20111229

Best of 2011 (w/ Mixtape)

Active Child - You Are All I See
The album opens with a harp arpeggio loftily carrying the song along, and the same ethereal foundation runs through the album, paired with R&B style vocals, for a surprisingly delightful combination.

The Antlers - Burst Apart
One of the most sonically beautiful records I've ever heard. Glassy guitar textures lay a foundation for bouncing bass lines and big beats as they carry soaring falsettos through some of the best songs of the year.

Atlas Sound - Parallax
Bradford Cox continues his spelunking through the depths of rock n' roll history with another consistently great record. It's less ambient than Logos, but the same ambitious streak runs through it.  Cox apparently suffered a nervous breakdown around the same time as the recording of this album, which usually happens when an artist pushes themselves as hard as this.

BRAIDS - Native Speaker
The biggest surprise of the year, with looped guitars, layers and layers of keyboards, and Yeah Yeah Yeahs-like vocals about love and sex and everything between the two. Dynamically, the record goes between bouncy dream pop and swelling, ambient post-rock, pulling both of them off with the same professional panache.

Bon Iver - Bon Iver
See: lush.

Caveman - CoCo Beware
Glittery, folk-tinged indie rock in the vein of Grizzly Bear. One of the most listenable albums of the year.

Fleet Foxes - Helplessness Blues
Golden harmonies, sunshiny acoustic guitars, and some newfound psychedelic bents take Fleet Foxes' debut to higher heights and lower lows, filling all of the space in between. If this doesn't win a Grammy I'll be very surprised.

James Blake - James Blake
This is what happens when a dubstep producer takes a chill pill and listens to too much soul music. Down tempo and a little off kilter, this is a record for late night drives.

Kurt Vile - Smoke Ring For My Halo
Imagine a super high Bruce Springsteen floating through space. And make it better than you're imagining. Lazy, hazy, and spacy, this is the dictionary definition of chill music.

M83 - Hurry Up, We're Dreaming
Through the 22 songs on this double album, Hurry Up takes the listener through the deepest reaches of synthpop, post-rock, dreampop, and indie rock, and the ride is well worth it.

Neon Indian - Era Extraña
Teetering between chillwave and shoegaze, Era Extraña is just a plain happy, fun record.

Panda Bear - Tomboy
The same great textures that made up the excellent soundscapes of Person Pitch put to pop structure.  Hazy keyboards, lo-fi beats, and the warmest harmonies this side of the Beach Boys make this one of the most hypnotizing records of the year.

Radiohead - The King of Limbs (and related singles)
What happens when you've exhausted the known reaches of western music, pop and otherwise? You just keep making great records. 

St. Vincent - Strange Mercies
Annie Clark just keeps getting better. This record is a balancing act between beauty and chaos, and she tiptoes the line masterfully.

Washed Out - Within and Without
In a year so clogged with chillwave, it takes a special record to stand out among the haze, and this is a worthy contender.

Wilco - The Whole Love
After a couple albums that were good and not much more, Wilco finally has gotten back to their studio noodling, and the results are better than we could have asked for. Glitches and fuzzboxes are back, as well as folk epics topping ten minutes in length. Wilco, it's good to have you back.

20110831

2011's Must Listens (so far)

There has been so much good music this year that I haven't been able to give it all the time it deserves. However, there have been many, many releases that I have been able to give the time they deserve, and more.

LISTEN TO THESE ALBUMS. ALL OF THEM.

The Antlers - Burst Apart
Etherial and beat-heavy, this release features a bunch of songs about heartbreak and not being okay with yourself.

Beach Fossils - What a Pleasure EP
This is what happens when a surf rock band with a decent debut decides to try their hand at post-punk. Think pre-dancepop New Order or U2's Boy album, but with more sunshine.

Bobby - Bobby
Ambient folk music--this makes For Emma Forever Ago seem straightforward.

Bon Iver - Bon Iver
We've seen what Justin Vernon can do by himself with no budget. This shows what he can do with a bunch of a friends and quite a bit of toys. He breaks the chains of his folk-singer mantle and dips into indie rock, chillwave, and 80s pop. Anyone who's kept up with his side projects won't be surprised.

BRAIDS - Native Speaker
Loop driven and beat heavy one track, soft and swelly the next, all while their frontwoman sings about sex.

Cults - Cults
This is what Beach House would sound like if they were more fun and not so French.

Fleet Foxes - Helplessness Blues
An incredible follow up to one of the most fantastic debuts in recent history. Harmony riched folk songs of existential crisis.

James Blake - James Blake
Soul songs by a dubstep producer. This is what ghosts listen to when they want to relax.

Kurt Vile - Smoke Ring For My Halo
Americana at it's finest. This is what dreaming sounds like.

The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart - Belong
Do you miss 90s alt-pop already? Well, here's your fix. Think Belle & Sebastian with more distortion.

Panda Bear - Tomboy
Chillwave at its finest. The reverb drips off of this one. More straightforward than Person Pitch but with the same hypnotic production.

Radiohead - The King Of Limbs
I can't imagine why anyone wouldn't have listened to this yet, unless you were turned off by the haters. Well, haters gon' hate. This is a fine addition to the Radiohead canon, featuring some of the best beatwork, most claustrophobic, and prettiest songwriting of their career.

Thurston Moore - Demolished Thoughts
Remember how good Sea Change by Beck was? This is an acoustic record in the same way that was, with Beck behind the controls. All the same great guitar work and circling composition Moore has given us in Sonic Youth, stripped bare with strings and electronic bleeps tossed in for good measure.

20110604

Half-year list

I've been wildly inactive for how much music has been going through my speakers, so I'm just going to make some lists, and maybe some descriptions.

BEST ALBUMS SO FAR
Fleet Foxes - Helplessness Blues
So much more spacious and ominous and human than the first. Absolutely fantastic.

The Antlers - Burst Apart
Ambient textures with huge drums and soulful falsetto-sung lyrics. I'm a fan.

The Pains of Being Pure At Heart - Belong
Both more aggressive and sweeter than the debut, and so so so catchy.

Thurston Moore - Demolished Thoughts
You can't expect the larger force behind Sonic Youth and Beck to get together and make a bad album. Spacey and glassy and mashed up and all sorts of other things you wouldn't expect an acoustic album to be.

Radiohead - The King of Limbs
I don't care what any critic says, TKOL is on par with any of the rest of Radiohead's catalogue, matching psychedelic and Beatles influences (Morning Mr. Magpie, Little By Little) with more beat work than they have ever done (Bloom, Feral), as well as writing the most disarming song of their career (Give Up the Ghost). And at only 5 minutes shorter than In Rainbows, the complaint of it being too short is hardly valid. It just leaves you wanting more.

Still on my list to familiarize myself with is TV on the Radio's "Nine Types of Light," Lykke Li's "Wounded Rhymes," and Panda Bear's "Tomboy," which I have greatly enjoyed so far. Expressly not on this list is Death Cab's "Codes and Keys."


ALBUMS I HAVE GOTTEN INTO
Beach House - Teen Dream
I checked this album out the first week of the new year to see what the fuss was all about, and I love it.

Tame Impala - Innerspeaker
I've said so much about Tame Impala on here, so I will just recap: so so so so good

Dirty Projectors - Bitte Orca
How did I even miss this when it came out? Every melody line is flawless, and every harmony is so sweet I get a sugar high just listening to it. Every guitar line is fresh and every song just gets better with every listen.

School of Seven Bells - Alpinisms
Girl-fronted, electronic-driven shoegaze revival? I am all about every part of this.

Panda Bear - Person Pitch
Another 08 album that slid under my radar. This album isn't so much a collection of songs as it is a collection of atmospheres to cover yourself with.

The Unicorns - Who Will Cut Our Hair When We're Gone?
The funniest, catchiest, greatest lo-fi indie you'll hear.

Cymbals Eat Guitars - Why There Are Mountains
This album sounds like you took a mixtape of all of my favorite bands and the tape was corrupted so all the songs spliced together. omg.

Interpol - Turn on the Bright Lights/Antics
I never gave Interpol too much of a listen when these albums first came out. But I since have, and have been rewarded by the first two brilliant albums of a band that unfortunately has turned a little sour.

My Bloody Valentine - Loveless
I have recently found the time to finally give this album the attention it deserves, and I have ended up kicking myself for passing up a $15 copy I found once. Stupid, stupid, stupid.


RECORDS THAT HAVE NOT LEFT MY TURNTABLE
Sunny Day Real Estate - How It Feels To Be Something On
Their absolute best record, and one of my favorite records of all time.

Television - Marquee Moon
Do you love Wilco's guitar work? Then listen to this 1977 breakthrough from contemporaries of the Ramones.

Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion
My favorite from them. So synthy and poppy. It tugs at the heart of my ears everytime.

Deerhunter - Cryptograms, Flourescent Grey EP, Microcastles, Weird Era Cont., Halcyon Digest
DEERHUNTER HOW U BE SO GOOD???

20110503

Fleet Foxes - Helplessness Blues

Ten songs into the twelve-song playlist of the psychedelia-tinged folk rock of Helplessness Blues, something interesting happens. Robin Pecknold, the hippie poster-boy for the soothing harmonies and pastoral imagery of the folk revival that Fleet Foxes helped usher in two years ago, gets angry. He gets angry, and it's the most arresting moment the group has put to record.
Two releases ago, Fleet Foxes emerged with the Sun Giant EP, already brimming with harmonies and folksy highs and lows, sounding like the folk version of the Beach Boys. Their sound was so fully formed for the EP that on continuous listens, it's easy to miss the change from Sun Giant and their debut full-length. Not that that's a bad thing--Fleet Foxes are the best at what they do (in fact, Fleet Foxes is the reason I don't like Mumford and Sons. They just set the bar too high), but the Sun Giant/self-titled combo needed no follow up. Contained therein was a world of green fields and yellow sun and budding trees and a golden hue to everything (even when singing about winter). And to be honest, after a while, all that summer started to wear on me. After too much time in its earshot, I grew lethargic, like after a day at the beach without sunscreen. And to be honest, the thought of a follow up frightened me. All that was good and pleasing about Fleet Foxes was contained in that album and a half. How could an attempt at a follow do anything but overripen their sound?

By growing, apparently. However spacious and thick the first record, Robin & Co. somehow found room to get even bigger--and at times ominous. The first track opens with Robin asking questions of worth and maturity and accomplishment, with much the same passive acceptance as in "He Doesn't Know Why" where he sings, "There's nothing I can do." As the record spins on through tracks like Bedouin Dress and The Plains/Bitter Dancer, it slips seamlessly between the familiar sunshiny folk rock thick with harmonies and minor-key swells with a similar tone to the Biblical prophets. The title-track contains the most bittersweet sentiment on the record, with Robin admitting that he would forsake uniqueness to serve something greater than himself, in the most familiar-sounding track. The album's instrumental, The Cascades, follows, showing that, in addition to widening his lyrical themes, Mr. Pecknold has also gotten better as a guitar player, ripping through breakneck arpeggios effortlessly.
A few pleasing tracks later, we finally reach the record's masterwork: The Shrine/An Argument, an eight minute breakup song filled with imagery of apple trees and pennies in fountains and the aforementioned anger, manifest when Robin sings in despair, bitter gloating, or jealousy, "Sunlight over me no matter what I do." The anger quickly gives way to a blissful key change, but it's impact is still felt. It's the type of moment that reminds me why I got into music in the first place. The opening section soon gives way to a cymbal-crash and organ pound that makes the explosive sections on "Mykonos" and "Blue Ridge Mountains" seem tame, until it ends with one final crash, the lone acoustic guitar hanging, with the organ and a sound like rubbed glass swelling to join as the Foxes layer their harmonies on as Robin sings about apple trees and being washed away by the ocean. Soon, in the albums largest wtf moment (and my favorite moment), two saxophones stolen by John Coltrane's Ascension sessions burst in screaming and cracking and flailing about, as a string section and drum set wax psychedelic underneath.
The last two tracks adequately bring it back to center after such a far wander of their 'signature sound,' with "Blue Spotted Tail" featuring a lone Robin Pecknold doing what he does best before "Grown Ocean" brings the whole band back to close with the closest Fleet Foxes has ever come to initiating their own wild rumpus, bringing the album to well deserved and satisfying close.

In the end, we never should have been afraid of what a group of Seattlites who are completely enamored with music and the making of it would create--the record is fantastic. So fantastic, in fact, that in the year preceded by one in which Mumford and Sons and the Avvett Brothers were nominated for Grammys and Arcade Fire actually won Album of the Year, I would be surprised if Helplessness Blues wasn't at least nominated for Album of the Year.

20110409

My New Favorite Bands.

Dirty Projectors.
Islands.
The Unicorns.
Danielson Famile.
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah.
Two Door Cinema Club.