Hello, hello, and happy new
year! We’ve made another successful orbit of the sun, and that’s something to
celebrate. Yay us!
But you’re here for the tally
of the year in music and books. Let’s get to it!
Top Plays 2025
1. Kate Bush, “Running Up
That Hill”
2. Tears for Fears, “Mad
World”
3. Air Supply, “Sweet
Dreams”
4. Supertramp, “The Logical
Song”
5. Queen, “You’re My Best
Friend”
6. The Who, “Magic Bus”
7. Dua Lipa, “Houdini”
8. ABBA, “Chiquitita”
9. Blue Rodeo, “After the
Rain”
10. Love & Rockets, “So
Alive”
11. Seals and Crofts,
“Summer Breeze”
12. Doobie Brothers, “Long
Train Runnin’”
13. Gowan, “Moonlight
Desires”
14. ABBA, “Summer Night
City”
15. Kate Bush, “Burning
Bridge”
16. Deep Purple, “Hush”
17. Linda Ronstadt with
Aaron Neville, “Don’t Know Much”
18. Rod Stewart, “Ain’t
Love a Bitch”
19. Luba, “Every Time I See
Your Picture”
20. Rockpile, “Teacher
Teacher”
21. Simon and Garfunkel,
“The Boxer”
22. Florence and the
Machine, “Dream Girl Evil”
23. Little River Band, “Help
Is on Its Way”
24. The Lovin' Spoonful,
“Summer in the City”
25. Gerry Rafferty, “Night
Owl”
As I have done for the last
several years, I leaned into nostalgia this year, well, nostalgia and
familiarity. My iTunes library now contains roughly 32,500 tracks, which is a
LOT of listening. To listen to most of the library (which I did: only 9,760 tracks
— less than a third of the collection — were unplayed as of last night at
midnight), I had to listen more extensively and less intensively. But obviously
old favourites persist.
Speaking of old favourites,
now seems as good a time as any to mention that toward the end of 2026 I have a
short creative nonfiction piece coming out in an anthology called Beyond the
Concert Hall, which might explain some of my listening habits. Watch this
space!
New music acquired:
• Hania Rain, Nonfiction:
Piano Concerto in Four Movements
• Edmonton Winds, Close
to Home
• Florence and the Machine,
Everybody Scream
• KPop Demon Hunters
soundtrack
That's not to say that I didn't also acquire a lot of older music, as obviously I did. But one certainly isn't immersed in music in one's fifties as one is in one's teens.
And then of course there's reading, and so...
Books, Books, Books
My final tally of books
read in 2025 was a personal low: 106. But things can only get better,
right? Here are some stats:
• Books written/edited by women:
72
• Books written/edited by
men: 32
• Books written/edited by nonbinary
people: 2
• Volumes of poetry: 24
• Nonfiction (including memoir,
creative nonfiction, and anthologies): 21
Here are some of my
favourite books read this year:
• Alana Cattapan et al.,
eds., Feministing in Political Science
• Dawn Macdonald, Northerny
• Craig Mod, Things
Become Other Things
• Premee Mohamed, The
Annual Migration of Clouds
• Kenneth Oppel, Best of
All Worlds
• Philip Pullman, The
Rose Field
• Richard Siken, Crush
• Emily Tesh, The
Incandescent
• Ira Wells, On Book
Banning
Of these, Things Become
Other Things and The Rose Field were the most striking, and I can see myself rereading them (although the final three books in Lyra's world are so long!). The others? Well... there's so much to read, and my "to-be-read" shelves are groaning, so I'm not confident I'll be doing a lot of rereading. But maybe?
While we’re at it...
Favourite cultural experiences
of 2025
As I mentioned in an
earlier post, I tried to participate in many cultural activities this year, and
hope to continue doing so in the year ahead. Here are some highlights:
• Sarah Millican, Late
Bloomer
• Laser Pink Floyd The
Wall
• Edmonton City as Museum
Project (ECAMP), Ukrainian Ties
• Provincial Archives Open
House
• Samantha
Williams-Chapelsky at the FAB Gallery
• Sarah Slean at
Festival Place
Once again, I wish you
bright, happy days as we move through the universe once again.