…But the Moment Has Been Prepared For
On the End of Conan, The End of Time and End Times

Like a lot of people, I’ve been riveted to the Late Night Wars these past few weeks.

I’m not much of a late-night talk show kind of guy. I only ever think about it once a year, when I go back home to visit my mother. She thinks Jay Leno is hilarious, and she doesn’t like “that Conan.” If we were the kind of people who pledged allegiance to talk show hosts, she’d be Team Leno, and I’d be Team Conan. But I’d probably choose Team Letterman, more than anyone else.

Conan O’Brien premiered on Late Night when I was a freshman in college. I was taking a few media studies courses at the time, and the First Late Night Wars were a big topic. I watched Conan’s first three shows, and declared that he’d be off the air in six months, maximum. He was awkward and twitchy, his jokes were painfully obvious, and he seemed desperate for laughs. It was the general consensus of my school’s communications department that giving this guy Letterman’s old show would go on to be a huge black eye for NBC.

And then I stopped watching, except for the occasional look-in. “Oh, Conan’s still on? Wow,” I would say, and then promptly lose interest again. I saw the funny stuff – the masturbating bear, the Triumph spots, his classic interview with Louis C.K. – on the internet. Cut to 17 years later, and NBC actually made good on their threat to give Conan free rein over The Tonight Show, their most enduring franchise. I think Conan’s premiere Tonight Show episode was the first time I’d watched him with any real interest since college.

And man, what a difference. O’Brien has grown into a genuinely funny, very likeable host and comedian. His whole shtick is joyous mischief, like he can scarcely believe that he has a major network show all to himself. He’s found a way to use his awkwardness to his advantage, and his comedy bits are uproariously random. I found myself tuning in more and more over the last seven months (though not regularly by any stretch of the imagination – I’m a Jon Stewart/Stephen Colbert addict, after all.)

In short, I’ve watched more late-night talk over the past two weeks than I have in years. There’s no question in my mind O’Brien’s getting screwed. And there’s also no question he’s come out of this scuffle in a much better position than anyone else. Leno’s a damaged brand – he didn’t retire like he promised he would, he didn’t stand up for Conan, he didn’t fight NBC’s ridiculous plans, and because of all this, his stock has fallen sharply. And NBC, well, I can’t imagine how they could look any worse here.

But Conan has seized this opportunity, and I’m not just talking about his $45 million settlement. Over the last two weeks, he has shown two things: first, he’s a very funny man, and second, he’s probably the classiest act in television, and that’s what’s helped garner him so much support. He was bankable before, but after these last two weeks, he’s like America’s sweetheart.

Sure, it’s a numbers game, and Conan just wasn’t pulling in the ratings for NBC. But Leno fared far worse at 10 p.m., and it took Conan a while to find his feet on Late Night, too. O’Brien’s ratings for the past two weeks have been astonishing, and he’s responded with some truly memorable shows. And think about this: Jay Leno hosted The Tonight Show for 17 years, and the country didn’t rally around his last weeks on the air the way they have Conan’s. I think he can write his own ticket.

I’m writing all this to talk about Conan’s final Tonight Show, which aired Friday, on which he more than proved his worth. He’s been taking (very funny) shots at NBC over the past two weeks, and he took a couple more on Friday, but in his emotional goodbye speech, he thanked the network for making his dreams possible for more than 20 years. He thanked his staff and crew, and saved his biggest thanks for the fans, who have gone all out for him in recent days. And then he said this.

“All I ask is one thing, and I’m asking this particularly of the young people that watch: Please do not be cynical. I hate cynicism. For the record, it’s my least favorite quality. It doesn’t lead anywhere. No one in life gets exactly what they thought they would get. But if you work hard, and you’re kind, amazing things will happen. I promise you, amazing things will happen. It’s just true.”

Honestly, it was a great speech, one of the classiest things I’ve ever seen on television. Here, watch for yourself.

My sympathies have been with Conan since the beginning of this thing, but his last show sealed the deal for me. Bravo, sir, and we’ll see you again after September 1. And this time, I may even watch regularly. You never know.

* * * * *

So I’m finally finding the time to write about The End of Time.

Apologies to everyone who hates my infrequent forays into Doctor Who criticism. I’ll keep this brief, but in the world of the longest-running science fiction television show of all time, this holiday season was a significant one. Of course, I’m talking about regeneration, Doctor Who’s astoundingly clever gimmick, and one of the main things that has allowed this show to last for 30 seasons (soon to be 31) and captivate audiences in the U.K. and around the world since 1963.

For the uninitiated: when the time-traveling main character of this show, known only as The Doctor, gets into a scrape he can’t get out of, well, he dies. And then his body regenerates, leaving him looking (and in many ways acting) like someone else, with the same memories. Of course, this means the lead actor changes as well, and each time it’s happened (there have been 10 Doctors, with the 11th about to start his run), the show has changed around him. It’s a risky proposition – imagine Hugh Laurie suddenly being replaced as the lead in House. But every time, the possibilities are endless. What kind of Doctor will the new guy be?

It’s also a moment tinged with sadness. I remember the first one I saw – the venerable Tom Baker transforming into Peter Davison at the end of 1981’s Logopolis. Start with the fact that I had NO IDEA what was going on, but then add in a young boy’s attachment to his childhood hero. This was before DVDs, and I knew I’d never see the Doctor with the curly hair and the scarf again. But then Davison took over the role, and he was amazing – in many ways, he’s my Doctor, the one I remember most from my childhood. Death and rebirth, the pain of loss and the joy of discovery, all made easy for a child to understand.

All this is to say that we’ve come to the end of the line for the 10th Doctor, David Tennant. Now, I will always pledge allegiance to Baker and Davison, but I think Tennant is my favorite actor to ever play the part. He’s quick-witted, funny, able to pull off the dramatic moments, and overall just a sheer joy to watch. Over three seasons and eight specials, Tennant dove into the role with gusto, bringing a manic energy to every moment, and selling even the most ludicrous of stories. (And some of them were absolutely ludicrous.)

The End of Time, the umbrella title for the two specials that aired on Christmas Day and New Year’s Day, also marks the finale for producer Russell T. Davies. God bless Davies for resurrecting the show in 2005, but he’s changed it dramatically, and not always for the better. His long-term plotting has always left much to be desired, and his fascination with present-day Earth (and with creating a regular cast of characters to keep bringing back over and over and over and…) limited the show’s scope under his watch. But at the heart of it, I think Davies understands Who, and while he worked to inject emotion into the mix, he gets the goofy imagination that has always been at the core.

I think his biggest screw-up came at the end of Tennant’s last season, when he used regeneration as a gimmicky cliffhanger. It cheapened the show’s most sacred thing, for no good reason, and it casts a long shadow over The End of Time. But I won’t get into that here. I’m more interested in talking about the plot, and the emotions of the final specials.

Anyway, after his last season, Tennant signed on for five specials, which ran sporadically from Christmas 2008 to January 1, 2010. The first two were lightweight and fun, but the third, The Waters of Mars, took the Doctor to a dark emotional place he’d never been. It was riveting television, honestly, and it led directly into the 135-minute extravaganza called The End of Time. Except… it really didn’t.

Oh, sure, the ghost of Waters is present, but it isn’t dealt with in a way I’d have liked. Essentially, the plot of The End of Time involves the resurrection of The Master, killed at the end of Tennant’s second season. The first special then follows him around as he goes insane and uses up his life force battling the Doctor (in a special effects-heavy bit that made my heart sink). John Simm is marvelous in this part, but the story is degrading to the Master, and more than a little silly. The first hour is all wasted time, in a way, and ends with one of the dumbest cliffhangers in the show’s history.

But the second part, the New Year’s special, gets a good number of things right. The Master isn’t the Big Bad of The End of Time – that honor goes to the Time Lords, the Doctor’s people, who find a way to break free of the time lock they’ve been trapped in. (Really, it makes sense. Kind of.) Timothy Dalton overacts to the best of his ability as the Time Lord leader, and the resulting plot climax gives Tennant a true moral dilemma to solve. And he’s awesome.

However, it’s only after the explosions stop and the smoke clears that The End of Time takes off. For all the special’s bluster, its final half hour is quiet and sad, and exactly right. The 10th Doctor’s demise (the long-prophesied “he will knock four times”) is heart-in-mouth stuff, and Tennant is simply marvelous here. He spends the final 30 minutes visiting the people he loves, helping them one last time, and then returning to the Tardis alone. With a final, anguished “I don’t want to go,” Tennant regenerates. And I admit it, I was moved.

And then? And then we get a minute or so of the new guy, Matt Smith. He’s 27, the youngest actor to ever take on the part, and his first scene is… well, crazy. But enjoyably crazy. I fear that “Geronimo!” is the new catchphrase, and that makes me sad, but in one scene, Smith captured the Doctor’s manic energy, and made me want to see more from him.

And we will. Season 31 (which is being marketed as Series One by the BBC, for some reason) starts this spring, under the care of Steven Moffatt, unquestionably the best writer the new series has given us. We get six episodes by the Grand Moff, six others by some of the show’s best writers, and one by filmmaker Richard Curtis (Love Actually, Pirate Radio). We also get the return of the Weeping Angels, an extremely clever monster. I think this is going to be very good.

So, like with any regeneration, I am a mix of sad and hopeful. I will very much miss David Tennant in the role. I admit I was getting somewhat tired of his performance after his last season, but at the end, he showed me new sides to the Doctor, and he went out wonderfully. I will also miss Russell T. Davies, but not nearly as much. Davies has a boundless imagination, but very little discipline and quality control. It’s long past time to give someone else a shot at running the show. But Davies deserves endless credit for bringing the program back, and loving it as intensely as he does.

On the other hand, I am very excited for Matt Smith, and Steven Moffatt. That a show that’s been on the air for 30 seasons can still give me that little tingle is extraordinary. I’m on board for wherever the Tardis ends up next. It’s hard to describe just what regeneration does to me, as a fan. I feel refreshed myself, and ready for brand new adventures. As my favorite band once sang, I don’t know why you say goodbye, I say hello.

* * * * *

I sometimes get the sense that Mark Everett is making one long album, and just releasing pieces of it as they’re finished.

That’s a nice way of saying that every album by Everett’s band, Eels, sounds essentially the same. You’ll get a couple of guitar-heavy rave-ups, a boatload of simple, sad-sack tunes, and some very basic lyrics about childhood, love and loss. Even the way he plays the guitar is exactly the same from record to record – the strums and finger-pick patterns are becoming something of a signature.

Part of the problem is that he makes so many records – his new one, End Times, is his 12th since 1996, not counting live releases (or that gargantuan b-sides project), and it’s out a mere seven months after its predecessor, Hombre Lobo. Eight of those are Eels albums, but it doesn’t matter – it’s all the Mark Everett show, whatever it’s called. And it all sounds of a piece.

So why do I like it? I couldn’t tell you. The songs are basic, the sentiments simplistic. Everett’s vocals are certainly heartfelt, but not what I’d call particularly appealing. And yet, there’s a magic to Eels albums that defies description. Somehow, he makes these very simple songs into windows looking in on his soul, and the atmosphere he conjures is oddly heartbreaking.

Eels fans know that Everett makes his best art when his life is at its most miserable. His twin masterpieces, Electro-Shock Blues and Blinking Lights and Other Revelations, delved into the loss of his mother, father and sister, and dove deep into the causes of his own loneliness. End Times isn’t quite in the same league, but the air of sadness that surrounds it is similar. The album is entirely about Everett’s divorce – he split with his wife in 2005 – and uses the “end times” motif as a metaphor for his life reaching a dead end.

As you might expect, the result is pretty and sad. Only a few songs bring the tempo above desolate, most notably “Gone Man,” which sets the scene (equating the lines “How much longer for this earth” and “She used to love me but it’s over now”), and “Paradise Blues,” which I believe is Everett’s first “____ Blues” song that turns out to be an actual blues.

The rest of the record is slow, strummed beauty. “In My Younger Days” is about how Everett’s become less resilient to heartbreak as he’s grown older, and “A Line in the Dirt” sets its crushing marital disputes over a lovely piano backdrop. (There’s humor here, too: “She locked herself in the bathroom again, so I am pissing in the yard,” Everett sings.) The title track makes the metaphor obvious, actually including a “crazy guy with a matted beard” standing on the corner shouting about the end of days. “The world is ending and what do I care?” Everett sighs. “She’s gone, end times are here.”

This is an album with its curtains drawn, and very little light gets in. The last track, the six-minute “On My Feet,” contains the only moments of hope, as Everett explores just what it will take to get him back on track. The song is a sweet shuffling waltz, and Everett uses its rambling structure to describe people “sleeping in hazmat suits and taping up their windows” one second, and revealing that the day he met his ex-wife is one of the “small handful of days that I do hold near to my heart” the next. “One sweet day I’ll be back on my feet, and I’ll be all right,” Everett sings as the music fades.

Of course, you’ve heard all this from E before. The circumstances change, but most Eels songs are about dealing with loss, and letting the healing begin. End Times breaks no new ground, but it’s still a warm and moving record, and it’s clear Everett dug deep into his soul to create it. I just wish (and it’s a minor wish) that he’d put as much of himself into the music, making something that stands apart from his vast catalog.

But perhaps that’s too much to ask. I like Everett the way he is well enough, and as far as I’m concerned, he can keep making melancholy records like End Times until the… well, end times, and I’ll still enjoy them.

As a quick side note, the cover art for End Times was drawn by Adrian Tomine, one of my favorite graphic novelists. Tomine’s irregularly-published series is called Optic Nerve, and you can’t go wrong with any of the three collections available. Go here.

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And now, the next installment of the Top 20 Albums of the Decade:

#18. Over the Rhine, Ohio (2003).

In the perfect world inside my head, Over the Rhine is one of the most celebrated bands in the country. They have millions of fans, and each new album of perfectly-pitched homespun beauty is anticipated and adored by people the world over. And yet, their concerts remain intimate little affairs in small, smoky clubs, so I can get right up close and see them work their magic.

This will never happen in the real world – if OtR ever gets huge, they will likely lose the you-and-me simplicity that defines their work. And that would be a tragedy. I’m happy with them as a well-liked secret among thousands, as a working band that can make any kind of record they want, and as a songwriting team willing to be as small as necessary to get to the heart of things, even when they’re making something as sprawling and vast as Ohio, their double album from 2003.

I love this album intensely. I will accept arguments, however, that its two follow-ups, Drunkard’s Prayer and The Trumpet Child, are better albums. But here’s the thing: I consider those records to be new directions, with their embrace and exploration of jazz and classic balladry mixed in with OtR’s core sound. They’re exciting new directions, don’t get me wrong, but Ohio is much more of a pure Over the Rhine album. In fact, I think it’s the plateau, the destination point of their original musical journey – with this record, they went as far as they could go without shaking things up.

Of course, one element hasn’t changed at all – Karin Bergquist still has one of the finest voices ever given to anyone. It’s high and powerful, low and husky, strong and supple, clear and glorious. You hear her sing, and lights go on in your head. Whatever else happens around her, Bergquist’s voice is the center of Over the Rhine, and one of the main reasons to listen.

That voice is in amazing form throughout Ohio. The album is 20 songs long (21 with a bonus track), and spans 94 minutes, but it is, at heart, a very intimate affair. In a lot of ways, it’s a comedown from 2001’s massively-produced Films for Radio. Many of the songs are performed by Bergquist and the band’s other half, her husband Linford Detwiler, alone, and it’s those that will stick with you the longest. The album’s dark masterpiece, “Changes Come,” is just piano, acoustic guitar, some organ near the end, and That Voice. And it’s as haunting as anything you’ve heard.

Ohio is a sad record, certainly. “Suitcase” is a moving song about watching someone leave, while “Professional Daydreamer” is about working through loss. The title track, stripped to piano and voice, eulogizes their home state: “Ohio, where the river bends, and it’s strange to see your story end…” But there are moments of sheer joy as well, like “Show Me,” a song about throwing cares to the wind: “The bed is made, the world’s a mess, maybe we’ve got it backwards, maybe we should just care less.”

Through it all, the music ebbs and flows masterfully, the full band joining in when they’re needed. Detwiler and Bergquist save soulful rave-ups like “When You Say Love” until near the end, building slowly to them, and for the entire journey, they never use more instruments than are necessary. The album ends with a remake of an old OtR song, “Bothered,” and this new version swells with power and hope: “I never thought that I could be this free,” Bergquist sings, and the music takes flight behind her one last time.

Ohio is an important record in the 20-year history of this band – it’s a mission statement, a grand finale and a new beginning, all in one. I don’t know if they’ll ever make another one like it. The subsequent grand-scale tour proved a strain on their marriage, so they canceled it partway through, retreated home, and began making smaller records with lighter touches. Ohio is the crescendo point for Over the Rhine Phase One. But it’s also one of the simplest and most graceful 94-minute records you’re ever going to hear. I’ve carried these songs with me for seven years, and they haven’t lost an ounce of their beauty and wonder.

Over the Rhine should have millions of fans, and maybe they’re working up to that, one at a time. If you haven’t heard them, you should be the next fan on their list. Go here.

* * * * *

Next week, the Magnetic Fields, and maybe Spoon. I always think of The Tick when I say that band’s name. Spooooooon! 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 ‘I Pan Contra‘ Affair
Vampire Weekend's Second Effort is a Confusing Mess

I hate when this happens.

I’ve been looking forward to hearing Vampire Weekend’s second album for months. I resisted their debut for as long as I could, and then bought it expecting some typically over-hyped indie rock nothing, but what I got was something extraordinary. Easily one of the five best debut albums of the last 10 years, Vampire Weekend immediately had me simultaneously excited and worried for their follow-up.

And now it’s here, and I’ve heard it about 12 times, and I’m still just as conflicted.

The one thing I will definitely say is that the VW boys deserve endless credit for not going over the same ground again. That would have been easy – their debut album was equal parts African pop and American indie-punk, performed with a winning innocence and an organic warmth. Had they delivered another 10 or 12 songs like “Oxford Comma” or “Bryn,” they would have had an immediate hit on their hands. But even though they’ve gone with a similar cover design and font, making the two records look like sequential issues of a magazine, the Vampire Weekenders have taken their sound to new places on their follow-up, called Contra.

Ordinarily, that would be an unqualified good thing, as far as I’m concerned. But in this case, the sound of the debut was so ingratiating, so immediately wonderful, that I can’t help wanting more of it. And instead, Vampire Weekend has given me something willfully odd. I’ve been trying to appreciate it on its own terms, and enjoy it, but I’m afraid that all the sonic exploration on this album is masking some pretty weak songs.

But let’s talk about the new sounds. Contra sticks with the African influences, and even ramps them up in places. But it also allows keyboardist/producer Rostam Batmanglij an even freer rein – a distressingly large chunk of Contra sounds programmed, with blipping synths and electronic drums where real African percussion ought to be. They don’t ease you in, either – the first two songs contain no guitars at all. It helps that they’re both very good, particularly “White Sky,” which soars on gossamer wings of percussion and Ezra Koenig’s untethered falsetto. It’s beautiful, and if they’d written a few more like it, I would have embraced the new material without question.

But no. Instead we have songs like “Taxi Cab,” which meanders aimlessly for four minutes atop Casio synths and handclaps. If you’re waiting for the chorus, don’t bother – it never comes. “Run” uses the same dippy keyboard sounds, but adds a mariachi horn section, which is interesting, but not particularly successful. The six-minute “Diplomat’s Son” is the weakest thing Vampire Weekend has yet given us – it samples M.I.A. while repeating three chords endlessly. Only Koenig’s high voice comes close to saving it, but then it devolves over a cheeseball ‘80s electronic beat, turning into bargain basement Fiery Furnaces. At this point it becomes pretty much unlistenable.

So far, it doesn’t sound like I’m conflicted, right? Well, there is magic and wonder on Contra, too. “Holiday,” at track three, is probably the closest in tone to the debut, and even that throws in a little rockabilly, just for spice. “California English” actually finds Koenig whipping out the Auto-Tune (or perhaps the “I Am T-Pain” iPhone app), but it’s got an awesome little chorus, and some sweet guitar lines. Single “Cousins” is fabulous, easily the most live-band energetic throwdown on the album. And closer “I Think Ur a Contra” is surprisingly moody and ambient, and for that, I can forgive its lack of melody.

Roughly half of this album grabbed me right away, and the other half has slowly diminished since that first listen. But the most surprising track is “Giving Up the Gun,” which ditches the otherwise ever-present Afrobeat entirely and gives us pulsing ‘80s synth bass under a pretty straightforward pop song. This is what Vampire Weekend might sound like if they gave up everything that makes them special, and even so, it’s not bad. Still, no song encapsulates my conflicting feelings over this album like this one does.

It’s hard to call Contra a sophomore slump, because the VW boys clearly tried hard to push at their own boundaries – even the ones that didn’t need to be pushed. It’s a strikingly confident record, even when it doesn’t work, and I can’t fault it for ambition. When it does work, as on the amazing “White Sky,” Contra feels like a natural next step. I hope next time out, the band takes a hard look at this spotty, messy second effort, figures out which paths led to dead ends, and keeps walking down the others. There’s much to like on this album, but much I hope never to hear on a Vampire Weekend record again.

* * * * *

Going into this week, I expected to love the Vampire Weekend, and give the new OK Go, Of the Blue Colour of the Sky, only a cursory listen. Imagine my surprise, then, when Contra turned out to be inconsistent and shaky, and Colour instantly became an early front-runner for my favorite album of 2010.

I’ve never been a huge fan of OK Go, despite their Chicago origins. Their first two albums were catchy and fun, but not particularly memorable – the viral videos of the foursome on treadmills were more interesting than the songs they accompanied. But Colour is something else altogether, a defiant sideways step into something much stranger and more compelling.

For their third outing, OK Go hired Dave Fridmann to sit in the producer’s chair. Fridmann, a former member of Mercury Rev, is best known as the producer of just about every Flaming Lips album, and he adds a striking, psychedelic edge to the band’s sound. In turn, the band members have written some of their weirdest and strongest tunes, nimbly jumping over their power-pop past. The result sounds like what might happen if the Lips tried to make Prince’s 1999 – it’s a compelling blend of danceable funk and alien atmospherics.

Take the self-referential opener, “WTF?” It borrows liberally from the Purple One’s ‘80s output, incorporating the clean funk guitar, the falsetto vocals, and even a trademark Hendrix-with-epilepsy solo in the middle. But it’s in 5/4, which means it’s impossible to dance to, and the drums all sound like they were recorded with 50-year-old microphones shoved directly into them. As the album progresses, the band continuously plays to these two influences: “This Too Shall Pass” is more Lips, with its massive keyboard fanfares, while “White Knuckles” is 100% Prince, right down to the synth lines that sound ready-made for the Revolution – until the insane lead guitar lines start up.

The final third of the album is darker and deeper, starting with the extraordinary “Before the Earth Was Round” – the vocals are pure Wayne Coyne circa Yoshimi – and continuing with the sparse acoustic interlude “Last Leaf.” That song pivots on the nakedly romantic line “And if it takes forever, forever it’ll be,” and while the album never gets that emotional again, it’s a lovely moment. The last three tracks get bigger and bigger, until the six-minute “In the Glass” concludes with a massive repeated coda.

I have a major reservation about this album, and you’ve probably guessed it – OK Go is a band without a consistent identity. Their debut was cheeky power pop, complete with cheesy synths, stacked vocals and numerous Jellyfish moments. Then they hired Franz Ferdinand producer Tore Johansson to helm their second, Oh No, and (surprise!) it sounds like Franz, rawer and more angular. Now with Fridmann behind the boards, they’ve made a Flaming Lips record (albeit a better Lips record than that band’s own Embryonic, from last year). OK Go has spent so much time sounding like other artists that I have no real idea what kind of band they’re meant to be.

But in the absence of that, I’ll take an album like Colour, which surprised me from first song to last. The common denominator has always been frontman Damian Kulash, who never fails to write well-crafted songs, whatever style he’s aping. Colour is a thoroughly unexpected triumph from out of nowhere, a dark and dreamy record that should bring OK Go some well-deserved attention. Who knows how long it will remain on top of the (admittedly small) 2010 heap, but the fact that it’s there at all right now is pretty amazing to me, and you should definitely take that as a strong recommendation.

* * * * *

And now, the next installment in my Top 20 of the Decade. I swear, I didn’t plan it like this, it just happened. But it’s serendipity, because it gives me an opportunity to remember why I liked this band so much in the first place.

#19. Vampire Weekend (2008).

I can’t even tell you how much I didn’t want to hear Vampire Weekend’s debut album. It dropped in January of 2008, amid an ocean of hype, and after suffering through similar tsunamis of breathless excitement over similarly-named indie-rock shithole bands in 2007, I’d had enough. I decided I wasn’t even going to listen to a single song. Vampire Weekend and its inexorable hype machine just weren’t for me.

But I kept reading articles and reviews, and the album just kept sounding more interesting to me. I think my resolve lasted four weeks or so, and then I broke down. The whole time, I kept grumbling to myself. “Vampire Weekend. What an awful name. I bet it’s some goth bullshit.” “Ooh, look at the oh-so-artsy cover. Nice photo, Leibovitz.” “I’m going to regret paying for this, aren’t I?”

You all know what happened next. I listened to Vampire Weekend, and was suitably blown away by its delirious mixture of college rock and African pop. It was like these four New York kids had grown up listening to nothing but Paul Simon’s Graceland, and were stunned to find out that people their own age had never heard of it. So they decided to recreate it, but without traveling to Africa or importing African musicians. And also, they decided to do it with an energy you only have when you’re young. Ezra Koenig was only 24 when Vampire Weekend was released. Paul Simon was 45 when he made Graceland.

So what you have here is an album that combines a literate, global sensibility with an enthusiasm usually found only in bands just learning their instruments. It’s wide-eyed and wonderful, and flush with possibility. Just check out “A-Punk,” which could be this record’s mission statement. It opens with a terrific high-skipping guitar figure over a commanding beat, but then drops into a lovely pipes-and-percussion chorus, complete with “oh, oh” vocals. This shouldn’t work, but it does, marvelously.

Just about every song on Vampire Weekend is a highlight. “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa” is a singular delight, but the baroque arrangement of “M79” is a treat, as is the brief yet brilliant “Bryn.” Only on “One (Blake’s Got a New Face)” do they hint at where they went next with Contra, all blipping keyboards. Everything else sounds like a group of fresh-faced music theory students having a great time bashing this stuff out in their dorm rooms. It’s one of the warmest albums you’re likely to hear.

In 2008, Vampire Weekend was a breath of fresh air. Here was a sound no one else was doing, a sound so fascinating and so fully-formed that it almost felt surreal. It’s simultaneously important-sounding, and tons of fun. There is still no other band like them, and with their second album, they’ve kind of left the debut as an island unto itself. But it’s an amazing island, and no amount of gasping hype can take that away.

It’s one of the best albums of the decade because its authors came up with something that sounded brand new, and did it with an uncomplicated shrug. The best music sounds effortless, like it was merely breathed into being, no matter how much sweat and toil went into it. Vampire Weekend is strikingly original, and whimsically playful – it’s a joy from front to back, which belies how precise and perfectly-formed it is. They are a band for the Internet age, not only building buzz online, but absorbing everything they hear on the World Wide Web. The world is getting smaller, and Vampire Weekend is the sound of cultural walls collapsing, with no fanfare whatsoever. It just sounds natural, and exactly right.

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Next week, number 18, and new ones from Eels and Owen Pallett. 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.

Ten Years! Ten… YEARS!
A Look Back, A Look Forward and An Announcement

Welcome back, everyone.

This column marks the start of Tuesday Morning 3 A.M., Year Ten. I’m just going to let that sink in for a minute, because I can hardly believe it myself. That doesn’t even count the two years I wrote this thing for Face Magazine, either. I started this column’s current incarnation in November of 2000 – my tenure with Face had come to an ignoble end, I’d moved to Tennessee, and after taking all of October off from writing (what I called my October Project, and I hope someone out there gets that), I tentatively strung a few sentences together about the then-new Everclear album and e-mailed them to my friends.

Then, the next week, I did it again, this time reviewing Marilyn Manson’s Holy Wood. And then I was in the habit – every week for the past 10 years (with a couple of vacation weeks), I’ve strung those sentences together. The musical selection has gotten a lot better since the early days. I’d like to think the writing has, too, but that’s your call, not mine. I still e-mail this column out to two dozen or so of my friends each week, but hundreds more of you check it out online.

And I’m so very grateful to all of you for that.

So! Let’s keep going, what do you say? I’ll keep writing them, if you keep reading them. I initially said I only wanted to do this thing for 10 years or so, but I have so much fun putting this together each week that I don’t expect I’ll want to stop come December. Plus, there’s always more music to talk about, and I doubt I’ll stop wanting to hear it all. That seems like a hard-wired part of my brain, at this point. Bad for the checkbook, good for fans of this column.

Quite a bit has changed in 10 years. I’m living outside Chicago now, writing for a living, and much more stable and secure than I was when I started this thing. But through all of that, music has remained an important – nay, essential – part of my life. I’m rarely happier than when I find music that moves me so much I want to share it with everyone I know. TM3AM is my ongoing attempt to do that, and to capture the strange excitement that goes with being an obsessive music fan. I may feel differently in December, but right now, I want to keep doing it as long as I can.

So, Year Ten. Strap in, here we go.

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Ordinarily, the first few columns of the year are dead boring. I do my best to spice them up, but there usually isn’t much happening on the music front in January. Or February, for that matter. But 2010 is already shaping up to be a mold-breaker, on a few fronts.

As a side note, I’m saying “Twenty-Ten.” It just rolls off the tongue better, and fits with the pattern set by the last few centuries: Seventeen-Ten, Eighteen-Ten, Nineteen-Ten, Twenty-Ten. My inner grammar snob approves. As do the more openly snobby folks at NAGG, the National Association for Good Grammar, for whatever that’s worth.

Anyway, I’m usually scrambling for something to write about in the second week of January, but this year, we have an embarrassment of riches. Already out are new albums from OK Go, Freedy Johnston, Elvis Costello, Final Fantasy, and the one I’ll be reviewing next, Vampire Weekend’s Contra. Coming Tuesday are new things from Spoon, the Eels, and the Editors. One week later, we have the new Magnetic Fields album, Realism, and one week after that, an explosion of goodness from Midlake, BT, and the Album Leaf. (BT’s album has me the most excited – two hours, two discs, with Rob Dickinson of Catherine Wheel providing vocals on two tracks.)

But it’s not stopping there. February and March are bank-breakingly amazing this year. Take a gander:

February 9 will see the new one from Massive Attack, called Heligoland. That’s a good start, but February 16 brings the new Peter Gabriel (a covers album called Scratch My Back), a double album from Field Music, the zillionth solo album from Robert Pollard, a new Silver Mt. Zion concoction, and the stateside release of Jason Falkner’s 2007 elpee I’m OK You’re OK. (He’s made another, All Quiet on the Noise Floor, since then, and that one hasn’t hit these shores yet either. Grumble grumble.)

February 23. Oh, my, February 23. Here’s what’s coming: the new Shearwater, called The Golden Archipelago; a two-CD excursion by David Byrne and Fatboy Slim entitled Here Lies Love; Joanna Newsom’s third album, the just-announced Have One on Me; a new thing from The Rocket Summer; another glorious soundscape from Balmorhea; another kickass slab of stoner fuck-all from High on Fire; and most importantly, Johnny Cash’s final Rick Rubin session, American VI: Ain’t No Grave.

But wait! There’s March! Highlights of what we know so far include Liars’ fifth album, Frightened Rabbit’s third, the debut from Broken Bells (a nifty collaboration between Danger Mouse and James Mercer of the Shins), the new Ted Leo, a covers disc from Nada Surf, a live record and DVD from the White Stripes, and finally (FINALLY) the remastered, spiffed-up, super-awesome re-release of one of my favorite albums of all time, The Cure’s Disintegration. There’s more, of course, and there’s more on the way we don’t know about yet, but even if there weren’t, I’d be out-of-my-skin excited for 2010 already.

What else might we see? Well, there’s a new Arcade Fire rumored for May, and a new Shins on the boards for about the same time. The Beastie Boys came within weeks of releasing Hot Sauce Committee Part One last year, so we should see that, and maybe Part Two. Quiet Company will have a new EP sometime very soon. Radiohead’s in the studio, and both Soundgarden and Faith No More have reunited. Plus, on the spiritual pop front, we’re definitely getting a new Choir album in 2010, as well as the Lost Dogs’ album and movie project, Route 66.

And I will be broke. But I will be happy.

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So apparently I disappointed a few people with my announcement that I wouldn’t be publishing a best-of-the-decade list. My reasons were various and sundry, and I guess you’ll know what’s coming when I say I can’t really remember why they were so compelling a couple of weeks ago.

Yes, Virginia, I’ve put together a best-of-the-Aughts list. But rather than dump it on you all at once, I think I’m going to stretch it out, and make it a recurring feature of the first half of this year. The list itself is something I’ve been agonizing over, and why make it easy on myself? Why not allow myself to lose countless hours of sleep deciding whether the #4 and #5 albums should swap places? What is a list like this, if not a way for me to demonstrate just how blindingly obsessed I really am?

When I first set out to compile this thing, I thought it would be simple. Really, I did. I thought I would just have to write down the #1 and #2 albums from each of the last 10 years, and then rank them. But I forgot, of course, that what ascends to the top of the heap in one year might not even rate an honorable mention in another. Already I’ve made some decisions on this list that have surprised me, and chosen some records that, in retrospect, should have been praised more in their respective years. I’ve also taken a pass on some albums that I initially rated very highly. It’s like getting a re-do on your decade, in a way.

Speaking of decisions that have surprised me, here’s one: you won’t see Brian Wilson’s SMiLE on this list. It is, unquestionably, one of my favorite albums of the last 10 years. But I bent the rules to declare it the best record of 2004, and in retrospect, I shouldn’t have. While it is absolutely the first presentation of SMiLE in its intended form, the meat of the record – the songs themselves – are all more than 40 years old at this point. As much as I love what Wilson’s done here, and as much as I think SMiLE is one of the finest pieces of pop music I’ve ever heard, I couldn’t justify ripping up my rules again.

Plus, including SMiLE makes it too easy. Of course it would be number one. Of course it would. Now, you’ll be guessing.

So let’s start this off. Once a week, for the next 20 weeks, I’ll be giving you a little essay on a record I love. Together, they’ll form my Top 20 List of the Decade. Hope you enjoy!

#20. Bruce Cockburn, You’ve Never Seen Everything (2003).

Bruce Cockburn, one of Canada’s finest songwriters, was 57 when he recorded You’ve Never Seen Everything in 2002. It was his 21st album, marking 33 years as a recording artist. This is not a young man’s album. It’s seeped in the grim wisdom that comes from living a long life, and experiencing the best and worst humanity has to offer. And on this by-turns heartbreaking and invigorating musical document, he pours out those years, those experiences, in riveting poetry.

Cockburn has long been one of the most globally cognizant artists around, and on You’ve Never Seen Everything, he takes you on a tour of some of the darkest places he’s been. The reactionary rage of 1984’s “If I Had a Rocket Launcher” is gone, replaced by a simmering disgust with man’s inhumanity to man. On “Postcards From Cambodia,” he calls what he sees there “too big for anger, too big for blame.” And on the positively mesmerizing title track, Cockburn tells vignettes that burn themselves into your brain: murder-suicides by pitchfork, bakers cutting their flour with pesticide to save money, a teenage girl setting fire to her home, killing herself and her family.

“You’ve never seen everything,” Cockburn intones, turning the title into a knowing retort.

Elsewhere, he takes aim at our corporate greed, our “trickle down” economics, our policies that leave half the world starving while we wage wars for oil. You’ve Never Seen Everything is a post-9/11 album that widens the lens, giving Cockburn’s audience the benefit of his global view. And if that’s all it had been, it still would be commendable, but this album (like all of Cockburn’s work) manages to find light amidst the darkness as well. “Open,” “Everywhere Dance,” “Put It In Your Heart” – these are lovely songs of joy and wonder, proving that despite all he has seen, Cockburn is nowhere near jaded or cynical.

The mission statement of the album, couched near the end at track 11, is “Don’t Forget About Delight.” It’s simple, but deceptively difficult: “Amid the post-ironic postulating and the poets’ filtered rhymes, meaning feels like it’s evaporating, out of sight and out of mind, don’t forget…”

Musically, Everything is a triumph, a culmination of Cockburn’s criminally overlooked catalog. On the darker pieces, he speaks rather than sings, over mantra-like guitar figures, and on the lighter ones, he gently finger-picks his acoustic, dropping lovely choruses. He makes jazz-rock sound convincingly angry on “Trickle Down,” and puts extra verve into the plucked gallop of “Wait No More.” It’s a full, rich sound he conjures up, and even when the writing gets repetitive, it’s hypnotic and immersive.

Bruce Cockburn has long been one of the smartest men to ever pick up a guitar, and You’ve Never Seen Everything – one of only two studio albums he released last decade – is a career highlight. It sports a shining intelligence, but wraps that in observation and emotion. This is an album that connects, viscerally and immediately, and its lessons are ones we could still stand to learn, seven years on. It is Cockburn’s late-career masterpiece, as brilliant and as unjustifiably ignored an album as he has ever made. If you’ve never heard Cockburn, this is a great place to start.

So that’s number 20. Guesses are welcome on numbers 19 through 1. If all goes well, we’ll wrap up this little experiment on May 26.

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Next week, Vampire Weekend’s second album, and perhaps OK Go’s third. Year ten! I’m still wrapping my brain around it. 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.