12.25.2010
Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun: a melt-the-snow mix
Here is a mix that might aid that effort. Merry Christmas!
1. Ce Matin-La / Air
2. D.A.N.C.E. / Justice
3. Seasun / Delorean
4. New Theory / Washed Out
5. In The Morning (featuring Andi Toma) / Junior Boys
6. As Serious As Your Life / Four Tet
7. Ready 2 Wear / Felix Da Housecat
8. Transformers (Ghosthustler Remix) / Futurecop!
9. All My Friends / LCD Soundsystem
10. Hello Jenn, I'm A Mess / Evangelicals
11. Fragile / God Is An Astronaut
12. No Comply / Studio
13. Baptism / Crystal Castles
14. Up, Up, Down, Down, L, R, L, R / Truckasauras
15. Windowdipper / Jib Kidder
16. A Paw In My Face / The Field
17. Don't Save Us From The Flames / M83
18. Flim / Aphex Twin
Download the full mix here.
12.14.2010
Top 10 of '10
10. The Morning Benders Big Echo
The opening track “Excuses” is wonderful. It’s very reminiscent of a 1950’s “At Last” Etta James type of chord-progression, yet still bringing something completely new to the table all at the same time. The album continues from there and stays very strong.
9. Sufjan Stevens The Age of Adz
I was actually surprised by this album. Not as much surprised in the obvious shift of sound that Sufjan chose to make, but honestly surprised by how good it is. This guy just knows who to make music and how to achieve the exact sound that he is trying to achieve.
8. Blitzen Trapper Destroyer of the Void
In all fairness, this album is extremely up and down. There are some great high points, but then there are some very mediocre low points. But, the high points are very strong. The opening track, which is the title track, is seriously awesome. The only descriptive which I can think of, in an attempt to describe this song, is to call it “Queen Folk”. And I don’t mean “Queen Folk” in the sense of something that some guy from Montgomery, Alabama (while travelling to New York City for the weekend) would say when he saw a bunch of trendily-dressed men hanging out together and so he yells, “Hey, look at all dem Queen Folk o’er dere!” I mean “Queen Folk” in the sense of somehow combining Queen (the 70’s rock band) and folk music… if Freddy Mercury and John Denver had a child, what kind of music would it make? (Sorry for making you picture what Freddy Denver would look like.) But, this song is serious. And there are other really, really strong points on this album… about a handful of them. And when those strong points shine, this album was on it’s way to being as excellent as anything that was released this year… but, for the remainder of the album there was almost the feeling that they didn’t keep trying… that they kind of did what bands used to do… the kind of bands that used to make their living off of successful singles… the kind of bands that would just record a few good songs (and make those few songs excellent) and then just put some filler around them on the album. Blitzen Trapper was on their way to making the best album of their career, and then it feels like they just got lazy before they were done.
7. The Walkmen Lisbon
My first five to ten listens of this album I really wasn't all that impressed and I felt pretty strongly that You & Me was far superior to Lisbon. And, though I still think that You & Me is the better album between the two, Lisbon has now grown on me a ton and I am actually in the middle of still appreciating this album more and more. At this point I assume that if I were asked about this album a couple of months from now I would have an even higher opinion of it... it just keeps slowly climbing the charts for me. I have no clue how they chose to produce and record this album, but they somehow give you this feel that you are sitting in the center of a large room (almost like a big high school wrestling room... I know that's random, but something that expansive with cold, concrete walls and no windows), you feel like you are sitting in the center of this large room while they are recording this album on all sides of you... there's a lot of near-empty space, and yet even the remotest of spaces are still filled with just enough sound. Great production, great sound, and it keeps getting better the more I listen to it.
6. New Pornographers Together
First of all, I want to say that Challengers was a massive letdown (other than the title track, which was beautiful). Fortunately, Together brought back everything that I love about the New Pornographers. This was certainly no Twin Cinema, and with all of the side-projects that these guys do (or, maybe New Pornographers is now all of their side-project at this point) I don’t think they will every recapture the pop perfection of Twin Cinema. But, nonetheless, I really enjoyed this album.
5. Arcade Fire The Suburbs
Arcade Fire officially recovered from the “sophomore slump” with The Suburbs. (Though some may not feel like Neon Bible was a “sophomore slump”, it was good but certainly not great in my opinion.) The Suburbs was great… and “Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)” was honestly shockingly good and completely unexpected from these guys. A really strong album.
4. Beach House Teen Dream
Beach House has had a certain and specific sound for a number of years. I remember them opening up for The Clientele a few years ago at The Basement and there was not a person in the entire room speaking (I’m not sure if anyone was even breathing). It was one of those live-music moments that I wish I could go back and re-experience. They have had some amazing tools to work with from the start (Victoria Legrand’s voice is both mature and moving to degrees that hardly anyone else can currently compete with), but it wasn’t until Teen Dream that they finally learned how to really use those tools to the full implementation of all that they could do. I think that their sound finally came together on this album and it turned out to be a beautiful album.
3. Local Natives Gorilla Manor
I know this album came out at the beginning of the year, so I hope you haven’t forgotten already, but please remember how fun this album is. Give it another listen… this a really solid album.
2. Suckers Wild Smile
This is the one band that kicked me in the teeth this year. Please, please, please go and see these guys live. If you take my advice then I will go ahead and preemptively tell you “Your welcome”.
1. The National High Violet
On the surface this is not “my style” of album. It’s honestly not what I usually think of as “my favorite album of the year" type of music… but, as it turns out, “Runaway” was my favorite song of 2010 (by far) and it is definitely not the type of song that is usually my favorite “song of the year” type of song. (Grizzly Bear’s “Two Weeks” was far and away my favorite song of 2009 and, for what I love about music that makes perfect, logical sense… “Runaway” is obviously in an entirely different category from a song like “Two Weeks”.) I love the song structure… which is to say, there really is no traditional structure (what exactly is the chorus and what is the verse, and is there a bridge in there?). I’m listening to it right now… my goodness, do me a favor and play this song right now and close your eyes and turn up the volume and take it all in… wow… so good. This is also the first album I’ve really fallen in love with in awhile where I only “kinda” liked it at first, but kept listening to it, and then a few months later I was mesmerized by it (it honestly took about that long, but for some reason I kept it in my CD changer in my car that whole time because I continued to grow increasingly intrigued… yes, I still listen to music on CD’s). “Conversation 16” is an excellent song, which is followed by “England”, which rocks. This whole album is strong top to bottom. “Terrible Love” is such a perfect album opener… the way it enters (also the way those drums come in… which very much brings you into that The National type of sound, and yet the smooth “oohs” that show up later in the song introduce something more promising). I’m always a huge fan of album bookends, which is to say that I put a lot of weight (probably too much weight) into songs that open and close albums (but, I’m just a huge fan of albums taken as a whole). With that said, in my opinion, which I recall was the opposite of Pitchfork’s review of this album, (I remember them pooh-poohing this song when the album came out, for some stupid reason… I don’t know why) but I think “Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks” is a gorgeous closing track. It’s one of those songs that carries me along on top of it’s waves (I hope that vaguely makes sense because being carried along on top of the unending, rolling waves of the ocean is the feeling that I get when I listen to this song), it’s one of those songs that I wish was twenty minutes long, I just want him to keep singing “Vanderlyle, cry baby cry/ Oh the waters are rising/ Still no surprising you/ Vanderlyle crybaby cry…” until I fall asleep. And, then I’ll wake up tomorrow and push “Play” again.
11.21.2010
Albums from the past and Snowden
Other, bigger blogs do it, but I think we can as well. I was thinking about friends and such, and I realized that there are various albums from the past handful of years that we all secretly (or not so secretly) revisit over and over again. These are the albums that one or two of us loved from 1999, 2005, 2007, 2000, etc. They are often albums that—when released—were received with little-to-no critical acclaim. For some reason, though, we go back to them. It’s like walking into Cheesecake Factory – we both hate it and love it at the same time (the portions are so big!!! – it’s like three meals for the rest of the week!!!). We all have them, and we all listen to them. It’s time for them to come out of the woodwork, and for them to show off all of their dirty glory in the soft, warm glow of Thom’s Lazy Eye.
Because I am the one who introduced this idea, I’ll start.
My dirty laundry album is Snowden’s Anti-Anti from 2006, and I am prepared to defend it.
Snowden knows how to look cool. Their lyrics and appearance project a “we-soooo-don’t-(but do)care-about-everything-you-don’t-(but really do)care-about” attitude. The tone, sound, and feeling of the album position the band as either super cool or super ridiculous. I’m not really sure which one is the truth.
Their lyrics, ranging from the “I don’t care” anthem of “Anti-Anti” to the silly and crafty wordplay of “Innocent Heathen,” speak to the 20 or 30 something’s contrasting feelings of apathy and desire. By this I mean a feeling of apathy toward modern society in general, but a genuine desire for something more, even when that desire is horribly misguided and/or banal. And sometimes—and I’ve come to realize this even more recently—the desire to feel something is important. I don’t necessarily struggle with this very often, but I know others do. Snowden captures this apathetic sentiment, and turns it into something bigger, grander. Does that sound so ridiculous?
I think the most important and defining characteristic of Snowden is that they have a sound. It’s clear and pronounced, and because of that, I am willing to forgive many of their faults. Enjoy.
11.02.2010
the age of adz
10.15.2010
WILD MOUNTAIN THYME, an autumn mix
So here is a digi-mix for those who enjoy sustaining the color of autumn with some tunes. Enjoy!
1. Been So Long / Vetiver
2. Graceland (Paul Simon cover) / The Tallest Man On Earth
3. Spanish Pipedream (John Prine cover) / The Avett Brothers
4. Ol' Man River (cover of the Show Boat tune) / The Beach Boys
5. Sweet Black Magic / Ryan Adams
6. Jens Lekman's Farewell Song To Rocky Dennis / Jens Lekman
7. 1979 (Smashing Pumpkins cover) / HoneyHoney
8. Salvador Sanchez (Acoustic) / Sun Kil Moon
9. Thirteen (Big Star cover) / Wilco
10. Crayon Angels / Judee Sill
11. Sally Goodin / Heron
12. Saro (Traditional) / Samamidon
13. Dump The Dog / Loudon Wainwright III
14. Toboggan / Breathe Owl Breathe
15. Les Champs-Élysées / Joe Dassin
16. Into The Mystic / Van Morrison
17. Ooh La La / The Faces
18. Roll On Babe (Derrol Adams cover) / Ronnie Lane & Slim Chance
19. Buffalo / Mountain Man
20. Back to Tennessee / Christabel & The Jons
21. Walk Out / Justin Townes Earle
22. Horn / Nick Drake
23. Wild Mountain Thyme (William McPeake cover) / White Antelope
24. Communion Cups and Someone's Coat / Iron and Wine
25. The Beginner / Wheat
26. 1 John 4:16 / The Mountain Goats
27. You Should've Seen The Other Guy / Nathaniel Rateliff
Download the full mix here.
9.28.2010
future islands
perhaps it was timing. last week, i downloaded the interpol against my better judgement. the sting of that disappointment was fresh when i heard theirs synthesizers, hollow beats, and garbled tom waits roar on friday night.
future islands are clearly pulling heavily from new wave (more than one review has placed them in the "post-wave" camp). but, what i've found so refreshing is this band is creating original, intense music while referencing older styles. helped by his voice and the synths, the album is very dramatic, almost dance-able.
give it a listen, i'm pretty sure they're way better than my lame description.
Future Islands - Tin Man from Thrill Jockey Records on Vimeo.
i just found this video while tracking down the album cover. it's really cool as well--enjoy!
9.05.2010
Suckers!!!
Checkout the song "Beach Queen" below. It's the opening track from the E.P. and it will give you a tasty lick of the Suckers...
Beach Queen by Suckers
8.11.2010
A Favorite Summer Song
Hello friends, this is my first attempt at a post on Thom's Lazy Eye. It's good to be here. It's a simple one, I just want to share what has become a favorite track of the summer. "Solitude Is Bliss" by Tame Impala may be familiar to some of you already, but if not I recommend you download it and let the bliss take you over. It has a kind of updated late-60s psychedelia sound that totally hits the spot. Hope you like it.
5.14.2010
Sleigh Bells
I just picked up Sleigh Bell's album, Treats. It's...weird, fun, catchy, LOUD, and really, really distorted. The best description I can give it is that it's a mix of rock and hip-hop beats with extremely heavy and distorted guitars, all accompanied by sugary-sweet cheerleaderish chants. Or you could say its the lovechild of chillwave, metal, and 80's pop. It's hard to describe. Just give it a listen. Below is a song from the album that's already been out on the internets for a good while (sorry for the huge player - also, if you click the link on there, you can listen to the whole album at npr's site).
4.24.2010
Fanfarlo
I’ve been enjoying this album a lot the past few weeks. I know people want to make the Arcade Fire comparisons here, but I think that’s basically what people do when they listen to the first track of an album and think of the first band that pops into their head… which, there are some similarities (especially on the opening track), but there’s a lot more to this album than simply being a mid-meal appetizer while Arcade Fire fans await their next release. Even if there is something slightly familiar here this honestly is also very much it’s own work (and not just pulling from other people like so many artists are obviously doing right now… if that makes any sense?). Anywho, there are some really great melodies on here. There is also some very pretty texture added by horns and sweeping vocals throughout. This is really good stuff and I’m really digging it right now. If you haven’t done so yet, check it out… give it a taste… see whatcha think...
4.01.2010
Lissie
Wow! I'm loving this little EP right now. Part of me just wants to say "Check it out" without giving the usual comparison to thirty different artists in order to peak your interest. I could say something like, "Imagine Neko Case taking a trip down the Mississippi River on a paddle-bound steamboat. And, also take comfort in the fact that Bill Reynolds (from Band of Horses) is the steamboat captain of the ship (which is to say that he is the producer of the EP)." But, I won't say any of that... I'll just say: Check it out, I hope you enjoy...
Oh, and thanks to 'Lil Trucker for introducing me to Lissie... good stuff.
3.18.2010
Pickin' on Modest Mouse
This group of middle-aged bluegrassers have managed to soften-up the beautifully cacophonous sound Modest Mouse is known for as well as lyrically lighten-up their often dark content. Upon close inspection, Iron Horse achieved this simply by rewording the ubiquitous F-bombs, GDs, and various other unholyness. What is impressive is that they pull this off seamlessly. On the other hand, it should be noted that there are common Modest Mouse themes that resonate well with bluegrass music (i.e. "drink away the part of the day that I cannot sleep away" as heard in Polar Opposites).
The fact these songs translate so well is itself an homage to the great talent of Modest Mouse. Making lyrics like "two one-eyed dogs there looking at stereos, Hi-fi gods try so hard to make their cars low to the ground " (again, Polar Opposites) sound so effortless and meaningful in any musical style is impressive.
Pulling songs from three Modest Mouse albums, Iron Horse clearly did their homework. The arrangements make since, both individually and as a compilation. If you fall into the camp that believes the greatest sound a banjo can make is falling into the bottom of a dumpster, then you’ll hate this tribute. However, if you’re open minded, appreciate great talent, whimsy and unique interpretation, you’re sure to enjoy all 10 tracks... though I'm sure tracks 1 and 4 will garner your immediate attention.
2.23.2010
washed out
To make up for it, here is my winter 2010 jam:
Washed Out - New Thoery
If any of you are like me, you skimmed right over Washed Out during last year's "glo-fi" insurgence. Neon Indian, Toro y Moi, Delorean, Washed Out.... blah blah blah.
But then I heard "New Thoery" months later, in my cold, cold car and I was like, "Okay!"
Washed Out is a guy named Ernest from Georgia who sits in his parents' basement (probably) and makes pretty music that I liked while driving in my cold, cold car. Thanks Ernest!
Here's another one:
Washed Out - Feel it All Around
local natives
2.21.2010
rites of spring
NSFW, but totally safe for Rites of Spring!
2.19.2010
Been listenin' to and been lovin'...
If John Denver, Cat Stevens, Paul Simon, Rudy Gatlin and all of Elton John's background singers got together and had a child it would be one freak-nasty, five-eyed, foamy-mouthed, forearm growing out of the back of his head monster... but, that monster would make some really sweet music and it would sound something like Bonnie "Prince" Billy's Beware. I've been listening to this album on repeat for the past handful of weeks and loving it. There is certainly that 70's approach to the instrumentation, as well as the backing vocals (which I love)... but, there is also just some really great music on here. If you're not afraid of the folky-er, country-er side of things then definitely check this album out.
Thanks again for the recommendation, Collin.
2.08.2010
Indie Asia: on tour with Handsome Furs
Check out the goods here.
1.11.2010
here's an effort...sorta
Let me just go ahead and get it out in the open:
I’ve been a lazy boy this year. For starters, I didn’t run the half marathon like I promised I would (sorry Tristen). I drank too much beer. I played a lot of video games. I quit my job (before you jump to any conclusions - that was actually a good decision), and, once again, I became a student…to get my M.A. degree in (…wait for it…) English!!! But the most grievous and heinous lack of discipline was my negligence to actively seek out new music. There. I said it. Or wrote it. Whatever.
It’s not that I didn’t listen to music. I enjoyed plenty of good music. But I feel like I really looked for it early on in the year, and then as the moved forward I simply stopped looking for it and began to rely too heavily on my friends (you know who you are, and I thank you for your recommendations – especially the 5 different people who recommended the XX to me) and certain “best new music” lists on certain websites.
For instance, Wade puts me to shame. Not only has he posted his top albums of the year, but he has also posted HIS TOP 25 ALBUMS OF THE DECADE.
This post, however, is not any attempt to reach such lofty heights. It’s not about the top albums of the decade. In fact, it’s not even about the top albums of the year. Well, that’s not entirely true, as I will list my favorite albums of the year, in no particular order:
Bibio – Ambivalence Avenue
Japandroids – Post Nothing
The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
The XX – XX
Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion
Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
The Antlers – Hospice
But that’s all I’m going to say about them, especially since I feel like I would be repeating much of what many of you have already said (rather eloquently) about these albums.
Instead, I have decided to simply post my favorite songs of the year. I believe this approach goes along incely with the general lazy vibe I’ve established for this post.
Japandroids – Wet Hair
She had wet hair. Say what you will. I don’t care. I couldn’t resist it. This song is pretty ridiculous, but it also encapsulates much of what I like about Japandroids – simple lyrics, loud, rolling beats, fuzzy guitars, and a straightforward melody. I find myself tapping my feet every time I hear this song.
Animal Collective – Summertime Clothes
If you’ve ever visited or lived in NYC in the summer…this song captures so much of the city’s feel in July and August.
Hideaway – Karen O and the Kids
This is from the Where the Wild Things Are soundtrack. I know – it’s a little random. My enjoyment of this song has something to do with how deeply the movie moved me as well. I don’t want to go too deep into this one, but let’s just say I have my reasons for liking it.
Bibio – Lover’s Carvings
Bibio is great – if you have not checked out last year’s release, be sure to grab it. It is perfect for detailed listening with headphones or as background music at a party. This song is especially fun, as it transitions from a quiet offering to something a little more upbeat.
The XX – Shelter
Whoa. This song should belong on some sort of noir detective sci-fi movie soundtrack. I don’t say this about much, but it’s sexy.
The Antlers – Epilogue
An excellent cherry on top of an amazing sundae of an album.
Phoenix – 1901
This one is just a no-brainer for me. I actually got kinda sick of it, but it’s a dang good pop song.
So there are some of my favorite songs from 2009. Let’s hope I’m not as lazy in 2010.
1.10.2010
Best Albums of the Decade
Top 25 Albums of the Decade
First of all, what do we call this past decade? This is not a Best of the 2000’s list… that would include every album of this millennium (2000-2999)… which, let me just say, if this blog is still kickin’ in the year 3000 I can’t wait to write my Best Albums of the Millennium list whilst floating on a cloud and typing on my harp-shaped heavenly MacBook. Anywho, I think this past decade should really be called the 00’s, but that sounds really stupid… though, I think it is correct.
Furthermore, my sincere apologies to the year 2006 for being excluded from this list. Though, in fact, 2006 is the one that should be apologizing to me because I mean, seriously 2006 my friend, you really brought nothing to the table... I know, I know, I know, TV On The Radio Return to Cookie Mountain, Grizzly Bear Yellow House even Band of Horses Everything All the Time… yes, all good albums. But, seriously 2006, who are you kidding? That’s just not enough. So, 2006, to a year that allowed the Seattle Seahawks to play in the Super Bowl as well as handing Ang Lee a Best Director Academy Award for Brokeback Mountain… when people refer back this decade you will be the year of which we do not speak.
Having said that. I give you the best albums of the 00’s…
25. Panda Bear – Person Pitch (2007)
Only seven tracks long, but this album holds all the weight of a full length LP. On the surface there are the obvious comparisons to the Beach Boys, but there is much more going on here… like eating a layered cake that is composed of a few different flavors yet when eaten all in one bite it works best as a whole. A beautiful album.
24. Beck – Sea Change (2002)
For people who think that the producer of an album is not that significant and more of an afterthought… you’re wrong. Not to give too much credit to Nigel Godrich (which is also a mistake that could easily be made on the other side of the discussion), but nonetheless this album would not have been the sonic experience it was without Godrich’s touch. My favorite Beck album.
23. Spoon – Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga (2007)
This is a true, straight-ahead rock album (in all of the best senses of the term). There is a sound that so many bands try to achieve, whether you call it “raw” or “stripped down” or whatever… and so many bands go for that sound and it just sounds empty. When bands try to fake that rock-and-roll swagger and effortlessness it comes across as mediocre and the lack of effort shows all too well. I think one of the keys to the success of Spoon (especially on this album) is Britt Daniel’s voice. It’s not one of those voices where he’s trying to sound like he’s not trying… it’s his voice and I think it sounds better than ever on this album… without his vocal delivery I think a lot of these songs would still be good but they honestly wouldn’t have been as great as these songs turned out. He just naturally is that rock-and-roll essence that so many bands try to fake or manufacture or search for (without ever finding it). This is a very solid rock (and pop, hence “You Got Yr. Cherry Bomb”) album.
22. Coldplay – A Rush of Blood to the Head (2002)
Woops… I included Coldplay on my list. Party foul! Nonetheless, this really is a solid album from top-to-bottom. “Politik” is a strong album opener. “God Put a Smile Upon Your Face” is everything that’s good about Coldplay. The synthesizer on “Daylight” is perfect, there is a certain depth to the way the synth and the guitar work together that makes them very stirring… they kind of pull your chest into the movement and melody of the song. And, from a band that always knows how to close an album well “Amsterdam” is a solid closer. (Oh, and by the way… sorry Coldplay, but U2 still had a better album than you this decade... keep chasin’! Keep dreamin’!)
21. Fleet Foxes – Fleet Foxes (2008)
Ahh… so good. So tasty. So sweet. Thank you, Fleet Foxes. Let’s be friends.
20. Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest (2009)
Hooky, poppy melodies: Check. Warm, soaring harmonies: Check. Music video where band members’ heads reveal a portal to the Light Bright Universe: Check. Album that I love: Check.
19. Bruce Springsteen – Magic (2007)
Springsteen has, of course, always been a storyteller, but there is something about his approach to lyrics on this album that rose to a new level (at least for me). His tone is different than all of his past work… using a much more nostalgic tone. There are songs here that draw you into a certain scene, a certain time and setting and place and you really are feeling what he is feeling (and, even more, seeing and smelling and tasting what he is experiencing). Springsteen has always been willing to bear himself and stand naked and exposed in front of his audience, though often to make a point or some statement. But this time he seems to do it more out of vulnerability for vulnerability’s sake. As for the music, this is the E Street Band at the top of their game. “Girls in Their Summer Clothes” (my favorite track of ‘07) puts you perfectly into this scene of an older teenager or even young guy in his 20’s hanging out during the summer, yet Springsteen is not playing the part of “The Man” (or, “The Boss”) he is seeing all the girls pass him by as he is forced to sit on the sidelines and watch. “Living in the Future” is classic Springsteen without sounding like an imitation of himself (like so many older artists so often do). And, the closer “Terry’s Song” is a perfect rock eulogy (if that’s a term). A truly great rock album.
18. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavillion (2009)
An amazing combination of infectious melodies, electronic rhythms, gorgeous vocals, happy feelings, drawn butter and gravy boats. Seconds, please.
17. Red Hot Chili Peppers – By the Way (2002)
Didn’t expect to see this one on here. Well, I like it a lot. Since John Frusciante returned to the band this was the best of the three albums they made in their California Trilogy. And, now that he has left the band again, they may not ever make another good album… but, we’ll see.
16. Johnny Cash – American IV: The Man Comes Around (2002)
Not many artists get to have a true “Swan Song”. Of course, not many artists are Johnny Cash. “Hurt” was the perfect closing single to an amazing six-decade-long career. It was not Johnny singing a Nine Inch Nails cover, that song is now a Johnny Cash song which Nine Inch Nails can feel free to cover, if they so prefer (or, if they so dare). And, the pain (yet hope also found) in “Hurt” was the perfect song for Johnny to end on. And, as much as Chris Martin wanted Johnny to sing “Til Kingdom Come” (another attempt to play the part of U2 that came up just short for Coldplay in missing out on having Johnny sing lead vocals on an album-closing track), “Hurt” was the correct finale from the Man in Black. This a great album. This is Johnny. This is music.
15. U2 – All That You Can’t Leave Behind (2000)
First of all, I hate the phrase “return to form”. This album is not a “return to form” that is just a phrase used by people who work for music magazines hoping they can hear the same album they heard that made them love music in 1987 and they don’t know how to move on and move forward. If U2 had never made Achtung Baby, Zooropa and Pop then there never would have been All That You Can’t Leave Behind. Not that those albums were aiming towards All That You Can’t Leave Behind (Achtung Baby is the finest work of their career and possibly the best album of the 90’s)… the point is that bands who do not progress cannot help but regress and whenever a band does not progress it grows stagnant, irrelevant and uncreative. Certainly U2 returned to a form of being more direct guitar-driven with arena-ready lead vocals, but this album was new. It was new for U2 and it took them to fresh sounds and in a new direction. And, it was (and is) an excellent album.
14. Brian Wilson – Smile (2004)
The phrase “musical genius” gets thrown around too often. And, I don’t mean that people are saying it all the time, but it’s the kind of phrase that should only be said on extremely rare occasions. People to whom I will permit this term being used to describe are: Stevie Wonder, Prince, any non-Ringo Beatle (this includes Pete Best and Stuart Sutcliffe) and Brian Wilson. If you like harmonies. If you like songs. If you like music. If you like life. Then grab a copy of Smile. Roll down the windows. Turn up the volume. Listen... Smile.
13. The Flaming Lips – Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (2002)
It’s easy to only remember this album for the hits that it spawned. Most familiar being “Do You Realize?” which is a great song, but since it has been played so much it can tend to make you only think of that song when you reflect on this album. This album deserves a revisit, not just for the hits but for the hidden gems that are the glue holding this album together. Tracks like “Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots pt. 2” demand to be re-appreciated. Go back in time and re-battle the Pink Robots alongside Yoshimi, she won’t let the robots defeat you and she’ll sing you a lovely tune while holding your hand on the journey. Yoshimi loves you… do you love her?
12. Radiohead – Kid A (2000)
Somehow, ranking this album at Number Twelve is almost an insult in comparison with where it is winding up on most end-of-the-decade lists. But, I love it… it may not be the “Number One Album of the Decade” in my opinion but it is still an amazing album. It is also insane (in retrospect) that this was the follow-up to OK Computer and The Bends… those albums were the sounds this band was capable of making and then they went to Kid A out of nowhere. Who are these guys? I think they’re gonna be big some day. Heard it here first (from me in January 2010)… Radiohead is a good band and will become quite famous. Called it!
11. Sufjan Stevens – Come on Feel the Illinois (2005)
Another album that critics made-out with so there is not a lot new to say. But, this really is a fantastic album. And, in a decade that has been as musically eclectic as this past one has been there is no album that anyone else made that sounds even remotely similar to what Sufjan was doing on this album. People didn’t even attempt to imitate this sound and that says a lot about this work. It’s like in the 80’s when the entire music industry got together and said, “You hear that stuff that Michael Jackson is doing? Don’t even try to imitate it. None of us can do that.” And they all just agreed that no one else could achieve that sound and thus no one even tried. Not that I am comparing Sufjan Stevens to Michael Jackson (Sufjan has much darker skin), but the simple fact is that he composed an entire sound that truly sounds nothing at all like anything else that other people are doing and because of that fact this album will genuinely hold up for many, many years to come.
10. Of Montreal – Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer? (2007)
This album makes me wanna put on a costume, paint my face and go trick-or-treating in the middle of April… not in the “Who is that sketch adult male running through the neighborhood dressed like a clown and scaring small children?” sort of way, but more in the, “Wow, let’s all play ‘Dress Up’ and have fun!” And, “Who says you ever have to grow up?” kind of way. I love the melodies. I love the playfulness (a playfulness that is balanced by soul-searching and moments of depression and self-evaluation). I love all the sounds taking place. I love the whole album.
9. Whiskeytown – Pneumonia (2001)
This is the best album with which Ryan Adams has ever been involved. “The Ballad of Carol Lynn” is a perfect album opener. And “Paper Moon” immediately sends you to a Walt Disney World where everyone around you is a cartoon and yet you’re real. There is a bluebird on your shoulder and you’re walking hand-in-hand with Mowgli (your man-cub friend) and Geppetto (your sketchy old-man friend who likes to turn small boys into real people so he can play with them)… nonetheless, it is a gorgeous song that literally does send me to a different place every time I hear it. Adams has sung alongside other female voices over the years but none of them blends with his voice the way Caitlin Cary’s does… they sound perfect on this album.
8. R.E.M. – Reveal (2001)
Since the departure of Billy Berry, R.E.M. has been in somewhat of an identity crisis (to put it kindly). The past two albums have been basically forgettable. But, one album in the post-Berry era has been great and not at all because it tried to imitate the band’s 1980’s excellence, but exactly because it departed sharply from their previous work. Reveal is a gorgeous album that stands separate from the rest of the body of work from the band that did as much to create the whole “Indie Music Scene” as any band can lay claim to. A band that laid it’s foundations on the dark and damp sounds of Murmur, Reckoning and Fables of the Reconstruction comes out in Reveal basking in the sunshine. The opening synth of “The Lifting” truly does lift (for lack of a better word) the album to a whole new level. Stipe’s voice on “I’ve Been High” has never sounded so moving. “Beat a Drum”, “Summer Turns to High”, “Chorus and the Ring”… all the songs on here are great and have a true warmth and gentleness to them. I don’t know if these guys will ever be able to “find themselves” again, but the experiment that became Reveal gives me some hope that they might make great music again.
7. Super Furry Animals – Rings Around the World (2002)
This album makes me happy. Like licking the cake batter off the cake mixer in the kitchen when your mom wasn’t looking. And, somehow, it can shift abruptly from pop melodies to harsh (almost disturbing sounds) and yet the shift does not feel abrupt. The track “Rings Around the World” has hints of Beach Boys, but not in the way that everyone is currently chasing after Pet Sounds, but more the early Beach Boys “I Get Around” type of fun. “Receptacle for the Respectable” is absolutely awesome and, shockingly, features Paul McCartney playing carrots and celery (that’s not a joke). I had no clue that Paul knew how to play vegetables… I knew that he nurtured a vegetable for six years (Ringo) but I just didn’t know that he knew how to play vegetables. The instrumental moments on the album are also completely awesome. I revisited this album this week and it not only still holds up but it truly sounds as strong (and as musically relevant) as it did the day it was released.
6. Radiohead – Hail to the Thief (2003)
I know... shocking that I like Hail to the Thief better than Kid A. I also like ribeye steaks better than filet mignons, Michael Keaton’s portrayal of Batman better than Christian Bale’s and flats better than stilettos. Having established that, everything I love about Radiohead is here… the rhythms, the melodies, Ed’s harmonies, Johnny’s absurdities, Thom’s lazy eyed-ness… it’s all here and I love every ounce of it.
5. My Morning Jacket – Z (2005)
I’ve always been a sucker for wordless choruses (“Belong” by R.E.M., “Earth Song” by Michael Jackson, “Hey Jude” by the Beatles… not considering “Na” to be a word) but then My Morning Jacket had to go and open an album with a song actually called “Wordless Chorus”. Well, that’s one fine “How do ya do?”! This is a great album. It’s large enough to fill up every corner of any size space or setting. Jim James seems capable of doing absolutely anything he so desires with his voice and the entire band also seems capable of going anywhere his voice leads. Great stuff.
4. Elliott Smith – From a Basement on a Hill (2004)
I often hear Elliot Smith fans talk about how they love his earlier work and how they feel that (starting with Either/Or) each album got slightly worse than the previous… not that each album was a letdown, but more that Either/Or and XO were the pinnacle of his work. Nothing against those fans, but I have had the exact opposite experience with Smith. I honestly think that each one of his albums gets progressively better and he ended on his finest work. From a Basement on a Hill is an overwhelmingly amazing album. Big words I know, but I really think it’s that good. Each time I revisit this album I feel like I peel back another layer only to find more beauty and richness to be appreciated. Oh, and “King’s Crossing” is uhhhhMAzing every singe time I hear it… I dare you to write a line any cooler than, “I got a heavy-metal mouth that hurls obscenity. And I get my check from the trash treasury. Because I took my own insides out.” WOW!!!
3. Arcade Fire – Funeral (2004)
Let’s rock! More than any album this past decade that punched me in the face, then kicked me while I was lying on the floor, then stole my lunch money to go and buy arcade tokens (the true meaning behind the name “Arcade Fire”)… this album really did blow me away when it was released. I can still enjoy it to this day, and it also points to something that’s just awesome about music… you can go back and listen to an album and it takes you back to a certain season in your life and you can remember when all of these new sounds were so fresh. This album was a fresh wave of “Deal with me and be rocked by me and then thank me for it.” And I do, I still do… Thank you, Funereal.
2. The New Pornographers – Twin Cinema (2005)
Pop perfection. The glossy, clean goodness of Carl Newman alongside the gritty, playful rockiness of Dan Bejar next to the stunning, memorizing sounds of Neko Case all thrown into the blender with perfectly written, guitar-driven, melody-infectious music is a recipe for pop perfection. The New Pornographers have always cooked with this same recipe, but this time the dish came out flawless.
1. Wilco – Yankee Hotel Foxtrot (2002)
Music is both corporate and personal. There is an aspect to music where it can be judged and experienced by a group of people because there is genuine and definable artistic merit to that work of music. Though there is also a personal aspect to experiencing music. This takes on lots of different specific forms, but (simply put) different people experience certain albums at certain seasons of their life that (no matter how much later in life they revisit that album) it always sends them back to a certain time and place and season in life. For me, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is one of the most personally rewarding experiences I have ever had with an album. Being just out of college, and at an age in life where buying lots of CD's and driving to see concerts out of town was a regular part of life, while at the same time falling more and more in love with Wilco. Then, the band gets dropped from their record label and they somehow use that huge disappointment to swell their fan base like nothing previously had done for them. Downloading YHF for free (on Wilco's website) while they had no record label, I immediately loved the whole album. I memorized it word-for-word from top-to-bottom. One of my favorite concert experiences of my life, which was seeing Wilco at The Roxy in Atlanta before YHF was released, standing on the front row center-stage, singing along with every song off the yet-to-be-released album. Jeff Tweedy shaking our hands before the encore (he shook my hand, Clay Headden’s hand and Ryan Doyle’s while skipping over only Collin Brown… poor Collin… always the martyr) and at that moment Ryan Doyle said, “Reprise sucks!” to Jeff Tweedy. (Reprise, the bands' former record label who had just dropped the band from the label, which is pronounced “Reh-preez”, though Ryan pronounced it “Re-prize”.) Tweedy looked to me and said, “What’s he saying?” and I said “Reprise... the record label!” To which Tweedy responded, “Oh good, I thought he was saying ‘You guys suck!’”. Anywho, in recent interviews I still hear Tweedy refer to that season as when he knew something special was happening with the band... going on tour while having no record label and looking at the audience each night and noticing people singing along word-for-word to an album that hadn’t yet been released. This is an album that I personally experienced. I personally was into the moment when (and before) it came out and sucked up every morsel of it. I do think it is a beautiful album. The layers and textures of the sounds are amazing. The concept of miscommunication that takes place in radio signals being compared to the miscommunication that takes place in relationships is a genius foundation upon which to build a concept album. The songs (ALL of them) are excellent. While I don’t call this my “all-time favorite album in music history”, I do call it the one album that I have personally enjoyed experiencing more than any other album in my life. And, I clearly call it the best album of the 00’s.
P.S. Ringo jokes aside… I’m actually a huge fan of Ringo and a defender of the fact that he was a necessity to the Beatles. Ringo, if you are reading this blog (which, I assume you are) and in reference to my disparaging remarks you are at present saying out loud, “Well, that’s just a bunch of bollocks now isn’t it?” You’re right… bullocks. I get by with a little help from you, friend.