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So Floating Points is 1 in RA and 47 in The Wire. I genuinely love these lists for this reason alone.
So Floating Points is 1 in RA and 47 in The Wire. I genuinely love these lists for this reason alone.
Well, it's that time of the year again and Rough Trade have just released their top 100.
1. Bjork – Vulnicura
2. Father John Misty – I Love You, Honeybear
3. Courtney Barnett – Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit
4. Ezra Furman – Perpetual Motion People
5. Max Richter – From Sleep
6. Wolf Alice – My Love Is Cool
7. Kamasi Washington – The Epic
8. Royal Headache – High
9. Romare – Projections
10. Jamie XX – In Colour
I have made 60 plus purchases so far this year (40 plus gigs as well), it's been a bumper year for me with some memorable albums and shows. I have 4 of their top 10. I couldn't find the text version of their top 100 so if someone can paste it I'll be appreciative.
I'll get the "it's early, there's still 6 weeks of the year to go" and the "it's just a marketing ploy for Xmas" out the way so we can all concentrate on the task at hand.
Like last time I'm going to just give my top 5 otherwise I feel its more just a list of what I've listened to as opposed to the true highlights of my year.
[MENTION=28490]Machiavelli[/MENTION] The Joshua Abrams album in the Wire list is right up your street, I think. You may even already have it.
Three tracks here - http://eremite.com/album/mte-63-64
And another here is all I can find
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KETy2ArUsUg
4th: Jamie XX - In Colour
Lucky enough to see 3 of them live this year too. 2015 has been fantastic.
10. Oneohtrix Point Never – Garden of Delete (Warp)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jt5tRaV3iY0
'Daniel Lopatin has established a remarkable chronology of challenging and experimental electronic releases under the alias Oneohtrix Point Never throughout the last 10 years. He has continually baffled and wondered audiences with his unique vision of space music, crafting wonderlands that expand beyond the usual expectations of electronica.
Garden of Delete is probably his most audacious project yet and the one that will most likely solidify his place among the upper echelon of computer producers. He's almost reached Richard D. James status now and the fandom for his music among the next generation of young producers is justifiably ravenous.'
http://www.thefourohfive.com/music/review/oneohtrix-point-never-garden-of-delete-144
9. Follakzoid – III (Sacred Bones)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=coBQQMxJlSo
“It wasn’t always exactly thus. Föllkzoid have always operated at the more psychedelic, prog rock end of the musical spectrum, but their self-titled debut album was heavier, and took slightly more from the blues-rock tradition from which the original wave of krautrock deviated. Their second LP, II, with galactic cover art and expansive, repetitious jams, took more of a space rock direction. III takes things further still, yet it reins the mood in more tightly.
The guitar is now less prominent; the shape of the sound is dictated by prominent basslines and those motorik drum patterns. The music is minimal – minimal in the same way that minimal techno is minimal, with subtle adjustments to pitch and tone. At times there is more detail going on within the mix than might be apparent on the surface: there are scratched frets and whispering static sounds that could be digital, analogue or organic. Occasionally, the guitar is freed from the constraints seemingly imposed upon it by the ruthless rhythms, and it unwinds; this is the case in Piure, which tends towards post-rock almost as much as it does toward krautrock.
http://www.musicomh.com/reviews/albums/follakzoid-iii#uA5WH5SfC7DAevkI.99
8. Blanck Mass – Dumb Flesh (Sacred Bones)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MG0sxc4bTVo
“It doesn't feel appropriate to describe Benjamin John Power's music as "noise". As either one half of **** Buttons, or in his solo guise as Blanck Mass, there is simply far too much melody, askew beauty and demented euphoric energy going on in his output for reductive genre labels to capture it all. Not that it isn't noise too. It's loud, and prone to puzzlingly appearing in Olympic ceremonies, and so forth. There's also an expansive, at times pop orientated, at times brutal, assessable idiosyncrasy to his work that feels wholly of its own.”
http://thequietus.com/articles/17908-blanck-mass-dumb-flesh-review
7. Viet Cong – Viet Cong (Jagjaguwar)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOLIHJKCu8M
“The four-piece includes two members of sadly defunct Women, whose own noisy, abrasive tendencies won them lots of love. It's a mystery how singer/bassist Matt Flegel (sometimes sounding like Spencer Krug) and company can combine frenzied shards of guitar lines, chilly ambience, bulldozer drumming and lyrical bleakness - "If we're lucky we'll get old and die" - into something so appealing.
For one, the songcraft is high, balancing repetitive groove with dynamic surprises. There's so much variety here, from icy Joy Divisionesque excursions (Silhouettes) to Guided by Voices-through-an-echo-chamber mood (Continental Shelf) to melodic hooks (Bunker Buster) to howling post-punk fury (Death). It lends huge excitement to the project.
Eleven-minute closer Death is the perfect example: every few minutes it arrives at another astonishing place.”
https://nowtoronto.com/music/album-reviews/viet-cong/
6. Julia Holter – Have You In My Wilderness (Domino)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VosSz4pUa4U
“The result is a genuinely exceptional and entrancing album, opaque but effective, filled with beautiful, skewed songs, unconventional without ever feeling precious or affected. From the title downwards, you’re struck by the sense of an artist who once seemed austere and forbidding beckoning you into their world. It’s an invitation that’s hard to resist.”
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2015/sep/24/julia-holter-have-you-in-my-wilderness-review
5. Mbongwana Star – From Kinshsha (Atlantic)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJCwfjl_sXc
“The video for Mbongwana Star’s debut single, Malukayi, was a mysterious and rather compelling thing. Figures loom out of a low-lit, smoke-wreathed gloom: a dancer, a frantic percussionist, a couple of middle-aged men in wheelchairs, and, most intriguingly, a spaceman wandering the streets of Kinshasa. The latter seemed like the perfect metaphor for a track that seemed to have fallen out of the sky, that somehow managed to be both identifiably Congolese – you can’t mistake the amplified likembes of guest stars Konono No 1 – and utterly unlike anything else the fertile Kinshasa music scene had yet produced: hypnotic rhythm patterns that clattered and echoed as if they were being played at the end of a vast tunnel; vocals coated with so much distortion they sounded like something picked up on a shortwave radio; a beautiful, keening male voice marooned over spacey electronics and mournful gusts of feedback to eerie effect.”
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2015/may/14/mbongwana-star-from-kinshasa-review
4. Panda Bear – Panda Bear Meets The Grim Reaper (Domino)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3-bVmwidGc
“ To say Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper is a textural album is probably stating the obvious, but it very much is, in a way where the individual tracks feel simultaneously adventurous and tamed, like a dog that knows deep down it’s descended from wolves, wild at heart. “Boys Latin” works from a template of vocal stretching, with Lennox’s rubbery words acting like ping pong balls moving so fast, all the listener can pick up is the light trail of where they once were. “Come to Your Senses” chugs along like a goopy train. “Tropic of Cancer” literally sounds like a heaven in the clouds with angels playing harps. It’s all so evocative, it becomes hard for the listener to get the “dark and abrasive” subject matter that Lennox alludes to in interviews, specifically with Boiler Room, where he notes the album is “about presenting something that we don’t have an easy time dealing with in a costume that’s just a little bit more clown-y.“
http://www.pastemagazine.com/articl...-panda-bear-meets-the-grim-reaper-review.html
3. GNOD – Infinity Machines (Rocket Records)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=im2oZGIwxX0
“Infinity Machines, throughout, is as human an album as has been made this year. When Tim Gray made his drone composition Polyhedrons, he linked his master’s thesis on using music as an intentionally therapeutic asset. Though they utilize the same tools, GNOD’s created a brutally raw release that laughs in the face of anything providing solace. While Thomas Hobbes reminded us that life is brutish, nasty, and short, the world in which these lives are played out is large and imposing, inescapable and challenging. An album commanded by machines, few releases could tap into our terrifying mortality like this.”
http://www.popmatters.com/review/193321-gnod-infinity-machines/
2. Lonelady – Hinterland (Warp)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-J0gmOkaak0
“In Hinterland, the follow-up to 2010's Nerve Up, LoneLady's Julie Campbell has created a thoroughly modern record that doesn't simply nod to its forebears in its zeal for an analogue approach to recording, or the self-evident groove of A Certain Ratio's basslines. No. Here Campbell is riffing on the myth of Manchester itself, revelling in revealing – rather than breaking down – the fourth wall. Influences are worn playfully – a lick here, a beat there – and processes are revealed. "Put a record on/make a connection," she sings in 'Bunkerpop', a self-reflexive treatise on the genesis of the album, the very act of creativity as Campbell's subject. Walking through the city, treading the familiar ground of post-punk desolation, she seeks out the scars her idols have scorched on the city, exploring how these post-industrial histories – indeed, very fewherstories – form a perceived Northern psyche. "I feel you here right in the hollows", she sings. "You can't stop this Bunkerpop".”
http://thequietus.com/articles/17500-lonelady-hinterland-review
1. Jlin – Dark Energy (Planet Mu)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQcJEHKHRc0
“This feel is very much Jlin's own. Based not in Chicago but neighbouring Gary, Indiana, she's developed a musical dialect that sets her apart from her footwork peers. For one thing, she mostly foregoes sampling in favour of abrasive digital synthesis. For another, her use of rhythm is unique. Much of footwork's twitchy funk comes from the way different grooves compete for dominance. Jlin favours just one rolling triplet feel, which can stomp along mercilessly or break apart into a mess of whirring tom-toms and hi-hats. The effect is often apocalyptic.”
http://www.residentadvisor.net/review-view.aspx?id=16763