Getting to the good stuff now.
#65.
WU LYF –
Go Tell Fire to the MountainThis really seems like an unlikely record to have generated buzz in 2011. The band is sort of Explosions in the Sky post-rock, and the vocals are incomprehensibly hoarse, garbled yelps. They also have a terrible name. But there's just something about this that works. The ambitious, soaring grandiosity of it carries a naivete that it comes about honestly since, after all, this is just a bunch of teenagers. All this larger-than-life yearning - or whatever it is - doesn't feel forced or put on. These kids really mean it, as ridiculous as they may seem (WARNING: don't read anything they've written online), and it's not hard to let yourself get swept up in this, whatever it is. There are plenty of easy, obvious criticisms you could make here, but it's a pretty powerful and moving record if you can get past them.
7.5/10#64.
The Caretaker –
An Empty Bliss Beyond This WorldAs beautiful as this record is, it's hard not be nagged by thoughts of how easy it must have been to make. At times it just sounds like Leyland Kirby just let an old record play through a filter or two, and that's it. Like the beauty really lies more in the source material than anything he actually did himself. But then, the name he's chosen for this project kind of covers that: The Caretaker. Sometimes I think of if more as "The Curator". Simply put, I would never have found these recordings or pieced them together this way, and I do think the various atmospheric effects and enhanced pops and cracks do add something. It's just a wonderful sounding album. And the criticism of "anyone could have done this" never really rings true anyway because no one else
did do it.
7.5/10#63.
Washed Out –
Within and WithoutIt seems to me that Washed Out is the most generally well-respected chillwave act. He gets some credit for being an originator, and just generally hasn't inspired as much ridicule as a lot of the other artists in this genre, from what I can tell. He's sort of the "median" chillwave sound, though. It's super smooth and slick, a little bit funky but not as much as Toro y Moi and none of the quirk or playfulness of Neon Indian. It's a really warm and inviting sound, though, both sexy and nostalgic, slow-motion, top-down, sunset, chill-out, feel-good music. I can certainly see why it's a desirable lifestyle soundtrack.
7.5/10#62.
Ulcerate –
Destroyers of AllHow great a metal band name is Ulcerate? I mean it's definitely better than Herniate, and "Lesionate" isn't really a word. Yeah, Ulcerate is pretty badass. They've got the appropriate sound, too. Death metal growls definitely feel like the kind of singing that would induce ulcers. The guitars could totally tear up your insides, too. In fact, it's the guitars that I mostly focus on here. The drums are your fairly typical metal pummeling, but with some nice dynamic and textural shifts here and there to keep things interesting. The vocals are... as described above. I assume there's bass here. But the guitars are really pretty cool. Very twisted, atonal, knotty, intricate. It seems almost freeform at parts, but it also totally drives the dynamic of the music and seems like it must be meticulously composed. I don't know, but it's pretty fun to listen to.
7.5/10#61.
Kate Bush –
50 Words for SnowI have to confess that I never really listened to Kate Bush prior to last year. Pretty late last year, too, like when this album came out, and I've still to date only heard this and
The Dreaming. Two very different records, for sure, and both of them very good.
The Dreaming is more than just "very good", I'm sure, but I'm still kind of familiarizing myself with it. This album, too, although I feel like I've gotten a pretty good handle on it already. Thematically, it's pretty quirky and playful, a lot like her older stuff, but musically it feels much more somber, subtle, and subdued. It actually sounds a lot like latter-day Talk Talk in most parts. And that's a very, very good thing, but unfortunately the album kind of stumbles in a couple of places. One, the obvious one, is the duet with Elton John. The main problem with that being that it's a duet with Elton John. The other is the title track which, while great musically, starts to get a little tiresome on repeat listens. You get the "joke", and then it just starts to seem a little too frivolous or something. Overall the record works really well, though, and the longest track, the 13-minute "Misty", might even be my favorite. I'm definitely looking forward to listening to this and a lot more Kate Bush in the coming year.
7.5/10