Drink, I sort of worked up a loose Top 20 last year and looked up and it was March and just said screw it. I always want to post more detail about each album but I just don't have the time these days.
k Wrote:
Here is another list from someone who I trust that has that War On Drugs record at number 1. I feel like Cap in the Sleater Kinney thread...I feel like I must be missing something with that record as it may be my least favorite thing I heard all year.
That being said some other stuff on here I will have to check out for sure.
Thanks k. I'm pretty much a traditionalist at heart. I like big dumb rock, good songwriters, some twang here and there, and a sucker for pop hooks. That said, I always find your list interesting because, in general, it's stuff that I gravitate towards a few times a year, if not on a visceral level, then an intellectual one. I'm fascinated by the music but also the process of making more ambient and experimental records and how that sort of stuff finds an audience.
As for the War of Drugs, it's success is pretty interesting. I didn't necessarily think it was some huge leap forward for them but I've got friends who are casual music fans asking me about them now. Drinky is on to something with some of the artists he compared them to. There is a loose 80's production aesthetic to the whole thing that may be appealing to me in my subconscious since that's a time when I was a kid and listening to pop radio all the time.
But at the same time, I just find the songs so good. They way they build or pull back. Just when I think it could start to get monotonous he changes it up with tempo or a solo or even a saxophone (80's again). Like, I could easily see a song like "Suffering" being sung by Dylan in the 80's off of something like "Oh Mercy". There's also a sadness throughout the whole thing as well. I get the Springsteen comparisons to Born In The USA era in that much of the songs are upbeat and melodic but serious in nature. Like, if "I'm On Fire" had babies, the songs would be on this album.
But also, it's an inoffensive album. Lots of trance inducing longer songs with extended grooves. It leaves the listener the opportunity to put their interpretation or their experience onto the music. Could be why it's reached such a wide audience.
I also should've included "Red Eyes" as one of my songs of the year.