Someone gives you a letter, and you pick 5-10 songs that start with that letter and maybe say a few words about them.
eternaleponine gave me F.
1. "Fashion," David Bowie
Bowie was one of my first major music obsessions and celebrity crushes, and there qill always be a place in my heart for his work. I am not objective about it. I can't be. So this song came first. It was this or "Fame," and "Fashion" is more fun to dance to.
2. "Fatally Yours," Alkaline Trio
Gloomy lyrics and killer pop hooks anchored by powerful bass lines. What more could you ask for from a band?
3. "Friday I'm In Love," the Cure
I always think of this song as bouncy and cheerful, uncharacteristically so for the Cure. It was
kit_kindred who pointed out how dark the lyrics could be, if looked at a certain way -- "I don't care if Monday's black, Tuesday, Wednesday, heart attack..." A classic.
4. "Fall On Me," R.E.M.
"Buy the sky and sell the sky and lift your arms up to the sky..." There's such a quality of yearning in the melody, too. One of my favorite R.E.M. songs ever.
5. "Flood II," Sisters of Mercy
Okay, it's something of a filler track on "Floodland." Nevertheless, I find the repetition of "sackcloth and ashes and ashes and ashes" very effective.
6. "Friend of the Devil," the Grateful Dead
*grin* How's that for musical whiplash? Saw my first Dead show on July 4th, 1987 -- Dylan and the Dead at Foxboro, back before it was Gillette Stadium. Probably heard Luke Hunsburger play it outside Au Bon Pain in Harvard Square a lot more times than I ever heard the Dead do it.
7. "For You," Bruce Springsteen
From his first album, "Greetings From Asbury Park," when he still wanted to be Bob Dylan. I might like this song even better than "Spirits in the Night." "And your strength is devastating in the face of all these odds / Remember how I kept you waiting when it was my turn to be the god?"
8. "Favorite Son," Green Day
Couldn't let the list go by without a Green Day song. This one's a "rare-or-unreleased" track that leads off the "Rock Against Bush Vol. 2" compilation from Fat Wreck Chords.
And that's where I stop.
Comment if you want a letter.
1. "Fashion," David Bowie
Bowie was one of my first major music obsessions and celebrity crushes, and there qill always be a place in my heart for his work. I am not objective about it. I can't be. So this song came first. It was this or "Fame," and "Fashion" is more fun to dance to.
2. "Fatally Yours," Alkaline Trio
Gloomy lyrics and killer pop hooks anchored by powerful bass lines. What more could you ask for from a band?
3. "Friday I'm In Love," the Cure
I always think of this song as bouncy and cheerful, uncharacteristically so for the Cure. It was
4. "Fall On Me," R.E.M.
"Buy the sky and sell the sky and lift your arms up to the sky..." There's such a quality of yearning in the melody, too. One of my favorite R.E.M. songs ever.
5. "Flood II," Sisters of Mercy
Okay, it's something of a filler track on "Floodland." Nevertheless, I find the repetition of "sackcloth and ashes and ashes and ashes" very effective.
6. "Friend of the Devil," the Grateful Dead
*grin* How's that for musical whiplash? Saw my first Dead show on July 4th, 1987 -- Dylan and the Dead at Foxboro, back before it was Gillette Stadium. Probably heard Luke Hunsburger play it outside Au Bon Pain in Harvard Square a lot more times than I ever heard the Dead do it.
7. "For You," Bruce Springsteen
From his first album, "Greetings From Asbury Park," when he still wanted to be Bob Dylan. I might like this song even better than "Spirits in the Night." "And your strength is devastating in the face of all these odds / Remember how I kept you waiting when it was my turn to be the god?"
8. "Favorite Son," Green Day
Couldn't let the list go by without a Green Day song. This one's a "rare-or-unreleased" track that leads off the "Rock Against Bush Vol. 2" compilation from Fat Wreck Chords.
And that's where I stop.
Comment if you want a letter.