Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Top 10 of 2010: The Roots–How I Got Over

#3

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The fantastic title track

I would put side A of How I Got Over up against the first half of any record released this year. This is an album with a great deal of purpose and the first few tracks establish that immediately. In the words of Spin Magazine”s Charles Aaron - "You'd have to rewind early-'90s Scarface or Wu-Tang for such convincingly cold-eyed hip-hop existentialism.”

The guest appearances on this album take it to another level. Monsters of Folk, Joanna Newsom, members of the Dirty Projectors and even John Ledged all make incredible contributions. My favorite guest spot though, belongs to STS who lays down an incredible flow on “Right On” – coincidentally my favorite song on this record. Some critics have likened this record to Curtis Mayfield’s Superfly and Maybe that’s why I love this album so much. I think the comparison dead is on in terms of the urban alienation that is at the heart of both albums. Like Superfly this is an album that no serious music fan should be without.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Top 10 of 2010: Shout Out Louds–Work

#4

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This is actually a pretty fun video

This was one of the first 2010 releases I listened to and its managed to stick with me since I first heard it. Similar to last year’s Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix by Phoenix it can sometimes take a foreign band to remind you about what makes the American institution of Rock and Roll great. Work is certainly nothing groundbreaking. Just great songs, great production and fantastic sequencing.

There is a kind of wistful melancholy that makes it resonate with me so deeply. If you’re having an off year this album is like a warm hug. “1999” typifies the “how can I feel so nostalgic about something that wasn’t that long ago? Or was it that long ago?” feeling that I and many of my peers have experienced after college. So if you’re finding yourself in a mid-twenties malaise, give it a listen. 

Monday, December 13, 2010

Top 10 of 2010: Superchunk–Majesty Shredding

#5

Not many recent Superchunk videos on YouTube. This is pretty great though….

After watching artists like Ryan Adams and the Drive-By Truckers complete their slow slides into mediocrity this year the fact that Superchunk – one of the most consistent and influential bands of the nineties - can release one of the best albums of their career in 2010 seems particularly astounding. All reputations aside, if this album doesn’t grab you during the first four songs I don’t understand how you can call yourself a rock fan. This is inspired stuff.

And that what makes Majesty Shredding so different from so many other artists with similar careers. Everything that made Superchunk great from the epic hooks, the crunchy riffs and the punk attitude are all here and miraculously they still sound fresh today. I can’t say theres anything on here as inspiring as “Slack Motherfucker”……

But man does it come close.

Just for the uninitiated…

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Top 10 of 2010: Ted Leo–The Brutalist Bricks

#6

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This is the first “Bricks” song that I heard–back in 2008 on my honeymoon in NYC.

My admiration of Ted Leo is well documented and The Brutalist Bricks was more than enough for me to keep believing in the supreme talent of Ted Leo and the musicians he surrounds himself with. Aside from the excellent “Bottle in Cork” and its accompanying video this album didn’t seem to get much attention and that’s a damn shame.

This album is the perfect distillation of everything that makes Ted Leo great. Influences ranging from Curtis Mayfield to The Jam mingle comfortably. Ted’s lyrics continue to be concise and speak not just to the world we live in but his struggle to find a place in it. I was lucky to see him play several times this year and am thrilled that I’ll get to see him play a solo show this February (interestingly enough I first saw him play as a solo performer).

These six top records were hard to sequence. On any given day any one of these could be named my favorite record of this year. To put it another way: for me – The Brutalist Bricks is as good as it gets.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Top 10 of 2010: The National–High Violet

#7

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The National always release top notch music videos. It’s a shame there isn’t a TV station that plays them.

High Violet marks the third entry in a very impressive hat trick by The National. While it doesn’t have the “instant classic” designation that Boxer had seemingly on arrival  it makes the run of albums from Alligator to High Violet the greatest 1-2-3 punch since Elvis Costello’s first albums.

Another collection of ballads of white collar malaise High Violet builds on fantastic production that made Boxer such a classic. That fantastic drum sound and instrument separation are still there and Matt Berninger continues to expand his range. There are some more tender and intimate moments on this record like “Afraid of Everyone” and "Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks". I strongly recommend getting your hands on the newly released expanded edition and giving the alternate version of “Terrible Love” a spin. It has the extra teeth that all of their songs seem to acquire in a live setting. Seeing them play at Pioneer Courthouse Square on a September evening may have been the highlight of Musicfest Northwest.  

Friday, December 10, 2010

Top 10 of 2010: CR Avery–The Great Canadian Novel

#8

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Hilarious.

*REPOST*

My love of CR Avery is deep and well documented. His short set opening up for Billy Bragg at the PNCA in 2008 is still seared in my memory and remains the best opening set I have ever seen.

CR comes as close as any performer I’m aware of to channel Tom Waits during his beat poet phase. On top of that - he’s also a killer pop songwriter.

His latest release The Great Canadian Novel is his best album yet (although his best song is still “Disclosure” from Chainsmoking Blues). It begins with the punchy guitar riffs of the hilarious and sardonic “Folk Singer” and transitions seamlessly to the bluegrass-meets-hip-hop of “Town to Town”. The record hits a soaring high with the epic track “Channeling Frustrated Energy” - a torrent of verse poetry cascading over a Crazy Horse style riff interrupted by a blistering harmonica solo. The record ends with portrait of Pierre Trudeau and CR asserting his identity as a Canadian progressive.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Top 10 of 2010–#9 Typhoon–Hunger and Thirst

#9

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Typhoon - Starting Over (Live at OPB) from opbmusic.org on Vimeo.

I bought this album from the Tender Loving Empire store before meeting my cousin for lunch one day. After listening to it for the first time when I got home it became clear to me that Typhoon is the best thing to happen to this city since the food cart explosion. Having first heard of this band in our local alt-weeklies I knew I had to check them out when I listened to a full song during a Sound Opinions spotlight on Portland's music scene.

This is probably the most cohesive album on my list. The band may be comparable in size to Arcade Fire but they bring soul and discipline to the table instead of the bloat and dourness that makes The Suburbs my pick for most overrated album of the year. Hunger and Thirst runs like a very structured song cycle with each song being essential to overall work. Simply put – this is all killer no filler stuff. Even the “intermission” track serves a purpose.

Everything about this album from the poignant and haunting lyrics to the powerful horn and string arrangements makes it an instant classic. Portlanders should take a trip to the Tender Loving Empire store and pick it up as a gorgeous white vinyl set (that I would love for Christmas by the way) or on CD (which I uncharacteristically went with that day).

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Top 10 of 2010 in 10 Days…. “Harlem River Blues”–Justin Townes Earle

Well, its that time of year again folks. 2010 has been as great of a year for music as I can recall. Tons of great albums from new bands, developing bands and a few aging acts have shown that they still have some classics in them. I’ll be spending the next 10 days listing off my favorites one by one…..

#10

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Great performance of the title track…..

My first impression with Justin Townes Earle was his sublime cover of The Replacements “Can’t Hardly Wait” off of Midnight at the Movies – still his best album. I was pretty excited to hear Harlem River Blues after hearing a few tracks from it at the show he played at the Doug Fir on Valentines Day 2010. It certainly didn’t disappoint.

The albums high points occur during the juxtaposition of Earle’s neo-traditionalist country stylings and modern tales of life in New York City. Songs like “Working for the MTA” sound like Hank Williams classics but their lyrics give them a sense of currency. The album is greatly enriched by the excellent guitar playing of fellow Americana phenom Jason Isbell who really shines on “Christchurch Woman”.

Certainly my favorite Americana album of the year.

Friday, November 5, 2010

10 Favorite albums of 2010 (so far)

We'll see if this holds between now and December.

1. Janelle Monae - The Arch Android
2. Gaslight Anthem - American Slang
3. Shout Out Louds - Work
4. Ted Leo and the Pharmacists - The Brutalist Bricks
5. Superchunk - Majesty Shredding
6. CR Avery - The Great Canadian Novel
7. Typhoon - Hunger and Thirst
8. The National - High Violet
9. Justin Townes Earle - Harlem River Blues
10.The Hold Steady - Heaven is Whenever

Friday, October 22, 2010

100 Favorite Albums: Patti Smith – Horses

Tomorrow evening my wife and I will attend the fabulous Night Owl Record Show in SE Portland. Hundreds of vinyl enthusiasts will be pawing through crates and boxes looking for gems to add to their collection. We’ll be looking for (among other things) the decent copy of Patti Smith’s Horses that has eluded my wife and I for several years now. Sure, we could just pick one up on ebay for a fairly reasonable sum – but theres just something about the thrill of the hunt. The thought of pulling it out of a box, taking it home and dropping the needle and hearing it as it was meant to be heard.

Horses is - among other things – one of the best albums of the 70’s, as important as any album in terms of defining the punk movement, one of the greatest debut albums of all time and the definitive Patti Smith record. It also has the rare distinction of being one of those records that anyone with even a cursory interest in the history of American music should listen to.

Patti Smith was in my mind the first artist to successfully blend spoken poetry and rock music. Previous attempts were either vacuous or overwrought and pretentious (or in the case of The Doors: all three). In songs like “Free Money” and “Gloria” Smith’s rapid fire delivery has a primal quality that demands your attention. Its easy to forget how great of a singer she is. Her instrument is certainly unique and might be oft putting to people looking for something more conventional from female singers. Its her phrasing, tone and performance that make her great. Just like Bob Dylan.

This may not be the first post-modern rock record, but it is certainly one of the best - only inferior to Highway 61 and Born to Run in terms of rock pastiche. The reworking of “Gloria” that opens the album turns a bar band classic by Van Morrison's Them into a hymn of sexual and spiritual liberation. The “Land” suite on side two is a tremendous accomplishment that manages to stand up on repeat listens despite its length. This is simply as good as it gets when it comes to rock music. I eagerly await the day when I can listen to it as a complete work as it spins on my turntable.      

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

My week with Last FM

http://www.last.fm/user/Blake1984

I'm sure most people reading this have heard of the social media / music site called Last FM. I had always been meaning to check it out and finally took the plunge last week.

My favorite thing about the service is if you install a "scrobber" (I installed one with Media Monkey and its been great) literally every track you listen to is cataloged on your profile. This not only shows your friends what you've been listening to, it allows them to see charts and rankings of your favorite songs and artists. You can also integrate it with facebook, something I'm still figuring out how to use most effectively.

I was struck by how accurate my artist rankings on Last FM compare to how I would rank my favorite bands and artists in real life.



Elvis Costello, Steve Earle and Billy Bragg all have a few less plays than my bottom 4 so things switch around quite a bit. My only issue is that artists like Elvis Costello aren't grouped with "Elvis Costello and the Attractions" or "Elvis Costello and the Imposters" - if they were EC would be my 3rd favorite artist which is more accurate than just plain old Elvis Costello being #12 but #8 with the attractions. Guided By Voices may be a bit too high as well, since they have so many short songs its pretty easy to rack up a ton of plays.

I would definitely recommend last FM as a way of seeing what you're actually listening to on your PC. I guess the fact that most of its features only make since if you actually listen to a lot of music on your computer might be a turn off to some folks. Feel free to "friend" me if you use the service, I'm always interested to see what people are listening to.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

100 Favorite Albums: Tom Waits - Bone Machine

With an artist like Tom Waits who has produced so many influential albums its easy for one to slip under the radar a bit. I listen to at least one Tom Waits album a week and most often its either Swordfishtrombones or Rain Dogs - or Small Change if I'm feeling loungey. Whenever I listen to Bone Machine though, I am reminded of its outright brilliance. After the Harry Partch experimentation of Tom's 80's releases Bone Machine finds him in a more bluesy and percussive mood. On the harder tracks there is a sense of swagger that reminds me of Heartattack and Vine. Lyrically the album is a collection of songs are either about death, murder or decay. In many ways I think its Tom's most spiritual album. I listened to it today for the first time in a long time and feel that it stands alongside his best work.

"Going Out West" is as good of a place to start as any

Thursday, September 30, 2010

100 Favorite Albums: Guided By Voices – Bee Thousand

 

A week from this Saturday my wife and I are heading to Seattle to see Guided By Voices for the very first time – to celebrate the occasion I decided to revisit the first Guided By Voices album I ever heard: Bee Thousand.

Bee Thousand is a very special record. While each Guided By Voices album certainly has its merits (especially Alien Lanes) the band would never release an album of comparable quality. Its a bell to bell classic and the best album of the 90’s as I see it.

Bee Thousand is steeped in what frontman Robert Pollard calls “the four P’s of Rock” - pop, punk rock ,progressive rock, and psychedelia. I think of it as a collection of anthems like “Gold Star for Robot Boy”, “Echos Myron” and “Tractor Rape Chain” surrounded by experimental tone pieces. Pollard certainly has a gift for melody and a special creative energy – but I’m often taken back by the quality of his lyrics. To a casual observer they may seem like nonsense but as far as I’m concerned they are incredibly powerful and evocative. Take “Tractor Rape Chain” for example:

“Parallel lines on a slow decline – Tractor Rape Chain”

My favorite song on Bee Thousand will always be “Gold Star for Robot Boy”. In a saner world this would have been a top 10 single. Heres hoping they play it in Seattle on 10/09.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Thanks Ted

Last night I saw Ted Leo for the 10th time at the Crystal Ballroom as part of Portland’s seminal Musicfest NW. As always with Ted, it was a great show. I also had the opportunity to see Ted play a radio session for KEXP and it was during that afternoon set at the Doug Fir Lounge with a vodka in my hand that I felt nostalgia creeping in. Those feelings returned later that night at the Crystal so I’d like to take the opportunity to reflect on them via blog post.

I did a little research this morning and realized that the first time I heard Ted Leo was in early 2003, over 7 years ago. It wasn’t a particularly great time in my life. I didn’t graduate high school the previous Spring (but damn did I do well on that GED test) and was living with my Mom at the time while working 5 days a week at an Ace Hardware - a job that I still have nightmares about to this day. Most of my friends were either still in high school and busy, or in college and gone. Several nights a week I would end up going on long drives with my friend Micah and think about how there wasn’t a single thing I really wanted to do with my life. I would typically stay up until 2 or 3 in the morning regardless of when I had to wake up the next day.

Some weekday night during this time frame I was watching the Conan O’Brien show and saw Ted Leo for the first time performing “Where have all the Rude Boys gone?”

It certainly wasn’t a life changing experience in and of itself, but listening to the two albums Ted had released at that point: Tyranny of Distance and Hearts of Oak – made me feel better about my life. Shortly after discovering his music I had the opportunity to see Ted play for the first time in the student union of Linfield College (I think…it might have been George Fox). I made the mistake of taking one of my friends that was still in high school and we ended up leaving before Ted even took the stage (although I did see him string up his guitar). Luckily for me it was only a few months later that Ted would return to Portland, this time on a solo tour that brought him to the now defunct Meow Meow club. The highlights I remember from this first show include a killer version of “The Sword in the Stone” – one of his most underrated songs in my opinion and a great cover of of the Split Enz classic “Six Months in a Leaky Boat”.

It should be noted that Ted Leo was the first real “indie” music I listened to regularly. More than that Ted was a gateway to another favorite artist of mine as his cover of “Keep on Pushing” inspired me to download a Curtis Mayfield compilation. At some point I realized that my three favorite musicians at that time: Eddie Vedder, Steve Earle and now Ted Leo all cited Bruce Springsteen as an influence. Around this same time I was seeing a girl who lived in Canada and we effectively broke up during a trip she took out here in August of 2003. After I dropped her off at the airport I was devastated and went to Best Buy to pick up a few CD’s to try to cheer myself up. The two albums I bought that evening were Bruce Springsteen’s Greatest Hits and Tunnel of Love. I didn’t take to them immediately - but before I knew it The Boss became a big part of my life and has been a constant ever since.

Later in 2003 I saw Ted Leo play with the Pharmacists at the (also now defunct) Nocturnal club. I saw him play there twice in a six month period so its hard for me to pick out highlights other than a killer cover of the Stiff Little Fingers “Suspect Device” and a show stopping “Ballad of a Sin Eater”. Its interesting to look back on these shows as I have no idea where these clubs were as I lived in the suburbs at the time and only went to Portland about once every few months and it always scared the crap out of me. It would have been hard for me to imagine then that only three years later I would be living in downtown Portland, hanging out all over the city and loving every minute of it.  

I saw a lot of great music in 2004 including Neil Young, Damien Rice w/ The Frames and another Ted Leo show at the Nocturnal. I met my wife online that summer before she moved here from California. I thought I’d send her some CD’s for her drive up and made sure to include a copy of Hearts of Oak. She would later tell me that she listened to it several times on that long drive up from California and loved it. Soon after she moved here we saw Ted play the Bossanova Ballroom (which isn’t closed, but no longer hosts rock shows) in what I’m pretty sure was her 2nd rock show while living in Portland (the first was Pearl Jam at the Showbox, fittingly enough). We saw him play the Bossanova again in February of 2005 drawing heavily on Shake the Sheets material, I vividly remember an awesome version of “Little Dawn” that had an extended bass solo because Ted broke a string – it ended up becoming one of those magical moments that have made live music such an addiction of mine.

We missed Ted when he played the Aladdin Theater that year because we were up in Vancouver to see Pearl Jam. Before the show that evening at GM Place we turned on the news and saw what hurricane Katrina had done to the city of New Orleans and that remains my most vivid memory from that trip although the Pearl Jam show was spectacular as always.  I’ll always regret not seeing Ted Leo play Victoria BC the next night since I didn’t have the opportunity to see him at all in 2006.

Ted played a blistering set at the Hawthorne Theater shortly after the release of Living with the Living in 2007 in what remains my favorite Ted Leo show to this day.  We were about 3 rows back with our friends Curtis and Maureen and I think we all had some serious hearing damage by the end of the evening. He added a second guitarist in the return of James Canty which gave his songs some added texture and an epic quality. Ted played a long set that included a set closing “Biomusicology” (my favorite song of his by that point), an encore opening “Timorous Me” and a cover of “Rappaport’s Testament (I never gave up)” that was especially moving. 

<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/13029146" width="400" height="273" frameborder="0"></iframe><p><a href="http://vimeo.com/groups/330/videos/13029146">Ted Leo- Rappaport's Testament (I Never Gave Up) live</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/user1814346">Andrew Pellegrino</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>

In 2008 we saw Ted Leo play twice on our honeymoon opening for Pearl Jam at Madison Square Garden. Both times the crowd was fairly apathetic. I recall overhearing a ten club member wondering out loud why Pearl Jam could never get a band like Silverchair or Bush to open for them. I shit you not. Ted Leo did play a great set that included some new material that would end up on The Brutalist Bricks and a great version of “Stove By a Whale”. The next time I saw Ted was another opening set, this time for Against Me at the Roseland Theater. I was by myself and left right after he finished because my wife was at home with a mean case of pink eye. He opened with a great version of “2nd Ave, 11 AM”.

I wouldn’t see Ted again until 2010 when he played two shows at the Doug Fir Lounge, one on a Saturday night followed all ages show on Sunday afternoon. The Saturday show was probably the better experience (aside from my good friend having to leave when his girlfriend at that time passed out) but the Sunday show had the better set list featuring some of my favorite songs from Tyranny of Distance. I finally got to see “Parallel or Together” – a Leo classic if there ever was one.            

So I guess I’ve actually seen him 11 times, 12 if you count that radio session yesterday afternoon. There have been some rumors lately of Ted possibly hanging it up or going into semi-retirement and the thought of that really bums me out. By all accounts Ted is a great guy and should obviously make whatever decision is best for him and his family. Having said that though, Ted and his music have been an integral part of my adult life and not having a constant stream of Ted Leo shows and records would be quite an adjustment for me. Theres something about Ted Leo’s music in general, but especially his live sets, that really inspires me and makes me feel like regardless of all the injustice and tragedy that has beset our country in the past decade that everything will be okay. Or as ted sings at the end of “Little Dawn” - “Its alright”

So thanks Ted. I hope I get to see you play this song again someday.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

100 Favorite Albums: Nas – Illmatic

 

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Many of you know that I’m not the greatest fan of the 90’s as a decade when it comes to music (or anything else really). But one thing about the 90’s that can’t be argued is both the quality and importance of hip hop music during that time. In the early to mid nineties you had three of the best hip hop records of all time dropping on the east coast during 93-94 -  36 Chambers by the Wu Tang Clan, Ready to Die by Notorious Big and Illmatic by Nas.

East coast inner-city life is fairly messed up to this day but it was especially bad in a pre-Giulianified New York City. Illmatic is an album that gets by on the strength of its singles like “Halftime”, “The World is Yours” and my favorite track: “Life’s a Bitch”

Its a convincing portrait of ghetto life that speaks truth to power in a way that only great music can. Its a shame that Nas has never been able to replicate his initial success. Theres something special about an artist being hungry, especially in hip hop. 

Thursday, September 2, 2010

2010 Greatness: CR Avery – The Great Canadian Novel

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As we enter the all important 4th quarter of this year (is it Basketball season yet?) its time to look at some of the noteworthy releases of 2010 before I start compiling that all-important “Best of 2010” blog post.

My love of CR Avery is deep and well documented. His short set opening up for Billy Bragg at the PNCA in 2008 is still seared in my memory and remains the best opening set I have ever seen. To give you some idea of how visceral the experience was – here’s a video of the tune he opened his set with:

 

CR comes as close as any performer I’m aware of to channel Tom Waits during his beat poet phase. On top of that, he’s also a killer pop songwriter.

His latest release The Great Canadian Novel is his best album yet (although his best song is still “Disclosure” from Chainsmoking Blues). It begins with the punchy guitar riffs of the hilarious and sardonic “Folk Singer” and transitions seamlessly to the bluegrass-meets-hip-hop of “Town to Town”. The record hits a soaring high with the epic track “Channeling Frustrated Energy”  - a torrent of verse poetry cascading over a Crazy Horse style riff interrupted by a blistering harmonica solo. The record ends with portrait of Pierre Trudeau and CR asserting his identity as a Canadian progressive.

This album will probably land somewhere in my top 5 favorite releases of this year when its all said and done – so needless to say I recommend you download it (legally) as soon as possible.

Monday, August 2, 2010

100 Favorite Albums: “Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely”

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**** out of *****

Although I thoroughly enjoy Come Dance with Me and Songs for Swingin’ Lovers this album is by far the best of the “concept albums” Sinatra released for Capital Records and made a lasting impact on the concept of an LP album as its own art form. Longtime collaborator Nelson Riddle is huge on this record, his lush arrangements set the melancholy tone and Sinatra sounds defeated, reflective and resentful simultaneously. This LP is best listened to alone on headphones while walking at night downtown and should be punctuated by hard alcohol of some kind. 

Start with:

New Music Review: Arcade Fire – The Suburbs

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**1/2 out of *****

I’d like to applaud Win Butler and the gang for having the courage to take a bold and decidedly unhip stance against the suburbs.

But seriously folks - did you know that growing up in the suburbs can be an alienating experience? You will after making it through these 16 tracks.  Win Butler and the Arcade Fire have been christened “The Next Springsteen” and the “Indie U2” by several critics but after listening to this album it seems obvious to me that Pink Floyd is the better analogy. Not since The Wall has there been an album with this many songs that so pedantically focuses on such a simple theme. Add in a melodramatic stage show, a fair amount of pretentiousness, “profound” lyrics that speak in platitudes and you have to wonder when Roger Waters will sue for royalties.

All the repetition might be easier to swallow if the record wasn’t so front loaded. There are six excellent songs that begin this album and make me wish that they had been released alone as an EP. Although you might not be able to tell from this review I really do like this band. Funeral is in my top 100 albums and Neon Bible had its moments. I’m afraid that this band will fall in to the trap that so many bands have and churn out a steady stream of releases that have a handful of memorable moments surrounded by mediocrity.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

My 100 Favorite Albums

 
Folks,
 
I’ve been meaning to post this for some time. I recently updated the list so now seemed as good a time as any to do a blog re-launch. My goal is to keep my writing honed by posting fairly regularly  so I’m planning on writing a short review of each of the albums on here.
 
These are my 100 favorite albums in chronological order (for the most part). This list can, and should change periodically.
 
Album Name Artist Year Rating

Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely


Frank Sinatra
1958 4
Highway 61 Revisited Bob Dylan 1965 5
Rubber Soul The Beatles 1965 4.25
The Exciting Wilson Pickett Wilson Pickett 1966 4.25
Complete & Unbelievable: The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul Otis Redding 1966 4.5
Revolver The Beatles 1966 4.5
Pet Sounds The Beach Boys 1966 5
Scott 4 Scott Walker 1969 4
Let it Bleed Rolling Stones 1969 4
Moondance Van Morrison 1970 4.75
Roots Curtis Mayfield 1971 4
Whats Goin' On? Marvin Gaye 1971 4.5
Harvest Neil Young 1972 4
Superfly Curtis Mayfield 1972 5
The Wild, The Innocent and the E Street Shuffle Bruce Springsteen 1973 4.25
Horses Patti Smith 1975 4.75
Born to Run Bruce Springsteen 1975 5
Small Change Tom Waits 1976 4.75
The Clash (UK) The Clash 1977 4.75
My Aim is True Elvis Costello 1977 4.5
This Year's Model Elvis Costello 1978 5
Darkness on the Edge of Town Bruce Springsteen 1978 5
Armed Forces Elvis Costello 1979 4.75
London Calling The Clash 1979 4.75
The River Bruce Springsteen 1980 4.5
Big City Merle Haggard 1981 4.25
Imperial Bedroom Elvis Costello 1982 4
Combat Rock The Clash 1982 4.25
Nebraska Bruce Springsteen 1982 5
Hi, How Are You? Daniel Johnston 1983 4.5
Murmur REM 1983 4.5
Swordfishtrombones Tom Waits 1983 4.75
Born in the USA Bruce Springsteen 1984 4
Tim The Replacements 1985 4
Rain Dogs Tom Waits 1985 5
Life's a Riot with Spy vs Spy Billy Bragg 1986 4.25
Talking with the Taxman about Poetry Billy Bragg 1988 4
Pleased to Meet Me The Replacements 1987 4.25
It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold us Back Public Enemy 1988 4
Guitar Town Steve Earle 1988 4.5
Damaged Black Flag 1990 4.5
Reckoning REM 1984 4.5
Bandwagonesque Teenage Fanclub 1991 4
Don't Try This at Home Billy Bragg 1991 4
Ten Pearl Jam 1991 4.25
Frenching the Bully The Gits 1992 4
Life's Rich Pageant REM 1986 4
VS Pearl Jam 1993 4.75
Exile in Guyville Liz Phair 1993 4.5
Illmatic Nas 1994 4.75
Vitalogy Pearl Jam 1994 4.75
Bee Thousand Guided By Voices 1994 5
Alien Lanes Guided By Voices 1995 4.75
The Ghost of Tom Joad Bruce Springsteen 1995 4
I Feel Alright Steve Earle 1996 4.5
Brighten the Corners Pavement 1997 4.25
OK Computer Radiohead 1997 5
Stranger's Almanac Whiskeytown 1997 5
Mermaid Avenue Vol 1 Billy Bragg and Wilco 1998 5
The Pilgrim Marty Stuart 1999 4
Bone Machine Tom Waits 1992 4
Summerteeth Wilco 1999 4.25
The Mountain Steve Earle 1999 4.75
Supreme Clientele Ghostface Killah 2000 4
Heartbreaker Ryan Adams 2000 5
Kid A Radiohead 2000 4.25
Tyranny of Distance Ted Leo 2001 4.5
O Damien Rice 2002 4
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot Wilco 2002 4.5
Jerusalem Steve Earle 2002 4.5
The Rising Bruce Springsteen 2002 4.5
The Fine Art of Self Destruction Jesse Malin 2003 4
One Beat Sleater-Kinney 2003 4.25
Love and Distance Helio Sequence 2003 4.25
Decoration Day Drive-By Truckers 2003 5
Hearts of Oak Ted Leo 2003 4.75
Love is Hell
pts 1 and 2
Ryan Adams 2003 4.5
Funeral Arcade Fire 2004 4.25
Shake the Sheets Ted Leo 2004 4.25
The Dirty South Drive-By Truckers 2004 4.75
The Woods Sleater-Kinney 2004 4.75
Little Rock Hayes Carll 2004 4
Alligator The National 2005 4
Separation Sunday The Hold Steady 2005 4
Bang Bang Rock & Roll Art Brut 2005 4
Smile Brian Wilson 2005 4.5
Boys and Girls in America The Hold Steady 2006 5
Magic Bruce Springsteen 2007 4.5
Ash Wednesday Elvis Perkins 2007 4.25
Pseudosix Pseudosix 2007 4.5
Magic Hour
Sailor Songs
CR Avery 2007 4
Boxer The National 2007 5
This Is It & I Am It & You Are It & So Is That & He Is It & She Is It & It Is It & That Is That Marnie Stern 2008 4.25
We Brave Bee Stings and All Thao with the Get Down Stay Down 2008 4.25
Seven Mile Island Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit 2009 4
Rose City Viva Voce 2009 4
Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix Phoenix 2009 4.5
American Slang Gaslight Anthem 2010 4.5
The Archandroid Janelle Monae 2010 4.75
The Final Sessions Hank Williams (Various) 4.5