Monday, December 15, 2025

Favorite Songs of 2025 - Songs 23-33

We're back again with The List - who knows if successfully completed by year's end, but giving it the old college try. This year's List is somewhere between eclectic and confusing, as always, featuring some recent denizens, some new artists, some old favorites who have never made the list, and a few who may have actually made their way into the category of popular music. As always, anyone in the last group included in The List is purely accidental.

23.    Lou Reed Was My Babysitter by Jeff Tweedy.

"I wanna shake, shake, shake, shake, shake until my shoes untie
'Cause rock 'n' roll ain't ever gonna die
Not as long as you and I are alive.
'Cause rock 'n' roll is dead
But the dead don't die."


Exhibit A in the category of "old favorites who have never made The List." In fact, neither Tweedy nor his band Wilco ever have, although I've listened to them for years. I'm sure there are two people out there (to whom I am related) who can also relate to the song title. And bonus points for Tweedy doing a great Lou Reed impersonation. 

24.    Honkeytonk by Oldstar.

"I knew I’d make a fool of myself
If I walked on to your side of the band
So I packed up and left
Haunted by the thought of you in someone else’s arms."


Not a song of lost love, but instead love never realized. Oldstar are a NYC band playing "country rock from Florida for everyone" according to their Spotify bio. Seems about right. Couldn't find a video of just Honkeytonk, but the song begins at 9:09 in the video above. Or you can listen to two other of their songs beforehand as well.

25.     Down to be Wrong by HAIM.

"Down to be wrong, don't need to be right
I left you the keys, I left on the lights
I locked myself out of the house
I'm on the next flight, you can't talk me out of it, yeah."


A second appearance on The List for the Haim Sisters. This one's a break-up song, completely lacking in remorse.

26.    Ankles by Lucy Dacus.

"If it's the thought that counts
Let's think it through."


To be honest, I was a little disappointed by this latest effort "Forever Is a Feeling" from Lucy Dacus (my "teacher's pet" according to my friend Philbert). But I like this song a lot, and the above couplet is among my favorites of the entire year.

27.    Twist and Turn by Cardinals.

"Wrong and right
Ah all your life.
Get those wrongs and right them, baby
Learn to tell your lies."


Another fairly depressing song (sorry about that!), but this one from Irish band Cardinals, which along with the upbeat tempo somehow makes it easier to take. That and the seemingly cathartic ending where they seem on their way to redemption. 

28.    The Forks of Cypress by Patterson Hood and Waxahatchee.

"Wait until morning and I will meet you there
Even when it's storming there's sunlight in your hair
I'll bask in your splendor and your scent upon the air
Past the Forks of Cypress."


A Southern tale of forbidden love by Drive-by Truckers' Patterson Hood, made all the more haunting by Waxahatchee/Katie Crutchfield's backing vocals.

29.    Snowflakes by Dropkick.

"We complicate the words that we hear
Thinking that it wasn't clear."


Most of the British Isles are now covered, with this effort from Edinburgh-based Dropkick. Some power pop to relieve the depression of most of the above songs (Jeff Tweedy excepted).

30.    Inept Apollo by Nation of Language.

"How many miles ago?
A dream that fell
Lamented in the morning glow
Embraced and left alone
How many miles ago?"


Nation of Language is one of those bands (synth pop? semi-shoe gaze?) that I would have told you I would never like. And yet here they are, for the second year in a row, on The List. AI tells me that this song "explores themes of artistic self-doubt, imposter syndrome, finding solace in creative work amidst life's difficulties, and the struggle with love and loss." I will take our soon-to-be computer overlords' word for it. 

31.    Last Night I Held Your Hand by Somebody's Child.

"And I thought my youth was over
Now I'd die for you
Now I feel myself get older
But not when I'm with you."


Ireland strikes again on The List with Somebody's Child. A song about reflecting on lost youth (from 30-something front man Cian Godfrey ... spare me says this 60-something listener), or perhaps a Mrs. Robinson-esque relationship?  

32.    What's Fair by Blondshell.

"Maybe it was not the right time
Maybe it was not the right wine
Maybe it was in the water
Maybe God turned a blind eye."


Sounds as though Blondshell, a.k.a. Sabrina Teitelbaum is working through some issues with her mom. Language warning for this one, if that's still necessary these days ...

33.    Hard to Love by Dehd.

"Won't catch me goin' on about where the good men gone
Give me someone rough and tumble, someone hard to love."


Dehd's Emily Kempf seems to be looking for a bad boy.