Posts tagged pains of being pure at heart

Each year I listen to music with a single goal: discovering the handful of songs I will cherish for the rest of my music-listening life. My year-end list is not a tribute to the past but rather a bet on the future, informed speculation on what I hope will still sound great years from now. Tomorrow I’ll publish my top 10, along with Rdio and Spotify playlists on the off chance you haven’t heard some of these. Until then, here are 10 I’ll still be listening to well into 2012.

20. “Daily Mail,” Radiohead. It was bound to happen eventually, I suppose: Radiohead released a bad album this year. Not awful, exactly, but King of Limbs was undercooked in a way we haven’t seen from the band since Pablo Honey. A handful of year-end critics tried to argue that there was gold in all that glitchy piffle, but the truth is that the band’s best song of the year was a non-album B-side. “Daily Mail” is a simple piano ballad until 1:40, when Thom Yorke’s piano zig-zags into something darker and more complicated. Drums rise up and horns sound. Yorke free-associates, and Johnny Greenwood remembers he can play guitar. “Daily Mail” builds like a migraine, grim and inescapable. But it turns out to be a thrilling catharsis — and the one 2011 Radiohead song you would actually look forward to seeing played in concert. 

19. “Taken for a Fool,” the Strokes. You thought they were done, it seems like they are done, and yet waiting there on their middling new record was this instant addition to the greatest hits collection. Nick Valensi and Albert Hammond Jr., their guitars still precise as surgical lasers, cut through years of bullshit to give Julian Casablancas some much-needed cover.

18. “Need You Now,” Cut Copy. Releasing Zonoscope in bleakest Februrary, when few of us could tear off our shirts and run down to the beach as “Need You Now” blares from our convertibles, seems like a missed opportunity. Then again, when why deprive us for another four months? The song begins modestly, with Dan Whitford telling his darling not to cry against a bed of shimmering synths. Slowly the band adds layers — soft ooh-oohs from voices in the background, a nice twist in the vocal melody around 2:45 — and suddenly you remember why you’ve been waiting so patiently for the latest from these Aussie disco cheeseballs. (This is the band that named a song “Eternity One Night Only” with a straight face.) The influences are obvious, but the approach is sincere. Play it loud enough and it’s like the springtime is always upon you.

17. “Piledriver Waltz,” Arctic Monkeys. The highlight of this year’s (*rolls eyes*) Suck It and See is a breakup song notable for its empathy. On one hand Alex Turner knows she hates him: “I heard the news that you’re planning / to shoot me out of a cannon.” On the other he knows how much she’s hurting: “You look like you’ve been for breakfast at the heartbreak hotel.” Even when he snipes at her for playing the martyr — “if you’re gonna try and walk on water, make sure you wear your comfortable shoes” — the accusation isn’t hurled so much as sighed. The song wheels to bittersweet conclusion with much left unsaid, and one of England’s best songwriters lets us fill in the gaps.

16. “Heart in Your Heartbreak,” the Pains of Being Pure at Heart. A winning single from one of the most consistent bands working today. “Heart in Your Heartbreak” marries Kip Berman’s wistful vocal to a kicky beat and a sugar rush of keyboards I never tire of. When I saw the band live this year at Slim’s, this was the tune that kept us all pogoing in place. 

15. “Hair,” Lady Gaga. Maybe it’s cloying, or pure fiction: the megastar looking back on her youth, recalling a time when her parents wouldn’t let her style her hair the way she wanted to. And yet contained within this song is everything we love about Gaga: the emphasis on self-expression, the tributes to individualism. It’s a cornball ode sung with such conviction that you never once doubt her sincerity — and its four-on-the-floor rhythm seldom failed to send me running to a dance floor, even if the closest one was in my bedroom.

14. “Countdown,” Beyonce. How many discrete musical ideas are in this song? A thousand? Is every verse actually a chorus? Or every chorus secretly a verse? When did Bey start calling Hova “boof boof”? Did she just make that up or is that something that people say? Is it OK if I start saying it now too? And keep saying it forever? Has so much joy ever been concentrated in three and a half minutes? If Beyonce didn’t exist would we be forced to invent her? Is this real life

13. “Eyes Be Closed,” Washed Out. At last some chillwave to get excited about: anthemic, unembarrassed, built with modern instrumentation. Sure, you could still imagine it playing poolside at some boutique hotel, but what surprised me was how good it sounded on headphones. Ernest Greene, sincere as his given name would suggest, infused his synths with real feeling. 

12. “Baby’s Arms,” Kurt Vile. The sound of a hazy, hung-over morning waking up with the one you love. Kurt Vile’s gentle acoustic reverie on the pleasures of his lover’s embrace recalls a young Van Morrison, brown-eyed girl at his side, sailing into the mystic. 

11. “Super Bass,” Nicki Minaj. One advantage to waiting until the year’s tail end to pick out your favorite songs is that you have the time and permission to graze on others’ lists. No song I slept on this year was as electrifying as “Super Bass,” Nicki Minaj’s giddy tribute to the guy who turns her heart into a ghetto blaster. “Super Bass” is so wonderfully simple that when it comes time for a bridge, Ester Dean, who is responsible for the hook, just sings the chorus again slightly slower than before. Pure bliss.


Among the current crop of indie rock front men, few are so humble as Kip Berman from the Pains of Being Pure At Heart. Or maybe ‘humble’ isn’t the right word; at times, he seems downright self-loathing. “I don’t know if this record will mean anything to anyone in 10 years; I don’t if it means anything to anyone now,” he told Stereogum, regarding this year’s excellent Belong. Reflecting on how the band’s first two albums might be compared, he imagined a listener saying “you sucked and now you suck even more.”

I am not one of those listeners. Since the band debuted in 2009, I’ve followed their work closely and with growing enthusiasm. What the band never gets credit for is their hooks, which are big and unexpected and turn their best tunes into earworms that live for days in your head. “Everything With You,” a live performance of which is embedded above, is one of them. It’s everything I love about the band — the dreamlike vocals, swaddled in blankets of guitar, shot through with expert pop sensibility. 

Last night I saw the band live for the first time. It was at a club on the outskirts of the Mission called Slim’s, which is small and has tables in the back so that people can consume dinner and indie rock simultaneously. Slim’s was maybe three-quarters full when I arrived, at the end of a desultory set from Twin Sister. The Pains took the stage reeking of Brooklyn — the guitarist in a Johnny Greenwood haircut and a scoop-necked shirt whose sleeves stopped uncertainly at the elbows; a manic pixie dreamgirl at the keyboards, her face mostly theoretical behind a thick curtain of bangs. Standing in the middle was Berman, energetic and sincere, compensating for his bandmates’ studied anti-charisma with dramatic strumming and rock-god poses borrowed from his heroes. Berman’s banter was minimal and oddly bloodless — “Everyone here is just so nice” — but he observed the first rule of rock ‘n’ roll success, which is to always act as if you are playing to a much larger room.

One of the reason I’m fond of the Pains is that they’re so consistent. If they’ve written a bad song I haven’t heard it, which makes them all but unique in my world. They arrived fully formed with a template that works, and they’re sticking with it. Over the course of two records and a handful of EPs they seem to have grown without really changing; rather, they are becoming more like themselves. The price for this is a certain sameness that pervades their live set; frequently last night I found myself asking, “Now which one is this again?” But even that didn’t really bother me, because a few seconds later some killer hook would come crashing around the corner, and I’d resume pogoing in place. I was impressed with the band as musicians — they play tight and loud, and in the small club the songs off Belong sounded huge.

“Eventually every band fails,” Berman told the Line of Best Fit earlier this year. “You are a failure if you fail to have success and if you become successful you will eventually become irrelevant and become a failure. Every band will become a failure — it is inevitable.” He’s probably right, and yet I find myself rooting for this band to succeed — to play clubs larger and fuller than Slim’s, to succeed to the point that Berman no longer has to work the merch table before shows. In the meantime I just enjoy the music and hope for the best — which, happily, is Berman’s approach as well. “For this record, I don’t know how it is going to be received,” he said. “But at the same time, I know we made this album how we wanted it to sound and we are proud of it. Whatever happens — even if it gets shat upon — it doesn’t matter, because we really love these songs.”


Titus Andronicus’ entire approach to their second album was deeply inspiring to me. No, we didn’t write a concept record filled with 8 minute “singles” using the American Civil War as an extended metaphor for the social and political divides we face in contemporary life. But they looked deeper into themselves and found the thing that made them Titus Andronicus and focused on that — all the ramshackle mess of hyper expressionism, uncommonly vivid poetry and a righteous aesthetic that is tempered by a willingness to look inward before casting any first stones.

Kip Berman, of the Pains of Being Pure at Heart, in a thoughtful piece on his influences. (He is far too modest about the great Belong, one of my favorite albums of the year.)

Is it just me, or is there a hint of Elvis Costello in Kip Berman’s vocals these days? The Pains of Being Pure at Heart brought “Heart In Your New Heartbreak” to Letterman last night, and there was something reminiscent of Imperial Bedroom in the way Berman hit his lines. The whole band looks and sounds very good — more polished than they when they first hit the scene. Their new record, Belong, comes out March 29 — and until they you can stream it at the band’s website. (via Dan)


Eventually every bands fails. You are a failure if you fail to have success and if you become successful you will eventually become irrelevant and become a failure. Every band will become a failure -– it is inevitable.

Kip Berman, front man for the Pains of Being Pure at Heart, in the Line of Best Fit.

Stream the new Pains of Being Pure at Heart

The stream is up at the band’s website. Belong is out March 29. (via Dan)


No, not self-righteous, just gonna go on Twitter and pat themselves on the back in the most public way possible.
I’d always thought the Pains of Being Pure at Heart were a little more self-aware than this. The band’s Peggy Wang is a senior editor at the meme factory Buzzfeed, where knowingness is practically the business model.
The bottom line is that it’s hell to pay the bills making music — ask OK Go — and there’s no shame in being compensated fairly for your work. Purity of heart may be painful, but it’s nothing compared to the pains of being broke and 40 and wishing you had maximized your earning potential during the flicker of time that the world was actually paying attention to you.

No, not self-righteous, just gonna go on Twitter and pat themselves on the back in the most public way possible.

I’d always thought the Pains of Being Pure at Heart were a little more self-aware than this. The band’s Peggy Wang is a senior editor at the meme factory Buzzfeed, where knowingness is practically the business model.

The bottom line is that it’s hell to pay the bills making music — ask OK Go — and there’s no shame in being compensated fairly for your work. Purity of heart may be painful, but it’s nothing compared to the pains of being broke and 40 and wishing you had maximized your earning potential during the flicker of time that the world was actually paying attention to you.


Stream a new Pains of Being Pure at Heart track

I am increasingly of the opinion that, in this band’s short life, they have not released a bad song. See also “Young Adult Friction,” “The Tenure Itch,” “Say No to Love,” “Higher Than the Stars.” Bewitching 80s-influenced pop.


Pop Intellectuals