OK sere here's my list of the best
EPs, singles, 7"s, comps, live albums, etc. that I didn't want to put on my albums list...
#1.
The Soft Moon -
Total Decay EP
The Soft Moon's self-titled album could have been in my Top 10 for 2010 if I'd heard it that year, and that was a great year. This EP is a worthy companion piece, and probably gets bonus points from me for bringing my attention to this "band" (really all one guy, I think) in the first place. As you can tell from the above clips, the sound draws heavily from vintage post-punk, Joy Division in particular, and even though I'm not the biggest JD fan, this is totally my thing. I like it immediately and haven't tired of it.
8/10#2.
Clams Casino -
Rainforest EP
I listened to almost no hip-hop at all in 2011. I just didn't care. I know Clams Casino produced tracks for Lil B and A$AP Rocky, but I've only heard his stuff in "intrumental" form. And I'm totally fine with that. Even though his
Instrumental Mixtape isn't quite as fleshed out - or, frankly, pretty - as this is, I have no desire to hear anybody rapping over any of his tracks. He creates a gauzy, relaxing, dreamlike sound world that rapping would only disrupt - at least for my ears. But anyway, the point is just that I like this just as it is, and I like this EP much more than the mixtape.
8/10#3.
Tim Hecker -
Dropped Pianos EP
Sort of the behind the scenes/outtakes companion to Hecker's excellent
Ravedeath, 1972 album. It reveals a little of Hecker's creative process, featuring more sparsely layered tracks of piano tinkering minus most of the effects. It took several plays, but it eventually became a totally captivating listen in its own right for me. While Hecker is no great piano virtuoso, he's a master of mood and ambiance, even without all the buzzing drones and washes of noise.
8/10#4.
Ty Segall -
Singles 2007-2010This would seem to have a pretty unfair advantage stacked up against single-7"s and 4-song EPs... and it does, I guess. It's fairly uneven, though, and a fair amount of it sounds pretty tossed-off. Still, Ty Segall makes garage rock sound like effortless, spontaneous fun, and that's just as it should be.
7.5/10#5.
Factory Floor -
Two Different Ways/R E A L L O V E Singles
I've probably mentioned more than a few times that I'm not really into electronic dance music. House, trance, techno, whatever else, usually just leaves me cold. Or bored. Or irritated. So I'm kind of puzzled when I end up liking something like this as much as I do. It's mechanical repetition, but there's something about it that just works for me. It has a certain edge to it. As it turns out, these guys actually perform something like a real band, with an actual live drummer and somebody doing something with a guitar although I never would have guessed it from hearing the recordings. Maybe the reason I like this lies somewhere in there. There's definitely something human and primal at the core of these tracks.
7.5/10#6.
White Denim -
Takes Place in Your Work SpaceI'd never listened to White Denim prior to late-December, and I'm wishing I hadn't slept on them for so long. I wouldn't say I've fallen in love with their sound, but I certainly enjoy it. The "Southern Prog" of their album
D has been compared to '70s prog bands like Gentle Giant, and I find it similarly likable and unpretentious. These songs are more laid back, more comfortable, and probably catchier than what's on their album. I was having the hardest time pinning down who this band reminds me of until just recently when it struck me that (this EP in particular) reminds me of
Liquid Skin-era Gomez. I don't really know if that's a good or bad thing - or even if it's very accurate - since I haven't listened to that in nearly a decade, but I'm pretty sure that's what I was trying to think of.
7.5/10#7.
Andy Stott -
We Stay Together EP
I saw a lot of mentions of this guy as year end lists started rolling around so I thought I'd check him out. I'm always up to hear some new electronic music although for most of the past decade there's really been very little that I've latched onto. I don't know how much I'll be coming back to this, but it's definitely some of the better stuff I've heard. It's bass music, deep and dark. I'm not entirely sure what sub-genre it falls into if it does in fact fit into one. (The best stuff never quite does, IMO.) He put out another release before this that's of similar length that I put onto my albums list. Retroactively they've been grouped together on most lists and counted as album, but I thought I'd keep them separate for whatever reason. (Maybe because I acquired them separately?) And I put this one as an EP because that's how I've seen it listed some places. I like it slightly less than the "album"
Passed Me By.
7.5/10#8.
Weekend -
Red EP
I really enjoyed Weekend's 2010 album
Sports even if it wasn't the most original thing. One more shoegaze revival record, but one that took a noisier bent rather than a dream pop one. This is a little less hazy and fuzzed out, mostly with good results. I really like four of the five tracks here, especially opener "Sweet Sixteen" and closer "Golfers". The only one that really doesn't do it for me is "Hazel", probably just for the seemingly dumb lyrics. Otherwise, sign me up as looking forward to their next album.
7.5/10#9.
Echo Lake -
Young Silence EP
Another shoegaze-y thing, this is the first and still only thing I've heard by this band. It's very good. Also somewhat on the noisy side but prettier and more tuneful and than Weekend.
7.5/10#10.
Hauschka -
Youyoume EP
When I finally got around to hearing Hauschka's 2011 album
Salon Des Amateurs, it blew me away. (More on that on my albums list.) This EP, however, did not. Where his album is bouyant, dense, and busy, this is much more sparse and downcast. It's grown on me, though. It's very pretty. Here Hauschka's piano is less cut up or layered so it flows more at it's own languid pace rather than the kinetic rush of the album. It may need more time to sink in, or maybe there just isn't as much here.
7.5/10Honorable Mentions:
11.
Ty Segall –
Ty Rex: 7.5/10
12.
Women/Cold Pumas/Fair Ohs/Friendo –
Split 7”: 7.5/10
13.
Toro Y Moi –
Freaking Out: 7.5/10
14.
Mikal Cronin –
Tide: 7.5/10
15.
Darkside –
Darkside EP: 7/10
16.
The Fresh & Onlys –
Secret Walls: 7/10
17.
Deerhunter –
iTunes Live from Soho: 7/10
18.
Burial –
Street Halo: 7/10
The rest:
19.
Radiohead –
The Daily Mail & Staircase: 6.5/10
20.
Pure X –
You’re in It Now: 6.5/10
21.
Dum Dum Girls –
He Gets Me High: 6/10
I'll start on my albums list tomorrow, if possible.