ENDORSED FOR '11
- Mister Heavenly -- Out of Love
- Washed Out -- Within and Without
- Arctic Monkeys -- Suck it and See
- Givers -- In Light
- My Morning Jacket -- Circuital
- J. Mascis -- Several Shades of Why
- The Antlers -- Burst Apart
- TV on the Radio -- Nine Types of Light
- The Veils -- Troubles of the Brain EP
- Telekinesis -- 12 Desperate Straight Lines
- Gorillaz -- The Fall
- Radiohead -- King of Limbs
- Mister Heavenly -- Out of Love
- Washed Out -- Within and Without
- Arctic Monkeys -- Suck it and See
- Givers -- In Light
- My Morning Jacket -- Circuital
- J. Mascis -- Several Shades of Why
- The Antlers -- Burst Apart
- TV on the Radio -- Nine Types of Light
- The Veils -- Troubles of the Brain EP
- Telekinesis -- 12 Desperate Straight Lines
- Gorillaz -- The Fall
- Radiohead -- King of Limbs
ENDORSED FOR '10
- Superchunk -- Majesty Shredding
- Autolux - Transit Transit
- Arcade Fire
- Interpol -- Interpol
- Best Coast -- Crazy For You
- The National -- High Violet
- LCD Sound System -- This is Happening
- Black Keys -- Brother
- Broken Social Scene -- Forgiveness Rock Record
- Doves -- The Places Between
- Dr. Dog -- Shame, Shame
- The Drive By Truckers -- The Big To Do
- Hot Chip -- One Life Stand
- OK Go -- Of the Colour of the Blue Sky
- Vampire Weekend -- Contra
My 10 favorites from '09:
10. Dinosaur Jr.: Farm.
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9. Phoenix: Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
This album snuck up on me. At f
irst listen its just really nice guitar pop with little substance. SingerThomas Mars’ vocals waft like light background noise… He might as well have been singing in French. But the songs are infectious and better performed than I first gave them credit for. I found myself waking up with“Lisztomania,” “1901,” and “Lasso” on my mind. I’d hum the tunes to myself and sing the breezy lyrics. The French band’s fourth studio album is a work of power pop perfection.
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8. Reverend and the Makers: A French Kiss in the Chaos
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7. St. Vincent: Actor
Texas songwriter and guitarist Annie Clark -- who goes by the stage name St. Vincent -- played with some interesting acts before venturing out on her own in ’07. She was a member of the weird and psychedelic Polyphonic Spree and later was a member of singer songwriter Sufjian Stevens’ touring band.Actor finds Clark in really terrific form. It’s a collection of haunting and beautiful songs, “Actor out of Work” recalls Arcade Fire; “The Strangers,” hints at Portisehead. But the album is wholly original. This is Clark finding her own voice -- a voice with real promise.
6. Silversun Pickups: Swoon
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5. Arctic Monkeys: Humbug
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4. The Veils: Sun Gangs
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3. Sonic Youth: The Eternal
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The incredible thing about Sonic Youth is that they continue to challenge your ears some 30 years after their founding. The trademark guitar squalling and chugging is still there, but it still sounds as though the rest of rock hasn’t caught up with Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo. From the opening track “Sacred Trickster,” (maybe the best Sonic Youth album opener ever) the band is full of energy. Other great songs include “Antenna” and “Malibu Gas Station.”
The Eternal is what a rock record should sound like --edgy, loud, mysterious and it kicks a lot of ass.
2. Neko Case: The Middle Cyclone
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The Middle Cyclone shares a lot with its predecessor. These are songs that might be classified as genuine Americana -- roots music that struggles with the strange and murderous reality of the New Land. Middle Cyclone stakes the same path and subject matter with reverberating guitars and echoing rhythm sections -- a sound that is simultaneously new and ancient. Case is mesmerizing right from the first track: “This Tornado Loves You” a song sung from the perspective of a Tornado chasing after an unnamed lover.
Sings Case: “Carved your name across three counties / Ground it in with bloody hides / Their broken necks will line the ditch / 'til you stop it, stop it /Stop this madness / I want you.”
It sounds impossible, but the song works. It’s chilling. Case is not only the most compelling female artist I’ve heard, she’s one of the most wonderfully strange songwriters, period.
1. Doves: Kingdom of Rust
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2009 found the band topping 2005’s masterful Some Cities with this year’s wonderful and overlooked Kingdom of Rust. Kingdomis not an album unified by theme and pace, which is what you’d usually look for in a great album. It is, however, unified by the Doves’ adventurous sonic palette, a space-rocking sound that is comparable to Radiohead. Jimi William’s vocals have a consistent quality that bind the songs together no matter the stylistic influence -- tracks draw from from Johnny Cash “Kingdom of Rust”) to Blondie (not kidding. Listen to “Compulsion” and compare to “Heart of Glass”).
The Doves manage to make every song really terrific. Even when “Compulsion” plunges the band into Blondie-like disco-pop, the band retains something grand. Every song on the album is an accomplishment. “10:03” builds slowly into a loud rush of big-guitar chord power and “The Outsiders” and Greatest Denier” are some of the band’s most muscular rockers to date. The band does beauty well, too. The melancholy “Birds Flew Backwards” is a slow, penatrating song and the anthemic “Lifelines” closes the album with a rush of optimism
Kingdom of Rust is a big album with perfect production. It’s not the synthetic overproduction of Weezer or the contemptible fellow Englishmen, Muse. Each Kingdomis composed of big, spacious songs with spectacular arrangements of cinematic proportions. It’s an album you can easily get lost in and by far, my favorite of the year.
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