Hey there, it’s been a while! I’ve been busy with IRL stuff and day job things, but over the last few weeks I’ve been thinking that it’s time for me to revive the Twenty Years On series, as it’s now entered the San Francisco Years. Yes, this means that we’ve been here in this city for just over twenty years now!
I will say that it’s going to be a bit disjointed for a few reasons…after a whirlwind 2005 of several (very positive) personal events, we settled into our new apartment overlooking a busy intersection at the tip of the North Beach neighborhood, just a few blocks away from the tourist trap that is Pier 39. While A spent several days (and months) getting things in order at the office she’d transferred to, I chose to restart with a completely blank slate jobwise. I’d get a temporary position at Bank of America (soon to become permanent), and start getting used to living on the west coast. My writing nook was now a large bay window overlooking said intersection and named Arkham West, and I was writing Love Like Blood at the time but secretly wishing I could return to the trilogy.
Oddly, it took me a while to reconnect with music. I’d somehow drifted away from what I’d been listening to at the time, partly because I no longer had my own private writing nook that wouldn’t bother anyone else, partly because I couldn’t locate any college radio stations that appealed to me…but mostly because alternative rock seemed to be evolving in directions that couldn’t quite retain my interest. The brilliance of 2002-2003 seemed to have retreated and replaced by Pitchfork-rated hipster-influenced indie. To me it kind of felt like the scene was kind of losing its vision a bit. Not that it was all bad, of course, just that it was harder for me to find something I liked.
There was also the fact that I’d gotten rid of an extremely large portion of my music collection before we’d moved. The vinyl and cassettes stayed with my family (I allowed them to do what they wished with it, including selling it off and keeping the money), and after spending the entire summer of 2005 ripping my cds, I found myself unsure of what I still wanted to listen to. I’d purposely disconnected myself from my solace, so to speak, and ended up adrift. Even despite living just blocks away from a Tower Records (which would soon shut down within the year), I’d realized that I really couldn’t spend all my pocket money on CDs as I used to. And we really didn’t have the room for my huge collection.
It would be a few more years before I’d reconnect and find sounds that resonated with me, but those musical times in the Belfry Years were definitely over.
*
Morningwood, Morningwood, released 10 January 2006. I’d actually heard this band in mid-2005 during the months I lived in New Jersey. There was an intriguing cable channel called International Music Feed whose playlist was steeped in everything not originating in the US that me, A and our roommates constantly listened to. We loved their two singles from this record, “Nth Degree” and “Jetsetter”, both giddy and goofy pop gems. They only lasted a few years (as did the channel) though singer Chantal Claret followed up with a pretty decent solo career in the ’10s.
She Wants Revenge, She Wants Revenge, released 31 January 2006. I remember hearing “Tear You Apart” a lot on Live 105, the local alternative rock station that was pretty much the closest analogue to the Boston area’s WFNX that became our usual station to listen to in the car. I was of two minds about this album — on the one hand, I liked their Joy Division/Interpol sound, but on the other hand it felt a little too derivative. They’d drop an album a few years later (2011’s Valleyheart), however, that I felt was absolutely brilliant.
Sparks, Hello Young Lovers, released 6 February 2006. I’d been a passive fan of Sparks but never quite got around to buying any of their albums, at least not until I finally took the plunge a few years later and downloaded their discography. They’re still a bit confusing to me but I wouldn’t have it any other way.
Belle and Sebastian, The Life Pursuit, released 6 February 2006. Their album The Boy with the Arab Strap was a huge Belfry/HMV Years favorite of mine, and I’d put them on my ‘will buy anything they release’ list. That kind of fell apart around this time, however, mostly due to wanting save money, but at the same time I was having trouble trying to get used to their evolving sound. Their sound was no longer the bedsit twee pop I loved. I’d eventually come around, though.
KT Tunstall, Eye to the Telescope, released 7 February 2006. You couldn’t escape “Black Horse and the Cherry Tree” that year, as it showed up all over the place: music video channels, AOR stations, alt.rock stations, and everywhere in between. It’s a fun album worth checking out.
Elbow, Leaders of the Free World (US Edition), released 21 February 2006. I continued (and still continue) to be a huge Elbow fan ever since picking up Asleep in the Back early in 2002, and while this album is a bit odd compared to the dreamlike Asleep or the pastoral Cast of Thousands from 2003, it remains a wonderful record. “Forget Myself” got a good amount of play on Live 105 at the time.
Arctic Monkeys, Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not, released 21 February 2006. It’s funny — for a good couple of years I constantly mixed this band up with LCD Soundsystem, who appeared right around the same time. I think part of it was because they both embraced that indie-punk-meets-dance style that had become a big thing at the time, a style I wasn’t entirely all that interested in. I kinda-sorta liked them? But not enough to go out of my way and pick up their work? At least not until their major breakthrough, 2013’s AM.
*
Coming up: getting used to the new sounds and finding stuff online