Pazz and Jop 2010

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Also, I totally support the idea of personal rules for voting. Mine, which I don't claim anybody else should follow unless they feel like it, are that I do the album list first, thinking of it as "year's greatest achievement at album length", and then I do the song list, thinking of it as "honorable mention for notable achievement at song length". So no duplication of songs from listed albums, and no duplication of artists, but the songs always end up being a mix of standout moments from albums that just missed my album list (but album #11 doesn't necessarily get a song slot), and random songs that blew me away even though their albums didn't (or didn't come from albums).

I rarely get much overlap with other voters this way -- none in 2010 -- but I figure people who wander into my ballot via album votes or trawling around at the bottom of the song list will get this little playlist of suggestions that you might be interested in if you like the kind of thing I vote for...

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 28 January 2011 02:34 (thirteen years ago) link

Idiosyncratic singles ballots that are full of songs that only got one or a few votes are totally cool in my opinion, especially if your tastes run exclusively towards the esoteric or outside any singles charts. Mine don't, personally, so when I'm making my singles ballot I'm kind of rooting for each song to get votes from other people, even as I know some of those songs have a better shot than others. I'm wary about how consensus has formed around some songs and types of songs, but the people that are just total individualists should go for it.

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 02:40 (thirteen years ago) link

But I mean, the Arcade Fire thing -- they were #3 on the albums list, plus a non-single got to #11 on the singles list. I'm sure every top 3 Pazz & Jop album ever has had some deep cut that everyone who voted for it could agree was great, but what's really the point of voting for that song too? It's not a question of how many of the song's voters also voted for the album, either -- someone might vote for just the song as a 'statement' about how they dislike the album but love the song, but that's not expressed in any meaningful way by the song finishing in the top 20.

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 02:44 (thirteen years ago) link

maybe they were bewitched by regine's streamers when the arcade fire performed the song on SNL.

da croupier, Friday, 28 January 2011 03:07 (thirteen years ago) link

It's not a question of how many of the song's voters also voted for the album, either -- someone might vote for just the song as a 'statement' about how they dislike the album but love the song, but that's not expressed in any meaningful way by the song finishing in the top 20.

― williamstevenjames (some dude), Thursday, January 27, 2011 6:44 PM (50 minutes ago) Bookmark

i think you have to accept that people may have voted for arcade fire jam #7 simply because they love it, love it not exclusively as an inseparable part of an album but as a thing in itself, a thing to be watched on youtube, slotted into playlists, or bought for 99 cents from itunes. voting for an album track needn't be a "statement" about the album as a whole, and it isn't necessarily lazy or incurious. such a vote can be a sincere statement regarding what one honestly believes: that the song in question legitimately deserves to be singled out for individual attention. worrying about it any more than that seems petty.

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 03:45 (thirteen years ago) link

I accept that, sure. Thinking about how one's vote effects the results of a poll one is participating in beyond the main motivating factors behind how one votes isn't necessary or important -- I don't know if I'd use the word "petty," maybe just neurotic.

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 03:50 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah, that's fair. "petty" was kinda sharp, no snub intended.

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 04:08 (thirteen years ago) link

A lot of it comes down to not wanting my singles list to be redundant with my albums list, and likewise thinking that the more the P&J singles poll resembles the albums poll, the less it feels like it has a reason to exist

OTM. The same line of thinking applies to my own ballot -- if I voted for the album then I've already endorsed all the songs on there, so why not use my singles ballot to vote for something different? That was my thinking this year, at least. It helped that there weren't any obvious hit singles on the albums I voted for.

NoTimeBeforeTime, Friday, 28 January 2011 09:18 (thirteen years ago) link

I do a top 50 albums list and a top 50 singles list every year; this year, my singles list this year featured 11 songs that appeared on records on my albums list, and 16 songs from albums I've heard. I know not every critic has the time or inclination or compulsion to do that. But I mean, when people can't come up with 10 songs they loved that weren't on albums they listened to and I was able to think of 34, I'm not calling them "lazy" but I do think they could maybe to treat their singles ballots as more of a unique space to honor music that's not a permanent part of their record collection.

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 14:27 (thirteen years ago) link

^^ Yes. You've made good arguments here for that.

curmudgeon, Friday, 28 January 2011 16:05 (thirteen years ago) link

For another slightly different perspective, I just did a quick calculation to give each P&J year since 1979 a Single/Album Vote Ratio, by taking the average ratio between the corresponding single and album at each chart position from 1-25. So if the two top 25s in a year had the same number of votes all the way down, they'd get a score of 1.0, and the lower the number, the less consensus the singles list represented compared to the albums list.

1979 - 0.54
1980 - 0.614
1981 - 0.921
1982 - 0.872
1983 - 0.969
1984 - 0.839
1985 - 0.886
1986 - 0.719
1987 - 0.799
1988 - 0.755
1989 - 0.855
1990 - 0.719
1991 - 0.835
1992 - 0.654
1993 - 0.708
1994 - 0.722
1995 - 0.8
1996 - 0.659
1997 - 0.676
1998 - 0.599
1999 - 0.55
2000 - 0.693
2001 - 0.642
2002 - 0.644
2003 - 0.84
2004 - 0.742
2005 - 0.656
2006 - 0.622
2007 - 0.53
2008 - 0.537
2009 - 0.581
2010 - 0.551

Interesting that the numbers vary so much. They've been low the last few years, but statistically the overall downward trend is both slight and debatable. If you look only at the top 10s it's even less clear whether there's a trend.

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 28 January 2011 16:32 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah it's interesting to see how the strength of the consensus has varied, that definitely seems like something that's fluctuated independent of any single factor or trend.

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 16:37 (thirteen years ago) link

...the average ratio between the corresponding single and album at each chart position from 1-25. So if the two top 25s in a year had the same number of votes all the way down, they'd get a score of 1.0

so, where there is track/album correspondence in the top 25s, you compared the number of votes each got, generating a ratio from 0 (statistically impossible) to 1 (both got the same number of votes). is that right?

if so, it's interesting that this sort of consensus, whatever it might indicate, seems to be declining over time. wonder what might be motivating that? might be that participants have, over time, become less inclined to vote for matching albbums and tracks, but it's hard to say.

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 17:20 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm slow here. So, you're comparing the #25 album to the #25 single (and both #24s, both #23s, both #22, etc.), right? It has nothing to do with whether the same artist places on each list, right? Or does it? (If it does, I'm confused -- wouldn't that just take into account artists who do place on both tallies, whether there's 1 of them or 25, and artists who don't place on both lists wouldn't be a variable at all? But I don't think it does. Still kind of dense about what point it's making! I think part of my confusion is your use of the phrase "corresponding single and album" -- corresponding because they're from the same act, or finish in the same slot?)

xhuxk, Friday, 28 January 2011 17:27 (thirteen years ago) link

If you're doing what I think you're doing (comparing #25 to #25, and so on), seems the biggest factor might just be the number of voters who actually file singles ballots, vs. ones filing album ballots. (Which would explain the low scores in 1979 and 1980, when lots of crusty old cusses were resistant to voting for singles, as I believe Christgau talked about in his essays back then.) Interesting exercise, but I'm not really following what it has to do with there being a "consensus," I guess.

xhuxk, Friday, 28 January 2011 17:30 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm slow here. So, you're comparing the #25 album to the #25 single (and both #24s, both #23s, both #22, etc.), right?

lol, that's what i thought at first, based on the explanation. but i decided i must be wrong, because i couldn't see the utility in measuring that sort of consensus. i guess i don't really get what's being measured there.

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 17:36 (thirteen years ago) link

Idiosyncratic singles ballots that are full of songs that only got one or a few votes are totally cool in my opinion, especially if your tastes run exclusively towards the esoteric or outside any singles charts.

lol are you really trying to claim ud b any less of a crybaby if ppl started voting for noise cassingles & chillwave 7" instead of the shitty malltrash stuff u like? werent you mad last year when forx was repping for youtube only synth experiments & videogame dlc trax or w/e hes into?

i mean i admire that u have such a consistent aesthetic but itt it just comes across like your mad more ppl didnt give mumford & sons a vote & i dont really get why its remotely valuable or admirable that some 36 yo critic votes for a ke$ha track instead of the national or if someone uses the singles list as an 'honorable mention' type of thing or just to rep for specific trax from their albums list

Lamp, Friday, 28 January 2011 17:42 (thirteen years ago) link

LAMPOTMUS

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 17:45 (thirteen years ago) link

No, Chuck's right, this is just averages the differences between album #1 and single #1, album #2 and single #2, etc. It's just one way of measuring how much less clustery the singles votes are than the albums in a given year. Adjusting for the numbers of album vs single *votes* in a given year would be better, but I don't have that historical data on hand.

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 28 January 2011 17:47 (thirteen years ago) link

lol are you really trying to claim ud b any less of a crybaby if ppl started voting for noise cassingles & chillwave 7" instead of the shitty malltrash stuff u like? werent you mad last year when forx was repping for youtube only synth experiments & videogame dlc trax or w/e hes into?

My giving forks a hard time about putting "so-and-so's YouTube output" on an albums ballot was about my pious reverence for the sanctity of the Album. This is a whole different type of pedantry. If you think I don't want people to vote for anything obscure or unloved check my centricity score on Glenn's site, dogg, I was the sole voter for at least 3 album son my ballot.

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 17:47 (thirteen years ago) link

*albums on my ballot

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 17:48 (thirteen years ago) link

haha fair enough. again fwiw i respect your taste a lot even if (mb bcuz!) its so different from mine. also i think only one of the albums in my top ten had another person repping it :-/

i guess it just feels like the way you use the singles ballot is valid but any more than the person using it to single out a particularly great beach house deep cut. the only value p&j has is as a reflection of what a specific group of ppl liked that year its not historically impt or definitive in any way imo so let ppl vote what they like & not what you want them to like

Lamp, Friday, 28 January 2011 18:04 (thirteen years ago) link

I guess I should stop the injunction I filed with the state of New York to block the Village Voice from holding next year's poll until they fulfill my demanded changes to the voting policy, huh.

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 18:08 (thirteen years ago) link

It'll take 3-5 years to work through the courts, anyway.

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 28 January 2011 18:21 (thirteen years ago) link

Do we know how many of the contributors to the Nashville Scene newspaper Country music poll voted as well in P & J?

http://www.nashvillescene.com/nashville/country-music-critics-poll-voters/Content?oid=2191637

curmudgeon, Friday, 28 January 2011 18:24 (thirteen years ago) link

hold on, I'll correlate

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 28 January 2011 18:30 (thirteen years ago) link

37 of those 75 voted in P&J this year, 38 didn't.

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 28 January 2011 18:34 (thirteen years ago) link

38 actually, after I fixed one stray name. And here's what we get from looking at those 38 as a subset of the P&J:

https://pub.needlebase.com/actions/visualizer/V2Visualizer.do?domain=Pazz-Jop&query=A+World+Centered+in+Nashville

glenn mcdonald, Friday, 28 January 2011 18:58 (thirteen years ago) link

interesting:

Janelle Monáe · The ArchAndroid
Jamey Johnson · The Guitar Song
Kanye West · My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
Arcade Fire · The Suburbs
Elizabeth Cook · Welder
Taylor Swift · Speak Now
Black Keys · Brothers
Robert Plant · Band of Joy
Mavis Staples · You Are Not Alone
Neil Young · Le Noise
Chely Wright · Lifted Off the Ground
Robyn · Body Talk

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 19:17 (thirteen years ago) link

remove kanye from that list on the theory that everyone voted for kanye this year so he doesn't mean anything particular for any specific subgrouping, and you're left with a list that suggests, not too surprisingly, that (a) nashville (and nashville-esque) voters like real music played real people who have real roots, and (b) they're probably older than the average voter. that's what that list says to me. except for robyn. not sure how robyn fits in there. but everything else, including janelle, makes complete sense.

fact checking cuz, Friday, 28 January 2011 19:37 (thirteen years ago) link

robyn is pretty 'real music played by real people' for her style of music

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 19:42 (thirteen years ago) link

probably not any less so than janelle monae, anyway

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 19:43 (thirteen years ago) link

well, the inclusion of kanye does mean something. it supports the argument that nashville critics are engaged with the same overarching pop cultural narratives that vibe and pitchfork (etc) are. it isn't a balkanized territory.

i like a number of things about that list, not least that it includes several recordings by older artists where P&J includes none. it's pretty diverse, really. subtract, say, two of the three telegenic country pop idols, and you've got a surprisingly broad view of the american pop landscape in just 10 records. you've got young & old, club music and rock, indie and rap, black and white, homegrown americana and songs from other lands. not bad.

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 20:06 (thirteen years ago) link

i don't know, just looks like a paste magazine playlist to me.

who are the three telegenic country pop idols?

fact checking cuz, Friday, 28 January 2011 20:13 (thirteen years ago) link

there's only one artist on the list who fits that description, i'm a dick to have suggested otherwise and should be shot. leave it at that.

what i should have said: there are four artists in that top 12 that code straight country (johnson, cook, swift and wright). drop a couple of those and you have a top 10 that...

dunno from paste playlists, but their published 2010 top 10 is much narrower. it's almost all indie, it's whiter, it makes no room for older artists, allows for nothing from outside the US/UK, etc.

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 20:29 (thirteen years ago) link

The Paste I knew almost definitely wouldn't have had room for Taylor Swift or Chely Wright. (Too, uh, "telegenic" or something. Even if one of them did come out of the closet this year.)

Also, it's kind of a misnomer to call Michaelangelo Matos, Mikael Wood, Frank Kogan, Carol Cooper, Robert Christgau, Kandia Crazy Horse, Anthony Easton, myself, and several other critics whose votes would've figured into that tally "Nashville critics."

xhuxk, Friday, 28 January 2011 20:37 (thirteen years ago) link

Yeah...that group probably votes for more non-country in P&J than, say, the people from ILM's metal poll voted for non-metal or the goons voted for non-rap (or maybe I'm wrong? I dunno).

williamstevenjames (some dude), Friday, 28 January 2011 20:40 (thirteen years ago) link

Also, it's kind of a misnomer to call Michaelangelo Matos, Mikael Wood, Frank Kogan, Carol Cooper, Robert Christgau, Kandia Crazy Horse, Anthony Easton, myself, and several other critics whose votes would've figured into that tally "Nashville critics."

ulp, gotcha. was making the ridiculous/ignorant assumption that contributors to the nashville scene newspaper country music poll would mostly = industry insiders and people who write exclusively about country musicc.

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Friday, 28 January 2011 20:54 (thirteen years ago) link

"forx was repping for youtube only synth experiments & videogame dlc trax or w/e hes into?"
pfffft youtube only synth experiments and videogame dlc trax are SO 2009

i turned my head n boom I saw that tweet #wow (forksclovetofu), Friday, 28 January 2011 21:20 (thirteen years ago) link

One last (maybe) note about Kanye's margin of victory. Measuring margin by the ratio of votes for #1 over #2, this was only the 3rd most decisive victory: Arrested Development beat Pavement 97-50 in 1992, and Beck beat the Fugees 110-58 in 1996. If we do a weighted average by taking twice the #2 album's votes plus the #3 album's, and dividing by 3, and then comparing the #1's votes to that, Kanye's win drops to 4th, after Beck over the Fugees and Sleater-Kinney, PJ Harvey over Tricky and Moby 120-71-44 (1995), and Arrested Development over Pavement and REM.

The lowest such-weighted ratios, of course, went to Dylan in 2006 and LCD Soundsystemin 2007, both of whom won on points but were 3rd on votes...

glenn mcdonald, Tuesday, 1 February 2011 01:23 (thirteen years ago) link


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