I'm very fond of music, and I have eclectic tastes. I decorate time with music when it doesn't distract me from other duties, often using classical or ambient music while working, and sometimes using popular music while doing other activities. I was actually a DJ on a small local nonprofit radio station when I was a teenager.
The music that tends to be most popular usually holds no attraction for me, and most of my favorite popular music is from alternative or independent label musicians. I'm interested in creating a series of podcasts or radio programs in Mandarin Chinese to introduce such music to an audience in Taiwan (and China, perhaps). One of my motives is to help create a market demand for live concerts by the sort of bands that in America would play in venues with audiences of several hundred up to a thousand. The big name bands that can play in huge venues are already known all over the world, and the unknown bands that tour on a shoestring and play to audiences of fewer than a couple hundred can also make a go of it, but the middle-tier popularity bands have a hard time touring in East Asia because they are too famous to tolerate the low returns they would get performing in small venues, but not famous enough to have much of an audience outside of North America, Europe, and Australia/New Zealand/Japan.
So, what would I include on such a series of podcasts, and what would I say about the songs? For an hour of programming, you need about 48-52 minutes of music, leaving you with 4-6 minutes for explanation/description and another few minutes of station identification, weather, or advertising and public service announcements.
Hour 1: The antecedents.
Garage Band sound:
Louie Louie (Kingsman) 1963 (out of Portland, Oregon—my father went to high school with these guys)
Surfin’ Bird (Trashman) 1963 (out of Minneapolis, Minnesota)
Sometimes garage bands could break big, as the Kingsman and Trashmen did in 1963. This was "outsider" music at its time, but it had broad appeal.
Independent label
Apache (The Ventures) 1962 (out of Tacoma, Washington, recording on the independent label Dolton out of Seattle, Washington)
Pipeline (Dick Dale) 1963 (from Massachusetts and Southern California, started out on his own label, Deltone Records)
Dick Dale and The Ventures were extremely influential on rock music.
British Invasion
You really Got Me (The Kinks) 1964 (London, England). Important because it was loud and super simple. Loud and simple, with a garage band sound, this provides a foundation for the alternative music that was to come later, such as punk music.
Psychedelia and Glam Rock
A Dream for Julie (Kaleidoscope) 1967 (London, England), a representative sample of the sort of music called psychedelia, which was extremely popular from 1967-1969, and is associated with popular bands such as The Beatles, Jefferson Airplane, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, and the Moody Blues. This music took a philosophical position, and questioned many assumptions of mainstream culture and music, and thus influenced other artists to write music that challenged the values and assumptions of mainstream world-views.
All Tomorrow's Parties (The Velvet Underground) 1967 (New York City). The Velvet Underground were an influential part of the countercultural music scene, and an important inspiration for many alternative bands that followed. The band was not only musically influential, as the popular uprising to change the Communist government in the Czechoslovakian Republic was called the “Velvet Revolution” partly because many of the activists were very fond of the Velvet Underground. Lou Reed and John Cale, two members of this band, continued to be extremely important in creating innovated sounds and musical forms for decades following.
Ride a White Swan (T. Rex, Marc Bolan) 1970 (London, England), Glam Rock such as the early music of David Bowie and the work of Marc Bolan was extremely popular, and included performances and costuming that questioned presentation of gender. The music and performances were sometimes shocking and outrageous, a characteristic that was also an important ingredient of some early alternative music.
Experimental and Electronica
St. Elmo's Fire (Brian Eno) 1975 (London, England), Brian Eno was a significant innovator in electronic and guitar music and sounds. He is one of the founders of the ambient music form. He also created innovative popular music that influenced others who were interested in sounds that were different from the mainstream.
Franz Schubert - Endless Endless (Kraftwerk) 1977, Synthesizers and electronic music were another part of the alternative approach to music, and Krafwerk basically introduced this sound and approach, which became so influential in the 1980s.
Regiment (Brian Eno & David Byrne) 1981 (New York City). This album was influential for its use of sampled music, and this song uses the voice of Dunya Yunis, a Lebanese mountain singer, whose performance Eno and Byrne found on a world music collection Music in the World of Islam. The mixing of sounds on this album inspired many later artists, and such unusual and experimental music was generally only heard on stations or programming that included alternative and indie, punk and new wave.
American innovators of the 1970s
Roadrunner (Jonathan Richman & The Modern Lovers) 1972 (Boston, MA). Jonathan Richman was an example of an eccentric outsider whose music was inspiring to other artists who wanted to do something different.
No More Mr. Nice Guy (Alice Cooper) 1973 (Phoenix, AZ, with roots in Detroit, Michigan). Alice Cooper was a mainstream popular band, but like the glam rock of England, the band used unusual costuming and stage performances that were described as “Shock Rock”. Their songs and performances were critical of mainstream values and institutions.
Marquee Moon (Television) 1977 (New York City). Television were important influence on punk and alternative music, especially with their emphasis on basic guitar sounds.
Hour 2: Early Indie and Punk in the USA
Loud, Dirty, Rock
Two important groups who brought the earlier forms of popular music toward the underground and alternative side are the Stooges and the New York Dolls. In particular, Iggy Pop, the leader of the Stooges, is sometimes credited with starting the punk music scene in the United States. Sometimes the New York Dolls are credited with this. At any rate, we will hear an early Stooges song from 1969, a mid-70s song from Iggy Pop as a solo artist without the Stooges, and an example of what the New York Dolls sounded like around 1973. These artists are known for a raw, loud sound, and their powerful influence on subsequent bands that shaped American punk and rock-n-roll in the late 1970s through the 1980s.
I Wanna Be Your Dog (The Stooges) 1969 (Detroit, Michigan),
The Passenger (Iggy Pop) 1977 (Detroit, Michigan),
Personality Crisis (New York Dolls) 1973 (New York City),
The influence of the CBGB music venue in New York City.
The CBGB music club in Manhattan, New York City (1973-2006) was originally intended as a venue for country, bluegrass, and blues music. However, in the mid-late 1970s it was the place where many of the punk and new wave bands played. In the 1980s it became more known as a venue for the eighties style punk music and hardcore punk, a form of punk that was very angry, fast, and masculine. This is where bands like the Ramones, Blondie, The Talking Heads, the Cramps, and the Fleshtones performed. The Damned, one of the first punk bands out of the British punk movement first played in America at CBGB. The genre of punk when it first appeared in America was not always as angry, fast, and loud as it became later in the 1980s. The following songs give a sense of the diversity of the New York punk sound in the mid-to-late 1970s:
Blitzkrieg Bop (The Ramones) 1976 (New York City),
Heart of Glass (Blondie) 1978 (New York City),
Mind (Talking Heads) 1979 (New York City),
Animals (Talking Heads) 1979 (New York City),Punk, West Coast and Washington, DC
Diversity in Post-Punk and New Wave and Alternative music in the early 1980s
Hour 3: The take off of independent and punk music in the UK.
In the United Kingdom, as in the United States, many musicians and aspiring musicians were deeply dissatisfied with the forms of rock-and-roll that were popular on the radio. The dominance of easy listening, progressive rock, disco, and vapid popular music irritated these persons, and as did the control of the major recording labels over what was marketed to the public.
Throughout the United Kingdom, some of these artists formed garage bands, or they started building their own electronic instruments, or they innovated with new forms of sound and approaches to music. At the same time, many people who liked this approach, and wanted to escape the dominance of the major record labels, or else had no chance of catching the attention of record company executives, started creating their own recording studios and record labels. Punk music was an important part of this trend, but a wide variety of artists adopted the do-it-yourself attitude and countercultural rejection of mainstream music while creating music that sounded nothing like the punk music of such famous bands as The Sex Pistols or The Clash.
This first song is by the Clash, one of these bands that was vocal in its criticism of major record labels. The song Complete Control complains about the way record labels mistreated the musical artists who signed contracts with the music industry giants. After Complete Control by the Clash, we’ll hear Boredom by the Buzzcocks, a band that was the first one to establish their own independent label (the New Hormones label) to pay for the pressing and distribution of their Spiral Scratch extended play record. The song was recorded in a short (three hour) session, and mixed in about two hours, and then master tapes were taken to be pressed into vinyl. So, let us now hear a song by a major label punk band complaining about artists being mistreated, and a song by punk artists who were doing it all on their own without the help of a big record label company.
Temptation (New Order) 1979 (Manchester, England)
Hour 4: More Post-Punk and Do-It-Yourself music out of the UK
I Don't Know What To Do With My Life (The Buzzcocks) 1979
Love Will Tear Us Apart (Joy Division) 1979
Bunker Soldiers (Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark) 1980
Second Skin (The Chameleons) 1983
Eighties (Killing Joke) 1984
Blue Monday (New Order) 1983
(This Is Not A) Love Song (Public Image Limited) 1983
No Bulbs 3 (The Fall) 1984
Rusholme Ruffians (The Smiths) 1984
The Cutter (Echo & The Bunnymen) 1985
Ocean Rain (Echo & The Bunnymen) 1984
I Promise (Radiohead) 1997
Hour 5: College Radio Music
Genius of Love (Tom Tom Club) 1981
These Dangerous Machines (Martha and the Muffins) 1983
Seven Chinese Brothers (R.E.M.) 1984
Alex Chilton (The Replacements) 1987
Take the Skinheads Bowling (Camper Van Beethoven) 1985
Don't Let's Start (They Might Be Giants) 1985
When Men Were Trains (Big Dipper) 1987
Boy (Book of Love) 1986
Years Later (Cactus World News) 1986
Why Are You Being so Reasonable Now? (The Wedding Present) 1987
I Love Hot Nights (Jonathan Richman) 1987
Here Comes Your Man (Pixies) 1990
So You Think You're In Love (Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians) 1991
Not Too Soon (Throwing Muses) 1991
Hour 6: Punk, Pop-Punk, Riot Grrrl
Punk wasn’t necessarily “hardcore” yet
Where Next Columbus? (Crass) 1981
Run Like A Villain (Iggy Pop) 1982
Southern California
TV Party (Black Flag) 1981
The Hammer Hits The Nail (The Flesh Eaters) 1983
The Cheerleaders (Minutemen) 1985
Washington DC, Dischord Records, Ian MacKaye
Minor Threat (Minor Threat) 1984
Waiting Room (Fugazi) 1989
Twin Cities and Midwest
Love Is the Law (The Suburbs) 1982
Guns at My School (Hüsker Dü) 1981
Chartered Trips (Hüsker Dü) 1984
I Can't Hardly Wait (The Replacements) 1985
Heartbeat (Big Black) 1987
The 90s. Emo and Riot Grrrl
In Circles (Sunny Day Real Estate) 1994
Rebel Girl (Bikini Kill) 1993
Get Up (Sleater-Kinney) 1999
Hour 7: Grunge, 1990s, Pacific Northwest
Early influences (from Massachusetts!) KAOS-fm radio and Calvin Johnson
Out There (Dinosaur Jr.) 1993
Feel the Pain (Dinosaur Jr.) 1994
Good Enough (Mudhoney) 1991
Cry for a Shadow (Beat Happening) 1991
Seattle
Smells Like Teen Spirit (Nirvana) 1991
All Apologies (Nirvana) 1993
Spoonman (Soundgarden) 1994
Better Man (Pearl Jam) 1994
California
Interstate Love Song (Stone Temple Pilots) 1994
Doll Parts (Hole) 1994
Idaho
Big Dipper (Built to Spill) 1994
Untrustable / Part 2 (Built to Spill) 1997
Hour 8: 1990s Alternative
UK early 1990s popular on College Radio in the USA
Tonight I Fancy Myself (The Beautiful South) 1990. From Hull, England
Right Here, Right Now (Jesus Jones) 1990. From Wiltshire, England
Grey Cell Green (Ned's Atomic Dustbin) 1991. From Stourbridge, near Birmingham, England
Yr Own World (Blue Airplanes) 1991. From Bristol, England
Fortune Cookie Prize (Beat Happening) 1992. From Olympia, Washington
Line Song (Shrimp Boat) 1993. From Chicago, Illinois
Hour 9: Accessible (Beautiful) Alternative Music
The 1980s
Avalon (Roxy Music) 1982. From London, England
Down on Mission Street (Lloyd Cole and the Commotions) 1984. From Glasgow, Scotland
Among the Americans (10,000 Maniacs) 1985. From Jamestown, New York
Up On The Sun (The Meat Puppets) 1985. From Phoenix, Arizona
You (Tuxedomoon) 1987. From San Francisco, California
Birthday (The Sugar Cubes) 1988. From Reykjavik, Iceland
You Keep It All In (The Beautiful South) 1989. From Hull, England
Angels with Dirty Faces (Los Lobos) 1993. From Los Angeles, California
Mustard (Latin Playboys) 1999. From Los Angeles, California
Sylvia (Creeper Lagoon) 1997. From San Francisco, California
Is It Wicked Not To Care? (Belle & Sebastian) 1998. From Glasgow, Scotland
Virginia Reel Around the Fountain (The Halo Benders) 1998. From Boise, Idaho and Olympia, Washington.
Hour 10: The New Millennium
1999
Millennium Cars (Keith Secola) 1999. Ojibwa singer from Cook, Minnesota
Waitin' for a Superman (Is it Getting Heavy?) (the Flaming Lips) 1999. From Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Carry the Zero (Built to Spill) 1999. From Boise, Idaho
Else (Built to Spill) 1999. From Boise, Idaho
2000
Balls (Sparks) 2000. From Southern California
Legal Man (Belle & Sebastian) 2000. From Glasgow, Scotland
The New You (Tim Keegan & Departure Lounge) 2000. From London, England
The Littlest Birds (The Be Good Tanyas) 2000. From Vancouver, British Columbia
The Sailor in Love with the Sea (The 6ths) 2000. From Massachusetts (Stephin Merritt)
Bohemian Like You (The Dandy Warhols) 2000. From Portland, Oregon
Later On
Elephant Song (Sky Cries Mary) 2003. From Seattle, Washington
Museum of Idiots (They Might Be Giants) 2004. From New York City
One Chance (Modest Mouse) 2004. From Seattle and Portland
Hour 11: Below the Equator
New Zealand (and Flying Nun Records)
Six Months in a Leaky Boat (Split Enz) 1982.
Loving Grapevine (Jean-Paul Sartre Experience) 1986.
The Crying Room (David Mitchell and Denise Roughen) 1996.
The Record Store (The Brunettes) 2004.
The Sun (The Naked and Famous) 2010.
Australia
Don't Change (INXS) 1983.
Right Here (The Go-Betweens) 1987.
Beds Are Burning (Midnight Oil) 1987.
I'm a Believer (Anita Lane) 1993.
Beautiful Trash (Lanu) 2007. ( Lance Ferguson is originally from New Zealand)
Morning Song (The Babe Rainbow) 2019.
South Africa
Bafana Bafana (Cop On the Edge) 2010.
Fire Is Low (Freshlyground) 2010.
Down South (Jeremy Loops) 2015.
Hour 12: Europe in the 80s
Electronic, Industrial, and Experimental
Cars (Gary Numan) 1979. From London, England
Collapsing New People (Fad Gadget) 1985. From London, England
Yü-Gung (Einstürzende Neubauten) 1985. From Berlin, Germany
Headhunter (Front 242) 1988. From Belgium
Sympathy for the Devil (Dem Teufel Zugeneigt) (Laibach) 1989. From Slovenia
More Mainstream and Popular
Up On The Catwalk (Simple Minds) 1984. From Glasgow, Scotland
Marcia Baila (Les Rita Mitsouko) 1985. From Paris, France
Ask (The Smiths) 1986. From Manchester, England
Just Like Heaven (The Cure) 1987. From Crawley, West Sussex, England
Björk in the 1990s
Human Behavior (Björk) 1993. From Reykjavik, Iceland
Covering 1980s Alternative Songs decades later
Fade to Grey (Nouvelle Vague) 2006. From Paris, France
Hour 13: New York City
Introduction to the New York City scene
Chinatown (Luna) 1995.
The 2000s
You Only Live Once (The Strokes) 2005.
Forever Song (Mosquitos) 2003.
Don't Tell Them (Paul Brill) 2006.
Someone Great (LCD Soundsystem) 2007.
Two Weeks (Grizzly Bear) 2009.
Laughing With (Regina Spektor) 2009.
Knotty Pine (Dirty Projectors & David Byrne) 2009.
Tragically Alright (Ex-Cops featuring Ariel Pink) 2014.
Give Me Just A Minute (Computer Magic) 2015.
Crying in the Sunshine (Miniature Tigers) 2017.
Seventeen (Sharon Van Etten) 2019.
We are in the 20s now
Overlord (Dirty Projectors) 2020.
Everything is Gonna Be All Right (Infinity Song) 2020.
Hour 14: East Coast
Vampire Weekend and Rostam (New York City, but Rostam lives in Los Angeles now)
A-Punk (Vampire Weekend) 2008.
Bike Dream (Rostam) 2017.
Rich Man (Vampire Weekend) 2019
New England
Gigantic (Pixies) 1988. From Boston, Massachusetts
Art Isn't Real (City of Sin) (Deer Tick) 2007. From Providence, Rhode Island
Sleepyhead (Passion Pit) 2008. From Cambridge, Massachusetts
Just One Look (The Derevolutions) 2018. From Boston, Massachusetts
Have Some Fun
Considering A Move To Memphis (The Colorblind James Experience) 1987. From Rochester, New York
Every Hour Here (Innocence Mission) 1991. From Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Ohm (Yo La Tengo) 2013. From Hoboken, New Jersey
Mid-Atlantic
Arpeggiator (Fugazi) 1998. From Washington, DC
Shade And Honey (Sparklehorse) 2006. From Richmond, Virginia
Easy (Thao with The Get Down Stay Down) 2009. From Falls Church, Virginia (now relocated to San Francisco)
Hour 15: Canada
The 2000s, Anglophone Canada
Anthems For a Seventeen Year Old Girl (Broken Social Scene) 2003. Toronto, Ontario
Precious Metals (Russian Futurists) 2003. Toronto, Ontario
Haiti (Arcade Fire) 2004. Montreal, Quebec
Sing Me Spanish Techno (The New Pornographers) 2005. Vancouver, British Columbia
Jamelia (Caribou) 2010. Hamilton, Ontario
What about Francophone Canada? (it is more “pop” than alternative)
Montréal (Ariane Moffatt) 2005. Montreal, Quebec
Tourne encore (Salomé Leclerc) 2011. Sainte-Françoise, Quebec
Rêves d'été (Laurence Nerbonne) 2015. Gatineau, Quebec
The 10's in Anglophone CanadaThe Lamb (Little Scream) 2011. Montreal, Quebec
Da Dunda (Slam Dunk) 2012. Victoria, British Columbia
Amerika (Wintersleep) 2016. Halifax, Nova Scotia
Utopia (Austra) 2017. Toronto, Ontario
Saved by a Waif (Alvvays) 2017. Toronto, Ontario (but from Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island)
Texas (Jennifer Castle) 2018. Toronto, Ontario
Hour 16: The American South
Rockabilly and Psychobilly
Bales of Cocaine (Reverend Horton Heat) 1993. From Dallas, Texas
Deja Varoom (Southern Culture on the Skids) 1997. From Chapel Hill, North Carolina
College Towns
Id Engager (Of Montreal) 2008. From Athens, Georgia
Ain’t No Rest for the Wicked (Cage the Elephant) 2009. From Bowling Green, Kentucky (but they have relocated to London, England)
Digging for Something (Superchunk) 2010. From Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Deep South
Song Against Sex (Neutral Milk Hotel) 1996. From Ruston, Louisiana
Can’t Hold On (The Black Lips) 2017. From Atlanta, Georgia
Hungry Ghost (Hurray for the Riff Raff) 2017. From New Orleans, Louisiana
Texas and Oklahoma
Do You Realize (The Flaming Lips) 2002. From Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Actor Out of Work (St. Vincent) 2009. From Dallas, Texas
Champaign, Illinois (Old 97's, covering a song written by Bob Dylan and Carl Perkins) 2010. From Dallas, Texas
Hour 17: The Midwest
Illinois in the 1990s; Alternative Country, Synth-pop, and Emo.
In the 1980s and early 1990s Chicago was the scene where House Music (alternative Dance music) was emerging, and it would go on to strongly influence electronic dance music, trance, and various global forms of dance music. While not as significant to global culture as New York’s contribution of Hip-Hop and rap (rap itself is influenced from the toasting of Jamaican DJs), the people of Chicago can justly be proud of that form of alternative music. But, alternative and independent music as we are exploring in this series holds closer to rock, punk, folk, synth pop, and country. What was going on in Chicago in the 1990s? Well, one thing going on was a flourishing of a punk-country or alternative country form, exemplified by WILCO and The Waco Brothers (whose members include several members of the Mekons, a first wave punk band from England that had relocated to Chicago).
Plenty Tough Union Made (The Waco Brothers) 1995. From Chicago, Illinois (I'll play the 2020 version from the Resist album)
Can’t Stand It (WILCO) 1999. From Chicago, Illinois
Other stuff going on in the late 1990s, included emo music, ("emo" for "emotional"). This was a widespread alternative genre, and I want to share an example from Braid, a band out of Central Illinois, where I have lived for the past couple decades. But first, the retro-New Wave sound from the Pulsars, two brothers from the Chicago area, singing about their pet robot. Science fiction has been a frequent theme in some alternative music forms.
My Pet Robot (The Pulsars) 1997. From Chicago, Illinois
Milwaukee Sky Rocket (Braid) 1998. From Champaign-Urbana, Illinois
Indiana and Ohio
Takmit (Saintseneca) 2014. From Columbus, Ohio
Anthropocene (Peter Oren) 2017. From Bloomington, Indiana
Maria (Frances Luke Accord) 2018. From South Bend, Indiana
Trees We Couldn't Tell the Size of (wished bone) 2019. From Athens, Ohio
The National
Carin at the Liquor Store (The National) 2017. From Cincinnati, Ohio
Turtleneck (The National) 2017. From Cincinnati, Ohio
Northern bands
Holocene (Bon Iver) 2011. From Eau Claire, Wisconsin
You Were Born (Cloud Cult) 2010. From Duluth, Minnesota
Mississippi (The Cactus Blossoms) 2016. From Minneapolis, Minnesota
Concerning The UFO Sighting Near Highland, Illinois (Sufjan Stevens) 2005. From Michigan, but he has lived in New York since the late 1990s)
We will conclude this episode with two more from Chicago. Andrew Bird is a classically trained musician with a degree in violin performance, who seems to be involved in almost all forms of music and an unimaginably wide range of instruments. We will hear his 2007 meditation on the course of history and the end of empires, Scythian Empires. Then, we will hear a song from OK Go, who are now based in Los Angeles, California, but got their start in Chicago, and you may have seen their videos, which are often attention-grabbing.
Scythian Empires (Andrew Bird) 2007. From Chicago, Illinois
This Too Shall Pass (OK Go) 2010. From Chicago, Illinois
Hour 18: The Pacific Northwest
Washington State
Every Iceburg Is Afire (Sky Cries Mary) 1995. From Seattle, Washington
No Sunlight (Death Cab For Cutie) 2008. From Bellingham, Washington
Helplessness Blues (Fleet Foxes) 2011. From Seattle, Washington
Portland
The Dandy Warhols' T.V. Theme... (The Dandy Warhols) 1995. From Portland, Oregon
Oakland (Genders) 2013. From Portland, Oregon (bands with the same name exist in Texas and Israel)
Chinese Translation (M. Ward) 2006. From Portland, Oregon
Mystic Isle (Jared Mees) 2017. From Portland, Oregon
Wide Role (Rose City Band) 2019. From Portland, Oregon
Doug Martsch and Built to Spill
Stay (Doug Martsch) 2002. From Boise, Idaho
Goin' Against Your Mind (Built To Spill) 2006. From Boise, Idaho
Liar (Built To Spill) 2006. From Boise, Idaho
Aisle 13 (Built To Spill) 2009. From Boise, Idaho
Hour 19: California and the Southwest
Early stuff
Jane Says (Jane's Addiction) 1987.
Buddy Holly (Weezer) 1994.
Short Skirt/Long Jacket (Cake) 2002.
Intelligent
Letter From Belgium (The Mountain Goats) 2004.
New Roman Times (Camper Van Beethoven) 2004.
My Family's Role In The World Revolution (Beirut) 2007.
Bay Area
Hey World (Remote Control Version) (Michael Franti & Spearhead) 2009.
Bizness (tUnE-yArDs) 2011. From Oakland, California
Palmreader (Sonny & The Sunsets) 2013. From San Francisco
Southern California
Cloudlight (Eskmo) 2010. From Los Angeles (but originally from Connecticut)
Sometime Around Midnight (The Airborne Toxic Event) 2009.
Simple Song (The Shins) 2012.
Ends of the Earth (Lord Huron) 2013.
Hour 20: The United Kingdom
The 80s
Song to the Siren (This Mortal Coil) 1984.
Do It Anyway (Woodentops) 1985.
One Great Thing (Big Country) 1986.
You Trip Me Up (The Jesus & Mary Chain) 1985.
Hit the North, Part 1 (The Fall) 1988.
Powder Keg (The Fall) 1996.
The 90s
Brimful Of Asha (Cornershop) 1997.
I Don’t Love Anyone (Belle & Sebastian) 1999.
The 10s
Are Friends Electric? (Gary Numan) 1979 (this version is from 2012).
Fireside (Arctic Monkeys) 2013.
3WW (Alt-J) 2017.
Aside from Growing Old (Cate Le Bon) 2017.
Semicircle Song (The Go! Team) 2018. From Brighton, England (this album featured young musicians from Michigan)
Shady Grove (Yola) 2019.
Hour 21: Europe
Iceland
You've Been Flirting Again (Björk) 1995
Með Blóðnasir (Sigur Rós) 2005
Dirty Paws (Of Monsters and Men) 2012
Sweden
Young Folks (Peter Bjorn and John) 2007
I Was Jesus (Hello Saferide) 2014
Trouble in the Streets (Goat) 2016
Switzerland, Portugal, Belgium
Motherland (Silver Firs) 2013
Dry Dry Land (Tap Tap) 2010
Easy (Absynthe Minded) 2019
France
Pas les saisons (Skydancers Remix) (Mina Tindle) 2015
Les Moissons (Radio Elvis) 2016
La vie facile (Julie Blanche) 2015
Russia
Берег (Shore) (Забавные Игры [Funny Games]) 2019
Издалека (Izdaleka) (Как Никогда [Kak Nikogda]) 2020
Hour 22: The Folk Revival
Fly Around My Pretty Little Miss (Built To Spill) 2001.
Skinny Love (Bon Iver) 2007.
God? (The Dodos) 2008.
5 Years Time (Noah & The Whale) 2008.
Die (Iron & Wine) 2009.
The Cave (Mumford And Sons) 2009.
Starving Robins (Horse Feathers) 2010.
From Finner (Of Monsters and Men) 2011.
Ho Hey (The Lumineers) 2012.
Lightning Bolt (Jake Bugg) 2012.
Time to Run (Lord Huron) 2012.
You Take Yours, I'll Take Mine (Matthew Mole) 2013.
Over Your Roof (Frances Luke Accord) 2014.
Visions (Saintseneca) 2014.
Noah (Amber Run) 2015.
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