Sunday, February 16, 2014

Q101: Intro

My co-worker Mandie and I recently undertook a project very dear to each of us.  We were both listeners of Q101 and we both thoroughly enjoyed listening to their yearly top 101 countdowns.  Over the years I have illegally downloaded legally purchased many of the songs from these countdowns and added them to my music library. Those lists represented some serious effort and reflect a strong piece of who I am.  I had tried sharing my music library with other co-workers but they just didn’t appreciate the awesome power of what they had been given.  Mandie, on the other hand, very much wanted to listen to the Q101 lists.  It took fighting through some technical network difficulties but eventually she was able to enjoy the lists as I did.

I’ve shifted gears to being more of a country music fan these days but this past December I had a deep longing for the Q101 countdowns that were always played during that time of the year.  I decided to start at the beginning and listen to my custom lists in order.  I casually mentioned this to Mandie and she agreed to do the same.  Since I like lists and ranks, I thought it would be fun to create our personal top 5’s from each year and compare them.  She then got this crazy idea that we should blog about our top 5’s.  I initially balked at the idea because that was going to be a lot of work.

I had been posting my top 5’s in my IM status at work and they didn’t seem to be tilting anyone’s world on its axis.  In fact, only one other co-worker (Jon) even commented on the lists and that’s only because he was using them as a way to gauge his knowledge of “modern” music.  It was usually a good year for Jon, a self-proclaimed fan of music from my parent’s generation, if he had heard of (and not even necessarily heard) 2 of the songs in my top 5.

Citing the lack of interest in my IM statuses, I complained that no one would want to read about my silly little lists.  People have their own lists and can’t be bothered with mine.  I knew this from fantasy sports and Okrent’s Law.  Those who know me best understand that fantasy sports may be my ultimate passion, even more so than *gasp* Q101 countdowns.  Daniel Okrent is credited with creating rotisserie (fantasy) baseball and his law is the words he used to describe his creation: “There's nothing more interesting than your own rotisserie team and nothing less interesting than someone else's."  Simple but oh so true.

Incidentally, if you ever want to endear yourself to me and win your way to my heart, you should view ESPN’s excellent ‘30 for 30’ documentary about Okrent and the creation of fantasy sports, entitled “Silly Little Game.”  Only then will you understand the depths of my insanity and truly empathize with me when I complain to you about Henderson Alvarez’s no-hitter screwing me out of a championship on the final day of the 2013 season.

But I digress, and this is about the music.  Anyway, Mandie insisted on the blog entries and I finally relented.  Since I’m a man of my word and I do acknowledge that writing this will be pretty fun, here we are.

I’ve composed many love letters in my head to girls I’ve had a crush on.  I’ve even done it very recently.  Those letters have gone unwritten and undelivered however.  It’s my hope that all of those pent up feelings will come spewing out now in a glorious tribute to Q101 and a select few of the songs that comprised its top 101 lists.  I’m going to serenade the crap out of these songs.  You see, Q101 also stole my heart but it never brought me pain and it never kept me up at night against my will.  I can assure you that if Q101 kept me up, it was very much in accordance with my will. 

Granted I’ve listened to all of these songs many times over through the random shuffle of my music library.  However, I had not listened to them in sequence by year since Q101 had died.  It was pure joy to start at the beginning and advance through the years as if I was growing up all over again.

1994 was the year I first started really being aware of music, so that’s where my Q101 journey should begin.  My musical education up until that point consisted of whatever I had heard in car rides with my dad and whatever CDs my mom would have played on the living room stereo.  It’s why I’ll always have a soft spot for The Beach Boys and why I listen – listened, listened, I meant listened! – to Wilson Phillips.

I didn’t own any albums of my own and I didn’t even listen to the radio before then.  I was 11; I played sports outside and I played Nintendo.  Life was good and I didn’t know I had any voids to fill.  Slowly, music weaved itself into conversations at school.  Nirvana.  Alice in Chains (NOT Allison Chains as I later learned).  Stone Temple Pilots.  What the heck were my friends talking about?  They had discovered music and it was clear I was woefully behind the times.  I too began to wonder if there was a whole other world out there for me to explore.  All I knew is that I definitely wanted to fit in and talk amongst them as a peer. 

And so my musical enlightenment began.  I could have been pulled in the direction of any genre.  Thankfully my friends chose the music that they did, even if their options were limited.  Pop music could get you made fun of, country wasn’t “cool” enough, and rap/hip-hop had not really penetrated into the walls of our small, all-white school.

I had the great fortune of being able to listen to Q101 on the bus rides to and from school during my formative years (’94-’96).  I don’t know if our bus drivers wanted to prove that they were hip and with it, or if the high schoolers on the bus high had more authority than I thought.  We had nicknames for all of the drivers -- Tar Lungs, Dave Thomas (yes, the Wendy’s guy), Heavy Evey -- but looking back, I appreciate them for giving me the gift of Q101. 

I acquired a stereo during this time period and began listening to Q101 in my room as well.  It was a pain in the ass getting the antenna positioned just right sometimes but I could listen to Q101 late at night if I kept the volume low enough to avoid waking up my parents.  Discovering headphones was a big win for me.

As I entered high school, I began to crave for something more.  This era (’97-’99) was marked by exponential growth in my love for alternative music.  I had begun to select favorites in the alternative community and, dammit, I wanted to hear them on demand.  I couldn’t simply wait for Q101 to decide it was worth playing.  My stereo had a CD player and my dad’s ’92 Bonneville (my first car) had a cassette player.  My friend Josh had become the music fan I aspired to be but knew I never could.  He had accumulated something like over 800 CDs, so his collection had pretty much anything that suited my fancy.  He burned a couple mix CDs to tide me over and I converted them to cassette tape for the car. 

There was also a guy named Adam who was a year older than me; he made (and sold) custom mix CDs at request.  He had a pretty lucrative little business in high school from what I recall.  Virtually any song you wanted could be yours.  This guy must have thousands of CDs I thought to myself.  I also had him burn me a couple mixes of my favorites. 

One day, it all changed.  A high school acquaintance named Van Ham turned me on to this thing called Napster.  It was a file sharing program where I could get music from others who shared my musical tastes.  So that was Adam’s secret.  Well, I didn’t need to pay him any longer.  I became an insatiable beast downloading everything I could think of.  I’d queue up 20 songs to download before I went to bed and anxiously check the next morning to see how many went through to completion.  We had incredibly slow internet so I was prepared for a low success rate.  Still, there were countless times I cursed angrily at songs that had failed at 95% complete.  It was all worth it though to add to my personal library and create even more custom CDs.  Because I was a jerk who took advantage of the system, I downloaded songs from others but didn’t share mine.  Plus I had been told that it was only illegal to distribute music illegally.

My favorite years of Q101 are during the end of high school and junior college (’00-’03).  My high school graduation was symbolic of my alternative music graduation.  I was now listening to songs as they came out.  My musical library was growing impressively.  I have the highest collection of songs from the countdowns during these years.  My best friend Tom and I listened to so much music during the trips to and from JJC.  Accordingly, my strongest musical memories often come from this time period. 

The next period (’04-’06) represented a bit of a transition period.  I still very much enjoyed the music and Q101 was still an important part of my life.  Napster had since been shut down but there were other offshoots (iMesh, Limewire) that let my library continue to grow.  It just wasn’t quite the same though.  Perhaps it’s because I had idealized the music from the previous “graduation” period so much that nothing after could possibly live up to it.  Perhaps it’s because friends were moving away and drifting apart so the memories created through music weren’t as strong.  Q101 helped guide me through the remainder of college.  It was my buddy during that rough stretch after college when I felt little self-worth because my only form of employment was a part-time retail job. 

The final years of Q101’s reign over the airwaves (’07-’10) were less influential on my life.  I was now a working adult trying to cling to an ever-changing work of rock music.  Q101 never moved from its place as good ‘ol #1 on my radio dial but it was definitely competing with country music by this point.  As I shared my time between the 2 genres, I inevitably started falling out of touch with some of the newer bands coming onto the scene.  This is evidenced by the fact that my library contains barely over half of the songs on the list in 2009 and 2010.  By contrast, I have over 90% of the songs from a couple years during my golden age of Q101.  Music was getting much harder to acquire as file sharing networks were condemned left and right.  I stopped creating my custom CDs and I do miss those days.  Fortunately, sites likes Pandora, Grooveshark, and Spotify came to the rescue.  Even if I couldn’t obtain a copy of everything I wanted, I could still listen to it. 

There are a few logistical things to call out about this project.  As anyone who has listened to the countdowns knows, some songs appear on the list in multiple years.  Mandie and I agreed not to double up on any song.  She believed the song should be included the first year it made a list because we “didn’t really want to give credit to a song clinging to its past glory.”  That worked for a while but halfway through I realized that some multi-year songs may actually have been more popular in the 2nd year.  I made the executive decision, for my lists anyway, that a song was only eligible for the top 5 in the year in which it ranked higher on Q101’s list. (To be fair, I’ve since reapplied that rule to all years.)

It is also worth reiterating, especially when we get to the latter half of the 2000 decade, that these are MY personal lists.  I do not have all of the songs from each year and I made no attempt to listen to all of the songs from each year.  Some of the missing songs I simply don’t care for and others I probably never heard in the first place.  Even if it’s missing for the latter reason, I highly doubt the song would break into the top 5 anyway.

I do have a playlist from Q101 for 1993.  I don’t remember it being played in the later years they did the countdowns but it must have been played at some point.  The station did create the list and I do vaguely remember a DJ apologizing for some of the music on the list.  You get songs from artists like Sting and Duran Duran.  You also get songs from several groups I’ve never heard of.  It was a year of transition for the station from its previous format and I don’t have any memories of listening to the station in 1993.  Neither did Mandie, so that year wasn’t included.

Mandie has already posted her top 5’s for all years.  I sincerely encourage you to check it out as well the other things she’s written in the past.  Partly due to the aforementioned “lot of work” and partly due to my long-winded nature that precludes me from writing anything quickly, this project is going to be a series.  I will write about each year separately but the individual years won’t be nearly as long as this.  I figure doing it this way will also help me boost my blog post totals.

What you can expect from each entry (for as long as I’m willing to put forth the energy):
  • A link to the full list as created by Q101
  • Links to the music video (assuming I can find it) for each song in my top 5
  • A few lyrics from each song in my top 5 that likely have some meaning to me
  • A snippet about each song that includes any or all of the following:
    • My justification for picking the son
    • Stories I have to tell related to the son
    • Fun facts about the song gleaned from Wikipedia (re: Dave has nothing else to say about the song)
  • Writing that tries really, really hard to be interesting despite the limitations of its author and would feel offended if you didn’t read it and comment on it

I have no timeline for the rollout of this series.  I’ve already wrote the entry for 1994 though.  So what are you waiting for?  Let’s kick this thing off!

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