Top Ten of 2006
Like death and taxes, year-end best-of lists are inevitable. Here’s my contribution to this swirling vortex of opinion:
- Return to Cookie Mountain (TV On the Radio) – Light years ahead of their debut, TVOR have created a sound that is nearly uncategorizable – try indie rock/hip-hop/doo-wop and that still doesn’t come close. Listen to the sad groan of “I Was a Lover” or the punkish stomp of “Wolf Like Me” and hear a band coming to terms with their place in the world.
- I Am Not Afraid of You and I Will Beat Your Ass (Yo La Tengo) – an impressive return to form that finds YLT once again mixing Velvet-inspired fuzz jams with AM Radio pop songs.
- Pink (Boris) – Japanese noise bands like the Boredoms are some of the last artists I expect to embrace, but Boris broadens their thrash metal sound to include stoner rock, garage blues, and ambient textures, in turn creating a surprisingly engaging experience.
- Serena-Maneesh (Serena-Maneesh) & Citrus (Asobi Seksu) – The two sides of the new shoegazer coin, with Serena-Maneesh going for the jam-based theatrics, while Asobi Seksu embrace their inner Blondie and churn out pop nuggets with oodles of guitar effects.
- Nine Times the Same Song (Love Is All) – Post-punk grooves meet up with a cowbell-playing Swedish vocalist to create one of the more danceable albums of the year. Love Is All stir up an even more intense experience when seen in person.
- Rather Ripped (Sonic Youth) – Sonic Youth head back to the economical Goo and Dirty for inspiration on Rather Ripped. If it were 1994, this album would be platinum.
- Paper Television (The Blow) – The Blow make literate, catchy dance music that echoes both old-school Madonna and au courant glitchy indie pop. Very fun.
- The Life Pursuit (Belle & Sebastian) – B&S smooth out some of the rough edges of Dear Catastrophe Waitress and fully embrace a fuller band sound for The Life Pursuit. The polar opposite of If You’re Feeling Sinister, but who wants another one of those ten years down the line?
- Everything All the Time (Band of Horses) – The bastard child of Built to Spill and My Morning Jacket, and with “The Funeral,” Band of Horses created this year’s “BIC Lighter Moment” for indie rock.
- Let’s Get Out of the Country (Camera Obscura) – Camera Obscura improves upon their prior work by upping the lushness and crafting fully realized compositions.
2 Comments:
At 11:49 PM,
roger said…
Didn't Federline release an album this year?
At 12:37 PM,
Joe said…
I knew I should have come here weeks ago. It's just that I was still too busy with the Susanna Hoffs thing. Well done list. I'll need to give some of these a listen over the next few weeks.
That said, I'm with Roger re: the curious omission of K-Fed.
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