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December
12, 2008 |
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Yes, it's that time. Time to look back and reflect on
the year that was. Our consensus? Say what you want about the
music industry, this was a damn fine year for music. So in that
spirit we present to you our choices for the year's finest albums.
From all of us here at Sound Fix, we thank you for your support
and wish you a happy holiday season. |
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Deerhunter Microcastle |
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(Kranky) | |
In
a way, we’re really naming Bradford Cox
Artist of the Year, because the mad genius behind
Deerhunter in effect pulled off a hat
trick – three great albums in one year. After all 2008
began with his brilliant, mind-blowing Atlas
Sound side project. Then came
Microcastle, the follow-up to last year’s
breakthrough Cryptograms. And what did Cox do
as a response to the album’s earlier leak on the
Internet? He threw in a full-length bonus disc,
Weird Era, which was every bit as good as
Microcastle. Now that’s dedication. And then
there’s the music. We loved Cryptograms and its raw,
fuzzed-out noise rock, but Microcastlee/Weird
Era is a stronger, leaner effort, as bold and
imaginative as Deerhunter’s finest work
but with a more expansive musical pallette, with nods to
garage, post-punk and lo-fi indie rock. We hate to use
that dreaded word “accessible,” but there’s no denying
that Deerhunter’s newfound pop
sensibility and straightforward rockers (thanks to some
new band members and guest appearances) will broaden the
group’s audience. But there’s no studio slickness here;
the spirit of ‘60s experimentalism very much dominates
Deerhunter’s sound and aesthetic, with
moments of paisley pop, acid folk and lush, dreamlike
ballads filling these two wonderful, memorable discs. So
hats off to Cox and Deerhunter for
giving us more great music in one year than most bands
can manage in a career. (Please note: the vinyl version
only contains Microcastle.)
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This
was a great year for psych, and this knockout LP
from Abe Vigoda was one of the
genre’s finest offerings. The 14 songs on
Skeleton stop and start at a moment’s
notice, driven by a bass that effectively pulses
and an oddly pitched guitar sound, equally hollow
and wide. “Cranes” and “Live-Long” are headlong
crowd-pleasers, not pop songs so much as
motion-friendly rave-ups that someone’s bound to
invent a dance for before long. Moreso than their
debut, Skeleton showcases Abe
Vigoda’s particular talent: taking the
noisy energy of punk rock and shifting it into
something airy, something that moves along with an
effortless momentum. (Toby)
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Abe
Vigoda Skeleton |
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(PPM) |
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We
knew Baltimore’s Beach House was
going places after their excellent debut from two
years ago, but nothing prepared us for this.
Expanding on the skeletal feel of their first
record, Beach House’s
Devotion pays attention to space and
atmosphere in a way that’s hard to find in the
context of orchestrated pop music.
Vocalist/keyboardist Victoria
Legrand loosely guides us through songs
languid, nervous and pastoral, all piecing
together into a drifty, reverb-seeped whole. Her
off-kilter lyrics occasionally sift to the
surface, only to melt back into the beautiful well
of sound. Moments like the perfectly realized “You
Came To Me” and a haunting cover of Daniel
Johnston’s “Some Things Last a Long Time”
are perfect examples of the evocative nature of
the album, occupying a musical space much like a
lucid dream, allowing your mind to wander not away
from the music, but with the music. (Fred)
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Beach
House Devotion |
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(Carpark) |
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It’s
a sure thing, peeps: Olga Bell is
a star in the making. This delightful collection
of six songs hover somewhere between the breathing
bombast of St. Vincent and the
laptop electro-twirls of Bjork’s
Vespertine. BELL’s vocal
melodies are always beautiful, catchy and soaring.
“Expanding File” begins at double-time, pausing
every once in a while to assert a click or beep
and culminating in a stadium-rock reverb cacophony
of BELL’s harmonizing. It ends up
playing out as something akin to the
Guillemots in that it is
astronomically catchy and is best for long drives
or train rides to a place where there are a lot of
trees. (Andrew)
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BELL EP |
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(self-released) |
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Every
so often a ray of light emerges, rising above the
strummy-strum of the indie-folk ghettos and
crystallizing everything pure about simple
American roots music with an approach that works
perfectly and reminds you how good it can be. It’s
never as discernible as just a unique voice or an
especially nice way with words, it’s more like a
total one-of-a-kindness that separates,
inexplicably, their sound from any other.
Bon Iver is one such ray of
light, the newest addition to the hierarchy of the
Oldhams,
Newsoms,
Banharts and other such rare
performers who become instant forever favorites.
For Emma, Forever Ago is an album of
irresistible intimacy, finding Justin
Vernon, the man behind Bon
Iver, ruminating gently on remote
memories, cycling through swells of emotion. His
voice is incomparable, feeling like he’s
simultaneously singing to himself in a room or to
the entire world. The album draws you in and
merits repeat listens, all day if necessary, much
like any record that becomes synonymous with a
specific time in your life, eventually
establishing itself as a unique, identifiable
experience. (Fred)
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Bon
Iver For Emma, Forever
Ago |
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(Jagjaguwar) |
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The
near-annual release of a superb Will
Oldham record never gets boring. Like
2006’s The Letting Go, Oldham's most
recent effort as Bonnie ‘Prince’
Billy is a slow, spare ramble; here, his
song structures are even more extended, with
sonics focused squarely on the vocal interplay
between Oldham and his duet
partner, Ashley Webber of
Canada’s The Organ (and sister to
Black Mountain’s
Amber). Webber’s
dark smolder of a voice is a beautiful
counterpoint to Oldham’s warble,
and the songs' meander allow us plenty of time to
luxuriate in the loveliness. Though sonically
joyous to the point of buoyancy, Lie Down In
The Light nevertheless includes
Oldham’s trademark darkly
quixotic lyrics: epic opener “Easy Does It”
presents alternates hopeful and disturbing
nature-vignettes, “So Everyone” is an ode to true
love expressed via public oral sex, and “You Want
That Picture” looks forward to death to end the
pain of heartbreak. Sure to be a favorite among
Oldham’s current fans, Lie
Down in the Light is also a tremendous
introduction for new listeners to one of the most
talented songwriters of the past few decades.
(Anna)
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Bonnie
Prince Billy Lie Down in the
Light |
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(Drag
City) |
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Few
records this year have delighted me more than this
one. It’s not only a great album, but Born
Ruffians gave us one of 2008’s best
in-stores: warm, intimate and fun. This Toronto
trio’s debut full-length on Warp sizzles with
hooks, style and a wonderfully frenzied energy,
with jangly guitar riffs, tight and melodic bass
playing, and lead singer’s Luke
LaLonde’s warbled vocals and wry wordplay
bringing to mind the likes of Animal
Collective, Modest Mouse
and Built to Spill. The
guitar-bass-drums format hardly breaks ground, but
the band always keeps things interesting by
throwing you a hook, whether it’s the sudden
introduction of doo-wop harmonies, a tinkling
piano or rapid shift in rhythm. With nary a bad
track on the record, Red, Yellow &
Blue is a triumph. (James)
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Born
Ruffians Red, Yellow &
Blue |
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(Warp) |
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It’s
been far too long since the
Breeders gave us a new album, but
Mountain Battles sure was worth the wait.
Far from the ultra-catchy and inspired pop of
Last Splash, Mountain Battles
carries on with the sparse and minimal rock
tradition of Pod and Title TK.
“Bang On,” with its quirky guitar riff and simple
distorted drumbeat, is an infectious punk-rock
track with Kim Deal mouthing off
“I love no one and no one loves me.” The
beautifully melancholic “Night of Joy” and “We’re
Gonna Rise” display pure raw emotion with their
desolate minor guitar chords and sorrowful backing
vocals, while “Walk It Off”’s simple and plodding
rhythm section instantly brings to mind
The Pixies. Oh, and there’s even
a ballad sung in Spanish called “Regalame Esta
Noche.” All good fun! The Deal
sisters have delivered another
straight-to-the-point rock record with quiet
moments and sudden explosions of noisy guitars.
Classic album number four for The Breeders, check!
(Morgane)
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The
Breeders Mountain
Battles |
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(4AD) |
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How
many bands can still deliver on their 14th album
(and a studio album at that, not even including
live albums or collections)? Not many.
Nick Cave continues his icon
status with Bad Seeds in tow on
Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!, a new chapter in
brooding, drunken, menacing and accurately
literary rock and roll in the language he’s
single-handedly crafted over the years.
Cave’s ranting, bile-spewing
baritone is in top form, as are the Bad
Seeds’ chops, filling in spaces left by
lackluster releases of the early 2000s and also
keeping up with Cave’s recent
rollocking side project
Grinderman. Lyrical themes center
around journeys out West, death, betrayal and the
regular American nervous breakdowns that have
haunted and fascinated Cave since his
Birthday Party days. A stellar
record for any band, let alone an institution with
a past of their own to contend with like the
Bad Seeds. Also on vinyl with a
limited seven-inch and free download. (Fred)
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Nick
Cave Dig, Lazarus,
Dig!! |
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(Mute) |
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Call this the year of the Crystal band:
Antlers, Castles, Stilts. The fact that
Crystal Castles share their name with
an 1983 Atari arcade game and play keyboards
using vintage video consoles sound chips pretty
much sums up the Toronto-based duo’s
punk-rock/video-game chic ethic. The recent
sample controversy about their track
“Insecticon” should not eclipse the fact that
Crystal Castles are a genuinely
exciting young band, offering an innovative
mixture of fuzzed-up screaming vocals and the
disco-gone-wrong compositions of Ethan
Kath. “Magic Spells” and “Reckless”
bring to mind ultra-catchy and more danceable
version of the “Legend of Zelda” soundtrack,
mixed in with dissonant electro vibes for good
measure. In the end, Crystal
Castles is an original and fun first
album that manages to retain an intense and
surprisingly mature vibe amongst all the 8-bit
glitches and Game Boy noises. (Morgane)
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Crystal
Castles s/t
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(Last
Gang) |
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If
albums were people, I’d be in much deeper
trouble with my wannabe-shrink of a sister than
I am already. With its barely intelligible
lyrics and overall ghoulish pop drone,
Crystal Stilts’ Alight of
Night has at least a mild case of what in
the animate is referred to as antisocial
personality disorder — and boy, do I find it
irresistible! Yet Crystal
Stilts aren’t brooding to a fault: They
can sound sweet too, maybe even transcendent, on
tracks like “Prismatic Room”, “Shattered Shine”
and the closer, “The City in the Sea.” A minute
on Google will provide you with all the
comparisons and supposed influences your heart
desires (Joy Division and the
Jesus and Mary Chain being
chief among the name checks), but that their
sound is not — gasp! — completely
unprecedented shouldn’t dissuade you from
getting seriously excited about this long
overdue debut full-length. Alight is
refreshing in its sly charisma. It is quiet
abandon done right. (Jane)
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Crystal
Stilts Alight the
Night |
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(Slumberland) |
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Few
records brought more joy to us this year than
this spectacular new record from Australia’s
Cut Copy. The deliriously fun
and hooky In Ghost Colours is an
electronic record electronica-haters could love,
with dancey beats, rousing choruses and
shimmering pop melodies worthy of early-80s
Britpop. Skimming through reviews of the record,
the word “positive” keeps coming up, and there
is indeed a consistent cheeriness throughout
that never gets cloying. For that you can thank
in part the expert production of
DFA’s Tim
Goldsworthy, who builds on the promise
of the band’s previous release while keeping
things light and airy. Fun and utterly
unpretentious, In Ghost Colours is one
of the feel-good records of 2008. (James)
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Cut
Copy In Ghost
Colours |
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(Modular) |
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There’s
nothing groundbreaking about Nothing Is
Precious Enough For Us, the latest from
Joel Thibodeau’s Death
Vessel – it’s just a beautiful and
strange collection of songs, with warm, sunny
melodies and inventive arrangements. Thibodeau’s
castrato-like voice is unusual, to be sure, but
once the novelty wears off, his songs take on
their own persona, shedding the
“I-can’t-believe-he’s-a-dude” reaction many
initially have and enveloping you with their
beauty and grace. His vocals are haunting and
soulful, and the album in infused with lovely
and uplifting tracks, from the glorious choruses
of “Fences Around Field” to the Paul
Simon-esque folk gentleness of
“Jitterakandie” and “The Widening.” (Joe)
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Death
Vessel Nothing is Precious
Enough for Us |
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(SubPop) |
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Who
knew? Once considered a Grizzly
Bear side project, Department
of Eagles prove they are a great band
in their own right with the wondrous In Ear
Park. Led by Daniel Rossen
of Grizzly Bear and helped
enormously by the band’s other members in the
studio, the band delivers the same dreamy avant
pop of Grizzly Bear’s
Yellow House and Friends, with
baroque arrangements, stirring hooks and
beautiful harmonies, resulting in one of the
year’s finest pop albums. The band, formed by
Rossen and Fred
Nicolaus in 2000 when they were NYU
students, has honed its sound from its previous
effort, 2003’s sprawling but entertaining
The Cold Nose. Now joined by several
Grizzly Bear members,
Department of Eagles have a
released a touching and elegiac record (Rossen
made the album in tribute to his late father)
that never falters. Not a bad cut on the record.
(James)
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Department
of Eagles In Ear
Park |
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(4AD) |
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The
Dodos have put together such a unique
combination of genres and sounds here that it’s
pretty much impossible to dismiss them, with or
without all of the hype. With a propulsive
(almost tribal) style of percussion and
finger-picking, rootsy ruckus, this album
remains dynamic from beginning to end. Their
live show is explosive with energy and allows
you to connect the audio to the visual,
discovering all of the nuanced instruments that
blend so well in the recording: a toy piano,
vibes, sleigh bells, a tamborine adorned for
feet (for even more percussion!). Favorite new
band, favorite new record. (Tammy)
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Dodos Visiter |
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(French
Kiss) |
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The
king of ambient electronica retains his title
with another enchanting, engrossing album.
Proving that ambient is about more than
chillout, he builds magnificent yet delicate
sonic cathedrals in which the wholes are vastly
more than the sum of their parts. As usual,
Christian Fennesz mostly works
alone but has guests on two tracks:
Anthony Pateras contributes
prepared piano to the denser, buzzing
co-composition “The Colour of Three” and
Rosy Parlane co-writes/performs
“Glide,” which starts as quiet noise and becomes
a gently clanking drone crescendo. Easily one of
the best electronic albums of 2008. (Steve)
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Fennesz Black
Sea |
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(Touch) |
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There’s
something inherently compelling about a chorus
of voices joined in song. Seattle’s
Fleet Foxes join that
sensibility — virtually everyone in the band
lends a sizable vocal contribution here — with a
penchant for pop hooks (at times) and
void-spanning textures (at others). While
Robin Pecknold’s voice is a
close cousin to those of Jim
James and Ben
Bridwell, the songs heard on their
self-titled album head into a more
self-consciously pastoral (note the titles
“Ragged Wood” and “Blue Ridge Mountains”)
direction. And yet for all the massed harmonies
and fervent instrumentation heard here, the
group’s command of dynamics is subtle but
definitely present. Note the drums that advance
“Ragged Wood”, or the slow, steady progression
heard in “Your Protector”. Fleet
Foxes borrow from the folk traditions
of two continents and the songcraft of two
coasts, and the result is a constantly shifting,
richly adorned work. (Toby)
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Fleet
Foxes s/t |
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(SubPop) |
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The
masterful indie electronica of 2007’s EP
Reset would have been a tough act to
follow for anyone but Steven
Ellison, a.k.a. Flying
Lotus, a Los Angeles-based DJ, producer
and electronic musician. The laptop maestro’s
second long player departs from the lounge-y
vibe of his earlier works and establishes a more
mature, ambient sound which requires several
listen before revealing the beauty of its
multi-layered, almost cinematic in nature,
tracks. Flying Lotus’ trademark
bass-laden compositions and mysterious samples
find inspiration in abstract random noises as
demonstrated by the cosmic-sounding samples on
“Auntie’s Harp”, Ellison’s
homage to his great-aunt, jazz legend
Alice Coltrane. Los Angeles’
mostly instrumental short tracks almost feel
like the soundtracks to a futuristic avant-garde
movie and together, those musical pieces create
a complex and flawless electronic hip-hop
masterpiece. (Morgane)
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Flying
Lotus Los Angeles |
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(Warp) |
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I
was ready to declare Frightened
Rabbit’s The Midnight Organ Fight
one of the freshest and most exciting
debuts I’ve heard this year, until I discovered
that this is actually their second album. How
could a band this good remain a secret? The
consensus seems to be that their first album,
from two years ago, was a bit inconsistent and
never quite found an audience. Their fate should
now change very quickly. Now with the stellar
indie label Fat Cat, this Scottish trio have
delivered a warm, soulful and powerful record
that only grows more endearing with repeated
listenings. The opener, “The Modern Leper,” is
one of the year’s outstanding tracks, a slow,
building anthem filled with anguished lyrics.
Indeed, frontman Scott
Hutchison’s dark, lyrical songwriting
gives the record a unique voice, with his
brother Grant’s creative drumming adding a
driving force. And despite the band’s spare
lineup, The Midnight Organ Fight has
great range and a real depth in sound, with
plaintive ballads mixed in with moments of
countryish twang and a few midtempo stompers.
Highly recommended. (James)
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Frightened
Rabbit The Midnight Organ
Fight |
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(Fat
Cat) |
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Finally,
Gang Gang Dance gives us the
album that unites lovers of electro, rock,
hip-hop and prog – no easy thing. Brooklyn’s
Gang Gang Dance has always been
an enigma, and that can be a good or bad thing,
depending on your point of view. Their recording
output has been uneven – and I don’t mean uneven
in quality, as the band’s releases have
uniformly been strong, but uneven in sound and
aesthetic and often, frustratingly, uneven in
availability (the great Revival of the
Shittest has long been out of print, and
the self-titled debut on Fusetron is always hard
to get too). That air of mystery has given the
band many admirers but it’s also kept them from
reaching a larger audience, I suspect. Well,
that won’t be the case with Gang Gang
Dance’s superb new album, Saint
Dymphna. It is easily their most
pop-friendly album, with enough smooth beats and
hooks to find their way into a few dance clubs
in Williamsburg, but plenty of exotic arty
touches, polyrhythms, and experimental sounds,
as hard-core fans have come to expect.
Gang Gang Dance have dipped
their toes in pop and hip-hop and art rock
before, but on Saint Dymphna
they’ve jumped right into the waters with no
apologies: “House Jam,” the track that should
raise many eyebrows, could almost pass for 80s
dance-pop; “Princes” is straight-up hip-hop,
rapping and all; “Blue Nile” employs funky beats
with proggy guitar riffs; and the gorgeous
finale, “Dust,” with its heavy synths and beats,
sounds like something right out of vintage 4AD.
Saint Dymphna is an instant classic that should
immediately be placed alongside the finest works
of Animal Collective,
Black Dice and
Excepter. (James)
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Gang
Gang Dance Saint Dymphna
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(The
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We
try to avoid sticking compilations on this list,
but every now and then something so special
comes along, we would be derelict in not citing
it. Gas’s Nah Und Fern
is essential on so many levels – as a
meticulously compiled box set, as a piece of
important history, as pure entertainment. Box
sets are a mixed blessing – bloated, expensive,
unwieldy – and an electronic box set may seem
even more daunting, but Kompakt’s 4-CD package
of the complete works of Wolfgang
Voigt’s immensely influential
Gas is truly something special.
Voigt is one of the most important figures in
electronica, one of the leading forces in the
birth of Cologne’s minimal-techno scene, which
transformed dance music into a genuine cultural
force. Here is Voigt’s work in the late 1990s,
digitally remastered, mostly ambient but with
subtle use of rhythms and loops to give the
music an atmospheric, hypnotic edge. You don’t
have to be a deejay or a club hound to love
Gas; fans of
Eno’s ambient work will love it
too. Voigt later went on to found Kompakt, one
of the world’s greatest labels – of any genre –
and now finally have this long-awaited
compilation of his finest work, with more than
five hours of music! Absolutely indispensable in
every way. (James)
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Gas Nah
Und Fern |
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(Kompakt) |
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Hands
down, the party album of 2008. The greatest
mashup album ever assembled – and “assemble” is
the only right word to describe this kind of
music. Who else but Girl Talk
can seamlessly connect Outkast, Roy
Orbison, the Spencer Davis Group, DJ Funk,
Cupid, Pete Townshend, Twisted Sister, Huey
Lewis, Lil Mama, Ludacris, Lil Wayne, Edwin
Starr, Sinead O’Connor and Rage
Against the Machine – and that’s just
on the first track. No bad cuts on the record?
Try no bad moments. It soars from start to
finish, and in the process Gregg
Gillis (aka Girl Talk)
has done more than make the year’s finest party
album, he’s made a nice statement about the
universality of pop music. Here’s your one time
to buy the CD, folks, since Girl
Talk has made one pressing and promises
to do no future ones. (James)
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Girl
Talk Feed the Animals
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(Illegal
Art) |
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We
all did a double-take of sorts when we heard
that Antony (of
Johnsons fame, of course) was
making a dance album, but damn if he hasn’t
pulled it off. Here Mr. Hegarty
assumes a new identity, lending his highly
distinctive falsetto to a disco-y/house-y
electronic outfit that might be the best thing
DFA’s ever done. It’s a perfect fit for
Antony’s voice, and the
retroness of producer/mastermind Andrew
Butler’s sound is changed up with some
cool effects – there’s some real originality
here in how the old-school styles are
blended/contrasted. Nor is this one of those
dance albums that’s all beats and no hooks –
there are real melodies here, and some great
horn riffs. Butler also sings a
bit, and Kim Ann Foxman and
Nomi add female vocals, so
there’s plenty of variety in that arena as well.
Ever since this came out in Europe, we’ve been
besieged by requests for it. The summer’s dance
soundtrack still sizzles well into winter.
(Steve)
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Hercules
and Love
Affair s/t |
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(Mute) |
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What
a year this has been for Brooklyn’s High
Places. They put out two full-lengths,
a ton of popular 7-inches, and emerged as one of
THE band’s to watch in 2008. We not only
watched, but heard plenty, especially this,
their proper full-length debut (the previous
offering was a collection of singles).
Mary Pearson’s vocals and the
haziness of the music impart an ethereal mood to
the proceedings, but there’s also an unabashed
pop sensibility throughout, alongside a
surprisingly potent low end. The duo of
Pearson and Robert
Barber have expanded on that sound for
their self-titled debut, and while some of the
songs here are rhythmically charged and catchy
(“Golden,” “The Storm”), there are also more
forays into a drifting, almost ambient sound.
These songs also feel more complex than their
earlier work; they’re clearly looking to see
where the style developed so memorably on those
initial singles will take them. The result here
is a defiantly textured ambient pop album, with
reference points spanning everything from dance
music to field recordings to the drifting
spatial rock of, say, Califone.
(Toby)
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High
Places s/t |
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(Thrill
Jockey) |
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Too
many bands, eager to home in on a profitable
genre, undeservedly adopt the psychedelic label,
but Indian Jewelry is the real deal, Free Gold!
throbs, drones and fuzzes, but the band is way
too cool to get excited, so they keep their pace
slow. The Houston art-rock group, which has over
20 guest members who fluctuate in and out,
claims inspiration for the groundbreaking music
of the 1970s, but they’ve made an experimental,
psychedelic sound that’s all their own. “Bird is
Broke (Won’t Sing)” has a constant pulsing that
sounds the way a hangover feels, but in a good
way. (It should inspire that eyes half open,
slightly pissed off look in listeners.)
“Everyday” pears down the instruments to focus
on some sexy, echoing female vocals. And the
only lyrics in the David Byrne-ish “Hello
Africa” are “Hello Africa” over and over. To our
ears, this was the year’s finest psych album.
(Margi)
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Indian
Jewelry Free Gold! |
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(We
Are Free) |
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Best
new artist of 2008? Very possible. Listening to
the debut album from Lia Ices,
courtesy of our local Rare Book Room Records,
gave me a chilling, exciting feeling that I was
not just listening to a good record but indeed
the work of a rare and special talent. At the
heart of Necima is Lia
Ices and her amazing voice and piano.
There is a warmth and tenderness to her singing,
unusual in its depth and complexity. I’m sure
many will compare her to Cat
Power, and Ices does
indeed possess a bit of Chan
Marshall’s scratchy soulfulness, but
there’s an aching vulnerability that’s all her
own. And the arrangements! This is chamber pop
of the highest order, with swirling strings and
other acoustic instruments bringing a majesty to
the songs. There’s not a bad track on the
record, but my favorites are “Healed,” perhaps
the most pop-friendly track on the record, the
long and rich “Many Moons,” reminiscent of the
best of Joni Mitchell’s
early-70s work, and the uplifting finale, “You
Will.” Ices is joined by some fine talent too,
including David Muller of the Fiery
Furnaces, Andy Macleod
of White Magic and
Robbie Lee of Love as
Laughter. Lia Ices is
going places. (James)
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Lia
Ices Necima |
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(Rare
Book Room) |
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No
question, when it comes to hip-hop, this was
Lil Wayne’s year (sorry,
Kanye). The “best rapper
alive,” as he modestly calls himself, put
together a beautifully realized hip-hop record
in Tha Carter III (the sequel to
Tha Carter II, natch), with a steady
stream of guest appearances (Jay-Z,
Kanye West, Babyface) and mixtape
samples galore. The beats are smooth and easy,
and with singles like “Lollipop,” “Dr. Carter”
(complete with chipmunk choruses, a
David Axelrod sample and
Jay-Z’s vocals) and the
politically themed “Tie My Hands” (a devastating
post-Katrina indictment). Few rappers these days
use wordplay this imaginatively and know how to
tie it together musically as well. Maybe he is
the best rapper alive. (Ralph)
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Lil
Wayne Tha Carter
III |
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(12K) |
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Electronic
music may not be known for tunes of
Ramones-like brevity, but even
the most ardent clubhound will be left a bit
breathless after the knockout 30-minute opener
(no, that’s not a misprint, 30 minutes) on
Hans-Peter Lindstrom’s latest
epic, Where You Go I Go Too. “Epic”
isn’t a word tossed around much these days when
it comes to electronica, but
Lindstrom thinks big. And on
Where You Go the Norwegian dance
maestro recalls the bolder days of 70s disco
(Giorgio Moroder, Cerrone) in
making one of the year’s very finest dance
albums. The half-hour title track is a wonder,
never faltering through its many peaks and
valleys, anchored by a series of synth riffs
that brings ripples of joy with every chord. Not
since the heydey of Kraftwerk
have we seen a tune this long and exciting. The
rest of the album? The pieces are shorter (two
more tracks, a more 10 and 16 minutes in length)
but daring and adventurous as well, floating
elegantly with soft melodies, mighty fat
bass-drums and bubbling basslines. (Tammy)
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Lindstrom Where
You Go I Go Too |
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(Smalltown
Supersound) |
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This
one was a finalist for Album of the Year.
M83’s move towards more vocals
increases considerably and successfully thanks
to new vocalist/keyboardist Morgan
Kibby, not only because her breathy
vocals are sexily intoxicating, but also for the
variety she brings. Leader Anthony
Gonzalez’s love of vintage keyboards
remains, but he has not just moved more towards
pop, he’s also honed his songwriting skills and
acquired a better sense of structure. Yeah, the
chiming guitars (returning multi-instrumentalist
Loic Maurin) and chord
progression of “Graveyard Girl” keep threatening
to turn into “Money Changes Everything,” but
that fits well with the ‘80s love displayed
throughout. Gonzalez shows he’s
still got the ability to craft lush, dreamily
drifting instrumental soundscapes on the closing
“Midnight Souls Still Remain.” (Steve)
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M83 Saturdays=Youth |
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(Mute) |
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With
a first track that thunders in like a surf
rock/Jesus and Mary Chain
mashup, it’s clear from the start that
Distortion represents a new aesthetic
wrinkle for Stephin Merritt’s
motley Magnetic Fields. While
2004’s spotty I found
Merritt flailing into too-crisp
adult-alternative territory, the band’s latest
effort embraces noise and mess to great effect.
As the title implies, the entire album is
swathed in layers of feedback, which
half-submerges Merritt’s
dramatic baritone into an appealing intimacy.
Merritt shares vocal
responsibilities with the terrific
Shirley Simms (who figured
prominently throughout 69 Love Songs);
her liquid alto hovers just above the oceans of
guitar squall, bringing brightness to the
album’s best songs. Distortion finds
Merritt’s trademark lyric
acerbity (among the topics this time around:
getting drunk to avoid dreaming, a nun who wants
to be a centerfold, and, well, “Zombie Boy”)
combining with some of the most infectious
melodies of his career. The close, intentionally
murky production highlights the perfect
simplicity of the Magnetic
Fields’ trademark sad, bouncy love
songs; Distortion reminds us that
nobody does them better. (Anna)
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The
Magnetic
Fields Distortion |
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(Nonesuch) |
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Stern’s
debut album was very guitar-focused and kinda
mathy, a daring punk-metal-prog hybrid. This
time out, still working with
Hella drummer Zach
Hill (plus alternating bassists), she’s
refined her writing and structures, putting her
machine gunnish hammer-on guitar heroics in more
substantial frameworks. And her singing’s gotten
better, though not much less aggressive,
conveying her wryly witty lyrics with punchy
power. This is still some wild and crazy stuff,
but just enough more accessible (without
compromising her sound) to be a great leap
forward for her. (Steve)
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Marnie
Stern This Is It & I Am It
& You Are It & So Is That & He Is It
& She Is It & It Is It & That Is
That |
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(Kill
Rock Stars) |
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So
how did this become one of our most beloved
records of 2008? It doesn’t hurt that the
opening notes of “Time to Pretend” recall
American Analog Set’s “The
Postman.” Nor does it hurt that Dave
Fridmann is on production duties here,
lending the entirety of Oracular
Spectacular a spacious, hazy air.
MGMT’s debut album encompasses
a wide stylistic ground: “Time to Pretend”
blends an earnest fullness (think a more uptempo
Mercury Rev) with sardonic
lyrics about excess; the low-end-friendly
“Electric Feel” is convincingly slinky; and “The
Handshake” ends on a nicely anthemic,
fist-pumping note. MGMT is also
fond of the big finish – witness the
planetarium-friendly conclusion to “Of Moons,
Birds, and Monsters.” If there’s a flaw here, it
may be that the album’s breadth comes at the
expense of a clear, album-long progression: at
times, this sounds like a solid collection of
singles than a cohesive whole. But what a
collection of singles. (Tobias)
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MGMT Oracular
Spectacular |
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(Sony) |
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Super
Furry Animals' singer Gruff
Rhys and hip-hop producer Bip
Boom gave us one of the year’s great
party records, a deliciously nostalgic 1980s
rock opera/concept album recounting the life
story of automobile engineer, playboy, and
ultimately drug-trafficker John
Delorean. The opener “Neon Theme” sets
the tone for the rest of the album, with new
wave synthesizers and a funky disco bass line.
Also check out the hilarious “Michael Douglas,”
an ode to the power-crazed fictional character
Gordon Gekko, replete with sequenced beats and
synthetic drum machines. In the end,
Stainless Style’s ironic yet warmly
affectionate musical statement about the failure
of the American dream is a perfect slice of
Pet Shop Boys/OMD/Duran Duran
synth-pop and would be the perfect soundtrack to
the VH1’s series I Love the ‘80s.
(Morgane)
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Neon
Neon Stainless
Style |
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(Lex
Records) |
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The
thing that makes No Age’s music
so exciting is there’s really no precedent for
it. Sure, from a distance they look like a
two-piece punk band, playing fast music to
hordes of excitable kids, but look closer. The
layers of atmospheric guitar noise and lopsided
samples transcend punk pretty quickly, bringing
to mind the more warped moments of Black
Dice or My Bloody
Valentine without ever really sounding
like those reference points. Also it’s pretty
hard to find music (punk or otherwise) so obtuse
and vaguely dark that leaves such a positive
feeling in it’s wake. Following last year’s
Weirdo Rippers, a collection of
out-of-print vinyl tracks that felt a lot more
like a solid album than most of the records
released last year, Nouns is the official debut
long-player. Capturing the energy and
impossible-to-pin down vibe of those first
singles is a daunting prospect, but
Nouns delivers and expands. First
single “Eraser” bounces an almost neo-hippie
guitar line along on a jingle-bell rhythm until
everything explodes into raucous noise, gone
before you realize it came. The soft and strange
atmospherics of instrumentals like “Impossible
Bouquet” add a sense of pacing to the record,
making room for assaults like “Teen Creeps”.
Easily one of the most exciting, original and
oddly joyous records of the year already. Extra
bonus points for great packaging with 70 pages
of photos, lyrics and general weirdness.
(Anna)
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No
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It’s
a shame. If the year were 1978, then
Todd Osborn’s first album,
Osborne (why he adds the “e” to his
musical persona I cannot say), would probably be
a worldwide success. His beautiful warm and
melodic brand of house would be at home in any
disco dancefloor during the days of shag carpets
and polyester. But it’s not 1978, and besides,
Osborne’s brilliant self-titled
record would be hard to conceive without the
wonders of modern technology, so I suppose it
all evens out. This deejay and producer par
excellance crafts music unlike any other artist
these days, from the Daft
Punk-meets-Chic
booty-shaker “Downtown” to the warm R&B vibe
of “Ruling” to the crazy-beats syncopation of
“Outta Sight.” He pays tribute to the heroes of
yesteryear while looking forward all at once and
never loses sight of the fact that dance music
should be fun. Reportedly his admirers include
Gilles Peterson to
Richard James to Flying
Lotus. Join the club. (James)
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Osborne s/t |
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(Spectral) |
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By
expertly mixing elements of old-school punk,
surf music and untamed experimental indie rock,
the whippersnappers of Baltimore quartet
Ponytail have managed to create
something quite sonically refreshing and unique
on their second album, Ice Cream
Spiritual. The strongest tracks on the
record “7 Souls” and “Small Wevs” bring to mind
the 1980s art-rock of Bow Wow
Wow and Gang of Four
with Molly Siegel’s erratic
yelping, upbeat drums rolls, angular guitar
riffs and reverberated melodies, as “G Shock”
knocks down the stunned listener with a chaotic
wall of noise and ferocious rhythms. For all
this sonic assault, the strength of the
songwriting still manages to shine on Ice
Cream Spiritual, as
Ponytail capture the convulsive
energy of their live shows and mix it with a
funky dissonant vibe. (Morgane)
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Ponytail Ice
Cream Spiritual |
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(Spectral) |
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No
one but Portishead could pull
something like this off. Think about it; one of
the three or four definitive trip-hop groups in
the 90’s puts out two albums that not only set
up the genre but become slow-burning classics
that sculpt musical minds in all circles for
years to come. They wait eleven years and put
out a record that not only contends with those
first classics, but branches off into sonic
territory they never even touched before. If
you’re expecting a rehash or even a glowing
update of Dummy, this is NOT it.
Instead we’re treated to eleven new scorching,
inventive and outlandishly killer songs.
Beth Gibbons' voice,
unparalleled in haunted elegance, remains the
centerpiece of the entire show, and churning,
troubling, stellar production and creepy grooves
seep out of every track. The aptly titled first
single “Machine Gun” rides a beat so distortedly
powerful the rhythm track alone makes the song.
Elsewhere we find glitchy electronica, lurking
yet shimmery guitars and spacey dirges that
would make the Silver Apples
jealous. This record is transcendent, beyond
important. Fully essential. (Fred)
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Portishead Third |
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(Mercury) |
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How
can you not love Santogold?
Seriously, we know how subjective music can be,
but here’s an album that not only bends genres
unlike just about any other we can think of, but
she brings enough cheer and optimism to her
music to give Cut Copy a run
for their money. After cutting her teeth with
the Bad Brains-influenced punk
band Sniffed, here she emerges
as a true solo artist, giving us a terrfic album
that’s a neat hybrid of electronica, dance,
world, dub, grime and punk. “L.E.S Artists” is
one of the year’s most infectious singles, while
“Creator” isn’t far behind. One of the year’s
true anthemic party records. Irresistible!
(Tammy)
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Santogold s/t |
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(Downtown) |
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It’s
tempting to lump Sic Alps with
the other garage bands du jour (Jay
Reatard, Times New Viking, King Khan,
etc.), but beware facile comparisons: the San
Francisco duo of Matt Hartman
and Mike Donovan have given us
one of the year’s freshest (and finest) rock
albums. After toiling around the Bay Area psych
scene for years, the group has hit its stride
with U.S. EZ, a heavy, dark and melodic
record, with echo-shreiking vocals, jagged,
start-stop riffs and rhythms, and thundering
bass lines. The bluesy stomper “Gelly Roll Gum
Drop” shows that the band can deliver some
hooks, while “Mater” combines a deliriously
catchy guitar riff with harmonies worthy of the
Velvets. The songs are short
and economical, delightful free of pretense and
filler, straightforward in their exuberance and
sheer joy. One of my absolute favorite albums of
2008 – check it out! (James)
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Sic
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(Siltbreeze) |
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One
of the year’s most magical records.
Harmony Korine has always
relied heavily on music for sculpting the feel
and identity of his movies. It’s hard to imagine
the images in Gummo or Kids
being half as effective without their tumultuous
scores. Korine’s latest work,
Mr. Lonely, is a damaged film
loosely centered on the misadventures of a
commune full of celebrity impersonators, and the
soundtrack follows suit, hopping genres and
styles through demented interludes and ambient
longer songs. Spacemen
3/Spiritualized headman J.
Spaceman and ethno-musicology
appropriators the Sun City Girls
never collaborated on any of the music
for the film (which would have been a whole
other experiment), but the two entities
complement each other surprisingly well over the
course of the soundtrack. String-heavy numbers
like “Garden Walk” drift through random moments
of dialogue into soft psychedelia from SSG like
“3D Girls” and feedbacky tape collages of cut-up
flute on “Panama 1.” A roller coaster of
sprawling theatrics and calming ambiance and a
listening experience equal parts disturbing and
enlightening as Korine’s films.
(Fred)
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J.
Spaceman/Sun City Girls Mister
Lonely Soundtrack |
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(Drag
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It’s
been a while since we’ve heard from
Jason Pierce’s storied
Spiritualized, but he had a
good excuse: a near-fatal encounter with
pneumonia in 2005, which not only took its toll
on him physically but artistically as well. Few
artists in recent years have made out-of-body
experiences as central to their work as the
psych-hazed musings of Pierce
and his bands Spacemen 3 and
Spiritualized, but his scary
flirtation with the other side has given a
renewed purpose to his work. Never has he
sounded this assured and focused, putting
together a stunning album of plaintive, wistful
songs in turn mournful and uplifting. No longer
are Pierce’s tunes drowned in
layers of drone and feedback; here he reveals
his emotional core, confessional but never
self-pitying, in an album that’s enjoyable as it
is powerful. Coming on the heels of his terrific
soundtrack for Harmony Korine’s
Mister Lonely, Jason
Pierce has shown that his best work is
still ahead of him. (James)
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Spiritualized Songs
in A+E |
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(Sanctuary) |
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Damn,
this guy’s good. Tom Fec of the
fabulous Black Moth Super
Rainbow (a.k.a.,
Tobacco) releases his first
solo album, and it’s a gas from start to finish.
The music certainly dabbles in the dreamy
psychedelic pop of Black Moth,
but Fucked Up goes beyond in new
directions, delivering some highly stylized,
trippy lounge music, with heavy, fuzzy, funky
beats and great grooves and riffs. And there’s
no bachelor-pad cheesiness here; on Fucked
Up Friends Tobacco has
made a serious party record, endlessly creative
in its use of sound and rhythms, with
mellotrons, crackling tapes and some nostalgic
nods to 70s soundtracks. He also employs the
great Aesop Rock to rap on a
few tracks. Fun, fun, fun. Oh, by the way: check
out “Hawker Boat” and other
Tobacco clips on YouTube.
Delicious. (James)
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Tobacco Fucked
up Friends |
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(Anticon) |
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TV
on the Radio continue to top
themselves, and they manage to do it by breaking
ground every time. After the gritty, distorted,
fuzzy sounds of Return to Cookie
Mountain, the band defies expectations with
a stripped-down, electro’d-up album. That’s not
to say they’ve gotten slick; there’s still
plenty of grit, but it’s buzzing, throbbing,
funky grit this time out. Yes, funky – check out
“Crying” and especially “Golden Age.” Other
highlights include the pretty, keyboard-hooked
haunters “Family Tree” and “Love Dog,” the
Afro-pop-tinged “Red Dress,” and the propulsive
“Dancing Choose.” The band retains its love of
off-kilter hooks and knack for anthemic songs
that avoid any sense of self-indulgence, if
anything honed even more sharply. Scene-spotters
will note guest appearances by
Antibalas and Katrina
Ford of Celebration.
Also in a limited deluxe version with bonus
tracks and remixes. (Steve)
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TV
on the Radio Dear
Science |
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(Interscope) |
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Yeah,
yeah, yeah, they sound a little bit like
Animal Collective. But remember
when Animal Collective came
around? We were told they sounded like the
Incredible String Band and
Milton Nascimento. The point?
No one operates in a vacuum, and the fact that
this remarkable new band shares a bit of AC’s
experimental acoustic musings obscures the fact
that they bring a wealth of influences to their
sound, from the modern classical stylings of
Arvo Part and Philip
Glass and Xenakis to
flamenco music to sci-fi soundtracks. Led by the
classically trained guitarist Anthony
Lebron, this trio is nominally an
acoustic act, but what a bold sound they have,
with all kinds of creative percussion
arrangements and harmonizing. Memorable from
beginning to end, Music for Spaceships and
Forests is easily one of our favorites of
the year! (Tammy)
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Twi
the Humble Feather Music for
Spaceships and Forests |
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(Friendly
Ghost Recordings) |
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In
a year of many fine psych albums, this one was
near the top. Valet is the solo
vehicle of Honey Owens,
sometimes member of Jackie O
Motherfucker, Atlas Sound and
Nudge, and
Naked Acid is
her second collection of spectral, murky
musings. The seven lengthy stretched-out pieces
that make up the album flow more like a sound
collage at times, with fragments of underwater
vocals, washes of muted guitar fuzz, found sound
percussion and the occasional Spacemen
3-style demented blues moment. The
randomness of these skittering explorations gels
at some point and creates a flow that makes the
entire picture bigger than the individual parts,
inextricable from each other. As a new
generation of artists rediscover and mutate the
space-rock genre, with varying degrees of
success, Valet really nails it
by warping the obvious influences and bringing a
real darkness and paranoia to the sometimes
too-dreamy shoegaze catalog. (Fred)
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Valet Naked
Acid |
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(Kranky) |
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A
band as hyped-up and blogged-out as
Vampire Weekend has a lot to
live up to when it comes to actually making a
record. This self-titled debut sweeps the hype
machine into the corner and gets down to
business, eradicating anything you might have
heard or imagined in favor of making a glorious,
overjoyed noise. Drawing on a cannon of 80s
influences (with heavy nods to Paul
Simon, Peter Gabriel, Elvis Costello
and the Talking Heads) for a
solid foundation of upbeat, infuriatingly hooky
pop songs, the band interjects
Afro-pop/highlife-inspired guitar lines, cheeky
referential lyrics and unexpected twists in
orchestration to weave together a pristine sonic
statement. The songs will stick in your head
without permission, leaving impressions of
ecstatic happiness and nebulous reassurance.
(Fred)
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Vampire
Weekend s/t |
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(XL) |
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This
was the year of African compilations. So many
great ones came out (three on Soundway alone),
we could devote a whole page to them. This one
was perhaps the year’s best. Strut being more
focused on danceability than sociology or
musical anthropology, the compilers of
Nigeria 70: Lagos Jump care only about
giving us great grooves, more great grooves, and
even greater grooves. Even the tracks most
beholden to American funk or soul have a more
elliptical quality to their beats, so while
there is pure highlife here (and proto-juju),
there’s no pure funk. With stellar quality all
around, tracks that stand out do so on context
and/or oddity – the garage-rock quality of the
Immortals’ “Hot Tears,” the
fuzztone on the Faces’ “Tug of
War” (not that a little psych was all that
unusual in Nigerian rock!), the reggae lilt of
Chief Checker’s “Ire Africa.”
If it seems like Strut is sticking to
obscurities here, well, they already covered the
famous stuff seven years ago with their three-CD
Nigeria ‘70 box set. When the obscurities sound
this good, the strategy’s working just fine.
(Steve)
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v/a
Nigeria 70 Lagos
Jump
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(Strut) |
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The
buzz was swirling about Brooklyn’s
Vivian Girls months before their record
hit our shelves, from the talk about their
amazing live shows to the array of 7-inches that
sell out here in a nanosecond and go on eBay for
for triple the amount days later. Here’s their
full-length debut, long out of print but
rereleased courtesy of garage-punk label In the
Red, and it did not disappoint. This all-girl
trio is indebted to many styles and sounds: girl
groups, shoegaze, garage, DIY punk, new wave –
it’s all there, mixed together in a delectable
stew of raw, fiery, unabashed rock. The album
whizzes by at breakneck speed with no room for
filler, like one of those great Ramones records
from the mid-70s that clocked in 25 minutes (if
that). Backlash be damned – this is music hard
to dislike. It’s fun, amiable, full of hooks,
good cheer and tremendous style. I can’t wait to
hear what they do next. (James)
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Vivian
Girls s/t |
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(In
the Red) |
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Hard
to believe that not too long ago, some people
were writing off the Walkmen.
After some recent misfires, many wondered if the
Walkmen could recapture the
brilliance of 2004’s Bows & Arrows.
Well, with You & Me, they have done
just that. This is a spectacular return to form
for this great New York City band, the driving
guitars, the churning organ sounds, the
energetic but understated drumming once again
delivered to great effect. Hamilton
Leithauser's gruff delivery continues
to draw from Dylan, but he’s a
compelling lead singer. With its spacious,
driving and urgent songwriting, You & Me is
an absolute must to own. (Joe)
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Walkmen You
& Me |
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(Gigantic) |
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No
joke: This got strong consideration for Album of
the Year. To be sure, it’s the best debut of
2008. I know little about this band – four dudes
from Canada, they recorded it in Chad
VanGaalen’s basement, that’s about it –
but they’ve crafted a unique and highly
appealing sound, a bit of psych and post-punk
mixed with experimental electronica.
Women cite This
Heat as an influence, so they are
immediately aces in my book, and they bring that
legendary band’s aesthetic to their self-titled
debut, with heavy, jagged rhythms, lo-fi pop and
furious raw energy. The first few tracks give
you the album’s eclectic sound. The opening
one-minute track, “Cameras”, immediately brings
to mind early Velvet
Underground, while “Lawncare” with its
layers of guitar feedback, is pure post-punk.
Then there’s “Woodpine,” an instrumental track
of keyboards and guitars that could pass for
Christian Fennesz, followed by
“Black Rice,” almost Nuggets-like with its hooks
and pop sensibility. A spectacular record, one
of the year’s best. (James)
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Women s/t |
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(Jagjaguwar) |
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1. Neil Young: Sugar Mountain
(Reprise) 2. Belle & Sebastian:
BBC Sessions (BBC/Matador) 3.
Fennesz: Black Sea (Touch) 4.
David Byrne & Brian Eno: Everything
That Happens Will Happen (Todomundo/Opal) 5.
Fleet Foxes: s/t (Sub Pop) 6.
The Walkmen: You & Me
(Gigantic) 7. Girl Talk: Feed the
Animals (Illegal Art) 8. Love Is All:
A Hundred Things Keep Me Up At Night (What's Your
Rupture) 9. Deerhunter:
Microcastle (Kranky) 10. Gang Gang
Dance: Saint Dymphna (The Social
Registry)
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