Sunday, November 28, 2010

I Singalongs

Welcome aboard the bipolar express, a musical trainwreck on a 5-stop continuous loop between the twin stations of elation and deflation. I've had plenty of time on my hands recently but I've still failed miserably in my editorial duties and this bloated tradition continues to expand its tasteline year on year. But my hope is that the scope creep should make things a little more interactive. Feel free to self-edit and build your own sub-compilation of favourites from the 89 samples contained here.

Same rules apply :
- Play Loud
- Sing Along Where Appropriate
- Skip The Ones That Make You Uncomfortable

Previous Compilations
Upsetting The Apple Tart
We Send Kisses
Choo-Choo-Choo-Choo Beep! Beep!
Songs For Girls and Boys

All of the songs on this first one were indirectly chosen by a set of (nearly) 3 year old ears and an even fresher set of 18 month old ears. These are the songs which the girls have responded to in some small, sometimes imperceptible way, singing along, asking for it to be turned up, nodding their heads along silently in their seats, asking me to play it again, asking me who it is or what's the name of the song or in some cases what instrument is jumping out at them. And two fine sets of ears they are - D's party piece is "name that tune" and she can generally out-gun anyone. For example the first 45 seconds of the Freelance Whales song is just random plumbing noises barely audible when the car is moving - within 5 seconds D always pipes up with "Are we ready?" preparing us all to sing along once it kicks in.

We're like an indie-rock Flanders family driving around the back roads of west Wicklow, hail rain or shine, pretending we're outdoorsy with the heating cranked up full and the stereo belting out dodgy hipster experiments. So this collection has been truly road tested and these songs are guaranteed to provoke in-car singalongs and wild 4-part family harmony experimentation in all trajectories of the nuclear family in motion.

1. Karen O and The Kids | All is Love"L.O.Beep.Beep" is how this is sung in our house. Had no idea these guys were responsible for the Where The Wild Things Are soundtrack. This features whistling, clapping, counting, spelling, ooohing, and simple lyrics wrapped around a great tune. A huge favourite with the under 3s in our family.
2. Edward Sharp and The Magnetic Zeroes | Home



This one goes back a while - a guaranteed full house on the dance floor. Has been known to inspire wild experimentation in dance moves....and the girls generally follow suit.

3. Air Waves | Shine On

4. The Avett Brothers | I and Love and You

5. Bill Callahan | Sycamore
This guy is phenomenal. Listened to him a lot as Smog in the mid 90s but lost touch a little. His voice is incredible and his off kilter song writing and willfully unscientific song structures always keep you guessing. His ability to gnaw feeling from the most inert subjects is praiseworthy - here for example he's singing about a housing estate in Naas and it's like, soooo evocative! This is amazing :



6. Boat Beam | Rain Pauly
D loves this..... she sings "See The Rain...... Falling" This is also her first exposure to a cello in the wild. And she appears to have developed a peculiar affinity with the instrument. Having shown her a couple of youtube clips of girls playing cellos, she now hilariously plays air-cello (very seriously) along with this song during our Kitchen Discos.
7. Dixie Cups | Iko Iko
I believe this is an old New Orleans marching song. This version was recorded in the foyer of a recording studio as they waited their turn to record. The drumming you hear is drumsticks on an ashtray. The version was good enough to keep and they added some additional instruments in the studio and the rest as they say is fun for kids.

8. Freelance Whales | Generator ^ First Floor
The first song Jolly Small ever sang along to. Jolly Tall scarily knows most of the words.
9. Midlake | Jungler


10. The National | So Far Around The Bend
From the Dark Was the Night compilation.
11. The Notwist | Boneless
This will get ridiculous as we move through the rest of this year's compilations. Here, the 2 Acher brothers appear together, in the one band, amazingly enough. I've been listening, enthralled to The Notwist for years. Everyone should own a copy of Neon Golden.

12. The Saw Doctors | Red Cortina
Anyone who remembers dancing in a shed or a community centre as a child at a "disco" with "the light still shining through the winda" will relate to this. Anyone who has a daughter, listen well.

13. The Shins | Saint Simon


The complex, intertwined, multilayered vocal and guitar lines in the last minute of this are the equivalent of an ice cream headache for the ears. In a good way.

14. The Softpack | Answer to Yourself
No idea what it is about this piece of new-wave self-help which D relates to but excessive reason has been known to result in the "Universe being thrown out with the bath water." So lets not over analyse.

15. The Strokes | Is This It

16. Thao | Bag Of Hammers




D does a great rendition of this featuring a random tumbling-out of kiddie syllables all finishing with "ice cream".


17. Those Darlins | The Whole Damn Thing
I call this the vegtarian guilt song.

18. Wintersleep | Weighty Ghost
"I got outta bed today, swear to God I couldn't see my face." A classic example of puffy smushins in the wild. These guys were chewing tinfoil on last year's compilation if you cast your mind back. The missing link between dairy products and depression. I have this tic where, without even being conscious of it, I stare at strangers and generally within seconds, superimpose on them the first draft of my version of their life story. I was in The Oval on Abbey Street with Herr Doylee before the Wintersleep gig and there was a group of boyos drinking in the corner, looked like they were school friends from Kilkenny, combat jackets, bad hats covering bad haircuts, probably hooking up for a regular Friday night pint and a chat. Turns out they were from Halifax, Nova Scotia and they were called Wintersleep :) How rare and refreshing a thing in this age of media saturation not to have any kind of awareness of what a band you're dying to see live looks like or whether the lead singer is a bearded giant or a bald dwarf. How rare and refreshing a thing also in this age of media saturation for a band not to have addressed the bad hair and combat jackets as a going stylistic concern. I'm sure there's a lesson in there for me not to be so judgemental of Kilkenny people. But tics are tics and I won't be told, even if I'm a million miles off every time.
19. Wisely | Through Any Window
D learned her colours with the help of this song and a wall-hanging in our kitchen so it has a special place in her heart and ours.


20. YACHT | Psychic City
The dance floor filler at our Saturday morning discos.


21. Andrew Bird | Oh No
Teaching children all over the world how to whistle.
22. dEUS | Everything is the Same (Except No One Believes Me)
A Bside. The chords, the words and the main vocal line on this are pretty simple. So my job is easy. M has been known to make the high pitched shrieking refrain her own. Not so easy, but she has earned the permanent respect of her children and her life partner through her efforts. These are the things that matter.

1 comment:

Jev said...

Thanks a million for the music for Christmas! They arrived yesterday, and we listened to two of the CD's so far through dinner. A proper treat to have a fresh mix with no idea of what the next track will be! This is a great idea, and your some man for putting in the effort, very much appreciated!