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!

 

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…

Autumn (Or What It Feels Like To Fall) Vol. 2

If I had to–and I mean, had to–pick one Season as my favorite, it’d be Fall. Why, you ask? Well, why not? The foliage, the fashion, the faint and freckled ending of a Summer filled with love… I know it sounds silly now, but a long walk on the beach would pale in comparison to a tree-lined street, so forget about showing off your ridiculous tan-line and put some warmer clothes on. Let’s share this moment of clarity as we finally take our sunglasses off. Yes, it’s the end of impulsiveness and the beginning of improvement, the calm and colorful realization that we didn’t really commit to any of our resolutions. Oh, but don’t sweat it. In fact, make like a tree and leave your worries behind. It’s a beautiful mess out there and not even the sidewalks seem to mind… because there is always room to grow, and by that I mean read good-er.

MP3 Yellow Ostrich – Mary
MP3 Nurses – Fever Dreams
MP3 Pepper Rabbit – Dance Card
MP3 Peter Wolf Crier – Beach
MP3 Beirut – The Rip Tide
MP3 Memory Tapes – Yes I Know
MP3 Young Galaxy – Cover Your Tracks
MP3 Slow Club – You, Earth or Ash
MP3 Pieta Brown – Butterfly Blues
MP3 Mates of State – Desire
MP3 Youth Lagoon – Cannons
MP3 Teen Daze – Watch Over Me
MP3 Canon Blue – Indian Summer (Des Moines)
MP3 Bombay Bicycle Club – Lights Out, Words Gone
MP3 Fruit Bats – You’re Too Weird
MP3 Sundress – Derelict
MP3 Megafaun – State Meant
MP3 The Paper Kites – Bloom
MP3 Sóley – Smashed Birds
MP3 Dominant Legs – Calm Down
MP3 Scattered Trees – Where You Came From
MP3 Devon Williams – Tired of Mulling
MP3 Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – In A Motel
MP3 Radical Face – Always Gold

Download this mix in its entirety here: Various Artists – Autumn (Or What It Feels Like To Fall) Vol. 2-mfa.rar (175.29 MB)

Spotify Playlist: Autumn (Or What It Feels Like To Fall) Vol. 2

50 Songs Of The Decade (2000 – 2009)


(photo by dcdead)

I released my 50 albums of the decade list two years ago with all intentions to follow it up with a matching songs list. Days turned into weeks and weeks into months. No such list ever materialized and I kindof gave up on the idea. That is until earlier this summer when I took a weekend trip to visit some friends in Chicago and decided to soundtrack the drive with a playlist of my favorite songs from 2000-2009. I thought the mix turned out pretty good so I chiseled it down to my absolute favorite 50 songs, gave them a mostly-arbitrary ranking and now I’m sharing it with you. Of course, belating this list for two years has given me the necessary perspective to narrow this list down to only the essentials. These are the tracks that I play over and over and never get tired of, the songs that always make me turn the volume up when they shuffle on my iPod, basically the songs that are “really, really ridiculously good looking” and not just “so hot right now”.

A few words of about this list, I’m not claiming to have made an end-all be-all “greatest songs of the naughts” list, just my personal favorites. A few folks took offense to the lack of  some genres (ahem, hip hop) on the albums list but hopefully this one will counterbalance that woeful underrepresentation somewhat. Furthermore, I didn’t do full reviews of each track, because seriously, who has that kind of time, but I’ve created a Spotify Playlist where you can listen to all of the tracks (there’s also vimeo/youtube videos linked to each one). In keeping with my yearly songs lists I’ve limited myself to one track per artist.  If you scroll all the way down you’ll see some songs that “just missed” and some per-year stats (‘05 reins supreme again in my book). So here it is, the long overdue top 50 songs of the decade according to me. Feel free to dispute or agree with my choices in the comments. Enjoy!

music for kids who can’t read good presents: 50 Songs Of The Decade (2000 – 2009)

Most easily found on: The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place

Most easily found on: The Execution Of All Things

Most easily found on: Bows + Arrows

Most easily found on: Veckatimest

Most easily found on: Sticking Fingers Into Sockets

Most easily found on: Black Sheep Boy

Most easily found on: White Blood Cells

Most easily found on: Let It Die

Most easily found on: Shut Up I Am Dreaming

Most easily found on: Give Up

Follow the jump to see the rest!

Continue reading “50 Songs Of The Decade (2000 – 2009)”

Summer (Or What It Sounds Like) Vol. 2

As they say, better late than clever. Or was it never? No, I don’t think that has ever been the case. You can blame Summer for its leisure arrival to great Northwest or the fact that a greater understanding of time management quite frankly just eludes me–this really only happens as it gets warmer, I swear. Whatever the case may be, Music For Ants’ second Summer mix is here and is yours for the taking. Should these songs fail to grow on you… learn to seek the sun (and read better, of course).

MP3 Givers – Up Up Up
MP3 The Naked and Famous – Young Blood
MP3 Friendly Fires – Pull Me Back to Earth
MP3 Young Galaxy – We Have Everything
MP3 Asobi Seksu – Perfectly Crystal
MP3 Company of Thieves – Tallulah
MP3 The Devil Whale – Barracudas
MP3 Cage the Elephant – Shake Me Down
MP3 tUnE-yArDs – Bizness
MP3 Cults – Bumper
MP3 Generationals – When They Fight, They Fight
MP3 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – How Can U Luv Me
MP3 Alex Winston – Sister Wife
MP3 Foster the People – I Would Do Anything For You
MP3 The One AM Radio – A City without Seasons
MP3 Hooray for Earth – Realize It’s Not the Sun
MP3 TV on the Radio – Keep Your Heart
MP3 Braids – Same Mum
MP3 Beirut – East Harlem
MP3 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. – Skeletons
MP3 Motopony – King of Diamonds
MP3 White Denim – Street Joy
MP3 Little Scream – Red Hunting Jacket
MP3 Secret Cities – Ice Cream Scene
MP3 Rosebuds – Go Ahead

Download this mix in its entirety here: Various Artists – Summer (Or What It Sounds Like) Vol. 2-mfa.rar (180.11 MB)

Spotify Playlist: Summer (Or What It Sounds Like) Vol. 2

MP3: Beirut – East Harlem

Beirut‘s music never fails to brighten up my day. The young folk troubadours emerged on the indie scene in 2006 with the brilliant debut album Gulag Orkestrar (which still holds up, by the way, as one of the best debuts of the last decade) and after the grand sophomore album The Flying Cub Cup, two EPs, and becoming oddly massive in Brazil (they have festivals dedicated to his music there, seriously), Zach Condon and co. are finally back with a new full length, The Rip Tide.

Although the new album title sounds surprisingly surf-rock for the traditionally ornate, Eastern European-inspired band, their first single “East Harlem”, which is actually a rearranged tune that Zach wrote when he was 17 (!), shows the band are still doing what they do best. The track is exuberant and carefree with bouncy piano chords, ebuillent horns and Zach’s effortless, delightful vocals. Download the MP3 below and purchase the vinyl here (the artwork will definitely appeal to the dog lovers out there).

MP3 Beirut – East Harlem

You can stream the b-side “Goshen” here:

Beirut – Goshen by ListenBeforeYouBuy

Pepper Rabbit

Since the 1990’s, Silver Lake, California has quickly evolved into a melting pot for the Alternative/Indie Rock world. The same hilly neighborhood that brought you artists like Local Natives, Karen O, and Rilo Kelly has me once again digitally navigating through its bustle of venues to the lofty discovery of Pepper Rabbit — the low-key, lo-fi duo in-transit to unpolluted airwaves.

There is something to be said about Xander Singh and Luc Laurent’s style of production, which was noted in a number of reviews as the perfect recipe for a live show, but beyond what these two have established as visually stimulating on stage, the audible illusion of minimality they’ve created with an armful of instruments is the real force to be reckoned with. The duo have delicately netted the echoic and haunting vocals of Animal Collective with the stringed orchestration of Beirut, all the while reeling up a sound that is uniquely their own, weighted, chambered, and covered in dust. Their debut album Beauregard released on Kanine Records plays right through with such unassuming proclivity, revealing the contradicting nature of giving–the unwarranted concept of wanting without wanting and the nobility one finds in perhaps never getting. It is in this virtuousness that real music comes forth, where the line the separates an artist from a musician is drawn.

MP3 Pepper Rabbit – Older Brother
MP3 Pepper Rabbit – Babette!

Favorite Live Shows of 2009

It’s time yet again for EOY (that’s “end of year” for newbies) lists! 2009 has been one of my busiest years, but in the midst of all that I’ve still been able to catch some great concerts. I chose the 15 shows of 2009 that I loved the most for this list. Make sure to visit the musicforants.com flickr page to check out all my concert pictures from this year.

15. Cymbals Eat Guitars @ Pitchfork Festival (Chicago)

Cymbals Eat Guitars’ debut hadn’t been given an official release yet when I saw them at Pitchfork and they still managed to put on one of the most energetic, explosive shows I saw of the year.

MP3 Cymbals Eat Guitars – Wind Phoenix

***

14. Asobi Seksu / Bell @ Illinois Weslyan (Bloomington)

This was my second time seeing Asobi Seksu and I was again entranced by Yuki’s ethereal vocals and the band’s huge sound.

MP3 Asobi Seksu – Me & Mary

***

13. Junior Boys / Max Tundra @ Canopy Club (Urbana)

Junior Boys provided a wonderful night of soulful dance tunes and gorgeous, melodic electronica with wonderful opening support from Max Tundra.

MP3 Junior Boys – Hazel

***

12. Harlem Shakes / Passion Pit @ Empty Bottle (Chicago)

Passion Pit have really exploded on the scene lately but it was Harlem Shakes that stole this show with their jubilant, infectious pop tunes.

MP3 Harlem Shakes – Strictly Game

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11. Beirut @ Pitchfork Festival (Chicago)

Zach Condon and his band of spirited young troubadours swooned the crowd with classics like “Postcards for Italy” and “Elephant Gun”. Owen Pallett joining them for “A Sunday Smile” was one of the festival’s biggest highlights.

MP3 Beirut – Scenic World

Continue reading “Favorite Live Shows of 2009”

50 Albums of the Decade


(photo by dcdead)

I told myself I wasn’t going to do a decades album list. I mean how can you really rank all your favorite albums over a period of ten years that isn’t even completed yet? Over the last couple of months though, I found myself slowly beginning to compile a list of my albums from the 00’s that I loved and I then I began chiseling the list down to around 50 albums. I guess my love for making lists got in the way of the logic and reasoning I had for not making a list. Also since, I started this blog around the middle of the decade I thought only fair that I share this list to acknowledge those great albums that I wasn’t around to write about or put into a fancy EOY list.

A few words of about this list, firstly, these are my personal favorites of the decade and not the end-all be-all of decade-end lists. I realize that some genres (ahem, hip hop) are being woefully underrepresented because of this. Secondably, I would have liked to do full-scale reviews for each album but life kept getting in the way so instead for each album I’ve linked reviews that I feel capture the spirit of the album (click the album cover to go to there). Scroll all the way down to see some albums that “just missed” and some per-year stats (if you want to know which year is best, it’s between ’02 and ’05). So without any further ado, here’s the top 50 albums of the decade according to me. Feel free to dispute or agree with my choices in the comments. Enjoy!

music for kids who can’t read good presents: 50 Albums Of The Decade

50. Mates of State - Bring It Back (2007)

Key track: “Beautiful Dreamer”

49. Grizzly Bear - Veckatimest (2009)

Key track: “Two Weeks”

48. Beirut - Gulag Orkestrar (2006)

Key track: “Postcards in Italy”

47. The White Stripes - White Blood Cells (2001)

Key track: “Hotel Yorba”

46. Phoenix - It's Never Been Like That (2005)

Key track: “Consolation Prizes”

Follow the jump to see the rest!

Continue reading “50 Albums of the Decade”

Beirut – Live @ Pitchfork

When I first saw Beirut, I was completely blown away by Zach Condon and his group of spirited young troubadours playing songs you would think were coming from a Balkan folk band in Eastern Europe. That was three years ago and Zach and co. are now seasoned professionals wielding their trumpets and accordions with ease and incorporating an even larger array of sounds and influences. Seeing him headline a main stage at Pitchfork Festival, it’s hard to believe that when Zach started out a few years ago he was just a twenty year old with a ukelele and some home recordings.

Beirut has certainly not lost their exuberance through the years and seem to thrive on stage whether it’s quickly switching between a variety of unconventional instruments or joking about someone who attempted to crowd-surf to one of their slower ballads (the exact song is escaping me at the moment. Anyone remember?).

The band know how to please a crowd swooning them with a number of classics like “Postcards From Italy”, “Elephant Gun”, and “Scenic World”. From what I could gather, the diehard Beirut fans in the front row rivaled only Flaming Lips in their love and devotion to their band. They closed with a beautiful rendition of “A Sunday Smile” joined on stage by Owen Pallet of Final Fantasy. Overall Beirut provided my favorite set of the day, which taking into account the quality of bands playing is saying a lot.

MP3 Scenic World (EP Version)

Follow the jump for more Beirut pictures. Click here to see the full set.

Continue reading “Beirut – Live @ Pitchfork”