Top 20 of 2009: #20-11
Posted on | December 30, 2009 | 2 Comments
Here is some of the music that struck me in 2009. In case you missed it, read the manifesto for this site. It might help you understand where I am coming from. If you didn’t see the Bird List, now might be a good time to check it out.
#20: Dave Alvin and the Guilty Women
Dave continues a great late-career run. Come to think of it, his “run” has never stopped, or really even slowed. Read a single review.
Reverent enough to know when to leave the song alone, but restless enough to know when to shake things up.
There is country music that is funny outside of “She Left Me For Jesus”. Most of it is here.
Mining that Canadiana sound, BoH comes up with something fresh. Good songs and great voices. Read a single review.
This should probably be filed under “educational” rather than “country”. Read a single review.
Wry humor and stripped down execution from the Great White North. Read a single review.
A beautiful sounding record, with great songs to back it up. Possibly his most consistent. Read the original review.
This sounds old, worn in, and gorgeous. I don’t think people are used to quality of this level anymore.
#12: Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
His departure didn’t kill the Drive-By Truckers, but gave us double the output. DBT also put out a rarities record, and Isbell had the best song (”TVA”) on it. Read the original review.
One thing you can say about Robert Keen is that he always sounds like he is having fun. Read the original review.
Five Records with… Gordy Quist
Posted on | October 23, 2009 | 2 Comments

I talked to the talented Gordy Quist from the Band of Heathens last week, who recently released One Foot in the Ether, their second studio record and fourth overall. You can read a review of that record’s first single “L.A. County Blues” here. Five Records is an occasional feature of artists talking about the music that inspires them. Read more of these posts here.
“My aunt and uncle sent me a copy of The Jayhawks album Hollywood Town Hall when I was about 13 or 14 and just starting to play in bands. Although most of the music I was playing at the time was much heavier, that album struck me as both a songwriter’s album and a band’s album, which was something I was after.”
“Echo is one of my favorite Tom Petty albums, even though it’s pretty dark and didn’t have the hits that some of his other albums did. He’s an artist who has continued to write great songs, put out great records, and still tours with a great rock ‘n’ roll band.”
Orphans, Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards
“I was listening to a lot of Tom Waits stuff while we were in the studio making One Foot in the Ether. Specifically, the Mule Variations album and the triple album Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards. They’ve both got some amazing songs and interesting sonic textures and arrangements.”
“I wish I had written the song, “The Dirty South”, from the Gary Floater album A Hero Never Learns.”
“The Magpies are a band from Cleveland and they’re great live and they put out great albums”












