I know one of Tina's songs. I even have the album. Of course it's her love the song, hate the band tune, but hey.
Xander ,'Lessons'
Buffista Music II: Wrath of Chaka Khan
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
Jayhawks, "Blue" - Tomorrow The Green Grass
I adore this song (nearly used it for my color song category).
Love songs? "Tanglewood Tree" by Dave Carter and Tracy Grammer, off their CD of the same name. And "Into the West" (from the ROTK soundtrack) is my current favorite love song.
Edit: I finally sent my CD off today! It's still slightly imperfect, but much less so than before.
Hello, music nerds!
In case this is a spoiler, I'm whitefonting: Tina, Drakkar Sauna, I'm so jealous. They were the talk of the Winfield list right after the fest. The folks in the Grove loved 'em. Did you hear them there?
On the love song front might I suggest Pig by Dave Matthews Band, Sail Away and This Year's Love by David Grey
I have the Hec-u-mix!! I am listening to it right now AIreallyFG!!
I don't think I know a single song on Tina's mix. I might recognize one or two if I heard them, but...eeesh.
eeesh not!! I made it very new-to-me listener friendly. The really eclectic songs are very short.
katefate! hi! I did see Drakkar Sauna at Winfield and they are all bartenders here in Lawrence - so, with my drinking habits, I see them quite often - they have really improved a lot already since Winfield. Sigh..... Winfield.
Tina! Question for you (or anyone, really) -- your end-of-year mix has "The Laws Have Changed," by the New Pornographers -- is that representative of their music in general? Because I really like it, and if the rest of their CD is more or less like that song, I'ma get it.
Steph - IMO - Laws Have Changed is one of four of the poppiest, catchiest songs on Electric Version - but all together it is a solid album beginning to end. It all sounds pretty similar to LHC but not so much that you feel like you are listening to the same song over and over. I think you'd really like it. (And yeah - how catchy is that song?)
Here's what AMG says about it:
Three years after the sonic honey of Mass Romantic, the New Pornographers come up smiling once more with their sophomore effort and Matador debut, Electric Version. These beloved indie rockers stick with the syrupy goodness found on their first album, but opt to turn the amps up for a brighter, slicker sound, hence the title. It's a kitschy play on the band's power pop, and Carl Newman and secret member Dan Bejar keep their clever lyrical twists in tune. Twiddling riffs and organs dance with Neko Case's sunny harmonies on the rollicking "It's Only Divine Right" and "From Blown Speakers." The energy is there, but Electric Version captures a new kind of energy from the New Pornographers. While Mass Romantic was a little more quirky in spirit, Electric Version is more polished. They took just under a year to create this album, so naturally a fresh confidence would transpire and "The Laws Have Changed" highlights the New Pornographers' musical growth. This album standout is bold as brass, drenched in Case and Newman's perky vocals. "All for Swinging You Around" takes things further with wacky synth beats and tripped-up percussion, Velocity Girl-style, but its the band's own glossed-over rock & roll on "Miss Teen Worldpower" that truly represents the smooth emotion and might behind the New Pornographers' sound. Electric Version is an enjoyable and easy listen, chock-full of hungry hooks and brimming with indie rock's classic humility. -- MacKenzie Wilson
This Year's Love by David Grey
I heartily second this recommendation.
I am very pleased with the jewel case insert I came up with for my mix. It's very plain, but I like the effect muchly. Basically, all I did was handwrite intriguing scraps of lyrics from each of the non-instrumental songs in a sort of graffiti-like pattern. The overall effect was, I thought, rather nice. I got a printer for my birthday along with some label-making software, but I have yet to figure out how the whole deal works.
Hec's mix is just great. I'm totally chair dancing to it. And FTR - I had heard of 8 of the artists on it previously but only about 3 of the songs.
I started smiling like a loon and looked at the liner notes - it was the 5 a.m. make you smile song. Who else would include Editorial Notes in his own liner notes (which are so fun to read and full of charming hand-written corrections)?
I did my CD cover/track listing in about 5 minutes. I photo copied a funny greeting card and handwrote the tracks on the back. They didn't fit and I had to use white out and really squeeze in the last four or so. I'm 15.
"The Laws Have Changed," by the New Pornographers -- is that representative of their music in general?
I just want to wrod what tina said. TLHC is one of the hits, but there are several others and it's a supersolid album all around. It was one of these albums where, during the first three months of its release, DJs from my radio station combined to play almost every single song at least once.