The 10 Best Spoon Songs
Photo by Oliver Halfin
Last Friday, Spoon released Everything Hits At Once: The Best of Spoon, a greatest hits album by a band without a single Billboard 200 song to their name. It’s nearly impossible to argue with any song on the tracklist, one that weaves in and out of every era of the band, beginning with 2000’s Girls Can Tell all the way up to a new song released along with the compilation, “No Bullets Spent.” But they mostly opted for singles, so it’s also tough to see them leave off certain songs.
Spoon, as one of the most consistently great American rock bands of the 21st century—maybe even the best—has endless amounts of “fan favorites,” loads of which didn’t make the greatest hits record. Of the 10 songs we included on our list of favorites, only three made the cut for Everything Hits At Once, showing the depth of the perpetually cool Austin band’s back catalogue. Though it was hard work for us to narrow down an initial list of 30 songs to 10, you can only imagine how much more agonizing the process was for frontman Britt Daniel, who had to find it within him to shut out standouts like “Stay Don’t Go” and “Jonathan Fisk.”
Here, we attempt that same Herculean task, creating our own list of Spoon’s greatest hits, deep cuts, and fan favorites.
10. “Sister Jack”
On Gimme Fiction, Spoon try a lot of new sounds: “I Turn My Camera On” is a throwback funk song while “The Beast and Dragon, Adored” and “My Mathematical Mind” attempt piano rock without much of a reference point. But Spoon are at their best when they strip everything away and make anthemic, no-frills rock ‘n’ roll, perhaps best exemplified by “Sister Jack,” a song that largely maintains the same melody throughout. Complete with a bizarre guitar “solo,” the song chugs along, begging the listener to roll down the car windows and just blast it until the speakers give out.
9. “New York Kiss”
When announcing They Want My Soul on Facebook, Spoon wrote, “We’re pretty sure that the levels indicate this to be our loudest record… Side One begins with the gnarliest Jim Eno drum sound ever recorded and Side Two ends with Rob Pope’s bass amp completely breaking down to fuzz + hiss at the end of a take.” They hold up that promise on album closer “New York Kiss,” the sound of a band playing their instruments so hard they broke down at the end of the record. Built around an earworm-y synthline, “New York Kiss” is maybe the poppiest thing Spoon have ever released, a call-to-arms depicting love in an apocalyptic Manhattan. Plus, Daniel screaming, “I say goodnight,” is an all-time great album-ending lyric.
8. “Stay Don’t Go”
“Mmm, ahh, mmm, mmm, ahh.” Framed by an instantly recognizable pseudo-beat box, “Stay Don’t Go” combines a simple guitar line and Daniel’s breathiest vocals outside of “I Turn My Camera On” to create one of Spoon’s catchiest songs. They rarely allow themselves to be this simple and strip almost everything away in such a wild fashion. It shouldn’t work this well, but if anyone could pull it off, it’s Spoon.