Eleven songs for a rainy Friday:
1. The Autumns: The End
The slow build... the Jeff Buckley-esque vocal range... the brief moment of chaos as the song segues from a gentle, acoustic number into something very different... and the knowledge that The Autumns made the irrational and wonderful choice of making a song called "The End" the opening song on their tremendous self-titled album... what's not to love?
2. Cold Water Flat: Numb
I was always mystified by the fact that they never made it big. A trio led by Paul Janovitz - brother of Buffalo Tom's Bill - they had a sense of drama, a muscular grasp of melody, and great vocals to boot. I remember seeing 'em open for (with?) Superchunk about a millions years ago, and they kicked everybody's ass. Their self-titled album didn't disappoint, either. And yet... they vanished into the cutout bins. Sad.
3. The Catherine Wheel: Salt
Because it's the right thing for a dark, rainy day. And because I never get tired of hearing it. There have been times in my life when I've listened to nothing but this song, over and over and over again.
4. Swirl: Yesterday Blue 
I don't know anyone who's ever heard of them, but Swirl was a great, great, great Australian shoegaze band. Eventually, they morphed into a more commercially-viable concern, and became nearly as big as... I don't know. Someone who's big in Germany. Someone hugely popular. The name is on the tip of my tongue...
5. Creeper Lagoon: Centipede Eyes
Another band whose lack of massive success baffled me. Although it was surprising (and nice) to hear the music from "Dreaming Again" used as a backdrop to TBS ads about Law and Order and the nature of drama.
6. Swans: Will We Survive
Despite the fact that Michael Gira and Swans were one of the most relentlessly morose sources of music the world has ever seen, I always found something perversely uplifting about parts of their late-period albums. The last two and a half minutes of this song captures that perfectly, as Gira's moaning gives way to a mounting fugue of increasingly complex instrumentation and wordless chorale that, by the end, is nothing shy of purely ecstatic.
7. Ian McCulloch: Start Again
As much as I enjoy mid-period Echo and the Bunnymen - "Bring on the Dancing Horses," "The Killing Moon" and all that - I enjoy their post-reunion stuff even more. McCulloch's solo Candleland fits neatly into that category -- an often gorgeous meditation that culminates in this haunting tribute to his father and Pete De Freitas.
8. Ida: Maybelle
A song custom-made to be heard while you're driving on a rainy day, your wipers clicking back and forth in time with the gentle beat. Like Low, Ida prove that married couples don't have to go all Rumours on you to make resonant music.
9. Pernice Brothers: Dimmest Star
Some people find it disconcerting when they overhear you singing lines like "Don't ever leave my troubled life." These people will never understand the sardonic magic of Joe Pernice.
10. Trash Can Sinatras: The Genius I Was
Trash Can Sinatras = joy. This is from their lovely third album, A Happy Pocket -- which, sadly, was never released domestically in the U.S. but is well-worth the effort to hunt down and make a part of your life.
11. Bike: Sunrise
Because while there is always something sad and lovely about rainy days... there's also something wonderful about feeling the bright sun on your face afterwards.




