Posts Tagged ‘boards of canada’

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Off This Century – My Favorite Albums of 2000-2009

Friday, December 25, 2009

First of all, Merry Christmas and a happy holidays to everyone! I hope 2009 and this decade have been great for everyone, and I hope you all are looking forward to the new decade as much as I am.

You may be wondering where I have been for the past year. Because besides a couple rare one-off posts, I sure haven’t been at Kaini Industries.

True, I’ve been busy with college and work, but that didn’t stop me from updating last year. The truth is that I have been working on this project, which started in its raw forms as early as late 2008. I’ve started and stopped the project more times than I can count, and at times have questioned the point of doing this at all. But eventually I found myself with a good half of a particular incarnation of it done and plowed through the rest and here we are.

When people started cranking out lists like this not just for the 2000s but for other decades as well, I found that they were most useful for getting me to think about my favorite music and why I like all of it. I hope at the very least that it will get other people thinking about great music as well.

I started out writing lists year by year of my favorite releases and I came up with a list of about 200 really good albums. I decided 100 seemed like an appropriate enough number, so with a lot of difficulty I nailed the list down to 10o and started writing reviews. As I started writing, the list changed many times. After giving up the first time, I posted many reviews on the blog from the trashed list, and some of their remnants show up here. There are also some leftover reviews of albums not on the list, older drafts and other goodies I might post later.

This list is by no means meant to be definitive. I understand that I haven’t even come close to hearing all the great albums from this decade (God knows I try) and I’m sure my favorites will change. Above all else considered about this list, it should be considered that it is a list of my favorite albums of the 2000s right now.

I thought about numbering this list but I decided that entire process is arbitrary, and I also decided that ranking one hundred albums, most of which are completely different from one another, is really hard to get right. This list however is also hosted on rateyourmusic.com, so if you want the version with the arbitrary numbering, go here.

http://rateyourmusic.com/list/red_atm/off_this_century___my_favorite_albums_of_2000_2009

Please keep comments constructive and respectful. I don’t want any “where’s the ____???” stuff. If you want to give me a recommendation or have a discussion just be civil about it. That should go without saying.

Here we go.

cLOUDDEAD

cLOUDDEAD – cLOUDDEAD [2001]

We could keep asking “what is cLOUDDEAD?” for another decade, and we’ll probably never get a straight answer; the only people who ever even knew the literal answer don’t remember it. Ironically, this is enough to ensure this album is never forgotten, and cLOUDDEAD stands alone as one of the most unique hip hop albums of all time, having no yardstick by which to be measured. However, it’s brilliance is self evident beyond its uniqueness. Consider it’s vaporous fluidity, barely staying in one place for more than a few minutes before it transforms, or its menacing rhythmic lurch and glowing ambience from Odd Nosdam, the hell-raising modernist lyrics from Doseone and Why?… Try to pin it all you want, but in the end, you can only call it one thing.

♦♦♦

The Crane Wife

The Decemberists – The Crane Wife [2007]

The Decemberists have always operated best as storytellers, Colin Meloy’s lyrics delicately working through ancient tales and the rest of the band backing him up with a sweeping confidence, as if their notes are etched in stone. The Crane Wife takes their storytelling to the next level, and though it follows several tales throughout its span, we might still call it somewhat of a modern rock opera. It delivers impressive developments (“Summersong”), segments of mystery (“Shankill Butchers) and stunning climaxes (“O Valencia,” “The Crane Wife 1 & 2″) as parts of a grand whole. Chances are good that there will never be a universally acknowledged Decemberists masterwork; there are just as many fervid supporters of Castaways and Cutouts, Her Majesty the Decemberists and Picaresque as there are for this. I would make the case, though, that Crane Wife is their most focused and humble work, a sublime slice of folklore from a band doing what they do best.

♦♦♦

Drukqs

Aphex Twin – Drukqs [2001]

Though not a completely focused work like its predecessors, Richard D. James achieves a synthesis on Drukqs is an accomplishment nonetheless. And it’s not like the album doesn’t bring its fair share of new styles to the table. A good chunk of the album consists of simple, melodic pieces played on piano and prepared piano, while a converse portion contains his hardest hitting breakbeat/glitch tracks to date. On top of this are shards of styles past such as elements from the Selected Ambient Works series, acid techno and other one off genre experiments. The differentiation between all of these styles should make up for a messy album, which many claim it to be. James himself has stated that Drukqs probably isn’t meant to be listened to all the way through, but he has also expressed that it was meant to be a gift to fans, and it might as well be the best gift he’s given us.

♦♦♦

Heroes to Zeros

The Beta Band – Heroes to Zeros [2004]

The Beta Band were the quintessential indie every-men, and even when they were experimental, it was hard not to relate to not only their music but the band themselves. Their simple, repetitive motifs, their painfully honest lyrics, their ability to laugh at themselves…Whatever it was, people just wanted to sit down and have a drink with these guys, and that made their break up that much more of a letdown. Good thing they went out with a bang, then. Heroes to Zeros might be their most quotable album, a collection of memorable space-pop that is characteristically thoughtful and blunt, but also probably their most fun album to date. Flip on these songs and you won’t sell five copies of Heroes to Zeros but you’ll do better; you’ll feel like you’re sitting in a room with The Beta Band. How’s that for experimental?

♦♦♦

Beyond

Dinosaur Jr. – Beyond [2007]

In 2009, me going to a Dinosaur Jr. concert, getting my ears destroyed and seeing J Mascis, Lou Barlow and Murph all on stage at once, and even at one point all smiling at one another, seemed just as natural as it probably felt like in 1989. But let’s rewind about ten years here; in the new century, what the hell were the odds that all the original members of Dinosaur Jr., having at one time barely spoken to one another and slowly broke up do to seemingly irreconcilable differences, get back together, still be awesome, and release a string of albums that ranks with their absolute best? OK, maybe the chances weren’t that low, but we had all sure been hoping for it since Bug, and their reunion felt like a jackpot. This album is more than a surprise; it’s an unprecedented triumph of (*gasp*) teamwork! Beyond is classic Dinosaur Jr., loud as hell and possibly their most emotive record to date. Especially moving: “Can we be the same again?” Altogether now: “AWWWWWW!”

♦♦♦

Threads

Backini – Threads [2003]

Rob Quickenden may not have made the first great plunderphonics album (DJ Shadow and The Avalanches beat him to the draw), but he arguably was the one to make the genre truly sexy and fun. Backini’s debut exhibits a love for both dance music and jazz, and the resulting songs are often fusions of danceable downtempo and luscious jazz. His sampling is surprisingly restrained considering his eclecticism (save the decidedly nostalgic Nick-at-Nite funk of “Company B-Boy”); Quickenden can take a single sample and gently draw out all of its beauty (“Where R U,” “Istanbul,” “Go Go Killer”), and even his dense, fast pieces seem humble (“Dreamer,” “Champagne Flute”). While Endtroducing nailed sampling to a science and Since I Left You made it a party, Backini breathed further life into it by exploring the minute details of the process and crafting them into something instantly memorable.

♦♦♦

Merriweather Post Pavilion

Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion [2009]

On their ninth album, Animal Collective tread ground between experimentalism and accessibility like never before, using electronics to craft a challenging but enjoyable psychedelic pop album. You don’t have to think with an open mind to appreciate “My Girls,” “Summertime Clothes” or “Brother Sport,” but they still sound like no other hit singles in the history of pop. They only scratch the surface of this album’s accomplishments, though, and every song here is a gem, some appealing to Animal Collective’s noisier instincts (“Taste,” “Lion in a Coma”) and others more melodic (“In the Flowers,” “Bluish”), but everything here is, shamelessly, really catchy and happy, and that’s probably the reason that Merriweather Post Pavilion has more balls than any other Animal Collective album.

♦♦♦

Univers Zen ou de zéro à zéro

Acid Mothers Temple & the Melting Paraiso U.F.O. – Univers Zen ou de zéro à zéro [2002]

I haven’t listened to every Acid Mothers Temple album such that I can say with certainty that Univers is their greatest achievement, but really, who has that kind of time? Shit, the last time I got an AMT album was 2007’s Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars, and apparently they’ve made ten albums since. For a bunch of stoners that make records with a similar noise rock style (many of which are forgettable) what seems like every month, it surprises me that they have made at least one album that is transcendent, a monolith of the Japanese noise scene that touches on all of the band’s strengths within massive suites. Heavy metal, punk, psychedelia, folk, noise, even blues- it’s all here.

♦♦♦

Labor Days

Aesop Rock – Labor Days [2001]

Aesop Rock’s breakthrough album rings disturbingly true for many people in the working world, and the fact that Aesop Rock was working full time as a waiter during the creation of Labor Days makes its overall concept all that more genuine. But it is the execution of the album that is truly impressive. Aesop’s delivery is uncompromising, funny, intelligent, and without match in flow. His brilliant, philosophical, often cross referential lyrics seem endless, and are held up by a rock solid albeit rough foundation of production from Aesop himself. The subtle eastern flavor and harrowing dynamics of the music highlights his mystical, burning representation of the plight of the working person. One would be hard pressed to find a more challenging and rewarding hip hop album than Labor Days, in any era.

♦♦♦

Sea Change

Beck – Sea Change [2002]

With Sea Change, Beck Hansen made his very own Blood on the Tracks; comparing the man to Dylan may seem hasty but there is little doubt that this album did many of the same things for Beck, putting his raw emotion over a painful breakup on display and showing a strong clarity in songwriting. While Beck had made folk songs since the very beginning and advanced them to a higher, more refreshing level on Mutations, those albums felt all over the board and unfocused. Sea Change is unapologetically melancholy and dramatic all the way through, and although it would be a bald faced lie to call it a fun listen like Mellow Gold or Odelay, it is the closest we have ever come to being inside his head, and although we may know him as an Asshole, Loser and Jackass already (in the best ways!), we see him here as as a human.

♦♦♦

Akuma no Uta

Boris – Akuma no Uta [2003]

By 2003, Boris had been hammering the Japanese underground for ten years with a repertoire so diverse that it bordered on ridiculous. Heavy metal, sludge, drone, noise, punk, and experimental music were all par for the course and they had already produced their fair share of cult hits before Akuma no Uta, which pulls all of their interests together into a compact, explosive set of songs. But this is more than a band playing the best cards in their hand or trying to be fully representative. Boris clearly realize the strengths and weaknesses of all of their interests and tailor the album’s structure with subtle cleverness, working its way to an ending for the history books. Akuma no Uta was by no means the first great Boris album, and they would go on to make several more great “anything goes” albums, but it proved that they could go beyond genre and produce music of their own breed.

♦♦♦

In Rainbows

Radiohead – In Rainbows [2007]

Looking back on it, it seemed difficult at the time to separate In Rainbows with it’s now famous pay-what-you-want innovation that has had people chattering about it since. Although it is important to look at this album on it’s own, there was something telling about stripping their music of any stated value (at least for one album). Right about when people were questioning the validity of claims that Radiohead were the most important band of the past twenty years, they had the balls to express that the issue was completely out of their hands. But when they keep releasing albums this cohesive and memorable, they aren’t doing much to argue their dominance.

♦♦♦

The Reminder

Feist – The Reminder [2007]

On Let it Die, Feist showed herself to be a humble yet vital musician, but on The Reminder she’s a full blown star. The album is not a complete departure from the delicate pop music on Let it Die, and we’re still reminded of why we appreciate Feist so much as a vocalist and songwriter. But what sets The Reminder apart is its utter refusal to let up with jaw-dropping highlights. And we can’t just point to the singles for this massive success, although they are certainly an amazing set. Not everything here is as catchy as “I Feel it All” and “1234,” but I’ll be damned if the suite of complementary songs “The Park” and “The Water” aren’t just as memorable, and what else can we call “Brandy Alexander” besides great modern folk music?

♦♦♦

Z

My Morning Jacket – Z [2005]

They charmed country rockers with The Tennessee Fire, came into themselves on At Dawn and won over a wider audience with It Still Moves – It seemed as if My Morning Jacket were unstoppable in 2005, but they were still, perhaps justly, pidgeonholed as the new face of Southern Rock. Without leaving behind their roots, My Morning Jacket became Rocketmen Elton John style and flew to New York, L.A., and everywhere in between before launching beyond the stratosphere. Z is above all its other elements a pop album, and My Morning Jacket give melody ultimate precedence: “Gideon,” “Off the Record” and “Anytime” are obvious choices for some of the 2000’s greatest pop-rock tunes, and their singalong penchant even works its way into possibly the greatest song you can’t sing along to (at least during the chorus) as well as the bossanova shine of “Knot Comes Loose.”

♦♦♦

Sakura

Susumu Yokota – Sakura [2000]

After spending the 1990s producing some of Japan’s most loved underground house music, Susumu Yokota delved into his artier instincts and produced an ambient masterwork, Sakura, which is as possessing as it is soothing. Fitting it’s cover art perfectly, Sakura is both elegant and sparse, natural and meticulously crafted. Though the core of the album is ambient music, what makes it most interesting is that it always can also be called something else: “Genshi” recalls his earlier house style, “Hisen” is whimsically experimental and the jazzy “Naminote” broods with an urban rush, and a vast majority of the album reflects on Yokota’s interest in both Japanese and Western classical music. For ambient music, Sakura is a very uneasy album, and the more you listen to it the more unnerving it sounds while still preserving its stable tranquility. It’s an album that keeps us listening on the edge of our seats in anticipation of something that never really comes, and like all great ambient music, speaks for itself.

♦♦♦

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... Pt II

Raekwon – Only Built 4 Cuban Linx… Pt II [2009]

The first installment of Only Built 4 Cuban Linx was a youthful, raw, head nodding masterpiece presented by rap’s new greats. On Pt II, you can really only sit and listen in fear at the game’s vets; Raekwon now rules his environment more than ever. As efficient as he is, the world of Cuban Linx Pt II is of chaos, and we see it’s ugly cross-section, everything from big business to the actual cooking of crack. The entire crew is in full force here: Ghost sounds like a bull out of the pen on the Dilla produced “House of Flying Daggers,” GZA kills it on his only verse appearance on “We Will Rob You” and Raekwon, with his cool composure and electrifying charisma more than leads the army; he controls and elevates it, drawing the best out of RZA, making the initially crusty Dre productions sound like the work of Pharrell and snaking the audience through the most uncompromising Wu album since Liquid Swords. And we listen with the lights out and eyes wide open.

♦♦♦

Thirteen Tales From Urban Bohemia

The Dandy Warhols – Thirteen Tales From Urban Bohemia [2000]

Expanding the Dandy Warhols’ unique brand of glam-psychedelic-pop to an art with their most eclectic album to date, Thirteen Tales from Urban Bohemia is continuous and cohesive, and for that reason alone it makes how damn fun it is a shocker when considering its ambition. Even the psychedelic jams here that harken back to as early as Dandys Rule OK sound meticulously crafted, and numbers such as “Godless,” “Mohammed” and “Sleep” are successes of both texture and melody. And when the Dandys get playful (“Country Leaver,” “Solid,” “Shakin’”), just try not to get involved. Hell, they even walked away with a radio mega-hit. I’ve always felt that the Dandys have been both loved and hated for their style (you can’t authorize cool, after all), but if there will be any reminder in the future of their standalone musicality, Thirteen Tales will cement their special place in pop music.

♦♦♦

Night Ripper

Girl Talk – Night Ripper [2006]

People like club anthems you can shake your ass to, pop hits you can sing along to and indie rock you can air-guitar to, so why don’t we just combine them all so everyone is happy at once? It doesn’t take a biomedical engineer to figure out that simple math, and Greg Gillis showed up to the mashup scene ten years too late to be groundbreaking. So why is it that Night Ripper is still the quintessential 2000s party album, and why does everyone still yell out “Hell yeah!” whenever they hear one of their favorite samples on it? You can say it’s a number of things: perhaps the speed and enthusiasm with which Gillis constructs these progressive pieces, his adoration for a plethora of genres or his zen-like handling of his and our favorite musical moments. Rationalize this as much as you want, but you’ll still get down to it, because it’s a hell of a lot of fun.

♦♦♦

Rossz csillag alatt született

Venetian Snares – Rossz csillag alatt született [2005]

Who would have thought that one of the most revered electronic albums of the decade would have come from breakcore mad scientist Aaron Funk? Well believe it. Just about the only album in Funk’s discography that truly earns its impact on its own terms, Rossz csillag is a concept album about pigeons that I would argue ranks among the greatest of modern classical compositions. Of course it isn’t the first album to combine breakbeats and classical music (we have Richard D. James Album to thank for that), but Rossz csillag is nonetheless a energizing and moving listen. I am picturing myself at a ripe age in a symphony hall watching a full orchestra take on this album in its entirety, Funk watching with old, wise eyes from a box seat.

♦♦♦

The Eraser

Thom Yorke – The Eraser [2006]

Was there a better idea in 2006 than Thom Yorke making a glitch album? Alright, it seems too easy, and he doesn’t always hit home runs. I can admit that I have no idea what “I want to eat your artichoke heart” means (if anything), but it hits me every time like a wrecking ball. You can make plenty of arguments for pretension here and if you aren’t a Radiohead fan this will only drive you further away, but those of us who followed Yorke up until The Eraser were treated with a startling album defined by subtle gestures. Yorke’s singing takes a backseat to his songwriting and simple but effective laptop productions, which seem at breaking point under the weight of depersonalization and claustrophobia. It’s easy to write off this album when comparing it to Radiohead’s discography and more complex experimental electronic music, but it would be a shame to fail to recognize its brilliance.

♦♦♦

Fleet Foxes

Fleet Foxes – Fleet Foxes [2008]

By the time this album came out, no one needed any reminding that great Americana was still in full force and being made on a regular basis, but Fleet Foxes still felt like a punch to the face. When we came to, it seemed as if folk music was the standard for indie music and the U.S.A. had transformed into the freaking Shire for about a year. It was hard not to be spellbound by this album, with its tender instrumentation, reminiscing lyrics and yeah, those damned vocal harmonies that have been so sadly underused for decades. It was immediately hailed as a Summer classic, but it was the perfect soundtrack to the leaves turning in Autumn, breathed life into the dead winter and felt rejuvenating in Spring. By the time all of the seasons made their rounds with this on our radar, it’s mythological mood and spirited melodies had already solidified it as an American classic.

♦♦♦

Give Up

The Postal Service – Give Up [2003]

It’s easy to acknowledge Give Up for its significance in popular music as opposed to its actual quality, but seriously, just spin this once and it’s easy to hear. This album brought electronic pop music to a wider audience for a damn good reason; it is one of the most consistent indie records of all time, and easily the height of the careers of both artists involved. Jimmy Tamborello’s production perfectly surrounds Ben Gibbard’s aching lyrics, and the two elements turn the potential weaknesses of one another into bonafide successes. It may be a continuous cash-in of one trick (soft electronic beats, airy symphonics, sing-along-able pop melodies), but it’s one hell of a trick, and the excellent songwriting here is what makes this album one of electronic pop’s greatest.

♦♦♦

The Disintegration Loops

William Basinski – The Disintegration Loops [2001-2003]

Placing this album anywhere on this list was terribly hard. William Basinski’s massive, four album set The Disintegration Loops isn’t really something that one likes or dislikes or even assign a value to, so much as something that one experiences and takes for what it is. It does require some background information; Basinksi was digitizing old tape loops that were literally disintegrating (carbon pieces falling from the reel), and he just happened to finish up the recordings on September 11th 2001. He and his friends ran the equipment up onto the roof and the result is a project inseparable from its circumstances and yet still timeless. The technical aspects of the project may mark it as avant-garde that is more important than it is enjoyable, but getting lost in The Disintegration Loops‘ echoes and being touched by their mortality is an incredibly easy process.

♦♦♦

Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix

Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix [2009]

When all is said and done, Phoenix have made some of the most loved songs of this decade. On that inevitable day that Best of Phoenix comes out, there is going to be an awful lot of rabbling about the selection, but it’s going to sell (or at least download) like The Eagles’ Greatest Hits. Phoenix are more important as artists and songwriters than as a producer of albums, and having to chose one to best represent them seems arbitrary, but I can’t help mentioning their latest, which is incidentally their most cohesive to date. All this talk of sunsets make me really worried that that Best Of album will come sooner than we would like, but Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix is reassurance that this band will be more fondly remembered than sorely missed.

♦♦♦

Rainbow

Boris with Michio Kurihara – Rainbow [2006]

Boris have made several great albums that consolidate their strengths, but their first collaboration with Michio Kurihara seems to pull together a set of ideas that are completely new. It’s still heavy metal, and to an extent drone, but what is more important here is that Boris and Kurihara are skilled songwriters, and we often forget that behind their production values. What you’ll remember on Rainbow are the tunes, their style retro and delivery spacey. We’ve never heard Boris be nearly as deliberately emotional as they are on songs like the gentle “Rainbow” (Wata SINGS!), the atmospheric “Shine,” the funky build of “Sweet No. 1″ and the ambient glow of “…And, I Want”.

♦♦♦

More Adventurous

Rilo Kiley – More Adventurous [2004]

I barely ever listen to Rilo Kiley in my free time, because their style of music doesn’t interest me, though they are probably beyond being pinned in a particular genre at this point. And yet every time I have listened to any of their albums or seen them live, I’ve had my ass kicked. As far as the albums go, More Adventurous is the one in particular that deserves the brownie points on merit alone of being the most literate and lyrically complex album that I can remember hearing, relentless and challenging in its content. Songs ask innumerable questions and provide evidence that can only lead the listener towards their own answers. Trains of thought double back before reaching conclusions, fairy tales of falling in and out of love are spun, and both life and death are celebrated and mourned. This is an album that I simply could not dismiss how hard I tried, and it didn’t take too long before I didn’t care to anymore. It feels good to be idiosyncratic. I do love this.

♦♦♦

The Tired Sounds Of

Stars of the Lid – The Tired Sounds Of [2001]

In the history of ambient manifestos, the ’70s had Music for Airports, the ’80s had Structures from Silence, the ’90s had the Selected Ambient Works series and now the the ’00s have The Tired Sounds of Stars of the Lid. What it has to say about ambient music is a little more understated than its predecessors, though; the album moves in hazy, continuous waves of dreamy sound that leave little resolved and even less clearly stated (the wordy titles are the most we get as far as tangible concepts go). But the music is undoubtedly ambitious and sprawling, delivering snapshots in time and space within suites as well as standalone tracks. Naming highlights is a fruitless process, and it’s difficult to nail down essentials to anything less than the full tracklist. By the end of it I always find that it earns its collective impact as a development, it’s astral tones echoing back and forth until they have formed a flawless whole.

♦♦♦

And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out

Yo La Tengo – And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out [2000]

The idea of Yo La Tengo making an album of love songs seems like the most natural thing in the world, so it’s a bit of a surprise it took them fifteen years to actually do it. More than worth the wait though; And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out is yet another Yo La Tengo masterwork comparable to Painful and I Can Hear The Heart… Actually, the title of the latter seems just as applicable as Inside-Out, and it sounds as if the band are pouring out their most intimate, internal emotions. On You Can Have it All, Georgia Hubley gently sings “If you want my heart, take it baby…” I can’t think of a band I could be more flattered by having been given their all.

♦♦♦

You & Me

The Walkmen – You & Me [2008]

The most important place for the Walkmen is of course New York City, but my favorite Walkmen album sees them leaving home. As its title suggests, You & Me album is mostly about love, but like many great stories, this love is viewed from an unusual context: The Adriatic Sea, Cabo San Lucas, Barcelona, the Caribbean. The Walkmen’s classical delivery congeals fantastically with the international styles they explore here, but You & Me is hardly a walk on the beach. Hamilton Leithauser’s yearning vocals and bittersweet lyrics ache with more emotion than he has ever delivered before, and we get the feeling that these songs are fleeting memories more than they are current events. It’s a good sign for an album if you don’t even have to close your eyes to be taken to a different place.

♦♦♦

Crystal Castles

Crystal Castles – Crystal Castles [2008]

What is most impressive about Toronto duo Crystal Castles’ debut is how much ground it covers within its limited genre of visceral 8bit video game techno, shown by its wealth of utterly unique songs and seemingly endless stream of “holy shit” moments. The excellent singles (“Alice Practice,” “Crimewave,” “Air War,” “Courtship Dating”) may be representative of the album’s strengths, but the highlights don’t stop there. The otherworldly vocals on “Untrust Us,” the chopped up aggression of “Xxzxcuzx Me,” the steadily developing groove of “Magic Spells,” the dance floor demon “Black Panther”… And if the final, show stopping “Tell Me What to Swallow” doesn’t slap you in the face and make you believe that Crystal Castles are capable of transcending their reputation, well, something else here probably already did.

♦♦♦

Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots

The Flaming Lips – Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots [2002]

The Soft Bulletin may have been the most accomplished album by the Flaming Lips, but it certainly was not the last great album. Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots is the most advanced the band’s sound has ever been, and yet another wonderful set of songs that meld together into a grand, lush album. But also in its possession are some of the bands most immediate and touching  singles, which The Soft Bulletin does not quite deliver in as great a breadth.  “Fight Test,” “Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots Pt. 1,” “Ego Tripping At The Gates of Hell,” “It’s Summertime,” and of course the timeless “Do You Realize?” are all in the run for both catchiest and most sophisticated pop songs ever. Only one of the world’s most talented bands could ever make an album about such magical content so heartwarming and human.

♦♦♦

And the Glass Handed Kites

Mew – And the Glass Handed Kites [2005]

Alright, “progressive dreampop” isn’t exactly the most likely genre combo to be successful, but any Mew fan will probably be the first to remind you of that. And that’s probably what makes And the Glass Handed Kites so impressive in the first place; it shows Mew taking disparate ideas, weaving them together and being really passionate about what they are doing. The Danish band love rock music just as much as they love texture, which explains why they can pull off featuring J. Mascis and cranking out catchy riff rockers and name songs shit like “The Seething Rain Weeps for You” on the same damned album, and why we buy into every second of it.

♦♦♦

Let it Die

Feist – Let it Die [2004]

Listening to Let It Die is like an old fashioned practice; Leslie Feist whispers gentle lyrics of love and heartbreak over delicate, mostly piano-based melodies, and we listen intently with a gentle sensitivity. The album harkens back to a time when pop music was either heard on a phonograph or in a piano lounge, and when vocals meant much more. People make albums of music like this all the time, but what differentiates Feist are her distinctive, intimate vocals and her sense of songwriting adventure which takes the listener from somewhere not even on a map to a New York City penthouse and back again with ease.

♦♦♦

Lesser Matters

The Radio Dept. – Lesser Matters [2003]

The Radio Dept. had stiff competition and little chance to really fall into place in indie pop. Trailing the release of The Postal Service’s Give Up by a single month, Lesser Matters is a  humble, sentimental lo-fi electronic pop album of a largely uniform style. The Radio Dept. never hit it big, but Lesser Matters guaranteed a place for them immediately with its warm production and genuine lyrics which outline realistic life problems with a playful sense of adventure. Some dots can be connected to shoegaze and dreampop (“Keen On Boys” sounds like it’s coming live from a sauna), but Lesser Matters is largely a unique, stylized effort that brings genuine gravity to everyday events.

♦♦♦

Supreme Clientele

Ghostface Killah – Supreme Clientele [2000]

On one hand, Ghostface Killah’s borderlilne nonsensical lyrics may make him seem less threatening than his Wu-Tang brethren due to sheer lack of intelligibility, but it’s actually what makes him the most vicious and unpredictable of the bunch, especially when he’s leading the pack. His James Joyce-like free associative lyrics range from playful to apocalyptic, and they meld with his fast paced, caustic delivery perfectly. But we’d known about all that since Enter the Wu-Tang. What’s cool about Supreme Clientele is that while it is still very much a Wu-Tang album, it owes little to nothing to its predecessors and bravely moves from one unique idea, producer and style to another, much like Ghost’s relentless delivery.

♦♦♦

Lamentate

Arvo Pärt – Lamentate [2005]

As a classical musician, Arvo Pärt’s output naturally isn’t exactly album-based, and many of his best releases are compilations. But Lamentate is mostly a single segmented work, save the beginning inclusion of the lovely peace-call “Da Pacem Domine”. “Lamentate” itself is a work of staggering emotion, specifically sadness, crystallized into music. The pieces range from agony to grief to desperation to loneliness, most making use of Pärt’s talent for capitalizing on silence, which resonates here as a destructive force beyond comprehension. An essential composition, Lamentate is proof that even sixty years into his career, Arvo Pärt is still pushing his boundaries and is one of the most talented composers in the world.

♦♦♦

Body Riddle

Clark – Body Riddle [2006]

It’s hardly debatable that Chris Clark was one of the most important electronic artists of Warp’s second decade. Clarence Park and Empty the Bones of You had obvious peaks of genius, but as wholes they felt like fragmented collections of songs. Body Riddle was where Clark’s brilliance found a cohesion, and it is a continuous, fully formed work. The title is appropriate; the album is a cerebral puzzle, one that rewards repeated listens with great rewards, not unlike other more difficult Warp touchstones such as Selected Ambient Works Volume 2, LP5 and Geogaddi. It’s sensible that it was around this time that Chris Clark shortened his name to simply “Clark”; he more than earned the shorthand with this album, his finest achievement and a turning point for his consistently great career.

♦♦♦

Nothing Changes Under the Sun

Blue States – Nothing Changes Under the Sun [2000]

Blue States’ debut album of spacey synths and mountain-high rhythms started off ambient techno in the new millennium with a bang, effectively fusing the genre with jazz and maximizing its appeal for home audiences. Moon Safari comparisons may hold some legitimacy, but Nothing Changes Under the Sun does more than just subtract the French cheese and a couple hundred thousand in sales. Andy Dragazis lets his rhythms run to their full potential and builds jazzy compositions with sweeping harmonies over them, resulting in an album that can’t manage to stop delivering high points while keeping its cool composure. Nearly a decade later it has aged wonderfully, a quiet monolith of new millenium electronica.

♦♦♦

Vampire Weekend

Vampire Weekend – Vampire Weekend [2008]

Ok, I’ll bite. There really isn’t anything challenging about Vampire Weekend. Maybe the hardest thing is not cringing at the fact that they are singing about punctuation and Louis Vuitton. African Pop? Bait and switch. You need literally no background knowledge of any sort to appreciate what these guys do on this album of Mothersbaugh-esque chamber pop. But I’ll tell you what it is: a punk record. Yeah, that’s right. Sure, no glue is being sniffed and they’re a bunch of cardigan-wearing cream puffs, but making pop music with absolutely no strings attached was just about the most punk thing you could do in 2008, and at its core this is one of the most honest, fearless pop albums of the decade.

♦♦♦

Since I Left You

The Avalanches – Since I Left You [2000]

Picking up where DJ Shadow left off in 1996, The Avalanches expanded on retro sampling with their only album release, Since I Left You. Both albums sound like they resonate from a crackly AM radio, but while DJ Shadow filtered nostalgia through a prism of melancholy, this music is gloriously happy with a touch of longing. It is shamelessly a shimmering pop synthesis of genres that people already look back on with fondness: soul, R&B, swing, hip hop, dance and retro sampling. It’s overall product is a continuous album that is endlessly replayable and fun. While listening to Since I Left You, it is difficult not to regard the album with the giddy excitement with which they themselves regard musical buried treasure.

♦♦♦

XX

The xx – XX [2009]

Talk about greatest album covers of all time: pointed, encroaching blackness behind a pure white figure which dims and warps subtly the longer you stare at it. It easily ousts Merriweather Post Pavilion’s illusory silliness. This album is black licorice, the kind of vintage, no-tricks sexy that you couldn’t get at a burlesque. The xx’s cheap sex and cigarettes are both their greatest strength and their most considerable weakness. This album is a quiet thrill with a unique, bare bones style: With its simple drum machine, pulsing bass tones and Romy Madley Croft’s subtly slurred vocals, XX sounds like it was birthed in a single night. For that reason, it ends up more than just a humble album; it sounds like a peek through a window, revealing only part of a greater story. It’s unlikely that with the modesty the xx have that they will ever rise to stardom, but in that sense they’re ten steps ahead of the game in becoming legends, this album their chilling definitive statement.

♦♦♦

Return to Cookie Mountain

TV on the Radio – Return to Cookie Mountain [2006]

Return to Cookie Mountain might be the aural equivalent of George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead: In their claustrophobic, terrifying world of sound, TV on the Radio are their own worst enemies. Tunde Adebimpe and Kyp Malone yowl in anguish of lost love, addiction and terrifying transformation over crashing drums and jagged guitars. But their self-deprecation is hardly sympathy-seeking. What is really weird about this album and what sets it apart from the aforementioned fellow cult-hit is that in the face of all of its conflicts, it seems to find a solution in its conclusion, breaking into a blinding dawn after stumbling through the darkest night. Maybe that was a clever foreshadowing to the invigorating victory lap of Dear Science. They deserved it after this, their toughest battle in their ugliest hour.

♦♦♦

The Glow Pt. 2

The Microphones – The Glow Pt. 2 [2001]

It’s kind of hard for me to believe that this album came out in the twenty first century. I feel like it has been around for longer, gaining trunk-rings and turning leaves for decades. But it doesn’t seem to fit in anywhere in the twentieth century either. With The Glow Pt. 2, Phil Elvrum achieves a superb level of control without sacrificing his free-form style, and the result, not just in spite of its occasional chaos but because of it, feels wholly natural and timeless. The turn of the century was typically deeply concerned with time-crunching, degradation in the face of technology and the fear of creating new legacy; in general, most of these fascinations lay in things unnatural. The Glow Pt. 2, however, is wholly organic, and those themes only exist as distant lights on the horizon. Primarily, Elvrum takes on the most complex and relevant issue of all; the self.

♦♦♦

( )

Sigur Rós – ( ) [2002]

How can I even begin to describe this, an album that doesn’t even have a title and is allegedly composed of a void (you can even HEAR the parentheses, for Christ’s sake)? It’s not that it’s impossible to describe, just difficult to do justice to. To say this album is full of slow moving, melancholy post-rock is just about the least attractive thing I could imagine saying about any album. But ( ) is all of these things as well as cold, warm, dense, sparse, and much more. Oh yeah, and it contains eight of Sigur Rós’ greatest songs, all of them utterly moving. Listen and then try doing better than I just did, I dare you. I’ll bet Sigur Rós would be proud that this album finds us as speechless as it found them.

♦♦♦

Kill the Moonlight

Spoon – Kill the Moonlight [2002]

Each Spoon album has felt like a systematic advance over the last, but to many their fourth album may have felt like a step backwards. Spoon had always shown that less was more with their music, but Kill the Moonlight took those ideas to the extreme. Songs are subtly built up with simple melodic shards, and at first glance they don’t sound much different than the band’s previous work, but closer inspection reveals their intricacy. “Stay Don’t Go,” for example, may be constructed with the most simple of elements that anyone could have created, but it’s details and sequencing could only be the work of Spoon. Kill the Moonlight is in no way deceptive. It lays all of it’s spirit out on the table and somehow we wait, thinking we’re going to get to some kind of “point” or find an answer. On any other album that would be a sign of weakness, but here it is a great strength, and you only have to listen and find yourself incredibly satisfied by the end to see why that is.

♦♦♦

Akron/Family

Akron/Family – Akron/Family [2005]

One of the most representative artists in the neo freak-folk movement was Brooklyn based Akron/Family, and their self titled debut is one of the most memorable folk albums of its time. The concept is straightforward: accompany simple campfire melodies (some of the best melodies on record, as it happened), with sharp contrasts in delivery and production. The results are intriguing; the often bizarre idiosyncrasies make the songs distinctive and memorable, yet still warm and comforting. From the R2D2 bleeps and bloops of the opening “Before And Again,” to the lush synthesizers in “I’ll Be On The Water,” through the splashes of reverberation and recorded natural sounds on “Afford,” all the way to the crooked horns and vocals on “Franny/You’re Human,” Akron/Family is loaded with highlights that feel like fragments of great folklore with surreal modern contexts. Although quite strange, an album as warm and intimate as this is a rarity.

♦♦♦

Endless Summer

Fennesz – Endless Summer [2001]

For what is certainly one of the most revered glitch albums of all time, it is a natural question to ask, “what would we get if we took the glitch away?” The answer: probably elevator music. Endless Summer sputters and whirs, grinds and distorts the simplest and least interesting of melodies into masterpieces. I’ve heard many claim that at its heart this album is Beach Boys pop, and I wouldn’t argue, but to me its heart is only mechanically important, much less the point than than its brain, which can’t seem to get a full grasp on things. We’ve all experienced this before, revisiting a childhood vacation locale ten years later to realize it’s not half as cool as we remember it. Endless Summer touches people so internally because it imitates the way memory works, scratchy and imperfect. Thus, the real secret of this album is that said “Summer” ended a long time ago, and we just can’t bear to leave it behind.

♦♦♦

Souvenirs d'un autre monde

Souvenirs d'un autre monde

Alcest – Souvenirs d’un autre monde [2007]

When Souvenirs came out, Neige said that he had never listened to shoegaze before. With that said, any shoegaze fan won’t be able to help raising an eyebrow at this album. It screams influences like Slowdive, Ride and the Catherine Wheel, but then I’ve also heard some people call it Black Metal, which seems ridiculous to me. Whatever the hell it is, it sure is purdy, and Neige has a sublime control over his dynamics and flowing melodies that make up these six multi-faceted epics. There is diversity within these songs too; the title directly translates to “Memories from Another World,” and there are heavenly soundscapes abound here, but the beginning of “Ciel Errant” sounds like the theme to your middle school dance, and we even get some double bass-drum metallic edge on “Les Iris”. Maybe this is some kind of heavy metal after all. If it is, it definitely blurs the line.

♦♦♦

Guero

Beck – Guero [2005]

I’ll never forget my experiences with  Guero, quite possibly my favorite Beck album. I’ve heard it be written off more times than I can count and I’m sick of it. This is, to me, just about the definitive Summer album. Sunny pop pieces like “Girl,” rockers “E-Pro” and “Rental Car,” lazy head-nodders “Missing” and “Earthquake Weather,” hilarious experiments “Que Onda Guero” and “Hell Yes;” all among Beck’s greatest. By this time, the album may have seemed to many to be typical, and I can see why. He makes writing such good, unique tunes sound effortless, and his delivery on Guero is tame, even relaxed with its South-of-the-border style, but Guero is by no means a lazy album. Beck clearly had to work hard to squeeze out so many thoroughly enjoyable songs, simultaneously stylized and diverse. If typical Beck is this fun, then we only have further evidence that he’s one of the greatest songwriters around.

♦♦♦

Vivian Girls

Vivian Girls – Vivian Girls [2008]

Many would claim the Vivian Girls had everything going against them, having blossomed in a time when pop-punk was out of style and hipster backlash could have killed a group with such honest intentions, but this album speaks for itself; It sounds like it could level a city, and the most frequent adjective thrown around to describe it is appropriately “apocalyptic.” Think an atom bomb painted pink; Vivian Girls is noisy and destructive, and any semblance of cute is rendered stark and devastating by its surroundings. But what really shines here is Cassie Ramone’s combination of syrupy sweet vocals and dark lyrics, which perfectly congeal with this album’s instrumental grit.

♦♦♦

For Emma, Forever Ago

Bon Iver – For Emma, Forever Ago [2007]

Musically, 2007 was a year of detail and complexity: Kala subverted all expectations on a song by song basis, Untrue unfolded a world of dark secrets and For Emma, Forever Ago…uh, well, actually ended up being exactly what it sounded like, a dude in a cabin in Wisconsin with a guitar. I may have spent more time thinking about those other albums, but I remember every moment on Emma because there aren’t any tricks here. Alright, ambition is important, but the term is often consigned to experimentation and advancement. Justin Vernon was ambitious on this album in the classical sense. We get albums like this once in a blue moon, albums that settle in with you and become an important part of your life for their duration. More than anything, we needed Bon Iver in 2007, because we always need reminding that honesty never goes out of style.

♦♦♦

Stankonia

Outkast – Stankonia [2000]

By now we have recognized Outkast as one of the most important singles bands of the 2000s, and before the turn of the century we already knew they were an important album band, but Stankonia cemented both concepts. The sprawling hip hop funk masterpiece is loaded with memorable songs, a vast majority of which could have passed for singles even though only a few of them did. But what is really special about Stankonia, as well as the interplay of Andre 3000 and Big Boi, is how they function as a whole, resulting in not only one of the most fun albums I’ve ever heard but also one of the most underhandedly affecting. It’s hard to not dance to “Humble Mumble” and “B.O.B.” is possibly Outkast’s most electrifying performance, but the custody war saga “Ms. Jackson” will hit you like a brick wall, and the suicide story “Toilet Tisha” is worthy of discussion in a sociology symposium. Thus, Outkast crafted a fierceley dual-themed album, ironically their last with any real unity as a group. Yes, “Hey, Ya!” is good, clean fun. But great music isn’t always clean or polite. The truth can be unabashedly stanky.

♦♦♦

Night Piece

Shugo Tokumaru – Night Piece [2004]

Miles Davis once said, “Don’t play what’s there – play what’s not there.” Shugo Tokumaru’s debut album Night Piece seems to do just this, perhaps not in the exact way that Davis described his musical philosophy, but much like a wood block painting where musical subtleties are outlined by vast expanses of empty space that jut off into infinity. Night Piece reaches a sort of equilibrium where sweet melodies and subtle irregularities balance each other out. For this reason, the album is completely engaging and ambitious, but simultaneously warm and comforting. The humble melodies are often left bare and full, so that each pluck fills the massive space it inhabits and each rhythm takes confident control. Every song is a musical haiku, completely satisfied with its own simple beauty. Once you get comfortable with Night Piece, it might as well blanket your thoughts and really just make you extremely HAPPY for an indefinite number of plays.

♦♦♦

Geogaddi

Boards of Canada – Geogaddi [2002]

Boards of Canada followed up their masterful 1998 LP Music Has the Right to Children with Geogaddi, a lucid, potentially frightening pseudo-concept album. It’s underlying themes are not stated explicitly, but there is clearly a sonic narrative being told here. On paper, this music is much the same as Music Has the Right’s long I.D.M. pieces dispersed with short vignettes, but in actuality Geogaddi’s warped execution and form is Music inverted. Pieces warp and twist under their own energy, and around every turn the listener peers around, there lies yet another turn. Geogaddi is an album that rewards extended time spent with it and close examination, and every time the bigger picture comes closer, but remains just out of reach.

♦♦♦

Hail to the Thief

Radiohead – Hail to the Thief [2003]

After meticulously crafting the twin albums Kid A and Amnesiac, Radiohead were probably going to get ragged on no matter what they did here, and the fact that Hail to the Thief is as much a collection of songs as it is an album probably didn’t help their chances. Good news? Those songs fit together like jigsaws, and Thief still manages to be a cohesive album. Even better news? It contains many of their best songs, all unique, and none of them weak, although the album echoes of some kind of physical and mental damage. It is still their darkest album to date, and everything from haunting electronics to elegant acoustics to noisy rock resonate of crisis. Greatest news? This is yet another great Radiohead album, and we’ll be listening to it decades from now, parsing through it, just as amazed as we are with the rest. Bad news? Your world is falling apart.

♦♦♦

Microcastle / Weird Era Continued

Deerhunter – Microcastle / Weird Era Continued [2008]

While few albums weren’t effected by the internet in the 2000s, this might be the only album that was truly shaped by it. If Microcastle hadn’t leaked six months early and Bradford Cox hadn’t flipped a shit about it (and reasonably so), we might never have gotten the second disk of this album, Weird Era Continued, which itself subsequently leaked anyway. Make no mistake, Weird Era is no bonus disk; this album is proof that the double album can still pack a wallop, and Deerhunter blaze through two tireless disks of their unique and now perfected style of developmental dream-pop (if you can really call it anything except Deerhunter, dammit), and we’re left slack-jawed. “Agoraphobia,” “Vox Humana,” “Nothing Ever Happened,” “Backspace Century”… Aw forget it, just jump on this train and don’t get off.

♦♦♦

White Blood Cells

The White Stripes – White Blood Cells [2001]

Remember rock music before The White Stripes? Yeah, me neither. OK, I’ve got a little bit of a bias; White Blood Cells was one of the first rock albums I ever bought, and it shaped the development of my personal taste, but there is still something self-evidently brilliant here. It practically sounds like a Greatest Hits album (of course excluding the their two brilliant prior albums), albeit of a really off-the-wall underground band. White Blood Cells is loaded with gems, many of which found their way into American culture through media and radio play very fast (“Hotel Yorba,” “Fell in Love With A Girl,” “We’re Going to Be Friends”), but it is also in it for the long haul, delivering emotive pieces like “The Union Forever” and “This Protector.” The White Stripes proved that great rock bands can still thrive as adventurous, album-based units, and White Blood Cells was their most convincing proof.

♦♦♦

In a Beautiful Place out in the Country

Boards of Canada – In a Beautiful Place out in the Country [2000]

This is the only EP on this list, and it’s really no surprise. Scarcely any EPs from any decade even get close to this one, a collection of four songs from the Geogaddi sessions that perfect Boards of Canada’s style: chilled out, nature-oriented, nostalgic, beat-driven ambient techno. The songs here are not quite as disturbing as the songs on Geogaddi, but they still have their fair share of sonic details that just border between interesting and unnerving. As a result, these songs take on an otherworldly spiritual texture, but are still down to earth in form, structured much like the material on Music Has the Right to Children but advanced in technique.

♦♦♦

Original Pirate Material

The Streets – Original Pirate Material [2002]

Could there be a more appropriate commencement than “Turn the Page”? The Streets’ debut album Original Pirate Material was by no means the first UK garage album, but it felt like both the beginning and the end of big things. Most importantly, though, it showed Mike Skinner in his prime, with the vitality necessary to push garage and grime forward. He shows no hesitation in dressing his productions with aching, dramatic strings and pianos to depictions of typical UK post-rave culture. He elevates mundane situations (chance meetings on the street, trips to K.F.C., drunken stumbling) to near biblical levels of precedence, painting stark portraits of deep-seeded urban decay, not unlike the photograph by Rut Blees Luxemburg titled “Towering Inforno” which adorns the album’s cover. And somehow, interspersed among melancholy and anger, Skinner maintains an intelligent sense of humor and assures us that stars are aligning, weak are becoming heroes and the best thing we can do for ourselves is to stay positive. On one hand it’s easy to say he’s got a lot of nerve, the twerp, but it’s undeniable that he has tapped into something frighteningly close to the human condition, and we’ll likely be repeating his words even when his empire has fallen.

♦♦♦

Los Angeles

Flying Lotus – Los Angeles [2008]

Flying Lotus is not the future of hip hop. Flying Lotus is the future of music, and Los Angeles is the badge to prove it. With his second album, Steven Ellison melts down all of his influences (hip hop, electronic, jazz, among others) into a malleable form and shapes it to his liking to create a masterwork. Los Angeles is, as a result, a left-of-center album of the future, recalling those genres he loves but putting a completely new spin on them, forming a melting pot of ideas like the city from which it takes its name. Beats are off-tempo, sounds are diverse and highly distorted, and songs are unique and fresh. At times productions sound like they are limited by the sound register: “GNG-BNG”’s beats are too huge for their environment, “Camel” is nearly tangible and “Auntie’s Lock/Infinitum” brings Los Angeles to an inscrutable close. It’s not hard to see this being an influential electronic album, not only because it is unique but also because it is so dynamic, and if we still have artists like Flying Lotus pushing the boundaries of what is going on in modern music, the future looks bright.

♦♦♦

Rejoicing in the Hands

Devendra Banhart – Rejoicing in the Hands [2004]

There are a couple features which set Devendra Banhart apart from his peers: you could point a finger at his vocals, persistent weirdness or constant show of pubic hair as reasons he’s never going to be forgotten. But what gets him through the day on his second album on Young God is nothing more than sheer excellence in songwriting, and he is without peers in 2000s folk music. Rejoicing in the Hands is loaded with gems that are a pleasure to listen to, only bolstered by his unique vocals, but are for the most part left naked, and they succeed on their own terms. He can make his fingerpicking shine like the sun (“This is the Way”, “The Body Breaks”) or brood like a storm (“See Saw”), and the final product is fully formed and rounded. There is no reason that troubadours at crossroads shouldn’t be singing these songs for hundreds of years.

♦♦♦

Vision Creation Newsun

Boredoms – Vision Creation Newsun [2000]

When people talk about monumental albums, they don’t usually mean it in the literal sense of the word. Boredoms last major album feels like it could be a physical construction, something tangible and awesome. Instead, at least unless you’re on acid, Vision Creation Newsun is an spellbinding musical statement, and we are reminded that The Boredoms are capable of great focus and inspiration resulting in awesome things, here a progressive, free-form rock symphony. Vision Creation Newsun is the album where the Boredoms set a collaborative goal and power towards it with everything they’ve got. They really reach for the sky here, and they most definitely touch it.

♦♦♦

Funeral

Arcade Fire – Funeral [2004]

For me, the definitive moment of Arcade Fire’s debut album has always been the middle stretch of “Haiti” where Regine Chassagne sings over arugably the album’s catchiest hook “in the the forest we lie hiding/unmarked graves where flowers grow/hear the soldier’s angry yelling/in the river we will go.” It seems to embody the spirit of the album, that is, an incident frozen in time, either explicitly explained or implicitly suggested, where someone is there, living, loving and learning. Indeed, this happens on more than one occasion, and Funeral is a continuous string of crystallized humanity. While the album is named “Funeral“, it primarily recognizes death as a necessary component to life, and this puts all of its ambitious goals on a song by song basis into perspective. The love here is completely human, and it might be considered the 2000s’ indie prototype for that reason alone.

♦♦♦

Feels

Animal Collective – Feels [2005]

Feels may not be the first time Animal Collective operated in a certain way (Here Comes the Indian and Sung Tongs typically get high praise for just those reasons), but it sees them in top form, pulling all of their elements together with dazzling results. And interestingly enough, Feels is their album of love songs, and these whimsical pieces pulse with lovely pop sensibility. This doesn’t sound much different than what Of Montreal brought to the table with The Gay Parade, but what sets Animal Collective apart is their innovative pop structures, favoring formless ambient passages and noise influences just as much as they value catchy tunes.

♦♦♦

Hell Hath No Fury

Clipse – Hell Hath No Fury [2006]

Some moments on Hell Hath No Fury will have you believing that the Thornton Brothers find themselves literally invulnerable. They push, shove, and unflinchingly advertise themselves as the top of the coke game. But other times, their ultimate mortality casts its eye on them over piles of keys and cash. They know it’s there, and it’s killing them slowly. In the wake of a damning label controversy, Pusha T. and Malice teamed up with exclusive producers the Neptunes once again, and the result is a violently schizophrenic hip hop album, contrary to its unswerving confidence (thanks in part to Pharrell and Chad Hugo’s dirty, sparse production). Every track is fair game for best accomplishment claims: The middle Eastern burn of “Trill,” the guilty accordion confessional “Momma I’m So Sorry,” the desperate swagger of “Ain’t Cha”… Yes, they’re on a boat wit’cha bitch, but a storm is brewing.

♦♦♦

Ashes Grammar

A Sunny Day in Glasgow – Ashes Grammar [2009]

The latter half of the 2000s had one hell of a run for awesome shoegaze albums. Since 2005 we got at least one knockout a year, and A Sunny Day in Glasgow’s Ashes Grammar was and is the shoegaze album of 2009, in a big way. Their 2007 debut was interesting in its airy experimentation, but it too often found itself stuck in its own rules. Ashes Grammar does create its own musical grammar, syntax and vocabulary, but they are fluid, shifting freely from idea to idea, musical glossolalia. No, not improvisation; this album is meticulously planned, concrete, and pleasingly melodic. It won’t float away from you, and it is oddly familiar, even at first listen. Give these pieces a little time and they become as natural as breathing.

♦♦♦

The Moon and Antarctica

Modest Mouse – The Moon and Antarctica [2000]

In many ways, The Lonesome Crowded West was the left field success of the ’90s, gathering its strength from ideas obscured by situations, both unusual and frighteningly common. Hearing Modest Mouse go from there to The Moon & Antarctica, which wears its dark themes on its sleeves, was understandably a shock and a turnoff to many. Although it might not have the clever literacy of Lonesome Crowded West, Antarctica is an even more ambitious statement, further diversifying Modest Mouse’s sound with instrumentation that varies from warm to harrowingly cold and of course the words of Isaac Brock, one of the most underhandedly brilliant lyricists of all time. This album is of a rare kind, one that wants to be big and ambitious and succeeds with flying colors.

♦♦♦

New Amerykah Part One (Fourth World War)

Erykah Badu – New Amerykah Part One (Fourth World War) [2008]

It’s easy to miss Erykah Badu on the first track of New Amerykah. This is odd, because she sings and speaks throughout, but for some reason she melts into what is around her, a sloganeering p-funk styled boogie. She does this throughout the album, her voice hovering like a specter commanding all that it shares space with. This album has plenty you can shake your ass too, but also a lot you can only really listen to attentively in anticipation at. And then before you know it, it’s over. In short, this album sneaks up on you no matter how much you are paying attention, and somewhere along the line this chain of ambitious but subtle R&B gems becomes bigger than Erykah Badu, bigger than hip hop, religion, America. Most artists pray for that kind of achievement, but Badu steps up to the plate and actually earns it.

♦♦♦

Boris at Last -Feedbacker-

Boris – Boris at Last -Feedbacker- [2003]

Most of Boris’ grand achievements in the 2000s have been syntheses of their greatest elements. Boris at Last has, to me, always functioned as the band’s definitive metal statement despite the fact that it overlooks many of the band’s interests, namely punk and experimental  jamming. But it sure covers all the heavy metal bases: In five sprawling, unnamed suites, Feedbacker is a heavy metal opera, the kind of thing that people crowd around a stereo and nod their heads to in understanding. With massive buildups, walls of drone, cacophonous noise, cathartic screams and rock-hard riffing, this album may not have it all but it’s hard to imagine it sounding any more full. In a word, epic. And it has that timeless cover art too; the album practically gives its listeners a concussion, so I can only imagine what it would do to the creators.

♦♦♦

God Is Saying This to You...

Kurt Vile – God Is Saying This to You… [2009]

Kurt Vile’s most striking album is also his most irregular. God is Saying This to You is said to be a collection of obscurities, and clocking at under thirty minutes, half of these songs are experimental instrumentals. It sounds like it shouldn’t be fully formed, but why does this album hit like a ton of bricks? Vile’s songwriting is the culprit, and he is truly one of the decades finest folk singers. The aforementioned interludes are bitingly cerebral, and this carries over to the folk songs too. Vile is no stranger to good fun, but these songs are of a different breed. They transcend expression through music, because they don’t even sound like expression. They sound downright internal, deeply meditated thoughts and fleeting feelings of love and pain.

♦♦♦

The Ape of Naples

Coil – The Ape of Naples [2005]

Five years later and Coil’s final album, The Ape of Naples, still scares the living shit out of me. I can’t truly say that any other album can really affect me at every listen like that, although some could manage it for multiple listens before the shock wore off. But for some reason, I still can’t shake the vibe this one gives me. John Balance’s consumptive alcoholism was finally the death of him, and we get the feeling that he realized that this was happening. What makes The Ape of Naples so effective is that it is a process. No behind-the-door scare tactics, no twists. You see the degradation happening. It is easy to recognize the subject of it’s narrative arc from the beginning (the opening “Fire of the Mind,” which gave the album its original name, even sounds funereal), but that doesn’t make the following songs any less truly stunning, and I don’t know if there is anything to leave accountable besides frighteningly genuine musicianship.

♦♦♦

Guitar Romantic

The Exploding Hearts – Guitar Romantic [2003]

Please, hold me back now; how else can I help but gush about The Exploding Hearts? People listen to this album and they just know that the Hearts were something special. Granted, it does seem like this could have come out of a time machine from the ’70s, a pop-punk record unafraid to show its influences, but great pop music is timeless and Guitar Romantic is bursting with enthusiasm. “I’m a Pretender” should be instated as the nation’s official drinking song, “Throwaway Style” is a rare song that might actually be comparable to the Beatles and if there is any justice there will be always be High School punks somewhere outside a burger joint smoking to the sounds of “Sleeping Aids and Razorblades”. The rest of the story is painful but necessary to tell; their van flipped and three of them died. What can I say? Guitar Romantic makes me want to throw my hands up into the air, sing and dance. It’s an album that stands alone, not because of legacy but because of The Exploding Hearts’ obvious sheer love for craft.

♦♦♦

Gorillaz

Gorillaz – Gorillaz [2001]

Almost a decade after the fact, the debut album from Gorillaz feels less like a virtual pop experiment than it does an exercise in diversity. Sure, we had plenty of all-over-the-board albums this decade, but none of them as ambitious as this. Throughout the album, the songwriting of primary members Damon Albarn and Dan “the Automator” Nakamura lend themselves to developing ideas within and between their favorite genres like rock, electronic, hip hop, dub and punk over long periods of time spanning many songs each, and in the process blur the lines between all of them. The result, in my opinion, is the most underrated album on this list. It’s understandable that no one found it a masterpiece of any genre in particular; it may be spread out, but it’s spread out damn thick.

♦♦♦

Is This It

The Strokes – Is This It [2001]

My guess is that Is This It will be the first album on this list to be considered “classic rock.” Not because it is in any way antiquated; on the contrary this album still sounds fresh, and isn’t that what a classic is? It proves something that albums have proved for decades; there will never be an end to creative ways of doing rock ‘n roll. Julian Casablancas and company still pop my eyes out of my head on this one: The fast and melodic riffing, the uptempo rhythm section, and of course the heartbreaking vocals. These elements sounded like age-old standards when Is This It came out, and it’s hard to believe that The Strokes were the first to use them. It’s New York punk, definitely, but it sounds like it has been zoned in from somewhere else, although Casablancas even seems to doubt that this all can be pinned down: “In spaceships they won’t understand / And me? I ain’t never gonna understand.” That, my friends, is how classic albums are made.

♦♦♦

Saint Dymphna

Gang Gang Dance – Saint Dymphna [2008]

Saint Dymphna’s defining lyric comes from guest vocalist Tinchy Stryder on “Princes”: “Oh shit, Gang Gang!” From the opening moments of this album straight until the end, it’s clear that no one has their shit together better than Gang Gang Dance in 2008. Dymphna is a synthesis of cultures and sounds as well as a percussive explosion, not unlike the band’s past successes, but Saint Dymphna brings them to a completely different level. Gang Gang Dance are fearless, and no where else in indie or electronic music do you hear anything even remotely like these choice songs: The high-as-the-sky “Vacuum,” the down-the-rabbit-hole “House Jam,” the propulsive hip-swinging “First Communion,” the ethnic ambient pop of “Dust”… “Oh Shit, Gang Gang” indeed.

♦♦♦

Burial

Burial – Burial [2006]

We may have not known who Burial was, but his message was clear; the South London Boroughs are a very dark place, and you probably wouldn’t want to be there. With that said, it’s funny that his debut album and dubstep’s first true knockout is so salivatingly addictive. Burial puts atmosphere at the top of his priorities, and even the 2-step beats, propulsive as they are, are simply used as a catalyst to get to a more vivid ambiance. His sampling is also impeccable: the loading of handguns act as beats, Middle-Eastern strings blossom in fields of dead grass and musical structures teeter on the verge of collapse. It’s a fantastic portrait, but it’s hard to say of it’s really fantasy. In the new millennium, decaying urban grit might have been the most defining environment, and Burial captured that in music like no other.

♦♦♦

Alive 2007

Daft Punk – Alive 2007 [2007]

Without question Daft Punk were among the most important artists of the 2000s: With their larger than life productions and memorable singles they brought dance music and DJ culture to both mainstream and indie audiences. When “One More Time” comes on at a party, who can’t get down? But somehow their studio albums as wholes don’t quite cut it at describing exactly why Daft Punk were so brilliant; their shows, clearly, do. While listening to Daft Punk’s second live album, you may not have the legendary pyramid or the blinding lights, but the energy translates in full and Alive 2007 is an electrifying listen with aural fireworks that their studio albums can’t quite replicate. Though it ignites the hits and energizes many of the obscurities, Alive is much more than a retrospective; it shows a vital band at the height of their power, filling more than mere stadiums with energy and music.

♦♦♦

Yankee Hotel Foxtrot

Wilco – Yankee Hotel Foxtrot [2002]

I’ve learned an awful lot from spending personal time with Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, and I know I am not the only one. I remember in particular listening to it while riding a city subway just for the hell of it, and it seemed to fit what I was doing perfectly. It moves at a slow, deliberate pace with a sort of grace to it, but it is by no means delicate. On the contrary, it is often fractured and dissonant, and it embodies the concept that music, as well as life, can be perfectly imperfect. For that reason it seems totally in place in the city, specifically Chicago, where at one point you may feel like you are in the center of everything and at other times feel like you are about as far from reality as you can get, slowly disintegrating with impersonal day to day routines. This all sounds pretty depressing, and at times it is, but when I’m listening to Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, these themes are undercurrents to a collection of wonderful, experimental pop, rock, and folk music. This is timeless American music.

♦♦♦

Citrus

Asobi Seksu – Citrus [2006]

When it comes to shoegaze in the 2000s, I understand the desire for familiarity. There is warmth in many of the Slowdive and Ride sound-alikes out there, but to score points with me you need to really do something unique. Asobi Seksu’s symphonic sophomore album Citrus bridged the gap between rock, pop and ambitious atmospherics. It expands on the bands self titled debut by widening their sonic palette to be truly immersing, and yet it shreds and bounces, all within the same songs. This can be heard best in “Red Sea,” perhaps the most ambitious shoegaze track since Loveless. Yuki Chikudate’s singalong vocals seem completely at home with James Hannah’s audacious guitar work and flood of feedback. This album succeeds in bringing shoegaze out of itself. It is my belief that Citrus kills the genre by deeming it an unnecessary label, and no other recent band has exercised quite this much freedom with their interests.

♦♦♦

Third

Portishead – Third [2008]

Of all the late decade reunions, Portishead walked away with the best evidence to show. The reunited trip-hop heroes pull no punches here, and unreservedly deliver their most difficult and arguably their most rewarding album yet with Third. These are some of the most genuine songs I’ve heard in a long time, and just about all of them are terrifyingly heavy (even by the time you reach “Deep Water,” you’re most likely cowering in fear of the unseeable). Clearly Portishead have a deep understanding of not only their own musicality but also its effect on their listeners, and they know that exactly what may scare them off can keep them coming back. It’s easy to want to turn Third off when you hear the paranoid trip of “Nylon Smile” or the crawling on the ceiling head rush of “We Carry On,” and don’t even get me started on the utterly concussive “Machine Gun.” I’m convinced that the apocalypse will sound like “Threads.” These are just a few of the reasons that it is so easy to be drawn into Third’s dark energy and so hard to escape its grasp on your psyche. Beware of the rule of three.

♦♦♦

Donuts

J Dilla – Donuts [2006]

I often hear people questioning the true quality of J Dilla’s final album based on the circumstances surrounding its release. Dilla made most of Donuts from a hospital bed, and it was released only three days before his death of TTP. To me, Donuts‘ brilliance has always seemed quite self-evident, and the question of whether it would have gained the popularity that it has had Dilla not passed away is irrelevant; Dilla would never have made an album quite like this, loaded with romantic cut-and-paste soul haiku, emotional flourishes and acknowledgments of his brief time left – all at almost painfully short, bite-sized lengths – had he not only had a short amount of time to do it. It’s no surprise at all that Dilla has become one of the most namechecked artists of the latter half of the decade and that the echoes of Donuts can be heard everywhere. These songs, themselves constructed from lost vinyl gems, sounded like new standards from the beginning, and it’s likely that Dilla’s final statement will be on repeat in the hip hop world for a long time.

♦♦♦

Devotion

Beach House – Devotion [2008]

Although Baltimore-based Beach House haven’t changed their style much since their 2006 self-titled debut, their second album is much advanced beyond its predecessor. Devotion’s songs change frequently, segueing from one pastoral arrangement to another with ease, but frequently surprising with shreds of melancholy. Songs therefore seem to sputter with emotion, flickering lights through windows drenched in rain. At some points, the pieces are hushed tropical lullabies, and at the next moment booming, painful dirges. “You Came to Me” and “Holy Dances” evoke a heartwarming mysticism while others such as “Gila” and “Heart of Chambers” woefully lament. But the ultimate spirit is that of genuine, mature romance, which Legrand articulates so delicately in every song. She sings of love managing to overcome time and space as if reading from a book of hymns with ultimate faith, and she preaches a word we can’t help but hold on to and believe unconditionally.

♦♦♦

Arular

M.I.A. – Arular [2005]

Maya Arulpragasam was not the first artist to capture globalization in music, and by no means was she the first musical activist, but she was the one to garner the most discussion, controversy and popularity in the 2000s. With Arular, M.I.A. brought forth a new wave of dance music, relentless in it’s political and social observations and culturally collaborative in its musicality. You can hear the chaos of the Sri Lankan civil war which M.I.A. so stringently fought against on Arular in both M.I.A.’s lyrics as well as the production which receives assistance the likes of Diplo and Switch. Perhaps what is most amazing about this album is that it manages to be challenging and uncompromising while still being irresistible and fun. The dissonance that results from the inevitable groove elicited by this album’s non-stop energy paired with Arulpragasam’s bitter social observations is more than just discomforting; it takes a special kind of talent to get the masses dancing in opposition to genocide. Cutting edge.

♦♦♦

Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga

Spoon – Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga [2007]

This album is about as habit forming as morphine but without all the negative repercussions. I still need a little taste of it at least every few days (the louder the better), and when I get it I’m immediately happier. Some of the decade’s finest pop songs are on here, all of them simultaneously hummable and innovative. Take “The Ghost of You Lingers,” for instance: It still has the signature Spoon elements of hypnotic repetition and simplicity, but I always get the wind knocked out of me when the warped electronics come in. The song is unique, but its quality and ambition are not. Leave it to Spoon to make the catchiest album ever while still retaining their songwriting maturity; it seemed like the only thing they hadn’t done yet.

♦♦♦

And Their Refinement of the Decline

Stars of the Lid – And Their Refinement of the Decline [2007]

Taking six years to follow up the vastly successful The Tired Sounds Of, Stars of the Lid did pretty much the polar opposite of what anyone would have expected with their eighth album, even considering they had done just about everything else in their long career; they made a pop album. Granted, it is also still an ambient album and a drone album, but the melodies here are more pronounced than anywhere else in their career, and what we find is that when the Stars raise the tempo of their melodies even by just a couple non-existent beats per minute, they are pretty much the most legitimately talented songwriters of their genre. In the end, Their Refinement may not have the benefit of being the first masterpiece that Stars of the Lid made, but it is even more moving, and on a grander scope.

♦♦♦

Takk...

Sigur Ros – Takk… [2005]

If Sigur Rós’ 1999 album Ágætis Byrjun was their defining statement and ( ) showed them at the height of their expressive power, Takk was the album where, as an established band of incredible talent, they could truly do whatever they wanted. Their sound doesn’t dip back into the experimentalism of Von, the hazy psychedelia of Ágætis or the melancholy of ( ), and we have yet another Sigur Rós album that sounds nothing like the rest. Here the band are more emotive than ever, and take on a more uptempo approach to many of the songs (“Hoppipolla,” “Gong,” “Saeglopur”), and craft achingly beautiful developments that take full advantage of accompanying string section Amiina. It’s completely arguable which Sigur Rós album is the best, but Takk is almost unquestionably their most free spirited.

♦♦♦

Amnesiac

Radiohead – Amnesiac [2001]

It’s not really surprising that Radiohead’s headiest album is also one of their most rewarding. Like Kid A, it contains its fair share of willfully difficult and abrasive moments, but it is just as gripping, paranoid and visceral. It digs to deep, uncomfortable places, and begins its ambitious process immediately (“After years of waiting, nothing came / and you realize you’re looking in the wrong place”). People seemed to think that Amnesiac was hodgepodge and messy upon release, and who can blame them after albums such as OK Computer and Kid A, that were meticulously crafted as seamless wholes? One of Amnesiac’s greatest strengths is that it is at times disjointed. Almost every serious Radiohead fan reaches a point of understanding with this album, and then asks themselves the million dollar question: How could they have possibly ever thought that Radiohead didn’t know exactly what they were doing?

♦♦♦

You Forgot It in People

Broken Social Scene – You Forgot It in People [2002]

Alright, so it’s the early part of the millennium and everything already seems stagnant. I’m walking around seeing kids with tight jeans and Fallout Boy t-shirts who are supposed to be emotional, and then there’s this album, by a band called “Broken Social Scene” for Christ’s sake. And then it turns out to be a playful, sophisticated, romantic album made by an ever-changing cast of adults. Yeah, this is an album that, to an extent, celebrates that we are all fucked up, but it is something else too. This is the sound of growing up, I am sure of it. There have been so many albums about the subject, but the reason why Broken Social Scene make You Forgot It In People transcendent is because they portray the process as continuous and collective.

♦♦♦

Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill

Grouper – Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill [2008]

The traces of melody scattered throughout Liz Harris’ previous albums may have made Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill a logical next step, but it didn’t do anything to soften the blow. Here the Portland singer/songwriter makes a full transformation to a folk artist, meticulously crafting a developmental melancholy album of subtle victories. At times we hear the most inviting songs that Harris has made up to this point (“Heavy Water/I’d Rather Be Sleeping,” “A Cover Over,” “Fishing Bird”), but she hasn’t completely left behind her previously utilized drone and noise techniques, and an enveloping layer of reverberation hangs around this album. On the outside is blackness. The most we get from Grouper here are her melodies, barely recognizable lyrics and loosely related song titles. We only seem to get half of the pieces to this puzzle of an album, but we can be content leaving it unsolved, wrapped in warmth and broken beauty.

♦♦♦

Vespertine

Bjork – Vespertine [2001]

In 1997, Bjork released the heated, internal Homogenic, and it was her most violent and dramatic development yet in a career already filled with twists in turns. Her 2001 follow up is comparatively emotional and personal, but in deep contrast to Homogenic’s in-the-moment theatrics, Vespertine sounds aged like fine wine. It is an album from another world, one which is both cold and warm, as indicated by the album’s elegant and icy strings, warm electronic rhythm and skyward melodies. But like all of her other albums, Bjork’s vocals and lyrics demand the spotlight, and she delivers performances that stand among the greatest of her career (listen to the breathy “Aurora” for yet another reminder of why Bjork is your favorite vocalist since Liz Fraser). In the end, it’s our delight to see Bjork doing what she does best yet again: creating a world of her own from scratch and immersing us completely.

♦♦♦

Kala

M.I.A. – Kala [2007]

Kala left a good portion of us silenced in awe regardless of our prior opinions of M.I.A.; the album to fulfill Arular’s most progressive ambitions but in a different dimension. Loaded with innovative pop hits and difficult genre hopping experiments, the album draws ideas from all over the world following M.I.A.s travels. The momentum is unstoppable, even when it hits its downtempo middle section. It’s about as daring as any pop album has ever come, a complete meltdown all the way through. Some scared doubters said that M.I.A. sold out, but when you examine how literate this album is, it becomes obvious what the focus is; If you are listening to M.I.A., be it through an Academy Award winning film, a stoner movie trailer or the radio, it’s that much more time you have to sit down and actually think about things like the genocide in Darfur, the mistreatment of women world over, the Sri Lankan civil war, illegal immigration, the third world, and hell, even that twenty dollar bill in your pocket. M.I.A. has always put the world before herself in her music, and that her bangin’-est album could be so conscious is a testament to that.

♦♦♦

Madvillainy

Madvillain – Madvillainy [2004]

One of my favorite moments on Madvillainy is during “Bistro,” where a relaxed, probably stoned, perhaps suit dressed Supervillain introduces the one and only Madlib, at which point the backing track goes silent. It might just be Madlib staring at us all pissed off as if we’re wasting his time, or for all we know he might be completely absent, backstage smoking a blunt. Both DOOM and Madlib do this disappearing act several times throughout the album, creating a rotating cast of hip hop deviants, but when they decide to grace us with their presence, Madlib provides some of the most sophisticated productions in the hip hop world, and DOOM continuously proves himself to be the most bizarre (“Freshwater trout!”) and skilled (“There will be the chopped off heads of leviathan”) MC of his generation. And dammit, these jackasses make it seem like it’s just another day in the life- while they could have milked just about all of these tracks into radio hits, they keep them all brief and fleeting. This is two incredibly talented artists with great chemistry doing whatever they want and turning up with a classic, unique hip hop album. “So nasty that it’s probably somewhat of a travesty.” Indeed. Be afraid. Very afraid.

♦♦♦

Silent Shout

The Knife – Silent Shout [2006]

Forget electroclash. Forget dance-punk. Forget all the other 80s electronic and dance revivalist bands of the 2000s; Silent Shout is the definitive back-to-basics electronic album of the decade. A decisively determined album, it focuses on its goals without making any concessions, and thus Silent Shout produces no pop gems in the vein of “Heartbeats,” but what replaces the style that the band previously explored is no less engrossing. It’s got everything necessary to make it a classic: The haunting, unique vocals, icy electronics, danceable neck-breakers (“We Share Our Mothers Health” is a rare track that might actually be physically dangerous), melodic burns and dark mystique. Silent Shout both sounds like something completely new and futuristic and yet also somehow antiquated; “The Captain” is a perfect example, sleek and yet frozen, smooth and yet rough as if coated in brine. It only further emphasizes the fact that the album doesn’t quite fit in with anything else of its age, even consciously nostalgic dance music that dominated much of the decades independent scene. If it recalls anything, it’s an alternate reality of the 80s when Antarctica had a thriving electronic scene, but it also sounds cutting edge and advanced. Perhaps this is what makes Silent Shout so timeless; ultimately, it is an album that seems to resound from nowhere, and thus answers to no one, nothing.

♦♦♦

Ágætis Byrjun

Sigur Rós – Ágætis Byrjun [2000]

Okay, I’ll admit it; I made a big, unnecessary stink about this one. Yes, it was initially released in the 1990s, in addition to a few other albums on this list, but these albums are unmistakably millennial, and Ágætis Byrjun especially is an important album for the 21st Century. Some big changes came with its international release, and I don’t just mean that the lovely Icelandic band Sigur Rós were now a part of the lives of millions, although that in it of itself is important. Ágætis Byrjun’s power is completely original because it is devoid of context. Yes, they make music that we might be able to uneasily delineate to “dream pop” or “post rock,” but we only do this because we have no idea what the hell else to call it, because we have never heard anything quite like it. The reality of this album is that it feels like a modern composition, only in part because of its gorgeous backing strings, sweeping crescendos or heartbreaking melodies; what also gives Ágætis Byrjun its spellbinding power is that it is simultaneously unique and gorgeous enough that it completely changed the landscape of music in the 2000s.

♦♦♦

Leaves Turn Inside You

Unwound – Leaves Turn Inside You [2001]

Around the turn of the century, one of the finest post-hardcore bands of the 90s spent years making their own studio, MagRecOne, recorded their final album, and disappeared. Made around the time that indie rock as well as America were about to make important, indescribable changes, the double-album Leaves Turn Inside You, as its title suggests, is about subtle but gravitational changes as well. It reinvents Unwound’s style, keeping their paranoid punk riffing but mixing it with melancholy and mystery. It’s difficult to listen to this record and not think on some level that there is something very wrong going on, but exactly what always illudes, and that’s what keeps me coming back to the surreal build of “We Invent You,” the jagged rock of “Scarlette” and the emotive “Below the Salt,” as well as the rest of this album. It’s rocking, tough, heady, introspective, emotional, scary, and beautiful at once. I couldn’t possibly ask for more from Unwound.

♦♦♦

Untrue

Burial – Untrue [2007]

For what many considered to be a scattershot genre, Burial turned out to be dubstep’s only bonafide superstar, and for a long time no one even knew who he was. While his debut album is more focused on setting, Untrue is instead a personal, internal affair, and the poignancy of this was only bolstered by his anonymity. A favorite example of the genuine but haunting humanity he injects into his music comes with “In McDonalds,” one of the album’s beatless tracks, that even goes so far as to set up a narrative using only its title, some gentle vocal samples and the music’s raw emotional power. This is a melancholy album of confounding difficulty with its fractured, slowly changing rhythms and haunting sampling, and requires repeated listens to get the full effect. Give it a couple spins to settle and pretty soon its nature as a meticulously developed album becomes apparent, and its sounds become second-nature. With its synthesis of interests in creative rhythm, sampling and atmosphere, Untrue is without question one of the most unique and accomplished productions in electronic music of the decade.

♦♦♦

Person Pitch

Panda Bear – Person Pitch [2007]

When all is said and done, a lot of people are going to be making claims that Animal Collective ruled this decade, and it’s going to be hard to argue with them. No other bands were nearly as simultaneously ambitious, prolific and loved. With that said, it was a bit of a surprise that the best album to come out of the Collective was actually a Panda Bear solo album, and it ends up being the most forward thinking as well as accessible in the Paw Tracks library. What’s most striking about it is how unique it is; the only things that sounded anything like it were the subsequent Animal Collective albums which it clearly influenced with its sound collage techniques. What Panda Bear does on Person Pitch is an album of sample based melodies, breaking down disparate sources (everything from choir music, Kraftwerk, Lee Scratch Perry and Cat Stevens to fireworks, bubblebaths and projector reels) then building them up from scratch to make unique developmental pop pieces. It’s no surprise that the album has already gained widespread admiration; as the years roll by, there are only more and more things to say about Person Pitch.

♦♦♦

Elephant

The White Stripes – Elephant [2003]

I’ve always had a difficult time explaining exactly why I feel that Elephant is the definitive rock album of the decade. I blame the tip-of-the-iceberg technique used with not just this album but with the band as a whole. The White Stripes give you some pretty simple, bare bones shit, and you can’t feel like you are missing something, but as soon as it hits your eardrum the flowers bloom. The band did the same with their personae, and we didn’t know what Jack and Meg’s relationship was for years, but after we heard this, we knew immediately that they were stars with much more to offer than a guitar, drums and some amps.  Of course they are still a heavy metal minimalist band at their heart and they show it here in spades, but this proved that they had the ambition to do anything they wanted with whatever tools they chose and still reach incredible heights, pounding through retro pop, ballads, hard Detroit blues, punk and the weirdest, sexiest, most free and irresistible moments I’ve heard from any rock band, ever.

♦♦♦

Turn on the Bright Lights

Interpol – Turn on the Bright Lights [2002]

Interpol may or may not have made one of the most influential albums of the decade that you can trace a good portion of indie rock’s elements back to (highly melodic riffing, violent and melancholy dynamics, throaty vocals, dark atmosphere). They may or may not have started that whole chic punk thing, or indirectly birthed everything from The Killers to dance-punk. The fact of the matter is that the best thing Interpol brought us is this album, standing on its own as a powerful melancholy statement. We’ve heard it all before; Interpol aren’t messiahs. They have influences, like everyone else does, and they could never manage to follow Bright Lights properly, but after listening to it, one could never expect them to. It’s songs are deeply personal and resonant: “NYC” is about a specific time and place, but who hasn’t felt that they need some more change in their life? The massive “Stella Was a Diver and She Was Always Down” is similarly intimate and still achieves a haunting reach. And try to keep your feet on the floor during the beautifully cruel “The New.” In my experience with Bright Lights, I first found it to be difficult, and this is completely expected. Then, it became second nature, and then again a wholly uncomfortable experience. I explain the return of that discomfort by pointing a finger at how far this album really goes, and how deep it digs. It’s a natural arc, and we wait for albums like this for decades, albums that truly connect with their listeners on a deeper level.

♦♦♦

Kid A

Radiohead – Kid A [2000]

I knew this was the album I had to talk about last from the start. This may not be too big of a surprise. With it’s fragmented structure, lush instrumentation and raw emotion, Kid A has stood as a figurehead of music in this decade since its release, but it evades categorization or explanation. Yes, we can talk about it’s high points objectively, of course: From “Everyone is so near” to “I’m not there/This isn’t happening,” how Thom Yorke’s vocals meld with the instrumentation on “How to Disappear Completely” at 4:37, the destructive statement on dance music with “Idioteque,” the communication breakdowns, the looming disaster, and having to face it all alone, regardless of how many people you’re sitting in a room with when you try to break it all down. Other artists have achieved similar heights and even comparable narrative arcs within albums this decade, but none of them have been nearly as involving, and what makes Kid A priceless is that it builds a relationship with the listener, not only in the long term but also on individual spins. I’ve seen it in myself as well as others. While at first listen Kid A almost always seems a mess, given time the paranoid echoes of “In Limbo” become zen, the gentle melancholy of “Kid A” resonates, “Idioteque” sings the body electric and we wait in silence, counting the seconds, for the coda of “Motion Picture Soundtrack.” Kid A has utter command in its atmosphere and the mood of its listeners, and stopping it anywhere before the end just feels wrong. When all is said and done, calling Kid A my favorite album of all time, discussing its strengths and weaknesses or questioning what it all means echoes through empty space. I find myself standing at the threshold of expression when I try to talk about Kid A, mostly because it transcends genre, class, describability. It is an album that has grown to be a fixture in people’s lives because they can sit down with it and, despite all conceivable obstacles and difficulties, achieve a level of trust unlike any other album before has elicited.

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Halloween Albums

Friday, October 24, 2008

Halloween is near, and I have started to pick out some spooky favorites from the music library. I figured it might be appropriate to acknowledge some of the more genuinely scary or creepy albums I have come in contact with over the years. Six might seem like a rather arbitrary number, but these releases are of a rare breed and I find each one to be essential to the list. Of course there’s nothing wrong with traditional Halloween music (the Monster Mash, sure), or some other fun retro music that might be appropriate for the holiday (The Cramps!), but if you want something that might really creep you out, this list might be able to help.

♦♦♦♦♦

Alice in Chains – Dirt

Alice in Chains’ second album Dirt arrived just in time for the Halloween season in 1992, and took over the grunge scene with its spooky hard rocking style. The album is almost unbelievably advanced past the band’s debut album Facelift, every song taking on its own texturally rich identity. In terms of technical skill, every member of the band is in prime form despite their drug addictions which are reflected heavily in the album’s lyrical themes. The late and great Layne Staley spits “what the hell am I/thousand eyes a fly/lucky then I’d be/if one day deceased” on one of the album’s underhand knockouts Sickman. We can hear both the anger and anguish associated with personal breakdowns and drug abuse. The consistency of the album alone makes it one of the finest albums that grunge had to offer, with a killer lineup of singles, the hammering Them Bones, Vietnam reminiscent Rooster, and possibly the greatest grunge single ever, Would?. But the highlights don’t stop there; the album also has a slew of brooding, slow moving, moody masterpieces (Dirt, Rain When I Die, Down In A Hole), as well as many other sleeper highlights (God Smack is the origin of the name of AiC knockoffs Godsmack, to exemplify the album’s influence). Although Alice in Chains’ best work may be scattered throughout their albums and EPs, Dirt is easily their most representative and possibly most accomplished work, a scary, fun, and emotional masterpiece of its genre.

♦♦♦♦♦

Slint – Spiderland

Considered the premier post rock album, Slint’s second and final album Spiderland is made by a band with absolutely nothing to lose. Perhaps it is this that makes it so startlingly affecting. How out of no where the album must have seen at the time is also probably a reason that it was as vastly influential as it is. But legacy aside, Spiderland is quite a scary album by all accounts, softly building damaged melodies out of nothing and then disassembling them again. As soon as the opening arpeggiated harmonics of Breadcrumb Trail start, it sounds like the beginning of the end. This mysterious, slow urgency pulls the listener through the albums six unsettling songs with great anxiousness. All of Slint’s weaponry is fully formed here; their percussive anger, David Pajo’s atmospheric guitars and sense of instrumental tension, and Brian McMahan’s oft whispered creepy poetry. These elements make for six completely perfect songs, the rocking Nosferatu Man, the quiet, brooding Don Amon, the sadly beautiful Washer, and the extremely quiet instrumental For Dinner… It all seems to lead to something, and when it does, we get one of the single scariest and most beautiful songs of the nineties, Good Morning Captain, which evades all explanation. It may disappoint fans that the subsequent two song Slint EP was as far as the band would ever go, but Slint’s three releases, and particularly Spiderland were all they needed to be one of the most important bands of their genre.

♦♦♦♦♦

Boards of Canada – Geogaddi

With Board’s of Canda’s second major full length release Geogaddi, brothers Michael Sandison and Marcus Eoin make certain that their love of degradation and psychosis plays itself out on more than just their own production values. In fact, one might be given the false impression of their own mental degradation while listening to the album, it is so elaborately and eerily constructed. Although its format is essentially the same as its championing predecessor Music Has The Right To Children (long pieces dispersed with very short pieces, beat driven IDM), their style is distinctly advanced over their previous works. The album is almost extravagantly detailed with myriad fascinating jigsaw pieces of sound; reversed beats, distorted vocal samples, dissonant chords, and heavy aural contrasts provide the album’s basic groundwork. Although some pieces here are vaguely reminiscent of previous fan favorites (Sunshine Recorder, 1969, Dawn Chorus), every song is highly advanced and vaguely unsettling. Throughout the album Boards of Canada paint as they call it a vast, winding, labyrinthine “journey” through a beautiful and horribly warped dreamland. Once you follow the white rabbit down the hole, something immediately seems very, horribly wrong, and this feeling is played with, turned upside down and inside out at every turn of the album. The more you think about it, the more it scares you, and the more one recognizes its intricacies such as mathematical structures, biblical references, and distorted fascination with the occult, the more one wants to dismiss Geogaddi as pretentious and supersaturated. However, it is a genuinely creepy album, and its ominous atmosphere cannot be denied. And yet the brothers state the ultimate innocuousness of the album in interviews. “…If we’re spiritual at all, it’s purely in the sense of caring about art and inspiring people with ideas.” (interview “Play Twice Before LIstening” by Koen Poolman). Despite what its message is, Geogaddi is an album that genuinely brings you to the brink of your own mind and refuses to let you forget the experience.

♦♦♦♦♦

Coil – The Ape of Naples

If any album has ever been literally haunted, or at least come close, The Ape of Naples is the culprit. Created posthumously after Coil frontman John Balance tragically fell to his death over the banisters of his Mansfield home in a drunken stupor, The Ape of Naples is actually a collection of the industrial/electronic band’s leftover material. This makes the overall cohesion of the album nothing short of a small miracle of planning. In fact, it makes little to no sense that this album is more than a rarities compilation, and it is more, much more. Through it’s lengthy textural songs it develops many stories with real life reference points, perhaps outlining both the experiences of the unsettling said ape on the cover art as well as John Balance’s descent into alcohol addiction. The haunting opening chords of Fire of The Mind (the original title of the album) set the stage for an album loaded with treasures, all uniquely disturbing and affecting. Songs call on an eclectic selection of instruments such as accordions, marimbas, horns and pipes, and as always carefully synthesized melodies, beats, and atmospherics. Songs range from gentle to violent, and the album’s transformation is downright scary. The Ape of Naples is an all around great performance from all those involved, but John Balance remains the album’s key player. His voice touches every song in different ways, and his emotion is fluid, sometimes gracing songs with subtle melancholy and other times with spitting anger. The album comes to a close with a cover of the British sitcom Are You Being Served?’’s theme song Going Up, featuring vocals from Balance’s final onstage performance at the Dublin Electronic Arts Festival in 2004. And with John Balance’s final vocals, locations of bedding materials, tea, and travel products as well as the final direction of an elevator, it isn’t hard to hear him simultaneously falling down and going up.

♦♦♦♦♦

Merzbow – 1930

Many non-noise fans may turn on Japanese noise godfather’s quintessential album, 1930, and be disgusted. It is, to put it one way, a deliberately disgusting album, barely music in any traditional sense, and more of a terrifying sound assault. Perhaps best at home in a torture chamber (just how the bondage obsessed Merzbow would like it), listening to 1930 at loud volumes is a potentially terrifying experience that can push one’s sanity to the limit. Once again, it is barely even music, but more an aural representation of a mile high battleship with cannons filling every square inch, all firing at the listener at the same time. Reach for the off switch and the terror goes away temporarily, but curiosity will make you turn it on again at some point, and when you get curious enough to listen to the entire thing, you probably won’t be able to turn it off as much as you want to. There is something almost inhuman and unearthly about 1930 that manages to consistently fascinate here, and even if you can’t bear to turn the volume up higher than a whisper, it is unspeakably overbearing. Everything from the fiery title track to the dizzying cacophony of Degradation of Tape to the final explosive, twenty two minute, ever changing Iron, Glass, Blocks and White, everything here is sheer chaos. For how brutal and unpredictable it is, it is no surprise that this horrifying album is considered a cornerstone of noise music. To say it is good or bad is irrelevant, because it definitely shouldn’t be judged by the same standards as any other album on this list, let alone any form of “art” on this planet.

♦♦♦♦♦

Brian Eno – Ambient 4

Brian Eno’s final installment in his Ambient series is possibly the most emotionally startling ambient album of all time, and may be considered to be the first dark ambient album. In that sense it is hard to imagine the entire genre of demonic dark ambient texture without this album as a precursor, although Ambient 4 is anything but paganistic or demonic. In fact, there is little to nothing subversive about Ambient 4 in the slightest, except perhaps its one odd song out, the deliberately creepy Shadow featuring Jon Hassell on trumpet, although if we are talking about scare factor the song is the album’s clear winner. Beyond this song, the album makes its goals known almost instantaneously and follows through with its goals systematically, like the other members of the beautiful ambient family. Moreso than any other album on this list, Ambient 4 carries a wide range of emotions with it, of which horror is only one. The collection of soundtracks to geographic locations here range from touchingly calm (A Clearing) to impendingly scary (The Lost Day). The distant chains of Lantern Marsh, the distorted miasma of Tal Coat, the birds and frogs of Leeks Hills…The album is startlingly emotional in ways that can be simultaneously relaxing and unsettling. On one hand, you get the feeling that at any point during the album someone could appear behind you and cause your heart to skip a beat, and yet at the same time the soundscapes are warm and completely safe sounding. The wide range of emotion here is mostly due to simple skill in production and crafting of music. The soundscapes sound so deftly realistic that the emotion comes quite naturally and makes the overall product quite moving. This may be the one to play on the boombox outside when the trick-or-treaters come by.

♦♦♦♦♦

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Boards of Canada – In A Beautiful Place Out In The Country

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

The songs on the In a Beautiful Place Out in the Country EP were taken from the Geogaddi sessions, which yielded the dark, schizophrenic final product of said album. However, the songs on the Beautiful Place EP are slightly more listenable than the songs on Geogaddi, although they do have their fair share of unsettling details. The title track features a sample from a religious recruitment recording, and the second track’s name is a play off of Branch Davidian leader Amos Poe Rodan (thanks for that info, Shawn). But these subtle hints of perversity do not hinder the aural beauty of this EP. All four songs are crafted simply wonderfully. As the first track, Kid For Today, suggests, listening to the disk is like taking a time machine in two different directions. All of the songs sound innocent in their underlying melodies, yet still have a curious undercurrent of mysteriousness. Also present is a balance between nature and technology. Each song seems to reminisce of some natural landscape degraded in the signature Boards of Canada style, as if viewed on an elderly nature documentary. And yet every song is electronically touched, giving some kind of suggestion of an old, outdated video game. All four songs here stretch the imagination with candy sweet synth melodies and bass heavy beats. Kid For Today and In A Beautiful Place Out In The Country are the more chilled out, free form pieces on the album, while Amo Bishop Roden is soaring and moody although just as relaxing. Also, one of Boards’ more unique songs, Zoetrope, is here to end the EP on a very light note. A contemplative, shimmering gem of a piece, Zoetrope feels otherworldly, magical, and nostalgic while only utilizing a single synthesizer. In the end, the winning force is what Boards of Canada have always been about…chilled out beauty.

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Boards of Canada – Geogaddi

Friday, August 17, 2007

With their 2002 sophomore album, Geogaddi, Boards of Canada would have had to have pulled something completely special out of their box of tricks to cement their place in the musical world. Music Has The Right To Children was already hailed by some as a masterpiece, but who was to say it wasn’t a one time draw? For all anyone knew, Boards of Canada were the exact right band to fall back into obscurity and stay a cult hit for the rest of forever. And yet somehow, they managed to craft an equally popular album while still sticking to the style that made Music Has The Right To Children such an unexpected powerhouse. On many second outings, it is expected that a band would make their best album yet, change a genre, or bring something completely unique to the table. The fact that Boards of Canada are not concerned with record sales or trends in popular music was overshadowed by the fact that they simply want to challenge their working space, and bring their music to a new level. In this way, for many people, they ended up following the trend anyway and made what might be their best album.

But in reality, is it their best album? No. Music Has The Right To Children was simply better, better on the grounds that it did something completely different, better in it’s personal style, and simply more enjoyable to listen to. But that is another notion that BoC simply swept under the table with Geogaddi. Enjoyable music does not have to be initially enjoyed, and good music is sometimes inspiring without being enjoyable at all. That isn’t to say that Boards of Canada fans won’t find many of the things here that made Music Has The Right To Children such an enjoyable album. Because this follows many of the same trends and styles that made that album special. As usual, a good half of the songs here are very short interludes that represent very specific emotions or images, about a fourth are sprawling complex webbings of beats and rhythmic synthesizers played in striking conjunction, and another fourth are medium lengthed songs that combine elements of the two. Each type of song is important. Although many people would write off the short interludes, they are half the fun, and just as engaging as the long ones.

Perhaps it is of benefit of the listener to go through the first few songs step by step. I only do it this way because every step of the journey is as individual as the last, and there isn’t much of anything that will let anyone know what they are in store for before they listen to Geogaddi.

The first song, Ready Lets Go, is just shy of a minute in length and sounds like a small drone of an air conditioning system played underneath very subtle chords most likely produced by a cheap casio keyboard and interesting little swirls of noise. One thing that always strikes me about songs by Boards of Canada are the titles. Right off the bat, Boards of Canada assures you that you are on your way as long as you make it past that first track. This is only step one. Step two, Music Is Math, is one of those longer songs I mentioned. Various minor tonalities with simple sound are played over a rather harsh set of beats. These beats are warped every so slightly in their sound and rhythm throughout the song. This is one of Boards of Canada’s biggest tricks. By making these subtle changes in both beat and other instrumentation, songs keep fresh without loosing focus, and thus never overstay their welcome. The next song is Beware The Friendly Stranger, what sounds like a simple flute melody played through a crackly walkie talkie over the sound of children playing. What man in a trenchcoat could this song possibly describe?

Even after hearing those first three songs, starting over again reveals a completely new angle in Ready Lets Go, making it sound deceptively disturbing even after only having heard a tiny portion of the massive album. How do all these pieces fit together? Beyond the fact that they all sound vaguely like something you would hear in a nightmare, this is something I am yet to figure out. I can’t place my finger on it, but this music just works. It has to, for how well it gets under ones skin and pushes outward relentlessly. And I’ll be honest here, this album is a very difficult listen. It’s creepy. No, scary. The more you listen, the more you wish you hadn’t heard, and yet the deeper you want to dig. One song is named The Devil is in The Details, which describes Geogaddi fairly accurately. In fact, Boards of Canada have been accused of subliminal messaging, and at that, satanic messages. Are Boards of Canada satanists? No, no they are not, and they mean no harm. The listener harms themselves by doing all the vicarious listening.

I’ll bet this album sounds pretty pretentious right about now, doesn’t it? Because it sure sounded pretentious to me after the first listen. An album that puts a song of complete silence at the end has to be pretentious to some extent. Then I looked at my stereo, which had stopped upon completing the CD, at exactly sixty six minutes and six seconds. And then people start telling me that Geogaddi is smattered with mathematical equations in the music, and that there are biblical refferences here and there. And yet Boards of Canada assure us that there is no devil worship here, and that they are simply trying to make inspiring music. They tell us that the word “Geogaddi” has a specific meaning to them, but they want it to mean whatever the listener feels it should mean.

…What the fuck? Geogaddi is a puzzle. And Geogaddi is a puzzle with answers. Was that last track, one minute and forty six seconds of silence, an optimistic ending or a dreaded one? There is a full picture to be completed, but the jigsaws are cut by the listener. Maybe it is just a big mess of sounds and coincidences with no real meaning spawned by a bunch of stoners with too much time on their hands, or maybe it merrits attention. Who knows.

And to be fair, this is not some musical revolution. This is probalby my least favorite Boards of Canada album, out of three. I’ll bet it was this new, scary world of sound that inspired the band to make their most compulsively listenable and accessible album, The Campfire Headphase. This is not the bands best album, but it might be the most rewarding and exciting upon multiple listens. In any case, my mind has come to a stalemate with Geogaddi. I have finally admitted that I enjoy the album, and it continues to supply me with surprises and fun. And yet at the same time, I look at it from a distance with confusion and contempt, while it continues to baffle and disturb me.

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Yet Another Ten Reviews

Monday, April 23, 2007

For some reason, this time I ended up reviewing a lot of albums that I love and not so many that I just like a lot or are in the middle. I pulled some of them out of the vaults. I find it easier to praise than to complain, I guess. Some of these are my absolute favorites. I’ll bitch more next time, I promise.

Alice in Chains – MTV Unplugged

This Unplugged concert was, for all intents and purposes, Alice in Chains’ final farewell. There is almost nothing that is not conclusive about this collection of songs, and in some ways it does it’s job very well. Alice in Chains was just screaming for an Unplugged concert, having two acoustic EPs under their belt and an impressive array of softspoken songs alongside their haunting metal. But perhaps there just wasn’t quite enough in the queue for the acoustic treatment. While half of these acoustic takes are absolute treasures, the other half are miscalculated performances of songs that should not have been acoustic in the first place. The renditions of Down in a Hole and Rooster were the only songs appropriate from the bands second album Dirt, and Angry Chair and Would are simply better loud and electric. Frogs probably was not a good choice to include either, nor was Sludge Factory, the name of which lets the listener know it is best played with muddy obnoxious guitars. While these clunkers are present, the rest of the performance is solid. Performances of classics such as Nutshell, Got Me Wrong, and Over Now are among the bands best moments, and unspeakably touching. Some other songs from the Sap and Jar of Flies EPs could have been included, but for the most part the most important cornerstones are hit that should have been hit. Another perk of this show is that the band is in excellent playing condition even after not playing a show for many years, and the guitar sound is as distinct and delicious as many other famous Unplugged shows are known for. The rendition of the unreleased Killer Is Me would have been grounds to buy this in the first place, and it is the perfect closer to the bands career. On one hand some great songs are played here, but the setlist is just not that well thought out. Depending on the listener, this could be either wonderful or bland, thus leaving this to be for the fans only and really a wasted opportunity.

Boards of Canada – Trans Canada Highway

While nothing works effectively as a replacement for a Board of Canada LP, Trans Canada Highway is a more than good way to whet fans appetites. While this is fairly short in terms of new material, it is also easily the best EP Boards of Canada have released yet. Boards of Canada are a band with such scant material that fans delightfully lap up whatever material they can get their hands on. Luckily, this is a solid release and completely consistent despite it’s brevity. Dayvan Cowboy, the head track from The Campfire Headphase, is truly one of the greatest songs Boards of Canada have ever produced, and it is very worthy of being included here as well as being remixed. The remix, however, feels like a completely new song and is not just a throwaway. Trans Canada Highway does almost feel like a miniature BoC LP though, as it almost equally split between longer building signature electronica and short aural vignettes. The two longer new songs, Left Side Drive and Skyliner, are both fantastic and among the bands best. The signature Boards of Canada sound is marginally augmented by a simple matter of experience, and both songs are absolutely gorgeous in every way you love the band to be. Left Side Drive is a great chillout track with a great, steady, varying beat and awesome synthesizers floating in the background. Skyliner is equally as priceless though, layering itself an impressive amount of times and carefully changing the beat in comfortable ways. The two short interludes are both heavenly, otherworldly ambiance that you would expect a group with as much clarity to produce. Trans Canada Highway may simply be a taste of Boards of Canada’s future, but it’s a fantastic EP and a necessary augmentation onto an impressive discography.

Jane’s Addiction – Strays

This really isn’t as bad as everyone says it is. Sure, it doesn’t compare to Nothing’s Shocking or Ritual de lo Habitual, but very few albums do, so what is the point in complaining? People don’t seem to get that they should be thankful that the band came back and did their career justice at all. The album is not as completely standout on a song by song basis, but there are a few of the bands absolute best songs on here. True Nature is the heaviest Perry Ferrel and company have ever been, The Riches is a classic riff that seamlessly transforms into a relaxing segment that is very distinctly Jane’s Addiction, and Just Because and Superhero are very respectable short rockers. All of the other songs are good, just not great. Part of why people complain so much is because these are more aimed at the mainstream, but after doing as much trailblazing as the band did a decade earlier, this is a bit of a relief in some way. The production is solid, but Perry’s voice has deteriorated a little bit and is at his best when he’s really yelling. It’s no question that this is Jane’s Addiction’s worst album and it does not really stand out that much, but it’s a treat that fans will especially love.

Led Zeppelin – Physical Graffiti

All things considered, Physical Graffiti was the last Led Zeppelin album that really mattered. And it was a surprise too, considering Houses of the Holy was rather disappointing when compared to the bands earlier numbered albums. Fortunately, the bounceback was in the form of a gargantuan double album around the time that the bands popularity was at it’s height and anticipation was at a record high. The album delivered in any way that a fan could ask for, with as much hard blues as could ever be asked for, and enough new heavy sophistication to keep critics who wanted change and variance happy. The disk delivered as a middle ground between every extreme the band had ever relinquished in. Custard Pie is a shorter lighthearted sexual blues knockout, and In My Time of Dying is a marathon ten minute blues epic. Trampled Underfoot is a danceable organ oriented heavy trance, while Night Flight is shorter guitar pop reminiscent of earlier days. Even Led Zeppelin’s love for eastern music is touched on with Kashmir and In The Light, alongside the pounding dinosaur rock of Houses of The Holy. Surprisingly enough, yet another middle ground is reached when one considers that the album was about half full of older unreleased tracks and half new material. The result of all of these factors convening is a colossal smorgesborg for fans of hard rock, and not just Led Zeppelin either, but a wider audience. You could even say this album shows the band in their absolute prime, and although it may never surpass the popularity of IV or II, Physical Graffiti is a grand album and anything but a let down.

Luna – Bewitched

Although Luna’s momentous worth should truly be judged by the span of their long career, their most respectable effort, Bewitched, should not be overlooked. The album not only defined the bands sound for many great albums to come, but presented it with unmatched consistency. The mood that the pleasant dreampop group always tried to convey was a sleepy melodic dreamscape, and if there is one kind of dream that people love to have, they are dreams of love. The impressive aspect of not only this album but Luna in general is that they can do so much with so little; the simple dreamy chords and lullaby bass line gently carry the title track into a definitive sleeping song, and utilizing what could easily be Beatles lyrics, centered around love and wispy attractions. The level of sophistication in the songcraft is also very impressive, and while certain songs like Bewitched and Sleeping Pill may make do with simple strums and reserved beats, others like Great Jones Street and This Time Around boast beautifully spontaneous guitars and complex yet accessible melodies. The album also has two killer openers, setting the mood perfectly. On one hand the more uptempo daytime song California (All The Way) that very well might be the least depressing breakup song ever, and the dropdead gorgeous innocent classic Tiger Lily, that may just make your heart melt. If you have ever wanted a varied collection of top notch dreampop, look no further.

Brian Eno – Another Green World

Essentially, this album was the first venture into the art of synthesizers, loops, and synthetic sounds incorporated into pop music that was easily accessible. And it still stands as an absolutely gorgeous venture even to this day, which makes it even more amazing that it was released in the seventies. Although I hate to quote AMG, the writer of that sites review for this says it best. Another Green World plays like a dream sequence, or at least the ideal dream sequence, of creations both relaxing and structured. The record is almost short lived, and in a way sadly so, because each song almost begs for more time to express itself. This work of art comes in two specific but scattered parts. There are a few melodic pop songs featuring Eno’s pop/rock lyrics that accompany a catchy electronic background. Some of these songs are the compelling St. Elmo’s Fire featuring Robert Fripp on a downright mean guitar, the charming I’ll Come Running, and Sky Saw, which was probably the most out there pop music at the time. The other side of the spectrum are a wealth of amazing instrumental pieces that seem to describe their moods in perfect harmony with their names. In Dark Trees is an unsettling nightmare, Sombre Reptiles is a wonderful natural groove, and The Big Ship might just be Eno’s most gorgeous creation. The final five songs on the album are also to be noted as one of the strongest wrap-ups in pop history, reiterating the defined structure of the album. And while Eno amazes on all of these levels, he keeps up a specific style, which is about what would happen if someone built a time machine and simultaneously mixed the future of pop music with classical aesthetic, as the cover art projects. While Brian Eno may have arguably changed music even more with his ambient series, this was the record that not only pointed in that direction, but also made all of that able to happen. What Brian Eno did with Another Green World inspired a wealth of change in the pop music industry, and if not for it, electronica, ambient, or even structured mood music would not have been possible. So not only did Eno make a fantastic record, but he set the stage of music for years to come. Almost all artists today owe something to Eno, unless they foolishly believe that the studio’s only function is to record what is played and nothing more.

The Radio Dept. – Pulling Our Weight [EP]

Radio Dept.’s follow-up EP to their 2003 full length debut Lesser Matters ended up being more than just affirmation that the band were a one shot deal. The Pulling Our Weight EP ended up trumping an already impressive album of lovely dream-pop with only five songs, all of which are utterly fantastic and indesposable. This EP is the Radio Dept. shedding off whatever weaknesses they may have had and exploding with their full talent much like a blooming flower. The title track is the bands greatest and most representative work. The song seamlessly presents hook after hook over the trademark soft looped drums and shy hushed vocals, and the accompanying music video is a charming work of art on it’s own. The album surprisingly looses no momentum even with the consideration in mind that from the top, there is no where to go but down. A shockingly touching aural poetry is delivered with We Climb The Wired Fences, and I Don’t Need Love I’ve Got My Band is the romantic keystone of the disk and a lovely display of gently cascading guitar solos. The short two minute haiku Someone Else is tropical and relaxing, and the band once again displays their knack of creating an atmosphere with subtle touches without loosing their pop sensibilities. The album is rounded off by what seems to be a shoegaze revival, The City Limit. The song carries along a wonderful soundscape and many more beautiful melodies to contemplate. This is truly one of the most accomplished works of pop music produced in years and the Radio Dept. may well be the best band indie band out of Sweeden ever. Pulling Our Weight EP is a masterpiece of underspoken dream-pop, a perfect culmination of everything this wonderful band has to offer, and a grand sign of what the future may hold. One of the best EPs ever, for sure.

Silversun Pickups – Carnavas

Silversun Pickups’ full length debut has been pinned as a lot of things. They say takes influence from certain alternative bands of the nineties a lot, but in truth this album is fairly unique. But being unique does not always make you fantastic, as Carnavas proves. The song with the most pinnable source is the opening Melatonin, a pretty obvious My Bloody Valentine rip, but it is actually a very good song despite it’s unoriginality. But if unoriginality was the only problem with this album, it would simply be a damn good album for nostalgic alt rockers. But the problems dig deeper than that. The mood here is despondent, which is fine, but unfortunately the theme does not develop throughout the near hour it lasts. The concluding moments of this pretty much sum it up. “We’re always going to cross the finish line while everybody wants to run and hide, but now it’s too late.” Whatever opportunity that Carnavas had to be concluded beautifully was botched. Sound wise this album just feels tired. This could have been a great shoegaze record, but the drums are too loud, the guitars are too subdued (this problem is relieved if you REALLY crank it), and the vocals are awkwardly miscalculated. The vocalist kind of sounds like s/he wants to scream like Dave Grohl but doesn’t quite have the guts to actually come out and do it, and if they did it would just be painful. The upshot is that these guys can write some very good songs. Lazy Eye has gotten some significant radio play for a reason, Rusted Wheel is a very contemplative outing, and some of the albums first half can be very fun. But the fact that these people know how to write music is unfortunately overshadowed by the fact that they simply cannot produce it well quite yet. If you have heard some of these songs and liked them you will find comfort in the rest of the record, but it still really isn’t that memorable. As imaginative as these songs are, they feel like wasted ammunition, and I can only hope that the future holds good things for these possibly talented but misguided musicians.

Tool – Ænima

Tool’s second album Ænima is a significant leap forward from an already great album, and it secured the bands fanbase while delivering one of the ninties more compelling metal albums. Like all of Tool’s albums, this takes time to open up. At first it seems passive and less forceful than the aggressive and fast-paced Undertow, but Ænima is truly an informing listen. And simultaneously driving too. On one hand the album delivers a radio hit with Stinkfist, but after that the listener is plunged right into the middle of the issues and ideals that are to be put accross. As opposed to being stated explicitly, these themes are to be realized after close inspection. Even then, fans of Undertow will love this album. Songs like Eulogy and Forty Six & 2 are alternately introspective and uncompromising. And yet the album still rocks out while delivering it’s complex and important messages. Hooker With A Penis is a short rocker (at least for Tool), and the title track is more rock solid than anything off of this album or Undertow. And the album can get progressive too. Eulogy, Pushit, and Third Eye are all huge, interesting pieces that are expanded on in complex ways that only the attentive ear can decifer quickly. When I first bought this album I didn’t like it at all, but after giving it a chance and looking for what makes this so popular, every song on this album opened up. This really isn’t inviting, as far as the general style goes or the colorful yet disturbing filler, but this is a fantastic album and it really put Tool on the map for a reason.

Cocteau Twins – Treasure

Treasure is Cocteau Twins’ most popular and influential record, but it’s questionable whether it is truly the best. Undeniably this is the Twin’s at their stylistic peak, delivering the goods with a greater and more constructive precision than ever before. These melodies are, for the most part, touchingly beautiful and accessible. This is really the breakthrough music that the band had been working towards, although the Spangle Maker EP was geared towards the same thing with significantly less success. The difference lies in the vocals, and Treasure is Liz Fraser’s vocal peak. The most obvious and unique charm of this record is Liz Fraser’s new vocal style. She no longer even tries to sing words but instead sings in unintelligible sounds thus extending her voice into what is now truly a musical instrument. Side A is quite simply perfect, and all five songs are beautiful and essential. Ivo is perfectly refined nuanced poetic dream-pop and one of the bands absolute best. The following Lorelei is misleading. The song has unbelievably beautiful hooks, a quality that the band were not known for, but if you turn up the volume on this, spontaneous eargasms will follow. Beatrix is as regal as it is fresh even over twenty years later, Persephone has deliciously dirty guitar cutting accompanied by another flawless vocal performance, and Pandora (For Cindy) is a lovely, relaxing, and almost tropical song that points directly to the bands next album, the beautiful Victorialand. An album with this much momentum seems unstoppable, and it almost is, but the unfortunate flaw of Treasure is that Side B derails a bit. Or maybe it just seems like it does because some of the songs aren’t as standout as those that preceeded them, but in any case it feels like the album runs out of energy. Amelia is very good upon closer inspection, and Aloysius is just as priceless as anything on Side A. But Cicely feels like a revisit to Persephone only with less enthusiasm, Otterley has almost no melody at all (although it is pretty ambiance), and Donimo is a vocal misfire. Even considering the fact that some of these songs are not quite as priceless as others, the album still stands in quality and this may well be the Twin’s best, most moving album.

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Eleven Reviews

Sunday, April 1, 2007

Alice in Chains – Alice in Chains [Tripod]
Tripod
For their final studio effort, Alice In Chains delivered a full album that they did not accompany with a tour. They did, however, perform on David Letterman, and watching that performance even today will send chills down even casual fan’s backs. Alice In Chains Unplugged may have tied the loose ends up and ended up being the final farewell, but this album is where you see the breakdown happening for Layne Staley. Not that the album is all melancholy or heavy metal. This is actually AiCs most diverse record, and it touches on everything from the most hardcore sludge they have ever produced (no less Sludge Factory, and Grind too) to more positive songs (Heaven Beside You, Shame In You). But you can definitely hear the dissolution of the band in this record, mostly because it bounces around so much. The beautiful classic Heaven Beside You segues into the insane nausea of Head Creeps without any provocation. Most all the songs are good except for a few in the last half that don’t quite cut it as AiC classics, but Heaven Beside You is still one of the bands best and Again is the heaviest thing since Them Bones. The real winner is Over Now. After what appears to be a curl-up-and-die maneuver with the interesting Frogs, there is silence, and then a muffled recorded trumpet resound, after which the confused positive/negative song kicks in and does significant emotional effect on the listener. The biggest problem with this album is the production, which falters very obviously. The idea to continue layering Layne’s vocals was a good idea, but the vocals are treated very poorly here and the sound is simply not heavy enough. Such an emotional record should not have been treated so preciously. A remaster, perhaps? It’s not perfect, but it is a respectable way to throw in the towel and contains some of Alice In Chains’ very best songs.

Led Zeppelin – Led Zeppelin [Box Set]
Tripod
This box set released in 1990 acts as an inflated greatest hits to the music of Led Zeppelin. Each disk both covers a specific time period as well as a musical aesthetic. The first disk is the dirty blues rock that made Led Zep famous, the second disk more folky acoustic stuff (my favorite), the third disk is the longer stuff mostly from the middle career, and the fourth disk is the best of the latter stuff that kind of needs to be included for posterity. Jimmy Paige himself chose the songs so the selection is solid, and every song is great. But the truth stands that this box set was probably unnecessary. There are some rarities rounded up, the bands two famous b-sides Traveling Riverside Blues and the Bob Dylan cover Hey Hey What Can I Do, as well as a brilliant live Jimmy Paige take of White Summer/Black Mountain Side. But beyond that, there isn’t too much incentive for fans. This collection is geared towards the fan who is a little more than casual but less than obsessive, a rare breed for Led Zeppelin. For that reason, people interested in the band could have done better with the two disk greatest hits, and people who want more could have gone with The Complete Studio Recordings box set, which also has the two aforementioned b-sides. The fourth disk may be useful for people who do not want to get too into the bands latter mediocre career, as it gathers the best of those albums pretty effectively. As a collection of songs this is easily an A+ purchase, but as a compilation it is just dumb. One is probably better off just getting The Complete Studio Recordings or starting the long fan trek of buying all the albums. Led Zeppelin was a fantastic band and this is a good portrait, but why stop at this when you could have the whole deal?

Boards of Canada – Music Has The Right to Children
Music Has The Right To Children
Surely Boards of Canada’s finest work, Music Has The Right to Children is at first downright confusing and off-putting but is ultimately a great ambient work. This is an album that has no clear purpose but in that sense reasserts itself within each song, creating everything ranging from small interludes to long beat oriented ambient techno. I remember walking home one day listening to this on my headphones. An Eagle In Your Mind was playing on the way there, the cool constantly changing beats keeping my mind interested and relaxed over the interesting synthesizer. Then the second I unlocked my door and walked into my dark apartment, The Color of the Fire started to play. The song is basically an airy drone underneath a childs voice horribly echoed and warped, complemented by bell-like instruments. I kind of freaked out. I didn’t know what the hell was going on and I felt like the sounds were real enough to be in the actual apartment. That is when the true purpose of this album opened up to me. Music Has The Right to Children is an album of electronic audio toys. Every song on the album has it’s own fun charms. There are some more straightforward pieces, especially the chill Turquoise Hexagon Sun comes to mind, and other times the album is more challenging, like with Sixtyten. Roygbiv is unspeakably fun or the short time it lasts, and Wildlife Analysis is a relaxing ambient opener. The whole album has a recurring mood of comfortable technology, and for that reason the album sticks together very well for how much it bounces around. It may have a few weaker songs, but the strong songs are enough to compensate and make the album a joy to listen to at any time, and a personal favorite as well. Rarely will you find an electronic/ambient album that is both passive and interesting, but Music Has The Right to Children makes the cut and is a completely unique, priceless album.

Aphex Twin – Richard D. James Album
Richard D. James Album
The issue everyone seems to have with Aphex Twin’s Richard D. James Album is mostly due to confusion. Confusion that the record simply does not straighten out. James’ approach on this record is completely skewed, and while this is definitely a product of his usual fun and ultimately effective psyche, listeners will likely be put off by his odd taste. Simply put, this record isn’t sure if it wants to be happy or evil, and the result is a big mess. It’s a fun mess, and an interesting one too, but by no means is this for the casual electronica listener. The ingredients are usually simple ambient melodies that could have worked as songs on their own (or maybe with soft beats) inflated to ludicrous levels of energy by breakneck beats. A surprise lies at every turn of this album, and as a result, the listener is hardly ever spared their temporary sanity. The opening 4 is an Aphex masterwork, a touching gel of strings hammered by the fast beats to make an interesting and contemplative modern piece. But then conversely the next song, Cornish Acid, is fun in a horribly evil way, with practically the same beats overlaying a creepy synthesizer. These decided contradictions are placed by the minute. Sometimes the trick works, and sometimes it doesn’t. Goon Gumpas strangely enough has no beat, and it’s a charming melody, enough to make even the happiest listener suspicious of what tricks might be up Richard’s sleeves. Girl/Boy Song is fairly innocuous even under the asteroid field of a drum machine, and another highlight. Logon Rock Witch is just evil, with a playful organ/jack-in-the-box tune that drifts into a creepy haze. And of course, Milkman is a schizophrenic trick that needs no explanation. This album probably does what it sets out to do with flying colors. I simply don’t always enjoy the goal. The intent is to make good electronic music, and there is a myriad of good tracks here, specifically 4, Fingerbib, and Girl/Boy Song. But the intent is also to confuse with an obnoxious juxtaposition of clashing elements. This can be enjoyable, and there are people who enjoy beats like this, so this is no throwaway. But I probably would have enjoyed the album more had those beats not been there at all. This album is insanity, take it or leave it.

The Cranberries – Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We?
Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?
Irish rockers The Cranberries delivered their most acclaimed record as a debut, Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We. There is a certain charm to this kind of music, and no question they presented their style very well for a debut. But there is simply something about this that is lacking. If anything, the wonderful tune Dreams is enough to justify the rest of the album repeating itself. And it does sort of linger on the same melancholy Gaelic themes a lot. When it does it with specific taste and hooks like with I Still Do, it’s alright. But one would think that if the band continued on in the same way they presented Dreams, the album would have been nothing short of phenomenal. But unfortunately, what The Cranberries do the most is not necessarily the most interesting. In any case, some songs here are just priceless, namely Linger and Dreams, but for anyone who wants good Irish rock, a very narrow genre, it definitely wouldn’t be a bad purchase.

The Cure – Standing on a Beach
Standing on a Beach
The Cure are the owners of a frighteningly large body of work and can therefore be a complete hassle to approach. Starting at any individual album can likely result in misconceptions or an unclear picture of what The Cure were really like because at every leg of their long career they have been a bit different. The later compilation Greatest Hits just doesn’t do the job, and there has not yet been a good collection that has covered the bands whole near three decade career. When Standing on a Beach was made, there was never any question whether another collection would have to be made because the band was already making their next album Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me, so this was never meant to be a complete picture but it is most likely the best place to start diving into The Cure’s imposing discography. The material here runs from the subdued punk of the bands debut Three Imaginary Boys all the way through the commercial sucess The Head on the Door, and the development is undeniably great and a wonder to listen to. Robert Smith’s voice is honed and the guitars are refined over the years that this spans. All the songs here are great, and it’s a wonder how a band so comtemplative and long winded can make such great pop gems. Accuracy is not any issue because this is a collection of singles, but the band definitely gave their best to the radio and never lost their grace in the process. The Cure are a great band and worthy of exploring, but it is tiring and troublesome to know where to start. This is not a complete picture, but there will most likely never be a completely accurate one, so for casual fans this along with the bands other singles collection Galore will be all one could ever need. And for those who want to dig deeper, this is a good branching point and signpost for where to go next. Either way, Standing on a Beach is a collection of great songs and further proof that The Cure are always fantastic.

Nine Inch Nails – Pretty Hate Machine
Pretty Hate Machine
At what it does, Nine Inch Nails’ debut Pretty Hate Machine is a killer record. But unfortunately it has some qualities that are hard to get used to or simply not for everyone. This isn’t considered one of the industrial genres best records for no reason. Most all the songs are irresistibly catchy while staying abrasive and heavy. For a first song, Head Like a Hole is still arguably Trent Reznor’s finest concoction of muscular guitars and hypnotic electronica, and the lyrics aren’t bad either. However, one of this albums many flaws are how hit or miss the lyrics are. Half the time, they are spot on and a joy to hear unfurl (lay my hands on Heaven and the sun and the moon and the stars / while the devil wants to fuck me in the back of his car), and at all other times they are cringeworthy at best (how could you turn us into this? / after you just taught me how to kiss…you). Another problem people will have with this album is the very ’80s production values, such as the echoed snares and the stylized synthesizers. But fortunately the core of the record is simply good enough to keep it’s quality apparent even after almost twenty years under it’s belt. Each song is individually crisened with great hook and develops with great guitars and catchy electronic beats and tunes. Not only are all the songs strong, but the record presents itself like a finely cut gem. None of these tunes are as bleak or pained as Reznor’s later songs, but they still have a significant bit of emotion. No question, this is a thematic album based on a relationship that is both painful but also seductively fun, but the lyrics just don’t quite cut it in the end. All the tracks are standout, from the devils hook Kinda I Want To to the sexual pulse of Down In It. The album has great things to share with the right listener, a lot like The Downward Spiral, but it’s problems catch up with it pretty readily. Although it may not be an indesputable masterpiece, it is still a great collection of songs, one of the first truly good industrial records, and a fantastic start to Trent Reznor’s great career.

Cocteau Twins – Garlands
Garlands
Garlands is no question Cocteau Twins most off the wall, odd creation. Being the bands debut one can only expect so much, but either way this is hardly an enjoyable listen. The intension here is clouded. This is kind of a stab at the gothic genre but without as much force as The Cure or similar artists. Garlands is of it’s own world, though. The beats are almost primeval, and the guitar and bass provides a quiet, reserved swirl of out of place sound in the backdrop of Liz Frasers at this point un-honed vocals. To say I don’t understand this record is avoiding the obvious fact that I don’t enjoy listening to it, but the album may well be purposefully strange. Almost every track is an uncomfortable swirl of insanity, and the guitars rarely do anything more than unsettle, and the songs do not conclude very well. One has to wonder, judging from the sharp rise in quality with the proceeding record Head Over Heels, whether this disorder was intended. But the album does have it’s redeeming moments that justify it’s existence. Blind Dumb Deaf is absolutely gorgeous in a sad paranoid way, the title track Garlands is actually kind of interesting, and Wax and Wane is often cited as a Cocteau Twins favorite by hardcore fans who like the bands earlier work. The truth is, this is just setup for the brilliance of Head Over Heels and the spectacular career that follows, but this might actually be your thing if you are looking for early gothic music.

Oceans 11 Soundtrack
Ocean's 11
For a movie that has an otherwise fantastic soundtrack, the CD release is a let down in most all ways. Whoever compiled this clearly did not know what the hell they were doing, that simple. What struck me about Oceans 11 most the first time I saw it was the awesome jazz score, but on here, most of the songs are smashed in value by way of either brevity or inclusion of in-movie dialogue. Tunes like Pickpockets, Ruben’s In, and Stealing The Pinch, and Hookers would be ten times more enjoyable if they weren’t so criminally short, and the dialogue sprinkled throughout is not only unnecessary but also annoying. Some otherwise darling Percy Faith songs are only played as background music to dialogue… So stupid. What saves this for near salvation in the longrun is the fact that the music is fantastic. Boobytrapping, The Projets, Gritty Shaker, $160 Million Chinese Man, and 69 Police are all great songs and long enough for the keeping. Claire de Lune is, as always, a charming classic as well. But the fact of the matter is, the production here is catastrophic. Fans of the movie and it’s music deserve better, and this just doesn’t deliver on the level it should.

Smashing Pumpkins – Rotten Apples: The Smashing Pumpkins Greatest Hits
Rotten Apples
As a sampler to the Smashing Pumpkins discography, Rotten Apples does a fair job, but as a Greatest Hits compilation it fails on a few levels. For one thing, the song selection is rather mixed. To be fair, this is not “Rotten Apples: Best Of Smashing Pumpkins.” Instead, we are treated to what is supposed to be the bands biggest hits on the radio, and in many ways those hits are not presented well enough. Any fan could make the argument that certain songs should have been included, but for a few reasons this compilation just can’t decide whether it wants to be a Greatest Hits or a Best Of, so it falters more in the face of these complaints. The choice of including a shortened version of Drown from the Singles soundtrack is a nice treat though, and two bonus unreleased songs are saved for last as the incentive for fans. These two songs are, no question, fantastic. But attention to the bands whole career is divided between it’s uneven components at the demise of quality of songs. Once again, personal preference is a prevalent complaint. Mayonaise was a much bigger hit than Disarm, and there was no reason whatsoever to include Eye at all. Landslide is truly one of the bands greater gems, but it does not reflect on it’s respective album quite as much as something like Frail And Bedazzled would. If you want a place to start, this might be the best bet you have.

Nirvana – Nirvana Unplugged
Nirvana Unplugged
For as long as I can remember, Nirvana Unplugged has haunted, amazed, and touched me on levels that no other record can. It would be silly for me to pretend that this isn’t my all time favorite record considering how much I come back to it even after long periods of leaving the bands music on the backburner. Every song here is a classic, and each song, be it one of the bands songs or one of the covers, is flexed to it’s otherwise unseen limits, displaying all their glory at completely new revealing angles. Instrumentally, the music is hypnotizing, and I’m yet to figure out why even after all these years, but the perfect rhythm section probably helps and the beautiful guitars are always wonderful. The momentum the album carries is never interrupted, from the Beatles pop of About A Girl through the Meat Puppets set straight down to the Leadbelly cover. Absolutely every moment on this album is as good as can be; there is not one weak song, and even Something In The Way, which I have always considered to be one of Nirvana’s lesser songs from their popular days, is seamlessly transformed into a wonderful gem. Considering Kurt Cobain shot up some heroine right before this show and was nervous out of his mind, the quality of the music is nothing short of miraculous. The band is, in fact, in better playing condition than they have ever been, even if Dave isn’t used to playing so quietly and Kurt is high and emotionally broken. There is clearly an uneasiness here, which makes the listening experience that much more enjoyable. Kurt exaggerates the price of a Leadbelly guitar among other precious nuances shared with the audience in between songs, as if to hide what emotions are really there. Thankfully, this music speaks emotions that words cannot capture and more than makes up for the less than adequate suicide note that Kurt would write in not that many more weeks. This is not only the greatest recording Nirvana ever did, but it is also the unequivocal culmination of their entire career, perfectly tying up any loose ends and leaving me with nothing more to desire from what has always been my favorite band even under deep scrutiny. It is my personal opinion that no record is ever completely perfect, but for all intents and purposes, this is as perfect to me as any album has ever been.