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The 100 Best Songs Of 2011: 50-41

December 24, 2011 Leave a comment

50. PNAU ‘The Truth’

I still think this is the great lost U2 comeback single that never was. Pnau had impressed me before with ‘Embrace’ and they went beyond my expectations with ‘The Truth’. A desperate, angry love/hate song set to an insistent and occasionally stadium-sized beat, ‘The Truth’ should have been all over radio but was, for whatever reason, not hugely successful. The title appearing at the end of each chorus in a ball of incredulous anger is a truly effective pop moment.

49. RUPAUL ‘Responsitrannity’

The title of this song is enough to land it in my top 100, but beyond the novelty of ‘Responsitrannity’ is a rather serious message to be yourself. Being yourself is the message of most RuPaul songs, it’s true, but this is one is different – it isn’t just about self-confidence, it’s about taking responsitrannity for your own view of yourself. Don’t let anybody else bring you down, and don’t blame others if you can’t do something. Some truly great lyrics set to a hands-in-the-air beat and a catchy melody – this was Ru’s greatest musical achievement of the year.

48. BJÖRK ‘Crystalline’

You might have noticed that Björk did not appear on my top albums of the year list, and that’s because Biophilia was truly awful, the worst thing she has ever put her name to. Maybe one day it’ll reveal itself to be a masterpiece – wake me up when that happens. And what makes it even more crushing is that I absolutely love ‘Crystalline’, the first single. Just about the only song on the record to have any sort of notable melody, Björk starts growling over a music box and then suddenly the song goes H•A•M and harsh beats are coming at her out of nowhere. A gem in a sea of tuneless garbage.

47. KATE BUSH ‘Misty’

So this is what it’s come to: I’m a little turned on by a song about snowman sex. The much-discussed thirteen minute ‘Misty’ is the long, gorgeous centrepiece of 50 Words For Snow, and it reads like a snowpeople version of ‘The Man With The Child In His Eyes’. Girl finds snowman, girl and snowman get it on, snowman melts. It’s a genuinely heartbreaking tale with some beautiful little instrumental flourishes here and there that make this feel Christmassy even though it hasn’t got anything to do with Christmas. ‘Misty’ will make you pine for your very own snowman fuck buddy, but remember that if you love something, let it melt.

46. DAVID GUETTA ft. SIA ‘Titanium’

Few moments in pop this year were more thrilling that Sia’s crazed scream of “I AM TITAAAAAAANIIIIIIUUUUUUUUUUM”. Two artists who I’m generally indifferent to, David Guetta and Sia have come together to create a dance epic from outer space, blasting out of the speakers and punching you right in the face with its ferocity. I wasn’t aware that Sia had the voice to pull this off, and the big kicks in the song come when David knows how to let the beat fall away for a minute and then come back with a bigger impact than before – a great lesson for any dance producer to learn.

45. NICOLE SCHERZINGER ‘Don’t Hold Your Breath’

Two stunning singles in a row from Nicole, who became a bit of a surprise success this year after I was worried ‘Poison’ would be a fluke. But ‘Don’t Hold Your Breath’ is a triumph, an excellent pseudo-ballad with ‘Irreplaceable’-style Dear John lyrics. It was a number one single in the UK, it did okay in the US and it was her solo breakthrough in Australia – but most of all it was just awesome.

44. KELLY ROWLAND ft. BIG SEAN ‘Lay It On Me’

If I had a pussy I would be popping it like crazy to this. There’s not much more to say, is there? Another slice of divine R&B from Kween Kelendria and Big Sean does a great guest spot. The chorus is just the title repeated over and over and yet it feels so good. Now back to pretending I’m Kelly in the privacy of my bedroom.

43. LEONA LEWIS & AVICII ‘Collide’

Why did this flop (sort of, number 4 isn’t really a flop)? I thought it was absolutely divine, and the exact sort of thing everybody wanted Leona to do. Stay the same, get slated. Do something different, nobody likes it. She can’t win, but whatever, this is fantastic. This “collaboration” with Avicii takes Leona is a direction she’s never been in before, and being a club diva really suits her big voice and knack for drama. She can bring the best out of a ballad, and ‘Collide’ proves, to me anyway, that she’s just as great on the dance floor.

42. BEYONCÉ ‘Countdown’

This is a serious contender for lyrics of the year. Even just “I’m all up under him like it’s cold – wintertime/All up in the kitchen in my heels – dinnertime” would make this an instant classic, but the sixties-meets-nineties vibe and Beyoncé’s energetic performance send this over the edge. Bey needs to ditch the boring ballads (but keep the good ones) and do more of this – homages to the past that still feel entirely fresh and exciting. And to think I didn’t like it at first! Oh, the fool I’ve been.

41. PAUL SIMON ‘Rewrite’

A living legend with nothing left to prove, Paul Simon is still serving up classics at 150 years of age. ‘Rewrite’ is an American story in the style of ‘Mrs. Robinson’, ‘The Boxer’ or ‘America’, and the lyrics will crush your heart. A Vietnam veteran who works at a car wash is writing a book based on his life, however he substitutes all the bad for superficial things like “car chases” in an attempt to forget the lowest points of his past. An unsettling tale of regret and misunderstanding, ‘Rewrite’ is a genius piece of songwriting.

The 100 Best Songs Of 2011: 90-81

December 22, 2011 1 comment

90. WILLOW SMITH ’21st Century Girl’

The life-defining ‘Whip My Hair’ was clearly one of the songs of 2010, so when ’21st Century Girl’ debuted, it was seen as a bit of a disappointment due to it being a bit… well, basic. But the flyest fetus in the game sold this generic beat with her wide-eyed, confident vocal performance and one hell of a video. The chorus is awesome, and if you can forget that you’re singing along to an obscenely rich pre-teen talk about how awesome her life is, there’s a lot of fun to be had here.

89. NICOLA ROBERTS ‘Lucky Day’

That “WAAA WAAA WAAAA WAAAAA” in the first verse of ‘Lucky Day’ is a really, really annoying flaw that probably killed this otherwise great song at radio. Nicola’s voice is gorgeous in the right environment, and while it takes a little getting used to here, the hugeness of this song and the completely unselfconscious vocal performance cannot be ruined by a few irritating moments. “Could it be my/Could it be my lucky day?” repeated into infinity makes me want to go skipping down the street in a sack like a psycho.

88. LEONA LEWIS ‘Hurt’

Anything that gets rock purists riled up is fine by me. That “15 Disappointing Facts About Music” list doing the rounds lately fills me such glee, and I lol at everybody who gets pissed off about it, and pissed off about this. This take on this Nine Inch Nails classic is not as good as the original or Johnny Cash’s definitive version. But it is absolutely gorgeous, done in Leona’s trademark cover style, building up and up into an epic crescendo. She hits all the notes flawlessly, and she brings extra bombast to a song that is already completely drenched in theatrics and melodrama.

87. RIHANNA ‘You Da One’

I think Rihanna’s first two albums are underrated. In the minds of many she had two singles, ‘Pon De Replay’ and ‘SOS’, before ‘Umbrella’, when songs like ‘Break It Off’ and ‘We Ride’ were truly great and do not deserve to be forgotten. How awesome, then, that Rihanna revisited that sound for ‘You Da One’, the second single from Talk That Talk. Over a midtempo-but-hard-so-it-doesn’t-sound-midtempo beat, Rih gives us some music of the sun that is meaningless, pretty and perfect for blasting out of car windows.

86. SNEAKY SOUND SYSTEM ‘Big’

I wish this was a ballad. I know that Sneaky Sound System are a dance act and this is the type of thing they’re known for, but imagine how absolutely stunning this would be with an orchestra and all that shit? Luckily, the shiny disco backing that is here is more than enough to make ‘Big’ a dance epic, a punchy love song that should have been all over the radio. I must say I fell out of touch with Sneaky Sound System during their second album but now I’m back on board thanks to the brilliant ‘We Love’ and this, one of the best Australian singles in recent memory.

85. DRAKE ft. RIHANNA ‘Take Care’

Oh, the melancholy. This song is drowned in an echoing sadness, and both artists involved turn in flawless performances. Reminiscent of Kanye’s 808s & Heartbreaks, this song rolls along on subtle but powerful drums and a piano loop that lodges itself into your brain, ensuring that the emotions of the song stay with you long after it is finished. Drake plays insecure, Rihanna plays lover/mother-figure, and together they build ‘Take Care’ into a raging but quiet storm.

84. DARREN HAYES ‘Angel’

The best pop cover in a year where there were like three released in total, Darren’s take on this Madonna classic is the perfect B-side to the similarly bright ‘Talk Talk Talk’. Like his previous cover of ‘Dress You Up’, this sticks pretty close to the original, sounding very eighties and not messing with the song in any significant way, which works out well. Darren clearly loves the source material and he, as always, sounds absolutely fantastic.

83. DR. DRE ft. EMINEM & SKYLAR GREY ‘I Need A Doctor’

What an epic. The three elements here – Eminem’s desperate verses, Dre’s defensive response and Skylar’s explosive chorus – all combine to provide some of the most dramatic moments to be heard in music all year. The chorus is perfection, the production is beyond brilliant and this brings back some of the drama and emotion that was missing from Eminem’s last two albums. Whether Dr. Dre will ever hurry the fuck up and put out another album is unknown, but if he keeps releasing amazing singles like this I don’t mind the wait.

82. BEYONCÉ ‘Best Thing I Never Had’

Yeah, it sounds a bit like ‘Irreplaceable’ but ‘Best Thing I Never Had’ is too great in its own right to be brought down by a bit of recycling. I’m a bit confused as to why Bey is thinking about this guy if she’s supposedly really, really over him (and on her wedding day in the video? WTF?) but this is a finger-waving ladies/sassy gays anthem for the ages. Yell it into the mirror while pretending some high school non-sweetheart is standing in front of you, sing it at karaoke with your drunk mess friends, and keep this close to your heart always.

81. CHER LLOYD ft. MIKE POSNER ‘With Ur Love’

That’s the story of, that’s the glory of love. Few songs released this year were so bright, so sunny, so full of pure joy. ‘With Ur Love’ is a lost bubblegum hit from the early seventies transported into 2011, and Cher Lloyd (I just can’t refer to her by her first name alone, okay) proves her worth as a pop heavyweight of tomorrow with her on point delivery. Mike Posner is shit but his part is small and he’s hot so I’ll let it slide.

Songs Of The Week: 02/10/11

October 2, 2011 3 comments

1. JENNIFER LOPEZ Papi (LW: 2, WI: 2, HP: 1)

2. DARREN HAYES Bloodstained Heart (LW: 1, WI: 4, HP: 1)

3. RIHANNA ft. CALVIN HARRIS We Found Love (LW: 5, WI: 2, HP: 3)

4. THE SATURDAYS All Fired Up (LW: 3, WI: 4, HP: 1)

5. FLORENCE + THE MACHINE Shake It Out (LW: 6, WI: 3, HP: 5)

6. ADELE Set Fire To The Rain (LW: 4, WI: 4, HP: 4)

7. FRENZAL RHOMB Knuckleheads (NEW, WI: 1, HP: 7)

8. TORI AMOS Carry (LW: 8, WI: 2, HP: 8 )

9. BRITNEY SPEARS Criminal (NEW, WI: 1, HP: 9)

10. LEONA LEWIS & AVICII Collide (LW: 7, WI: 4, HP: 3)

LW: last week
WI: weeks in
HP: highest position

Songs Of The Week: 25/09/11

September 25, 2011 Leave a comment

1. DARREN HAYES Bloodstained Heart (LW: 1, WI: 3, HP: 1)

2. JENNIFER LOPEZ Papi (NEW, WI: 1, HP: 2)

3. THE SATURDAYS All Fired Up (LW: 2, WI: 3, HP: 1)

4. ADELE Set Fire To The Rain (LW: 4, WI: 3, HP: 4)

5. RIHANNA ft. CALVIN HARRIS We Found Love (NEW, WI: 1, HP: 5)

6. FLORENCE + THE MACHINE Shake It Out (LW: 7, WI: 2, HP: 6)

7. LEONA LEWIS & AVICII Collide (LW: 3, WI: 3, HP: 3)

8. TORI AMOS Carry (NEW, WI: 1, HP: 8 )

9. DEMI LOVATO Skyscraper (LW: 6, WI: 3, HP: 6)

10. LADY GAGA Yoü And I (NEW, WI: 1, HP: 10)

LW: last week
WI: weeks in
HP: highest position

Songs Of The Week: 18/09/11

September 18, 2011 Leave a comment

1. DARREN HAYES Bloodstained Heart (LW: 2, WI: 2, HP: 1)

2. THE SATURDAYS All Fired Up (LW: 1, WI: 2, HP: 1)

3. LEONA LEWIS & AVICII Collide (LW: 3, WI: 2, HP: 3)

4. ADELE Set Fire To The Rain (LW: 5, WI: 2, HP: 4)

5. MELANIE C Think About It (LW: 9, WI: 2, HP: 5)

6. DEMI LOVATO Skyscraper (LW: 6, WI: 2, HP: 6)

7. FLORENCE + THE MACHINE Shake It Out (NEW, WI: 1, HP: 7)

8. KELLY ROWLAND ft. LIL’ WAYNE Motivation (LW: 4, WI: 2, HP: 4)

9. COLDPLAY Paradise (NEW, WI: 1, HP: 9)

10. YOKO ONO Talking To The Universe (LW: 10, WI: 2, HP: 10)

LW: last week
WI: weeks in
HP: highest position

Songs Of The Week: 11/09/11

September 11, 2011 Leave a comment

So I’m going to try something I’ve thought about but never done: a list of my ten favourite current songs, every week. I can’t see this being super-interesting to anyone but me, but considering this blog is full of my stupid opinions, this list offers a snapshot of what current* songs I’m listening to/watching the music video of/cry-singing along to/dancing around to this week. Thrilling! Better than the ARIA charts, anyway.

*Current means a recent single, a track on a recent album, or an old song being re-released or re-promoted or remixed (see this week’s number 10).

1. THE SATURDAYS All Fired Up

2. DARREN HAYES Bloodstained Heart

3. LEONA LEWIS & AVICII Collide

4. KELLY ROWLAND ft. LIL’ WAYNE Motivation

5. ADELE Set Fire To The Rain

6. DEMI LOVATO Skyscraper

7. JAY-Z & KANYE WEST No Church In The Wild

8. NICOLA ROBERTS Beat Of My Drum

9. MELANIE C Think About It

10. YOKO ONO Talking To The Universe

Single Review: Leona Lewis & Avicii – ‘Collide’

September 10, 2011 Leave a comment

Remember ‘Outta My Head’, from Echo? Many pop fans flipped out over the uncharacteristically club-influenced track, proclaiming that dance was something Leona Lewis needed to get into – perhaps not permanently, but at least for a change every now and then. The two singles from Echo were ballads, and while ‘Happy’ was a top three hit in the UK, it was widely seen as a lesser version of ‘Bleeding Love’, and as for ‘I Got You’, I can’t even remember how it goes. ‘Collide’, the hugely uptempo first single from new album Glassheart, is much more memorable.

Going just by the descriptions of the new album (“progressive”, “darker”), it feels like Glassheart might be the best Leona album so far. ‘Collide’ supports that feeling, marrying some of my favourite lyrics of the year with a monstrous beat, while still making sure to feature That Voice as the centrepiece. The instrumental – and I’m sure you all know by now that it’s from the Avicii song ‘Penguin’, hence “& Avicii” – is uplifting, and reminiscent of the Guetta/Rowland classic ‘When Love Takes Over’. That song took Kelly from R&B to dance and ‘Collide’ is seemingly designed to do the same for Leona. It works, though I still fully expect there to be ballads galore on the new record.

Even if Glassheart turns out to be a huge disappointment, ‘Collide’ can stand alongside ‘Bleeding Love’ and ‘Run’ as one of Leona’s greatest moments, an epic in a different way, an exploration of new musical themes. Oh and it’s really fun to scream-sing along to.

8.5/10

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