Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Albums Of The Year

For a few years now, there has been this misguided notion that music is dieing. But don't confuse the business part of "the music business" with the music, because music is alive and well and getting along just fine. There may be no more smash blockbuster albums flying off shelves the way N*Sync and Beatles records used to, but think about how many kids have iPods and how much music they got packed in those little things. For a world that has so much going on at once nowadays, think about how prevalent music continues to be. The songs are still out there, my friends.

The art of the ALBUM, however, isn't doing quite as well. Songs have become the new albums. The power to choose songs only has come along with the listener's newfound power and control over what they listen to. So the albums I'm about to highlight aren't the ones that were packed with the most hit singles or most delectable tunes. These are full, bullet-proof albums that were perfect in songwriting, song order, packaging, and zeitgeist timing. These aren't albums that I found and liked, but albums that searched me out, swallowed me, and spit me out as a different dude than I was before I heard these songs or held their artwork in my hands.

Ladies and gentlemen, the five finest albums 2007 gave us;

5. Meredith Bragg - Silver Sonya
Headphone record of the year. Mr. Bragg ditched his band, The Terminals, for this one-off solo record, and it resulted in one of most dynamic, yet simple performances all year. Sonically, it's the reincarnation of Elliott Smith; sad, hopeful, blissful, scathing, heavy and gentle, all at once. Sync up tracks like "New York" or "Twin Arrows" and you won't be sure if you should be sad, or ecstatic for the rest of your life to unfold. If the future holds more records like this from Bragg, however, consider me ecstatic.
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4. LCD Soundsystem - Sound of Silver
One of the year's funkiest dance records to get down to with your bad self. Oddly enough, it's also one of the solidest records of the 21st century. James Murphy packs it all into this 8-song set. From the best song you'll hear all year (the anthemic "All My Friends") to massive blasts of shiny groove ("Someone Great" and "Time To Get Away") to punky hip-shakers ("Watch The Tapes") to goofy piano ballads ("New York I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down").
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3. Against Me - New Wave
This explosive record is this decade's equivalent to Nirvana's "Nevermind" and Green Day's "Dookie," or even The Clash's self-titled debut. The formula is the same; an angsty group of dudes become ignited by a generation gone bored, crank their amps up, tune their guitars to snarl, and let the mud hit the fan. It's not a cry for attention, but for connection, which so many young breaking artists screw up. When fluid records like this come along and work this genuinely well, it's rare. And with the state we're all in right now, this was the album 2007 needed. Thanks Against Me for stepping up.
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2. Arcade Fire - Neon Bible
The underground indie music scene has coughed up a massive band with a massive sound that could easily become the biggest band in the world. This 2nd-full length of theirs is a strongly cohesive set of songs that serves as a solid 'state of the union,' stirring up a heavy sense of disillusionment with everything from music to patriotism to religion. Take U2's Joshua Tree and splice it's dominant genes with Bruce Springsteen's finest recordings and this fantastic album would be the result. It gets a little murky at times, but explosive songs like "Keep The Car Running" and "Windowsill" will keep you spinning over and over again, finding new things in every song with every listen.
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1. Radiohead - In Rainbows
One of the unfortunate things about being Radiohead is that BEING Radiohead overshadows the fantastic records Radiohead put out. They're like the Bob Dylan of alt-rock. And this is probably more true this year than ever before. They got everyone abuzz about what they're doing WITH their music when they put this album on their website for people to download at the price of their choosing, which many opted to do for free predictably. Fortunately, the music itself holds it's own quite well against all this 'changing the system' talk. In fact, it's the most perfect record of their career, running the stylistic gamut of adrenaline-laced alt rock ("Bodysnatchers" and "Jigsaw Falling Into Place"), soft soothing jazzed-up numbers ("House of Cards"), and achingly gorgeous songwriting ("Reckoner" and "Videotape"). Yet, every edge of every song fits perfectly together with every brushstroke of the artwork and every detail of production, painting the band's masterpiece of the decade, if not of their career. If you didn't download it when you had your chance, it will be commercially available on Jan 1... so record of the year for 2008 as well? Let's see what 2008 has in store, but I wouldn't be surprised.
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Honorable Mention: The Shins - Wincing The Night Away, Kanye West - Graduation, Bright Eyes - Cassadagga, Minus The Bear - Planet of Ice, Cassino - Sounds of Salvation, The Fratellis - Costello Music
Come back tomorrow for TOP FILMS OF THE YEAR. I'll be joined by my panel of Mercury staff film enthusiasts.

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