Posts Tagged ‘ninja tune’

INAUDIBLE’S BEST OF 2023

January 16, 2024

Hello world! Hello universe! Another spin, another list! Better late than never, right? So let’s get down to it, shall we? Welcome to INAUDIBLE’s 14th almost annual BEST OF LIST!

TOP 14 ALBUMS OF 2023 (in stunning random order)

(click on album cover to sample a track)

Tim Hecker – No Highs (Kranky Records)

Montreal ambient drone king, Tim Hecker, released his eleventh full-length album No Highs this year on the stalwart Kranky label, and it’s an unsettling yet soothing listen. It’s a contrasting juxtaposition of sounds and swirls that immediately drew me in and had me playing it every morning for a month while writing.

I remember telling my friend Mike that it kept a low-level anxiety churning in my gut at all times while listening, but it also made me feel calm and allowed me to be super productive. Songs slowly build in mood and depth and there’s barely any release as similar motifs play throughout the duration of the album, but once you allow yourself to get lost in the greyscale ambience, it’s easy to want to stay put.

So good.

***

Laurel Halo – Atlas (Awe)

L.A. based artist, Laurel Halo, has released music on Hyperdub and Honest Jon’s, and has resisted classification over the course of five albums, yet over her last two she’s embraced a more ambient modern classical sound, and Atlas showcases her strongest music to date.

The album begins conventionally enough, with a subdued surge of strings that might not sound out of place on a Stars of the Lid record, but as the album expands, it becomes stranger — competing string passages swell and bleed into one another, deep in the murk piano chords clang like far off church bells. It feels like you’re standing outside the venue only hearing the muffle, or in a grand hall wandering about trying to find the room where the music is coming from.

In this sense, it reminds me a lot of The Caretaker’s amazing album, An empty bliss beyond this World from 2011, and I can’t think of a more glowing comparison. Atlas is definitely an album I can put on and decide to pay attention to or not. It can comfortably fade into the background or open up into so much more for the careful listener, however, there are moments such as the crescendo in “Belleville” that demands your attention or makes you pause from whatever it is you’re doing to acknowledge its beauty.

Check it.

***

Gonubie – Signals At Both Ears (Métron Records)

Born and based in Cape Town, South Africa, Gonubie is an interdisciplinary artist with a background in fine art and architecture. Known in the Cape Town dance scene as DJ raresoftware, her Gonubie project finds her taking a break from the beats and the dance floor, finding her inspiration in nature (namely the Gonubie River), and crafting a beautiful ambient record.

Like Atlas, I can also tune in or tune out to Signals At Both Ears, but the music ebbs and flows like the soft moving current of a river or stream. Working with short synth loops, melodic chimes, and samples, Gonubie’s music offers calm in a world seemingly in gross disarray. Give it a whirl.

***

Sofia Kourtesis – Madres (Ninja Tune)

Berlin-based, Peruvian producer Sofia Kourtesis showed listeners what she was capable of over the course of several EPs on the Studio Barnhus imprint, but with her debut full-length Madres on Ninja Tune it all comes into high relief.

This album has received a lot of hype and praise and I’m happy to say it’s all worth it. I hate terms like “instant classic” so I won’t use it, but Kourtesis hits the ground dancing and she doesn’t let up the whole way through. There is joy in these songs, ready for you to embrace as you close your eyes, tilt your chin skyward, and shake your big fat asssss goddammit. Shake it hard, my friends. Shake it good. No matter where you may be.

There’s lots of talk about embracing spirituality and her mother’s illness online for you to read about which adds depth to the album’s narrative, but from a strictly “house music” standpoint, this album feels timeless to me — I hear Villalobos, Akufen, Luciano, 2000’s Kompakt, Sutekh, Apparat, and early Axel Boman, just to name a juicy handful.

Kourtesis is already on the bill for Mutek Barcelona, so my fingers are triple-crossed that she also makes it to Montreal this year, because to be able to lose myself to “El Carmen” and “Habla Con Ella” on a sweaty dancefloor would be absolutely delightful.

Make it happen Mutek, s’il vous plait, ok merci!

***

JPEGMAFIA and Danny Brown – Scaring the Hoes (AWAL)

A Peggy and D.B. collaboration at long last! Revitalizing Danny Brown’s drugboi status and making him sound as stoned and fresh as ever.

JPEG brings a DIY-lofi-asf production style to the project that only makes it sound even cooler in my opinion. There’s a punk rock aesthetic that permeates throughout the whole album. I dare you to listen to those dirty guitars in “Garbage Pale Kids” without hard-bopping your head.

Many have complained that Danny’s voice is too quiet and mumbly in the mix but I don’t mind, you just have to work a bit harder to decipher what the fuck he’s saying (pro-tip: it’s prolly about drugs or pu$$y).

Danny’s debut XXX is still one of my favourite hip hop albums of the last 15 years, and although Scaring The Hoes now feels like an amazing outlier among his recent releases, as his Q-Tip produced album from before and his just released Quaranta don’t feel as urgent to me, Danny Brown is still one of the most unique voices in the game.

I’ve always been impressed with Peggy’s music, but also always found it hard to digest an entire album, but thankfully this one just works. Lots to enjoy and jam out to here, from more soul-based beats to spastic crunk shizzz. Check it.

***

Gigi Masin – Wind (The Bear on the Moon)

This album originally came out in 1986, so it’s definitely not a 2023 album, but it’s one that has been on steady rotation since I discovered it this summer. I’ll have to thank the algorithm for this one, because I had never heard of Gigi Masin until I clicked on “Similar Artists” while listening to an album called Light Patterns by David Horridge and Kevin McCormick (more on these guys later).

And as soon as that slow pulse synth beat begins in “Call Me”, I was enraptured. The same synth line is used in the next song “Tears of a Clown” as well, just kicked up a few bpm’s, and it’s even more enveloping.

There’s a meditative quality to this record, while some songs evoke Eno and Budd and New Age, others mix in tenor sax adding an experimental jazz touch. There’s also some definite influence on Aphex’s and BoC synths. After some research, I realized Masin is also in Gaussian Curve, which have two lauded releases out on Music From Memory. He has an enormous discography, so I’ve got loads more to discover, but his debut Wind from 1986 is an absolute quiet stunner and comes highly recommended.

***

Actress – LXXXVIII (Ninja Tune)

Darren Cunningham returns as Actress, with the beguiling LXXXVIII on Ninja Tune. Cunningham’s M.O. hasn’t changed much since Splazsh came out over a decade ago, nor does it need to — he’s still deftly using spliffed out eclectic melodies and piano tinkle melded avec uber hazy beats that skirt with the dance floor as well as your favourite spot on the couch.

Covid made a lame comeback into my entire family’s life this Christmas holiday, and while I was isolating (until we realized it was too late and I’d already spread my holiday cheer to everyone), I pretty much listened to LXXXVIII exclusively — while reading, while finishing up some very late grading, while staring out the window or napping, it was my soundtrack.

The percussion, bass, and subtle melodies are all on point, and I love how the album jumps from beat-based tracks to wide-open ambience. With song titles like “Memory Haze”, “Chill”, “Hit that Spdiff”, and “Green Blue Amnesia Magic Haze”, I think you get a solid sense of where Cunningham is trying to take his listeners. He’s playing here in Montreal at Le Ritz in February and I am ready to experience the haze. Yes!

***

Yves Tumor – Praise A Lord Who Chews but Which Does Not Consume; (Or Simply, Hot Between Worlds) (Warp Records)

Over the course of their last four albums, Yves Tumor has evolved from amorphous noise experiment to full on glam rock star. Although a part of me still yearns for Safe in the Hands of Love era Yves, this is their most accomplished and fun work to date.

Mining the sound of 90’s rock radio, Prince, and MBV, Praise A Lord is ambitious in scope, but what clinches the deal is that it sounds so fantastic. The guitars sound like James Iha is playing side by side with Kevin Shields thanks to the tight as balls production by Noah Goldstein (he’s worked with everyone from Frank Ocean to Bon Iver to Rosàlia). Praise A Lord is probably my most jogged to album of the year.

This is the third time Yves Tumor has made my end of year list and seeing their live show this year was fantastic. I am interested to see which direction they will push the Yves Tumor sound next…

***

HiTech – Détwat

Well, you won’t be able to find this album on your preferred streaming service anymore, thanks to an ugly fallout with FXHE label head Omar-S. You can read about his shitty behaviour here, but suffice to say Omar went from Detroit success story to techno tastemaker to cancelled turd. Bleh.

But no worries, King Milo, Milf Melly, and 47Chops, the three rapper-producers that make up HiTech won’t have any trouble finding a new distributor for their gritty, hilarious, ghettotech party record, Détwat.

Détwat is the trio’s second full-length, and it deftly uses frenetic 808s and a grab bag of crate-deep samples to kick off the raunchiest club night since the heyday of Detroit techno. It reveals the steady evolution of the Detroit sound and showcases some of the freshest artists currently reppin’ the D.

You just have to hear it to believe it, but probably my favourite line from any song this year comes from the aptly-named “POCKETPUSSY”, in which the chorus rings: “I think I might . . . I think I might buy a Fleshlight!”

The lyrics are ratchet, grimy, and funny as f. The beats are spastic, catchy, and designed for booty shaking. This was my second most jogged to album of the year. Only up and upwards for these next-gen Detroit ghettotech heroes . . .

***

Kokoroko – Could We Be More (Brownswood Recordings)

London based, eight-piece jazz crew, Kokoroko, released their debut full-length in 2022 on Gilles Peterson’s Brownswood label, and I was a little bit late to the party. Glad I made it though, because this band takes me back to my formative undergrad jazz boogie heydays.

The album features Afrobeat, soul, funk, smooth jazz, and highlife all melded into one singular steady ass groove. As a bass player, man, does Kokoroko’s bass player, Duane Atherley know how to hit deep in that smooooth pocket. Not to mention: the horns are so infectious, the guitar and synths absolutely on point, the percussion masterful.

As you may have noticed, my musical tastes are varied, yet what I feel like I stopped listening to the most over the last twenty years is music that made me joyful, or simply made me feel real darn good inside. I was a massive fan of Jamiroquai in their prime, no shame. Why? Because their music made me happy, it had a fat ass groove, Jay Kay’s voice was Stevie and Michael at once, and man, could you ever dance to it.

As a moody indie rock teen, I was a wallflower and shoegazer, too cool to be seen letting my guard down and vulnerably shaking my fat ass. Jamiroquai and acid jazz and hip hop helped bridge the gap to techno and house and all things dance floor. Now, fuck it y’all, the world is my dance floor, and good lord, this old buck’s got some real nice swanging hips! Shiiiit! Watch out! And goddamn, if Kokoroko doesn’t hit that groovy wheelhouse sooo nice.

***

Sault – Untitled (Rise) (Forever Living Originals)

Seems only fitting after Kokoroko to talk about this baby banger, Sault’s 2020 release Untitled (Rise). Sault came out of nowhere in 2019 and put out so many albums in such a short period that I felt overwhelmed. Many friends rec’d one album or another, but I didn’t quite know where to start, so I didn’t bother . . . until 2023.

It was actually the new Little Simz album NO THANK YOU that made me want to check them out, since it’s produced by Inflo, defacto head of Sault. So I sort of randomly chose this album to start. It was evening in the kitchen and opening song “Strong” started and within 30 seconds, my kids Sylvia and Simon, were up and dancing around, and then so was I and Kat.

Strong” is a truly amazing song. Propulsive bass, Quincy Jones guitars, uplifting vocals, and that marching drum breakdown and kick back into the chorus — oh myyyyy — the kids go bonkers! And ding ding ding, there it is! That joy I’m talking about. Pure simple joy for its own sake. Dancing in the kitchen with my kids while the water for pasta boils over on the stove.

Them simple pleasures are becoming the most meaningful.

And shit, that’s just the first six minutes of the album. The rest is equally just as molten hot. So many grooves and emotions packed tight. This is music for the resistance. Music that says fuck you to racism and fuck you to close-mindedness. Music to move your mind, body, and heart. This is a nod to all the great Black musicians that came before and will come after.

And shit, it’s just one of the 10 albums Sault has released in the last five years. Good heavens, this music is fire.

***

billy woods and Kenny Segal – Maps (Backwoodz Studioz)

billy woods second album collab with LA beatmaker, Kenny Segal, is a high watermark release for him, and my favourite hip hop album of the year. This is old-head shizz for sure, and it’s not an easy listen, but it sounds positively melodic compared to woods’ heavy Armand Hammer release this year with ELUCID.

Kenny Segal’s beats venture from boom-bap to piano looped jazz to dark apocalyptic. The production on “Year Zero” and “Hangman” is so grim it borders on post-fall dystopic (I just coined a new term lol). It makes the beats on El-P’s Fantastic Damage sound like K-pop.

woods’ songs rarely dole out a hook, and his rhymes are often metaphorical and super cerebral. There’s a creeping sense of paranoia throughout. He remains suspicious of many things: of gentrification, technology, our post-pandemic world, of sell-out rappers, and the true intentions of his friends, but he’s a storyteller who creates laser sharp images that ring as clear as any great poet.

On opening track, “Kenwood Speakers” woods is at a dinner party at a neighbour’s newly renovated apartment, drinking “natural wine”, eating a fancy meal with “capers” and “sprigs of thyme”. He keeps turning the music up little by little during the dinner, and whispering “mischievous lies” in the host’s ear all night. And then the song ends with the host’s fate: “I hear they found him in the morning / Hose run from the exhaust pipe.” Fuck yeah. What an opener.

On album closer, “As The Crow Flies”, the song’s last verse ends with woods wondering about mortality, as he pushes his son on the swing at the park, and fast forwards through his thoughts on the trials and worries of fatherhood, and then he anti-climactically mic drops the closing line: “I watch him grow, wondering how long I got to live” as a light and airy jazz piano tinkles softly in the background and the and the album slowly fades out to nothing . . .

Pure class. Listen to all the songs in between those two tracks and see for yourself how damn good Maps really is. Fire guests on here too: Aesop Rock, ELUCID, Quelle Chris, ShrapKnel, and Danny Brown.

***

Kevin McCormick – Sticklebacks (Smiling C Records)

Kevin McCormick put out an album with fellow Manchester musician, David Horridge, called Light Patterns in 1982. It was a quiet success at the time, but slowly disappeared into obscurity. Thanks to Smiling C Records, the album received a much needed repress in 2022 and brought these two musicians back into the light.

2023 sees Smiling C putting out never-released solo material from both McCormick and Horridge, and I enjoy both of their solo albums even more. Sticklebacks consists of a series of bedroom demos McCormick wrote in between 1984-1987, and sheds the acoustic sound of Light Patterns, instead adopting a swelling electric palette to explore different moods. These songs are a shift towards a more sparse and ambient style, and their hazy, repetitive movements create plenty of space for some subtly evocative melodies.

McCormick’s songs are gentle and evoke a feeling of peace, there’s a pastoral countryside motif that runs through his song titles – coves, lakes, mountain tops, church bells, evening drives, and feeling lonely in a crowded room are all inspirations here, as McCormick leans hard on the delay and various sub-octave pedals to make it sound like you’re listening to more than just one guy and his guitar.

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve listened to Sticklebacks and David Horridge’s A Journey Within, Wind by Gigi Masin and Surround by Hiroshi Yoshimura as a makeshift playlist while working, reading, and writing this year. The music by these artists basically create my ideal sonic mood — full ambience, a little electronic, a little guitar, deep bass, some synth and soft drone — it all hits my brain cloud jusssssst right.

***

David Horridge – Journey Within (Smiling C Records)

Like McCormick’s Sticklebacks, Journey Within, is David Horridge’s unreleased bedroom studio recordings from 1982. The album is barely a half an hour, but it packs quite an emotional punch as every second of the EP is a gem.

Horridge’s playing comes in the form of well-timed melodies and carefully placed bass lines. Nothing is forced or rushed, and each movement really sits with whatever mood he’s trying to build. The album’s greatest strength is in creating a peaceful, hypnotic vibe that allows for a completely relaxed listen. He really knows how to lay down some great bass in the mix, especially in penultimate track “Dark River”, which may be my favourite song of the year. I just love the way it makes me feel like I’m floating a few inches above myself, and each time the little bass lick comes in it pulls me back down to earth.

There’s a bunch of labels out there like Smiling C, Music From Memory, Light in the Attic, and RVNG Intl, that are exposing modern listeners to a treasure trove of forgotten classics, and for me in 2023, 1982-1987 seems to be my aural sweet spot.

So much absolutely wonderful music coming at me this year from several timelines at once. 2023 had me looking back but also ever ahead, stubbornly optimistic that 2024 — the Year of the Dragon — is going to be consistently exciting and incredibly memorable.

***

VERY HONORABLE AUDIBLES

Aesop Rock – Integrated Test Solutions (Rhymesayers)

Tinashe – BB/ANG3L (Nice Life)

Andy Shauf – Norm (Anti- Records)

Aphex Twin – Blackbox Life Recorder 21f (Warp)

Beach Fossils – Bunny (Bayonet Records)

Kelela – Raven (Warp)

Armand Hammer – We Buy Diabetic Test Strips (Fat Possum)

Natural Wonder Beauty Concept (Mexican Summer)

Little Simz – No Thank You (Forever Living Originals)

Lusine – Long Light (Ghostly International)

Julie Byrne – The Greater Wings (Ghostly International)

Mondo Tempo – Freak Heat Waves (Mood Hut)

***

All right then! We made it to the end! Yesssss! Miss you and love you all. Happy 2024. Be good. Be honest. Be vulnerable. Keep your ears wide open.

xoxo,

ml

Machinedrum at SAT in Montreal

November 17, 2013

machinedrum

15 November 2013

Travis Stewart aka Machinedrum dropped by the SAT this weekend to showcase his newest album Vapor City, and he gave us an absolutely intense and amazing live performance. Armed with a guitar, his synths, a drum pad, a MIDI controller, a laptop running Ableton, and a live drummer, Stewart took Vapor City to new heights with loads of bass and reverb and the volume cranked to twelve.

I don’t know where he found his drummer, but the guy played non-stop for over an hour and pounded out drum ‘n bass beats at 120 to 192 bpm with no sign of ever wanting to stop. He was ridiculously tight and his on-stage energy was infectious. When the set began and I saw Stewart strap on a guitar, I was a bit worried it might not sound right, but he quickly proved me wrong with the first strum of “Center Your Love”, one of my favourite tracks off the new album. “Infinite Us” came next and they played a near twelve minute version of this song, extending sections and building the track to an incredible intensity that had the crowd pretty much going bonkers. And by the time they moved into the massive “Gunshotta”, empty cups were flying, some dude was crowd surfing, and the threat of a mosh pit started up in front of us.

Stewart also did a great job on vocals, looping and manipulating his vocal hooks seamlessly in the tracks. Watching him on stage, you could tell he’s been doing this for way longer than a minute – he was a straight up professional, operating several instruments at once, and doing it in style. They played the deepest cuts from Vapor City, including a down right dirty version of “Eyesdontlie” and a super tight version of “U Still Lie” that was reminiscent of M83 when the synths reached their deafening crescendo. I went to the show not really knowing what to expect, figuring that if I heard “Gunshotta” super loud in a club it’d be worth the price of admission, but instead Machinedrum blew it up big time, showing us he really knows how to throw down live.

We left the SAT and our ears were buzzing, and when I woke up in the morning with the chorus to “U Don’t Survive” in my head they were still ringing. A stellar show and a stellar album. If you haven’t heard Vapor City yet, I suggest you check it, because it’s gonna be on many a best of list in the coming weeks. Peace.

Photo cred: A. Rad Photo

INAUDIBLE’S BEST OF 2010

January 5, 2011

INAUDIBLE is overjoyed to unveil his 2nd annual end of year listy list!

 
TOP 25 ALBUMS OF 2010

25. Luke Abbott – Holkham Drones (Border Community)

Norfolk England producer Luke Abbott offers up a strong selection of electronic tracks that are modest yet immediately rewarding. Similar in a way to Boards of Canada, it’s rare that music primarily composed on a computer can also move a listener emotionally, striking between the invitation to dance or the opportunity to deliberate without diluting either approach’s effect. Abbott’s songs build in linear fashion, exploring psychedelic melody and synth-fuelled beats. I guess you could call it IDM, if people are still tossing that moniker around. Either way, it’s a smooth listen that works whether you’re both bobbing your head at a party or sunk comfortably into the couch.

Fave track: “Brazil”

 

24. Pausal – Lapses (Barge Recordings)

Pausal are a duo from Hampshire UK, and they create warm and impressionistic ambient soundscapes. Like Stars of the Lid, Mountains, and Marsen Jules, Pausal’s music has a sense of weightlessness and calm that washes over the listener, and the result is immersive and reflective. Lapses has sailed me off to soft slumber on many a night, and greeted many a morning with me as well. Warm and welcome layers of drone that pulse subtly and beautifully.

 

23. Pantha du Prince – Black Noise (Rough Trade)

Hendrik Weber made a strong return this year with the follow-up to his much acclaimed This Bliss avec Black Noise and it does not disappoint. With chimes and marimba acting as aural touchstones throughout, Black Noise shows the further evolutions of Weber’s melodic-robotic dichotomy and his penchant for deep and infectious bass. And speaking of infectious, “Stick To My Side”, Weber’s collaboration with Animal Collective’s Noah Lennox will leech itself into your memory banks and have you humming and singing it for days. Weber does a great job of melding 4/4 hitters alongside of more sedate and moody tracks, and the effect is captivating.

 

22. Toro Y Moi – Causers of This (Carpark Records)

2010 truly was a breakout year for chillwave and glo-fi musicians. I still find these names for sub-genres absolutely ridiculous, but Chad Bundick’s debut as Toro Y Moi is a slowburn of an album that just kept growing on me until I was completely smitten. I love his use of tape-hiss loops, cheap homemade beats, familiar samples, deep bass, and voice (not for the actual lyrics but for they way he uses his voice as added layers of sound). And although there are many other artists in the genre doing relatively the same sort of thing, Causers of This was the album I returned to most throughout the year. Fun, sunny, haphazard, and guaranteed to put a smile on any a hipster’s mug.

 

21. Bonobo – Black Sands (Ninja Tune)

Simon Green aka Bonobo released his fourth full length album and managed to somehow breathe new life into the weary genre of “chill out” and/or “downtempo”. Black Sands is no radical departure from his earlier musical palette, but Smith incorporates his love of world sounds, great string arrangements, a little dubstep, and amazing vocals from Andreya Triana, and fills the void left in the absence of new material from The Cinematic Orchestra. Black Sands is a groove-laden album that is sexy and introspective. Perfect for romantic dinner dates at home, where after the second bottle of wine, you’re up and shaking booty in the kitchen, making room for dessert. Check it.

Fave tracks: “Stay The Same”, “Kong”, and “Animals”

 

20. Flying Lotus – Cosmogramma (Warp Records)

Let’s be honest here, Fly Lo’s space odyssey is pretty damn dope and sprawling and ambitious, but it just never got the heavy rotation on my stereo that Los Angeles did. I know he felt he needed to rise above the countless producers who’d been biting on his style since 1983 and Los Angeles came out, and also wanted to create an aural homage to his musical family tree, and overall I think he was successful in those two realms, but in the end his late 2010 EP Pattern+Grid World had me more excited than Cosmogramma. That said, I still think he does a helluva job meshing drum-n-bass, hip-hop, jazz, psychedelia, and house to smashing effect, but at the end of the year, it just didn’t blow my head up the way I had originally anticipated. And to be honest, I think a lot of it just sounds like Squarepusher. There I said it. I’ve somehow managed to diss one of the most creative electronic artists alive today. But let me give him props by saying I look forward to all his future evolutions, be they missteps or the right steps.

 

19. Beach House – Teen Dream (Sub Pop)

Baltimore’s Beach House followed up the lovely Devotion with Teen Dream and revealed the perfect evolution of their sound, adding steady drums to the mix and offering up a mature collection of groovy and sexy tunes. Victoria Legrand’s voice has never sounded stronger or more emotionally assertive. The interplay between Alex Scally’s guitar and Legrand’s keyboards is smooth, gloomy, and warrants repeat listens. “Norway”, “Take Care”, and “Lover of Mine” are my favourite tracks, and what’s perhaps most telling is that the album is a generational crossover smash, inspiring teens and seasoned adults alike. Dream pop at its finest.

 

18. Onra – Long Distance (All City)

Onra changes things up with Long Distance, casting aside the old world samples that became his trademark in Chinoiseries, and 1.0.8, and adopts a smooth 80′s vibe instead. I imagine it being the sound of the 1980′s New York underground, and Onra lays it on thick and chilled. Dirty funk bass, hand clap beats, soul breaks, old skoool scratching, Lionel Ritchie guitars, moments reminiscent of J.J. Fad and bad 90′s muzak, plus some great guests makes this definitely one to check out. His live show in Toronto with Buddy Sativa was a bass-heavy throwdown and a live highlight of the year for me. I love everything this man has put out and look forward to his next shit.

 

17. Mount Kimbie – Crooks and Lovers (Hotflush)

While not quite as absorbing and heart stopping as their earlier EP’s Maybes and Sketch on Glass, Mount Kimbie‘s full-length debut still found itself on heavy rotation in my living room this year. I just kept putting it on again and again. It’s one of those albums that you can choose to either get completely absorbed in or just have on in the background as you do your thang, and its slowed down dubstep inflect is just right. As dubstep continued to grow, Mount Kimbie were a breath of fresh air in an oversaturated genre, because the young duo have their own definitive style which makes them stand out. Seeing them play live also revealed their strengths as they chose to play without laptops and did a fantastic job of recreating their bass-laden style in front of a crowd. Dig it!

 

16. Beach Fossils – Beach Fossils (Captured Tracks)

Beach Fossils emerged out of the hipster muck of Brooklyn and crafted a beautiful self-titled debut album, that effortlessly played out as the soundtrack of the summer. Comparing them to the xx seems a bit of a stretch, but just as the xx’s debut was the soundtrack to the grey days of last summer, Beach Fossils’ debut plays out as a pristine pop album for your pool party on a sunny day. There’s a bit of a surf rock feel, a bit of indie rock, Halifax pop, and a touch of Joy Division, making it an incredibly easy and fun record to listen to. That said, it breaks no new ground or boundary, but it’s a definitive grower of an album and comes highly recommended for a day at the beach or with a few drinks in the backyard.

Fave tracks: “Wide Awake” and “Daydream”

 

15. Scuba – Triangulation (Hotflush)

Hotflush head honcho Paul Rose aka Scuba continued his label’s thrilling run with a proper full-length of fluid, melodic dubstep that sounds beautiful and aggressive in equal measure. The album flows brilliantly building on dark mood, melodicism, and grimy beats. “Three Sided Shape” works alongside the territory Burial carved out, using cavernous bass drops and haunting vocals, while “You Got Me” leads in with propulsive bass that is perfect for crowded and dark dancefloors. “Lights Out” could find itself on any Echochord release or even as an old Theorem B-side and is the perfect closing track. Scuba’s had a great year, also putting out his Sub:stance mix in the early months of 2010, which is a fantastic set and a perfect primer into the world of dubstep, bass heavy music, and Hotflush records.

 

14. Darkstar – North (Hyperdub)

James Young and Aiden Whalley take a bold leap forward and backward with their debut album North, and help their label Hyperdub diversify in the process. The two-step beats and funky grime you’ve come to expect from Darkstar, have been replaced with cold synth lines and dark pop vocals courtesy of James Buttery. Essentially what we have here is a synth-pop album in the style of Junior Boys, yet where Junior Boys have worn their formula ragged, hackneyed, and thin, Darkstar add new life in the genre. Early standout track “Deadness” illuminates this quite well, with smooth synth, gently processed vocals, and an amazing darkwave guitar-line coda that evokes plenty of emotion and rainy day pathos. North is an emotional album full of slick production and great vocals.

 

13. Foals – Total Life Forever (Sub Pop)

UK scenesters, Foals, returned with Total Life Forever, the follow-up to their 2008 debut Antidotes and offered up a softened version of their sound with a fairly mature collection of songs. The first four tracks start the album off at a great pace, mixing moments reminiscent of Talking Heads with the earlier Foals sound to great effect. “Black Gold” is my fave track on the album and reveals the band’s new found maturity when it comes to composition. “Spanish Sahara” is their breakout hit, a slow-downed, mournful seven-minuter, that blasts into a cathartic emo kick in the end. Although, it was not where I expected their sound to go, I have returned to it many times during the year, and find it packs an emotional punch, while still retaining the inherent groove of a good rock album.

 

12. Crystal Castles – II (Fiction)

I don’t care about any of the hype or the bad press or the douchebaggery or the hoopla, I just care about the songs. Crystal Castles’ sophomore album is punk rock electro clash awesomeness. 8-bit beats and dirty and gorgeous analogue. Their sound is slightly less abrasive and a bit more poppy here than on their debut, but I find it a solid evolution of their Aphex-inspired DIY punk rock aesthetic. Alice Glass’ vox sounds great meshed in with Ethan Kath’s haphazard yet infectious production. The album was recorded at various locations, including a church in Iceland, a cabin in northern Ontario, and an abandoned convenience store in Detroit. This adds to the DIY pulse I dig so much. They can keep pissing off whoever they like, and I’ll just keep on listening.

Fave tracks: “Suffocation” and “Violent Dreams”

 

11. Pawel – Pawel (Dial Records)

Pawel’s self-titled long player was years in the making, but well worth the wait, because it’s a surprisingly tight and refreshing collection of smooove tech-house beats reminiscent of Audion, Theorem, and his Dial buddies Sten and Pantha du Prince. Tracks like “Coke” and “Dawn” get things cooking with that classic Kompaktesque four on the four vibe that’ll have you up and dancing, until he slows it all down with “Mate”, a beautifully atmospheric and subdued composition marking the album’s middle. He then turns it right back up with “Muscles” and “Crillon”, the disc’s heaviest hitters, and closes shop with two excellent tracks: the emotive and pulsing “Kramnik” and the fantastic, vocally-charged, “Wasting My Time”, which may actually be the album’s highlight. Dial Records has been incredibly relevant this year and Pawel started it off just right. More please.

 

10. The Fun Years – God Was Like, No (Barge Recordings)

Ben Recht and Isaac Sparks, the duo that make up The Fun Years, returned this year with the follow-up to the much revered Baby It’s Cold Inside with the excellently titled God Was Like, No. From the opening minutes of this album, when the minor chord guitar begins you immediately get pulled into their world — and it’s a bleak place, full of moody drones and post-rock guitar. This is a dark album, one that sucks you in and holds you there, yet never by force, because once it starts you want to hear it through to the end.

The album is broken up into eight tracks, but the whole thing flows as one 40 minute movement into the darkest post-rock and sensorial abduction. One could argue The Fun Years sound like a slowed down, pitch dropped Mogwai circa their Come on Die Young days. However I guess more genre specific references would be Ben Frost or Fennesz — still the post-rock vibe flows throughout, and may be one reason why I love it so much. Like their debut Baby it’s Cold Inside, God Was Like, No is unsettling music, but all I can say is, as the weather’s grown colder this album’s been on steady rotation. Here’s to a frozen and bleak next couple of months…

 

9. The Green Kingdom – Prismatic (Home Assembly)

Michael Cottone has been quietly making music under The Green Kingdom moniker since 2006, and with each release he further refines his brand of introspective ambient bliss. Cottone skillfully uses digitally enhanced acoustic guitar, strings, bells, and a myriad of samples and field recordings to create his compositions. Within his arrangements, melody and space work in tandem in an attempt to manifest what Cottone has called an “optimistic nostalgia” for the listener — an aural experience that can provide a momentary reprieve from the frenetic, fast-paced world that surrounds us. And indeed his music is perfect for contemplative mornings and quiet evenings, where the vibe is to “slow down” and to “reflect”. Prismatic is one of the finest ambient albums of 2010, and a prime example of electronic and organic sounds working together so effortlessly. Fans of Helios, Nest, The Boats, Kiln, and Susumu Yokota should check out The Green Kingdom immediately.

Fave tracks: “Wetlands” and “Radiance Reflected”

 

8. Local Natives – Gorilla Manor (Frenchkiss)

Local Natives appeared on the scene early in 2010, and at year’s end feel as if they’ve been around for years. Upon first listen, their influences seemed a little too apparent. They sounded a bit like Fleet Foxes, a bit like Grizzly Bear, with a touch of Pinback and Band of Horses — but after a few more spins, one quickly realizes Gorilla Manor possesses a dark, spiraling beauty. The band is perfectly capable of delivering big anthems strong on memorable hooks — the likes of “Shape Shifter” and brilliant opener “Wide Eyes” are sure to swim around the listener’s head for days. The rhythm section is tight, the guitars interweave wonderfully, yet the young band’s best asset are their strong and varied vocal talents. Quieter tracks like “Cards and Quarters”, “Cubism Dream”, and “Who Knows Who Cares” reveal their voices best, remind me of Crosby, Stills, and Nash, and offer up some lovely and emotional hooks.

Seeing them live made me appreciate their debut even more, as they presented their songs without a hint of pretension or rock-star attitude. They were just five young dudes having a fucking blast on their first headlining tour, and they played an amazingly tight set. In the end, Gorilla Manor is no classic — it’s still too indebted to its makers’ influences for that. But it is a strong, striking debut that exceeds expectations and should open enough doors for the band to ensure that their second album be one of the most anticipated records of the year. Lovely.

 

7. Nest – Retold (Serein)

Otto Totland, one half of neo-classicist duo Deaf Center, teamed up with Serein label head Huw Roberts and released Retold, a subtle masterpiece in piano-based ambience. Even on first listen, this record excels on every level as a piece of cinematic, modern classical composition. Each song is slow and deliberate evoking mood and solitary wonder. Using piano as the cornerstone for each song, samples, and strings are gently meshed to startling result. “Trans Siberian” features the distant blare of a locomotive, wintry drones, fractured strings, and what sounds like drops of rain hitting a piece of paper and the crackle of a fire, as it swirls moodily along. Retold is truly a special album and one that you must discover for yourself, as it grows with each successive listen and yet always sounds fresh. I’ve returned to this album time and time again, and consider it the finest in the genre of modern-classical released this year.

 

6. Wild Nothing – Gemini (Captured Tracks)

I’ve really loved the indie pop 80’s revival that has been becoming more and more prominent in the last year or so, and no one does it better than Virginia native, Jack Tatum, the man behind Wild Nothing. So often in these cases, where bands are attempting to sound like the heroes of their youth, I end up saying to myself, well shit, I’d really just rather listen to The Smiths or New Order, than some dudes who are trying to sound like them. But with Wild Nothing, even though his influences are startlingly apparent, there’s still something riveting about it. Because after I recognize the outside influence on a track (The Smiths, Cocteau Twins, The Cure, New Order, Belle and Sebastian, et al.), I forget about it and it becomes all Wild Nothing.

Gemini and the recently released Golden Haze EP are pure pop genius. Tatum possesses a keen ear for melody and composition and plays the bass just as well as the guitar. Chugging and veering basslines in “Confirmation”, “The Witching Hour”, and “Your Rabbit Feet” from Golden Haze carry the tracks from really good to fucking awesome. His guitar work is also worth mentioning as he tends to use two weaving guitar lines accentuated by synth and he uses distortion and reverb to great effect.

The fact that Tatum plays all the instruments on the album, allows him to always stick to his musical vision, and also reveals his uncanny ability to write songs that stick in your head but never get stale. I’ve listened to Gemini so many goddamn times this year it’s embarassing, and yet I keep going back again and again. “Pessimist”, “Chinatown” and “The Witching Hour” are fantastic pop songs that everyone should have stuck in their heads. I look forward to new material in the coming year, as well as, his first live show in Toronto in February. Shoegazers unite!

 

5. Kanye West – My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy (Def Jam)

I have a lot of guilty pleasures when it comes to mainstream music. Rihanna: Love her. Aaliyah: Would’ve died for her. Katy Perry: Secret shame. Usher? Craig David? Justin Timberlake? Jay-Z? They’ve been known to set me off as I get ready to go out for the night. I can’t help it. I grew up listening to cheesy pop music and bad R&B, so how can I turn it off now? I cannot and I will not.

Now, I’ve always had a soft spot for Kanye West. Ever since College Dropout came out you could occasionally find me blasting his tunes, learning his weak rhymes, and dancing to his ever slick production. And even though with each release he was becoming more and more a caricature of himself in the media, his music kept getting stronger and stronger. The man is a sponge, sucking up influences from all over and he’s got the money to make it happen. When I moved from Montreal to New Brunswick, Late Registration was my soundtrack, and when I left NB to move to Toronto, it was Graduation that I was playing as my outro from the Maritimes.

Flash forward to 2010. Kanye’s media attack has really been nothing short of brilliant. From his impromptu a-capella rap at Facebook HQ, to his “Power” it’s not a video it’s a painting, to his incessant Tweets, to his 30 minute beautifully shot, terribly acted, yet no less captivating short film, “Runaway”. And with each one of these media plugs he slowly gave us tastes and snippets of his new opus, and in the process he effectively sucked me in.

The excitable folks over at Pitchfork decided to give Fantasy a perfect 10, and while it’s a far cry from a perfect album, it is still one of the most exciting listens of the year. “All of the Lights” is an absolute banger, that is so undeniably thrilling I truly cannot believe it. The second half of “Runaway” reveals some of the most innovative work written with Auto-tune thus far. “So Appalled” is fucking ridiculous but I still love it. Opener “Dark Fantasy” features a perfect hip-hop beat and helps us all find bravery in our bravado. “Lost in the World” with Bon Iver is an amazing crossover hit and a fitting closer. And overall, the album plays out smooove from start to finish. Truly, the “Runaway” short film helped make this album what it is — its viewers craved the best moments of the album before it was released, and it revealed Yeezy is more than just a musician, he really is an “artist”, even if he has an entire team of people helping him become one.

At the end of the day, I don’t care, yo. I still love this album.

To paraphrase CyHi Da Prynce from the album: “If God had an iPod, Ye’d be on his playlist.”

 

4. Arcade Fire – The Suburbs (Merge Records)

The Suburbs is an album that blossoms a bit more with each successive listen, and one that is full of dynamic and proper indie rock songs that subtly recall your favourite musicians from the last 30 years. A small list: The Boss, The Beatles, The Byrds, The Who, The Doors, Heart, Cyndi Lauper, U2, Yo La Tengo, Broken Social Scene, Bon Iver, David Byrne, oh yeah, and Arcade Fire. It is an amazingly calculated and mature collection of songs that immediately churns up a strong sense of nostalgia and emotion. But for this listener, the reason The Suburbs is such a genuine winner, and the reason it rests near the top of my list for 2010, is the lyrics. They really resonate with me.

I am unsure if a twenty-year old listener would feel the same way, but I wonder: what contemporary album has had lyrics that actually, truly speak to my generation? “A mulatto, an albino, a mosquito, my libido?” I think not. The Suburbs is the Nevermind of twenty years later, where we no longer want to oh well, whatever, nevermind — now what we want to do is remember the past, and take hold of all the stupid mistakes and amazing strides we made to get to exactly where we happen to be now. To reflect on the past and laugh and shake it all off and keep on keeping on whatever good paths we’ve set for our futures…

“Month of May”, “Ready to Start” and “We Used to Wait” are solid and tight rockers that you can blast in your living room and get swept away in. “Modern Man” and “Rococo” are also great songs with strong lyrics, and “The Suburbs”, “Deep Blue”, “Suburban War”, “Sprawl I / II” pack the emotional wallops with tight changes and great orchestral accompaniment to boot. And then the lyrics of the end reprise sums it all up beautifully:

If I could have it back
All the time that we wasted
I’d only waste it again
If I could have it back
You know I’d love to waste it again
Waste it again and again and again

 

3. Ben Swire – From Here to There (Preservation Records)

San Francisco based musician Ben Swire came out of nowhere this year and released the gorgeous From Here to There — a sweeping album of enveloping ambience and thoughtfully processed acoustic instrumentation. Swire skillfully weaves electronic elements, field recordings, and conventional instruments (guitar, bass, percussion) into fluid, meticulously arranged set-pieces that retain an experimental edge without losing sight of musicality and melodicism.

There’s a jazz motif and a minimal techno pulse that runs throughout the album as well, making it by far the smoothest album of the year for me. From Here to There has been my soundtrack to writing essays for school, studying, reading, waking, sleeping, long walks, trudging streetcar rides, and more. It’s an album that defies defintion, being moody, dark, light, airy, and carrying a strong pulse and steady rhythm throughout. Not surprisingly, it is my most listened to album of the year according to my computer’s playlist, and one that will continue to be played wholeheartedly in 2011. L’amour it!

 

2. Autechre – Oversteps / Move of Ten (Warp Records)

In honour of the fact that Autechre have been making robots dance for two decades, Rob Brown and Sean Booth released twenty new tracks in 2010 split onto two separate albums, both just as equally captivating and haunting. Oversteps and Move of Ten are melodic and strangely emotive records that emit far different sonic vibrations than the duo’s last three full-lengths.

There’s no conscious way one can fully understand the compositional mind of Autechre, you just put them on and know that patience will reward. But with their new work, the duo’s vibe will immediately pull you in and have you convinced machines must feel love before Oversteps opener “r ess” is done. Their signature klings, klangs, and syncopated rhythms are in full effect here, and with repeated listens they become infectious, full of darkened corners strobed with light. Autechre is one of the reasons I fell in love with electronic music in the first place. Tri Repetae, along with Music Has the Right from Boards and Aphex’s Richard D. James album (the Warp trifecta), effectively helped foster my love of electronic music, and helped me push the boundaries of my own musical pallette. Music need not be linear or have build-ups and crescendoes, it just needed to eke out emotion, and somehow Autechre’s always been able to do that for me, even though their methods have been completely methodical and computer-based.

Years ago, Jake Mandell put out an album entitled Love Songs for Machines, and with Oversteps and Move of Ten, Autechre have truly done exactly that. Two decades of pushing the boundaries of composition and leaving hundreds of copycat artists in their wake, none even remotely close to them in style and execution and fear and emotion.

Both Oversteps and Move of Ten are not beat heavy albums at all, in fact the tempo is more subdued and textured throughout, which reveals a definite maturation of the duo’s sound and synthesis. As usual, both albums are not the easiest of listens, yet will reward the patient listener and become much more than just the sum of their parts, in fact they become Autechre’s strongest output in half a decade. Furthermore, in many ways Autechre have put out homages to the other heroes of the Warp trifecta — “nth Dafuseder.b” sounds very much like a BoC track, while “M62” could have been mined from Aphex’s archives. Still, their strongest tracks are ones that are abstract and build on the strange digital emotion they are able to pull out of the wireless air. Tracks like “O=0”, “see on see”, and “iris was a pupil”, reveal this the best.

I hope to see Autechre on my top list again in another decade, and wonder if their music will have morphed into an inaudible sensation that one experiences remotely from space. Thank you Ae and Warp for twenty years of groovy mindfuck. More please. New Boards in 2012 is my friend Mat’s call. Let’s hope we make it there.

 

1. Sufjan Stevens – The Age of Adz (Asthmatic Kitty)

I was really quite surprised not to see this album on many top lists this year. I wonder if Sufjan had instead released a sprawling opus to Massachusetts or Wisconsin or Texas and stuck to his earlier indie-rock sensibility and sensitivity if this album wouldn’t be resting high on the top of the big lists this year. But alas, it is not, and I can only believe it is because listeners didn’t give it enough of a chance. And to be sure, I remember feeling overwhelmed and spent after my first complete listen of The Age of Adz. Like the title of the album’s second track, it really felt like “too much” — but I knew it was full of magic and amazing production and uncompromising emotion on a grand scale. And so I kept listening.

The new material from Adz is above and beyond anything Sufjan has produced thus far, mixing folk, electronica, pop, cinematic orchestra and indie rock, and filtering it all through the sensibilities of a Broadway musical. Its production value is what makes it a challenge, as it’ll take a few listens for you to take it all in, but what makes it brilliant is that by the second listen, you’ll already find the melodies glued to your brain. You’ll wake up humming the chorus to “I Walked” and end up singing the coda of “Vesuvius” in the shower. The repetitive nature of the lyrics and the simple melodies hidden under the surface makes Adz a highly accessible album, yet some may still find it too “electronic” or “layered” for their tastes, but for me I couldn’t have asked for a better amalgamation of my ear’s favourite things — electronic production smashed together with perfect pop melodies.

The album is book-ended brilliantly, beginning with “Futile Devices”, Sufjan alone with his guitar, pulling at your heartstrings immediately, before the album veers off into more abstract territory. At the end of the 25-minute “Impossible Soul”, the old Sufjan resurfaces out of the esoteric splendour, and closes the album alone again with just his voice and guitar. In five minutes out of seventy, he effortlessly reveals he is still one of the finest singer-songwriter’s out there, with the uncanny ability to make you want to cry, yet cheer for the future. But he has bigger aspirations, and no longer needs to write an album full of emotive ballads anymore.

Highlights for me are “Get Real Get Right”, “Vesuvius”, Too Much” and “Impossible Soul”. “Impossible Soul” is my favourite song of the year, as it embraces and exploits practically every genre of the last fifty years — from 60′s rock to Disney-esque orchestra to hip-hop to techno to simple folk. What other song features a raunchy guitar solo, an inspirational sing-a-long, and some kick ass Autotune? And more importantly, what other song smashes all these genres together and does it so effectively? I’ve yet to find any other.

My attempt to describe this album falls way short of articulating the true grandeur of what occurs throughout the span of the record. His live show was the best concert of the year for me, just as The Age of Adz is my favourite album. It’s not an album I can put on at any time of the day or night, but it’s one that will be played time and again for the rest of my life. Give it a real listen and discover its beauty.

Yes! I made it to the fucking end!

 
HONORABLE AUDIBLES

Loscil – Endless Falls (Kranky)
Marc Houle – Drift (Minus Records)
Pop Ambient 2010 (Kompakt Records)
Donato Dozzy – K (Further Records)
Erik K Skodvin – Flare (Sonic Pieces)
The Besnard Lakes are The Roaring Night (Jagjaguwar)
Oneohtrix Point Never – Returnal (Editions Mego)
Ikonika – Contact, Love, Want, Have (Hyperdub)
Shed – The Traveller (Ostgut Ton)
The Chap – Well Done Europe (Lo Recordings)
The Sight Below – It All Falls Apart (Ghostly International)

 
R.I.P. Jay Reatard (1980-2010)

 
Thanks for reading everyone!
Best wishes for 2011!

Love,

ml