Top 100 Songs of 2011 (Honourable mention & 100-76)

2011 was replete with an abundance of fantastic music. I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the tunes that were good but couldn’t find a place in my Top 100. Here they are…

Honourable mention:

Alex Turner – Piledriver Waltz; The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – Belong; Daft Punk – Fall (M83 vs. Big Black Delta remix); Honeychild – The Owl; Martin Solveig f. Dragonette – Hello; Wild Beasts – End Come Too Soon; Joker – The Vision; The Antlers – No Widows; Gang Gang Dance – Adult Goth; We Are Augustine – Chapel Song; Frank Ocean – Swim Good; Lady Antebellum – Just a Kiss; Jennifer Lopez f. Pitbull – On The Floor; The Strokes – Under Cover of Darkness; Cold War Kids – Bulldozer; Cage The Elephant – Aberdeen; Desire – Under Your Spell; Radiohead – Lotus Flower; Wye Oak – Civilian; Tune-Yards – Bizness; Junip – White Rain; Beady Eye – The Beat Goes On; The Naked & Famous – Girls Like You; Patrick Wolf – The City; Crystal Fighters – Home; Blue October – The Feel Again (Stay); Lights – Toes; Evanescence – Lost in Paradise; Hot Chelle Rae – Bleed; Fefe Dobson – Can’t Breathe; The Sheepdogs – I Don’t Know; Jay-Z & Kanye West – No Church in The Wild; Emmy The Great – Paper Forest (In The Afterglow of Rapture); Jessie J. – Price Tag; Karen O., Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross – Immigrant Song; Ellie Goulding – Lights; KO – Moving Mountains; The Script – Science & Faith; Into the Clouds – The Sound of Arrows; Foster the People – Waste; AWOLNATION – Sail; The Death Set – I Miss You Beau Velasco; The Chemical Brothers – Escape 700; Baden Baden – 78; Armistice – City Lights Cry; Buck 65 f. Jenn Grant – Paper Airplane; Rainbow Arabia – Without You; Hooray For Earth – Comfortable, Comparable; Astral Rejection – I Set My Friends on Fire; Iamamiwhoami – T; The Get Up Kids – Pararelevant; Active Child – Playing House.

If that cracking collection of songs couldn’t fit into my top 100, those that did must be pretty monumental. They are…

100. The Japanese Popstars – Song For Lisa

Dance-tastic, flighty and levitating. Watch your head.

99. Shakira f. Pitbull – Rabiosa

If you don’t like this song, Pitbull will bite you en la boca. I’m not taking that chance, thanks. If it were Shakira on the other hand…

98. Pitbull f. Ne-Yo, Afrojack & Nayer – Give Me Everything

If you don’t like this song, Pitbull, Ne-Yo, and a couple other cats will bite you not only en la boca, but also en el cerebro; again, call me risk averse, but I’m willing to err on the side of caution and avoid the possibility. Just grab somebody sexy, tell em hey!

97. Chris Brown – Yeah x3

Chris (Blonde a la Demolition Man Wesley Snipes) Brown hits wicked hard on this song. He hits three things undeniably hard: his vocals, his dance moves, and, um…I’m forgetting the last thing.

96. Grouplove – Betty’s Bomb Shell

Just has that je ne sais quoi. A tranquil jaunt down memory lane.

95. Monarchy f. Rokhsan – I Won’t Let Go

Surprisingly affecting for a relatively simple dance-pop song. I hear a bit of Hot Chip, Gabriel & Dresden, and Chris Isaak in “I Won’t Let Go”. Quite the mix. Ears, transfixed.

94. Creature – So High

Blondie meets Dragonette meets a lingerie photo shoot. What’s the address?

93. USS – Prefontaine/Yo Hello Hooray (Everyday)

Ash Boo-Schultz and The Human Kebab deliver again on their nostalgic sojourn of an EP, Approved. USS have the gift of inane gab, constructed carefully in their secret sonic lab. Always fun.

92. The Sounds – Yeah Yeah Yeah/The Best of Me

Sweden, Sweden, got me believin’, that melody’s a gift you be constantly thievin’.

91. Panic at The Disco – Memories/The Ballad of Mona Lisa

Their latest LP Vices and Virtues, was wildly surprising for its depth of quality. Cast as write-offs from the long since dead emo era of the early aughts, PATD have quietly matured into a really good band. Highlighting their well-honed sense of melody and songcraft, “Memories” and “The Ballad of Mona Lisa” are instantly gratifying.

90. Arctic Monkeys – Suck It And See/Love is a Laserquest

If you don’t believe me, suck it and see for yourself. I’ll just go ahead and put you down in the ‘yea’ camp. It’s rather amazing how good Arctic Monkeys have become at making music, how comfortable they sound in their own skin.

89. Geographer – Kites (Limousines remix)

One of the most obscure songs of the year, “Kites (Limousines remix)” hand-glides around the sky with nary a care in the world. It’s not coming down any time soon.

88. Yellowcard – The Sound of You and Me/For You and Your Denial

Yellowcard are back and masters of their domain. Both “The Sound of You and Me” and “For You and Your Denial” are relentless smashes.

87. Charlie XCX – Stay Away

Rambunctious, raucous, trapping pop. Nothing less.

86. When Saints Go Machine – Kelly

Weird, catchy, body-propelling, fantastic. When Saints Go Machine is part Depeche Mode, part Antony Hegarty (specifically “Blind” with Hercules & Love Affair), part feral cave-dweller and disco head-bopper. An engaging confluence indeed.

85. Vanbot – Maybe

“Maybe” is literally unsure, but at its heart, it consoles and cajoles. Vanbot and Young Galaxy are kindred spirits.

84. Austra – Darken Her Horse/The Beast

Two staggering tracks from Austra’s debut record. “Darken Her Horse” is focused and sharp. “The Beast” is tender and plangent. Whoa — what an effort.

83. D-Sisive – No More Words/#1 Record

Nothing in hip-hop moves me much anymore — wait a sec, hold the phone. Toronto rapper D-Sisive obliterated my ideas on the genre with his amazing Jonestown 2: Jimmy Go Bye Bye LP. This man has a voice and he intends to use it. A special lyricist with some thunderous beats.

82. Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds – AKA… What a Life!/AKA… Broken Arrow

What a comeback. Noel’s still got it — in spades. Both “AKA” tracks are phenomenal. That Noel has come up with so many compelling melodies over the years is kind of unbelievable. At this point, I think he might be a sorcerer. In fact, let’s take out the might. He is clearly a sorcerer. And I’m elated to be under his spell.

81. Florence & The Machine – No Light No Light

One of the standout tracks from the formidable follow-up LP, Ceremonials, “No Light No Light” is a regal slice of pop buoyancy.

80. Ladytron – White Gold/Melting Ice

Featuring the typical Ladytron sound, “White Gold” and “Melting Ice” carry extra brawn, making them impossible to resist. Bulking up (sans HGH) suits Ladytron well.

79. Lady Gaga – Marry The Night/Born this Way/Judas

The beats are supple, boisterous, and resilient; the hooks are epinician, diligent and aplenty. Gaga is The Queen of Pop, but also The King, The Prince, The Princess, The Court Jester, The Soothsayer, The Witch, The People, and The Dominion itself. We’re at her beck and call and I’m ok with that.

78. Blink-182 – Ghost On The Dance Floor/Snake Charmer

From their solid comeback album, Neighborhoods, “Ghost On The Dance Floor” and “Snake Charmer” are rife with might, vigour, and urgency. The perfect mix of Angels and Airwaves and +44. What do you know, that equals the new Blink-182. It was always going to happen this way.

77. Manchester Orchestra – Leaky Breaks

A redoubtable song at peace with itself. “Leaky Breaks” is considerate and reflective; the guitars canoodling with the casual beat at every turn. A pensive song. A baby-making one too.

76. Neon Indian – Polish Girl

How does one put the essence of an entire culture and sexual orientation into a song? Sounds kind of biggoty. I’m willing to cut Neon Indian some slack though; this song is elusive and fanciful. Too many influences to mention here. The end result is startlingly good.

Top 100 Songs of 2009 (10-1)

10. The XX – Intro

Is it a full-on instrumental? Probably not if you’re picking nits, because of the background “aaahhhh-ing” towards the end, but for all intents and purposes, this is just music, and this is far-and-away the most accessible and soaring piece of music on the critics’ darlings self-titled debut. Not much of a fan of anything else on the record, this opener gives me hope that the young Brits have it in them to ramp up the melody and layer their songs with some sick groove-age, but for now this song will more than suffice. This tune is an attention-grabber from the outset. Waaaay too short at 2:08, I could listen to this song on loop for hours. Less simple than their other songs, there’s still nothing overly complicated here. A guitar lick sent from the Tibetan mountains and that drum beat suggest to me they’ve been chilling with monks. Classy.

9. Phoenix – 1901

Sure, this song sounds like it’s been played over a billion times in the public sphere, finding space on every radio station imaginable, every cool kids iPod and that omni-present Caddy commercial. No matter though, this song deserves it, and it sure sounds like the catchiest piece of tune-age that Phoenix have ever done (and probably ever will do). This sounds like a band in their effervescent prime. It sounds like this song was easy as hell to write, though I’m sure it wasn’t. It all just sounds so bloody effortless. The song, like the band, couldn’t be more warm if they tried. Bonus points for the sing-along-ability and the B(f)allin! yelping.

8. Metric – Gimme Sympathy

Plainly and simply, the best song Metric have ever done, and that says a lot considering the jacked-up strength of their back catalogue. Absolutely filled to its skyscraper brim with hooks and buzzing melody. I hear happiness when I listen to this song, as if the Chesire Cat’s smile infiltrated it, popping up every few seconds, only to slowly disappear before re-emerging again. I’m convinced this song is the reason their April show at the Mod Club was a scalper’s paradise. I find it endlessly interesting that Metric have had this song up their sleeves for at least 2 years, as I can remember hearing it at their Sound Academy show in early 2008, and seeing how much they’ve tinkered with everything about the song except the core melody. Go and watch an early youtube video of this song–it’s almost completely different, both lyrically and musically. I don’t care how many souls they had to sell to get to the final version, because the end result is perfect in every way. I’ll cut them some slack for any misdeeds done in the process and give them all the sympathy they desire. Bonus points for the super-cool video.

7. Yeah Yeah Yeah’s – Hysteric

My heart belongs to this song. If I could give it more, I would. I don’t know if they can ever top the emotional resonance of “Maps”, but this may be as close as anything else they have done or will do. Whilst my heart belongs safely to “Hysteric”, Karen O’s heart was unquestionably taken out of her chest and smeared all over this simmering, blissed-out ballad. I don’t know how she managed to put it back in, but she clearly did, as she is one of the most energetic, lovely, weird, and engaging performers the past decade has given us. Brian Chase’s drums are perfect, and Nick Zinner’s guitar histrionics are empassioned to say the least. To have a ballad build up so much anticipation and tension is epic. That the band released a stripped down version of “Hysteric” that is nearly as affecting is a testament to just how on their game the YYY’s are. The acoustic version is soooo bloody strong it’s almost not fair–that violin, ohhh that violin. The music in both versions is perfect, but if I had to pinpoint it, it’s the lyric that leaves the indelible imprint, “You suddenly complete me, you suddenly complete me…” Indeed. I would be a puzzle one piece short if not for this song.

6. Florence & The Machine – Cosmic Love

The song that aspires to the greatest heights. The song that inspired me to write something extremely worthwhile. The song that captured my imagination like a bee to cross-polination. The sound of a woman not only worshipping the stars, but becoming one. The drums. The most powerful vocal performance of the year from the biggest pair of lungs to come along in forever. Her favourite song. Mine too. The song that could soundtrack any honest love story ever told and seem poignant. This song plays in far off galaxies and doubles as a hymn to that which is peaceful, that which is necessary, that which is life itself. The sound of the Little Prince’s journey. All this and I still don’t think I fully grasp how special this song is. With one song, Florence and her Machine have made a fan for life. Vehemently essential.

5. Lady Gaga – Paparazzi

This is pure and perfect pop. I loved this song from the second I heard it and saw what it was destined for immediately–worldwide dominanation. The fact that I liked this song for a solid six months last year, and it’s still sounded fresh to me for all of 2009 is kind of jaw-dropping. The melody is impregnable, and Gaga’s vocal yearns for fame unlike anyone else. She’s flat-out begging for fame, even though she knows it might not be all it’s cracked up to be. She can’t help it. She knows no other way. She is the despot of pop. I don’t where she came from. Yes ‘Just Dance’ was super-catchy, and I, like everyone else, had no idea where she was going to go, or where she’ll eventually end up for that matter, but if I’m placing bets on anyone in pop to define the landscape and then scrap it all and redefine, it’s her. Pretty much as amazing as pop can get.

4. La Roux – Bulletproof

Speaking of amazing pop, The Little Red One came out of nowhere to bring us the best electro-pop song of the year, hands down. The chorus is absolutely ridiculous. This song is like the unstoppable force, only there is no immovable object to stand in its way. If I was ten or maybe even five years younger, I’m pretty sure this would be my song of the year, but to get to the top spot now, a tad more is needed. That’s weird because I don’t think this song could offer any more condensed awesomeness, but that’s the way it goes. I love the way she says “bulletproof”, I love how every musical layer fits together to sound so cohesive, and lastly, I love that this sounds like vintage yet futuristic Ace of Base. If you don’t like to eat sugar, this tune can more than help you out. Candy for the ears never sounded so good.

3. The Big Pink – Velvet

An incendiary beat with a haunting vocal coo as its centrepoint. Once again, The Big Pink use their gargantuan, layered style to awe-inspiring effect. “These arms of mine don’t mind who they hold/You call out my name, for the love you need” Robbie Furzone sings, and it’s as urgent as it gets. Considering the mega-sized bravado to which The Big Pink stand beside, this is probably the most romantic and vulnerable thing they could ever say. Laced with melodic distortion and more hooks than a Peter Pan convention, “Velvet” is the ultimate head-bopping and foot-tapping song. “I found her in a dream, looking for me” is apropos, as this song sounds like it was borne of a dream. A staggering Indie/Electro tune.

2. The Killers – Four Winds

The most anonymously-great song of 2009, released as a B-side on the “Spaceman” single. Like Metric’s “Waves”, this is no B-side. This is a soaring, synth-laden, gem of a song. And oh yeah, it’s a cover. Sure, Bright Eyes are more critically credible, and a lot of people consider the original “Four Winds” a work of irreproachable art, but I say screw that. The point of a cover should be to make it as different as can be, if not, what’s the point? Well, The Killers certainly accomplish that here. And to be frank, I think it’s a much better version than the original, which was already a good song with a great lyric. What works here is the gorgeous pop melody that The Killers have become known and the deep, considerate lyric. It’s clear Conor Oberst cared and thought deeply about this song before he wrote it, it’s just that I don’t feel the music matches the grand lyrical aspirations. This version does. A swirling mass of synths descends upon on the listener like the first snowfall for a tropical refugee.

This song stands up with The Killers’ best, and that is an astounding claim, considering they’ve built an empire with anthems that connect to such a large and diverse audience.  When I gave this song a couple listens, it hit me–a rush of endorphins like a joyous, jumping dolphin and the smell of freshly baked, home-made muffin. The shame is that I don’t think a lot of people even know this song exists. I hope more do. In a non-album year, The Killers still find a way to have three top songs of the year. I think it’s a testament to their chameleon like shiftiness and preternatural abilities with melody. In addition to being one of the biggest bands on the planet, they have quietly become the world’s best cover band. They’ve done at least five (“Girls Just Wanna Have Fun”, “Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love to Town”, “Shadowplay”, “Romeo and Juliet”, “Four Winds”) that are absolutely monumental and many more that are very, very good. Maybe my favourite song of the year and almost the best.

1. Animal Collective – My Girls

I don’t know where to begin with this track. This song is simultaneously batshit crazy and gas-panic hazy, while being the most accessible Animal Collective have ever sounded. The sound of a ridiculously potent chemical concoction. The sound of the newest and freshest designer drug that will make the streets go broke. That loop–wow does that loop grate on the psyche like sports go with Nike and Brad Pitt is Pikey. Those soaring vocals–wow do those vocals belie description like JK Rowling writes fiction. Those every-man lyrics–“I don’t mean to seem like I care about material things like my social stats” should make other bands cower in the corner and re-evaluate why they are writing songs in the first place. Presumably a song about their own families and struggles, Animal Collective have, intentionally or otherwise, invited us to commune with them as one. It is easier that way.

This song is a mesh and woven web of some of the most forward-thinking music human beings can make. This song will sound fresh in 2025, I guarantee it. Some electronic songs feel a bit empty. That coudn’t be further from the truth if you made a martini without vermouth. This song is not just a hymn that you hear at church, this song is the church, the priest, the congregation and the Sunday afternoon cookies and tea. “My Girls” is not a tenet of faith, but religion itself. “My Girls” is not a branch of social philosophy, but the tree that gave us speech and discourse itself. “My Girls” is a revelation, a revolt against everything that came before it and a warning for anything else that might come after. The modern timeline should not be B.C. and A.D., it should be B.M.G. and A.M.G.

To me, this song is akin to finding water on Mars; we always knew it was there, we just needed to find it. We always knew that Animal Collective had it in them to be prolific, but I for one wasn’t a fan of their older stuff. They needed to find themselves, and with “My Girls” and their Merriweather Post Pavilion album in general, they have not only found themselves, they’ve celebrated the sense of sound and inspired worship of the purest kind. Possibly a once in a lifetime effort, I’ll have no complaints if it is, as this stuff will be sufficient forever. After seemingly endless deliberation, I can’t come to any other decision, “My Girls” is the best song of the year. Wow. Just wow.