if you like year end lists and free and legal mp3’s….

audiofile free mp3s

then check out Thomas Bartlett’s ‘best of the year’s free downloads’ over at Salon, there’s something for everyone.

Thomas says, “here are my 20 favorite downloads from Audiofile this year. As usual, they’re not as eclectic as I’d like, as it’s still the case that indie rock is the only genre to have fully embraced the Web and the idea of giving away songs on it as an effective promotional tool. Regardless, much as I wish there were more jazz, more world music, any classical, etc., this is still a batch of 20 songs that I’m proud to have hosted. Tell me where you think I went wrong in the comments. Thanks to all the artists and labels for allowing us to post their music, and thanks to you for listening.”

01. “Looter’s Follies,” Destroyer
The best track from my favorite record of the year, a songwriting tour de force.

02. “Ambiguity,” David Thomas Broughton
The opening track from Broughton’s debut, recorded live in a church.

03. “Jolly Jolly Jolly Ego,” Dirty Projectors
An astonishing, brilliantly constructed song from one of the most innovative minds in modern music.

04. “No Education,” Plush
An equally brilliant construct from an anachronistic pop classicist.

05. “Lies,” Carl Hancock Rux
A standout track from one of my surprise favorites of the year, Carl Hancock Rux’s “Good Bread Alley.”

06. “Marla,” Grizzly Bear
The gauzy, impossibly tender emotional core of Grizzly Bear’s brilliant “Yellow House.”

07. “Maybe in Another Year,” Jennie Pearl
A haunting song from 15-year-old Joni Mitchell wannabe Jennie Pearl.

08. “The Legend,” Willie Nelson
An elegant take on a classic Kris Kristofferson song, by one of the great interpreters of our time.

09. “Estrela,” Susana Baca
A honeyed, beatific duet by Baca and Gilberto Gil.

10. “Post-War,” M. Ward
A ballad for the dusk from the silky-voiced young songwriter.

11. “Truth Is Marching In,” Marc Ribot and Spiritual Unity
The guitar great leads his new quartet through a tribute to Albert Ayler.

12. “O Yes My Lord,” Voices of Conquest
A Detroit choir backed by a single drummer — one of the strangest things I’ve ever heard.

13. “Polska på övervåningen,” Väsen
The legendary Swedish folk trio giving a gorgeous performance of one of its best compositions.

14. “La Llorona,” Chavela Vargas
A legendary and heart-wrenchingly ravaged voice in her Carnegie Hall debut.

15. “Bells,” Albert Ayler
The legendary free jazz saxist (that’s three legends in a row, best take a break) in an 18-minute-plus performance of one his signature tunes.

16. “Prepared (2),” Lambchop
Whispered, nearly indecipherable intimacies from the masterful Kurt Wagner.

17. “I Cried Last Night,” Junior Kimbrough
Junior Kimbrough definitely stands out among modern bluesmen, not just for his singular evocation of the Delta blues ethos but because of how loose and weird and mysterious his music is.

18. “De Makeba,” The Jazz Dazzlers
For me, South African township jazz is an instant dopamine booster.

19. “Give All to Love,” Niobe
A gorgeous and disorienting song from a German electronic music artist.

20. “This Lamb Sells Condos,” Final Fantasy
Dazzling, adorable, punchable.

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