Tunes Du Jour Presents 2007

Looking back at 2007, what stands out isn’t a single dominant sound but rather the year’s refusal to commit to any one direction. Rihanna’s “Umbrella” became the year’s unavoidable anthem, its rain-soaked hook lodging itself in collective consciousness while Jay-Z’s opening verse added hip-hop credibility to what was already a perfectly constructed pop song. Meanwhile, Amy Winehouse’s “Rehab” proved that retro-soul could feel urgent and contemporary, her defiant delivery turning personal struggle into something both devastating and oddly triumphant. These weren’t songs that simply topped charts—they were cultural moments that demonstrated pop music’s expanding possibilities.

The indie and alternative world was having its own moment of crossover success, with acts that had been bubbling under suddenly finding mainstream attention. Peter Bjorn & John’s “Young Folks” turned a whistle riff into an inescapable earworm, while Feist’s “1 2 3 4” made counting feel revolutionary, particularly after its appearance in an iPod commercial blurred the lines between advertising and artistry. LCD Soundsystem’s “Someone Great” offered something more melancholic, a dance-punk meditation on loss that proved electronic music could carry genuine emotional weight. These songs suggested that the wall between “indie” and “popular” was becoming increasingly porous, if not entirely irrelevant.

Rock music in 2007 occupied a fascinating space between theatrical ambition and raw simplicity. My Chemical Romance’s “Welcome To The Black Parade” opened with a piano line that promised—and delivered—pure arena-ready drama, a five-minute epic that wore its Queen influences proudly. On the opposite end of the spectrum, The White Stripes’ “Icky Thump” was all garage-rock aggression and Jack White’s snarling guitar work, while Kaiser Chiefs’ “Ruby” split the difference with its hooky, festival-ready energy. Even Foo Fighters’ “The Pretender” managed to sound both massive and tightly controlled, proof that straightforward rock could still command attention.

The electronic and dance music represented here reveals a year when those genres were becoming more adventurous and less confined to clubs. Justice’s “D.A.N.C.E.” filtered disco through a French electro lens, creating something that felt both nostalgic and futuristic, while Klaxons’ “Golden Skans” brought rave culture into the indie sphere with its pulsing urgency. Björk’s “Earth Intruders” and Battles’ “Atlas” pushed even further into experimental territory, the former with its martial rhythms and the latter with its stuttering, math-rock complexity. These tracks suggested that electronic music was no longer content with simply making people move—it wanted to challenge and surprise them too.

What emerges from this collection isn’t a neat narrative about where music was headed, but rather evidence of a year when multiple possibilities existed simultaneously. You had Britney Spears’ “Gimme More” and its deliberate, almost menacing production sitting alongside P!nk’s “Who Knew,” a straightforward power ballad that wouldn’t have felt out of place a decade earlier. Mims’ “This Is Why I’m Hot” represented hip-hop’s confident swagger, while Modest Mouse’s “Dashboard” showed alternative rock could still be genuinely weird and still find an audience. Two thousand and seven was a year when the music industry hadn’t yet fully figured out what the streaming era would mean, when radio still mattered but was losing its grip, and when artists could still surprise us by becoming stars without following any established playbook.

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Tunes Du Jour Presents The John Lennon Songbook

It’s interesting to start a playlist of John Lennon songs with David Bowie’s “Fame.” It feels like an outlier at first, until you remember Lennon co-wrote the track, contributed guitar, and sang backup vocals. It’s one of just a handful of songs on this list that isn’t a straightforward cover, and its placement at the top serves as a great reminder: one of the best ways to understand a songwriter’s impact is to see how their work thrives in the hands of others. Listening to a collection like this isn’t just about nostalgia; it’s an active exploration of how durable and adaptable Lennon’s compositions truly are, revealing the deep-seated melodic and lyrical strengths that invite constant reinterpretation.

The sheer variety of artists drawn to his work speaks volumes about its fundamental structure. A Lennon song can be a sturdy vessel for almost any style. In its original form, “Help!” was a desperate plea disguised as an upbeat folk-rock hit. But when Tina Turner gets ahold of it, she strips away the disguise, transforming it into a full-throated, soulful cry for salvation. Similarly, Johnny Cash takes “In My Life,” a song of youthful reflection, and imbues it with the profound weight of a long life lived, making each line land with a different, more somber gravity. From the raw R&B groove Otis Redding finds in “Day Tripper” to the cool, atmospheric poise Roxy Music brings to “Jealous Guy,” these songs prove to be exceptionally resilient, their core emotions accessible to any genre.

Beyond musical versatility, the playlist highlights the different facets of Lennon’s lyrical persona. There’s the acerbic political commentator, whose pointed dissatisfaction is channeled perfectly by the punk sneer of Generation X on “Gimme Some Truth” and the world-weary defiance of Marianne Faithfull on “Working Class Hero.” Then there is the deeply vulnerable Lennon, the man wrangling with insecurity and fame. You can hear this in the anxious, propulsive energy The Feelies bring to “Everybody’s Got Something To Hide (Except Me And My Monkey)” or the stark, pleading quality Maxïmo Park finds in the solo track “Isolation.” He could be pointedly political or achingly personal, and both modes have continued to resonate with artists who have their own truths to tell.

Of course, no look at Lennon’s work would be complete without touching on his more surreal and experimental side. These are often the songs that seem most tied to a specific time, yet they possess a dreamlike logic that continues to inspire. Elton John, a friend and collaborator, treats “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” not as a museum piece but as a glam-rock epic. R.E.M. leans into the hypnotic, floating quality of “#9 Dream,” while Fiona Apple’s take on “Across the Universe” honors its ethereal nature while grounding it with her distinctive emotional intensity. These artists don’t just copy the psychedelia; they find new ways to access the spirit of imaginative freedom that fueled the original recordings.

Ultimately, listening through these interpretations feels less like a tribute and more like a conversation across decades. We hear Billy J. Kramer’s simple pop charm on “Bad to Me,” a song Lennon wrote for him in 1963, and then Glen Campbell’s posthumous, heart-rending version of “Grow Old With Me,” one of Lennon’s last compositions. The journey between those two points is remarkable. This collection of songs, re-shaped by everyone from The Breeders to Bettye LaVette, demonstrates that the power of Lennon’s work isn’t just in his own iconic recordings. It’s in the bones of the songs themselves—the unforgettable melodies, the honest lyrics, and the restless spirit that others can’t help but be drawn to, again and again.

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