, I did buy every entry in the LivePhish series so far, and I’ve liked them all. It doesn’t take much to get me to shell out for a live record. But for the less avid listener? Tough one.

You could always go with historical relevance. Many live documents are released to commemorate special occasions, concerts that either have or will go down in history. There’s a certain you-were-there element to these packages that I usually can’t resist.

Take, for example, the recently-released Good Evening New York City, by Sir Paul McCartney. These two CDs and one DVD capture the Cute Beatle’s three-night stand inaugurating Citi Field in New York this summer. It’s a historical two-fer, in fact: it was the first concert in the new field, which sits next to the site of the former Shea Stadium, where the Beatles set attendance records in 1965. (This time, McCartney has quipped, the musicians could hear themselves over the roar of the crowd.) So this is kind of a Big Deal.

But how is it? Well, it’s okay. First, I wouldn’t call this a sterling example of live recording technology. The mix is distant and indistinct – not quite bootleg quality, but close. The set list is practically unimpeachable – more than half of it is made up of Beatles songs, and the solo and Wings selections are also very good. The performances, however, are just average.

Top that off with the fact that McCartney has neglected to bring any horn and string players along with him, leaving that to his trusty keyboardist, Paul “Wix” Wickens. So we get godawful synth horns on “Got to Get You Into My Life,” and an atrocious plastic saxophone solo on “Lady Madonna,” and an absolutely terrible fall-on-the-keyboard approximation of the orchestra in “A Day in the Life.” These are, without a doubt, the worst moments of the entire thing.

Blessedly, the songs carry the day. How could they not, really? When it comes to the Beatles material, Paul largely stays on the McCartney side of the Lennon/McCartney axis: “Back in the U.S.S.R.,” “I’ve Got a Feeling,” “Hey Jude,” “Get Back,” “Let It Be,” “Yesterday,” everything you’d expect. He offers a fine version of “Something” in tribute to George Harrison, and segues from “A Day in the Life” into a tender take on Lennon’s “Give Peace a Chance,” but otherwise, it’s all Paul. And that’s just fine – in the ‘60s, he was one of the best pop songwriters who ever lived.

Sadly, that didn’t carry onward into the ‘70s, ‘80s, ‘90s or ‘00s, but he’s still done some good stuff, as he demonstrates on the album’s first disc. “Only Mama Knows,” from 2007’s Memory Almost Full, is as fine a rock song as he’s given us in 30 years, and solo gems like “Calico Skies” and “Flaming Pie” come off well. He even whips out a Fireman song, “Highway,” from last year’s Electric Arguments. In many ways, the band sounds better and more confident on these tracks than on the Fab Four tunes.

And maybe that’s how it should be. Good Evening New York City is a decent document of an important show, but it’s one you won’t pull out very often. The accompanying DVD is also quite nice, if only to highlight Billy Joel’s guest spot on “I Saw Her Standing There,” but again, you won’t watch this more than once or twice. For collectors like me, it’s the kind of thing that’s worthwhile to have, but isn’t revelatory.

On the other hand, Tom Waits’ new live record Glitter and Doom isn’t at all important. It showcases the gravel-voiced singer/songwriter’s 2008 tour, backed by a crackerjack band, playing mid-sized venues in 10 different cities. It was a tour seen by few, and this live record will probably sell to even fewer. But you know what? It stomps all over McCartney’s live album for sheer energy and repeat-play value.

If you’ve never heard Waits, I don’t think anything I can say will properly warn you. Waits writes earthy blues and ballads, but he sings them in a voice that sounds kind of like a hoarse gorilla. It’s a low, sick rumble, which often switches to more of a feral growl, and it’s definitely an acquired taste. I’ve acquired it, mainly because Waits’ songs are so damn good. And you get a bunch of very good ones on Glitter and Doom.

And the band! Man, these guys are good. “Get Behind the Mule” is suitably abrasive, all thumps and gut-shots, but one song later, “Fannin Street” will break your heart. Waits remembered to bring his top people – saxophonists, clarinet players, pianists, mandolin pluckers, and drums to die for. Atop all this perfectly played beauty and clamor, Waits feels free to go even deeper into his grizzled hobo image, snarling and grunting his way through the stompers, and singing his little heart out on the weepers.

The track listing sticks to his more recent material, as it should – he’s made remarkable strides as an idiosyncratic songwriter recently. One of the absolute highlights is “Trampled Rose,” from his most recent studio album, 2004’s Real Gone. It’s a percussion-fueled Mellotron excursion, quite unlike anything else you’re bound to hear, and performed with real grit and fire. Another bright spot is “Dirt in the Ground,” from 1992’s amazing Bone Machine. The smoky atmosphere is heightened live, and Waits makes the song’s world-weary fatalism something of a joy.

So the album proper is awesome, but there’s a value-added as well: a second disc called Tom Tales. This is, believe it or not, 36 minutes of Waits’ between-song patter, and it’s amazing. He spins stories, tells shaggy-dog jokes, and mumbles non-sequiturs, and it’s all delightfully entertaining. I don’t want to ruin any of this by excerpting it, so I won’t. Suffice it to say that Tom Tales is worth the price of admission all by itself. That you get an exceptional live album to boot is just gravy.

But if you want value for your money, and a truly revelatory live album experience, you can’t do any better than The Live Anthology, by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. For 20 bucks, you get nearly four hours of music on four CDs, all designed to drive home one message: the Heartbreakers are, and always have been, a great live band.

The Anthology takes liberally from every era of Petty’s career, and the sound is remarkably consistent throughout. Even when he was flirting with synthesizers in the ‘80s, or giving his sound over to Jeff Lynne in the ‘90s, the Heartbreakers still played every song on stage like a raucous American rock band. Hits like “Breakdown” and “Refugee” and “Here Comes My Girl” are all here, given new life. And if that’s all this was, a Greatest Hits Played Faster kind of thing, it wouldn’t be anything special.

But Petty and the band do a couple of things very right here. For one, they take on some surprises from deep in the catalog, like the lovely and underrated “Straight Into Darkness.” And for another, nearly half of this anthology is made up of cover tunes, and they’re all awesome. Just the first disc contains Bobby Womack’s “I’m In Love,” Koko Taylor’s “I’m a Man,” Thunderclap Newman’s “Something in the Air,” and Willie Dixon’s “I Just Want to Make Love to You.” These are all very different songs, with very different vibes, but the Heartbreakers make them all their own. (They do an even better job with the Grateful Dead’s “Friend of the Devil” on the second disc. And you really should hear their rip-snorting take on Fleetwood Mac’s “Oh Well” on disc four. But I digress.)

Petty has a thin, high voice, but this sampling of his work over three decades shows he can turn the Bob Dylan on and off like a switch. He’s in full Zimmerman mode on opener “Nightwatchman,” but by “Breakdown,” recorded two days later, he’s hitting all the notes strong and clear. But it’s the band that really makes this thing. They’re never flashy, those Heartbreakers, but all of them, especially mainstays Mike Campbell and Benmont Tench, are tight and fiery players.

Like most good live albums, there isn’t a lot more to say about The Live Anthology. It’s a strong and sterling overview of a band that has rarely taken center stage in the musical world, but deserves this lavish spotlight. The final disc ends perfectly: after a superb version of deep cut “Century City,” it gently washes away with “Alright for Now,” a song from Full Moon Fever that still stands as one of Petty’s prettiest melodies. It’s not often you’ll get to the end of four hours of music and want to start again, but you will here.

And like the best live albums, this one does its job admirably – it shows that in front of an audience, with no escape hatch in sight, these musicians can pull magic out of the air. I like this more than I like most of Petty’s often-stilted studio discs. It makes the live album argument for me by showing a different side of a long-running band, one you wouldn’t get under any other circumstances. This is why I love live albums, right here.

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Next week, Animal Collective, Blakroc, and a look at the honorable mentions of 2009. Leave a comment on my blog at tm3am.blogspot.com. Follow my infrequent twitterings at www.twitter.com/tm3am.

See you in line Tuesday morning.

People I Know, 2009 Edition
You Should Know Lost on Liftoff and Andrea Dawn Too

I’ve been worried that 2009 would end without giving us a British pop masterpiece.

My top 10 list this year is decidedly American. With no new records from Keane, the Feeling, Coldplay or virtually any other melodic Britpop band I love, there’s been a severe deficiency this year in the kind of dramatic-yet-sweet cheeky-cheeseball pop the Brits do so well. I’d all but resigned myself to a full 12 months without that sound, but then I got an email from a reader named Nick Martin.

And Nick turned me on to a band called The Yeah You’s.

Yes, the misplaced apostrophe drives me nuts. But I’m dealing with it, because this London duo’s debut album, Looking Through You, is pretty great. The Yeah You’s take their cues from the bands I listed above, particularly Keane and the Feeling, but they add even more dollops of sugar in the form of glorious, five-mile-high harmonies. Every song on Looking Through You has them, and even when the musical backdrop is silly and synthetic, those light-through-the-clouds harmonies carry the day.

And there are some terrific silly pop songs on here. Opener “15 Minutes” is big and dramatic, and its musings on fame are a sweet and ballsy way to open a debut album. “I’ll be back in 15 minutes when they’ve made me a superstar,” Nick Ingram sings, then adding, “When I’m back in 15 minutes, I won’t forget who you are…” Second track “Getting Up With You” is even better. It could be a lost Keane song, apart from the giddy hopefulness of the whole thing. It’s full of little touches – the protagonist loses his house keys, and his significant other knows right where they are – that come together to paint a picture of a relationship worth getting out of bed for.

While I like the rest of Looking Through You, it never hits those dizzy heights again. Ingram and Mike Kintish start weaving in dancehall influences with the next track, the insanely catchy “If I Could,” and play the reggae card with “Won’t Be Long.” Both of these songs are well-written enough to rise above the seas of cheese, but tracks like “Ready to Love Again” and “Clifftop” (which opens with a keyboard line reminiscent of early Genesis) aren’t quite so lucky.

I don’t dislike anything on Looking Through You, but I haven’t fallen in love with anything past the first four tracks. The good news is that every single song here is produced with a vibrant, life-loving joy, and even the weakest tracks are carried along by that feeling. Even a slow lament like “If I’d Only Said Hello” is full of hope – you get the sense that Ingram will seize his chance next time it comes around. Whatever else it is, Looking Through You is the feelgood album of the year, and each listen leaves me with that giddy grin on my face. I haven’t grown tired of singing along to these songs, and I don’t think I will.

I forwarded this recommendation on to Dr. Tony Shore, and he’s ready to call Looking Through You the album of the year. I don’t like it quite as much as he does – it’s a little too plastic in places for me – but if you’ve been missing the big, glorious British pop sound as much as I have this year, then this will be just the ticket. A hundred thanks to Nick Martin for tipping me off to this band. You can check them out here.

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And now, another installment of People I Know.

Ten years ago, meeting musicians was my job. I worked for Face Magazine, a local music rag based in Portland, Maine. Every day, the staff of Face got free CDs in the mail from local artists looking to make a connection. And every week, I got to go to local rock shows for free. In the course of four years, I met a lot of very good songwriters and players – more than you’d think would call a place like Portland home, honestly. The music scene up there is surprisingly diverse and amazing.

I’ve only kept in touch with a few of them through the years, but one of them is Shane Kinney. Drummer extraordinaire, stand-up comedian, business owner and renaissance man, Kinney is one of the funniest and nicest people you’re likely to meet. He was the skin-beater with a hysterical band called Broken Clown when I met him, and I still remember sitting in the Great Lost Bear late one night with him and guitarist/singer Mark Belanger, watching in amazement as the two of them performed an a cappella rendition of Iron Maiden’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” I still have that on tape somewhere, I think.

A few years ago, Kinney joined up with Walt Craven, one of the mainstays of the Portland rock scene. Craven’s come close to the big time twice before, with Gouds Thumb and 6gig. But it’s his collaboration with Kinney (and guitarist Ted Warner and bassist Dan Walsh) that, to these ears, has the greatest chance of putting them and Portland on the map.

The band is called Lost on Liftoff. Their new album is called The Brightside, and it’s a quick burst of tightly-controlled modern rock, explosive and melodic and well-crafted and fun. It’s the follow-up to their full-length debut, Mixtape Blackouts, and while I found their consistency of style somewhat tiring over 13 tracks, it’s perfect over eight. The Brightside runs a trim 30:59, and every song is a winner. It’s like a midnight bombing run – blow some shit up, get out quickly.

In my world, the second track, “All That Love,” is a hit. Craven has never sounded better than he does here – I’ve always been a fan of his tough yet emotional voice, and it’s made for songs like this. The chorus is huge and wonderful, the kind of thing I would go hoarse singing along with at shows. As good as that song is, my favorite here is “The Day the Sun Forgot to Rise.” That one’s a rocket ride, opening with a killer riff and segueing into a powerhouse chorus. Just listen to Kinney on this one – he’s a superb drummer, but he’s always delivering exactly what the song needs, and no more. A lesser drummer would have cluttered up this song, but Kinney’s just the right level of awesome here.

I have two complaints, and they’re the same ones I had last time. First, the mix is flatter and quieter than I would like – this record should pop from the speakers, but it kind of sits there, and the wall-of-sound guitars all start to sound the same after a while. Second, while I love what Lost on Liftoff does, I’d like to hear them try a few other things. The Brightside is eight well-written rockers with melodic choruses, and only the bridge section of closer “Total Wreck” goes somewhere else. What’s here is great, but a little more experimentation, and a better mix, and Lost on Liftoff could soon be worldwide.

Check them out here. You can buy The Brightside from Maine’s greatest music store, Bull Moose, here.

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I left Face Magazine in 2000, and I transitioned into news reporting. That means I meet many more politicians these days than I do musicians, but I still like to keep my finger somewhere near the pulse. Thankfully, I met Benjie Hughes, whose Back Third Audio is essentially the center of the Aurora music scene.

Through Benjie, I met Andrea Dawn and her husband, Zach Goforth, both terrific musicians. Andrea plays piano and sings like an angel, and Zach seems to play everything well. One of the most interesting and fun stories I got to write this year tracked the two of them as they waited for most of an entire day to audition for American Idol. I couldn’t say this in the story, but I’ll say it here: they’re too good for that show. They’re actual, you know, musicians.

I’ve owed Andrea this review as long as I’ve known her, and I feel pretty bad about putting it off for so long. Last year, she teamed up with fellow songwriter Jeremy Junkin to write and record First Try at Goodbye, an eight-song document that serves as her second full-length. Ironically, Dawn and Junkin said goodbye shortly after the album came out – he moved on to another state. (She’s come up with a nasty-awesome song about it, which just goes to show you shouldn’t piss off a songwriter.)

I say ironically, because First Try is a series of songs about leaving and being left. It starts with Dawn’s piano-led march “Over It,” which showcases her husky, soulful voice. The lyrics are about a bad breakup, and consist of a litany of things the singer won’t miss: “I’m over your stupid trendy sense of style, your condescending sideways smile, your super sappy emotional world…” Elsewhere, Dawn’s “Better Be Good” seemingly catches that same relationship a month or two earlier: “I’m losing sight of what I’m doing here by your side,” she sings over a liquid piano line, before the song erupts, the Hammond organ and electric guitar adding color and shade.

I tend to like Dawn’s songs better than Junkin’s – his are more rooted in Americana (and a bit more typical), and his voice isn’t as striking as Dawn’s is. The title track wears out its welcome, the spare melody leaving more spaces than it should, but Junkin’s closing song, “Say Goodbye,” is nice, stripped down to acoustic guitar and two voices. I find I’m drawn more to off-kilter pieces like Dawn’s “Clarinet Suite,” the most propulsive thing here – yes, there are clarinets, and saxophones and trumpets, all in service of a pumping piano and a skipping beat.

But it’s “Ask Me” that stands out to me. This one’s just Andrea Dawn and her piano, and it’s the album’s one song of reconciliation – it’s a list of things the singer has given up, and at the end she admits, “I’ve been doing it to do right by you, and be right by you…” The melody is simple, but she digs into it, finding soulful nuances and wonderfully graceful moments. It’s this song that makes me excited for what Andrea Dawn will do next, now that she’s back on her own, playing with Zach. (Who is all over this record as well, and also co-produced it.) For now, First Try at Goodbye is a sweet and sad little album that ably demonstrates just how good she is.

Check her out here. Jeremy Junkin is here.

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Next week, some end-of-the-year live albums and surprises. Leave a comment on my blog at tm3am.blogspot.com. Follow my infrequent twitterings at www.twitter.com/tm3am.

See you in line Tuesday morning.