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Pick Your Poison: Monday 12-17-12

Ah, the week before Christmas. Do you have all your shopping done yet? If you’re like me, which I’m sure many of you are, the shopping doesn’t REALLY begin until this week. I don’t blame myself for procrastinating, rather I blame everyone I’m buying gifts for because they’re all so indecisive. I ask at the beginning of December what they want, and then they toss out a few ideas, change their mind, and finally settle on something during this last week. I’ve been burned enough times to know that the earlier I shop, the more likely it is I won’t get the right gift. And it is about getting the right gift for the right person. So once I’ve got all that squared away and am able to get an official commitment from friends and family, I’ll map out a shopping plan and get most if not all of my shopping taken care of in a single day. Wham, bam, thank you ma’am. Long lines and frustrated shoppers aren’t for me, save for one day or two a year, and I’d like to think that makes everyone a little saner. By the way, did you happen to catch my Top 50 Songs of 2012 as I unveiled them last week? In case you missed it, you can go here to check out all the fun, post by post. I’ve also created a Spotify playlist for the Top 50 Songs in order, not to mention an alphabetically ordered playlist of 50 songs I consider to be “Runners Up”. Together those 100 tracks add up to over 6 hours of music, every bit of which is excellent in some way, shape or form. You probably won’t be in love with every song like I am, but I do hope you’re able to discover something new and great that you may have missed earlier this year. Of course you could also miss something new and great by skipping a day of Pick Your Poison, so don’t do that either. Today’s highlights include tracks from The Antlers (as re-imagined by Brent Arnold), Blackfeet Braves, Laura Warshauer (doing a Christmas classic), Sin Fang and Ellie Herring’s remix of Social Studies. In the Soundcloud section (located after the jump), there’s a bunch of new and great songs from Marnie Stern, Parquet Courts, Wavves, Widowspeak and William Tyler.

A. Chal – Dirty Mouth

The Antlers ft. Brent Arnold – Empty Castles (No Windows Refracted)

Ash Reiter – I’ve Got Something I Can Laugh About

Blackfeet Braves- Vicious Cycle

Dog Bite – Forever, Until

My Gold Mask – Violet Eyes (Alex Zelenka Remix)

Harness Flux – Stockholders

Hayden – Old Dreams

Laura Warshauer – Deck the Halls

Passion Pit – Carried Away (The Golden Pony Remix)

Sin Fang – Young Boys

Social Studies – Terracur (Ellie Herring Remix)

Songs for Walter – Moon/Two Out of Ten

Swim – Ride (Turbo Turbo Remix)

Listmas 2012: The Top 50 Songs of 2012 [#10-1]


Here it is, friends. My Top 10 Songs of 2012. I’m so intensely excited to be telling you all about these tracks that meant so much to me this past year. I like to think that these songs encompass the full spectrum of emotions and beauty that I felt over the course of 2012, which was arguably the most difficult year of my adult life so far. So many people I know that died, so many that got married, so many that got sick, and so many that lost (and later found) jobs. It was a whirlwind of happiness, sadness, celebration and grief. At the start of every year, I consciously hope that everything will turn out for the best, and that it will be 12 months of a joyful high. That’s what we all want in our lives – a pure sense of contentedness. But as many will tell you, the highs seem that much higher when you’ve also experienced your fair share of lows. While I’m looking back on 2012 with a sense of disappointment and regret, the lights are most definitely burning brighter for 2013. With that belief and that hope, let me tell you in greater detail about 10 songs that held me close in the bad times, brought me higher in the good times, and made me feel like a champion even as my world was crumbling around me. These are my Top 10 Songs of 2012.

Pick Your Poison: Friday 12-14-12

While most weekends of December can be considered holiday party weekends, I think this upcoming weekend takes the cake for having the most going on. You don’t have to be attending a holiday party, but hopefully you were invited to one. A popular choice is the Ugly Christmas Sweater party, where everyone breaks out their novelty knitted holiday sweaters and wears them for the one time each year. Personally I don’t own a Christmas sweater because I refuse to own a piece of clothing that’s only wearable 1-2 times a year. Hypothetically you could wear an ugly Christmas sweater as many times as you wanted to, but why would you? Well, unless you’re the sort of person that doesn’t find them ugly. There’s a market for them somewhere, I guess, otherwise people would stop making them. The point being, I hope you have fun at a party this weekend. In my opinion, you earned it. Now then, let’s take care of this Pick Your Poison business for Friday. I’ll recommend tracks from Bear Ceuse, Judy Kang, Midnight Spin, Monster Rally, They Might Be Giants, and Hugsnotdrugs’ remix of Crystal Castles. As for the Soundcloud section, I’m just going to go ahead and recommend every single track in there. It’s a really damn good set today. Have a great weekend!

Bear Ceuse – Entertain Me

Cloud Boat – I Left for a Reason (It Escapes Me Now)

Crystal Castles – Pale Flesh (Hugsnotdrugs Remix)

EEEK! – Tough Guys

Judy Kang – You

Midnight Spin – Lion Run

Monarchy – Disintegration ft. Dita Von Teese (Mighty Mouse Remix)

Monster Rally – The Wolf

OH!Hello – MURDA

Paradise – Psychic Returns (Piano Version)

Rhian Sheehan – Little Sines

The Sky Drops – Christmas Time Is Here

They Might Be Giants – Call You Mom

A Tribe Called Red – Trap Heat

Vaticans – Out of the Fold (Silent Rider Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 12-13-12

How are you enjoying Listmas so far? I’ve been posting my Top 50 Songs of 2012 all week this week, and we’re nearing the finish line on that. It’s really good and fun stuff, and I invite you to check it out, especially if you’ve arrived on this page specifically to look at this post you’re reading now. Sure, there are some good songs in today’s Pick Your Poison, including ones from Benbrick, Brooms, Oneohtrix Point Never, The Record Summer, The Wonder Revolution and The Soft Moon’s remix of How to destroy angels_. Sure, there are some good audio streams too from The Night and Why? and Com Truise’s remix of Everything Everything. But the only place you’ll hear the absolute best songs of this year are in the posts directly adjacent to this one. So please check it out, I’m really proud of this list and think there’s so much in it to listen to and fall in love with. If you’re going to start somewhere, start here. Thanks!

The 1975 – You (Andrea Remix)

Ab-Soul – Only 1

Benbrick – What We Run To

Brooms – Barracuda Belly

China Rats – To Be Like I

How to destroy angels_ – Ice age (The Soft Moon Remix)

Jon DeRosa – O Holy Night

Minttu & Olli – Don Juhani

Oneohtrix Point Never – Blue Drive

Para One – When the Night (Amtrac Remix)

The Record Summer – Brighton

Two Door Cinema Club – Sleep Alone (Math Bishop Remix)

The Wonder Revolution – Invisible Until

Listmas 2012: The Top 50 Songs of 2012 [#20-11]


As we drift ever closer to the finale of these Top 50 Songs of 2012, let me tell you a bit about what these next ten songs have going on for themselves thematically speaking. There’s a couple R&B love songs, a couple synth pop love songs, about three songs that are unfiltered and angry as they get, and a couple mellower, more relaxed moments. The key thing they all have in common is passion, whether it be for another person, against another person or for life in general. Not everything in this set will likely please you, but if you can discover something new and enjoyable out of this set, I hope you’ll find it worthwhile anyways. For more, let me encourage you to check out the other songs that have been covered on this list so far. Click for:
#50-41
#40-31
#30-21

Listmas 2012: The Top 50 Songs of 2012 [#30-21]

Today’s set of ten as part of this Top 50 list cuts right through the middle, but this is the point where I think we really start to hit the meat and potatoes section. Not that the songs that came before it in #50-41 or #40-31 were bad by any means, but as the numbers get lower I get more excited to write about these songs. I genuinely hope you’re enjoying this list so far, and there’s two more days to go until we finally hit #1! For now, please enjoy my Top 50 Songs of 2012, #30-21.

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 12-12-12

So it’s 12-12-12. It’s the last time it’ll happen in my lifetime, and very likely yours too. That is, unless we’ve come up with a superdrug that will keep us all alive another 100+ years. Man would we have an overpopulation problem if that happened. But what can I say on a date such as this? Enjoy it. Some people consider it to be lucky, and if you’re one of those people, I wish you luck. For me, it’s just another day, except that it looks really cool when you write it out. And honestly, 11-11-11 felt just a little cooler because it’s all the same number. Really it’s neither here nor there. I’m just going on about the date and nothing else to delay the inevitable start of another edition of Pick Your Poison. Don’t let me hold you back. Please enjoy tracks from Invisible Garden, Lovelife, Olympic Swimmers, The Plastic Pals and remixes of tracks by Aesop Rock and How to Dress Well. In the Soundcloud section, you might enjoy streaming songs from Mount Moriah, Nico Vega and Santigold.

The 1975 – Sex (Liar Remix)

Aesop Rock – Cycles to Gehenna (Zavala Remix)

How to Dress Well – & It Was U (Doss Remix)

Invisible Garden – Pirate Ship

J-Fresh – I Got Dreams

Lovelife – Your New Beloved

M. Constant – Us Tempenauts (Moduloktopus Remix)

OLGWI – What If

Olympic Swimmers – Fallen Trees

Pet Moon – Hold the Divide

The Plastic Pals – Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea

Tomika – Good Night, Lily

Tom Morgan – Taste for Blood

TV Snow – Downtown

Listmas 2012: The Top 50 Songs of 2012 [#40-31]


Let me start this second set of my Top 50 Songs of 2012 by giving you a small bit of background on how this list was put together. The rules are simple, really. After assembling a list of songs worthy of ranking, I start at #1 and work my way back to #50. In order to qualify for the Top 50, the song must have appeared on an album, EP or 7″ single released sometime in the calendar year of 2012. In an effort to broaden the scope of this list, I also limited this list so only one track from each artist could be included. If you check out my Runners Up list, you’ll notice a few songs on there from artists appearing on this Top 50 list. They’re extra songs I loved this year but was unable to include due to restrictions of time and space and rules. Other than that though, this list is pretty encompassing of the many great songs this year had to offer. Here’s a link to see songs #50-41, which went up yesterday. Now please enjoy #40-31!

Pick Your Poison: Tuesday 12-11-12

It’s new music release Tuesday, but there’s little to nothing worth checking out this week. Okay, there are a couple things. Green Day release their third full length album in 2012, and there’s also more goodies from Peaking Lights and The Wonder Revolution to check out. The soundtrack to the new Judd Apatow film This Is 40 is out this week too, and it features new music from Fiona Apple plus classics from Wilco and Ryan Adams, among others. That pretty well covers everything that isn’t a reissue or greatest hits collection. There’s also new music if you want it right below in today’s Pick Your Poison. Thom Yorke’s supergroup Atoms for Peace have a b-side up for free download, and there’s plenty of other good focus tracks from Circle, Dominic Lord, The Maginot Band and Torkelsen. The Very Best’s remix of Django Django is worth investigating in the Soundcloud section, plus tracks from Katy B (ft. Jessie Ware) and YACHT are great too.

Atoms for Peace – What the Eyeballs Did

Circle – The Magician Part One

Dominic Lord – Never & Never

E4RTH – ICE4GE

Electric Shepherd – Imitation Gardens (Part 1)

Glossary – All Is Well Tonight

Gross Ghost – Leslie

Http – Big Shit

Kiki Pau – Tomte Mars

K-X-P – Melody

The Maginot Band – Veiled Clock

Ted Morris – We’re Calling It Love

Torkelsen – Travels

Unlike Pluto – NewFinland

Listmas 2012: The Top 50 Songs of 2012 [#50-41]


Hello friends, and welcome to the official start of Listmas 2012! It’s been a long time and a lot of songs coming, but we’ve finally made it to that crucial end of the year point where we can look back on the music from the last 11 or so months and place the ultimate judgement upon it. Then we’ll forget all about it weeks later when 2013 starts to consume our brains. Some songs stay with you more than others, just as some songs stand out and make you question what you knew or thought you knew about music as a whole. Selecting my Top 50 Songs of 2012 was no easy task; in fact, I find it much harder to do than selecting my Top 50 Albums of the Year. It’s because albums are collections of songs, and judging 40-60 minutes of music is easier than judging 3-4 minutes. Still, I felt very strongly about a number of tracks this year, so much so that I’ve created a list of 50 more “runners up” that I feel are worth listening to if you haven’t already. I didn’t rank the runners up, but simply placed them in alphabetical order. It makes for a remarkably exciting playlist that I hope you’ll listen to. As for my official Top 50 Songs, that starts in the here and now, and each is assigned a number and official rank. We’ll be doing this 10 songs at a time, one set each day through Friday. That said, please enjoy Faronheit’s Top 50 Songs of 2012: #50-41.

Listmas 2012: The Top Songs of 2012 – Runners Up


This isn’t much of a post, except to say that in advance of my Top 50 Songs of 2012 list, I wanted to give you more this year. What follows below is a Spotify playlist featuring 50 songs that I consider to be great tracks from this year, but not quite enough to make the official list. I haven’t assigned any of these tracks numbers, and they’re all in alphabetical order by artist. It’s just another great snapshot of some tracks you may have missed, so I hope you’ll at least check some of them out, if not listen to the entire 3 hour playlist. Call it a bit of bonus fun. Enjoy!

Pick Your Poison: Monday 12-10-12

Welcome back (from the weekend). I’d like to go over a couple quick housekeeping notes for the site right now, if you don’t mind. I had hoped that last week would be the official start of the annual end-of-year countdowns known as Listmas, however if you’ve paid close attention to the posts it’s clear that didn’t quite happen. Alas, I’m a little swamped at the moment, and getting all these lists sorted out for you before Christmas has been more time consuming than anticipated. Still, I’m pleased to note that this week most definitely 100% begins the Listmas season. I’ll be counting down my Top 50 Songs of 2012 starting later today, and that will progress throughout the week. Next week I’ll do the same thing with my Top 50 Albums of 2012. In the week between Christmas and New Years I may have a couple odds and ends for you as well, including my Top EPs of the year and a final look at how the Class of 2012 fared. It’s going to be a blast, and I hope you’ll be paying close attention to the site for all of it. I think you’ll really enjoy what I’ve put together for you this Listmas. Oh, also, Pick Your Poison will be going on a mini “vacation” for the last week of 2012/first week of 2013. I’ll need the break to decompress from the year-end stuff, and nobody sends me much then anyways. For now though, it’s business as usual. Enjoy downloads today from The Bixby Knolls, The Buttercream Gang, Glossary, Hayden, Hey Anna and Lemonade’s remix of Young Dreams. In the Soundcloud section, stream songs from Chela and Ducktails too.

The Bixby Knolls – Through the Cracks

Bryant Dope – Champion Sound

The Buttercream Gang – Couch Games

Christina Courtin – Varsity

Criminal Hygiene – Rearrange Me

Erin McKeown – Proof (Payoff Mix)

Garrett Pierce – Santa Anita

Glossary – Keep It Coming

Hayden – Old Dreams

Hey Anna – Blackout

Ian Place – Belly

Misfit Mod – Sugar C

The Night Marchers – All Hits

Young Dreams – Fog of War (Lemonade Remix)

Show Review: Other Lives + Indians [Schubas; Chicago; 12/7/12]


On a dark, cold and somewhat rainy night in Chicago, the tour that is Other Lives and Indians rolled into town for one final gasp of air before disappearing for awhile. See, Other Lives have been on tour for what seems like forever. They released their second full length Tamer Animals in mid-2011, and have barely taken a break since then. They’ve been around the world and back multiple times, and were even offered a slot opening for Radiohead for the first leg of their King of Limbs tour in early 2012. By the time they showed up in Chicago for the first of two shows, this particular leg of 40+ American dates extended back to mid-October. But Chicago was the final stop, at which point they promised no more touring for awhile as they worked steadily to complete their next album. Fresh 4AD signee Indians has also been with them for this last set of dates, touring in advance of the debut album Somewhere Else, due out in January. So how did both bands fare after so much time on the road and the end in sight? Read on to find out.

Søren Løkke Juul is the name of the Copenhagen multi-instrumentalist behind the name Indians, and though press materials often reference a band along with the word “they,” the genuine reality is it’s just the one guy. Well, he has a friend that helps with stage set-up and take down and runs the soundboard during the show, but Juul is the only person on stage, at least for the time being. Like many great singer-songwriters, there’s a good chance a couple people might eventually join up with him to help make performing live easier and better. That’s not to say he was bad though, because there was something thrilling and impressive about the way he twisted knobs, pushed buttons, and played keyboards and guitars, sometimes all in the course of a single song. He’s clearly very talented, even if he looks a little lonely on stage. But this was the way he originally constructed the songs that will appear on the first Indians album, before being given a budget and a studio and a couple extra hands to help flesh out some very raw demos. All things considered, 2012 has worked out quite well for Juul, as he’s gone from playing his first live shows ever this past February in his hometown, to getting a record deal, studio time and a world tour. In essence, the shrink wrap has barely been removed on this project that is likely to lead to big things for 2013. For now though, you could say that Indians are still a bit green when it comes to performances. With more than 40 shows under his belt on this fall tour alone, surely Juul has grown in confidence and stage presence, but he’s not quite there yet. Maybe it’s a product of trying to do too much on his own, or maybe as he continues to tour things will only get better.

At bigger issue are the songs themselves. When he’s got a guitar in hand, Indians can sound a little like The Tallest Man on Earth crossed with M. Ward. When working on keyboards or other electronic elements, he can be a Toro y Moi or Baths. Almost everything sounds like something you’ve heard before in one context or another, and none of it particularly stands out or is strikingly catchy. Perhaps that’s more to do with the way these songs were performed rather than how they actually sound on record. The album version of “Cakelakers” (MP3) for example sounds positively radiant compared to the shrug-worthiness of how it was done live. Still, it seems unlikely that Indians are a future success story among intense music lovers, at least not until he starts to push and strain against his current limitations. Keep one eye on this guy though – the crowd at Schubas really seemed to like him, and he was warm and friendly to every fan that approached him after the show. Kindness might not win you awards and critical acclaim, but connecting with people no matter how good or bad your music is can in many ways be an even greater currency throughout your career.

Preorder Indians’ Somewhere Else from 4AD

When it comes to Other Lives, awards and critical acclaim also aren’t on the list (yet), but that doesn’t seem to bother them any. With good reason too, because it’s strikingly easy to enjoy one of their records while appreciating the sheer talent that went into making it. Their sound is largely based in folk with Fleet Foxes-like harmonies, but their ability to incorporate everything from horns to xylophones to cello and piano adds a sense of effortless beauty to the proceedings. Watching them pull it off live is that much more impressive of a feat, as pretty much everyone in the band plays multiple instruments on every song. The energy they bring to their performances is both literally and figuratively electric too, as frontman Jesse Tabish will pound on his piano, smash a few cymbals and generally jump around his part of the stage while various lightbulbs flicker on and off in time with the music. It’s a relatively unique stage setup, one that embraces the showmanship of bigger bands playing in bigger venues, but on a more modest budget. Other Lives would have put on equally interesting show had they not used the oversized on-stage lightbulbs, but there was something indiscreetly charming about them anyways. There was an energy and a passion to their set that just grabbed hold of you and wouldn’t let go. They extend songs where they can get away with it, and make a sharp left turn into a cover of Nirvana’s “Something in the Way” during the bridge of one of their own tracks, simply because there’s a similar chord progression. Transformations in tracks like “For 12” and “Dust Bowl III” somehow reach new heights compared to their studio versions, and on occasion the thought hits you that this is a band trying to push themselves. They’ve been on tour for so long and played these songs so many times, instead of getting bored with them, they’re finding new and creative ways to take what works in them and place greater emphasis on those elements. It’s one of the big reasons why seeing them live is essential to truly appreciating their songs and records.

They played a new song towards the end of their set, and it fit in well with everything else that they’ve done to this point, which can be viewed as good or bad depending on how you feel about that earlier work. The encore was entertaining too, because Tabish came out to play a song solo on just a keyboard, but apparently broke his on the final song of the main set. So he used one of the other keyboards on stage and it worked out okay. That broken keyboard wasn’t so much an accident as it was the result of a show where the band truly gave their all, and a few smashed keys was part of it. Schubas is apparently a very special venue for the band, and undoubtedly they treated their performance as such. The following night Other Lives had their final show of the tour at Schubas sister venue Lincoln Hall. It’s nearly double the size and boasts a powerful, modern sound system that makes Schubas sound almost meek by comparison. It’s the venue that this band has grown into, on the road to even bigger and better things. Yet in so many regards you can’t beat the intimacy and charm that Schubas has in spades. The point being, while it’s kind of Other Lives to essentially underplay a show in Chicago because they like the venue, it may also be the last time they do it as their popularity continues to rise. It might be six months or a year or longer before Other Lives have a new record and are ready to tour again, and when they finally do, it’s going to be an event not to be missed no matter how good or bad the new songs sound. I walked into Schubas on a rainy Friday night in December with the expectation of hearing some pleasant songs from a pleasant band. What I got was an intense, impressive show that turned me into an instant convert. Other Lives are the real deal.

Buy Tamer Animals from Amazon

Click past the jump to stream Tamer Animals in full!

Pick Your Poison: Thursday 12-6-12

It’s time for your weekly Chicago show update, this week brought to you by the letters F and U. I mean that in the most loving way possible. Anyways, from time to time I like to keep my Chicago readers updated on a good show coming through town that they might not otherwise be aware of. Of course when the show is sold out, it’s relatively clear that maybe awareness is reasonably strong. Case in point, on Friday night, Other Lives will be headlining a sold out show at Schubas. That’s what I planned to talk about here, and I’ll mention the details just in case they release a few more stray tickets before doors open tomorrow night. Tickets are $16, the show starts at 10PM and is 21+. Go here to see if tickets are still sold out. If you really want to see Other Lives though, and why wouldn’t you, it may be comforting to know that they’ll be playing a second non-sold out show on Saturday night, this time at the larger Lincoln Hall. Tickets for that are relatively cheaper ($14) and it’s only 18+ for the 10PM show. You can buy tickets for that Lincoln Hall show by going here. For those unfamiliar with Other Lives, a quick tutorial will reveal that they’re from L.A., and make contemplative orchestral rock. They’ve had some songs placed in popular TV shows before, and opened for Radiohead on a bunch of recent tour dates. Thom Yorke calls them friends, and he even remixed one of their songs under his Atoms for Peace moniker. Consider what might happen if Sigur Ros and Fleet Foxes ever teamed up, and that should give you a good idea of what Other Lives sound like. Or you can always stream all of their last album Tamer Animals on Spotify or Soundcloud. It’s pretty good stuff, and they’re dynamite live. Indians are opening for them on this current tour, which is another great reason to try and see them perform. If you’ve got your Saturday night in Chicago free, make the trip and go see them. Okay, let’s do Pick Your Poison for Thursday. Recommended tracks today come from Bloody Amateur, Dream Boat, The Longwalls, San Fermin and Split Screens. In the Soundcloud section stream tracks from John Cale, Lowlakes and Memory Tapes’ remix of Tame Impala.

Abbe May – Karmageddon

Bloody Amateur – Companions

Calvin Love – Magic Hearts (Cooper Saver Remix)

Dream Boat – Wildfires

Eli Escobar – Set My Heart on Fire

Jacob Morris – Landscapes

Lane 8 – For You

The Longwalls – Kowloon

Low Culture – Screens

Renny Wilson – By and By

Sally Shapiro – He Keeps Me Alive (Cedric Gervais Remix)

San Fermin – Sonsick

Shadow Dancer – Pinback

Split Screens – Deep Down

SOUNDCLOUD

John Cale – Hatred

Kodaline – The Answer

Lizzy Plapinger (MS MR) + Mr. Dream – Israel (Siouxsie and the Banshees cover)

Lowlakes – Song For Motion

Nautic – Fresh Eyes

Tame Impala – Feels Like We Only Go Backwards (Memory Tapes Remix)

Pick Your Poison: Wednesday 12-5-12

If you ask me (which you didn’t), the Grammys are a pretty useless award. Of the four principal awards talented & artistic people can win, including the Oscars, Tonys and Emmys, the Grammy is easily the least important. The main reason why has to do with their general disrespect for legitimately good music. Okay, so they sometimes get things right, like when Arcade Fire won the most prestigious Album of the Year award in 2011 for their record The Suburbs. Of course that also created this Tumblr, which pulls together the hundreds of people commenting online and asking what this Arcade Fire band was all about. Yes, we live on a planet where a fair portion of the population has never heard of Arcade Fire. Outside of that isolated incident though, the Grammys often prove themselves either out of touch or reward popular but not necessarily good artists. The nominations for 2013 were announced tonight, and once again it was a mixed bag of good and bad. Grizzly Bear, for example, was robbed, as were Grimes and a whole bunch of other artists that put out great records this year. Of course the person that may have put out the greatest record of all, Frank Ocean, actually did earn his keep, pulling in a total of 6 nominations. Also earning 6 nominations were The Black Keys, who will have interesting competition vs. Coldplay, Muse and Bruce Springsteen in the Best Rock Album category. Just mentioning Muse and Coldplay as nominees should give you a sign as to what they’re working with. The Best Alternative Music Album nominees are almost always interesting though, and this year is no different with Fiona Apple, M83, Gotye, Tom Waits and Bjork all up for that one. There’s a bunch of other categories with names you’ve probably heard of getting nominations, but I’m not going to name them all. Instead, let me simply advise you to go here to see all the nominees. I don’t think any of the bands in today’s Pick Your Poison have earned Grammy nominations before, but that’s perfectly okay. There’s still lots of good stuff in this set from Amor de Dias, Beach Fossila, The Birthday Suit, Broke For Free, Burywood and Lucius (covering Freelance WHales). In the Soundcloud section please enjoy streams from Cass McCombs, Eat Skull and Thee Oh Sees, plus a holiday track from Kishi Bashi.

Amor de Dias – Jean’s Waving

Beach Fossils – Careless

The Birthday Suit – Uh-Huh Uh-Huh

Broke For Free – Budding

Burywood – Latenight

The Centerfolds – The Storm

Giant Giant Sand – Undiscovered Country (John Parish Remix)

The Goodnight Darlings – Red Hot

Lexie Roth – Stay or Go

Lucius – Ghosting (Freelance Whales cover)

Moduloktopus – WTF

Newtimers – Heavy Weather

Radiohead – Everything in Its Right Place (Jeremy Hills End of the World Remix)

Stars in Coma – Come to Me

SOUNDCLOUD

alt-J – Fitzpleasure (Betatraxx Remix)

Australasia – Spine

Cass McCombs – Empty Promises

Eat Skull – How Do I Know When To Say Goodnight?

Kishi Bashi – It’s Christmas But It’s Not White Here In Our Town

Thee Oh Sees – Teacher’s Holiday

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