Tunes Du Jour Presents 2006

If you had to pick one song to sum up 2006, you might reach for Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy” — a song so omnipresent that year it practically became ambient noise. But that choice would also tell you something true about the year: it was a moment when genuinely strange, interesting ideas were landing at the top of the charts, not just surviving on the margins. Cee Lo Green and Danger Mouse made a song that was simultaneously soulful, psychedelic, and completely radio-friendly, and somehow the world went along with it. That tension — between the weird and the accessible, between art and commerce — runs through a lot of what made 2006 a particularly interesting year in music.

The mainstream pop landscape was, by any measure, stacked. Justin Timberlake’s “My Love,” with its spare Timbaland production and T.I. verse, pointed forward toward the minimalist R&B that would define the next decade. Beyoncé released “Irreplaceable,” a song so well-constructed it barely needs any production to hold your attention. Rihanna was still in her early hitmaking mode with “SOS,” and Nelly Furtado, working with Timbaland, was having a pop renaissance with “Promiscuous.” What’s notable in retrospect is how many of these tracks were built around restraint — the arrangements have room in them, the hooks don’t have to fight to be heard. It’s pop music that trusted the song.

On the rock side of things, the year had an interesting split personality. Arctic Monkeys had exploded out of Sheffield with “I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor,” all nervous energy and sharp elbows, while The Killers’ “When You Were Young” pushed toward something more cinematic and earnest. The Raconteurs gave Jack White a different context to work in, and “Steady, As She Goes” was proof that a riff-first approach still had plenty of life in it. Muse were somewhere in the atmosphere with “Knights of Cydonia,” a song so committed to its own grandiosity that it looped back around to being genuinely exciting. Meanwhile, Band of Horses released “The Funeral,” which occupied a completely different emotional register — slow, aching, and built to last.

Away from the obvious mainstream, 2006 had a lot happening in the spaces between genres. TV on the Radio were making rock music that felt genuinely new with “Wolf Like Me,” while Hot Chip and Junior Boys were finding the emotional depth available in electronic pop. The Knife’s “Silent Shout” was something else entirely — icy, theatrical, and slightly unsettling in the best way. Camera Obscura offered a gentler alternative with “Lloyd, I’m Ready to be Heartbroken,” a song that wore its Lloyd Cole reference as a badge of honor, and The Pipettes were busy making sharp, witty girl-group pop that felt both nostalgic and pointed. Hip-hop, meanwhile, was getting some of its most creatively ambitious work from Kanye West (“Touch the Sky”) and Lupe Fiasco, whose “Kick, Push” used skateboarding as a fully realized metaphor for outsider identity without ever feeling forced.

There were also moments in 2006 that went beyond music into something more like public conversation. The Chicks released “Not Ready to Make Nice,” a direct response to the backlash they’d faced since 2003, and the fact that it became a hit felt genuinely significant — a mainstream country-adjacent audience giving space to a song about refusing to apologize. Cat Power’s “The Greatest” was quieter but no less affecting, a meditation on loss and missed potential delivered with a stillness that made it hit harder. Morrissey was still being Morrissey (“You Have Killed Me”), which is either a comfort or an irritant depending on your history with the man. What holds all of this together isn’t a single sound or movement — it’s more that 2006 was a year when music across a lot of different genres was being made by people who seemed to be thinking carefully about what they were doing, and the results have held up.

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My Favorite Songs Of 2024

  1. Good Luck, Babe! – Chappell Roan
  2. HOT TO GO! – Chappell Roan
  3. TEXAS HOLD ‘EM – Beyoncé
  4. Houdini – Dua Lipa
  5. I KNOW ? – Travis Scott
  6. Espresso – Sabrina Carpenter
  7. girl, so confusing – Charli xcx & Lorde
  8. Not Like Us – Kendrick Lamar
  9. I Guess Time Just Makes Fools Of Us All – Father John Misty
  10. Like That – Future, Metro Boomin & Kendrick Lamar
  11. Training Season – Dua Lipa
  12. Jerkin’ – Amyl and The Sniffers
  13. Nothing Matters – The Last Dinner Party
  14. Water – Tyla
  15. Guess – Charli xcx feat. Billie Eilish
  16. Broken Man – St. Vincent
  17. Please Please Please – Sabrina Carpenter
  18. Pink Pony Club – Chappell Roan
  19. Starburster – Fontaines D.C.
  20. Abigail – Soccer Mommy
  21. Step Into Your Power – Ray LaMontagne
  22. What About the Children? – Gary Clark Jr. feat. Stevie Wonder
  23. LUNCH – Billie Eilish
  24. WILDFLOWER – Billie Eilish
  25. MY HOUSE – Beyoncé
  26. Mamushi – Megan Thee Stallion feat. Yuki Chiba
  27. Deeper Well – Kacey Musgraves
  28. yes, and? – Ariana Grande
  29. My Golden Years – The Lemon Twigs
  30. All In Good Time – Iron & Wine feat. Fiona Apple
  31. Taste – Sabrina Carpenter
  32. Lights Camera Action – Kylie Minogue
  33. The Architect – Kacey Musgraves
  34. That’s How I’m Feeling – Jack White
  35. Dancing in the Flames – The Weeknd
  36. BIRDS OF A FEATHER – Billie Eilish
  37. Femenine – Empress Of
  38. Saturn – SZA
  39. Once in a Lifetime – Joshua Idehen with the Social Singing Choir
  40. Capricorn – Vampire Weekend
  41. The Door – Teddy Swims
  42. Calling You Out – Charly Bliss
  43. Mess It Up – The Rolling Stones
  44. Eusexua – FKA twigs
  45. x-ray eyes – LCD Soundsystem
  46. Grace – IDLES
  47. Too Sweet – Hozier
  48. Young Lion – Sade Adu
  49. Baddy on the Floor – Jamie xx and Honey Dijon
  50. Euphoria – Kendrick Lamar
  51. Life – Jamie xx & Robyn
  52. Mother Nature – MGMT
  53. JOLENE – Beyoncé
  54. The Rest of Me – Michael Kiwanuka
  55. Worth It. – RAYE
  56. Dream Job – Yard Act
  57. Mood Swings – Little Simz
  58. All You Children – Jamie xx & The Avalanches
  59. The Light Nights – Camera Obscura
  60. J CHRIST – Lil Nas X
  61. Weightless – Romy
  62. 360 – Charli xcx featuring Robyn and Yung Lean
  63. LEVII’S JEANS – Beyoncé featuring Post Malone
  64. Sinner – The Last Dinner Party
  65. Sticky – Tyler, the Creator feat. GloRilla, Sexyy Red & Lil Wayne
  66. Too Much – girl in red
  67. Well, Alright – Johnny Cash
  68. Peaceful Place – Leon Bridges
  69. Clams Casino – Cassandra Jenkins
  70. Sympathy Is a Knife – Charli xcx feat. Ariana Grande
  71. Take Me Home, Country Roads – Lana Del Rey
  72. Racist Piece of Shit – Fishbone
  73. While My Guitar Gently Weeps – Lucinda Williams
  74. Classical – Vampire Weekend
  75. Bells and Whistles – Bright Eyes
  76. Alimony – Miranda Lambert
  77. Genesis. – RAYE
  78. Neva Play – Megan Thee Stallion feat. RM of BTS
  79. Disease – Lady Gaga
  80.  BLACKBIIRD – Beyoncé with Brittney Spencer, Reyna Roberts, Tanner Adell and Tiera Kennedy
  81. Flea – St. Vincent
  82. Friend of a Friend – The Smile
  83. HIND’S HALL – Macklemore
  84. HISS – Megan Thee Stallion
  85. Timeless – The Weeknd with Playboi Carti
  86. 16 CARRIAGES – Beyoncé
  87. we can’t be friends (wait for your love) – Ariana Grande
  88. On My Mama – Victoria Monét
  89. Death Valley High – Orville Peck featuring Beck
  90. Tennessee Rise – The Tennessee Freedom Singers
  91. The Feminine Urge – The Last Dinner Party
  92. Surround Sound – JID feat. 21 Savage & Baby Tate
  93. Talk Talk – Charli xcx
  94. Cinderella – Remi Wolf
  95. Afterlife – Sharon Van Etten
  96. Real Good – Homeboy Sandman
  97. Sexy To Someone – Clairo
  98. Beaches – Beabadoobee
  99. Favourite – Fontaines D.C.

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Your (Almost) Daily Playlist: 2-9-24

The Magnetic Fields’ Stephin Merritt was sitting in a piano bar in Manhattan, listening to the pianist’s interpretations of Stephen Sondheim songs, when he decided he ought to get into theater music because he felt he had an aptitude for it. “I decided I’d write one hundred love songs as a way of introducing myself to the world. Then I realized how long that would be. So I settled on sixty-nine. I’d have a theatrical revue with four drag queens. And whoever the audience liked best at the end of the night would get paid.”

The Magnetic FieldsStephin Merritt was born on this date in 1965. Lots of his/their music is included on today’s playlist.

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