20 Songs You NEED to Hear

Поделиться
HTML-код

Комментарии • 267

  • @okasa64
    @okasa64 3 месяца назад +26

    Here is a playlist of the songs listed above:
    ruclips.net/p/PLcKh5uvyw3hZ3HfKuuoJh1QeoAl-YAdaA&si=1u4cLo78ss_PmiZ6

    • @commontater8630
      @commontater8630 3 месяца назад +1

      Thank you! I started to do the same myself, but now I'll use yours. Shout out to Samuel: how about you pin this playlist to the top?

    • @samuel_andreyev
      @samuel_andreyev  3 месяца назад +8

      Done. Thanks!!

    • @commontater8630
      @commontater8630 3 месяца назад

      @@samuel_andreyev 👍

  • @anaether
    @anaether 3 месяца назад +42

    "I don't know why Mike Love, who's this kind of... well, we won't get into that" 😆

    • @jgmbennett
      @jgmbennett 3 месяца назад +4

      It's a signature arrangement by Van Dyke Parks. Why not give praise where praise is due?

    • @moshearturogarcia-ribbi6804
      @moshearturogarcia-ribbi6804 3 месяца назад

      Hahaha so good

    • @alfredoaran3372
      @alfredoaran3372 3 месяца назад +2

      Honestly I lack the context to get this, any one care to explain?

  • @calamari3707
    @calamari3707 3 месяца назад +12

    I don’t find the dumbness of the beach boys to be a downside, but an extremely charming upside to their music. It’s an endearing and friendly quality.

  • @jacobscardino4330
    @jacobscardino4330 3 месяца назад +4

    I feel you 100% on the white light white heat album. Sister Ray, ooh boy. And I love 16 shells from a 30. 6; some of my favorite lyrics EVER are “so I spent all my buttons on an old pack mule” and “woah you gotta meet me by the knuckles of the skinny bone tree.”

  • @alistairmaleficent8776
    @alistairmaleficent8776 3 месяца назад +7

    Every list should be prefaced in this way. Bravo, maestro.

  • @arjay9745
    @arjay9745 17 дней назад +1

    Love this. A glimpse of a serious musician's personal, private loves. I listened to each song (even the ones I already new), and tried to imagine what you heard that I might not have. Wish I had a platform for doing the same :).

  • @rwtrpt
    @rwtrpt 3 месяца назад +1

    Nice list. I love “Ooh Baby Baby” by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles. It follows “genre conventions” gracefully, but also transcends them by being so very beautiful.

  • @gustavonecochea3496
    @gustavonecochea3496 3 месяца назад +12

    "The dumbness serves an aesthetic purpose." Is an amazing zinger 😂. This and the comment about Saint-Saëns living long enough had me in stitches

    • @jasonbrianbronson
      @jasonbrianbronson 3 месяца назад

      This is such a perfect description of The Beach Boys, and it's also why I love them so much. Bravo, Samuel Andreyev!!

    • @gustavonecochea3496
      @gustavonecochea3496 3 месяца назад +4

      P.S. It would be amazing to hear an analysis of Animal Collective's music, especially Alvin Row from Spirit They're Gone, Spirit They've Vanished. Or Acid Mother Temple's very long jams (La Novia, Psycho Buddha, etc.).

  • @genuinefreewilly5706
    @genuinefreewilly5706 3 месяца назад +12

    Can't dispute anything from that list. Glad the Kinks made the list.

    • @Hydrocorax
      @Hydrocorax 3 месяца назад +3

      Especially on Ray Davies' 80th birthday.

    • @lawsonj39
      @lawsonj39 3 месяца назад +1

      Samuel's point about the Kinks going in the non-hippy direction is so right: they celebrated Englishness in ways that anticipate Brexit.

  • @commontater8630
    @commontater8630 3 месяца назад +3

    Thank you.. I'm unfamiliar with a good half of the songs (or at least the particular recordings), so lots of fun. I must say I was flabbergasted to see one of my alltime faves, White Light / White Heat, on the list. I couldn't agree with you more about how it feels to listen to it!

  • @gwfhegel5045
    @gwfhegel5045 3 месяца назад +17

    Really good and diverse list… I didn’t expect Soft Machine! The Third album is really good although I like their fusion “Allan Holdsworth” era.

    • @bonzey1171
      @bonzey1171 3 месяца назад

      Love Soft Machine

    • @krzysztofcybulski5559
      @krzysztofcybulski5559 3 месяца назад

      @@bonzey1171 I'm sure you've had that conversation a number of times, but in my opinion the best part of Soft Machine's "Allan Holdsworth era" was Allan Holdsworth himself, who moved on rather soon after Bundles was released, leaving Jenkins' SM to a slow and steady decay... "Third" is great. In my opinion, though, the best SM stuff was captured live in between "Third" and "Fifth" and gets released by Cuneiform every now and then...

    • @bongodroid
      @bongodroid 3 месяца назад +2

      I did own Bundles decades ago. It´s not bad but I feel they had lost so much of what I loved about them after "Six" that it had became a separate thing. I do appreciate some of the Jenkins era but.. it´s something else than the older Soft Machine I love.

  • @badlula17
    @badlula17 3 месяца назад +6

    Thanks for the recomendations, I think this channel is doing important work creating bridges between classical and “popular” music.
    I’d also like to recomend the album “To be Kind” by Swans. It’s technically a rock album but the genre is pushed beyond its breaking point. It’s almost reminiscent of Bruckner in how primal, large scale and patient the music is.
    For me, the definitional experimental album of the century so far.

  • @alxvdark
    @alxvdark 3 месяца назад +2

    I can't even get through the video, you've sent me off listening to everything and that leads to more things... Great stuff. Thanks for this!

  • @villetoivonen3360
    @villetoivonen3360 6 дней назад

    Characterising "Moon in June" as Proustian was brilliant! Whereas Proust, among other things, encapsulated a certain social ethos at the beginning of the 20th century and, at the same time, delved deeper into the individual experience and its conditions, Moon in June seems to capture a whole segment of the pop music of the 60s as well as forge ahead into a new mode of free-flowing expression in popular music - the first half being like a collection of associative snapshots of the past and the second half more stream-of-consciousness expression.

  • @LeVercune
    @LeVercune 3 месяца назад +15

    Would be really interesting hearing you talking about Aphex Twin.

  • @germanchocolatecake8143
    @germanchocolatecake8143 3 месяца назад +2

    Other pop song masterpieces include but certainly aren't limited to: "Mayor of Simpleton" by XTC, "You Get What You Give" by New Radicals, "Sowing the Seeds of Love" by Tears for Fears, and "Sledgehammer" by Peter Gabriel.

  • @curiousnomad
    @curiousnomad Месяц назад

    Thanks so much both for your music but also for the incredible depth and breadth of your musical knowledge and appreciation of musical history and composition. Cole Porter, Beefheart, Soft Machine… etc - wow. I’d love to take a history of music course with you ( and I’ve taken many of them). I’m sure you’d be contrasting Palestrina with Reich and Senegalese drumming, Bach to Boulez, or how someday Beefheart and Zappa will be part of the American Song Book. It’s so refreshing to see someone who sees the totality of musical expression as a big picture and not the often “classical or jazz, pop or rock” etc.

  • @culturefan
    @culturefan 3 месяца назад +2

    Re: Beach Boys, define of what do you mean by dumb? I never thought of there music in that light.

  • @zacattacx5637
    @zacattacx5637 3 месяца назад +1

    Great list Samuel. These individual tracks all provide an "experience" so to speak.
    Another great experience track, for those who haven't heard it, is Frankie Teardrop by Suicide. It's unforgettable.

  • @bf0189
    @bf0189 3 месяца назад +1

    Great diverse list!
    One of my personal favorite pop songs is Kraftwerk - Neon Lights. There is something haunting about the vocals, the melody and the effects they used on their synthesizers. Florian Schneider knew how to write a great melody and was clearly classical trained or at least heavily influenced.
    One of my other favorites is Another Star from Stevie Wonder. It might be his all time best work which is saying something. It's such a powerful song with its Latin rhythms, the instrumentations and Stevie's delivery. He's able to turn these relatively simple lyrics into something so personal and touching.

  • @russellhenrybieber6620
    @russellhenrybieber6620 3 месяца назад +1

    Fantiastic list, love to see that the Kinks made the cut. Was not suprised to see Beefheart and Velvet Underground up there. If you like the grit of those artists I highly recomended the Animal Speaks by the Numbers Band, Smile by the Fall, and Marquee Moon by Television. Each song is a severly underrated.

  • @high_tension_house
    @high_tension_house 3 месяца назад +13

    I'm Italian and it's incredible that your favourite of these song is the Adriano Celentano's one 😂 Btw love your channel, the best channel about music on RUclips✨

    • @samuel_andreyev
      @samuel_andreyev  3 месяца назад

      Grazie!!!

    • @fabioalbertani945
      @fabioalbertani945 3 месяца назад

      Not only is all made up words but musically is all in the same chord (kind of modal I would say). Really unique

    • @samuel_andreyev
      @samuel_andreyev  3 месяца назад +2

      @fabioalbertani945 that’s right-not even a chord really but more like a drone. An amazing track.

  • @dariocaporuscio8701
    @dariocaporuscio8701 3 месяца назад +3

    Great Beatles pick, you should have mentioned the immaculate horn playing by Alan Civil, horn player from Berliner and Philharmonia...
    I'll take my time to make my list!

  • @feinstruktur
    @feinstruktur 3 месяца назад

    Thanks for sharing this remarkable and quirky list!

  • @bonzey1171
    @bonzey1171 3 месяца назад +1

    No Backstage Pass by Caravan is lovely. As is Didn't Matter Anyway by Hatfield and the North. Richard Sinclair is a great musician
    Mumps is also ace. The Northettes were such brilliant vocalists

  • @KingJorman
    @KingJorman 3 месяца назад +1

    coincidence that Cole Porter and the Beach Boys mention Plymouth Rock?

  • @chrismcwilliams2778
    @chrismcwilliams2778 3 месяца назад +3

    Great list and great commentary! Most "lists" are pure B.S.! Can't wait for the next one! Also, loved the metaphor about the cards for the Syd Barrett song

  • @gcangur1
    @gcangur1 3 месяца назад

    Samuel, you are a gift to us

  • @bongodroid
    @bongodroid 3 месяца назад +1

    Oh.. I did not expect you to namedrop Aphex Twin or VU´s menacing WLWH, but the way you did it immediately made sense to me. Music shouldn´t always be comfortable. ** The Kinks are possibly the most underrated of the famous "classic" rock bands. ** Sometimes I actually prefer the more spontaneous late 1968 demo version(s) of Moon in June over the one on Third.

  • @diegobeirao8661
    @diegobeirao8661 3 месяца назад +2

    Maybe I'm being biased because I'm brazilian, but I think every list of must-hear songs that doesn't include Tom Jobim is incomplete

    • @samuel_andreyev
      @samuel_andreyev  3 месяца назад +1

      I’ll check him out. Thanks!

    • @diegobeirao8661
      @diegobeirao8661 3 месяца назад

      ​@@samuel_andreyev i would sugest the albuns "Urubu", Matita Pere" and "passarim" for a start. ;) I hope you enjoy.

  • @nicholaswerner8170
    @nicholaswerner8170 3 месяца назад +2

    How about Animal Collective? Would love to hear your opinion on songs from early and recent, namely "Leaf House" and "Who Could Win A Rabbit" from Sung Tongs and "My Girls" from Merriweather Post Pavilion. You'd like the animalistic (no pun intended) fervor and experimentalism in their music, including metric modulations and a lot of vocal fireworks (Fireworks also a great song!).

  • @stubblejumper
    @stubblejumper 3 месяца назад +2

    i have a british friend who goes to the opera every weekend, we talk about mahler and autechre and xenakis and the rest. one band that i've gotten him deeply into (this still dumbfounds me) is slipknot, particularly their first record. it's white light white heat to the extreme, there are caveman polyrhythms and a ragged almost jazzy approach to timing and drum fills, it has an organized chaos feeling that reminds a bit of beefheart. i'm not exactly championing it for it's written complexity, but something like the song "eyeless" is without a doubt extremely unique, i think it's a must hear

  • @Ifoundtheanswer
    @Ifoundtheanswer 17 дней назад

    I adore Anything Goes!

  • @franciscocanas5686
    @franciscocanas5686 3 месяца назад +1

    Great work, Samuel. Ithink it would be interesting if you analyzed some of your favorite albums (jazz/rock) for us. Perhaps providing a list some of your favorites would also be engaging.

  • @bnfox
    @bnfox Месяц назад

    love your channel and all the different topics you cover and your wide breadth of musical adventures....really enjoyed this video as well...and thought it would be fun to submit my own list, as hard as it was to narrow down!
    1. Big Star - Back of My Car
    2.MX 80 Sound - Train to Loveland
    3. Family Fodder - Playing Golf with My Flesh Crawling
    4.Alice Cooper - Halo Of Flies
    5. The Groundhogs - I Love You, Miss Ogyny
    6.Stooges - I Got a Right
    7.Everything But The Girl - The Night I Heard Caruso Sing
    8.Fleetwood Mac - The Green Manalishi
    9.King Crimson - Starless and Bible Blac
    10.Robert Fripp - Exposure
    11. Eno - Baby's On Fire
    12.The Beatles - Tomorrow Never Knows
    13.Jimi Hendrix - Machine Gun
    14.Van Der Graaf Generator - A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers
    15.Wishbone Ash - Time Was
    16.Public Image - Public Image
    17.Skating Polly - Don't Leave Me Gravity
    18.Cheap Trick - Daddy Should Have Stayed In High School
    19.Todd Rundgren - Couldn't I Just Tell You
    20.The Pop Group - We Are All Prostitutes

  • @stansfieldcolin
    @stansfieldcolin 3 месяца назад

    Samuel, this was very interesting (and surprising)! I very much enjoy your wide spread of interests and knowledge. How about a similar exercise to this covering your "Twenty best jazz tracks". Also, I'd love to hear what you've got to say about Monteverdi. Many thanks.

  • @jasnesciemnienie9107
    @jasnesciemnienie9107 3 месяца назад

    The Residents definitely deserve a spot here too. „Spotted Pinto Bean” is a wild ride

  • @MrKrisstain
    @MrKrisstain 3 месяца назад +3

    Someone with energy, create a playlist of these songs :D

    • @mqrk4187
      @mqrk4187 3 месяца назад +2

      Did so and tried linking it multiple times and working around the filter, but RUclips automatically deletes any comment with a link on it, sorry

    • @robertmc3103
      @robertmc3103 3 месяца назад +1

      I made a playlist, but if I cannot put a link in a comment, then you will have to search for it.

  • @not_emerald
    @not_emerald 3 месяца назад +4

    Many interesting observations, Samuel! My musical tastes aren't all that broad to be honest, but I always enjoy your suggestions, and some of them really stuck with me. I was caught off guard with the overlap between this list and my popular music taste though.

  • @pedterson
    @pedterson 3 месяца назад +2

    Beautiful choices! I'm tempted to list 20 of my favourite songs now, but instead, stretching your list a little further, I'll just add Joanna Newsom's Emily from her album Ys (2006). That whole album is a miracle to me, without past or future comparison in all of its qualities.

  • @eamonnkelly8945
    @eamonnkelly8945 3 месяца назад +1

    I have a couple (I'm a guitarist, so my taste skews that way).
    My Bloody Valentine - To Here Knows When
    Guitarist Kevin Shields is a pioneer in 'effects' guitar, and his masterpiece is undeniably the album Loveless, which almost bankrupted the bands label Creation Records prior to Oasis. Shields' main innovation to guitar playing is the 'glide' picking, whereby chords are strummed at the same time that the tremolo arm is depressed, which, when combined with the reverse reverb and fuzz that has become synonymous with the band, creates this melted, 'vacuum cleaner' sound. Honestly, throw a dart at a track from the Loveless album, it's a masterpiece.
    The Flaming Lips - Race for the Prize
    the album 'The Soft Bulletin' came at a low point in The Flamin Lips' career, their guitarist had just left, and a number of experiments (such as the 4LP Zaireeka, designed to play simultaneously and to draw attention to the space of the room it was being played in similar to something like Alvin Lucier's experiments in the same vein) commercially failed. The album was an attempt to write songs without the big guitar sounds that they were known for (see: She Don't Use Jelly), and although they aren't totally strict with that rule, much of the instrumentation on the album succeeds at that goal. Race for the Prize, the album's opener, starts with these super compressed drums, recorded in the confined space of a bathroom, more compression being added at the mixing stage.
    Xiu Xiu - Master of the Bump (Kurt Stambaugh, I Can Feel the Soil Falling Over My Head)
    Xiu Xiu are one of my favourite bands, Jamie Stewart writes about sexuality and gender from such an alienated, almost perverse perspective. Master of the Bump I see as a parody of all the big macho guitar-solo songs of the late 80s and early 90s. It's this tender, almost whispered song about toxic masculinity, and ends with the first few phrases of one of these solos that is left dangling in this rather insecure manner.
    Big Thief - Jenni
    Adrienne Lenker is a songwriter that people should probably pay more attention to, she's writing some of the most exciting guitar music today - her 'quarantine' solo album Songs and Instrumentals is one of my favourites in recent history. For Jenni, Lenker and her bandmate Buck Meek tied a guitar to the roof of a barn and hit it with drum sticks, physically swinging the guitar in the room, creating this otherworldly swirling effect.

  • @rossanopinelli5150
    @rossanopinelli5150 3 месяца назад

    Dear Samuel, you are an excellent composer and popularizer, as well as a great connoisseur of the subject. I venture to add a couple of songs (there would be MANY others) that I particularly love: Experience by Gentle Giant and New Frontier by Donald Fagen. Thanks for your attention and keep up the good work!

  • @mrhenu
    @mrhenu 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm glad you also have a good taste in non-classical music!

  • @johannesbowman2194
    @johannesbowman2194 3 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for recognizing Adriano Celentano! Also, I am glad that we have similar tastes in terms of some of the song picks.

  • @guille____
    @guille____ 3 месяца назад

    interesting list! Learned a lot of new music

  • @mestresuzuka
    @mestresuzuka 3 месяца назад +5

    do more of these lists! I would also love if you analyzed in depth one of these songs

    • @samuel_andreyev
      @samuel_andreyev  3 месяца назад

      Which one out of the 20 would you most like to see an analysis of?

    • @mestresuzuka
      @mestresuzuka 3 месяца назад +3

      @@samuel_andreyev Any one of those would be great, but if I had to pick one I would probably go with Sabotage, mainly because I'm interested in hearing your analysis on a rap rock song. Or maybe Whip It, since it's one of my favorites too!

    • @stevealleman9206
      @stevealleman9206 3 месяца назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing. I'd love to hear Samuel's thoughts on the harmonic structure of Autumn Almanac.

  • @larrynova100
    @larrynova100 3 месяца назад +1

    You 're a good man, dude..very good selection and explaining, thanks from the ❤

  • @srogamina
    @srogamina 3 месяца назад +1

    Would you mind to do more of lists? Like, the darkest pieces of music or any other unique value.

  • @davetye
    @davetye 8 дней назад

    A bit like Alan Partridge's radio phone-in, What is the best thing?
    Anyway the correct answer is the Waterboys' studio version of Van Morrison's Sweet Thing. Perfection.

  • @danb2622
    @danb2622 3 месяца назад +1

    Good to see Kate Bush on your list. She’s such an amazing talent.

  • @davidyounng9061
    @davidyounng9061 3 месяца назад

    Probably the best song of the 2000's is "Pink Bullets" by The Shins . Beautiful melancholy melody and these lyrics " It's just like a book that you read in reverse. So you understand less as the pages turn or movie so crass and awkwardly cast that even I could be the star." GENIUS!

  • @arisumego
    @arisumego 3 месяца назад +3

    what exactly do you mean by “dumb”
    in that sweeping statement about the beach boys’ music? do you mean they’re actually dumb and poorly made or not worth anyone’s time or that they’re like… silly, but not necessarily bad? just curious because im a tad confused

  • @montego2
    @montego2 3 месяца назад

    Loved this selection, though my own personal choice from the Kinks would probably be "Waterloo Sunset".

  • @jonathandore7521
    @jonathandore7521 3 месяца назад

    Something you might enjoy Samuel is, well, almost anything by They Might Be Giants -- in their forty years of output I can't think of another act that so consistently produces both superbly catchy melodies and smart, quirky lyrics. You may already know them, but if not try some songs like "I Palindrome I", "Dead", "Turn Around", "The Statue Got Me High" or "Mr Horrible", or little miniatures like "Exquisite Dead Guy" or "Weep Day". I don't listen to much pop music, but I play their songs all the time.

  • @guest_informant
    @guest_informant 3 месяца назад +2

    I'd never come across Prisencolinensinainciusol. It's a masterpiece. And the comments under the video are hilarious eg
    "What's your wifi password?"
    "It's on the back of the router"
    Back of the router:

  • @kevinlynchcomposer
    @kevinlynchcomposer 3 месяца назад +1

    You could have any number of Cohen songs here, overused but the still brilliant "Hallelujah", "Dance me to the end of love" and "A thousand kisses deep" which is a truly great song in my opinion. Bohemian Rhapsody is self indulgent to my ear, structurally it is innovative for a pop song but it's a bit of an overblown whine.
    I think Bob Dylan could have a mention here as well.
    "I think it's going to rain today" by Randy Newman is another great song, just perfect.

    • @samuel_andreyev
      @samuel_andreyev  3 месяца назад

      I regret that I didn’t choose You Want it Darker from Cohen’s last album. That was my original choice and I somehow forgot it when I was preparing to film. That last album is OUTSTANDING!

    • @kevinlynchcomposer
      @kevinlynchcomposer 3 месяца назад

      @@samuel_andreyev agreed. I found it tremendously consoling at a difficult time.

  • @markwhite2207
    @markwhite2207 22 дня назад

    Interesting list including one of my obsessions, Tom Waits. Another obsession is late-period Talk Talk, especially the final two albums. I never see anyone analysing them, how about it Sam?

  • @Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole
    @Acoustic-Rabbit-Hole 3 месяца назад +5

    Prince and the Revolution: "When Doves Cry." The full album version that is about six minutes long. For the songwriting and for the guitar work & synthesizer improvisation at the end. // There is the legendary story of how Prince, in the studio with the engineers suddenly removed all the base tracks to the song at the very last minute before mix-down. As the final mix began turned to everyone and said, "No one would have the _balls_ to do this."

  • @lukemchugh9490
    @lukemchugh9490 3 месяца назад

    The celantano track is amazing....id have picked dead end street from the kinks.....
    Great stuff

  • @tandmark
    @tandmark 3 месяца назад +2

    An interesting and generally excellent list! I've spent much of the evening listening to the songs you mentioned that I'd never heard before. And I'll probably revisit several of them over the next few days. Then I kept thinking of songs I'd add, and wondering if you were familiar with any of them. Ah well, it was a fun way to spend an evening....
    It surprised me that your Beefheart pick wasn't Frownland, about which you made a super video some months ago. This and (I supposed) Moonlight in Vermont have always been my favorites from him. ruclips.net/video/r9lpLm7jwQY/видео.html
    I first ran across Prisencolininsenainciuso (however you spell it) some years ago. Sorry to offer a correction, though -- the staging in your linked RUclips clip isn't anything like an official music video, conceived by Celentano along with the song. It's just one of several stagings broadcast by Italy's RAI network over the years and choreographed by the RAI team. And the staging you offer is far from the best one, which sadly got taken down a couple years ago. This clip however very roughly marries the album version of the song with the best staging (starting around the 2:15 mark). It features an unhinged Raffaela Carra, a corps of impossibly flexible bell-bottomed dancers, and a strategic wall of mirrors: ruclips.net/video/foU3Tgg7VJI/видео.html
    I've never liked Leonard Cohen's music, sorry to admit. My pick for a Canadian entry would be one of these three --
    Summer Wages sung by Ian & Sylvia officially, but Ian Tyson is the only one singing on the track: ruclips.net/video/9oybX65J4dI/видео.html
    The Mary Ellen Carter sung by the late, great Stan Rogers, a song that, as the introduction to this clip makes plain, has saved lives: ruclips.net/video/fT-aEcPgkuA/видео.html
    Or one of the songs by Tragically Hip, such as Fireworks, a song so Canadian, it mentions Bobby Orr: ruclips.net/video/O9wW9ENBPlQ/видео.html
    Only two of your picks are from Black singer-songwriters? Here's two more to help even things out a bit --
    Cab Calloway is better known as a showman than as a songwriter, but he did pen several popular tunes, including Jumpin' Jive. Half of this RUclips clip of the song features Calloway singing it, and the other half is, simply put, the greatest pop dance routine ever filmed: ruclips.net/video/qXZRWa8kyAE/видео.html
    Then there's Rubber Biscuit by a short-lived New York City doo-wop group called The Chips, which fits nicely into your category of songs that are worth hearing because they're stupid but fun: ruclips.net/video/E_D_mwTcsKk/видео.html
    Next, I offer for your inspection a trio of songs that are straight-up in foreign languages --
    The first song has been called the best Brazilian pop song ever. I think Rolling Stone rated it as the 2nd best, but no matter. Aguas de Março/Waters of March is basically a list of the random debris that washes down the streets when the March rains hit Brazil. The idea is that life can be pretty random, but it's also abundant and beautiful, as is the delightful singing by Elis Regina and the song's composer Tom (Antonio Carlos) Jobim:: ruclips.net/video/E1tOV7y94DY/видео.html
    From Belgium comes this heartbreaking French-language hit written and performed by Jacques Brel, Ne me quitte pas/Don't leave me, which RUclips kindly subtitles in English: ruclips.net/video/q_bq5mStroM/видео.html
    There are different accounts of the next song; some say it was written by Serge Gainsbourg, others say it was written by Anna Karina, whose 1967 music video performance of Roller Girl is seen in this clip (which has English-language subtitles). I'll go with it being written by her, claiming for the nonce that it's a legit suggestion in the spirit of your 20-item list: ruclips.net/video/YEbHNhRsq3E/видео.html
    There's no doubt, however, that British folk-rocker Sandy Denny wrote (and first recorded) the haunting tune Who Knows Where the Time Goes, before dying far too young: ruclips.net/video/n2xODjbfYw8/видео.html
    Staying in Britain, I'd like to offer Elvis Costello's intense Watching the Detectives as being a song everyone needs to hear at some point. Truth to tell, his back-catalog is full of songs that richly reward the listener, though I admit that his voice is, for many, very much of an acquired taste: ruclips.net/video/K--POHTLGY0/видео.html
    And finally, a magnificent song of love and longing and separation -- and the literary references are front-and-center -- Tim Buckley's Song to the Siren: ruclips.net/video/vMTEtDBHGY4/видео.html

  • @CentrifugalSatzClock
    @CentrifugalSatzClock 3 месяца назад +1

    Here are three songs to add to that very fun and interesting list!
    1.Flanders Dictum Part of a much larger story it reflects on psychopathic leadership and their planning, as it affects the innocent. Original and unique Omni writing.
    ruclips.net/video/m6CNd1gJ19w/видео.html
    2. Won't give in (Finn Brothers) This is everything a great pop song should be, outsized in pleasurable melody and golden mean form, which Neil Finn had found a predilection for. Note the short white hot center at the golden mean. Very fine writing.
    ruclips.net/video/byPG-_9RKCM/видео.html
    3. I want to be with you, Mandy Moore. Lyrically, it contains everything I hate in a pop song but so what. This is an extreme masterpiece of music mixing, production and planning. It should be listened to on a good stereo, not mp3 but wave. The sounds are little brush strokes of impressionistic feathering. Perfect in reverb amounts and automation of such said feature. The singing is perfect and the back hooks are adhered to religiously. A masterpiece.
    ruclips.net/video/ErntJrtQGBg/видео.html

  • @jonathanwingmusic
    @jonathanwingmusic 3 месяца назад +1

    If you like the late 60s Beach Boys and Kinks kind of thing, I also highly recommend checking out the entire 1968 album "Odessey and Oracle" by The Zombies, which I feel is an underrated masterpiece of chamber pop as well as a fantastic use of the "studio as an instrument." It gets experimental at times but is also completely accessible all around. The most famous song from this record is the single "Time of The Season" which I love, but also notable is "Hung Up on a Dream" which I think is absolutely beautiful.

    • @samuel_andreyev
      @samuel_andreyev  3 месяца назад +4

      The Electric Prunes were pretty good too!

    • @jonathanwingmusic
      @jonathanwingmusic 3 месяца назад

      @@samuel_andreyev Checking that out now - thanks!

    • @musikhunden6694
      @musikhunden6694 3 месяца назад +1

      Hung Up on a Dream is amazing!!

  • @eliasmontanez
    @eliasmontanez 3 месяца назад

    Hell yeah, this will be my weekend playlist!

  • @jacksonelmore6227
    @jacksonelmore6227 3 месяца назад +2

    Why is this my exact music taste

  • @mordantfilms
    @mordantfilms 3 месяца назад

    Great list! I was pleasantly surprised to see Moon In June included as I'm a huge Soft Machine fan (especially the Wyatt era). Devo, The Kinks and The Beach Boys are also favorites.
    Have you heard much Scott Walker?

  • @teacake_94
    @teacake_94 3 месяца назад

    Can’t believe he didn’t mention the horn solo on For No One

  • @aaronclaus7261
    @aaronclaus7261 3 месяца назад

    Love the Bjork selection, Medulla is one of her most interesting projects to date, imo.

  • @davidminnick
    @davidminnick 3 месяца назад

    I’ve always thought that “Dear God” by XTC is an incredibly brilliant bit of songwriting and production.

    • @davidminnick
      @davidminnick 3 месяца назад

      Also, you’ll get no disagreement from me that Devo is funny. However, I find them so much deeper than that. They’ve had a consistent aesthetic and message for nearly 50 years. Humor and incredibly subversive satire throughout their career all tied together by all they do and say. (Especially before 1984 though).
      I play the Whip It, Freedom of Choice or Jocko Homo video for all of the college classes I teach. I don’t comment on it, I just let these 18-20 year olds see and hear it. It’s so much fun!

  • @suppliolistico9452
    @suppliolistico9452 3 месяца назад

    As an italian, music fanatic following and respecting you since years, i had a stupid big smile on my face watching this video knowing Adriano Celentano was on the list. Also i would like to highlight how he nailed the "playback" of a nonsense song : D

  • @gcummings88
    @gcummings88 3 месяца назад

    great show...

  • @Snardbafulator
    @Snardbafulator 3 месяца назад

    While not quite as grandiose as Adriano Celentano, 12-year-old singer Stella Zelcer (recording as Stella) made hit parodies with her uncle of Ye-Ye (from "Yeah Yeah"), the French version of Anglophilic (think Johnny Hallyday) teenybopper pop. She went on to marry Christian Vander and front the legendary Zeuhl (prog fusion) band, Magma.

  • @toruscore
    @toruscore 3 месяца назад

    Thanks for nr. 10 😊

  • @brumd
    @brumd 3 месяца назад +1

    Really nice to see this different side of you, and an interesting choice of songs (I am familiar with the majority of them). I was kind of expecting to see Sonic Youth included (you interviewed Jim O'Rourke), but I understand not every song can make it on the final list.
    Tip for some exciting contemporary "pop" music (imho): KNOWER - I'm the president . There's an incredible live version on RUclips.

  • @jonathanwingmusic
    @jonathanwingmusic 3 месяца назад

    You might also enjoy Scott Walker - starting with "Scott 3" (1969). He was a bit like a Frank Sinatra style crooner but surprisingly experimental. The first song on Scott 3 literally sits over a bed of dissonant sul pont strings - who in pop does that?! David Bowie was a huge fan and they were also friends.

  • @guitatronik-lab
    @guitatronik-lab 3 месяца назад

    "Close to the Edge" is a criminal omission but I want to believe it's just because a suite is not considered a song? ;)

  • @ConvincingPeople
    @ConvincingPeople 3 месяца назад

    "Prisencolinensinainciusol" is fascinating in how, as an English speaker, it nails everything about the cadence, morphology and texture of English while being completely incomprehensible. Absolutely brain-frying. Love it. (Also a big fan of Wyatt, Waits, Cohen and Devo, although in the latter two cases I might have chosen "Who By Fire" and "Smart Patrol/Mr. DNA" respectively.)
    A few (by which I mean quite a few) suggestions of my own, mainly from before 2004 per the video proper but with a few later entries of especial note:
    - The United States of America, "The Garden of Earthly Delights" (1968): I could have gone with the more lyrically acerbic opening number to this record here, but this conceptually simpler number is simply undeniable in terms of the urgency of its instrumentation, performance and musical focus, sensuous yet laced with potent menace.
    - Wire, "Map Ref. 41°N 93°W" (1979): An immaculately arranged and structured pop song, easily one of the most beautiful pieces of music to ever emerge out of the punk/post-punk movement, reflecting on the awe of observing the vastness of the Earth from the air and sonically painted with guitars and keyboards with all of the colour and grandeur of the vistas depicted.
    - This Heat, "Makeshift Swahili" (1981): The nightmare of colonialism and cultural imperialism made manifest through a blend of Canterbury-school progressive rock sophistication, visceral punk rock aggression, and highly experimental studio-as-instrument soundplay, the studio version flipping to a particularly raw live recording during the chaotic coda for maximum disorientation.
    - Coil, "Ostia (The Death of Pasolini)" (1986): The lush interweaving of Fairlight sampler lines and string quartet behind Jhonn Balance's inimitable vocals really provide the perfect setting for the morbid neo-Decadent homoeroticism of the lyrics, a fragmented portrait of the assassination of the radical Italian filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini.
    - The Magnetic Fields, "100,000 Fireflies" (1989): Another perfect pop song, albeit more austere and humble, carried by clear melodic lines, a gently emotive vocal performance from the late Susan Anway, and lyrics which, while initially sardonic if evocative, transform into something far more sincere and all the more devastating for it.
    - Swans, "Her" (1992): What begins as a soft, intimate little love song like the lapping of a lone candle flame expands outward further and further into a titanic wall of protean melody before dissolving into glittering noise and the sound of a tape-recorded voice from decades before, coming full circle.
    - Burzum, "Jesu død" (1996): Odious as Varg Vikernes and his views are, there is something undeniably compelling about the demoniac minimalism of best work, particularly this eerie slice of almost Feldman-esque repetition, luxuriating in the timbre of a single repeated guitar motif overwhelmed with tape saturation.
    - Sonic Youth, "Hoarfrost" (1998): A gorgeously arranged and performed tone poem about walking with a loved one in the snow, comprised primarily of layers of intricate, warmly luminous melodic guitar work, at once comforting and tinged with a certain niggling unease, as if some threat lurks just out of view, or hidden in plain sight.
    - Current 93, "Sleep Has His House" (2000): Mostly comprised of a layered, lulling harmonium drone and a murmured refrain for the better part of twenty minutes before blooming into an impassioned wail of grief listing all of the wondrous things which death renders trivial.
    - Dälek, "Ever Somber" (2005): One of the most beautifully produced works of modern music, hip-hop or otherwise, the thematic lynchpin to an album reflecting on the role of music in bringing attention to social issues which turns inward, speaking to self-destruction as an escape from the ravages of systemic racism and art as an escape from self-destruction.
    - St. Vincent, "The Neighbors" (2009): Pretty much any song off of Actor could go here, but I'm going to go with what might be the most peculiar, an off-kilter, jaunty number stuffed with subtly odd instrumentation which could be a portrait of teenage recklessness and minor small-town scandal or something far more sinister or, conversely, personal and interior.
    - Jute Gyte, "Yarinareth, Yarinareth, Yarinareth" (2017): Closer to a work of classical art music in terms of composition than a traditional metal song, with the use of quartertones facilitating both horrific dissonances and some of the most sumptuous melodic lines I've ever heard.
    - billy woods & kenny segal, "Speak Gently" (2019): Another thematic crux to a fairly harrowing and excellently produced hip-hop record about poverty, here primarily not for the extremely on point verses but the spoken word coda where the instrumental dissolves into freeform abstraction and woods discusses the strange experience of receiving other people's mail year after year, an anecdote mundane yet haunting.

  • @calamari3707
    @calamari3707 3 месяца назад

    I love soft machine. One of my favorite bands. Despite some of the greatness that comes later in the band’s life, I still prefer their first album the most. It’s super low budget, and it captures this raw, almost modern punk energy. I have yet to hear anything from that era that has real teeth like that album has.

    • @ronaldchives2486
      @ronaldchives2486 3 месяца назад

      Agreed, still my favourite Soft Machine album🙂

  • @davidmackie2901
    @davidmackie2901 3 месяца назад

    Gotta put in a word for Rickie Lee Jones. The general consensus seems to be that her second album, Pirates, is the best, and from that album, I'd choose Traces of the Western Slopes, but there's so much genius across the first three albums at least. Also, try Weasel and the White Boys Cool from her first album, or Gravity from The Magazine.

  • @robertmc3103
    @robertmc3103 3 месяца назад +1

    A Playlist for lazy listeners. Only 13 of the 20 were available as singles. You will have to click on the remaining 7 songs on Samuel Andreyev's list above. ruclips.net/p/PLwOqCL3KW3u8QgBv8IBdAu_Ps3eQEDNyO&si=QJSkIASMKU5sRavu

  • @oo0O08
    @oo0O08 3 месяца назад

    YES to Sabotage. One of the all time great basslines. People should check out the Letterman performance to get a proper sense of what all the members are bringing to the song.

  • @HANECart1960
    @HANECart1960 3 месяца назад

    OH!!!!! you should have explained why you like Bohemian Rap!!??? hearing what is interesting about it from a trained composer is so so so rare!! you nut! 😊

  • @heinzbleffert6088
    @heinzbleffert6088 3 месяца назад +3

    Love those lists. Compared to my own, agree on Moon In June(!!), DEVO, Cpt Beefheart, Beatles, Kinks; loathe Cole Porter, Steve Young, Tom Waits, Leonard Cohen, Beastie Boys; never understood the fascination with Velvet Underground, Syd Barrett; find the rest of offbeat (dis)interest; missing would be Zeuhl(Magma), Geri Reig(The Residents), RIO(Art Bears), Prog Rock (Gentle Giant) and last but not least, Frank Zappa. But thank you.

  • @Smudge4199
    @Smudge4199 3 месяца назад +1

    Any thoughts on Scott Walker?

  • @fstover5208
    @fstover5208 3 месяца назад

    I'm not a pop person, but I'd add Purple Haze by the Fibonocci's, Save Me by Kimbra, National Health (UK band), Harry Nielsen, etc.

  • @stevealleman9206
    @stevealleman9206 3 месяца назад

    I really enjoyed that, thanks. (I just wish I could unsee Celentano's dancing.) You've got a few of my favorite songs here. I've decided that too much creativity is holding back my music career, so I'm going to start cultivating my "imbecilic exterior."

    • @Martykun36
      @Martykun36 3 месяца назад

      sounds like your problem isn't creativity rather than ego

    • @stevealleman9206
      @stevealleman9206 3 месяца назад

      @@Martykun36 Geez relax, it was a joke. I would have thought that was obvious, but maybe I should have put an lol in there. I don't even have (or want) a music career.

  • @BartdeBoisblanc
    @BartdeBoisblanc 3 месяца назад

    Samuel I like your list. While listening to your analysis I thought if you do another one Jethro Tull "Locamotive Breath" would be a good candidate.

  • @krzysztofcybulski5559
    @krzysztofcybulski5559 3 месяца назад

    I guess "moon in june" is actually a penultimate track on "Third". Great song nevertheless, and great selection of songs as well!

    • @pariaheep
      @pariaheep 3 месяца назад

      Soft Machine's "Third" was a staple on our "music for tripping" playlist... "The moon in june" stood out on that album as a trip within the trip. It connects me to the spirit of 2 dearly loved friends lost to heroine and suicide. R.I.P Luc & Tom.

  • @alessandrocendamo462
    @alessandrocendamo462 3 месяца назад +2

    1) I adore lists, but well, who doesn't?
    2) I know that italian music never reached the international radar, but please please please, liste to Lucio Battisti, our John Lennon, or our David Bowie let's say. Just pick up his masterpiece 'Don Giovanni" one of his most experimental song. Do yourself a favour ❤
    Ps i was still listening and didn't know you had added Celentano!!!! Jeeeeeez man!!!! ❤❤

    • @narosgmbh5916
      @narosgmbh5916 3 месяца назад +1

      I solved my first answer because (Freudian mistake?) I read Franco Battiato instead of Lucio Battisti.😮

    • @alessandrocendamo462
      @alessandrocendamo462 3 месяца назад +1

      @@narosgmbh5916 both undeniable Geniuses!

    • @narosgmbh5916
      @narosgmbh5916 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@alessandrocendamo462
      Franco Battiato has a work with a range that in the 20th century can only be compared to Frank Zappa.
      With a 20 popsong playlist I would prefer Franco as cantautore

  • @Pretzels722
    @Pretzels722 3 месяца назад

    Please make a video on the Ligeti piano etudes

  • @AndrejaAndric
    @AndrejaAndric 16 дней назад

    Nice list. But it's 2024 and the most recent song is from 20 years ago, and more than half are from more than 50 years ago. Would be interesting to see a list with popular music from past 10 years or so. :)

    • @samuel_andreyev
      @samuel_andreyev  16 дней назад +1

      Thanks. I stated at the beginning that my chosen timespan was 1934 to 2004. A video covering the last two decades is something I’m working on.

  • @donlaloux
    @donlaloux 3 месяца назад

    Kate Bush is so fun to listen to. Symphony In Blue, Them Heavy People, Hammer Horror, Nocturn and many more are so unique. It'd be great to hear you talk more about her!

  • @Scriabin_fan
    @Scriabin_fan 3 месяца назад +2

    Let’s see how many feathers are ruffled by this one.

    • @loadishstone
      @loadishstone 3 месяца назад +2

      That would be weird. Not really any “controversial” choices here and, more importantly, it’s his opinion lol.

    • @Scriabin_fan
      @Scriabin_fan 3 месяца назад

      @@loadishstone I said this because there was a lot of controversy under his video about 20th century masterpieces. That was his opinion also.
      I don't know much about this genre of music so I didn't know if it was a controversial list.

    • @Martykun36
      @Martykun36 3 месяца назад

      Not many I'd say. They're all pop and rock songs that everyone would say have "something" to them. Someone could say like "why isn't A Day in the Life or What’s Going On in there" and it could be either because they're not that interesting to him, or just because they're so obvious picks they would add nothing to the list.

  • @davidbanks4168
    @davidbanks4168 3 месяца назад

    Yes! Everybody knows! Great choice

  • @davidbanks4168
    @davidbanks4168 3 месяца назад +1

    I would love to hear your thoughts about the last two Talk Talk albums.

  • @fastenbulbous
    @fastenbulbous 3 месяца назад

    Great list. I'd love to hear your thoughts on John Fahey.

  • @TaTopePia
    @TaTopePia 3 месяца назад

    Is there any band/composer/singer songwriter/song that resonates with you, that doesn't seem to resonate with anyone else? Or the other way, that everyone else likes that you just don't get?
    I sometimes feel like I'm taking crazy pills when certain bands, songs, albums, composers, etc. are held in such high regard and I just don't get it.

  • @dariocaporuscio8701
    @dariocaporuscio8701 3 месяца назад

    My list:
    Dorsey and Sinatra: Polka dots and moonbeans (40)
    Charles Trenet: Que reste-t-il de nos amours (43)
    Screamin Jay Hawkins: I put a spell on you (58)
    Jaques Brel: Au suivant (64)
    Bob Dylan: I want you (66)
    Leonard Cohen: Suzanne (67)
    Pink Floyd: See Emily play (67)
    Velvet Underground: Heroin (67)
    Faust: Meadow meal (71)
    John Hartford: Up on the hill where they do the boogy (71)
    Brian Eno: Burning airlines gives you so much more(74)
    Lucio Battisti: Abbracciala Abbracciali Abbracciati (74)
    Patti Smith: Birdland (75)
    Televisions: Marquee moon (77)
    CCCP: Curami (86)
    Slint: Breadcrumb Trail (91)
    Supreme Dicks: in a sweet song (96)
    Joanna Newsom: Have one on me (10)
    Julia Holter: Voce Simul (18)
    Jpeg Mafia: Jesus forgive me I'm a thot (19)

  • @Amptronique
    @Amptronique 3 месяца назад +1

    Brown Shoes Don't make it - Zappa

  • @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328
    @attichatchsound-bobkowal5328 3 месяца назад

    A lot of cool choices! BUT. I'll confess I am still mystified by the love for Velvet Underground. Must be me.
    I might have gone with "Prophet's Song" from Queen. Musically very interesting and unique and serious.
    Freddie's "round" is performed live in the studio with two echo devices. One of the great Rock Vocal performances committed to vinyl.
    Bonnie Raitt's version of "I Can't Make You Love Me". Maybe the most perfectly crafted, perfectly performed beautifully poignant song ever to grace the radio.
    Bruce Hornsby's "Harbor Lights": I couldn't believe I was hearing something so high information, yet so emotionally powerful on the airwaves - AND a Pat Methany solo!
    The Who's "Won't Get fooled again: Greatest Track on the best album from the greatest rock group. . . .(IMHO)
    "Bag Lady" from Todd Rundgren. Getting verklempt thinking about that song. A LOT of Todd deserves at least one listen.
    "On reflection" Live from Gentle Giant. A Capella vocals and bonkers fun.
    "NSU" from Cream Live - maybe too "Instrumental" but the most sophisticated inter-weaved improvised interaction between musicians - any genre - --ever
    "Ticking" form Elton John. Mostly piano and vocals. Beautiful composition with tragic lyrics from the view of a tormented individual.
    "Into the Light" from Peter Gabriel. It does all the same things as "Ticking"
    "How do you think It Feels" from Lou Reed's "Berlin" The whole album has a hard to pin-down magic, and this maybe it's most immediate intense track.
    Benny Mardones "Into The Night". 80s "middle of the road" genre, mildly successful Radio hit - - that happens to be very well composed and drenched with heart featuring as soaring of a vocal as you will hear on the radio. The Man is proclaiming from the mountain tops!
    Is Zappa's "Village of the Sun" cheating?
    Johnny Cash's "San Quentin" where he performs it live TWICE in a row for good measure - That's as proudly down-in-the-dirt country/blues as you get!
    Al Jarreau "Take Five" 76. Or ANYTHING form 70s Al Jarreau! Not mentioned enough among the great vocalists.
    King Crimson's "The Howler". Bizarre and jagged yet somehow Adrian Belew makes it accessible.
    Rufus 1976 "Sweet Thing" Just so laid back and cool and comforting. Sophisticated but deceptively simple sounding. Chaka Kahn's vocal is so intimate and alluring.
    While we're doing 70's RB: Ramsey Lewis -"Sun Goddess". Teamed with Earth Wind and Fire's leaders, everything is master-level and still singable. AND
    "Too High" from Stevie Wonder: Just get a kick out of hearing Stevie not giving a sh!t and opening an album with so much chromaticism! His early 70s output was a historic achievement.
    Johnny Winter's Version of "Johnny B. Good" because everyone needs to hear peak Johnny Winter at least once!
    Last One: "Tea in the Sahara" from the Police: Hypnotic. Simple bass. Sparse guitar swells. Single Vocal. No drums. The space sucks you in. The Police at their minimal best.

  • @FesteringGhoul
    @FesteringGhoul 16 дней назад

    I might have gotten into the talking heads a long time ago if the first song I heard from them was “once in a lifetime.” Ive always hated that song lol. But i think the rest of that album is an absolute masterpiece.