A May Revolution in Song

It’s been a while since I’ve done a song-a-day project, and the last few started to lean more into musical conversation than topical discussion. But with everything happening, I decided it’s high time to get topical again.

For the month of May, 2025, I am diving deep into some of the strongest musical statements I can find. I expect these songs to be in various degrees challenging, inspiring, surprising, and appalling. I want to warn you right now that I am not pulling any punches on this one – there will be explicit language, explicit content, and abrasive opinions. I will post relevant content warnings on every selection, but it’s also completely understandable if you choose to nope out of the whole playlist. I’m also going to be less picky about making sure every song has a video or a live performance. Most of them do, but not all. So sometimes you’ll be staring at album covers or reading lyric videos, but that’s because the songs are important enough that they need to be there anyway.

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Regional Bands That Should Have Been Bigger

There are many cases of bands being in the right place in the right time. R.E.M. hit it big partially because the B-52s had focused record companies’ attention on the Athens, GA college music scene. CBGB was responsible for launching multiple careers in the 70s and 80s. And these days bands push to get into high-profile festivals like SXSW and Coachella with the hopes that they will be seen and boosted by influencers.

But there are plenty of stories where those things didn’t happen. There are many worthy bands that, for one reason or another, were not as lucky. Whether they were in the wrong place or whether their sound was just not what people were into at the time, these bands had talent, drive, and lots of great songs, but they didn’t necessarily hit it big. I’d like to look at four of my favorite overlooked bands of the 80s and 90s, with the hope that someone else might discover something new for themselves.

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Music Ain’t Dead, You’re Just Old (Music Archive #10)

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Well, I threatened it, prepared it quickly, so now here it comes.

Music Ain’t Dead, You’re Just Old

The month of December 2021 will be a look at more recent music – I will be focusing only on artists who have emerged in the 21st century. Not only will I be looking at the music of the last 20 years, but I will also be examining the changing ways that people discover music.

The reason for this is that the list emerged in response to a narrow-minded Twitter thread passed around recently that insists that music is now homogenized because all the radio stations are owned by fewer companies. The idea that music requires radio for diversity is ridiculous and historically disproven, but I understand that there are many Gen-Xers and Millennials who just don’t know how to find new music these days. I intend to help.

With that in mind, I will be arguing several things:

  • There’s good music today.
  • There’s good Pop music today.
  • There’s actually been quite a variety of musical movements over the past two decades.

I will also warn you that my list leans heavily toward women artists and women-led bands, partially because that’s my preference and partially because literally everyone I saw sharing that thread was a dude, and I think there may be some subtle, unexamined misogyny in people’s views on popular music.

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Short-Lived Transformative Music (Music Archive #9)

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I have chosen this title specifically to eschew the idea of one-hit wonders because that phrase is fraught with a lot of assumptions about genre, region, and awareness. Also, many of the artists I have chosen for this list had more than one hit. Several of them even had long, successful careers, but perhaps not under the same band name or in the same part of the industry.

What I want to examine are songs that, for one reason or another, had a disproportionate impact when compared to the success of the artist or group. Because of this, most people will probably recognize quite a few of the songs on the list. But I want to put the song and artist in context and talk about why both are amazing.

Organizing the songs into categories was less clear this time, as many of the songs could fit into more than one. But here’s my rough grouping:

Part 1 – Lost in the Era

This is the largest section, which covers a broad range of music that was iconic at the time of release and maybe even saw some resurgence later. But while the songs themselves were popular, the artists were often overshadowed or failed to live up to their potential.

Part 2 – Soundtracks and Special Appearances

There is plenty of music that is well-known mostly because of its presence on a soundtrack or because the band guested on a popular TV show. These songs represent important moments in media, ones which captured the imaginations of their respective generations.

Part 3 – Mainstream Visits the Club

This short section looks at dance music that broke out of the club rotation and into much broader awareness. But these particular dance hits came from artists that quickly vanished back into club obscurity.

Part 4 – Supergroups and Side Projects

The artists in this final section are ones you will certainly recognize, though not necessarily in these incarnations. These are projects by otherwise successful musicians that were short-lived for a variety of reasons.

I’m particularly proud of this list, because it is one my more diverse ones – branching out more to the 70s and even a bit earlier. (My earliest selection is from 1902, but that’s certainly an outlier.) Keep in mind that your choices and thoughts may differ from mine, and I am happy to have that conversation in the comments below each song. But this is my list to share. You can always do your own.

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A Month of Peter Gabriel (Music Archive #8)

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During my last one, I really thought I was about out of time periods and/or genres to consider. But then I had an idea that has really taken hold of me. And when ideas take hold, I have to act on them.

So in March, I will be doing my first ever deep-dive into a single artist. So get ready for

A MONTH OF PETER GABRIEL

Most people know at least a few things he’s done, and they may recognize more than they think, but I want to really expand people’s knowledge of his amazing body of work. With that in mind, here are the categories I’ll be exploring:

The Genesis of Peter – A short look at his pre-solo days and his origins as a prog-rock icon
3 or 4 Untitled Albums – The early days of Peter’s solo career, covering all the albums through Peter Gabriel 4 (aka Security)
The Secret World of So and Us – A shortish look at the height of Peter’s popularity in the late 80s/early 90s
A Passion for Collaboration – Movie soundtracks, guest appearances, video games, and an epic (but mostly unknown) rock opera to ring in the new millenium
Raising Up the New Blood – The late era, including orchestral work, reflective introspection, and exchanges of covers with other artists
The Nest that Sailed the Sky – Closing songs and thoughts

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The 90s That Almost Was (Music Archive #7)

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After (and even a little bit during) my Gothtember musical retrospective, I had yet another inspiration for a month of music. This one came together a lot faster than usual, and I decided that I wanted to do it to close out the year. Decembers are often used for looking back, but not many people want to spend a lot of time examining 2020. Instead, I’ll be looking a little further back for my December song-a-day list:

The 90s That Almost Was

We all know the 90s were full of Grunge, Boy Bands, 3rd Wave Ska, and Punk Revival, but there was a lot more going on during that decade than we often remember. In this list, I’ll be taking a look at movements and artists that almost had a huge influence on 90s music but ended up being overtaken by the more well-known trends.

I have a lot of categories for this one:

Riot Grrrls

A quick, 3-video history of the sound that could have been a lot bigger, except the boys stole it and turned it into Grunge.

Psychedelic Surfers

Early in the 90s, we were returning to the 60s in a hopeful rush of love, peace, and psychedelia…before it all got grumpy.

Madchester and More

A look at British trends that failed to gain a foothold in the US despite being musically amazing.

(Real) World Music

Partially because of Peter Gabriel’s outreach work with Real World Studios, for a brief moment it looked like musical globalism would make it big.

The McLachlan Effect

Sarah isn’t on this list (because she WAS part of the popular 90s), but her success had a huge impact on other artists, especially in and around the Lilith Fair festival.

Folksplosion

Folk had as much of a revival as Punk in the 90s, but didn’t really hit the mainstream all that much. I end with a selection of my favorites.

Those of you who know my musical tastes will quickly see that this list is also “what Eric was listening to in the 90s,” and that’s certainly true. This is a very personal and important list for me, fitting for the end of a hard year. If you get through the whole month loving everything, please let me know. It means we should probably talk about music a lot more than we already do.

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Gothtember (Music Archive #6)

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This will be an examination of the history of Goth music. I know several of my friends are definitely more of an authority on this than I am, but I like to think I know enough. I once again felt compelled to build a bridge between Gen-X and the younger folks who came into the scene a bit later. I know many people who seem to equate Goth and Emo because the scenes share some aesthetics, but the music is vastly different.

My categories for this song-a-day exploration of Goth are as follows:

1) Origins – bands and songs that may or may not be officially “Goth,” but certainly helped spawn the genre
2) The Dark Wave – the emergence of the first Goth bands from a combination of Punk and New Wave
3) The Metal/Industrial Edge – Goth music’s transition into the 90s and influences from hard rock and heavy metal
4) Downtempo – the simultaneous and contrasting movement towards trance and ethereal Goth
5) Lasting Impact – just a couple of post-Goth songs that I want to comment on in terms of how they relate to the genre

As always, this will be a mix of well-known songs and much more obscure ones. (If you know all of them, you’re probably one of the people I was referring to earlier.) However, if you’re familiar with my various FB music series, then you know that the context and flow is important. You may disagree with some of my choices, and that’s fine. Everything is up for discussion and interpretation.

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The 90s Through a Gen-X Lens (Music Archive #5)

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Okay, I’ve been quiet on Facebook for a while, so I think it’s time to flex my song-a-day muscles. This one’s gonna be a little more ambitious, though, so buckle in.

I’ll be talking about hits and trends that I watched happen in the 90s that made me think about earlier music. This will be divided into three sections:

#1 – Giants on the Shoulders of Giants

This will include important songs and artists from the 90s compared with their musical predecessors. In many cases, I will be matching groups that the 90s artists don’t necessarily acknowledge as influences, but they share musical DNA.

#2 – Evolving Artists

This section will be all about how bands change over time – bands that were still active and well-known in the 90s but came from an earlier background. This list will include bands that were still together and artists that went solo or joined other projects.

#3 – Stream of Consciousness

This section will be more about my personal connections to music – songs that made me think of other songs for more free-associative reasons. You may not always see them the same way, but I’ll explain my logic so you can be amused by my connections.

Again, all of this is just about my experience. For those of you who have not seen me do this before, my lists are not meant to be all-encompassing or definitive. It’s just my own musical essay that I want to share.

Oh, and the ambitious part? I’ll be posting two songs per day. I’ll start with the 90s song and then I’ll post the connection in the comments. That’s 62 songs I have prepared for March.

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1987, My Best Year in Music (Music Archive #4)

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For those of you who have looped in here since July of this year, I will warn you that I occasionally do month-long projects of posting and discussing a song each day on a single theme or topic. You’ll find that I take these pretty seriously – perhaps unusually seriously. You’ll notice a couple of things about my posts during the month:

a) I go into a LOT of detail about the song, artist, and culture surrounding them. I curate these projects like collections of art (which I believe they are), so if you like reading descriptions next to paintings, then you should enjoy my approach.

b) I share videos, not just songs. I grew up in an era when MTV ruled our collective consciousness, so for me the video is often as important as the song itself. I know that Spotify-minded folks may have a difficult time with this, but I ask you to consider watching the videos for the full impact.

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80s in July (Music Archive #3)

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I was reflecting recently that people who didn’t grow up in the 80s have settled on just a few go-to music videos for understanding the early 80s look and sound, but there’s so much more out there that I wish they could experience. It’s not just Take on Me and Africa.

So I’m going to be exploring 31 of what I consider to be the iconic videos of the 80s that have become somewhat forgotten. Make sure you watch, because the videos are absolutely as important as the songs.

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