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All Songs Considered At 25

2025/3/4
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All Songs Considered

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Stephen Thompson
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Robin Hilton: 作为All Songs Considered节目的主持人,我回顾了节目25年来的历程,并与Stephen Thompson一起分享了我们每个年份最喜欢的歌曲。我们选择这些歌曲的标准并非基于公告牌榜单,而是基于它们对节目和我们个人生活的影响。我们从2000年开始,依次回顾了每个年份的代表性歌曲,并分享了我们对这些歌曲和当时音乐环境的回忆。例如,我们谈到了Napster等文件共享软件对音乐传播方式的影响,以及一些电视节目对独立音乐推广的作用。我们还讨论了Coldplay、The Shins、Moby、Air、The New Pornographers、Bjork、Andrew W.K.、Alicia Keys、Jimmy Eat World、Dirty Vegas、Avril Lavigne、Flaming Lips、Damien Rice、The Roots、The Postal Service、Death Cab for Cutie、Outkast、Missy Elliott、The Killers和Snow Patrol等乐队和歌手的音乐作品,以及它们对我们和当时听众的影响。总的来说,这段回顾展现了我们对过去25年音乐的热爱和对音乐发展变化的思考。 Stephen Thompson: 作为New Music Friday节目的主持人,我与Robin Hilton一起回顾了All Songs Considered节目25年来的No.1歌曲。我们从2000年开始,依次回顾了每个年份的代表性歌曲,并分享了我们对这些歌曲和当时音乐环境的回忆。我分享了我对Coldplay、The Shins、Moby、Air、The New Pornographers、Bjork、Andrew W.K.、Alicia Keys、Jimmy Eat World、Dirty Vegas、Avril Lavigne、Flaming Lips、Damien Rice、The Roots、The Postal Service、Death Cab for Cutie、Outkast、Missy Elliott、The Killers和Snow Patrol等乐队和歌手的音乐作品的个人感受,以及这些音乐如何与我个人生活经历相结合。例如,我谈到了Napster对音乐获取方式的影响,以及一些电视节目对独立音乐的推广作用。我还分享了我对2000年代初期独立流行摇滚乐融合的看法,以及对一些乐队音乐风格变化的观察。总的来说,这段回顾展现了我对过去25年音乐的热爱和对音乐发展变化的思考,以及这些音乐如何与我个人生活经历相结合。

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Chapters
This chapter starts by highlighting the show's unplanned celebrations of past anniversaries and introduces the concept of revisiting 25 No. 1 songs from each year of All Songs Considered's existence, starting with the first five years. It delves into the show's origins, its evolution from instrumental music to a broader range of indie rock and pop, and the role of Bob Boylan in its inception.
  • All Songs Considered's 25th anniversary.
  • Unplanned celebrations of past milestones.
  • Show's evolution from instrumental music to indie rock and pop.
  • Bob Boylan's role in the show's inception.

Shownotes Transcript

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This message comes from Best Western Hotels and Resorts. From adventures to new places, Best Western has you covered. With over 4,000 hotels worldwide, you're sure to find the right hotel for your next getaway. Life's a trip. Make the most of it at BestWestern.com. So I think, you know, if you listen to all songs considered with any regularity at all, you have probably picked up on the fact that we barely know what we're doing. I mean...

Not terribly organized. No. Horrible planners. No. Just... Not the greatest taste in music. Not even that. Honestly, just cannot get our act together. It's been a hallmark of this show, really, its entire life. In fact, the last time there was a really big milestone for All Songs Considered, it was our 15th anniversary, and we totally missed it. I mean, we knew it was coming, which is even worse. We knew it was coming, but we just could not...

plan no we couldn't get anything ready in time for it it was actually on your calendar and oh yeah you reamed right past yeah and we're like okay well so instead we celebrated the next year and we called it our sweet 16 yeah it was kind of genius honestly it was like it was planned the whole time but now this year all songs considered is 25 years old

And keeping with tradition, we missed the actual anniversary. It was in January. The show launched in January of 2000. So to mark this milestone, Stephen. Yes. Let's remember some songs. And here's how we're going to do it. We are going to do 25 number one songs, one from each of our 25 years here on Spaceship Earth. And to clarify...

These are not Billboard number one songs from each year or whatever. These are songs that have helped define the sound of all songs considered, songs that were big for us, that shaped the show and our lives. On this episode, we're going to go through the first five years. So 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004. Can you do that math, Stephen? The first five years. So we start with the year zero. Zero, and we're going to go through to four. Zero to four. Zero to four. Okay.

And then, over the course of the spring and the summer, we're going to look at a different year each week. We'll include it as a segment in upcoming episodes of All Songs Considered. I thought it would be fun if we just sort of play some stuff for each other. We can say what our number one song is. But there's so much other stuff.

We can test the limits of our pea-sized, dust-filled brains and see what we remember. The calcified remains of our synapses. And I thought we could start with this song that we've been listening to, and I bet you don't know what it is. ♪

I'm going to bail you out. Yeah, I have no idea. This is the first song ever played on All Songs Considered. Wow. So when the show first started in January of 2000, it was all instrumental music.

It was music that Bob Boylan, who started the show, that he played between stories on All Things Considered. He was the director. That was the original concept of the show was the interstitial music from the news magazine. Right. That was the whole premise, to play full versions of those little snippets between stories. Eventually, I started working here about a year after the show started.

And we just started covering all kinds of stuff, mostly indie rock and pop, you know, regardless of whether or not it was ever played between stories and all things considered. And this was a big one. I don't think I said it. Gustavo Santo Alaya.

The song is Gaucho from his album Ron Rocco. What were you doing 25 years ago, Stephen? What do you think of when you think of 2000 and music? Well, in the year 2000, I was working at The Onion. I was editing the AV Club and copy editing the comedy. When I think about that particular era in my life, I mean, I was probably listening to an album from 1999 called Your Favorite Music by Clem Snyde.

I was a Clemson super fan, still am a Clemson super fan. But if I were picking like what music defined the late 90s early aughts for me, that's probably the band I was obsessing over to the point where I was like collecting bootlegs on the internet and stuff. Right.

I mean, in every single one of these years, we could go 50 different directions. Sure. Right. I mean, I was going to play Thong Song by Cisco. I could have played Higher by Creed. Oh, God. You know, when we're talking about the biggest hits of the year 2000. But I think a song that encapsulates, I think, part of where All Songs Considered is coming from and where indie pop and rock and, quote, unquote, alternative music kind of all came together is,

A band that has since become something of a punchline. Okay. But that made, I think, an absolutely perfect song as its introduction to the world. Come on, brain. This has continued to be one of your favorite bands. Of course. Oh, my God. Coldplay, let me tell you, those first couple Coldplay albums are foundational. Look at the star, they shine for you.

Look, Coldplay reached a point, and Coldplay's relationship with the internet is really wild, where somewhere along the way, probably around like X and Y, it felt like the internet just turned on this band.

and just decided that Coldplay was hot garbage. And I think the weakest moments of Coldplay on the records that have come out in the 25 years since Yellow came out have some pretty shaky moments on them. But as you say, foundational records, Parachutes and A Rush of Blood to the Head are phenomenal albums.

This song, in many ways, is kind of a fulcrum that leads us into a lot of the music that was really resonating throughout the 2000s. Yeah. And when we talk about the era that we're hearkening back to here, the first time I heard Coldplay was from downloading songs on Napster.

Napster was a file-sharing program where people... Sorry, you've got to do the NPR. The Batman is a crime fighter. So... And then eventually they hugely took off in the U.S. Yellow became this big hit. But it speaks to the era of, like, right at the turn of the century, we were suddenly starting to get into music in completely different ways than we had ever gotten into music before. What's an MP3? Right. What is file-sharing? What is this Napster thing? Yeah, I remember...

The first time I ever heard someone say, I got that for free. I just downloaded it from Napster. Right. What are you talking about? Why? Yeah. What? And that's something I also found as I went through all this music from the past. It really took me back to the way listening habits have changed, the way discovering music has changed, and yeah, file sharing.

That is such a great thing to track right around 2000. Well, I'm so glad you picked that because I was thinking of playing Coldplay a little later around when we get to 2002 because that's when A Rush of Blood to the Head came out and that was also a really huge album. Yeah. We did a version of the show in 2016 when all songs considered turned 16. And this was the song that we played for 2000. ♪

Oh, come on. You should have this instantly. Oh, this is the Moby record. Moby, yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, my gosh. This record and NPR. Yeah, this is NPR. So the song's Porcelain from Play. Like, every song on that album was used... As interstitial music. Yeah, yeah, exactly. But I'm going to pick one for 2000. I think you'll also get this one pretty quickly, but let's see here. ♪

It's another band that I think of right around that time as being kind of foundational.

Is this Radiohead? No, it's Air. It's Air. Oh, Air. I'm like, I bet Robin's picking something from Kid A. Oh, no, that's a good pick. I had been unable to shake the thought that you were going to play Radiohead. Air, yes. Is this Moon Safari? No, this is the one that came after their soundtrack to the film Virgin Suicides. Virgin Suicides. And this is the song High School Lover. Early aughts, that whole moody...

Kind of drifty, but still hooky electronic music that was being made then. So many we could play from 2000. I was thinking maybe Granddaddy, the software slump. That album came out. Talk about foundational records for what makes a Robin Hill. Oh my God, yeah. That album was huge for me. I certainly could have played something from Kid A, maybe like National Anthem or something. Radiohead was really big then too. Yeah.

Yeah. Well, if we're just going to play our favorite songs. I will give you one more from 2000 and then we need to move on to 2001. All right. This is going to take us like 17 hours. Oh, New Pornographers. Yes. New Pornographers. Mass Romantic came out in 2000. Oh my gosh. Of course. Just as long as I shoot what I watch. Ten minutes of dark meat. And that's your money. Yeah, I'll have the 70s. Pardon me. You trade me.

This was my favorite album of 2000, Mass Romantic. It continues to absolutely rule in many of the 25 years that we're talking about.

If you just said, pick a song you love from this year, there's a very good chance I'm just going to go ahead and play a new pornographer's song. Yeah, I saw a lot of Nico Case. I saw a lot of new pornographers. I saw AC Newman. AC Newman. He had some great stuff. Oh, yeah. Oh, great pick. Let's go to 2001. I mentioned that we did a version of this show in 2016. Here is the song that we picked in 2016. Oh, Bjork. It's Bjork, yeah.

So this song is Hidden Place. It was the opening track to her album that came out that year, Vespertine. Through the warmest current of care

Such a good record.

I think you rarely hear that on this Bjork record. But honestly, in retrospect, I don't know why we didn't pick this. Oh, sure. Gold teeth and a curse for this town They're all in my mouth Only I don't know how they got out Turn me back into the dead I was when we met

Was there a bigger song in the indie pop world than New Slang by The Shins that year? I mean, this really defines so much of the music that I was listening to around 2000, 2001, 2002. Kind of Garden State core. Right. So you've got The Shins, you've got Death Cab for Cutie, you've got Iron and Wine. Well, maybe we didn't pick it for 2001 because even though it came out...

You mentioned Garden State. Garden State, the movie, had this incredible indie pop and rock soundtrack, and this was included on it. That came out in like 2004 or something like that, a few years later. So maybe this just wasn't on our radar for that year. But this is definitely what I'd pick now.

All right, so I'm going to play something completely different. You will be able to figure out what it is in approximately one second. When it's time to party, we will party hard. Is this Andrew WK? It sure is. Who else? No, no, Robin. It's Rhett Miller from the old 97s. What do you think? You work hard, because we work hard. You work hard, because we work hard. So let's get it started.

You give me so much grief for Robin core music that I like. There is no band that says Stephen Thompson more, or I should say artists, than Andrew WK. Maybe Weird Al, but yeah, Andrew WK. I mean, this record, I Get Wet, is one of my favorite albums of all time.

And I interviewed Andrew WK about it for the AV Club when this record came out. And he was talking about his process and what he wanted to do with music. And the way he described it, he's an extremely passionate, kind of voluble guy. And he was sort of saying, like, my goal was for each second of this record to lead into the next second, and that next second is even better. Right. Like, he's trying to...

top himself. I thought you were going to say one party is going to lead to another party and that party is going to be bigger and better than the party that came before. I mean, he would tell you that as well. Yeah. I mean, the fact that this record has three different songs with the word party in the title, Party Hard, Party Till You Puke, It's Time to Party, and they're all so good. This record has given me so much joy and so much life.

The number of times that I've been on a road trip where I'm about to fall asleep and then all of a sudden I'm like, I need something. I need a pick-me-up. I could pull over to a truck stop and get some godforsaken energy drink that will give me a rapid heartbeat. Or I could just put on I Get Wet by Andrew W.K. I get wet.

So I know we're technically picking a number one song from each year, but there's so many things that I keep thinking of from each year. And there's some really big ones that I feel like might take people back right away if they hear it. This is actually another one that I think of whenever I think of 2001. I keep on falling. Oh, sure. In that love.

Alicia Keys. I was going to try to do the vocal run and bailed out for a second. Thank you for not doing that. Sometimes I feel good. Bad times I feel good.

from her debut songs in A minor, the song Fallen. I remember seeing her play this. It might have been at the Grammys, I think. And just being absolutely blown away. As much as Moby's play was made for NPR, Alicia Keys was made for the Grammys. Yeah, totally.

I'm going to do one more before we get to the end of this year. A song that has, frankly, only somehow improved with age. Jimmy Eat World. Very good. The middle. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

I remember when I was in high school, somebody brought up the band Boston and I kind of heard of Boston. I didn't really know Boston.

And my friend, in trying to explain what Boston was, what the band was, said, Boston's that band that literally everybody loves. Right. I would say the same thing, at least about this song, if not Jimmy B World in general. And that whole Bleed American record, which was later changed to self-titled in the aftermath of September 11th, is just wall-to-wall bangers. Yeah.

The middle is a banger that doubles as a collection of really good advice. What a great song. And they did this at their tiny desk when they came to play. They did. And people lost their minds.

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Whether you're seeking auto, home, or life coverage, they'll work with you to choose the policy that best serves you and your family. Discover how Amica can help protect what matters most to you today. Go to Amica.com and get a quote today. All right, 2002. We have clawed and scratched our way all the way to 2002, Stephen. It's going to take a while. We're currently reconsidering whether this was a good idea or not.

For those who are still with us as we've catapulted our way to 2002, see if you remember this one. Is this Daft Punk? No.

still a whisper on my lips feeling that my fingertips is pulling at my skin you leave me when i'm at my worst feeling as if i've been cursed a little cold within goodbye and

Days go by. Days go by. Dirty Vegas. Oh, Dirty Vegas. This was their self-titled debut. I'm sitting here like...

Oh wow. Dirty Vegas. This has had the best video from around that time. I'm not even gonna bother explaining what happens in the video. It's just, oh it's incredible. Dirty Vegas. I was absolutely obsessed with this song when it came out. There's some incredible dancing in the video and all I wished more than anything in the world is that I could dance like the dude in that video. Oh my god. Wow.

That one had gotten lost in the recesses of my brain. That's something else that happened as I was going through these years is, oh, right, oh my god, of course, Dirty Vegas. I haven't listened to this song in 20 years, but it was so huge in my life when it came out. Culturally speaking, we have such a strange relationship with

the past in this country and like there's so much retro radio and retro playlists and like think back to the you know the we're playing all 80s but then they're playing like the same six songs right and and so it's like oh the 80s that's summer of 69 girls just want to have fun thriller and

And that's it. And so it's so easy for great stuff, stuff that you loved every time you heard it on the radio, stuff that you played in your car, to have totally evaporated from your world. And so like Dirty Vegas. But it's in there somewhere. I had not thought about Dirty Vegas in 20 plus years. Yeah. What do you got? All right. Well, I'm going to go. You're going to get. Who am I talking to? You're going to get this in one.

Don't say that because then I'm going to feel like a complete idiot. Robin, there's no way. Okay, yeah, all right. Everyone knows this is Avril Lavigne's Complicated. Also a great song. It came out in 2002. Do you realize that you have the most beautiful face? Do you realize that you have the most beautiful face?

So one of the things that was amazing about this song Do You Realize It came out on Yosemite Battles the Pink Robots is that when it came out, when the Flaming Lips put this out,

They had been making music at that point for like 25 years or something. I mean, just some astronomical... Yeah. And then they finally strike gold with this huge hit. Well, they had had... She Don't Use Jelly was a big hit. Yeah, but I don't think it had to reach this song. And it's sort of like, what do you call it? Like crossover, right? It was getting its hooks in people who had never listened to...

Flaming Lips before. And the other one, She Don't Use Jelly, was a little more out there. It was more of a 90s ironic kind of vibe. I mean, one thing that this record is not is ironic. Right. And for me, in terms of when this album came out in my life, this is, you know, 2002 is the year I turned 30. I had an infant son at home. And...

What a time to find a record that puts you instantly and deeply into your feelings. And I know there were people who were like, oh, it's mawkish. It's too... But it's like, oh, I'm sorry. The heart is mawkish to you? What a great pick. I'm glad you picked that one. That was on my short list of ones that I might have picked for 2002. For the 2016 show we did, Wilco's I'm Trying to Break Your Heart.

Yankee Hotel Foxtrot had come out. That was certainly huge. But when we think back to, you know, you said, wow, Dirty Vegas is a band I hadn't thought of in a really long time. There's another artist who put out an incredible record that year, and I thought, we're going to get something from him every year or every couple of years, and it will always be amazing. And this is one of the songs from the record he put out in 2002. Damien Rice. Very good. Wow, you got that fast. Ha ha ha.

Oh god, is that Lisa Hannigan? Yes. Oh my god.

So good. When those harmonies kick in, this song Volcano from the album O from Damien Rice, he only put out two more records after that. The first was like, follow-up was in 2006 and then another one in 2014 and that was it. Yeah, I mean, I don't think he necessarily had commercial ambition. I don't think being a big rock star was what he necessarily wanted from life.

He was a big one for me. Yeah. My Irish mopes, Damien Rice, The Frames. Yeah. But I want another record. I'm very greedy. Okay, one more. Okay, so I really thought about doing Lose Yourself by Eminem here. I wrote that down on my short list, too. That is peak Eminem. But I'm going to go with a different one. It's one of my favorite songs of that year, but I wonder if you know it. It sure sounds familiar. I don't get my

I don't know it. This is The Seed 2.0 by The Roots.

Wow. With Cody Chestnut. And this was my introduction to Cody Chestnut, who's another artist like Damien Rice, who I would have assumed was going to put out 20 classic albums. Right. And slowed way down. This for me is just like a perfect marriage of what the Roots do, what Cody Chestnut does, into this just big, grand, timeless anthem. When I think of the Roots, this is not what I think of now.

Right. Well, I mean, one thing about The Roots is they can be any band you want if they decide to be that band. Yeah.

Very cool pick. I should also note for 2002, that was the year Nora Jones put out Come Away With Me. Oh, wow. That album and the song Don't Know Why, that was a really huge one on all songs considered. Sigur Rós' The Parentheses, that album came out. That was a huge one. Beautiful, beautiful album. But we should move on to 2003. And when I look back at what it was like listening to music then and working on this show, it felt like we were entering this era

kind of new golden age of pop and rock music, if you want to call it indie pop and rock music. And the last time we did an anniversary show, the 2016 one, this is the track that we picked as our number one song for 2003. The district sleeps alone tonight. Yeah, I mean... The postal service. Name that tune. I can get that in one half of one time. Stephen, name that tune. Palms are sweaty, nasty

Staring at the asphalt Wondering what's better

We talk about how music felt like it was changing and entering this new era, and one of the things I don't really think I'd heard before was something like this, which is these sort of disjointed beats, polyrhythms, set against a voice that sounds like, and melody, that sounds like it should be alongside a piano or a guitar strummed or something, right? Two entirely different sonic universes working together so perfectly here. Yeah, what a year, Ben Gibbard.

had in 2003. He's the singer-songwriter on The Postal Service, and he's working with Jimmy Tamburello and Jenny Lewis. That's a brilliant record. But Death Cab for Cutie made transatlanticism in 2003. Footsteps crossing flatlands to your door Have been solved forever Distance is quite simple Much too far for me to row It seems farther away

There are several Death Cab for Cutie records that one could describe as masterpieces, and I think Transatlanticism is probably the one that stands out the most. I mean, the fact that he made two of the very best albums of the year in 2003. And 2003, man, this is a very hard year to narrow down.

Incredible year, like I said, for indie rock. My Morning Jacket releases, It Still Moves. That album came out that year. The White Stripes had Seven Nation Army. Seven Nation Army, which is now basically their signature song. But this song, have you seen Death Cab do this specific song, the title cut to Transatlanticism Live? Yeah. Oh my God, when it builds at the end. So come on, come on.

I've seen them in massive music festivals playing this. I've seen them in small venues playing this. And without fail, everyone in the room is levitating by the time they get to this moment. Levitating is exactly the word that I was searching for. There's just this sense that you're being lifted. Light is bursting from your chest. Yeah, and...

What a great batch of music to have when you're discovering how to articulate your feelings for the first time, which for me was like new parent, early thirties, waking up to some stuff, learning how I fit into the world and like having stuff like the flaming lips record or transatlanticism or the postal service record. These, these records that, that are going for something really big and grand and are all about pulling feelings out of the person listening to them.

Just a beautiful, beautiful record. It was a big time for Gen Xers because like right around then, late 90s, early 2000s, they're all starting to turn 30, going through these big life changes. And this music soundtracked it so perfectly. But I have a long list here from 2003. Where do we even begin? I mean, let's just... One, two. I mean, you had to play Outkast, right? I mean, that record was so huge. Don't try.

This song from Speakerboxx, The Love Below. Hey, yeah. I mean, Crazy in Love by Beyonce came out in 2003. I mean, Beyonce is going to come up again later in these discussions. Yeah, and we're just talking in a way like there are some years where you just have to talk about what were the most important songs. What were the songs that defined the year? And you can't talk about 2003 without talking about

about Hey Ya, you know, you can't, or Crazy in Love. Seven Nation Army. Seven Nation Army. Like some of these songs that have never stopped reverberating. So good. And just such a forward-thinking sound. I kind of feel like, I know we should move on to 2004, but can I play something from the world of hip-hop and rap that stands out for me from that year? Absolutely. Pass down, pass down, pass down, pass down, pass down.

Oh

Missy Elliott is another one. We talked about Damien Rice and Cody Chestnut, people that I wanted to put out like a dozen more albums than they have. Yeah, exactly. But my God, this is not a test. That album, from 2003, Missy Elliott album, I remember when I first heard this beat on Pass That Dutch,

I was just starting to get into making music at home, like with the home recording system, and I had a drum machine. And I remember trying to imitate this beat because it is just so sick.

Pop that, pop that, jiggle that fat. Don't stop, get into your clothes, get wet. Number one, drums go bum, bum, bum. This beat here will make you hum, bum, jump. If you's a fat one, put your clothes back on before you start putting potholes in my lawn. Oh my gosh, oh my gosh, I'm under attack like my name was Saddam.

Oh my God. So good. Just such a forward-thinking sound. I guess we're up to 2004, and this is where we were going to end this episode. I'm going to go with a big, fat pitch down the middle and one of the songs that truly defines 2004 in a good way. Coming

And I've been doing just fine Got it cause I want it all It started out with a kiss How did it end up like this? It was only a kiss It was only a kiss Now I'm falling asleep And she's calling a girl While he's having a smoke And she's taking a drag Now they're going to bed And my stomach is sick

I think I know the band, but is it The Killers? Yes. Oh, of course. Okay, yeah. Robin, my God. I didn't listen to a lot of The Killers at the time. Right, Mr. Brightside. Yeah. Yeah, okay, yeah. And I just can't maintain jealousy Turning saints into the sea Swimming through sick lies Choking on your lies It's just a crime

is calling a family

To this day, this song comes on the radio and the dial cannot move farther to the right. I will crank this song every single time I hear it. Undeniably huge in 2004. I guess I just wasn't really listening to a lot of them then. And there's so many others that I think of first when I think of 2004. Like this one. ♪

Oh, this is keen. Yeah. So I'm just as incredulous that you wouldn't know this one immediately. Okay, it took me like three seconds. Okay. I walked across an empty land. I knew the pathway like the back of my hand. I felt the earth beneath my feet. Sat by the river and it made me complete. Oh, simple things.

Oh man, this and Snow Patrol. Yeah.

I feel like I'm on my couch watching Grey's Anatomy all over again. That's something I actually meant to say about the death cab for Cutie. Totally. Because we talk about what was happening in the world of music. Streaming services hadn't launched yet. How are we discovering music? How are we listening to music?

And there were a handful of TV shows back in the very early 2000s that were pushing all of this music onto the world in wonderful ways. The O.C. Totally the O.C. Yes, Grey's Anatomy, Six Feet Under, the Transatlanticist, that was on Six Feet Under. Also, you know, Saturday Night Live just had its 50th anniversary, that big special. And everyone on the music team started reflecting on their favorite performances. I ended up writing about Pearl Jam, their 1994 performance.

But King's performance of this song actually was one that I thought of when I think back of really great performances. It was a pretty simple performance, but it was the first time I'd ever seen the band do this song live, and I realized, they don't have a guitarist. It was such an unusual setup to me, the keyboardist, the drummer, the singer, and such an incredible, incredible sound. A simple friend, how have you gone?

There's such an interesting confluence of cultural influences going on here, right? Like we're talking about the blog era, we're talking about early internet era, we're talking about the OC and Six Feet Under and TV shows that really became known for the musical stamp that they put on each episode.

but also you're hearing some of the, a little bit of the influence of like American Idol. I thought the same thing. I started seeing all these releases like, oh wow, all the American Idol winners and runners up are all starting to put out records. And that's, and that's a big part of kind of the, the,

soup of what we're hearing in the early aughts. And obviously, as we get into the late aughts and into the teens, you know, we're going to get into the ho-hey era. We're going to get into the stomp and clap. And how many drummers does your band have? Fewer than three. Right. You know, but this era really is, you know, we're talking about, you know, we're roughly past the 20th anniversary of this era.

This was a really sweet and special time, musically speaking, when a lot of these bands were rising up and had extremely commercially accessible sounds, but were tapping into kind of...

indie music that hadn't necessarily reached this gigantic audience before. Yeah. So the number one song that we picked back in 2016 when we did this was from Arcade Fire's funeral album, the song Neighborhood, number one. I think I would probably pick the King song, Somewhere Only We Know. But let's just do one more from this year from a band that I think you're going to know this one right away. This was another one that was really big for all songs considered when it came out. ♪

Is this Paula Batgirl? Oh no, this is Go Team. Go Team, you're right. Go Team from Thunder, Lightning, Strike. The power is on. Go!

Again, going back to how was music changing, this collage-ist music that we started hearing. You know, like somebody's really chopped all this up really, really brilliantly. So fun. So much more stuff we could play.

I mean, this was never going to be comprehensive. No, but we're going to end it here for now. And like I said, we're going to keep this going. Keep listening to all songs considered each week. We're going to include a different year in each episode of the show through the spring and into the summer. Well, the next 20 weeks, because 25 years, we'll do one year in each show.

But we'll go out on this from the GO team. Thanks as always, Steven, for all the memories made and those yet to come. What a ride. It's been a ride. Thanks for having me, Robin. And for NPR Music, I'm Robin Hilton. It's all songs concerned.

so

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