30-26 | 25-21 | 20-16 | 15-11 | 10-6 | 5-1
#10: The Weeknd - House Of Balloons
Let me make something clear. I do not consider myself a fan of hip-hop, rap or R&B. I don't hate it or even dislike most of it. It is just not one of my first listening choices. That is, until I heard The Weeknd. To say the feel of House Of Balloons is beyond R&B would belittle the genre. This album sounds like music from another century, another planet, another plane of existence. The topics addressed, however, are graphically present and real. The obsession with women, parties, sex and drugs is a well trod road. However, the lost, distant cries of how everything goes horribly wrong is an intriguing mystery. If any album this year indicates the future of music, House Of Balloons is it.
Download all albums for free at http://the-weeknd.com/.
The Weeknd - House Of Balloons Mixtape
#9 Neon Indian - Era Extrana
Chillwave's greatest achievement in 2011 is from one of its founders in Alan Palomo. The lush and accessible grooves on Era Extrana are the next progression for this often indiscernible genre. Here, Neon Indian borrows heavily from shoegaze purposeful blurs and new wave pop beats to cobble together moments that are equally exciting and soothing. From the simplicity of his most accessible tracks "Polish Girl" and "Fallout" to the cacophony that blankets "Hex Girlfriend" and "Halogen (I Could Be A Shadow)", this is the less popular, yet much cooler version of M83's Hurry Up, We're Dreaming. Hopefully, the rest of the world will catch on to this better made and edited effort.
Download Track | Purchase Album
Neon Indian - Fallout
#8 - Radiohead - The King Of Limbs
The most hyped album of the year was a disappointment before anyone had heard it. Maybe it was the fact that it was preceded by arguably their best album, but Radiohead's The King Of Limbs by comparison to all of the fanfare (which was not self-marketed) was uneventful. People even invented stories about a second half to the album thinking that there had to be MORE. Alas, this album was a retreat by comparison, an anti-album from the World's Greatest Band. Ignoring the blather, this is simply a collection of eight loosely connected songs addressing the themes of loss and disconnection. Even a middle-of-the-road Radiohead album is better than most in my mind. I guess others feel differently. Or maybe they just did not want to pay for it this time around.
Download Track | Purchase Album
Radiohead - Lotus Flower
#7 TV On The Radio - Nine Types Of Light
Watching an avant-garde band like TV On The Radio move closer to the mainstream in sound and popularity brings mixed emotions. As you hear each musician become more refined and focused on Nine Types Of Light, you realize that those tightrope moments will be fewer and less likely. Still, on tracks like the slow dance of "Will Do", the doo-wop intensity of "Repetition" and lamenting soul of "Forgotten", they are pushing the establishment into the future, rather than succumbing to those dated and stagnant rules.
Download Track | Purchase Album
TV On The Radio - Will Do
#6 St. Vincent - Strange Mercy
When I first started making my end of the year list, Annie Clark's latest as St. Vincent started as a mere consideration. After each listen, the quirky, experimental sounds and words that tumble from Strange Mercy kept winning me over. This album is a collection of awkward stories and confrontational confessions that simply fascinate. The dichotomy of tempo and theme on "Cruel", for example, takes beautiful sweeping synths and her angelic voice and stabs it playfully with that artfully maddening guitar. Look to the creepy "Cheerleader", the seductive "Surgeon" and the boiling intensity of "Hysterical Strength" to hear the full range of this amazing effort.
Download Track | Purchase Album
St. Vincent - Cruel
Showing posts with label TV On The Radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV On The Radio. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Monday, May 2, 2011
Album Review: TV on the Radio - Nine Types of Light
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What a strange, wonderful and dramatic trip the band TV on the Radio has been. They began with humble art school beginnings releasing a shoddy, self-produced CD and created their explosive debut album Desperate Youth, Bloodthirsty Babes less than two years later. The awesome consistency of the band as a unit and the various side projects of the members culminated in their latest release a month ago. It is apparent that this band's longevity or their level of success was never their ultimate goal. Yet here we are listening to Nine Types of Light with the loftiest expectations like the previous decade of creative output of this band was not just this accidental happenstance. Taking a moment to appreciate the huge accomplishment that is TV on the Radio is a prerequisite before listening to any of their releases. The singularity in their sound and the sheer emotional content in their music is unfailingly awe inspiring. Once you put this journey of this band in context, the appreciation comes naturally.
TV on the Radio is always at their best when its avant-garde sound grinds down its retro tastes to a thorn that gets unforgettably stuck. The gradual build on opener "Second Song" tills new soil once again as the lyrics begin at a spoken word confessional that swells into a sweet groove complete with their tip of the hat to retro soul and doo-wop. "New Cannonball Blues" preaches on with end-of-the-world imagery and some well placed profanity amidst the bleating horns and electronic rhythms. Connecting to "Repetition", TV on the Radio lifts from hip hop, Kraftwerk, and The Temptations' antiwar epic "Ball Of Confusion" and throws them into the blender for a pureed glass of paranoia and chaos. The heady romantic strings over the industrial throb on "Forgotten" brings what begins as a light hearted ode to a fitting mushroom cloud finish.
The biggest pill to ingest is the emphasis on balladry on Nine Types of Light that seems to take the teeth out of their gritty sound. The two lengthiest tracks, "Keep Your Heart" and "Killer Crane" can drag in their ultimate trek for tender moments. Yet, they nail the sentiment on "You" that sways with a siding riff and perfect falsetto. Another standout slow jam is the soulful "Will Do" that deftly traverses the space between the apocalypse and Marvin Gaye. The reoccurring theme of a bleak future is common for TV on the Radio, but the emotional nature of some of the songs on Nine Types of Light is a new topic still being explored. Perhaps the long illness and untimely passing of their bass player Gerard Butler had an influence in their more positive and heartfelt reflections. The confrontational nature is still an indelible force on their newest effort. It just rides shotgun with TV on the Radio's best artistic expressions of love itself.
TV on the Radio will be headlining the Pitchfork Music Festival Sunday July 17. Tickets are still available, so you are a fool if you don't go.
Bonus: Stream samples of Nine Types of Light and download various songs below. Also, watch the corresponding movie to the album that the band is calling "a visual re-imaging of the record". Included are videos of every song directed by various artists and friends of the band.
Purchase Nine Types of Light: CD | Vinyl | mp3
Right-click here to download "Will Do".
Right-click here to download "Caffeinated Consciousness".
What a strange, wonderful and dramatic trip the band TV on the Radio has been. They began with humble art school beginnings releasing a shoddy, self-produced CD and created their explosive debut album Desperate Youth, Bloodthirsty Babes less than two years later. The awesome consistency of the band as a unit and the various side projects of the members culminated in their latest release a month ago. It is apparent that this band's longevity or their level of success was never their ultimate goal. Yet here we are listening to Nine Types of Light with the loftiest expectations like the previous decade of creative output of this band was not just this accidental happenstance. Taking a moment to appreciate the huge accomplishment that is TV on the Radio is a prerequisite before listening to any of their releases. The singularity in their sound and the sheer emotional content in their music is unfailingly awe inspiring. Once you put this journey of this band in context, the appreciation comes naturally.
TV on the Radio is always at their best when its avant-garde sound grinds down its retro tastes to a thorn that gets unforgettably stuck. The gradual build on opener "Second Song" tills new soil once again as the lyrics begin at a spoken word confessional that swells into a sweet groove complete with their tip of the hat to retro soul and doo-wop. "New Cannonball Blues" preaches on with end-of-the-world imagery and some well placed profanity amidst the bleating horns and electronic rhythms. Connecting to "Repetition", TV on the Radio lifts from hip hop, Kraftwerk, and The Temptations' antiwar epic "Ball Of Confusion" and throws them into the blender for a pureed glass of paranoia and chaos. The heady romantic strings over the industrial throb on "Forgotten" brings what begins as a light hearted ode to a fitting mushroom cloud finish.
The biggest pill to ingest is the emphasis on balladry on Nine Types of Light that seems to take the teeth out of their gritty sound. The two lengthiest tracks, "Keep Your Heart" and "Killer Crane" can drag in their ultimate trek for tender moments. Yet, they nail the sentiment on "You" that sways with a siding riff and perfect falsetto. Another standout slow jam is the soulful "Will Do" that deftly traverses the space between the apocalypse and Marvin Gaye. The reoccurring theme of a bleak future is common for TV on the Radio, but the emotional nature of some of the songs on Nine Types of Light is a new topic still being explored. Perhaps the long illness and untimely passing of their bass player Gerard Butler had an influence in their more positive and heartfelt reflections. The confrontational nature is still an indelible force on their newest effort. It just rides shotgun with TV on the Radio's best artistic expressions of love itself.
TV on the Radio will be headlining the Pitchfork Music Festival Sunday July 17. Tickets are still available, so you are a fool if you don't go.
Bonus: Stream samples of Nine Types of Light and download various songs below. Also, watch the corresponding movie to the album that the band is calling "a visual re-imaging of the record". Included are videos of every song directed by various artists and friends of the band.
Purchase Nine Types of Light: CD | Vinyl | mp3
Right-click here to download "Will Do".
Right-click here to download "Caffeinated Consciousness".
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
TV on the Radio Give Away Another Free Track, Play Live In Chicago...Twice!
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Just a couple of weeks ago, this blog was happy to report that the first taste of new TV on the Radio music was available for free download. The smoothed out track "Will Do" was originally featured on BBC Radio, but do to mass availability of low quality radio rips, an album quality version was made available for stream on Soundcloud. In a refusal to slow down the hype train, the guys have decided to release another track for the cost of one well-marketed email address via the widget below. The new track "Caffeinated Consciousness" should be plenty to quell your desire until April 12, when the band's fourth full length Nine Types of Light becomes available on Interscope Records.
If anyone was disappointed by the mellow nature of "Will Do", "Caffeinated Consciousness" should make those hard-to-please fans more forgiving. The stuttering, blues-referencing rocker is a bounty of riffs and attitude served up on a simple platter. The blissful bridge is infused to give the song a loud-quiet-loud effect, but noise rules across this effort. The only drawback is that the moment is too brief, making its furious statement then moving on to the next narrative. As previously announced, TV on the Radio will be headlining Pitchfork festival on Sunday, July 17. For the impatient, they will be making an early tour stop in Chicago at the Metro April 22. Grab your tickets here before they are gone. Sadly, the band will be without their longtime bassist Gerard Smith as he recovers from lung cancer. According to Pitchfork, the prognosis is promising for a full recovery. Keep fighting, good man.
Pre-order Nine Types of Light here.
V On The Radio - Caffeinated Consciousness
Just a couple of weeks ago, this blog was happy to report that the first taste of new TV on the Radio music was available for free download. The smoothed out track "Will Do" was originally featured on BBC Radio, but do to mass availability of low quality radio rips, an album quality version was made available for stream on Soundcloud. In a refusal to slow down the hype train, the guys have decided to release another track for the cost of one well-marketed email address via the widget below. The new track "Caffeinated Consciousness" should be plenty to quell your desire until April 12, when the band's fourth full length Nine Types of Light becomes available on Interscope Records.
If anyone was disappointed by the mellow nature of "Will Do", "Caffeinated Consciousness" should make those hard-to-please fans more forgiving. The stuttering, blues-referencing rocker is a bounty of riffs and attitude served up on a simple platter. The blissful bridge is infused to give the song a loud-quiet-loud effect, but noise rules across this effort. The only drawback is that the moment is too brief, making its furious statement then moving on to the next narrative. As previously announced, TV on the Radio will be headlining Pitchfork festival on Sunday, July 17. For the impatient, they will be making an early tour stop in Chicago at the Metro April 22. Grab your tickets here before they are gone. Sadly, the band will be without their longtime bassist Gerard Smith as he recovers from lung cancer. According to Pitchfork, the prognosis is promising for a full recovery. Keep fighting, good man.
Pre-order Nine Types of Light here.
V On The Radio - Caffeinated Consciousness
Friday, March 4, 2011
Leaked TV On The Radio Track Available, Album Out April 12, Headliners at P4K!
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The humble gents from NYC TV On The Radio have been splintered into solo projects since their 2008 LP Dear Science,. Dave Sitek spent last year pushing his collaborative Maximum Balloon (read my album review here), Kyp Malone fronted Rain Machine and Tunde Adebimpe is an accomplished actor. As the sum is greater than TVOTR's parts, we are happy to have them back together and readying their latest album. Nine Types of Light is their first LP on major label Interscope and will hit the streets April 12. However, the first track from the album got some radio play, some nefarious ripping took place and now is it available here for your listening pleasure.
The track "Will Do" is a departure from the intensity that gave the band its following. The synthesized bells ring in a loving croon that inspires more of a hip sway rather than a head bang. There is still that stark interpretation of the future in the music, but the goal here is subtlety. The build starts to conjure the passion that sets another promising expectation for the new effort. The lyrics calls this a "lovesick lullaby". I could not describe it any better than that.
Bonus: TV on the Radio will be one of the headliners at the Pitchfork Festival this summer. They will be on the top of the bill for an amazing Sunday, July 17 lineup that includes Deerhunter, Cut Copy, Destroyer, Yuck and OFWGKTA. Tickets go on sale today at noon, so grab them here.
Pre-order Nine Types of Light here.
Right click to download "Will Do" for free here.
TV On The Radio - Will Do
The humble gents from NYC TV On The Radio have been splintered into solo projects since their 2008 LP Dear Science,. Dave Sitek spent last year pushing his collaborative Maximum Balloon (read my album review here), Kyp Malone fronted Rain Machine and Tunde Adebimpe is an accomplished actor. As the sum is greater than TVOTR's parts, we are happy to have them back together and readying their latest album. Nine Types of Light is their first LP on major label Interscope and will hit the streets April 12. However, the first track from the album got some radio play, some nefarious ripping took place and now is it available here for your listening pleasure.
The track "Will Do" is a departure from the intensity that gave the band its following. The synthesized bells ring in a loving croon that inspires more of a hip sway rather than a head bang. There is still that stark interpretation of the future in the music, but the goal here is subtlety. The build starts to conjure the passion that sets another promising expectation for the new effort. The lyrics calls this a "lovesick lullaby". I could not describe it any better than that.
Bonus: TV on the Radio will be one of the headliners at the Pitchfork Festival this summer. They will be on the top of the bill for an amazing Sunday, July 17 lineup that includes Deerhunter, Cut Copy, Destroyer, Yuck and OFWGKTA. Tickets go on sale today at noon, so grab them here.
Pre-order Nine Types of Light here.
Right click to download "Will Do" for free here.
TV On The Radio - Will Do
Friday, September 24, 2010
Album Review: Maximum Balloon - Maximum Balloon
Aging musicians releasing collaborative solo albums fronted by an all-star lineup of vocalists is a real marketable tool right now. Big name guitarists such as Slash and Carlos Santana are cashing in on pushing mediocre lifestyle music on their devoted fans who listen with the pretense, "Hey, I like (add dull MOR artist name here) and I like 70's classic rock/80's hair metal! This song must be good!" Millions of units sold and multiple Grammy wins later, mainstream opinion becomes the truth obscuring what the product really is: an glossy, over-constructed collection of songs with no common thread beyond the one money driven focal point whose name graces the album cover. With the album release from Dave Sitek's (of TV On The Radio's fame) Maximum Balloon on a major label, it brings notice to some strange parallels to the star-studded collaborative/big money product push. The overarching debate is this: Is Maximum Balloon a well-orchestrated, cohesive effort or merely a pedantic collection of tracks with a couple gems found amidst the rubble?
Maximum Balloon has some large shoes to fill with Sitek as a main creative force in musicianship and production behind TV On The Radio. The comparison if unfair is definitely inevitable. One thing is obvious from the kickoff: this is no TVOTR project. "Groove Me", featuring vocals from Theophilus London, is a sexy pop hit in the making featuring funky keys and Prince-like guitar jabs that juxtapose the industrial hum and roll under the London's assured voice. The nearest tracks to his Sitek's early efforts are by no surprise the tracks fronted by TVOTR frontmen Tunde Adebimpe and Kyp Malone. Adebimpe's track "Absence of Light" has that slinky buzz meshing with Adebimpe's hefty voice that raises the hair on your neck while the beat punches you in the gut, making it the album's standout track. Malone's offering "Shakedown" is soulful and smooth, reaching beyond the doo-wop style carried by horns and chimes, sounding like a Curtis Mayfield jam brought back to life 500 years in the future. Oh, and that is a good thing.
The female vocal representation ably colors the wide open canvas on Maximum Balloon, often sounding like a different take or a remix, for better or worse, of their band of origin. The track "Communion" sung by Karen O has a Yeah Yeah Yeahs flavor via new wave that is sultry and swaying but misses the guitar crunch that fans expect. That similar retro pop is found on the Katrina Ford fronted "Young Love", a New Order groove that misses the subtlety of its inclination. The best female vocals on Maximum Balloon goes to Little Dragon, whose track "If You Return" blends the her effortless performance with jittery guitars and an ethereal synth that is a lovely homage to the best of 1980's pop. On that topic, I would be negligent if I did not mention the David Byrne track "Apartment Wrestling", that lifts the best nervous riffs from Remain In Light but retaining the contemporary flow, making me wonder what the Talking Heads would sound like formed circa 2005.
To answer the question posed earlier, Maximum Balloon leans more towards an album rather than a collection, with Sitek borrowing from his influences, then giving them a whitewash of futuristic industrial buzz that makes him a sought after producer. The diversions in sound are never so great to draw away from the whole album and the standouts rival anything in the TVOTR catalog. The result is Dave Sitek's outlook on the direction of pop music that touts a evenly distributed balance between memorable earworm melodies and au courant indie sensibility. It makes me look forward to the future of music while reminding of an amazing and varied past.
Purchase Maximum Balloon here.
Maximum Balloon - Groove Me
Maximum Balloon - Absence of Light
Maximum Balloon - If You Return
Maximum Balloon - Pink Bricks
Maximum Balloon has some large shoes to fill with Sitek as a main creative force in musicianship and production behind TV On The Radio. The comparison if unfair is definitely inevitable. One thing is obvious from the kickoff: this is no TVOTR project. "Groove Me", featuring vocals from Theophilus London, is a sexy pop hit in the making featuring funky keys and Prince-like guitar jabs that juxtapose the industrial hum and roll under the London's assured voice. The nearest tracks to his Sitek's early efforts are by no surprise the tracks fronted by TVOTR frontmen Tunde Adebimpe and Kyp Malone. Adebimpe's track "Absence of Light" has that slinky buzz meshing with Adebimpe's hefty voice that raises the hair on your neck while the beat punches you in the gut, making it the album's standout track. Malone's offering "Shakedown" is soulful and smooth, reaching beyond the doo-wop style carried by horns and chimes, sounding like a Curtis Mayfield jam brought back to life 500 years in the future. Oh, and that is a good thing.
The female vocal representation ably colors the wide open canvas on Maximum Balloon, often sounding like a different take or a remix, for better or worse, of their band of origin. The track "Communion" sung by Karen O has a Yeah Yeah Yeahs flavor via new wave that is sultry and swaying but misses the guitar crunch that fans expect. That similar retro pop is found on the Katrina Ford fronted "Young Love", a New Order groove that misses the subtlety of its inclination. The best female vocals on Maximum Balloon goes to Little Dragon, whose track "If You Return" blends the her effortless performance with jittery guitars and an ethereal synth that is a lovely homage to the best of 1980's pop. On that topic, I would be negligent if I did not mention the David Byrne track "Apartment Wrestling", that lifts the best nervous riffs from Remain In Light but retaining the contemporary flow, making me wonder what the Talking Heads would sound like formed circa 2005.
To answer the question posed earlier, Maximum Balloon leans more towards an album rather than a collection, with Sitek borrowing from his influences, then giving them a whitewash of futuristic industrial buzz that makes him a sought after producer. The diversions in sound are never so great to draw away from the whole album and the standouts rival anything in the TVOTR catalog. The result is Dave Sitek's outlook on the direction of pop music that touts a evenly distributed balance between memorable earworm melodies and au courant indie sensibility. It makes me look forward to the future of music while reminding of an amazing and varied past.
Purchase Maximum Balloon here.
Maximum Balloon - Groove Me
Maximum Balloon - Absence of Light
Maximum Balloon - If You Return
Maximum Balloon - Pink Bricks
Friday, July 23, 2010
Maximum Balloon Release Another New Single, LP Out August 24
As the artists in the innovative band TV On The Radio are on a friendly hiatus, we reap the benefits from their worthy side projects. Tunde Adebimpe is building a quality resume of acting credits. Kyp Malone gave us his solo effort Rain Machine last year and this year we have been enticed by Dave Sitek's latest creations as Maximum Balloon. According to a SPIN magazine article, the release party last month in Los Angeles showed an indie parade of vocalists including Malone and Adebimpe, David Byrne and Karen O.
In the meantime, Mr. Sitek has been letting a steady drip of songs loose for maximum interest to escalate. The most noticeable quality in these tracks is their purposeful variety in sound while still finding room under the thematic umbrella. It started with the lovely "If You Return" that features an 80's keyboard engine and ethereal vocals from Little Dragon's Yukimi Nagano. After that, we were given the TVOTR soundalike "Tiger" featuring vocals from frontman for Dragons Of Zynth Aku. Most recent on the tease list is the best of the lot "Groove Me". Fronted by hip hop artist Theophilus London, this dance track features a jittery funk guitar stab, whistling keys and a smooth disco sheen that is a true attention grabber. "Groove Me" is available for purchase at the Maximum Balloon website. Give all of the tracks a listen and watch the balloon-laden video for Tiger below. After that, pencil in August 24 on your calendars.
Purchase the Maximum Balloon album here.
Purchase "Groove Me" as an early single release here.
Maximum Balloon - Tiger
Maximum Balloon - If You Return
In the meantime, Mr. Sitek has been letting a steady drip of songs loose for maximum interest to escalate. The most noticeable quality in these tracks is their purposeful variety in sound while still finding room under the thematic umbrella. It started with the lovely "If You Return" that features an 80's keyboard engine and ethereal vocals from Little Dragon's Yukimi Nagano. After that, we were given the TVOTR soundalike "Tiger" featuring vocals from frontman for Dragons Of Zynth Aku. Most recent on the tease list is the best of the lot "Groove Me". Fronted by hip hop artist Theophilus London, this dance track features a jittery funk guitar stab, whistling keys and a smooth disco sheen that is a true attention grabber. "Groove Me" is available for purchase at the Maximum Balloon website. Give all of the tracks a listen and watch the balloon-laden video for Tiger below. After that, pencil in August 24 on your calendars.
Purchase the Maximum Balloon album here.
Purchase "Groove Me" as an early single release here.
Maximum Balloon - Tiger
Maximum Balloon - If You Return
Saturday, February 20, 2010
My favorite albums of the decade.
The “00’s” and the advent of the computer and Internet as our primary source for information made music easier to hear about, make, produce, sell, share and remix. It is more than downloading a song or torrent; this new era has been a cultural and artistic revolution. The albums listed below, and many others, are so good that it reaffirms my belief that the best music will still never be on traditional radio (another dying institution), so why bother with the expectation. Be happy you were here for it.
1. Broken Social Scene – You Forgot It In People (2003)
Broken Social Scene is a collective of musicians who each bring something special to You Forgot It In People. Instead of getting a structured rock album, we are given a statement of each musician’s expression like a declaration of love of his or her music and, in fact, life itself. What comes from this community is raw rock music that is emotional and passionate. It feels grandiose and orchestral like an opera, even when it is just a meager handful of voices and instruments. The whole album (as many of these albums do) play out best beginning to end, like a movie or a great TV series where you can’t start watching in the middle of second season. No surprise that many of these songs were used in one of the best movies of the decade, Half Nelson. The songs hit a wide range of emotions. Sometimes the songs are sweet and tender like a kiss on your neck and a whisper in your ear. Other moments they are breaking bottles and tear soaked cuss words after a passion-fueled fight. This album has half dozen virtual instrumentals as well that say more with the distant hums and wails, percussive piano and insistent drums than most lyrics can. It moves me every time I listen.
Standouts: Stars and Sons, Anthem for a Seventeen Year Old Girl, Almost Crimes (Radio Kills Remix)
Purchase the album here.
2. LCD Soundsystem – Sounds of Silver (2007)
I am reminded of that classic Dave Chappelle (please come back!) skit where he tackles why white people can’t dance. It isn’t that we can’t dance; we just need the right kind of music. Of course, he ventures of into silly rock stereotypes, but the sentiment rings true. White people can dance and here is Exhibit A. Sometimes disco, sometimes techno, sometimes dub, sometimes punk, James Murphy brings it all together in a package of flashing lights and cowbell. All of the songs are great, but the standouts are epic lengths of 6 to 8 minutes, which is how long you wish all of your favorites songs were. The topics of the songs, however, are often far from dance anthem material. Getting older, being proudly ashamed to be American or aching to be with another (ok, that is pretty common) is where he takes us, but quickly puts us right back on the dance floor where we belong. I can’t even remember why I ever stopped dancing, but looking at 40 coming like a freight train, I want to make sure I can dance as long as I am able. Children of all nations, please join me there.
Standouts: All My Friends, Get Innocuous, Us Vs. Them
Purchase the album here.
3. Interpol – Turn on the Bright Lights (2002)
Blah, blah. Joy Division was better. The truth is that they came along suddenly and ended too soon, so why not try and pick up where they left off? There has been a wave of Joy Division inspired music recently and not unlike the grunge explosion of the 90’s, not a lot of it is worthy of comparison. Interpol’s first full length takes that obvious influence and dresses it up in a $1000 suit. The post-punk jabs and stabs are undeniable, the bass and drums relent for our attention, the vocals are deep, brooding and abstract and the keyboard washes over it all like midnight surf and smoke. Turn on the Bright Lights is dim, hazy and steely cool yet comfortable like your empty bed after a late night. This album proves that imitation and influence, when done right, makes greatness.
Standouts: Untitled, Obstacle 1, The New
Purchase the album and preview a song here.
4. The Arcade Fire – Funeral (2004)
I am going to say it; this is the album U2 wishes they could still make. Ever since Bono got people to sing along about “a mole digging in a hole”, I could see the bottoming out of popular radio rock rapidly approach. Thus we are given The Arcade Fire’s Funeral, an album that is passionate and earnest without a moment of embarrassment for doing so. They have gotten a lot of backlash and bad press recently, but if I stopped listening to a band because they were found to be pretentious, my life would be a quiet one. This band loves their music and wears it on its rolled up, sweaty collective sleeve. You can almost picture them crying as they play and sing their hearts out. Man, if I could do what they do, I would weep as well from the sheer joy. You all can shell out the $100+ for the light and stage show covering up the aging rock star; I will be at the Arcade Fire concert saving my money and time for something better.
Standouts: Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels), Wake Up, Rebellion (Lies)
Purchase the album and preview a song here.
5. The National – Alligator (2005)
A fine example of how Pitchfork can often be dead wrong. Luckily they admitted it in their later posts that they missed the mark by calling this a “grower”. To me, that description still discounts the watershed moment for a truly great band. This is the most tuneful and musically straightforward album in my Top 10 and could easily play next to anything in someone’s classic rock catalog. However, there is a lot going on here beyond the traditional. These songs are aching, upset love songs soaked in booze and turmoil. The music is uncomfortable and tense and sweeps you away from your comfortable home to the nearest forlorn bar. However, the true gem is the vocals: deep, masculine with the confidence of a man who has been hurt many times. If you like your lyrics poetic and picturesque, strap on your headphones and shut your eyes.
Standouts: Secret Meeting, Karen, All The Wine
Purchase the album here.
6. Radiohead – Kid A (2000)
If everyone says it is great, then it must be great. I try not fall into the trappings of rock critics and taste-making bloggers who have already listed their faves and sung the praises time and time again of Radiohead. Here is my take. Radiohead is quite simply the best band over the past 15 years with no one else coming close. Most groups ebb and flow between solid and suspect or have one remarkable album to then succumb to the expectation. Yet Radiohead rolls out a new album every few years while never failing to reach that level of greatness. And Kid A is their best album. Some will argue for the prog-rock, standard setting OK Computer, some even speak of The Bends or In Rainbows are their crowning achievement. But where OK Computer reinvented the rock concept album, Radiohead went ahead and reinvented it again. That is the stuff of the Beatles. If they manage to not get too serious or pressured by this whole greatness thing (and there is no sign of that), they might just do this for a long, long time.
Standouts: Everything In It’s Right Place, Optimistic, Morning Bell
Purchase the album here.
7. Girl Talk – Night Ripper (2006)
A lot of people hate Andy Warhol. His exploitation and blatant stealing of mundane items and events for his own personal statements on culture makes many question whether it is viable art. I argue that the purpose of art is to invoke those polarizing discussions and that in itself makes it the most important kind of art. Enter Greg Gillis, a guy who loves all music; rock, hip hop, new, old, beautiful, profane; so much that he wants it all together in one song and, damnit, he wants everyone who feels the same way right next to him. Like many great artists, he takes a pseudonym, in this case the disarming title of Girl Talk. He then takes pieces of his favorite songs and lays them over a drum machine beat and makes a joyfully blurred barrage of music without the borders of culture or genre. It is equal parts social commentary, methodical trashing of fair use laws and boundless dance party. Sure, there are arguments and lawsuits over Girl Talk, but that is just one more instance on the growing list of how the dinosaurs of music distribution and ownership will never get it, even as they are sinking in the tar pits of their own making. When the big record companies eventually crumble, we can play Girl Talk at the funeral so it won’t be so sad.
Standouts: Smash Your Head, Bounce That, Overtime
Purchase the album here.
8. TV on the Radio - Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes (2004)
Have you ever watched a sci-fi movie or a film takes place in the future and they try to define the ultramodern setting with REALLY BAD INDUSTRIAL/HARD ROCK MUSIC? Think of the final Matrix film or Strange Days. I know, ugh. Your heart need not yearn any longer, for TV on the Radio is that futuristic music and it is happening right now. They have been picking up fans and critical accolades over the more recent albums, but this is the one that has captured the most spirit, energy and intensity. Their sound is the bastard mix of space age trance and doo-wop harmonies that causes each new listener to sit back upon first listen. They are taken aback when they hear shards of each song’s surrounding ambience: bleating horns, machinery hums, bass and guitars interweaving like car crashes. Just when it is almost too intense, those reassuring, soulful vocals rise above the thump and grind. And it is beautiful.
Standouts: The Wrong Way, Dreams, Ambulance
Purchase the album here.
9. Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Fever To Tell (2003)
Sometimes music just has to be nasty. It could be John Lee Hooker growling “boomboomboomboom” or John Lydon spitting on you with utter disdain. Whether the crotch grabbing, bedroom groaning vocalist is Peaches or David Lee Roth, you sometimes need a little raunch in your rock. That is what this album is, strutting, seedy and sexy music to sink your teeth into. The songs are short and straight ahead, a stripped down drum and guitar combo fronted by Karen O, exotic and glamorous as she coos and howls like an overheated sports car. There is no time wasted as the lyrics and music dually plunge into each track to bring up taboo topics such as rough sex, incest and ambiguous gender roles sung about without a hint of shame over a pummeling beat. Even the calm tracks still glisten with the sweat of long, hot evening that went so right, even when it went a little wrong.
Standouts: Black Tongue, Maps, Y Control
Purchase the album here.
10. Sleater-Kinney – The Woods (2005)
The final choice on a list is always the most difficult. All considered albums have such strong qualities, but none had the sledgehammer of emotions of this swan song from the best all female rock band ever. By the time The Woods came out, Sleater-Kinney was well respected and had grimy handfuls of indie cred. Like all great bands they wanted to push their boundaries to play and sing in a whole new way. With the help from some seriously overdriven production, they bore this album of edgy stress and dark fury. The best example is on the first track, where the lyrics are as simple as a child’s nursery rhyme but are delivered with an overt display of unrestrained anger as the instruments pummel in their best attempt to cause you pain. There is such blatant anger here that I am literally scared to consider what personal demons were summoned for this album. Maybe they were close to breaking up when they recorded this album or maybe this album literally drove them apart, but I am hard pressed to find a better way for a seminal band such as Sleater-Kinney to leave the stage.
Standouts: The Fox, Rollercoaster, Steep Air
Purchase the album here.
1. Broken Social Scene – You Forgot It In People (2003)
Broken Social Scene is a collective of musicians who each bring something special to You Forgot It In People. Instead of getting a structured rock album, we are given a statement of each musician’s expression like a declaration of love of his or her music and, in fact, life itself. What comes from this community is raw rock music that is emotional and passionate. It feels grandiose and orchestral like an opera, even when it is just a meager handful of voices and instruments. The whole album (as many of these albums do) play out best beginning to end, like a movie or a great TV series where you can’t start watching in the middle of second season. No surprise that many of these songs were used in one of the best movies of the decade, Half Nelson. The songs hit a wide range of emotions. Sometimes the songs are sweet and tender like a kiss on your neck and a whisper in your ear. Other moments they are breaking bottles and tear soaked cuss words after a passion-fueled fight. This album has half dozen virtual instrumentals as well that say more with the distant hums and wails, percussive piano and insistent drums than most lyrics can. It moves me every time I listen.Standouts: Stars and Sons, Anthem for a Seventeen Year Old Girl, Almost Crimes (Radio Kills Remix)
Purchase the album here.
2. LCD Soundsystem – Sounds of Silver (2007)
I am reminded of that classic Dave Chappelle (please come back!) skit where he tackles why white people can’t dance. It isn’t that we can’t dance; we just need the right kind of music. Of course, he ventures of into silly rock stereotypes, but the sentiment rings true. White people can dance and here is Exhibit A. Sometimes disco, sometimes techno, sometimes dub, sometimes punk, James Murphy brings it all together in a package of flashing lights and cowbell. All of the songs are great, but the standouts are epic lengths of 6 to 8 minutes, which is how long you wish all of your favorites songs were. The topics of the songs, however, are often far from dance anthem material. Getting older, being proudly ashamed to be American or aching to be with another (ok, that is pretty common) is where he takes us, but quickly puts us right back on the dance floor where we belong. I can’t even remember why I ever stopped dancing, but looking at 40 coming like a freight train, I want to make sure I can dance as long as I am able. Children of all nations, please join me there.Standouts: All My Friends, Get Innocuous, Us Vs. Them
Purchase the album here.
3. Interpol – Turn on the Bright Lights (2002)
Blah, blah. Joy Division was better. The truth is that they came along suddenly and ended too soon, so why not try and pick up where they left off? There has been a wave of Joy Division inspired music recently and not unlike the grunge explosion of the 90’s, not a lot of it is worthy of comparison. Interpol’s first full length takes that obvious influence and dresses it up in a $1000 suit. The post-punk jabs and stabs are undeniable, the bass and drums relent for our attention, the vocals are deep, brooding and abstract and the keyboard washes over it all like midnight surf and smoke. Turn on the Bright Lights is dim, hazy and steely cool yet comfortable like your empty bed after a late night. This album proves that imitation and influence, when done right, makes greatness.Standouts: Untitled, Obstacle 1, The New
Purchase the album and preview a song here.
4. The Arcade Fire – Funeral (2004)
I am going to say it; this is the album U2 wishes they could still make. Ever since Bono got people to sing along about “a mole digging in a hole”, I could see the bottoming out of popular radio rock rapidly approach. Thus we are given The Arcade Fire’s Funeral, an album that is passionate and earnest without a moment of embarrassment for doing so. They have gotten a lot of backlash and bad press recently, but if I stopped listening to a band because they were found to be pretentious, my life would be a quiet one. This band loves their music and wears it on its rolled up, sweaty collective sleeve. You can almost picture them crying as they play and sing their hearts out. Man, if I could do what they do, I would weep as well from the sheer joy. You all can shell out the $100+ for the light and stage show covering up the aging rock star; I will be at the Arcade Fire concert saving my money and time for something better.Standouts: Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels), Wake Up, Rebellion (Lies)
Purchase the album and preview a song here.
5. The National – Alligator (2005)
A fine example of how Pitchfork can often be dead wrong. Luckily they admitted it in their later posts that they missed the mark by calling this a “grower”. To me, that description still discounts the watershed moment for a truly great band. This is the most tuneful and musically straightforward album in my Top 10 and could easily play next to anything in someone’s classic rock catalog. However, there is a lot going on here beyond the traditional. These songs are aching, upset love songs soaked in booze and turmoil. The music is uncomfortable and tense and sweeps you away from your comfortable home to the nearest forlorn bar. However, the true gem is the vocals: deep, masculine with the confidence of a man who has been hurt many times. If you like your lyrics poetic and picturesque, strap on your headphones and shut your eyes.Standouts: Secret Meeting, Karen, All The Wine
Purchase the album here.
6. Radiohead – Kid A (2000)
If everyone says it is great, then it must be great. I try not fall into the trappings of rock critics and taste-making bloggers who have already listed their faves and sung the praises time and time again of Radiohead. Here is my take. Radiohead is quite simply the best band over the past 15 years with no one else coming close. Most groups ebb and flow between solid and suspect or have one remarkable album to then succumb to the expectation. Yet Radiohead rolls out a new album every few years while never failing to reach that level of greatness. And Kid A is their best album. Some will argue for the prog-rock, standard setting OK Computer, some even speak of The Bends or In Rainbows are their crowning achievement. But where OK Computer reinvented the rock concept album, Radiohead went ahead and reinvented it again. That is the stuff of the Beatles. If they manage to not get too serious or pressured by this whole greatness thing (and there is no sign of that), they might just do this for a long, long time.Standouts: Everything In It’s Right Place, Optimistic, Morning Bell
Purchase the album here.
7. Girl Talk – Night Ripper (2006)
A lot of people hate Andy Warhol. His exploitation and blatant stealing of mundane items and events for his own personal statements on culture makes many question whether it is viable art. I argue that the purpose of art is to invoke those polarizing discussions and that in itself makes it the most important kind of art. Enter Greg Gillis, a guy who loves all music; rock, hip hop, new, old, beautiful, profane; so much that he wants it all together in one song and, damnit, he wants everyone who feels the same way right next to him. Like many great artists, he takes a pseudonym, in this case the disarming title of Girl Talk. He then takes pieces of his favorite songs and lays them over a drum machine beat and makes a joyfully blurred barrage of music without the borders of culture or genre. It is equal parts social commentary, methodical trashing of fair use laws and boundless dance party. Sure, there are arguments and lawsuits over Girl Talk, but that is just one more instance on the growing list of how the dinosaurs of music distribution and ownership will never get it, even as they are sinking in the tar pits of their own making. When the big record companies eventually crumble, we can play Girl Talk at the funeral so it won’t be so sad.Standouts: Smash Your Head, Bounce That, Overtime
Purchase the album here.
8. TV on the Radio - Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes (2004)
Have you ever watched a sci-fi movie or a film takes place in the future and they try to define the ultramodern setting with REALLY BAD INDUSTRIAL/HARD ROCK MUSIC? Think of the final Matrix film or Strange Days. I know, ugh. Your heart need not yearn any longer, for TV on the Radio is that futuristic music and it is happening right now. They have been picking up fans and critical accolades over the more recent albums, but this is the one that has captured the most spirit, energy and intensity. Their sound is the bastard mix of space age trance and doo-wop harmonies that causes each new listener to sit back upon first listen. They are taken aback when they hear shards of each song’s surrounding ambience: bleating horns, machinery hums, bass and guitars interweaving like car crashes. Just when it is almost too intense, those reassuring, soulful vocals rise above the thump and grind. And it is beautiful.Standouts: The Wrong Way, Dreams, Ambulance
Purchase the album here.
9. Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Fever To Tell (2003)
Sometimes music just has to be nasty. It could be John Lee Hooker growling “boomboomboomboom” or John Lydon spitting on you with utter disdain. Whether the crotch grabbing, bedroom groaning vocalist is Peaches or David Lee Roth, you sometimes need a little raunch in your rock. That is what this album is, strutting, seedy and sexy music to sink your teeth into. The songs are short and straight ahead, a stripped down drum and guitar combo fronted by Karen O, exotic and glamorous as she coos and howls like an overheated sports car. There is no time wasted as the lyrics and music dually plunge into each track to bring up taboo topics such as rough sex, incest and ambiguous gender roles sung about without a hint of shame over a pummeling beat. Even the calm tracks still glisten with the sweat of long, hot evening that went so right, even when it went a little wrong.Standouts: Black Tongue, Maps, Y Control
Purchase the album here.
10. Sleater-Kinney – The Woods (2005)
The final choice on a list is always the most difficult. All considered albums have such strong qualities, but none had the sledgehammer of emotions of this swan song from the best all female rock band ever. By the time The Woods came out, Sleater-Kinney was well respected and had grimy handfuls of indie cred. Like all great bands they wanted to push their boundaries to play and sing in a whole new way. With the help from some seriously overdriven production, they bore this album of edgy stress and dark fury. The best example is on the first track, where the lyrics are as simple as a child’s nursery rhyme but are delivered with an overt display of unrestrained anger as the instruments pummel in their best attempt to cause you pain. There is such blatant anger here that I am literally scared to consider what personal demons were summoned for this album. Maybe they were close to breaking up when they recorded this album or maybe this album literally drove them apart, but I am hard pressed to find a better way for a seminal band such as Sleater-Kinney to leave the stage.Standouts: The Fox, Rollercoaster, Steep Air
Purchase the album here.
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