Wednesday, December 26, 2007

THE TOP 20 ALBUMS OF 2007

2007 has been an amazing year for music, there's no doubt about that. This list could be different if I had written it a week ago, or if I waited until after the start of the new year to write it. It's a wine year: different depending on when it's opened, or in this case, completed.

At the start of the year, I decided to devote more of my energy to music, and stay current in the music scene. I started keeping a list in April of albums up for consideration for this list, and I updated it frequently.

Unfortunately, my social life took a massive change, and that list stopped getting updated. I looked at the list a week ago and laughed at it.

About two weeks ago, I took note of the time, and realised it was time to do what I set out to prevent from doing again, after lat year's Year End fiasco: I have listened to, at very least, 30 albums from 2007, all of which I had never heard before. These two weeks have been hellish to say the very least, and they have shown me how obnoxious it is to neglect music. I'll discuss this over the list.

Without further ado, I present you with...

THE TOP 20 ALBUMS OF 2007

20) The Dear Hunter – Act II: The Meaning Of, And All Things Regarding Ms. Leading
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Again, I am a fan of theatrics. No album in recent memory is more theatric than that of ex-Receiving End Of Sirens frontman Casey Crescenzo, and he's made sure of it. The Dear Hunter are bizarrely wonderful, and it's in defiance of the genre of indiecore itself: though it comes packing with a heavy helping of pleasant sounding distortion, it also brings with it violins and a song that slants and enchants "A Day In The Life' by The Beatles. For no good reason, this album was panned by critics, and that fact is criminal: this is an amazing album, and it shows that not all indiecore is as terrible as it logically should be.

Video: The Dear Hunter - "Red Hands" (Live)





19) The Shins – Wincing The Night Away
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Though Wincing The Night Away is certainly not The Shins' strongest release (that would be Chutes Too Narrow), Wincing The Night Away is a wonderful album, showcasing the band's newfound love of strange noises, and their ever-present love of modest production and humbly brilliant lyrics, at the hands of frontman James Mercer. Though it isn't their best, it serves as a perfect stepping-off point for the group's next album, which is certain to be an instant classic.

Video: The Shins - "Sleeping Lessons"





18) The Besnard LakesAre The Dark Horse

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Though the label debut of The Besnard Lakes was well-received upon its release, it has since been completely forgotten by every year-end list I have come across, strangely including Paste's 100 Best Of 2007 list. A Floydian record if there ever was one, I regret forgetting to listen to The Besnard Lakes until recently, due to how fantastic and well-done this album is. I like albums with "holy shit" moments, and this is an album packed with them. Albums like this deserve more respect and praise for as good as they are, and I think it's criminal that this has been left out of the maelstrom of the year's end.

Video: The Besnard Lakes - "For Agent 13"





17) Ryan Adams – Easy, Tiger
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Ryan Adams is another consistently brilliant musician, and this confirms that Adams is an ignored genius of our generation. I spent a great deal of time listening to Easy, Tiger over the summer whilst tearing through the final Harry Potter book, and I had to set the book down a number of times to simply listen to the album. It's that good. Ryan Adams is simply too good to be ignored, simple as that. Enough said.


Video: Ryan Adams - "Oh My God, Whatever, Etc." (Live)





16) Blitzen Trapper – Wild Mountain Nation
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Chances are, unless you follow the Indie press carefully, you haven't heard of Blitzen Trapper. I had the immense pleasure of hearing them open for The Hold Steady (the first place I heard them), and I also saw them again a month later when they performed in-store at Music Millennium (a Portland record store), and discovered that not only are they fantastic musicians, but amazingly humble guys as well. Wild Mountain Nation is Wilco if they were a garage band from the Northwest, and that works out for the best. Hailing from Portland, OR, this six-piece have put out one of the more enjoyable albums to come out this year, and even stranger, they've done so with almost no production value. If you want a great sounding record, look elsewhere. If not, give this album a thorough listen, and you won't be disappointed. Don't miss "Wild Mountain Nation", "Sci-Fi Kid", and "Country Caravan".

Video: Blitzen Trapper - :Wild Mountain Nation"




15) The White Stripes – Icky Thump
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The White Stripes are another band that really doesn't put out bad albums, for what it's worth. Ex-husband and wife Jack and Meg White have been proving that all a band needs is a guitar and a drum kit for nearly 10 years, and they have never been what one would call "polished". There are no bones about the fact that White Stripes are a ROCK band, and Icky Thump, a volume-at-11 album if there ever was one, is certainly no exception. With everything from a song written for Michel Gondry ("I'm Slowly Turning Into You") to a Patti Page cover ("Conquest"), these two have proven once again that The White Stripes will never be anything but The White Stripes, and quite frankly, that's not a bad thing.

Video: The White Stripes - "Conquest"







14) Amy Winehouse – Back To Black

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Yes, I listen to Amy Winehouse. Yes, this album was first released in 2006, but in Britain. Yes, she is a boozer and a druggie. However, yes, she I one of the most soulful singers in the last 20 years, conjuring visions of Billie Holiday and Frank Sinatra alike. Don't let her public antics get to you, Winehouse is worth her salt for certain, and mark my words: even without the arrests and the dedications by Lily Allen, Winehouse is going to be remembered in 20 years for her music, because this is a record so behind its time, it makes you want to hug her for being so un-modern. Soulful music is back, and Winehouse is to thank.

Video: Amy Winehouse - "Rehab"






13) Bloc Party –
A Weekend In The City
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Bloc Party are part of the handful of somewhat similar rock bands to come out in late-2004/early-2005, who were all okay but sounded something alike. This list included The Bravery, Kasabian, and Kaiser Chiefs, all of which have released sophomore records this year, though none have shown as much growth and promise as that of Kele Okereke's band of rockers, Bloc Party. Sounding a great deal like Morrissey in voice and lyrics, Okereke shows here that Bloc Party is better than their name suggests. Make no mistake: this is an album worth hearing, an album without a truly terrible song, and with lyrics tinged with weariness and boredom with society ("I've got nothing to add or contest/Can still kick a ball a hundred yards/And cling to bottles, and memories of the past/So give me moments/Not hours or days/Just give me moments" ["Waiting For The 7:18"]), these boys are to be ignored at your own risk.

Video: Bloc Party - "Hunting For Witches"





12) Spoon – Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga
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Spoon is a band that has never put out a bad album. Don't take my word for it; go listen to their full discography for yourself. With Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga, however, Spoon have decided to step out of their more polished box and put out something to the effect of a jam record, basically doing something for fun. The result is the band's finest work to date, a wonderful Indie-pop record the likes of which the community shouldn't be seeing from a group that's on their 6th album to date. Highlights include "The Underdog", "Don't You Evah", and "I Got Yr. Cherry Bomb". For added fun, give the b-side disc, Get Nice!, a listen. It's just as good as the album.

Video: Spoon - "The Underdog"





11) TIE: Les Savy Fav – Let's Stay Friends / Liars – Liars

http://mt.laweekly.com/sea/reverb/lsf-letsstayfriends.jpghttp://media.collegepublisher.com/media/paper997/stills/g92n68b3.jpg

It's almost tradition for me to have 11 be a tie for me. Thus, here's another tie, between two angular noise rock greats, Les Savy Fav and Liars. I wrote on Les Savy Fav a couple months ago, when Let's Stay Friends, arguably the band's finest work to date, and I immediately fell in love with the group. Because I had then found a strange perchance for catchy noise, I decided to look into Liars, who were getting a considerable amount of buzz for their self-titled album. Both of these albums are raw and wonderful, and don't let the descriptor of "noise" turn you off: this music will hook you like nothing else. It's loud, but it's catchy and fantastic, and you won't be disappointed.

Video: Les Savy Fav - "Patty Lee"




Video: Liars - "Plaster Casts Of Everything"





10) Modest Mouse – We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank
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Modest Mouse has always held, and always will hold, a place in my heart. Being from a town 5 miles from where I grew up, Isaac Brock's merry band of miscreants have always been making their fat fleshy fingers to moving and bending all their silly strings, even if they did it in a commercially-friendly way with their 2004 release, Good News For People Who Love Bad News. And even then, in an album so strangely optimistic and thus out-of-character for frontman Brock, he still found room for yelping and itchy guitars (see: "Bury Me With It" and "Bukowski"). But, before that, the Issaquah four-piece was making wailing Indie for the flannel-wearing and rock-magazine-reading masses.

With their fifth release, We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank, Brock's boys (which now included a man by the name of Johnny Marr, from this little band called THE SMITHS) have taken their sound and fame that made Good News popular, poured beer on it, and kicked it in the stomach, and let's face it: it was asking for it for being such a little bitch. From the start of this album, Modest Mouse shows that, even if they may have aged and possibly softened, they still know what the heck they're (evident in the opener, "March To The Sea"), but they know how to make a truly fun Indie-pop song, too ("Dashboard" ahoy!). The album slowly changes and evolves, with songs about sailors being buried alive ("Fly Trapped In A Jar") to robotic messiahs ("Steam Engenius"), and with everything from heartfelt ("Little Motel") to flat out epic ("Spitting Venom"), these boys have proven, once again, why they are the now and future kings of angular Indie rock, and why if it's too weird, you're too old.

Video - Modest Mouse - "Dashboard"





9) Of MontrealHissing Fauna, Are You The Destroyer?

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Are you kidding me? Of Montreal has always been a crazy sounding band, producing strange pop record after strange pop record, with Kevin Barnes' bizarre lyrics tying everything together with a strange pop bow. The fact of the matter is, these guys really don't put out bad records.

But with Hissing Fauna, he's doing the same, but in a different way. Instead of a real true pop record, this is a danceable lament, contemplating how to deal with one's flaws ("I spent the winter with my nose buried in a book/While trying to restructure my character/Because it had become vile to its creator" ["A Sentence of Sorts in Kongsvinger"]), and all centered around a bizarre, angst-ridden epic entitled "The Past Is A Grotesque Animal", a nearly completely spoken track clocking in at barely under 12 minutes. After this part, though the album feels more like an acidic disco record, Barnes' lyrics get stranger and more creative ("My, my, you busted me like a Robocop/Strike me with your riding crop/I'm forever going celibate tomorrow/But tonight, like success, knows no shame" ["She's a Rejecter"]), and yet the album is not only incredible upon its first listen, but actually gets much better over time. You find yourself on your 20th listen, thinking, "A crisp endorsement from the C.C.A.A. Booty Patrol? Are they out of their minds?" The truth of the matter is: yes, these boys are out of their minds, and it couldn't have worked better.

Video: of Montreal - "Gronlandic Edit"





8) Stars – In Our Bedroom After The War
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Ever since I first heard "Your Ex Lover Is Dead" from Stars' 2004 album Set Yourself On Fire, I was love. For a long while, I had neglected the album, until I re-listened to it in early June after the death of Dearly Devoted Dexter, my iPod. After that, when I found out about the impending release of their newest album, In Our Bedroom After The War, I was more excited than one could imagine.

My excitement was not wasted, most thankfully. After The War confirms what we already knew about Stars: they were meant for the stage. The ballet duet vocals of Torquil Campbell and Amy Millan have never sounded as much like monologues as they have here, and it's not exactly a bad thing. Opening with a goosebump-inducing opener entitled "The Night Starts Here", Campbell and Millan bounce back and forth with their artistic and brilliant lyrics. Their stagecraft is demonstrated best in three songs: "Personal", a minimalist piece which is almost barely sung, about two people conversing through Personals ads; "Barricade", a track about love and rebellion performed with nothing but Campbell and a piano; and the slow-boiling finale, "In Our Bedroom After The War", which verifies how brilliant this band is ("Wake up!/Say good morning to that sleepy person lying next to you/And if there's no one there, then there's no one there/But at least the war is over"), and how wonderful build-up can be in music. All-in-all, if you haven't given Stars a listen yet, you've been slighting yourself for quite some time, and you had better remedy this quickly, before you've missed out on one of the most promising bands of the current scene.

Video: Stars - "The Night Starts Here"





7) Arcade Fire – Neon Bible

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Arcade Fire is a big band, and they know how to use their sound. Arguably one of the few "epic" Indie acts around, Arcade Fire have been Indie darlings since they first hit the scene in 2004 with their Pitchfork-fellated album Funeral. The question after that was, could they top the album with something better?

The answer is yes, though they haven't done it with Neon Bible. It is on the same level as Funeral, but in a different way: while Funeral was on the grief process and dealing with death, Neon Bible is about losing your way in the world ("Oh, Lord, won't you send me a sign/'Cause I just gotta know if I'm wasting my time" ["(Antichrist Television Blues)"]) and dealing with an overwhelming feeling of hopelessness ("Not much chance for survival/If the Neon Bible is right" ["Neon Bible"]). The sound of the album isn't as epic as its predecessor, though it shouldn't be for the album. The themes dealt with here are much less epic than they were on Funeral (the subject being apt for the title: death and mourning); on Neon Bible, the name of the game is seeing life around you start to break down, and trying to cope with it.

Video: Arcade Fire - "My Body Is A Cage" (Fan made, using footage from Sergio Leone's Once Upon A Time In The West)




Video: Arcade Fire - "Neon Bible" (Live, in a sodding elevator)





6) Iron & Wine – The Shepherd's Dog

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June 10th was a glorious day. I spent the entire day with a wonderful girl who I've been dating since then, I had just finished a Psychology final that brought up my grade two letters, and when I came home and logged on, my friend Brian had let me know that The Shepherd's Dog, the Iron & Wine album which he knew full well that I'd been looking forward to for months, had leaked three months early. It was the perfect end to a perfect day.

Even better, the album was absolutely stellar. Sam Beam (AKA Iron & Wine), who is known for his wondrous lyrics and lo-fi production, did something different with The Shepherd's Dog: he added a bit more sound to it. The Shepherd's Dog finds Iron & Wine in full form, and with a full band it seemed. A lot of purists would condemn Beam for so heinously rejecting his lo-fi roots, but it seems to work to his advantage on such an amazing sounding album. After the sound of his Woman King EP, this is his final progression (or is it?) to what, one thinks, Iron & Wine will be remembered for.

Video: Iron & Wine - "House By The Sea" (Live at the Orpheum in Boston




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Video: Iron & Wine - "No Surprises" (Radiohead cover. live at Pitchfork Festival)





5) M.I.A. – Kala

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Kala was the first stop on my tour of albums that I missed this year. It was released in August to rave reviews which I promptly and totally ignored. When the praise kept rolling in, I kept ignoring it, until it started making lists. This, coupled with hearing "Paper Planes" on the radio, inspired me to finally take interest in the album.

No album released this year, not even Strawberry Jam, has been as colourful and danceable than Kala, the second opus of world hip-hop artist M.I.A. Now, when most people hear "hip-hop", they immediately think they know what they'll hear, so I'll state now that M.I.A. is hip-hop in name only. With everything from aboriginal hip-hop to Jamaica dance hall grooves, Kala is an album that you simply have to get up and dance to, no matter what. If you don't, you must not understand the album completely, which is ever so tragic. Simply put, this is one of the best "hip-hop" records release in a good while, and it's an album that you can listen to without getting sick of it. Top marks as well for rejecting Timbaland as a producer for the album, in favour of traveling the world to record the album.

Video: M.I.A. - "Paper Planes"





Video: M.I.A. - "Boyz"





4) Menomena – Friend And Foe

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Friend And Foe is a strange bloody album, if one ever did exist. Hailing from Portland, OR, Menomena has made a lot of noise for a three person band. For those who have heard the album and don't know, yes, this is a three member band. I had the immense pleasure of catching Menomena in November, and for the record, they are a band that has to be seen live to truly and completely appreciate, instrumentally.

I let the reader know this because of how expansive this album is. With enough instrumentals to make Sufjan Stevens smile, Menomena does a lot for three guys. Each member plays several instruments, and all three contribute vocally, creating one of the most unique sounds around. The effect is something like that of Strawberry Jam: simply great pop music, but amped up a great deal. From the first drumbeat of "Muscle n' Flo" to the ever-so-catchy whistle of "Boyscout'n", to the hazy saxophone that winds throughout the album, Menomena are most certainly an Indie band with a lot going for them. In fact, if you give them five years, one could imagine seeing them as the new Apples In Stereo, though not as happy, but just as fantastic.

Video: Menomena - "Rotten Hell"






Video - "Wet And Rusting" (Live in an alley in Paris)






3) The National – Boxer

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I first started listening to Boxer at 2 in the morning after walking a sorrowful and troubled friend home. When "Fake Empire" began, I immediately felt like I was listening to a personal soundtrack. "Stay out super late tonight/picking apples, making pies/put a little something in our lemonade and take it with us/we're half-awake in a fake empire" I was swept away. I kept listening, but regrettably changed it for loud music to sing along to walking home. I put it on again one night a few weeks ago, and never looked back.

I can't say that I've been listening to The National for long enough to fairly judge this record. As I have not heard their previous records, I can't attest to the more grown up sound that critics are talking about, or how this is a breakthrough. I will tell you, however, that Boxer is most certainly a musical breakthrough, and an amazingly heartfelt album altogether. If asked where I stood on this album, I would tell you honestly that front man Matt Berninger has something special here with Boxer, which is most definitely an album that will stay in heavy rotation in my record collection for quite some time, and is an album that I'll be saying "Oh my god, have you heard…" for a good while.

Video: The National - "Mistaken For Strangers"





Video: The National - "Fake Empire" (Live on Letterman)





2) Radiohead – In Rainbows


Most people would be apt to call a foul on me for putting this album at 2 on my year end list. "Favouritism is what that is!" people will shout, because I'm a massive Radiohead fan. For the record, I'm going to say right now that I hate that this is so high up, because people expect it. However, I simply can't help that this makes my list, and so high up.

Radiohead started making music back in 1993, and since then, they have never truly kept their sound the same. From the garage rock of Pablo Honey to their adult sound on The Bends, to their defining record OK Computer, and then to sprawling electronic weirdness on Kid A, Radiohead is a band that sounds like themselves and nobody else. For In Rainbows, their sound is most like OK Computer lyrics meets Amnesiac sound: Diverse and yet minimalist, but still very much lush. From the strange R&B sound of "15 Step", to the Beatles callback of "Faust Arp", to the sparse piano closer "Videotape", In Rainbows is an album that changes as it progresses, and somehow changes with each listen. You can be on your 25th listen and then realize, "Hey, there are kids screaming 'yeah!' on this track!" or notice that "Faust Arp" sounds a lot like "Julia", but more tragic.

And yet, one of the best parts about In Rainbows is how much it sounds like what people expect of Radiohead. It's cryptic and strange, but still completely accessible, which is something that Radiohead have spent their post-Bends career trying to blend. If you want my honest opinion, this is a career-defining record, and I would be honoured to put it on my shelf a few paces from OK Computer, on the best albums of the last 20 years, from one of the most dynamic rock bands in the modern era.

Video: Radiohead - "Videotape"




Video: Radiohead - "Down Is The New Up"





1) TIE: The Animal Collective – Strawberry Jam / Panda Bear – Person Pitch

I regret ignoring no album more than I regret Person Pitch. When it was released much earlier this year, it received so many stunning reviews that I couldn't fathom it, and yet I completely ignored it. A few months later I broke down and downloaded it, but never listened. I finally got around to it in my final sweep of albums I'd ignored over the course of the year, and… I have sinned

PANDA BEAR - PERSON PITCH

The image

Noah Lennox (AKA Panda Bear) has had a good year, one must think. First, he released a new solo album, Person Pitch, which immediately received rave reviews and was hailed as one of the best albums of the year, topping Pitchfork's year end list. Then, in September, he released Strawberry Jam, with his main band, Animal Collective, which received equally outstanding marks.

My friend and colleague, Brian Earls, described the album as "Smile if Brian Wilson would've made it while he was crazy", and this comparison is entirely apt. Person Pitch is a far cry from the insanity of Animal Collective. While Animal Collective is glitchy and loud, Person Pitch is a mellow but spacey album, full of amazing sonic moments, such as the entire album. Lennox could not have made a more pleasing album with Person Pitch if he wanted to, and I personally believe that this album is truly a classic.

Video: Panda Bear - "Comfy In Nautica"





Video: Panda Bear - "Comfy In Nautica" (Fan made, using footage from George Lucas' Indiana Jones And The Raiders Of The Lost Ark)






ANIMAL COLLECTIVE - STRAWBERRY JAM


The image

Then, there's Strawberry Jam. Here we have an album that is just as genius, but in the way that Dr. Frankenstein was – completely and totally insane, yet stunningly brilliant. The sound of a rainbow being gutted by a Mexican street gang, Strawberry Trip is what would happen if you recorded Syd Barrett's brain while he was on acid or really at any point in time. A psychedelic mess if one ever did exist, this is an album that feels strangely good, for as weird as it is. If you listen to these songs, you realize that what you're listening to is, on its basest level, simply pop music, but stranger than usual. Even if you dislike this album, it's most definitely worth the listen so that you have it in your frame of musical reference.

Video: Animal Collective - Peacebone
WARNING: DO NOT WATCH WHILE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF ANY SUBSTANCE




Video: Animal Collective - "Fireworks"





Other Albums
Not every album I wanted to be on here was on here. The following are worth your consideration, without a doubt:
-Bright Eyes - Cassadaga
-Band Of Horses - Cease To Begin
-Andrew Bird - Armchair Apocrypha (Originally made 6, but was removed due to lack of words)
-The Maccabees - Colour It In
-The Sea And Cake - Everybody
-Efterklang - Parades
-Art Brut - It's A Bit Complicated
-Wu-Tang Clan - 8 Diagrams
-Dustin Kensrue - Please Come Home
-LCD Soundsystem - Sound Of Silver
-Justice - Cross
-Battles - Mirrored
-El-P - I'll Sleep When You're Dead
-Aesop Rock - None Shall Pass
-Lily Allen - Alright, Still
-Field Music - Tones Of Town
-Mason Proper - There Is A Moth In Your Chest

-
THE MOST ENTERTAINING ALBUMS OF 2007-

Across the year, I've come across a lot of amazing music, and a lot of terrible music. Somewhere in the ether between the two, you'll find albums that aren't amazing, groundbreaking albums, but are absolutely fantastic and, most importantly, FUN. I've decided to piece together a list: The Five Most Entertaining Albums Of 2007. These are albums that aren't up to snuff for the big list, but are great just the same. Enjoy.

1) Gogol Bordello - Super Taranta!
Gogol Bordello is a band that refer to themselves as "gypsy punk". With crazy accordians, and a vocalist who has been described as "somewhere between Borat and Triumph The Insult Comic Dog", Gogol Bordello's Super Taranta! is an album that, if you sit down whilst listening to it, you have no soul. This is stuff that you almost feel compelled to get up and dance to.


This Album, In A Nutshell:






2) Dan Deacon - Spiderman Of The Rings
Dan Deacon is someone I reported on earlier this year, when I first gave in and listened to this album. This is not a serious record. Described as "The Postal Service, on speed", Dan Deacon comes forth with some of the craziest music you will ever hear, full of lyrics about "big sharks/Sharp swords/Beast bees/Bead lords/Sweet cakes/Maste lakes", this is an album that you cannot feel mature listening to. It just isn't happening. If you want to have fun, give this a listen. You need it.


This Album, In A Nutshell:






3) Deerhoof - Friend Opportunity
Deerhoof honestly deserves to be in the Top 20, but a lot of people are apt to disagree with me. Simply put, I don't understand how people take Deerhoof seriously, but they're still worth their salt, for the fun, colourful music they've put out over the years. As a friend of mine said, "This sounds like the inside of my head". That's basically it. And with Friend Opportunity, this is completely true.


This Album, In A Nutshell:






4) Big A Little A (Aa) - gAame
Big A Little A.... what's there to say? They're tribal. They're visceral. They're LOUD.
All I can say is.... Geez, watch the video.


This Album, In A Nutshell:






5) M.I.A. - Kala
This is an album that IS making my big list, and is most likely making the Top Ten. This IS an innovative album, it IS an amazing album, but most of all, it's just a fun album. Kala, like Super Taranta!, is an album that you just HAVE to move to. It feels worldly, and it feels, quite simply, good. It would be unfair for it to top this list, and be included in the big list, so I put it here at #5 to clarify: this is a fun album.


This Album, In A Nutshell:






Acknowledgements:
I'd like to thank:

-Sadie Michelle Dixon, for everything. Just... everything. That's all I can say. I thanked you last year, but this year, I can't put my words into words. You know it all, anyway.
Though, in addition to that, thank you for giving me someone to show The Beatles to. It's something I've always wanted to do, but for obvious reasons could not.
-Kayla Frates, for essentially being one of the best friends a girl could hope to have.
-Cara Hohmann, for listening to me complain so frequently.
-Kira Taylor, for not bitch-slapping me every time we come in contact with each other, and having some of the best music taste around.
-Brian Earls, for having essentially the same taste in music as me, for saying that going to The Hold Steady would be a good idea, and for dealing with my indie rock bullshit for at least three years.
-Shane McBroom, for putting up with my bullshit in general, and making me laugh so fucking much.
-My parents, for the love and support, and oh yeah, the laptop I used to finally get this fucker done.
-Insomnia Coffee Co., for the Wi-Fi, the coffee, the great music, and a place to get this done at 7 in the morning.
-Everyone who reccomended music to me over the past year
-And, finally, though she won't read it, thanks to Marissa, for mentioning M.I.A., which made me remember that I'd not listened to so many albums. Thanks a lot, bitch. You punctured my brain.

Musicians:
-Ben Gibbard, who didn't do anything new this year, but made me cry so many times I can't explain it.
-James Murphy, for releasing the best song of the year, and maybe of the decade, with "All Your Friends". It hurts that such beauty exists.
-Menomena, for existing.
-The same goes to Radiohead.
-And every other band mentioned here.
-The Sound Of Animals Fighting, for putting out music for me to have seizures to and entertain my friends, and for "The Heretic".
-Neutral Milk Hotel, for In An Aeroplane Over The Sea.
-The Shins, for putting out the only song I really know how to play on guitar.
-The Decemberists, for the same reason.
-The National, for the fond memories of lying in bed cuddling with Sadie to Boxer, and debating the lyrics of "Racing Like A Pro".
-My band. My band.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Post #5: The Current State Of Music

Author's Note: This article was drafted in March of '07. It may have continuity issues, as I have only now chosen to finish it. Let me know of any problems. Enjoie.

I'm going to come out and admit it: I do, on occasion, read Spin Magazine. I don't have a problem, I can stop at any time, but it does happen.

Ages ago, I picked up a copy of Spin magazine, because of it's nice little review of Arcade Fire's newest gem, Neon Bible, and an interview with Iggy Pop, whom, I've realized, is fantastic to read about (See Paste, March 2007). Whilst thumbing through it's pages, and sneering at Pete Wentz (and feeling saddened by our mutual respect for Refused's The Shape Of Punk To Come), I came across a reader's poll, of the best and worst of 2006. My Chemical Romance's surprise masterwork The Black Parade ranked as the best and worst of the year, while the band also scored best and worst of the year. But then, opposite that page, I find myself at staring at a rock hero if there ever was one: Thom Yorke. The Radiohead lead singer had been named, by the pop-rock rag of the millenia, the solo artist of 2006.

The image “http://www.spin.com/features/news/images/2006/07/060719_yorke.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
Well, BULLY for you, Mr. Yorke!
But one thing still confuses me: When did Spin readers wise up? The cover of the issue that I picked up today is one of several I've come across in recent days with Fall Out Boy as the cover band, and last month's was My Chemical Romance. When the hell did they start digging Yorke's strange lyrics and, most importantly, the overall catchy beats on his solo album, The Eraser?

My friends, we live in a strange world. Phony Beatlemania has bitten the dust, and we now fellate bands that all sound the same (Paging Mr. Wentz and Mr. Urie...), but we neglect artists who put their blood, sweat, tears, and talent (oh, the talent!) into decent records. Rolling Stone was once a respectable source of music news, but they took the last train for the coast and have devoted a great lot of black-and-white to faux-punk rockers Green Day and Fall Out Boy (who also made cover this month). Sure, decent reviewers still give a nice bit of time to great artists (TV On The Radio's brilliant 2006 release Return To Cookie Mountain was one of the few albums I've never heard a bad word about, and likewise for the afore mentioned Neon Bible, which was the main review for the Spin issue that prompted this post). But why in hell's name are bands like Panic! At The Disco so well-liked?

I know, I'm rambling a bit. What I say about these bands is spiteful, hurtful to some, and probably sounds downright bitter to most. Most people would ask if I dislike these bands because I don't like their music, or because they're popular? Paying attention to my music history, the latter seems more likely, because I stopped liking Fall Out Boy after they got popular. But, the question is: is it popularity that makes people stop (or start, in most cases) liking the music, or is the popularity making artists produce music for the fans, rather than for themselves?

Am I crazy for starting to dislike bands once they become popular? Could it be that people ruin these bands for me? Could it be that fandom clouds the judgment of the artists, and leads them to do things to keep a fan-base?

Post #4: Six Life-Changing Albums

Thinking back on the gobs of music I've listened to, I realize that there are several albums that have, essentially, stopped being records to me; they've become small vignettes that make up the film of my musical history.

What follows is an account of the ten records that have changed my life, in some way. Without these, I doubt I'd be the same person. Without them, I expect I'd still be listening to Linkin Park and talking about how deep they are. Enjoy.

1) The Beatles - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Capital Records - 1967

I remember exactly where I was when I picked this album up for the first time. My mum and I had driven out to Sweet, Oregon to see a couple people she was selling insurance to, as this was what she did at the time. On the way back, we stopped at - and I hesitate to mention this - a 24-Hour Wal-Mart, because, why the hell not? We picked up About A Boy on DVD, a pair of Pink Floyd pjs, and this record, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. I wish I could tell a different story about getting this particular album, but no, I picked it up at Wal-Mart at around 1 in the morning, after a very long drive to sell insurance to some couple.

Sgt. Pepper changed everything, really. It's the album that changed music itself, and changed a lot of people. People get into pub fights over which Beatles album is the best, and I'd gladly take a pool-cue to the temple in defence of this record. I remember listening to this record for the first time and thinking, wow, I use to hate on these fellows? What the hell was wrong with me? This is perfection in song form. And thus, my ways changed. I stopped being such a pretentious little pratt, and I started listening to everything, in search of what was really good in the music world. Thus far, nothing has truly matched up to this record. I'm still looking, though, but I doubt I'll find it.

2) Radiohead - OK Computer
Capital Records - 1997
OK Computer cover
I picked up OK Computer at a little record store in Hillsboro, called CD/Game Exchange. The record store isn't there before, and I only went there three times. However, all three times, I left with something.

The last visit, I sold a number of video games, and got $80 in credit. I got Violent Femmes' Violent Femmes, The Mars Volta's Scabdates, System Of A Down's Mezmerize and Hypnotize, Björk's Telegram, and OK Computer. I had never listened to it, and I'd heard loads of great stuff about it, so I thought, what the hell? I've got money to burn, I might as well!

I didn't listen to it for a number of months. I first listened to it on a small motorbike trip with my father, his girlfriend, and a couple of family friends. I reckon, I listened to it 8 times over the course of the day. I think I tried to listen to something else as well, but I couldn't. I came right back to the intro of "Airbag".

I came home and downloaded Kid A. And The Bends. And everything else they had put out, EPs and everything. And I listened to it all, repeatedly, until I knew the songs in and out. Radiohead became my all-time favourite band after that, and I have never been able to shake this album. It is superb from the guitar intro of "Airbag" to the chime that signals the end of "The Tourist", and it is damn near impossible to hate this record.

It's really quite hard to explain its influence in my life, but it's worth noting that, after this, I really had no choice but to get rid of my Fall Out Boy records. It would be like Athiesm after having tea with god herself. Bad analogy, but really, this particular record short circuits my brain.

3) Pavement - Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain
Matador Records - 1994
Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain cover
I first heard Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain after looking for lo-fi bands to get into. I listened to it once, and thought to myself, this is okay, but not what I'm looking for, and filed it away.

When my computer crashed a month or two ago, I grabbed my burnt copy of Crooked Rain, and put in my stereo. It pretty much stayed there for awhile. It blew my mind! It blew my mind with its simple brilliance, and the fact that I had ignored it for so fucking long! I really don't go very long without listening to this record, and every time I do, I bask in its glory. I feel blessed to have heard it.

4) The Mountain Goats - The Sunset Tree
4AD - 2004
The Sunset Tree cover
Like the aforementioned Pavement, I first heard about The Mountain Goats when I was looking into Lo-Fi. I got their Ghana album (a b-side compilation), because it had over 20 tracks, and it would've been wonderful to get a firm hold on the sound of the band. It was pretty much...some of the worst stuff I'd ever heard. I didn't find out until later that it was a rejects disc, so I didn't know that John Darnielle was better than that album.

So, I read a review of The Sunset Tree, and decided to give them another shot. I had it in my "to be changed" folder for a couple months before I processed and listened to it. It kept a firm grip on my soul, and my ears, for the next two weeks, give or take. Such was the case with Radiohead's OK Computer, when I would make a bid for freedom by turning on another record, but finding myself listening to Darnielle singing about St. Joseph's Baby Aspirin, Bartles & Jaymes, and you, or your memory. I finally managed to break away from it for a time, to listen to other things.

A couple of weeks later, I turned it on again. I got to the song "Love Love Love", the second-to-last track on the album, and discovered, to my astonishment, that that there were tears in my eyes. Oh dear lord, Darnielle, you managed to break me. He did this again with the title track from their next album, Get Lonely, of course, but since then, I've held a grudge against Darnielle for cutting into my heart with his skillsaw of brilliance. I've never quite managed to figure out why the record made me weep, but I don't think I want to know. That's something The Sunset Tree hasn't told me about yet.

5) Barenaked Ladies - Stunt
Reprise - 1998
Stunt cover
Yeah, I kind of like this album. I got it for Christmas the year it came out, because I liked the song "One Week" so goddamn much. Yeah, you remember that song, don't you? Stop lying, you know you do.

This is the very first album I ever became obsessed with. And by obsessed, I don't mean, like, how any other 8 year old would practically wet themselves over the mere mention of The Spice Girls or N'Sync. I'm talking the way I obsessed over OK Computer, The Sunset Tree, and Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain. We're talking about five times daily listening, belting out the lyrics of the songs that I knew far too well, which included the track "Alcohol". It's not a well known song, but I'd reckon my parents never heard me singing "Alcohol, my party-time necessity/Alcohol, alternative to feeling like yourself" or "I thought that drinking just to get drunk was a waste of precious booze."

I also reckon that this album set the gold standard for musical obsessions to come. I did it with the aforementioned records, and I did it with The White Stripes' Elephant. Any sort of musical obsession that came after this odd little record was just a slanted and enchanted version of the chokehold that this album kept on me 'lo those many years ago.

6) Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot
Nonesuch Records - 2002
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot cover
Rock fans have heard this fucking record if they know what's good for them. This is the album. This album represents a struggle between a major label and a small rock band from Chicago. This album represents the 00s as a decade, as far as I'm concerned. Good albums have come and gone thus far this decade, but this? Now this is what I call a slice of fried gold.

I don't have any real backstory behind how I came around to listening to Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, besides hearing how good it was, though I'm always shocked about how brilliant such a simple record is. Why it's so good is beyond me, to be perfectly honest. This record means a great lot to me, but I can't explain why. Maybe one day, I'll be able to tell anyone who asks, at great length, about how amazing this record is and why. Until then, I'll leave it up to everyone else to figure it out. Get right on that.