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December Listening List 2009
2009年 12月 24日, 1:39 作者:WatanabeKazuma
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Top 20 Gigs of 2009
2009年 12月 22日, 23:29 作者:DJH30
Top 20 Gigs of 2009
Another great year for gigs indeed I don’t think for any of the list below I’ve thought ‘wish I hadn’t gone’. It’s been really hard to decide the Top 20 let along the rankings. Some of those outside of Top 20 were still really great gigs. Like last year I’ve not included festivals in the rankings as it would be unfair to compare them plus I’ve rated individual performances in earlier posts. My gigs I’ve attended in 2009 listed below with the Top 20 ranked in bold.
9 Jan The Ballet, Help Stamp Out Loneliness The Luminaire 14
17 Jan Jonny Cola & The A-Grades The Marlborough, Camberwell
21 Jan The Melting Ice Caps Last Days of Decadence, Shoreditch
27 Jan Luke Haines Roundhouse Studio
28 Jan Jonny Cola & The A-Grades Good Ship, Kilburn
29 Jan Performance Feet East, Brick Lane 13
18 Feb Black Box Recorder The Luminaire 15
21 Feb humousexual, drunk granny, Husbands Red Rose, Finsbury Park
26 Feb Cure, Franz Ferdinand, Crystal Castles, White Lies The O2
6 Mar Pet Shop Boys Album Playback & Q&A ICA, The Mall
12 Mar Patrick Wolf Heaven
14 Mar Butcher Boy Brixton Jamm
21 Mar Sparks Forum 12
8 April ABC Royal Albert Hall 7
10 April Simon Bookish Vortex Jazz Club 8
11 April Mr Solo/The Indelicates The Fly
21 Apr Jonny Cola & The A Grades/Keith ToTP The Lexington
23 April The Soft Close Ups Vibe Bar, Brick Lane
3 May Music for One,Bela Emerson,/Nathan Octavia Cafe Oto, Dalston
8 May Beirut Forum
16 May Saint Etienne Bloomsbury Ballroom 10
20 May Jonny Cola & The A Grades The Catch
21 May Spring Awakening Novello
28 May Final Fantasy Union Chapel 11
30 May Ed Harcourt Union Chapel
1 June Jonny Cola & The A Grades Album Launch Ghetto
19 Jun Pet Shop Boys The O2 9
24 Jun Glastonbury
30 Jun The Melting Ice Caps/How to cure dyslexia/Orwell Slaughtered Lamb
1 July Tindersticks Serpertine, Hyde Park
15 Jul Ting Tings, Dan Black Somerset House
16 Jul Latitude Southwold
22 July The Melting Ice Caps, The Smittens Wilmington Arms 14
23 July Black Box Recorder Queen Elizabeth Hall
26 July Ben and Jerry’s Summer Sundae
1 Aug Field Day Victoria Park
8 Aug Jonny Cola & The A-Grades Feeling Gloomy 18
10 Aug The National Royal Festival Hall 5
16 Aug British Sea Power Regents Park
29 Aug The Melting Ice Caps Good Ship, Kilburn
5 Sep David Ford Bloomsbury Theatre 4
18 Sept Jonny Cola & The A Grades Dublin Castle
29 Sept Florence and The Machine Shepherds Bush Empire
1 Oct Luke Haines Borderline 17
22 Oct Brel Tribute Marc Almond, Momus Barbican
31 Oct Grizzly Bear Barbican 6
1 Nov Marc Almond Roundhouse
3 Nov Morrissey Brentwood 1
4 Nov Alphabeat Heaven
10 Nov Flaming Lips Troxy
15 Nov Patrick Wolf Palladium 2
19 Nov White Lies Brixton Academy 20
26 Nov My Life Story Koko
3 Dec Julian Plenti Scala 19
6 Dev Alison Moyet Royal Festival Hall 3
14 Dec The Soft Close Ups 12 Bar
Year kicked off to a great start with a new find ‘The Ballet’ doing their first UK gig.
Great to see Black Box Recorder back – loved their Luminaire gig – sound wasn’t great for Queen Elizabeth Hall and seemed a little flat. Hopefully see an album from them soon as they played new songs. Good to see Luke Haines back this year too.
First time I’d seen David Ford – really great gig.
ABC doing The Lexicon of Love and some other hits at the Royal Albert Hall was a real treat. Always avoided the 80s revival tours but this was something special.
Paul Banks up close at the Scala was a nice treat whilst awaiting Interpol’s return.
Really loved The National with Matt almost getting to the rear stalls during Mr November – looking forward to the new album.
The Melting Ice Caps/Soft Close Ups didn’t play as much as I’d like but always excellent. Real indie-pop night at the Wilmington Arms was the best though – David on top form.
Jonny Cola have been going from strength to strength too with their Feeling Gloomy gig the best of the year.
The difference between the two Patrick Wolf gigs I went to was striking - Not very good at Heaven but the best ever at the Palladium.
Pet Shop Boys put on a fantastic show at the O2 although enjoyed it better during the summer at Latitude where I was near the front and the atmosphere fantastic.
Performance were fantastic as ever – looking forward to their second album and more live gigs next year.
Alison Moyet - real good selection of songs including some new interpretations of her 80s classics. Some real spine tingling moments as well moments of humour.
Great to see Saint Etienne back and in a venue perfectly suited to them.
Simon Bookish at the Vortex was quirky and wonderful but unlike previous albums he now has the songs to match and make the most of his great voice.
Grizzley Bear at the Barbican with full orchestra was something special.
Very pleased to see Morrissey topping one of my charts again. I missed out on Albert Hall tickets and missed out on a rescheduled gig due to Latitude so thought I might not actually see him this year. Never thought my favourite gig of the year would be at Brentwood Leisure centre however I think it was the low expectations (whether he’d appear, whether the venue would put him off etc) that meant when he did Morrissey at his best it really was striking – plus being much closer to the stage than I would have been at the Albert Hall or Ally Pally was a bonus – could see every grimace and eyebrow raise. -
My Top 20 Albums of the Decade
2009年 12月 22日, 15:06 作者:joergpeters
01. Interpol - Turn on the Bright Lights
02. Sunset Rubdown - Shut Up I'm Dreaming
03. Born Ruffians - Red, Yellow & Blue
04. Arcade Fire - Funeral
05. The Rapture - Echoes
06. The Notwist - Neon Golden
07. Modest Mouse - Good News for People Who Love Bad News
08. HEALTH - HEALTH
09. Sigur Rós - Agaetis Byrjun
10. The Postal Service - Give Up
11. Radiohead - Amnesiac
12. Crystal Castles - Crystal Castles
13. Bloc Party - Silent Alarm
14. The Shins - Oh, Inverted World
15. Wolf Parade - Apologies to the Queen Mary
16. Jamie Lidell - Multiply
17. MGMT - Oracular Spectacular
18. TV on the Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain
19. Out Hud - Let Us Never Speak of It Again
20. Feist - Let It Die -
seen live 2009
2009年 12月 21日, 18:23 作者:mcos
W tym roku jakby trochę mniej, ale wiadomo, że nie ilość... :)
Kolejność jak zwykle chronologiczna:
George Dorn Screams
Skinny Patrini
Lao Che
The Car Is on Fire
Arctic Monkeys
Basement Jaxx
Grabek
Skinny Patrini
Pati Yang
The Gossip
Gaba Kulka
The Kooks
Wiolonczele z miasta
Moby
Crystal Castles
Kamp!
Fisz Emade
Faith No More
White Lies
Pendulum
M83
Buraka Som Sistema
Santigold
Kings of Leon
Placebo
The Prodigy
Łąki Łan
Moderat
Radiohead
iTAL tEK
Speech Debelle
King Cannibal
Dan Le Sac vs Scroobius Pip
King Cannibal
Ebony Bones
Jon Hopkins
Tim Exile
Fever Ray
Flying Lotus
Hudson Mohawke
Pogodno
Kamp!
Jacaszek
Onra
múm
O.S.T.R.
Roots Manuva
Wojciech Majewski Quintet
Birdpen
Archive
Chasing The Sunshine
Iowa Super Soccer
Wintersleep
Editors
Myslovitz -
Najlepsze (je hie hie hie) płyty poznane w 2009 roku.
2009年 12月 18日, 16:38 作者:Kiciok5
Rok 2009 był wspaniały. Wygrana w lokalnym konkursie informatycznym, i... poznałem tyyyyyle super muzyki. W dużej mierze to zasługa tego serwisu. No to przejdźmy do rzeczy:
20.
Crystal Castles-Crystal Castles

Bo tu taka głupia pińdzia przerabia sobie głos, facet robi jakieś techno komputerem z lat 80 ubiegłego wieku. Okazało się, że to świetna płyta, dobra na inteligentne imprezy.
19.
The Knife-Silent Shout

Rodzeństwo Dreijer dostanie klapsa za komputerowe obniżanie nieprzeciętnego głosu Karin. Ale na tej płycie czai się najprawdziwszy mrok i niezwykle mroczny klimat rodem z futurystycznych opuszczonych fabryk. Częściowo ten klimat zdradza trv mhroczna okładka. No i perełki takie jak [track]We Share Our Mother's Health[/track],
czy [track]Forest Families] stać niewielu. Warta uwagi jest także koncertowa wersja Heartbeats z wersji deluxe.
18.
Kate Nash-Made of Bricks

"Darling don't give me shit, cause I know that you full of it" *dziecko się podnieca*
17.
Powerslave
Bogowie NWOBHM nagrali płytę, której Metallica i Doda z Nergalem mogą pozazdrościć. Nie można przejść obojętnie obok
Aces High lub
2 Minutes to Midnight.
16.
GoldfrappSeventh Tree

Pomijając marketingową bajeczkę o drzewie z numerem siedem, odkrywamy niezwykły, ciepły, zmysłowy głos Alison. Goldfrapp rzucili w kąt dyskoteki, przenieśli się w ciepłą amerykańską prerię, jednak w klimacie angielskiego folku i minimalistycznej elektroniki.
15.
MolokoStatues
Ostatni album Mleczka. A szkoda, mieli świetne piosenki. Wokal Roszinki może nie był niezwykły, ale charakterystyczny. I zero fałsu przy śpiewaniu na żywo.
Cionk dalshy nastąpi -
The Best Of 2000-s: my version
2009年 12月 17日, 10:41 作者:Onlygleb
100. Roisin Murphy - Owerpowered/ 2007
99. Otep - Confrotation/ 2007
98. Земфира - Прогулка/ 2004
97. Ленинград - Дороги/ 2003
96. Infernal - Self Control/ 2006
95. Duffy -
Stepping Stone/ 2008
94. The Gossip -
Love Long Distance/ 2009
93. t.A.T.u. - Не верь, не бойся не проси/ 2003
92. Воровайки - Вороваечки/ 2001
91. Evanescence -
Call Me When You're Sober/ 2006
90. Adele -
Hometown Glory/ 2008
89. Goldfrapp -
Train/ 2003
88. The Ting Tings - Shut Up & Let Me Go/ 2008
87. Linkin Park - Breaking the Habit/ 2003
86. Верка Сердючка - Гоп-Гоп/ 2002
85. FRATELLIS - Chelsea Dagger/ 2006
84. Филипп Киркоров и Анастасия Стоцкая - И ты скажешь да/ 2004
83. Cansei de Ser Sexy -
Alala/ 2006
82. Depeche Mode -
Wrong/ 2009
81. S Club 7 - Don't Stop Moving/ 2001
80. HIM -
The Sacrament/ 2003
79. Nelly Furtado - Turn Off The Lights/ 2001
78. t.A.T.u. - All About Us/ 2005
77. Florence + The Machine -
Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up)/ 2009
76. Город-312 - Останусь/ 2006
75. Mark Ronson & Amy Winehouse - Valerie/ 2007
74. KT Tunstall -
Saving My Face/ 2007
73. Little Boots - Remedy/ 2009
72. Lasgo - Lost/ 2009
71. Yeah Yeah Yeahs -
Heads Will Roll/ 2009
70. Кристина Орбакайте - Перелётная птица/ 2004
69. Gwen Stefani & Akon - The Sweet Escape/ 2006
68. Ladyhawke -
Back Of The Van/ 2009
67. Jennifer Lopez -
Get Right/ 2005
66. ВИА Гра -
Биология/ 2003
65. Alanis Morissette - Underneath (Josh Harris Radio Mix)/ 2008
64. royksopp - What Else Is There?/ 2005
63. Fragma -
Everytime You Need Me/ 2001
62. Bob Sinclar & Cutee B - Rock This Party (Everybody Dance Now)/ 2006
61. Depeche Mode - Enjoy The Silence/ 2004
60. Safri Duo - The bongo song/ 2002
59. Воровайки - Хоп, мусарок/ 2001
58. Muse - Uprising/ 2009
57. Shakira & Wyclef Jean - Hips don't lie/ 2006
56. Gwen Stefani - Wind It Up/ 2007
55. Goldfrapp -
Ride A White Horse/ 2005
54. La Roux -
Bulletproof/ 2009
53. Amy WinehouseRehab/ 2006
52. Booty Luv - Boogie 2 Nite/ 2006
51. Bodyrox & Luciana - What Planet U On/ 2007
50. Bloc Party - Flux/ 2007
49. Black Eyed Peas - Let's Get In Started/ 2004
48. Kylie Minogue - I Believe in You/ 2004
47. Bloc Party -
Banquet/ 2005
46. Надежда Кадышева - Широка река/ 2004
45. София Ротару - Белый Танец/ 2003
44. t.A.T.u. - Я сошла с ума/ 2000
43. Kanye West -
Stronger/ 2007
42. Armand van Helden -
I Want Your Soul/ 2007
41. Crystal Castles -
Alice Practice/ 2008
40. Groove Armada -
Get Down/ 2007
39. Маша Распутина и Филипп Киркоров - Роза Чайная/ 2003
38. royksopp - The Girl & The Robot/ 2009
37. The Chemical Brothers -
Galvanize/ 2005
36. Shania Twain - Ka-Ching
35. Freaks - The Creeps/ 2007
34. Despina Vandi -
Gia/ 2003
33. Benny Benassi - No matter What to you do/ 2003
32. Lasgo -
Something/ 2002
31. The Ting Tings -
That's Not My Name/ 2008
30. Lady GaGa -
Just Dance/ 2008
29. P!nk - U & Ur Hand/ 2006
28. Paul van Dyk - Let's Go/ 2008
27. Yeah Yeah Yeahs -
Gold Lion/ 2006
26. Infernal - I Won't Be Crying/ 2007
25. Alex Gaudino -
Destination Calabria/ 2007
24. Arctic Monkeys - Brainstorm/ 2007
23. Nelly Furtado -
Say It Right/ 2006
22. Amy Macdonald -
This Is The Life/ 2007
21. Gwen Stefani - What You Waiting For/ 2004
20. Madonna -
Die Another Day/ 2002
19. Boogie Pimps - Somebody to Love/ 2004
18. Camille Jones - The Creeps/ 2007
17. Nickelback - Rockstar/ 2007
16. Depeche Mode -
Precious/ 2005
15. Evanescence -
Going Under/ 2003
14. MGMT -
Kids/ 2008
13. The Ian Carey Project - Get Shaky/ 2008
12. Cansei de Ser Sexy - Let's Make Love and Listen Death to Above/ 2007
11. The Gossip - Standing in the Way of Control/ 2007
10. Bloc Party - Signs (Armand Van Helden Remix)/ 2009
9. t.A.T.u. - Нас не догонят/ 2001
8. Lady GaGa -
Poker Face/ 2008
7. Madonna -
Hung Up/ 2005
6. Воровайки - Шмон/ 2002
5. September -
Cry For You/ 2008
4. Лолита -
Ориентация Север/ 2007
3. Mason - Exceeders/ 2006
2. Bodyrox & Luciana - Yeah Yeah/ 2006
1. Amy Winehouse
Back To Black/ 2006
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top albums 4
2009年 12月 14日, 16:41 作者:maleohcc
maleohcc's top albums (overall) 1. Crystal Castles - Crystal Castles (534)
2. Schizma - Hardcore Enemies (443)
3. Hurt - Musisz to kupić (162)
4. Alice in Chains - Alice in Chains (161)
5. Alice in Chains - MTV Unplugged (160)
6. Hurt - Nowy początek (154)
7. Hurt - Dokładny Czas (140)
8. Hurt - Czat (128)
9. Gojira - From Mars to Sirius (127)
10. Hurt - Babilon / Serki Dietetyczne (123) -
A decade of dark infatuation: 2000-2009's releases in retrospect
2009年 12月 13日, 20:25 作者:Lysander
As the second decade of the 21st century looms, I thought it relevant, though rather clichéd, to make a personal top twenty albums from the last ten years. This top twenty, of course being extremely subjective, does not only exhibit albums which feature good musicianship, tone and songwriting but those that have affected me poignantly, emotionally, or have accompanied me through good and bad memories. I may well have left one or two out which later I'd consider pertinent to include, but if they haven't been by now, such belatedness would hardly warrant them deserved placement anyway.
20. Black Math Horseman - Wyllt [2009, USA, Tee Pee Records] Progressive metal/post-rock

1. Tyrant
2. Deerslayer
3. A Barren Cause
4. Origin Of Savagery
5. Torment Of The Metals
6. Bird Of All Faiths And None / Bell From Madrone
As the metal scene becomes awash with post-metal and as black metal bands clasp at post-rock for some semblance of originality in their modern sounds, BMH were the one band for me who have been able to craft something truly interesting from the embers of post-rock. Wyllt is not only an emotional and dark journey, mixing post-rock with progressive metal and ambient sections, but its distant, discordant female vocals also make it a truly eerie experience. As it becomes more and more difficult for metal and rock bands to do something interesting to stand out, BMH did so with a truly innovative début, and the only 2009 album featuring in my top 20.
19. Crystal Castles - Crystal Castles [2008, Canada, Different Records] Electronic/chiptune

1. Untrust Us
2. Alice Practice
3. Crimewave (Crystal Castles Vs. Health)
4. Magic Spells
5. XXZXCUZX Me
6. Air War
7. Courtship Dating
8. Good Time
9. 1991
10. Vanished
11. Knights
12. Love And Caring
13. Through The Hosiery
14. Reckless
15. Black Panther
16. Tell Me What To Swallow
The inclusion of Crystal Castles will doubtless have many spitting fire. One of the most hated bands in the indie scene [as far as the elitists go anyway], CC put out a thrillingly varietal début last year of a mixture of ambient, cacophonic and melodic electronic melodies, all tinged with a 90s chiptune vibe. It may well stand out as a complete pariah in this list, but this album is mostly important to me for being significant of a highly difficult period of psychological turmoil last year, got spun to death and ended up as one of my top played albums ever. It must have been due to its disparity with metal and dark ambient twinned with its heavy early 90s feel which made it such an effective companion through the moderate depression I encountered. Originally downloaded from a blog, I remember being more proud than usual to pick it up on CD.
18. Mira - There I Go Daydreamer [2005, USA, Projekt Records] Shoegaze

1. Say When
2. Pieces
3. Highs In The Lows
4. Adrift
5. No Other Way
6. Long Division
7. Window Seat
8. Reset
9. Heavenly Slumber
10. Passerby
11. Nearest Exit
12. Hinterland
Mira's third and final album was by far their most mature. Never being a particularly large fan of bands like Slowdive or My Bloody Valentine, There I Go Daydreamer really nailed the shoegaze formula for me in a way that other albums didn't. Its predecessor, Apart, took a while to get into and understand, but once I'd wrapped my psychosis around the atmosphere that Mira created, it was clear that TIGD had forged the sound perfectly. The shimmering, lush guitars; simple yet textured drumming and Regina's tender vocals created a comfortable but lonely sound like few others in ethereal music since Cocteau Twins' middle period or the first two albums from the excellent Love Spirals Downwards.
17. Aeoga – Zenith Beyond The Helix-Locus [2005, Finland, Aural Hypnox] Ritual ambient

1. Impenetrable-Chimera
2. Permuting-Remote-Shrieks
3. Ash-Breath
4. Reptilevitation
5. Interplanary
6. Burialgae-Resonance
7. Birthcry
8. Owleye-Mandalchemy
9. Impulses
10. Winged-Beings
11. Prism-Mountain
12. Implosion
13. Voidclysm
14. Salamander-Maqet
15. Lustrous-Kosmolesion
I remember originally describing this as "being on drugs without being on drugs". The Helixes Collective have always produced some of the very best material as far as dark or ritual ambient goes. The use of purely organic materials such as animal horns and bone flutes without the use of synthesisers, make Aeoga and Halo Manash's work far more genuine that most. Zenith Beyond the Helix-Locus is one long, undisturbed ritual - a highly evocative and unsettling piece. Ensconcing yourself in its atmosphere is key to understanding and appreciating it and it warrants multiple play throughs to completely understand. If you have the patience and the attention, it truly is one of the finest ritual ambient works produced.
16. Herbst9 – The Gods Are Small Birds But I Am The Falcon [2008, Germany, Loki Foundation] Ritual ambient

1. The Laments Begin
2. Must I Die? (Because Of My Holy Songs)
3. Threshold Of Tears
4. Enenuru
5. The Gods Are Small Birds, But I Am The Falcon
6. White Ashes (Black Smoke)
7. ...And Everything Around Him Answered
8. Shaking Ground
9. Ilimmu
Inspired by a Sumerian hymn to Enheduanna, The Gods Are Small Birds But I am the Falcon took me by surprise. I had already assumed that Herbst9 had peaked with their 2005 effort Buried Under Time And Sand, but The Gods Are Small Birds was more ambient, more focused and included greater use of vocal samples which made songs such as
Nanab Ishtar - Exalted Light of Heaven so brilliantly effective. Evoking the gods through incantations related to ancient Sumer, it was a high point not only in Herbst9's catalogue, but also for ritual ambient in general.
Full review, written 2009.
15. Textures – Drawing Circles [2006, Holland, Listenable Records] Progressive metal/hardcore

1. Drive
2. Regenesis
3. Denying Gravity
4. Illumination
5. Stream Of Consciousness
6. Upwards
7. Circular
8. Millstone
9. Touching The Absolute
10. Surreal State Of Enlightenment
Even though 2008's Silhouettes was a more lavish and heavier piece of work, it didn't strike such a successful balance between heavy and melodic as its predecessor. After the comparatively thin Polars released in 2004, Textures raised their own bar several notches and came out with an astounding piece of work which, as far as I'm concerned, beat several genremates into the ground. What made Drawing Circles more interesting and more successful for me over bands such as Between the Buried and Me and SikTh, was the perfect combination of simplicity and complexity mixed with the composite vocals of singer Jochem Jacobs. At first Drawing Circles seemed like quite a raucous affair to acquaint oneself with, but seeing the patterns eventually becomes more satisfying and more nourishing than on a lot of progressive albums. The band manage to tease you to a point of excess with a milligram too much heaviness before switching to softer, mellower sections with clean vocals, and then back again to another intense lashing of progressive barbarism. There's probably not much here to appease fans of purely more traditional metal like Dream Theater or Evergrey, but those looking for something more gritty and more spiked with an abundance of variety could hardly do much better than to look into this.
14. Biomechanical - The Empires of the Worlds [2005, UK, Earache Records] Progressive metal/thrash

1. Enemy Within
2. The Empires Of The Worlds
3. Assaulter
4. Relinquished Destiny
5. Long Time Dead
6. Regenerated
7. DNA Metastasis
8. Survival
9. Existenz
10. Truth Denied
11. Absolution - Part 1: Final Offence
12. Absolution - Part 2: From The Abyss
13. Absolution - Part 3: Absolution
14. Absolution - Part 4: Disintegration
After a particularly alcohol-fuelled day watching Exodus down at the Underworld in November 2006, I had the first - and only one of two opportunities so far - to see Biomechanical. Even though the sound was pretty off during the set itself, it was intriguing enough for me to pick up what was at that point, their latest album, a few days later. The Empires of The Worlds, clearly sounding much better on CD [this one, at least] than live is a frenzied gallop through progressive thrash metal. Fast riffs, blistering drumwork and track upon track of some of the most intense music I've come across. In spite of the fact that most speed metal bores me to death, the combination of progressive thrash mixerd with occasional orchestration made this almost a guilty pleasure, a rewarding listen which isso full-on its akin to aural rape. Empires is a chariot race on speed, a marathon sprinted from start to finish, and by the time Part 4 of Absolution has ended, going through the album in one go can't fail to leave its daunting and unforgiving mark on the exhausted listener. Unfortunately, the long-awaited and long-hyped follow-up Cannibalised two years later fell victim to excruciatingly bad production in a similar vein to Eight Moons, and became unlistenable as a result. When asked if I'm a fan of Biomechnical the answer is a resounding yes, through it's more accurate to say I'm a fan of just one album. But what an album it is.
13. Naamah - Resensement [2004, Poland, Metal Mind Records] Progressive metal

1. Daydream Part One
2. Severed
3. Not For You
4. Subsistance
5. Red Light
6. Alright
7. Daydream Part Two
8. Subsistance [polish version] [bonus]
9. Twoja [piano version] [bonus]
Resensement was Naamah's third – and up to this point still most recent album. For some reason, one suspects disagreements with the label, the band are still to put out the final album that they've been contracted for. Resensement saw the band change their sound hugely. Ultima, it's predecessor, was an averagely respectable Gothic metal record with meagre production values. Resensement saw the band put out a far more heartfelt and progressive recording, with much higher production values. What made it better than a lot of other progressive metal was that it was actually interesting to listen to in each of its multifarious sections. Every note, line and melody has its own honestly and texture. Ending with the ambient and highly atmospheric Daydream Pt 2, it was truly one of the high points of my musical reviewing when I came across it, and still remains one of my all-time favourites today.
Full review, written 2004.
12. Moon of Steel – Insignificant Details [2002, Italy, Steelheart Records] Progressive metal

1. What Will Remain?
2. I Am
3. After All
4. Grey 0
5. The Wave
6. Details part 1
7. I Hear You Call
8. Forced (Your Way)
9. Waiting For The Moonlight
10. Details part 2
11. Details Part 3
One of 2002's best female-fronted metal albums was also one of its most unknown, and still has garnered hardly any attention over the years. Insignificant Details, Moon of Steel's second studio album since the band put out its first full-length 1989, included a new dynamic and new singer who was also to only feature on their 1999 EP. With it's perfectly woven mix of complex, progressive metal, slow, smooth jazz interludes and some of the very best female vocals ever to fit on a metal album, Insignificant Details was a revelatory turning point for me, and still is one of my all-time favourite metal albums. The music on display is gloomy, dark, lonely and bitterly honest. It remains one of most underrated albums in metal. It's leaving statement “your life depends on that which you can seize and your dreams are not insignificant details” has resonated with me for as long as I can remember.
Full review, written 2003.
11. Forgotten Silence - KaBaAch [2000, Czech Republic, Redblack] Progressive metal/death metal

1. Red Paiom - The Yellow-Blue Snake
2. Rostau - The Sandwaves
3. Al Qáhir - In The Marble Halls (Of Fame) IV.
4. Saqqára - The Sitting Statue
5. FL2C - The Morning In Cairo
6. Vaset - The Breath Of Tasechetaat
7. Memnon - The Ancient Moaning
8. Ipet Isut - The Sunflames
9. Dendara - The Deepest Depth, In The Darkest Dark...
10. Idfú - Under The Hor's Wings ...
11. Syene - The Waterlines
12. As Suwais - One Step To Another World
KaBaAch came at a time of particular musical drought, and I remember on first hearing it thinking that it wasn't my thing at all. The band, still relatively unknown but occasionally still active, put out a string of wildly inaccessible albums in the late 90s with KaBaAch being their most easy to get into. This isn't to say that it's an easy listen at all. Most of the album is a relentless, uncompromising mish-mash of death metal, progressive metal and funk/jazz sections mixed with various unusual ambient interludes. It is what it wants to be - it's so self-involved that it doesn't care if you misunderstand it or dislike it. What's most unusual about this album and its inclusion in this list, is that most of the songs in the album - 7 out of the 12 - are ambient interludes. However, the remaining five are some of the best examples of progressive metal I think of: marvellous song structure, very skilled playing [especially the bass and drum work] and accomplished female vocals by Hanka Nogolová, now spending most of her time in Silent Stream of Godless Elegy. Visiting the band's previous works has proved to be a very difficult experience, not least the highly impenetrable Senyaan, though KaBaAch is the best starting point for those looking for something truly fascinating and different in progressive metal.
10. Atrox - Orgasm [2003, Norway, code666] Progressive metal

1. Methods of Survival
2. Flesh City
3. Heartquake
4. Burning Bridges
5. This Vigil
6. Tentacles
7. Second Hand Trauma
8. Prè Sense
My first clash with Atrox, which seems a fitting way to describe coming into contact with them, was in 2003 when I was sent a promo of Terrestrials. I had read various comments around the internet about the band with regards to how they were just "too crazy" for a lot of reviewers or just too weird to be given the literal time of day. Of course there are many bands in the avant-garde spectrum who produce far more curious and outlandish metal, but for female-fronted metal before the likes of Akphaezya or Ayin Aleph, Atrox was pretty much as crazy as it got. The band never really fell into either the progressive or avant-garde metal camps but more a strange halfway house between the two which the band described as 'schizo metal'. Even though Terrestrials was an accomplished album with doubtless the best lyrics that I have ever come across, it was Orgasm where, under Monika at least, the band perfected their balance of creative intensity and forward-thinking metal. Every track here is a standout, be it the excellently over the top Flesh City ["masturbating teens around every corner"]; the most unusual love song ever Heartquake; or the excellently and usually progressive Pre Sense ["what's so unusual about being unique? We all are"]. After this album Monika left the band to, well, start one with her own pet freak plush and sit in Trondheim making weird artwork. I remember she accepted an interview offer from me which she proposed to do vocally as Rødingen - possibly complete with egg slicer - but for one reason or another the answers to the questions were never forthcoming.
Full review, written 2004.
9. The Moon and the Nightspirit – Regő Rejtem [2007, Hungary, Equilibirum Music] Neofolk/ethereal

1. Regő Rejtem
2. Örökké
3. Avaràlom
4. Szarvaslélek
5. Föld Szive Dobban
6. Csillagnàsz
7. Rögből Élet
8. Éjköszöntő
9. Holdtànc
I remember thinking on hearing track 7 of Regő Rejtem, Rögből Élet, that it was possibly one of the most beautiful songs I'd heard. It was particularly helpful and useful to me in 2008 when I was going through my depressive state, and I ended up delving into the album more and more and with ever greater intensity to the point whereby it became some kind of musical precious stone to me. I absolutely can't stand it when people start talking about albums "helping them through difficult periods” in their lives, and Regő Rejtem didn't do that directly. What it did do, however, was occasionally lift me out of the psychological quagmire that I was spending my time in and make me realise that there were far more aesthetic and uplifting things out there which should always be remembered, no matter how helpless you're feeling. In this way Regő Rejtem seemed to cross the psychological Rubicon with me.
8. Vas – In The Garden Of Souls [2000, USA, Narada] Ethnic/ethereal

1. In The Garden Of Souls
2. Inamorata
3. Samaya
4. Prayer For Soheil
5. Ceremony Of Passage
6. Beyond Despair
7. The Inward Coil
8. Ephémère (Upon The Faded)
9. Lila
10. Unbecome
11. Sevdama
In the Garden of Souls came to me at a time when I was becoming particularly interested in progressive metal. I remember Ashtoreth passing the album to me and my being instantly bewitched by it. Its distant, otherwordly ether grabbed me as something I'd never heard before in stark contrast to the metal I was listening to at the time. It started a trend of interest in other bands such as Stellamara, Lumin and Axoim Of Choice which, though high quality in their own rights, never quite stood up to Vas' calibre. I was rather late in discovering the band since they disbanded after Feast of Silence in 2004, though Niyaz's Nine Heavens is the closest album I've come across in a similar vein, being much more mystical and laid back that their rather energetic self-titled album. ITGOS is still one of the most beautiful and transfixing albums I own, a dark and entrancing piece of work.
7. Dark Sanctuary - L'Être las - L'envers du miroir [2003, France, Wounded Love] Neoclassical

1. L'arrogance
2. L'envers du Miroir
3. Malveillance
4. Les Larmes du Méprisé
5. Profondeur de l'âme
6. Assombrissement de l'âme
7. Silence Macabre
8. La Mort Avant le Déshonneur
9. Larmes et de Sang
10. Vie éphémère
11. Face à une Mort Rassasiée
12. Loin des Mortels
13. La Rencontre Fatale
14. Tout ce Sang Versé
L'Être Las - L'Envers Du Miroir took me quite a while to get into, let alone to understand. It was my first introduction to darkwave and neoclassical music and initially I found it rather dull, being only exposed to the accessible strains of bands such as Nightwish, Within Temptation and Lacuna Coil at that point back in November 2003. On a late journey back from Newcastle, having seen women in skirts and heels tearing themselves apart in the streets and people stealing babies from distraught mothers' buggies as a joke, I remember the album beginning to make sense once Loin Des Mortels came on. The piano, the transcendent strings and the exquisite voice of Dame Pandora made it an enchanting experience exemplified by tracks such as L'arrogance and Vie éphémère. This sparked a heavy appreciation for one of the most musically rich bands in the neoclassical spectrum and one which I had the great pleasure of promoting at St Pancras Parish Church for their final concert in October 2009, six years later.
Full review, written 2003.
6. Riverside – Second Life Syndrome [2005, Poland, Inside Out] Progressive rock

1. After
2. Volte-Face
3. Conceiving You
4. Second Life Syndrome
5. Artificial Smile
6. I Turned You Down
7. Reality Dream III
8. Dance With The Shadow
9. Before
Discovering bands like Fates Warning and Riverside quite early on in my progressive metal initiation became problematic. What bands like these did was showcase a certain skill for maturity and intensity in metal, especially lyrically, which is hard to top. Most metal bands - in fact most bands in general - are poor at writing lyrics. It was the stark personal feel to Riverside's lyrics which was the first thing that caught my attention, followed by the sincerity of both the melodic and heavier sections, not to mention that painfully beautiful, highly Pink Floyd-esque guitar solos. Second Life Syndrome has been nearly impossible for the band to top, following it with the weaker "difficult third album" Rapid Eye Movement and the stronger Anno Domini High Definition. Riverside were another band that I had the opportunity to promote in London a couple of times, both to very high audience turnouts. In both cases it was refreshing to see a down-to-earth, relaxed and affable group of band members rather than the prima-donas that one comes across all too often in promotion at either end of the spectrum.
5. Catafalque - Dialectique [2007, Turkey, CTF Records] Gothic metal

1. Seasons
2. The Ordeal
3. Red Lights
4. Fading Beauty
5. Together With All The Pain
6. Blamed
7. Crimson Dust
8. Butterfly Inside
9. Ballerina
10. Bringer Of The Night
After the release of Sirenia's At Sixes And Sevens Gothic metal became tired, frayed and withered. It was the last truly good Gothic metal album in the accepted old style. The huge amount of ensembles jumping on the female-fronted bandwagon afterwards meant that that the sound had reached saturation point and there was little originality left in the pot. 2007's Dialectique saw Catafalque change sound from gothic/doom into a more atmospheric type with greater use of emotion and keyboards. The songwriting and production were all of a very high quality, though the jewel in the album's proverbial crown was undoubtedly Özge Özkan 's vocals, being soaring, genuine and heartfelt.
Dialectique is so exquisitely emotional that it almost transcends any other Gothic metal album made. These days it's so rare for albums to come across as emotional: indeed, a lot of the time I almost forget that the point of music is to make people feel something. Dialectique takes you through a dodectet of perfect Gothic atmospheric numbers and doesn't drop for a moment. The music doesn't have to be big, complex and pretentious to be emotional and effective, because Dialectique accomplished more with its simplicity than most other albums could hope to after years of careful preparation.
4. Opeth - Deliverance [2002, Sweden, Music For Nations] Progressive death metal

1. Wreath
2. Deliverance
3. A Fair Judgement
4. For Absent Friends
5. Master's Apprentices
6. By the Pain I See in Others
Deliverance was always supposed to be Opeth's heaviest album. Or maybe that was just a selling point put out for promotional reasons, the original intention being to release it at the same time as Damnation. Deliverance was not necessarily their heaviest effort, it included more prog rock and melodious influences than their works during the Candlelight years - but one thing which Deliverance does remain is their most consistent album. Every track on the album is a dark, complex, opaque and beautiful work. There are many moments to commend here, be it the accessibility of the title track with its repetitive complex outro; A Fair Judgment with one of the best and most emotional guitar solos I have heard; or the unexpectedly beautiful prog rock section in the middle of the otherwise gruffly heavy Master's Apprentices. In spite of two more strong records since its release, Deliverance is still my favourite Opeth recording - with Still Life, of course, a respectably close second.
3. After Forever - Decipher [2001, Holland, Transmission Records] Gothic metal

1. Ex Cathedra
2. Monolith of Doubt
3. My Pledge of Allegiance #1 - The Sealed Fate
4. Emphasis
5. Intrinsic
6. Zenith
7. Estranged (A Timeless Spell)
8. Imperfect Tenses
9. My Pledge of Allegiance #2 - The Tempted Fate
10. The Key
11. Forlorn Hope
I suppose this is the best time to admit that I got back into Gothic metal after an abstinence of four years due to watching an episode of Pop Idol. One of the costumes worn by Gareth Gates had a slightly Gothic tinge to it and that led me idly one day to check out Shoutcast, which was in 2002 a far more effective and popular way of finding new music that it is now. On browsing the stations I came across After Forever's Intrinsic, the first female-fronted metal track I ever heard, and this led me to download Decipher over WinMX and subsequently order it from Sonic Cathedral as my first purchase along with Aesma Daeva. Even now Decipher is, for me, one of the most important albums in all of Gothic metal. Though it took time for me to get used to the unexpected male growling elements, it was Floor's vocals, the complexity of the songwriting and the orchestration that were the album's complete strength, and which were hardly ever improved upon by the band themselves or in the genre altogether. Decipher remains one of the most impressive and important albums in Gothic metal - in spite of the band's insistence, even in their early Transmission days, that they didn't make Gothic music.
2. Fates Warning - Disconnected [2000, USA, Metal Blade] Progressive metal

1. Disconnected (Part I)
2. One
3. So
4. Pieces Of Me
5. Something From Nothing
6. Still Remains
7. Disconnected (Part II)
Disconnected is one of the most vital albums I have come across. On a trip to Baltimore in March 2006 I was furnished with a number of Fates Warning CDRs from the No Exit period right up to FWX [though missing out, strangely, A Pleasant Shade of Gray]. Seeing as I was no fan of male-fronted vocals at that particular time, I indifferently played Inside Out and Perfect Symmetry with neither igniting my interest. It was only when I hit
Still Remains from Disconnected that anything psychologically snapped into place. The track was probably the first male vocal metal track I had liked since listening to Paradise Lost and Megadeth as a teenager in the mid 90s. What Fates Warning did was lead me away gradually from the monomania I had with female vocal metal and open the gates to other artists such as Symphony X, Opeth, Dream Theater and Riverside. Disconnected was an immense turning point for me and Fates Warning remain possibly my all-time favourite metal band as a result. The maturity in the lyrics, vocals, guitars and atmosphere supersede those of any artist in the same category for me. In spite of the fact that Perfect Symmetry eventually became more important for me and one of my most valued albums of all time, its 1989 release makes it at least a decade too early for inclusion here.
1. The Mars Volta – De-Loused in the Comatorium [2003, USA, Universal] Progressive rock

1. Son Et Lumiere
2, Inertiatic ESP
3. Roulette Dares (The Haunt Of)
4. Tira Me A Las Arañas
5. Drunkship Of Lanterns
6. Eriatarka
7. Cicatriz ESP
8. This Apparatus Must Be Unearthed
9. Televators
10. Take The Veil Cerpin Taxt
4chan's /mu/ came through in spades with this one. Majoritively a breeding ground for the largest amount of trolling, spite and verbal cess on the internet, the music board kept whoring De-Loused particularly in the closing months of 2008, much to the respective elation and chagrin of the community. Idly listening to Inertiatic ESP gave me sufficient impetus to spin the album in its entirety and I became shocked by its lyrical and musical complexity, especially for Universal and a category such as progressive rock, which most of the time I'd associated with wet, flimsy and shamelessly tepid music. TMV showed a drive, expression, class and fervor that I had yet not experienced in rock or metal. The album's neat originality, its perfect mixing of rock with the frenetic feel of Latin jazz and salsa made it immediately mesmerising. The sheer talent and virtuosity of each band member induced TMV to scream ahead of any other band I was listening to in the closing months of 2008 by a long way.
They may be called ostentatious and pretentious by some, but progressive music relies on certain mindsets by its innovators for effective experimentation. De-Loused has kept me retreating to its cadences time and time again, be it the bleak beauty of Televators and Cicatriz ESP or the sheer power and dynamism of Drunkship Of Lanterns or Take The Veil Cerpin Taxt. There is no edging the listener in here, no acceleration: De-Loused starts at 60mph and ups the gears progressively, musically and conceptually till its closing bars. For me it is not only a great album of the 2000s - but a legendary one. And that's a word I generally hate to use. -
Personal list. [WIP]
2009年 12月 13日, 4:33 作者:JeAxra
The Dresden Dolls
Amanda Palmer
Regina Spektor
Rammstein
St. Vincent
Joanna Newsom
CocoRosie
Rasputina
HUMANWINE
The Yeah yeah yeahs
Tegan and Sara
Modest Mouse
MIA.
Kimya Dawson
Spillsbury
Soap&Skin
Zoë Keating
Philip Glass
My Brightest Diamond
Mindless Self Indulgence
Emilie Simon
The Knife
Karpatenhund
Crystal Castles
Mariee Sioux
Marissa Nadler
Lady GaGa
Wir sind Helden
Frittenbude
Vashti Bunyan
Keren Ann
The Joy Formidable
Paramore
Flyleaf
Björk
PJ Harvey
Grossstadtgeflüster
Fever Ray
Diane Cluck
Alina Orlova -
Top 200 Songs of the Decade: Part 1
2009年 12月 13日, 0:57 作者:likecrocodiles
Presented in alphabetical order, because with this many tracks it's impossible to rank them.
1. Juanes -
A Dios Le Pido
If you're a Spanish teacher, this song is great for teaching the subjunctive. It's also Juanes' best song.
2. Kaki King - Air And Kilometers
Kaki King manages to wring an incredible amount of emotion out of her guitar. The breakdown about a minute in is great.
3. LCD Soundsystem -
All My Friends
Surprisingly, the repetition of the keyboard line for 7 minutes doesn't get tiring, but just adds to the melancholic punch of the lyrics: "You spent the first five years trying to get with the plan, and the next five years trying to be with your friends again."
4. Yeasayer - Ambling Alp
It's got a great hook and appealing vocals, but it's the complexity of this song that brings it up a notch: the intricate bassline, the synth run at the end, the drums that anchor the rhythm.
5. Thom Yorke - Analyse
Deceptively simple and terribly affecting.
6. Porcupine Tree - Anesthetize
Porcupine Tree's best song. Really, each of its three sections could be a separate song and they'd all be great.
7. Broken Social Scene -
Anthems for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl
Emily Haines' vocals steal the scene, and I didn't really notice how great the instrumentals are until I listened to the instrumental version of this song,
Pitter Patter Goes My Heart.
8. Regina Spektor -
Après Moi
Sadly, I think this is the only track where Regina Spektor sings in Russian. She should do it more often.
9. Islands - The Arm
I'm in the minority in preferring Arm's Way to Return to the Sea. The entire album is deliciously complex and unrelentingly intense, and this is its best track. The violins are especially good.
10. Battles - Atlas
If this list were ordered, this song would definitely be in the top 5. Battles are one of the most precise and technically skilled math rock bands around, but what sets them apart is their sense of whimsy, which is never more apparent than on this track, which is probably the most fun song of the decade.
11. Do Make Say Think - Auberge le Mouton Noir
As a genre, post-rock is often labelled as being formulaic and repetitive, but the compositional complexity of this song shows that creative post-rock is still being produced. The bit starting at 3:30ish is wonderful.
12. Late of the Pier -
The Bears Are Coming
Another song with a great sense of fun. The combination of an infectious beat with a dance-punk aesthetic is what makes this song.
13. Crystal Castles -
Black Panther
When you listen to Crystal Castles' debut album, you start to think that you've heard these songs before. The melodies are so basic, so inevitable, that it's hard to believe that nobody's come up with them before.
14. The Fiery Furnaces - Blueberry Boat
Yes, this song is about a blueberry boat being attacked by pirates. The "doom chords" (if you know this song, you probably know what I'm talking about) are sheer awesomeness.
15. Kyte - Boundaries
I'm surprised at how little attention these guys get. Their debut album was a completely original sound, and this song is complete bliss.
16. Pure Reason Revolution -
The Bright Ambassadors of Morning
The last four minutes of this song are one of the most epic things you'll ever hear.
17. Panda Bear -
Bros
For a 12-minute song built around one chord, this is pretty damn awesome.
18. Animal Collective - Brother Sport
This is my most listened-to song ever, according to iTunes. It deserves the spot, too.
19. Pure Reason Revolution -
Bullitts Dominæ
Yet another PRR song. The Dark Third was one of the best debuts of the last few years, despite the nonsensicality of the lyrics ("And as I ask them inside everlasting the inosphere's collided, everyone's falling, sun-suicide's optimal").
20. This Will Destroy You - Burial on the Presidio Banks
This song destroys me. One of the most explosive climaxes in post-rock.
21. Wolf Parade - California Dreamer
The best chorus Wolf Parade has ever written, probably.
22. Vampire Weekend - Campus
This song is so light and breezy, and any song with the line "spilled kefir on your keffiyah" is good in my books.
23. Sufjan Stevens - Casimir Pulaski Day
The saddest song written about cancer before The Antlers released Hospice.
24. Muse - Citizen Erased
I always have a hard time choosing my favourite Muse song, but this song has their best riff (and they're a very much riff-based band) and their best solo.
25. Porcupine Tree - Collapse the Light Into Earth
The piano is kind of reminiscent of Coldplay's "The Scientist," but this song is much more affecting. It'd be a good song to play at your funeral.
26. Joanna Newsom - Colleen
I can't help but break out into a grin whenever she does the "yip" between verses.
27. Metric -
Combat Baby
On their tour this year, Metric ended their concerts with a sing-along acoustic rendition of this song. That it actually worked testifies to their melodic genius.
28. Sufjan Stevens - Come on! Feel the Illinoise!
I could put this song on the list just for the title.
29. Mew -
Comforting Sounds
That's funny, I didn't know Mew was a post-rock band. Listen to this song on full volume and you'll be blown away.
30. Joanna Newsom -
Cosmia
This is the shortest track on Ys, but it still has more depth than 90% of the songs out there.
31. José González - Cycling Trivialities
Simple but beautiful. It's 8 minutes long but it feels more like 3.
32. Justice - D.A.N.C.E.
The fact that this is the only dance song that made the list says something about how great it is.
33. The Mars Volta - Day of the Baphomets
The section that starts with "I am the reason for your missing child" is so intense. Actually, this entire song is intense.
34. Wolf Parade -
Dear Sons and Daughters of Hungry Ghosts
Spencer Krug can basically do no wrong, but nowhere is his songwriting stronger than on Apologies to the Queen Mary.
35. Under Byen - Den Her Sang Handler Om At Få Det Bedste Ud Af Det
This is possibly the most underappreciated song ever. It used to be my favourite song, and it's still in my top 5. The climax and piano coda are incredible.
36. 65daysofstatic -
The Distant & Mechanised Glow of Eastern European Dance Parties
Frankly, I don't see how anyone could dislike this song.
37. Do Make Say Think - do
Like "Auberge Le Mouton Noir," a beautifully complex post-rock song. It's hard to decide which one is their best.
38. Architecture in Helsinki - Do The Whirlwind
Such unadulterated joy.
39. Yeah Yeah Yeahs -
Down Boy
I used to think that nobody could top Jim Morrison when it comes to yelps, but Karen O certainly comes close in this song.
40. Sunset Rubdown -
Dragon's Lair
This is Spencer Krug's best post-Apologies to the Queen Mary song, especially the guitars at the end.
41. Patrick Watson - Drifters
The delicate piano intro and the wall-of-sound climax couldn't be more different, but they fit together seamlessly.
42. 65daysofstatic -
Drove Through Ghosts to Get Here
Usually when I'm walking and listening to music, I involuntarily step to the tempo of the music. If I did that for this song, I'd be running by the end.
43. Joanna Newsom -
Emily
This song contains Newsom's worst lyrics ("peonies nod in the breeze and while they wetly bow with hydrocephalitic listlessness, ants mop up their brow"), but also some of her best ("I dreamed you were skipping little stones across the surface of the water, frowning at the angle where they were lost and slipped under forever, in a mud-cloud, mica-spangled, like the sky'd been breathing on a mirror" and "the ties that bind, they are barbed and spined and hold us close forever"). I could go on about this song, but I won't.
44. At the Drive-In - Enfilade
The amount of energy in this song is remarkable.
45. Cloud Cult - Everybody Here Is a Cloud
Making lyrics about mortality fun!
46. Radiohead -
Everything In Its Right Place
This is a rarity, a song that grabs you from the very first note, and keeps your attention until the end.
47. The National - Fake Empire
There's an entire group on last.fm dedicated to this song, and not without reason.
48. Andrew Bird -
Fake Palindromes
This is one of the few tracks that I never skip when it comes up. The lyrics at the beginning give it a momentum that carries through to the end: "my dewy-eyed Disney bride, what has tried swapping your blood with formaldehyde? Monsters? Whiskey-plied voices cried fratricide, Jesus, don't you know that you could've died, you should've died?"
49. TV on the Radio -
Family Tree
Such a tender song. It's hard to believe that this is the same band that made
DLZ.
50. Animal Collective - Fireworks
This song is the ultimate jam when they play it live. It starts strong with a driving, train-like beat and doesn't let up.









