Monday, December 8, 2008

Top 10 Albums 2008, Music #10

Many of you know that I run a number of different blogs... one of those is ...and music will set you free. Its a fun little blog and I enjoy doing it... I'm not on the cutting edge of indie music by any means, but I like to think I'm close. At any rate, my main motivation for starting this blog was to give me the motivation to write more album reviews for my favorite indie music store, Stinkweeds. At the end of the year, Stinkweeds releases a year in review booklet and those who review music with then submit their top ten list, with a mini review with each album. I got home from Ireland and had 5 days to submit this list to Lindsay at Stinkweeds, so I buckled down last week and widdled my top ten list down and sent it off to Lindsay. While the review booklet has not been finished I wanted to get my list up here first because, well no other reason then I'm exited about it. I am really surprised about my top ten list this year but I'm very happy with it as well. Sometimes with the blog I get a little caught up in the scene and forget to enjoy the music... so seen for the first time here (besides by Jeffrey via Facebook email): 2008 Top 10 Albums:

As soon as the booklet is published I will present it here!

Dr. Dog – Fate
Rarely is a band able to put together an album that combines the innovation needed to intrigue the ever changing indie ear and the deep soul of pop music that might have been listened to by our parent. Fate is a master piece in Dr. Dog’s already magnificent discography. Fate is truly the quintessential indie-fusion album.

Sigur Ros - Med sud i eyrum vid spilum endalaust
From the explosive opening song (Gobbledigook) to the crescendo in Ára bátur, your heart will feel like it is going to over flow and gush out Icelandic beauty everywhere. This is a simple beautiful album all around; nothing ground breaking, nothing over the top, just beautiful touching music.

French Quarter – S/T
You know the soft rain that patters on roof or window of your apartment. I’m talking about the rain that creep in and just lingers; you use words like drizzle to describe it… well the closest we get to it in Arizona is French Quarter (Stephen Steinbrink). This album is beautiful in so many ways. From the distant rhythm of “bold with fire” to the beautiful silence wove in the sinew of “for andy”. Stephen is so young and his music is beautiful.

The Duke AND THE Duchess – He’s The Duke, She’s the Duchess
Every now and then I get to hear an album like "The Dutchess AND THE Duke - She's The Dutchess, He's The Duke" that takes me back to that time when music was simple and exciting. She's The Dutchess, He's The Duke are somewhere between, Leadbelly , The Rolling Stones and Velvet Underground. The album is a sultry mix of male and female vocals, gritty guitar along with the occasional hand clap, flute, harmonica and tambourine. You'll quickly fall in love with the album and wonder why.

Delta Spirit – Ode to Sunshine
Ode To Sunshine is crafted out of the same stuff the Beach Boys made Pet Sounds and the Beatles made Magic Mystery Tour with a twist of soul! To categorize these guys under indie would be much to narrow, you'd need to include Americana, Soul and Blues as all these elements are present on this album.

The Tallest Man on Earth - Shallow Graves
The longer I listen to music the more and more a lean toward those sounds that are more organic and natural. The Tallest Man on Earth has rightfully so been compared to Dylan on more then one occasion. Between his quick witted lyrics, simple chord progression and rusty voice there is a lot to love about this debut album.

Mount Eerie – Lost Wisdom
Along the great expanse of music, there are dozens and dozens of record labels that are just that, "record labels"... the antithesis being, obviously, CD companies or rather mp3 companies. The bands who float along this sphere stay close to the earth, content with lo-fi music and the simplest means of production. They make strange music and their performances are often stranger. Those that are crawling on the underground of this scenemeet in a Dean & Sal'ist style, on porches and couches across the catacombs of America. Lost Wisdom breathes from these roads.

Frightened Rabbits – Midnight Organ Fight
Aw, the honesty of saying what you mean to say and using the words that should be used. Front man Scott Hutchison is a master at this. Really, this is one of the most honest albums that I have heard in a long time.

Mountain Goats – Heretic Pride
I looked at my collection of some 30 LP/EP’s in the discography of The Mountain Goats, and thought... how can a man continuously put out magnificent music. Heretic Pride is truly a fantastic album, depicting a wide range of unique characters and abstract emotions. It is a far cry from The Hound Chronicles, but that is to be expected with 15 years of music that has miraculously managed to stay relatively under the radar.

Horse Feathers - House with No Home
Unique in its simplicity and beautiful in its complexity; if that makes sense and is at all possible. Simple because he doesn’t complicate the music with strange sounds but complex because some of the string orchestrations are fantastic. This is really a beautiful record, folk at its greatest.

1 comment:

azsmith said...

Hey, your list appears 3/D on my screen which is great. I will make it a goal to listen to your top ten albums in the next few months and see if I agree with your choices, which of course, I will.