Archive for 'Lists'

I’ve released this way too late. We’re already 44 days into 2013. Let’s get on with it!

50. Tame Impala – Lonerism

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Give it time, give it time. Wanted to like it more, it kind of clicked in Australia. Now to just wait until it’s warm again.

49. Anais Mitchell – Young Man in America

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Such a unique voice sometimes I love it sometimes I can’t stand it. I won’t deny the songwriting ability.

48. Dirty Projectors – Swing Lo Magellan

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‘Gun Has No Trigger’ is my favourite song they’ve written. Not nearly as difficult Bitte Orca, and for that I thank them.

47. Sebastian Tellier – My God is Blue

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French cheesy disco dance party.

46. Angus Stone – Broken Brights

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Australian folk-rock singer takes you there and back again. Not normally my scene, but it feels like the edge of the outback.

45. Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes – Here

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Lo-fi and as sparse as you can be in a ten person band. Nothing as catchy as ‘Home’, but definitely more cohesive than the last one.

44. Bat For Lashes – The Haunted Man

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Someone really wants to become Kate Bush. Tori Amos did before she got all contemporary pop, let’s hope Bat for Lashes keeps this up.

43. Moonface – With Siinai: Heartbreaking Bravery

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Spencer Krug’s descent into darkness. It’s all doom and gloom up in here.

42. The Shins – Port of Morrow

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James Mercer fired the whole band and proved that the Shins were basically a one-man band all along. Their most polished record yet, it also has some great music on it too!

41. Various Artists – Lawless (soundtrack)

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The Bootleggers (a band which is basically Grinderman and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds) curate this album which contains some excellent dark and dusty country covers of non-country music. Emmylou Harris joins in.

40. Sharon Van Etten – Tramp

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I feel like crying when listening to Sharon sing.

39. Daphni – Jiaolong

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A little bit more accessible than the previous works by the man formerly known as Caribou, formerly known as Manitoba (or is it the other way around?). It’s a dance party until the bleep-bloops come around.

38. Florrie – Late

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Only 4 songs more from the English pop Goddess, but she’s back on form after her slightly disappointing Experiments EP.

37. Heartless Bastards – Arrow

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Laid back rock from a band who was already too laid back. I wish for more rocking out, but i’ll respect the subtlety.

36. Fiona Apple – The Idler Wheel…

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Fiona Apple is still angry, but she sounds older and raspier.

35. The Antlers – Undersea

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Another EP on the list, this time from the band that had my number 2 album last year. It really does sound like you’re underwater except for the song that sound like Nintendo.

34. Father John Misty – Fear Fun

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He left the Fleet Foxes to make some great music. I don’t believe he was the lead singer, but damn, he should of been.

33. Whitehorse – The Fate of the World Depends on the Kiss

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Seeing them live really made me appreciate this album even more. I love when I can say that. I also love Melissa McClelland. Now to get Luke Doucet out of the picture…

32. Regina Spektor – What We Saw From the Cheap Seats

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It’s been a year where I’ve had way more female singers on the list than usual. Why? Because they’re making the best music! Regina put out a lovely little album here,  probably her most accessible yet.

31. Dum Dum Girls – End of Daze

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This is where they take off. This is pure bliss in 5 songs. Beautiful.

30. Niki & The Dove – Instinct

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You wanted The Knife to sound like a mainstream band, well maybe Niki is for you. Dancey, a bit experimental, but good ole’ Swedish pop.

29. Grimes – Visions

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She had a good year.

28. The Avett Brothers – The Carpenter

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Still good, but not as good as the last one. Maybe it sounded too much like the last one. I wonder…

27. Various Artists – Don’t Break My Love: A Collection of Lost Memories from Sunset & Clown

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A great introduction to a label which doesn’t have much recognition. Also it’s a metal cube you plug in to your stereo. Talk about accessibility.

26. Killer Mike – R.A.P. Music

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It feels like the 90′s again. Sometimes we need that.

25. Bear in Heaven – I Love You, It’s Cool

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Is this the 80s or the 90s or just something I don’t understand since I wasn’t 18 in 1986.

24. Perfume Genius – Put Your Back N 2 It

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A depressed man can make some very good music.

23. Shearwater – Animal Joy

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Solid release, back on track, not as good as Rook though.

22. Schoolboy Q – Habits and Contradictions

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This album is too long, which is to say it is the average length of time of a hip-hop album. It could have been gold, I’ll settle for silver, especially when it has two of my favourite songs of the year and a Portishead sample.

21. Olafur Arnalds – Another Happy Day

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A little classical for your enjoyment. Shaun can tell you all about him if you ask nicely.

20. DIIV – Oshin

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Hazy surfer shoegaze. The more I look at the cover the more it makes me want to listen to this album again.

19. The xx – Coexist

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Their first album sounds like a non-stop party compared to this. Talk about a band showing restraint. Minimalism in rock music taken to a whole new level. I just wish it was as good as the last one.

18. Lana Del Ray – Born to Die

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Up and down year for poor Lana. Terrible live performances after 2 big singles. I hear she’s gotten better. Her album is pretty good though, catchy, sexy and sultry.

17. Japandroids – Celebration Rock

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It seems like I don’t listen to a lot of loud music based on this list. This acted as that angry album for me this year, even though it has a positive message. More Canadiana please.

16. Beach House – Bloom

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If you’ve head a Beach House album you pretty much know what you’re in for with this one.

15. Cat Power – Sun

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Chan doesn’t sound so sad anymore, i think she’s decided to get angry and take it out on a synthesizer. Is this a one-off or her new direction for the future. I miss her long hair.

14. Wild Nothing – Nocturne

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Early 90s indie updated for all the young ones or the nostalgics. Something really catches me with this album, must be the nostalgia.

13. Poliça – Give You the Ghost

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Drums and layered female vocals, surprisingly addictive.

12. Electric Guest – Mondo

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A little bit electro, a little bit soul and a whole lotta Danger Mouse make this one work.

11. Frank Ocean – Channel orange

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He basically made me start to associate the colour orange with music similar to his when really it should be more of an aquamarine. I liked a few songs, then a few more and now it’s all good.

10. Ellie Goulding – Halcyon

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She became a dance queen, or shall we say almost. Ellie’s second album shows off her vocal chops once again, but it’s a livelier affair with chipmunk vocals, addictive choruses and some beats here and there. I only remember ‘Lights’ off her last one, I remember most of these. She should keep this up.

9. David Byrne & St. Vincent – Love This Giant

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David Byrne is a bonafide hero. The music he created in his career has influenced so many bands that he could be solely responsible for much of New York’s sound in the 2000s. Here he collaborates with one of the indie world’s goddesses to create a new fresh sound. Backed by a large brass section, rather than relying on the typical 4 instrument arrangement, Love This Giant sounds unique and unlike anything either of these artists have done before.

8. First Aid Kit – The Lion’s Roar

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Good old fashioned country music straight from the country we most associate with country music, Sweden. Let’s not dismiss Sweden as not having any affiliation with country music as Lee Hazlewood’s ‘A Cowboy in Sweden’ came from there many years ago. Two ladies from Sweden make some of the sweetest country-folk you could imagine and do it in a manner which does not disgrace the fine heritage of the genre, but also pays homage to the greats in a track called ‘Emmylou’.

7. Burial – Kindred EP

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It’s only 3 songs and about 30 minutes long, but Burial’s Kindred EP easily deserves it’s place in the top ten album of 2012. There is a lot more going on in these songs, which are more like sonic collages, with the beginning and the end of each track sounding dramatically different from one another, often feeling like a whole different song. The highlight is ‘Loner’ where we are presented with the first Burial track that belongs in a club. It’s still really dark, but the beat just calls for your feet to take over. The other two tracks expand on his atmospheric sound and really set the bar high for anything he releases in the future.

6. Hot Chip – In Our Heads

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It’s another Hot Chip album! Seems like every couple years a Hot Chip album ends up in my top ten and I say how great it is and how their next one could be their best yet. I admit now that I don’t think that is going to happen because every Hot Chip album is on that same great level and i’ve come to accept that. A consistently great band is very difficult to find and Hot chip is innovative and smart enough to remain in that category for many years to come. In Our Heads is even more reminiscent of the 1980s than their last album and many of the sounds and effects reinforce that. Whatever, its fun, its dancy and its just geeky enough to make it accessible for everyone.

5. Grizzly Bear – Shields

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Grizzly Bear’s Veckatimest was nowhere to be found on my favourite albums list of 2009 as it did not click for me until 2010. Looking back it should of been in the top ten, maybe even the top 5. Shields is nothing like Veckatimest and that turned quite a few people off. Gone are the multi part harmonies, the strings, the gentleness. Instead Grizzly Bear turned into a rock band, a more complex rock band, but a rock band nonetheless. What Shields doesn’t lack though is great songs. At least 5 of the tracks on this album rank with Grizzly Bear’s best work. Sure there isn’t a ‘Two Weeks’ on the record, but the songs get under your skin after multiple listens and just drive to be listened to over and over. Shields was a departure from their previous work and I believe Grizzly Bear will go back to their earlier style on their next album. This will be the one in their catalogue looked back as the ‘different’ record, but some will consider their favourite.

4. Jessie Ware – Devotion

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Last year I praised the return of 80s soul with Jamie Woon’s stellar Mirrorwriting. This year Jessie Ware has taken the 80s soul sound and refined it even further. She’s like a modern-day Sadé with smooth silky singing over songs that scream sensuality, but would not be out of place at a dance club. An album that could find its place on the dance floor, on the radio or in the bedroom, it hurts that more people are not aware of Jessie Ware and her revival of a type of music that has been missing for many years.

3. Kendrick Lamar – Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City

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One of the few hip-hop albums that can claim correctly that it is consistently great from start to finish. Based on his previous output I didn’t think much would come out of this record, but positive reviews started to flood in, I gave it a listen and after a couple of times I was hooked. It’s rare for me to want to listen to a whole hip-hop album over and over, but Good Kid, m.A.A.d. City has the cohesiveness of a good movie or story. It doesn’t rely on interludes or skits unless they play a part in the autobiographical tale. It is full of great songwriting and smart production decisions. It is an updated story of growing up in Compton, reflecting on many of the same issues that gave rise to one of rap’s iconic groups, N.W.A.

2. Chromatics – Kill For Love

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A 90 minute late night drive, windows down, a pack of cigarettes within arms reach and no destination. 80′s throwback, shoegaze, Italian-disco, songs that dissolve into silence, seductive female vocals. The Chromatics create a sexy haze of a record with Kill For Love. Starting with a stark cover of Neil Young’s ‘Hey Hey My My (Into The Black)’ flowing into the danceable title track the album weaves a journey through the darkest streets of night hitting stretches of neon-lidden strips and then back into the darkness. The vinyl version was released in hot pink which only reinforces the 80′s feel.

1. John Talabot – Fin

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Being a fan on the sideline of electronic music for years, I’ve only had minor forays into the genre, though others have enlightened me on certain sub-sub genres. I can’t classify this album into one of those sub-genres, but it is house music. Possibly Spanish house since Talabot is from Barcelona. What I can tell you is that it has been my favourite album of 2012 since it was released early in the year. It is a culmination of all that makes electronic music good, this is and will continue to be my go-to album to show people what I like about electronic music.

It is full of cathartic payoffs after long build-ups. The songs seem to follow the same pattern buildup/payoff/breakdown/repeat, but the sounds utilized don’t make the album ever seem old or repetitive. It doesn’t sound new, but it sounds fresh and unique. And while it does have its stand-out tracks (see my top songs of 2012) it works much better as a whole, an hour long trip through the mind of one of the best electronic artists today. If I was ever to indulge in creating electronic music this the album I would hope to make, that’s the highest praise I think I can offer.

Another year and always more music.

This year’s list was much more difficult than last year’s was. I’m normally an albums person, but this year I found myself listening to individual songs much more than whole albums. A bunch of tracks didn’t make the list including songs from the Dirty Projectors, Meg Myers, Death Grips, Diplo, Niki and the Dove and so on and so on. I hope you enjoy this list and feel free to listen to my Top 50 (in order) on 8tracks:

50. M.I.A. – Bad Girls

M.I.A. returned for this one-off in 2012. A great song, better than anything off her last album and one of the best videos of the year.

49. Beach House – Lazuli

Synth arpeggios combined with the Beach House haze bring the music. Layered vocal lines of ‘Like no other, you can’t be replaced’ over top really make this song stand out in their catalogue.

48. Ab-Soul – Black Lip Bastard (Remix) (Featuring Black Hippy)

A bonus track featuring all of Black Hippy, the hip-hop collective that includes Kendrick Lamar, Schoolboy Q, Jay Rock and Ab-Soul. Dark, lo-fi hip-hop goodness.

47. Yes Nice – Hot River

Locals make well with a perfectly produced pop song. Eagerly anticipating the release of their new album.

46. Psy – Gangnam Style

I’m sick of it now, but I really did like this song when it was just starting up. Korean Pop channeling LMFAO, a dance song with a message about the absurdity of class in Seoul. An equally absurd video and dance made it catch on fire.

45. Lee Fields – Faithful Man

Fields’ ‘Faithful Man’ harkens back to the day of Al Green and Sam Cooke with this slinky soul number.

44. Die Antwood – I Fink U Freeky

South African dance/rap music with lazers, beats and innocent sounding yet malicious female vocals.

43. Bear in Heaven – Sinful Nature

Sounds like chill wave in a standard song structure. The 1980′s through a piece of cellophane.

42. Japandroids – The House that Heaven Built

Loud, abrasive and earnest. The Japandroids sound like they are putting everything in to each song, ‘The House that Heaven Built’ is the cumulative pinnacle of Celebration Rock.

41. John Talabot – So Will Be Now (Featuring Pional)

The closing track on John Talabot’s amazing ⨏in. An end of the night, time to chill out song.

40. Lana Del Ray – Off to the Races

The best songs from Lana Del Ray’s Born to Die were released last year, see Top 50 songs of 2011, but this track proved that she still saved some good ones for her debut album.

39. Kanye West – Clique (Featuring Jay-Z & Big Sean)

Kanye’s GOOD MUSIC crew really came together on a few tracks this year. While Cruel Summer was more miss than hit, some tracks really showed how good Kanye is at music production.

38. Mother Mother – Let’s Fall in Love

Canadian alt-pop group release one of the catchiest tracks of 2012. A thankful return from Mother Mother after their disappointing 2011 album Eureka.

37. Matt & Kim – Let’s Go

Matt & Kim returned with their infectious upbeat music. A great track to sing a long to at the top of your lungs.

36. Kendrick Lamar – Swimming Pools (Drank)

So many great songs from Kendrick this year, but I picked this as the first out of two on the list. A slow burn of a hip-hop song with a glorious chorus.

35. Purity Ring – Obedear

Robotic electronic Cocteau Twins. Purity Ring takes you to a beautiful sinister place in this track.

34. Frank Ocean – Lost

The most singable sing-a-long song on Frank Ocean’s excellent channel ORANGE.

33. Andy Stott – Numb

I like to think of this as operatic techno. It’s not really opera at all, but there is something about the female vocals in this track that really make it unique.

32. Angus Stone – It was Blue

A driving dirge that was unexpected from Angus Stone. I like when singer/songwriters add some depth to their work.

31. Jessie Ware – Still Love Me

Jessie Ware’s music is updated 80′s soul. Imagine dancing really slowly in a club under the disco ball.

30. The Shins – The Rifle’s Spiral

The Shins return! Well really James Mercer and the new Shins as he fired the rest of the band. Same sound, a bit more oomph and this opener, which could be the best Shins song yet.

29. Bat For Lashes – Laura

Bat for Lashes is becoming more theatrical as her career progresses. I see her taking the reins from Tori Amos as the next Kate Bush. ‘Laura’ is a grower that really shows Natasha Khan’s vocal chops.

28. Poliça – Dark Star

This band reminds me of Sleigh Bells, not because they sound the same, which they don’t, but because they’re trying something different with a female vocalist. This is the ‘Rill Rill’ of their debut album.

27. Schoolboy Q – Hands on the Wheel (Featuring A$ap Rocky)

Built around a sample from Lissie’s live version of Kid Cudi’s ‘Pursuit of Happiness’ Schoolboy Q and A$ap Rocky rap about weed and booze. Trite lyrics but catchy as hell.

26. The Raveonettes – Curse the Night

My new favourite Raveonettes song. Could listen to on repeat for hours.

25. Rihanna – Diamonds

Not the best Rihanna song, but I haven’t been able to get it out of my head for the last 2 months. It became the theme of a trip i was recently on and it will always remind me of that.

24. Electric Guest – Troubleman

Eight minute epic that grooves along nicely. Soul pop from this young LA band.

23. Yeasayer – Henrietta

I’m so very sad that Yeasayer’s 2012 album was nowhere near as good as 2010′s Odd Blood. At least there were a couple good tracks on it, ‘Henrietta’ showing the great love song writing of this band.

22. Carly Rae Jepsen – Call Me Maybe

Pretty sure this was released in 2011, but officially released in 2012. Super addictive song that was everywhere at the beginning of the year. Beiber made it popular and for that I thank him.

21. Twin Shadow – Five Seconds

When making this list I totally forgot about this song and how i listened to it all the time in the Spring and Summer. It is a great track that really reminds me of music that was realized in the mid 2000s. Your indie dance track of the year.

20. Grizzly Bear – Yet Again

Difficult to pick a favourite from Shields, but i find this one stuck in my head most often.

19. Doe Paoro – Born Whole

It doesn’t do much, but what is there is perfect. The simplicity of this track is what makes it great.

18. Killer Mike – Untitled (Featuring Scar)

Reminiscent of early 1990′s rap, Killer Mike has a style that seems retro yet modern at the same time. This track and ‘Reagan’ are the standouts from his 2012 release.

17. Ellie Goulding  – Only You

The danciest track on her album Halcyon finds Goulding using vocal manipulation, heavy beats and an incredibly addictive chorus. This is the farthest she’s travelled from her ealier music, and i really like it.

16. Dum Dum Girls – Lord Knows

First song by any Frankie Rose / Dum Dum Girls project that really stuck with me.

15. The xx – Chained

Most songs on Coexist feel incomplete, missing that final part that would make them great. ‘Chained’ is fantastic, but just misses the mark. If it had that extra push it would easily make the top ten.

14. Hot Chip – Motion Sickness

Consistently getting better album after album, the opener on In Our Heads is an example of a perfectly constructed dance song.

13. First Aid Kid – Emmylou

A great country song that relies on the influence of so many greats before it. You’d swear they were from Nashville, but these two girls are from Sweden.

12. Alabama Shakes – Hold On

Just some good old modern rock with a dash of the South, a dash of soul and roughness around the edges. I hear this has to be heard live to really be appreciated.

11. Jessie Ware – Wildest Moments

Another track from Jessie Ware, the Sadé of 2012.

10. Cat Power – Ruin

Lead off single from Cat Power’s first album of original material since The Greatest. Built around a piano riff, it is one of the fastest paced and rocky tracks Chan Marshall has ever done. A bleak look at the world today.

9. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis – Thrift Shop

Holy crap, turn on the radio for the last couple months and this is on ALL THE TIME. It’s getting a bit old now sadly. 4 or 5 months ago Shaun posted this on the blog and based on it’s catchiness and a wicked video it became a hit. Now it’s huge. If you haven’t watched the video yet, make sure you check it out.

8. Chromatics – Lady 

Part of a soundtrack for the world between waking and sleeping. This shoegaze, Italian disco, whatever you want to call it, track demands late night listening, preferably while driving at 3am.

7. Burial – Loner

A Burial song that you can actually dance to, at least for a couple minutes. Over the 8 minutes of ‘Loner’ you’re transported from horror film to dance club to rave to empty streets in the middle of the night to a freaky children’s show.

6. Schoolboy Q – There He Go

I feel like I have to apologize for the lyrics in this song. This isn’t for sensitive ears. This is just an amazing introduction song on Schoolboy’s Habits and Contradictions. It really sets the tone for the rest of the album and shows what you’re in store for the next hour. Dirty with an amazing flow and a great backing sample.

5. Kendrick Lamar – Backstreet Freestyle

When I first heard ‘Backstreet Freestyle’ it reminded me of Lil’ Wayne’s ‘A Milli’, but after many listens this is world’s above that track. The beat is perfect and there is a lot going on (especially if you listen to it on a 5.1 system) that you don’t pick up on first listen. The vocal build-up shows that Kendrick can do mean rap just as well as his usual laid back style.

4. John Talabot – Destiny (Featuring Pional)

If I was to create an electronic song I would likely make something like this. This song is very similar to the rest of the album, but Pional’s vocals add that extra je ne sais quoi. An excellent track for dancing, relaxing or driving.

3. Frank Ocean – Pyramids

I don’t think anyone thought that Frank Ocean was going to release a 10 minute track as a single preceding the release of channel ORANGE. Really two songs sequed together one an upbeat dance track, the second a slow jam, ‘Pyramids’ is the epic of the year.

2. Kanye West – Mercy (Featuring Big Sean, Pusha-T & 2 Chainz)

It starts off with a sample of what I though was Indian music (it’s actually dancehall), adds some bass, a sample about lamborgini’s and an eerie piano line that sounds slightly like steel drums. Then get some guys to rap over it. On first listen it didn’t really make sense to me, but it quickly grew to me my favourite hip hop song of 2012.

1. Chairlift – I Belong in Your Arms

Maybe I’m just a sucker for a cheesy 1980′s love song. This could have been in The Breakfast Club or Say Anything back then. It just makes me want to spin around in circles in the middle of the dance floor. I’m surprised it is my #1, but it just snuck up there and makes me smile.

March was the quietest month I have had in a very long time. I liked it. It was a month of Spring cleaning and a month of music. We saw a few live and local bands, and a British Classical prodigy. And I ended up getting a “few” new records. But what did I listen to the most in March? Once again it seems to be new music. I like new sounds. new things. Old stuff is amazing, but I am always seeking new stuff. So we have one oldie, and 4 brand new tracks. The song I have listened to the most I posted on the weekend. So you should check out the video for DJ ease my mind by Niki & the Dove. I just can’t get enough of it.

5. Meg Myers – Monster

A simple sounding guitar riff, a percussive hit, and minimal beats begin this track. Simple and understated. Until the chorus, when that sad cello line comes in. “What it takes out of me to lay by your side”. An angry and remorseful tune that has been on repeat all month. And here is a link to download her EP for Free!

4. Teenage Fan Club – The Concept

I wasn’t much of a Teenage Fan Club fan back in Junior High when this track was first released. However, I see a large resurgence of this sound lately, and its prominence in the movie “Young Adult” nearly elevates it to the level of a character. “She wears denim wherever she goes, says she’s gonna get some records by the Status Quo”. A classic 90′s rocker.

3. Angus Stone – Broken Brights

Angus Stone is an Australian singer known foremost as being the guy in Angus and Julia Stone. Both Angus and Julia have solo albums being released this year, and this is the first single from his. A simple and pretty acoustic track that features his calmingly raspy voice. You can download the track over here at his website, and his album is to be released in July.

2. Sam Sparro – Happiness

This list needs a happy and bouncy track. Too much, angst and sadness. Sam Sparro to the rescue. This song is very much like his earlier work, which is great, and it calls to mind the Jim album by Jamie Lidell. Music that is very 70′s/80′s retro soul/funk, mixed with 90/00′s dance. Ultimately it’s dancey. And as the name implies, it’s happy. Here is the video featuring him and his new pervy mustache. And he is Australian as well, bringing the Aussie count to 2 out of 5 on this list. “Happiness you belong to me, happiness you’re mine”. Album due this Spring.

1. Glen Hansard – Take the heartland

And back to the angsty rock. This time care of Ireland. Glen Hansard, known as the frontman for The Frames, or as the guy in The Swell Season, or as the Actor in the amazing movie Once, released this track on the Hunger Games Soundtrack. Or should I say album of music inspired by the movie the Hunger Games, aptly entitled “The Hunger Games: Songs From District 12 And Beyond” as I don’t really think more than one of the tracks is actually in the movie, and that is during the credits. But I digress. This is a rocking track that features Glen and his amazing voice pushed to the edge, where it belongs, over guitars and pounding drums. A killer rock song about killing.

Bonus: And here again is the video for DJ Ease my Mind – by Niki & The Dove

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February 14, 2012 in Lists

Hey, hey it’s Valentine’s Day. From us at Bolster your Holster to all of you out there we hope you have a great day no matter your facebook relationship status. Just don’t let it be the only day you tell someone you love them.

I’m unsure if I like Valentine’s Day. It has nothing to do whether I’m with someone or not, but the whole act of having a day where you HAVE to get something for someone else or HAVE to take them to dinner or HAVE to see them is disconcerting.

I’m all about the concept of Valentine’s though. Love is great, love is grand, love is hell, but it is always worth it, no matter how much joy or pain it eventually puts you through. Yes, the old adage is true: It is better to have love and lost then to have never loved before. So maybe I’m not feeling Valentine’s this year, but that doesn’t mean I can’t feel it any other day of the year. Probably the only place I could still get a restaurant reservation is at Dennys anyways.

So I’ve put together a Valentine’s mix for all of you out there. But due to some limitations with WordPress that is not going to happen today. Instead here are a couple tracks from the mix that either make you more in love or brighten up your day.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FH0Q2lBK9-U

Shaun has invited and encouraged me to take part in this monthly retrospective so I humbly accept his invitation. It’s a great way to keep track of some of those musical moments throughout the year that could be easy to forget down the line and I like that.

January was a strange month. I’d like to include the last couple weeks of December in there as well for the strangeness, but music wise I’ll keep it to stuff from January. A lot of stuff has happened in the last six weeks ranging from heart wrenching to scream-out-loud fantastic and while I won’t list those things here I will say it has been emotional. It also doesn’t help that I’ve been stuck with the damn flu for the past week and unable to do much of anything.

5. Jeff Buckley – Everybody Here Wants You (1998)

A random revisit to Jeff Buckley happened a couple weeks ago. Such a shame that he died so young. I know I can’t sing as good as he could, but Buckley is often my sing-along music for the car. I love the range. This is one of the most straight forward rock ballads he ever wrote, but I think it should be reinterpreted with a slight soul flair that a certain band should start playing soon. This is definitely something you want to put your soul into.

4. LMFAO – Party Rock Anthem (2011)

Yeah I’m late to the party, I only heard this for the first time on December 28. I don’t even know if I like it, but it’s damn catchy and I finally understand what people were saying when they said, “everyday i’m shuffling”, being only familiar with the classic Rick Ross line “everyday i’m hustling’”. It’s also a good song to dance to, that’s a thumbs up in my books.

3. Townes Van Zandt – Only Him Or Me (1971)

Part of my continuing dip into the annals of classic pop/rock/folk/country that doesn’t seem to have an end. Townes seemed like the right choice earlier this year with a glass of tequila or bourbon. Just sad enough to raise up those emotions and just angry enough to throw them away. I’ve been listening to Live at The Old Quarter a great intimate concert to really get to see Townes as he was. He closes the show with this track, one that makes me able to push some feelings elsewhere and move on.

2. Azealia Banks – 212 (2011)

The requisite song that should of been in my top songs list of 2011, but I didn’t hear until 2012. This is something I need to hear in a club. Is there anywhere that would play this in a club. Somebody let me play this in the club.

1. Gene Clark – Strength of Strings (1974)

I have never really listened to The Byrds. I know the hits, but I haven’t listened to a full album of theirs ever. Gene Clark was the original Byrd, but his solo work is so good that I’m scared to even listen to The Byrds now. I wanted to listen to old country/rock one day in January and put his album No Other on after having not listened to it in over a year. Instead I got a perfect piece of psychedelic country rock that is pieced together so beautifully. This is my favourite track from it.

This is intended to be a new and recurring feature to be presented at the end of each month.  A small list of things that I listened to every month, new or old.  I have been creating monthly playlists for the last 5 years now, and it is always interesting to go back in time to important landmarks to hear the music that you were listening to at the time.  To see your tendencies and trends.  To see how your life events effect your listening, or vice versa.

January tends to be one of those months that has you looking back at what you have accomplished, and has you planning for the future.  This January was a lot busier than anticipated.  I ended up working on a feature film (including my acting debut (in an extremely small role)), which took up a lot of time.  And the Best of 2011 lists proved to be a large undertaking.  But this allowed me to go back and look at the year in music in more depth, which also yields new finds and develops new connections to older pieces.  January also tends to be a cold month that usually lends to colder music.  Maybe not so much this year as it was unseasonably warm.  Alright, so here we go.

5.  Hit the ground (Superman) – The Big Pink

After their fantastic album “a brief history of love” was released in 2009, their follow-up was a heavily anticipated album for me.  Unfortunately it doesn’t seem to live up to the expectations quite as much as I hoped.  It is a good album, but it is a safe album.  One that doesn’t push things forward.  But the first single “Hit the Ground (Superman)” is a great little pop gem that I have been listening to all month.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9_xniHg8pc&w=560&h=315]

4.  Young Blood – The Naked and Famous

So this track goes back to 2010.  I had heard it a number of times, and likely thought it was a Passion Pit track.  But I recently watched “The Art of Flight”.  A brilliant snowboarding film with an equally great soundtrack.  This song simply stood out, and I just can’t get enough of it.  It also appears in a remixed form on the new Underworld Film soundtrack.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lcJlTQgdoc&w=560&h=315]

3.  Montreal – The Weeknd

In Late December the 3rd album from The Weeknd was released.  And it was an instant hit for me.  The lead off Michael Jackson cover of Dirty Diana (which happens to be a top 5 fav of his) is extremely good, but Montreal is the original that I have been listening to nearly every day.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MrPN5pXRI8&w=560&h=315]

2.  Somebody that I used to know – Gotye

I had been listening to Gotye for a few years, but never really got into them.  But all of a sudden Facebook was all abuzz with Gotye.  Which I thought to be weird.  But I decided to check out what all the hype was about.  It centered around a song that was very Peter Gabrielish, the accompanying body paint stop-motion/hybrid video, and a subsequent 5-person on 1 guitar cover video.  But ultimately it is a hugely infectious song that just doesn’t go away. “Now you’re just somebody that I used to know”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UVNT4wvIGY&w=560&h=315]

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d9NF2edxy-M&w=560&h=315]

1.  Travel as Equals – Joseph Arthur

As I pointed out a couple weeks ago Joseph Arthur released a new double album for free on his website.  The following day he was on David Letterman with a fantastic performance with full band accompaniment. He performed the lead off track “Travel as Equals” which is definitely one of the standout tracks on the album.  ”The only way we can survive, is travel as equals or not at all”  This is an album that will likely stand as his some of his best work ever.  A true return to form and a step forward.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jOwK7nCGZD0&w=560&h=315]

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhYU1NOH4Co&w=560&h=315]

 

Bolster Your Holster presents the Best Albums of 2011 (according to Kris)! This year I decided to go with 50 albums instead of the regular 40 and included comments on as many as I was inspired to. Hope you enjoy the list and please share your comments below.

50. Charles Bradley – No Time For Dreaming

“The Screaming Eagle of Soul” soars again! Technically, this is his debut album, but Bradley has been around for a few years releasing singles on the Daptone label. This is his debut album released at the tender age of 63, but he sounds like he’s been doing this his whole life. Like most stuff on the Daptone album it is classic soul that sounds like it could have been recorded anytime in the last 50 years. Also the fantastic cover contributes to that as well. I’m pretty sure there is always time for dreaming Charles, maybe while listening to some of your sweet soul music.

 

 

 

 

 

 

49. Adele – 21

48. Eleanor Friedberger – Last Summer

47. Little Dragon – Ritual Union

46. Wild Beasts – Smother

45. Braids – Native Speaker

44. Beirut – The Rip Tide

43. James Blake – James Blake

I am being drawn to it yet not being able to love it as it feels like glass. James Blake is so fragile and delicate that it feels like it could break at any time. The times it does allow it to crack, the bass drop in ‘Limit to Your Love’, the build-up in ‘The Wilhelm Scream’, we can see what Blake would be capable if he just let go. Yet, the album has a way to work it’s way under your skin and even though I couldn’t embrace the album I wanted to listen to it again to understand where Blake is at in making his music and how it will change over time as it already has in his very short career. I expect much from him over the next few years, I’m sure he will deliver.

 

 

 

 

 

 

42. The Weeknd – Echoes of Silence

41. Rainbow Arabia – Boys and Diamonds

40. Tim Hecker – Ravendeath, 1972

39. Iron & Wine – Kiss Each Other Clean

38. Frank Ocean – Nostalgia,ULTRA.

37. The Rural Alberta Advantage – Departing

36. Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues

35. Panda Bear – Tomboy

With my attempted hate towards Animal Collective I really shouldn’t have this album on the list. Merriweather Post Pavilion got to me though, so I though I’d give Panda Bear a second chance. Sometimes I think this album is a piece of crap, but most of the time I think it is a credible mix of drone, reverb vocals and strange noises which combine into something like a high day at the beach. Being released on clear vinyl also got me as well. The singles weren’t representative of the album either, it’s those “other” tracks that show what it is really about.

 

 

 

 

 

 

34. EMA – Past Life Martyred Saints

33. Raphael Saadiq – Stone Rollin’

32. M83 – Hurry Up, I’m Dreaming

As I write this, I technically have not listened to the whole album yet. I have to include it on the list because I know how much I am going to like it and how much it will be listened to it over the next few months. The first half is wave upon wave of electronic shoegaze bliss. I never felt a connection to M83′s previous work, but this album finally grabbed a hold of me, especially the amazing standout ‘Midnight City’, which I wish I had been listening to in the Summer when it came out, instead of the last few weeks. This is one that definitely would have been higher if I had listened to it earlier, but for now it will settle in this position, content and dreaming.

 

 

 

 

 

31. Erkin Koray – Meçhul: Singles & Rarities

Erkin Koray is the father of Turkish rock music and was one of the first Turkish musicians to adopt western rock music and add its elements to Turkish folk, thus creating a huge psychedelic scene in the 60s and 70s, especially in Istanbul. This is the only compilation on the list this year which features non-album tracks recorded by Koray between 1968 – 1976. Technically it doesn’t include anything from 2011 (besides the artwork), but I have to put it here because it is such fine release from Sublime Frequencies, and if only one other person decides to listen to this then it was all worth it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

30. Death Cab for Cutie – Codes and Keys

I’m sure a lot of people look back on Death Cab and reminisce for the time before The OC helped bring these guys to the mainstream. My favourite Death Cab album, Transatlanticism, found them on the verge of popularity, but with their next album being featured on that soap opera for teens really pushed them into the limelight. The thing is that they’ve kept making solid albums since then that really shouldn’t be dismissed because of their popularity. St. Peter’s Cathedral, Doors Unlocked and Open and Underneath the Sycamore are just three prime examples of why you should listen to this album if you haven’t given Death Cab a chance since the early 2000s.

 

 

 

 

 

29. The Twilight Singers – Dynamite Steps

28. The Black Keys – El Camino

27. Sigur Ros – Inni

I’ve been off Sigur Ros for a while now. But they’ve just come back from a hiatus with the live film/album Inni a look at their live 2008 tour. Listening to the album I’ve come to a realization that I should have seen them live some time ago. I love Sigur Ros live, the guitars are louder and have more feedback, the drums are way more powerful and Jonsi’s vocals are almost on par with the recorded album versions. Inni contains some of their best songs and makes a cohesive whole of their last four albums. I’m not one to put live albums on a Best of list, but this one really deserves to be here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

26. tUnE-yArDs – WhoKill

25. Jay-Z & Kanye West – Watch The Throne

24. Zola Jesus – Conatus

23. The Weeknd – Thursday

22. Devotchka – 100 Lovers

21. Laura Marling – A Creature I Don’t Know

20. Elbow – Build a Rocket Boys!

A little bit disappointing after the greatness of The Seldom Seen Kid, Build a Rocket Boys!  found Elbow at their most minimal with only a few tracks featuring the bombast stadium melodies that they were slowly getting known for (Outside North America of course). Still it was a great album that had some standout tracks including the 8 minute opener ‘The Birds’, ‘Dear Friends’ heartwarming reflection on life and ‘With Love”s loud and quiet dynamics. It plays out like an old man reminiscing about youth, an album of reflection and memories.

 

 

 

 

 

 

19. Bill Callahan – Apocalypse

Bill Callahan’s a hell of a guy, or at least I’d like to think so. He’s made some great music over the years and is one of the most consistent artists. His albums are always a slow burn and take some time to get in to. I’d often find myself putting on Apocalypse in the background and take in little parts of it each listen. It’s finally coming together and I wouldn’t call it revolutionary, but it is another excellent edition to his catalogue. Callahan shows his confidence and his ability as a songwriter on Apocalypse more than he’s ever done before.

18. Theophilus London – Lover’s Holiday

London released a full length album this year, but for me it was this EP that defined him as an artist. 5 songs, each of a different genre, that all had the ability to be hit singles. He channeled Prince on ‘Strange Love’, made a TV on the Radio song better than any TV on the Radio song from the last 5 years, made a robotic freakout dance anthem and bookended the EP with two great R&B numbers featuring some killer female vocal lines. This might be all I need from Theophilus, his album was good, but this EP condensed everything we need to know about him in five songs clocking in at about twenty minutes.

 

 

 

 

 

17. Okkervil River – I Am Very Far

The best song released by Okkervil River this year was not on their new album. If they had gone in that direction for I Am Very Far it would have made me so very happy, while making me so very sad. Instead they released this, which most critics said was a wall of sound and too crowded. I was just happy it showed Okkervil going in a new direction and not making the same old crap we’ve been hearing since 2007. I know, I know it wasn’t crap, but Black Sheep Boy was so good that it pales in comparison. I Am Very Far doesn’t bring them back to that greatness, but showed something missing from the last couple albums, passion.

 

 

 

 

 

16. The War on Drugs – Slave Ambient

The War on Drugs are a rock band that fittingly titled their newest release Slave Ambient. The album flows just like a wave of ambient sound. You can be listening to the first song and then turn around and you’re already on track eight. The thing is it is not at all samey. Each song can be taken on its own as well. Come to The City, Your Love is Calling my Name and Baby Missiles are three great anthemic rock songs, like something you’d find on a U2 or Springsteen record.

It’s in the haze.

 

 

 

 

 

15. Cut Copy – Zonoscope

14. Tom Waits – Bad as Me

As with every Tom Waits album before, you’re looking at a solid release full of genre bending dynamics and some very interesting vocal arrangements. Bad As Me  is the most accessible thing he’s released, but don’t worry it is a Tom Waits record so that doesn’t mean much. It has a few more ballads than previous Waits release I can remember, but they all have their charm like Keith Richards guesting on ‘Last Leaf’, the gramophone feel of ‘Kiss Me’ and the excerpt from ‘Auld Lang Syne’ on ‘New Year’s Eve’. There are some barn burners here as well though like the scathing war track ‘Hell Broke Luce’ and the chugging ‘Chicago’.

 

 

 

 

 

13. Wye Oak – Civilian

12. Lykke Li – Wounded Rhymes

You ever have someone you call babe? Sometimes it can sound pretentious, but often it just fits. I’ve always thought of it as a term of endearment, something for someone you love, something for only one other. I’ve liked Wounded Rhymes since it came out, but only recently have I wanted to revisit it. A track, ‘I Know Places’, slipped through the cracks on initial listens and is now finally capturing me. A beautiful acoustic number showcasing Li’s sultry vocals and featuring the afformentioned “babe”. And then it turns into two minutes of Mazzy Starish reverie. Oh yeah, the rest of the album is awesome too.

 

 

 

 

 

 

11. Lia Ices – Grown Unknown

10. Yacht – Shangri-La

9. Jamie Woon – Mirrorwriting

I want it to be one am. I want it to be raining. I want to be pouring out of some club and this playing as I hop on a bus for somewhere, anywhere. Call it soul, call it post-dubstep, call it pop, call it whatever the hell you want. Jamie Woon had a tragically underrated year with his debut not appearing often on any Top 50 lists. Originally grouped together with James Blake because of their great voices and links to dubstep, Woon is a completely different creature that creates an early morning atmosphere that can take you on a journey in any direction.

 

 

 

 

 

 

8. Noah and The Whale – Last Night on Earth

An album of change. Optimism after the devastating The First Day of Spring. This is a different Noah and the Whale as obvious by the first song’s refrain: “And it feels like his new life can start, And if feels like heaven”. Utilizing a heavy dose of 80s rock American influence including Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen, Last Night on Earth is full of glorious sing-a-long pop anthems with lyrics about growing up, getting over love and playing music. ‘Give it all Back’ is the next ‘Summer of ’69′, just listen to it and tell me not.

 

 

 

 

 

 

7. Radiohead – The King of Limbs

After almost a year and the initial hype has settled, The King of Limbs, sits safely as my second bottom Radiohead album. This does not mean this album is bad by any means, but rather to the high standard of excellence that one has come to expect from a Radiohead release. Maybe it was too short. Maybe it didn’t have enough hooks. Maybe it just felt like we deserved more. Oddly enough The King of Limbs has been followed up by four songs that are as good as the best parts of this album. Those songs could have been on this album. They could have made this album better. Nevermind, nevermatter, The King of Limbs is an excellent experiment that shows Radiohead reinventing themselves while still trying to make music that is different and that matters at the same time.

 

 

 

 

 

6. Washed Out – Within and Without

I’m sitting on a beach waiting for my heart to break again. Float off into the sea and let the music take hold. ‘You and I’ is the centerpiece of this album, but it is so much better when taken as a whole. This is one of those albums that I may never know the titles of all the songs, but still love each one, even if it feels like one long single song. This is how chillwave should sound. It needs structure, melodies, haunting echo vocals and waves of emotion. This was a year of some beautiful albums, this could easily be the best.

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. Bon Iver – Bon Iver

Justin Vernon mentioned that the next Bon Iver album was made up of soundscapes rather than songs. After listening to this album many, many times I would agree. Bon Iver is full of many places, times and moments that fit together so well. The lyrics fit with the music as well, even if they don’t make any sense or are often unintelligible. There are hints of the 2009 acoustic Justin Vernon, serious influence from the Gayngs side project and just a hint of some of the swagger he received from Kanye. Impossible to classify, the record plays more like something from Sigur Ros than a man known as a singer/songwriter.

 

 

 

 

 

4. PJ Harvey – Let England Shake

Earlier in the year I wrote a review of this album on Bolster Your Holster. In my opinion it was the best album of the year at the time it was released. It hasn’t dropped far, but I just haven’t been giving it the same attention that it received earlier in the year. I can’t decide if it is my favourite PJ album, but it is the one I’ve dedicated the most time to and the one that has made me want to revisit her first couple albums, which I’ve never managed to listen to. This is an album about war that is relevant today, but seems to focus more on the World Wars or at least it just feels that way. It feels modern and 1940ish in the same way. I think this album can cross generations and will end up being PJ’s masterpiece once all is said and done.

 

 

 

 

 

3. Timber Timbre – Creep On Creepin’ On

I admit I didn’t like the title when I first heard it. Concerned would be a better word. After first listen though, Timber Timbre just made another great album. An expansion of sound and soundscapes would be the best way to describe their evolution on this album. 3 instrumentals and 7 songs and it doesn’t feel like it is missing anything. The last track also sounds like an instrumental outtake from Dark Side of the Moon, which doesn’t hurt the cause any. Timber Timbre is dark swamp folk, but I feel a hidden sexuality behind the music. Sure they’re singing about murder and other dark secrets, but hidden in the music is a sexual tension that reverberates in the air. Or maybe it’s just me.

 

 

 

 

 

2. The Antlers - Burst Apart

“You wanna climb up the stairs, I wanna push you back down. But I let you inside,
So you can push me around. If I leave before you, And I walk out alone, Keep your hands to yourself When you follow me home. I don’t want love.” It’s a break-up album. It’s pledging love and waiting for it to come back. It’s begging to be wanted. Burst Apart may not be as devastating as Hospice, but it certainly carries the melancholy in its own way. You can interpret it any way you want, more freedom means more connection. All I know is that it continues to grow on me with each listen and begs me to come back for more.

 

 

 

 

 

1. The Weeknd – House of Balloons

This is an album that completely reinvented modern R&B that reached a whole new audience while making it accessible, or at least accepted, by a completely different demographic than before. It made me want to listen to only modern R&B (The Weeknd obliged there with 3 mixtapes in one year). I have found no one that compares to the production. Drake has tried, The-Dream is close, but Abe Tesafaye’s debut to the world grasped the late-night, dirty world of hip-hop/R&B so darkly beautiful that nothing else needs to be written on the subject. This is pure sex on record.

Once again it is time for the requisite best of lists. As always, I have issues narrowing things down as I tend to like everything. So to start things off, I have the 111 songs that soundtracked 2011 for me. Not necessarily the best songs of the year, but rather the songs that occupied my earballs throughout the year. It seems that there was a lot of garage rock, mellow music, bands with a lot of members, post-dubstep, and bands that sound like old bands. And since I chose a rather large selection of songs, it takes forever to write about and post them, so I will be very brief with most songs, and may even just quote some lyrics for some. I’m lazy like that. – Shaun

111. Ode to Janice Melt – Army Navy
Just can’t get enough of that bouncy piano. A catchy little ditty.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89W1iF0eLVc&w=560&h=315]

110. Too Much Midi (Please Forgive me) – Ford and Lopatin
This retro 80’s synth number apologizes for its awesomeness.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHYyazhBXcw&w=420&h=315]

109. No Church in the Wild – Jay Z, Kanye West, and Frank Ocean
The opener from the most extravagant album of the year. It also happens to be one of the most restrained songs on the album, and it benefits heavily from the presence of Frank Ocean.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJ4qVeLMybo&w=560&h=315]
108. Can See Miles – I’m From Barcelona

This 27 member band from Sweden always brings a small to my face. My favourite track from a strong 4th album.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UeBPtSM7K0&w=420&h=315]

107. St. Peter’s Cathedral – Death Cab for Cutie
The way all Death Cab for Cutie songs should be.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r73MxE3d6wQ&w=420&h=315]

106. Morning Thought – Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr.
Scattered electronic intro opens into a layered rock track that slowly textures as it progresses. Fantastic song from a great debut.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QTdg7Hj9wY&w=560&h=315]

105. Bizness – Tune-Yards
One of the most unique voices in the bizness. My Standout track from a breakout album.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQ1LI-NTa2s&w=560&h=315]

104. Sweet – Common
Common is BACK!!! His new album was released just as this list was being made, and it is most definitely a return to form. Also, one of Common’s angriest tracks in awhile

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAo6s94X2sk&w=560&h=315]

103. Tornado ’87 – The Rural Alberta Advantage
The RRA excel at turning Albertan tragedies into love stories.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8hdSF7OzEY&w=560&h=315]

102. Shoulders and Turns – The Belle Game
A simple and pretty song. Harmonies and lots of instruments. What else do you need?

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVNmwZ7ul6g&w=560&h=315]

101. Windows are Rolled Down – Amos Lee
Blue Eyed acoustic Soul Americana at its best.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4xY__FoDzY&w=560&h=315]

100. Little Talks – Of Monsters and Men
My favorite new band out of Iceland! Multi-instrumental New Folk that takes a lot of cues from Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes. One of the happiest sounding songs of the year.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Dw8qdmT_aY&w=560&h=315]

99. Baby Missiles – The War on Drugs
Having become a fan of Bruce Springsteen in the last 5 years, I have become attracted to bands that are heavily influenced by The Boss. Baby Missiles is an E-Street rocker that brings you right back.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4oTxcBElAxo&w=420&h=315]

98. Heart Attack – Raphael Saadiq
Mr. New Jack Swing is a huge part of the great new-soul movement. Just enough old soul and new soul to keep it fresh.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dfJe_Cl6CpU&w=560&h=315]

97. Bust-Out Brigade – The Go! Team
The perfect soundtrack to any sports medley. Just enough over-the-top Marching Bandness to be awesome.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCyzdsyDl-E&w=560&h=315]

96. How it Starts – The Features
I could listen to the Features all day. There is a certain energy to their songs, and this song is no different.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oh96CaVE2_4&w=420&h=315]

95. I Mind – James Blake
On an album full of non-singles, certain tracks stand out at different times. This is a song that I played over and over on vinyl for a few days in a row. This one is all about the layers of samples that build and overlap and separate and then rebuild and the fracture and then attack with a glitchy drum loop that draws you in deeper.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iyb9LNLIJd0&w=560&h=315]

94. Feeding Line – Boy & Bear
This Australian band picks up the space that Mumford and Sons and the Avett Brothers left by not releasing an album this year. This infectious new folk song builds perfectly.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3AeKD2oHrFg&w=560&h=315]

93. The Birds (Part 1) – The Weeknd
One of the biggest surprise debuts of the year was the Weeknd. Releasing 3 freely released albums (Mixtapes) that dominated the year. The Birds was part of the second mixtape, which may be the least exciting of the three. However, The Birds was the perfect centerpiece to the album, focused around a dirty martial drum beat that develops and crescendos in just the right parts.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t2_YyRBYZjM&w=560&h=315]

92. No Harm – The Boxer Rebellion
A haunting slow burner. ‘Nuff said.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlxiOGTIV0A&w=420&h=315]

91. Jessica Jalbert – Paris Green
A Local Edmonton Artist that I recently discovered that embraces the lazy female led rock of the 60’s and 90’s.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2qDwSPSE_8&w=560&h=315]

90. Fuck it. You Win. – Hanni El Khatib
Garage blues rock that sounds like the Black Keys first albums. It also reminds me of what Kris might sound like if he sung some garage rock.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2qDwSPSE_8&w=560&h=315]

89. Baby’s Arms – Kurt Vile
Kurt Vile’s gorgeous opener sets the pace for his brilliantly understated album. His interesting delivery and flourishes set him apart from the standard acoustic fare.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63KB-EJKdyI&w=560&h=315]

88. The Valley – Okkervil River
One of my favorite Okkervil River songs in a very long time. It has an intensity that I didn’t think that they were capable of.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vCAAceeWA_Q&w=420&h=315]

87. Black Leaf – The Cave Singers
Another intense burner that sounds like the guitar was routed through a carboard box. Rough and Raw.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJPoPkoKRGc&w=560&h=315]

86. Helen/I’m on Fire – Felix Riebl
Another Springsteen influence that touches on his more acoustic phase. The delicate beauty of Helen segues so perfectly into the subdued cover of I’m on Fire.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9MxzuYCMx_c&w=420&h=315]
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nHS8RKAos80&w=420&h=315]

85. Love the way you walk away – Blitzen Trapper
This song soundtracked a small moment in the TV series Chuck, and it stuck out enough to be played over and over and over. The best track on a varied album.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Go8yeUSV4g&w=420&h=315]

84. The Round – Pickwick
Pickwick is just one of those artist’s that I can’t get enough of. Unfortunately, there are only 6 tracks that they released this year. This is a perfect hybrid of classic soul and the new folk sound.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n5xN3_OWuZc&w=560&h=315]

83. Graveyard – Feist
What all Feist songs need is mournful horns. I just can’t get enough of the last half of this song, it could have fit on Bon Iver’s new album.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-xJ-2DHgFA&w=420&h=315]

82. This is Why We Fight – The Decemberists
My Dad likes to listen to the Satellite Radio upstairs while I work downstairs and listen to my music and movies. I would always pause my stuff to hear this song.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLSOzcEQjiE&w=560&h=315]

81. Trust Me – The Streets
The second last song on Mike Skinner’s final album as The Streets. A nicely paced cadence overtop a sampled 80’s soul groove. Exiting on a high note.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsW8J_vuAko&w=560&h=315]

80. Rumour has it – Adele
Adele’s sophomore debut was riddled with hits, and this one is one of the more lively ones.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgJyoKUHzpQ&w=560&h=315]

79. Without You – Rainbow Arabia
Mix tribal rhythms with the Knife-style vocals and you have the potential for greatness. Kris introduced me to this fantastic band.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1U7M6DHKpY&w=420&h=315]

78. Cinema – Benny Benassi
Pure pop with a dubstep influence. Very guilty, and very addictive.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8k01lcSB0-g&w=560&h=315]

77. As Bright as Your Night Light – Nerves Junior
This Kentucky band relies on it’s rock and electronic influences to create a sound that is heavily in sync with today’s scene, yet still sounds original. An all around mid-tempo rocker.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_adFQMZrG0]

76. My Body – Young Giant
“My Body tells me no, But I won’t quit, Because I want more”. A huge dance number at the Sasquatch festival.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQYpF2pCkLI&w=560&h=315]

75. Move On – Bing Ji Ling
This member of the Phenomenal Handclap Band, releases a fantastic retro sounding soul album under the moniker Bing Ji Ling (Mandarin for Ice Cream). This one sounds like it is straight out of the Motown era.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4oGto1uiB50&w=420&h=315]

74. 2 Hearts – Digitalism
This German Electro-house Duo released this catchy track that borrows heavily from the dance-punk scene of the last few years.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppRQEXhNC-o&w=560&h=315]

73. Truth – Alexander
Whistling makes music fun. The dude from Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes whistles his way into our heads on his solo release.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9yibUR5KNI&w=560&h=315]

72. Shuffle a Dream – Little Dragon
If we had to pick our favourite non-North American country to source music from it would be a close call for me between Iceland and Sweden. This band from Sweden features the always-intriguing vocal affectations of lead singer Yukimi Nagano. This song was also featured on Gossip Girl, which I of course overheard as my wife was watching. ;)

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dD65vfuNhI8&w=560&h=315]

71. Ya Messinagh – Tinariwen (Feat. Dirty Dozen Brass Band)
This track comes from an album recorded in a desert in Algeria. The raw and acoustic Tuareg sounds features a brilliant horn accompaniment from the great dirty dozen brass band. Some of the best sounds out of Africa in a long time, or from anywhere for that matter.

70. Eleven – Thao and Mirah (Feat. Tune-Yards)
A collaboration between Thao (and the Get Down Stay Down) and Mirah. This album was produced by Merrill of Tune-Yards and this track features her contributions quite obviously. Three multi-talented female voices combined in one kickass track.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4m0IEC6Q4QM&w=420&h=315]

69. Think You Can Wait – The National (Feat. Sharon Van Etten)
From the disheartening movie Win Win, The National do what they do best. Melancholy. Sharon Van Etten’s contributions add to the melancholy and beautify this simple track.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rx3PW1mqadA&w=560&h=315]

68. Perth – Bon Iver
This track sets the stage for Bon Iver’s transitory album. A song that builds upon Bon Iver’s past and explodes with a fervor that only his live shows hinted at. Martial drums hint at what is to come. And then it arrives. A clear standout on the album, and in his live show.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3GN9CqxKAY&w=560&h=315]

67. Gathering Stories – Jonsi
This year saw Jonsi relatively quiet. His band Sigur Ros released a live film and accompanying album, and he scored/soundtracked the movie “We Bought a Zoo”. This song co-written with Film Master Cameron Crowe somehow manages to make Jonsi even more cinematic.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyKK55SUqDk&w=560&h=315]

66. For 12 – Other Lives
This song is almost like a cross between post-rock and classic country road songs. Maybe its just that one rolling guitar lick, and the jangly acoustic, and the rambling feel of the track. And those ambient string swells overtop. Or its all in my mind. Either way. A song I enjoyed all year, and loved live.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWMqgeIDJs8&w=560&h=315]

65. The Sound – jesh de rox
I first heard this song live and acoustic in my Dad’s living room. It was one of those experiences that is hard to explain. Then came this updated studio version that sounds like it was produced by Coldplay. Its over-the-top production transforms the song completely, and somewhat appropriately. There will always be two versions to me, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

[bandcamp track=807628007 bgcol=FFFFFF linkcol=4285BB size=venti]

64. Shuffle – Bombay Bicycle Club
I love me some piano, and this partially shattered piano loop has me hooked. I like this new direction they are headed on.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDuif301F-8&w=560&h=315]

63. Half Moon – Blind Pilot
On an album full of songs I became enchanted by, it’s hard to select favorites. The deluxe edition came with a t-shirt with “Hold high how faint your reason” taken from this song. A classic Blind Pilot track that makes me feel good inside. Also featured in a Chuck Episode this season.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68EIBy9Z-ew&w=420&h=315]

62. Life is Life – Noah and The Whale
As with Blind Pilot, I had trouble choosing favorites from this album as well. This song resonated with me on several levels. A song about reinvention. About moving forward.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6HKdXbTI49U&w=560&h=315]

61. Wildfire – SBTRKT
The UK Bass Dj featured different vocalists on his breakout album. This track features Yukimi from Little Dragon. This is Bass music for the masses.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-LEiOzXHWM&w=560&h=315]

60. 1 + 1 – Beyonce
Never been a huge Beyonce fan, but when you combine The Dream and have him rip off Purple Rain, you got gold, err, purple.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaasJ44O5lI&w=560&h=315]

59. Go Outside – Cults
The perfect summer anthem.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eAM9diyVRiM&w=560&h=315]

58. Future Starts Slow – The Kills
This album is killer. Loaded with great songs. This one stands out because of the pounding drums, the simple guitar riffs, and the competing vocals.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiLjuRG3hoE&w=560&h=315]

57. Original Don – Major Lazer
This single released ahead of the album due in 2012 is a very promising sign. The dance anthem of December!!! Run the Track!!!

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKKdJoXF7PI&w=560&h=315]

56. Summer Home – Typhoon
A close second to “Honest Truth”, Summer Home is pure large band heaven. Horns, strings, keys, guitars, multiple drums. This band has it all. A camping favorite for me.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IrsZ65TacE&w=560&h=315]

55. She Will – Lil Wayne feat. Drake
Lil Wayne and Drake together will almost always work out perfectly. They seem to be made for each other. By far my favorite track on IV.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7nYuyfkjCk&w=560&h=315]

54. Serve the People – Handsome Furs
Clearly an 80’s inspired synth-rocker. But, clearly more than that as well. A very anthemic song that soundtracked the last half of the year. Parts of it sound like it was recorded on Bebot.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JIKeQTjeo0M&w=560&h=315]

53. Near Light – Ólafur Arnalds
Ólafur Arnalds decided to record a song each day in his living room. The result is a short EP that exudes beauty at every turn. What makes Near Light stand out from the rest is the burst of electronics and beats that migrate into the last half of the song. It’s the perfect song for a late night in the living room.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHVh_L_kv1Q&w=560&h=315]

52. Helplessness Blues – Fleet Foxes
Helplessness Blues is obviously Fleet Foxes. But something about it feels different.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KyP0DACgdgc&w=560&h=315]

51. Video Games – Lana Del Rey
Could there be any more hype around this girl? She seems to polarize listeners, but her sultry voice and her nouveau retro sound are striking. “I hear that you like the bad girls honey, is that true?”.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HO1OV5B_JDw&w=560&h=315]

50. Atlas Hands – Benjamin Francis Leftwich
“I will remember your face, because I am still in love with that place”. A gorgeous single from a strong debut album.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pyue2N1XZ0M&w=560&h=315]

49. Can’t Hold Us – Macklemore and Ryan Lewis (feat. Ray Dalton)
Just let the rhythm grab you. This song is so sonically captivating you just can’t help but move.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KngfGA9oenI&w=560&h=315]

48. Out on a Limb – Joseph Arthur
“Hanging out on a limb in plain sight.” A plaintively beautiful acoustic track with subtle string accompaniment.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtVRQjGXzOg&w=560&h=315]

47. What the Water Gave Me – Florence and The Machine
From an album that shows no restraint, this is a song that doesn’t apologize for its bombast. It begins with hints, and like all great Florence songs, it builds until it wraps you whole and then squashes you.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=am6rArVPip8&w=560&h=315]

46. You and I – Washed Away
Washed Away’s album is one you put on from start to finish and just relish in its simplicity. But You and I is one of the tracks that stands on its own. A playlister so to speak. At times it sounds like the record just isn’t keeping up, but that is part of its charm.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KoN2IvLlK8w&w=420&h=315]

45. Time – Black Lips
Every time this song comes on I am reminded of the early Beatles recordings.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4JGydfoQcRQ&w=420&h=315]

44. Dig Down Deep – Vandaveer
Vandaveer are one of the best bands in the new folk movement. Their sound is traditional and bold. Forward thinking, but strongly rooted in the past. Dig Down Deep is laden with harmonies. It rises and falls, swells and recedes.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kLylyZciMg&w=560&h=315]

43. Lucky Now – Ryan Adams
A song about the passing of his former band mate. Heartbreaking Ryan Adams at his best. “And the night will break your heart, but only if you’re lucky now.”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bp064T7rQSk&w=560&h=315]

42. How Deep is Your Love? – The Rapture
This 6.5 minute dance anthem captivates. The religious overtones never overpower the groove.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTIKffFPFv0&w=560&h=315]

41. Rolling in the Deep (XX Remix) – Adele (feat. Childish Gambino)
Rolling in the Deep was everywhere this year. A song you just couldn’t escape. Jamie from the XX remixed it into a dancey claptastic affair, and then Childish Gambino added his own touches with a verse at the end. After getting sick of the original, this version brought back my love.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mkTMj0McIvc&w=420&h=315]

40. The Wolves – Ben Howard
This is the song that introduced me to Ben Howard, and it remains the one I just can’t get enough of. It has a shuffle feel that reminds me of a train rolling through the countryside, and the vocal inflections in the howls and when he pushes his voice to the edge elevate the song to a new height.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BLQaGEI5D2Q&w=560&h=315]

39. Buckjump – Trombone Shorty
I have always been a fan of horns, and this track is an exercise in mostly instrumental horn-based hip-hop. Funky fun.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dSD8iFtkE1Q&w=560&h=315]

38. Freaks and Geeks – Childish Gambino
Donald Glover returns to the list only 3 tracks later. This comedian/actor/writer/rapper released an EP and an LP this year. The LP was too much of the same, but the earlier released EP featured this great track. A very explicit track like all of his, but this one features some of the best pop-culture based rhymes in a very long time.

37. East Harlem – Beirut
A beautiful track from a beautiful album. “Another rose wilts in East Harlem, and uptown, downtown, a thousand miles between us.”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WzORRh6lzg4&w=420&h=315]

36. So Much for Love – Gramatik
Sample-based instrumental electronic glory.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C56h08hMLnM&w=560&h=315]

35. Sophia – Laura Marling
A different approach for Laura Marling on this album, and this song showcases her new sound. A progression from her last album into a more band oriented feel, this song builds throughout the first half into a country-folk jam when the band joins in.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-TMl5oCRjk&w=560&h=315]

34. County Line – Cass McCombs
Cass McCombs released a very quiet album this year. County Line is not only one of the best songs on that album, but one of the best of the year. It borrows heavily from 80’s Hall and Oates era instrumentation, but sounds like a song that could’ve been written in the 70’s, yet not feeling out of place in 2011. It is a song that latches onto your soul, pulling it in and down. “You never really tried to love me, whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOcnITphyjk&w=560&h=315]

33. Lady Luck – Jamie Woon
More UK Bass music up on the list. Jamie Woon’s brand features his silky smooth soul/R&B vocals overtop a polished sampled beat.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvsfGhEqnXE&w=560&h=315]

32. Tongue Tied – Grouplove
Grouplove released a killer EP last year that hinted at what was to come this year. Tongue Tied perfectly embodies their sound. Upbeat, fun, interesting indie-pop. Also featured in a iPod touch commercial later in the year. “Don’t take me tongue tied, Don’t wave no goodbye”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1x1wjGKHjBI&w=560&h=315]

31. Rolled Together – The Antlers
The Antlers returned this year with more sad songs. “Rolled together with a burning paper heart” is repeated throughout overtop a bed of Sigur Ros sounding layers.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=utLtAU9uCNk&w=560&h=315]

30. Numbers in Action – Wiley
One of the catchiest tracks by Wiley off his great LP. After a few listens, you will be singing the hook nearly every time someone says numbers. “I wanna see numbers in action”.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CkYJuv82ME0&w=560&h=315]

29. Losers – The Belle Brigade
An anthem for accepting yourself, even if you are a loser. “Don’t care about being a winner, Or being smooth with women, Or going out on Fridays, Being the life of parties, no, no more, no.”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0-HLG7Dxec&w=560&h=315]

28. We Lay in Caves – Campfire OK
I find it hard to pinpoint what it is exactly that really draws me into this song. It has all of my favorite elements in it, but I think it is the way that they all mix together. A song I found myself playing a lot as I drove alone.

[bandcamp track=649571538 bgcol=FFFFFF linkcol=4285BB size=venti]

27. Houdini – Foster the People
After the huge success of last years “Pumped up Kicks”, Foster the People became a household name. This was a song that my wife and I would dance to in the kitchen in the summer when we were BBQing up some dinner.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DHXXZP2L7w&w=420&h=315]

26. I’m Getting Ready – Michael Kiwanuka
This is a lazy soulful number that reminds me of Otis Redding and Bill Withers with a hint of James Taylor. It takes you back a few decades, and puts a smile on your face.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFXKb491QcQ&w=560&h=315]

25. Twins – Gem Club
My roommate came home to me laying on the couch in the dark listening to this track. She then proclaimed it to be the most depressing song she has ever heard. But I just hear the beauty of the song. It sounds like it is being performed right in your living room. The echoey piano and foot pedals are accompanied by mournful cello and horns and then there is that Dexter-ish fill that gives you chills. Best heard in the dark.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hn7vYoZcKxw&w=560&h=315]

24. Novacane – Frank Ocean
Frank Ocean is going to be big in 2012. The best R&B of the year was all released free online, and this picks up on a similar sound to The Weeknd. Sexually explicit and drugged up R&B for the masses. “Cocaine for breakfast, yikes”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMfPJT4XjAI&w=560&h=315]

23. Lonely Boy – The Black Keys
The Black Keys are back with what may be the catchiest song they have ever done. Watch the video, and try not to dance along.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_426RiwST8&w=560&h=315]

22. Need you Now – Cut Copy
Need you Now is classic Cut Copy. And that is a great thing.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2xovJyBo-0&w=560&h=315]

21. Rivers and Roads – The Head and the Heart
A live staple for the Head and the Heart that got released on the 2011 SubPop rerelease of one of my favorite albums of 2010. A great addition.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AclhwQKlgfw&w=560&h=315]

20. Get Some – Lykke Li
Lykke Li’s sound changed significantly this year. Get Some is the anthem of the new sound. A little more grown up. A lot more sultry, sexy and dirty. I like it.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TTPGAy5H_E&w=560&h=315]

19. Little by Little – Radiohead
I listened to “The King of Limbs” a lot this year. And this was the song I always came back to. It wouldn’t seem out of place on any of their last 5 releases.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDpiJ7cyWz4&w=560&h=315]

18. Crystalline (Omar Souleyman Remix) – Bjork and Omar Souleyman
Iceland meets Syria. Bjork’s Biophilia album felt flat. It was unique, but it felt cold and calculated. Omar Souleyman remixed 3 of the tracks from the album. The remix of Crystalline elevates it to something that has energy and even picks up the uniqueness quotient. Best Bjork track in awhile.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cPXZ-NPEjvk&w=420&h=315]

17. It’s Real – Real Estate
This one of those songs that you just like and don’t know why. It has a hidden charm.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4HWcViTXdYc&w=560&h=315]

16. We are Young – fun. (Feat Janelle Monae)
Somehow fun. have become popular. They toured with Janelle Monae, get played on the radio, and were covered on Glee. This is the song that changed things for them. An advance single from their album due to be released on my birthday in February. As mentioned earlier it features some of my favorite storytelling set to song this year, and they just released a new video for it.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sv6dMFF_yts&w=560&h=315]

15. Laut – Lockerbie
Icelandic post-rock bliss.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdlwdCC4ff0&w=560&h=315]

14. Dirty Paws – Of Monsters and Men
3 of the last 5 songs are from Iceland. Of Monsters and Men released a fantastic debut album this year that borrows heavily from American sounds. I just can’t get enough of Dirty Paws and its animal story.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KP4DAlKocIY&w=420&h=315]

13. Niggas in Paris – Jay Z and Kanye West
Best hip hop track of the year. That Shit Kray!

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXMJ-V6MCzw&w=560&h=315]

12. Blue Jeans – Lana Del Rey
Taken from her upcoming album to be released January 31st, another slow burner that sounds fresh and timeless. “I will love you til the end of time”.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8t-I-Lqy06g&w=560&h=315]

11. I Don’t Know – Kassidy
A classic premise. The getting over you song. But really, can you stop singing along to this? I don’t know. Harmonies, claps, and sing-alongs.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3L0Xlr3bAS4&w=560&h=315]

10. Hacienda Motel – Pickwick
A soulful number about the death of Soul legend Sam Cooke. Live versions are fuelled by bring your own tambourine moments and jazz hands.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRpo2zWZ6lc&w=560&h=315]

09. Wicked Games – The Weeknd
Rough and Raw R&B fuelled by more sex and drugs. Another popular theme in music… I am so depressed that I just need you to pretend to love me. A theme that Frightened Rabbit has perfected. “So tell me you love me, Only for tonight, Even though you don’t love me.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9PuAm7d0PA&w=560&h=315]

08. Get Away – Yuck
This song take me back to high school. A time when rock was noisy, and feedback and distortion were used in abundance. “I want to but I can’t get this feeling off my mind, I want to, I need to.”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kz7vyrFhFE8&w=560&h=315]

07. We are the Tide – Blind Pilot
A simple acoustic rhythm guitar repeated over a lumbering elephant-sounding drum, fleshed out by pedal steel, harmonies, trumpet and harmonies. A sweet and simple song that just makes you feel good. “Everybody on the street is singing like it’s a Sunday”

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZzfAWcHZns&w=420&h=315]

06. Heart is a Beating Drum – The Kills
Back when I was a kid listening to Nine Inch Nails, I always wanted to use odd everyday samples as rhythms in Rock music. One of those was Ping-Pong balls. Heart is a beating drum uses Ping-Pong samples so perfectly its crazy. “It’s not the door you’re using, but the way you’re walking through it”.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0td9a-0cMv0&w=420&h=315]

05. Tonight’s the Kind of Night – Noah and the Whale
One of those perfect pop songs. A story of transition. A catchy chorus. A timeless sound. This was my anthem for the year.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDudIT93m_s&w=560&h=315]

04. Midnight City – M83
The pieces of this song come together so well to create a song that is pure 2011. It’s a song to dance to. To run to. To drive to. It’s a song that just fits the year perfectly.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tmtq_MfOs6E&w=560&h=315]

03. The Honest Truth – Typhoon
A complete reworking and rebuild of last year’s “Mouth of the Cave” that turns the 45 second acapella interlude into a 4-minute new-folk anthem. This is a song that dominated the year. One I came back to several times a month.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHRFhLxuLj8&w=560&h=315]

02. Holocene – Bon Iver
One of the most beautiful sounding songs in a very long time. Seemingly nonsensical lyrics that appear to support the music that builds upon layer upon layer. “…And at once I knew I was not magnificent” A song that stands on its own and supports the magnificent album it hails from.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWcyIpul8OE&w=560&h=315]

01. The Wilhelm Scream – James Blake
This song came as a surprise to me. It somehow steals you away from everything else. Blake’s voice has enough sorrow and soul and emotion to captivate you and make you feel what he feels, yet it is purposefully detached as well. And then there is the minimalist beat throughout layered with electronic and organic sounds that eventually erupt into a cacophony of sound that shrinks the world around you, bringing you in deeper. Then it releases you in a flash, and you return, wishing you could go back in.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVgEaDemxjc&w=560&h=315]

Thanks for paying attention. Stay tuned for the best albums of the year.

-Shaun

As is a tradition here for the first week of January on Bolster Your Holster we’re releasing some lists of our favourite stuff of 2011. Below are my 50 favourite songs of 2011, most of them have comments, but some are still coming. Thanks for reading and let us know what your favourite songs of the year were!

50. Wiz Khalifa – Black and Yellow

Black and yellow black and yellow black and yellow. The single came out last year, but the album in February so you can’t stop me from starting off the list with this. Wiz’s album was 5 or 6 songs too long to make it a consistent affair, but it had its fair share of great tracks with this Top 40 single being the catchiest.

49. Rainbow Arabia – Without You

I first thought of this band as a jungle version of The Knife. It feels more upbeat and a lot less creepy. This was their first and most popular single from their debut album.

48. Wiley – Numbers in Action

A first of a few songs on this list that Shaun introduced to me from his various monthly playlists. Wiley is an established British grime MC who is basically unknown in North America. Though his new stuff is not nearly as “grimey” as his previous work, I like it more.

47. Kendrick Lamar – HiiPoWeR

Kendrick once said that 2Pac visited him in a dream encouraging him to keep rapping and keeping the spirit of 2Pac alive. Oddly I don’t see any similarities between the two since he ripped off Kanye West with this song.

46. The Rural Alberta Advantage – Tornado ’87

A sentimental favourite due to the tragedy hitting their and my hometown back in the 80s. It’s a love song with deep macabre undertones if you know the story behind the song.

45. tUnE-yArDs – Powa

“Your power, inside, it rocks me like a lullaby” Merill Garbus uses vocal manipulations to create a whole cast of characters that fill her sophomore albums with stories from all sides. This track has a hip-hop slow jam feel while not feeling like that type of song at all.

44. Colin Stetson – Lord I Just Can’t Keep From Crying Sometimes

http://youtu.be/7KgMrS1CRhU

Yay Canada! So Stetson is not technically Canadian, but he does live in Montreal (who doesn’t these days) and was nominated for the Polaris music prize. This is a cover of Blind Willie Johnson’s blues classic reinterpreted with fuzzy bass saxophone and the beautiful haunting vocals of My Brightest Diamond.

43. Braids – Glass Deers

These Calgarians, now Montrealers (of course), add a little alternative experimentation to the list with this eight minute slice of beauty. They’ve been compared to Animal Collective, but I find this track easier to digest than most things from that cast of characters.

42. Major Lazer – Original Don

I think the album is going to be huge when it drops in 2012, and the leadoff single really sets up the dance party that is going to happen very soon.

41. Coldplay – Paradise

It’s catchy.

40. My Morning Jacket – Victory Dance

http://youtu.be/kEZd2zeFFH4

This is how a jam band approaches re-writing Muse’s ‘Knights of Cydonia’ for an older, less theatrical audience. I think I stopped listening to this album after this song and it is the first one on the album.

39. Cut Copy – Need You Now

I liked the whole album, but had to pick one song to represent them on this list. ‘Need You Now’ starts off slow but bursts forth into a beautiful dance track, the perfect way to open one of the great dance albums of 2011.

38. Death Cab for Cutie – St. Peter’s Cathedral

Death Cab always blows me away with at least one amazing song from each album. I’m a fan of the slow burning heart-wrenching numbers from previous albums like ‘Tiny Vessels’, ‘Transatlanticism’ and ‘Summer Skin’. ‘St. Peter’s Cathedral’ isn’t as painful, but still hits where it hurts.

37. The War on Drugs – Come to the City

This is what happens when an American rock band rewrites U2′s ‘Bad’ for the 2000s. It sounds so much like it, yet still amazing. This song really came out of nowhere when I first listened to it and just made me want to pump my fist in the air.

36. Gil Scott-Heron & Jamie XX – NY is Killing Me

Starts off with a warning that something is going to explode, Scott-Heron exclaims New York is Killing Me and then comes the heavy bass. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. It makes me feel like I need to discover everything Scott-Heron did in his lifetime. Another XX reference on the Bolster!

35. Radiohead – Lotus Flower

If you can get past the Thom Yorke dance you get Radiohead’s first and only single from The King of Limbs. Weird time signatures abound and just try to clap your hands to this song. There’s always dancing like Thom Yorke…

34. Frank Ocean – Lovecrimes

Do you hear the woman slowly getting annoyed in the background? She starts off laughing, but by the end of the song she demands respect. Lovecrime. The piano and drum beat really make the song, which is rare as Ocean’s vocals are usually the highlight of his work.

33. Theophilus London – Wine and Chocolates

First time hearing this I swore it was a TV on the Radio track. Later I found out it was recorded with TV on the Radio which explained a lot. And it was better than anything on TV on the Radio’s album that came out in 2011. I’m disappointed in them, but happy that Theophilus filled that void.

32. Noah and The Whale – Just Me Before We Met

Noah and The Whale ditched the sombre breakup songs for some good old americana on their third album. Another album where every song was excellent I decided to settle on this one because of the chorus. It’s a wonderful track that really livens me up.

31. Foster the People – Pumped Up Kicks

The biggest indie song of the year that was great before I saw them perform it on Saturday Night Live. Why can’t bands act as cool as they sound?

30. The Antlers – Putting the Dog to Sleep

“Prove to me I’m not going to die alone”, opens one of the most depressing songs of 2011. This almost takes me back to Antlers debut album Hospice with feelings of abandonment and despair. Using putting a dog to sleep as a metaphor for the end of a relationship, it is more a song about smartening up and believing in someone rather than throwing it away.

29. Lia Ices – Daphne

Lia teams up with Bon Iver on the best duet of 2011. It’s a magical folk tale of a tree and a girl, her lyrics are almost as bizarre as Bon Iver’s.

28. Raphael Saadiq – Heart Attack

Does anyone remember Tony! Toni! Toné!? This guy was in that band, but now he makes some sweet soul, funk and R&B. I love modern soul that sticks to its roots. Saadiq is at the top of his game here with a rock infused funk burner.

27. Alexander – Truth

Edward Sharpe is not the lead singer of the Magnetic Zeroes. Alex Ebert is. Alex Ebert released a solo album under the moniker Alexander and the highlight was this laid-back soul number featuring some mean whistling and powerful vocals.

26. The Weeknd – The Morning

http://youtu.be/jxzn5C4Dmuk

Most of this list could have been songs from The Weeknd, as I don’t think I’ve ever heard modern R&B done as good as this before. ‘The Morning’ is best summed up with the lines: “House full of hoes that specialize in the hoeing’, Make that money rain as they takin off they clothes”. Sure the lyrics are raw, but isn’t that what makes it real?

25. Elbow – The Birds

I have a sweet tooth for album openers. First impressions are strong and when it comes to albums you gotta come out strong to keep me listening. With ‘The Birds’ I had high expectations since I loved Elbow’s last album and they didn’t disappoint. Check out Bolster’s review of Elbow to learn a bit more about this track and the rest of the album.

24. Jamie Woon – Street

Post-dubstep with smooth soulful vocals and a shadowy feel make this track something to be enjoyed after a late night out while it rains outside. I’m wishing you were here with me walking on a city street.

23. PJ Harvey – The Words That Maketh Murder

Everything that PJ does is gold and this is no exception. A scathing look at war sung in that beautiful voice of hers.

22. Burial – Street Halo

A big fan of what Burial has done here. Scratching, which sounds like rain falling the pavement. Deep heavy bass. A chugging house beat. Distorted female vocals. This is what I thought dubstep was supposed to sound like.

21. Timber Timbre – Too Old To Die Young

Haunted swamp folk, and this is their most up beat song possibly ever? It is the sounds of getting murdered in a 1950s flick combined with David Lynch and maybe even a bit of the Boreal forest in there as well.

20. The Rapture – How Deep is Your Love?

I don’t know whether I was disappointed that this wasn’t a cover of the Bee Gees song when it came out, but at this point I’m glad it reminds me of how good The Rapture were in the mid-2000s. Infectious dance song that is as good as anything they’ve ever released.

19. Lil’ Wayne – She Will (Featuring Drake)

http://youtu.be/ti3CKuU3FRs

Young Money! Most critics thought that LIl’ Wayne was running out of ideas on The Carter IV, I, on the other hand, enjoyed most of it as the beats were good and Wayne was doing what he does best. This track featuring Drake is a gloomy slice of angry hip-hop.

18. Yacht – I Walked Alone

17. Bjork – Crystalline (Omar Souleyman Remix)

Omar Souleyman should remix every Bjork track. I love the Middle Eastern vibe that flows throughout this song. The original is very minimal, but this makes it a track you’d hear at an Iranian wedding, something that Souleyman has sung at hundreds of times in his career. You want to get people dancing, put on this song!

16. The Head and The Heart – Rivers and Roads

A bonus track from the reissue of their album and a live favourite, ‘Rivers and Roads’ is longing at its finest. The finest long-distance song of the year, I know I listened to it many a night in 2011. The emotion in this song, especially when played live, makes it hit both the head and the heart.

15. Okkervil River – Mermaid

I wrote about this song earlier this year and commented that Okkervil River was back in from and writing kick-ass depressing music. ‘Mermaid’ was better than any song on their 2011 album I Am Very Far and still resonates as their best song since Black Sheep Boy.

14. M83 – Midnight City

13. The National – Exile Vilify

My favourite band released three new tracks this year. This was used as the theme to the video game Portal 2, which I have yet to play, but hear is outstanding. They’ve moved towards more piano driven ballads, but still write magic.

12. Lana Del Rey – Blue Jeans

Her album comes out in January, but this preview single really set the bar high. It’s a rip-off of Chris Issak’s ‘Wicked Game’ with Stevie Nicks and Tori Amos vocals. Highly addictive and suggestively erotic, it really gets under the skin.

11. Adele – Rolling in The Deep

I think you’ve heard this song before…

10. Big K.R.I.T. – Sookie Now

‘Sookie Now’ just soars in and takes over. This has to be played in clubs, has to be played at parties, it is just Southern hip-hop at its best.

9. James Blake – The Wilhelm Scream

I don’t know about my dreams anymore. What’s that thing they call post post dubstep? I think this guy invented it.

8. Ellie Goulding – Lights

Released as a single in 2011 from a 2010 album makes this an iffy selection, but it really is one of two great pop songs in my Top 10 that deserve recognition, even if they were released in 2010. ‘Lights’ is one of those songs that grabbed a hold of me ever since seeing her perform it on SNL. She just seemed to be putting everything into the song and that it really meant something to her. I admired that and feel it every time I listen.

7. The Weeknd – Wicked Games

6. Radiohead – Give Up The Ghost

A very minimal Radiohead song that plays out more like a Thom Yorke solo piece than a full band effort. We have sampled vocals, an acoustic guitar and Yorke’s lead in the front and way in the back is the rest of the band. It’s beautiful though, their best song since In Rainbows and something very Radiohead on a very un-Radiohead 2011 album.

5. Washed Out – You and I

http://youtu.be/S7REZE6MDdk

I’ve never been a fan of chill wave, but Washed Out works both as a pick me up or a come down. ‘You and I’ makes me want to dance and cry at the same time, which usually means that it will be one of my favourite songs of the year. The female vocals that enter around the 3:30 part add just enough to change up the track and make it stick.

4. Florrie – Left Too Late

I’m breaking a big rule here by having a 2010 song up this high, but it was too good to not put on the list. Her Introduction EP was released in November 2010, but I didn’t hear this song until 2011 so I’m putting it here. Likely my most listened to track of 2011 this is the perfect pop song. The way it takes off when the guitar and synth come in, it’s just perfectly produced.

3. Jay-Z & Kanye West – Niggas in Paris

“we’re gonna skate to one song and one song only” Why the clips from Blades of Glory, i don’t know, but they work seamlessly with the track. The beat and production on this one is stellar and I would say the first two minutes are the best hip-hop you’re going to find this year.

2. Bon Iver – Holocene

This song is beautiful but it makes no sense. I don’t understand a word of this song and think he keeps saying “Shake and Bake and stick with her”, but it just is and that is what makes it so magnificent.

1. The Antlers – I Don’t Want Love

An oddly-titled song to have as my number one for anyone who may know me, this ended up as my number one song though I never really pictured it there before making this list. Once in a while a song comes along that doesn’t seem to have anything special about it, but over time it really takes a hold. I found this with The XX and The National before and with The Antlers I found it this year. ‘I Don’t Want Love’ was something I could listen anytime, though the lyrics aim at something fairly devastating, and love it.

Every year I hear it. Someone always says “This was a bad year for music”. I always end up disagreeing. Whether it’s because I like way too many things or I simply like to disagree, I always feel that there are some great artist’s putting out some great music.

So a couple weeks ago, I heard it three times that this is a bad year for music. That there were no great albums. And of course, I disagree.

This is my list of my favourite 15 albums of the year thus far. A slightly eclectic list of albums that I have been listening to consistently throughout the past 6 months. 2011′s ever building soundtrack.

#15 – Cut Copy – Zonoscope

Zonoscope fizzed out for me the first few listens.  It was a big disappointment.  Until a few weeks ago when I gave it another go.  And I can’t stop listening.  It’s versatile and diverse like their previous outings.  And of course it’s dancey, like so much of this years great albums.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tb1o42RdVzA&w=560&h=349]

#14 – Lockerbie – Ólgusjór

I recently did a post on this album, so I won’t go into too much detail at this time. This is an album that I have been listening to consistently since it’s release. This is Icelandic Post-Rock that finds its own voice.

#13 – The Handsome Furs – Sound Kapital

Their last album was a blast.  And Sound Kapital, is even more so.  A gritty synth rock album full of dance anthems to soundtrack the late night drive.

#12 – Radiohead – The King of Limbs

As with every Radiohead release, this is a progression of sounds.  A blend of their previous work, with today’s sounds, and a touch of the future.  It is always interesting and complexly beautiful.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cfOa1a8hYP8&w=560&h=349]

#11 – Typhoon – A New Kind of House

This is an EP that came out this year from this collective that hails from Portland. With at least 12 active members this band has a loud sound that is pushing the boundaries of the new folk revival. The Honest Truth is up there as one of my favourite songs of the year, and their performance at the Sasquatch festival was one of the best of the fest.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHRFhLxuLj8&w=560&h=349]

#10 – Joseph Arthur – The Graduation Ceremony

I have been a big fan of Joseph Arthur’s for over 10 years now.  I finally get to see him this Sunday at the Calgary Folk Fest and I am extremely excited.  To see him touring in support of this album will be great as it is a great folky album with some nice flourishes.  It is a safe Joseph Arthur which has its pros and cons, but it is definitely up there with his best works.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yUGFeMDe_R4&w=425&h=349]

#9 – Foster the People – Torches

This band proved that they are more than last years HUGE hit.  The album is full of catchy pop songs in the vein of MGMT and other synth rock acts.  Nearly every song on the album is single worthy and they put on a great show at Sasquatch that had the small stage overflowing.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2SZGW-6AF3A&w=560&h=349]

#8 – Lykke Li – Wounded Rhymes

This album is a very big departure from her debut hit album.  It’s darker.  Moodier.  And somehow more danceable.  It took me several listens to adjust but grew to really appreciate the shift and the new sound.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TTPGAy5H_E&w=560&h=349]

#7 – Jamie Woon – Mirrorwriting

Call it Post-dubstep, call it whatever you want.  It’s soulful and it makes you dance inside.  I am a big fan of this album and find myself listening to it a lot when I am outside.  What that means, I don’t know.  But it must mean something.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BvsfGhEqnXE&w=560&h=349]

#6 – The Weeknd – House of Balloons

Canadian soul/hip hop duo that is making huge splashes worldwide, and with good reason.  This is the future of soul music and their new mixtape is sounding like it will be just as good.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9PuAm7d0PA&w=560&h=349]

#5 – Yuck – Yuck

This band from the other side of the pond is bringing back the 90′s.  This album channels the bands I wasn’t cool enough to listen to in the 90′s and and makes it all their own.  This is a driving album for me, and likely one of the top albums of the year.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kz7vyrFhFE8&w=560&h=349]

#4 – TuNe YaRdS

Alternating caps are out, but these guys are in.  This album features some of the most forward thinking rock melodies I have heard in awhile.  This is an album that takes some work to get into, but it rewards heavily.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQ1LI-NTa2s&w=560&h=349]

#3 – James Blake – James Blake

Another entry into the Post-Dubstep Genre that defies boundaries.  It’s nearly impossible to explain how amazing this album is.  It is an album that haunts you from the inside out.  It has scattering beats and soulful vocals, and twists.  It is straightforward blue-eyed soul, slowed down and shattered beyond recognition.  Makes sense, right?

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVgEaDemxjc&w=560&h=349]

#2 – Noah and the Whale – Last Night on Earth

It is no secret that I am a huge Noah and the Whale fan.  I finally got to see them for the first time at Sasquatch and get to see them for the second time at the Edmonton Folk Music Festival.  All three of their albums are sonically diverse.  This album is less folky and more synth rocky.  The melodies, harmonies, and lyrics are pure NATW, and they still have a knack of making dark subjects sound happy.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fbGUEelmzxo&w=560&h=349]

#1 – Bon Iver, Bon Iver

There is not much that can be said about this album that will do it justice.  This is an album of pure beauty.  An album that I have listened to over 100 times by now.  It rewards each listen.  It is adventurous and powerful.  We get to see them in Vancouver in September and cannot wait to see the live renditions of these compositions.

[vodpod id=Video.11523222&w=425&h=350&fv=]

 

Also in contention for the best of the year are the recent releases from:  Beirut, Okkervil River, PJ Harvey, TV on the Radio, Elbow, The Best Westerns, Alela Diane, Cass McCombs, Thao and Mirah, and Adele.

 

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