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December 20, 2007

Sufjan Selects An Xmas Xchange Winner, Has Little Fans In Taiwan

We already brought you Sufjan news today, but it's close to Christmas and Santa Stevens has selected the winner of his Xmas Xchange. You can hear the prize tune by Alec Duffy over at Asthmatic Kitty. That said, the best part of the whole thing is SS's description of the the other 600-something entries, and his reasoning for choosing the croon-y winner:

I fell in love with them all. Even the songs with expletives, the songs with Christmas clichés, the many songs about ex-girlfriends, nativity scenes, snow globes and apple cider. Rummaging through these songs was an arduous and fascinating sociological project! They were all glorious, gorgeous, intimate, whimsical musical meditations on the holiday that never ceases to capture our imagination, year in and year out. A hundred million thanks to all of you who labored over these gifts of song! A hundred million holiday thanks! Oh how I wish I could choose them all!
More Soof-y effusions, his reasoning for picking the Duffy song, and our after-the-deadline submission to the XX contest post-jump.

There were songs with banjos and ukuleles, songs with synthesizer strings, songs with Casio beats, techno beats, beat boxing, sugary shaker sounds and tambourines. There were songs in Latin, songs in Danish, songs in multiple key signatures, songs with vocoders, songs with Rhodes pianos, toy pianos, multiple xylophones, precious songs with Midwestern accents, sardonic songs with English accents, whistling songs, songs with wrapping paper as metaphor for an overbearing lover, songs as advice columns to Santa, as advice columns to ex-lovers, songs with reed organs and mouth organs and pipe organs. Songs with references to Henry James, in-laws, more ex-girlfriends, abstract ambient songs with twinkling bells and silver glitter, no-nonsense songs with the curmudgeon-y sneer of a Grinch, songs about innocence and forgiveness, songs about spite and regret, songs with great big bear hugs and songs with wintry gazes, songs with reminiscent, sentimental choruses, songs with the names of soccer players and American tycoons, songs with sleigh bells and happy rapping, songs with the thumping back beats of reindeer hooves, screaming children, bumbling boo hoos, bah-humbugs, songs with the beating hearts of all mankind. These were the generous songs of many creative voices participating in the convoluted mysteries of the Christmas tube sock! Yes!

Well, it was an impossible task to chose a winner, but in the end I fell most in love with one particular song because of it's happy simplicity: Alec Duffy's "Every Day Is Christmas." It feels, at once, like a classic show tune, the perfect parlor song, a lackadaisical bar ballad, and a church hymn. It is unencumbered with the pejoratives and prophetic exclamations of Christmas, the most complicated of holidays. Oh sure, I continue to indulge in the Christmas blues, the heavy winter dread, the melancholy expectations of the season. And I still marvel at the sacrilege, the subversive satire, and the silly nonsense of Christmas as commodity, patterned with the cartoon characters of Charlie Brown, Santa Claus, and Rudolf. For me, the entertainment of these bi-polar fantasies will never quite fade away; they are fundamental to the mysteries of Christmas. But when it came down to it, I just wanted the simple relief of ordinary, every day love, the love between two people, the kind of love that doesn't obligate itself to the trumpet fanfares and jingle bells of a holiday spectacle. Alec Duffy's unfettered song "Every Day Is Christmas" summarizes this simple phenomenon with the most effortless of words and melodies, somehow making perfect sense out of a senseless holiday. Thanks, Alec, for this great gift. And Happy Christmas to you and yours!

But wait, where's the tune Mr. S gave Alec? That's the whole "Xchange" part of the equation. If you're out there, Alec, let us hear it! To get a taste of the competition, you can hear 36 select other in the AKRadio Player at AK or read up on the other winners according to various genres. Ah, best techno! OK, we think this fourth grad class from Taiwan lip syncing to "Put The Lights On The Tree" should've been in the running for "best kid's song." Is it too late, AK?

Adorable! Poor kid that had to play the old lady, though. In case you forgot, the original's still under the bejeweled YouTube tree. That's it, we're X'd out.

Posted at 12:24 PM in
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7 Comments

coollll! my buddies castledoor made the stream.

also the Candy Claws song is amazing.

Posted by: John at 12/20/07 4:26 PM | Reply
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That's pretty unsurprising that a Sufjan fan video came out of Taiwan. I just came back from four months there and indie rock is pretty big--nothing like the popularity Mandopop has but bigger than you might think. Lots of twee and post-rock from the local bands but people like other indie pop and indie rock quite a bit. The Apples in Stereo played Kaohsiung (where that video is from) and Taipei while I was there. I also saw posters and things from past performances there by the Album Leaf, Saxon Shore and (I think) American Analog Set.

Posted by: Adrian at 12/20/07 6:21 PM | Reply
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awwww
i really love the winning song; it's adorable.

Posted by: aLEX at 12/20/07 6:45 PM | Reply
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Cool song by Mr. Duffy. Reminds me Loudon Wainwright a little bit.

Posted by: b.LOUD at 12/21/07 2:59 AM | Reply
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Fun song, and not at all what I would have expected Sufjan to pick. Pleasantly surprised.

Posted by: Stephen at 12/21/07 3:31 AM | Reply
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Alec & Co. are not going to let us hear the song until next year when they debut it in some quirky performance piece:
http://allgoodnaysayers.net/news/2007/12/24/the-song-that-will-never-be-uploaded/

Posted by: one good naysayer at 12/24/07 12:22 PM | Reply
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I'm positive I've heard the winning song somewhere before this contest, and I can't think of where it was. Anyone?

Posted by: Phil at 01/02/08 3:41 PM | Reply
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