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2013 FBG Album Poll - Results Thread (1 Viewer)

- Will a band that once finished #1 on our poll miss completely?
I thought that Phoenix album was a pretty big letdown. :oldunsure:
It's still pretty good though. :shrug:

Maybe I should have given it more than ten points. I did have it above the only other contender for this distinction, which was a bigger letdown imo.
I thought they were both disappointing, but the other one did make my list. I haven't listened to the Phoenix album in a few months now...maybe I should revisit.

 
#23

Pearl Jam - Lightning Bolt

55 Points, 2 votes, 2 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: mon & dal boys phan

Previous Albums on Our Countdown: Backspacer (#33 in 2009), Pearl Jam (#16 in 2006)

Album Review: There comes a point in a band’s career — say, 22 years after its mega-selling debut — when the metric by which a new album’s success or failure is measured isn’t the quality of the material, exactly, so much as the degree to which that band can stave off its own exhaustion. On album number 10, Pearl Jam has plenty of spark left, opening with the determined “Getaway” and the punkish fire of “Mind Your Manners” before the smart change of pace of the anthemic “Sirens.” A few songs recall the dense eclecticism of “Vitalogy,” while others echo the Who’s solidity of purpose; with its stringy guitar lines, back-and-forth tension-driving riff, and a terrific, song-catapulting solo, “Swallowed Whole” (a modern gloss on “Pure and Easy”) touches a lot of wires together and crackles. “Lightning Bolt” occasionally stumbles, as on the maudlin overreach of “Future Days” and the “Hey, Soul Sister”/“Goodbye Stranger” hybrid “Sleeping by Myself.” But Pearl Jam’s not just still alive, it’s kicking.

--Boston Globe

 
- Will a band that once finished #1 on our poll miss completely?
I thought that Phoenix album was a pretty big letdown. :oldunsure:
It's still pretty good though. :shrug:

Maybe I should have given it more than ten points. I did have it above the only other contender for this distinction, which was a bigger letdown imo.
I thought they were both disappointing, but the other one did make my list. I haven't listened to the Phoenix album in a few months now...maybe I should revisit.
Bankrupt! made my list, but fell just outside my top 10, I ended up giving it 5 points.

 
#22

Deafheaven - Sunbather

55 Points, 3 votes, 2 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Iluv80s & Fly

Album Review: Deafheaven is a pretty polarizing band, and for every person gushing about the transcendental nature of its new full-length, Sunbather, there’s a metal purist dismissing the group as another “hipster” act like Liturgy, and then going back to listening to something far more authentic (i.e. from Sweden). The problem with this particular distinction is that it’s based on an inherently flawed perception of a band that has far more in common with screamo acts like Envy than, say, Entombed.


This should be pretty evident from the album’s opener, “Dream House,” a nine-minute announcement that’s as emotionally resonant as an Explosions In The Sky song, but filled with enough blast beats and skull-rattling screams to keep it from ever ending up on the soundtrack for a series like Friday Night Lights. The trick is that the track—and Sunbather as a whole, for that matter—is teeming with enough surprising moments that it manages to avoid redundancy, one of the major pitfalls of bands in this genre. Whenever there’s a pause in the pandemonium, it’s impossible to know if the sonic trajectory is about to rise to the heavens or hit the ground, shattering everywhere.

If Sunbather (which is made up of seven seamless tracks that collectively last an hour) has a mission statement, it’s the title track, which opens with a shoegazing wall of noise before segueing into a half-time groove. Then, after being lulled into a dreamy state of relaxation, the double bass kicks back in and, all of the sudden, the listener is thrust back into a world of carefully controlled destruction. Deafheaven’s masterful control of these dynamics—loud and soft, fast and slow, metallic and melodious—are exactly why the band is so divisive; the trade-off being that those traits also make 14-minute opuses like “Vertigo” so engaging.

Deafheaven’s music isn’t about making things as heavy as possible. Instead, its approach is akin to a painter understanding that much of art’s beauty lies in the blank space on the canvas that makes the flashes of color that much more awe-inspiring. Deafheaven achieves this by slotting the deceptively simple and distortion-free segue “Irresistible” and the ambient, Godspeed You! Black Emperor-esque “Windows” into the madness. On their own, both of these tracks would sound out of place, but in context they keep Sunbather from sounding like multiple variations on the same musical formula, regardless of how awe-inspiring those variations might be.

Will the hype surrounding the album attract fair-weather fans that listen to it for weeks and then move on to the next buzzed-about band? Maybe, but that’s missing the point. What’s undeniable is that moments from Sunbather will resonate long after the pointless babble has died down, proving that sometimes the greatest beauty can only be found in the face of chaos
--AV Club
 
- Will a band that once finished #1 on our poll miss completely?
I thought that Phoenix album was a pretty big letdown. :oldunsure:
It's still pretty good though. :shrug:

Maybe I should have given it more than ten points. I did have it above the only other contender for this distinction, which was a bigger letdown imo.
I thought they were both disappointing, but the other one did make my list. I haven't listened to the Phoenix album in a few months now...maybe I should revisit.
Bankrupt! made my list, but fell just outside my top 10, I ended up giving it 5 points.
I liked it better when I went back to it a few months after release.

 
We're up all night to get lucky

#21

Daft Punk - Random Access Memories

60 Points, 5 votes, 1 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: E-Z Glider

Album Review: When Daft Punk announced they were releasing a new album eight years after 2005's Human After All, fans were starved for new material. The Tron: Legacy score indulged the seminal dance duo's sci-fi fantasies but didn't offer much in the way of catchy songs, so when Random Access Memories' extensive publicity campaign featured tantalizing clips of a new single, "Get Lucky," their fan base exploded. But when the album finally arrived, that hugely hyped single was buried far down its track list, emphasizing that most of these songs are very much not like "Get Lucky" -- or a lot of the pair's previous music, at least on the surface. The album isn't much like 2010s EDM, either. Instead, Daft Punk separate themselves from most contemporary electronic music and how it's made, enlisting some of their biggest influences to help them get the sounds they needed without samples. On Homework's "Teachers," they reverently name-checked a massive list of musicians and producers; here, they place themselves on equal footing with disco masterminds Giorgio Moroder and Nile Rodgers, referring to them as "collaborators." That could be self-aggrandizing, yet it's also strangely humble when they take a back seat to their co-stars, especially on one of RAM's definitive moments, "Giorgio by Moroder," where the producer shares his thoughts on making music with wild guitar and synth solos trailing behind him. Elsewhere, Daft Punk nod to their symbiotic relationship with indie on the lovely "Doin' It Right," which makes the most of Panda Bear's boyish vocals, and on the Julian Casablancas cameo "Instant Crush," which is only slightly more electronic than the Strokes' Comedown Machine. And of course, Pharrell Williams is the avatar of their dancefloor mastery on the sweaty disco of "Lose Yourself to Dance" as well as "Get Lucky," which is so suave that it couldn't help but be an instant classic, albeit a somewhat nostalgic one. Indeed, "memories" is the album's keyword: Daft Punk celebrate the late '70s and early '80s with lavish homages like "Give Life Back to Music" -- one of several terrific showcases for Rodgers -- and the spot-on soft rock of the Todd Edwards collaboration "Fragments of Time." More importantly, Random Access Memories taps into the wonder and excitement in that era's music. A particularly brilliant example is "Touch," where singer/songwriter Paul Williams conflates his work in Phantom of the Paradise and The Muppet Movie in the song's mystique, charm, and fragile yet unabashed emotions. Often, there's an almost gooey quality to the album; Daft Punk have never shied away from "uncool" influences or sentimentality, and both are on full display here. At first, it's hard to know what to make of all the fromage, but Random Access Memories reveals itself as the kind of grand, album rock statement that listeners of the '70s and '80s would have spent weeks or months dissecting and absorbing -- the ambition of Steely Dan, Alan Parsons, and Pink Floyd are as vital to the album as any of the duo's collaborators. For the casual Daft Punk fan, this album might be harder to love than "Get Lucky" hinted; it might be too nostalgic, too overblown, a shirking of the group's duty to rescue dance music from the Young Turks who cropped up in their absence. But Random Access Memories is also Daft Punk's most personal work, and richly rewarding for listeners willing to spend time with it.

--All Music

 
I can't believe she hasn't been in one of our countdowns before but that looks to be the case...

#20

Laura Marling - Once I Was an Eagle

61 Points, 3 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: wazoo, Iluv80s, Eephus

Album Review: If the usual tropes about Laura Marling in the past have centered around the British singer-songwriter’s startling precocity, on her fourth album, Once I Was An Eagle, the conversation shifts to her maturity. At 23, Marling has clearly crafted her most virtuosic album—lyrically rich and engaging, with adept arrangements that often nod to ’60s folk and country but leave plenty of Marling’s own stamps.


2011’s A Creature I Don’t Know found Marling going in a heavy folk-rock direction but falling short of her best material, 2010’s I Speak Because I Can. After what’s been described as a fairly rocky tour, the singer retreated to the studio with producer Ethan Johns. They recorded all the vocals and guitars for Eagle, alone, in one marathon recording session.

At 16 songs, Eagle can sometimes feel overwrought, but Marling may have also created a classic. The record opens with a four-song cycle that sets the album’s dominant theme of artistic independence. “When you wake you’ll know I’m gone, where I’m going there’s no one,” she sings on “Breathe.” “So don’t follow me.” While the opening section’s schematic is sweeping orchestral folk, Marling goes into deeper modal folk on “Little Love Caster,” and recalls murder ballads like “The Two Sisters” (and its variants) with the melody and imagery of “Undine.” Eagle continues to progress in sections, moving on to folk-rock with the excellent “Where Can I Go?,” reminiscent of Bonnie Raitt, and “When Were You Happy? (And How Long Has That Been),” with its Richard Thompson-esque guitar filigree and examination of mundane cosmopolitan discontent.

If most of Eagle finds Marling acting as a firebrand, the album’s last few songs come as a note of reconciliation. On “Love Be Brave,” one of the album’s best-written songs with some nice melodic surprises, she sings, “In a world you can’t get lost in, I find my way to him.” “Saved These Words” follows a Bert Jansch-style fingerpicking pattern with its mix of sweet and sour notes. “When your work is over, your day is done / Put down your hammer, into my world come,” she offers at last. Whether or not Marling’s huffy folk music is your brand of gin, it’s hard to deny the markings of such a raw talent. Eagle is a master class in creation.
--AV Club
 
#19

Waxahatchee - Cerulean Salt

63 Points, 4 votes, 2 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: wazoo11, kupcho1

Album Review: Katie Crutchfield’s young but she’s no rookie – for years she played with her twin sister Allison (who now fronts Swearin’) in a brilliantly named band called P.S. Eliot and Cerulean Salt is her second record under the name she took from a lake near her family’s Alabama home, Waxahatchee. Her first solo album,American Weekend, was decidedly more folk-tinged; on Salt, Crutchfield turns up both the feelings and the guitar volume (and distortion) to great effect – she might have released one of the breakout records of the year.


Crutchfield’s a talented, versatile songwriter – on tracks like “Lips and Limbs,” lilting guitar that sounds like the soundtrack to old, sun-flaring home movies takes the lead; on “Coast to Coast” she goes for pop-punk distortion; on “Dixie Cups and Jars” she chooses hollow-sounding, bluesy strums to anchor distant, tinny riffs. Her lyrics, though, usually delivered in a soft, soothing, almost secretive drawl, as though she were whispering in your ear, have a focus in common, as she wrestles with vivid memories of unhealthy relationships in excruciating, gorgeous detail. Musically and lyrically, each track on Salt is a short-but-sweet time capsule that summons a particular memory of a particular lost time about which Crutchfield sounds half nostalgic and half pleased to be done with. On “Lips and Limbs” she sings “You’re deaf and dumb and I am numb and we’re alone and eighteen,” and that guitar line is aural nostalgia but her words are undercut by a sense of irony; you get the feeling she would change that memory if she could. Same with her words in “Blue Pt. II:” “If you think that I’ll wait forever you were right and I’d give you everything you wanted if I can” – she sounds so hollow and lost that it feels like a fact, but it’s not one that makes her proud.

Then there’s album highlight “Dixie Cups and Jars,” where Crutchfield sings about the grotesque nightmare and existential disappointment of an old friend’s wedding (“makeup sits on your face like tar”). Her minimalist, repetitive guitar gives her voice plenty of room to seethe; every verse seems to end with a line about her need to run away; in the end all she can do is find escape “in aerator bliss,” filling her mason jar to the brim as everyone around her drinks from champagne flutes. She’s disappointed in her newly married friend and in the lost lovers of the record’s other songs, but you get the sense that most profoundly she’s disappointed in herself – “this place is vile and I am vile too,” she belts over simple acoustic strumming on “You’re Damaged.” “My words are ugly and you can’t discern me.” In the end, Crutchfield’s music is hauntingly personal not because it gives you uncomfortably wide a window into her own life but because it provides you with a mirror. Words like “identifiable” get thrown around a lot with reference to a myriad of artists, and Crutchfield isn’t necessarily aiming to delineate any universal truths about love or loss, but what makes Cerulean Salt so enjoyable and so endlessly relistenable is that some of her snapshots likely resemble ones from your own lost photo albums.
--Pretty Much Amazing
 
#18

The Head & the Heart - Let's Be Still

66 Points, 4 votes, 2 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: mon, mphtrilogy

Album Review: Sub Pop, a label once known for pioneering the raucous Seattle sound, has found its footing in the new millennium as a purveyor of soft rock. This strange shift in orientation only makes sense on a regional level as a few of the major acts on their roster on from the Emerald City, namely Fleet Foxes and their cathartic spin off Father John Misty.

Let’s Be Still, the newest release from Seattle collective The Head and The Heart is an exercise in low key, unobtrusive folk rock. As the title suggests, there are no numbers here that force one onto their feet, let alone the dance floor. Rather, the album winds down at a leisurely pace with the sparse sound of acoustic plucking, twinkling piano and deadened snare driving the melancholy songs forward.

The meditative strings and synth punches of “Summertime” awaken the album from it’s autumn slumber but it continues on in what seems like a deliberate duskiness; even the tick-tick clapping rhythm of “Shake” is offset by lyrics sung in woeful half time. The hazy tempos and lethargic lyrics are most effective on the lovely title track, where lead singer Josiah Johnson ruminates on our hyper linked culture, proclaiming, and “The world’s just spinning a little to fast. If things don’t slow down, we may not last”.

There is a hardy amount of sweet material on Let’s Be Still and it is a perfect accompaniment to a morning sunrise or a low-key soirée in the woods. With the current industry trends flooded with pickers and grinners, it is impressive enough that The Head and The Heart have found a way to stand out amongst the throngs of neo folkies.

If you are a die hard fan, be sure and order Let’s Be Still directly from theheadandtheheart.com where you can snag a copy of the special edition of the album, which will be pressed on two pieces of clear vinyl; the first with blue accents, the second with gold accents.
--adequacy.net
 
#17

Local Natives - Hummingbird

69 Points, 3 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Kenny Powers, Disco Stu, Iluv80s

Past Albums on Our Album Polls: Gorilla Manor (#14 in 2010)

Album Review: Local Natives' 2010 debut, Gorilla Manor, was fully-formed and immediately pleasing, functioning at a level that lesser acts spend entire careers trying to reach. But it had a certain youthful scrappiness, too. Alongside expansive tracks like "Shape Shifter" and "Wide Eyes", there were the silly howls that introduced "Airplanes" and the shouty breakdown of "Sun Hands", both of which brought comparisons to Animal Collective. All told, it was very of-the-moment with influences to match. Guitarist/singer Taylor Rice cited Broken Social Scene in an interview around the time of the album's release, and anyone following along with big-tent indie rock could pick up on other borrowed elements: Grizzly Bear's choirboy sway, the National's starched-shirt seriousness, Fleet Foxes' rolling melodicism. But while the songwriting was strong, you had to wonder if the band would prove to be more than the sum of their influences.

Hummingbird, Local Natives' second album, offers a tricky answer to that question. They're still on the same path-- no fashionable synths or newfound fixation with 1990s R&B here-- but innovation seems beside the point. This is a record of lateral growth, one that finds the band establishing their own place among their contemporaries. Ironically, they've found their sound with the assistance of one of their major forebears: the National's Aaron Dessner performs and contributes songwriting on Hummingbird, and shares production credit with the band while recording with them in his Brooklyn studio. (His brother and bandmate, Bryce, contributed horn arrangements to several songs, too.)

As with member-cum-producers Death Cab for Cutie's Chris Walla and TV on the Radio's Dave Sitek, Dessner's production style isn't terribly distinctive. But he knows how to make things sound good, and there's plenty of richness and depth to these songs. Bassist Andy Hamm left Local Natives in 2011, leaving Local Natives as a quartet; on Hummingbird, Aaron Dessner acts as fifth band member of the group.

In our interview with the band last year, they described the split with Hamm as "heartbreaking," and it wasn't the only loss suffered following Gorilla Manor's release: lead vocalist Kelcey Ayer's mother passed away last summer. Accordingly, the brightness and boisterousness of Gorilla Manor is mostly absent. Advance track "Breakers" is a pulsating rush of drum fills and "ooh"s that deflates to nearly nothing just as the wordless hook begins to sink in. There are other ominous touches: the tangled vocal ascent of "You & I", "Black Spot"'s closing instrumental tumble, the static laden "Wooly Mammoth", one of many cuts that showcases drummer Matt Frazier's knack for creating expressive, overwhelming washes of rhythm. Lyrics convey the anxiety and depressed confusion. Where Gorilla Manor tried to capture the feeling of twentysomething malaise ("Water's in the clouds/ Is my life about to change?/ Who knows?/ Who cares?"); here words are more vivid, conveying scenes of hopelessness and the feeling that everyone you know around you is slowly becoming a stranger.

Lyrically, they're best when they're at their most direct. "Colombia"'s beautiful swell takes syncopated bass and stately piano and grows into something warm and emotionally cathartic. Vocally, Ayer takes a lilting upper register, leaning into it more and more as his lonely voice turns pleading while addressing his deceased mother: "If you never felt all of my love/ I pray now you do". On an album that spans a wide range of emotions, "Colombia" is Hummingbird's most affecting moment; it's also one of the best songs the band's ever written.

Although there are a number of fine uptempo songs, Hummingbird's strongest moments are the quiet, elegiac cuts similar to "Colombia": the brief, sweetly sung "Ceilings", the skyward wails of "Three Months", Ayer's simmering solo take on the verses of "Heavy Feet". Subtlety is key, and Hummingbird is nothing if not subtle. There's nothing as melodic as "Airplanes" or "World News" on here, but this isn't a bad thing. With Hummingbird, Local Natives have made a thoughtful, lovely album with small gestures that provide great rewards.
--p4k
 
I'm glad we've all finally agreed he's much better than his former band.

#16

Jason Isbell - Southeastern

69 Points, 5 votes, 2 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Nick Vermeil, dal boys phan

Past Albums on Our Album Polls: Here we Rest (#31 in 2011)

Album Review: Jason Isbell has always been closely associated with the groups he’s been a part of: Drive-By Truckers and, more recently, The 400 Unit, with whom he’s released two albums. While members of the latter step in to back him up on Southeastern, for the first time since his 2007 solo debut, Sirens Of The Ditch, listeners are able to hear an unfiltered representation of this Alabamian prodigy, and the results are so stellar it’s not hyperbole to say that he could be his generation’s answer to Steve Earle.


Thankfully, unlike Earle, Isbell learned to face his demons relatively early, and that tone is immediately set via the opener “Cover Me Up,” an acoustic number that sees Isbell’s voice soaring above twangy flourishes as he confesses, “I sobered up and I swore off that stuff forever this time.” While most artists are scared that sobriety will hinder their writing, it seems as if it’s inspired Isbell to write some of his most personal songs to date. (Marrying Amanda Shires, who plays fiddle and sings on “Traveling Alone,” probably didn’t hurt, either.) It’s always been difficult to tell fact from the fiction with Isbell since his writing is steeped in so much Southern mythology. That tendency, which defines some his most popular DBT songs like “Decoration Day,” is continued on “Flying Over Water,” which sees him revisiting his roots to recount a story of “Daddy’s little empire / Built by hands and built by slaves.” Things may get sweaty when Isbell sings, “In the heat I saw you rising from the dirt,” but listeners can feel that burn when he rips a distortion-drenched guitar solo during the song’s climax. Country music is a genre where authenticity is paramount and there’s no question that when Isbell sings about topics that might be foreign to city dwellers, it comes from a place of experience. Even when the protagonist has a different name—like Andy on “Elephant,” a somber ballad that tells the story of his friendship with a terminally ill woman with sharecropper eyes—there’s something in Isbell’s voice that’s hauntingly honest when he sings about doing his best to “try to ignore the elephant somehow.” As a respite, these types of sentiments are broken up by the occasional fun honky-tonk like “Super 8,” but for the most part Southeastern is pretty serious business. Then again, so is life and the one that Isbell has lived thus far is certainly worth documenting, especially when the songs supporting it are this stunning.
--AV Club
 
#15

Haim - Days Are Gone

76 Points, 5 votes, 2 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: themeanmachine, Steve Tasker

Album Review: It’s been almost a year since Haim released its first single, “Forever,” the track that garnered the trio of California sisters a ton of hype just for singing about an intimate yet universal experience—a relationship’s do-or-die moment. “Forever” has since become the second track on Haim’s debut, Days Are Gone, and creates the lovelorn landscape of an album filled with subject matter that will surely resonate with the recently single.


Days Are Gone’s third single, “Falling”—about getting “rough” when relationship times are tough—follows the same formula. Middle sister Danielle Haim sings a somewhat restrained lead over a mix of upbeat folk and R&B, while oldest sister Este Haim and youngest sister Alana Haim provide perfect backing harmonies à la the Christine McVie-led version of Fleetwood Mac.

It’s not until the album’s third track and latest single, “The Wire,” that listeners are given extended vocal contributions by Este and Alana. The Eagles-esque song sees Danielle receding to the background after the first verse before returning to the fore later on. It’s a nice change of pace that conveys Haim’s versatility, making for some of the album’s strongest songs as Days Are Gone’s second half shifts from peppy, hook-laden numbers to songs with stringent rhythm and somber lyrics.

“My Song 5” exemplifies this shift. The hard-hitting tune still showcases what seems to be an effortless ability from the Haim sisters to craft a catchy melody—surely a result of their musical upbringing, complete with participation in the parent-led family band Rockinhaim—but the amount of instrumentation is more varied; the synth-heavy first half of Days Are Gone is replaced by some of the album’s most overt guitar work. Penultimate cut “Let Me Go” hits the same sweet spots with harsher beats and repeated pleas to a lover that swell into assertive verses. The arrangements throughout, however, provide enough pop to keep even the darker parts of the album danceable.

It could be an overstatement to say that if Days Are Gone is any indication of what’s to come for Haim, the band is set. The twentysomethings are still young, after all, and will no doubt change their style as new experiences color their view. Still, Days Are Gone is remarkably solid and—forthcoming changes or not—with all the hype and talent behind the group, Haim is overwhelmingly likely to succeed.
--AV Club
 
I can't believe she hasn't been in one of our countdowns before but that looks to be the case...

#20

Laura Marling - Once I Was an Eagle

61 Points, 3 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: wazoo, Iluv80s, Eephus
I'm surprised this didn't make NV's list. He was an big early champion of Marling here and on Hoof.

 
I'm kinda over being told to throw my hands up in the air

#14

Lorde - Pure Heroine

77 Points, 5 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Brony, Abraham, Northern Voice

Album Review: Away from Western ears and eyes, Lorde’s formidability metabolised into something of substance and feeds the core manifesto of her debut album. Pure Heroine could have coasted on the high definition rush of “Royals” and given us a litter of serviceable facsimiles. Instead it seeks to redefine coming-of-age themes against a backdrop of juddery dystopian baroque pop that translates musical and lyrical influences into something way beyond a juvenile rant. The record is a triumph of Trojan horse ideology; nods to three decades of school disco staples are enough of a trust anchor to mask a powerful two inch lyrical punch.


Yet Pure Heroine is also a record that lives or dies by more subjectivity than most. Those who found the amped-up conceits of Richard Kelly’s Donnie Darko unpalatable may come away with the same disregard for O’Connor’s hyper-aware capture of the angst, anger and generational loathing that scatters the tender years between childhood and adulthood. Frustration as much as impulsive petulance dominates lines like “I’m kinda over being told to throw my hands up in the air / So there” (“Team”) and “All work and no play / Never made me lose it” (“Still Sane”) but the songs they belong to are part of a more considered whole.

Pseudo-ballad “400 Lux” plays out escapist frissons of a grounded love-match on the canvas of suburban repetition. It’s an age old story but O’Connor’s delivery is shot through with recognisable experience. Her stories are set in the “cities you’ll never see on screen” where developing minds struggle with the glamour and narrative of celebrity – but she isn’t the archetypal outsider. Pure Heroine paints its central character as considered participant who can let loose when she wants to but isn’t necessarily damaged enough by the failing world around her to lose all hope. She’s angry about is the way the world tries to capture her peer group with neat generalisations. “Maybe the internet raised us or maybe people are jerks” she offers up on closing track “A World Alone”.

There’s a subtle nuance to the 16-year old’s vocal delivery that underpins every track. When she sings ”It drives you crazy getting old” on “Ribs”, the smiling, wry wink is noticeable. The line neatly underlines an overarching point too: the transition from a one space to another is arduous, terrifying and life changing. It’s a universality that feels more profound with every listen.

O’Connor’s coup d’état on Pure Heroine is ultimately the subversion of sentiment and expectations she achieves as Lorde: an often incongruous mix of the small-town study-hard goth-geek and a vampishm, leftfield pop star in the making. While she’ll have to work even harder to find an angle for record number two her debut delivers everything you could have hoped for from a pop star in 2013.
 
I can't believe she hasn't been in one of our countdowns before but that looks to be the case...

#20

Laura Marling - Once I Was an Eagle

61 Points, 3 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: wazoo, Iluv80s, Eephus
I'm surprised this didn't make NV's list. He was an big early champion of Marling here and on Hoof.
I love Alas I Cannot Swim, and I Speak Because I Can. For some reason, I haven't listened to this :bag:

 
I can't believe she hasn't been in one of our countdowns before but that looks to be the case...

#20

Laura Marling - Once I Was an Eagle

61 Points, 3 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: wazoo, Iluv80s, Eephus
I'm surprised this didn't make NV's list. He was an big early champion of Marling here and on Hoof.
I was an early fan of this (and Lorde, too), but neither made my list in the end. Marling was actually my final cut to get to 20, I believe.

 
I was debating Swedish Fish... Roasted peanuts or licorice... I was so stoned and starving


#13

Parquet Courts - Light Up Gold

79 Points, 6 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Brony, El Floppo, Bonzai

Album Review: Sorry, but Parquet Courts don’t like you. It’s not personal. Their scepticism of anyone other than immediate band members (and possibly their wonderful tour manager, Chris) is universal. (And possibly down to some very strong weed.)


But is this blanket rejection a bad thing? ‘Light Up Gold’ proves that it absolutely isn’t. An album of urgent art-punk verve and rattling brevity, its 15 songs pass in 33 raucous and immediately re-listenable minutes.

By turns they bear the gawky judder of The Feelies’ ‘Crazy Rhythms’ (‘Master Of My Craft’), the loafing of Pavement at their most louche (‘N Dakota’) and the mark of Guided By Voices’ Bob Pollard at his dislocated and melodic zenith (‘Picture Of Health’).

‘Borrowed Time’ shows off Austin Brown’s hurtling guitar skills between false endings. ‘Stoned & Starving’ finds Andrew Savage rambling about the perils of foraging in a funk over a racing riff.

It’s a pitching and yawing listen, and it’s compelling and punchy in a way that’ll have you bouncing straight out of your chair.

They may be disdainful and obtuse, but for this record, and this record alone, Parquet Courts should gain your unfettered adoration. Not that their manners, to be frank, quite deserve it.

But since when have manners been rock’n’roll?
--The Fly
 
Our whole Top 20 is pretty awesome IMO by the way, lots of albums over 100 points and every album left to come was on a whole bunch of lists. Good year for people getting their lists in and lots of good albums.

 
Our whole Top 20 is pretty awesome IMO by the way, lots of albums over 100 points and every album left to come was on a whole bunch of lists. Good year for people getting their lists in and lots of good albums.
I was starting to get worried that I didn't see any/many of my picks so far.

Somehow, I don't think my #1 is going to make it. :kicksrock:

 
#12

Kurt Vile - Wakin on a Pretty Daze

96 Points, 6 votes, 4 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: wazo11, Time Kibitzer, El Floppo, Disco Stu

Previous Albums on Our Countdown: Smoke Rings for My Halo (#28 in 2011)

Album Review: In most photos, he hides his face behind his hair. Long, dark, nappy in the summer months—Kurt Vile’s wavy strands fall like drapes over the edge of his microphone. His beady eyes rarely catch a square gaze with a camera lens, an audience member or an interviewer. Through most of his career, Vile’s voice, too, was but one element of a multi-layered mix; masked.


So, when Vile sings his first line some 40 seconds into the first song on his new record, Wakin On A Pretty Daze, and when those lyrics are as clear and bright and crisp as the dawn that he describes, you know something is intrinsically different about this album. While his early releases, namely 2008’s Constant Hitmaker and 2009’s Childish Prodigy, were more a collage of loose ideas organized around a singular, murky sound, Daze presents 11 carefully composed tracks with beginnings, middles and ends.

Producer John Agnello (Dinosaur Jr., Phosphorescent, Son Volt) is back with a fresh strip of sandpaper. Agnello’s touch helped make Vile’s previous record, Smoke Ring For My Halo, one of 2011’s unexpected breakouts. On Daze, Vile’s amorphous, ambient drones continue to solidify into sharp shapes with defined edges. While he was always a contemplative songwriter, Vile’s lyrics are now more ponderous and worldly rather than navel-gazing. (He’s married and a father of two.)

Themes of movement and escape are the bedrock of this album. Vile’s dreamlike crooning on “Girl Called Alex” precedes the punchy, more direct sentiment of “Never Run Away.” With its multiple breakdowns, songs like “Pure Pain” recall the better moments of Crosby, Stills, Nash and & Young’s “Déjà Vu,” among other cornerstones of the Laurel Canyon scene of the 1960s and ‘70s. Subtle pedal steel swells are a welcomed addition to the live mix, more atmospheric than country or kitschy.

“There is but one true love within my heart,” he tells us on “Snowflakes Are Dancing.” It’s a continuation of a theme from Smoke Ring, wherein Vile proclaimed, “There is but one true love in my baby’s arms.” There’s a calming balance to this record—lyrically, thematically, sonically. It closes exactly as it begins, with a long, winding, peaceful melody—one of the prettiest Vile has ever penned. “In the night when all hibernate, I stay awake, searching the deep, dark depths of my soul,” he says. He describes his process of finding that one moment, the “golden” tone. It’s a beautiful song about—what else—the nature of writing a beautiful song.

Things are different now. His voice is in the foreground. His eyes meet the camera in the press photo. He’s alert, aware. Awake.
 
Just missing the top 10.

#11

Savages - Silence Yoursefl

100 Points, 7 votes, 4 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Ahrn, ZJilla, El Floppo, wazoo11

Album Review: I’ve been reading Please Kill Me, an oral history compiled by Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain that traces the evolution of the musical anti-movement we know as punk in New York in the 1960s and 1970s. It’s immensely jealousy-inspiring – those interviewed talk about going to see the Velvet Underground or Patti Smith or the Stooges or Television play among their first shows at divey Lower East Side clubs, sensing they were watching history in the making. It’s appropriate, at least for me, that the London quartet Savages’ debut record Silence Yourself is coming out around the time I’m totally immersed in this history – seeing Savages live in October 2012 felt like watching history in the making perhaps more than any other show I’ve seen, and they’ve reminded me since I first heard their music of Kim Gordon’s t-shirt from that famous Sonic Youth press photo: “Girls invented punk rock, not England.”


The first word that comes to mind about Savages is “challenging.” It’s complicated, like so many other things about them, because their music itself isn’t inaccessible or difficult or alienating (you try to resist Ayse Hassan’s basslines), but everything about it functions like a dare: the first chorus singer Jehnny Beth gives you to latch onto is “If you tell me to shut up, I’ll shut it now;” on “No Face” she croons “Don’t worry about breaking my heart, far bigger things will fall apart.” On “Strife” she sings stunningly frankly about a torrid love affair – “they wonder how come I’ve been doing things with you I would never tell my mum” – over Gemma Thompson’s apocalyptically distorted guitar. Then there’s “Hit Me,” less than two live-recorded minutes of Beth’s breathless shouting over Faye Milton’s percussion avalanche, “Will you hit me, I’m ready.” It’s the most explicitly punk the band get – huge drums, bottled-up tension that bursts forth, in-your-face lyrics like Beth’s reinterpretation of X-Ray Spex’s “Oh Bondage, Up Yours” – but Silence Yourself is thoroughly laced with that sense of intense confrontationality that characterizes the genre. Still waters run deep under Milton and Hassan’s slinky motorik groove in the form of Thompson’s guitar, playing along and then utterly not (see: her collapsing walls of noise in “Waiting for a Sign”), and Beth’s forceful, hypnotic vocals and lyrics, as she mediates on lust and violence, often juxtaposed discomfortingly closely. She switches roles in a teasingly chameleonic way: on “I Am Here” she’s your mom dispelling your nightmares, and then she’s leading you by the hand through the rest of the band’s thunderclouds-gathering firestorm coda – “Are you coming?”

The idea behind Gordon’s t-shirt still resonates: as evidenced in Please Kill Me, it’s often marginalized communities – women, queer communities, people of color – who, faced with adversity, channel their frustration into truly game-changing art. Savages’ smart reorganization and shuffling of punk, post-punk, krautrock, and noise music into something brutal, jarringly confrontational, and completely singular is a breath of fresh air and an unignorable statement of power and resistance. We still live in a world that’s always finding new ways to silence the breadth of women’s voices, and Savages, adamantly, defiantly, will not be shut up. It’s in the requests they’ve posted at their shows for concertgoers to turn off their cameras and cell phones, it’s in the title of their record, it’s in the considered, seething hypnotics of their music itself – you will shut up and listen, and Savages dare you to try and look away.
--Pretty Much Amazing
 
Early guess on how this will shake out ...

Arctic monkeys
Vampire weekend
Jake bugg.

123.






#10

Jake Bugg - Jake Bugg

104 Points, 6 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: mon, Kenny Powers, E-Z Glider

Previous Albums on Our Countdown: Shangri-La (#29 in 2013)

Album Review: There's a great story about Jake Bugg that illustrates just how different he is from your average British teenager. Shortly after playing his first gig (not in some fauxhemian east London snakepit, but at his high school in Nottingham), Bugg's friends, suitably impressed, implored him to audition for Britain's Got Talent. In their defence, it's no stretch to imagine Amanda Holden violently weeping all the fluid out of her body to the strains of 'Country Song' or 'Someone Told Me', but Bugg was having none of it. "I never would have done that," he told one interviewer, "because it doesn't seem genuine, it doesn't feel natural."


Authenticity is the last meaningful currency left in indie. These days we tend not to focus on whether our pop stars are doing things we haven't heard before, but instead on what their education cost and how many failed musical adventures they had before getting famous (please see: The Vaccines, Mumford & Sons, Spector). Jake Bugg needn't worry about that. For one thing, at just 18-years-old, he's barely had time to be a failed anything. For another, having grown up in Clifton, formerly the largest housing estate in Europe, he's more likely to nick silver spoons than choke on them. Mostly though, it's because he's a frighteningly talented songwriter. Whisper it, in case the weight of expectation proves too heavy, but he's the real deal.

Though he's been pegged as an East Midlands Dylan, that particular influence is a little overstated, and Bugg's music is very much a product of the last 20-odd years of British guitar pop. You can trace the genealogy of 'Lightning Bolt''s swaggering indie-skiffle back to The Coral, or the heart-stopping acoustic Merseydelica of 'Slide' to The La's. There's a wry, Turner-worthy lyric here, a dash of Libertines-esque urgency and danger there... you get the picture. Not for nothing he's won the approval of Noel Gallagher.

Bugg's love of '60s psych-folk fella Donovan aside, his cues may not come from anywhere unexpected, but it's what he does with them that counts. His urchin's eye-view is drawn to the unglamorous and insalubrious: 'Seen It All' opens in a car park with Bugg dropping a pill ("Or maybe two") before crashing a party at a local gangster's house where "a friend took me aside, said 'everyone here has a knife'". Sure as the bullet in Chekhov's gun, the song ends with someone being shivved in the garden. Another tune, 'The Ballad of Mr Jones', finds our young voyeur watching from the periphery as a wronged man exacts revenge on the people who killed his wife. Nottingham's tourist board must be thrilled.

But his scowling anger is just a front, a carefully erected facade that shields a vulnerable and contemplative soul. The album's more subdued moments – like the disarmingly sweet navel-gaze of 'Simple As This', or the folksy arm-around-the-shoulder reassurance of 'Note To Self' – are its most remarkable ones, where Bugg's voice, usually accompanied by little more than an acoustic guitar, takes on a preternatural wisdom. 'Broken' is a song of such towering beauty and elegance, it boggles the mind that a scruffy teenager barely old enough to shave could have written it.

On 'Two Fingers', Bugg talks wistfully of scheming on the streets of Clifton, where he and his mates would "skin up a fat one, hide from the feds", as though life held no nobler pursuit. You can tell that, up until now, his world has been small, and he might well have spiralled down the sinkhole that swallows so many marginalised estate kids. Eventually, however, Bugg comes to the same conclusion that we do: "Something is changing, changing, changing". If this debut album - rife with uncommon wit, insight and melody - is testament to anything, it's that his small, unremarkable world is about to get a whole lot bigger.
--NME
 
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#9

CHVRCHES - The Bones of What You Believe

105 Points, 7 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Steve Tasker, themeanmachine, D House

Album Review: At the end of 2012, Scottish electro-pop trio Chvrches had little more to its name than a couple songs online and a bit of buzz. When The Bones Of What You Believe, the group’s first full-length, comes out this week, the band will be on a sold-out U.S. tour, playing bigger rooms than it had when it came through those same cities earlier this summer. The polite yet insistent buzz from the beginning of the year has grown to a roar by fall, making The Bones Of What You Believe one of 2013’s most anticipated albums.


Much of the attention Chvrches attracted last year was due to “The Mother We Share,” which the band had released online. It opens The Bones Of What You Believe and is the album’s leadoff single, with good reason: It’s one of the year’s best songs, propelled by overlapping synthesizers and a triumphant chorus that vocalist Lauren Mayberry carries higher with her lilting voice (made more charming because she doesn’t attempt to hide her accent). “The Mother We Share” attracted a lot of attention toward the end of 2012, but the band wisely kept it off March’s Recover EP and let it anchor the full-length.

As good as “The Mother We Share” is, it wouldn’t be enough to carry the album, but Chvrches follows it with an even catchier song, “We Sink,” and another solid track, “Gun,” making for one of the strongest starts to any album this year. The rest of the album doesn’t sag, either; the only track that stumbles is the moodier “Science/Visions,” and that’s mostly because the discordant backup vocals clash with the other melodies. The song finishes strong, though, and is preceded by a pair of standouts, “Recover” and “Night Sky.”

A lot has been made of Chvrches’ similarities to The Knife, but The Bones Of What You Believe owes more to earlier electro-pop and electronic rock bands, such as New Order, OMD, or even Yazoo. (The New Order/OMD comparison feels especially apparent when multi-instrumentalist Martin Doherty—a former touring member of The Twilight Sad—takes lead vocals on “Under The Tide.”) “Science/Visions” veers away from the album’s poppier sound and into straight-up EDM, and moody album closer “You Caught The Light”—led again by Doherty—conjures Disintegration-era Cure.

Chvrches’ bread and butter remains highly melodic, synthesizer-based pop, but with just the right amount of darkness, thanks in part to Mayberry. She has a law degree and a masters in journalism, so she writes like she has something to say, not just to fill the space in the songs. She, Doherty, and multi-instrumentalist Iain Cook have crafted one of the year’s best albums, which means that buzz won’t be dying down any time soon.
--AV Club
 
This is the lowest they've ever finished in one of our polls...

#8

The National - Trouble Will Find Me

114 Points, 9 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Brony, mon, themeanmachine

Previous Albums on our Countdown: High Violet (#7 in 2010), Boxer (#4 in 2007)

Album Review: The past three National albums—a.k.a. the ones that launched the band from semi-obscurity to festival headliner—have been released in late spring, but they couldn’t be wintrier. And yes, the new Trouble Will Find Me burbles in the same gloomy stewpot as the uniformly excellent Alligator, Boxer, and High Violet, collections whose differences from each other are subtle enough to elude all but the most fanatical listeners. Luckily, The National is exactly the type of band to inspire that sort of fanaticism: Careful, patient listening always offers copious rewards (and perhaps a mild case of depression).


Trouble’s main difference might actually be that it’s slightly less immediate than High Violet, though almost nothing the band has ever done—save maybe “Terrible Love” and “Abel”—could be described as immediate. Like the rest of the National catalog, Trouble Will Find Me is subtly insinuating; at first it seems almost free of hooks, then six listens later it’s difficult to get it unstuck. It burrows and then resides, first easy to forget then basically impossible.

It starts slowly and builds both in songwriting and performance strength: Gorgeous as it is, album opener “I Should Live In Salt,” with its repetitive “you should know me better than that,” won’t bring new people into the National fold. But things pick up and never flag with the rollicking (relatively speaking) “Don’t Swallow The Cap,” which chugs on the surface and simmers underneath, and in which Matt Berninger eventually admits in his comely baritone, “I have only two emotions / Careful fear and dead devotion / I can’t get the balance right.”

“Sea Of Love” sounds the most like an Alligator track, which is to say slightly more aggressive and with Berninger reaching into his more impassioned register for a song-length apology of sorts to a spurned lover or former friend. It’s the Trouble song that will allow the band to unleash live, à la “Mr. November.” “Graceless” serves a similar purpose, though it brings in some weird little new wave/goth flourishes that The National occasionally flirts with.

Winter lets up just a bit with “I Need My Girl,” an almost-traditional-sounding ballad that serves as Trouble’s best showcase for Berninger’s voice: Like the music that weaves around it, his voice is singularly beautiful, and more diverse than it’s given credit for. Sure, The National’s range is limited, but the band has spent its career—or at least the four albums including this one—finding new wonders in that limited space.
 
#7

Mikal Cronin - MCII

118 Points, 9 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Disco Stu, Bonzai, JZilla

Album Review: Two songs into Mikal Cronin’s sophomore album, MCII, he decides to tell, not show, unveiling the record’s thesis statement earnestly: “I’m pretty good at making things harder to see / And turning problems back to me / It’s not the way I want to be.” The 27-year-old garage-punk wunderkind has been playing music—often with high-school buddy, Ty Segall, who drops a couple guitar solos on MCII—for about 10 years now, so it makes sense that he’s getting a little self-reflective. But more than that, he’s buffed the edges on his oft-scrappy rock ’n’ roll, which is also understandable. When artists soften with time, their music often loses some of its appeal; rarely does a songwriter nail his voice as successfully as Cronin has here.


With few exceptions, MCII finds the California rocker turning to acoustic strums instead of walls of feedback, jaunty or melancholy piano instead of raucous breakdowns, and gentle backing vocals instead of feral screams. In a recent interview, he called his music “aggressive pop,” but even the aggression is measured, like on the guitar solo from standout “Am I Wrong” or the glorious moment 45 seconds into another standout, “Weight,” where the distortion kicks in. Instead of inducing mosh pits, these elements incite little, pleasurable bursts of serotonin—the kind that gifted musicians performing at the top of their game can provoke in their listeners.

Throughout MCII, Cronin wrestles with self-doubt and self-betterment. “I’m dyin’ to get along with you,” he sings on “See It My Way.” On the pensive “Peace Of Mind,” he echoes Sha Sha-era Ben Kweller, pleading, “Say you want me / Say it loud.” Even the song titles themselves—”Am I Wrong,” “See It My Way,” “Peace Of Mind,” “I’m Done Running From You,” “Don’t Let Me Go”—ooze relatable sentiments for anyone who’s made it through their unstable, uncertain 20s. Now that Cronin nearly has, it’s tempting to wonder what he’ll sing about next. But MCII exhibits such an easy, enjoyable knack for pop songwriting that, whatever it is, it’ll almost certainly be a joy to behold.
--AV Club
 
#6

Foxygen - We are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic

121 Points, 9 votes, 5 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Iluv80s, erricctspikes, El Floppo, Bonzai, kupcho1

Previous Albums on Our Countdowns: Take the Kids off Broadway (#11 in 2012)

Album Review: With their album-length 2012 EP Take the Kids Off Broadway, backwards-looking concept rockers Foxygen arrived with so many classic rock reference points you could have made a bingo card out of the various nods to various heroes contained in their still somehow undeniably hooky songs. Proper full-length We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace and Magic is even more stuffed full of familiar sound cues and convincing '60s and '70s pop star mimicry, this time with heightened production from Richard Swift taking the album out of the lo-fi realm, and more personal lyrics adding some character to the artifice. Picking apart the blatant, intentional references to different classic songs that cycle verse-to-verse throughout the album is a fun game for record collector types; from the nod to the intro of Sgt. Pepper's on album-opener "In the Darkness" to the bold-faced Dylanisms (and less overt but equally strong Al Stewart-isms) of the incredible, big city lament "No Destruction." Bowie, Lou Reed, all eras of Mick Jagger, specific doo *** songs, and even moments of the Band; no oldies are safe from Foxygen's pure-hearted appropriation. Their reconstructive surgery of various influences is an interesting approach for a band made up of kids in their early twenties circa 2013, but it isn't the entire formula for what makes this record so great. Lots of bands before Foxygen have dealt with quick changes and sonic patchworks of older influences, but few have managed to craft songs as moving and catchy as these. The thick accents and psychedelic swirl of "San Francisco" walk the line of being patronizingly nostalgic until the hook-heavy chorus comes in, distant guest vocals from Jessie Baylin and Sarah Versprille answering singer Sam France's "I left my love in San Francisco" with refrains of "That's okay, I was bored anyway" and "That's okay, I was born in L.A." This one move disarms any cloying elements of the song and reminds the listener that Foxygen are in complete songwriting control, not just throwing back-dated pop culture references at the wall and hoping something sticks. In their earliest days, Of Montreal had a similar knack for updating their favorite records with their own personalities, as did many artists of the Elephant 6 collective, but WAT21CAOPAM is more tuned in, clear-headed, and full of intent than any of Foxygen's more immediate predecessors. It's a gorgeous and non-stop convergence of ideas, some borrowed, some original, some refurbished, and some outright stolen. In the end, however, the album's coherence comes in its incredible architecture of all these ideas, and the way the band sells them with everything they've got, taking what could be incredibly obtuse music back into the realm of pop from which it was born.

 
#5

Portugal. The Man. - Evil Friends

127 Points, 8 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Fly, Nick Vermeil, Northern Voice

Previous Albums on Our Countdowns: In the Mountain in the Cloud (#30 in 2011), The Satanic Satanist (#50 in 2009)

Album Review: The collaboration between Portugal. The Man (band) and Danger Mouse (producer) on the Alaska group’s eighth full-length album was one of those things that made perfect sense as soon as it was announced. P.TM frontman John Gourley and company have always been open to experimentation, always had the musical chops and always exhibited a Danger Mouse-ian undercurrent of gloom, but in recent years they’ve has struggled to find an edge. So who better to refine and congeal the strengths of a stylistically diverse group such as Portugal. The Man than a genius producer who has worked with everyone from Cee-Lo to MF Doom to James Mercer to The Black Keys?


Part of what makes the Danger Mouse/P.TM collaboration work is that Gourley’s natural progression as a songwriter plays right into Danger Mouse’s own strengths. Beginning with 2009’s The Satanic Satanist, Portugal. The Man’s music has skewed toward nebulous, life-affirming proclaimations, evoking things like the sun and giving off a general sense of positivity. There’s nothing wrong with this, but there wasn’t a great deal that differentiated The Satanic Satanist, 2010’s American Ghetto and 2011’s In the Mountain in the Cloud, especially considering 2008’s ominous and hard rocking Censored Colors. On Evil Friends, the first album the band has taken an extra year to make, the songs are markedly darker, more sinister and more fun than anything we’ve heard from the band perviously.

Danger Mouse, of course, is known for casting a gloomy, mysterious pall over the artists he works with. Most notable to Portugal. The Man is what he did to The Black Keys on the eerie, ghostly Attack & Release, the first album he produced for the blues duo and one which marked a vast departure from the rough-around-the-edges garage rock fans had come to expect from the band. On Evil Friends, the effect is similar but even more focused and more concentrated. The result is an album that is chock full of stand-out tracks. The first two singles—“Evil Friends” and “Purple Yellow Red and Blue”—are pulsing, driving hits that will undoubtedly be the centerpiece of the band’s new live show, and others like “Atomic Man,” “Creep in a T-Shirt” and “Hip Hop Kids” showcase the band’s strengths with similar force. Portugal. The Man has always had a tender side—and how couldn’t they with Gourley’s angelic voice—and for that there are songs like the contemplative “Waves” and the exultant closing track “Smile.” Danger Mouse’s fingerprints are all over all of these songs, and it’s easy to see parallels with some of his other projects, but in many ways Evil Friends is the most quintessentially Portugal. The Man album the band has released. It’s also undoubtedly their best.
--Paste
 
I thought I found a connector...

#4

Arcade Fire - Reflektor

147 Points, 13 votes, 4 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: errictspikes, Time Kibitzer, E-Z Glider, Scoresman

Previous Albums on Our Countdowns: Suburbs (#1 in 2010), Neon Bible (#9 in 2007)

Album Review: "If this is heaven/I need something more," Win Butler and Régine Chassagne, Arcade Fire's founding singers, declare in close, almost whispered harmony as the opening title song of their band's extraordinary new album goes into high gear. "Reflektor" is seven and a half busy minutes of art and party. Over a strident-disco hybrid of the Rolling Stones' "Miss You" and Yoko Ono's "Walking on Thin Ice," Arcade Fire and their new co-producer, James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, throw brittle-fuzz guitar licks, grunting bass, mock-grand piano and ballooning synth chords across deep reverb like frantic instrumental argument. They also find room for David Bowie, one of Arcade Fire's first and biggest fans, who sings with Butler near the end and repurposes the descending vocal flourish from his 1975 hit "Fame."


The way Butler and Chassagne, who are married, sing those lines in "Reflektor" is a sublime moment in the commotion. It is also a perfect summary of their group's still-fervent indie-born hunger after a decade of mainstream success, and specifically, the decisive, indulgent ambition on Reflektor: a two-record, 75-minute set of 13 songs and the best album Arcade Fire have ever made. Founded in 2003, the Montreal-based band – which includes multi-instrumentalists Richard Reed Parry and Butler's brother Will, bassist Tim Kingsbury and drummer Jeremy Gara – has always thought and acted big, using serious echo and drum-circle-like percussion to amplify the emotional mysteries in Win's U2-meets-elliptical-Springsteen writing. Arcade Fire's third album, 2010's The Suburbs, was urgent and clear, a record about dreams and escape, gassed with classic-rock punch. It was a Number One hit and rightly won a Grammy for Album of the Year.

Reflektor is even better, for this reason: the jarring, charging union of Murphy's modern-dance acumen and post-punk sabotage with Arcade Fire's natural gallop and ease with Caribbean rhythm. (Chassagne is of Haitian descent; she and Butler have been active in relief efforts there.) Murphy worked on all but two songs, with most of those tracks near or over six minutes long. The result is an epic made for dancing and sequenced like whiplash. "We Exist" rolls like the pop-leaning late-Eighties Cure, then butts into the paranoid mule-kick reggae of "Flashbulb Eyes." "Here Comes the Night Time" abruptly zigzags between rapid Haitian drumming and a Talking Heads-at-the-beach stroll – as if Murphy and the band can't decide which night they like best – while "You Already Know" is buoyant New Wave Motown, with Chassagne's half of the call-response chorus sparkling in the reverb. That song has to be a single. It ought to be a hit.

Arcade Fire don't play a lot of straight-up heads-down rock & roll. But they are damn good at it. "Normal Person" starts with a joke (the sound-effect chaos of a club band plugging in for a night's work), then sounds like Butler singing in front of the Velvet Underground with a wobbly Little Richard on piano. The opening shock of "Joan of Arc," the last track on the first disc, is hardcore punk. But the blitz quickly drops into meatier surprise: a Gary Glitter-style stomp. The song – a memorial to female strength and sacrifice – surges to an inevitable conclusion: long keyboard sighs and Chassagne singing in French through warping electronics, as if from inside a ring of fire. It is a dynamic, poignant finish, and I doubt anyone would feel cheated or unhappy if Reflektor ended right there.

But the two discs have their own mood swings, the second less manic and more plaintive, even luxuriant at times. The sequence is loosely based on Greek myth – the rapture, violent separation and eventual reunion of the lovers Eurydice, a nymph, and the musician Orpheus (depicted on the album's cover). "Feels like it never ends/ Here comes the night again," Butler sings with an eerie-Neil Young effect in a reprise of "Here Comes the Night Time," before the trouble starts.

There is dance music in this half of Reflektor too: the industrial-funk strut and Bowie- esque vocal glaze of "It's Never Over (Oh Orpheus)"; the "Blue Monday"-prime New Order all over "Afterlife." But this is the push and pull of loss and hope, utter despair and the refusal to quit. "I gotta know/Can we work it out/Scream and shout/Till we work it out," Butler and Chassagne ask each other, in heated unison, in "Afterlife," before Reflektor dissolves into the warm vocal-and-electronic exhale of "Supersymmetry." There is no specific resolution by then. But there is calm, at least for now.

It is tempting to call Reflektor Arcade Fire's answer to the Rolling Stones' 1972 double LP, Exile on Main Street. The similarities (length, churn, all that reverb) make it easy. But Reflektor is closer to turning-point classics such as U2's Achtung Baby and Radiohead's Kid A – a thrilling act of risk and renewal by a band with established commercial appeal and a greater fear of the average, of merely being liked. "If that's what's normal now, I don't want to know," Butler sings in "Normal Person," sounding like a guy for whom even this heaven, next time, won't be enough.
--Rolling Stone
 
#3

Phosphorescent - Muchacho

149 Points, 9 votes, 3 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: The Dreaded Marco, Kenny Powers, Kupcho1

Previous Albums on Our Countdowns: Here's to Taking it Easy (#24 in 2010)

Album Review: Phosphorescent’s sole proprietor, Matthew Houck, begins his sixth proper full-length album, Muchacho, with a bit of a fake-out. The ethereal album-opener, “Sun, Arise! (An Invocation, An Introduction)”—with its multi-layered harmonized vocals and burbling, bubbling keyboards bordering on space-age—indicates that perhaps Houck is feeling a little Fleet Foxy this time out. Or perhaps he’s hoping to revisit his 2007 effort, Pride, an album whose songs Oxford American aptly described as sounding as if they were being “backed up by choirs of miserable ghosts, the percussion often knocking and rattling like stuff shifting around in a room at night.”


Phosphorescent’s next album, 2010’s Here’s To Taking It Easy, was his breakout, and Muchacho is about as opposite of that title as a follow-up can get. A companion title to describe Muchacho might be Here’s To Taking The Hits As They Come. Muchacho is also Houck’s most accomplished release to date—his most heartrending and life-affirming, equal parts lost-love devastation and hip-swaying, horn-led exultation.

Well, maybe not equal parts. “Song For Zula” is a mournful beast of burden, Houck’s lyrics stealing the show from the string section and bass-as-heartbeat supporting actors. “I will not open myself up this way again,” he sings at one point, before laying it all out at song’s end: “So some say love is a burning thing / that it makes a fiery ring / Oh, but I know love as a caging thing / just a killer come to call from some awful dream.”

Elsewhere, “Terror In The Canyons (The Wounded Master)” employs a piano-and-pedal-steel country shuffle as the new foil for Houck’s world-weary warble. Not one for missed opportunities, he sings, “But now you’re telling me my heart’s sick / And I’m telling you I know / And you’re telling me you’re leaving / And I’m telling you to go.” Houck is usually pretty reticent about explaining his lyrics, but when describing the sounds that eventually became Muchacho for Spin, he admits, “My life, to be honest, sort of fell apart.”

While all of Muchacho isn’t a wrist-slitting affair, it is, apparently, the sound of a man dealing with the consistent and consistently frustrating ups and downs of life. “The Quotidian Beasts” plays out like the spiritual brethren of Songs: Ohia’s “Almost Was Good Enough.” And on “Muchacho’s Tune,” when Houck sings “I’ve been ####ed up / and I’ve been a fool” over a marching bass, spare strums, mournful pedal steel, and noncommittal piano, it’s as if the arrangement agrees that #### got pretty real back there. Yet when the horns step in to lead the way, everyone must move on if they’re to accomplish anything. Houck admitted as much when he explains, “A lot of this record is about getting something of what you want and still having your ### handed to you by the world. Like, ‘That’s how it is, muchacho. Handle it.’”

Handling it isn’t a simple proposition, of course, and the eight songs following “Sun, Arise!” sound nothing like their introducer as they work through a rather exhausting set of emotions. Unsurprising, then, is album-ending sister song, “Sun’s Arising (A Koan, An Exit),” which also has little in common with those eight songs sandwiched in between. The bookends wipe the mind clean in preparation, then cleanse the palate in conclusion. They’re necessary and refreshing, much like moving on.
--AV Club
 
Well, maybe not equal parts. “Song For Zula” is a mournful beast of burden, Houck’s lyrics stealing the show from the string section and bass-as-heartbeat supporting actors. “I will not open myself up this way again,” he sings at one point, before laying it all out at song’s end: “So some say love is a burning thing / that it makes a fiery ring / Oh, but I know love as a caging thing / just a killer come to call from some awful dream.”
I could never quite get into the album, but I love this song.

 
I might as well use the two gushing reviews (one from each side of the pond) for these two.

#2

Arctic Monkeys - AM

215 Points, 11 votes, 8 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Northern Voice, Kenny Powers, Nick Vermeil, Eephus, E-Z Glider, Abraham, D House, Fly

Previous Albums on Our Countdowns: Suck It And See (#32 in 2011), Favourite Worst Nightmare (39th in 2007), Whatever People Say I Am (36th in 2006)

Album Review: Arctic Monkeys’ fifth record is absolutely and unarguably the most incredible album of their career. It might also be the greatest record of the last decade. It’s not, however, the work of a band operating at their absolute peak – that’s yet to come. It’s the work of a band still growing, still fine-tuning, still learning and still experimenting; a band who will not look back on this record as a career high, but as the moment they stopped being defined by genre and instead became artists. Not a rock band, definitely not an indie band, but artists. Think Bowie, think The Beatles, think Stevie Wonder and think Bob Dylan. From this point on, Arctic Monkeys can do whatever they want, sound however they like, and always be Arctic Monkeys. But that’s all for another day, sometime in their stupidly bright future. For now, we should celebrate this record for what it is – 41 minutes and 57 seconds of near perfection.


Let’s begin with the details. Twelve tracks, recorded at Sage & Sound Recording in Los Angeles and Rancho De La Luna in Joshua Tree, California, featuring guest appearances from Queens Of The Stone Age’s Josh Homme, Elvis Costello’s drummer Pete Thomas and ex-Coral man Bill Ryder-Jones. It was produced by James Ford and co-produced by Ross Orton, with mixing from Tchad Blake, who worked on The Black Keys’ 2010 breakthrough album, ‘Brothers’. It’s a record about sex, lust, frustration and isolation, and about getting really, really high. As you will have already read in NME, it’s a total West Coast record that’s as much late-’90s hip-hop in sound as it is mid-’70s rock. And the lyrics… oh, maaaan. At times they sound like they were written by a man with a burning hard-on who wants – or rather needs – to savagely #### your body, mind and soul.

That man, of course, is Alex Turner, one of only a handful of musicians dead or alive that it’s not completely ludicrous to describe as an actual genius. On ‘AM’ – as he has been for the past 18 months or so – he’s channelling the spirit of another one of that select bunch, John Lennon. And we’re not just talking about the Hamburg quiff here. Throughout the record, you can’t get away from Lennon’s presence, never more so than on ‘Arabella’, the cornerstone of the album, where Dre collides into Sabbath with the elegance of a horny drunk on a lost weekend. Alex’s wordplay echoes the surrealism of ‘I Am The Walrus’ or ‘Come Together’, announcing that “Arabella’s got some interstellagator skin boots/And a helter-skelter around her little finger and I ride it endlessly” before slamming into a vocal delivery lifted straight from the chorus of Lennon’s 1975 Old Grey Whistle Test recording of ‘Stand By Me’. In keeping with the influences of the record, there’s a whiff of Eminem in the way he rolls his elongated sentences across a few lines of melody, finding rhymes in the middle of lines where less gifted songwriters wouldn’t even think to look. Speaking about Lennon to NME last year, Alex explained how difficult he found trying to write in such a way: “It’s all a jumble, but it’s not just that. It paints you a picture and puts you in this place. He’s got a way of leading you somewhere with these unusual words that don’t make sense, but also make perfect ####### sense.” Right here, he’s nailed it. Unsurprisingly, they’re Alex’s favourite lyrics on the album. But they’re not the best.

For those, take your pick of the opening lines to ‘Do I Wanna Know?’, the slow-grinding juggernaut of handclaps, feet stomps and that Jamie Cook riff that kicks off the whole record (“Have you got colour in your cheeks/Do You ever get the fear that you can’t shift/The type that sticks around like something in your teeth?”), the sexed-up chorus of the R&B-influenced ‘One For The Road’ (“So we all go back to yours and you sit and talk to me on the floor/There’s no need to show me round, baby, I feel like I’ve been here before”), or the heart-stopping beauty of ‘I Wanna Be Yours’ (“I wanna be your vacuum cleaner/Breathing in your dust/I wanna be your Ford Cortina/I will never rust”). The latter’s lyrics are lifted straight from a John Cooper Clarke poem with slight tweaks and an added chorus. It’s the last track on the record and highlights the confidence that Alex is now writing with, where he can leave you with a feeling that he’s saying, “Yeah, I’m good, but check this guy out.” It only adds to the sense that the best is yet to come from this band.

In-between ‘Do I Wanna Know?’ and ‘I Wanna Be Yours’, the record bristles with that same confidence and depth. You already know ‘R U Mine?’, the song whose sound informed the entire writing and recording process and introduced the world to The Cosmic Opera Melodies Of The Space Choirboys (namely Matt Helders and Nick O’Malley doing their best falsettos), and ‘Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High?’, where Helders’ drums have never sounded so hip-hop as they beat out the rhythm to Alex’s pissed-up booty call. As for the rest, ‘I Want It All’ is a pure glam-rock stomp, ‘No 1 Party Anthem’ could have been lifted straight from Alex Turner’s own Submarine soundtrack or Lennon’s ‘Double Fantasy’, ‘Mad Sounds’ pitches somewhere between a sleazy Lou Reed slowie and a Primal Scream ballad, ‘Fireside’ (featuring Bill Ryder-Jones) gallops along on a mariachi rhythm, dragging the desert influence back into the city, and ‘Snap Out Of It’ swirls with such orchestral intensity that it wouldn’t feel out of place on a second Last Shadow Puppets album.

If Arctic Monkeys had never walked into the desert with Josh Homme to record ‘Humbug’ in 2009, they could never have made ‘AM’. ‘Humbug’ was as much about subverting people’s impressions of who the band were as it was an album in its own right. It was a shedding of the skin, a descending of the bollocks, where riffs became heavy and boys became men. But most importantly it condemned the first incarnation of Arctic Monkeys – the bright-eyed teenage know-it-alls with hits tumbling out of their trackie bottoms pockets – to a shallow grave in the sand. ‘Humbug’ was the first evolution of the Monkeys, ‘AM’ is the second, which in a completely ####ed-up way makes 2011’s masterpiece ‘Suck It And See’ the most insignificant record in the band’s history.

Homme’s presence is most prominently felt on ‘Knee Socks’, where he repays the favour for Alex’s involvement in the most recent Queens Of The Stone Age record by adding a haunting, agonised howl to a Destiny’s Child-style breakdown that flips Merry Clayton’s ‘Gimme Shelter’ vocal on its head. It’s a fitting, heavyweight contribution from the man who many originally thought had destroyed the Arctic Monkeys with his influence, but who history will remember as the man who helped turn them into gods.

So yes, look at the score, listen to the record, and bask in the glory of knowing that while this may be chapter five of the complete history, it’s the first act of the real golden age.
-NME
#1

Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires of the City

275 Points, 15 votes, 11 top 5 votes

Ranked Highest By: Steve Tasker, The Dreaded Marco, themeanmachine, Kenny Powers, Disco Stu, Northern Voice, Time Kibitzer, pettifogger, kupcho1, Fly, D House

Previous Albums on Our Countdowns: Contra (#26 in 2010), Vampire Weekend (#8 in 2008)

Album Review: “It’s really hard to even talk about the internet without seeming instantly corny," Ezra Koenig told Pitchfork recently, "even the word 'blog' sounds a little grandma-y." He should know. The Vampire Weekend singer and lyricist gave up on his own Blogspot site, Internet Vibes, seven years ago, as he finished up his English studies at Columbia University (the final post's title: "I HATE BLOGGING"). But before he graduated from the ye olde blogosphere, Koenig held forth on a vast array of topics-- from geography, to Wellington boots, to music writer Robert Christgau's allegedly unfair critique of Billy Joel's oeuvre-- looking at everything from a incisively self-aware, curious, and optimistic angle. What's most impressive is the way he's able to connect art and ideas from different eras and continents into a kind of ecstatic worldview. One particularly inspired ramble spins an analytic web from a friend's visit to Morocco, the history of the Strait of Gibraltar, a 1984 interview between Bob Dylan and Bono, the film The Secret of Roan Inish, and National Geographic's famed Afghan refugee cover-- and not only does it make sense, it's written in a way that's funny and smart and completely inclusive. Pretty good for a 22-year-old kid from middle-class New Jersey. Now 28, Koenig's creative medium has changed, but his omnivorous cultural appetite has not.


Take "Step", the third song on Vampire Weekend's third album, Modern Vampires of the City-- the record that is already forcing one-time haters of this band to rethink their entire lives. At its core, the song reads like an ode to obsessive music fandom in which the object of Koenig's affection is "entombed within boombox and walkman." Modest Mouse are name-checked. But the sense of infatuation extends beyond a list of influences and is embedded into the music itself. The chorus and parts of the melody are borrowed from wordy Oakland rap act Souls of Mischief's "Step to My Girl"-- which itself samples Grover Washington, Jr.'s version of a Bread song called "Aubrey". But "Step" avoids back-patting nostalgia and debunks bogus generational hierarchies while using the past to inspire the present. It's also melancholy, with Vampire Weekend musical mastermind Rostam Batmanglij surrounding Koenig's musings with lilting harpsichord ambience. Because, as we know, music is a young man's pursuit. "Wisdom's a gift but you'd trade it for youth," Koenig sings.

Still, Vampire Weekend make a damn good case for wisdom all across Modern Vampires. Yes, this is a more grown-up album. It largely trades in the Africa-inspired giddiness of their first two records for a sound that's distinctly innate and closer to the ear. There's more air in these songs, more spontaneity, more dynamics. The overarching themes-- death and a dubious sense of faith-- are certainly Serious. But you never feel like you're being preached at while listening to this album.

Koenig and company are probably more clever and gifted than you, sure-- but they're not rubbing your face in it or anything. Their message is one of collective understanding and betterment, and Modern Vampires is the kind of album that'll have you Googling for Buddhist temples and Old Testament allusions at 3 a.m. while listening to reggae great Ras Michael (who's sampled on opener "Obvious Bicycle"). Now, you don't have to get obsessed to enjoy this music, but it's presented with such care that you can't help but want to learn about its deeper meanings. So while Koenig gave up a potential teaching career to take his chances as a rock singer, he's still doling out knowledge in his own way.

Though the record often traverses in darkness-- the zipped-tight "Finger Back" alludes to historic atrocities and brutality while "Hudson", easily the band's bleakest track to date, imagines an apocalyptic Manhattan-- there's also hope here. Partly because Vampire Weekend seem to have internalized all of the positive traits of their internet-soaked generation while resisting the ugly ones: they'll offer jokes and humanity on Twitter without navel-gazing; they'll play a concert for a credit-card company while roping in Steve Buscemi for promo videos that are no-#### funny; they'll use the tools of modernity to expand their universe rather than contract it. And then they'll go ahead and crack your heart in two.

Along with the more lived-in sonics, Modern Vampires has the band taking a leap forward into emotional directness. Koenig and Batmanglij truly seem of one mind here, as the vocals and music interact with each other in an effortless flow. While skronks and snares pop on "Diane Young", the singer matches the live-fast intensity hit-for-hit. The song is a dissection of the 27 Club rock'n'roll myth, where Koenig's voice on the sly "baby, baby, baby" bridge is manipulated to intoxicating effect.

Then there's "Hannah Hunt". In some sense, it seems like Vampire Weekend's entire career thus far has led to this one song. It begins with the hiss of wind and some vague background chatter-- the sounds of the everyday-- before it's all quickly tuned out in favor of Batmanglij's piano and bassist Chris Baio's upright plucks. Koenig comes in soft, telling of a couple on a cross-country road trip. His details-- crawling vines, mysterious men of faith, newspaper kindling-- are sparse, delicate, perfect. And then, after two minutes and 40 seconds of quiet beauty, the song blooms, and Koenig lets it absolutely rip: "If I can't trust you then damn it, Hannah/ There's no future/ There's no answer/ Though we live on the U.S. dollar/ You and me, we got our own sense of time." On an album preoccupied with the ominous ticking of clocks, this is the moment that stops them cold.

Koenig has said in recent interviews that the band's three albums make up a trilogy. "Hannah Hunt" could be a sobering continuation of Contra's Springsteen-ian "Run", where two people decide to up and leave their known lives in search of some sort of American transcendence. There's also a perilous chandelier at the center of new track "Everlasting Arms", perhaps a callback to the hanging lights that cover the band's debut LP. And the Modern Vampires font is the same exact one used in a trailer for Koenig's absurd-looking college-era werewolf movie, from which Vampire Weekend got its name. These little links are not only satisfying, but inevitable. After years of engaging with anything and everything in reach, Vampire Weekend are now a primary source in their own right.
 
Man, FIDLAR didn't make it? I had them, Parquet Courts, and Foxygen grouped together all year. Figuratively and literally (spotify playlist). For some reason I thought FIDLAR was the most popular here.

 
Man, FIDLAR didn't make it? I had them, Parquet Courts, and Foxygen grouped together all year. Figuratively and literally (spotify playlist). For some reason I thought FIDLAR was the most popular here.
Deerhunter's Monomania didn't crack the top 50.

suprised to see that.

 
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Full Results

1 - Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires of the City - 15 - 275
2 - Arctic Monkeys - AM - 11 - 215
3 - Phosphorescent - Muchacho - 9 - 149
4 - Arcade Fire - Reflektor - 13 - 147
5 - Portugal The Man - Evil Friends - 8 - 127
6 - Foxygen - We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace and Magic - 9 - 121
7 - Mikal Cronin - MCII - 9 - 118
8 - The National - Trouble will Find Me - 9 - 114
9 - CHVRCHES - The Bones of What You Believe - 7 - 105
10 - Jake Bugg - Jake Bugg - 6 - 104
11 - Savages - Silence Yourself - 7 - 100
12 - Kurt Vile - Wakin On A Pretty Daze - 6 - 96
13 - Parquet Courts - Light Up Gold - 6 - 79
14 - Lorde - Pure Heroine - 5 - 77
15 - Haim - Days are Gone - 5 - 76
16 - Jason Isbell - Southeastern - 5 - 69
17 - Local Natives - Hummingbird - 3 - 69
18 - The Head and the Heart - Let's be Still - 4 - 66
19 - Waxahatchee - Cerulean Salt - 4 - 63
20 - Laura Marling - Once I was an Eagle - 3 - 61
21 - Daft Punk - Random Access Memories - 5 - 60
22 - Deafheaven - Subather - 3 - 55
23 - Pearl Jam - Lightning Bolt - 2 - 55
24 - J Roddy Walston & the Business - Essential Tremors - 2 - 55
25 - Frightened Rabbit - Pedestrian Verse - 4 - 54
26 - The Mavericks - In Time - 2 - 48
27 - Yo la Tengo - Fade - 4 - 45
28 - Queens of the Stone Age - Like Clockwork - 4 - 42
29 - Jake Bugg - Shangri-La - 3 - 40
30 - Drake - Nothing Was the Same - 2 - 40
31 - Jim James - Regions of Light and Sound of God - 2 - 40
32 - Jack Johnson - From Here to Now to You - 2 - 38
33 - The Avett Brothers - Magpie and the Dandelion - 4 - 36
34 - Pissed Jeans - Honeys - 2 - 36
35 - Drenge - Drenge - 2 - 35
36 - Unknown Mortal Orchestra - II - 2 - 35
37 - Okkervil River - The Silver Gymnasium - 3 - 34
38 - Mayer Hawthorne - Where Does This Door Go - 2 - 34
39 - Fall Out Boy - Save Rock & Roll - 2 - 31
40 - White Denim - Corsicana Lemonade - 2 - 31
41 - Hollis Brown - Ride on the Train - 2 - 31
42 - ASG - Blood Drive - 1 - 30
43 - Dirty Fences - Too High To Kross - 1 - 30
44 - Jonathan Wilson - Fanfare - 1 - 30
45 - Charli XCX - True Romance - 1 - 30
46 - Brett Dennen - Smoke and Mirrors - 1 - 30
47 - The Wonder Years - The Greatest Generation - 1 - 30
48 - Califone - Stitches - 1 - 30
49 - Cayucas - Bigfoot - 3 - 29
50 - Disclosure - Settle - 3 - 29
51 - Janelle Monae - The Electric Lady - 2 - 29
52 - Avicii - TRUE - 2 - 29
53 - Future of the Left - How to Stop Your Brain in an Accident - 2 - 29
54 - Futurebirds - Baba Yaga - 3 - 28
55 - Little Green Cars - Absolute Zero - 2 - 28
56 - The Eels - Wonderful, Glorios - 2 - 28
57 - Sigur Ros - Kveikur - 2 - 28
58 - Phoenix - Bankrupt! - 3 - 25
59 - James Blake - Overgrown - 2 - 25
60 - Dexateens - Sunsphere - 2 - 25
61 - Polvo - Siberia - 1 - 25
62 - Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds - Push the Sky Away - 1 - 25
63 - Boards of Canada - Tomorrow's Harves - 1 - 25
64 - Cults - Static - 1 - 25
65 - Camera Obscura - Desire Lines - 2 - 24
66 - Ashley Monroe - Like a Rose - 2 - 24
67 - Darkside - Psychic - 3 - 23
68 - Franz Ferdinand - Right Thoughts Right Words Right Action - 2 - 23
69 - Palma Violets - 180 - 2 - 23
70 - Bill Callahan - Dream River - 3 - 21
71 - Bombino - Nomad - 2 - 21
72 - Foals - Holy Fire - 2 - 21
73 - Joey Badass - Summer Knights Mixtape - 2 - 20
74 - Fort Frances - Harbour - 1 - 20
75 - the 1975 - the 1975 - 1 - 20
76 - Paul McCartney - New - 1 - 20
77 - Lucy Schwartz - Timekeeper - 1 - 20
78 - Clutch - Earth Rocker - 1 - 20
79 - Islands - Ski Mask - 1 - 20
80 - Caroline Smith - Half About Being a Woman - 1 - 20
81 - Amason - EP - 1 - 19
82 - Milk Music - Cruise Your Illusion - 1 - 19
83 - Atlas Genius - When it Was Now - 2 - 18
84 - Los Campesinos - No Blues - 2 - 18
85 - Ty Segall - Sleeper - 2 - 18
86 - Dawes - - 1 - 18
87 - FIDLAR - FIDLAR - 3 - 17
88 - Thee Oh Sees - Floating Coffin - 2 - 17
89 - Patty Griffin - American Kid - 1 - 17
90 - Fitz & the Tantrums - - 1 - 17
91 - Vista Chino - Peace - 1 - 17
92 - Cut Copy - Free Your Mind - 3 - 16
93 - Kasey Musgraves - Same Trailer Different Park - 2 - 16
94 - Dominique Pruitt - To Win Your Love - 1 - 16
95 - Steve Mason - Monkey Minds in the Devils Time - 1 - 16
96 - Neko Case - The Worse Things Get - 2 - 15
97 - Pusha T - My Name is My Name - 1 - 15
98 - Eric Church - Caught in the Act - 1 - 15
99 - The Districts - - 1 - 15
100 - twenty one Pilots - Vessel - 1 - 15
101 - Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Mosquito - 1 - 15
102 - Kvelertak - - 1 - 15
103 - French Films - White Orchid - 1 - 15
104 - Nils Frahm - Spaces - 1 - 15
105 - Michael Franti - - 1 - 15
106 - Melt Yourself Down - Melt Yourself Down - 1 - 15
107 - Blood Orange - Cupid Deluxe - 1 - 14
108 - Lindi Ortega - Tin Star - 1 - 14
109 - Connections - - 1 - 14
110 - Killer Mike & El-P - Run the Jewels - 1 - 14
111 - The Men - New Moon - 2 - 13
112 - Diarrhea Planet - I'm Rich Beyond Your Wildest Dreams - 2 - 13
113 - Junip - Junip - 2 - 13
114 - Ha Ha Tonka - Lessons - 1 - 13
115 - The Airborne Toxic Event - Such Hot Blood - 1 - 13
116 - Sarah Jarocz - Build Me Up From Bones - 1 - 13
117 - Small Black - Limits of Desire - 1 - 13
118 - Black Sabbath - 13 - 1 - 13
119 - J Cole - Born Sinner - 1 - 13
120 - Kanye West - Yeezus - 1 - 12
121 - KT Tunstall - Invisible Empire/Crescent moon - 1 - 12
122 - **** Diver - Calendar Days - 1 - 12
123 - Ice Age - You're Nothing - 1 - 12
124 - Earthless - From the Ages - 1 - 12
125 - Sara Barelles - The Blessed Unrest - 1 - 11
126 - Wavves - afraid of Hights - 1 - 11
127 - Brandy Clark - 12 Stories - 1 - 10
128 - Iron and Wine - - 1 - 10
129 - Diane Coffee - My Friend Fish - 1 - 10
130 - Patty Griffin - Silver Bell - 1 - 10
131 - The Ocean Blue - Ultramarine - 1 - 10
132 - Tegan & Sara - - 1 - 10
133 - Sombear - Love You in the Dark - 1 - 10
134 - Volcano Chior - Repave - 1 - 10
135 - My Bloody Valentine - MBV - 1 - 10
136 - Youth Lagoon - Wondrous Bughouse - 1 - 10
137 - Mark Kozalek & Jimmy Lavalle - Perils from the Sea - 1 - 10
138 - Destruction Unit - Deep Trip - 1 - 10
139 - The Growlers - Hung at Heart - 1 - 10
140 - Thundercat - Apocalypse - 1 - 10
141 - Torres - Torres - 1 - 10
142 - Charles Bradley - Victim of Love - 2 - 9
143 - Tripwires - Spacehopper - 1 - 9
144 - Prefab Sprout - Crimson/Red - 1 - 9
145 - Washed Out - Paracosm - 1 - 9
146 - Chelsea Light Morning - Chelsea Light Morning - 1 - 9
147 - Fuzz - Live in San Francisco - 1 - 9
148 - Speedy Ortiz - Major Arcana - 1 - 9
149 - Deerhunter - Monomania - 2 - 7
150 - The Veils - Time Stays, We Go - 1 - 7
151 - Houndmouth - From the Hills Below the City - 1 - 7
152 - Danny Brown - Old - 1 - 7
153 - John Vanderslice - Dagger Beach - 1 - 6
154 - Jagwar Ma - Howlin - 1 - 6
155 - David Bowie - The Next Day - 1 - 6
156 - Drink a Toast to Innocence: A Trubute to Lite Rock - - 1 - 6
157 - Girls Names - The New Life - 1 - 6
158 - Ben Harper & Charlie Musselwhite - Get Up - 1 - 5
159 - GRMLN - Empire - 1 - 5
160 - Luke Bryan - Crash My Party - 1 - 5
161 - Keith Urban - Fuse - 1 - 5
162 - The Civil Wars - The Civil Wars - 1 - 5
163 - Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell - Old Yellow Moon - 1 - 5
164 - Hanni El Khatib - Head in the Dirt - 1 - 5
165 - Earl Sweatshirt - Doris - 1 - 5
166 - And So I Watch You From Afar - All Hail Bright Futures - 1 - 5
167 - Wampire - Curiosity - 1 - 5
168 - Agnes Obel - Aventine - 1 - 5
169 - Suuns - Images du Futur - 1 - 5
170 - Classixx - Hanging Gardens - 1 - 5
171 - Jimmy Eat World - Damages - 1 - 5
172 - Mutual Benefit - Love's Crushing Diamond - 1 - 5
173 - Courtyard Hounds - Amelita - 1 - 4
174 - Eleanor Friedberger - Personal Record - 1 - 4
175 - ASAP Rocky - Long Live ASAP - 1 - 4
176 - Atoms for Peace - AMOK - 1 - 4
177 - Kim Richey - Thorn in My Heart - 1 - 3
178 - Typhoon - White Lighter - 1 - 3
179 - Matt Nathanson - Last of the Great Pretenders - 1 - 2
180 - Polica - Shulamith - 1 - 2
181 - Braids - Flourish // Perish - 1 - 2
182 - MS MR - Secondhand Rapture - 1 - 2
183 - The Julie Ruin - Run Fast - 1 - 2
184 - Grant Hart - The Argument - 1 - 2
185 - The Postelles - And It Shook Me - 1 - 2
186 - Direct Hit! - Brainless God - 1 - 2
187 - City and Colour - The Hurry and the Harm - 1 - 2
188 - Blitzen Trapper - VII - 1 - 1
189 - The Stone Foxes - Small Fires - 1 - 1
190 - Warm Soda - Someone for You - 1 - 1
191 - Dr. Dog - B-Room - 1 - 1
192 - Dan Croll - From Nowhere - 1 - 1
193 - The Thermals - Desperate Ground - 1 - 1
194 - Anna Meredith - Black Prince Fury - 1 - 1
 

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