Thursday, December 30, 2010

Top Soundtracks of 2010

Judging the score of a film can be a funny thing, given they're inherent subtlety. If a score is demanding to be noticed, it might very well be detracting from the film, as such many of the more effective scores go largely unnoticed. A truly great score is the one that both compliments the film and can stand on it's own, and those tend to be more inventive, standing out from the usual orchestral pieces that are quickly forgotten.

I'm not sure if it's that there weren't as many memorable soundtracks comprised of popular music this year, or that there were just so many great scores, but since I've been compiling this annual list, there's never been this many score-heavy soundtracks. Seven of the 13 soundtracks mentioned below are on here (mostly) because of their score. Even music-heavy Scott Pilgrim reaches the top slot here because of the labor of Nigel Godrich on the inventive score. Sure, having Beck, Broken Social Scene and Metric writing music for the fictional bands helped a bunch, but Godrich's score puts it over the top.

(As an added bonus, several of the entries below have "reassembled" playlists incorporating all the songs used in the film -- enjoy!)

10. Winter's Bone
Not since Deliverance has a banjo and a ride down a river been so frightening. Southern Missouri native Marideth Sisco was hired as a music consultant but ended up singing nearly all the authentic Ozark mountain folk in the film. She even appears in the film at one of the most pivotal scenes - where actress Jennifer Lawrence (as Ree) comes upon Sisco and the Blackberry Winter band she assembled singing "High on a Mountain." Lawrence really comes alive in that moment and there's no turning back for either Ree or the film.
Album stream

9. 127 Hours
Director Danny Boyle re-teams with Bollywood composer A.R. Rahman for this uplifting survival drama. The long stretches without dialogue serve as a challenge for Rahman to walk that fine line between emotionally informing the audience and outright manipulation. The score helps keep this realistic horror from falling into the traps of that genre.
Rssmbld Sndtrck Playlist

8. Heartbeats (Les amours imaginaires)
Xavier Dolan's film of heartbreak and lust has a soundtrack to match it, leaning heavily on the ethereal voice of Sweden's Karin Elisabeth Dreijer Andersson of Fever Ray and The Knife. And damn it if French new wave band Indochine doesn't make a perfect backdrop to scouting out a new lover in the city of Quebec.
Rssmbld Sndtrck Playlist

7. TRON: Legacy
The French electronic duo Daft Punk worked for two years in secrecy on the score, opting to go it alone even after producers brought in the more seasoned composer Hans Zimmer to collaborate. In the final product, the robotic duo seem surprisingly at home working in the classical realm, but the highlights are still where you recognize that Daft Punk sound. Their appearance in the film coincides with the album's single "Derezzed," making it both a highlight of the soundtrack and the film.
Album stream

6. The Kids Are All Right
The moment in the film when the micro-manager of the two moms Nic (Annette Bening) sings Joni Mitchell's "All I Want" and sperm dad Paul (Mark Ruffalo) joins is when this soundtrack was cemented in the top 10. It moves up several notches thanks to the thematic use of David Bowie for Paul and Deerhoof for Joni (Mia Wasikowska).


Rssmbld Sndtrck Playlist

5. Inception
Hans Zimmer has come a long way since his work with the Buggles, but he's not afraid to pull from his eighties alternative past. Old friend and Smiths' guitar great Johnny Marr lends a hand for this memorable score, which initially is based upon the Edith Piaf performed "Non Je Ne Regrette Rien." Zimmer slows down the opening and creates something wholly new and menacing. That Marion Cotillard won an Oscar for playing Edith Piaf makes it like a reference within a reference. Or does it?
Album stream

4. Greenberg
There a few key songs in the Noah Baumbach-directed film that LCD's James Murphy weaves his score around, toning down his DFA slack sound to work side-by-side with the 70s classic “It Never Rains In Southern California” by Albert Hammond and with the coke-fueled Duran Duran track “Chauffer." The most memorable use of music in the film, though, occurs to Serge Gainsbourg's "Histoire de Melody Nelson," as party goers all stare into the pool in amazement.
Rssmbld Sndtrck Playlist

3. Carlos
Is it a movie or a mini-series? I don't know, but since it made the rounds during film festivals, I'm including it here because it deserves some serious recognition. Director Olivier Assayas wanted to use New Jersey post-punk band The Feelies for much of the soundtrack, but ran into issues when the band didn't want to be associated with on screen terrorism. Assayas instead employed similarly rhythmic songs from UK's post-punkers Wire ("Ahead," "The 15th," "Drill") for a chilling effect. Assayas still managed to work The Feelies "Loveless Love" into an early non-violent scene, but the best moment has to be when Dead Boys' "Sonic Reducer" blasts from the radio during a tense moment at the Swiss border. Throw in some early New Order and some Lightning Seeds and you have an exquisite mix. At 332 minutes in length, there's lots of room for music, but Assayas doesn't over do it, instead targeting them wisely, making every bullet count.
Rssmbld Sndtrck Playlist

2. The Social Network
Here's the selection on this list that I'm most likely to regret. As I'm watching it again here in the background while I write, is it possible that it's already feeling dated? I'm leaving it here at #2 anyway, because of the initial feeling after first viewing. Trent Reznor and repeat collaborator Atticus Ross do a lot to make the re-enactment of a court hearing seem more exciting than it really should. Points tallied for the re-working of Greig's "In the Hall of the Mountain King" to back the much ballyhooed Henley Sequence.

1. Scott Pilgrim vs the World
One of the most overlooked films of 2010 tops the list here, thanks to its inventive mix of stylized score, original and popular music. The story goes that director Edward Wright pointed longtime Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich in the direction of Dario Argento's prog-rock band Goblin, which he both played in and also used extensively for score in his horror films. Godrich mixed this with video game inspiration and comes up with some truly wondrous moments to back the craziness on the screen. Because music is an important part of the plot, other musicians/writers were brought in to write the music for the bands being portrayed. Beck famously knocked out 18 songs in an afternoon for our heroes, Sex Bob-Omb while Broken Social Scene obviously had some fun recording their short bits for Crash and the Boys. But it's Metric's "Black Sheep," written for The Clash at Demonhead that nearly steals the whole show, as Brie Larson's Envy Adams stops us all dead in our tracks (video.) The actors all played the instruments and sang the songs, so they could achieve Spinal Tap-authenticity, so the final product on screen is like Scott Pilgrim himself: endearing, scruffy and perhaps a bit too behind the beat.
Rssmbld Sndtrck Playlist

Also worth mentioning:
Black Swan - No drama was more reliant upon music that this film. Clint Mansell weaves Swan Lake into his score, but it's Tchaikovsky's composition that ultimately drives the picture.
The Ghost Writer - Alexandre Desplat's taut score recalls Bernard Herrmann's work with Hitchcock.
Jonah Hex - Mastodon did the music and really that's all that's needed to get mentioned.

Previously: Top Ten Movie Soundtracks of 2009; Top Movie Soundtracks of 2008; Top Movie Soundtracks of 2007

Monday, December 27, 2010

Ear on TV: Week of 12.27.10: Live at Daryl's House

Hall & Oates - Live at Daryl's House on WGN New Year's Eve
New Year's Eve has always seemed to suffer from inflated expectations -- so much pressure on 'blowing out' the past year to welcome in the new. For those either stuck at home or taking the event in stride with more tempered expectations, there are plenty of options on TV this year to play in the background during your New Year's Eve Bridge Tournament Blowout 2011! (or whatever you're calling it).

Top of the list is the surprisingly successful monthly web series from Hall & Oate's Daryl Hall, Live from Daryl's House, which is crossing over to TV on Chicago's WGN. For the New Year's Eve special, Hall is culling together a best of from the critically acclaimed series, featuring collaborations with artists like his old buddy John Oates, legends Todd Rundgren, Smokey Robinson, Toots & the Maytals and even some younger artists like Neon Trees and Sharon Jones. Hall likens his show to a sort of response to the Elvis Costello-hosted Spectacle, a show frequently featured in this space. Said Hall recently, “I love Elvis, but his show is more like Inside the Actors Studio. My show is the exact opposite of that. There’s no audience, and it’s balls-to-the-wall craziness and chaos.” WGN will be airing the special from 11:00PM-1:00AM (EST), and if it goes well, the series may make the move to television a more permanent thing.

Your other musical options for the evening vary enough to satisfy just about any party-at-home's taste. New Year's Eve with Carson Daly, may have the more interesting lineup this year, featuring performances from Lil' Wayne and the very hot Nicki Minaj while Daly interviews Bono and The Edge about their experience on Broadway with the calamity that is Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. Dick Clark's Rockin' New Year's Eve with Ryan Seacrest spices things up a bit with Ke$ha, Drake, Far*East Movement, Mike Posner and Avril Lavigne. MTV will play it for laughs and/or spectacle, with comedienne Whitney Cummings hosting a countdown with Snooki inside the ball this year and the rest of the cast of Jersey Shore running around Times Square. Speaking of spectacle, HBO will be running the Bette Midler special The Showgirl Must Go On.

Elsewhere this week, the winter of Paul McCartney appreciation continues with this year's Kennedy Center Honors in Washington. McCartney is honored for lifetime achievement in the arts with fellow singer/songwriter Merle Haggard, along with Oprah Winfrey, Broadway composer Jerry Herman (La Cage aux Folles, Hello Dolly!), and dancer and choreographer Bill T. Jones. Artists performing tributes to McCartney include Foo Fighter's Dave Grohl (a big Wings fan), No Doubt and, a surprising highlight of the night, Steven Tyler doing an electrifying rendition of tracks from The Beatles' Abbey Road. Willie Nelson, Sheryl Crowe and Norah Jones highlight Merle Haggard's tribute.

Finally, power pop legends Cheap Trick has been playing the rock for over 36 years now, finally garnering them a performance on the PBS concert staple Austin City Limits. The Rockford, IL quartet's 12 song set list features nearly all their hits, including favorites "Surrender" and "I Want You to Want Me." Absent is longtime drummer Bun E. Carlos, who is still in the band but taking a break as the touring drummer -- the sticks remain in the family with guitarist Rick Nielsen's son Dax beating the skins as his temporary replacement. It's not a bad way to start 2011, really, repeating the Cheap Trick mantra of, "We're all alright, we're all alright."


Watch the full episode. See more Austin City Limits.
Picks for the week
Monday, December 27
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: The Temper Trap (REPEAT)
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Ra Ra Riot (REPEAT)
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Jonny Lang (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Japandroids (REPEAT)
TBS: Conan: Soundgarden (REPEAT)
Tuesday, December 28
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Diddy (REPEAT)
CBS: Kennedy Center Honors: Paul McCartney, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Dave Grohl, Sheryl Crow, Steven Tyler, Norah Jones, Kid Rock, No Doubt
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Annie Lenox (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Menomena (REPEAT)
SYNDICATION: The Ellen DeGeneres Show: Pink, Rascal Flatts (REPEAT)
TBS: Lopez Tonight: Ne-Yo (REPEAT)
Wednesday, December 29
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Little Big Town (REPEAT)
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Florence and the Machine (REPEAT)
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Robyn (REPEAT)
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Paul McCartney (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: City and Colour (REPEAT)
TBS: Conan: Reggie Watts (REPEAT)
Thursday, December 30
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Crystal Castles (REPEAT)
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: John Mellencamp (REPEAT)
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Toots & the Maytals (REPEAT)
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Los Campesinos! (REPEAT)
TBS: Conan: The 88 (REPEAT)
Friday, December 31
ABC: Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve With Ryan Seacrest 2011: La Roux, Drake, Ke$ha, Mike Posner, Avril Lavigne, Far⋆East Movement
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Rihanna (REPEAT)
HBO: Bette Midler: The Showgirl Must Go On: Bette Midler
MTV: MTV's New Year's Bash 2011: Whitney Cummings, Flo Rida
NBC: New Year's Eve with Carson Daly: Lil' Wayne, Nicki Minaj, My Chemical Romance, U2
WGN: Live From Daryl's House: Hall & Oates, Toots & the Maytals, Todd Rundgren, Sharon Jones, Rob Thomas, Neon Trees, Train, Smokey Robinson, Eli "Paperboy" Reed, Jose Feliciano
Saturday, January 1
BBCAMERICA: The Graham Norton Show: Eliza Doolittle
NBC: Saturday Night Live: Rihanna (REPEAT)
PBS: Austin City Limits: Cheap Trick

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Top 50+ Albums of 2010

2010 turned out to be another pretty good year for music, but no album ran away with the top spot this year. LCD Soundsystem's This Is Happening gets the nod for me, by a nose, but it's not even really James Murphy's best effort (that would be Sound of Silver). The rest of the more than fifty releases below are an eclectic collection, although my rockist bias is still probably apparent. But how many lists out there are you going to find with Ty Segall, Kanye West and John Mellencamp on it. (Yeah, the last one surprised me as well, but it's gooooood.)

Playlist: Top 50 Albums of 2010

LCD Soundsystem - This is Happening1. LCD Soundsystem - This is Happening
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

If this is indeed the last album that LCD Soundsystem releases, and James Murphy has hinted as much, then this is the way to go. This is Happening, lyrically, is Murphy's most personal release, continuing the inward trend since LCD SS' beginnings in detached irony.

Review, May 18, 2010


Deerhunter - Halycon Digest2. Deerhunter - Halycon Digest
Stream / Purchase [mp3

The slow and steady progression for Deerhunter from damaged art rock to accessible (yet still damaged) pop band has been fascinating to witness, and with Halycon Digest, they've perfected the right balance between the two for a artful pop album that rewards on repeat listens.

Review, September 28, 2010


Wavves - King of the Beach3. Wavves - King of the Beach
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

Nate Williams rebounded nicely from an up and down 2009. Enlisting the late Jay Reatard's old band to back him, King of the Beach finds Williams still in the loner/outsider role, but now the music backing the loser-based lyrics are far more rich. Easily one of the most exhilarating releases of 2010.

Review, August 3, 2010


Titus Andronicus - The Monitor4. Titus Andronicus - The Monitor
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

With every repeat listen of The Monitor, the seams holding together New Jersey split just a little more, as the love/hate relationship Titus Andronicus has with their home state is volatile, to say the least. And this from an album allegedly about the Civil War, complete with spoken word cameo from Craig Finn as Walt Whitman (the best recording Finn took part in this year).



Los Campesinos - Romance is Boring5. Los Campesinos - Romance is Boring
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

Romance is Boring is anything but boring, instead at times white hot and most of the time unable to sit still. It's pop at in the face of chaos. An album that seems to have been overlooked by many (maybe some were assuming they'd be releasing more like the year prior).

Review, January 26, 2010


Sleigh Bells - WTreats6. Sleigh Bells - Treats
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

As if The Go! Team's cheerleaders decided to make out with the AV club guys, sending the dial into the red. Distortion and pep don't often go together, but this noisy affair is one for the eardrums.



Male Bonding - 7. Male Bonding - Nothing Hurts
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

The album I played the most in 2010. Combines everything I loved about the early 90s and turned the BPMs up to workout pace. Lift those knees!

Review, May 11, 2010


Ariel Pinks Haunted Graffiti - Before Today8. Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - Before Today
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

Much like Deerhunter, Ariel Rosenberg has graduated a bit from the lo-fi art noise of his earlier recordings, moving from the bedroom to an actual studio. The songs, however, are still warped by the sun and probably under the influence of illegal substances. So there's that. Wheee!


Kanye West - My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy9. Kanye West - My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

Might have topped my list had it been released sooner/Kanye didn't seem like such a douche bag/it weren't for my aforementioned perceived rockist bias. Certainly wins for Best use of a King Crimson song on the scorcher, "Power."

(Review November 23, 2010)


Beach House - Teen Dream10. Beach House - Teen Dream
Stream / Purchase [mp3]

The Baltimore duo Beach House also upgraded their recording studio this year, in their first Sub Pop debut, putting some extra polish on their already lush and dreamy sound.

(Review January 26, 2010)


11. Vampire Weekend - Contra
(Review January 12, 2010)


12. Ty Segall - Logos


13. The Posies - Blood/Candy

Review, September 28, 2010


14. Joanna Newsom - Have One on Me

(Ear on TV preview December 13, 2010)


15. Arcade Fire - The Suburbs
(review August 3, 2010)


16. Best Coast - Crazy For You


17. Spoon - Transference


18. Twin Shadow - Forget


19. John Mellencamp - No Better Than This


20. The Fresh & Onlys - Play it Strange


21. Superchunk - Majesty Shredding

(review September 14, 2010)


22. Sufjan Stevens - The Age of Adz

(review October 12, 2010)


23. Swans - My Father Will Guide Me Up A Rope To The Sky


24. No Age - Everything In Between

Review, September 28, 2010


25. Off! - Four EPs

26. The Walkmen - Lisbon (review September 14, 2010)
27. Gil Scott-Heron - I'm New Here
28. The Soft Pack - The Soft Pack (review February 2, 2010)
29. The Tallest Man on Earth - The Wild Hunt
30. Grinderman - Grinderman 2 (review September 14, 2010)
31. The Intelligence - Males
32. The Black Keys - Brothers (Ear on TV preview)
33. Field Music - Measure (review February 16, 2010)
34. Bottomless Pit - Blood Under the Bridge (review August 17, 2010)
35. She & Him - Volume 2 (review March 23, 2010)
36. Janelle Monae - The ArchAndroid (Ear on TV preview for May 24, 2010)
37. Jenny & Johnny - I'm Having Fun Now (review August 31, 2010)
38. Robyn - Body Talk
39. Liars - Sisterworld (review March 9, 2010)
40. Crystal Castles - II
41. Baths - Cerulean (review 05/19/09)
42. Big Boi - Sir Lucious Left Foot...The Son Of Chico Dusty (review July 5, 2010)
43. Marnie Stern - Marnie Stern
44. Yeasayer - Oddblood (review February 9, 2010)
45. Mumford & Sons - Sigh No More (Ear on TV preview February 15, 2010)
46. Tyvek - Nothing Fits
47. The Roots - How I Got Over (review June 22, 2010)
48. The National - High Violet (review May 11, 2010)
49. Gorillaz - Plastic Beach
50. New Pornographers - Together (review 05/19/09)
Broken Social Scene - Forgiveness Rock Record (review May 4, 2010)
Women - Public Strain
Charlotte Gainsbourg - IRM (review February 13, 2010)
Ted Leo & the Pharmacists - Brutalist Bricks (review March 9, 2010)
Dum Dum Girls - I Will Be (review March 30, 2010)
Hot Chip - One Life Stand (review February 9, 2010)
Perfume Genius - Learning
Boston Spaceships - Our Cubehouse Still Rocks (review September 21, 2010)
Delorean - Subiza

Previously: Top 50 Albums from 2009, Top 50 Albums from 2008, Top 100 Albums from 2007, Top 100+ from 2006, Top 50 from 2005, Top 10 from 2004

Monday, December 20, 2010

Ear on TV: Week of 12.20.10: Beach House

Beach House perform on Conan, Monday December 20
With only a few more days until Christmas, it's both time for holiday music and to reflect upon the past 12 months with year-end lists. One album that keeps popping up at or near the top of every list this year is the latest from Beach House, Teen Dream, released all the way back in January. Tonight, the duo from Baltimore will be all too happy to remind us why that album is still stuck in our heads, with a performance on Conan.

While the band continues to tour in support of Teen Dream, they also just offered up a new song for the holiday season, "I Do Not Care for the Winter Sun," free to download from their site. It's a song that's quite appropriate for the shortest of days and darkest of nights* but expect the band to play something instead from the album (likely, the great "Norway").

*Tonight, in fact, is a lunar eclipse occurring on the longest night of the year, the first time this has happened in nearly 500 years.

Finally, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon gets into the holiday spirit with special holiday-themed musical performances from Jose Feliciano (Thursday) and Aaron Neville (Friday). Feliciano's "Feliz Navidad," which has become a classic in the holiday season, is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year and the Roots will join in for a no doubt stirring rendition (queue the horns!). The Puerto Rican born Feliciano recently found his way to Daryl Hall's online show Live From Daryl's House to perform the classic:


Picks for the week
Monday, December 20
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Goo Goo Dolls (REPEAT)
E!: Chelsea Lately: Diddy-Dirty Money
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Brad
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Pink Martini
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Jimmy Eat World (REPEAT)
TBS: Lopez Tonight: Xzibit
TBS: Conan: Beach House
Tuesday, December 21
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Social Distortion (REPEAT)
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Sam Adams
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Alberta Cross (REPEAT)
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Patti Smith
TBS: Lopez Tonight: Bettye Lavette with the Ese Vatos
TBS: Conan: Los Lobos
Wednesday, December 22
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Brad (REPEAT)
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Grace Potter & the Nocturnals
COMEDY CENTRAL: The Colbert Report: Patti Smith (REPEAT)
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Sam Adams
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Whitney Cummings
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Jose Feliciano
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: The Walkmen (REPEAT)
TBS: Lopez Tonight: will.i.am
Thursday, December 23
CBS: Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson: Aimee Mann
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Get Busy Committee
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Aaron Neville
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Kate Nash (REPEAT)
TBS: Lopez Tonight: Filter
TBS: Conan: Reggie Watts
Friday, December 24
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Darker My Love (REPEAT)
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Get Busy Committee
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Nas & Damian Marley (REPEAT)
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Johnny Mathis, Lyle Lovett
SYNDICATION: The Ellen DeGeneres Show: Sugarland
Saturday, December 25
BBCAMERICA: The Graham Norton Show: Ellie Goulding
PBS: Austin City Limits: Ben Harper and Relentless7 (REPEAT)

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

MTV's $5 Cover Launched Today

18 months after shooting, MTV's 2nd edition of the Craig Brewer (Hustle & Flow) creation $5 Cover is finally live on their site. Lynn Shelton (Humpday, Mad Men) directed the 12 mini episode season featuring several Doe Bay Fest veterans -- The Maldives, The Moondoggies, Thee Satisfaction -- along with other local acts like The Lights, Thee Emergency, The Tea Cozies and more.

In the span of time it's taken to make it on the web (appears to be a web-only project this time out, and all the episodes are available at once), a lot has changed in the Seattle music scene, so it kind of feels like a cool time capsule for 2009. And really, regardless of whether it encapsulates the Seattle scene or not, there's a definite passion about the locales and the music that is immediately evident in Lynn Shelton's work here.

Besides the wonderful performances by the bands mentioned, and seeing The Tractor Tavern, Blue Moon and Chop Suey locales, you should watch if only to listen to Sean Nelson (Harvey Danger) and Jason Dodson (The Maldives) shoot the shit outside a show. They could really film a spin-off of them just waxing about beards and pop culture and I'd watch.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Riffs, Harmonies & Earworms: The Posies and Brendan Benson (Showbox, Dec 11, 2010)

Jon, Brendan & Ken in full harmony mode (more pics here)
I'm still picking up the pieces from the flood that greeted me at home Saturday night, but there's no need to clean up after the flood of harmonies that rained on us at the Showbox earlier in the evening. Saturday marked the final night of the tour for this all-star power pop lineup of Brendan Benson and The Posies. Besides being the final night, it was also a homecoming for The Posies, so Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow were especially on fire, and pulling double-duty as half of Brendan Benson's band, they had a lot of stage time to for their musical theatrics.

Stringfellow backing up Benson
The witty banter and in-jokes between Ken and Jon sometimes had the stoic Benson shaking his head (as if to say "ah shucks, Ken!"), but when the songs were playing, the three (along with Benson's drummer/neighbor Brad Pemberton) played like they'd been singing and playing together for years. Benson's set drew a lot from the great songs of the past, reminding me what a shame it is that more folks don't know about his pre-Raconteurs work. From the opener of "Folk Singer" to "Spit it Out" and "Tiny Spark" (and, my God yes, "Crosseyed"!) there are so many great songs in his quiver to draw from. When his set ended, Ken and Jon conferred briefly and negotiated another song to end on, as they rightly surmised that "A Whole Lot Better," from 2009's My Old, Familiar Friend, absolutely needed to be played. For each and every song, Ken and Jon added punch and incredible background harmonies, adding even more life to Benson's already exquisite songcraft. I really do hope they revisit this connection again in the future so we can find a way for more folks to get a chance to hear the magic. (The video below is the only one I could find from the night... it is shaky and barely representative, but it is.)



Auer backing Benson
This being Seattle, The Posies got to end the night, and while relying heavily on the latest (and near greatest) Blood/Candy - seven songs, there was plenty of room for nostalgia and songs rarely heard (for instance, the entirety of the 1996 UK single for "Please Return It," which includes the b-sides "Sad to be Aware" and "Terrorize"). Despite playing a full set with Benson, Jon & Ken came out white hot, moving all over the stage in quick dashes and leaps galore. All eras were well represented and unless your night hinged upon hearing something from 1989's Failure or 2005's Every Kind of Light, Posies fans had to be thrilled at the song choices. The encore of "Definite Door" running into "Burn and Shine," complete with Auer's guitar strings no longer being able to withstand the onslaught, gave me flashbacks of performances from the mid-90s, when angst was in full bloom*. In a year filled with 90's nostalgia, leave it to The Posies not to just revisit fondly, but to tear it up and re-arrange it anew.

*You have to love YouTube for being able to hunt down the past and present it all again. Check out this video circa 1994 of The Posies destroying their equipment after playing "Definite Door" for the UK's "The Word" on Channel 4.

Click here for photos.

Playlist: The Posies setlist for December 11, 2010 (click for text listing)
Brendan Benson approx. setlist for December 11, 2010 (click for text listing)

Previously: Power Popgasm - Brendan Benson & The Posies concert preview

Monday, December 13, 2010

Ear on TV: Week on 12.13.10: Joanna Newsom

Joanna Newsom on Letterman, Tuesday
Fresh off her recent triumphant performance at Carnegie Hall, indie rock harpist Joanna Newsom is back in the Big Apple for an appearance on Letterman. Besides her electric performances, Newsom's been in the news thanks to a living tribute album to her for charity called Versions of Joanna and featuring covers of her songs by Billy Bragg, M. Ward, Owen Pallett and more. Proceeds from sale of the album go to Oxfam America's Pakistan Floods Relief Fund.

Meanwhile, in a bid to take over the winter holiday entirely, Mariah Carey appears in two more Christmas specials this week, entertaining the Obamas with Christmas in Washington (airing on Friday) and her own holiday special, Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas To You, tonight on ABC. All this after having already performed at the annual Christmas in Rockefeller Center.

Perhaps it's the nesting instinct is kicking in, as Carey's pregnancy at these performances has started to become the bigger take away than her vocal chords. At the Christmas in Washington special, filmed yesterday, Carey hardly moved and seemed winded after singing "One Child," from her Merry Christmas II You album. Considering baby daddy Nick Cannon's genes are involved, the kid probably wasn't sitting still for the performance.

Picks for the week
Monday, December 13
ABC: Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas to You: Mariah Carey
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Darker My Love
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Diddy-Dirty Money
COMEDY CENTRAL: The Colbert Report: Patti Smith
FUEL: The Daily Habit: The Greenhornes
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Good Charlotte
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Stephen Bishop
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Two Door Cinema Club (REPEAT)
TBS: Conan: Jimmy Eat World
Tuesday, December 14
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Goo Goo Dolls
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Joanna Newsom
COMEDY CENTRAL: The Colbert Report: Stephen Sondheim
FUEL: The Daily Habit: The Greenhornes
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Stephen Bishop
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: A Perfect Circle
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Trent Reznor
TBS: Conan: Broken Bells
Wednesday, December 15
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: The Temper Trap
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Ronnie Spector
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Red Jumpsuit Apparatus
NBC: Late Night With Jimmy Fallon: Annie Lennox
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Interpol
SYNDICATION: The Ellen DeGeneres Show: Ciara
TBS: Conan: Edward Sharpe & the Magentic Zeros
Thursday, December 16
ABC: Jimmy Kimmel Live: Diddy
CBS: Late Show With David Letterman: Florence and the Machine
COMEDY CENTRAL: The Colbert Report: Paul Simon
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Brad
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: School of Bells
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Stevie Wonder
TBS: Lopez Tonight: Ciara, Justin Timberlake
TBS: Conan: Jenny and Johnny
Friday, December 17
FUEL: The Daily Habit: Brad (REPEAT)
NBC: The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Lyle Lovett with Kat Edonson
NBC: Last Call With Carson Daly: Fitz & the Tantrums
PBS: Tavis Smiley: Stevie Wonder
TNT: Christmas in Washington: Maxwell, Andrea Bocelli, Mariah Carey, Annie Lennox, Matthew Morrison, Miranda Gosgrove
Saturday, December 18
NBC: Saturday Night Live: Eminem
PBS: Austin City Limits: Andrew Bird, St. Vincent (REPEAT)