Traveling music
Pop that made the grade in 2001
BY MATT ASHARE
"The top 10 albums of 2001" --
that entire notion seems dwarfed by the events of September 11. Which is not to
suggest that pop music lost any of its resonance or value in the wake of the
World Trade Center attacks, just that it's hard to sort back through the
thousands of CDs that came out this year without bumping up against that date
hard and wondering, if only for a second or two, what's the point. I mean, if I
had to pick a band of the year, it would surely be U2, if only because they
seem to represent the right combination of hope and cynicism in the aftermath
of a sobering disaster. Too bad their All You Can't Leave Behind (Interscope)
came out in 2000 -- it even had a song called "New York" on it. For the most
part, though, pop music isn't equipped to handle large disasters, and nothing
proved that better to me than the A&E special that had all kinds of serious
stars covering John Lennon tunes in tribute to New York City. Lennon may have
lived in NYC for a time, but if I remember correctly, he was British.
No, the best one could hope for in 2001 were full-length albums that could get
you from Providence to New York in a car without making you switch to talk
radio. And though there were plenty of great singles to enjoy over the course
of the year, those albums were few and far between -- especially the ones that
could bring a little joy to the ride. That's not meant as an indictment of
music in 2001, which I actually thought was a pretty good year (a decent
Aerosmith single and a listenable Mick Jagger album released within 12 months
of each other is nothing to complain about). It's only my way of shedding some
light on why my favorite albums of 2001 had little or nothing to do with
anything else that was going on in the world.
1) Ike Reilly, Salesmen and Racists (Universal). Out of nowhere
-- actually, Libertyville, Illinois -- this Irish sonofabitch father of four
(he just had another baby boy, so now that's five) delivered an album that
dealt with deep things like mortality, not living up to the person you'd like
to be, and getting laid, then hit the road to try to get people to like him. It
might not have worked out all that well, but as I told him the last time he
came through town: you'll always have a great, great album to look back on, one
that proved for those lucky enough to hear it that rock and roll is still a
valid medium for genuine self-expression, not just for fashion-magazine
spreads. And that it can still be fun, too.
2) Idlewild, 100 Broken Windows (Capitol). This sophomore disc by
a bunch of Scottish kids from the middle of nowhere actually came out overseas
in 2000. But thanks to Spin magazine's listing it as one of the top 10
albums you didn't hear in 2000, Capitol decided to take a chance on it. Fact
is, the Nirvana-style grunge these guys specialize in didn't stand a lick of a
chance of selling here in the US. But at least the boys got a chance to tour a
country they'd never seen. And anyone who can allude to Gertrude Stein in a
punk song and keep a straight face has my vote.
3) Mark Kozelek, What's Next to the Moon (Badman). Pairing
Mark Kozelek, the leader of the San Francisco sadcore outfit Red House
Painters, with 10 Bon Scott-era AC/DC songs might seem some kind of ludicrous
joke, but the result turned out to be one of the heavier, funnier, and more
brilliant albums of the year. Kozelek has done away with most of AC/DC's
original music, kept the lyrics intact, and shone a whole new light on the
likes of "Love Hungry Man," "Walk All over You," and "If You Want Blood."
Pathos doesn't even begin to describe the impact he has on these songs -- you
have to hear them for yourself. And then you'll never hear an AC/DC song the
same again.
4) Lucinda Williams, Essence (Lost Highway). Okay, so it
isn't really as good as Car Wheels on a Gravel Road, which itself wasn't
quite as good as the Lucinda Williams Rough Trade disc she put out a
decade ago. But there's still nobody around who understands contemporary
Americana -- or, should I say, has it bred in her bones -- like Lucinda. The
title track is yearning at its most exquisite; the rest finds the notoriously
picky Williams letting the emotions flow uncensored, which is something she's
been needing to do for quite some time. An artistic triumph that may (and I
hope will) lead to bigger or at least better things.
5) Weezer (Interscope). Okay, so one of my best friends played
bass on this album. Big deal. He's no longer with the band, which means it's
perfectly acceptable for me to point out that Rivers Cuomo, for all his faults
as a frontman, has reopened the door for geek rock with this belated album and
maybe convinced a new generation of kids that a guitar is every bit as
expressive if not more so than a sampler and that it's time to go back to the
garage and start writing pure power-pop songs. "Hash Pipe" isn't even the best
tune, and neither is "Island in the Sun." Record-company people are notoriously
inept when it comes to picking singles.
6) Buck Cherry, Time Bomb (DreamWorks). If the drummer
would only stop playing fills, then Buck Cherry would sound just like AC/DC.
Unfortunately, he keeps busying things up. But next to the Weezer record,
nothing sounded as good as Time Bomb when you were cruising along Route 95 in August with the windows down -- especially the philosophical parts
where he explains that love ain't nothing but bitches and money. Man, things
must really suck in Hollywood.
7) Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, B.R.M.C. (Virgin). There's
nothing wrong with ripping off another artist's shtick, especially if it's the
right artist and the right shtick -- just ask Buck Cherry. Black Rebel
Motorcycle Club wanna be the Jesus and Mary Chain circa sometime in the
mid '80s, and they wanna know whatever happened to their rock and roll. I don't
blame them -- in fact, I commend them for trying to bring it back. A fine blast
from the past that may be a harbinger of better things to come if labels like
Virgin keep finding bands like this to sign.
8) Jimmy Eat World, Bleed American (DreamWorks). Capitol Records
lost a bundle on Jimmy Eat World, but that didn't bother the folks at
DreamWorks. Not sure why, either. I mean, emocore is dead, long live emocore.
And Jimmy Eat World are, at this point, the emocore prototype. Earnest lyrics.
Razor-sharp guitar hooks. Rachel Haden singing background vocals. It's punk
rock with a purpose and a shower. But what makes it great is that it sounds
almost as good as Buck Cherry when you're cruising along the Mass Pike in
August with the windows down.
9) The Strokes, Is This It (RCA). Ah, the Strokes. Perhaps the
most overhyped underground band of the year. That thought would be a lot
funnier if they didn't have such damn good songs. And if the singer weren't
somehow able to channel Iggy Pop, David Johansen, and Lou Reed all at once. RCA
better be counting on a whole lot of European sales, because music like this
just doesn't cut it in the US -- at least not these days. But if all the people
who see the Strokes eventually form their own bands, well, we'll have a bunch
of pretty cool music in five or 10 years, and no one -- not even the Backstreet
Boys -- will have anything to say about it.
10) New Order, Get Ready (Reprise). A decade ago, the dour
foursome who arose from the ashes of Joy Division were way ahead of their time
in their use of sequencers, electronic drum beats, loops, and all the other
trappings of so-called electronica. So maybe it made sense for them to wait
around for a few years before committing to a new full-length. Whatever, Get
Ready is my dark-horse winner for 2001 both because it grooves from
beginning to end and because it's more of a surprise comeback than the Weezer
album, even if New Order don't stand a chance of reclaiming their past stature
as dance-pop leaders.
Issue Date: December 28, 2001 - January 3, 2002
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