2017: My year in music
Kurt Vonnegut in Timequake:
I say in speeches that a plausible mission of artists is to make people appreciate being alive at least a little bit. I am then asked if I know of any artists who pulled that off. I reply, ‘The Beatles did’.
Here is a little tribute to all the artists that helped me appreciate being alive. Very little (if any) of this music was released last year. 2017 just happens to be the year I discovered these artists or songs in. And as for The Beatles, this list includes one jazz piece inspired by them, one cover and a Paul McCartney solo.
The playlist is on Spotify.
Just like last year, the songs are not ranked by play count or how much I like them, but rather in more or less the same order that I came across them. One notable exception is the last track in this list, which even though I had been listening to since July, I decided to include here at the last minute.
En Oruthiye: Sreeramachandra | |
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Spotify | Youtube |
Modern Tamil film music defies classification. It’s an ecelectic mix of contemporary electronic, western classical and carnatic/hindustani classical sounds seamlessly weaved with decades-old playback singing tradition that is perhaps unique to India. This song has it all. The opening bars reminded me of Joan Osborne’s 90s hit - One Of Us. |
Piccolissima serenata: Renato Carosone | |
Spotify | Youtube |
Renato Carosone’s voice is magical. A simple song from simpler times. Growing up in India one heard a lot of 50s, 60s, 70s film music as that is what the parents would lean towards. Despite the likelihood of this song having ever come up on Indian Radio during my childhood being close to 0, the song manages to evoke nostalgia about those days. |
Succar ya Banat: Mouzanar Khaled | |
Spotify | Youtube |
From a Lebanese film from 2007 (Caramel). I have no idea what cosmic (algorithmic?) coincidence caused this song to appear in my weekly Spotify Discovery playlist but I am glad it did. The piano and strings intro almost had me anticipating a German Lied and not a woman singing in Arabic. |
Cab’Verde Na Coracon: Nancy Vieira | |
Spotify | Youtube |
Certain songs evoke the warmth of the sunny places of their orgin. I simply need to close my eyes with this song on my headphones and I feel as if I am at a sunny white sandy beach. A welcome discovery during the cold early months of the year. |
Down: Marian Hill | |
Spotify | Youtube | I discovered this song because Apple used it for their AirPods ad. The song starts with just a piano playing a simple repeating motif in a minor key. Vocals join the piano after four bars but soon things take quite an unexpected turn. After multiple hearings feels a few seconds too long but it makes the cut for the sheer surprise element. |
Ça ira tu verras: Séverin | |
Spotify | Youtube | The sort of music that fills your heart with joy and hope. |
Fevgo: Orfeas Peridis | |
Spotify | Youtube | European languages like French, German or Spanish come up enough in popular culture that if I hear two people talking in any of these languages I might not understand them but I’d know which language they are talking in. Not with Greek. Hopefully, if more songs like these keep showing up in my recommendations that would change. A poignant song about goodbyes. |
Soul Alphabet: Colleen | |
Spotify | Youtube | Ethereal. At times reminded me of Strauss’ Pizzicato Polka and the second movement of Ravel’s string quartet. |
Le Front Cache Sur Tes Genoux: Cécile McLorin Salvant | |
Spotify | Youtube | This one seemed to capture my dark mood earlier this well rather well. Many hearings on, and the piano interleude around 2:06 mark still gives me goosebumps. I seem to have said the same thing about another track (I didn’t know what time it was) from the same album I featured last year. To think that she is just 28 and the music she’d go on to make… |
The Finishing: Stavroz | |
Spotify | Youtube | A long-ish electronic intro that doesn’t seem to be going anywhere but around 1:37 mark the tempo picks up and a saxophone joins in and lifts the track to an entirely different level altogether |
Paradis Perdus: Christine and the Queens | |
Spotify | Youtube | I learned from Wikipedia that “the song interpolates Kanye West’s best-selling single Heartless as well as Christophe’s 1973 song Les Paradis Perdus”. I felt that this song a considerable improvement over the material it uses as source. |
La Belle Dame Sans Regrets: Chris Botti | |
Spotify | Youtube | Some inspired trumpet playing redolent of Chet Baker. |
Porquè - Original: Pochill | |
Spotify | Youtube | Breezy |
Wassiye: Habib Koité | |
Spotify | Youtube | This one grew over me gradually. I’d love to know what the lyrics mean. Sadly Bambara is not a big enough language for Google Translate to have support for it. |
Jungla de Asfalto - Acústica: Au/Ra | |
Spotify | Youtube |
A song about cities and modern life. Sounds more cheerful than the slightly dystopian contents of the lyrics would lead you to believe. e.g. a couple of lines from the 2nd stanza: Emporios al por menor abandonados - Abandoned malls Amazon Prime la nueva potencia mundial - Amazon Prime the new world power |
Shimbalaiê: Maria Gadú | |
Spotify | Youtube | Intentionally left blank as an exercise for the listener. |
In Fashion: Gregory Porter | |
Spotify | Youtube | I almost discovered Gregory Porter in 2016. Lufthansa’s in-flight magazine in my seat pocket on a flight back from Munich had a little feature on him. I had hasitly snapped a picture of the page with the intention of looking him up but I promptly forgot about it. Only when this song showed up in my Discovery playlist in February last year, did I realise what I had been missing. |
Ausencia: Lula Pena | |
Spotify | Youtube | I love songs that keep things simple. This one features just a guitar and Lula Pena’s warm voice. Full credit here to the sound engineer as well - if you listen to this on headphones you’d appreciate how intimate it sounds. |
Não Me Deixe Só: Vanessa Da Mata | |
Spotify | Youtube |
I have to borrow from Wikipedia again to accurately describe the stylistic elements of this song: Música popular brasileira (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈmuzikɐ popuˈlaʁ bɾaziˈlejɾɐ], Brazilian pop music) or MPB is a trend in post-bossa nova urban popular music in Brazil that revisits typical Brazilian styles such as samba, samba-canção and baião and other Brazilian regional music, combining those with foreign influences, such as from jazz and rock. Or in short, should have you tapping your feet in no time. |
Walking On the Moon (feat. Aloe Blacc): Roseaux | |
Spotify | Youtube |
Fun, playful lyrics: Giant steps are what you take Walking on the moon I hope my legs don’t break Walking on the moon As you might’ve noticed by now, a lot of songs I listen to are not ones you could hum along. This one is a rare exception! |
Aux débutants de l‘amour: Vianney | |
Spotify | Youtube | Intentionally left blank as an exercise for the listener. |
Naan Nee: Shakthi Shree, Dheekshitha | |
Spotify | Youtube | This song is not exactly what you’d think of an ‘earworm’, but don’t be surprised if it begins to loop in your head several days later. |
Calaverada: Gipsy Kings | |
Spotify | Youtube | I came across this song just a few days after our Seville visit and somehow in my mind it is now associated with that trip. The singing is just so full of energy and almost feels like a live performance rather than studio recording. I can only imagine what it must’ve been like to listen to Gipsy Kings live. |
And I Love Her: Brad Mehldau Trio | |
Spotify | Youtube | The music The Beatles made 50 years ago, continues to inspire musicians to date. As far as derivative works go, this is sublime. |
Pachai Uduthiya Kaadu: Abhay Jodhpurkar, Harini | |
Spotify | Youtube | A tune at once both familiar and new. Bright guitars, wonderful singing, flute and orchesteral interludes. Though at first it was a little hard to look past the ridiculous Tarzan-themed album cover. |
C’est si bon: Janne Schra, Robin Nolan Trio | |
Spotify | Youtube | This is probably one of the most covered French song. It’s hard to best the Eartha Kitt version but I like it because of its gentler touch (e.g. instead of the brass heavy opening of Kitt’s version you get guitars). |
Replay: René Aubry | |
Spotify | Youtube | The track begins with piano and the guitar building up a lot of anticipation for about 50 seconds and then the drums come in quite unexpectedly release the tension. Must be fun to choreograph to a piece like this. |
Remedios: Gabriella Ferri | |
Spotify | Youtube | Huantingly meloncholic? |
Cruise: Lazerhawk | |
Spotify | Youtube | This sort of synth-heavy electronic music is as far as it gets from the kind of music I usually enjoy, and yet I find this track oddly fascinating. Probably because it reminds me so much of a Kitaro mix-tape I used to listen to in my early teens… |
Adieu Tchin Tchin: Juliette Armanet | |
Spotify | Youtube | When you listen to opera, you come across a lot of vocal feats on the higher side of the octave. Yet singing in a high octave in contemporary pop music is bit of novelty and that’s what drew me to this song. |
Gigi L’Amoroso: Emily Loizeau | |
Spotify | Youtube | The cello and piano opening draws you in immediately. As a song it is a little unusual in structure with a little monologue towards the end punctuated with singing. I leanred only today that it’s a cover of a 1974 single. |
O Vai: Vaiteani | |
Spotify | Youtube | Music with roots in French Polynesia and yet sounds very contemporary. The lyrics are in Tahitian but thankfully, French translation is available on the duo’s website. I have a feeling there’ll be more songs by Vaiteani in the list in the coming years. |
Gostar de Quem Gosta de Nós: Raquel Tavares | |
Spotify | Youtube | It must be hard being part of a folk tradition like Fado that goes back a couple of centuries. Adhere too much to the genre and you don’t have anything new to offer, adhere too little and you risk being an outcast. Coming across a song that strikes that delicate balance between the old and the new is always a joy. |
Mahalla: Carolina Chocolate Drops | |
Spotify | Youtube | The sort of music that catches your attention in a noisy café and makes you want to ask the first available attendant if they could find out what song is playing. Of course these days one just uses Shazam. |
Trés Mininu: Mayra Andrade | |
Spotify | Youtube | Music by Mayra Andrade is fast becoming my aural equivalent of comfort food. That’s why there are two of her songs in this list. |
Imagining My Man: Aldous Harding | |
Spotify | Youtube | One of the joys of Spotify is how easy it makes artists to share their influences and favourite works. Came across this song in a playlist by Lorde. Aldous Harding shows a wide vocal range in this song. I love how the mood of the song shifts from despairing to hopeful (if not outright triumphant). If you told me I could pick just one song from last year, it’d probably this one. |
Segundo Movimiento + Improvisación Cerca De Tu Casa: Sílvia Pérez Cruz | |
Spotify | Youtube | After 1 minute 40 seconds of piano, a beautiful voice joins in, hums along and gives it wings. |
Téra Lonji: Mayra Andrade | |
Spotify | Youtube | Intentionally left blank as an exercise for the listener. |
Ojos Grandes: Las Migas | |
Spotify | Youtube | Soulful, contemporary Flemenco music. |
Ferré: Colloque sentimental: Léo Ferré, Philippe Jaroussky | |
Spotify | Youtube | Philip Jaroussky sings in a beautiful counter-tenor voice. Once you’ve heard him perform a work, to hear anyone else perform it often sounds wrong. |
Let It Be: Miloš Karadaglić, Gregory Porter | |
Spotify | Youtube | If you want to cover a song that The Beatles released at the top of their game, you better be good. Miloš and Gregory are, without any doubt, quite up to the mark. |
Matanga: Richard Bona, Mandekan Cubano | |
Spotify | Youtube | Richard Bona’s voice is this song is like warm honey being poured down your ears - without the complications that’d arise if you were to attempt such a thing literally. |
Fusion: Rosa Passos | |
Spotify | Youtube | Hypnotic. |
Jenny Wren: Paul McCartney | |
Spotify | Youtube | This reminded me of The Beatles of the old (think the White Album, Blackbird) and I was quite surprised to learn that this is a more recent (recorded 2004) solo work by Paul McCartney. When you are an artist as celebrated as Paul McCartney, the fans will pore over every single work of yours and put something equivalent up on Wikipedia. I learned from this song’s page that what I had taken for clarinet in this song, was actually an Armenian woodwind instrument called Duduk. |
Efemera: Márcio Faraco | |
Spotify | Youtube | This song evokes in me the feeling of being adrift in a vessel on a calm body of water at senset. |
Sacred Heart: The Civil Wars | |
Spotify | Youtube | Talking of metaphors that if applied literally would be uncomfortable at best and fatal at worst, this one should melt your heart the moment you hear the first bars. |
Bei mir bist du schoen: Liz Green | |
Spotify | Youtube |
I actually thought this recording was from 1930s and not from 2011. I wasn’t that far in the sense that the original song this one covers is from 1932, but that a recording in 2011 would sound so much like one made in the 1930s was a bit surprising. I wonder if they tried to use vintage studio equipment for recording this or treated it digitally to sound like an old recording. Regardless, Liz Green’s voice definitely sounds like one that’d would’ve been popular in early 20th century. Quirky lyrics too: Bei mir bist du schoen, please let me explain Bei mir bist du schoen means you’re grand Bei mir bist du schoen, again I’ll explain It means you’re the fairest in the land I could say “Bella, bella”, even say “Wunderbar” Each language only helps me tell you how grand you are |
Verde: Sílvia Pérez Cruz | |
Spotify | Youtube | Filed under - is nothing like what I grew up listening to but makes me nostalgic. |
Soar Away: Dave Douglas, Uri Caine | |
Spotify | Youtube | Bound to do to your mood exactly what the label says - make it soar away. |
Get Me Away from Here, I’m Dying: Luna Picoli Truffaut | |
Spotify | Youtube | Sung in a high key - the sort of voice you’d use when humming. To carry it through an entire song must’ve taken quite some effort. And as was the case many times last year, this too is a cover of an original. |
Neguinha: Márcio Faraco | |
Spotify | Youtube | Intentionally left blank as an exercise for the listener. |
Une belle histoire: Michel Fugain & Le Big Bazar | |
Spotify | Youtube |
When you are an outsider to a country’s music, it is even harder to tell if a song is original or a cover. I began listening to a Dutch podcast this year. It’s basically a recording of a late night current affairs radio show put out by one the public radio stations. Between news stories and interviews, they play light music - mostly Dutch, English, French and German songs from the 1970s and the 1980s. This song came up in the episode they published on 22 Jul 2017. It was then that I realised that a song that I had been listening to since April 2016 was a cover of one by Michel Fugain. Un belle history (A beautiful story) sounds like an appropriate note to end this playlist on. |
p.s. There was of course more music in my life this year than listed here. I added 207 new songs to the “master playlist” off which I compile this year-end retrospective. There were a couple of songs - one in Hindi and one in Tamil - that I must’ve heard tens of times. My new-found affection for this period of Indian music is making me wonder if I am finally turning into someone from my parents’ generation (surely everyone’s greatest fear when they are in their teens). Music is also an integeral part of many shows that Netflix produces. I wish they’d release this one from Godless on Spotify.