I kicked off 1999 not with that Prince song (the Chicago bar I attended that New Year’s Eve played the intro before its patrons verbally demanded a cease-and-desist) but by falling deep into 1996’s If You’re Feeling Sinister, a premonition. This was one of the more disjointed and new music-deficient years of my life. Between stumbling across the finish line of grad school and desperately seeking steady employment, I took a four month long mental health break from doing much of anything (“A Summer Wasting”, if you will), leaving me with no money to spend on music. I adapted accordingly, raiding a plethora of suburban libraries to acquire previously unheard (i.e.—old) stuff ripe for discovery (Nina Simone, Serge Gainsbourg, Os Mutantes, etc.) Still, even if I had had the cash, it’s not like I’d have been rushing out to buy any of the year’s best-sellers.
What endures from this transitional period is something of a grab bag. We have tracks from both long-beloved artists—a sweet sigh from Everything But The Girl’s last album (until 2023!), Aimee Mann’s Magnolia soundtrack triumph, another indelibly-titled Pet Shop Boys single—and good stuff I didn’t hear until much later: Le Tigre’s unstoppable party anthem (not fully appreciated by me until its inclusion in the 2006 film Reprise), Super Furry Animals’ Tropicalia-by-way-of-Wales, The Negro Problem essaying a heavenly ballad leader Stew would include in his Tony-winning musical nearly a decade later. And yet, I recognize selections I knew and loved at the time, like the lead-off track to Beth Orton’s mostly forgotten second album, Ben Folds Five’s flop follow-up to “Brick” (how did their label think that could be a hit in the mook-rock era?!), Blondie’s underrated (in the US, anyway) reunion single and an Indigo Girls tune that didn’t trouble the pop charts but received heavy rotation on Boston’s WBOS (then a decent Triple-A station).
Of course, I was never going to hear The Magnetic Fields or Sleater-Kinney without actively seeking them out. Same goes for Jason Falkner, whose second LP Can You Still Feel was a lucky library find not long after its release. As for Fiona Apple’s impossibly-titled second album (which I picked up in early 2000), today it less resembles 1999 than an ongoing future/past/present, even on such heavily indebted-to-the-past (in this case, the Beatles and the Great American Songbook) three-minute masterworks like “Paper Bag”.
1999: When It Costs Too Much To Love
- Le Tigre, “Deceptacon”
- Beth Orton, “Stolen Car”
- Jason Falkner, “The Plan”
- Everything But The Girl, “No Difference”
- Supergrass, “Moving”
- Fiona Apple, “Paper Bag”
- Pet Shop Boys, “You Only Tell Me You Love Me When You’re Drunk”
- Tom Waits, “Hold On”
- Tori Amos, “Bliss”
- Aimee Mann, “Save Me”
- Steve Wynn, “Cats and Dogs”
- Ben Folds Five, “Army”
- The Magnetic Fields, “All My Little Words”
- Hedwig and the Angry Inch, “Wicked Little Town”
- Blur, “Coffee and TV”
- Indigo Girls, “Peace Tonight”
- Fountains of Wayne, “Red Dragon Tattoo”
- Meshell Ndegeocello, “Bitter”
- Moby, “Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad?”
- Sleater-Kinney, “Don’t Talk Like”
- Blondie, “Maria”
- Super Furry Animals, “Northern Lites”
- Guster, “Fa Fa”
- Ani DiFranco, “Everest”
- Roxette, “Wish I Could Fly”
- Delirium feat. Sarah McLachlan, “Silence”
- Cibo Matto, “Spoon”
- Emm Gryner, “Disco Lights”
- Dido, “Here With Me”
- The Negro Problem, “Come Down Now”
- Madonna, “Beautiful Stranger”
- The Chemical Brothers, “Let Forever Be”
- R.E.M., “The Great Beyond”