Thursday, January 9, 2014

Best of 2013: Albums

I don't think I'm breaking a lot of new ground with this list but hopefully there is an album or two that you missed. To be honest this year wasn't quite as strong for new music as last year based on my recollection of constructing last year's list but I'm confident in the top ten I was able to come up with below.

10) Blood Orange - Cupid Deluxe
This isn't a make up pick but if I had heard the debut album from Blood Orange entitled Coastal Grooves when it was released in 2011 it almost certainly would've made my top ten list. Lucky for me, I didn't have to wait long for the latest effort Cupid Deluxe which is equally unique and pleasing to the ear.

9) Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires of the City
Modern Vampires of the City is a great album. Don't take my word for it. In the past few weeks it's been named album of the year by Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, NPR listeners and many others. It doesn't have the same energy as the self titled debut but it is much more refined and has a terrific combination of melody and lyrics.

8) Daft Punk - Random Access Memories
The first studio album from Daft Punk since 2005 was a hit in every sense of the word. It received nearly universal acclaim from critics, has been nominated for an Album of the Year Grammy and the single 'Get Lucky' which was arguably the song of the year has sold over 7 million copies. All that being said, what's popular isn't always good but in this case they go hand in hand.

7) Russian Circles - Memorial
This late release almost slid under the radar as I gave it a listen or two when it was released in late October but coming back to it recently I was blown away by the tone, precision and heavy riffs on Memorial. It's the 5th album from the Chicago based instrumental rock band and it might be the best they've ever made.

6) Haim - Days Are Gone
Three sisters from Los Angeles fronting a band might sound like a gimmick but Haim's music is anything but. Haim started gaining traction last year with the release of a couple singles and their debut album Days Are Gone is chock-full of catchy tunes that propelled them onto Saturday Night Live and mainstream radio.

5) Queens of the Stone Age - Like Clockwork
Like Clockwork is the first album from Queens of the Stone Age in six years was worth the wait. It's the best pure rock album of the year and good from beginning to end.

4) Arcade Fire - Reflektor
After winning Album of the Year at The Grammys for The Suburbs it would've been easy for Arcade Fire to rest on their laurels but they certainly haven't done that. Whether you love Reflektor or hate it, you can't say it wasn't a departure. I happen to fall into the camp that loves it but that was thanks in part to a secret show at The Hollywood Palladium right after the album's release in which played almost the entire record. It's been in constant rotation ever since that show.

3) Typhoon - White Lighter
This was my favorite discovery of the year. Somehow, I stumbled upon the tremendous track 'Young Fathers' and it wasn't until a couple months later that I went back to listen to the entire record which blew my away. It was something very different but at the same time sounded like something I've been hearing for years.

2) Volcano Choir - Repave

Like most right thinking music fans, I'm eagerly anticipating the next Bon Iver album but Justin Vernon has been keeping himself very busy with several other projects, most notably Volcano Choir. He appeared on albums by Kanye West, Polica, The Shouting Matches and The Blind Boys of Alabama but it was the sophomore effort from Volcano Choir that stood out. It's difficult to describe the genre of music other than just calling it great.

1) The National - Trouble Will Find Me

The National has been a favorite of mine since I discovered them in 2007 after the release of their critically acclaimed album Boxer. This marks the third consecutive album of theirs to make my best of list but the first to come in at number one. I fell in love with Trouble Will Find Me after the first listen and after seeing them live at the Greek Theatre in August, my appreciation for the album only grew. Trouble Will Find Me doesn't have a single bad track and many of them are phenomenal.

Honorable Mention:

CHVRCHES - The Bones Of What You Believe
Daughter - If You Leave
Har Mar Superstar - Bye Bye 17
Junip - Junip
Kanye West - Yeezus
M83 - Oblivion (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Nine Inch Nails - Hesitation Marks
Pelican - Forever Becoming
Rhye - Woman
Youth Lagoon - Wondrous Bughouse

Belated mention (my favorite album from 2012 that I discovered in 2013):

Caspian - Waking Season

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Best of 2013: Songs

The list of songs to pick from this year wasn't quite as long as last year but I still had to leave off about 10 truly great songs. Just like last year, you can listen to the Spotify playlist of my favorite songs from 2013 to hear them all for yourself. I've only included one song per band or album so the whole list doesn't fill up with my two or three favorite records of the year.

30) Nine Inch Nails - Everything
29) Kid Cudi - Immortal
28) The Ceremonies - Land Of Gathering
27) Bad Rabbits - Get Up and Go
26) Youth Lagoon - Mute
25) Charles Bradley - Victim of Love
24) Rhye - The Fall
23) The Shouting Matches - Seven Sisters
22) Dan Croll - From Nowhere
21) Sigur Ros - Isjaki
20) Houses - The Beauty Surrounds
19) Blood Orange - You're Not Good Enough
18) Junip - Line of Fire
17) Daft Punk - Doin' It Right (feat. Panda Bear)
16) The Appleseed Cast - Barrier Islands (Do We Remain)
15) Beck - I Won't Be Long - Extended Version
14) M83 - Oblivion (feat. Susanne Sundfor)
13) Queens of the Stone Age - The Vampyre Of Time And Memory
12) CHVRCHES - Recover
11) Foals - Inhaler
10) Vampire Weekend - Diane Young
9) Arcade Fire - Afterlife
8) Wise Blood - Alarm
7) Haim - The Wire
6) Har Mar Superstar - Lady, You Shot Me
5) Kavinsky - Odd Look (feat. The Weeknd)
4) The National - Graceless
3) Typhoon - Young Fathers
2) Lady Lamb the Beekeeper - Bird Ballons
1) Volcano Choir - Byegone

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Best of 2012: Film

This was a strange year for movies. Over forty times I went to the movie theater and although I only saw a few terrible movies (Savages, The Campaign, Dr. Seuss' The Lorax) it wasn't a very impressive year overall. I can't remember ever having so many action films make my top ten list but they were some of the best films of the year. Without further ado, here are my ten favorite films released this year.



10) Sleepwalk With Me

A stand-up comedy routine turned one man show turned movie might sound like an odd choice for one of the best films of the year. However, Mike Birbiglia is very likable playing himself even if at times he's not doing likable things. It's a very keen self-examination and probably the most accurate portrayal of making it as a stand-up comedian that's been put to film.










9) Prometheus

With rare exception I'm not excited about a remake, sequel, prequel or anything that has been done before being revisited because it's usually just a cash grab. When Ridley Scott is involved it's a pretty good bet that it wasn't just a cash grab. More than thirty years after introducing the world to his vision of the future in Alien, Ridley Scott has revisited that world for Prometheus.









8) Skyfall

With Javier Bardem cast as the Bond villain  Roger Deakins behind the camera and Sam Mendes at the helm, it was going to be hard to screw this one up. That being said, all they did was make what in my opinion is the best James Bond film of all time. Skyfall was a critical and financial success that many people, including myself, thought was overlooked for a Best Picture nomination.










7) Jeff, Who Lives At Home

It's hard to recommend Jeff, Who Lives At Home on a general basis because I've never felt before like a movie was specifically tailored for me. The family dynamic is so close to mine in terms of members and age that it's frightening. Ed Helms and Jason Segel are great as brothers Pat and Jeff even if they physically don't like anything alike. Written and directed by brothers Jay Duplass and Mark Duplass, they do an excellent job of capturing a dynamic between two brothers who are jealous of each other's lot in life without seeing the turmoil beneath the surface.






6) Argo

Ben Affleck had a few swing and miss movies as an actor but so far as a director he's been three for three which each film getting better than the last. To show how far he has come as a director, Affleck not getting a nomination for Best Director at this year's Academy Awards was regarded as the biggest snub of the whole ceremony. In Argo, he seamlessly goes from edge of your seat tension to laugh out loud moments while continuing to move the story along. Not to mention staring in the film based on the real life events of CIA Agent Tony Mendez.






5) Moonrise Kingdom

Wes Anderson's interpretation of young love is exactly what you would expect it to be but that's not in the least bit disappointing. I was a huge fan of Fantastic Mr. Fox but felt that Wes Anderson's last two live action films left something to be desired following on the heels of Rushmore and The Royal Tenebaums. Moonrise Kingdom is a terrific return to form and the terrific ensemble cast including the two unknowns he cast in the lead roles were uniformly great.









4) The Raid: Redemption

I'd be hard pressed to think of a movie with more action per minute than The Raid: Redemption. That's exactly the movie that Gareth Evans has made. The story is very simple, which isn't to say it's bad, and explained in the first ten minutes of exposition which leads to 90 minutes of the most amazing fight choreography you'll ever see.










3) Zero Dark Thirty

The title Zero Dark Thirty is fitting for more than the obvious reason that it was the time when the mission that led to the death of Osama Bin Laden was carried out. It's fitting because from the opening scene of the film, it's a dark and unsettling subject. The controversy surrounding the torture scenes in Zero Dark Thirty have seemed strange to me because the director Kathryn Bigelow clearly doesn't endorse it and the central character Maya played brilliantly by Jessica Chastain is ambivalent about what is taking place. Even though it's a long film, there are no wasted moments and every scene helps make the payoff at the end that much more meaningful.


2) Looper

Looper is my favorite science fiction film since Gattaca and has cemented writer-director Rian Johnson as a filmmaker to watch for the foreseeable future. Joseph Gordon-Levitt continues to streak of picking great projects (I'm willing to overlook Premium Rush) as he re-teams with his close friend Johnson who cast him in his first film Brick. Bruce Willis and Joseph Gordon-Levitt are both excellent as the same character at different points in his life who happen to meet.









1) Django Unchained

There is no mistaking a Quentin Tarantino film. It probably only takes a page of his script being read by a computer before you'd recognize that dialogue that isn't heard anywhere else. The experience of a Quentin Tarantino film is unlike anything else in modern film. I would make the argument that Christoph Waltz has now joined with Tarantion alum Samuel L. Jackson as the two actors who were born to read his dialogue. Jamie Foxx is the title character and is terrific but it is Waltz who again steals the show after winning an Academy Award for his last Tarantino role as Col Hans Landa in Inglorious Basterds. Django Unchained is possibly too long and overindulgent but it is so well written and acted that it was still my favorite film of the year.



Honorable mention for the following films that almost made my list:

21 Jump Street
The Cabin in the Woods
The Dark Knight Rises
Friends With Kids
The Grey
Perks of Being a Wallflower
Searching for Sugar Man
Silver Linings Playbook
Ted
This is 40

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Best of 2012: Television

There are a few glaring omissions this year on my best of television list. The truth is that I got behind on Mad Men and still haven't caught up. It's a great show and I'm sure would land in the middle of this list but I don't want to include it without having seen the full season. I know some of you are fans of Louie, Son of Anarchy and Downton Abbey but those are shows I've yet to really delve into.



10) Modern Family

Modern Family has managed to increase viewership in each of the first three seasons. After I felt the show had been resting on its laurels over the last year or so, it's been as good as ever in its fourth season.

9) The Walking Dead

Another show that's seen a dramatic rise in viewers each season is The Walking Dead. Although still not the same quality drama series it was in the first season with Frank Darabont at the helm, it has been highly entertaining over the last year since they freed the audience of the Sophia storyline. Even if the show is flawed, we still tune in every week to see how Rick and his group of survivors get out of one predicament after another.

8) Girls

Writer, creator and star Lena Dunham has been at the center of controversy since the first episode of Girls hit the air- whether it was people upset that the cast of a show about four white girls in New York wasn't diverse enough or the amount of nudity by Dunham herself. The show has silenced most critics and recently won a Golden Globe for Best Comedy Series. As Reggie Jackson famously said "They don't boo nobodies."

7) Community

While it seemed like NBC was actively trying to kill Community by delaying the second half of the third season then burning the last three episodes of the season on the same night, it still managed to air some of the best comedy on network television. While I concerned about the show moving forward after NBC fired its creator Dan Harmon, I'm optimistic the goal of six seasons and movie remain a possibility.

6) Veep

While Girls garnered all of the attention and awards, for my money, Veep was the best new comedy of 2012. The show's creator Armando Iannucci, the man behind the very biting political satire In The Loop, segued nicely into HBO's Veep which battles 30 Rock as the two shows with the most jokes per minute on television. Julia Louis-Dreyfus and the cast that surround her as uniformly excellent.


5) Homeland

I was worried at the end of Homeland's first season that it would be impossible for the show to keep moving at such a frenetic pace. Halfway through this season it looked like there were going to be able to pull it off but then the plot became convoluted and they stretched the audience's ability to suspend disbelief. It's still highly entertaining but if it hasn't jumped the proverbial shark already, it's getting damn close.


4) Justified

Justified is the best show on television that you're not watching. Plain and simple. It was hard to top the second season which had a spectacular performance and character from Margo Martindale and Mags Bennett respectively. While the third season wasn't quite on par with that season, it did introduce another great villain and contained another 12 episodes of Raylan Givens as perhaps the coolest character on television.

3) Parks and Recreation

What makes a great series more than anything else is the characters. You can have great writing and terrific actors but without interesting characters to inhabit the fictional world, you've got nothing. Parks and Recreation is so strong each year because the characters are so well defined. It doesn't hurt that they have a terrific ensemble cast and an all star lineup of great comedy writers. What makes Parks and Recreation eclipse what has been done by so many other comedies is that you actually care what happens to these ridiculous people and they can play awkward for a laugh and not just for the sake of making their audience uncomfortable.

2) Breaking Bad

Since I watched the first three seasons of Breaking Bad in span of just over two weeks immediately before the start of the fourth season, it's hard for me to differentiate between the seasons. When a few friends told me they thought season five was the weakest of the series (which is in no way to say it was bad), it was hard for me to agree or disagree. I wish AMC had allowed the series to end with two full 13-episode seasons instead of two mini-seasons of 8 episodes each but it's so well done that I'll clearly take anything they will give me and can't wait for the final episodes starting this summer.

1) Boardwalk Empire

Placing Boardwalk Empire above Breaking Bad was the toughest decision on the list. That being said, I believe that Boardwalk Empire was the best television series of 2012. After killing off one of the show's major characters at the end of the second season, the future seemed unclear for Boardwalk Empire. However, the writers delivered a new indelible character that made the third season the best so far.


Other shows I've watched in the past year that I've enjoyed (at least somewhat):

30 Rock
Dexter
Game of Thrones
Key & Peele
The League
The Life and Times of Tim
Life's Too Short
The Office
Workaholics

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Best of 2012: Albums

I'm not sure if it has more to do with the way I've consumed music over the past year but there haven't been nearly as many stand out albums this year than in past years. There were a ton of artists who released great songs but very few albums that I listened to from start to finish multiple times. After writing mini-reviews for about half of the albums I found to be much more monotonous than in previous years. So presented without justification or hyperbole, here are my 10 favorite albums from 2012.


10) The Life And Times - No One Loves You Like I Do

9) Daniel Rossen - Silent Hour/Golden Mile

8) Beach House - Bloom

7) Menomena - Moms

6) Tanlines - Mixed Emotions

5) Sea Wolf - Old World Romance


4) Geographer - Myth


3) Zeus - Busting Visions

2) Grizzly Bear - Shields

1) Twin Shadow - Confess

During my first listen to Confess shortly after it was released in July, I was pretty sure it was going to be my favorite record of the year. The entire album has a very specific and unique sound yet each song can stand on its own. As mark of most of my favorite albums, my favorite track has changed several times during my many listens but sums of its parts have stayed uniformly excellent.


Honorable Mention:

Chad Valley - Young Hunger
Deftones - Koi No Yokan
Electric Guest - Mondo
Father John Misty - Fear Fun
Grimes - Visions
Porcelain Raft - Strange Weekend
Vacationer - Gone
The Weeknd - Trilogy
Yellow Ostrich - Strange Land
The 1975 - Sex EP/Facedown EP

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Best of 2012: Songs

This was much more difficult than I remember it being last year. I suppose since I had to narrow down the list from the 200+ songs on my 2012 Spotify playlist and once I whittled that list down to 50 songs it became increasingly hard to pick just 30 of them. As you'll see shortly, there is a big difference between the bands who released the best songs of the year and the best albums of the year. Same rules apply that I only picked one song per band/album.


30) The Big Sleep - Ace
29) Oberhofer - oOoO
28) Daughter - Youth
27) The Life And Times - Day Nine
26) Father John Misty - Only Son of the Ladiesman
25) New Build - Medication
24) Haim - Go Slow
23) Trailer Trash Tracys - You Wish You Were Red
22) Yeasayer - Henrietta
21) Anais Mitchell - Coming Down
20) Grimes - Oblivion
19) The Samuel Jackson Five - Ten Crept In
18) Orbital - New France (feat Zola Jesus)
17) Passion Pit - I'll Be Alright
16) Yellow Ostrich - The Shakedown
15) LP - Into The Wild
14) Perfume Genius - Hood
13) Sea Wolf - Priscilla
12) Torche - Kicking
11) Grizzly Bear - Yet Again
10) Japandroids - The House That Heaven Built
9) Schoolboy Q - There He Go
8) Twin Shadow - Five Seconds
7) Daniel Rossen - Saint Nothing
6) The XX - Chained
5) Tanlines - Not The Same
4) Alabama Shakes - Hold On
3) WZRD - Teleport 2 Me
2) Nada Surf - When I Was Young
1) Wye Oak - Spiral

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Best of 2012: YouTube Videos

I still can't explain why I made this list last year. I'm sure there are other more comprehensive lists available online but here you go.

Top 12 Music Videos from 2012:

12) Gotye - Giving Me A Chance


11) Alabama Shakes - Hold On


10) Foals - Inhaler


9) Hot Chip - Look At Where We Are


8) Electric Guest - This Head I Hold


7) M83 - Wait


6) Menomena - Plumage


5) Ben Folds Five - Do It Anyway


4) Tanlines - Not The Same


3) The xx - Chained


2) Gotye - Easy Way Out


1) Grizzly Bear - Yet Again



Top 12 YouTube Videos from 2012:

12) Collective Soul Cat


11) Somebody That I Used to Know - Walk off the Earth (Gotye - Cover)


10) PETE WEBER GOD DAMMIT I DID IT WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE


9) Mister Rogers Remixed


8) A Conversation With My 12 Year Old Self


7) World's Largest Rope Swing


6) Pepsi MAX & Kyrie Irving Present: "Uncle Drew"


5) Batman Chooses His Voice


4) This is SportsCenter - John Clayton


3) THE MOST AWESOME DRUNK VIDEO ON THE PLANET


2) Don Cherry's Piano Desk


1) Jon Dore Stand-Up 12/17/12 - CONAN on TBS



Here's the link to a bonus video that YouTube has taken down that's incredible.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Fifty Years of Dodger Tradition: From Clayton Kershaw to Sandy Koufax

It was fitting that the first glimpse of Clayton Kershaw most Dodgers fans saw was in the spring of 2008. It was one of only a couple games that Hall of Fame broadcaster Vin Scully called from Vero Beach, FL in the Dodgers last season at Holman Stadium which Sandy Koufax called home for his 12 major seasons. In the top of the 4th inning with two outs, Kershaw, still ten days away from his 20th birthday, threw a curveball to Sean Casey so devastating that it buckled the knees of the veteran hitter and prompted Scully to exclaim "What a curveball! Holy mackerel! He just broke off public enemy number one." He had been blessed by Vin Scully whose smile could be heard through the microphone. Then it was the waiting game for fans. Along with the wait came the hyperbole and comparisons, or to be more accurate, the comparison.

I was not the first and certainly won't be the last to draw parallels between the careers of Dodgers current ace pitcher Clayton Kershaw and Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax.



In fact, Tony Jackson of ESPNLosAngeles.com wrote a piece detailing the first meeting between the two pitchers. The similarities are so numerous it's hard to know where to begin, but for the uninformed they are both left-handed starting pitchers with a similar build and great stuff who to this point spent their entire careers with the Dodgers.

Let's look at the numbers through the first 138 starts of their career, which for Koufax was until the end of the 1961 season and for Kershaw was his complete game shutout against the San Francisco Giants on Sunday afternoon.

Sandy Koufax:

  • 947.1 Innings Pitched
  • 54 Wins
  • 53 Losses
  • 37 Complete Games
  • 7 Shutouts
  • 3.94 ERA
  • 1.37 WHIP
  • 115 HR Allowed
  • 501 BB
  • 952 K
  • 9.04 K/9
  • 1.90 K/BB Ratio

Clayton Kershaw:

  • 865.2 Innings Pitched
  • 55 Wins
  • 34 Losses
  • 8 Complete Games
  • 5 Shutouts
  • 2.89 ERA
  • 1.15 WHIP
  • 57 HR Allowed
  • 317 BB
  • 888 K
  • 9.23 K/9
  • 2.80 K/BB Ratio

It wouldn't be an asinine statement to say that to this point in their careers, Kershaw has outperformed Koufax. Their ages were also very similar to this point with Koufax turning 26 after the 1961 season while Kershaw will turn 25 just before the start of the 2013 season.

However, the reason there is a plaque in Cooperstown, NY for Sanford "Sandy" Koufax is because of the subsequent five seasons and the 176 starts therein. Over that span, Koufax won the Major League Cy Young three times, won the Major League Triple Crown three times, threw 4 no-hitters including a perfect game and put up the following numbers: 111 wins to just 34 losses, 1377 innings pitched, 100 complete games including 33 shutouts, 1.96 ERA, 0.93 WHIP, 316 BB, 1444 K (4.57 K/BB ratio).

In the World Series, Koufax sported a 0.95 ERA with a record of 4-3 including two wins in 1963 against the rival New York Yankees which resulted in a sweep. This was the second World Series title over the Bronx Bombers in eight meetings between the two teams. After game one of the 1963 World Series, the ever quotable Yogi Berra said of Koufax who went 25-5 in the regular season "I can see how he won twenty-five games. What I don't understand is how he lost five."

After I was halfway through writing this I found an article on Bleacher Report by Richard Leivenberg which is similar to what I was writing. It's definitely worth a read but I decided to go ahead with my own comparison piece since I was taking a more in-depth look at the numbers. However, his piece included a very interesting poll question which asked "Who would you rather have at this stage of their career, Kershaw or Koufax?". I'm not sure if the question implies the reader knowing that Koufax would go on to have a historic five year run and also have his career cut short by injury. Either way it's an interesting question and there is no wrong answer, which speaks volumes about what Kershaw has been able to do through this point in his career.


Obviously Kershaw won't be able to touch Koufax in the categories of complete games or shutouts and matching the ERA of 1.90 for five combined seasons in today's game seems unfathomable, but if he continues to improve upon the impressive foundation he has laid thus far, it wouldn't be far fetched to imagine that twenty years from now Clayton and Sandy could meet again- only this time in Upstate New York.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

The Hunt for a Bloody November

"Those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything." - George Bernard Shaw


The presidential election is still almost four months away but judging from the media coverage and posts on various social networks, you'd think it was just weeks away.


The idiom that one should never discuss politics, sex and religion among polite company clearly doesn't apply when referring to the internet. One thing is certain; the internet has made the world smaller. What is unclear is if that has created more hatred, divisiveness and bigotry or just made it more visible. The most rational explanation is that it is a little bit of both. There are those who are always seeing red on the other side of the aisle and are now emboldened by the anonymity of the web. You may not say anything to your coworker who mentions who they are voting for over fear of a face-to-face confrontation but it's easy to cast stones from behind a keyboard.


The lack of decorum from the online journalism community is especially shocking to those who are used to objective reporting. When Ted Kennedy died in 2009, writer and self described "Reagan conservative" Andrew Breitbart took to twitter with some choice words about the long time U.S. Senator. So it wasn't a complete surprise that when Andrew Breitbart died of a heart attack earlier this year, several left leaning journalists didn't hesitate to write some disparaging things of their own. Within hours of Breitbart's passing, Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone had posted an article titled 'Andrew Breitbart: Death of a Douche' that spread around the internet like wildfire.


Of course both Breitbart and Taibbi are protected under the 1st Amendment to state whatever they think of any person but by spewing such vitriol they are just adding fuel to a fire that needs no more accelerant. I'm all for a spirited debate and have been known to engage in a few myself but there is a time and place which is probably not 2AM on your friend's Facebook wall.




I posted the above status update earlier today and received mostly positive feedback but lost two Facebook "friends" within a few hours.


Sadly, the quote at the top from George Bernard Shaw is accurate and the reason we see such little change in politics or the world in general is because most people aren't open to change. So I'll close this out by reminding you to think for a second before you send out your next politically charged tweet, YouTube comment or Facebook update and ask yourself if you have the right audience, the right intentions or if it might upset someone you consider a friend.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

See Spotify Run

On a Satuday afternoon in January I went out to lunch with a few of my closest friends while their wives and girlfriend were at a baby shower. In between sips of beer, we started talking about new music and I mentioned how much I liked Spotify. In fact, I said the following sentence that I instantly regretted; "If you don't have Spotify, then you don't truly like music." That statement was met with understandable disagreement but to be honest with you, I think it's true.

I realize Spotify is already quite popular and writing this almost feels like saying "I'm telling you guys, personal computers are the wave of the future!", but I feel so strongly about Spotify that I have to spread the word. If you're reading this, it's safe to say that you probably own a computer or use someone's computer on a regular basis. Good, because that's pretty much all you're going to need.

Now, I can really only speak to you as a premium Spotify subscriber because I only had the free version for about two days before realizing that I needed to have this on my iPhone and have it commercial-free (two perks of paying for the premium subscription). They've figured out the perfect price point for the premium subscription, which is currently $9.99 a month, because it feels like a bargain but if it were to increase I'm sure they'd lose some customers. Let's hope they learned from the mistake Netflix made with Qwikster.

The comedian Arj Barker had a very funny bit about why anyone would need an iPod with enough memory to store music that it would take 3 weeks to listen to every song. Well, according to a Spotify it would take over 100 years to listen to every song in their catalogue and I believe it. Every week there are probably a dozen or more new albums released that I get to check out to see if something jumps out at me.


My playlist for the best songs from 2011 has well over 200 songs by 200 different artists. My playlist I am currently building for my favorite songs from albums released this year already has songs from 120 different bands which is one of the reasons why whenever someone tells me "They just don't make good music anymore", I get unreasonably upset.




There has been a lot of debate about how to monetize music. It was again the topic of conversation this week because of an NPR blog post from a 21 year old intern who bragged about having 11,000 songs in her iTunes library while only having paid for 15 CDs in her lifetime. I won't get into a lengthy debate about the ethics of buying music but I believe an artist should be compensated for their work in a way no different from any other profession. I've spent thousands of dollars on iTunes, owned about 1,000 CDs, started a nice vinyl collection over the past couple years and paid for well over 100 concerts. I haven't procured any music in an illegal or unethical way since I started using Spotify.

I'll leave it to Sean Parker (founder of Napster and majority investor of Spotify) to say that Spotify is the future of music. However, a service that offers a both a desktop and mobile version as well as a pay subscription and plays advertisements for users who opt for the free version seems like it might be close. While the business model isn't perfect and there is still some controversy about whether all artists are compensated fairly, the artists are receiving money and are getting exposure to fans that might pay to see them, buy a t-shirt or get their album on vinyl.

If you still aren't using Spotify, I won't say you don't like music (not to your face anyway) but I will encourage you to give it a chance.