5. Belong – Common Era: This is not what I expected from Belong. These guys created a masterpiece with “October Language” a few years ago—all texture and guitar swirl, but here they have reimagined the concepts there into what may be the best shoegaze/dream pop record of the past ten years. MBV and JAMC-esque muted percussion (which explores slight variation on most of these tracks that fans of Brightblack should like) and breathy vocals are all over this thing. There is melody and real songs here, they just happen to be made up of this blanket of washed out and delayed sound. It’s a difficult album for sure as there is so much happening it is hard to pinpoint specific things to listen to/for, but this might just be the pinnacle of “drone-pop” or whatever subgenre this thing gets catalogued under when all is said and done.
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?g28llr16v98ur87
4. The Caretaker – An Empty Bliss Beyond This World: I have to pick up my daughter from school and really want to get through this list today, so here is what the label said about this record. It is pretty spot on.
Quote:
With An Empty Bliss Beyond This World, Kirby tackles amnesia, building on his previous work with the subject in 2005's Theoretically Pure Anterograde Amnesia. This time around, Kirby contemplates the ability of Alzheimer’s patients to recollect passages of music from their past and connect them to specific people and places. Sourced from Kirby’s massive collection of '78s, the pieces return him to the faded arena of ballroom jazz, which he further corrodes with subtle loops and haunted static. Kirby's chosen subject matter surfaces most explicitly in song titles like "I Feel As If I Might Be Vanishing," "Moments of Sufficient Lucidity," and "Tiny Gradiations Of Loss." A few titles even reoccur in the span of the album, but with the accompanying audio in varying degrees of decay.
These samples range from seemingly complete songs, lifted from the past with crisp recollection, to pieces that feel clouded and frustratingly incomplete. As time and the album wear on, the level of clarity waxes and wanes; graininess evolves into holes and gaps as passages replay, eroded by wear, age, and, metaphorically, by disease. It's as though the album is trying to recall the originals, but is failing. For anyone who’s witnessed the frustrating effects of Alzheimer's in real life, it's hard not to be touched by Kirby's drive to understand the emotions that accompany the deterioration of the brain-- not only the part of the patient, but also that of the observer. The result is one of the most devastatingly tender electronic albums of the year.
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?n4c8r14b4anptbc
3. Psychic Paramount – II: The rock album of the year, hands down. This is physical, and loud, and heavy, but remains ridiculously complex. I still have never heard their first one, or any Laddio albums, so I have no reference point for any evolution of sound on this one. I don’t need it. I am happy just having the album that I wish Comets On Fire ever would have made. This record shows that a band can be atmospheric and challenging and difficult without sacrificing energy and grit in any way. Just a classic record that I never saw coming this year.
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?a5y2g8csm76dfie
2. Jasper TX - Black Sun Transmissions: This record is just stunning. Harry writes better than I do though:
harry Wrote:
Not all drones are equal. Not all noisy hums are the same. Not all space music sounds like the 80s, so Dag Rosenqvist with his (80s?) analog workouts gives hints of a richer, warmer universe than some of his contemporary noise artists. Ok, “warm” is probably misleading. But in the mystery of his sound I sometimes hear a Gregorian Chant focus, the spiritual intent incrementally growing with repetition. A revealed string instrument: it is Wien , 1908. A buzz explodes to a bell sound and it is the space lounge in Kubrick’s 2001. Ideas take a while to develop: slow is the new fast. Given the album covers and penchant for “black” in the titles, this does seems relatively cosmic, dark matter-oriented electronically generated noise. Musical residue to march into solar flares
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?1dh44mm238z3n7h