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Thursday, December 22, 2005

Top 12 of 2005

2005 has been an undeniably brilliant year for new music and narrowing my finds from a whole year down to ten was an impossible task, hence it being a top 12.

1. Arcade Fire – Funeral



An album, though released in 2004, has had a profound impact on many people this year, The Arcade Fire led the way for a new wave of exciting, deep, dark Canadian bands. Funeral expresses the rawest and most inexplicable of human emotions – most notably love for the family and the feelings of loss. These subjects have rarely been touched on so explicitly, but the Arcade Fire have handled it in a way that is both dark and euphoric. It is musically lush and grandiose and often experimental, but not in a way that should put people off. If you haven’t given this album a proper listen, then do it soon. This album is truly brilliant.


2. Sons and Daughters – The Repulsion Box



The darkest and bleakest album in a good while, Glasgow’s Sons and Daughters have proven themselves as clever songwriters with this almost-concept album – the concept being sinister stories, nasty characters, dying in bathtubs, the Shangri-Las. Adele Bethel’s screaming banshee vocals contrast nicely with the low gravely drawl of Scott Paterson. There are Scottish folk influences, which make the feel of the album all the more dark and pagan. Nick Cave is also a clear influence, but Sons and Daughters are no mere copyists. At 30 minutes all in, this album leaves the listener out of breath from its pounding intensity, hand claps and military drumming. It is not the year’s most accessible album, but makes for compulsive listening.


3. Patrick Wolf – Wind In The Wires



Patrick Wolf’s second album is a beautiful and folky affair, sweeping with it’s string arrangements, gypsy chants, songs of travel and escape. It opens with the Libertine – a warning and a push in the direction of freedom from boundaries and restrictions people put on themselves. The album was recorded on a cliff-top in Cornwall and the wildness of nature and the freedom of the experience are explicit from listening to the album. Patrick Wolf is a romantic and this album is about as beautifully romantic as they come. The composition on Wind In The Wires is also exquisite. Patrick has a natural ability for song-writing, knowing exactly to which chord to change and how to order an album.


4/5. Bright Eyes – I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning, Digital Ash In A Digital Urn



Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst is a prolific, prodigious talent. So prolific is he that he decided to release two albums on the same day – the former a stripped back folky, almost country album (notice a theme?), the latter a electronic and atmospheric folky album. I’m Wide Awake… is the most instant of the two records, more clean sounding than earlier Bright Eyes records and with a series of duets with Emmylou Harris. Digital Ash… is a real grower. The orchestration is almost epic, but certainly not over-produced or messy. Apprehension for the future is a theme that runs deep through Bright Eyes’ work, time and clocks recurring as metaphors throughout these albums. It is perhaps fitting, then, that these albums sound so timeless as though to evade past, present and future, despite one supposedly sounding modern and the other “stripped” – he’s a clever guy, that Conor Oberst, he knows what he’s doing.


6. Camille – Le Fil



Camille is a French singer, most famous for singing on Nouvelle Vague’s album of Bossa Nova interpretations of New-Wave classics, but Le Fil is actually her second solo album. The title translates as “the thread”, regarding the vocal hum that flows constantly through the record, under the complex and luscious vocal layering and melodies, creating a fluid and bound piece of art. The album is sung almost entirely in French, with a few strands of English appearing in some songs, but French speaking friends assure me that, though the lyrics are indeed wonderful, the wonder of Le Fil is its complex and beautiful sound. Opening song, “La Jeune Fille Aux Cheveux Blancs”, is the most luscious composition of them all. The orchestration is so pure – it feels like a sun rising, unscathed by cynicism and sin. The chord and respective melody movements are so genuinely perfect that they could make the hairs on your neck stand on end.

7. Wolf Parade – Apologies To Queen Mary



Like the Arcade Fire, Wolf Parade also hail from Montreal, and also like Arcade Fire, they play an experimental, expressive and dark blend of indie-rock, but there the similarities end. Wolf Parade are that kind of sad music you can dance to – flitting between desperation and angular yelping electronic dance-fests. In some ways it sounds like where Hot Hot Heat would be if they’d not gone down the major-label shitter and focused on their more darker emotions a bit more, but it’s a lot more new wave for the most part, with some killer synth lines.


8. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Clap Your Hands Say Yeah



Until recently they were the best unsigned bands and now they are just one of the best bands, having shifted over 25,000 copies of this sublime eponymous debut album through their own website, and signing record deals on the back of their “internet success”. But enough biography – the music speaks for itself. It is perfect pop music, sweeping synth strings, crisp acoustic guitars, complex layers of background vocals. It is thoroughly uplifting, but has a sad and desperate edge. The vocals are strained (in a good way!) and emotive, adding to the sense of passion in the music. Clapping your hands and shouting “Yeah!” never felt so good.



9. The Go! Team – Thunder/ Lightning/ Strike



The Go! Team is almost a religion. Their music is full of self-referential chants: “Go! Team!” “We came here to rock the microphone!” They resolve faith in mankind, they are something entirely positive. But unlike religion, they don’t cause divisions (controversial!), they bring people together in a hip-swinging and arm-waving mass with their sample-based, hip-pop-hop-disco-sixties-indie…altogether genre-defying party soundtrack of an album. It has been masterfully made from samples and loops in a similar way to the Avalanches, but with results that stamp all over the notion of genre and convention. Thunder/ Lightning/ Strike is an album that will make you smile uncontrollably.

10. Sufjan Stevens – (Come on feel the) Illinoise



Oh Sufjan, you handsome, talented, young man. Sufjan Stevens has set himself the task of writing an album about all fifty states in America. In 2004 he set the ball rolling with Michigan, and second on the list is neighbouring Illinois. This is a heartfelt and genius ode to growing up and being lost and, on another level, to the places he knew when he was growing up and getting lost. The originality is not limited to the unique concept for the album, but also the style – it is littered with Broadway style snippets, horns, steel drums, orchestral flushes. It creates a Big Sound – a sweeping soundscape suitable for the incomparable grandiose of Illinois.


11. Emiliana Torrini – Fisherman’s Woman



Fisherman’s Woman is a delicate, wistful folk album, so perfect in so many ways. It is all tinkling guitars, simple percussion and lovely crystal clear vocals, delivered in a faintly Icelandic accent. What is most striking is the honesty of the lyrics – the listener feels a personal connection with Emiliana as she sings about reminiscing over first loves, the inexplicable close relationships with friends, loss (Emiliana’s long-term boyfriend died in a car crash, almost stopping her from making music ever again – luckily she came to her senses), depression…it’s a wonderful, open album perfect for solitary listening, for summer evenings, for being young adventurous buckaroos, or nostalgia for times when you had more free spirit.

12. Tom Vek – We Have Sound



It’s over a year and a half since I was first amazed by Tom Vek and his dancey-funky-experimental-indie, but successive listenings and gigs have not taken their toll. The less imaginative would compare him to a young Beck, but this is more original and fresh than any comparisons would do justice. It’s all fairly lo-fi and self-produced – in his home studio, nonetheless. It is punchy in places – particularly “If You Want” and “I Ain’t Saying My Goodbyes”, while the latter half of the album is verging on trippy. Dance. In any case, Tom Vek dances, and makes me dance, like a blind mole – no cares, no barriers, and no boundaries.


Also deserving an honourable mention:

The Raveonettes – Pretty In Black
Franz Ferdinand – You Could Have It So Much Better
Maximo Park – A Certain Trigger
Fischerspooner – Odyssey
Arab Strap – The Last Romance
The Decemberists – Picaresque
Annie – Anniemal
Smoosh – She Like Electric
Death Cab For Cutie – Plans
Robyn – Robyn
Editors – The Back Room
Ladytron – The Witching Hour
The Rakes – Capture/ Release
Shelly Poole – Hard Time For The Dreamers
Bloc Party – Silent Alarm
Vashti Bunyan - Lookingaftering


Albums I know I'll love when I hear them:
The Chalets
Broken Social Scene
The New Pornographers
Stars

2006 will see highly anticipated albums from Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Long Blondes, The Pipettes, Belle & Sebastian, another Sons and Daughters, Stellastarr*, Radiohead...and many more bands we have still yet to hear. I'm excited already.

Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

Robbie
xxxx

posted by Unknown at 12/22/2005 09:48:00 pm

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