musicforants.com's Best Albums of 2012


(photo by cubagallery)

We’re quickly approaching the end of 2012 and/or the world depending on your interpretation of Mayan prophecy, and that can only mean it’s time to reflect on the best albums of the year. For me, one record stood head and shoulders above the rest in 2012, so album of the year was an easy decision, but there was much deliberation for the other 24 positions (plus, honorable mentions). This was one of the most diverse years of music in recent memory, with pop, guitar-oriented rock, folk music, indie-pop and electronica all being represented just about equally. It was also a year where lots of debut albums and new favorites dominated my listening, with 3/5 of the artists making their first appearance on one of my year-end album lists.

I want to thank you guys for continuing to read and support this blog. Next year, musicforants.com will be making some changes / transitions. I’m dedicated to continue sharing my music recommendations, mixes, lists, musings and whatever else, but for a variety of reasons, that won’t look the same in 2013 as it does now (stay tuned for more info on that). As always, feel free to leave a comment if you like what you see on this list and let me know if you have any of your own favorite albums to add. Have a wonderful holidays!

25. Father John Misty – Fear Fun

MP3 Nancy From Now On
MP3 Hollywood Forever Cemetary Sings


 

24. Hospitality – Hospitality

MP3 Eighth Avenue
MP3 Friends of Friends


 

23. Dirty Projectors – Swing Lo Magellan

MP3 Gun Has No Trigger
MP3 About To Die


 

22. Allo, Darlin’ – Europe

MP3 Capricornia
MP3 Tallulah


 

21. Jessie Ware – Devotion

MP3 Wildest Moments


 

20. Bowerbirds – The Clearing

MP3 Tuck The Darkness In
MP3 In The Yard


 

19. Cloud Nothings – Attack On Memory

MP3 Stay Useless
MP3 Wasted Days


 

18. First Aid Kit – The Lion’s Roar

MP3 Emmylou
MP3 King of the World


 

17. Bat For Lashes – The Haunted Man

MP3 Laura


 

16. Titus Andronicus – Local Business

MP3 Still Life With Hot Deuce On A Silver Platter
MP3 In A Big City


 

15. Shearwater – Animal Joy

MP3 You As You Were
MP3 Breaking The Yearlings


 

14. Lord Huron – Lonesome Dreams

MP3 Time To Run
MP3 Brother


 

13. DIIV – Oshin

MP3 How Long Have You Known


 

12. The Mountain Goats – Transcendental Youth

MP3 Cry For Judas
MP3 Harlem Roulette


 

11. Sigur Rós – Valatari

MP3 Ekki múkk


 

10. Twin Shadow – Confess

MP3 Five Seconds
MP3 When The Movie’s Over


 

9. Hot Chip – In Our Heads

MP3 Don’t Deny Your Heart
MP3 Flutes


 

8. Andrew Bird – Break It Yourself

MP3 Eyeoneye
MP3 Danse Carribe


 

7. Spiritualized – Sweet Heart, Sweet Light

MP3 Hey Jane


 

6. Japandroids – Celebration Rock

MP3 The House That Heaven Built
MP3 Younger Us


 

5. Jens Lekman – I Know What Love Isn’t

MP3 I Know What Love Isn’t
MP3 The End Of The World Is Bigger Than Love


 

4. Chromatics – Kill For Love

MP3 Kill For Love
MP3 Lady


 

3. Beach House – Bloom

MP3 Myth
MP3 Lazuli


 

2. Grizzly Bear – Shields

MP3 Speak In Rounds
MP3 Yet Again


 

1. Frank Ocean – channel ORANGE

MP3 Pyramids
MP3 Thinking About You

Honorable Mentions:

Moonface – with Siinai: Heartbreaking Bravery
Grimes – Visions
The Tallest Man On Earth – There’s No Leaving Now
Tame Impala – Lonerism
Chairlift – Something
Kindness – World, You Need A Change Of Mind
Alabama Shakes – Boys & Girls
Porcelain Raft – Strange Weekend

Spotify Playlist: musicforants.com’s Best Albums of 2012

Thanks again to everyone for reading! Stay tuned…

musicforants.com's Best Songs of 2012


(photo by cubagallery)

These are 50 tracks that delighted, inspired and fascinated us in 2012 and that we think are worthy of remembering long after the year is over. We present them here in highly unscientific ordered list form, with Matt’s songs marked with a “-MG” and my choices with a “-TJ” next to them. To better spread the love, we’ve stuck with the one song per artist rule. Click here to download all the tracks in a zip and subscribe to our Spotify Playlist to stream them all. Enjoy y’all!

50. Porcelain Raft – Unless You Speak From Your Heart MP3

Porcelain Raft’s Strange Weekend is one of my favorite debut albums of the year, and this swelling synth-pop anthem is the shining moment. -TJ

49. Sharon Van Etten – Give Out MP3

“Give Out” is Sharon Van Etten exploring the tension of exciting possibilities that she knows will inevitably lead to resentment. It exists in this weird space of breakups that haven’t actually happened yet. -MG

48. Moonface – Teary Eyes and Bloody Lips MP3

One of our generations’s most gifted songwriters delivers this soaring new-wave guitar anthem that sits as one of the best (and most explosive) tracks in Spencer Krug’s extensive catalog. -TJ

47. The xx – Chained [stream]

Even if “Chained” wasn’t really indicative of the rest of The xx’s new album, it proved that their first round wasn’t a fluke. They sound even more sure of themselves here, stripping away their sound until we’re left with something simple and pure. -MG

46. Hundred Waters – Me & Anodyne MP3

Hundred Waters have proved to be one of the most promising new bands of the year with tracks like this otherworldly gem, filled with layers of  vocals, synth textures and bubbling electronica. -TJ

45. Dirty Projectors – About To Die MP3

The best part of any Dirty Projectors song is trying to figure out why they put these particular sounds together, and “About to Die” provides plenty of puzzlers. It’s simultaneously weird and accessible, a combination few pull off as well.  -MG

44. Bobby Womack – Please Forgive My Heart MP3

Soul legend Bobby Womack delivers a passionate, heartfelt vocal performance in this electro-soul confessional produced with gorgeous sonic flourishes by Damon Albarn. -TJ

43. Nite Jewel – One Second Of Love MP3

“One Second of Love” sounds homemade, but not lo-fi. It’s intimate, but still gives off the vibe that it could pour out of speakers if it needed to. -MG

42. Eternal Summers – Millions MP3

The Virginian indie pop duo, Eternal Summers captivate with this dreamy, sunkissed power-pop tune that captures the very essence of summer in a brisk 2 minutes and thirty seconds. -TJ

41. Death Grips – I’ve Seen Footage MP3

“I’ve Seen Footage” was Death Grips’ shot across the bow of 2012, and by the end of the year the band had courted more than their share of controversy. It’s a reminder of a simpler time, when they were just assaulting eardrums instead of offending eyeballs. -MG

Follow the jump below to see the rest of the list!

Continue reading “musicforants.com's Best Songs of 2012”

Favorite Live Shows of 2012

As a result of certain life events due to transpire next year, I may not be going to concerts / festivals at the same rate I used to, so it’s a good thing that I went all out this year. This was my first year I went to Bonnaroo in addition to my usual Pitchfork Fest / Pygmalion coverage, and I  got to see some of all-time favorite, bucket list artists for the first time like New Order, Jeff Mangum and the Beach Boys. Below are my 20 favorite live shows of the year. You can visit the musicforants.com flickr page to view all my concert pictures.

20. Santigold @ Bonnaroo (Manchester, TN)

MP3 Santigold – Lights Out

***

19. Wild Flag @ Pitchfork Festival (Chicago)

MP3 Wild Flag – Romance

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18. The Head and the Heart @ Canopy Club (Urbana)

MP3 The Head and the Heart – Sounds Like Hallelujah

***

17. Alabama Shakes @ Bonnaroo (Manchester, TN)

MP3 Alabama Shakes – Hold On

***

16. Lord Huron @ Pygmalion Festival (Champaign/Urbana)

MP3 Lord Huron – The Stranger

Continue reading “Favorite Live Shows of 2012”

seenyourvideo.com's Top 50 Music Videos of 2012

We’ve come to the end of year one of our music video blog, Seen Your Video, and there’s been an explosion of talent in music videos in 2012. Unlike some years that have been dominated by an elite group of ultra-talented directors, this year saw an extremely diverse collection of new talent taking center stage. Among the up-and-coming directors that impressed me this year are Emily Kai Bock, who’s received much acclaim for her aesthetically cutting-edge work and Ninian Doff, who’s incredibly inventive concept videos have wowed me again and again. It was also a great year for Yoann Lemoine who continued his visually spectacular videos (and is quickly breaking into the mainstream), DANIELS who are still the most exciting and groundbreaking directing team out there, and enduring oddball favorite, Andreas Nilsson who can pretty much do no wrong in my book.

The following is my list of the top 50 music videos of the year and I’ll note that it was both difficult to narrow this list down and also come up with any type of sensible ranking for the excellent selections, so consider the order to be about about 80% arbitrary. The best music videos this year encompassed the entire spectrum, with remarkably inventive concepts, biting social and political commentary, beautiful visual pieces, breathtaking animation, and dramatic, poignant storytelling all factoring heavily into the year’s best. These are the music videos from 2012 that I felt pushed the envelope of the medium and are worth your valuable time to watch and rewatch. The first 10 videos are embedded below, and hit the continue reading link below to go to seenyourvideo.com for the rest of the list. If you have any favorites that you think I missed, feel free to leave them in the comments. Enjoy!

50. St. Vincent “Cheerleader” (dir. Hiro Murai)

MP3 St. Vincent – Cheerleader

49. Mint Julep “To The Sea” (dir. a nice idea every day)

48. Hilary Hahn and Hauschka “Draw a Map” (dir. Eric Epstein)

47. Of Monsters and Men “Little Talks” (dir. WeWereMonkeys)

MP3 Of Monsters and Men – Little Talks

46. tUnE-yArDs “My Country” (dir. Mimi Cave)

MP3 tUnE-yArDs – My Country

45. Flying Lotus “Tiny Tortures” (dir. David Lewandowski)

44. Delta Heavy “Get By” (dir. Ian Robertson)

43. Grimes “Oblivion” (dir. Emily Kai Bock)

MP3 Grimes – Oblivion

42. JUSTICE “New Lands” (dir. CANADA)

MP3 Justice – Newlands

41. Danny Brown “Grown Up” (dir. Greg Brunkalla)

MP3 Danny Brown – Grown Up

Continue reading at Seen Your Video »

20 Albums Snubbed By The People's List

Like many of you, I’ve been spending a lot of time today digging into Pitchfork’s People’s List and, while I think the 27,000+ voters got lots of stuff right, there was also plenty of albums I thought were criminally overlooked. So I turned those harbored resentments into a list (because that’s just what bloggers do, right?).

So, these are my picks of the albums from 1996-2011 that were robbed of their deserved People’s List glory by the 88% male, urbanites that voted in this thing. I limited myself to one album per artist (otherwise you’d be getting a lot more Mountain Goats albums on here). So without further ado, here’s the 20 Albums Snubbed By The People’s List. Enjoy!

20 Albums Snubbed By The People’s List


20. Beluah – When Your Heartstrings Break
MP3 Score From Augusta

 


 


19. The Decemberists – Castaways & Cutouts
MP3 July! July!

 


 


18. Bright Eyes – Lifted or The Story is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground
MP3 Bowl of Oranges

 


 


17. Mates of State – Bring It Back
MP3 Beautiful Dreamer

 


 


16. Destroyer – Destroyer’s Rubies
MP3 European Oils

 


 


15. Andrew Bird – Armchair Apocrypha
MP3 Heretics

 


 


14. Rilo Kiley – The Execution of All Things
MP3 With Arms Outstretched

 


 


13. Okkervil River – Black Sheep Boy
MP3 For Real

 


 


12. Jens Lekman – Oh, You’re So Silent Jens
MP3 Black Cab

 


 


11. Cloud Cult – The Meaning of 8
MP3 Take Your Medicine

 


 


10. Phoenix – It’s Never Been Like That
MP3 Consolation Prizes

 


 


9. Sunset Rubdown – Shut Up I Am Dreaming
MP3 Us Ones In Between

 


 

8. Belle & Sebastian – Push Barman To Open Old Wounds
MP3 I’m Waking Up To Us

 

 


 


7. Stars – Set Yourself On Fire
MP3 Ageless Beauty

 


 


6. Sunny Day Real Estate –  How It Feels To Be Something on
MP3 How It Feels To Be Something On

 


 


5. Iron & Wine – The Shepherd’s Dog
MP3 Resurrection Fern

 


 


4. of Montreal – Satanic Panic In The Attic
MP3 Disconnect The Dots

 


 


3. The Mountain Goats – Tallahassee
MP3 No Children

 


 


2. Beirut – Gulag Orkestrar
MP3 Postcards From Italy

 


 


1. The Hold Steady – Separation Sunday
MP3 Your Little Hoodrat Friend

 

***

If you have any albums you thought were overlooked by the People’s List, let me know in the comments!

 

The Rest of the Best Albums of 2012 (so far)

Honestly, you would think Taylor would have the hang of this by now. But no, instead it once again falls to me to fill in the gaps left by his recent Best Albums of 2012 (So Far) list. To his credit, my Rest of the Best list is significantly shorter this year, but these omissions are still pretty unforgivable. I don’t even know why you guys listen to him anymore. You all need to ask yourselves: How can someone with no interest in music run a music blog?

Chairlift – Something (January 24, Columbia)

“I Belong in Your Arms” made a splash earlier this year, but Something seems to have been lost in the shuffle. Which is a shame, because by any measure it’s one of the best records of the year. Chairlift have a solid grasp on their style, something that can go under appreciated in our mad rush to find new sounds. Every song on Something is meticulously crafted, and Chairlift know their way around a melody that can really get its hooks in you. It may take a few spins to fully appreciate, but Something is one of the most rewarding albums of 2012.

MP3 Chairlift – I Belong in Your Arms

El-P – Cancer 4 Cure (May 22, Fat Possum)

El-P has been pushing his brand of constellation funk for over a decade now. His is an uncompromising vision, one that can be difficult to stomach since he’s rarely willing to meet anyone halfway. You either listen on his terms, or not at all. Cancer 4 Cure is a further refinement of his style, and it’s poised to bring El-P to his biggest audience yet. So what’s changed? It’s not that he’s giving in, but that everyone else is finally realizing things are as bad as he’s been saying all along. The world has finally caught up with El-P, and Cancer 4 Cure is his warm welcome to the grim reality he calls home.

MP3 El-P – The Full Retard

Gentleman Jesse – Leaving Atlanta (March 20, Douchemaster)

Obviously, Gentleman Jesse leveraged his everlasting soul to some nefarious being. How else do you explain the abundance of gooey goodness dripping from Leaving Atlanta? Every song has a massive chorus, and the in-the-red production makes sure they leave a lasting impression. But the turn comes when you listen a little closer; on the surface these seem like fine pop songs, but Leaving Atlanta is actually Jesse’s way of dealing with the loss of close friends and family. That knowledge colors the album a bit darker, and gives the songs weight beyond simple pop perfection.

MP3 Gentleman Jesse – Eat Me Alive

Motion Sickness of Time Travel – Motion Sickness of Time Travel (May 11, Spectrum Spools)

You wouldn’t expect a four-song, 90-minute album to be accessible, let alone something you’ll want to put on repeat, but Rachel Evans accomplishes exactly that on her latest as Motion Sickness of Time Travel. Evans has a way with drones, one that lulls you while simultaneously keeping your rapt attention. She weaves sounds and textures together in such a fascinating and enjoyable way that you’ll find yourself carving out time to experience her world as a whole.

Rick Ross – Rich Forever (January 6, self released)

In a genre that has always been obsessed with wealth, Rick Ross stands out. Not because he bucks the trend, but because his taste is so grandiose that it borders on obscene. While other rappers are content to keep their boasts at street level, Ross has bigger plans. He’s past worrying about police, he’s flaunting his wealth in prosecutors’ faces. He’s done with cooking, he’s more concerned with imports and exports. Of course, Ross’ vision of luxury is helped by his choice in beats; there isn’t a dud here, and they all sound like they cost him a few hundred grand each. Rich Forever proves Ross’ concept of money is on another level. After all, what flaunts your wealth better than giving a million-dollar project away for free?

MP3 Rick Ross – Keys to the Crib (Feat. Styles P)

Sleigh Bells – Reign of Terror (February 21, Columbia)

A lot of us were ready to write off Sleigh Bells after Treats; that albums was good, but it was obvious Sleigh Bells wouldn’t be able to expand on its overwhelming force of sound. Well, obvious to everyone but Sleigh Bells. Reign of Terror pushes the band forward by scaling back; the songs here are still abrasive, but now they are tempered with a sweetness that adds a new dimension to the music. Attribute the change to the increased involvement of Alexis Krauss, or the personal tragedy of Derek Miller, but it injects the record with a humanity not previously found in the band’s music. With Reign of Terror, Sleigh Bells prove there is more to them than the tension between shred guitar and cheerleader chants. Who knew “depth” is a word we would be using to describe the band responsible for “Crown on the Ground”?

MP3 Sleigh Bells – Comeback Kid

Best Albums of 2012 (so far) + Songs Mix


photo via cubagallery

We’ve hit the halfway point for 2012 and that can only mean it’s time for our annual mid-year recap of the best albums of the year so far. Looking through my list of favorite albums, I’ve noticed a surprising dominance of guitar-oriented rock and folk music and a general lack of electronica (with Grimes, Hot Chip and Chromatics being the exceptions). I’ve listed the albums below with a sample track from each and (new this year!) I’ve added my 30 favorite songs of the year, which you can listen to in a handy-dandy Spotify playlist. So without further ado, these are the best albums (and songs) released in 2012 so far.

Best Albums of 2012 (so far)


First Aid Kit – The Lion’s Roar
(January 24, Witchita)
MP3 The Lion’s Roar

 


 


Hospitality – Hospitality
(January 31, Merge)
MP3 Friends of Friends

 


 


Shearwater – Animal Joy
(February 14, Sub Pop)
MP3 You As You Were

 


 


Grimes – Visions
 (February 21, 4AD)
MP3 Genesis

 


 


Andrew Bird – Break It Yourself
(March 6, Mom + Pop)
MP3 Eyeoneye

 


 


Bowerbirds – The Clearing
(March 6, Dead Oceans)
MP3 Tuck The Darkness In

 


 


Kindness – World, You Need A Change Of Mind
(March 20, Casablanca)
MP3 House

 


 


Chromatics – Kill For Love
(Mar 28, Soundcloud)
MP3 Kill For Love

 


 


Allo, Darlin – Europe
 (April 17, Slumberland)
MP3 Capricornia

 


 


Moonface – with Siinai: Heartbreaking Bravery
 (April 17, Jagjagwar)
MP3 Teary Eyes and Bloody Lips

 


 


Spiritualized – Sweet Heart, Sweet Light
(April 17, Fat Possum)
MP3 Hey Jane

 


 


Beach House – Bloom
(May 15, Sub Pop)
MP3 Myth

 


 


Sigur Rós – Valtari
(May 29, XL)
MP3 Ekki mukk

 


 


Japandroids – Celebration Rock
(May 29, Polyvinyl)
MP3 The House That Heaven Built

 


 


Hot Chip – In Our Heads
(June 12, Domino)
MP3 Night And Day

 


 

Honorable Mentions:
Cloud Nothings
Sharon Van Etten
Alabama Shakes
of Montreal
Tallest Man On Earth
Fanfarlo
Porcelain Raft
Sun Kil Moon

***

Best Songs of 2012 (so far) Mix

Click here to listen via Spotify Playlist. Click below to view the tracklist.

[spoiler intro=”View Tracklist”]

Alabama Shakes – Be Mine
Allo, Darlin’ – Capricornia
Andrew Bird – Danse Carribe
Beach House – Lazuli
Best Coast – Up All Night
Bobby Womack – Please Forgive My Heart
Bowerbirds – Tuck The Darkness In
Chairlift – I Belong In Your Arms
Chromatics – Kill For Love*
Cloud Nothings – Wasted Days
Eternal Summers – Millions*
Father John Misty – Nancy From Now On
First Aid Kit – EmmyLou
Grimes – Oblivion
Grizzly Bear – Sleeping Ute
Here We Go Magic – How Do I Know
Hospitality – Eighth Avenue
Hot Chip – Don’t Deny Your Heart
Japandroids – The House That Heaven Built
Kindness – SEOD
Moonface – Teary Eyes and Bloody Lips
of Montreal – Dour Percentage
Porcelain Raft – Unless You Speak From The Heart
Sharon Van Etten – Serpents
Shearwater – You As You Were
The Shins – Simple Song
Sigur Ros – Varúð
Spiritualized – So Long You Pretty Thing
Tallest Man On Earth – 1904
The Walkmen – We Can’t Be Beat

*unavailable on Spotify[/spoiler]

***

Leave your favorite albums / songs in the comments. Thanks for reading!

 

The Beach Boys – 25 Essential Tracks

I’ve been listening to the Beach Boys longer than any other band. Their greatest hits compilation was one of the first CDs I ever owned and I had the whole album memorized backwards-and-forwards. So it’s no exaggeration to say the California surf-rockers are near and dear to my heart. The band are having a huge resurgence this year celebrating their 50th anniversary, releasing a new album and embarking on a nationwide tour (their first with Brian Wilson in over 20 years). I’ll be seeing them for the first time at Bonnaroo and I couldn’t be more excited.

Below I’ve listed my 25 favorite tracks from America’s greatest band (debatably). As you’ll probably notice, I heavily favor their Pet Sounds / Smile-era, but I have my favorites from their earlier, surfier days and there more avant-garde, 70’s work as well. You can listen to the whole list on this Spotify Playlist (if you’ve dismissed Beach Boys because of “Kokomo” or their Full House appearance, I’d suggest you start here). As always, feel free to share your favorites or angrily disagree with my choices in the comments.

The Beach Boys – 25 Essential Tracks

Found on: Spirit of America

Found on: Surfer Girl

Found on: Today!

MP3 She Knows Me Too Well

Found on: Pet Sounds

Found on: Wild Honey

Found on: Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!)

Found on: Surfer Girl

Found on: Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!)

MP3 Let Him Run Wild

Found on: All Summer Long

Found on: Pet Sounds

Continue reading “The Beach Boys – 25 Essential Tracks”

Guided By Voices – 20 Essential Tracks

This week marks the release of Guided By Voices‘ first album in 8 years and the first to feature their classic lineup in 16 years, so I thought that’d make a good opportunity to do a list of my favorite tracks from the legendary Dayton, OH indie rock band. My history with the band actually starts, oddly enough, with Jason Schwartzman. He shared the track “The Goldheart Mountaintop Queen Directory” on his iTunes Celebrity Playlist and I’ve been hooked ever since. I’ve been lucky enough to see the band live twice since they reformed classic line-up, which definitely has turned me into a bigger fan.

GBV has 16 studio albums and over 1000 songs, so narrowing their extensive catalog down to just the essential tracks isn’t the easiest thing in the world (although I admit I haven’t listened to much pre-Bee Thousand or post-Isolation Drills), but I was able to chisel my list down to 20 favorites which you can view below. You can listen to the whole list in a Spotify Playlist (If you’re a newbie to GBV, this may be a good place to start!). Feel free to share your favorites or angrily disagree with my choices in the comments.

Guided By Voices – 20 Essential Tracks

Found on: Under The Bushes Under The Stars

Found on: Isolation Drills

Found on: Alien Lanes

MP3 A Salty Salute

Found on: Mag Earwhig!

Found on: Do The Collapse

Found on: Alien Lanes

Found on: Propeller

MP3 Exit Flagger

Found on: Under The Bushes Under The Stars

Most easily found on: Bee Thousand

Found on: Under The Bushes Under The Stars

Continue reading “Guided By Voices – 20 Essential Tracks”

musicforants.com's Best Albums of 2011


(photo by cubagallery)

Well, here we go again. Like last year, we voted for our favorite albums of the year and put it all together to make one definitive (not really), collaborative Best Albums list. We even all pitched in on writing some blurbs too. As can be expected, there are many albums we loved that couldn’t quite fit on the list, so you we each have Honorable Mention sections where listed a few of our other favorites.

Thanks for continuing to support this blog and reading what we have to say (even when you have streaming services like Spotify and Rdio that make music blogs seem passé). As always, make sure to leave a comment if you like what you see or have your own favorite albums to add. Have a wonderful new year!

25. Smith Westerns – Dye It Blonde

Dye It Blonde is an album that aims high, and won’t settle for anything less than transcendence. Smith Westerns’ songs are massive, packed with two, three, sometimes four hooks until you just can’t take any more and have to give in. It’s steeped in classic power-pop, but never feels rote. Instead, where many bands fall into imitation and repetition, Smith Westerns have crafted a record that could stand alongside many of the albums that inspired it. Dye It Blonde is a fresh and exciting spin on a well-worn tradition, and one sure to become a future touchstone.–Matt

MP3 All Die Young
MP3 Imagine, Pt. 3

24. Cults – Cults

Although Madeline and Brian of Cults have done a remarkable job of sustaining this portrayal of a “it just happened” band-slash-couple, the puppy-eyed duo seems to have rebutted their mysterious existence with catchy, straightforward music. The long-awaited debut of their self-titled record is a token of hard-edged, nostalgic pop and stands as a wonderful tribute to the idea that we don’t always need to know more. –Cheryse

MP3 Abducted
MP3 You Know What I Mean

23. Junior Boys – It’s All True

I always appreciate a band that finds their niche and perfects it from album to album and that’s exactly what Canadian electronica duo Junior Boys have done. The band has never sounded better then on It’s All True, which features some of the their most dynamic and infectious dance-pop tunes all culminating in the masterfully-structured 9-minute closer, “Banana Ripple”, a tour de force of bursting synths, pulsating rhythms and layered falsettos. –Taylor

MP3 Banana Ripple

22. Colin Stetson – New History Warfare Vol. 2: Judges

On first listen, New History Warfare Vol 2.: Judges can be disorienting, disconcerting and downright intimidating. But once you are acclimated to Colin Stetson’s world, you notice folds and wrinkles in his music that went heretofore unperceived, like your eyes adjusting to a new light source. What once seemed oppressive becomes rapturous when placed in the context of the whole. Judges is by no means an easy listen, but it reveals its rewards to those willing to let Stetson take them on this journey.– Matt

MP3 The Stars in His Head (Dark Lights Remix)

21. The Head and the Heart – The Head and the Heart

Bursting at the seams with soul and sincerity, The Head and the Heart’s self-titled debut album captures the essence of folk music while simultaneously showcasing their unique aesthetics through their immense vitality and heart-stopping crescendos. Violinist Charity Thielen showers songs such as “Rivers and Roads” and “Down In The Valley” with her magnificently raspy and raw vocals, bringing the already fervor-filled music to even more life. –Xakota

MP3 Down in the Valley
MP3 Rivers and Roads

20. James Blake – James Blake

James Blake’s full-length debut is a deceptively simple affair. The songs are sparse, built with only a few blocks, and Blake repeats vocal lines until they become mantras. The overall effect is incredibly hypnotic; Blake’s restraint provides the songs the necessary room they need to fully unfurl. The record envelops you and provides a sense of comfort and security. It’s as if these songs have always been with you, and Blake is just reminding you how they go. — Matt

MP3 The Wilhelm Scream
MP3 Limit To Your Love

19. Mates of State – Mountaintops

Mates of State have been one of my favorites from the beginning of this blog and their latest Mountaintops is an excellent addition to their catalogue. While 2009’s Re-Arrange Us, which was pegged as the mature, coming-of-age album, was filled with stately, piano arrangements, the band returns to upbeat, synth-heavy sound on this album, most evident on the exhilarating, cheerful opener “Palomino” and quirky, keyboard jam “Maracas”. All the while, the band don’t shy from embracing their emotional side on tracks like the gorgeous ballad “Mistakes”, a refreshingly honest reflection on the ups-and-downs of married life. –Taylor

MP3 Palomino
MP3 Sway

18. Girls – Father, Son, Holy Ghost

With Father, Son, Holy Ghost!, Girls turned up the talent while turning down the gimmicks, resulting in an album that exponentially exceeds their previous work. The album adopts a consistently vintage feel, with influences spanning over multiple past decades, but primarily channeling the 70s with centerpiece “Vomit”. The band continues to be charmingly simplistic, with infectious melodies and mellifluous harmonies heard in not only the opening, but star track of the album “Honey Bunny.” — Xakota

MP3 Honey Bunny
MP3 Vomit

17. Gang Gang Dance – Eye Contact

Eye Contact might be the most fundamentally strange record of the year. Gang Gang Dance transport the listener to an alternate reality where lines between genres are meaningless, there is only sound. Pure, joyous sound. The album can be bewildering, sometimes downright baffling, but it’s always exciting. You never know what twists Gang Gang Dance will throw at you, but following them down their various rabbit holes, portals, and stargates is what makes Eye Contact so enjoyable. –Matt

MP3 Mindkilla

16. Youth Lagoon – The Year of Hibernation

Trevor’s cunning ability to seamlessly merge what-ifs and has-beens into moments of clarity has in more ways than one, left my heart racing. He has singlehandedly transported his listeners from the quiet quarters of his bedroom studio to an endless landscape of possibilities. There really isn’t an album on this list that is more aptly named. With its ferns of fuzzy riffs and sun-drenched synths, The Year of Hibernation harks from start to finish with a sound that comes awful close to one I’ve spent all of 2011 searching for. –Cheryse

MP3 Cannons
MP3 July

15. The Mountain Goats – All Eternal’s Deck

On his 18th studio album, John Darnielle has made another spectacular collection of songs that ranks among his best work. All Eternal’s Deck doesn’t have an over-arching theme like many of his previous works, which gives the illustrious singer-songwriter opportunity to make a looser, more diverse collection of songs with jagged folk-punk, stripped-down acoustic, jubilant folk-pop and even a song that features a haunting a capella backing choir. Darnielle’s knack for clever word play is still as riveting as ever and the impeccable production and dramatic arrangements add a palpable weight to those lyrics. –Taylor

MP3 Birth of Serpents
MP3 High Hawk Season

14. Young Galaxy – Shapeshifting

As they say, third time’s a charm… and Dan Lissvik, well, he’s just a modern-day Picasso. That isn’t to say Montreal’s indie-rock band, Young Galaxy, had ever been subpar, but unbound by the complexities of imagination, you could say they needed a little direction—or maybe just someone to guide their musical hands. The result is groundbreaking, with Shapeshifting becoming an album that continuously plays and never the same way, easily the most entrancing record on this year’s list. –Cheryse

MP3 We Have Everything
MP3 Cover Your Tracks

13. The Decemberists – The King Is Dead

It’s tempting to peg The King Is Dead as a comeback album, but almost the opposite is true. Sure, it is easier to digest than The Decemberists’ previous record, The Hazards of Love, but it’s far more of an outlier in the band’s canon than it seems. The Hazards of Love represented the logical conclusion of The Decemberists’ aesthetic up to that point, The King Is Dead finds the band stripping away their songs, laying them bare and offering them to the listener as simple truths. Gone are the crutches of grandiose stories and flamboyant characters, and in their place is a sense of humility heretofore unhinted at by the band. The King Is Dead proves that The Decemberists are still capable of making fantastic music, even if they sound less like themselves than ever before. — Matt

MP3 Calamity Song
MP3 June Hymn

12. TV on the Radio – Nine Types of Light

Four albums deep, TV on the Radio still manages to keep us on our toes, just not in the way one would expect. The group seems to have tapered off from their experimental instrumentation and have settled down to a more accessible and lighter sound than previously heard. Frontman Tunde Adebimpe still carries the album with his larger-than-life and unique vocals, however Nine Types of Light surprisingly seems to have found its strength in the mellower tracks such as opener “Second Song”, rather than their typically popular upbeat and obscure melodies. –Xakota

MP3 Second Song
MP3 Will Do

11. Radiohead – The King of Limbs

While there’s some truth to the cries of King of Limbs being Radiohead’s most elusive and obscure album, with it’s sublimity comes a deep-seated beauty that’s most clearly seen on the magnificent second half (although the densely-packed first half has it’s share of treasures as well). Like all the band’s work, it takes more then a few spins to absorb it all and that’s increasingly true with this album. Whether it’s the shuffling hand claps on “Lotus Flower”, the slowly evolving guitar riff on “Separator”, the rapid-fire drumming in “Feral” or the mesmerizing trumpet line in “Codex”, I’ve continued to notice precious new details emerging throughout the album on every listen. –Taylor

MP3 Lotus Flower

10. St. Vincent – Strange Mercy

Annie Clark always seems content to do what she feels, whether it aligns with listener expectations or not. But Strange Mercy finds Clark crafting her best songs yet, while staying true to the foundation her music is built on. All the parts are here, the spindly guitar lines, the blasts of noise, Clark’s angelic voice, but everything just seems to fit better than before. Strange Mercy is a more visceral, tender, and altogether enchanting experience, unlike any other this year.–Matt

MP3 Cruel
MP3 Strange Mercy

9. The Antlers – Burst Apart

In a melting pot of poignant lyrics, velvety synthesizers, and Peter Silberman’s striking falsetto, the result nothing short of superb—and Burst Apart is just that. The Antlers’ sophomore album is by no means a half-hearted attempt at recreating the melancholy of Hospice, as it is carefully crafted to perfection with its fine mastery of somber lyrics and dreamlike coos juxtaposed with ethereal guitar swoops and mist-covered drum loops, creating an overall emotion-filled and cathartic listening experience. — Xakota

MP3 I Don’t Want Love
MP3 Putting The Dog To Sleep

8. Cut Copy – Zonoscope

When Cut Copy emerged a few years ago, they seemed destined to be written off as dancepunk also-rans. No one could have guessed that they would one day give us something as fully-formed and downright enjoyable as Zonoscope. Indebted to the music of their past, Cut Copy have created a rare treat: an album full of terrific songs that add up to more than their sum when taken together. Front to back, Zonoscope is an engaging listen, capable of stimulating the brain and feet simultaneously. Now that James Murphy has hung it up, it seems entirely plausible that Cut Copy could take up the mantle for forward-thinking dance music purveyors.– Matt

MP3 Need You Now
MP3 Take Me Over

7. Wilco – The Whole Love

The curse of making an album like Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is that the rest of your career, everything you will make will be compared to it. YHF is uniquely the most experimental album in Wilco’s catalogue but also the most accessible, and the incredible story behind the album (wonderfully illustrated in I Am Trying To Break Your Heart) cemented it’s instant classic status. Although it may be impossible to top, I believe The Whole Love comes the closest to recreating the album’s indescribable magic. From the opening krautrock mayhem of “Art of Almost”, giving guitarist Nels Cline invitation to unleash his insane guitar mastery, to the infectious, whistle-happy “Dawned On Me”, one of the finest pop moments in the band’s career, to the breathtaking and incredibly poignant acoustic closer “One Sunday Morning”, the album proves that Jeff Tweedy and co. are still in a class all of their own as songwriters. — Taylor

MP3 Dawned On Me
MP3 I Might

6. Lykke Li – Wounded Rhythms

Following Youth Novels, the bar was set high for Lykke Li. However the siren singer not only met, but surpassed our expectations as she balances her feminine romanticism with the eerily dark. Following her endearing debut, Lykke Li dims the lights with her melancholic “Love Out Of Lust” and “Unrequited Love” without venturing into depressing territory. Oozing with synths, Wounded Rhymes takes 60’s-influenced pop music and adds a sultrily ghostly—but shining—flair to it all. — Xakota

MP3 Get Some
MP3 Love Out Of Lust

5. Beirut – The Rip Tide

The Rip Tide is easily one of the most underrated albums of the year, perhaps due to its understated nature and slight departure from Zach Condon’s typical baroque instrumentation. With the tone-down, the album benefits from Condon’s restraint with its simplistic melodies, brought to perfection in the delicate “Santa Fe”. Yet while the maturation brings a breath of fresh air, a musk of nostalgia hangs over the album, with the bands upbeat, horn-loving, bohemian roots never entirely fading away with songs like “East Harlem” and “Santa Fe”. –Xakota

MP3 East Harlem
MP3 Santa Fe

4. M83 – Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming

With Hurry Up We’re Dreaming, Anthony Gonzalez of M83 has made his most vast, ambitious albums to date, one that seems to take all the good parts from previous work (the epic synth-rock majesty of Before The Dawn Heals Us, the glistening shoegaze of Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts, the 80’s synth-pop nostalgia of Saturdays=Youth) a well as offer up an entirely new experience. Gonzalez’ imagination seems to have no bounds like on “Raconte-Moi Une Histoire” which unites Kraftwerk-like keyboards, banjo / mandolin, and a full choir with a pre-schooler’s monologue about magic frogs. The album also offers up the two most immense, synth-pop anthems in his career with the exhilarating, saxophone-assisted “Midnight City” and the life-affirming propulsion of “Steve McQueen”.-Taylor

MP3 Midnight City
MP3 Steve McQueen

3. Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues

I’m not sure there was any album this year met with as high expectations as Fleet Foxes’ follow-up to their beloved debut album. The Seattle quintet were able to triumphantly exceed all of them with an album that builds upon the ideas of their debut and then completely surpasses them. The band stays true to the orchestral folk-rock of their debut while going for a much wider scope both musically, where psychedelia and prog-rock now inhabit the pastoral folk landscape and lyrically with Robin Pecknold’s emotional soul-searching making the achingly pretty songs like “Grown Ocean” and the title track even more meaningful. And of course, the band’s stunning vocal melodies and multi-part harmonies are still in a league all of their own. — Taylor

MP3 Helplessness Blues
MP3 Grown Ocean

2. Destroyer – Kaputt

The last couple years has seen many indie artists reclaiming the vintage 80′s soft-rock sound, but no artist has done so with such awe-inspiring results as Destroyer’s Dan Bejar. Kaputt strikes a balance of being faithful to the sound, with it’s palette of smooth jazz sax solos, airy synths and soulful back-up singers, and creating something entirely new that makes tracks like “Suicide Demo For Kara Walker”, “Downtown” and “Kaputt” both whimsical and stunning. This album further elevates the eccentric songwriter as one being of the most unique and talented voices of our generation. — Taylor

MP3 Suicide Demo For Kara Walker
MP3 Downtown

1. Bon Iver – Bon Iver, Bon Iver

In many ways, Bon Iver is Justin Vernon’s first album. For Emma, Forever Ago was an album built out of necessity, sounding exactly like you would think a folk record recorded in a Wisconsin cabin in the dead of winter would sound. But thanks to that album’s success, Vernon was afforded the means to create an album precisely as imagined, free of any restrictions, either monetary or temporal. The result is an expertly crafted record, able to simultaneously engage the listener at the micro and macro levels. There are moments so intimate they border on uncomfortable, Vernon’s lyrics mixing naked truths and obscure allegory. Then there are those moments of pure, transcendental bliss, moments where the sound breaks free and completely overtakes all of your senses. It’s overwhelming, honest, difficult, exciting, indulgent, and enchanting. But most of all it’s Bon Iver, fully-realized at last.–Matt

MP3 Calgary
MP3 Holocene

Taylor’s Honorable Mention:

I Break Horses – Hearts
The Rural Alberta Advantage – Departing
STRFKR – Reptilians
Iron & Wine – Kiss Each Other Clean
Patrick Wolf – Lupercalia
Summer Camp – Welcome To Condale
The Dodos – No Color
Bodies of Water – Twist Again
The Pains of Being Pure At Heart – Belong

Matt’s Honorable Mention:

F**ked Up – David Comes to Life
Ford & Lopatin – Channel Pressure
John Maus – We Must Become the Pitiless Censors of Ourselves
The Weeknd – House of Balloons
Angel Olsen – Strange Cacti
Matthewdavid – Outmind
Yuck – Yuck
Clams Casino – Instrumental Mixtape
Toro Y Moi – Underneath the Pine

Xakota’s Honorable Mention:

Real Estate – Days
Phantogram – Nightlife EP
The Strokes – Angles
Panda Bear – Tomboy
Nurses – Dracula
Kurt Vile – Smoke Ring For My Halo
Neon Indian – Era Extrana
Joy Formidable – The Big Roar
Class Actress – Rapproacher

Cheryse’s Honorable Mention:

Little Dragon – Ritual Union
Foster the People – Torches
Memory Tapes – Player Piano
The Black Keys – El Camino
Bombay Bicycle Club – A Different Kind of Fix
Fiest – Metals
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. – It’s a Corporate World
Austra – Feel It Break
Generationals – Actor-Caster
tUnE-yArDs – w h o k i l l

Spotify Playlist: musicforants.com’s Best Albums of 2011

Thanks again to everyone for reading! We will be back in 2012…