Eliminating procrastination resolution delayed until 2014…

But I still resolve to get this 2012 list in under the wire.

Big thanks, as always, to the lovely Waub for starting this tradition. Without him, numerous inboxes, harddrives, iPods & vinyl crates would be unenlightened.

It’s weird staring down a blank WordPress screen instead of a blank Celtex screen. While I’ve been writing much, much more this year (with/out writing partners…a story for another time, my friends),  I’m just not publishing it, & you can thank me for that later.

Maybe 2013′ll yield more benign bloggable topics. Hard to believe 2012 marked the 7 year anniversary for ‘withoutayard’ (archives mercifully under digital lock & key). The Twitter, Tumblr & 8tracks mistresses were also neglected, though not nearly as much as this poor old domain.

All in, 2012 was tough but fair. Lots of change. & not just hair colour, though I did cycle through my Riverdale High School role-playing fantasies with equal turns as a brunette, red-head & blonde.

As the film tour/screenings wound down at the beginning of 2012, new music/festival/conference work picked up. HPX’s inaugural year for digital & NXNE’s ongoing growth in this space were two massive highlights personally & professionally. Doing another Ignite was as terrifying as I remembered & SXSW talks get better every year, thanks to stellar conspirators.

Work-work ‘s been increasingly satisfying, too. Our digital team (& I can take absolutely ZERO credit for most of this cool stuff)’s progress in open data, web mod, intuitive design, visual identity, content strategy & outreach is inspiring (please remember that we work in a resource-restricted, foosball-free workplace before comparing us to Old Spice).

& with that rambling preamble-ing, I present two 2012 music lists.

One acknowledges my repressed-inner-Baby-Boomer-curmudgeon (or more optimistically the indelible mark of my Dad’s musical taste). The other tips its digital-hat to shiny new young(ish) things.

Juicy Rationalizations – 10 LPs for ‘The Big Chill II’ soundtrack supervisor job application

1) Dr. John – Locked Down: Swampy psychedelic southern-fried goodness.   Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach’s production adds a nice contemporary touch without changing the funky sounds you’d expect from the best Last Waltz guest of all time.

 

 

2) Bonnie Raitt – Slipstream: Poor Ms. Raitt doesn’t get a fair shake with anyone under 40. She’s BB King’s favourite slide guitarist for a reason. She’s equally badass as a lyricist & composer. Trust me.

 

 

 

3) Chilly Gonzales – Solo Piano II: Technically, this is an age-appropriate pick for a 30-something, but its family-friendly instrumental perfection makes more sense here. In terms of Chilly’s live performance, Pianovision never disappoints, the Winter Garden Theatre show was one of the best concerts of 2012.

 

 

4) Patti Smith – Banga: Zero objectivity when it comes to PS after reading ‘Just Kids.’ Zero.

 

 

 

5) Various Artists – Just Tell Me That You Want Me: This was for sale at Starbucks for chrissakes. The artists are really quite good though, & their (Fleetwood Mac, duh) covers aren’t entirely straightforward. I will stop trying to rationalize my love now.

 

 

6) Rufus Wainwright – Out of the Game: All hail the return of the pop-y cabaret-ish troubadour Rufus. We missed him.

 

 

 
7) Sixto Rodriguez – Searching for Sugarman s/t//Cold Fact: Great story, beautifully shot/directed music doc & gorgeous timeless songs.

 

 

 

8 ) Rush – Clockwork Angels: I will not apologize for being from Northern Ontario. At least the R&RHoF agrees.

 

 

 

9) Leonard Cohen – Old Ideas: Perfect poetry. Unmistakably unique warm growl. Cheese-free accompaniment (which can’t be said for some past synth-y LPs, unfortunately).

 

 

 

10) Neil Young – Psychedelic Pill//Americana: See #8.

 

 

 

Youthful Declarations – 10 LPs that probably aren’t cool enough to get my Urban Outfitters job back (despite a marked improvement in T-shirt folding)

1) Bahamas – Barchords: Is it so wrong that I still tear up a bit if I actually listen-listen to ‘Lost in the Light’? No, right? Thankfully the rest of the record is more upbeat. The combination of Afie’s vocals – which can swing from raspy M.Ward-y to chirpy Buddy Holly to Auerbach’s Black-Keys-blues – & his retro-reverb guitar-work - sealed this as #1 – the year’s most played LP by a country mile.

 

 

2) Allah-Las – s/t: To call these guys garage rock wouldn’t be fair. It’s a sunny light gossamer mix of psychedelia, Californian pop & the best jangly bits of early 60s Brit-invasion.

 

 

 

3) Tame Impala – Lonerism: Fell in love with these (again, psychedelic/pop, but ) guys while visiting Melbourne/Sydney in the winter of 2010. The cities’ cutest record store clerks drawled that TA’ed be big here soon.  Not quite Crowded House yet but we’ll clue in eventually.

 

 

4) Robert Glasper – Black Radio: Ever since Guru’s Jazzmatazz series in the early 90s I’ve been a sucker for hip hop/jazz collaborations. Some standout vocalists appear (Mos Def, I mean, Yasiin Bey, Erykah Badu & Shafiq Husayn) & some very fun/risky covers (Sade & Nirvana, anyone?) show that Glasper can hop from ‘traditional’ jazz (whatever that means) to R&B to hip hop seamlessly.

 

 

5) Zeus – Busting Visions: There will always be a special place in my heart for these guys. Their sound is definitely changing & maturing, but their 70s rock influences still lay a solid foundation for their upbeat melodic pop-rock.

 

 

6) Bat for Lashes – Haunted Man: Just when I thought Natasha couldn’t be more Kate Bush-infused, she unleashes this sweeping, orchestral, brooding set of songs that are perfectly mixed, paced & balanced.

 

 

 

7) David Byrne & St. Vincent – Love This Giant: I’ll be the first to admit that this isn’t exactly a fair fight. I love both of these artists & own all their albums. Who knew that all-brass instrumentation was going to be the glue binding these pleasantly complimentary songwriters, though? One of the most joyous live shows, too – Byrne was very gracious in ceding the spotlight often to Clark – even when they were covering Talking Heads tunes. Class act.

 

 

8 ) Fiona Apple – Idler Wheel: Another act that stands out for a live performance as much as an album. This is a powerhouse of a recording on its own, though. Put aside the ‘angsty-90s’ stigma that you probably assign to Apple & listen to the new wry wisdom of a woman who knows who she is, what she wants & how she’ll get it. Well, maybe not the last bit.

 

 

9) Cold Warps – s/t//Slimer 7″//Endless Bummer: Halifax knows how to churn out amazing four-piece power-pop/punk bands like it’s nobody’s business. I haven’t been this excited about a CanRock band in this vein since Cub. Serious.

 

 

 

10) Flying Lotus – Until The Quiet Comes: For lack of a better genre-name, I guess ‘glitch-hop’ will do the trick. Imagine Dilla & Caribou & Radiohead (Kid A-era) mixing an atmospheric trippy soundtrack for a co-pro from David Lynch & John Singleton.

 

 

Glaring Omissions – 10 LPs that I like-liked, but didn’t love

1) Gary Clark Jr. – Blak & Blu

2) Grizzly Bear – Shields

3) Frank Ocean – Channel Orange

4) Nas – Life Is Good

5) Kendrick Lamar – good kid, m.A.A.d.

6) Bob Dylan – Tempest

7) Jack White – Blunderbuss

8 ) Bright Lights Social Hour – New Year’s Live

9) Asteroid Galaxy Tour – Out of Frequency

10) Vybz Cartel – Kingston Story

inch by inch, life’s a cinch

Faced with debilitating top-ten-list-related anxiety, I’m posting this to stall for a couple days.  It’s not just my indecisiveness that’s delaying the big one, but it’s too lovely to be at the house with my parents.  Hopefully we’ll all pare down screen time in 2012.  Life’s too short.

Apologies in advance if my choices offend…or you could just take this as a challenge to convince me otherwise:

Top ten 2011 records I seriously tried to like but can’t get into:

  • Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues
  • Joanna Newsom – What We Have Known
  • M83 – Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming
  • Gillian Welch – The Harrow & The Harvest
  • Bon Iver – s/t
  • Jay-Z & Kanye West – Watch the Throne
  • Radiohead – King of Limbs
  • Destroyer – Kaputt
  • Drake – Take care
  • The weeknd – all of them

2009 – You’re dead to me

So this year was, erm, interesting.  Thankfully there were loads of fantastic LPs/EPs & shows to lift our collective spirits, right guys? Right?

Like every year, a virtual tip of the hat is directed Waub’s way for starting the best annual tradition among our crew.  Extra thanks go out to everyone who contributed to those list emails or posted lists on their respective sites.

I have been agonizing/procrastinating for over a month.  Had a Top 20 list burning a hole in my draft folder & I think I have whittled it down properly…So in no particular order, I give you:

Zeus – Sounds Like Zeus EP – Tho last year’s promise of a full-length won’t materialize til February, this tiny perfect pop confection arrived just in time for Zeus’ pint-sized, yet triumphant, takeover of the Arts&Crafts NXNEshowcase.  Neil’s tune ‘Marching Through Your Head’ is my personal fav, but the Phil Collins cover of ‘That’s All’ is a guaranteed crowd-pleaser!

Joel Plaskett – Three - 3xs the usual amazing JP output but surprisingly (unlike almost every other concept album in the history of rock music after Sgt Pepper’s) strung together with a cohesive theme, both lyrically and melodically, featuring beautiful guest vocals and insane hooks.  This undertaking stands on par with Down at the Khyber

Gentleman Reg – Jet Black – He’s Reg.  He can do no (faux)albino wrong.

Cats On Fire – Our Temperance Movement – Frosty Finnish climate makes for toasty warm indoor fireworks.  I am entirely biased because they are Finnish. (Insert Kayne interruption joke *here*)

Sprengjuhöllin – Bestu Kveðjur – What can I say?  I love Scandinavian dudes.  These psych pop lads are what The Coral would sound like if they were fronted by Sondre Lerche – borderline saccharine-sweet, but genuinely heartfelt. Now that they’re penning English-language lyrics, they’ll hopefully have 2010 North American success to match their string of homeland #1s.

Do Make Say Think – Other TruthsThis record makes me wish I was still in school so it could be my go-to-instrumental background writing s/t. If you have a chance to catch DMST/Happiness Project on tour – PROMISE ME you will attend.  Happiness Project is such a phenomenal experience live, I cried. (& I only cry for Rufus or when someone drops a delicious gooey cookie from Le Gourmand)

Bahamas – Pink StratThis record is more of a ’07-09 souvenir for the zillions of treks to the Magpie for Paso Mino or some other brilliant indie incarnation of Afie Jurvanen (here I go again with the Finns…).  I can promise with a clear-conscience that this record will make you smile – it’s perfect.

Dan Mangan – Nice, Nice, Very Nice
– This is the only album that overlaps with the year-end list by almighty music guru Frank at Chromewaves.  So I’ve got that going for me…Although it’s ridiculously earnest/shockingly adorable, Dan’s gravely voice balances it out & it turns into this laddish singer-songwriter masterpiece.

PJ Harvey & John Parish – A Woman A Man Walked ByPretty sure if I had to pick a #1 that this would be it…not necessarily due to its musical merits, but mainly because I’m a *little* stubborn.  I’ve been so disappointed that throughout the year, & especially now, this LP hasn’t gotten any love.  People take PJ for granted! I’m convinced if some new YouTubeing/Twittering waif in Portland put this haunting, sexy, gutsy, intense, raw, intelligent record out, you’d hear it in every pseudo bohemian cafe from here to Timbuktu.  But what the hell do I know?

Noah And The Whale – The First Days Of Spring
– Every couple years you need a new ‘break glass in case of sad bastard emergency (heartbreak, boredom, general malaise, crap manager who accuses one of job hunting whilst on medical leave, etc)’ record.  This is your new one if you get sick of your old Belle & Sebastian LPs.

Honourable Mentions:
St. Vincent – Actor
Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca
Yeah Yeah Yeahs – It’s Blitz!
Bruce Peninsula – A Mountain Is A Mouth
The Wooden Sky – If I don’t come home you’ll know I’m gone
Bon Iver – Blood Bank EP
Julie Fader – Outside In
M. Ward – Hold Time
Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest
Robert Francis – Before Nightfall
Neko Case – Middle Cyclone

I know that I’ve been warned & you tried to waive my rights

Top Ten Torontopia Treats – In no particular order, with more debuts, a younger vibe & probably a truer reflection of the live music experienced this year

1. Zeus – Something Awesome – Debut on Arts & Crafts soon. Slightly abnormal obsession with the melodic beauty of this band has led me to memorize their set.

2. Jason Collett – Here’s To Being Here – A grower & more for the Basement Revue than the contents of the record.

3. Brendan Canning – Something For All Of Us – Let’s make it an A&C hattrick, shall we?

4. - Laura Barrett – Victory Garden – The city’s kalimba kween – long may she reign.

5. Constantines – Kensington Heights – They get better every record. Insane.

6. The D’Urbervilles – We Are The Hunters – Lost none of the fun frenetic energy of the EP in the ‘real’ LP release. So good.

7. Samantha Martin – Back Home – Smoky-voiced sultry country singer worth checking out next time you’re in town.

8. William Delray – s/t – Mark my words: Anything you buy recorded by Wm will be a collector’s item someday.

9. Sloan – Parallel Play – 10th album & still solid – A song about a witch’s wand, you ask? Amazing, I reply.

10. Proof of Ghosts – s/t – Royal City meets Cuff The Duke under the mentorship of Neil Young to create banjoriffic fuzzy amazingness. Makes you wish you had a cottage.

Honourable Metro Mentions:  Paso Mino (Had I made the list next week, this’d probably be #3, I can’t stop listening to ‘Canadian Skin’ on repeat), Gentleman Reg

You got Tennessee tendencies & chemical dependancies

Totally cheating – but I can’t just do 10 – 2008 was such an amazing year in music – old farts aside, here’s 10 newish artists’ records who were at least old souls (not to be confused with ‘the’ Old Soul, who didn’t make the TO list that’ll follow…)
1. Cat Power – Jukebox
Sample Mp3 – New York, New York (Live in Paris for Black Sessions)
Chan’s second covers record – can’t say that it’s *better*, but it’s just – argh. Indescribable. To say she’s reinterpreted these tunes isn’t saying enough – they’re completely turned inside out, shorn & rebuilt as if she lived’em…

2. Eli Paperboy Reed & The True Loves – Roll With You
Sample Mp3 – I’m Gonna Getcha
So I love this guy. A lot. His scorching hot live performances translate surprisingly accurately on the record. There is no distance too far to travel to see Eli. He will change your life & restore your faith in soul music.

3. Dr. Dog – Fate
Sample Mp3 – The Rabbit, The Bat & The Reindeer
Imagine The Band reuniting for another epic Scorcese-directed Last Waltz blowout, with coked-out Shakey, saccharine Neil Diamond & mumbley Dylan, too – but instead of an afterparty with Joni, the night ends in an amazing gay sex male orgy. These are their babies.

4. Silver Jews – Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea
Sample Mp3 – Party Barge
To Quote ‘Party Barge’: “Father drove a steamroller. Momma was a crossing guard. She got rolled when he got steamed, And I got left in charge.” David Berman is the best lyricist I’ve come across since Jonathan Richman. ’nuff said.

5. The Black Angels – Directions To See A Ghost
Sample Mp3 – You In Color
We all go through a psychedelic phase, right? Let’s hope that these guys never grow out of theirs & keep putting out fuzzy spacey goodness.

6. Raphael Saadiq – The Way I See It
Sample Mp3 – Staying In Love
Call it retro-or-new-soul, or clump it with the cresting wave of DapTone’s roster, but Saadiq’s been making thick R&B records since 90′s Tony!Toni!Tone! & early 00′s Lucy Pearl. Bonus points for selecting smart vocal cameos from beefy studio mates like D’Angelo – le sigh.

7. Lykke Li – Youth Novel
Sample Mp3 – Little Bit (Aether Remix)
Slap me with a swan dress, but I’ll dare to say that Sweden’s produced a pop queen with the artistic chops, chutzpa, show(wo)manship & lyrics to rival Bjork. It you wanna complain, I’m not the complaint department.

8. Hercules & Love Affair – s/t
Sample Mp3 – Raise Me Up
It’s as if Antony had this musical karmic retribution that needed to be served. His longing, miserable, achingly perfect records with the Johnsons are completely balanced out by this peppy cosmic disco dance soundtrack for glamorous substance-fueled hookups & rollerskating.

9. She & Him – Volume One
Sample Mp3 – Change Is Hard (Live @ SXSW, March 2008)
Moms love it! Kids love it! It’s a public radio/indierock/vintagewearinghipsterhit! With good reason, not too sweet, not too polished, & twangier than you’d think. Imagine a delicious, warm, thick barley-filled soup with Beatles covers croutons sprinkled on top.

10. Erykah Badu – New Amerykah Part One
Sample Mp3 – Honey (Seiji Mix)
Mashup Sly & The Family Stone crazy funk weirdness with remixes by J Dilla & P-Funk Orchestra members chiming in for robust bridge breakdowns. Definitely old-school retro sound without being gaudy in its 70s excesses & staying true to Badu’s earth mother persona. There will be FOUR parts released in this series…eventually…& if you listen to them back to back while watching Wizard of Oz with the sound turned off….

Honourable Newish Old Soul Mentions: Ryan Adams & The Cardinals – Cardinology, Rufus Wainwright – Rufus Does Judy at Carnegie Hall, Jamie Liddell – Jim, Mason Jennings – In The Ever, Duffy – Rockferry

I hate the big decisions that cause endless revisions in my mind

For me, 2008 was the year of the sad bastard comeback record. 2007 was a mixed bag of mainly solo newish acts, this year…well, it was old-fart-friendly for live music & albums. I’ve always loved sombre, mopey stuff, but this year delivered career-highlight (reliving) LPs in spades. It’s almost not fair, stacking up rock’s legends & road-tested stalwarts against the whippersnappers, but thems the breaks. (Well, a whippersnapper list couldn’t *hurt*. Mañana.) Too many indie-alt-hiphoppin-whatvea-rock followups were just…meh. Jenny Lewis, Hold Steady, Girl Talk, Nada Surf, Ryan Adams, Teddy Thompson, Black Keys, Martha Wainwright, Kings of Leon, Q-Tip – thanks for coming out, but the intangible-holy-crap-press-repeat factor of your last releases wasn’t there. FAIL.

Chuck a rock into your local record shoppe & no doubt you’ll ping an expert yakking about whoever’s early stuff being infinitely better than the money-grubbing sacrilegious recordings churned out in the 21st c. I’m gonna rhyme off ten records released in 2008 that prove that theory false.

1. Lou Reed – Berlin – Live at St. Ann’s Warehouse
Sample Mp3 – Candy Says Feat. Antony
Not to break the music rules, but you kind of need to buy Julien Schnabel’s work of art doc/film version of Berlin to experience the amazing rebirth of these songs (I am loathe to type ‘rock opera’ for all the baggage it dredges…). But the audio recording, which mixes the various nights’ performances, is a good start. Guest vocalists Antony & Sharon Jones shine through, Reed comes across as more gracious than rock critics’ portrayal & the material doesn’t just withstand the test of time (35 years!!!) – it offers the audience a new, dark, jaded, but ultimately hopeful lens with which to see the world – jealousy, rage, addiction, depression, hate, war & eventually love & redemption.

2. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Dig Lazarus Dig!!!
Sample Mp3 – Lie Down Here & Be My Girl
Religion, love & death, served up with the darkest of the dark wit – just another day at the office for Mr. Cave & his Bad Seed cohorts. Lacklustre live, but this record rocks in the master’s most authoritative bombastic righteous voice.

3. Billy Bragg – Mr. Love & Justice
Sample Mp3 – I Keep Faith
You should always have a Bragg record in the house in case of emergencies, he restores your spine, reminds you what’s worth getting upset about & tricks you into falling in love with piercing couplets using misleadingly simpleish melodies. (From ‘I Keep Faith’: “If you think you have the answer – don’t be surprised; If what you say is met with anger – and contempt and lies.)

4. Randy Newman – Harps & Angels
Sample Mp3 – A Few Words In Defense Of Out Country
If you think it’s lame to like Randy Newman you’re missing out. Bigtime. Man up & get all of his 70s classics & then listen to the brilliance that is this record already. A true American patriot: “The end of an empire is messy at best & this empire is ending, like all the rest. Like the Spanish Armada adrift on the sea, we’re adrift in the land of the brave & the home of the free.”

5. Elvis Costello & The Imposters – Momofuku
Sample Mp3 – Flutter & Wow
I still haven’t forgiven him for ‘North.’ But whatevs, we coolish after this. He knew I loved ramen & songs w/ metaphors re. stereo equipment (See When I Was Cruel’s ’45′ & this one’s ‘Flutter & Wow’).

6. Daniel Lanois – Here Is What Is
Sample Mp3 – Where Will I Be
Amazing. & another DVD worth checking out. This man can do no wrong. (Eno foreshadowing….)

7. David Byrne & Brian Eno – Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
Sample Mp3 – Life Is Long
Two geniuses made a hopeful bright piece of art that’s totally different than what their previous output’ed lead you to expect. Watch this video, catch your breath & download the record.

8. Beck – Modern Guilt
Sample Mp3 – Youthless
Too short. Too good. Hard to believe this is the same man to made the bleepy ‘The Information’ or Mexi-jaunty ‘Guero’ a coupla years ago. (Or Mellow Gold in ’94…) No samples. No synths. No problem.

9. The Breeders – Mountain Battles
Sample Mp3 – Walk It Off
This is not some affirmative action powerplay. The Deal sisters reign supreme & as much as I like fat bald dudes, let’s hope Kim never goes back to Frank & instead keeps her sister Kelley on the road, clean, putting out garage rockers that’re on par with Last Splash.

10. Dennis Wilson – Pacific Ocean Blue
Sample Mp3 – Thoughts Of You
Oh, this doesn’t prove the comeback theory cause it’s a reissue of the only studio album recorded by the less-famous Wilson bro? You have something against drummers or dead hippies or The Beach Boys? Jerks. Originally released 11 years after Pet Sounds (’77) it has that somewhat too-earnest yacht-rock sheen, but listen longer, get past that, & dig into the bonus disc of songs that would’ve made up his 2nd LP – it’s worth it.

Honourable Sad Bastard Mentions: Louden Wainwright III – Recovery, R.E.M. – Accelerate, Radiohead – In Rainbows

Tomorrow….Old Souls/Newish Artists

you’re a nasty wasty skunk

So much for bahhumbuggery.  The outpouring of charitable donations & goodwill from #hohoto warmed this Grinch’s cockles (huge aside: like manna from heaven a perfect lil’case study floated down demonstrating the power of online tools, social networks & digital communities when they manifest themselves in the *gasp* real world to affect change – let’s scroll down & tag this bad boy under eAdvocacy, shall we?).  Of course I jest, this year has been filled with loads of NGO-time/volunteering/donations/etc…Here’s hoping that 2009, with all of its financial navel-gazing & wallet-snappin’, brings out the best in the uber-lucky-gainfully-employed peeps & reminds all that there’s more to life than griping about our investments tanking.


Photo w/ Sharanwrap courtesy of/snapped by Rannie

Top Twenty Xmas Tunes – Annotated, natch.

  1. Baby It’s Cold Outside – Dean Martin (Gotta love Deano’s studio chatter at the beginning of the track…you know he was totes sexually harassing those poor backup babes.)
  2. Linus & Lucy – Vince Guaraldi Trio (Classic.  Will be playing this on the ol’upright in 3 days!)
  3. You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch – Thurl Ravenscroft (Three words: Stink. Stank. Stunk.)
  4. Blue Christmas – Elvis Presley (C’mon.  Total cheesy goodness.  You know he’s hurtin’.)
  5. The Christmas Song -  Nat King Cole (Ditto.  From the good’ol days, before your royalty-grabbin’ kids’d sing creepy duets w/ya)
  6. Frosty The Snowman – The Ronettes (Ok, has there ever been a feminist scholar that’s appropriately dissected the strength, essence & impact of the Ronettes? They survived Spector’s insane maniacal clutches & triumph over one of the lamest, flattest Xmas carols of all time – RESPECT.)
  7. The Little Girl’s Wish – Spike Jones (No he wasn’t married to Sophia Coppola, you silly goose.  Before the Avalanches’ 9zillion samples & before digital shorts on SNL – there was Spike.  Bow down you musicomediantypes.)
  8. Santa Baby – Eartha Kitt (Annie says this song should be embargoed.  But Eartha’s version is sultry without being slutty.  You know you love it.)
  9. Little Drummer Boy – Neil Diamond (Buddha bless the heart of the Jewish crooner that can pull off first-person-recounting the gifting inadequacies felt by a percussionist accompanying baby Jeebus’ birth.  You go Neil.)
  10. Christmas Bells – Bing Crosby (Just can’t upload the Bowie duet. It’s pa-rum-pa-pa-creepy.)
  11. Snoopy’s Christmas – Vince Guaraldi Trio (close your eyes, lift your head up, shake your arms & dance like the dog already)
  12. Have yourself a merry little Christmas – Judy Garland (Y’all knew I’ve ALWAYS been a friend of Judy ;)
  13. Let it snow – Frank Sinatra (Frank’d be cool during a tsunami with his Rat Pack aloof sensibilities)
  14. Here comes Santa Claus – Elvis Presley (He’s the King – of course he gets 2 spots!)
  15. Christmas time is here – Alvin & The Chipmunks (If this song doesn’t make you smile, you probably eat kitten cereal in a baby seal bowl)
  16. Run Rudolph Run – Chuck Berry (Badass scorching guitar mastery)
  17. Rockin’ around the Christmas tree – Brenda Lee (Two words: Home Alone)
  18. Jazzy Christmas – Duke Ellington (The Duke’s jazz approach – crisp’n'clean’n'clear makes for sharp edges & bright touch – perfect for xmas tunes & frosty weather)
  19. Socko the littlest snowball – Spike Jones (Sooo goofy & good, worth a double dip)
  20. Winter Wonderland – Tony Bennett (The master of all things smooth…pre-ChiliPeppersEndorsement/Unplugged lauds, elder fam statesman turned me onto TB’s LPs)

But where is the *real* top ten, you ask…I, sigh, dunno…quite yet.  Got a buncha other cool (charitable! volunteer-iffic!) events & projects on the go…& that whole work thing…yeah.  Thankfully today’s snow allowed me some catchup time & I suspect this undergrad-style campout will continue throughout the weekend…but there have been so many amazing albums out this year…I’m overwhelmed!

For the little girls with the carousel eyes, and the brick-a-brak finding housewives, losing their minds

Holed Up Hotel Playlist – Part One – A Cover Song Sandwich (poofy top bun…mmm…forbidden wheat/yeast…)

1 – Everything Hits at Once (Live at the Parish in 04, ATX) – Spoon
2 – Dis-moi au revoir encore – Eleni Mandell
3 – Window Blues (Live @ SXSW – Mohawk?) – Lykke Li
4 – I’ve Been Out Walking (Jackson Browne, Live in Fort Worth) – St Vincent
5 – Water Runs Dry (Boyz II Men Cover, Live @ Googie’s Lounge) – Jens Lekman
6 – Love Will Tear Us Apart (Joy Division) – The Cure
7 – Calling And Not Calling My Ex – Okkervil River
8 – Story Of An Artist (Daniel Johnston, Live @ KEXP) – M. Ward
9 – Me And Julio Down By The Schoolyard (Paul Simon) – Julie Doiron
10 – Where Is My Mind? (Pixies) – Emmy The Great
11 – Sing a Song for Them – Jenny Lewis

These days I’ll sit on cornerstones & count the time in quarter tones to ten

Feeling like Eloise holed up in a nice hotel for this long.  Due to scheduling conflicts & miscellaneous foils, two of today’s interviews (eHealth comms pioneer & architect of major NGO’s digital strategy/re-weblaunch) were over the phone.  Produced very enlightening conversations nonetheless (made for easier note taking/furious non-eye-contact-typing, too).  Wrapped the day chatting in SoHo, visiting a collaborate social network for artists that’s taking community management/user engagement to the next level, growing exponentially & moving forward with innovative & useful (not just bright’n'shiny) tools for their ‘uber-users’ to beta test before full rollout.

One theme tied these very diverse chats together – know your user.  SurprisingEx. Mobile platform adaptation/adoption was not a huge concern for 2/3 interviewees because: 1) they’ve got bigger fish to fry; 2) their pool of users aren’t online via mobile devices & 3) it doesn’t serve the fundamental goals of the org.

All three organizations invested time tracking metrics, studying demographics and soliciting feedback to develop a very good sense of who they were/needed to reach.

The three organizations varied in size, scope & shape bigtime.  The largest, a more advocacy-focused NGO that’s registered over 300K members in its 70 years, is challenged by numerous offices mounting different campaigns & de-bureaucratizing/un-siloing an old-school site.  Engaging staff at all levels to adopt/accept a new web philosophy is a work in progress.  Shared colleague Collin’s phrase ‘Return on Intention’ to echo the interviewee’s explaining to colleagues that “the ‘front page’ is not nearly as important as you think it is in terms of findability or navigation.”  No doubt it’ll take many eAdvocates awhile, especially if they’re in older organizations with massive press-release-filled sites, to successfully proselytize the virtues of caring about the other ROI.

Will be publishing a white-paper-style presentation after the meetings this month, leaning against developing one-post write ups for each interview, too, it already lives in GoogleDocs, couldn’t hurt to publish mini vignettes, I just don’t want to create a siloed monolitic brutal web1.0 site of my own…

Hm.  What do you think I should do?