Friday, January 25, 2008

Our Year In Music...

2007 was a mind-bogglingly good year for music. So much so that when it was over, it felt like a bit of a rest was due. That won't happen, of course, because the ball is still rolling and the momentum of '07 is bowling forward. So to put the year into perspective, we've devised this list of 15 albums that came out last year. It is, in essence, a retrospective to the best albums, but the intent was larger in scope. We want to provide a portrait, a check-point, as it were, as to where we stand (stood) in this moment in time. We want to point people--and maybe our future selves--to the art of our time that has touched us, or that we feel is important or relevant. And though we wanted to represent as much of a cross-section of artists as possible, the landscape, while rich, is not sweeping. Mostly white, indie, rock and roll, which encompasses a surprisingly broad range of sounds. We can't deny that there is some representing going on, as most of the artists are from Brooklyn or New York, or have deep ties to the place. But that is not without good reason. Mostly, though, we want to talk about it. So let's open it up to discourse, shall we?

Music may be the most important art of the modern age. And this, to us, is the most important music of a great year.


1. Of Montreal - Hissing Fauna, Are You The Destroyer?

Though it was one of the very first albums to come out last year, its still the one we go back to. We still wake up with the songs in our head, still are infected by the beats, are still in disbelief that something so fun and funny and joyous can be so emotionally raw and personal and dark. The more we listen to it, the more challenging it gets, emotionally and intellectually. It is simultaneously a throwback and a way to the future, but its focus is neither. It is a painfully loving album reconciling the anguish of the past and the uncertainty of the future in hopes of being a full person and finding actual love or something like it in the present. The album's centerpiece, the 12-plus minute, "The Past Is A Grotesque Animal" is an obsessive rant that refuses to let go. It is destructive and terrifying and personal in the purest way--it never feels like therapy. It, like every song on the album, is wild energy focused to a pin's point. Kevin Barnes knows exactly what it takes to ask one's self the darkest questions, and invites us in on a personal quest, accompanied by insanely danceable beats and ridiculously catchy melodies. That this seminal album comes 10 years into their career is a promising shock.


2. LCD Soundsystem - Sound Of Silver

James Murphy makes sounds and sense. They are always truthful and surpsingly touching. He takes his time and we wait for him. He deftly knows what to do to make us laugh, cry, think, and move, usually all at once. 10 months old, but the album feels like its been around forever. The most listenable and move-to-able album out. It hardly does justice to talk about it.


3. The Dirty Projectors -
Rise Above

Dave Longstreth has been looking at things from left field for quite some time now, often with exhilarating results. But it wasn't until this year's Rise Above that he bowled us away with all that his imagination was capable of. Black Flag's self contained world of skater punk-dom seems to find a frightening depth when heard through Longstreth's voice and arrangements, all of which are executed with the energy and anarchic excitement that came with the original punk movement. This music is seriously exciting and disarming at every turn, as it juggles a bizarre sense of humor and an ability to cut deep to reveal frightening truths. Longstreth and his band, with Rise Above, help to reaffirm that art will always be able to deeply surprise and transform as long as artists are willing to lay themselves bare, no matter the cost.


4. Radiohead - In Rainbows

Radiohead is a complete artist. Every move they make resonates from top to bottom; from the broadest political or business decision, to every single note that is played or not played on their records or live shows. The thing we get from it is this: when we think they can't take us anywhere else, when they have taken us to what must be the end of the road, they force us to go further. And up until this album it has been by accelerating and pushing our limits (I'm thinking "Sit Down Stand Up"). But this time around, it comes in drastic curves in the road. They aren't forcing us anywhere, anymore--we willingly follow. They baited us with this move to self-release the album (an incredibly bold and inspiring move) and the album is their most precise and shockingly intricate to date. The songs are more disarming and mature. The band is more naked, more sexual than they have ever been. If the tension in Radiohead's music gets any more electric, we might not be able to handle it. But Radiohead has been surprising us all with our own capacity for a very long time.


5. The National -
Boxer


The Jesus-Christ-I-know-that-feeling album of the year. Perfectly articulates an inarticulate generation of lovers. See Seth's post from December below.





6. Menomena -
Friend and Foe

Each song is a different world, an unpredictable adventure. From the opening kicks of "Muscle'n'Flo," its clear that the album is epic in scope. The songs take unexpected turns that range from elevating, deceptively prog, anthemic oceans to full stops, gentle flicks, grains of sand, while the lyrics remain always simply honest. Its tied together by serious ambition and a wise-beyond-their-years sense of humor. 2007 was the strongest year for drumming in recent memory, and Friend and Foe's beats rank among the fattest. These boys are playing to no one's expectations and are always surprising.


7. Battles -
Mirrored

Mirrored is an unparalleled album. There is nothing unconscious about it. It is calculated and skillful and so rock solid. It is a complete work of art, compressed and refracting complex equations into jaw-dropping rock'n'roll. There is a surprise around every corner. Completely in control at all times with wild ambition. Perhaps the most notable display of their ambition is revealed in their stunning live show. These guys are clearly bringing the James Brown, sweating buckets, waking us up to the notion that it really does make a difference to be the hardest working in show business.



8. Deerhoof -
Friend Opportunity

When will Deerhoof stop getting better? I am starting to think that this band may not ever slow down, just keep growing and growing until one day the drummer just explodes and takes the whole stage with him. That the man who is able to hold down and execute such complex and insane drum beats might one day explode instead of die seems entirely possible. This stuff is so out there in its complexity that it, at times, feels improvised, effortless. In fact, the whole band gives off that sort of explosive energy; the kind that never lets you settle down, never lets on what is in store next. Not to mention that Satomi Matsuzaki opens her mouth and what comes out is both completely sexy and potentially insane. How can you not fall in love with Deerhoof?


9. Bjork - Volta

This album was entirely slept on. Bjork is an artist in a constant state of reinvention and this album exemplifies that. While not entirely cohesive, it is an experiment in chance from a mother in perpetual motion. Its a manic and maddening album, in stark contrast to her latest releases. Its her best work since the masterpiece Vespertine and with some of the hottest tracks since Post. Bjork found herself from the cutting edge of electronic music to the cutting edge of art. Here, she starts to reconcile the two without looking backwards or forwards, but at what she is right now.



10. Yeasayer - All Hour Cymbals

There is one word that sums up most how All Hour Cymbals feels : refreshing. Its such a clean feeling. Precise, exciting instrumentation and crisp production gives this album a feel that is both worldly and other-worldly. I have no idea where it came from, in the same way that we can't put our finger on where that dazing summer breeze or that bitter winter chill came from. But like those things, it commands our attention. Hopeful and post-apocalyptic, they know where we are, and are using tradition to take us to the future. They shine an optimism onto what they freely admit is a dreadful state of affairs. And the light comes through nowhere brighter than in four-part harmony.



11. Grizzly Bear - Friend E.P.

This album needs to be noted because Grizzly Bear presents themselves as artists with such control over their material that they insist on reinventing and reworking songs most bands would be terrified to touch again for fear of disrupting their beauty. This boldness not only rewards the band and listener with material that meets the former songs. In technique, scope, and depth of emotion, these songs far exceed the tracks featured on Horn Of Plenty and last year's revelatory Yellow House. The album deserves its place on the list not only musically, but philosophically as well. Grizzly Bear is able to eloquently and unabashedly share their search for identity with us, through self-exploration and having their friends pick them apart. It is healing for them and somehow, we are better for it.



12. Beirut - Flying Club Cup

Even if we don't consider that everything Owen Pallett touches turns to gold, its still a very good album with some very good songs. Zach Condon is, in the best way, the natural heir to Rufus Wainwright, who was never able to capitalize on the legacy laid by his first, most grandiose and textured album. Flying Club Cup's soaring melodies and layered instrumentation put Condon at the forefront of young singer/songwriters whose albums, we are certain, will only get better with age. Though some of the songs peter out before they reach the emotional depths they strive for, when they hit the mark, it is breathtaking. For instance, "Un Dernier Verre (Pour La Route)" is one of the most simply beautiful songs of the year. Plus, France is great.



13. Phosphorescent - Pride



A man and his tape recorder, world wise and steeped in folk tradition, uncertain or perhaps disregarding of what is happening with the Brooklyn scenesters, it runs deep.





14. Panda Bear -
Person Pitch

Something tells me that Noah Lennox and Brian Wilson would be seriously kindred spirits. It is obvious from any of Lennox's output with both Animal Collective or as Panda Bear that Wilson has been a great influence on him. But the relationship is much more complex than that. Both artists have a tendency to keep their lyrical themes simple and direct so that the quality of their voice tells the emotional story. Both artists have a great deal to say about what the computer is capable of as a musical tool. Person Pitch's shifting musical landscape is so serene and alien at times that we are fairly certain that it must be from the future. Wherever it came from, this album is constantly revealing new layers even nearly a year after its release.



15. Arcade Fire -
Neon Bible

This album is so puzzling. The lyrics, on paper, are positively bad. But somehow when Win Butler belts them or lets them out with a breathy whisper, they make a whole lotta sense. It doesn't have the exalting anthems that make us scream for Funeral, but it presents a very strong, impassioned, and we get the impression, burned band flexing its muscles and pounding the pavement. Its a strangely American album that only outsiders could make. And "My Body Is A Cage" is one of the best and certainly scariest songs of the year.




This is how we define 2007.
Please, share your thoughts...

4 comments:

Nick Link said...

Ok, I can get behind most of that. Although I dont own it, I love The Battles album. "In Rainbows" is great too. I would have mentioned Beastie Boys "The Mix-Up" (New York like none other), Clutch "From Beale Street To Oblivion", and my favorite album of the year Ween's "La Cucaracha". Now I know you have no edge so you may not like the new Clutch. I think "Beale St" is a great album in the rock tradition. I mean Clutch is the working mans band. Lastly nobody should forget Chromeo's "Fancy Footwork". I'm sure I could compose my own list (and maybe I will) and come up with 15 album you didn't mention. I just wanted to note a few that I love from 2007

Nick Link said...

Oh yeah, and The Roots "Game Theory"

Mark Jaynes said...

yes there are a whole host of honorable mentions that didn't get mentioned. maybe they will. but, no, clutch will not be on there. it's not so much my lack of edge as it is their being taints. wish i'd have heard la cucaracha. i live with a buncha ween lovers, you'd think i'd have heard it by now. i really do feel an obligation to seek out some chromeo. what i heard that you played for me was sweet and they're playing a couple nights here like next week and they're sold out. and game theory came out last year or you bet your ass it would have been on there. seriously, i did my best to find some hip hop that did it for me and just couldn't. the kanye was sub-par. cool kids are supposed to be, um, cool but i haven't gotten to them. any suggestions? i'd really love to see your list. do it!

Gordon Walker said...

Don't throw shit at me...I still haven't gotten on top of Volta. It just slipped past me...eeek...

From a poppier perspective, just to open up the frame a bit perhaps, we cannot ignore Amy Winehouse. Regardless of what you think of her, or of her music, I think we will look back years in the future and see that "Back to Black" changed the sound of our popular music. Changed the concept of "recycling" and homage and intelligence crafted into a hit -- something we kind of haven't seen in the same way since, well, the kind of 60s music to which Winehouse is paying homage.

Poor Rufus. His album just wasn't as good as we've come to expect. I liked his music A LOT MORE than his lyrics on this particular album ("Release the Stars").

However, gay or not, one must appreciate his performance of Judy Garland at Carnegie Hall. To go from the bleak and depressive and frustrated ambition of "Release the Stars" to the sheer exuberance and vitality and life and love -- and complete America -- of that set. It's incredibly gratifying. And I'm sorry, those songs still work. Check it out.

Feist's "The Reminder" is an excellent record. It is an excellent pop record. Does it mean anything? Did it change anything? I can't say entirely, but it's entirely enjoyable and often meaningful.

ALBUM of the YEAR: the soundtrack to "I'm Not There." Thank you!