10 Greatest Love Songs On The Magnetic Fields '69 Love Songs'
Finding love, losing love, making love... The love songs we love to love the most.
Released 20 years ago this month, 69 Love Songs by The Magnetic Fields remains a staggering achievement.
With multiple lead singers, a plethora of musicians, a bucketload of satisfying synth noises but only one songwriter, the band’s ridiculous ambition paid off and then some. Sonically and stylistically diverse, the album’s 69 tracks skip restlessly between moods and genres but the personality of band leader Stephen Merritt shines through on every song.
That said, not all love songs are created equal and amongst the jokier numbers and genre exercises are a few fairly disposable tunes. Most people would get by quite happily if they never heard Xylophone Track or Experimental Music Love again.
Of course part of the pleasure of giant rambling albums like The White Album or Use Your Illusions 1 And 2 is their rough edges. It great to have the off kilter tracks that would never have made the cut on a more focused and streamlined release.
But it’s also fun to be debate what songs would be kept on a more pared down version. So here, in a subjective list that will delight some and infuriate others, are the 10 greatest love songs on 69 Love Songs.
10. I Don’t Believe In The Sun
After the amuse-bouche that is Absolutely Cuckoo the album’s second track sets out it’s stall, prefiguring what is to come.
Yes, this is an album of love songs but we are not in for three hours of soppy, saccharine schmaltz.
Instead we’re in for songs that are dark, funny, laced with cynicism but still affecting. Songs about love that is transient and unrequited, about lovers that leave. All of that is apparent on I Don’t Believe In The Sun.
Merritt, morose in voice and word, finds himself lovelorn on a grand scale. “The noon to whom the poets croon has given up and died/astronomy will have to be revised.”
Its a theme that recurs throughout the album but this is one of the finest examples.