Top Albums of 2009: #11-#25

January 10, 2010

So now it’s time to get to the actual rankings.  Today I’m unveiling the 15 albums that make up #11 through #25 in this year’s rankings.  I’m only including a little blurb and a track for albums that I haven’t already blurbed about on the blog.  For the others, click on the band name to link to its write up.

#25) Wild BeastsTwo Dancers

#24) JapandroidsPost-Nothing

#23) Thao with The Get Down Stay Down – Know Better Learn Faster

Know Better Learn Faster is a joy to listen to, full of 13 bubbly and infectious tunes from Thao Nguyen and her backing band. Thao’s lyrics are sweet but pack a sense of feminine empowerment with their straightforward approach with lines like “I disarm you in the morning” in the title track and “What am I, just a body in your bed?” from the handclapping and horn driven “Body”.  The songwriting is exquisite and by the second track and my personal favorite “Cool Yourself” you’re instantly drawn in and before you know it 37 minutes has flown by with not a dull moment to be found.

[“Cool Yourself” – Know Better Learn Faster]

#22) Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic ZerosUp From Below

#21) The Big PinkA Brief History of Love

#20) The Rural Alberta Advantage – Hometowns

If this album had been released 10 years ago, it very well could have been thrown in among the late 90’s emo/indie scene, but thankfully in 2009 it gets to stand on its own despite being picked up and re-issued by renowned “emo” label Saddle Creek (Cursive, Bright Eyes, The Faint). Hometowns is unapologetically raw album brimming with confidence from the Toronto based trio complete with emotional, yes emotional, vocals and  personal lyrics.  The musicianship is simple but inspired as the drums really carry the songs but not to be outdone by the subtle orchestration from strings and keyboards.  Hometowns is a very refreshing and surprisingly fantastic debut that from a group overflowing with potential.

[“Don’t Haunt This Place” – Hometowns]

#19) The Mountain Goats – The Life of the World to Come

Just a quick glance at the tracklist of The Life of the World to Come can be quite a headscratcher with every song title named after a Bible verse.  However, inspiration can come from anywhere for frontman John Darnielle.  The Mountain Goats has never been, and never will be a Christian band, but John Darnielle, despite being a non-believer, is an avid reader and lover of the Bible, as he professed on his Colbert Report appearance.  The Life of the World to Come is not a religious album by any means, as Darnielle takes the lessons from these 12 Bible verses and applies them to his usual 3 or 4 minute long epics. This album does nothing to change Darnielle’s reputation as one of the 100 greatest living songwriters; it probably only strengthens that belief.

[“Genesis 3:23” – The Life of the World to Come]

#18) Built to Spill – There Is No Enemy

A band like Built to Spill has to look at the current state of indie rock and glow with pride.  Becoming one of the first indie rock bands to jump to a major label back when Warner Bros signed the band back in 1997, BTS returns with their 5th major label release and 7th overall with There is No Enemy, another excellent album for the Built to Spill catalog.  As a follow up to 2006’s You in Reverse, There Is No Enemy is a more polished effort but recaptures some of the heart that You in Reverse was missing.  Doug Martsch has to be considered a Godfather of current indie rock and he has hinted that this could be Built to Spill’s final release.  If so, they have gone out in very fine fashion and left another album for up and comers to look up to.

[“Hindsight” – There Is No Enemy]

#17) Neko CaseMiddle Cyclone

#16) The Avett BrothersI and Love and You

#15) Lightning DustInfinite Light

#14) Dinosaur Jr. – Farm

Back with their second album since their reunion, Farm picks up right where 2007’s Beyond left off but manages to trump it in every facet.  Farm is overflowing with the guitar drenched catchy tunes full of riffs and solos everyone would have expected Dinosaur Jr. to put out back prior to 1988, when the original lineup disbanded.  While it’s predecessor was successful possibly because of the excitement of a reunion, Farm can truly stand on it’s own as one of Dinosaur Jr’s finest.

[“Pieces” – Farm]

#13) Califone – All My Friends Are Funeral Singers

The vastly under-appreciated Chicago group returns with another collection of their experimental folk-rock songs that is again going by relatively unnoticed. Califone consistently releases some of the most interesting albums and All My Friends Are Funeral Singers is no different. The album is the soundtrack to a companion film by the same name that band created and plans to present on their tour and submit to festivals in 2010.  However, the album stands just fine on its own and might actually be some of the most tightly constructed songs of the band’s career.  The meanings of the songs should become more clear upon viewing the film, but it’s not a necessary viewing to appreciate what an impressive release it is.

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

#12) Sunset Rubdown – Dragonslayer

A year just wouldn’t be complete without multiple releases from Spencer Krug, one of the hardest working men in indie rock. After last year’s underwhelming Wolf Parade release, Krug released another Swan Lake album, announced another album from his Moonface project, and managed to slip in his best non-Wolf Parade release yet in Dragonslayer.  The album still features Krug’s warbling vocals, but is more accessible than his previous efforts and the backing female vocals absolutely shine on this album like none before.  It’s the easiest Sunset Rubdown album to listen to, but still contains all the quirks and ambitions that makes Krug such a brilliant musician.

[“Silver Moons” – Dragonslayer]

#11) Passion PitManners


Album Highlights from 3Q of 2009

October 9, 2009

I haven’t had much time to post lately, and I don’t envision being able to get an album review up anytime soon,  so I’m going to use this post as a summary of albums released from July through September that I haven’t already mentioned here on AROS.  I did a first quarter wrap-up as well as my mid-year awards, so I guess it only makes sense that I take some time to mention the highlights of the third quarter of 2009.  Hooray!

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We Were Promised Jetpacks – These Four Walls

This is the debut album from the Scottish quartet whose sound is in the vain of fellow Scotts Frightened Rabbit and The Twilight Sad (more on them later).  Those three are actually on an American tour right now, I guess doing a sort of Scottish “emo” tour as people have been branding it.  Anyway, this really is a solid and very enjoyable release with great energy, and I just love the thick Scottish accents.

[“It’s Thunder and It’s Lightning” – These Four Walls]

The xx – xx

The xx is a quartet out of London that have been a fairly hyped UK band consisting of four 20 year olds.  xx is their debut album and is getting rave reviews from everywhere.  I like it alright, although the hype may be a little much.  There is something about it though…it’s a very intriguing listen.

[“Crystalised” – xx]

Choir of Young Believers – This Is For The White In Your Eyes

Yet another debut album from a European band, this one coming from Denmark’s Choir of Young Believers.  This Is For The White In Your Eyes is full of some great orchestra pop tunes led by band frontman Jannis Makrigiannis.  The music is super ambitious at times, which I guess is to be expected from an 8 piece band, but when they get it right, the songs can be breathtaking.

[“Hollow Talk” – This Is For The White In Your Eyes]

Wild Beasts – Two Dancers

I’m struggling finding a way to describe the tunes of UK’s Wild Beasts, but theatrical is certainly an adjective that has been used before and seems to fit.  Two Dancers is the second album for the quartet and continues the ridiculously good year Domino Records is having.

[“All The King’s Men” – Two Dancers]

The Big Pink – A Brief History of Love

A Brief History of Love just might be my favorite album from the last 3 months.  It’s the debut album from, you guessed it, the British duo.  I’m in love with the electro-rock pop mix and industrial sound of the tunes.  It’s a very strong album from start to finish and as the BBC predicted, it looks like The Big Pink is one of 2009’s breakout acts.

[“Dominos” – A Brief History of Love]

Volcano Choir – Unmap

Justin Vernon (Bon Iver) teams up with fellow Wisconsiners Collections of Colonies of Bees to release this weird little 9 song album full of eerie and at times beautiful songs.  It’s an interesting release that may end up being an afterthought in the Justin Vernon catalog, but I do think it atleast validates what a great artist he is and ensures that For Emma, Forever Ago was no one hit wonder.

[“Island, IS” – Unmap]

The Twilight Sad – Forget The Night Ahead

This album was one of my most anticipated releases in the latter half of 2009 as The Twilight Sad released one of my favorite albums from 2007, Fourteen Autumns, Fifteen Winters, and led this recent Scottish invasion.  The lyrics of this group have always been so dark and nothing really changes with this release.  It’s probably not as good as their debut, but it’s still the thick emotional ballads that I came to expect.

[“I Became a Prostitute” – Forget The Night Ahead]