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Your Top 5 Albums of 2005

 
  

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Matthew Fluxington
21:02 / 30.12.05
I don't really do year-end lists, but this is my Pazz and Jop ballot. It's not the most accurate thing in the world, and loads of things get ommitted for extremely limited space.

-----

Dear Matthew Perpetua:

Thank you for your submission - your votes have been recorded.

Your Pazz & Jop albums ballot was submitted as follows:

1. Fiona Apple - Extraordinary Machine - Epic/Clean Slate (15)
2. New Pornographers - Twin Cinema - Matador (14)
3. M.I.A. - Arular - Interscope (13)
4. Robyn - Robyn - Konichiwa (12)
5. A Frames - Black Forest - Sub Pop (11)
6. Spoon - Gimme Fiction - Merge (10)
7. Girls Aloud - Chemistry - Polydor (7)
8. Fiery Furnaces - Rehearsing My Choir - Rough Trade (7)
9. Stephen Malkmus - Face The Truth - Matador (6)
10. Broadcast - Tender Buttons - Warp (5)

Your Pazz & Jop singles ballot was submitted as follows:

1. Kelly Clarkson - Since U Been Gone - RCA
2. Maxi Geil & Playcolt - Makin' Love In The Sunshine - Roebling Hall
3. Mike Jones - Still Tippin' - Asylum
4. Spektrum - May Day - Non Stop
5. Out Hud - It's For You - Kranky
6. Sugababes - Push The Button - Island
7. Rachel Stevens - I Said Never Again (But Here We Are) - Polydor
8. Pipettes - Dirty Mind - Memphis Industries
9. Lady Sovereign - Random - Chocolate Industries
10. Rinocerose - Bitch - V2

I wanted to include R. Kelly's "Trapped In The Closet" for the singles list, but there was a rule stating that each part of that song was to be counted as a discrete entity, and since I couldn't single out a favorite chapter and had no desire to split the song's vote, I opted to omit it from my list entirely. I'm kinda annoyed about that. With this list, I followed three self-imposed rules to narrow things down - the songs must have been released as an actual single in 2005 (so no album tracks, disqualifying a lot of remarkable material), no songs from artists on the albums list, and only one song per artist. (This is why Mike Jones' "Back Then" was omitted.)
 
 
Keith, like a scientist
22:12 / 30.12.05
05. P-Love - All Up In Your Mind (Bully Records)
P-Love rose to fame helping Kid Koala on his tours, both being Montreal natives. Then Marco Bully got a hold of him to do some 7"s for his Sixtoo affliated label. This is a lovely lovely album, full of warm and beautiful melodies, crisp drums, and uncommon for an album of this sound, all played live, mostly by P-Love himself. Instrumental hip hop with an electronic influence is the order of the day here. Fans of Express Rising, Sixtoo, Blockhead, etc. would do well to check it out!
"St-Viateur Shuffle, Part II"

04. Odd Nosdam - Burner (Anticon)
A good relationship with your local record store owner can really be conducive to discovering new music. He was going on and on one day about this album, and I was very hesitate because I have an aversion to some of the singing on Anticon releases, and have been burned before. But this instrumental album by Nosdam was a revelation. Like a melting pot of noise, cut n paste, beats, found sound, and DIY ethics, it quickly became the soundtrack to a book I was reading and ended up being played on repeat all night one night. Nothing else seemed so perfect. There is so much detail and so many ideas encapsulated in this. Totally fascinating.
"Small Mr Man Pants"

03. Prefuse 73 - Surrounded By Silence/Reads The Books (Warp Records)
Scott Herren's main project is back with a vengeance on this collaboration heavy album, and it's The Books collaboration companion EP. I have to say that all the collaborations on his album work to such an extent I didn't think possible with Herren's hectic and dense mixture. The MC tracks bang appropriately, and the guest musician tracks seem to show a evolution of the Prefuse 73 style into a much more melody driven affair. Favorites include the Ghostface/El-P track, the Pedro track, the Books track, and the Nobody track. The Books EP builds on the brilliance of "Pagina Dos" and shows more of a true collaboration between the two sounds. Always an artist to track, Herren is fast becoming one of this decade's masters.
"Gratis"

02. Sage Francis - A Healthy Distrust (Epitaph)
Terribly terribly underrated and underexposed this year, Sage's latest offering is one of the most perfect hip-hop albums I heard all year. From the first "SAGE" military samples to the sparse Johnny Cash tribute at the end, this albums is a soul poured out in sound. You are seriously damaged inside if you don't get chills listening to the Alias produced collaboration with Will Oldham, "Sea Lion." Utterly brilliant folk-rock/hip-hop hybrid. My second favorite track is easily the dark Controller 7 produced "Agony In Her Body," which unfurls as an epic tale of love and hurt. Sixtoo turns in a couple of tracks, as well, the best being "Ground Control," a brutal banger. The theme of this album is distrust, certainly, but distrust of not just what you would expect, but also love, emotion, feeling. Sage bares his soul here and in so doing presents a powerful statement of ideals.
"Sea Lion"

01. ElekTro4 - Keystroke One (Bully Records)
I played the shit out of this album for a month when it came out, and I wasn't even a big fan of his first 7" for Bully. Not sure what it was, but this album really amazed me. Being a fairly well-mined genre latey, instrumental hip-hop is hard to make impressive at this point, but Elektro4 certains brings some of the most interesting concoctions on this one. The fairly upbeat first half of the album rolls along with all the grace of the most classic hip-hop of the 90s, while the second half gets a little more serious and complicated. "The Explain Nation" is one track that has amazed me all year. The drums on this in particular are incredible. The other thing I enjoyed about this album is that it tries to musically describe an experience, living in the city of New York, and the emotions uniquely tied to that city. Nothing I can say can do this album justice.
"The Explain Nation"
 
 
Stoat-ROW ROW FIGHT THE POWAH
05:15 / 31.12.05
Umm... Flux, that's a list.
 
 
matthew.
05:49 / 31.12.05
I forgot Ben Folds' Songs for Silverman. What a great album. Rock-pop guys who need a lesson - look to Ben Folds, writer of "punk for pussies".
 
 
Boboss
12:32 / 31.12.05
Yeah, that is a list, Flux. I appreciate that you write at great length about music elsewhere, and that you sort of qualified your post by saying that you don't do end of year lists, buuuut, well, you don't get special treatment.
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
15:51 / 31.12.05
Stoatie, I understand the rules of this thread, and that's why I didn't bother with it, but the guy wanted me to participate, so I put that ballot here to satisfy curiosity. I've written about all of that stuff before and all of it is easily google-able if you're dying to know more.
 
 
Stoat-ROW ROW FIGHT THE POWAH
19:08 / 31.12.05
But think of the children! What kind of example are we setting?

(point taken, btw, and a happy new year to you... but people HAVE had their posts removed from this thread for just that. I know you're a million miles from lazy when it comes to this kind of thing, but lots of posters may not).
 
 
Boboss
19:35 / 31.12.05
For those that don't know.

Fluxblog
 
 
Boboss
19:36 / 31.12.05
Oh, and I'm really happy to see so many Twin Cinema recommendations.
 
 
rizla mission
15:00 / 03.01.06
I spit on your Top 5s! Have a Top 10;

The Mountain Goats – The Sunset Tree (4AD)

If we’re basically talking fucking great songs that’ll make even the most jaded amongst us sit up and take notice, laugh, cry, whatever… well then nobody on earth beats the Mountain Goats current form.

Herman Dune – Not on Top LP & Jackson Heights EP (Track & Field)

The latest instalments of the Herman Dune saga, and perhaps the best batch of songs these modern day heroes have cooked up yet. Not since the glory days of Leonard Cohen has listening to nomadic, bohemian Jewish guys singing their diaries been so much fun. And thinking about it, this also has zombies and giants and swearwords and singalong choruses and stuff, and is thus a lot more fun.

Oneida – The Wedding (Rough Trade)

I would hereby like to withdraw my initial reticence about this album being more of a grab-bag of ideas than a cohesive whole. Because what a fucking bag of ideas it is! Who else could storm through such an evocative mix of star-gazing pop majesty, crazed acid-punk shred and menacing pagan psychedelia with enough energy and sense of purpose to emerge with one of the best albums of the year? Nobody, that’s who. Discerning heads are gonna be diving into this one for pearls for decades to come.

Dead Meadow – Feathers (Matador)

If you are me, Dead Meadow are incapable of disappointing. This album sees them playing down their trademark Sabbath-on-acid dirge in order to explore slightly more blissed out realms of sweet, intertwining guitar leads and murky cosmic haze, but it’s still head-meltingly good gear, with their bold excursions into catchy, acoustic psych-pop emerging particularly triumphant, and highlighting the song-writing prowess behind the bong-blasting racket.

Helen Love – Bubblegum Killers EP (Sympathy for the Record Industry)

Just when we’d given up hope, four new Helen Love songs crash into our world on shiny pink vinyl and flip our wigs anew with their pristine joy-punk perfection yet again. “Debbie (hearts) Joey” is number one all over heaven.

Six Organs of Admittance – School of the Flower (Drag City)

Expecting to love it from the word go, I was initially a bit underwhelmed by this album – the perfectly realised psyche-folk compositions Ben Chasny presents herein don’t immediately stand out as being particularly weird or cosmic or experimental or loud or complex or whatever else us jaded music junkies may hope for, but that’s not what Chasny’s aiming at – he’s just putting his all into making genuinely beautiful, conventionally harmonic yet mysterious music that only an idiot could fail to get utterly drawn into on a summer evening walk or a long drift off the sleep – basically School of the Flower is a pure fucking pleasure that’s grown on me like fungus.

Birchville Cat Motel – Chi Vampires (Celebrate Psi Phenomena)

The first track on here sounds like a universal god butterfly trapped in an oil lamp. The second track sounds like the extended death rattle of a pre-industrial agrarian paradise being crushed by dark, satanic mills. The final track goes metal with enough majesty and ferocity to make the Sunn 0)))/Earth axis pause for thought and generally feels like a million bats blotting out the sky forever, culminating in what sounds like Bela Lugosi’s granddad broadcasting bloodcurdling revolutionary pronouncements from deep in the Ural mountains. So a fairly good listen all round really.

Low – the Great Destroyer (Rough Trade)

To my mind, this is the best album Low have ever done. The move towards a far more immediate and, um, assertive..? state of mind is a real shot in the arm for the band and, perhaps more to the point, there’s an almost unbroken hit rate here when it comes to stunning songs. Would make my top 10 on the strength of “Death of a Salesman” alone, but add “Just Stand Back”, “California”, “When I Go Deaf”, “Singing Everybody’s Song” etc. – well it’s just a great album in the classic sense. They were great live too – I never thought I’d live to see Alan Sparhawk doing Townhend-esque windmills on his geetar!

Edan – Beauty & the Beat (Lexx)

Outkast aside, this is the only new hip-hop album that’s really grabbed my attention since, well, I don’t even remember when. Anyway, it’s great. It sounds kind of like if one of the lesser members of the Wu-Tang Clan had played the Brian Wilson card and disappeared after ‘36 Chambers’ to spend a decade cooking up a totally whacked out psychedelic concept album. But even if you don’t dig the psyche thing, this shit is just so sharp and concise and FUN TO LISTEN TO that it’s modest half an hour blows the 80 minute monuments to macho bluster many other rappers have to offer completely out of the water.

Now there’s a bit of a scuffle going on for 10th place, and I can’t really make up my mind, so let’s call it a draw between;

Jeffrey & Jack Lewis – City & Eastern Songs (Rough Trade)
Featuring ‘Williamsburg Will Oldham Horror’ and some other great songs too!

Alexander Tucker – Old Fog (ATP)
More folk, more paganism, more beastly, bearded business with weird acoustic guitar tunings in the dead of night... another guy for me to proclaim a genius.

Vashti Bunyan – lookaftering (FatCat)
Not just a dead-cert for comeback of the year, but one of the loveliest bunches of songs too.

And if this Top 10 was a Top 23 or something stupid like that, I would also have loved to include;

Fursaxa – lepidoptera
A Hawk and a Hacksaw – darkness at noon
Boris – akuta no uto
Tunng – mother’s daughter & other songs
Afri Rampo – kore ga mayaku da
Lucky Luke – patrick the survivor
Nagisa Ne Ti – dream sounds
Stephen Malkmus – face the truth
Gang Gang Dance – god’s money
Hot Snakes - audit in progress
Alastair Roberts – no earthly man
The Research – I love you but.. (single)
Love as Laughter – laughter’s fifth
 
 
lord nuneaton savage
13:24 / 04.01.06
Well I'm not sure if it's because I've been mainly buying reissues (if those count then let me know and I'll go into some detail on my favourites) or maybe because I've just been so utterly underwhelmed by the recent crop of dudes with scratchy guitars rubbish, but I'm not sure that 2005 has been such a great year for music at all.

Yes, I've heard some great stuff but most of it has been on blogs, from bands who are some way away from releasing a full-length debut. As a result I'll just list two for now and maybe come back later when I've looked through my records.

First off:
Death From Above 1979: "You're a Woman, I'm a Machine".
The opening blast of mega-distorto bass on this album rates as one of my musical "OH-FUCKING-YES" moments of the year. It's insanely catchy, monstrously loud and leaves me with a stupid grin all over my handsome features. It's brilliant to hear an album where no concessions are made to either melody, groove or blasting noise, but rather where the three co-exist so comfortably.

And second
Circulus: "The Lick on the Tip of an Envelope Yet to be Sent"
Yes, a lot of people seem to think that Mojo invented them as a joke, and to look at them you could be convinced that those people were right. However, this album is so simple and open hearted, a stone gas from beginning to end, that you can forget about the tabards and just concentrate on the fact that what we have here is the best album of British Psych Folk (Fairport school) since the early 70s. The track "Orpheus" also has one of the most fearsome grooves of the year. How can it not be when it has what sounds like a crumhorn on it. More Crumhorns in rock, say I!
(and, lest we forget, they have a bloke on the cover in a suit of armour PLAYING A MOOG! Fan-bloody-tastic).
 
 
Fly Beezy (War Minister)
12:22 / 05.01.06
Boboss, I've been holding fire because, as always seems to be the way at the end (and therefore start) of a year, I've recently got my hands on a pile of new music, including several albums released in 2005 that I have high hopes for but haven't really had the chance to get to know yet.

Also, 2005 for me has been characterised by albums that were very good, but far from perfect. Not that perfect albums come along very often, but somehow this year has been more filled with albums that I've had reservations about than the last couple of years, with less in the way of obvious 100% classics. Which is not to say that 2005 has been a bad year for music in any sense - this may all just be a reflection of how the way I listen to music has changed, as like autopilot I'm now often about tracks more than I am about whole albums - or rather, more specifically, in 2005 I tended to be about bunches of songs - four songs by this artist, half an album by that one.

The point of all this rambling is that it seems harder than ever to pick out a top five, and then to say why these albums and not others... That being said, I'll give it a shot, but I might have to do it individual posts in order to ensure I say as much as I feel the thread deserves about each record.

So, in no particular order, let's start with:

The Kills - No Wow
Stripped-down, sexy, bluesy rock'n'roll. It tastes like black leather, Jack Daniels, fag smoke, all those worn-out but delicious cliches. Some of it is cowboy music, all dusty dirt roads and deserted small-town stations. Some of it is sex music, all sticky fingers and torn shirts. Like all rock'n'roll, you're being sold a myth, a lie - but The Kills know it's a lie, and bother to make the myth worth buying into, which is what makes this a great album.
Highlights you should download: 'Love Is A Deserter', 'Murdermile', 'At The Back Of The Shell'
 
 
Fly Beezy (War Minister)
12:32 / 05.01.06
LCD Soundsystem - LCD Soundsystem
Odd the way this sometimes happens - I was hotly anticipating this before its release, then when it arrived I had that brief period of disillusionment. Then I got to the end of the year and released I'd been listening to it all year on and off, and that it might well be a more consistent album than pretty much anything else I'd heard. (I'm now going to nick and adapt a couple of sentences I wrote about some of this album elsewhere.) The contradiction at the heart of LCD Soundsystem is as follows: James Murphy's lyrics are so often about himself or other people being uptight and yet the music that LCD Soundsystem make, at its best, is unmistakably, gloriously body music. It's music for going out and getting 'faced to and dancing like a broken robot, and it's a song for listening to in a fit of angst a few days later when you remember the terrible things you did and can take no comfort from the fact that everybody makes mistakes. (Nicking ends.) Also, LCD Soundsystem capture a series of emotions which are quite personal and private to me, something I haven't seen or heard expressed that well elsewhere: a cycle of anticipation, excitement and aspiration followed by disillusionment, cynicism and alienation, and then back up you go again when something new captures you. We could be talking about music, drugs, sex, love, socialising, or just life itself. Okay, I'm getting too Thought For The Day here. So quick diversion: 'Never As Tired As When I'm Waking Up' contains the best Beatles homage ever, and I didn't even think that was possible any more.

Highlights: 'Tribulations', 'On Repeat', 'Daft Punk Is Playing At My House'
 
 
Mike Modular
15:17 / 05.01.06
'Never As Tired As When I'm Waking Up' contains the best Beatles homage ever, and I didn't even think that was possible any more

Really? See, for me, that's the track that spoils the album. In the middle of all this exciting and fun modern music they do a Dear Prudence rip-off which only serves to remind me of Oasis, Weller and the like. Which is, like, Not A Good Thing and something I thought we'd all moved on from. I see what your saying, but it felt pretty pointless to me.

Anyway, interruption over, please carry on...
 
 
Fly Beezy (War Minister)
15:26 / 05.01.06
But it doesn't sound anything like Oasis or Weller. Anyway, to my ears it manages to both a) genuinely recall the kind of drugged-out drawl of the best bits of The White Album, and b) fit into the album, admittedly as a point of rest. It fits thematically because you have to have the moments of bleary-eyed exhaustion as well as the hyper highs, and because it seems to be about the difficulty of monogamy/relationships, that stuff about the impulse to "run outside to fuck someone" to show "it didn't mean a thing", which I can't help but think is connected to the "do I want to be a hipster hedonist or am I sickened by it?" questions elsewhere...

I did think the LCD Soundsystem album was badly sequenced for the first six months or so of the year, but I sort of forget about that after enough listens.
 
 
Mike Modular
16:07 / 05.01.06
I didn't say it sounded like Oasis or Weller, just that it reminds me of them because it sounds like the Beatles. Whereas you could see past this and enjoy such a pastiche in 2005, I couldn't get over the fact that it recalls some of the worst aspects of Britpop (I mean, bits of it are exactly like Dear Prudence) and it felt like a step back in terms of musical ideas. This might just be my problem, but it still means I have some difficulty enjoying that track which otherwise has some great lyrics and (borrowed) atmosphere like you say.
 
 
Fly Beezy (War Minister)
16:40 / 05.01.06
Ladytron - Witching Hour
As I write this, it is absolutely fucking freezing outside. I always find that British winters demand specifically winter music, so thank the gods for Ladytron, who dropped their third album at just the right time a few months ago. The ominous, stately 'Beauty #2' is as frosty and gorgeous and scary as Tilda Swinton in a sled. 'Fighting In Built-Up Areas' does exactly what it says on the tin, as they say: it's brutally brutal brutalist techno which is cold like a derelict housing estate in Eastern Europe heated only by those burning barrel thingies. 'International Dateline' is chilly but warm like being wrapped up in your coat on a late-night train journey, watching rain and hail beat on the windows and dark countryside fly by. Ladytron have always been a wonderful band with wonderful fans, but this is probably their most complete, accomplished album. Witching Hour sounds like everyone from My Bloody Valentine to the Pet Shop Boys via Black Box Recorder - it sounds like Ladytron - it's somehow the same as their first album but richer, deeper, more widely travelled. Oh, and they are totally out of the Goth closet.
Highlights: 'International Dateline', 'Beauty #2', 'Destroy Everything You Touch'
 
 
Hulk
19:12 / 05.01.06
Just thought i'd add a couple of thoughts to this thread- folks please don't feel you have to restrict yourselves to the top 5 as stated in the thread title (seth i want to know what you've got to say!) I know its only a starting point but i really enjoy hearing what the best records were- it gives you a really good chance to catch up on stuff that you missed so if you have ten or just the one or two i personally would love to hear your recommendations.

To follow up on earlier posts i went out and bought the New Pornographers 'Twin Cinema' today- having gone back to the tracks i downloaded earlier in the year and realised a great record had passed me by- so thanks for the reminder.

I have also downloaded tracks by The Mountain Goats, The Animal Collective, dEUS (who i used to love- but somehow forgot about?) and LCD soundsystem (i had never even thought hearing an 'album' - i'd just enjoyed Daft Punk is playing in my house and forgot about them...) I went back, checked out and have been loving the last album by The Fall and really need to order Julian Copes Citizen Cain'd as they both skipped me by- "What About Us Ship- MAN!" is a chant to match many a Fall golden moment- marvelous.

On the flux thing- if we've deleted others from the thread then i would prefer not to make exceptions Moderator/ Barbelith old hand etc- so can the thread be ammended (which i think we would all prefer) or deleted please?
 
 
Fly Beezy (War Minister)
20:45 / 05.01.06
It's not because he's an old hand. It's because as he has said, he only posted in the thread because someone asked him to by name, and his thoughts on the music he's posted about can easily be found in the archives of Fluxblog.
 
 
Keith, like a scientist
22:28 / 05.01.06
Just thought i'd add a couple of thoughts to this thread- folks please don't feel you have to restrict yourselves to the top 5 as stated in the thread title

The 5 entries I picked are from my more expansive end of year wrap up...2005 was a Top Twenty this year. If you are so inclined, you can read it the blog I setup but hardly ever use, but would like to start using more.
 
 
Fly Beezy (War Minister)
12:43 / 06.01.06
Stuff from Flux's blog about his top 5 albums (the MIA isn't strictly about the album, but hey):

1. Fiona Apple - Extraordinary Machine
"10.0, *****, A+, two thumbs waaaaaaaaaaaaaay up. I don't care what your rating system is, I just know that whatever it is, the officially released version of Extraordinary Machine is the one record that I've heard this year that deserves the top ranking..."

2. New Pornographers - Twin Cinema
"Whereas the first two New Pornographers albums feel like relentlessly catchy greatest hits compilations, the new record is more of an old fashioned classic rock album with relatively few obvious "hits", but a greater sense of narrative and musical cohesion."

3. M.I.A. - Arular
"One of the things that I find most impressive about M.I.A. is her ability to make a string of seemingly random (but highly specific) images, references, and slogans seem like a fully formed polemic while rarely ever making any direct statements."

4. Robyn - Robyn
"Though I am very pleased to see that Robyn's "Konichiwa Bitches" is slowly gaining in popularity on the internet and among critics, I worry that the rest of her new album is being overlooked. I can't overstate the excellence of this record - with the exception of the brief and entertaining skits that punctuate the first half of the running order, virtually every song is post-worthy, not to mention hit-worthy."

5. A Frames - Black Forest
"If you've been watching Late Night with Conan O'Brien with any degree of regularity in the past year or two, you've no doubt seen Conan slip into a recurring gag in which he affects "cold, dead eyes" - his entire face goes limp and his eyes narrow into a creepy, thousand-mile stare. In some ways, A Frames' brilliant, horribly overlooked album Black Forest is just like this bit - a startling expression of emotional emptiness and hopelessness affected for the sake of very dark humor."
 
 
Boboss
12:48 / 06.01.06
How very generous of you, Petey.
 
 
Fly Beezy (War Minister)
12:55 / 06.01.06
He's hooked me up with a LOT of music over the years. And Googling/cutting and pasting never takes as long as people imagine...
 
 
Boboss
12:57 / 06.01.06
He's hooked me up with a LOT of music over the years

Me too. He's a good lad and no mistake.
 
 
Hulk
13:53 / 06.01.06
Thanks Flyboy- I really didn't want to see the list go, but enough said on the subject, lets move on.

Petey/ Boboss any more to add on your short lists? (i'm getting download greedy now..)

Seth?

Any other posters want to drop in any recomends?
 
 
Jack The Bodiless
03:50 / 07.01.06
Ok, it's a re-release, and I've already bigged it up enough, but... this is essential, utterly incendiary rock music.

Slver Ginger 5 - Black Leather Mojo

It's Ginger (singer/guitarist/songwriter from the Wildhearts) with what's been called his glam rock album, having made his industrial metal album shortly before the Wildhearts split in 1998 (1997's brutal and controversial Endless Nameless, which until now I thought was his masterpiece), his noise-techno-pop album a year or so before (1999's Clam Abuse album 'Stop Thinking' with Antiproduct's Alex Kane), and his proper metal album (Super$hit 666, which I still haven't heard).

And ohmygod but 'Black Leather Mojo' is amazing. Ginger seems unable to write to order without stamping his own touch on the song, so despite the 'glam' remit, this is quintessential Ginger - riff after riff after melonfarming riff, gorgeous hooks that most bands would build an album around thrown away as middle eights, mobhanded shouts of backing vocals side by side with stunning harmonies... and the tunes. Good god, the tunes. This is vintage AC/DC in lipgloss and platforms, Motorhead in skintight leopardskin. This is every dirty, sweaty rock n' roll band you fell in love with that your mum wouldn't let you go see live, fed through a Top Of The Pops filter. This is seven pints of happy, guilt-free sex in a one pint jar.

'Sonic Shake' is the best album opener I've heard for five years. Opening riff to verse to soaring bridge to belting second bridge to what sounds like screaming kids on the chorus to thunderous repetition of opening riff. 'Too Many Hippies (In the Garden Of Love)' sounds like Slade covered by Ministry. 'Brain Sugar' is (probably) a delirious pisstake/homage to the Stones, and is more pop than pop itself. 'The Monkey Zoo' somehow manages to be tragic, sorrowful and gutsy even through a production job that sounds like they got every brilliant rock band of the last twenty years to play it simultaneously. The version of 'Church Of The Brokenhearted' on here is like the Beatles but if Jim Steinman had produced them instead of George Martin. Even the big riff monsters -'Divine Imperfection', 'Take It All, Why Don'tcha', 'Anyway But Maybe' - have something tangibly unique in their DNA that makes your jaw just DROP.

This album makes you want to sing, dance and dance the horizontal tango, at the same time, ALL the time. It's. That. Damned. Good. Buy it now or I kill you all...
 
 
GogMickGog
18:55 / 08.01.06
Um, that John Frusciante record Curtains is actually rather special.

I know he's in the horrible Chili Peppers and I know he put out a bazillion records this year, but Curtains is a total gem. It's just spare enough to avoid any 'bright eyes' style over-affectation and convexly, at certain points the multi-tracked harmonies and sense of space transport the songs into a sumptuous emotional overload.

Oh, and it's great to have sex to
 
 
matthew.
02:15 / 09.01.06
Can I actually say that both 2005 Bright Eyes albums were horrible? That Bright Eyes is horrible? His voice is so amateur? His songs are annoyingly sparse and void of any connection between me and him? That he can't sing? Can I ask more questions without sounding like a "Whose Line Is It?" contestant?

Here's another album of the year from me:
29 by Ryan Adams.
Somebody once told me that it's really cool to hate Ryan Adams. I can't possibly see why. This year, Mr. Adams put out three albums, one of which was a two-disc-er. 29 is his quiet album. Most songs are simply piano, acoustic guitar, and some simple drum beat. Nothing fancy. It's sparse, but the production is immaculate. How hard can it be to record vox humana, piano and drums and get the mix right? Very hard, and yet this album does it. Each song is rather long considering the arrangements, and most of the songs are autobiographical, with simple yet effective lyrics. This is not the most elaborate album you've ever heard, but it works. Beautifully.
(Also, I love his other releases from this year: Cold Roses and Jacksonville City Nights, which is the most honky-tonkiest album I would ever admit to owning.)
 
 
Fly Beezy (War Minister)
11:52 / 09.01.06
Girls Aloud - Chemistry
Some people have called this a Britpop album, which is accurate in the sense that the thing the best of Britpop was good at was mining the sharpest pop flourishes of the past half-a-century or so (everything from 'Sympathy For The Devil' to Bow Wow Wow to Kraftwerk), and in the sense that much of it is characterised by jaunty desperation, and in the sense that it's filled with surrealist observations about strippers and vicars, not to mention a couple of songs which are basically character studies - well, more like bitter character assassinations really, 'Models' being the best of these. But it's not a Britpop album in all the bad senses: it's not enslaved to a particular mythological period of the past, and it doesn't pretend or desire that the entirity of dance music never happened (on the contrary, as 'Swinging London Town' and 'It's Magic' illustrate, Girls Aloud's particular version of pop couln't have existed without house, techno, etc). One of the great things that pop music can accomplish is to sound simultaneously surprising and inevitable, and this does both: on the one hand, the quirky inventiveness and imagination on display here shouldn't surprise anyone who's been paying attention to Girls Aloud's output to date with genuinely open ears, and yet it does, it's just that one step further forward, giving you things you'd never have expected (like the way 'Wild Horses' starts with what sounds very much like carol singing, and then kicks into something totally different). On the other hand, it seems inevitable in that something like 'Watch Me Go' carries with it the sense that this what pop music has to be like in 2005/2006. This is how far we've come.
Highlights: 'Models', 'Watch Me Go', 'Swinging London Town', 'It's Magic'
 
 
Sniv
13:23 / 09.01.06
Matt - you can say Bright Eyes are shit if you don't mind me tacking you down and cutting out your tongue. I thought Digital Ash was a wonderful album, and though not as good, I'm Wide Awake... does have it's moments (notably First Day of My Life and Road to Joy, IMO). He can sing, in the way that Wayne Coyne can sing, or the guy from the Crocketts or Modest Mouse can. I find it very affecting, like listening to someone on the edge of tears. Very good winter music.

One other album I'd like to add my two penneth on is Broken Social Scene. Hot damn that's an amazing album. I think Swimmers is perhaps the sexiest song I've heard all year. That girl's voice is so... hmmmmmm...
 
 
Hawksmoor
22:00 / 09.01.06
I can't seem to think of very many albums from last year that i absolutely loved......except for two, and one of them didn't even come out last year, lol. The first is Alica Keys: Unplugged...the second is Evanescence...i ended up playing both of these to an almost obscene degree...lol.


Hawksmoor...From The Bleed.
 
 
El Directo
22:38 / 09.01.06
The USAISAMONSTER – Wohaw

If Lightning Bolt’s Hypermagic Mountain was evidence that they were the most entertaining one-trick ponies on the planet and Afrirampo’s Korega Mayaku Da dipped between inspired and meandering then it fell to Load’s USAISAMONSTER to be the near-telepathic two-piece stars of 2005. The backbone of their sound strikes some kind of halfway stage between Ruins and Fugazi, only a Ruins and Fugazi hybrid caught covering the operatic midsection from Bohemian Rhapsody. Their songs are about the plight of Native Americans. Somehow their drummer somehow manages to sing, play keyboards and drum at the same time. This album is their most diverse yet with forays away from their usual syncopated heroics into atmospheric folk, thumb pianos, spoken word narrative and strummed acoustics. Cheers boys.

MIA – Arular

A running theme this year is trying to say something new about albums that seem to have caught on to a degree at which there’s not a lot more to say. About the only thing that I can tell you that you might not already know is that I shamelessly ripped off the drums on Pull Up the People for I am Feudal Japan. There’s a pull in Hunting Lodge to head in a much more prog direction, but I want to sound like this.

Jackson and His Computer Band – Smash

You’d expect an album that took four years to make to sound overworked, bloated and heartless, not an instant classic to put alongside Mastered by the Guy at the Exchange and The Richard D James Album. Jackson Fourgeaud spent that time pouring his heart into obsessive detail, and at times this album sounds like the best of the last four decades of experimental dance-pop smashed up like so much broken mirror, reflecting all the best bits of your record collection back at you. Like everyone else these days his music glitches and contorts and stutters around, but he’s learned Aphex Twin’s best lesson and never once drops the beat. All that plus Mike Ladd.

Melt Banana – 13 Hedgehogs (MxBx Singles 1994-1999)

Enormous fun. Fifty-six tracks on a single CD from the best band in the universe. How is it possible for one single band to own the asses of so many lesser bands? Gold dust. They’re recording the new one this year. Excited, anyone?

Alva Noto and Ryuichi Sakamoto – Insen

Oooooh, this record feels so nice. There’s not much you can talk about here, it’s the execution that makes this album such a beauty. The piano is sparse, just the tone of the instrument, tiny clusters of notes here and there. The programming rarely takes centre stage, delicately breaking the edges, softly malfunctioning, slowly pushing the piano into the room with you as though the medium can’t contain it. Less an album, more a companion, and if you buy it get Vrioon too. You’ll be hopelessly addicted.

Sigur Ros – Takk
Explosions in the Sky – The Rescue


Old epic post-rock bands try new things, to dazzling effect. EitS go almost frivolous, adopting a fast-paced writing and recording methodology that stops them short of full-blown epics while keeping the tenderness of that guitar sound, the sound that somehow does that great trick of reminding you of all those bands you loved as a teenager while never really sounding like any of them.

It’s Sigur Ros who score the most points, however. Their last album () was contructed almost entirely from morose and repetitive slow dirges, which while being fantastic was never going to be more than a minority interest. What an about-face. The opener somehow manages to be bubbly yet yearning before suddenly cranking it up further than you’d ever expect and channels U2 for a stadium-sized crescendo. But it’s the second song that gives you most clues as to what is coming for the rest of the record. It dances across your speakers until it dawns into pure glorious pop music, as delicate as you’d expect from Sigur Ros but somehow as audacious as the Polyphonic Spree’s best. The album leaves you grinning from each to ear.

Taken together these records are proof that *experimental* is really too impoverished a tagline for this music. Wire journalists and may resent them for being the acceptable face of margin music ploughing the same old furrow as ever, but these days they seem to be going for bigger goals than mere innovation. Let’s hope they don’t bottle it when everyone starts liking them.

Ghostface Killah and Trife da God – Put it on the Line

I’m sorry, Trife. But really. This is a stop-gap for all us Ghostface fans dying for the next fix. I appreciate that it might seem as though you’ve got some kind of Cuban Linx/Ironman thing going on here. But we’re listening for one reason only.

I’ll be honest, I’ve been really disappointed with hip hop albums this year. I know it’s a singles market and all that, but still… I’m an albums man at heart. I don’t have a telly, don’t listen to the radio. I’m not clued in on that kind of thing. I’m not hugely into making myself compilations of all my favourite singles. So I listened to Edan and thought it was dull. Same with Dangerdoom (I don’t have much time for MF Doom’s flow). Snoozed through Quasimoto. Cage was much better but I just don’t really buy him as an MC, too much time wasted setting the scene with painfully obvious signifiers of DA URBAN DECAY. Kanye’s record was alright, there was some great stuff on there. But all in all I feel hip hop starved and need some good recommendations.

Until then, from what little I’ve heard so far, a Ghostface stop-gap (a cast off by any other artist) is still sufficiently wonderful to be an album of the year. Comes complete with a brilliant live DVD in which Theodore introduces his son to a sold out crowd: “This is my son. Nigger came out my fucking dick.” Gee, thanks Dad.

OV – Orthrelm
Kawabata Makoto – Inui III


When I first heard Oneida’s masterpiece Sheets of Easter I had to take it to excess and listen to it on repeat for hours. It still seems like all the Law and the Prophets, the entire meaning of life is contained in that song. And here’s more Reich’n’Roll from a band I know next to nothing about… yet. It’s forty-five minutes of bloody-minded guitar and drum repetition. Like the best ecstatic music it quickly becomes something else, something slippery and illusionary that snakes out from your speakers and wraps itself around your mind.

Meanwhile it’s business as usual for Kawabata Makoto. Here again he remakes the same record he’s always making. The AMT guitarist continues his sonic devotions, mining one single seam as though he’s ascending to the heavens or burrowing to the centre of the Earth, trying to make sense of exactly what happened to him in June 1999. I’m tempted to recommend that you not bother with this unless you can use it practically as a devotional aid… possibly the most useful record of the year.

I’m emailing the record labels to make sure future copies of these CDs have a label marked: Not For Flyboy.

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – Clap Your Hands Say Yeah

It seems like the entire western world is sitting up and taking notice of this band. I wish I was capable of writing the kind of recommendation that would puncture the hype and cut you to the heart, just enough so that you could trust me when I say that this is a really rather wonderful record. So I’ll just say that over the last five months or so everyone who’s been present when I’ve played it has needed to know who it’s by. Thanks Fluxblog for the early heads-up.

Roll Deep – In at the Deep End

Fair enough. There was one other great hip hop album. It seemed to split the fans a bit, but for my money the album just crackles with energy and sparkles with life. It’s unashamedly poppy and all the better for it, in places just so daftly infectious and lovable you wish they were all there with you so you could slap them on the back and buy them a pint. The round might be a bit expensive though.

Jamie Lidell – Multiply

Oh. Hell. Yeah. Maybe we should call this the year that everyone got bored of making experimental music and went supernova. Lidell ditches the sleek yet cold Supercollider sound and makes a fantasticly warm-hearted soul album. It’s totally heartfelt but never simplistic, the attention to detail is exquisite, the references to his own avant-garde past subtle and always underplayed. This is for Prince fans, for those who love Stevie Wonder, Otis, Marvin… and it’s no homage. It stands up to all those classics. Effortlessly. Along with Insen this is the most addictive album of the year, a career best, and a dazzlingly diverse showcase for what has become one of the most instantly lovable voices in all contemporary music.
 
 
El Directo
22:40 / 09.01.06
There's another fourteen albums on top of this that I might well write up at some point. Here's to 2005, my favourite year for music since 1995!
 
 
Jackie Susann
00:47 / 10.01.06
Lil Kim - The Naked Truth

Who would've thought Kim would end the year as the most credible rapper alive? Standing by the CODE OF THE STREET landed her a year bit for perjury, but she managed to drop her best album before she went away. You get dance monsters like Shut Up, Bitch and Spellcheck, the swaggering Jamrock-ite anthem Lighters Up, perfectly timed introspective midtempo downshifts, and, like every other rapper worth mentioning this year, plenty of 50 Cent disses. I dunno how well this did elsewhere - although the Source did give it 5 mics - but it dropped here just in time for Sydney summer, and I can't imaginine a more perfect soundtrack for too-hot days where all you can do is roll joints with your shirts off and go fucking mental.

Juelz Santana - What the game's been missing

Juelz can easily come across as a novelty rapper, that dude who says something wacky over a weirdo beat, but this album is consistent as fuck (notwithstanding: awful skit dredged out to song-length, Lil Boy Fresh). Its got the huge Dipstyle sample bangers, 'Oh Yes' rolling on a loop from The Marvelettes' 'Please Mr Postman' (Juelz punning - if you can call it that - the earlier songs 'wai-ai-ait' with crack 'weigh-eigh-eight'). Like Kim, he drags a track out of World-a-Jam (the ubiquitous riddim best known for Damien Marley's 'Jamrock' version), basing 'Murda Murda' on the 'down on the streets, they call it murrrrdaaaa' bit from World-a-Music, and its glorious, but for fake dancehall energy it doesn't beat 'Shottas' Sizzla loop and sinsiter repetitive quasi-rhymes. I read someone complaining somewhere that the beats on the album are so good you don't really notice Juelz, which would make sense if Juelz weren't like the most charismatic dude on the planet. Inexplicably, the first single - Mic Check - appears here in radio edit form, but its the last song on the album, so by the time you get to its subtle 'women' rather than 'bitches' you've spent like an hour listening to nonstop murderous crack-slinging. The worst thing about this is that the song loses the without-a-doubt best lyric of 05, i.e., 'if you catch me sexing a chick, its a bisexual chick, or something foreign I'll never forget'. What the fuck!?

Lil Wayne - The Carter Part II

Lil Wayne's gruff, clipped flow, simple beats and rhymes, there really isn't much to say about this. My favourite song, the least typical, is 'Shooter', so out of place it seems to come out of nowhere everytime you listen. Robin Thicke produces, kind of a jazzy, vaguely ambient Ennio Morricone, and sings in an incomprehensible mumble; mellifluous, sure, but it makes you wonder what happened to Weezy. Then he appears, suddenly, and quickly explains the point of the album: 'this is Southern, face it, if we too simple, yall don't get the basics', building the tension and anger word by word until it sounds like the songs going to grind itself down into powder. Instead, Thicke burbles along some more. Perfect.
 
 
El Directo
01:04 / 10.01.06
Why thank you Crunchy. One of those might be exactly what I was after.
 
  

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