Archive for the 'ben kweller' Category

The Last Christmas Post


Well, today is offically Christmas Eve. And for this little slice of the internet that means that today marks the last day I will be posting Christmas music. I hope you’re all enjoying the holiday, no matter what country you live in. In fact, I hope you’re not reading this blog right now because you’re too busy preparing for the festivities or you are actually celebrating them already. If you are reading this on Christmas Eve I appreciate that you chose to stop by for a little while, now go and have some fun with friends and family.

Merry Christmas everyone.

mp3 : Rooney - Merry Xmas Everybody
mp3 : Low - Just Like Christmas
mp3 : Leona Naess - Christmas
mp3 : Jimmy Eat World - Last Christmas
mp3 : Ben Kweller - Rock of Ages

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EA Mix vol 6 - A Fresh Start

First of all I’ve switched the format in which I construct my mixes. Before they were always 17 songs. A nice big prime number. And that number was chosen because, when burned to a cd, 17 songs usually maxes out the available space. I’m Dutch, hence I like to use everything you can.

But, in today’s modern age [where the single song download is rapidly watering down the effect of a solid album], everyone seems to have digital music players. Taking this all into consideration the mixes to follow will use 13 tracks and will only be offered in the form of single song downloads. If you want one archive file containing all of the tracks [for easy downloading] let me know in the comments and I’ll make it available. For now, enjoy the songs.


01 : Joshua Radin - Star Mile : It wasn’t just breathy boy/girl harmonies, catchy lyrics, and superb instrumentation that got Joshua recognized. As is true in so many fields it’s all who you know. And Mr. Radin knows Zach Braff, actually went to school with him. They first hooked up to put some of Josh’s songs on Scrubs, then Josh got a record deal, and now two of his songs are featured on The Last Kiss.

02 : Josh Ritter - Good Man : I love this song. I really cannot get enough of it. And it comes from one of the best albums of 2006. This man has a future in the new folk scene alongside such other acts as Page France and Zach Williams. If this is the future of “indie” pop then it is a bright future indeed.

03 : Fields - If You Fall We All Fail : It seems as if any band that sneaks out of Britain these days is spectacular. Add to this the fact that at least one of their band members hails from Iceland [homeland of Sigur Ros, an easily identifiable reference in their music] and you have a recipe for beautiful music. They will be huge, maybe not on the level of Coldplay or U2, but I expect them to rival The Arcade Fire for underground credibility.

04 : The Killers - When You Were Young : I like the lyrics, I love the band, I’m excited to hear their new album. I still don’t always understand what they’re talking about, what reference or point they’re trying to make, but it doesn’t really matter when you’re the new glam kids on the scene. Let’s hope that all the hype they’ve been getting doesn’t lead to a giant letdown.

05 : Envy Corps - Rhinemaidens : At the beginning of the track it sounds hauntingly like something I’ve heard, and loved, before. I can’t quite place what their sound reminds me of, but it feels comfortable and good. I really feel like once the guitar kicks in it sounds like something that Men at Work should have recorded.

06 : Thunderbirds Are Now! - We Win (Ha Ha) : I have no idea how I first heard of this band. They sound a little rough around the edges, almost like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs with a male lead. One thing is that their sound is frantic and at the same controlled. It has a certain driving energy, quick drums, sonic stops, and a hook that pulls you through the just over three minutes track before you know it.

07 : Gavin Mikhail - Fight the Sky : Yeah, I did include a basic pop song on my mix. Get over it. The first thirty seconds sound like standard, run of the mill piano pop. Then the song gets pushed to the point of almost being over-produced. And it sounds great. Like a better Jason Mraz with a real purpose and talent [and no trucker cap].

08 : The Triangles - Applejack : My little brother made me listen to this song while I was home this summer. At first listen I didn’t really like it. It took me awhile to really get into their sound, and to be honest it’s still not my favorite. It comes across as a poor man’s Polyphonic Spree. But in this weird mix of preschool sounding lyrics and hooks there resides a type of youthful energy which deserves at least two, maybe three, listens.

09 : Imogen Heap - Hallelujah : Originally a Leonard Cohen song, first famously covered by Jeff Buckley, then again by Rufus Wainwright, and now finally the brit voice behind Frou Frou. Buckley’s version is still the best on the planet, but Imogen brings her own twist to the song. Namely she drops the instrumentation and uses her voice, and breathing, in layers to make an old classic new again.

10 : Ben Kweller - Thirteen : BK himself said that this was the most personal, and best, song he’s ever written. It appears on his newest self-titled album and he has said that it’s difficult for him to perform live because he gets very emotional. The bottom line is that it’s another great song from the one time musical kid genius.

11 : Sufjan Stevens - Pittsfield : Sufjan Stevens has a disease, and the only cure is making more and more [and more] music. So he writes hundreds of songs every year and records most of them. This song hails from his b-sides album The Avalanche and it’s easily into my top ten favorite Sufjan songs. It builds and builds upon itself, even if it is simple in the way it’s constructed, and eventually reaches a peak that you wish would last forever.

12 : Zach Williams and the Ramparts - James : Mark my words, Zach Williams will be huge. All in due time he will play every indie festival from Bonnaroo to Pitchfork. And he will dominate. But for any of this to happen he needs to drop the “and the Ramparts” from his name. All that being said this is a wonderful song.

13 : DeVotchKa - How It Ends : I can’t quite classify the sound of this band. It’s good yes, it’s weird yes, and it somehow works [accordion and all]. When the music drops out and he wails “and you already know how this will end” I get goosebumps, I get a little crazy, I want him to keep singing forever. But alas, this is how it ends.

EA Mix vol. 5 - Going Home

EA Mix vol. 5 - Going Home

This mix was prepared while I was living overseas this past year. It wraps up the EA Mix volumes for this school year [vols. 1-5, EA standing for East Asia]. I put a lot of thought into these songs, the order they are arranged in, and especially the lyrics they contain. It’s always good to be going home.

download the full mix in .zip format
yousendit : here
megaupload : here

[click on the song titles below for individual mp3 downloads]

01 : Neil Diamond - America : The line, “They’re coming to America,” is repeated again and again in this classic by the former sequined wonderboy of Vegas. This song comes from his glory days and kicks off the album with the appropriate flair.

02 : Bruce Springsteen - Born in the USA : Ok, ok, I know that this song is about a guy, born in the USA, who is figthing in Vietnam. But I grew up with Mellancamp and Springsteen on the radio and it came down to a Born in the USA versus Smalltown battle. The boss just wins that fight my friends, and this song proves that the old guys know [or knew] how to rock.

03 : Simon and Garfunkel - Homeward Bound : Some of these songs are so ridciulously obvious that I feel a bit embarassed having to explain their inclusion. I mean, honestly, if they line “I wish I was homeward bound” doesn’t scream “put me on this mix, then I don’t know where to find lyrics more appropriate to this collection.

04 : Boyz II Men - It’s So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday : Again, blast from the past songs battled it out for inclusion here on the mix. This time it was Boyz II Men against Michael W. Smith’s Friends are Friends Forever. I know this song is cliched, overplayed, trite, etc., yet it still fits perfectly with the overall mood of the mix. And it serves to transition from the older kings of music into the new kids on the block [of course, figuratively speaking]

05 : The Weakerthans - Left and Leaving : “My city’s still breathing, but barely it’s true. Through buildings gone missing like teeth. The sidewalks are watching me think about you, sparkled with broken glass. I’m back with scars to show, back with the streets I know will never take me anywhere but here.” The Weakerthans were the most underrated, overlooked band of the year 2000. Maybe it was all the Y2K buzz, maybe it was mad-cow, or maybe we just missed something great in the process of understanding that 2000 really wasn’t the new millenium [or was it?].

06 : Brendan Losch - You Go You Leave : “Cause you go, you leave, you’ll never come back.” Plaintive is the best word I can think of to describe this song by Mr. Losch. I met, discovered, became efriends with Brendan on myspace and so I don’t mind plugging his musich at each and every turn. And I love this line, half way into the song, “are you even listening to me, cause I feel like you were never there.” I can just imagine that line being spoken aloud to countless of my friends as they drift in and out of conversations this summer back in the states.

07 : Primitive Radio Gods - Standing Outside a Broken Telephone Booth with Change in my Hand : Yes, it’s true, there were bands with obscenely long song titles well before Sufjan came along. And just like Mr. Stevens, when you make gorgeous music, you are allowed to take all the liberties you desire with your song titles. For some reason this song has always reminded me of coming home. Maybe it’s the line “the plane takes off from Baltimore and touches down on Bourbon street,” or maybe it’s the repetitive chorus of “I’ve been downhearted baby, ever since the day you left.” Whatever it is, this song feels like home to me, and I love the lyrics.

08 : Zach Williams & the Ramparts - Hospital Dream : I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again, but they need a new name for their band. Sure, Zach is the frontman, maybe even the overall controlling genius, but still, the last band I knew that made it huge with a name like this was Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers [or Max Weinberg and the Max Weinberg Seven - kudos to Conan]. Maybe it’s the “the” bands fault, but for whatever reason bands with “and the” in their name never seem to make it. And I really want Zach and company to thrive. He’s a great song writer, could easily be signed by Barsuk, and could make a killing if he moved to Chicago, Seattle, or Portland. But enough on that, this song is gorgeous.

09 : Phantom Planet - California : I know, I know, this song is overplayed as well. But as my friends are flying home from East Asia most of them will be landing first in California. And it just made sense to put a song that yells “California, here we come” over and over again on the mix. Not to mention that even though this song almost pushed them into T.V. song jingle embarrassment [see the Remembrants and the Friends theme song for one shining example] Phantom Planet has pressed on to reinvent their sound and their image.

10 : Stars - On Peak Hill : I love Stars, and stars. Both the noun and proper noun. And I felt like this song really had a home time feeling to it. It seems as if it’s a song taken from life in a small little town where you can talk about “the time I was five at the top of Peak Hill, and the wind almost took me away.” I could just imagine flying over oceans and looking out the window, back in time, and thinking about all those little stories and anecdotes that only make sense when you’re back home.

11 : David Gray - Shine : I feel if people besides Dave Matthews fans ever bought into this Brit then this song would be featured on all graduation mixes, goodbye finales, and funeral episodes for the rest of time. I mean really, just listen to the man sing. “And ours is a road that is strewn with goodbyes. But as it unfolds, as it all unwinds, remember your soul is the one thing you can’t compromise.” The whole song is a sad and yet strangely hopeful goodbye, after all “who knows what’s waiting in the wings of time? Dry your eyes, we’re gonna go where we can shine.”

12 : The Walkmen - Hang On, Siobhan : This is a song to a person with quite possibly the best name ever. Siobhan. Pronounce that correctly before listening to the song and you have won a free ticket to my heart. Really. From the first time I heard this song I’ve been in love with both it and the boys that crafted it. The opening line through the last straining lyric, it’s all amazing. “So hang on, Siobhan, we’re coming home soon.”

13 : Ben Kweller - Lizzy : Ben Kweller, or as he references himself in song and print, BK, is one amazingly talented individual. Granted, his early stuff with Radish might have been a little overrated, but when have music magazines [either in print or online] ever really been accurate at predicting the future? Anyway, this little ditty hails off of BK’s debut solo album from about five years ago, titled Sha Sha, and tells the story of two people spending time apart for the first time. “Lizzy I write our scene; telegraph, telegram, telephone, telling you I’ll be home soon.”

14 : Josh Garrels - Going Home : Question, how on earth could I not include a song titled “Going Home” on the going home mix? Question, how could I not continue to promote someone with as much tallent as Josh? I couldn’t find a reasonable response to either of those questoins, so Josh is here. “I’m going home. She’s, she’s going home. We, we’re going home. Going home when we die, we’re going home in the sky. Going home by and by, we’re going home to live with Christ. Hallelujah.” Writing out the lyrics does not do justice to this boys brilliance.

15 : Ben Gibbard - Recycled Air (acoustic) : Taking a music track, created by someone you’ve never met, and writing lyrics for it has to be hard. That alone would have qualified this song, as originally released by the team of The Postal Service, for the mix but Ben Gibbard takes this song to new heights with his solo rendition. Making it ever more melancholy, chill, and sad along the way. And the song is about flying away in an airplane. “I watch the patchwork farms, slow fade into the oceans arms. Calm down, release your cares, the stale taste of recycled air.”

16 : The Supertones - So Great a Salvation : Who would have ever thought I would include a throwback song from a Christian Ska band? Especially when it includes the line “Woke up this morning and I just had to pack up all my life. Just read through James’ book, start to pray and I ask God for a wife.” Doesn’t really seem like my bread and butter, I know, but the chorus is “Why me God? Why should you chosoe me? Your team God, can you use even me?” And I think that’s something we all felt this year, that we all go through, so it made the cut.

17 : Dntel - Last Songs : Such an appropriate ending to a mix album commemorating the end of living overseas for a year. I always have songs that, in my own little world, would fit perfectly in the soundtrack of my life. And this song always reminds me of that wait in the airport for that last flight on your way home. The one wait where you have to sit alone because all your travel friends have caught their flights and it’s just you from this point until you’re actually home. That’s what this song is to me.

And this concludes the broadcast of EA Mix albums for the time being, stay tuned for two new mixes in a new series, SS, coming soon this summer. Be aware, there is so much more good music in this world. Don’t limit yourself.

Check back often.