2014 was not quite the year 2013 was, as it was missing some of the high end albums we got last year, but it was still a year full of strong releases. And with apologies to Angel Olsen's Burn Your Fire For No Witness and Real Estate's Atlas, both of which received consideration for this list, here are my top ten albums of the year.
10. Lykke Li, I Never Learn
Highlighted by the sweeping ballad and lead single "No Rest for the Wicked," this 32-minute album focuses lyrically on heartbreak and loneliness, accompanied by a sonic landscape of strings, acoustic guitars, and pianos. The album is dark, as evidenced by the cover art, which perfectly describes the mood of her music. The songwriting is stellar, with perfect chord changes, and her voice is the standout. You can really hear the emotion in her voice in "Love Me Like I'm Not Made of Stone," which gives her words a rarely-realized emotional depth. It's sad, but not depressing, and flows from one good song to the next without a misstep in between.
9. Against Me!, Transgender Dysphoria Blues
Being a transgender person is an experience I cannot fathom. I admire the bravery of Against Me!'s Laura Jane Grace, who came out as transgender in 2012 and then wrote this album, an at least partially autobiographical account of the struggles of being transgender. The album's mission statement has been clear since its first single, which included the lines, "Silicone chest and collagen, lips, how would you even recognize me?" Many negative experiences are detailed in the ten songs here, but delivered with Grace's confident, defiant voice, these hard-hitting punk songs make it sound like she can overcome the challenges. This is the rare album on this list where there is more than music at play, and hopefully Grace can continue to serve as a role model through music.
8. Sharon van Etten, Are We There
Are We There is hard to classify as a particular genre, but whatever your favorite genre is, you can't deny the level of songwriting on this album. It's obviously highlighted by her strong voice, showcased best by a track like the 6-minute "Your Love Is Killing Me," which couples great lyrics with her strongest vocal performance.
7. TV on the Radio, Seeds
I'm baffled by the mediocre reviews this album got. Some of Seeds stacks up with TV on the Radio's best work (like the four song opening attack of "Quartz," "Careful You," "Could You," and "Happy Idiot"), and the album has some of the highest highs of any on this list. It's a little long, and it's not quite Dear Science, but it's at least as good as 2011's (much better reviewed) Nine Types of Light. From the throbbing bass of "Careful You" to the uptempo rocker "Lazerray," Seeds draws from each part of TVOTR's bag of tricks.
6. Cloud Nothings, Here and Nowhere Else
32 minutes of fast, loud punk from this Cleveland trio. Here and Nowhere Else never lets up from its fast tempos and power chords, opening strongly with "Now Here In" and closing even more strongly with the tremendous "I'm Not Part of Me." Not all the songs are up to that same standard, but they keep the cathartic intensity going throughout, led by their not-exactly-secret weapon, drummer Jayson Gerycz who leads each tempo change with his relentless play.
5. The New Pornographers, Brill Bruisers
Here's another album that was judged a bit harshly by critics this year, most likely because it's not Twin Cinema. Once you release an album like that, it's tough to come back with anything that's simply very good rather than great. But very good is good enough for fifth place on this list. Brill Bruisers incorporates many different sounds and voices (both in terms of vocals and songwriting), so it could have ended up disjointed, but all the different sounds, from the Daft Punk-style vocal manipulations and keyboards to the occasionally heavy guitars, mesh well together here.
4. Wye Oak, Shriek
When Wye Oak's Jenn Wasner announced early this year that she was abandoning the guitar on their forthcoming album, Shriek, many lamented the loss, as Wasner was one of the more interesting guitarists working, as proved by their previous album, 2011's incredible Civilian. And while it's easy to wonder what might have been, the lack of guitars makes Shriek an interesting contrast to their previous work. And while there was no chance of anything like "Holy Holy" appearing on Shriek, their previous incarnations could not have resulted in a song like "Shriek" or "Glory." Even a slight misstep like "I Know the Law" has a dreamy, synth-infused aura to it that keeps it interesting when it could just as easily have been boring. And isn't that really all you can ask for in an album after all: that it keeps you interested throughout?
3. The War on Drugs, Lost in the Dream
I'll admit that the grade I gave this album in my initial review was a mistake; a B is way too low for this. There are still some valid criticisms to levy at this album: it's bogged down by long periods of ambient sound that go on waaaay too long ( like the end of "Under the Pressure," or the unnecessary instrumental "The Haunting Idle"). It's a bit like Arcade Fire's Reflektor in that regard, except thankfully, the songs here are much better. This album was the result of months of constant work from Adam Granduciel and co., and it shows: this album had more moments of brilliance than anything released this year.
2. St. Vincent, St. Vincent
I thought hard about making this one number one. It's impossible to remain sitting down while this album is playing. Annie Clark makes the difficult seem like a breeze, sliding from the synth-driven "Rattlesnake" to the guitar freakout "Birth in Reverse" to the baroque "Prince Johnny" effortlessly--and that's only the album's first three songs. Clark also cements her status as one of the best, more inventive guitarists working today. This is definitely not an album for everyone, as some might find it off-putting or too difficult, but if you can get past that, this album is a tremendous accomplishment. It's brilliant and clearly could only have been made by Annie Clark.
1. Spoon, They Want My Soul
When this album came out, the narrative around it seemed to center around one aspect: 2010's Transference was a dud, but now Spoon is back! This seems strange when you consider that Transference was actually very well received by many of those same publications back in 2010, only to be recast for the sake of a narrative. The truth is, Spoon is good at what they did on Transference, they're just better at this; this being more straightforward rock and roll music, as Britt Daniel likes to call it. You won't find many bands that admit to making "rock and roll" music now, but Spoon wears the label proudly, from the opening drumbeat of "Rent I Pay" to the big, guitar-focused chorus of "They Want My Soul." They Want My Soul feels a lot like their 2007 album, Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga--short, catchy songs with some unusual decisions thrown in, and that's a very good thing, since Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga is, in my opinion, their best record. This one comes pretty close to hitting that mark, and 18 years and 8 albums in, that's really saying something.
A blog that can only hope to be as good at reviewing music as Jeff Ament is at wearing hats.
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Monday, December 29, 2014
The Top 25 Songs of 2014
Here are my top 25 songs released in 2014, complete with a Spotify playlist (which is at the bottom). I tried to limit repeat entries from the same artist as best I could, although I did end up making two exceptions that I couldn't justify not including. Following this list in a couple days will be my top ten albums list. And, as always, this is my opinion and my opinion only.
25. Silversun Pickups, "Cannibal"
Released as part of a curious decision to come out with a greatest hits album after only 3 albums, "Cannibal" is standard Silversun Pickups fare, better than most of 2012's Neck of the Woods, but not up to the standard of their very best.
24. Strand of Oaks, "Goshen '97"
This semi-autobiographical song features some great guitar work from Dinosaur Jr.'s J Mascis, and is generally recommended for anyone who is a fan of a great rock song (which should be a lot of you).
23. Angel Olsen, "Forgiven/Forgotten"
By far the heaviest song on Angel Olsen's great album Burn Your Fire For No Witness, closer to a punk song than the quiet folk she normally deals in, it ends with a knockout of a line: "Will you ever forgive me for loving you?"
22. The Dead Weather, "Buzzkill(er)"
A surprise release from Jack White's other other band may also be their best song, as White is finally content to take a backseat and let Alison Mosshart carry the song.
21. Chvrches, "Dead Air"
Chvrches had one of my favorite albums of last year, and this year released two songs for soundtracks. This is the better one, a pop song straight out of the '80s that would fit in perfectly on The Bones of What You Believe.
20. Alvvays, "Next of Kin"
Alvvays' debut album is happy, bright, and reminiscent of the Beach Boys in many ways, but it can be a bit too saccharine and sweet for my taste, particularly on lead single "Marry Me, Archie." This song doesn't have this problem as much, as it's basically a very good Real Estate song with female vocals.
19. Sharon van Etten, "Taking Chances"
Like most of her album, "Taking Chances" is a melancholy, well-written song highlighted by van Etten's very strong voice.
18. Interpol, "All the Rage Back Home"
El Pintor wasn't quite the comeback album that Interpol fans were hoping for, but it was easily a step up from their previous self-titled album (in that it was actually listenable). This song is easily the album's best, as it sounds like a classic Interpol track with some great tempo changes.
17. Real Estate, "Had to Hear"
The twin clean guitars are always Real Estate's defining sound, a sound that can most accurately be described as "nice." And none of the "nice" sounding songs on Atlas are better than the album opener, which arguably uses clean lead guitar better than any other song this year.
16. The New Pornographers, "You Tell Me Where"
There are a lot of songs from Brill Bruisers that could occupy this spot, but I feel that the best one is the album closer, which, like all the best album closers, really puts the exclamation point on an already strong experience, and also really feels like a closing song--you can easily this soundtracking a movie or TV show in the future.
15. Speedy Ortiz, "American Horror"
Speedy Ortiz didn't release a proper album this year, but they did give us this gem, a '90s/'00s sounding punk song that makes great use of heavy guitars.
14. TV on the Radio, "Careful You"
A lot of the best songs on Seeds are more straightforward than we're used to hearing from this generally experimental group. But that doesn't make them any less good. The best of them is "Careful You," which features a throbbing electronic bass beat with a great vocal melody.
13. The Men, "Another Night"
Poorly named band The Men's album Tomorrow's Hits doesn't live up to the promise of this early single, which takes the best aspects of classic rock and condenses them into this horn-heavy track.
12. The War on Drugs, "An Ocean In Between the Waves"
One of the longest songs on an album full of long songs, this one takes full advantage of each second of its seven minute run time, and shows off the band's dreamy sonic landscapes and excellent guitar solos, with a strong drumbeat serving as its backbone.
11. Cloud Nothings, "I'm Not Part of Me"
The closing song of this Cleveland band's album Here and Nowhere Else is easily the album's best, an anthemic guitar-led song that works well as an album (and show) closer.
10. Jack White, "Lazaretto"
Once you stop expecting White Stripes-level greatness from Jack White, and accept that as being firmly in the past, it becomes easier to appreciate songs like "Lazaretto." The similarly named album it comes from is probably his best record sans Meg White--which still makes it not quite as good as any White Stripes record, but hey, it's hard to top those.
9. Lykke Li, "No Rest for the Wicked"
This sweeping ballad is fitting as the lead single of Lykke Li's breakup album I Never Learn, as this somber, sweeping ballad is the best distillation of her feelings and the music.
8. Spoon, "Do You"
This is exactly the song that Spoon fans, some of whom were turned off by 2010's Transference, were waiting for-- a return to the straightforward style that Spoon does so well (see "The Underdog" or "Sister Jack" for further evidence). Rather than trying to be unique, Spoon proved what they could do here with just two chords.
7. Against Me!: "fuckmylife666"
Every Against Me! album so far has had at least one fist-pumping anthem to be proud of, and this is just the latest in that line. Of course it's impossible to ignore the lyrics or the story behind this album, but even if you do, this song is top-notch.
6. St. Vincent, "Digital Witness"
It's clear that Annie Clark took a few lessons from David Byrne after collaborating with him on 2012's Love This Giant. This song's lyrics are a biting criticism of today's selfie-obsessed culture, set to a horn-led stomp.
5. Future Islands, "Seasons (Waiting on You)"
Future Islands' performance of this song on David Letterman's show earlier this year was the talk of the indie world for a while (and for good reason--check out that dancing!) It doesn't hurt that the song itself is near-perfect '80s style synth-driven balladry.
4. The Decemberists, "Make You Better"
The only song on this list from a yet-to-be-released album (What a Terrible World, What a Beautiful World is due to be released in January), this song came out in early November and is as impressive as anything they've ever done, using harmonies and big choruses to great effect, with Colin Meloy's usual brilliant lyrics.
3. Wye Oak, "Glory"
No guitars, no problem, at least with this song. The bass and keyboards carry this with an almost disco funk to it, but with a Wye Oak spin.
2. Spoon, "Inside Out"
This song is unlike anything Spoon has ever done: atmospheric, almost trip-hop, led by a synthetic beat, a killer bass line, and a harp(!). It's very easy to get lost in the five minutes of "Inside Out," and very rewarding when you do.
1. The War on Drugs, "Red Eyes"
The earliest released of any of these songs also happens to be the best. There's so much reverb on the vocals that you can't understand a word Adam Granduciel is saying, but it doesn't matter. What matters is that the melody is great, the atmosphere is wonderful, the guitars are killer, the drums are... well, I'm out of superlatives. The point is this song is the best.
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Songs That Made Everything After Them Worse
This is not a ranking of the
worst songs of all time- that list probably consists of a baby singing lyrics
of its own invention while pounding the table, and a Creed-ripoff garage band
who thinks they’re the greatest thing ever- in short, few people have heard the
actual worst songs ever. No, this is a
list of songs that may or may not themselves be bad (though most of them are)
but which introduced trends into the world of popular music that negatively
affected music after their success.
11. Cher,
“Believe”
“Hey, so Cher
wants to do this dance-pop song. Thing is, she can’t sing anymore. How can I
break this to her?”
“Good news, you
don’t have to. We can use this vocal effect
that’ll make her sound like a robot!”
Yes, Cher’s
“Believe” was the first pop song to use significant amounts of Auto-Tune,
making her robotic but on-pitch, a formula that has been copied by every
wannabe pop star since, even the ones that can sing.*
*You’re not
absolved from blame for this, T-Pain.
22. Michael
Jackson, “Thriller”
Uh oh, looks like I'm in dangerous territory here. Let me be clear:
this is not a bad song; on the contrary, it’s good. But after the enormously successful album Thriller, every pop star decided that
they wanted to do this too, and pop music post-Thriller began a downward spiral from which it has never recovered. Remember: before the ‘80s, popular music and
good music was mostly the same music. After Thriller
and MTV this changed. Case in point: The bestselling albums before Thriller: AC/DC’s Back in Black; Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours,
Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon;
Meat Loaf’s Bat Out of Hell*; the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack; Led Zeppelin IV, and The Beatles’ Abbey Road and Sgt. Pepper’s. After Thriller: Shania Twain’s Come on Over, The Bodyguard soundtrack, Michael Jackson’s Bad, Celine Dion’s Falling
into You; Alanis Morissette’s Jagged
Little Pill, and Britney Spears’ …Baby
One More Time.** Need I say more?
*The exception.
** List courtesy
of Wikipedia, which is always right: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best_selling_albums#Best-selling_albums_by_country
33. Van Halen,
“Jump”
When Eddie Van
Halen ditched his guitar for a synth in “Jump,” bad synth-based ‘80s metal was
born. Including Van Halen’s own
forgettable work with Sammy Hagar.
44. Stone
Temple Pilots, “Plush”
The thing about
Pearl Jam ripoffs is that none of them can get it right. They think growling, deep voices, muddy
production and guitar solos is the recipe, but the thing STP and all the other
‘90s Pearl Jam ripoffs were missing is that sense of fun that Pearl Jam has
always had. STP sold millions upon
millions of copies of Core, though,
making this a formula worth exploiting, and the exploiters got worse and worse
as time went on: Bush, Creed, Staind, Nickelback… not exactly capturing the
spirit of Pearl Jam, but starting a chain reaction of bad rock music following
the “grunge”* era from which mainstream rock has never fully recovered.
*Side note:
“Grunge” is not actually a thing. Listen to Soundgarden, Nirvana, Alice in
Chains and Pearl Jam back to back: they sound nothing alike, they’re just from
the same city.
55. Green Day,
“When I Come Around”
The song that
helped transform the idea of punk music from rebellion and anarchy to “It’s so
cool to be immature! Power chords!”
66. New Kids
on the Block, “Step by Step”
The success of
this group was what led to the late '90s explosion of boy bands, Max
Martin-penned tracks*, and everything on the radio sounding the same.
*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Martin_production_discography
77. Korn,
“Freak on a Leash”
To be honest, I
don’t know much about the song itself- Korn has always made my ears hurt- but I
do know that it kick-started the “nu metal” era of the early 2000s, one of the
main reasons rock radio is no longer something people listen to. Thanks a bunch, Korn.
88. Whatever
Dubstep Song Was Popular First
Whatever this song
is, it’s its fault that pop music all has dance/dubstep beats now. And that my
neighbors are constantly blaring dubstep music which I can hear through the
walls. Thanks, song. Whatever you are.
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