A few years back, some friends of mine started including me in their annual discussion of the top albums of the year. (I still never know what to call them -- albums? CDs? LPs? Long-form downloads?) Our top-ten lists have provided great e-mail fodder, as well as invaluable advice for additions to my burgeoning music collection.
I usually wait a few weeks to post my favorites, because I inevitably receive a few CDs for Christmas or my birthday (Dec. 17, mark your calendars for 2008!). So I've finally gathered my thoughts, and I hereby present my list for the Top Ten of 2007.
t-10. Arcade Fire – Neon Bible; Bruce Springsteen – Magic – They're going to have to grow on me a little bit more, because I got them both in late December, but I think they will. I love AF's sound, and Magic sounds a lot like classic Springsteen, which is always a good thing. Download it: Keep the Car Running (AF), Radio Nowhere (BS)
9. Bettye LaVette – Scene of the Crime – You know I love those odd pairings that cross generational and genre lines (like Loretta Lynn and Jack White), so when you put an old-school soul singer together with the Drive-By Truckers, I'm sold. I should probably check out the Allison Krauss-Robert Plant CD too, huh? Download it: Before the Money Came
8. Jason Isbell – Sirens of the Ditch – Solo debut by former DBT guitarist showcases an outstanding young songwriter with more heart, soul and guts than anything you'll see on American Idol. Download it: Down in a Hole, Dress Blues
7. John Doe – A Year in the Wilderness – Former X frontman rocks hard and soft and crafts memorable duets with Kathleen Edwards and Aimee Mann. Download it: Lean Out Yr Window, The Golden State
6. Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings – 100 Days, 100 Nights – Always heard about her, never checked her out. Come to find out her band was the driving force behind Amy Winehouse's star-making work of 2006. Jones can belt it out with the best, and creates a sound that's straight out of Motown in the mid-60s. Download it: Let Them Knock, title track
5. The New Pornographers – Challengers – I'll admit, this isn't for everyone, especially fans of the upbeat, carefree songs on their first three discs. But there's a lot of substance here tucked between layers of strings, harmonies and nuanced hooks. Download it: Myriad Harbour, Go Places
4. Okkervil River – The Stage Names – I guess these guys were considered alt-country before this straight-up rocker. Whatever the genre, this is filled with catchy guitar licks, curious lyrics and one of the great angst-filled voices in lead singer Will Sheff. Download it: Unless It's Kicks, John Allyn Smith Sails
3. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club – Baby 81 – Ballsy, bluesy, visceral rock that grabs you by the throat and won't let go. I loved their mostly acoustic "Howl" in 2005, but the return of drummer Nick Jago put BRMC back on the highway to hellacious rawk. Download it: Berlin, Weapon Of Choice, Took Out A Loan
2. Wilco – Sky Blue Sky – Jeff Tweedy finally put together a lineup that allowed him to find his voice without covering it in layers of artsy posing or frivolous technocrap that just got in the way. Download it: Impossible Germany, What Light, Hate It Here
1. Rilo Kiley – Under the Blacklight – Apparently this is a love-it-or-hate-it album, and obviously I love it. Some critics didn't dig the mix of styles here – 70s rock, girl-group pop, soul, salsa, disco – and I agree it could be disorienting in light of the consistency of previous efforts. But it works for me. Jenny Lewis spreads her wings, and the band provides more than ample support for my favorite disc of the year. Download it: 15, Breakin' Up, Silver Lining
Honorable Mention
Son Volt – The Search; Ted Leo & the Pharmacists – Living With the Living; Southern Culture on the Skids – Countrypolitan Favorites; Andrew Bird – Armchair Apocrypha; Feist – The Reminder; The Fratellis – Costello Music; Johnathan Rice – Further North; Ryan Adams – Easy Tiger; Robbie Fulks – Revenge!
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4 comments:
Agree with most of your picks, especially Neon Bible which I consider to be the album of the year, hands down. No better album to listen to on a flight. Also nice to see Isbell receiving some recognition.
A few which may also deserve to be on the list: Peter, Bjorn and John - Writers Block; MIA - Kala; !!! - Myth Takes; and Kings of Leon - Because of the Times.
Linus -- I've got Kings of Leon and to be honest, I was underwhelmed. I've got all three of their major-label releases, in fact, and I've liked each new one a little bit less than the previous. They're just going down an inaccessible, jam-band path that rubs my ears the wrong way. I loved the exuberance of their first disc -- and loved a couple songs off the second ("The Bucket" is probably my all-time favorite of theirs). Because of the Times seemed just a bit ponderous for my tastes.
I'll have to look into the others. !!! joins The The on the list of alltime great band names.
Great list, VG! I'll admit I'm surprised -- nay, shocked -- you have the Rilo Kiley at No. 1; I liked it, but thought it paled in comparison with the Springsteen and Wilco discs, let alone last year's "Rabbit Fur Coat." But then again, with three albums of overlap between our lists, I'm not complaining.
And for whatever it's worth, I'd vote to call them "albums"; that word captures the sense of "collection" the other descriptors ignore. Besides, aren't "CD," "LP" and "download" better descriptors for the "format"? ft
I have to admit, I like the "artsy posing or frivolous technocrap" Wilco left behind. And I kind of enjoyed the crankier, moodier Tweedy to the current kinder, gentler model. But obviously he seems to be in a better place in life now. I streamed the current album off their site before it was released and was left wanting. Don't get me wrong, they are still rock-solid and one of the tightest performances in music right now. I've just been lost on their current evolutionary stage.
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