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music

Bridges, blues and the ghost of Jeff Buckley

July 17, 2012

The Husband and I spent a long, humid night in Memphis, steeped in the scent of smoky barbecue, submerged in the blues. Eventually too much sizzle did us in, and we headed back to our hotel in West Memphis, both of us exhausted and slow-cooked in our own sweat.

As The Husband navigated our car over the Hernando de Soto bridge, I suddenly sat up straight and said, “Jeff Buckley died here.”

“Who?”

“Jeff Buckley. The singer. He drowned right here.”

“Here? Like, right here?”

Well, I wasn’t really sure where, I admitted. It was somewhere in the Mississippi. But it’s a massive river. Any part of it could have taken a young singer’s life.

 

Curiosity got the better of me, and later that night I looked up the details of Jeff Buckley’s death. Sure enough, he died in Memphis — and within sight of the Hernando de Soto bridge. A chill ripped down my spine.

I haven’t thought about Jeff Buckley in years. I can’t even remember the last time I pulled out one of my Jeff Buckley albums. So what was it that summoned the memory of him then? There?

I am a person who believes in ghosts. I believe that a person’s energy never disappears from this world — that my mother whispered in my ear the night before her funeral, that her grandmother once paid a similar visit to the family, and sometimes I can still feel the both of them in the air around me.

I also believe that the veil between worlds in thinnest in the South. I don’t know why. Maybe the humidity weighs it down, makes that veil thick and droopy and, therefore, easily passable.

What I know for certain is that a wispy recollection of Jeff Buckley came to me in Memphis. I crossed over a bridge and looked in a rear-view mirror, all the while humming “Lover You Should’ve Come Over.” I felt the fullness of a life in the space of his death, and it reminded me that people are never really gone. They just temporarily drift away.

Top 14 songs of 2011

December 31, 2011

Do you remember Tom Cruise in “The Firm,” how he was constantly running? That’s how I feel about 2011.

 

I spent the first seven months of this year traveling overseas. Then I returned to California, where I moved to a new apartment, started a new job, began grad school and made some new friends. It was a year of movement, of being in flux, of constant motion.

It’s no wonder I could barely catch up with pop culture this year. Until August, I was more familiar with Thai karaoke tunes than anything on Pitchfork. My friends had to sit me down and explain Nicki Minaj. And I still have no idea what a Bruno Mars is, nor do I care.

So it was actually a struggle to compile this year’s list of 14 favorites. (Why 14 songs? Because 11 wasn’t enough, 12 is stupid, and I’m too superstitious to do 13.)  The list is a little disjointed and disconnected, but hey — that reflects my 2011 just fine.

 

Alabama Shakes “I Found You”

Take everything I love about the Black Keys and dip it in sweet tea. And then add a woman with a super-powered set of pipes. That’s Alabama Shakes. They’re still a really young and uneven band, but this song is a true standout.

 

Alexander “Truth”

You know that guy who fronts Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes? Did you think his name was Edward Sharpe? Me too. Well, we were wrong. His name is Alexander, and this is his hip hop-inspired jam.

 

Beirut “Santa Fe”

His voice sounds like crying. And sometimes that makes me happy.

 

Blood Orange “Sutphin Blvd.”

Dev Hynes creates music that is like nothing I’ve ever heard before. It’s layered, cinematic, complicated … I don’t even know how to really describe it. This song takes me by the hand and leads me into a place I thought I forgot a long time ago.

 

Booker T. Jones ft. Yim Yames “Progress”

Pure magic. Classic R&B underneath the golden voice of My Morning Jacket’s vocalist. I just want to preserve this sound in a little glass case forever.

 

The Cave Singers “Swim Club”

I remember being 16 in a humid Ohio summer. Driving back roads with my friends on starless nights full of potential. Laughing until I choked. Feeling like I would never get old. This song sounds like that.

 

Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. “Simple Girl”

They come really close to being the modern Beach Boys. The harmonies just kill me.

 

Friends “I’m His Girl”

This song does the 80s better than the 80s ever did.

 

Gotye “Somebody That I Used to Know”

Oh, how this song wounds me. It’s a slow lead-up to a powerful payoff. Love it. I’m pretty sure I’ve cried more than once while listening to this.

 

Los Campesinos! “By Your Hand”

I saw this Welch band play a few years ago at Coachella. They were so sweet and self-deprecating, I was utterly charmed by them. They’re not the strongest or most solid band, but I appreciate their energy and exuberance. They get better every year.

 

M83 “Midnight City”

My choice for song of the year. I don’t understand it — usually electronic synth pop leaves me more than a little cold — but this song is melancholy in a good way, the way that makes me ache for something unknown. It climbs right into that hollow space underneath my breastbone, settles in and stretches its legs.

 

Papa “I am the Lion King”

How fun is this band? They are everything fizzy and California.

 

Toro Y Moi “Still Sound”

It’s weird how this song sounds simultaneously like 1981 and 2011. It’s like watching “3-2-1 Contact” on my iPhone.

 

tUnE-yArDs “Bizness”

This one is just here for the video, which is awesome.