Whether your midterms were stressful and fruitless, the American electionâs unpredictable results shocked and disappointed you, or you just canât seem to shake the brutal, creeping cold, hibernating with a book and a somber playlist just might feel like the right thing to do. If this is the path you choose, here is a list of songs as angry and disillusioned as you are, while still being ambient and memorable. When you listen to this list, remember that you are not alone. Enjoy.
Playlist Available on Apple MusicÂ
âMe and Your Mamaâ by Childish Gambino:
The featured song in Gambinoâs brand new album Awaken, My Love! will send you to an entirely alternate plane of existence. Angry, passionate and unapologetically loud, Gambinoâs despondency is oddly infectious.
For Fans of: Kendrick Lamar, Alabama Shakes
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âNo Womanâ by Whitney
This Dad-Rock folk ballad feels comfortable, like an old sweater or a pair of slippers. Quiet and consistent, Whitneyâs folksy road-trip tune is America for a new generation. Unlike Simon and Garfunkel, Whitney is running with their eyes shut, motivated by fear rather than a yearning for reinvention. The band, signed to independent label Secretly Canadian, uses the wavering falsetto of their lead in a way that sends a shiver up the spine and inspires sepia-toned images of the falling leaves.
For Fans of: Bon Iverâs âFor Emma, Forever Agoâ
â33 âGODââ by Bon Iver
The border where music stops being music and starts being art is a frontier not often explored by top-billing artists. Bon Iver gracefully dances this line throughout his entire album, 22, a Million, but most specifically in his featured track, â33 âGODâ.â Â Sickeningly personal and quietly inventive, Bon Iverâs song is a patchwork of alien sound, humanized by its scattered randomness. Somehow, the song simultaneously takes on the qualities of love song and audio experiment, gracefully combining poetic verses with personal anecdote in a way that only Bon Iver could.
For Fans of: Kanye West, Mount Eerie
âBetween Two Mysteriesâ by Mount Eerie
Quiet and creeping, Mount Eerieâs David Lynch tribute song is the most ambient track on this list. An oft-forgotten B-Side on Mount Eerieâs most highly anticipated album, Windâs Poem, âBetween Two Mysteriesâ is dark and orchestral, utilizing the catchy synth loop of the Twin Peaks theme to build a heavily layered track with snare, marimba and tymany parts that could remind a listener of heavy rain or something slightly more ominous.
For Fans of: The sound of a train on a track or the sound of rain on a soundstage
âHomeâ by Common (feat.Bilal)
Intelligent, pointed and full of brilliantly catchy samples, âHomeâ is Commonâs newest politically-pointed song. Consistent and smooth, the song features just a few jarring breaks in baseline that are reminiscent of early electronica.
For Fans of: Kendrick Lamar, Wax Tailor
âDonât Wanna Fightâ by Alabama Shakes
A modern classic, this soulful, funk masterpiece is easy to move to. Most importantly, its catchy baseline and simple lyrics make it incredibly easy to scream along to.
For Fans of: Ryan Adams, The Black Keys
âGoldâ by Kiiara
There is one thing that sets this song apart from all the whiny, white-girl-pop-cheese that seems so popular right now: Kiiara uses the stuttering, fragmented digital noise that has infiltrated pop music to create an entirely new category of digital instrument. Her use of chopped vocals adds a never-before-heard dimension to her jerky-electro sound.
For Fans of: Grimes, Halsey
âRetrogradeâ by James Blake
James Blakeâs quiet, humming anthem bears no actual clear meaning. Like any piece of art with no clear direction or intention, the song takes on any meaning ascribed to it. Blakeâs soulful lyrics contrast excellently with the snappy pop snare that carries the tune from start to finish.
For Fans of: Mount Eerie, Bon Iver
Bonus Tracks:
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âPart One- Hey, No Pressureâ by Ray LaMontagne
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âSoberâ by Childish Gambino
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âNikes Frankâ by Ocean
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âBlessingsâ by Chance the Rapper
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âGive It To Meâ by HOMESHAKE