Showing posts with label Best Of. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Best Of. Show all posts

13 Best of 2013... So Far.

Friday, June 21, 2013



*Fair warning: I read an article a while back chastising the use of double spaces following punctuation (apparently it's a holdover from the typewriter days and supposedly should be regarded as obsolete).  Since then, I can't seem to commit to either single or double spacing.  So if you feel nauseated after reading this, you'll know why.  Apologies in advance.

Well, it's been a while (where "a while" = 2 years). Life has shifted into ludicrous speed with 3 little ones, and I've taken to sharing most of my musings single serving-style on Twitter. But I've got a few more hours to work with now that summer break has arrived, and I feel like I need some more square footage for this, so here we are.

Anyway, there's not much debating that 2013 has a strong shot at ending up one of the best years of music in at least half a decade.  This really isn't news; indeed it seems like pretty much the entire internet recognizes it.  And while it's debatable how much of this is due to what I've found to be a pretty subpar output over the last couple years, it's very difficult at this point to deny the strength of what's been released recently. In fact, I think you'd probably have to total up the best releases from the past 3 or 4 years just to even hold a candle to those from the the past 5 months.

Yeah, it's a bandwagon move on my part to write when there's a lot of great stuff to write about, but it is what it is I guess.  I've been looking for a reason to write something, so I figure I better go with it while I've got the inspiration (and I'm in between diaper changes, feedings, bath times, etc.).  So without further ado, here are my top 13 albums of 2013... so far. They're sans rankings due largely to the fact that some of these albums have been released very recently and I just haven't been able to give them the same listening attention as earlier releases.  Hopefully I'll have time for an end of year list, and we'll rank it out then.  Hopefully.

Appleseed Cast - Illumination Ritual
After releasing the epic Low Level Owl I & II back in '01, these guys were one of the first to be labeled "America's answer to Radiohead".  After straying in a couple different directions (albeit enjoyable ones) over the past decade, they've finally released what I think is the truest follow up to their masterpiece.  Not that I'm selling this as being as good as LLO, but it delivers on that promise more than the rest of their output since, and I'm thoroughly enjoying it.




Daft Punk - Random Access Memories
Daft Punk have forever been "the band that influences all the bands that take over the world".  Now they're "the band that has the biggest album on Planet Earth." Tons of tracks with guest vocalists (my faves are Julian Casablancas and Panda Bear) and the entire thing just grooves like crazy.







Deerhunter - Monomania
Bit of a departure from the sugary, retro, reverb pop that Bradford Cox has been releasing for the last 5 years.  It's a rowdy record, and the more you turn it up, the better it sounds. [Insert Spinal Tap joke here.]










Mark Kozelek and Jimmy LaValle - Perils from the Sea
Mark Kozelek (Sun Kil Moon & Red House Painters) and Jimmy LaValle (The Album Leaf) do the Postal Service thing.  Trust me, though; despite similarities in the blueprint, this isn't some redundant ripoff.  LaValle's brand of lap pop is much more ambient than Jimmy Tamborello's, and Kozelek's voice is one of the most unique out there. This is not the sugary pop that Gibbard and Tamborello produced, but it comes close to canceling out Owl City on their list of descendants.  I'm sure they can appreciate that.





My Bloody Valentine - m b v
Somehow these guys managed to successfully follow up one of the most influential albums in modern music - an album that was supposed to be impossible to follow up. And it only took them 20 years to do it.






The National - Trouble Will Find Me
These guys are in the running for my favorite band over the past 5 years.  They are just so consistently good, and they somehow consistently keep getting better.  They're not gonna knock you over with innovation, and their songs won't suck you in with gimmicks or huge hooks.  They just settle into your brain, establish camp, and stay there.  And they are very good at what they do.  Debatable whether or not it's as good as their last (High Violet), but if it isn't, it's right there.





Phoenix - Bankrupt!
Phoenix didn't fair quite as well as MBV at following up a huge album, but this is still a very enjoyable rock record.  In fact, about the only major complaint about it is that it's not as good Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix.  Which isn't much of a complaint, considering there's only been about 10 records released since then that are as good.  Don't compare, just listen and enjoy.





Queens of the Stone Age - ...Like Clockwork
Just getting into this album, but I can already tell I'm going to wear it out.  These guys have managed to maintain their edge over all these years, and they're still making the most melodic, goth-y alt-rock out there.







Rogue Wave - Nightingale Floors
Prototypical indie pop/rock band releases a prototypical indie pop/rock record. Don't hear any "Lake Michigan"-type standouts here, but they've obviously made a conscious effort to get back to what made them so good to begin with, and it's probably their best overall record since Descended Like Vultures.











The Strokes - Comedown Machine
Another return to form after a couple years of releasing not-so-great music. Think it's pretty well the internet consensus that this is the most under-appreciated album of 2013 at this point.  Lead off track "Tap Out" contains one of the best chorus melodies they've ever produced, and there's plenty more to go around afterwards.  I keep trying to put this album away so I can move on to other things, but then it just sucks me back in, and it sounds better every time I go back to it.






Their / They're / There - S/T
Mike Kinsella (American Football, Owen, Cap'n Jazz, Owls) has a new side job: playing drums with these dudes.  Personally, I think it's every bit as good as anything that he's been involved with since American Football. Really takes me back to the days of the legendary Polyvinyl releases at the turn of the century. And "Concession Speech Writer" is straight up lightning in a bottle.










Sigur Rós - Kveikur
After releasing their most immediate (and, I think, enjoyable) album in 2008, they dropped an album last year that was probably the most ambient, abstract, and boring of their career.  Didn't take them long to bounce back, though.  Kveikur seems almost hyper-focused for them, and it's the most percussion-driven and immediate album they've ever produced.  Particularly "Ísjaki", whose only peer in their catalogue in terms of immediate catchiness is "Inní mér syngur vitleysingur". Finally, a Sigur Rós album you can listen to in the car!







Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires of the City
Stereogum named this album the best of the year so far.  I don't know if I can say that's true, but I definitely can't say that it isn't, either.  Much like The National, they just continue to refine and improve what they do.  And, also much like The National, they're an acquired taste.  But regardless of what you like, it's hard to deny that these guys are very smart and very good at what they do.  It was easy to see them as potential one hit (and one note) wonders when they first came onto the scene, but based on what they've produced here, they're probably not going away anytime soon.






Honorable Mention
Atoms for Peace - Amok
Junip - S/T
The Knife - Shaking the Habitual
The Little Ones - The Dawn Sang Along
Ra Ra Riot - Beta Love


Pretty ridiculous that it was actually that difficult to pick out a top 13 in June.  But it was just that.  Let me know what you think and share your own lists below!

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1995-2000 Rebuttal

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Ok, it’s not really a rebuttal because I can’t find anything to rebut. I wanted to add this to the comment list but it’s way too long. My initial thought was that I agree, but I had to find out just how much I agreed. And upon searching for myself, I found that Ryan is absolutely right. Right enough for me to be able to come up with 100 more to further his point. It was an amazing time for music that helped shape the lives of most all my friends in one way or another. So, here are 100 more reasons to help make the point. In fact, I started this trying to come up with an additional 50 and it easily became 100. So Ryan, I’m not trying to out do you, but this is what happens when you get me in list making mode.

1995
Alice In Chains – Alice In Chains
Chavez - Gone Glimmering
Crimpshrine – Duct Tape Soup
Deftones – Adrenaline
Fugazi – Red Medicine
Guided By Voices – Alien Lanes
Hum – You’d Prefer An Astronaut
June of 44 – Engine Takes to the Water
Jawbreaker – Dear You
Morphine – Yes
Oblivion – Shoot Me A Waco
Red House Painters – Ocean Beach
Roky Erickson – All That May Do My Rhyme
Sea and Cake – Sea and Cake
TAD – Infrared Riding Hood
88 Fingers Louie – Behind Bars

1996
Archers of Loaf – All The Nation’s Airports
Avail – 4AM Friday
Beastie Boys – The In Sound From Way Out
The Crownhate Ruin – Until the Eagle Grins
Guided By Voices - Under the Bushes Under the Stars
Jawbox – Jawbox
June of 44 - Tropics & Meridians
Karate - Karate
Modest Mouse – This Is A Long Drive…
Nirvana – From The Muddy Banks of the Wishka
Propagandhi – Less Talk, More Rock
Rage Against the Machine – Evil Empire
Soundgarden – Down on the Upside
Tool – Aenima
Tortoise – Millions Now Living Will Never Die
Trans Am – Trans Am
2 Pac – All Eyez On Me

1997
Blur – Blur
Deftones – Around the Fur
Franklin – GoKidGo
Grandaddy – Under The Western Freeway
Hot Water Music – Forever & Counting
Houseboy – Ya Right!
Joan of Arc – A Portable Model Of
June of 44 – Anatomy of Sharks
Karate – In Place of Real Insight
Modest Mouse – The Fruit That Ate Itself
Mogwai - Young Team
Shipping News – Save Everything
Ween – The Mollusk

1998
Alkaline Trio – Goddamnit!
Avail – Over The James
Bone Thugs – E. 1999 Eternal
Califone – Califone LP
Coalesce – Functioning On Impatience
Engine Down – Under the Pretense of Present Tense
Fifteen – Extra Medium Kickball Star
Four Hundred Years – Transmit Failure
Houseboy - 1465 Tamarack Street Press Room
Hum - Downward Is Heavenward
Jets to Brazil – Orange Rhyming Dictionary
Neutral Milk Hotel – In The Aeroplane Over The Sea
Sleepytime Trio – Memory Minus
Tortoise – TNT

1999
American Analog Set – The Golden Band
Billy Mahonie – The Big Dig
Broken Hearts Are Blue – The Truth About Love
Buried Alive – Death of Your Perfect World
Casket Lottery – Choose Bronze
Castor – Tracking Sounds Alone
Flaming Lips – The Soft Bulletin
Inlantic – Inlantic
June of 44 - Anahata
June of 44 – Fish 6
Mercury Program – Mercury Program
Method Man & Redman – Blackout!
Mice Parade – Ramda
Mogwai – Come On Die Young
My Morning Jacket – The Tennessee Fire
Nine Inch Nails – The Fragile
Pavement – Brighten The Corners
Small Brown Bike – Our Own Wars
Trans Am – Futureworld

2000
Alkaline Trio – Alkaline Trio
Alkaline Trio – Maybe I’ll Catch Fire
The Anniversary – Designing For A Nervous Breakdown
At the Drive-In – Relationship of Command
Cursive – Domestica
Death Cab for Cutie - We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes
Deftones – White Pony
Don Caballero – American Don
Elliott – False Cathedrals
Engine Down – To Bury Within The Sound
Grandaddy – The Software Slump
Hey Mercedes – Hey Mercedes Ep
Karate – Unsolved
Ludacris – Back For The First Time
Mercury Program – From The Vapor of Gasoline
The Microphones – It Was Hot, We Stayed In The Water
Modest Mouse – Building Something Out of Nothing
Outkast – Stankonia
Q And Not U – No Kill No Beep Beep
Sunny Day Real Estate – The Rising Tide
Ween – White Pepper

If there was any doubt in my mind, it is gone now. I think I speak for all of us when I pose the challenge for someone to come up with a better 5 year span of music. For real, if you can do it, we want to see it!

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Is 1995-2000 the Best 5 Year Period of Music in History?

Saturday, February 13, 2010


I proposed this question to a friend a couple weeks ago, and he proposed I write about it on the blog. I don't think there's any question that a strong argument can be made. The amount of great albums that were released is staggering. Countless great bands got their start during this half-decade, and several great ones released the entirety of their output (or close to it). Thing is, this question is doomed to suffer the same fate as almost every argument I've ever gotten into with my friends concerning music. No matter how good of a case I present, it's all going to be for naught because it's all subjective anyway (although I don't think I'd get much of an argument from those guys on this one). Everyone is going to have different tastes and opinions when it comes to any kind of media based on their own backgrounds and experiences. Case in point: Why is it that hearing the Jonas Brothers makes me want to torture animals, but every time I hear Ace of Base I just wanna dance? You'd be better off spending your time figuring out why McDonald's doesn't serve hotdogs. Nonetheless, I've decided to offer 50 reasons why I think the years 1995-2000 are in actuality the 5 greatest years music has ever seen. I do this fully realizing that some will see the light, and many will run from it. But that's ok. Music has seen several other runs that have produced ridiculous amounts of great music that have influenced future generations of more great music. I have tremendous respect for what the catalogue of the more distant past has to offer, so you're encouraged to leave your own thoughts behind, whether they concern the evidence or the overall proposal. The evidence itself will be presented chronologically (by year only); these are in no way ranked. Also, it does not include EPs or live albums. Just because. Those are all arguments for another day:

1995
Ben Folds Five Ben Folds Five
Foo Fighters Foo Fighters
Less Than Jake Pez Core
Radiohead The Bends
Sunny Day Real Estate Sunny Day Real Estate (The Pink Album)

1996
Beck Odelay
Braid The Age of Octeen
Jeremy Enigk Return of the Frog Queen
Hot Water Music Fuel For the Hate Game
Jawbox Jawbox
Less Than Jake Losing Streak
Texas is the Reason Do You Know Who You Are?
Weezer Pinkerton
The Wrens Secaucus

1997
Ben Folds Five Whatever & Ever Amen
Foo Fighters The Colour and the Shape
Modest Mouse The Lonesome Crowded West
The Notorious B.I.G. Life After Death
The Promise Ring Nothing Feels Good
Radiohead Ok Computer
The Sea and Cake Fawn
Elliott Smith Either/Or

1998
Braid Frame & Canvas
Elliott U.S. Songs
Fugazi End Hits
Heroic Doses Heroic Doses
Karate The Bed is in the Ocean
Mock Orange Nines & Sixes
The Notwist Shrink
Outkast Aquemini
Spoon Series of Sneaks
Sunny Day Real Estate How It Feels to Be Something On

1999
American Football American Football
Blur 13
Built to Spill Keep It Like a Secret
Burning Airlines Mission: Control!
The Dismemberment Plan Emergency & I
The Get Up Kids Something to Write Home About
No Knife Fire In The City of Automatons
Pinback Pinback
Sharks Keep Moving Sharks Keep Moving
Sigur Rós Ágætis Byrjun
Wheat Hope and Adams

2000
Coldplay Parachutes
Euphone Hashin' It Out
Faraquet The View From This Tower
The Firebird Band The Setting Sun and It's Satellites
Modest Mouse The Moon & Antarctica
Radiohead Kid A
Spoon Girls Can Tell

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