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Year In ReView: Our 30 favorite songs of 2017

At several points throughout 2017, a simple question was asked: What are you listening to? Whether we were fielding it or asking it, the reply was often specific to a singular song. With all due respect to the time-honored album and EP -- and from Slowdive's self-titled to Kendrick's DAMN. to Quiet Giant's You're in Heaven, there were quite a few of note -- this year was all about the song. Songs of passion, songs of empowerment, songs of not giving a damn and songs of giving every last damn imaginable soundtracked a year that tested the will of the people. As Daniel Brockman notes in his intense Year in Pop essay for Vanyaland, pop music is headed down a dangerous path; but it's also merging into one giant streamable playlist, where the underground battles for clicks and listens with Top 40, and this year's Vanyaland year-end recap -- a mere selection of our staff's favorites, and by no means a silly declaration of the absolute "best" -- reflects that. Our staff was asked to come up with their faves, and these are the responses, presented alphabetically. The lead entry, via Toronto's Alvvays, feels like an appropriate jump-off, and the featured image of the up top was shot by the late, great Eddy Leiva, from their October show at The Paradise.

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Cardi B, “Bodak Yellow”

Let’s not bury the lede; Cardi B’s track “Bodak Yellow” is an absolute triumph. When the rapper’s single went to number one on the Billboard Hot 100, radio stations, media outlets, and fans lost their minds, and for good reason. The cultural significance of a solo female rapper’s tune going to number one for the first time in nearly two decades is overwhelming, historic, and frankly, a fucking force of nature. Highlighting the staggering gap between “Bodak Yellow” and Lauryn Hill’s song ”Doo Wop (That Thing),” the last song by a solo female rapper to hit number one, Cardi B’s career is mushrooming – and it’s out to make sure that it’s not such a damn long time before another rapping lady climbs her way to first place.

— Victoria Wasylak

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