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Can you believe it has been a year since we did this show, this time last year? It's kind of wild to think about that. It went by so fast for me. Are you at that point, Mitra, where... It's just time is just going faster and faster. It is. I very much am like, wait a minute. I thought it was January. Wait a minute. I thought it was September. What's happening? Yeah.
So this is our new annual tradition that we started last year, our episode about songs that hit hard. We did a call out to listeners and it turns out there are lots of songs that, you know, really hit lots of people really hard. We had a little form they could fill out online if they wanted to use that. Writing in, voicemails. telling us about a song that absolutely wrecked them.
One way or the other. Ugly cried to or just obsessed about. So we're going to share some of those songs and the stories and the song picks and everything on this episode. We'll get to as many as we can. Let's start with one of the written comments that we got. This was a song a lot of people picked. which would be SZA's Saturn, a single she released back in February. So people have been sitting with this for a few months now. But one of the listeners who wrote in was Mona from San Antonio.
She says, 2024 was a rough year. I had two great losses and was diagnosed with two chronic illnesses. This song hit me hard because the lyrics summed up my emotional state of mind. How can things get any worse? How much more can a person take? The melodic sound of the song though was somehow soothing. It made me feel every emotion. It made me feel like I wasn't alone. I love this song because it is a feeling that I have had often. Yeah. Yeah, it just really makes you reflect on it.
Why am I going through these things? And is there a way to get out of this? And I think it's also... I think about the verse, if there is a point to being good, then where's my reward? Yeah. Which is something I think a lot of people often think about. Yeah. I'm doing all the things I'm supposed to do. Yeah. And why are all these things... Yeah. She also asks, why do we always seem to lose the good ones, right? And the people who are just doing the worst possible things seem to thrive. Yes.
That is something I definitely think from time to time. It is interesting that So many people picked this song and not all of them. came to it because they were necessarily struggling or hurting or unhappy. A lot of people, in fact, were feeling great, you know, and Saturn just sort of underlined their feelings for them and sort of reinforced how they were already.
Already feeling, I think, you know, she asks, SZA does in the song, asks all these big questions about, you know, why we're here and what's the purpose of suffering and things like that. But her voice. Just the sound of her voice, the little arpeggiated synths, yeah. The production value in this just really give us that otherworldly connection. Yeah. says everything's going to be okay. Or even if everything isn't going to be okay or we don't know, it's okay to ask these questions. Right. Yeah.
All right, let's go to one of the voice memos we got. And this is from a listener named Josh in Dayton, Ohio. And the song that he picked is Laura Marling. child of mine. My wife and I were blessed to have our first child on April 12th this year. Being parents has completely transformed our lives. I've never known time to go by so quickly, and I don't want to miss any moment.
i've never known a love this strong laura marling's song child of mine is a beautiful tender and poetic reflection on raising a child i always end up crying hard during the bridge Long nights, fast years, so they say. Time won't ever feel the same. And I don't want to miss it. No, I don't want to miss it. And I'm not going to miss it, child of mine. I'm so thankful to have a song like this.
able to remind myself, even when times are hard, the nights are long, that I don't want to rush any moments with this wonderful, amazing daughter of mine. So this song Child of Mine is from Laura Marling's album Patterns. We just talked about another cut from it. called Patterns and Repeat on Our Best Songs of the Year episode. And this whole album just absolutely floored me for much of the same reasons that our listener Josh and Dayton mentioned. became a first-time mom not that long ago.
She actually recorded much of this album with her daughter in the room, and she kind of played the songs for her daughter that way. In fact, you hear a little sort of recording at the top there that makes me think that is from one of the sessions with her daughter sitting there listening. It made me feel so warm. I don't have children of my own.
But so many of the lyrics of it felt very familiar in terms of the things that I'd heard my mother say. There was one where she says, I can't protect you there, though I'll keep trying. Sometimes you'll go places I can't get to, but I've spoken to the angels who'll protect you. Yeah. And mad if that don't perfectly capture sentiments that my mother has expressed. It is definitely something that I wanted to play for her. Josh, our listener who wrote in,
Two things he said that I will co-sign on. The idea that it is so hard. It is so much work. But even at its worst, when you're just like, oh my God, this is awful. It's still the greatest thing in the world. And yeah, just that whole idea, again, about time, Laura Marling talks about and Josh talked about it. Just, you know, the days are long, the years are short. All the things that...
Felt like an eternity in the moment. You realize, wow, that was maybe two days or a week or something like that. But Josh, the listener who picked the song, his story and his reflections, I think, are a good example of what we heard a lot in our call out this year. Just a lot of joy. A lot of joy. A lot of joy and almost defiant joy and, you know, intense gratitude. It wasn't all just, you know, tearjerkers.
segue, I think, into the next song. Yeah. This next one was from Michelle, a listener in Philly. Yeah. And the song she picked is Beyonce's Two Hands to Heaven. And the reason this song hit me so hard is that I'm 45 years old. and finally met the love of my life. After going through so much I finally found the person I know I want to spend the rest of my life with. And that song speaks directly to finding that true love and feeling like everything is going to be all right.
So if you know the song, it's really sort of clear that the part that really was resonating with Michelle is that last part of finding that person. Yeah. Finding that person that you've been waiting your whole life for as you have been. surrendering and you've been figuring out who you are and putting yourself together and here is that other person that you've been waiting for. I love that. I'm so glad we picked this one too because
You know, what a gift to find true love at any point in your life. But, you know, she made a point of saying, you know, she's in middle life now and she's just so grateful now to have found it. That is just such a gift. I think one of the things that's great about this song, Two Hands to Heaven, is that it suggests a lot of struggle, but it's not...
It's not too explicit about it. No. It's sort of implied, in fact, the whole idea that she's got a drink in her hand and both hands are raised to heaven. Right. Like, that could be a celebration. Right. Or a plea. I always think about the surrendering part of putting your hands into heaven, but it's a very complex song. Yeah, there's a lot going on in it. Beyonce says something like...
10,000 steps to, yeah, find the time of your life, I think. And, you know, there's a journey there. And also acknowledgement and just that one little line that often the path to... To happiness is a lot of work. It is, yes. So that, of course, is from the Cowboy Carter album. It came out at the end of March.
All right, let's get to another one of the written comments we got. This is for the song 25 by the band Lake Street Dive. This is a song that I played on the show actually earlier in the year when it came out. It was picked by Sue in Cleveland. And Sue says, I turned 69 this year and I'm retiring at the end of the year. My mom passed away in August.
All these life changes have me thinking about my life and what's coming next. I'm happily married, and I have been for many years, but this song made me remember the first time I fell hard for someone in college. Never quite gotten over that man. My first grown-up love. This song sums up those feelings. from a distance of decades. One of the things that Lake Street Dive is so good at is storytelling.
It doesn't matter what song it is, the storytelling in their music always gets me in my feelings. And then you add on top of that Rachel Price's voice. And you just don't have any choice but to feel all the emotions. And I noticed as I was sort of looking over what we were going to be listening to. There's a lot of songs about memory. Yeah. A lot of songs about the past and nostalgia.
They are able to tell this story and thread that needle in such a very simple way where it's very specific to whoever in the group was the songwriter, but you can pull your own parts of your own past loves and easily lay it on top. Yeah, it is not hard to relate. to a lot of the ideas and feelings that come up in this song, at least for me at this point in my life, and I'm sure many other people too. I think the thing that I am moved most by in this song
is that, you know, this person who's reflecting on their youth in the past, and it's long gone, but they only have good things to say about this person that they're thinking about, right? Right. And that is something, you know, that just deeply moves me whenever I see that kind of kindness in. The way that love can endure like that, even when you know you weren't right for each other in the long run, that you wish only the best for him.
You know, you and I both brought our own picks in, songs that we want to talk about. Let's just go ahead and do yours because it's a good one. Sure. My pick is the song Traditions by Don Richard and Spencer Zahn. And it's a very simple song, but there is a line in it that just kills me every time. You call it lucky. I call it blessings. Does this make you think of your mom? It does. It makes me think of my mom. It makes me think of my grandmothers. It makes me think of all of those.
people, not even just the women in my life, but the people in my life who sort of layered on to me the different sort of cultural family bits that really made me who I am. and a lot of them having to do with faith. Because when I think about what some of our superstitions or what Don is saying are really our traditions, a lot of them are about faith.
Hoping they'll win. It's all about us, these small little acts of faith. Yeah. Hoping that we do our part. And it's hard to believe in those things. And they may not make sense to anybody else. And that for me is why the line, you call it lucky, I call it blessings, is so important to me. Well, when I listen to this, I immediately clocked.
Two things. One, North Carolina, even though you're from South Carolina, right? I'm from South Carolina, yeah. And family, because I know how important family is to you. Yeah. And I kind of thought this was actually a nice companion piece to the Duran Jones. Yeah, it is. I thought about, like... Oh, here I am again picking another thing that really sort of speaks to...
my Southern upbringing, all these sort of like family parts. Faith. Yes, exactly. All these things that sort of help inform who I am. And like I said, it's not a super complicated, complex song, but it... It really just sort of gets to the root of who I am. Yeah, no, I get it. And it's such a beautiful song, too. This whole album is such a, there's so much serenity in it, right?
It was hard to pick what song off of it because I love so much the album. Yeah. And that album's called Quiet in a World Full of Noise. You want to get me to listen to something? Call it Quiet in a World Full of Noise. And that title track is... Absolutely beautiful. I definitely recommend people check it out. Well, the song that I picked also speaks to Faith a little bit and is also, I think...
Pretty simple to follow, but yet is just so moving and powerful to me. It's a song that I played earlier in the year on the show. It's called God Person by Matty Diaz. This is my song of the year this song just And I have spent so much time trying to understand why does this song just devastate me? It's not explicitly joyful or sad, but I think it's, you know, when her voice starts to soar a little bit. There's just so much awe at life in that moment. I don't know, that sort of...
Simple wonder at life is all wrapped up in this song to me. When you sent it, and I sort of settled on what my song, they were such perfect companion pieces. Yeah. Because one song is sort of asking the questions. And the other song is not giving an answer, but sort of figuring out your way to. an answer. And this is me asking the questions about it. Yeah. I think for me too, it's the idea that she is finding God or the possibility of God in all of these tiny little things in life.
One of which she says at the very top of the song is like going to a show with people or something, just standing in the presence of others. Right. I talked with Maddie Diaz briefly about this song. She said she almost didn't include it on the album. I'm like, oh my gosh, I'm so glad you did. So that was from the Maddie Diaz album, Weird Face. Alright Mitra, let's get to another one of the voice memos.
Yeah, we got a lot of emails and voice memos from listeners about pets. Pets, yes. So this one comes from Olivia in Washington State. And the song she picked is Love Song from a Dog by Shovels and Rope. I was listening to a random playlist and I had the music interrupted by a phone call from my vet. They were calling to give a not so great health update on my dog. And my dog has been my best friend through everything.
So as I'm sitting there taking in this terrible news and I'm crying and telling my dog how much I love him. As soon as the call wrapped up, the playlist just kicked back on and started playing the next song and Love Song from a Dog came on. It might sound kooky, but it felt like I was meant to hear it in that moment, like my dog was trying to tell me. And I think this song is just such a beautiful ode to that special bond and partnership between a human and their dog.
Dogs are just so loyal and loving and they give so much to us. And it's nice to get that little moment to hear from their perspective. I still cannot listen to this song without crying. Heck, I can't even talk about it without crying. And I know my remaining days with my soul dog are numbered, but I am forever grateful for this beautiful, touching song.
I remember when I lost a dog that I had had for 14 years. This was a few years ago. Somewhere I saw, and I don't remember where I saw it or who said it, but somebody said, We're here on this planet to learn how to be good. And dogs already know how to be good, so they don't need as much time as we've got. So I thought that was a lovely explanation for why we don't get as much time with our dogs as we'd like.
I love the chorus of this song. Yeah. It's so fun. The running like I'll die if I don't get to you. Yeah. But also I just, I love that structure of. Talking about the love, the loyalty, the companionship that that character in the song wants to sort of make sure they have. You are the center of their world. And inevitably they become the center of your world.
Well, this was a song that I missed this year. I don't know how I did, but I'm so glad that our listener, Olivia, in Washington State, left a voice memo about it, and we got to hear it. This is another voice memo we got from a listener named Mary in Massachusetts, and she picked Kendrick Lamar's song Man at the Garden from his album Geonexit.
This year, Man at the Garden by Kendrick Lamar hit me in a way that I really wasn't expecting. From the very first listen, that repeated refrain, I deserve it all. it lodged itself in my mind, sort of like a mantra. I feel like every time I revisit the song, I find new layers to unpack, especially that ending crescendo. Tell me why you think you deserve the greatest of all time. It always brings me to tears. It's such a profound and challenging question.
and it really makes me reflect on my own sense of worth. What do I really deserve and why? For years, I've struggled with undervaluing myself, and this song feels like a wake-up call. At its heart, it reminds me that while greatness may be subjective, we all deserve peace. and maybe the courage to believe in our own potential.
name by the world leaders keep my crowds loud inside the beast i deserve it all I thought this was an interesting one to share because, you know, where I grew up, it was a real sort of... Pull yourself up by your bootstraps. You know, don't complain.
Just do your job, keep quiet, expect nothing in return. It's taken me a very, very long time. I mean, I'm still not comfortable with it, but it's taken me a very long time to get to a point in my life where I was even... a little comfortable with the idea of getting anything at all. You know, I still can't relate to the, I don't know, the defiance or whatever, the confidence in this song.
The confidence that he has saying that, you know, he deserves it all. I mean, well, I think when I look at the lyrics and I listen to them, I'm thinking about the fact that he's saying, I put in the work. Yeah. of course I deserve this. And that's a hard, like you just said, that's a hard thing to really settle within yourself because we're conditioned to not sort of make that declarative statement of like, yeah.
I deserve this. And I think it's even more a push in him doing that as a young black man from a certain community to say, All these things, I put in the work. I did the hard stuff. I did the hard stuff physically, emotionally, professionally. I deserve happiness and peace. As Mary said. Yeah, I love that that's the point that Mary made sort of at the very end of her voice memo was,
What do you deserve for all of this? And as she points out, and it's in the song too, it's like, I deserve love and peace. And doesn't everybody? Right. And since this has come out, I have seen so many people on social media saying, yeah. Kendrick said, I deserve it all, and he's right. Yeah. Well, I mean, he is Kendrick. He is Kendrick. But, you know, that speaking onto us or speaking into us, pouring into us via this song, like, yes, it is okay.
To claim your joy and your success, you do deserve it all. And what a great song. It is a great song. It is a great song, too. Yeah. All right, let's get back to some of the written comments we got. Our next one comes from Marsha in Belfast, Maine. The song she picked is One Last Dance by Baby Rose. Marsha says, Baby Rose sings hauntingly of running into a former lover and how the feelings still burn.
As I age and reflect on past friends and lovers, memories of broken relationships bring an aching swell of emotions. And I hope those people know, even when these connections either slowly drifted apart or burned down in raging flames. My heart still has a place for them and gratitude for their place in my life. It has a lot in common with that 25 song from Lake Street Dive, that old idea.
You know, looking back at someone who was a part of your life and having only good things to say. Yes, and great storytelling in it as well. immediately was seeing them encounter each other yeah and like oh man you look great ah was not expecting you to look that good I loved it I loved the nostalgia in this song and you know shout out to Bad Bad Not Good on the production and they're phenomenal sort of giving us that feel and then she
Baby Rose has this amazing beguiling voice that always, every time I listen to her, I'm trying to like, wait, I'm just trying to figure it out. Yeah. So it just all adds into this sort of great, almost in my mind, black and white sort of. movie feel sepia tone exactly yeah yeah oh yeah so good do you know the singer celeste do you know her oh god do you know her song strange no i don't know that one oh we're gonna do a bonus song here let's play a little bit of strange
Oh, man. Again, I'm sitting here in my mind, seeing the movie. Yeah. I'm seeing these scenes. Yeah. I don't want to take anything from Baby Rose. One last dance. It's a great, great song, too. Actually, quite a few people picked this song from Celeste, Strange, but we were only doing new stuff, so I couldn't do it. I think this came out maybe, gosh, four or five years ago.
And it just devastated me when I first heard it. But it's that same idea, you know, like all the people in your life who were total strangers, then you become friends, you become lovers, and then... Right. Strangers again. And because there's that line in the Baby Rose song of... I know you'll be all right if you never see me again. Yeah. Like we're probably never going to see each other again, but I'm good. Yeah. I know you're good. Yeah. And we've.
We've made those different stages in our lives. I love those stories of figuring out how people come together and how they fall apart. Yeah. Oh, so beautiful. Okay, well look, we'll put together a playlist with full versions of all of these songs. And a whole bunch of the other ones that the listeners submitted because there were just way too many that we could put on here. But if people search for NPR on Spotify or Apple Music, they'll find the playlist.
hit hard in 2024. But let's do one more. And so many we could choose to go out on. But I thought we'd pick this one from Adrian Linker, the singer Adrian Linker. It's called Sadness as a Gift. And I don't know, not really any additional commentary really needed on that idea of sadness as a gift. There's this great line, I don't remember where I heard it, where someone said, what is grief but love enduring?
From... Was that from you? No, that was from Marvel. That was from Wanda in... Oh, you're right. Vision. Vision says that, yes. Yes, Vision says that. What is grief? Thank you, Marvel. The Marvel Universe. Super deep, but that is so true. What is grief but love enduring? And so anytime, yeah, whenever I got sad about losing somebody or whatever, I think, wow, what a gift to be able to. Exactly. That they left you with so many great memories. Yeah.
Yeah. All right. Well, anyway, this song from Adrian Linker, Sadness as a Gift, it was picked by Michael in Massachusetts. And he writes, if love is a gift, so too is the sadness that accompanies our memories once it's gone. holding our hand while we visit the past or the future we once imagined. How sad, how wonderful it is that the love we shared with someone never really died.
And then Michael says, it hit me hard before, during, and after my short-lived relationship this year. What can I say? I'm a yearner. You know what, Michael? I'm a yearner, too. Same here. Same here, Michael. You're in good company. So we'll go out on this. Thanks so much, Mitra, again. Thank you so much for having me, Robin.
And a quick reminder to keep listening after the song as we continue to celebrate the 25th anniversary of All Songs Considered. Stephen Thompson and I have been looking back at the show's number one songs from across the years. Coming right up, we're going to look back at the year 2009.
All right, as I mentioned, we're celebrating the 25th anniversary of All Songs Considered all this spring and into the summer by looking back at our number one songs from across the years. We're doing a different year in each episode. This week, we are up to 2009.
talk about what stands out from that year. Hey, Stephen. Hello, Robin. You know, Stephen, I still laugh when I think about how we were going to do all 25 years in one episode. We're just going to sit down and knock out 25 years of music. As long as you pick one twentieth of a song for each year. I mean, we're not even playing full songs, but I thought, maybe it'll be a little long.
Oh, but what folly that was, because we're only up to 2009 now. And we're kind of doing this as a name that tune. You know, we're trying to surprise each other with our picks here. What's the first thing that you think of when you think music in 2000? I'm glad you asked, what do you think of when you think of music in 2009? Because I thought you were going to be like, what's the first thing you think of when you think of the year 2009? What is the first thing you think of when you think of 2000?
I was thinking because I got divorced in 2010. And so I think of 2009 as like we are in the best economy since 1928. Oh, gosh, that was a terrible time. Now that you mention it, I was totally underwater. So happy to remind you. Yeah, I was totally underwater in my house, and I had to sell it. Yeah, I had to cut a check to the buyer. I had to pay them. Anyway, we digress. We digress. You'd probably like me to play a song.
So this is your number one song from that year. Oh, it's my favorite song because I'm trying to represent. I love this song, but to me, this represents 2009. Let's do it. Yeah. Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. Very good. 2009 in a lot of ways. And one of those ways is just in terms of the larger themes of what music was sounding like. There was kind of this ever-increasing number of bands.
where they just seem to acquire more members as they move through the world. As I recall, there was an All Songs intern, really nice guy. I can't remember what instrument he played, but he wound up joining Edward Sharp and the Magnetic Zeros for a time. Oh, really? It's like my internship's ending. Might as well just go and play the triangle for Edward Sharp and the Magnetic Zero.
I don't remember what he actually played, but this for me is kind of kicking us into the stomp and clap era. This is the we have four drummers. You don't want to know what our tour bus smells like. But like, but big, kind of band as community. Banned as kind of a flood of emotions. And that, for me, was the experience of hearing Edward Sharpe in the Magnetic Zeros for the first time at Rachel Ray's day party at South by Southwest.
you know, was like walking into the room and seeing this huge disheveled band of oddball. nostalgia and emotion. Yeah. That it is recalling. It's just like a song that is just a flood of all the things you appreciate about life. And listening back to it now, there is this element. I mean, part of it is you played the part of the song where it's like, holy moly, me oh my. And I'm like, oh, this is so cloying. But at the same time, all of my resistances.
fall away this is a very sweet song and to have this this shambles come in really spoke to me in 2009. Yeah, and they brought that to the tiny desk as well. Such a classic. It really is, and it makes me think, you know, as we've gone through all these years, we have... been reminded of trends and things like that as you mentioned, the stomp clap. There was a real arc to that. as well that I think was dictated in no small part. There's lots of things, but dictated in no small part.
by the punishing economics of touring with 27 people in your band or whatever, because that all began to, you know, it kind of peaked and then it started to fade away where you didn't get all the stomp clap bands anymore just because... Just the economics of paying. Four drummers. Right. And just moving people around and, you know. But, oh, that's a great pick. And that is a band I've not thought of in a long time.
So we did a version of this show, an anniversary show in 2016 for All Songs Considered Sweet 16. I've mentioned that along the way here as we've been doing this. And the song that we picked for 2016 was Grizzly Bears, Two Weeks, which I think that's a pretty great pick. But I'm going to go with my personal favorite from 2009. And I think you might know what this is. All right. So that incredible voice belongs to Peter Silberman, if you remember him. Yes, this album from The Antlers.
called Hospice that came out in 2009, and this is the song Kettering from it. Hospice was a feel-good romp. It really was, for the whole family. It's just a devastating album about this woman who's dying of bone cancer and she's in hospice. And Peter Silberman has been, you know, he was very reluctant at the time to talk about... how autobiographical the album was. But he did say that it was based at least in part on things that did happen in his life and in his relationship.
And this album, it just wrecked me in all the best ways. And I still reach for it every now and then. It is all emotion. It's very beautiful. But it is like, it's going for your tear ducts. It's not messing around. And it sounds beautiful. to it that I really appreciate. And when I kind of scan through what were my favorite, what was my favorite album of 2009? It was this record called The First Day of Spring by Noah and the Whale. Oh yeah. Beautiful record.
but it is like that is a heartbreak record that's a that's a concept album about a breakup and and not to knock grizzly Right. But for me, Grizzly Bear is a great band that always left me cold. Yeah. And, like, those guys are still out there doing great work. They're doing film scores, and they're incredible. Yeah. Like, it's not a knock on Grizzly Bear at all, but, like, I didn't feel like...
I had really the language to speak about it. Compared to what we're talking about with Edward Sharp and the Antlers, two very different bands that are still going for an emotional big swing. We're only playing a little bit here. two songs. Yeah, there is no way to be comprehensive about an entire calendar year, especially when we're squeezing out about 50 different genres. I know.
But you must have, if you want to just rattle off a few others from that year that stand out to you. Oh, my gosh. Well, I mentioned Noah and the Whale. 2009 was when my love affair with the band Wye Oak began. What a great band. Swell Season put out a gorgeous record in 2009. Nico Case put out a phenomenal record in 2009. Yeah, tons and tons of stuff. I mean, again, like, I don't even know. Oh, my God, the thermals.
Oh, yeah. Wow. Thermals had a string of, you could drop many different calendar years and find a great record by the thermals. Certainly Jason Lytle, he had yours truly, The Commuter. Fever Ray had an incredible album that year, Laura Gibson. Beasts of Seasons was 2009. We've already been talking about her. Sharon Van Etten had a big record that year.
The number one alternate pick for me, though, that I was going to play was a cut from Fanfarlow, which is another great Stomp and Clap band. And a really lovely Tiny Desk, if people go back and check that out. You know what else came out in 2009? White and Nerd. No. By Weird Al Yankovic. Wow. I think it's the greatest Weird Al Yankovic song. But we'll go out on this. And until next time, thanks, Stephen. Thank you, Robin. And for NPR Music, I'm Robin Hilton. It's All Songs Considered. Yeah!
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