The 50 Worst Songs of the '00s, F2K No. 1: Counting Crows ft. Vanessa Carlton, "Big Yellow Taxi"

F2K has been a countdown of the 50 worst songs of the decade. Relive the whole long journey here. Thank you, and we're sorry.

As a concession to a vile, contemptible decade marked by commerce over reason, we pleaded to our editors at the Village Voice to let us publish the No. 1 entry as one of those annoying listicles that's also a photo gallery that you have to click through over and over again--but they refused. (Good thing we're not getting paid by the pageview.) But if there's one thing we learned this decade, it's that the people still love lists--so let's put forth our reasons for deciding that the 2002 cover of Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi" by Counting Crows and Vanessa Carlton is the worst song to come out of a decade filled with some of the most despicable examples of music inflicted on the world's hearing persons.

1. In a decade devoid of ideas, bad covers spread like a particularly noxious kudzu

There was no better way to gauge the cultural bankruptcy of the past 10 years than to survey the landscape of so-called "ideas" consisting of little more than brazen attempts to capitalize on already-marketed brands. A zombiefied version of Pride and Prejudice? That book report will bring home an A-plus. Turning the funny-page staple Marmaduke into a full-length "boy-meets-girl story, a coming-of-age and cautionary tale"? Well, it worked for Garfield. A movie based on fucking Candy Land? Hey, everyone loved that game as a kid--especially the dumb kids! Pop music was no stranger to this phenomenon; the ever-deepening crisis of revenue saddling its attendant industry only made the remake frenzy seem more desperate.

Even in the innocent days before American Idol embarked on a yearly Bataan Death March through the set lists of this nation's wedding bands, the music business was digging through the recycle bins, reusing any old track that had even the slightest Q rating. In 2001, you had Alien Ant Farm moonwalking all over "Smooth Criminal," Smash Mouth board-shorting the Monkees for the Shrek soundtrack, and a Christina Aguilera-led battalion of pop tartlets slutting it up to the strains of "Lady Marmalade." 2002's exhumations included DJ Sammy's version of the Bryan Adams prom chestnut "Heaven," Mario's curiously atonal rework of "Just A Friend," and Eminem making another one of his super-unfortunate Serious Artist Statements in concert with the chorus of Aerosmith's "Dream On."

In 2002, "Big Yellow Taxi" was pre-lubed and yearning for a nation whose nostalgia muscles were so atrophied they couldn't comprehend much more than the "hey, this pop culture reference exists"-style comedy of Scary Movie 2. It was served on a silver platter lined with Starbucks gift cards, a shiny new/old plaything for a populace so unwilling to accept anything remotely new that the decade's 20 highest-grossing movies were 95% sequels and remakes. By the end of 2009, Flo Rida and his ilk were able to reach the top of the pop charts simply by scraping the bottom of the pop barrel and adding an 808. We as a culture are pretty much one second away from will.i.am's chart-topping "Mambo #6."

When "Big Yellow Taxi" appeared, it wasn't because Counting Crows didn't have any ideas. (Though it wouldn't be too surprising if Adam Duritz's pea-sized brain was 85% dreadlocks, 10% water, and 5% actress phone numbers.) "Big Yellow Taxi" exists because the same nation that re-elected President Bush and demanded a sequel to Beverly Hills Chihuahua practically pisses their sweatpants at the idea of a modicum of change. "Big Yellow Taxi" is a song that didn't need to be remade the first seven times, but Counting Crows figured it was easier to record it than rob a bank. It's Alvin & The Chimpmunks without CGI and shit-eating--except in the case of "Big Yellow Taxi," the CGI is the glossy purr of Vanessa Carlton, and the shit-eating happens whenever we have to hear this song at the dentist or at Walgreens or inside a dingy Guantanamo Bay cell.

To make matters worse, the version of "Taxi" that reached the charts is a remake of a remake--which is so meta it makes our heads spin. (You can substitute "such a dogshit stupid idea" for "so meta" in the previous sentence, if you're so inclined.) "Big Yellow Taxi" was initially a hidden track on the Crows' 2002 album Hard Candy, an album with a title that broke truth-in-advertising statutes at least twice. We like to think that whoever was putting together the soundtrack for the Sandra Bullock/Hugh Grant romcom Two Weeks Notice had Hard Candy on in the background after a particularly stressful meeting where she was told that the flick needed to be "punched up" with a song that was sorta-recognizable, but also not, you know, like, old. "Taxi" probably hit her when she was lost in a panic about having to get in touch with Smash Mouth's people for the 75th time that year.

2. Duritz completely misses the point of the song

Homeboy, not sure if you noticed, but "Big Yellow Taxi" is a song made for 10th graders to feel like they're embracing something deep and spiritual and organic. And we're talking 10th graders in the 1970s, so they didn't have The Simpsons and Wikipedia and sexting-equipped phones. Who knows how a grown dude who went to four colleges missed the point of a Joni Mitchell song, although it might have something to do with the way you gender-flipped the lyrics so that you didn't have to sing about being troubled by the departure of an old man. A lyrical shift that also, it should be noted, resulted in the words "swing" and "away" being awkwardly rhymed through the power of your not-at-all-convincing drawl. (Not to mention: Who hears a screen door swing? Someone who's as against WD-40 as he is against DDT?)

Let us speak right into whichever of Duritz's ears doesn't have a cockily tipped wool hat over it. Adam, we don't know if you misunderstood the song's anti-globalization, anti-industrialization, anti-corporation message, or just chose to ignore it so you could get free Frappucinos for life. But we're gonna hip you to a harsh reality. Seriously, you know the line about how they "paved paradise and put up a parking lot?" Like how they replaced something beautiful with something cold and heartless and commercial? That's you. You're the parking lot, motherfucker. You drove your shitty steamroller over something everyone loved so you could pander your sensitive pussyhound whine to people waiting in line at the Carl's Jr. They paved Nirvana and put up a Counting Crow. Argh!

3. Why is Vanessa Carlton there again?

In 2002, Counting Crows had the slightly moldy stench of Courteney Cox and mushroom-induced Lollapalooza back tattoos around them, making record-company types wonder if they were a little bit too... '90s to convincingly pull off a big new-millennium hit. Sure, the song itself was way past the midlife crisis point, and the movie to which the song was going to be attached clung to rom-com cliches so old that they might as well have called it You've Got Morse. But this is Hollywood! Age is yucky!

Luckily for everyone, the Long Island piano lass Vanessa Carlton was on the rise, and apparently available for an hour or two of studio time. Carlton's career is almost as much an afterthought as her appearance, an integral part of the any-girl-with-a-piano-boom of 2001 (known in the industry as Y2Keys). Fuck us if her album Be Not Nobody didn't even have a shitty cover of its own (the whitest version of "Paint It Black" ever) and album art that looked like something Blackmore's Night found at the Ren Faire next to the giant turkey legs.

Anyway, it seemed like Vanessa had about enough time to peek her head into the studio and screech out enough saccharine, McDonald's-foreshadowing "ooohhh, bop-bop-bop"s to justify being tacked on to the song's credit list. Carlton's presence in the song was the Hot AC equivalent of that particular moment's common practice of adding Ja Rule to a female-fronted R & B track--but at least Ja Rule would get a verse or two in which to assert his presence. Carlton is so far removed from the proceedings that she's forced to exist in a parallel universe from the band during the song's attendant--and, of course, cab-filled--video. And it probably goes without saying that giving her a verse might have spared us the awkwardly "no homo" lyric change noted earlier.

Although it probably wouldn't have, since Duritz likely would have wanted to keep the "deep" lyric for himself.

4. The song just fucking sucks

Producer-for-hire Steve Lillywhite transforms Mitchell's crisp folk tune into a ropy mush of "groove," a trip-hoppish drum loop that sounds like airport restaurants. Self-important synthestra flourishes, with Duritz coming in a measure or two too early, then over-enunciating every lyric. His nerdball pronunciation makes us face the ugly reality that "They took all the trees/Put 'em in a tree museum" is actually kind of a shitty lyric--especially since he takes the "museum/see 'em" rhyme and replaces it with the leagues-more-awkward "museum/see them." The original's neat 2:16 run time is extended to an excruciating 3:46--almost double the original's length--perhaps because of the need to squeeze in Carlton and Duritz's "dueling egos" outro, in which she does her best cooing sex kitten impersonation and he wipes up some of the da-la-la-la-la scats he left on the floor during the "Mr. Jones" session. Joni laughs at the end of he original because it's fun; Duritz gives off a dour, serious vibe like Al Gore trolling for post-lecture vag. It's like the whole song emanates from his soul patch.

5. DDT was banned in 1972

Hey, Adam? You were 8. Vanessa wasn't even born yet. You're a dickhead.

The 50 Worst Songs of the '00s: The Complete List

50. brokeNCYDE, "Bree Bree"
49. LL Cool J feat. Jennifer Lopez, "Control Myself"
48. The Moldy Peaches, "Who's Got The Crack"
47. Akon, "Sorry, Blame It On Me"
46. Dynamite Hack, "Boyz-N-The-Hood"
45. James Blunt, "You're Beautiful"
44. Aaron Carter, "America A O"
43. Basshunter, "Please Don't Go"
42. 3 Doors Down, "Kryptonite"
41. Vanessa Hudgens, "Sneakernight"
40. Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, and the Wu-Tang Clan, "For Heaven's Sake 2000"
39. Aubrey O'Day feat. Roscoe Umali, "Never Fallin'"
38. Say Anything, "Got Your Money"
37. Satellite Party feat. Jim Morrison, "Woman In The Window"
36. Lady Sovereign, "Food Play"
35. Hampton The Hamster, "The Hampsterdance Song"
34. Happy Mondays, "Jelly Bean"
33. Heidi Montag, "Higher"
32. Smash Mouth, "I Wan'na Be Like You (The Monkey Song)"
31. 50 Cent, "Amusement Park"
30. Swizz Beatz with Ja Rule and Metallica, "We Did It Again"
29. John Mayer, "Your Body Is A Wonderland"
28. Xiu Xiu, "Support Our Troops OH (Black Angels OH)"
27. Kelly Osbourne and Ozzy Osbourne, "Changes"
26. Beastie Boys, "In A World Gone Mad"
25. Weezer, "Heart Songs"
24. Gummibar, "I Am Your Gummy Bear (The Gummy Bear Song)"
23. Santana feat. Chad Kroeger, "Into The Night"
22. The Notorious B.I.G. ft. Bob Marley, "Hold Ya Head"
21. Crazy Frog, "Last Christmas"
20. Gym Class Heroes, "Taxi Driver"
19. Nickelback, "Something In Your Mouth"
18. Toby Keith, "Courtesy of the Red, White, & Blue (The Angry American)"
17. Simple Plan, "Perfect"
16. William Hung, "O Come All Ye Faithful"
15. Hinder, "Born To Be Wild"
14. Korn, "Ya'll Want A Single?"
13. Sugababes Vs. Girls Aloud, "Walk This Way"
12. Disturbed, "Land of Confusion"
11. Darryl Worley, "Have You Forgotten?"
10. Fieldy's Dreams, "Baby Hugh Hef"
9. Ashlee Simpson, "La La"
8. Limp Bizkit and Johnny Rzeznik, "Wish You Were Here"
7. Nicole Scherzinger, "Puakenikeni"
6. Hot Action Cop, "Fever For The Flava"
5. Alvin & The Chipmunks, "Get Munk'd"
4. Blue October, "Jump Rope"
3. Tila Tequila, "I Love U"
2. Artists Against AIDS Worldwide, "What's Goin' On (Fred Durst's Reality Check Mix)"
1. Counting Crows ft. Vanessa Carlton, "Big Yellow Taxi"

50-31 were originally published on Idolator.com

Comments (88)

Squink says:

If the Voice recommissions this series for the next decade, I hope they employ someone who can come up with something a lot more imaginative than this list. Adam Duritz is a dickhead? No, really? Thanks Village Voice, I could never have figured that out for myself.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 9:35AM
Psmith says:

"...an integral part of the any-girl-with-a-piano-boom of 2001 (known in the industry as Y2Keys)."

This is the best sentence either of you have ever written.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 10:46AM
Sarah says:

Hiphop was basically ruined in the '00s. These listmakers are either whiteboy clueless or else die-hard fans of vocoders.

Also, the choices you made were really facile and unimaginative, even according to their own logic. Please try harder next time.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 10:57AM
TJ says:

Well THAT was anticlimactic. Not gonna lie; I feel like you guys gave up a little bit halfway through this list. Once it started getting posted on Village Voice it got way less interesting in its choices. I'd have been more impressed if it didn't feel like half of this list was comprised of recent acts covering songs from 20+ years ago.

Maura and Chris, you're both great writers and fantastic minds and I've loved reading your stuff for the last year, but here's hoping 2010 shows you in a better light than this list did.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 11:29AM
Sicks tea nein says:

@Sarah:

And my fave blog comment trope of the decade:

"Commenter implying that the writer's subjective tastes are racist making themselves seem vaguely racist."

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 11:32AM
Tyler says:

Apparently most of the commenters did not read this? Because this is the best thing I have read in 2009. A+

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 11:48AM
Jim says:

Oh my, where to even begin?

So for the most part I liked this list - it was funny with just the right about of snark. Maura is an amazing writer. However, a good portion of your contributions came off as pretentious and self-righteous.

We all know music tastes are opinions, and one person's Barry Manilow is another person's Bob Dylan - and that's fine. You can have your opinion and you can even mock others if they don't share your opinion, we all do that. However, this entry goes far beyond that, attacking a culture and you somehow find yourself above - as if you are on some critical ivory tower overlooking the retarded masses who eat up bullshit. You equate their music and cultural tastes with their political tastes, as if only people who like shitty much voted for George W. Bush and watched Beverly Hills Chihuahua (and where is this demand for a sequel again?).

Those masses don't even exist! At least not for this song. This song didn't even crack the top 40 on Billboard! It was a failure. Shit, the album that it was originally from, Hard Candy, only went gold - and in 2001 that was pretty sad. It's very easy to attack a group of people that you created in your own head. Most Counting Crows fans I've had the ill-fortune to run into are hippy-dippy potheads - not right-wingers who like shitty studio flicks.

You're whining about covers, as if they are somehow a recent phenomenon. That's sad and shows just how shallow your pop culture memory pool is. Shit, you even forgot to mention that Big Yellow Taxi was sampled (quite well) by Janet Jackson twice in her career. And way to devalue the excellent Lady Marmalade cover by calling the women to recorded it a "battalion of pop tartlets slutting it up".

Sexist much?

So, in summation; You create in your head a cultural zeitgeist that didn't really exist to attack a hit single that really wasn't a hit in order to make yourself feel better than a culture that you fabricated in your own pretentious mind. I got over thinking that I was better than everyone else because of my tastes in music when I was 20. Grow up.

No wonder you review music on Twitter, whenever someone gives you more an 140 characters you sound like a complete ass.

And My Humps is worse than this song.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 11:48AM
relaxing says:

Paved paradise, and put in a bunch of annoying alliteration.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 11:55AM
:) says:

I very much enjoyed this list regardless of "accuracy," thank you.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:01PM
relaxing says:

@Jim Just because ill-advised cover songs weren't unique to this decade doesn't mean the trend wasn't there.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:01PM
Victoria says:

I have no idea what the other comments are on about. This is a perfect worst song because it represents all that was wrong with the 00's. Corporate-sponsored, Starbucks, easy-listening dirge posing as some self-righteous heartfelt "message" song. It's also a great pick because I myself would've never thought to choose it, but I can't for the life of me disagree...now that I've remembered it happened (um, thanks?)
Also,
"Duritz gives off a dour, serious vibe like Al Gore trolling for post-lecture vag. It's like the whole song emanates from his soul patch."

might be the best thing I've ever read.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:04PM
Ned R. says:

Jim, did you meet Thrasher over in entry #4 the other day? You might find his ideas intriguing and wish to subscribe to his newsletter.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:16PM
Jim says:

@Ned:
Yeah, because what I said about this post is the same as Thrasher saying "FUCK YOUR LAZY ASS !!!"

You may have noticed that I agreed with Weingarten's choices (for the most part) but not with his reasoning. You also should have noted that I responded AGAINST Thrasher in that post.

And the trend of covers is nothing new, sorry.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:24PM
maura says:

Dear Jim,
Two points.
One, this particular entry was a co-write. (I know the byline's in gray type, but you can see it if you squint.) And the list on the whole was put together by two people.
Two, is "Lady Marmalade" not a song that could be construed to be about ladies of the night? Is the song's attendant video not set in what for all intents and purposes looks like a brothel? I understand the knee-jerk reaction against the phrase "slutting it up," but in this case, that verb was pretty much the raison d'etre for the whole enterprise.
Anyway, sorry we disappointed you! I'll spend the next 10 years working on it.
Love,
maura

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:32PM
andre says:

didn't some emo/pseudo-punk band release their cover of "Under Pressure" a few years ago? It died a well-deserved early death, but shouldn't it be included in this list?

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:34PM
Victoria says:

@Jim
You're right no one liked this song at the time, it didn't crack the top 40, yet everyone's heard it. Repeatedly. Isn't that an even bigger case for this being the worst song?
That even against public sentiment it became unbearably overplayed?

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:35PM
Nate P. says:

Those masses don't even exist! At least not for this song. This song didn't even crack the top 40 on Billboard! It was a failure.

I worked in a mailroom from November 2002 through November 2003. For about half of that time, the person who controlled the radio decreed that it should be tuned to the "adult contemporary" station, the format of choice for tedious office work everywhere. And I swear to Christ I heard this song at least once a day until I begged and pleaded for an oldies-station compromise. So yeah, it's insidious enough.

And I think it's weirdly appropriate that after so many groin-heavy mook anthems and failed attempts to make pop more over-the-top by overestimating the public's stupidity, the #1 on this list is a song so bland that it's actually offensive.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:35PM
Jim says:

@maura: Shit, you got me there. Sorry about misreading the byline. Good burn.

I do understand that two people put together the list, I liked most of the list! But as it went on it seemed to get more pretentious and self-righteous and this entry is certainly the worst offender of the bunch when it comes to that. It seems to me that this song was picked more for what you two seemed to think it represented than it's quality as "good music." I'm always offended by a bad cover - Jessica Simpson is evil for ruining "Take My Breath Away" and "Angels" - but to me this pick is a huge letdown and, like I said before, the #1 pick for all the wrong reasons.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 12:44PM
Rod Blagojevich says:

This is a bad, bad cover, and the essay was hilarious, I thought. I'm only mad because I had good money on "Popo Zao."

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 1:18PM
Elizabeth says:

Seriously. No Kid Rock? All Summer Long not only is a thoroughly shitty song, but it shits on two awesome songs and Fakes me out every time. I get excited for Warren Zevon for about two seconds only to be confronted with Kid Rock.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 1:21PM
Michael Daddino says:

Oh, Jim.

The idea that Chris and Maura position themselves as being above pop culture, rather than in the thick of it, is just...I dunno, chum. Like, you actually want people to believe that vocal fans of Green Day and Fall Out Boy and Amerie and Girls Aloud and what have you are (quelle horreur!) SNOBS? As if snobbery is always a bad thing? Well, if they're snobs, then the whole notion of snobbery got seriously devalued when I wasn't looking.

Just curious--you are aware of the comic and critical value of enraged hyperbole, right?

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 1:23PM
Anonymous says:

Hey Squink: add your name to the list. You seem awesome enough and have a whole decade to come up with some witty shit!

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 1:33PM
Chris says:

Speaking as a Counting Crows fan... that recording of Big Yellow Taxi sucks. A lot. Their live version of it is acceptable enough, but god damn if that's not the worst thing they've ever put on record.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 1:38PM
TJ says:

So I just re-read most of the list, and the comments of this post, and I sort of get it now. Yes, this song is indicative of a great many things that sucked about music in the 2000s. But this list was to count down the worst songs of the decade, not the worst musical trends and features. "Big Yellow Taxi" is far from a great song, but it's at worst listenable. I think saying its the worst song of the decade because it embodies certain trends without actually, you know, being a terrible song, does a certain injustice to the song and the aim of this list in general.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 1:43PM
Christopher R. Weingarten says:

"but it's at worst listenable"

As someone who had to listen to it 10 times last night to write this entry, I can tell you that you're starting on the wrong foot with that argument

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 1:46PM
maura says:

What Chris said.

And I mean I could get into a whole theoretical bla bla about how of course all these sorts of lists are subjective, particularly in the era where there's so much music being vomited into the public consciousness on a minute-by-minute basis, but I mean that's sort of obvious, isn't it?

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 1:59PM
Shawn says:

I enjoyed this list a lot. Thanks to Maura and Chris for putting it together.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 2:37PM
Jim says:

"As someone who had to listen to it 10 times last night to write this entry, I can tell you that you're starting on the wrong foot with that argument"

Okay, THAT was funny.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 2:50PM
Lucas says:

As a big fan of the F2k and someone who is friendly with the writers, I have to say that this is something of a misfire for a #1. To me it fails to be that bad in a musical way, and as something that's supposedly symptomatic of the decade, it's hardly an exemplar on par with previous entries like that Tila Tequila one or the godawful 9/11 entries by so many people on here. To me, those are far, far worse and seem more representative. This...just isn't bad. I mean, it sucks, and I hear it all of the damned time in dentist office-type places, but I never feel anything but ennui towards it, compared to the major-league antipathy I have for so many of these entries before it. It's a team-up cover for a soundtrack, and I know that those were hot poop in the 00s, but cash-in covers are as old as the hills, as are incongruous artist team-ups. And stupid soundtrack covers? I'm sure that Smash Mouth pooped out something worse than this, right?

The jingoism that followed 9/11 (e.g. the Toby Keith song), for me at least, is more egregious than anything offered here.

I think the writing on this is great, btw...I just have a problem with the choice.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 3:01PM
I said yesterday... says:

...that if "My Humps" (after not being listed in 50-2) was not #1, I might slit my wrists. The only reason I'm not doing so is because this is a truly godawful song that butchers a classic and has no reason to exist whatsoever. For any other song that could've been #1, I probably would have followed that sentence by saying, "But 'My Humps' is still a worse song." In this case, however, I'm not sure I can. At least Black Eyed Peas were trying (however terribly), whereas this shows no effort at all... to be honest, as compared to "My Humps", this version of "Big Yellow Taxi" might very well be worse.

And that is f***ing terrifying.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 3:17PM
Lucas says:

@I said yesterday:
You bring up a good point about trying vs. not trying that makes me slightly reconsider my position. Having said that, My Humps freaking sucks.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 3:27PM
MBi says:

Wow - Do you actually get paid to write such garbage?...So many songs to bash and you choose Big Yellow Taxi?? It seems like you just have an axe to grind. Did Adam Duritz diss you at some party or something?....Tasteless criticism.

I find it ironic that you call him out for having the pea-sized brain after reading this combined pea-sized effort.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 3:43PM
Bill says:

First few times I heard the song, before I knew it was a remake, it sounded like he was saying: "Put up a fucking lie." His accent is weird.

Terrible song.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 4:25PM
stephen says:

Big Yellow Taxi is a supreme example of shitty commercial music. I think it is deserving to make it in the top 10. Adam Duritz could write 50 amazing songs and it still wouldn't off set this piece of shit. I'd rather listen to Creed.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 4:27PM
Ceecers says:

YES! I love this review. Being forced to listen to terrible, soulless radio at work for years straight and hearing this song at LEAST twice a day always made me think exactly what you pointed out - the sickeningly sweet irony that by covering this song, they were, in fact, paving paradise and putting up a parking lot. Fuck Adam Duritz, dude. Dem dreadz ain't even real anyhow.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 4:27PM
David says:

ha! You got it all! Watching the video, the first thing I see is a yellow cab *sigh* but, hey... what do you expect, I'll let it slide. Then THERE'S A SECOND ONE and we're only 7 seconds in. It's going to be a long ride.

Museum/ see them? Idiot! If you don't want to sing "see 'em", pick a different song! And yes, the gender switch (No Homo! I laughed!)was awkward and stupid. If this isn't the worst piece of crap to hit the airwaves this decade, it's close enough.

Great column. I've enjoyed reading the series and this one really made me laugh while making some good points. thank you

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 4:53PM
Pinto says:

Part of me wishes "Birthday Sex" were #1, but I can definitely see the reasoning here. The existence of this recording is utterly indefensible.

Thanks, Maura and Chris, for helping us understand the trainwreck we just suffered through.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 4:56PM
Ares says:

How the fuck is fergie absent from this list?!?

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 5:02PM
insideoutbox says:

what an unexpected finish! while i agree this kind of parts ways with the spirit of some of the other entries (trends vs badness of actual song) i can in no way disagree with this choice.

this has been a great series, thanks to maura and chris.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 5:29PM
David says:

apologies for the second post so soon, but I did not read the comments before. To those saying that this song isn't that bad, I would suggest that there is some sort of math at work here. In addition to making a bad song, which would give them some negative points, they also started with a song that is pretty good, and removed everything that was likable about it.

They didn't walk in the casino broke and come out broke. They walked in rich and came out broke.

I would have picked on some of the other songs on the list actually, because who really expects anything from a song called "I Am Your Gummy Bear". But here you have a popular band, with a popular guest artist, singing a Joni Mitchell song, and not only that, but a Joni Mitchell HIT SONG, and they come up with this crap.

It's probably not worse than I'm Your Gummy Bear, or My Humps, but I follow why it was chosen, and this entry was certainly the most enjoyable to read of the series. I think this is more than valid. And it really gives us a focal point in Adam Duritz.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 5:38PM
President4Life says:

How the hell is "My Humps" not onthe list?

Hell, that might be the worst song I've ever heard.

I absolutely laughed through this entire list though, especially at the idiots defending Nickelback and Blue October(there have to be standards everyone or Paris Hilton will soon become the biggest movie star in the world), and it's about as good as any list I've seen, as I pretty much hated every song on the list(except no.1, ironically).

I think you guys spent too much time going after the 9/11 people and really should've gotten down to the nitty gritty of the Black Eyed Peas and Kid Rock and Fall Out Boy and all those horrible emo bands.

But overall, kudos.

Thank God, this decade is over. Hopefully, the new Nirvana will be coming soon.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 6:54PM
MK says:

My Humps definitely deserves to be on this list, but so does Alan Jackson's 9/11 song. I know Toby Keith and Darryl Warrgharbl are represented, but Alan Jackson's song is especially terrible. Look at these lyrics:

I watch CNN but I'm not sure I can tell you
The difference in Iraq and Iran
But I know Jesus and I talk to God

Enough said, really. The level of ignorance on display is shocking, not to mention absolving himself of any responsibility in knowing anything about the world by saying Jesus has his back. I guess none of the people in the Twin Towers knew Jesus or talked to God. Truly reprehensible.

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 8:03PM
@MK says:

Welcome to the REAL AMERICA, faygit! Palin '12!

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 22 2009 @ 10:02PM
Andrew says:

I respect your reasoning here, and this song is easily a top 10 contender, but no way in hell is this worse than the Fred Durst "What's Going On" cover. Listening to that one earlier in the week, I actually had to leave my house and take a walk just to calm down.

Great list, nonetheless. Although I really hated to be reminded of some of these.

And MK, I really didn't think that Alan Jackson song was all that bad. Sure, it had a rather poor grasp on geopolitics, but it wasn't exactly advocating mass-murder, and it was written very, very shortly after 9/11, before the Iraq war build-up had even started. And compared to those ghastly Toby Keith and Daryl Worley songs (which were on the list), Jackson is practically Billy fucking Bragg.

Or maybe it's just that I kinda like Alan Jackson.

Posted On: Wednesday, Dec. 23 2009 @ 1:18AM
Richaod says:

Great list and even better writing - in summary, congratulations... it takes a lot to create something enjoyable out of a pile of shit this big.

I'm kind of inclined to agree with both Lucas and David on this song though - it's the sentiment and failure as a cover that's more offensive than the composition. But you've justified it, and the symbolism of it as a #1 is very appropriate, so I can't complain!

Posted On: Wednesday, Dec. 23 2009 @ 3:28AM
sean says:

Is this actually worse than that Limp Bizkit cover of 'Behind Blue Eyes'? Because I think that particular cover might have stolen part of my soul.

Posted On: Wednesday, Dec. 23 2009 @ 7:52PM
MK says:

Andrew, I might be a little more sensitive to the Alan Jackson because I date a Persian woman, but that song was hard to listen to before I met her. I suppose this lyrical battle was won by Darryl however (http://blogs.villagevoice.com/music/archives/2009/12/the_worst_lyric.php) so I might have to give it the nod. It's all pretty terrible though. *sigh* Palin '12!

Posted On: Thursday, Dec. 24 2009 @ 7:42AM
rufus says:

I don't think Limp Bizkit counts - they aren't a REAL band.

Posted On: Thursday, Dec. 24 2009 @ 10:39AM
Greg says:

"Had a Bad Day" ... by Daniel somebody ... a song probably used to torture prisoners at Gitmo. It's from 2006, hard to believe it's not even on the list!

Posted On: Friday, Dec. 25 2009 @ 1:34PM
Ben says:

I think this review does touch on how the baby boomers don't accept anything which doesn't allow them to feel like the (culturally) greatest generation. I mean, is Big Yellow Taxi even that good? Kinda sanctimonious, don't you think? Anyway, rather than write something that sacrine-and-dull, they just re-record a song, adding nothing, in fact, draining any meaning left!
Of course mentioning this to the Village Voice (Motto: We Bitch About Things That Aren't From/Identical to Life Pre-1985) seems just as trivial.

Posted On: Friday, Dec. 25 2009 @ 6:04PM
Keegan says:

I set my friends on fire song called..well..their entire CD...should be included in this list, but whatever.

Posted On: Saturday, Dec. 26 2009 @ 7:30PM
ed c says:

i agree with most of these but this is the best you could come up with? the people who came up with this probably think the flaming lips are fucking genius and wilco is good. i've got news for you my music snob douchebag friends, this list is amateur and safe. grow a pair and call out radiohead for their last album being hot garbage or the fact that the arcade fire is possibly the most boring band on the planet. god this is worse than a rolling stone article.

Posted On: Saturday, Dec. 26 2009 @ 8:24PM
michael says:

why isn't that plain white ts band on here. that is the worst band i've ever heard in my life. worst lyrics and vocals ever. does that guy hang out in malls and write down what l4 year olds say and then turn it into a song? also they are tied with hoobastank as having the lamest band name of all time.

Posted On: Saturday, Dec. 26 2009 @ 8:28PM
Danny D says:

Funny list. I only new about 10 of the songs on it (Im a punk fan who either hangs in punk or biker bars and I dont have a TV). Im amazed however at how offended people got when their favorite bands were on the list. I mean come on im a fan of Kid Rock(guilty pleasure) but he very well could/should of been on this list for multiple songs. And if he was I would of read the article and laughed. The worst is those who deny that Nickleback's "Something in Your Mouth" is quality. That song is laughably bad.

Posted On: Saturday, Dec. 26 2009 @ 11:04PM
Morgan says:

Seriously, anything from The Paper Cut Chronicles by Gym Class shouldn't even be on this list. But at least you put Brokencyde on here I guess..

Posted On: Sunday, Dec. 27 2009 @ 11:24AM
Peter says:

so, any pro american song following 9/11 is bad? you better watch out - your elitist anti-americanism is showing.

Posted On: Sunday, Dec. 27 2009 @ 10:12PM
Joe says:

Personal bias much? I bet Adam Duritz didn't say "hi" once and these too are jaded. That cover sucks but come on, number one? That one wasn't even on my radar. It's completely forgettable. Brokencydes song on the list is way worse. Also, "Kryptonite" by 3 doors down? That song isn't even that bad in my opinion. I wouldn't put it in my top 50 but I don't think you should put songs you are just sick of in a "Worst Songs" list. Maybe make a "50 songs we're sick of" list if that's really what you mean.

Posted On: Sunday, Dec. 27 2009 @ 10:38PM
@Peter says:

I think they were pointing out that a few of those weren't pro american but anti-middle east.

Posted On: Sunday, Dec. 27 2009 @ 10:58PM
Adam Duritz says:

Relax. It's just a cover. Even if it was bad you are telling me you are gonna use my cover as worst song of the decade? You aren't gonna go after someones original song? Sounds pretty half assed to me. "My Humps" was worse and I'm almost positive that "Boyz in the hood" cover was from the 90s.

Posted On: Sunday, Dec. 27 2009 @ 11:17PM
Chris Miranda. says:

Thanks you didn't put "Asereje" by Ketchup, because I kinda liked that one.
No BEP songs. In the old Idolator, the users were suggesting My Humps, etc. I thought you guys will save yourselves from trouble by listing at 1-48, BEP tracks and save the two slots for an Attack!Attack!and Creed songs. Easy target??? So many easy targets , actually. Heidi Montag, Crazy Frog, Will Hung, Brokencyde, NickelBack and James Blunt. And ahhh, yes Weezer. I also see courageous choices such as Simple Plan's, John Mayer's and Toby Keith's. (Thanks Maura, finally someone agreeing with me that "...Wonderland" is really an awful song)
I would have much preferred songs that people actually thought were cool but really weren't, like tracks from Radiohead, etc.
Some thoughts:
@ ed c: Radiohead, Wilco and Arcade Fire made weak, boring songs but not bad songs. Their weakest and boringest is everyone else's banner songs. But I agree, this list is kinda safe. Nevertheless, I agree with most of the songs on this list (and Rolling Stone's too). Read Chris Weingarten's intro to F2K before saying music snob. Does the inclusion of Moldy Peaches and Xiu Xiu make you happy now?

@ Jim, Just bec. CCs +VC's BYT didn't break the top40 meant it was not heard by everyone. Thanks for googling BYT's charts for us to make a point. I'm pretty sure you are going back to this thread once in a while to check if someone replied your awesome, awesome comments.
@ Sarah,The 00's was not the decade when hip-hop died (that was the 90's). Thanks to Kanye, R. Kelly, Eminem and Li'l Wayne, it's actually the golden age for that genre.

@ everyone who thinks My Humps's the worst song of the decade. It isn't. It's the worst song of all time.
Big Yellow Taxi cover isn't the worst song, it's only the second worst song, next to 3!OH!3's "Don't Trust Me". No, I'm not having a decade amnesia, it really is the worst song evah.

@Maura J. and Chris W, Thanks for putting this up.

Posted On: Monday, Dec. 28 2009 @ 1:12AM
Tim Haught says:

What about Paris Hilton's Stars are Blind?

Posted On: Monday, Dec. 28 2009 @ 9:20AM
klai says:

Arrived at this article looing for something else but was grabbed by curiosity. I'm 40 and not from the USA, and I never heard 'Big Tellow Taxi' in my life until this debate. So of course, I went and searched both Joni Mitchell's and Crowes' (never heard them before either) versions.
Well... I guess you definitely NEED to be American and seeped in the context to understand the discussion here. I mildly enjoyed Mitchell's song, and thought the Crowes' version is pretty much some standard modern fare. To my ears, the Crowes version is easier to listen to at this point in time, and I don't think it's even remotely as (musically, lyrically, politically) bad as a hundred other songs.
But then again, I'm not American. I'm part of the other 95% of the world. Lists ain't as important this side of the fence.

Posted On: Monday, Dec. 28 2009 @ 2:11PM
nonono says:

How there is no Soulja Boy on this list astounds me

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 11:02AM
nonono says:

HAHA DISREGARD THAT, I SUCK COCKS!

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 2:23PM
Jordan says:

How brokencyde is not #1 is beyond me...

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 5:03PM
Alex Sarmiento says:

This list is NOTHING without Khia's "My Neck, My Back (Lick It)".

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 7:44PM
Lemmy says:

A worst songs of the decade list without the Yeah Yeah Yeahs on it?

Preposterous!

They might be the worst band I've ever heard. And I've heard a LOT of shitty ones. Even this putrid Counting Crows cover pales by comparison.

Hell, even Styx pales by comparison!

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 9:33PM
Greg Hoy says:

Ah the Voice: shooting fish in a barrel like no one else! I'm shocked circulation is down what with such wasted energy and space on such tripe! Get your paper next to Us Weekly or, heck, Weekly World News racks, pronto!

Posted On: Tuesday, Dec. 29 2009 @ 11:47PM
lastmilefire says:

WHATTTT !?!?!? FEVER FOR THE FLAVA is an AWESOME song ... soo funny and catchy. damn people just dont understand humor in music sometimes... sorry if its not as forward as weird al and what not but damn .. dont look over talent with a truly awesome band that got overlooked

Posted On: Wednesday, Dec. 30 2009 @ 8:22AM
jeff says:

Skillet monster song should definitely be on this list. that sucking fuckin sucks and that band is fuckin gay.

Posted On: Wednesday, Dec. 30 2009 @ 2:33PM
jeff says:

i really hate that song, and i really hate that band. even more than creed.

Posted On: Wednesday, Dec. 30 2009 @ 2:35PM
jeff says:

just kidding, they're my favorite band!

Posted On: Wednesday, Dec. 30 2009 @ 3:07PM
rob says:

Just one more example of why the music industry disintegrated before our eyes. If you constantly try to feed people sugar coated shit logs eventually they are going to be left with the taste of shit in their mouths.

Posted On: Thursday, Dec. 31 2009 @ 1:06PM
Al says:

Wow. Sounds like a personal attack against Duritz more than a true critique of the song. Funny how it can be the worst song and you simply attempt to destroy him, but fail to mention any other of his songs released in the 2000s.

Grow up Maura and Chris. You're both losers who will never grow beyond anything other than this worthless dribble.

Posted On: Friday, Jan. 1 2010 @ 10:49AM
Caleb says:

This list sucks.
Really it's a matter of opinion and taste in music anyways,
Fuck this shit ugh

Posted On: Monday, Jan. 4 2010 @ 3:44AM
DJ says:

My vote for #1..

Black Eyed Peas - I Got a Feeling

HOW IS THIS A SONG?!?!? I'm still waiting for Ashton Kutcher to pop out on this one.

Posted On: Monday, Jan. 4 2010 @ 6:14PM
weener says:

thank you both maura and chris for putting this steaming pile on the top of the list. ive hated this song for so long and im glad that justice has been served. it has to be the worst cover of any song with possible exception of any song covered by fred durst. this version of joni mitchells song has acutally inspired me to raze entire forest preserves in hopes of one day seeing a parking lot in its place. im not kidding, i actually became an advocate for deforestation after hearing this piece of shit. im pretty sure vanessa carlton's "bop bop bops" have caused temporary insanity in thousands and can be directly linked to the murder of at least a half-dozen innocent lives. duritz, may god spare no pity on you for this abomination.

Posted On: Friday, Jan. 8 2010 @ 3:16PM
steve says:

duritz, how do you sleep at night. this song is almost as embarrassing as your face.
p.s i too have became a staunch advocate in favor of deforestation because of this song. duritz, i hope your fucking proud.

Posted On: Friday, Jan. 8 2010 @ 3:28PM
Vasya says:

You SUCKS!!!!Fucking Village Voice!!!!!!
That you don't fucking understand!!!!!!
You should keep a blogs about gardening

Posted On: Saturday, Jan. 9 2010 @ 8:57AM
Tom says:

Big Yellow Taxi:
Duritz says nothing about hearing the screen door swing; he says "slam"...get your ears cleaned out.

And this is hardly the first song that needed gender switching of the lyrics due to gender switching of the singer, so leave it alone.

And when did music videos start having to have anything to do with the audio?

Posted On: Monday, Jan. 11 2010 @ 1:48PM
Keithus says:

This column is fantastic. The funniest thing about it is the fans of all these shitty ass bands. I love it.

Posted On: Tuesday, Jan. 12 2010 @ 6:09PM
Manuel says:

I still wonder how in a list of the "worst of the decade" acts like Kelly Osbourne, Tila Tequila, William Hung, Heidi Montag, Aaron Carter and the Crazy Frog rank lower than Counting Crows and Vanessa Carlton. Also, the list doesn't have any Britney (any decent list of the "worst of the decade" should have a lot of Britney on it, half of the s*** we've had to listen all the time on the radio this decade have been Britney's electroslut songs)and some of the songs in here are legitimately good. Just to name a few of the many things that are wrong with this list.

Posted On: Thursday, Jan. 14 2010 @ 11:50AM
Miko says:

Sure, that's a pretty damn awful cover. On the other hand, it's the least awful cover on the list.

Seriously, worse than the Moldy Peaches? I don't think so. You just had this rant all cooked up and ready to go, and needed somewhere to put it, so hey, let's just stick this blandly inoffensive song at #1 on this worst-songs countdown so the rant can go where it'll reach the most eyeballs.

Face it, this isn't "My Humps"; it's not "Who's Got the Crack"; it's not a Crazy Frog track; hell, it's not even a good example of offensively inoffensive drive-time schlock like "You Get What You Give" or "One Week". It's just a convenient strawman.

Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 3 2010 @ 6:45AM
og says:

I really don't see how anyone here can just brand this song, or any others on the list, as "bad music". There is no definition for it. It's all a matter of opinion. And personally, I like this song.

Posted On: Saturday, Mar. 27 2010 @ 6:45AM
Bo_Ouh says:

J'suis vraiment pas d'accord! Placer KoRn 14eme! D'accord ce n'est pas leur meilleure chanson, mais elle vaut beaucoup mieux que toutes les autres chansons du "top". Je vois que ce qui ont fait le classement n'avaient aucun sens de la "bonne musique".

Posted On: Thursday, Apr. 15 2010 @ 12:11PM
Your Mawm says:

THIS LIST FAILS. YOU TELL ME WHY THE HELL HEART SONGS BY WEEZER IS ON HERE. I AM GOING TO FIND THE MAKER OF THIS LIST AND ASSASSINATE HIM BY TAKING OUT HIS INTESTINES VIA SAW BLADE AND CHOKE HIM WITH HIS COLON WHILE SIMOULTANIOUSLY POURING LITTLE BITS OF MAGMA OVER HIS HEAD AT A TIME.

Posted On: Saturday, May. 29 2010 @ 10:44PM
pocket watch says:

This blog will be totally amazing with more clips or pix ... at any rate I am positive that my Flickr pals would prefer it a whole lot better.

Posted On: Friday, Aug. 6 2010 @ 7:40PM
Linkwheel Service says:

what an appropriate song "you dont know what you have got until its gone" how true is this in todays society, but isnt it still amazing how music can relieve you of your worries each day, but is it enough?

Posted On: Monday, Aug. 23 2010 @ 4:55PM

Write Comment


Comments may not show up immediately after submission. Please wait a minute after posting a comment for it to appear.

All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking "Post," you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Sign up for free stuff, news info & more!

Tools