Friday Five: best songs of the decade

Before I post my highly anticipated list of my selections for the top 100 albums of the decade, I need to get this out of my system: a brief Friday Five listing of my favorite singles of the decade. (I use “best” and “favorite” interchangeably, because if it’s one of my favorites, chances are I also consider it to be one of the best.)

Also, while you’re waiting for my personal list of the decade’s top albums, please visit the collective ranking by me and six other higher ed music geeks at Higher Ed Music Critics.

OK, on to our countdown. I’ll try to do my best Casey Casem impersonation for you:

5. (tie) I Bet You Look Good on the Dance Floor – the Arctic Monkeys. These bratty Brits came out of nowhere with buzzsaw guitar and hammering rhythm to accompany the clever, come-on vocals of this tune. No other word to describe it but “catchy.”

5. (tie) Fell in Love With a Girl – the White Stripes. I was hooked by Jack White’s chunky power-chord opening. The song’s sudden ending follows the showbiz rule to always leave ’em wanting more. This is the song that made me fall in love with the White Stripes.

4. Beautiful Day – U2. See the bird with the leaf in her mouth/After the flood all the colors came out. A song of hope and renewal.

3. Crazy – Gnarls Barkley. How could anyone listen to this and not get up and dance?

2. Hey Ya – Outkast. Another highly danceable tune, and the only one that compels us to shake it like a Polaroid picture. I am on record as proclaiming this the song of the decade, but upon further review I must place it a rung below…

1. Hurt, Johnny Cash. What a powerful, moving rendition of this Nine Inch Nails tune. The Man in Black, no stranger to pain, heartache and hard life, creates a beautifully dark and haunting melody at the twilight of his career. It’s pretty depressing, though.

Bonus: music video of the decade:


Here It Goes Again (video) – OK Go

New side project: best albums of the decade (off-topic)

Image stolen from Paste, which has already done a countdown.
Image stolen from Paste, which has already done a countdown.
A few months ago, several of us higher ed marketing/PR/communications types who happen to love music started talking across blogs, Twitter and email about collectively ranking our picks for the best albums of the 2000s.

The result of this discussion is Higher Ed Critics: The Top 100 Albums of the 2000s, a minty-fresh new blog offering the collective wisdom of seven higher ed folks whose musical tastes range from heavy industrial metallurgical sounds to that dulcet, wispy folk-inspired indie that has been so in vogue this past decade. The contributors are seven higher ed bloggers and tweeters you’ve come to know and love:

Steve Biernacki (@halogoggles)
Ron Bronson (@ronbronson)
Georgy Cohen (@radiofreegeorgy)
Mason Dyer (@MasonDyer)
Tim Nekritz (@TimNekritz)
Holly Rae Bemis-Schurtz (@hollyrae)
me (@andrewcareaga)

So, please, come visit our countdown. Read what we have to say. Listen to samples from the albums we’ve picked. Argue with us. We love witty banter.