Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Things I Didn't Listen to in 2008

Wanted to listen to but haven't had time yet:

Blind Pilot-One Red Thread
Chad van Gaalen-Soft Airplane

The Hold Steady-Stay Positive
The Magnetic Fields-Distortion
Deerhunter-Microcastle/ Weird Era Cont.
Jim Noir-Jim Noir (Listening to this right now)
Eric Hutchinson-Sounds Like This
These United States-Crimes
American Music Club-The Golden Age
Rivers Cuomo
MGMT-Oracular Spectacular
Appollo Sunshine: Shall Noise Upon
The Kills: Midnight Boom
The Vivian Girls-The Vivian Girls
The Knux-Remind me in 3 Days
Local H-12 Angry Months
Mates of State-Re-Arrange Us
Q-Tip-The Renaissance
Tokyo Police Club-Elephant Shell

Am not going to listen to for personal reasons:
Death Cab-Narrow Stairs
Portishead-Third
Santogold-Santogold
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds-Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!
Parts & Labour-Receivers
Sigur Ros: Med Sud I Eyrum Vid Spilum Endalaust
Sam Phillips: Sam Phillips
The Streets-Everything is Borrowed
Cut Copy-In Ghost Colours
Jenny Lewis-Acid Tongue
The Hold Steady-Stay Positive
Black Mountain-In the Future

Is/Are now irrelevant
Gun n Roses-Chinese Democracy: Didn't like them then, fuckin hate them now. Old artists cannot be relevant if you weren't fans of them to begin with. Read Chuck Klosterman's review.
The Killers-Day & Age
The Kings of Leon-Only by the Night
David Byrne and Brian Eno-Everything that Happehns will Happen Today
Lindsey Buckingham-Gift of Screws
The Black Crowes-Warpaint
Elvis Costello & the Imposters-Momofoku
Ray Davies-Workingman's Cafe
The Fireman-Electric Arguments
Oasis-Dig Out Your Soul
REM-Accelerate
Todd Rundgren-Arena
Paul Weller-22 Dreams

The Rest of What I Listened to in 2008

Not Quite Good Enough:

Beach House-Devotion: This album sounds nice, but other than the Jad Fair cover, Some Things Last A Long Time, it just makes me want to go to sleep.
Girl Talk-Feed the Animals: I don't get this. I don't doubt Greg Gillis' industry--I heard an interview where he described his song-making process, and it's insane--but it lacks the difficulty of actual creation that mark the other records on my list. I bet the concerts are fun though.
Flight of the Concords: Good for a chuckle here and there, but not much better than an Adam Sandler record with more production value. And they have a shitty TV show.
Vampire Weekend-Vampire Weekend: Yeah, it's catchy but...that's it I think. If I want pure candy, I'll go back to a New Pornographers album or wait for AC Newman's in January. This just doesn't have enough pull on me--the songs sound nice in the background, but not one would make my top 20, I'm not even sure I could pick out an individual song that I like or hate the most. So, I have no gripes with this record, it's not a disappointment. But I'm more interested in hearing their next one.
Erykah Badu-New Amerykah, Part One: I don't get CokeMachineGlow's hard-on for this album. One great song, the rest is boring.
The Oxford Collapse: Like Beach House but faster, and just as boring.

Disappointments:

Weezer-The Red Album: No Comment.
Of Montreal-Skeletal Lamping: It takes a lot, but this album is just too weird, too schizophrenic, and the pure moments of Elephant Six melodic beauty are either buried in 18 different songs or too few and far between.
Dr. Dog-Fate: A definite step back. Not enough swamp rock, too much cutesy crap. Hurts to talk about.
Annuals-Such Fun: Sophomore slump? I thought this was going to be a great record. Their first one had hints of spectacular songwriting along the lines of The Shins, but was overproduced. This one just isn't very good other than a couple of songs.
The Raconteurs-Consolers of the Lonley: Yeah, normally I suck the Jack White teat...and I wanted to with this release, but this is pretty awful. Maybe one or two songs that don't make me cringe.
The Silver Jews-Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea: Seemingly less personal than The Tanglewood Numbers, also less interesting. This would be fine if the songs were anywhere as good as the ones on American Water or Bright Flight. Instead, it's a sad, boring album.
Tapes n Tapes-Walk it Off: Another sophomore slump here (hey, a theme!). Only Le Ruse is as catchy as anything on their debut, The Loon.
Wolf Parade-At Mount Zoomer: Language city sucks, what does that shit even mean, stop telling me this album is any good. Yeah, after their first effort it sounded like these guys could put out a number of great albums and maybe become the next great indie rock band but this shit ain't it.
Coldplay-Viva La Vida: I'm not even sure I can count this as a disappointment--they haven't released an album worth listening to in more than 5 years. At least they're trying on this one, but it's still no better than X & Y.
Cold War Kids-Loyalty to Loyalty: Ugh. This band was either going to get a lot better after 2006's Robbers and Cowards or a lot worse. Unfortunately, it was the latter.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

My 17 Favorite Albums of 2008

Ok, I know 17 is a strange number, but basically if it's not on this list, I would not be willing to recommend the album, even if a couple of songs on it are good. Later posts will include albums I feel lukewarm about, as well as those that I haven't had a chance to listen to. For now, the top 17:

17. No Age-Nouns: Seventeen is probably a fitting number for this band, who got their name from their show policy to allow those under 18 to attend their shows. Lame gimmicks aside, Dean Spunt and Randy Randall's (those could be great porn names) debut full-length album is pretty darn good. The band weaves inventive guitar melodies through a layer of noise throughout Nouns, and the result is a promising debut record.

If you're willing to sift through a little bit of noise and feedback, there are some beautiful riffs on this album. Eraser sounds like Spunt and Randall lifted a guitar line from The New Pornographers, while Teen Creeps showcases their ability to move beyond the laconic guitar riff and write fully developed songs. Even when No Age fully form their songs, they are in and out quickly, to great effect, as witnessed on Here Should Be My Home and Ripped Knees.

However, this ability is not always on display. If anything, this album suffers from lack of structure. Some of the tracks seem to go nowhere (Keechie, Sleeper Hold), but that might just be something that comes with time, or maybe I just don't fully understand noise pop. Either way, this is an exciting album for a band that is still coming into its own.
16. Women-Women: I've always been a sucker for the lo-fi guitar sound, so it comes as no surprise that I really like this album. The opener, Cameras, sounds like it was recorded in the same studio as My Morning Jacket's The Tennessee Fire, but with fuzzier guitars. Of course, the song is gone as quickly as it came and immediately morphs into Lawncare, a 4 minute noise-pop exploration. And, I guess, that's why this album is so frustrating for me. Much in the way that the Olivia Tremor Control buffered their moments of brilliance with long stretches of sound, Women seem to hold out on hitting those great moments for a few songs at a time, and that's what holds this album back.

The song after Lawncare, Woodbine, is more of the same, until the band gets to Black Rice, which I wrote about in my favorite songs of the year section, and which is the best song on the album. There's nothing really complicated about Black Rice, it's just a simple riff that the band expands upon throughout the song. The rest of the album is mainly 1-2 minute tracks that are mostly instrumental, but contain the occasional vocal.

Personally, I would love to see Women forgo the noise-pop and focus on the hooks that seem to come so easy to them. Maybe at this point in the list I'm leaning too much on future promise, but this band could be great. Of course, that's their prerogative and regardless of the noise vs. hooks debate, I will still be looking forward to their second effort.
15. My Morning Jacket-Evil Urges: A disappointment, surely, as a whole. But not a failure. While I skip Librarian, Two Halves, and Look At You every time I listen to Evil Urges, the rest of this album is just as good as any other MMJ output (I happen to like Highly Suspicious, though from talking to others this seems to be a highly polarizing track). However, it is only "as good" as their other albums, and I don't think it improves upon Z overall.

While the sounds on Evil Urges is different, it wasn't a complete surprise for anyone who had heard some of their demos, which provided covers of White Rabbit, Downtown, Take My Breath Away(amazing cover), and Rocket Man among others. Suffice it to say that MMJ have diverse musical influences, and expecting a singular sound out of them over their career would have been a mistake. Highly Suspicious is their take on Prince, while Two Halves sounds like they're apeing James Taylor (and no, I don't regard that as a good thing).

Of course, MMJ are at their best when they're expanding on their own sound. Touch me I'm going to Scream Pts. 1&2 are both deserving of their place in MMJ's catalogue, and Smokin from Shootin is a nice bridge between the two. Aluminum Park sounds like a B-side from Z, but, um, in a good way if that's possible. When it comes down to it, I wouldn't pick Evil Urges over any other album by MMJ, but I would pick it over most of the music out there.
14. Man Man-Rabbit Habits: I recently listened to Paul and Linda McCartney's Ram for the first time, and, somewhat surprisingly, it has changed how I view any output from Man Man. That's probably unfair to Man Man, but I can't help feeling that their whole career is just doing derivative takes of McCartney's Monkberry Moon Delight. Rabbit Habits is a delightful album to listen to, and definitely a step above their last release, Six Demon Bag, especially in its consistency.

This is another band plagued with the qualifier that you don't really understand them/appreciate them until you've seen them live. And I believe it. But if that energy fails to translate to Man Man's studio efforts, it doesn't make the album any better knowing that I need to see them live. It may be the case that the louder, faster songs, which often sound dull on the record, are amazing live. But I'm still a huge fan of their unique style of piano balladry, on exhibit in Doo Right and Rabbit Habits. These slower songs come through great on the album, and Honus Honus's gravelly voice is particularly affecting.

Ultimately, Rabbit Habits is more listenable from end to end than anything not in my top seven, but doesn't hit the high points that albums 8-13 hit.
13. The Black Keys-Attack & Release: For better or for worse, DJ Dangermouse is all over this motherfucker (both this list and this album). What the fuck does he know about producing blues-rock? Here, he has helped (hindered?) the Black Keys release a good album, but one well below what they are probably capable of. Those saddened by this may look forward to Dan Auerbach's solo debut this spring, hopefully not produced by Dangermouse.

Attack & Release starts off well, All You Ever Wanted is a great introductory track, with the organ and fuzzed out guitar in full effect. The album isn't missing for intensity, as the second track, I Got Mine, finds Dan Auerbach snarling over his guitar with Patrick Carney's cymbals reverberating in the background. Psychotic Girl uses a beautiful banjo line to draw the listener in, but kind of falls flat after that.

A lot of the songs here have a few great lines or riffs, but grow tired before the song ends. Lies has a great opening ("You said the moon/was ours/you said the moon was ours/to help me today/the sunlight is only gonna take love away"), but the chorus is heavy handed and the rest of the song doesn't contain much that the listener didn't get out of the first minute. Remember When Side A is a waste, while Side B is a great blues rocker. Maybe a better producer gets a little more out of Auerbach and Carney here, maybe not.


12. Okkervil River-The Stand Ins: It was always going to be hard to live up to their last album, The Stage Names, and this is a respectable effort at doing so, even if not wholly successful. I listened to an interview with Will Sheff on All Songs Considered as he explained the thematic differences between the two albums and I can now see why I enjoyed The Stage Names a bit more.

The good on this album is tunes like Lost Coastlines, Singer Songwriter, Calling and Not Calling My Ex, and Pop Lie, which pick up where the last album left off, with rollicking guitar lines and not too much attention to fictional characters. The bad is where the band maybe lets themselves gets too caught up in this concept. Starry Stairs, a song about a porn star (I forget which one), contains some really painful lines ("they ask for more/what do you think this fanclub is for?") which really kill the song. Blue Tulip, while not a bad song, takes a little while to go anywhere as Sheff pulls out some dramatic vocals. The killer for me, however, was the awfully titled Bruce Wayne Campbell Interview on the Roof of the Chelsea Hotel, 1979. Not only did I have to google Bruce Wayne Campbell to find out that was the real name of former glam rocker Jobriath, but I also had to listen to this crappy song.

Perhaps it is unfair to compare this effort to their last, but every band is doomed to be compared to any earlier records, and Okkervil River can be no different here. That said, they have relased another batch of stellar songs, and despite my bitching, this is better than most of the other rock out there.

11. Beck-Modern Guilt: Count me among the skeptics of the ascension of DJ Dangermouse, and despite the prominent position here, I'm still not convinced. As most fans and critics noticed, about half this album is great, and about half is seriously wanting for more polishing/scrapping. My quick and dirty approach would have you listen to tracks 1, and 3-6, while skipping the rest of the album.

I've always thought Beck was at his best when doing his more melancholy songwriting, whether in partial jest during Loser, or in all seriousness for Sea Change. The title Modern Guilt excited me for this reason, I saw the possibility of Beck taking an epic look at the "plight" of a male about to enter middle age. Beck succeeds, at least partially. Chemtrails, Orphans, and Walls all find Beck sounding about as alone and hopeless as he has ever sounded, and Dangermouse's production on these tracks is immaculate.

Chemtrails
sounds like Beck is singing his vocals from the bottom of a well, and he is especially affecting when he tell us "all I can see from these scars is hope/but all I can see in this night are boats sinking." Orphans, the opener, is a little more upbeat musically, but finds Beck struggling along the same lines lyrically ("how can I make new again/what rusts everytime it rains/and the rain it comes and floods our lungs/we're just orphans in a tidal wave's wake"). Modern Guilt is a huge success in these five tracks, with Beck articulating the fear of ageing as well as it has been done in song form. However, I find myself struggling to even try to the annoyingly repetive songs like Soul of a Man and Gamma Ray, which could both use some more time in the studio by both writer and producer. Profanity Prayers and Volcano don't suffer from repetitiveness, but from being mostly inconsequential when compared to the rest of the album.

10. Randy Newman-Harps & Angels: Randy and I grew up together, which may be why he gets more of a look than a lot of the older artists who did not make this list (and most of whom I didn't even listen to). And by grew up together I mean I listened to his classic 1977 album Little Criminals while riding along in the backseat of my parents' car on every trip we ever made. For the uninitiated, Randy's style is usually less song-oriented and like he's telling a story that's so well-told it sounds song-like.

During the title track, Randy Newman imagines his conversation with God (god?) as they're discussing his life. It sounds a lot like a lot of our conversations will or might sound--"You ain't been a good man, you ain't been a bad man, but you been pretty bad. Lucky for you, this ain't your time. Someone very dear to me has made another clerical error, and we're here in a bit of a wild goose chase. But I'm gonna tell you a few things that'll hold you in good stead when it is your time. When they lay you on the table, better keep your business clean." Hilarious, yet poignant, all at once. Which is Newman's style.

On A Few Words in Defense of Our County, he compares Clarence Thomas' status as an African American to that of Pluto as a planet (ok, a stereotype, but cleverly done so I'll give it to him). But, he also has some great wisdom about taking G-dub's disastrous reign in a historical perspective ("now the leaders we have/while they're the worst we've had/are hardly the worst this poor world has seen"). It's a refreshingly funny view, and Newman gives it even handedly, neither deriding Bush too much nor too little. Even better: "A President once said 'the only thing we have to fear is fear itself,' now we're supposed to be afraid, it's patriotic in fact, and color-coded. And what are we supposed to be afraid of? Why, being afraid! That's what terror means doens't it? That's what it used to mean."

9. The Walkmen-You & Me: We're going to go ahead and call this one a comeback. I saw it blossoming when The Walkmen blew Spoon off the stage at the Carolina Theater this spring, and saw it come to fruition on this album as well as a great show they played at the Cradle a couple of months ago. Of course, like a lot of albums on this list, You & Me is only about halfway formed, and really drags during the second half of the record.

The album's start is immaculate. Donde esta la playa lays the groundwork for the comeback: "Well it's back to the battle today/but I wouldn't have it any other way." Of course, they're still bearing the scars of the past ocuple of years ("there/is still sand in my suitcase/there/ is still salt in my teeth"). On the Water give a little more of a taste, but Leithauser holds back a little bit here, not fully letting himself or the band go until the last minute of the song. The high lasts through In the New Year, my favorite song of 2008.

Unfortunately, and maybe inevitably, The Walkmen take a step back after In the New Year, a remarkably honest and probalby emotionally taxing track. Seven Years of Holidays is almost too slow to really catch hold. Postcards from Tiny Islands is slow to build, as is Red Moon, though both are worth the wait. The rest of the album, save The Blue Route, feels like scar tissue, the leftovers from a tough couple of previous years, but necessary to get the band to where they are now. The real turning point will probably be the next album--which can only be seen as a relapse or a realization.

8. Department of Eagles-In Ear Park: The Department of Eagles is more or less Grizzly Bear, of Yellow House fame, with Fred Nicolaus and Daniel Rossen leading the way as opposed to Ed Droste. In Ear Park, named for the park frequented by Rossen in his youth, is an outsanding companion to the Grizzly Bear work, and sounds, in a lot of ways, just like it. Just like a Grizzly Bear record, there are some ridiculous high points, and then a couple of songs that are just noise.

In Ear Park is an album focused on nostalgia, from song titles like No One Does It Like You, to moments in Herringbone where Rossen tells us about moments that "you won't get to relive them/or even to explain them/to your next of kin." More sad remiscing on Classical Records: "do you/listen to/your classical records anymore/or do you/let them sleep/in their sleeves/where they weep?"). And while the backward-looking lyrics imply a sad record overall, the music is more upbeat, and probably the strong suit of In Ear Park. Bells, guitars, pianos, organs and more abound, [insert requisite Brian Wilson reference here].

I could have done without Therapy Car Noise or the first half of Floating on the Lehigh, but in almost every song the band is able to hit that "wow" moment were the melody just comes together in a perfect way. This is more than a stopover between Grizzly Bear albums, this is an album that is to be celebrated in its own right.

7. Kanye West-808s and Heartbreak (A spirited defense of Kanye, not that he needs it): First, a little perspective. 808s was released on the heels of two traumatic events for West, the accidental death of his mother, and the breakup of him and his fiancee. So, Ye shuts himself off, writes these songs, and with only the help of the 808 drum machine and the ever-present Auto-tune, records 808s. For fans dismayed by the turn of sound and tone, don't worry, Ye's followup in the series of College Dropout, Late Registration, and Graduation--Good Ass Job, is still coming as far as we know. This is just an artisitic and cathartic detour, and luckily West lets us listen.

I admire West for a few things here. First, he is brutally honest--on Say You Will, he admits that "I wish this song/would barely come true/I admit I/still fantasize about you." On Coldest Winter he relates his insomnia to his ex as well as discussing his inability to get over her. Second, West retains his sense of humor. On the album's middle section, when he starts fighting back a little bit, he does so with humor, telling his ex that she's "just another L.A. girl" on the hialirously titled Robocop. The tracks lacking humor, Love Lockdown and Street Lights are not critiques of his ex, but more of West himself.

Third and finally, I really see this album as a big "fuck you" to everyone else. Instead of doing the next predetermined album in his series, he took a break and wrote with just himself and a drum & effects machine. Instead of just singing on the album and just using autotune to correct tonality and missing keys, he uses it to obscure his voice, giving him an artificial distance from the listener which is offputting at first but effective in the long run. He also lets his songs play out, meaning that instrumental elements that would be cut off in normal Kanye albums are left to run in songs like Bad News, Say You Will, and Love Lockdown. It is the classic case of an artist induldging themsevles, and in this case, it worked out for the better.

808s really only suffers when Kanye lets anyone else in on the therapy. Amazing is ruined by the out of place Young Jeezy, and Lil Wayne sounds similarly awkward in See You in My Nightmares as he squeals over the 808. Those moments aside, Kanye has created a magnificent detour in his career trajectory. I have a feeling that in the long run, this will be seen as Kanye West's Pinkerton, with the album panned at first (though less so than Pinkerton), then accepted as his masterpiece later.

6. Fleet Foxes-Fleet Foxes: This album has a classic feel to it that few other albums released this year, or even in the past 10 years have. And while the album could have been released in the 60s without anyone blinking an eye, it doesn't feel old or tired now either. Part Crosby Stills Nash & Young, part early My Morning Jacket, the Fleet Foxes have crafted one of the most surprising records of 2008.

The most immediate and most important thing on this record is the vocals. The CSNY comparison comes from the amount of harmonizing on this record, and how well done it is. Almost every track leads in with the vocals and fades out with them, and rightly so. They are so good, in fact, that they make songs that don't really appear to be about anything sound interesting. Unlike other bands, the Fleet Foxes are able to take the sound they perfected in live performances and translate it onto a record.

I think, however, that the key here is the guitar work. Songs like Blue Ridge Mountains, Sun Rises and Ragged Wood wouldn't be the same without the beatuiful picking by Skyler Skjelset (who, at least live, did most of the heavy lifting with the guitars). While not the focal point, it moves the songs along and does much more than just prevent the Fleet Foxes from being a talented acapella group.

5. Times New Viking-Rip it Off: Don't be put off by the feedback-laden sounds which dominates this album. Underneath the layers of fuzz are strong melodic riffs and songs which have no filler--this isn't noise-pop, this is just great indie rock under a layer of noise. In Rip it Off, Times New Viking has just over 30 minutes of great indie guitar pop.

This is a loud record, so much so that it became my favorite album to put on in a crowded area when I was trying to obscure the noise around me. Being only 30 minutes long however, I don't have much to say here. You're just going to have to trust me and give this one a listen.


4. Blitzen Trapper-Furr: Regardless of having the second worst cover on this list (MMJ's Evil Urges wins out by a mile here), Furr represents a strong follow-up to last years Wild Mountain Nation. Sonically, Blitzen Trapper land somewhere between the Allman Brothers and Dungeons & Dragons, and that is what both scared me and excited me leading up to Furr. Or, moreover, I was worried that Blitzen Trapper would release something that was a little too weird for my liking, and forgo the more folksy songs like Badger's Black Brigade, Country Caravan, and the title track, that I thought carried Wild Mountain Nation. Count me among those who did not want to hear tracks like Sci-Fi Kid, or even look at track titles like Woof & Warp of the Quiet Giant's Hem again.

Luckily for us, Furr expands on the more folksy country rock and blues sound that Blitzen Trapper has cultivated. The title track is perhaps the best song they've recorded thus far, clean musically and structurally, but still non-obvious in its lyrics. Sleepy Time in the Western World is an opener which wouldn't sound out of place on a Wilco or Bob Dylan album. Perhaps this uniformity in sound was brought on by Eric Earley, who is listed as the composer for all of Furr's tracks (whereas the whole band was listed for most of Wild Mountain Nation's songs).

The uniformity in sound doesn't mean that BT have lost their creativity. Instead, it seems like they let it flourish in more controlled ways, like on Saturday Night, where a simple piano line is used to provide a little funk. They even, with mild success, explore the art of composing a suite on Echo/Always On/EZ Con. The album lags a couple of times when it gets too slow (Not Your Lover, Lady on the Water), but overall fulfills a lot of the promise shown on Wild Mountain Nation.

3. The Dodos-Visiter: I think this band blew up at SXSW (yeah, I wasn't there), but for me I think it was the sheer loudness of the album, made by 2 young men from the West Coast, that got me hooked. After hearing this album for the first few times, I excitedly emailed a friend that it was somewhere between The White Stripes and The Magnetic Fields, "but in a good way." So I'm not sure what I really meant by that, but I can still see the White Stripes connection--the band is loud and quick, a la Little Room, but you're not going to find any of the electric guitar antics that have become the trademark of the White Stripes. Visiter is instead defined by the "urban folk" rockouts that mark songs like Joe's Waltz, Paint the Rust, and Jodi.

The other half of the album is filled with questions of patriarchy (Fools) as well as love songs well above the caliber of those found in any Michael Cera movie (Winter, Ashley, Undeclared). Despite the fluctuation of subject matter, the consistent sound provides a good flow, making it more like an earlier White Stripes album rather than some of the later ones that sound like singles collections. This flow is aided by tracks such as the minute-long Eyelids, which by itself mean little but ties the album together, and by the way tracks like Walking and Red & Purple are tied together through sound, providing a seamless transition between the two.

The album comes in at #3 because it is more consistently listenable than anything below it on this list. There are few lulls in this album, and certainly no duds. That said, the two albums besting Visiter are a bit more ambitious in their sound and content.


2. TV on the Radio-Dear Science,: Man, TVOTR rocked my top 20 songs, how could they not be #1? Well, you'll have to read #1 for that, but, #2 ain't bad at all. This was my first real experience with TV on the Radio, as I skipped out on most of the absurdly titled Return to Cookie Mountain(with the exception of the tragically beautiful I was a Lover). Thankfully, the myriad outlets declaring this album great convinced me to take a listen.

The album is able to convey a single feeling without having to stick to one, monotonic sound. The album is loud, with huge synthesizers and drums coming in on the opener, Halfway Home, before we get humming background vocals and handclaps interspersed with the drums for percussion. The sounds has you locked in the knees for two minutes before the falsetto vocals come and you buckle--the whole sound changes, and it's hard to catch your breath. Wait for the next track, Rinse, Repeat. Lyrically, this album reads as a both and indictment of a past love as well as the past 8 years. And while those goals often result in awkward or embarrasing hangups, the music and words flow so smoothly that you'd be forgiven for not noticing any of the actual content, and just focusing on the way they contrast sonically.

This is not a guitar heavy album, most songs start and end with percussion, but the guitar on tracks like Crying, Red Dress, Shout me Out is striking--quick, affecting, but not overdone. Often, TVOTR will go for half a song without the guitar, and then bring it in for a change of tone or tempo. Dear Science, may not be an easy album to get in to, it's over 50 minutes long and all but two of the eleven songs top 4 minutes. That said, each song is rewarding, even if some are not as immediate as others.

1. Bon Iver-For Emma, Forever Ago: I was caught first by the opening stanza--I am my mother's only one, it's enough/I wear garment so it shows--sad, mysterious, haunting and beautiful. This stanza opens up the world explored by this album, recorded in a remote Wisconsin cabin. The soulful yet lonely album by Justin Vernon and his band, aka Bon Iver, is the best album this year. Unlike the early work of Iron & Wine, For Emma has a full sound, but remains uncluttered in a way that The Shepherd's Dog could not.

Bon Iver wins out here because this is a full album without any weak tracks (and because both of my top two picks have commas in the album titles). The high's are not as high as parts of Visiter or Dear Science, but this is an album in the purest since of the word, and a great one at that. And despite sparse arrangement, the tracks are varied. The Wolves Acts I & II comes off as slow mountain gospel while For Emma uses horns and a slide guitar as the instrumentation while Vernon's strumming keeps the beat.

It also is #1 because, at least judging by his predecessors (Sam Beam, Elliot Smith, Nick Drake), this is the best its going to get. Maybe that's too sentimental and too disillusioned, but these sorts of albums rarely get better (cf. the Allmusic review, which seems to believe the opposite). I think once you start adding too many elements to something as pure as For Emma, it gets cluttered, sloppy, and average.

As compared to The Dodos or TV on the Radio, there is less room for expansion on For Emma, which is ironic considering it is probably the most simple album of those three. I think it's because part of the beauty of this album is the simplicity, and if you take that away you lose a lot of the greatness (not to mention The Shepherd's Dog again but...). Maybe I'm selling Mr. Vernon short, but I get the sneaking suspicion that The Dodos and TVOTR will best their efforts this year, while he may not. And so, we should be thankful for what he gave us this year.

My Favorite Songs of 2008 (UPDATED)

I love year-end lists (musical and otherwise). First, it's fun to reminisce about what you liked. Second, it helps me pick up gems that somehow slipped through my various musical filters. I usually end up with a late start on the next year because I've accumulated a huge list of things I missed over the previous one. Which has happened here again. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, it's always good to be able to argue with other people's lists.

So, I've created lists for my favorite songs of 2008, my favorite albums, and a couple of other things. My list of favorite albums should be up by the end of the day.

My Favorite Songs of 2008

Honorable Mentions (more coming here later):
  1. Antony and the Johnsons: Shake that Devil
  2. Cold War Kids: Something Is Not Right With Me
  3. The Walkmen: The Blue Route
  4. Kanye: Robocop, Bad News, Street Lights
  5. Blitzen Trapper: Sleepytime in the Western World, Saturday Nite, Stolen Shoes & a Rifle
  6. Starling Electric: Camp-fire
  7. Dr. Dog: Hang On, 100 Years
  8. The Annuals: Springtime, Hair Don't Grow
  9. Department of Eagles: In Ear Park, Herring Bone
  10. Okkervil River: Calling and Not Calling My Ex, On Tour with Zykos, Pop Lies
  11. Little Joy: With Strangers, Keep Me in Mind
  12. Beck: Chemtrails, Youthless, Orphans
  13. The Black Keys: I'm Glad (Captain Beefheart cover), Lies, All You Ever Wanted, I Got Mine, Psychotic Girl
  14. The Dodos: Red & Purple, Eyelids, Fools, Paint the Rust
  15. Erykah Badu: The Healer (I may have fucked up not finding a place for this in the top 20)
  16. Fleet Foxes: Oliver James, White Winter Hymnal, Quiet Houses, Ragged Wood
  17. Man Man: Hurly Burly, The Ballad of Butter Beans, Doo Right, Harpoon Fever, Rabbit Habbits, Top Drawer
  18. Randy Newman: A Few Words in Defense of our Country, Potholes, Korean Parents
  19. The Silver Jews: Suffering Jukebox, My Pillow is the Threshold
  20. Tapes n Tapes: Le Ruse
  21. Times New Viking: Teen Drama, My Head, The Wait, Mean God
  22. TV on the Radio: Everything that's not in my top 20
  23. Wolf Parade: Soldier's Grin
without further ado:

My top 20 songs of 2008

20. Nonpareil of Favor by Of Montreal: Fuck, this opening track had me hoping. Nonpareil means, generally, having no equal, but I would have settled for a followup anywhere near as good as Hissing Fauna. And my was I disappointed. But this is still a great song. Of Montreal opens up with the same brutal honesty and loneliness coated in bright music that they used so effectively in Hissing Fauna. The crazy thing is that even though this is one of the less schizophrenic tracks on the album, there are at least 4 different songs within this one cut. It's hard to talk about this song without going into the rest of the album, but I'm going to have to save it. Suffice it to say, if you're looking to start listening to some Of Montreal, don't start here (um, other than this song).

19. Say You Will by Kanye West: I'm going to get into this more when I start talking about my favorite albums of the year, but this song makes my list for a different reason than most. First, the musical aspects--there's not a lot here. Kanye singing through the auto-tune and a sparse beat, no rapping at all, and a bitter, biting chorus. But damn this is about as big of a Fuck You to open an album as I've ever heard. The former teddy-bear pop-star opens with a 6 minute (!) track, which closes with a 3 minute instrumental. All those expecting a normal Kanye album have now been warned. This is for him, and he's going to do whatever the fuck he wants with it. This is catharsis, not commercial. Fuck you, America. Damn right.

18. For Emma by Bon Iver: Ohhh he's picking the title track, what a copout. Fuck you. Bon Iver crafted the most albumish album, as opposed to the many collections of singles we saw this year. So sure, not as many tracks on this list, but there are still some standouts. This is one of the few tracks on the album bearing any sort of percussion beyond heavy guitar strumming, and it sounds like he's hitting a single drum here so don't go expecting too much. But here, as elsewhere, Bon Iver fits a few different elements into the music (guitar, drum, horns) without compromising any singular sound.

17. Red Dress by TV on the Radio: Dear G-dub : Hey jackal / fuck your war / cuz I'm fat and in love / and those bombs are falling on me for sure / and I'm scared that I'm living a life not worth dying for.

The guitar work here, as on the rest of the album, is well above par and sets the tone. I mean, when are the rest of the bands going to figure out that we want to hear all of the individual instruments, not some bombastic mix that just gives a single sound. Trust me, we can handle multiple parts. And, unlike most "protest" or anti-war songs, this one has some teeth, mainly because it doesn't come from some place of infallibility. Instead, TVOTR, at least in my mind, is not talking to G-dub, but perhaps to the rest of us. If we don't get our own shit together, our government's actions are really secondary. This call to arms, though a different kind of arms than usual, is both compelling and fun to listen to. Well done.

16. Randy Newman-Harps & Angels: Blast from the fucking past. Put this on and it sounds like you just invited Randy over and he took over the piano for a storytelling session. I grew up with Randy, so given some wine and imagination, it wouldn't be that weird. Randy's lessons:
      1. I am still a biting, funny motherfucker
      2. Better keep your business clean ("don't want no backstabbin'/assgrabbin'/you know exactly what I mean")
      3. I wish I spoke French
      4. I currently write more coherent songs than Dylan
      5. "There really is an afterlife, and I hope to see all of you there." Thank god (God?). Better trust Randy on this one.
15. Furr by Blitzen Trapper: There's something to be said for simplicity in music. When you take away all of the gloss, effects, and general tomfoolery, your song better be good because everyone's going to know it right away. Because of this, many bands seem to hide behind these effects. Other bands should take note of Furr, a simple track whose clean vocals and acoustic guitar hide nothing. The song, unlike a lot of other cuts, has a timeless feel to it, one that cause my sister, from afar, to mistake it for Bob Dylan (it's actually much prettier than a Dylan song, though probably not as biting or clever). I have no idea what this song is about, but damn does it sound pretty.

14. Walking by the Dodos: Forgive me if I hear shots at G-dub in most of the stuff released, but maybe it's because I was just hoping that everyone was at least noticing what we've been going through. This song provides the perfect soundtrack to the year before he is finally ousted. "man's, been wasting so much time/sending the children out to fight/don't you think maybe it's about time?" Yes, yes I do. This is a great album by the Dodos, and I'm not sure this track itself is that much above anything else on there, but I'm trying to establish some themes here, so it's gonna have to do (otherwise, Red & Purple or Fools would be fine as well).

13. Touch me I'm Going to Scream Pt.1/Smokin From Shootin/Touch me I'm Going to Scream Pt.2 by My Morning Jacket: Right, so this is three songs, and it's not the order the appear on in the album. But, strike a match, take a hit, put these on, and sit back for 17 minutes of bliss. I am unapologetic in my support of MMJ, and that ain't gonna change here. Spooky, unrushed, but also detail-oriented. Makes me wish I could be a fly on the wall in their recording sessions.

12. Love Lockdown by Kanye West: Oh, you want a single? Here's your fucking single.

11. Drop-out by Times New Viking: 1:05 of pure unadulterated bliss, reminiscent of Sleater-Kinney at their best. Only a minute long because that's all they need.

10. Black Rice by Women: A haunting piece of 60s pop a la the Kinks, but not quite as good as No One Does it Like You. In an album that hides pure candy bliss tracks like this between denser noise pop, this song stands out as the release after three songs of near climax.

9. Halfway Home by TV on the Radio: The fifth opener on my list, and the best. I can't figure out if I'm writing less as I come to the top of the list because I'm burnt out or because the tracks really speak for themselves. This one takes almost 2 minutes to open up, so be patient. More plays on my Itunes than any other track released this year.

8. Blue Ridge Mountains by Fleet Foxes: Everyone else apparently likes White Winter Hymnal, and maybe I'm partial to the Blue Ridge Mountains themselves, but I really like this one. Not as consistently upbeat, and you're certainly not going to be playing this one at parties. Of course, if you've come here for your dance party playlist, you're in the wrong place. I saw them live earlier this year opening for Blitzen Trapper, and between this track and Oliver James, they blew Blitzen Trapper off the stage. And it's not just the voices kicking ass here (as they do on the whole record), but a piano riff which really makes this song.

7. Walls by Beck: I was reading the early reviews of Modern Guilt, and they all gushed about Gamma Ray and Youthless, then said that the last five tracks on the album, including Walls, were ostensibly filler material. This analysis misses the best track on the album, and one of the best tracks of the year. Sonically and lyrically Beck is able to create a collapsing world in under 2:30. It's not as repetitive as Gamma Ray or as slow-moving as Chemtrails, and is better for it. This is some heavy, depressing shit: "Some days we get a thrill in our brains/ Somedays in turns into malaise...Hey, what are you gonna do?/with those wall's fallin down on you?" That's just the start, and the end is probably worse "You're wearing all of the years on your face/ got the tombstone you want into place/And your heart only beats in a murmur/with your words screaming out just like murder." Quick to the point I guess, but the sound is not as depressing as the lyrics, and Dangermouse probably saves Beck here with a beatufiul tune backing this solemn song. The result is part conundrum, part brilliance, all good.

6. Golden Age by TV on the Radio: Pitchfork described this as the first TVOTR song you could "dance to," but, erm, that's not what it's on my list here. No, it's because of this moment, 2:12 in, when a reassuring female voice comes in and coos:

Love, don't you falter
Burning hearts
Dragged behind
The horses dancing on the altar
Hooves breaking Gods
To diamond dust and stars
And there you are...

And, maybe that doesn't do it justice, as the whole instrumentation behind the song shifts from as well. You just have to hear it. 2:12 in. Now.

I must mention also the chorus, which basically tells us the age of miracles, the age of sound, the Golden Age, is right around the corner. Assuming this was written last year, this was either a ridiculously prescient observation by TVOTR, or a bitterly sarcastic comment on G-dub. I'm saying the second is more likely, but the first is more fun.

5. Lost Coastlines by Okkervil River: It was always going to be hard to follow The Stage Names, their previous album, but for at least one track on The Stand Ins, Okkervil River succeeded. Lost Coastlines is not as emotionally taxing as the previous couple picks here, and definitely not as overtly sad as the rest of The Stand Ins. It's more subtle, hidden behind the insistent guitar and drums that make this 5 and a half minute song feel like 2. Instead: "Every night finds us rocking and rolling on waves wild and wide / well we have lost our way / and nobody's gonna say it outright" and then, um, 2 glorious minutes of la lah, la la la la, la la la la la la la lahhhhhhh. Not convincing in print, but certainly in song.

4. Skinny Love by Bon Iver: Prob the saddest song on the album. Jesus ("took my love to wreck it all/cut out all the ropes and let me fall"). But also the most beautiful. An NPR commentator said, more or less, that listening to this was "like being punched in the heart, but in a good way." I would probably go along with that. Head and shoulders above Elliot Smith or Sam Beam, though probably not as sad as the former. The next song's more fun, so let's move on.

3. Dancing Choose by TV on the Radio: I know that I'm supposed to hate rap/rock, and I do, but this is the exception (and almost certainly is the only one). So the exercise becomes distinguishing this from all of the other rap/rock, or at least why this is better than Kid Rock. First, the instrumentation is infinitely better. Killer bass and barely there drums before the trumpet comes in and carries the song. The rap is not overblown, but sarcastic and funny (sweaters for wamerainers?). And it's all over as quickly as it started. The rap really isn't the story here, it's how the words build up to everything else that TVOTR does so well. And it's not some shitty almost cover of a Lynyrd Skynyrd song that everyone has heard about 500 times too many.

2. No One Does it Like You by Department of Eagles: What really makes this song for me is the opening bass line, so distorted that it sounds like a horn. I've had more conversations about this bass line in the past month than I've had about a number of more important things (my future, what people want for christmas, world peace, etc). But beyond how this song has caused the derelection of my dutiess as a son, friend, or general citizen, it also helps me fill my quota of band names with animals in them (if you had told me the over/under of non-extinct animal band names for this list was 2, I would have taken the over). And, you know, it's a flawless piece of 1960s era pop that matches anything Grizzly Bear has done before.

1. In the New Year by the Walkmen: It's hard to tell what excited me most about this song, the actual brilliance of it, or the growth of the band/realization of their potential. I guess you could debate over whether In the New Year is as good as their past triumphs (The Rat, We've Been Had, Little House of Savages), but for me, it takes the best aspects of each one and comes close to being a perfect song. The Walkmen were able here to take the ferocity and immediateness of The Rat and combine it with the pure beauty of We've Been Had and come up with a rambling song that shows restraint, then lets loose at exactly the right moment. That, and, to quote a friend, I've always been a sucker for a good organ workout.

Unlike their previous effort, the hugely disappointing One Hundred Miles Off, this song finds the Walkmen playing to their strengths--the jangly guitars, the escalating lament of Hamilton Leithauser, and the organ, my god, the organ. The song takes it time, letting the organ fill the chorus, and showing the band's confidence of letting the song come to them, rather than rushing through it.

"I, I know that it's true, it's gonna be a good year
Out of the darkness
and into the fire
I'll tell you I love you
and my heart's in the strangest place
that's how it started."

The chorus arrives harder and stronger than in previous efforts, where the band tended to show their cards a bit earlier. Here they use the restraint to create a good contrast, and thus a bigger climax. And while the hard/soft dynamic is by no means a new revelation in music, it is especially effective here. Leithauser's ramblings are punctuated by his usual cries, and they somehow seem more honest and more legitimate than ever. Great fucking song. And when he tells us at the end of the song "You took your sweet time/finally I opened my eyes," it's hard not to be thankful that they did, in fact, take their sweet time. A perfect song to end one year and start a new one.