A retrospective on indie pop music from 2009
By Bex Peterson, Editor-in-Chief
2009 was as big a year for me as it was for music. I was in the throes of teen angst at 15, with a CD player and a collection of soft indie pop music to set the atmosphere for tearful journaling by fairy lights. No one understands you when youâre 15âexcept maybe Regina Spektor. Hereâs a brief retrospective on some albums that came out 10 years ago, and whether theyâre worth a nostalgic glance back today.
Ocean Eyes â Owl City
By this point I think weâd all believe our eyes if 10,000,000 fireflies⊠well, you donât need me to say it. Yes, âFirefliesâ and other hits off the album have received some well-earned critical lumps since the recordâs explosively popular releaseâthe over-processed sound is distracting, the lyrics sound like your phoneâs autofill feature released a book of poetry, and Adam Young always sounds just a touch too sincere to take seriously. But damn it, I love this album with the passion of a broken 15-year-old heart, and Iâm not the only one. Hereâs what our Entertainment Editor Isabelle had to say:
The phrase âin my feelingsâ didnât exist in 2009, but for the entirety of the ninth grade I was perpetually âin my feelings.â It was hard balancing all the weight of puberty with the fact that I was never, ever, going to be kissed ever (or at least until I was 18 and had my first sip of an alcoholic beverage). Like many losers without friends I turned to the only company I hadâbanginâ tunes. At the time âFirefliesâ came out, I had a $30 MP3 player that let me record clips from the radio. Thanks to this function, I had a scratchy recording of Lady Gagaâs âLoveGame,â and probably some Metro Station. I have a crystal-clear memory of lying in bed at a reasonable hour on a Saturday night, flipping through stations until I came across âFireflies,â already halfway through the track. I quickly recorded what was left of the song and replayed it for half an hour with my eyes closed, imaging a night much different than the one I was living. It was a nice reprieve from the trials and tribulations of adolescence.
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Overplayed fave: âFirefliesâ
Overlooked gem: âOn the Wingâ
The Listening â Lights
If ever there was an album that truly spoke to all the little aspirations of my early teenage years, it was The Listening. All of Lightsâ music videos seemed to capture who I wanted to becomeâa musician with heavy eyeliner and tattoos crooning gentle electronic hits and doodling superhero versions of themselves in their notebooks that would come to life and have epic adventures. Lights felt like the patron saint of soft-hearted nerds. While her sound is certainly not for everyone, I still have a nostalgic pang for those on-the-nose, self-esteem-boosting ballads like âFace-Upâ and âLions!ââthe latter of which Lights later revealed was about playing World of Warcraft. âPretendâ is also still something of a tearjerker for me all these years later. If you like Owl City, youâll probably find a soft spot in your heart for Lights; and of course, the reverse is probably true as well.
Overplayed fave: âSaviourâ
Overlooked gem: âFebruary Airâ
Lungs â Florence + The Machine
Yes, this album is a 2009 baby too! While I didnât buy the album when it came out, the songs sort of filtered onto my iPod over the next few years (especially from fandom playlistsââCosmic Loveâ was the headliner for many, many Doctor Who fanmixes at the height of that particular fandom). I think of all the albums on this list, Lungs has so far aged the best. It doesnât have that heavily-processed electronic sound typical of indie pop in the late 2000s; if anything, it stands out for how organic it feels compared to its contemporaries. Itâs almost hard to think of it as a nostalgic album, since many of its hits such as âDrumming Song,â âYouâve Got the Love,â âDog Days are Over,â and so on are still often played today. To say it holds up would be an understatement.
Overplayed fave: âDog Days Are Overâ
Overlooked gem: âIâm Not Calling You a Liarâ
Ellipse â Imogen Heap
I feel like this albumâand the artist herselfâis sort of an overlooked master of the indie pop genre. Responsible for giving us âHide and Seekâ in her previous album (an incredibly beautiful, moving song thatâs been mercilessly memeâd to deathââmm whatcha sayâ indeed), Imogen Heapâs Ellipse is wonderfully rife with her signature transcendental electronic sound. Her lyrics range between ethereal and otherworldly to hopelessly relatable, such as in her unrequited love ballad âSwoonâ where she sings, âThis is where I was going to sing your name/Over and over again/But I chickened out/I havenât done it/âCause I thought you probably wouldnât like it.â The intensely eerie â2-1â was originally written for the Prince Caspian soundtrack, but it was ultimately deemed too dark for a Narnia filmâwhich is a shame because itâs a gorgeous piece of music. The final song âHalf Lifeâ is a heartbreakingly poignant end to a brilliant album thatâs well worth a listen 10 years on.
Overplayed fave: âCanvasâ
Overlooked gem: âWait It Outâ
Far â Regina Spektor
Regina Spektor is indie pop catnip. Her voice ranges from soft trills to loud brash belting, with plenty of vocal tricks and flips along the way. Far followed up on some of the themes and instrumental stylings of her previous album Begin to Hope on a broader scope, examining the human condition and aspects of modern society with her quirky lyrical stylings. âLaughing Withâ is an obvious choice for recommendation, as it succinctly states the themes of the albums in an uncomplicated, powerful ballad, but âMan of a Thousand Facesâ is probably the song that hits hardest for me.
Overplayed fave: âFolding Chairâ
Overlooked gem: âDance Anthem of the 80âsâ