No articles this week, just a list of 23 songs. Not only made by us but also by some of the readers. If you like a song on this list very much E-mail us your favorite 5 (or 4, or 3, or maybe just one). If you know of a recent single that's out but not on this list let us know as well. Better yet, leave a comment!!
TW LW W
01 01 5 Ida Maria - Oh My God (#3)
02 05 3 Tilly & The Wall - Pot Kettle Black
03 02 5 Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - Hold Me Tight (#1)
04 04 6 Titus Andronicus - Titus Andronicus
05 18 2 Constantines - Our Age
06 04 5 Frank Turner - Long Live The Queen
07 10 3 Dead Kids - Into The Fire
08 06 6 Tunics - Cost of Living
09 13 3 Coconut Records - Microphone
10 -- 1 cityLIGHTS - Mashed On Fashion
11 07 6 Holloways - Sinners & Winners (#1)
12 11 2 The Soap - Drive In To My Sheet
13 09 6 MGMT - Kids
14 -- 1 Jack Green and the Band of Thieves - Man From Mars
15 12 3 Emmy The Great - We Almost Had A Baby
16 08 6 Kings of Leon - Use Somebody (#1)
17 17 6 TV on the Radio - Dancing Choose
18 -- 1 Pravda - Body Addict
19 16 2 Morrissey - I'm Throwing My Arms Around Paris
20 -- 1 Lily Allen - The Fear
21 14 6 Red Light Company - Scheme Eugene
22 23 6 Vampire Weekend - A-Punk
23 15 6 Noah & The Whale - Shape Of Your Heart
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Friday, January 23, 2009
Explorer 23, January 22: The Ageless Soldier
This week the same Number one but has an actor, an old dude from the 80's and a frantic garage band from Kyoto (The Soap)
TW LW W
01 01 4 Ida Maria - Oh My God (#2)
02 02 4 Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - Hold Me Tight (#1)
03 04 5 Titus Andronicus - Titus Andronicus
04 06 4 Frank Turner - Long Live The Queen
05 13 2 Tilly & The Wall - Pot Kettle Black
06 03 5 Tunics - Cost of Living
07 05 5 Holloways - Sinners & Winners (#1)
08 07 5 Kings of Leon - Use Somebody (#1)
09 08 5 MGMT - Kids
10 12 2 Dead Kids - Into The Fire
11 -- 1 The Soap - Drive In To My Sheet
12 15 2 Emmy The Great - We Almost Had A Baby
13 23 2 Coconut Records - Microphone
14 09 5 Red Light Company - Scheme Eugene
15 10 5 Noah & The Whale - Shape Of Your Heart
16 -- 2 Morrissey - I'm Throwing My Arms Around Paris
17 11 5 TV on the Radio - Dancing Choose
18 -- 2 Constantines 0 Our Age
19 14 5 Fleet Foxes - He Doesn't Know Why
20 18 3 Skipper - Wrong Man Wrong Place
21 16 5 Death Cab For Cutie - No Sunlight
22 17 5 Hot Melts - Never Been In Love
23 19 5 Vampire Weekend - A-Punk
And here's the YouTube link (new songs as last)
Or watch and listen to it here
Since people have begun to sing songs, war has been a subject. All throughout the ages ballads have been sung to remember wars, battles and the heroes that fought in them. In the last 50 years in pop music there has been a change to sing more about the soldier, and not the great leader. In the long list of popsongs about war especially the Vietnam war has been a favorite subject since the early days of the conflict in some songs by Dylan and Phil Ochs. Then there are songs like ‘Fortunate Son’ by Creedence Clearwater Revival talking about the sons of the rich who are not going or Barry McGuire’s ‘Edge of Destruction’. And after the end of the war the veterans came back and had their problems to deal with, as in Springsteen’s ‘Born In The USA’ or John Prine’s story of a heroin addicted veteran called ‘Sam Stone’.
This article will focus on the soldier fighting all the wars throughout the history of the US in four songs: Buffy St. Marie’s ‘Universal Soldier’, Phil Och’s ‘I Ain’t Marching Anymore’, Richie Havens’ ‘Handsome Johnny’ and Dylan’s ‘With God On Their Side’.
Universal Soldier is perhaps best known in Donovan’s version of Canadian Buffy St. Marie’s song. The universal soldier can be any soldier who has ever fought a war. Any height or age without a certain nationality, either fighting for Canada, France, the Russians etc. Also no particular religion, as he is a Catholic, a Hindu, an atheist or a Jain but even though every religion forbids killing he still does so. The role of religion will return with Dylan.
The songs talks about how every soldier has something that he fights for, no matter what his background is and no matter the cause. And they always think the war they are fighting will be the war that ends all wars. The moral of the song is that as a man you still have personal responsibility and that you should not just follow orders, that you as a person can stop war by just standing up. It’s simple math: soldiers are being ordered by the generals, the generals are being ordered by the politicians, and ‘We The People…’ elect the politicians.
Unlike St. Marie Phil Ochs sees the soldier as a victim of the generals and politicians, he has a more realistic view of how things work. To him it is the old people sending the young to die. Ochs’ soldier is not universal but American. Starting at the Civil War and talking about the Indian Wars as well he explains the country’s history up to the 60’s, and giving a warning about the atomic bomb in the end. For him this is the weapon that is so destructive it will have to lead to the end of war. “When I saw the cities burning, I knew that I was learning, I ain’t marching anymore”. His soldier sees the destruction that war can now cause so he stands up and says no.
Handsome Johnny is Richie Haven’s name for the Universal Soldier. He, like Dylan and Ochs, takes a more linear approach to war by saying that every war has basically been the same. Starting from the American Revolutionary War through Civil War and Vietnam. Then he takes an interesting turn by focusing our attention to Civil Rights, where Johnny is marching with his hand rolled in a fist. He ends, like Dylan, with the hydrogen bomb. The song was well chosen for the opening set of Woodstock, and can be found in the documentary made about the festival
Bob Dylan’s soldier like St. Marie’s is nameless and ageless, but very personal. Dylan, like Ochs, sings in first person, starting from his childhood in the Midwest. It is also a history of the USA through war. Dylan talks about how people think they are doing the right thing, because God is on their Side, .”and you don’t count the dead when God’s on your side”. The Germans after World War II were forgiven because they now too had the American God on their side, even though they murdered six million. Dylan wrote this in 1962 when Vietnam was just starting, but the Cold war was going on. He also ends with atomic weapons. Even here, when all the rockets are fired you don’t have regrets, because they have God on their side. His hope is that if God is on their side he will stop the next war.
The early 00’s had it’s fair share of anti-war songs with artists like Neil Young and Steve Earle recording songs and Eddy Vedder re-writing Phil Ochs’ ‘Here’s to the State of Mississippi’. Let’s see what the coming 4 years will bring.
TW LW W
01 01 4 Ida Maria - Oh My God (#2)
02 02 4 Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - Hold Me Tight (#1)
03 04 5 Titus Andronicus - Titus Andronicus
04 06 4 Frank Turner - Long Live The Queen
05 13 2 Tilly & The Wall - Pot Kettle Black
06 03 5 Tunics - Cost of Living
07 05 5 Holloways - Sinners & Winners (#1)
08 07 5 Kings of Leon - Use Somebody (#1)
09 08 5 MGMT - Kids
10 12 2 Dead Kids - Into The Fire
11 -- 1 The Soap - Drive In To My Sheet
12 15 2 Emmy The Great - We Almost Had A Baby
13 23 2 Coconut Records - Microphone
14 09 5 Red Light Company - Scheme Eugene
15 10 5 Noah & The Whale - Shape Of Your Heart
16 -- 2 Morrissey - I'm Throwing My Arms Around Paris
17 11 5 TV on the Radio - Dancing Choose
18 -- 2 Constantines 0 Our Age
19 14 5 Fleet Foxes - He Doesn't Know Why
20 18 3 Skipper - Wrong Man Wrong Place
21 16 5 Death Cab For Cutie - No Sunlight
22 17 5 Hot Melts - Never Been In Love
23 19 5 Vampire Weekend - A-Punk
And here's the YouTube link (new songs as last)
Or watch and listen to it here
The Ageless Soldier
Since people have begun to sing songs, war has been a subject. All throughout the ages ballads have been sung to remember wars, battles and the heroes that fought in them. In the last 50 years in pop music there has been a change to sing more about the soldier, and not the great leader. In the long list of popsongs about war especially the Vietnam war has been a favorite subject since the early days of the conflict in some songs by Dylan and Phil Ochs. Then there are songs like ‘Fortunate Son’ by Creedence Clearwater Revival talking about the sons of the rich who are not going or Barry McGuire’s ‘Edge of Destruction’. And after the end of the war the veterans came back and had their problems to deal with, as in Springsteen’s ‘Born In The USA’ or John Prine’s story of a heroin addicted veteran called ‘Sam Stone’.
This article will focus on the soldier fighting all the wars throughout the history of the US in four songs: Buffy St. Marie’s ‘Universal Soldier’, Phil Och’s ‘I Ain’t Marching Anymore’, Richie Havens’ ‘Handsome Johnny’ and Dylan’s ‘With God On Their Side’.
Universal Soldier is perhaps best known in Donovan’s version of Canadian Buffy St. Marie’s song. The universal soldier can be any soldier who has ever fought a war. Any height or age without a certain nationality, either fighting for Canada, France, the Russians etc. Also no particular religion, as he is a Catholic, a Hindu, an atheist or a Jain but even though every religion forbids killing he still does so. The role of religion will return with Dylan.
The songs talks about how every soldier has something that he fights for, no matter what his background is and no matter the cause. And they always think the war they are fighting will be the war that ends all wars. The moral of the song is that as a man you still have personal responsibility and that you should not just follow orders, that you as a person can stop war by just standing up. It’s simple math: soldiers are being ordered by the generals, the generals are being ordered by the politicians, and ‘We The People…’ elect the politicians.
Unlike St. Marie Phil Ochs sees the soldier as a victim of the generals and politicians, he has a more realistic view of how things work. To him it is the old people sending the young to die. Ochs’ soldier is not universal but American. Starting at the Civil War and talking about the Indian Wars as well he explains the country’s history up to the 60’s, and giving a warning about the atomic bomb in the end. For him this is the weapon that is so destructive it will have to lead to the end of war. “When I saw the cities burning, I knew that I was learning, I ain’t marching anymore”. His soldier sees the destruction that war can now cause so he stands up and says no.
Handsome Johnny is Richie Haven’s name for the Universal Soldier. He, like Dylan and Ochs, takes a more linear approach to war by saying that every war has basically been the same. Starting from the American Revolutionary War through Civil War and Vietnam. Then he takes an interesting turn by focusing our attention to Civil Rights, where Johnny is marching with his hand rolled in a fist. He ends, like Dylan, with the hydrogen bomb. The song was well chosen for the opening set of Woodstock, and can be found in the documentary made about the festival
Bob Dylan’s soldier like St. Marie’s is nameless and ageless, but very personal. Dylan, like Ochs, sings in first person, starting from his childhood in the Midwest. It is also a history of the USA through war. Dylan talks about how people think they are doing the right thing, because God is on their Side, .”and you don’t count the dead when God’s on your side”. The Germans after World War II were forgiven because they now too had the American God on their side, even though they murdered six million. Dylan wrote this in 1962 when Vietnam was just starting, but the Cold war was going on. He also ends with atomic weapons. Even here, when all the rockets are fired you don’t have regrets, because they have God on their side. His hope is that if God is on their side he will stop the next war.
The early 00’s had it’s fair share of anti-war songs with artists like Neil Young and Steve Earle recording songs and Eddy Vedder re-writing Phil Ochs’ ‘Here’s to the State of Mississippi’. Let’s see what the coming 4 years will bring.
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Explorer 23: January 15, 2009
No reviews, just the Top 23, with again a new Number 1.
TW LW W
01 02 3 Ida Maria - Oh My God (#1)
02 01 3 Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - Hold Me Tight (#1)
03 04 4 Tunics - Cost of Living
04 09 4 Titus Andronicus - Titus Andronicus
05 03 4 Holloways - Sinners & Winners (#1)
06 07 3 Frank Turner - Long Live The Queen
07 03 4 Kings of Leon - Use Somebody (#1)
08 05 4 MGMT - Kids
09 08 4 Red Light Company - Scheme Eugene
10 10 4 Noah & The Whale - Shape Of Your Heart
11 11 4 TV on the Radio - Dancing Choose
12 -- 1 Dead Kids - Into The Fire
13 -- 1 Tilly & The Wall - Pot Kettle Black
14 12 4 Fleet Foxes - He Doesn't Know Why
15 -- 1 Emmy The Great - We Almost Had A Baby
16 13 4 Death Cab For Cutie - No Sunlight
17 14 4 Hot Melts - Never Been In Love
18 17 2 Skipper - Wrong Man Wrong Place
19 15 4 Vampire Weekend - A-Punk
20 16 4 Wiley ft Daniel Merriweather - Cash In My Pocket
21 18 4 Deichkind - Arbeit Nervt
22 21 2 oF Montreal - An Eleuardian Instance
23 -- 1 Coconut Records - Microphone
Here's the link to the YouTube Channel.
Or:
TW LW W
01 02 3 Ida Maria - Oh My God (#1)
02 01 3 Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - Hold Me Tight (#1)
03 04 4 Tunics - Cost of Living
04 09 4 Titus Andronicus - Titus Andronicus
05 03 4 Holloways - Sinners & Winners (#1)
06 07 3 Frank Turner - Long Live The Queen
07 03 4 Kings of Leon - Use Somebody (#1)
08 05 4 MGMT - Kids
09 08 4 Red Light Company - Scheme Eugene
10 10 4 Noah & The Whale - Shape Of Your Heart
11 11 4 TV on the Radio - Dancing Choose
12 -- 1 Dead Kids - Into The Fire
13 -- 1 Tilly & The Wall - Pot Kettle Black
14 12 4 Fleet Foxes - He Doesn't Know Why
15 -- 1 Emmy The Great - We Almost Had A Baby
16 13 4 Death Cab For Cutie - No Sunlight
17 14 4 Hot Melts - Never Been In Love
18 17 2 Skipper - Wrong Man Wrong Place
19 15 4 Vampire Weekend - A-Punk
20 16 4 Wiley ft Daniel Merriweather - Cash In My Pocket
21 18 4 Deichkind - Arbeit Nervt
22 21 2 oF Montreal - An Eleuardian Instance
23 -- 1 Coconut Records - Microphone
Here's the link to the YouTube Channel.
Or:
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Explorer Top 23: January 8, 2009
Hello again my musical friends. Two weeks later (nothing new worth mentioning last week) and a new name and for the first time some reviews: the first of hopefully many 50 word single reviews.
TW LW W
01 09 2 Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - Hold Me Tight
02 05 2 Ida Maria - Oh My God
03 01 3 Holloways - Sinners & Winners
04 07 3 Tunics - Cost of Living
05 02 3 MGMT - Kids
06 03 3 Kings of Leon - Use Somebody
07 16 2 Frank Turner - Long Live The Queen
08 04 3 Red Light Company - Scheme Eugene
09 17 3 Titus Andronicus - Titus Andronicus
10 06 3 Noah & The Whale - Shape Of Your Heart
11 08 3 TV on the Radio - Dancing Choose
12 10 3 Fleet Foxes - He Doesn't Know Why
13 11 3 Death Cab For Cutie - No Sunlight
14 12 3 Hot Melts - Never Been In Love
15 13 3 Vampire Weekend - A-Punk
16 14 3 Wiley ft Daniel Merriweather - Cash In My Pocket
17 -- 1 Skipper - Wrong Man Wrong Place
18 15 3 Deichkind - Arbeit Nervt
19 18 3 Duroc - Since You've Been Gone
20 -- 1 Michael Franti & Spearhead - Obama Song
21 19 3 Raveonettes - Blush
22 -- 1 oF Montreal - An Eleuardian Instance
23 -- 1 Deviation - Control
50 Word Single Reviews!
Frank Turner – Long Live The Queen
This song might become a ‘let’s remember our good friend who died too young after an illness’ classic. Frank Turner tells us a story about one of his friends dying and how the remaining group of friends cope. Very touching. Catch him on the Eurosonic Festival in Groningen next week.
Dead Kids – Into The Fire
A one riff, start to finish song. Video is very simple as well. It’s a catchy tune however by this band from London who have listened to the Clash a lot. But that can never be a bad thing can it? Shortest song of all the reviewed with just 2:02.
Emmy The Great – We Almost Had A Baby.
The Dead Kids listen to the Clash and Emmy likes Belle & Sebastian because this song, which has been out since November already, has that vibe. It’s a nice song with a story and a cute baby in the video plus a variety of hand puppets. The ending is sudden.
Deviation – Control
It took me a while to get this song but it might just crack our Top 23. Deviation has as much originality as… well, can’t think of anything right now but it’s not a lot. That doesn’t mean it’s bad though. I feel there’s more to come from these Dutchies.
And here's the YouTube Playlist of the Explorer 23:
TW LW W
01 09 2 Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - Hold Me Tight
02 05 2 Ida Maria - Oh My God
03 01 3 Holloways - Sinners & Winners
04 07 3 Tunics - Cost of Living
05 02 3 MGMT - Kids
06 03 3 Kings of Leon - Use Somebody
07 16 2 Frank Turner - Long Live The Queen
08 04 3 Red Light Company - Scheme Eugene
09 17 3 Titus Andronicus - Titus Andronicus
10 06 3 Noah & The Whale - Shape Of Your Heart
11 08 3 TV on the Radio - Dancing Choose
12 10 3 Fleet Foxes - He Doesn't Know Why
13 11 3 Death Cab For Cutie - No Sunlight
14 12 3 Hot Melts - Never Been In Love
15 13 3 Vampire Weekend - A-Punk
16 14 3 Wiley ft Daniel Merriweather - Cash In My Pocket
17 -- 1 Skipper - Wrong Man Wrong Place
18 15 3 Deichkind - Arbeit Nervt
19 18 3 Duroc - Since You've Been Gone
20 -- 1 Michael Franti & Spearhead - Obama Song
21 19 3 Raveonettes - Blush
22 -- 1 oF Montreal - An Eleuardian Instance
23 -- 1 Deviation - Control
50 Word Single Reviews!
Frank Turner – Long Live The Queen
This song might become a ‘let’s remember our good friend who died too young after an illness’ classic. Frank Turner tells us a story about one of his friends dying and how the remaining group of friends cope. Very touching. Catch him on the Eurosonic Festival in Groningen next week.
Dead Kids – Into The Fire
A one riff, start to finish song. Video is very simple as well. It’s a catchy tune however by this band from London who have listened to the Clash a lot. But that can never be a bad thing can it? Shortest song of all the reviewed with just 2:02.
Emmy The Great – We Almost Had A Baby.
The Dead Kids listen to the Clash and Emmy likes Belle & Sebastian because this song, which has been out since November already, has that vibe. It’s a nice song with a story and a cute baby in the video plus a variety of hand puppets. The ending is sudden.
Deviation – Control
It took me a while to get this song but it might just crack our Top 23. Deviation has as much originality as… well, can’t think of anything right now but it’s not a lot. That doesn’t mean it’s bad though. I feel there’s more to come from these Dutchies.
And here's the YouTube Playlist of the Explorer 23:
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