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Tag: 10 songs


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10 Songs That Were Huge 10 Years Ago

Posted on April 23, 2015April 23, 2015 by Andrew Plaskowsky

Ten years ago, most college age students had just begun middle school. Meanwhile, Chris Brown started his career, Mariah Carey and Madonna came back better than ever, and Gwen Stefani gave the entire world a lesson in spelling. Check out 10 of the biggest songs from 10 years ago.

1. Mario – “Let Me Love You”

Mario’s biggest hit stateside “Let Me Love You” kicked off his sophomore album campaign right with a nine week run atop the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Maybe the song was so popular because it contained the keyboard riff from Tina Turner’s 1984 hit “What’s Love Got to Do with It,” or perhaps it was the cheesy video that took this gooey ode to a love interest straight into the hearts of millions.

2. 50 Cent feat. Olivia – “Candy Shop”

It’s a rare occurrence for a rap song to top the mainstream charts, but this Middle Eastern inspired midtempo track did it in roughly a month thanks to its hook. While the rap verses were mostly forgettable, the chorus of “I’ll take you to the candy shop / I’ll let you lick the lollipop” was a clever sexual innuendo that was later repeated in Lil Wayne’s 2008 “Lollipop” — a track that saw similar success to its predecessor.

3. Gwen Stefani – “Hollaback Girl”

This sly middle finger to Courtney Love’s remark about Stefani propelled her to the status of a pop “it girl” in 2005. It took just a single “uh-huh” to let everyone who it was. Add in the marching drum beat, a brass line and a bridge that taught everyone the right way to spell bananas and you’ve got the makings of a hit that’s still popular a decade later.

4. Mariah Carey – “We Belong Together”

Touted as Carey’s comeback single following several years of declining commercial success, “We Belong Together” proved she was still in the game. The song spent 14 non-consecutive weeks at #1, received two Grammy awards and broke radio records until “Blurred Lines” was released in 2013. This song is considered to be one of Carey’s signature songs and was labeled as “the song of the decade” by Billboard.

5. Kanye West feat. Jamie Foxx – “Gold Digger”

West’s song about women who are only with men for their money is still his biggest worldwide hit to date. Created back before his ego ballooned, this timeless track contains a Ray Charles sample and a relentless flow that doesn’t allow the listener a moment to breathe before going on to the next verse. Ten years later this song is still being covered by countless artists.

6. Chris Brown – “Run It!”

Chris Brown’s immensely catchy debut single “Run It!” began his troubled career by ingraining itself into the hearts of teenage girls. The video also showed him as a serious performer by allowing him to showcase his dancing abilities. The softer vocals of the song are a perfect contrast to the hard edged production on the song and are something Brown has yet to repeat on his five other albums.

7. Kelly Clarkson – “Since U Been Gone”

A departure from the fluffy R&B styled pop from her debut, Clarkson’s first taste of her sophomore effort Breakaway was noticeably more rock oriented than previous singles “Low” and “Miss Independent.” Her risky move paid off as the bitter “Since U Been Gone” remains one of Clarkson’s biggest tracks to date and is yet another reason why Clarkson’s career has lasted longer than most other American Idol winners.

8. Pussycat Dolls – “Don’t Cha”

It’s a surprise the internet wasn’t broken by the Pussycat Dolls “Don’t Cha” long before Kim Kardashian’s attempt with her oily seminude photoshoot. This siren song oozes sexuality as the Nicole Scherzinger led group taunts men to date women that look like them. The inclusion of Busta Rhymes in the video filled with scantily clad dancers pandered to nearly everyone and it paid off in the long run.

9. Madonna – “Hung Up”

Following the critical panning and commercial failure of American Life, Madonna harkened back to her disco roots with the Stuart Price produced “Hung Up.” This jarring electronic song put her name back in everyone’s mouth and sought to prove she was far from being over. Madonna’s reinvention brought her career full circle back to the clubs she started out at as the track peaked at #1 on Billboard’s Hot Club Play.

10. Ciara feat. Missy Elliott – “1, 2 Step”

Besides for being automatic, supersonic, hypnotic, and funky fresh, Ciara’s second single off her debut Goodies inspired a dance craze around the world. A Missy Elliott feature that encouraged women to shake it like Jell-O further propelled the song to success and it remains her biggest worldwide hit. The song made its way to the top of the pop chart ten years ago and sounds just as fresh today as it did upon its release.

10 Songs by Up and Coming Artists You Should Know

Posted on April 1, 2015April 1, 2015 by Andrew Plaskowsky

upandcoming

Allie X – “Catch”

After being touted by Katy Perry as her “spring jam” this time last year, Allie X finally released a choppy yet stunning video for her earworm of a future pop hit ahead of her debut EP out this Spring.

Ghost Beach – “Everytime We Touch”

Ghost Beach opened for bands like Imagine Dragons and Vampire Weekend long before releasing its debut album Blonde last March. The album is a gritty combination of tropical music and alternative pop that ends up sounding reminiscent of Talking Heads.

Kat Dahlia – “Crazy”

Born Katrinia Huguet, this Cuban-American singer’s recently released debut album My Garden contains lyrically sharp tracks coupled with her fraught vocals that cover emotional ground such as toxic relationships, abuse and drug addiction.

Neon Hitch – “Sparks”

https://soundcloud.com/neonhitch/sparks

As someone who’s been following Neon since her signing to Warner Bros. Records in 2010, the termination of her contract last year certainly came as a surprise. Instead of staying down, she sought the help from her fans to release her album Eleutheromaniac the way she wanted. “Sparks” is merely a taste of what’s to come.

Only Real – “Yesterdays”

Hailing from West London, Only Real née Niall Galvin spent much of his 2014 recording his upcoming debut Jerk at the End of the Line in Atlanta. If the sun drenched rock of “Yesterdays” is any indication of what’s to come, get ready to hear tracks off this album all summer long.

Panama Wedding – “All Of the People”

Originally begun as a bedroom project, Panama Wedding gained critical attention with the release of “All Of the People,” with its cascading synths and ultra chilled vocals. Perhaps the group will ride the hype train all the way to an album release this year.

Ryn Weaver – “OctaHate”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTVZdW8pTEM

WARNING: You won’t be able to get this song out of your head. Now that that’s out of the way, Ryn Weaver’s debut single “OctaHate” was produced by Benny Blanco and Cashmere Cat as well as having Charli XCX listed as a co-writer. Weaver’s unique vocals truly shine in a monster of a pounding chorus.

The Veronicas – “If You Love Someone”

Okay, so The Veronicas might not be a technically new band, but their new self titled album is due to be released in February. The duo seems poised to fill the void in pop radio with their highly sarcastic lyrics and catchy singles (see “Cruel”).

Years & Years – “King”

https://soundcloud.com/yearsandyears/king

The winners of BBC’s Sound of 2015 poll, Years & Years have been perfecting their sound for a large part of the last three years. Enter “King,” a jumping synth heavy track about someone being manipulative with a soaring chorus guaranteed to root itself in your brain.

Zak Abel

If 2014 was the year of the British male crooner with radio eating up the likes of Ed Sheeran and Sam Smith, 2015 will be the year that such voices will be mixed with more…interesting production. Abel might be young, but his voice is heavenly against a sleekly re-imagined UK garage sound.

10 Songs Hated By Their Own Artists

Posted on February 19, 2015March 13, 2015 by Ross Woomer

vinyl-hatedbyartist

Everyone has heard about Robert Plant and his well known, self-professed hatred for “Stairway to Heaven,” or Slash’s iconic lack of fondness for “Sweet Child O’ Mine,” but there’s a much longer list of artists with contempt some of their own major work.

In the spirit of departing from overtly sensationalist, click-bait titles, this list really should have a more appropriate name. However, after giving it some thought, it was plain that “10 Songs Whose Own Artists Dislike Listening To and/or Performing Live” didn’t quite have the same ring about it.

This is a list mostly comprised of artist-given opinions about their own work, and contains information pulled from interviews, recorded expressions and quotes while relying less on rumor and hearsay. In this Top 10, artist opinions range from mild aversion to outright cringe-level at the thought of performing any of these in front of an audience or hearing them on the radio. Let’s get started.

10. Kings of Leon – “Sex on Fire”

Artists get sick of their songs over time. It happens. For Kings of Leon, fan insistence is probably the only thing keeping the song “Sex on Fire” on their set list night after night. The band’s members have been quite adamant in letting everyone know just how they feel about the continuous demand for their most popular hit—quoth Kings of Leon at a show about to play “Sex on Fire”: “We hope you guys like this one, because we’re fuckin’ sick of playing it.”

Funny? Yes, a little. But it turns out that the band was completely serious, as drummer Nathan Followill reconfirmed in an interview for UK newspaper, The Sun:

“I would be pretty damn happy if my sex was never ever on fire again. Fans want it and you have to do it, and after so many albums together I can tell you, there’s a lot of debate about what records make it onto a set list. Everyone has their favorites.”

9. Eminem – “Cleanin’ Out My Closet”

As any listener of Eminem knows, the relationship between the artist and his mother has been rocky at best, rising to the surface through tracks such as “My Name Is” and other releases at the turn of the millennium. “Cleanin’ Out My Closet” is one such release, and one that Eminem (aka Marshal Mathers) absolutely refuses to perform live anymore.

In fact, on the Marshal Mathers LP 2 in 2013, the song “Headlights” is featured as an apologetic lyrical play to his mother, Debbie Mathers and provides a good look at Eminem’s current perspective on their troubled history, as well as some of the motivations for writing “Cleanin’ Out My Closet”—now, Mathers explains, he cringes whenever he hears it, and states his regrets for mocking her drug problem and vowing to never let his daughters meet their grandmother.

8. James Blunt – “You’re Beautiful”

James Blunt is not a fan of being associated with the song that, according to him, was force-fed to anyone walking around in 2005 to the point of being completely obnoxious. To quote the artist:

“”I think, at the end of the day, I was marketed by a record company to appeal to women during Desperate Housewives‘ commercials and you lose 50 per cent of the population in doing so.”

Moreso, the success of “You’re Beautiful” served to paint Blunt as something that he felt misrepresented the direction of both his career and overall personality; he assures everyone that he isn’t happy being so glum all the time:

“The marketing also painted me out as an insanely serious person, an earnest person and, as all my friends know, I’m anything but. I have a couple of over-emotional miserable songs that I’m known for, but I think it’s turned that corner now. People can see I don’t take myself that seriously.”

7. Panic! At The Disco – “I Write Sins Not Tragedies”

Who can tout it better than the artists themselves? This pretty much says it all without us having to (obligatory NSFW language warning). On a more positive note, props to Panic! At The Disco and any other groups or solo artists that choose to deliver what their fans want to hear most, despite the grating monotony that must arise when playing a song hundreds of times a year.

6. Kanye West- “Gold Digger”

Did you know that Yeezy doesn’t like the song “Gold Digger?” Well, apparently, he doesn’t. As Kanye put it mildly in an interview last year with Zane Lowe of BBC Radio,

“…I would get paid for doing ‘Gold Digger’—which, I never really liked that song, but I always knew I would get paid…”

Imagine that. Whether Kanye had been referring to his dissatisfaction the song’s lyrical content, vibe, technical arrangement, or perhaps with its placement on his 2002 album, Late Registration, no one can really say. Whether or not there is more than a little irony in cutting and performing a song entitled “Gold Digger” because it’s guaranteed to make money…well, that’s for you to decide.

5. Coldplay – “Speed of Sound”

Coldplay hates “Speed of Sound,” specifically the studio recording. Vocalist Chris Martin told Howard Stern in a 2011 interview that their track, “Speed of Sound” (often criticized for having identical-sounding elements to “Clocks”) is actually one of his least favorite songs. After being asked if any Coldplay songs had ever become hits that he personally thought were terrible, Martin explained that, while he thinks “Speed of Sound” isn’t necessarily a bad song, it pains him to think that they never got it right on record; he cannot bear to listen to the current recording, or play the song live. To this day, Coldplay does not perform it in any of their concerts. When asked why, Martin’s reasoning was that the lack of enthusiasm would detract from the overall experience:

CM: “It pains me.”

HS: “Now, you have to play this in concert.”

CM: “No, we don’t. We don’t play it.”

HS: “Because of your feelings about the song?”

CM: “Yeah, because, like I said, an audience can pick up real fast if you’re not convinced by something…”

4. MGMT – “Kids”

MGMT is known for taking a contrarian stance on just about everything ranging from the prospects of living famously to their careers in music becoming too mainstream. It should come as no surprise that one (multiple, really) of their songs has migrated onto the list of things they don’t really care for. Fans of the band were disappointed to learn that MGMT had stricken “Kids” from their 2013 tour altogether, the beginnings of a departure from what the group perceived as being mired in a cycle of making music by pouring ingredients into a pop song success formula.

According to the group’s constituents, Goldwasser and VanWyngarden, this decision was a byproduct of “not trying to make music that everyone understands the first time they hear it”, which, among other things, manifested itself in the form of not wanting to define any singles before the release of their second album, Congratulations. Presently,

MGMT is less than thrilled to revive any of their songs from the record that made them famous in favor of composing material that is entirely non-reminiscent of their earliest and most popular work—a controversial move unappreciated by many of duo’s fans.

3. Baauer – “Harlem Shake”

Harry Rodrigues, otherwise known as the Brooklyn-based DJ Baauer, flew to the top of Billboard’s Hot 100 in 2013, riding a track from decidedly humble origins. Produced in his apartment in Williamsburg, NY, “Harlem Shake” exploded after being exposed to the unpredictable nature of the internet. The mix quickly became a phenomenon, spawning a meme of its own along with countless dance videos of people uploading their own clip of themselves flailing about to the song. However, like many pop culture whirlwinds, the appeal quickly faded for Baauer once it blew up out of his hands:

“Overall the song got big for no reason of mine, but I was still connected to it 100 percent,” he tells Corban Goble of Pitchfork, “I got a taste of what it’s like to have a song in that stratosphere and I can tell you that I’m happy with that being the only time it happens. I don’t want that shit.”

At points, Baauer felt as though his privacy had been invaded, and had even received backlash for the erratic and often over-the-top impact of the trend once “Harlem Shake” had reached critical mass. He certainly doesn’t want to keep performing it forever.

“At this point, I’m trying to go from playing the original, to just playing a remix, to maybe putting in one little clip—sort of weaning off of it until I can eventually not play it at all. That would be the perfect thing.”

2. Lorde – “Royals”

Lorde is prevalent enough to receive an honourable mention on this countdown; by way of introspection and watching a ton of YouTube videos, the young pop icon has arrived at the conclusion that her original recording of “Royals” falls short of expectations when thrown up alongside fan-made covers of the song. Speaking with the Daily Record, she explains her current views on the song that made her a household name:

“I listen to people covering the song and putting their own spin on it—and I listen to it in every single form except the original one I put out—and I realize that actually it sounds horrible. It sounds like a ringtone from a 2006 Nokia. None of the melodies are cool or good. It’s disastrous—awful. But, for the same reason, in the context of the way I released it, it just worked out.”

Referring to “Royals” in another sit down with The Music:

“I understand why it worked and why it was kind of a hit, but at the same time there’s part of me that’s like…’these melodies are just not as good as something I could have written now.'”

She’s tired of hearing it. Perhaps as an exercise of sensibility, Lorde now wishes for radio stations to let up on “Royals” a little bit, reasoning that she’d “like to give everyone a little bit of breathing room…” before unveiling something else just as likely to enthrall listeners to the point of insanity.

1. Gotye – “Somebody That I Used To Know”

If there is any artist on this list that has earned a moment’s reprieve from performing a song that they have written, that artist is Gotye. When “Somebody That I Used To Know,” or as I like to call it, “The Tune That Enveloped Us All” finally caught on in the US in January of 2012, there really was no escape; for this reason, it was the prime contender for the number 1 slot on our list. Its near overbearing popularity had seen it rise to the top of charts in 23 countries worldwide, not excluding the US, Australia, and the UK, and the sheer magnitude of its success only reverberated as the song comfortably carved out a place for itself in the top 10 lists of more than 30 other countries around the globe. The indie pop single flourished so wildly that it endures as the iconic centerpiece of Gotye’s music career, winning two Grammy Awards for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance alongside Record of the Year in 2013.

So, from whence comes the dislike? It’s simply too big! In a past interview with NME, Gotye stated his mixed response to “Somebody That I Used To Know” becoming the sensation that it did:

“I like the fact that people are still discovering it and I don’t feel like it’s a noose around my neck. But at the same time, I do wonder how many times you can listen to the same piece of music. I can’t think of any song that’s ever been picked up like this and I do feel like saying to people sometimes ‘Come on guys, there are other songs out there’.”

In the same interview, somewhere amidst the outrageous level of airplay and the flood of alternate renditions and covers filling his inbox, Gotye had yet to decide whether or not he had it in him to deliver something just as earthshattering as the hit single ever again. When asked, he responded, “Time will tell. I don’t know whether I can or whether I want to.”

Of course, he added that he still enjoyed playing the track live, and that it hadn’t quite become a burden to him yet…back in 2012. It goes without saying that carrying around that kind of baggage for so long wears heavily, and at what sentiments might be stirring beneath Gotye’s calm and collected visage, to this day, the world can only speculate.

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