Okay this is tough as hell - how does one narrow down across genres? Moods? Anyhow, here's the best I could come up with for now:
Aretha Franklin
The Kinks
Sloan
Nick Drake
Pulp
As for bands people may not have heard of, that's another thing that I could go on and on about.
Jens Lekman - Swedish pop diety (IMHO) who has written one of the best albums of the year,
Night Falls Over Kortedala. Download:
A Postcard to Nina - a perfect short story in song form.
The Harlem Shakes - NYC-based band with one record out. Upbeat and interesting. They are seriously fun live. Download:
Felt Wings, Sickos
The Format - In
Dog Problems, they produced the most perky yet bitter break up album I've ever heard in my life. It's a carnival ride of almost every pop style you could imagine. Endlessly entertaining and inventive. Download:
Timebomb, She Doesn't Get It
Patrick Wolf - Madly creative English multi-instrumentalist. On his most recent album,
The Magic Position, he collaborated with Marianne Faithfull, which made me love him even more than I did before. Download:
The Magic Position, Bluebells, Accident and Emergency
The Rakes - London-based rockers. This year's
Ten New Messages was a bit more polished than 2005's
Catch/Release but lacked none of the punch. Download:
The World Was a Mess but His Hair was Perfect, We Danced Together, Suspicious Eyes
I'd also have to argue that 3 of my faves might not be all that well known, so I'd like to recommend a few tracks from them as well:
Sloan - Long lasting Canadian rock band comprised of 4 very distinct singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalists. That gives every album a Whitman's Sampler flair, but in the best of ways. They can bring the perfect Big Dumb Rock song (harder than it may seem) as well as the best down tempo fare. They are also hands down one of the best live bands ever and their fans make every show a special event (Sloan fans are seriously devoted and sing every. single. word. I know, I'm one of them.)
Download:
She Says What She Means, Money City Maniacs, I Love A Long Goodbye, On The Horizon, Don't You Believe A Word
Pulp - Brilliant British pop band featuring one of the best frontmen to ever grace a stage, Jarvis Cocker. They're officially on a (permanent) hiatus now and Cocker has a fantastic solo album. But old Pulp stuff rules. Jarvis has a way of communicating the working class mundane grubby side of life that instantly engages you. He's as great an observer of British life as Raymond Douglas Davies and that is the highest compliment I can pay a person. Jarvis is also a serious horndog which adds much hilarity. Pulp has a large catalog spanning the better part of 20 years, so I'll just suggest a few tracks to download: The obligatory
Common People (their most famous song),
The Fear, This Is Hardcore, Babies, Do You Remember the First Time?
Nick Drake - English singer songwriter who died much too young (aged 26) in 1974. His gentle voice and sad, haunted words will break your heart again and again. Download:
Northern Sky, 'Cello Song, Time Has Told Me, Time Has Told Me, Fruit Tree
Bailey - you and I seem to have alot of bands in common! I have to second your recs of Andrew Bird, The Magic Numbers (They certainly aren't pin ups, are they? Bless.) and I'm From Barcelona. I'd also like to sell tickets to the IFB/Polyphonic Spree brawl. :-) :-) You just know someone's gonna get beaned by a cello or clonked with one of IFB's platform shoes. I also have to say that IFB is one of the most terrifyingly coiffured bands in recent memory. The terror of all that 70s influenced hair in the
We're From Barcelona video is enough to make you weep. I was a teenager in the 70s. We didn't even want that hair! ;-) Great song though.
Okay. That's enough from me. Note for the future: Don't start me talking about music!