Top Ten Albums of the Year

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  • BigHouseUSA
    Late to the party.
    • Jun 2009
    • 4907

    Top Ten Albums of the Year

    The thread last year was a disappointment, me and Relaxed posted our lists and everyone shied away from posting their's because our music is different. Grow some balls this time, dicks. I don't give a shit if you put a top ten list with Kesha and Katy Perry, even though they suck.

    Anyway, last year I struggled a bit for a list, this year was the complete opposite. I had nineteen LP's/EP's on my shortlist and I gave the nine that didn't make it an Honorable Mention because they were too good to leave off, so here we go.

    Honorable Mentions: She & Him - Volume Two, First Aid Kit - The Big Black & The Blue, The Morning Benders - Big Echo, Local Natives - Gorilla Manor, The National - High Violet, Jonsi - Go, Jenny and Johnny - I'm Having Fun Now, Clem Snide - The Meat of Life, The Magnetic Fields - Realism


    10. Foals - Total Life Forever
    Foals had a very good first album, but this was just fantastic. A little less abstract coupled with their previous sound works really well. Had I had more time to listen to it, it could easily be ranked higher. A very good, upbeat album.


    9. Joanna Newsom - Have One on Me
    A lot of people will probably have this higher, and I'm sure eventually I'l regret putting it here so low at nine. It's tough though, this is a great album, some of the albums above this one meant a lot to me. Have One on Me is fantastic though, all three of her albums are slightly different from each other, this one being the longest. One of the best folk albums to come out in a while, and there's been a lot of good folk albums. A really unique voice for those who haven't heard her either.


    8. Broken Social Scene - Forgiveness Rock Record
    They can't do anything wrong, at all. I used to have trouble getting into BSS, but the more I listen the more perfect it is. They can pretty much do anything in any song, rap, instrumental, whatever, the albums always turn out great. Just another album to be proud about.


    7. Belle And Sebastian - Write About Love
    When this album came out, it was instantly one of my top five records, it didn't get worse as I listened to it, in fact, it got even better. That's just a testament to how good the year in music was. Always twee Stuart Murdoch has really never recorded a bad song, and after a lengthy absence from studio albums it's good to see the whole group still works well together. And an appearance from Carey Mulligan on the title track. How fucking great is that?


    6. Arcade Fire - The Suburbs
    Similar to "Write About Love" in feeling, except I labeled it my number one album when it came out. It had a perfect release date as well making it the most listened to album throughout the summer. The whole album a political statement on middle America and suburbs, and mainly how it feels to be a teenager stuck in them. "Sprawl II (Mountains Over Mountains)" goes up there with some of the band's best, "Haiti," "Wake Up," the Neighborhood series. A perfect indictment on suburbia, definitely a must listen, even if you're not an a rock fan.


    5. Dr. Dog - Shame, Shame
    It's always great when a band so deep in albums can produce not only a good record, but a great one. "Shadow People" is easily one of the best songs of the year, but the whole album is almost on par with it. Fantastic effort by them, one of the more meaningful "psychedelic" albums you'll ever hear.


    4. Girls - Broken Dreams Club EP
    I'm not even sure an EP should qualify, but this one does. It's too good to be left off. Just recently released, adds to a ridiculous amount of highly regarded albums released at the end of the year. (Sufjan, Kanye, Girls, B&S, etc.) Girls have released one album before, a solid opening release, but nothing compared to this. A perfect collection of six songs, not one goes wrong. Definitely check it out, it only takes forty minutes.


    3. Beach House - Teen Dream
    One of my friends was struggling for a word to describe Beach House, they ended up using "groovy." As embarrassing as it is, I can't think of a better adjective. Don't let that put you off, this is fine example of a full album, from song to song you're trapped in their voices and it's a great feeling. Plug in your best headphones to your record player and let this shit take over your mind, you'll feel great after, I promise.


    2. Deerhunter - Halcyon Digest
    WAT. Deerhunter have made some good good albums in the past, but this is away from their norm, and one of the most surprising albums, in fact, it would be the most surprising album if it weren't for number one. Instead of the more electronic/psychedelic earlier albums, this one is pretty much straight up rocks. Bass, guitar, drums, etc. Bradford Cox is a pretty fantastic guy too.


    1. Sufjan Stevens - The Age of Adz/All Delighted People EP
    I almost, almost split these two up, they really should be, but I couldn't justify putting two EP's on the list and putting the same artist twice since there were so many good albums. Both of these records are completely different than anything Sufjan's done before, more so The Age of Adz. A lot of the folk an banjo are taken out for keyboards, guitars and electronics, even auto-tune. It's not just a concert when you see him, it's an event, lights, videos, dancing, all kinds of ridiculous shit. Both albums are pretty lengthy, including seventeen minute "Djohariah," eleven minute "All Delighted People," and twenty-five minute "Impossible Soul," described by Sufjan as an "epic love song." Sufjan found late artist Royal Robertson's work in between making album's, leaving him to worry more about aesthetics than lyrics, but that doesn't mean the lyrics are bad, at all. Two life changing records.
    Originally posted by mgoblue2290
    If you want to win, put Drew in.
  • Pitty
    Death, Taxes, Jeff Capel
    • Feb 2009
    • 7541

    #2
    I'll have to think for a while before I can come up with a list.

    Comment

    • Coked Up Elmo
      omle pu dekoc
      • Jul 2009
      • 1259

      #3
      vagina music
      sigpic
      "did you say cockintheass?"

      Comment

      • Woy
        RIP West
        • Dec 2008
        • 16372

        #4
        I'm going to list my top ten albums and such a little later when I'm done reviewing and re-reviewing them.

        I've always been interested in that Arcade Fire album...might check that out now.



        ^ Shouts to MvP for the sick sig. GFX TEAM BACK

        .

        Comment

        • leaffan
          Colton Orr Fan
          • Feb 2009
          • 11082

          #5
          The best way I can sum up pretty much all the music BigHouse just posted is this:

          You know those songs in the rock band/guitar hero games that are boring but your forced to play them because they are the begining songs that have to be played before you get to the good stuff.... Thats what we have there.

          I'll post a list if I'm not lazy but judging how every thread I create about an album coming out and 2 or 3 people actually posting in them no one will give a shit anyways.

          Leafs offseason training!

          Comment

          • MvP
            a member of vsn
            • Oct 2008
            • 8227

            #6
            I'm always interested in finding new music outside of hip-hop so any top ten lists that feature just that are more than welcomed over here. I have Sufjan's Illinois album and thought it was interesting so I'll probably check out his new one.

            I'm gonna start working on my top ten this week.

            Comment

            • Maize
              Senior Member
              • Jan 2010
              • 1912

              #7
              I need to think a little bit more, but I feel pretty good about #1-3. I have a laundry list of albums, I'll post it soon.

              Kanye will interrupt my list at some point.
              "Arrive, Raise Hell, Leave" | Kentucky Wildcats
              2014 Season: 11-2 (7-2)
              Next Game: Bowl Game

              Comment

              • BigHouseUSA
                Late to the party.
                • Jun 2009
                • 4907

                #8
                Originally posted by leaffan
                The best way I can sum up pretty much all the music BigHouse just posted is this:

                You know those songs in the rock band/guitar hero games that are boring but your forced to play them because they are the begining songs that have to be played before you get to the good stuff.... Thats what we have there.

                I'll post a list if I'm not lazy but judging how every thread I create about an album coming out and 2 or 3 people actually posting in them no one will give a shit anyways.
                None of them are on Guitar Hero or Rock Hand, but hey, nice work.
                Originally posted by mgoblue2290
                If you want to win, put Drew in.

                Comment

                • Rudi
                  #CyCueto
                  • Nov 2008
                  • 9905

                  #9
                  Think Imma do a Top 10 list as well. (for Hip-Hop). I may check out some of this music here as I like to expand my horizons

                  Comment

                  • relaxedanderson
                    I am not Abe Kabbible
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 1836

                    #10
                    Here we go then...

                    10. Polysics - Absolute Polysics (Ki/oon Records)


                    After hearing the track 'Cleaning' before buying this album I was terrified that this was going to be a poppy, commercialised grasp at mainstream acceptability. Instead I was greeted by probably the darkest, heaviest and most experimental album Polysics have ever released. Just as their heroes Devo are making a swing towards pop Polysics crawl into the underbelly. It's a shame Kayo has retired since this album though.

                    Speaking of Devo...
                    9. Devo - Something For Everybody (Warner Bros)


                    The first album from the Spudboys since the underrated 'Smooth Noodle Maps' in 1989. All the spiky New Wave edges from the Seventies have been smoothed off now and they are ploughing the same furrow that they started back in 1982 with 'Oh No! It's Devo!'. There are a few clunkers here and there and it's sadly missing the great single 'Watch Us Work It' but it's still one of the few albums you can put on in a room full of hipsters and pop-tarts and not mortally offend either of them.

                    8. Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs - Medicine County (Damaged Goods)


                    Third year in a row now that Holly and Lawyer Dave have made my end of year list and for the second album in a row they have made a big sonic progression from the last. Twangy, down-home Folky, Country Blues is still the order of the day but the lead-off track 'Forget It' adds a slinky organ into the mix to produce a sultry slow-burner that wouldn't be out of place on one of Holly's early solo LPs or even a lost Tarantino soundtrack. 'Murder in My Mind' is one of the most typical old-style Holly Golightly songs on the album until you find out it was actually written by Wreckless Eric and it finishes with a fine reworking of the old standard 'Jack O' Diamonds' which is always welcome.

                    7. Iron Maiden - The Final Frontier (EMI)


                    First I saw the cover art and I thought "Oh dear"; then I heard the single 'El Dorado' and I thought "Oh dear, oh dear", then I saw the video for the title track and I thought "Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear...". Then I heard the album and I though "Oh de...actually, I fucking like this!" The best you can usually say about the post-reunion Maiden albums is that they are growers, good eventually but you have to work at it. This one had me jumping around the room first listen the same way I did back in 1988 when I first listened to to 'Seventh Son of a Seventh Son'. Rather than grow on me I played this one so much in the six weeks after it was released that I actually made myself sick of it. I'm having a break from it now, I'll dig it out again next year.

                    6. Neil Young - Le Noise (Reprise)


                    Once again Neil Young, like Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs, makes a mockery of all the artists who think it's acceptable to wait five years between albums with his 45th LP in 41 years. He also pours scorn on the notion that a 65 year old man can't produce innovative and relevant music. Rather than follow last year's straight rocker 'Fork in the Road' this album is just Neil sat on a stool with a microphone and a guitar while Daniel Lanois fiddles with his knobs (fnarr!). Neil Young is not only keeping himself one step ahead of his contemporaries he's also one step ahead of his descendants.

                    5. Rose Elinor Dougall - Without Why (Scarlett Music)


                    The first solo material released since the great Pipettes fracture of 2008 and it's a cracker. It's impossible to compare this album to the Pipettes' excellent debut since this is the work of a woman rather than a girl but we can compare it to the slab of rubbish that the Pipettes put out this year and it's quite obvious that Rosay saw the creative dead end they were heading into and jumped ship just in time. This album is what pop music should be in the 2010s, whimsical, full of unusual melodies but still managing to be catchy without becoming cloying. You have to tune out the "I went to Uni, yeah?" accent a bit but once you do there is a sublime voice there that deserves to be heard...even if that means working with Mark Ronson :eek:

                    4. Grinderman - Grinderman 2 (Mute)


                    Does exactly what it says on the cover, it's the second Grinderman album. More of the same yet still refreshingly different...and still the ideal soundtrack for a night of beer-fuelled debauchery. Sounds so good blasting out of a jukebox at 1am it's unreal.

                    3. Chrome Hoof - Crush Depth (Southern Records)


                    Another side-project that is arguably better than it's parent band. This time it's Cathedral's Leo Smee with his bassoon and violin-fuelled, Proggy Disco Doom Metal. I had the vinyl on order for nearly six months before they decided to abandon the pressing so I bought the CD, and then the record label sent me a free one. You wait half a year for an album and then two turn up at once. Devastatingly heavy, unsettlingly catchy and perfect for throwing a few shapes to if you feel inclined.

                    2. El May - El May (Self Released)


                    After waiting seemingly forever for Lara Meyerratken to release her debut album I fired off a pre-order as soon as I heard it would be limited to just 500 copies and waited for the inevitable "Sorry, sold out" email. But I got one, along with a nice handwritten letter...

                    "Dear Relaxed's real name,
                    You are my first customer! Sorry this took so long. Enjoy the album + thank you so much for your support.
                    Lara x"

                    ...and written on the cover was the '1/500' that confirmed that I now own the first ever copy of El May's first ever album. This album wins this year's 'Best Package' prize as it was all handmade by Lara herself and, along with the note, showed that the personal touch from smaller artists trumps downloading and the bodyguard surrounded antics of the megastars.
                    The music is very good as well. Slightly disappointing that we didn't get the promised cameo from Mike Watt, who is the man that first introduced me to her music but you can't have everything.

                    1. Nina Nastasia - Outlaster (FatCat Records)


                    It needed something bloody good to keep El May off the top spot this year and, as usual, Nina Nastasia has produced something very bloody good. Six albums in and there hasn't been any let up in quality since her brilliant debut. The album starts with her trademark cold detachment on 'Cry, Cry Baby' but by 'You Can Take Your Time' she reveals a lighter, almost optimistic side. 'This Familiar Way' and the whole second side of the LP however throws something new into the Nina mix, drama. Her legendary control is pushed to breaking point as she wrings every last bit of emotion out of the songs. Exceptional from start to finish. She would have won this year's 'Best Package' prize as well if it wasn't for El May.

                    Onwards to 2011, rumoured releases include NoMeansNo, Projectionists, Blyth Power, Holly Golightly & The Brokeoffs, Future of the Left, probably another Neil Young album and there's a very, very outside chance of Right Hand Left Hand finally releasing their debut.
                    Z(u, w) = Z0(w)[1-exp{-b(w)u}]

                    ...and she said "Well I don't think you're a fishmonger. I think you've done a plop in the wrong lavatory."

                    Comment

                    • calgaryballer
                      Tiote!
                      • Mar 2009
                      • 4620

                      #11
                      Originally posted by heelswxman
                      Could you imagine Joanna Newsom on Rock Band? What?

                      'What do you mean Rock Band doesn't have a piano?'
                      ...it does now. You've been away too long ;)

                      Comment

                      • BigHouseUSA
                        Late to the party.
                        • Jun 2009
                        • 4907

                        #12
                        Rock Band harp for Joanna.
                        Originally posted by mgoblue2290
                        If you want to win, put Drew in.

                        Comment

                        • Maize
                          Senior Member
                          • Jan 2010
                          • 1912

                          #13
                          1. My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy - Kanye West
                          2. The Suburbs - Arcade Fire
                          3. Age of Adz - Sufjan Stevens
                          4. High Violet - The National
                          5. Congratulations - MGMT
                          6. Contra - Vampire Weekend
                          7. You Are Not Alone - Mavis Staples
                          8. Teen Dream - Beach House
                          9. This is Happening - LCD Soundsystem
                          10. Flamingo - Brandon Flowers
                          "Arrive, Raise Hell, Leave" | Kentucky Wildcats
                          2014 Season: 11-2 (7-2)
                          Next Game: Bowl Game

                          Comment

                          • Houston
                            Back home
                            • Oct 2008
                            • 21231

                            #14
                            Gotta check dates, for me some albums feel like they came out way back in 09 when they barely came out in the summer of this year.

                            Moving into another house threw off my timeline.

                            Comment

                            • relaxedanderson
                              I am not Abe Kabbible
                              • Feb 2009
                              • 1836

                              #15
                              The day after I write a very poor, single paragraph review of Nina Nastasia's Outlaster I get sent a link to a review that actually does the album justice.

                              Z(u, w) = Z0(w)[1-exp{-b(w)u}]

                              ...and she said "Well I don't think you're a fishmonger. I think you've done a plop in the wrong lavatory."

                              Comment

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