here they are:
"Baby I Love You" by Ryan Adams: Ryan Adams is known for having a bit of a hard heart, esp. when a fan requested BRYAN Adams' "Summer of '69" by mistake at one of Ryan's concerts. In recent years, however, Ryan has softened up, even performing a cover of the aforementioned song to poke fun at himself. Nothing has proven his sentimentality more than "Baby I Love You" so far, though. Ryan purposely released the song a few days after Valentine's Day. Using a lilting, jangly, Byrds-y melody and chord progression over a song whose title is the same as a Ronettes song, Ryan gives us one of his sweetest songs yet, without succumbing to being sappy in the process, thankfully.
"Extraordinary Love" by Erika Wennerstrom (from Heartless B*st*rds): Upon my first time hearing Heartless B*st*rds' music, I had thought their lead singer was a male, but it's actually a female. "Extraordinary Love" marks the first time that HB's lead singer has gone solo, and it also manages to be significantly longer than any song she did with her band, clocking in at a total of 6 minutes and 49 seconds. "Extraordinary Love" certainly lives up to its name in that aspect! It is a very adventurous song for someone whose band was known for its country-rock and roots-rock sounds. "Extraordinary Love" doesn't sound like either. Instead, it is a psychedelic and progressive rock fusion, evoking the sounds of such symphonic rock groups as King Crimson, The Moody Blues, and the Syd Barrett era of Pink Floyd. Each verse seems to take two minutes to complete, but with the enrapturing vibe of this song, each of those two minute intervals feels more like one minute to me!
"Nameless, Faceless" by Courtney Barnett: With its forceful intro bearing similarity to Devo's "Jocko Homo" in terms of its series of half step chords going progressively downward, Courtney Barnett proves herself once again as a force to be reckoned with in her latest song, "Nameless, Faceless". As with most of her material, it's not just the song that proves itself to be tough as nails, but the lyrics as well, particularly the part during the second verse where she says, "I could eat a bowl of alphabet soup and spit out better words than you", which is as scathing as it is funny! Another similarity "Nameless, Faceless" bears to "Jocko Homo" is how it is both hilarious and confrontational. Where Devo challenged the idea of man truly being an "evolved" creature, Courtney challenges the idea of gender harmony and tears it apart mercilessly when she says, "Men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them." Are we not women?! WE ARE DEVO!!