• Home
  • LUX ETERNA RECORDS
  • About Us
  • Contact

  • Culture
    • Music
    • Critical Condition
    • Sex & Mayhem Report
    • Metal!
    • Nostalgia
    • LUX ETERNA RECORDS
    • Live Music
    • Pop?
    • Avant-Garde!
    • Soul!
    • Records
    • The Biz
    • Rock?
    • Recording
    • The Contrarian
  • Media
    • Series of Tubes
    • Television
    • Comics
    • Conspiracy!
    • Poetry
    • Art
    • Journalism
    • Literature
    • Film
    • GameDrain
    • Copyright—Fight—Left
    • Video
  • Metaphysics
    • Behavioral Science
    • Buddhism
    • Atheism
    • Derangement
    • H+
    • Lovecraft Haiku
    • Magick
    • Mysticism
    • Sci-Fi
    • Religion
    • Paranormal
    • Eeeeevill!
    • We’re All Gonna Die!
    • Apocalypse!
  • Politics
    • America
    • Foreign Affairs
    • Current Events
    • Ethics
    • Our Sad Society
    • Intelligence?
    • History
    • Economics
    • Scam-tastic!
  • Allsorts
    • Technology
    • Complaining
    • Science
    • Too Fucking Cute
    • Podcasts
    • Linkdumps
    • Absolutely Unrelated
    • LOLZ
    • Drink
    • Vague Announcements
    • Travel
    • Teh Hotnezz
  • Scribes
    • Carrie Stanziola
    • Bill Simmon
    • Dr. Agamemnon Cox
    • Casey Rae-Hunter
    • Chris Parizo
    • Wes Covey
    • Arthur Leon Adams III
    • Neil Cleary
    • Molly Hodgdon
    • Cartomancer Carolyn

00-09: End Hits — By Katie Ehlers

Posted by: Casey Rae-Hunter    Tags:      Posted date:  December 4, 2009  |  No comment

myeye

Katie is my favorite Twitter buddy, because she’s stunningly witty with a mere 140 characters and makes me laugh so hard the single-malt shoots out of my nose (yes, it stings). She also has fine taste in music, and regularly shows Brooklyn what-for. Here’s her brief tour of the records that mattered in the first decade of the millennium.

Picks after the jump.

————————————–

If there is a signature aughts sound, and there isn’t, it’d be a kind of mashed-up, post-everything glamour. The ’00s, we’ll tell the kids, sounded like “Stronger.” They sounded like “SexyBack” and “Paper Planes” and “Feel Good Inc.” and “Take Me Out.” They tried to make us go to rehab, and they don’t love you like I love you, and 1, 2, 3, 4, and does that make me crazy? (Probably.) Take this as a shallow anthropology of the aughts — or a personal confession. Call it How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Pop Music.

Eminem, The Eminem Show
I mean, his alter ego has an alter ego. Come on. The Eminem Show is Mathers’ effort to make us aware of his self-awareness, once and for all. It is also one of the wittiest, most exuberant, most maddening, and greatest mainstream hip-hop albums I can think of. I always loved it, but it took me the better part of this decade to admit it.

PJ Harvey, Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea
These songs sound how falling in love feels.

Queens of the Stone Age, Lullabies to Paralyze
I know I’m supposed to say Songs for the Deaf or Rated R. But Lullabies to Paralyze is one of my all-time favorites. Why? “Tangled up in Plaid,” that’s why. For starters.

If Songs for the Deaf was imagined as a road trip to the desert, tuning in forgotten radio stations and ingesting trucker drugs, Lullabies is what happens when they reach their hot, dark destination and begin the party in earnest. Mark Lanegan’s whiskeytone bewitches on the opener. Josh Homme’s coven of vaguely predatory burnouts beckons. I was under the spell of this record for two years straight without realizing it. It smolders.

Madvillain, Madvillainy
Nonstop mental capers. I couldn’t even choose my 5 favorite songs. But if you don’t love “Raid,” “Shadows of Tomorrow” or “All Caps,” your ability to love is broken.

Radiohead, Kid A
I’m trying not to pick anybody else’s picks. And I’m trying to find better words than “special” and “important,” because I know how that sounds. But I can’t. This is The Record, it seems.

————————————–

Katie Ehlers lives in Brooklyn and is into really obscure things you’ve probably never heard of, such as sandwiches and The Beatles. By day, she works in book publishing. By night, she also works in book publishing, but more drunkly. She plays bass and writes songs, but is neither proficient enough to work as a studio musician, nor attractive enough to form her own band. She is sorry about that. You have no idea.


    Share This
About the author
Casey Rae-Hunter
Casey Rae-Hunter is a musician, public policy wonk and the editor/publisher of The Contrarian Media. An in-demand speaker, he gives frequent talks at conferences and campuses on issues at the intersection of creativity, technology, policy and law, and is a go-to source for major media outlets from NPR to the New York Times. Casey works alongside leaders in the music, arts and performance sectors to bolster understanding of and engagement in key policy and technology issues, and has written dozens of articles on the impact of technology on the creative community. Casey is an adjunct professor at Georgetown University and the Deputy Director for Future of Music Coalition. He also serves on the Board of Directors of the Media & Democracy Coalition and the National Alliance for Media Arts and Culture. The Contrarian does not necessarily represent the views of the organizations to which he belongs.



Wanna say something?





  Cancel Reply

« The Aughts — Whatever Norton Remembers
Gettysburg Ghost on Film? »
  • Heroes and Villains

    • Genomicon
    • Astral Spit
    • Norton Analog
    • Garamania!
    • Perfect Day Media
    • Blog-Sothoth
    • Autistic in the District
    • Charles Stross
    • TheContrarianMusic.com
    • CASH Music
    • OMNIL
    • Bradley’s Almanac
    • Candleblog
    • Diabologue
    • FlawedArt
    • Future of Music Coalition
    • J. Cole
    • Liquid Sunshine
    • Pure Pop Records
    • Undead Molly
    • Sentient Developments
  • Buck Dharma

    • Hardcore Zen
    • The Buddhist Blog
    • Tricycle Blog
    • Shambhala Sun Space
    • Progressive Buddhism
    • Buddhist Geeks
  • Careful!

    • Erik Davis/Techgnosis
    • Austin Osman Spare Archive
    • Disinformation
    • Greylodge Occult Review
    • IOT North America
    • Skeptic Magazine
    • The Burning Taper
    • The Gnosis Archive
    • R.A. Wilson
    • Thelema
    • Purging Talon
    • Reality Sandwich
    • Guruphiliac
    • The Lovecraft News Network
    • The Daily Grail
    • Hermetic.com
    • What Thou Wilt
  • Reads

    • Zen Twist
    • The Atlantic
    • The Daily Dish
    • Accelerating Future
    • Washington Monthly
    • Wired: Epicenter
    • Wired: The Underwire
    • Washington City Paper
    • StreetTech
    • Black Plastic Bag
    • The Eyeless Owl
    • T.M. Camp
    • FingertipsMusic
    • Dusted Magazine



 

 
No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public. ~ H.L.Mencken