2006 never seemed like that great a year for albums as it was moving along, but when it came time for me to pick apart and reassemble a list of favorites, I had trouble keeping it to a manageable number. What follows is a list of 21 albums, in descending order of urgency, that you should make an effort to hear (after you put down your craptastical
records, that is).
Skatebard - Midnight MagicNorwegian knob-twiddler Skatebard's first full-length is brimming with great Italodisco-inspired sessions and would be the perfect soundtrack for a John Carpenter movie never made.
Escape From Oslo anyone?
Henri Faberge & the Adorables - Henri Faberge & the AdorablesWhat happens when a whole troupe of Canadians get together, write upbeat and innocent-sounding songs and then narrate them with their dirty little potty mouths? Henri Faberge calls it "adorable" and so do I.
Deloris - Ten LivesIt was a weak year for gimmick-free indie rock. With The Shins busy writing, Okkervil River busy touring and The National busy just resting, Deloris produced an impeccable collection of songs in the same spirit as those bands. No weird singer, no cheap toy instruments--just tight songs with deep hooks.
Katerine - Robots Apres ToutPhilippe Katerine is excessively French in every way possible, and his album is better for it. A strange mix of cut-up electronics, live disco-driven instruments and an amateur choir providing the backing vocals on about 70% of the album's songs, it's not like anything else I heard this year (or any previous year either).
Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Show Your BonesAs I mentioned above with regard to Ladyfuzz,
Show Your Bones isn't exactly the sophomore album I'd expected from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs. It's more spacious, more acoustic, more melancholy and more grown up. Grown up? Hey, that shouldn't always have a negative connotation.
The Long Blondes - Someone to Drive You HomeThe Long Blondes could just as easily have existed in 1981 as in 2006. No, really.
Someone to Drive You Home is one of the few albums that sounds incredibly modern and different by truly sounding like it comes from another era.
Milkymee - Songs For Herr NickeEmilie Hanak (aka Milkymee) writes great songs that deserve to be fleshed out further, but performs most of them with only an electric guitar as her accompaniment. The couple tracks with a full band here really stand out above the rest, so hopefully her next album will move her in that direction.
Sinner DC - Mount AgeI wonder if I'd like this in the daytime. I don't have any idea, because I've only ever listened to it in the wee hours after midnight. Swirling strings on top of rigid beats and totally left-field sonic flourishes make the moon move from one end of the sky to the other. It might just make the sun sleepy, though.
American Watercolor Movement - It Takes Fifteen to Tango in My Book...American Watercolor Movement is a band that goes great lengths to make rock music something bigger, something different. Picked apart song by song, the album loses a lot. It's when you listen to the whole thing, every art-damaged second of it, that its full impact is felt. Completely genreless.
Imaad Wasif - Imaad WasifHe may be the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' touring-only fourth member now, but don't think he's bringing that world to meet this one. Wasif solo is more akin to the sounds of Elliott Smith and Nick Drake than it is the NYC new-rock scene. Quiet as a mouse and as beautiful as a painting.
Jody Wildgoose - AfterlifeIt seems all the best albums this year (or my favorite ones, at least) go a long way to defy classification. Jody Wildgoose's
Afterlife is no different in that regard. At heart, he's a pop songwriter, but he does it in about 1,000 disparate ways--sounding like Beck one moment and Robert Pollard the next.
Viva Voce - Get Yr Blood Sucked OutI've never found any of Viva Voce's albums to be all that good before now. Sludgy but sparkly, determined but carefree, these songs are genuinely exciting in a way that most other NW bands once made them (but sadly no longer do).
Super 700 - Super 700Another giant troupe of people making music (like Henri Faberge & the Adorables), except this time they're led by three sisters from Berlin. Largely guitar-based songs with occasional electronic embellishments and vocals that sometimes bring pre-MILF Gwen Stefani to mind.
Nine more deserving of honorable mention (rounding it out to 30):
Belle & Sebastian - The Life Pursuit; Lansing-Dreiden - The Dividing Island; The Classic Brown - Down With Fun; Nathan Fake - Drowning in a Sea of Love; The Gossip - Standing in the Way of Control; Lupen Crook - Accidents Occur Whilst Sleeping; Peter Bjorn and John - Writer's Block; Cat Power - The Greatest; Junior Boys - So This is Goodbye
Want singles? Sure you do. Who doesn't?! I'm limiting these picks to 20 songs that were actually commercially released as singles. Without those parameters, trying to compile a list of individual songs would be madness:
Robbie Williams - "Rudebox"
Nelly Furtado - "Maneater"
The Long Blondes - "Weekend Without Makeup"
Art Brut - "Nag Nag Nag Nag"
Depeche Mode - "Martyr"
The Killers - "When You Were Young"
Justice vs Simian - "We Are Your Friends"
Chromatics - "Nite"
The Needles - "Dianne"
Ladyfuzz - "Kerfuffle (Single Version)"
I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness - "According to Plan"
Joakim - "I Wish You Were Gone"
Peter Bjorn and John - "Young Folks"
Nelly Furtado feat. Timbaland - "Promiscuous"
Justin Timberlake - "Sexyback"
The Knife - "We Share Our Mother's Health"
Sol Seppy - "Slo Buzz"
Cat Power - "The Greatest"
Belle & Sebastian - "White Collar Boy"
Poni Hoax - "Budapest"
The best two (out of two) long-form singles of the year (in no order):
LCD Soundsystem - "45:33 Nike+ Original Run"
Ricardo Villalobos - "Fizheuer Zieheuer"
And last, but not least... ARTIST OF THE YEAR!
Gerard
posted by paul @ 11:30 AM
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