Best
Music of 2012 The Year of Chamber Drones, Cabaret singers, and retro-rock… and
the artifices of transforming space.
The
year of tribal retrogressions, disrupting chronologies, and chamber droning. The arrows flung to the past and future
accelerating in speed from each other like aftershocks from the recurring Big
Bang of mortality. The heart attacked
the cathedral of “art” this year, smashed it, and found the results in a
thousand shimmering shards, uprooted from the Masonic source and left for
future analysis of the detritus. In the
meantime, regular rock and indie sensibilities further lost the Secret Societal
energy in the entropic nightspot of
ambient electronics. The “voices” left
are very old… with very uneven outcomes.
Let your fucking stumbling blocks be stepping stones; fine, it’s time
gentlemen. The space might just as well
be, e.g. the cool sidewalk after closing time (which remains on someone else’s
side).
1.
John Murry – The Graceless Age
For
what it’s worth, I know both the metaphorical and tangible being of those
colored balloons sold on the astonishing corners of the Mission; although it
was the projects in Venice and alleys in the Pico Union. Once known, they are scars in the blood forever. But
this is about the “magic” of rock and roll.. the gritty Americana voice, the
“classic” production (string quartets, crunchy guitars, pretty piano fills, and
the passion of trying to figure this shit
out. That non-ironic, prophetic voice
isn’t possible in pop music much anymore, if at all. He’s the descendant of Faulkner, and the
compelling power of narrative carrying culture and spirit (near OD’ing on 16th and Mission becomes the
centerpiece for the ritualistic if
friable work of rebirth). Story-telling
as the foundation of real Folk music. Mom’s
voice et.al. in musique
verite portraits of background information for the “character”
created. Naked and artful, these songs
are so out-of-time for an age that doesn’t even know that grace is scarce. Doesn’t even know the definition of grace. The
space is a reprieve found in music with earnest guitar, root-source voice, and
production and melodies and lyrics that matter-of-factly mess up the
heart. The reprieve that simulates the grace
still sought unknowingly and numb.
2.
Various Artists - Lost in the Humming Air (music inspired by
Harold Budd)
Speaking
of Root Source, here’s a tribute to someone who was that of modern Ambient
music as much as Eno himself (see below), the 75 year old Budd. Budd’s abstract and painterly minimalist
compositions are championed by the current international stars of the
form: Deaf Center, Loscil, Xela,
Biosphere, Porn Sword Tobacco, Marsen Jules… and although each has its unique
language, all the cuts shimmer with Budd-like momentum… if you can have
momentum from one tone held for a whole minute.
A monumental collection of nods in the Right Direction. The space is
cathedral-cosmic in dimension and the grand organ resonates with what DNA is
left.
3.
Leonard Cohen – Old Ideas
So
it shouldn’t surprise that a work called old ideas doesn’t surprise. Its absolute expectedness, its inevitable
last call is its accomplishment. The themes, meditations and prayers on human
frailty and mortality are in the Cohen tradition. The almost-octogenarian’s admissions of
desire and depression are presented in the RealPolitik of aging, but still with
a blessed sacramental swing and sway. Confessional and digressive narratives
offered with the tricks of the poet/priest.
Darkness the final prize. “Crazy
has places to hide in that are deeper than any goodbye.” That Hammond organ is like the bell ringing
in mass; the spirit again incarnate in the oh too mutable flesh. The space is the very human body, its access
and decay naked to the airs and practices of life and death.
4.
Ghosting Season – The Very Last
of the Saints
An
overwhelming two-CD exercise in urbane urban chill trance-dance electo-tribal
musics. The human side of IDM,
mechanical crackles and rainforest angel song blending nicely in an intense combination,
voices calling to action. Chugging Last
to Train to Lhasa easy-listening.
Elegant by nature, and lofty in impact, brilliant composition to the
limits of this genre. The space is lit,
filmed, redacted, spliced for the film Kubrick never made; masque ball and
grand hotel lobby with the chic toe tapping.
5.
Loscil – Sketches of New Brighton
Another
excellent and robust dosage of Ambient Classic from the highest post-Eno expert
purveyor of the genre, Scott Morgan. The
quiet storm in the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligent Life. But no hyphens for this music; it is electronic. Delivered with a high expectation of the
listener’s compositional perceptivity.
Not volume, or sound treatments, but structure, theme, counterpoint, and
synthetic but affective composition.
Particles of manufactured sound settling in general and in particular.
Best appreciated if allowed to play over and over and over…. Four months in the
CD player in the Prius (which details argue the quality of the music, if not
chuckles as to the biography). Space is
a particular early morning highway, traffic moving particularly smoothly, and going
no particular place.
6.
Godspeed You Black Emperor –
Alelujah! Don’t Bend! Ascend!
A
crescendo of jet-engine intensity as the streets fill with protests. Bagpipe drones chewed up in the rhythmic
machinery of revolt. Relentless in
attack, yet matured from their last releases (can it really be 10 years ago?). This is not post-rock raging against some
Machine any more… this is a wise shriek and a focused rumble; raging guitar
feedback in counterpoint as tight as Bach.
A welcome return to the band who can be more political with timbre and
time signature than most can from written screed. The only revolution is of the cell. The space is the aural cell unlocked again.
7. Ian Hunter – When I’m President
It’s been years since I woke up singing a song. Three times in the last month I’ve awakened
signing “When I’m President.” I am not now, nor never have been really, a
roots-rock fan; I did however love Mott and the solo albums through the early
80’s. I clearly understood the brilliance
and, in my own way, rode on until I failed.
I am clueless as to why this record is so good. The songwriting, the silly “clever” if
hearfelt lyrics, the crunchy riff-laden guitar work and the classic rock
rhythms… are all good on their own terms, but give no hint as to why this has such
power. I think it is his brilliant
vocals; he sings before, after, or RIGHT on the beat perfectly. He has that yearning gruffness he’s always
had. He sounds like Dylan, Springsteen,
Keef, any number of old farts wish they could sound like. It isn’t higher on this list only because of
my cowardice and fear of not seeming cool.
Honest and sustaining rock opening its treasures only after many
multiple listenings. The space is the
familiar heart. Why, indeed, isn’t that
cool?
8. Swans – Seer
A work I should love a lot, its classic and summation-heavy doom-droning
gestures and navel-gazing sonics are up several of my alleys. But it’s cranky and ill-tempered where
transcendent is called for. The vocals
(Iggy Pop in Depends?) weigh it down beneath the surface where there is air. Its strength is its weakness, and so it
deserves its overrated status. The room
has storage boxes neatly stacked.
9. Damien Jurado – Maraqopa
West coast folk-rock, when not ironic nor self-referential, has
limited access and few pure purveyors. Jurado
keeps getting better and older. This is
his best. Glorious melodic songs, with satisfying instrumental arrangements
(that psychedelic guitar on the first cut, though never re-appearing, sets the
tone for the album). His voice sounds
like the plaintive next step of Jason Molina or the disappointing preciousness
of that Red House Painters guy. The
plaintive and thoughtful next step. The space
is a Sausalito waterfront café, late fall evening, the fog rolling in under the
Golden Gate, and there is port and Howl on the table.
10. John Zorn – The Gnostic Preludes
Bill Frissell at his most melodic and least studious. Zorn’s circular and spinning compositions
have an almost Hassidic intensity. They
are as familiar as your own body on first listening and sound brand new after
one thousand (and, after Deep Alpha I did play this more than anything else
this year). Music so intelligent it
calms the ego down. Much of harp-like
vibes, (and sometimes a real harp) in counterpoint to the tasteful guitar, is
what it must have been for David to charm the demons out of King Saul, letting
him sleep at long last. Music that
mesmerizes. Music that edifies. The space is a mountain top monastery in Big
Sur.
11.
Shackleton
– Music for the Quiet Hour
A sprawling ambitious 2 CD opus, as much science fiction
soundtrack as dubstep club music. A
mélange of sonic tricks and trade
offs: a rainstick fronting Gregorian
Chant, a Mothership Bass Rumble constant behind spoken language, synthetic
reverberations and close-mike organic found sound. Dystopian by genre, the total is an
envigorating glimpse that maybe doom isn’t so bad after all. The Quiet Hour, endlessly layered and fascinating,
is the void after time end. The space is
a cosmic morgue.
12. Kyle Bobby
Dunn – Bring Me the Head of Kyle Bobby Dunn
Double
CD of long lines of processed guitar drones.
The map of composition is 3-D and friendly,
soothing
and baleful. Chamber drone in its most
clear representation: dignified, patient
and insidiously powerful. The space is a
well organized desktop.
13.
Duane
Pitre – Feel Free
The odd title notwithstanding, this is the nexus of all the
ambient-electronic music I like and “serious” composition. Pitre is a modern accessible composer that
eschews filmtrack shapes to layer on textures of real instruments and
electronic treatments… which ultimately typify my newest favorite kind of
music, chamber drone. Calm, cerebral,
spacious music that no longer rests as an armchair.
14.
Brian
Eno - Lux
Although absolutely of a piece with the classic era of Eno ambient
music (Music for Airports, Discreet Music etc.), and more satisfying in that
respect than anything he’s done in decades, it’s not retro-ambient. It’s neo-classical ambient, soft, linear and
flowing, surprising, relentelessly and intensely relaxing. This sourcepoint is the seed of half of what
I buy and listen to now. He apparently
composed it as an installation for a hall in an Italian palace; the music is
full of air and light. It’s definitive
for its genre, and its space may as well making my forest cabin that hall in
Turin.
15.
Goat
– World Music
Despite the silly “atavistic small pagan village” backstory, this
is in fact the sound of some pre-christian Euro-tribe trance-like garage
rock. Sometimes sounding like the lost
tapes of Popol Vuh (see below) rehearsal sessions, circa 1971, sometimes
sounding like a parking lot at a Dead show in 1978, but at all times sounding
like some serious challenge to the corporate hegemony of modern popular music. It may be a joke, but a very serious,
Loki-driven, goof on the modern world. All
bow down in the ancient firelight to the wah-wah pedal and bongos. How do you catch imaginary butterflies in the
falling snow? The space is the circle
around the bonfire.
16.
Wild
Nothings – Nocturne
Ok so I really did like the Cure, and I guess I miss them even
though they are not gone. I don’t want
Robert Smith to get old and fat; mascara shouldn’t be worn by the middle aged
of either gender, it cakes in the wrinkles.
So this resurrects an insistence that is wrinkle-free; those guitar
lines and counterpoint bass figures are eternal youth audibilized. Avalonesque algorithms of bittersweet and
anxious Telecaster -soaked sadness. The
hunt continues. Now the parties over and
this music is tired and drained of relevance.
For students of the disintegration and the jagged edge. The space is study-hall, with rhythm guitar
splitting the difference between nocturnes and nowhere.
17.
Bat
for Lashes – The Haunted Man
Started out as the best Kate Bush pastiche … only I kept listening. Quirky production – sometimes Druidic hip
hop, sometimes artsongs. It’s a strength
that it’s hard to categorize, and it keeps running away from
understanding. Something simple, clear,
and poppy morphs into prog-folk rock danceable drama. Perhaps the record that I like most even
though I didn’t want to. Maybe it’s
because she’s closer to Sheila Chandra while hiding in Kate Bush clothing. Something subtlety dangerous, gosh, even
haunting about this cool mess. On a
train to Devon.
18.
Neil
Young – Psychedelic Pill
Sophomoric garage
rehearsals by the bard of bad folk-rock lyricism and his favorite three chord
simpletons Crazy Horse. It’s still
summer on Zuma Beach in some alternate universe. It’s still out on the mainline in some
memoir. It’s still rocking in the free
world. It’s still a rich vein to
mine. It’s still a fire dance. The long and wide arc of guitar grunge
history bends to some fed back hunger
for peace and justice. No regrets in the
failed dream. The space is Alice’s
Restaurant on Skyline, a dented pick up in the parking lot, weed in the
ashtray, a Tuesday night and he’s had too much to drink and he dances to the
riff, but the waitress is so kind to the old man… she was just like he was.
19.
Bahamas
– Barchord
Fresh and unvarnished production presents a rootsy stew of
Canadian country-rock and pop hooks. The
voice is the child of John Hiatt and Lou Reed; the lyrics are more Toronto than
Nashville, but the school is still hard-knocks and the redeeming qualities of a
good woman. The space is marriage
therapist’s yellow pad of hungover notes and plans to move on.
20.
Django
Django – Django Django
The well of intelligent Brit-Pop still not dry. Devo meets the Beach Boys meets XTC meets
Beta Band. “Clever” as a musical
ingredient? Nice rhythms and surprising
textures (Mumford and Sons covering a German techno riff). Vocals, (and therefore) words very up in the
mix, and stand up to the scrutiny. And
the cagey harmonies make this group a British Fleet Foxes. Space is a bedsit in Oxford where the roommates are
playing Monopoly in Latin.
21.
Biospher
e – N- Plants
The originator of electro-industrial thump/thump IDM ambient,
returns unfashionably, but deeply, to some Berlinesque urbane update for 2012. Albeit
there is a nod to the organic in the title, this future is more gleaming city
than sunny garden. Case again of the “modern” sounding
comfortingly retro. Easy listening car
trip soundscapes with rhythm and humor.
Space is a late model BMW humming along on the autobahn.
22.
Thomas
Stronen & Iain Ballamy – Mercurial Balm
Once upon a time there was an avant-jazz group called Food that
defined a genre of Northern Lights regional improv music. (OK, didn’t define, years after the great Scandinavian jazz renaissance
of the 70’s). They return with a
super-group of guest artists (Fennesz and Molvaer) whose guitar and horn
additions give atmospheric support to the sax/drums workout. Listen to the drums on any cut and (like
Elvin Jones) and hear Stronen take the rhythm making to sublime and centering
prayer. The atmospheric cool blue notes
blown hot as starlight physic. Healing,
catharsis. The space is a Left Bank apartment, stones and beams, and shamans.
23.
Steven
Halpern – Deep Alpha
Oh, what the heck. Half my
music sounds like massage/spa background crap anyway and I probably played this
more than anything else on the list. Why
not go to the source. It is, however,
true that there is biochemical change from these frequencies and
modulations. A great follow-up to last
year’s Deep Theta. Good to play then in
sequence. Really. Space is a hot tub.
24.
Pinback
- Information Retrieved
Easy going SoCal Beach progressive Indie rockers return after many
years off, and wind up sounding like a chilled out Rush, the Canadian band, not
the sensation. The uncluttered metric
jangle and interplay of guitars and comfortably numb vocals keep track of
not-so-simple songs. Maybe their best
ever; the space has been lost but we’ll look for it tomorrow.
25.
Eleh
– Radiant Intervals
Solid droning sound in decibels and ranges that tickle the sternum
and drain sinuses. The physicality of
soundwaves. The reminder that the music
of the spheres might not be too sweet. Space is the Large Hadron Collider or searches
for intelligent life outside the Milky Way.
26.
Spiritualized
– Sweet Heart Sweet Light
Beatle-proper and
over-produced, somebody needs to keep the Brit pop dream alive. Every song and every album by the Spaceman
arrives fresh, and about half-way through I lose interest and lose track. Its unraveling is perhaps its point. The tradition corrodes. The space is sitting in an English garden
waiting for the sun… eggman, spaceman…
27.
The
Men – Open Your Heart
I love this band for challenging the definitions of what cool
music is supposed to be. They are
sometime neo-punk, sometimes classic
rock, sometimes Sonic Youth urban dissidents and dissonances… but they are full
bore and relentless. Focused and free, a
band to watch for the future; there is immaturity here. Is it their strength, weakness, or both? Space is washing your face before class.
28.
Fiona
Apple – The Idler Wheel….
I had a love-hate relationship with this American music. Stick a
feather in your cap and call it chemed-up macaroni. Sensitive goth-girl music
never my favorite and “quirk” in general having limited attraction (the very
thought of Joanna Newsome producing a nauseous mini-dread), but these
asymmetrical art-songs pulled me back in, and the maturity of her bitterness
and refusal to compromise scored points.
America’s songbird… deep in the coal mine, time and lights out. Anthems for the self-loathers among us… count
me in with a swinging beat. A third
campfire songs, a third cabaret songs, and a third swan song. The space is the saloon where the skinny lady
sang, it’s all over now.
29.
Jens
Lekman – I Know What Love Isn’t
Perfect pop artifice. Hooks
and transitions, melodic and lyric subtlety.
In a parallel universe his voice would inspire heart-throb girl fan
screams. The melancholy at the heart of
his work is more out front here than ever.
A song cycle of a beautiful loser.
Artsongs for the narcissistic and depressed, whose medication is sublime melody and crafty
arrangements. The space is a therapist’s
office in Gothenburg loft.
30.
Holy
Other – Held
Club ambient dubby electronic etudes pulled apart and tossed in
fragments into air, not smoke. The space
extends out in the desert and over the bar where there is a rainbow of obscure
liquor and an appointment for a massage.
31.
Hilary
Hahn & Hauschka – Silfra
Classical violinist and treated piano player/composer create
something far exceeding the sum of its parts.
Not neo-classical nor ambient, it is serious and beautiful, and
(apparently) as they improvise off each other, reach new territory. Space is optional, provisional, but enough.
32.
Grizzly
Bear – Shields
Folky, folksy, and a
harmonic convergence of just what you’d expect.
The space is a rehearsal room in the basement of a humanities building
at Oberlin or Lewis and Clark.
33.
Ariel
Pinks Haunted Graffiti – Mature Themes
Annoying, catchy, brilliant creep-pop from the master of dirty
hair and telecaster melodicism. Reverb
chorus and petulant leads; the space is a therapist’s office in Beverley Hills
adjacent.
34.
Johan
Johansson – Copenhagen Dreams
Cloudy and cool movie soundtrack for walking through Scandinavian
capitols or museums with paintings of the back of women’s heads. The space is a dark theater with your life on
the screen.
35.
Sylvester
Anfang II – Latitudes series
Neo psychedelic improvisation from the children of Popol Vuh (see
above)… I believe they are part of some Flemish separatist movement, but the
extended jams are fresh off the corner of some garage in the Haight in early
1971.
36.
DB’s
– Falling Off the Sky
Lovely retro farfisa, three chord with a break, classic period
rock, produced this year. Like the Swans
they resurrect the influences they created which make them sound like a
thousand other bands who copied them since.
The space is a time travel machine back to a youth you never had.
37.
Father
John Mistry – Fear Fun
Another retro-like California paean to (also) a past that never
was. The body can only handle this abuse
while young. None of what this music is
is young anymore, so the irony is its strength and limitation. The space is a nicely maintained stucco 3
bedroom house in Silverlake with the bong left of the coffee table.
38.
Lower
Dens – Nootropics
I think I hear Nino Rota in some of these bitter/happy tracks. A break and harmony in fifths seems almost
like medieval music – there’s a residue of folk rock in the indie posing. Dreamy in the school of Yo la Tengo, with
maybe a dash of the Go Betweens. So
Fellini, Georgia and Ira, troubadour tunes that could also be theme music for a
kids show, and an occasional nod to k.d, lang… why isn’t this better? Space is my couch reading the New Yorker.
39. The DB’s – Falling Off the Sky
I greeted this with great enthusiasm and it was
glorious pop song perfection for about three listens, then it got mildly
annoying. Listened again and confirmed
that they are geniouses. A world where a hook and a catchy chorus were high
are. Glad they got together and are
still making music, and this is as good as what they did 30 years ago, only I
am not where they were and I was 30 years ago.
The space is Thomas Wolfe and DJ Shadow.
40.
James
Brooks – Land Observations – Roman Roads IV-XI.
Strings plunked simply, repetitively, the hypnotic electronic
hollowing out of travel. Fragments of melodies
and harmonics stripped down, but left with a warmly analog phantom limb. The
barely competent guitar playing rings and plucks its tube-amp tone with a
comforting salty reverb, and seems to be a song from a simpler time, a folk
song or a desert-twang dance-trance groove (African or the Mojave), the
rhythmic response to the call of what’s left of your heart. Hit the road Jack, with friendly company and
toe-tapping resolution.
41.
Scythling
– Smokefall
Improvised doom-sludge par excellence. Great slow moving tectonic plates of guitar
noise with distant drumming , the metric of Fate itself. The space is a universe closing in for the
final and mortal destination.
42.
Mark
Demarco - 2
If Ariel Pink is tongue in cheek, this licks the lips in its love
for deconstruction. It’s danceable all
the way through, and its respect for “chops” isn’t kidding. Which is to say the space for their friendly
retro-viral rolling rock could just as well be a frat party at ‘Bama as well as
a brownstone in the hippest area of Brooklyn.
43.
Tim
Hecker and Daniel Lopatin – Instrumental Tourist
More industrial and disjointed than what usual in Hecker’s smooth
electronic haze of counterpoint hiss, buzz, and drone. Fragments, aggregated with what might even be nerd-humor. Space is an embassy on Alpha Centauri.
44.
Terence
Dixon – From the Far Future, Part 2
Minimalist dance/trance with laser light show potential, yet a
jazz dissonance embedded in the driving fragments. This is relentless and chem.-love friendly.
The power is in its lack of development, its love of the
superficial. The space in on the floor
of the closet looking for crumbs.
45.
Sleep
Research Facility – Stealth
Buzzes, alarms, hums, drones modulating slowly in an
analog-acoustic space of a Stealth bomber hanger in Cambridgeshire. I guess they call it deep drone. It’s comforting, but not sleep inducing. For such minimalist ambient “music” it’s
calming but engaging/disturbing at the same time. The space is where it is.
46.
Ulrich
Schnauss and Mark Peters –Underrated Silence
Progressive chill wave?
Complicated elevator music? Great
washes of synths run in and among simple base and guitar strumming. Calculated and pulled apart. Atmospheric is the atmosphere is in some
alternate universe where “calm” does not mean “peace”, but could mean
“challenge.” The space is the slow burn
of sunrise driving away from the party.
47.
Mirroring
– Foreign Body
Soft-core droning with whisper-friendly girl vocals with a touch
of Brit-like folk rock (Grouper after all is ½ of this). Minimalist tension in the friendliest of
environments. If “quiet is the new loud”
is retro now, perhaps this is “soft is the new edgy” in 2012. Lots of
gentle and enduring space, which might have its ground in a craftsman
bungalow in Portland with light rain outside and steaming Earl Grey on the
table.
48.
Damien
Dempsey – Almighty Love
Those Dublin working class vowels and simplistic political
yearnings work better than ever after the total collapse of the Celtic Tiger, and
the mega-capitalist exclusion of the marginalized is no longer the only villain,
Dempsey struggles through the most personal of darknesses to glory, it’s the
Gaelic way after all. Suicide, drink,
drugs, unemployment, oppression and the longing for an almighty love that burns
all the pain away. Folk melodies, strumming acoustic guitars and the reified fiddle
and penny whistle. A simple mind, a
lovely voice, and the long view across the wide dark ocean of loss.
49.
Tame
Impala – Lonerism
Finally kicked-in for me.
The sophomoric psychedelicism of their last has been constructed with a
much larger footprint, although the late 60s idiom is still the lengua franca
of this stoner dancetrack for catching butterflies. The vocals sometimes drag it over in Oasis
territory, but that’s not an entirely bad thing. Paisley and flower power are still…powerful.
50.
Grumbling
Fur – Latitude series
Recalling a time of stark and minimalist Brit prog rock (Brian
Protheroe? Robert Wyatt? Meddle-era Pink Floyd) the loping inevitability at an
intersect of Druidic folk and classic Indian raga shapes, with posh boarding
school boy vocals. Churning art rock as
a form of meditation.
49. Alejandro Escovedo – Big Station
Rootsy and plaintive AmeriMexicana. Although the “chicano” perspective is more
Rolling Stones Aftermath than Paco Everyman.
Remember when rock and roll had “swagger” in palette of colors, even if
wounded. Not to mention the tasty horn
charts, remember that? Don’t give up on
love indeed. (Extra credit for a sleazy, boozy “Sabor a mi”). A motel room in Albuquerque after copping or
a 12 step meeting down the street.
50.
Haxan
Cloak – Men Who Parted the Sea to Devour the Water - Latitudes series
Melancholic drones, witches’ music, soundtrackish, and just a
touch tribal… though the natives-who-are-restless are on the other side of the
foggy valley.
51.
Julia
Holter – Ekstasis
I appreciate the project, and the artful arty artistic preciousness
of her …art. Some passages are more
Petula Clark than Laurie Anderson. I
also hear churches in the pixie kingdom.
I hear angel wing fashion shows.
And everything is so fashioned. Constructed. Space is a youth center dance in a particularly
affluent section of Oslo.
52.
Sigur
Ros – Valturi
Although I first heard it in its entirety on the Icelandic Air
flight to Reykjavik, and I was ready to like it as a “return to form”,
ultimately it seemed tepid. Sometime
soft isn’t the new hard, it’s just soft.
Pretty. Forgettable. The space is in the living room where
everyone’s left to go outside.
53.
Beach
House - Bloom
Yeah, yeah, it’s
brilliant. I really respect it. I love the 80’s retro flavors. But just like the Cocteau Twins I respect it
more than like it. The space is a corner
on the shelf when it’ll stay for years until I pull it out in the resthome in
2037 and tell Chris, who has put me there though he comes to visit regularly,
see they really do sound like the Cocteau Twins, but I thought they were
saccharine too, did you bring pictures of the dogs?
54.
Mono
– For My Parents
The British version of Explosions in the Sky expand their wall of
sound to symphonic proportions. Although
the loud/soft dynamics work well, the
arrangements owe more to Elgar or Ralph Vaughn Williams than to Roger
Walters. Every now and then a key
transposition or a melodic line sound like a Yanni concert in some ancient amphitheater… PBS
version, not Magus. Sentimental and solid. The space is headphones while running.
55. Sun Kil
Moon – Among the Leaves
One
of my favorite singer/guitarists with the bittersweet voice hits all the right
minor keys in a soundtrack jounal of his life and times. Only his life and times her are his alone,
insular and selfish. The space is an empty train station waiting
room deciding whether to give up.
56. Thomas
Köner - Novaya Zemlya
I
like the minimalism that borders on silence, that quiet right after thunder
(and there’s more than a few field recordings of thunder on this). The
sound a truck on a distant highway. The
sound of broken sewing machine in the next apartment. The hiss of a bad cable connection. Muffled voices and mothership docking. These are more sound installations than
music. The space is that moment in the
solar plexus right after Houston is told there is a problem.
57. John
Talabot - Fin
Proving
that disco has a certain “classic” status and the great production makes the
dance beats sound important and anthemic.
So much white music I listen to, the elements of soul are chic and sexy
in the DJing setting and assert a
humanity this kind of music usually lacks.
The space is a clubland palimpsest dream on summer vacation.
58. Andy Stott
- Luxury Problems
Dancy but high falutin’ baroque electronics. Too ornate, but always keeps you off balance,
with surprises and compositional depth; most electronic music seems horizontal,
this is vertical. A real warehouse of
pop opera detritus, but the lights are low enough to miss the mess.
59. Logn-I-Frahvarfi
Ljoss Myrkrid
I guess it’s dark metal, but it’s got a huge heart
and smoking guitar sound and I give it a 95 ‘cause you can dance to it. Icelandic top of the pops. Hard to know if the monumentally muddy
production is a mistake or intentionally anti-beauty. The space is… well you
need to wear a down jacket.
60. The XX – Coexist
Dark and clubby, hollow and capacious. But filled with stale air, it continued to
droop. Disappointing in that, unlike
their last, it didn’t grow with familiarity but rather evaporated. The flimsy desire. Waking up in the morning and considering the
bad decisions of the previous night.
Maybe you just have to be really young.
Her voice is warm and cold and a star’s turn; but the space wants a
window open.
61. Eivind Aarset – Dream Logic
The majestic nature of quiet. Guitars, bass, percussion “treated” to be a
soft landing in the territory between jazz and post-rock. Acoustic sounds very quiet and very close in
the ear in counterpoint to cosmic search-for-intelligent-life drones. Aleatoric
clinking or twelve-tonish noise melting into cocktail lounge guitar chords.
File under “slow.”
62. Steve Hauschildt – Sequitur
Back in the dawn of “electronic” music, there was a
school of “washes of sound” synth (Vangelis) as distinct from the trippy tribal
compositions (Tangerine Dream) and the ambient comfort food (Eno). I sorta hated Vangelis and that thick
tube-ampy synth sound; but here it is in
all its retro glory, deconstructed with a dance – E-vibe. Gooey music where the music’s texture is
actually an in-joke.
63. Esmerine – Lechuga
Lugubrioius string and voice in an elegiac reminder
that the original chamber drone actually was chamber music. The space is a softly lit funeral parlor with
opiates and style.
64. Keiji Haino, Jim O'Rourke, Oren
Ambarchi - Imikuzushi
Noise experiments that, all good intentions to the
contrary, stayed pretty much like noise after multiple listening. Respect.
65. Efterklang – Piramida
Danish psychedelic rock band sequesters itself in
above-the-arctic-circle abandoned village in Finland to re-kindle its creative
mojo. Winds up more jazz-fusion than
Stephen King short-story.
Space is an abandoned community hall on the tundra.
66. Spain – Sketches of Spain
Longingly stretched out lines of melody and horny
ennui reminding us of the original virtues of slo-core. Om Mani Padme Hum as a pop chorus? Space is a church prayer meeting in Corona
del Mar.
67. Snapshots – Sidesteps
Jumpy dance beats with a space cozily arranged for
green team and a good book inside a bass drum.
68. The Walkmen – Heaven
Nice upon first meeting, but the “songs” simply
crumbled over time; not strong enough to hold the weight of the tasty guitars
and mid-range vocals. A dusty storefront
studio in Austin.
69. Carlos Nino and Friends – Aquariusssss
The producer of the Build an Ark project turns from
psychedelic jam-references to what can only be called “world ambient”, full of
electronic sambas, and found sound evocations.
The narrow streets open to the crowded but quiet (this is a dream
afterall) marketplace. A bird sings, an
organ plays, a plane crosses the sky.
From Los Angeles to your praedial memory of ancestral homelands.
70. Emptyset – Medium
If minimalist industrial noise is your thing (fuzzy
knocks of a broken sewing machine), this is primal. The humming in the walls while frying. The city speaking out in waves of fierce
argumentative noise. The space is the
fusebox.
71. Twin Shadow – confess
Agit-prop pop on the vagaries of love. Noisy without relief. Retro dance weights. And angry love. Space is New York as it used
to be.
72. Beachwood Sparks – Tarnished Gold
Started out really a friendly return to the
Americana radar, SoCal version. Golden
harmonics – dashes of Dead, Jackson Browne, Blue Rodeo. But the threadbare nature of its ideas
eventually wore me out too. A dusty
storefront studio on Santa Monica Blvd.
73. Lambchop – Mr. M
Lugubrious slo motion vocals that defy
classification or dismissal. Same
love/hate respect engendered as a Nick Cave or Tom Waits offering. Always a taste on the verge of being
acquired.
74. Bruce Sprinsteen – Wrecking Ball
Moments or recaptured passion, but still unable to
find an answer the question, why bother?
75. Royal Headache – What’s Your Rupture?
Garage rock as art.
Passion still here. Space is a
garage in Cudahy.
76. Kadaver – Kadaver
The return of Blue Cheer, only without any sense of
irony. Hippie heavy metal. The space is a smoky garage in rural New
Jersey.
77. Future of the Left – The Plot Against Common Sense
Fine thick wall of guitars and lovely Brit working
class vowels shouting relentlessly dumb lyrics.
Space is a garage in the outskirts of Birmingham.
78. Om – Advaitic Songs
Nicely world metal; a garage in a suburb of Paris
(as imagined from a garage in Oakland).
79. Los Miticos del Ritmo
Absolutely silly project of a London club DJ
working with Columbian cumbia musicians to cover classic rock hits. Irresistible toe-tappin’, nalgas bumbin’ bullshit dance music. A carport in Caracas.
80. Carter Tutti Void – Transverse
Dancey trancey yet subtle disposable clothing. A fashionable drawing room in Ibiza.
81. Dan Stuart – The Disappearance of Marlow Biggs
The suicidal lead singer of the old 80’s LA band
Green on Red returns with an Americana classic under the guide of a slacker
Under the Volcano memoir of unexpected survival. RIYL what Westerberg should be doing. The space is borrowed time.
82. Souleance – La Belle Vie
Downtempo, hip hoppy happy music with a soulful
Brazilian flavor. Dance.
83. Bob Dylan – Tempest
Well, ok then.
84. Van Morrison – Born to Sing, No Plan B
Well, all right then.
85. Jack White – Blunderbuss
And so there you go.
86. Bruce Springsteen –
We take care of our own, in spite of ourselves. And so there you…
87. And You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead – Lost Songs
Normally my cup of tea, my hand wouldn’t put it in
the CD player more than twice.
88. High on Fire-De Vermis Mysteris
Continuing to reign as guitar god progenitor of the
resurgence in stoner metal, he just shouldn’t sing. I know I am a minority, but why do these
metal bands insist on screwing up boffo
riffs with that constipated devil growl.
89. Ape School – Junior Violence
Pink Floyd covering MGMT. Bouncy and friendly pop.
90. Mt. Eerie – Ocean Roar
Unfocused, which was their signature
contribution. Just evaporated in my
hands.
91. Café Tacvba – El Objeto Antes
Llamado Disco
A little bit more folk music this time around from
one of the world’s great rock bands.
92. Frank Ocean – Orange
I guess I am just too old for real soul. Seemed fragmentary and off key.
93. Dave Douglas Quintent – Be Still
Deconstructed spirituals. Great for Sunday mornings. Space is in the car on the way to church.
94. Jose Luis Monton – Solo Guitarra
Lovely solo and spacious guitar. Progressive but easy going Flamenco. Space is an old library in Cadiz, wearing
Ferragamo shoes.
95. Sepalcure -Sepalcure
Progressive drums and bass. Speaking of shoes, space is an ultra hip shoe
store in Tribeca.
96. Burial – Kindred
Now the party’s over, I’m so tired.
97. Adrian Crowley – I See Three Birds Flying
Growly Nick Cavish vocals in a serene and morbid Irish folk setting.
98. Jessie Ware – Devotion
It’s possible
“songstresses” working in the central idiom don’t work for me anymore, might as well listen to Adele.
99. Rhett Miller – The Dreamer
I am always looking for that salt-or-the-earth fix,
I think I shoulda had an Iris Dement or the Three Pears thing.
100.
St. Etienne
– Words and Music
A real marker of the passage of time. I used to eat of this faux Euro cocktail
language crap. It hasn’t change, this is
a return to form. I clearly have
changed. The space is pharmacy on Ibiza.
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