Songs That Rock: The ’00s
I decided to take a look at what albums I have that were released during the last decade, and I discovered something: there aren’t that many that really just ‘rocked.’ The decade was pretty dominated by a more subdued ‘indie’ sound (if the ’90s was the ‘alternative’ decade, the ’00s was certainly the ‘indie’ decade).
Looking at what I have, here are 10 songs–one from each year–that I thought really kept rock alive. It’s sad to say that most of these bands didn’t actually get started in the ’00s (the Yeah Yeah Yeahs have the honor of being my only pick from a debut album), but in the end we had to leave it to the elder statesmen to really keep things rocking properly.
We start the list off with a last gasp of the ’90s (and one of my all-time favorite Pumpkins songs), and end the list with one of the very few bands that have kept rock alive for the past 3 decades (it’s hard to listen to “Anti-Orgasm” and then remember that Kim Gordon is older than both of my parents.)
- 2000 - Stand Inside Your Love
from the Smashing Pumpkins album “MACHINA/The Machines of God” - 2001 - Dead Leaves and the Dirty Ground
from the White Stripes album “White Blood Cells” - 2002 - First It Giveth
from the Queens of the Stone Age album “Songs for the Deaf” - 2003 - Man
from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs album “Fever to Tell” - 2004 - Unlucky
from the StarFlyer 59 album “I Am the Portuguese Blues” - 2005 - The Fox
from the Sleater-Kinney album “The Woods” - 2006 - Comatose
from the Pearl Jam album “Pearl Jam”
- 2007 - Erase/Replace
from the Foo Fighters album “Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace” - 2008 - Living Well Is the Best Revenge
from the R.E.M. album “Accelerate” - 2009 - Anti-Orgasm
from the Sonic Youth album “The Eternal”
Special Jury Prize – Them Crooked Vultures – entire debut album
This album alone is evidence enough that rock will never die, and there is hope for the decade ahead. But once again, it’s up to the elder statesmen to show the kids how it’s done.
I’m sure you think I’m totally wrong about the past decade, and maybe I am, but I’m getting older and I’m perpetually stuck in the ’90s musically. (“Back in my day, rock music was blah blah blah…”)
Tell me why I’m wrong in the comments!








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