Top Albums of 2012: #6 thru #10

January 18, 2013

#10) Passion Pit – Gossamer [Columbia; released 7/24/2012]

homepage_large.5cfdc584

“I won’t let you go unless I’ll be alright.”

“I’ll Be Alright”

What sets Passion Pit apart from their electro-pop peers is their ability to create seemingly superficial songs that when unpacked reveal so much more about its authors. This is no more evident than on Gossamer, the Massachusetts band’s sophomore album, which is chock full of songs that can be easily enjoyed on the surface, but when delved deeper into become the revelations of a man battling his own personal demons. Once you get past opener “Take A Walk” which is a pretty straightforward radio pop song with some pretty weak lyrics, the journey inside lead singer Michael Angelakos’s mind begins and the true soul of Gossamer comes to the forefront. Angelakos is currently battling a severe bipolar disorder, something he has been struggling with since the age of 18, and his interview with Pitchfork is an eye opening look into his depression which puts this album in a new light. It’s a wonder Gossamer was even made at all, but when listened to in the context of what a painstaking process it must’ve been, we can enjoy this album (and band) for the elegance of its voice and not just music.

[“I’ll Be Alright” – Gossamer]

#9) Dirty Projectors – Swing Lo Magellan [Domino; released 7/10/2012]

homepage_large.91cf14ca

“I haven’t found it, but I will keep dancing until I do.”

“Dance For You”

Here’s a fun fact: Ferdinand Magellan himself never actually circumnavigated the Earth, yet he is still given credit for being the first to accomplish the feat. (His expedition made it, but he was killed prior to making it back to Spain.) It’s still an important moment in our world’s history and one that deserves accolades, but also something that we can only fully appreciate once we dig deeper into finding the whole story. With Swing Lo Magellan, Dave Longstreth’s brand of avant-garde rock is getting credit for being his most accessible album to date, which is probably true, but I’m here to tell you, this is still a very complex and weird album, one that doesn’t require deeper listening to enjoy, but can be appreciated all the more when doing so.

[“Gun Has No Trigger” – Swing Lo Magellan]

#8) Tame Impala – Lonerism [Modular; released 10/9/2012]

homepage_large.140bf2a7

“I just don’t know where the hell I belong.”

“Mind Mischief”

You know Australia, all tucked away down there? That’s where Tame Impala, the psych-rock project of Kevin Parker, calls home – Perth, more specifically. And judging by the themes of loneliness seen throughout his fantastic sophomore release, the aptly titled Lonerism, Australia’s isolation to the rest of the world is wearing a bit on Parker as his introspective thoughts serve as a perfect backdrop to an album that so perfectly captures a sense of alienation and what it really entails. Appropriately enough, Lonerism is a headphones album, one to be enjoyed in the joy of your own solitude and not really in the car with windows down and hair blowing in the wind. However, this is still an accessible album, full of rich melodies channeling 70’s pop with too many influences to name, best exemplified in “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards” and “Elephant”.  Whereas a song like “Mind Mischief” creates an almost atmospheric listen thanks to the hypnotic grooves that close out the track. Introversion has never been more mesmerizing.

[“Feels Like We Only Go Backwards” – Lonerism]

#7) The Men – Open Your Heart [Sacred Bones; released 3/6/2012]

homepage_large.dfde08c8

“I wanna see you write a love song. I wanna see you going down. I wanna see you when you try so hard. I wanna see you when you turn it around.”

“Turn It Around”

The Men are a quartet out of Brooklyn, which is part of what makes Open Your Heart so refreshing, because it absolutely rocks – a quality that’s been missing from the Brooklyn music scene, which churns out band after band of innovative indie-rock groups. These songs are loud, heavy, full of hooks, and completely lacking pretention, something that can’t be said of many of The Men’s Brooklyn counterparts. In a year where I found myself bored by much of the same, Open Your Heart was an album necessary to reinvigorate a genre in need of a jolt.

[“Open Your Heart” – Open Your Heart]

#6) Kendrick Lamar – good kid, m.A.A.d. city [Aftermath; released 10/22/2012]

homepage_large.25b1edda

“I am a sinner who’s probably gonna sin again.”

“Bitch, Don’t Kill My Vibe”

This is the highest I’ve ever had a rap album place on my albums of the year list, which should give you an idea of the quality of good kid, m.A.A.d. city, Kendrick Lamar’s sophomore album and major label debut on Dr Dre’s Aftermath Entertainment. Lamar subtitled this album “A Short Film By Kendrick Lamar” and it’s in that narrative where it really gains its power, not just the subtle, down-tempo beats and restrained production. This is a semi-autobiographical story of Lamar’s upbringing in Compton, CA and it offers a fascinating look at how family, religion, gangs, drugs, and even hip-hop can all tug a kid in different directions growing up in the streets. This album is a tour de force in creating a concept album and having it remain grounded in its own reality. It’s an album best appreciated as a true album, as the songs lose some of their power when not listened within the context of the story Lamar is developing. Case in point is “Backseat Freestyle” which taken on its own falls into the typical hip-hop tropes of money, power and misogyny, but in the context of the narrative, it becomes a satirical look at hip-hop and the dreams it promises young kids hoping to break into the industry. Kendrick Lamar has created as remarkable of an achievement I can ever recall hearing out of a concept album and one whose significance in the rap community really shouldn’t be understated, ya bish?

[“Backseat Freestyle” – good kid, m.A.A.d. city]


A Round of Sound: 2009 Mixtape

January 17, 2010

Now that the countdown is complete, all that is left is to present my 2009 Mixtape, an annual mix of the songs that helped shape the past year in music.  This is maybe becoming my favorite part of my yearly top albums tradition because it’s fun to see what tunes I can pack into an 80 minute disc.  I started doing this on my own just to make a mix cd of some of my favorite songs of the year to keep for listening in my car, but it has evolved into a way for me to kind of summarize the best music of the year in just a “mixtape” form, especially since I find it pretty impossible to do a ranking of the best songs of the year.  And people seem to enjoy it, so here we are again.  By the way if you want to see my complete top 25 Albums of 2009 on one nice, put together page, head on over to my Amazon.com list to give it a look.

So, here’s some stats about the mix.  This year I packed 19 songs on the disc (down one from last year’s 20), but as usual this does not necessarily mean these are my 19 favorite songs of the year.  There a plenty of songs that I had to leave off because they were too long, or maybe they just didn’t fit with the mix.  Also, as usual the order here is how they appear on my mix, but it is not a ranking.  The songs are placed based on how they appear on their respective albums.  For this year, 9 of the songs are off albums in my top 10 (Antony & the Johnsons is the only top 10 album not represented).  Five of the songs are from albums in my #11-#25 range and two songs come from albums outside my top 25.  The lowest ranking album with a song in the mix is Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free by Akron/Family (ranked #44) with “River”.  And finally, three songs (“Blood Bank”, “My Night With The Prostitute From Marseille”, and “It Gets Your Body Movin'”) are songs off of EPs, and thus came from albums not eligible to be in my rankings.  Most of these songs have been featured somewhere on this blog in the past, or in the top albums countdown, but now here they are all in one place!

The picture above is thanks to Amy Boyd, who for the second year in a row has provided me with the album art for the Mixtape.  Another fine job indeed. Today is her birthday (as well as Zooey Deschanel’s) so she also has that going for her.  Enjoy!

———-

[“French Navy” – Camera Obscura :: My Maudlin Career]

———-

[“Blood Bank” – Bon Iver :: Blood Bank]

———-

[“1901” – Phoenix :: Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix]

———-

[“Two Weeks” – Grizzly Bear :: Veckatimest]

———-

[“River” – Akron/Family :: Set ‘Em Wild, Set ‘Em Free]

———-

[“My Girls” – Animal Collective :: Merriweather Post Pavilion]

———-

[“Young Adult Friction” – The Pains of Being Pure at Heart :: The Pains of Being Pure at Heart]

———-

[“Crystalised” – The xx :: xx]

———-

[“Funeral Singers” – Califone :: All My Friends Are Funeral Singers]

———-

[“Now We Can See” – The Thermals :: Now We Can See]

———-

[“Stillness is the Move” – Dirty Projectors :: Bitte Orca]

———-

[“Don’t Haunt This Place” – Rural Alberta Advantage :: Hometowns]

———-

[“Never Seen” – Lightning Dust :: Infinite Light]

———-

[“Home” – Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros :: Up From Below]

———-

[“Two” – The Antlers :: Hospice]

———-

[“My Night With The Prostitute From Marseille” – Beirut :: March of the Zapotec & Realpeople: Holland]

———-

[“Marrow” – St Vincent :: Actor]

———-

[“Sleepyhead” – Passion Pit :: Manners]

———-

[“It Gets Your Body Movin'” – Suckers :: Suckers EP]


Top Albums of 2009: #5 and #6

January 12, 2010

#6) Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca [Domino; released 6/9/2009]

“When the child was just a child, it did not know what it was.  Like a child, it had no habits, no opinion about anything.”

“Stillness Is The Move”

All those first time Dirty Projectors listeners who picked up Bitte Orca after hearing of it’s “accessibility” from the reviews had to be scratching their heads after one spin of the disc.  Make no mistake about it; this is a weird album. However, by DP’s standards, the strangeness is scaled back to an enormous degree, even to the point where some first time listeners would be immediately drawn in. Notice I said some, because Bitte Orca is a definitely a polarizing listen, but those that accept the eccentricities are rewarded with an exhilarating listen and certainly one of the year’s best.  Frontman Dave Longstreth loves the human voice as an instrument and for Bitte Orca he gives his girls the chance to shine on these 9 songs, none more prevalent than album centerpieces “Stillness Is The Move” and “Two Doves”, the former being one of the best tracks of 2009 with it’s R&B grooves and Amber Coffman led vocals.  Bitte Orca is a refreshing release from the Brooklyn-based art rockers that while more accessible than previous efforts, still contains the complex arrangements and quirkiness to satisfy even the most avant-garde hipsters.

[“Stillness Is The Move” – Bitte Orca]

#5) St. Vincent – Actor [4AD; released 5/5/2009]

“Desperate don’t look good on you, neither does your virtue.”

“The Strangers”

In an interview this past summer Annie Clark, aka St. Vincent, was approached with the thought that she could “skate by” with her talent, voice, and looks to write “really easy stuff” and be just as successful.  While flattered, Clark didn’t agree and thankfully for all of us, she has chosen to use her talent to become one of the most creative musicians going today and her sophomore album Actor has vaulted her to the top of my list of favorite female artists.  A former Sufjan Stevens tour cheerleader and member of Polyphonic Spree, the Brooklyn-by-way-of-Texas musician composes smart and abstract pop-rock songs that are sweet but come with a hint of dementia.  Clark’s tunes are complex but melodic and with her voice, I dare say even beautiful at times.  Possibly no song encapsulates what Actor does so well better than “Marrow”, with its initial woodwinds before evolving in some sort of sinister wordplay and then exploding into a chorus that no one should be able to pull off; but Clark does so as second nature.  The song employs the distorted instrumentation that St. Vincent is becoming know for and takes the song to a completely unexpected level. It’s brilliant.  There’s a bit of everything on Actor, from the straightforward rock of “Actor Out of Work” to the glorious harmonies that close out “The Party”, but when it all comes together, there’s no doubt that it’s a defining release for the art-pop genre.

[“Marrow” – Actor]


Mid-2009 Music Awards

July 6, 2009

A little something I like to do every year is dole out some awards for the music up to the halfway point of the year.  Nothing too detailed, just a little summary.  As usual for all my lists, the only albums I’m including are albums that I own and are currently in my itunes library.  And of course all this can change as I listen to albums more, but this is what I’m feeling so far for 2009.  Enjoy!

Animal Collective

Animal Collective

Best, let’s say, 7 Albums (in order of release date):

Antony & the Johnsons – The Crying Light

  • It’s a beautiful and affecting listen, which was to be expected from Antony Hegarty.  It was the first great release of the year and has stuck around to now.  I already mentioned in my 1st quarter of ’09 wrap-up…nothing more to add to that really.

[“Her Eyes Are Underneath the Ground – The Crying Light]

Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion

[“My Girls” – Merriweather Post Pavilion]

The Antlers – Hospice

  • Once again, check my 1Q of ’09 post that mentions this release as well.  People are starting to pick up on its brilliance but it will surely gain even more of a following once Frenchkiss reissiues it this August.

[“Two” – Hospice]

Passion Pit – Manners

  • A very fun listen and impressive full-length debut from the Boston, Mass band that I already featured in my review here.

[“Little Secrets” – Manners]

Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix

[“1901” – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix]

Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest

  • About as perfect as an album gets.  The review goes into more detail.

[“Two Weeks” – Veckatimest]

Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca

  • The only album of these 7 that I haven’t mentioned on the blog yet.  The first 6 songs are hard to top.  Longstreth tones down the weird just a bit, and it gets album of the year hype…go figure.

[“Stillness is the Move” – Bitte Orca]

Most Overrated:

Japandroids – Post-Nothing

  • It’s a fun, rockin’ little album, but the 4th best reviewed release of the year?!…come on!

[“Young Hearts Spark Fire” – Post-Nothing]

Most Underrated:

Loney, Dear – Dear John

  • One of my most listened to albums so far this year.  It doesn’t deserve any album of the year or even top 10 talk, but I think it deserves more attention than it’s getting.

[“Airport Surroundings” – Dear John]

Biggest Disappointment:

The Appleseed Cast – Sagarmatha

  • They left behind their melodic pop hooks that made Peregrine so good, and went back to their post-rock instrumental days with bland results.  Best description I’ve heard was that it’s like Explosions in the Sky tried to make an Appleseed Cast album…not what I was hoping for.

[“The Summer Before” – Sagarmatha]

Biggest Surprise:

Maria Taylor – LadyLuck

  • Already mentioned this one here, but the more I thought about it, the more I concluded that it probably is my biggest surprise of the year.

[Time Lapse Lifeline – LadyLuck]

Need to give more listens:

Cymbals Eat Guitars – Why There Are Mountains

  • I just haven’t put enough time into this one to get a reading on it.  Some of it has some early Built to Spill indie feel to it, which deserves my attention.

[“Indiana” – Why There Are Mountains]

Notable albums I still need to get:

Camera Obscura – My Maudlin Career

St. Vincent – Actor