Showing posts with label the xx. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the xx. Show all posts

Friday, December 21, 2012

Top 10 Albums of 2012

Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

You might have noticed there was no Work Tunes last week. That's because I was saving the surprise of my Top 10 Albums of 2012. My top 10 list has been my weekly soundtrack this week. 

The albums I've selected are not necessarily the same ones that would make my critical top 10 list. These are my favourite albums this year, the ones I have especially enjoyed listening to. The one that I have continued to play all year whenever the mood strikes. These are my top 10.

I've written a few words on each of them and listed them in reverse order - just for the suspense* (*suspense may not be actual). At the end of the list, you'll find the next ten albums in my top 20 and finally a mixtape of one song from each top 10 selection.

Check it out:

10. Paul Kelly - Spring and Fall

This year's release is among Mr Paul (poet and living legend) Kelly's best in a while. Spring and Fall is the sound of a man growing old and weary but comfortable in his own skin. As 'over the hill' as the narrator of every song is, he's still obsessed by the universal themes of love and sex and death. By the end of the album with Little Aches and Pains, we hear a man expressing how the heart is willing but the flesh is weak. At the Stories of Me event, PK told us that the song was written because he and his siblings have a rule that they can only talk for 5 minutes about their medical complaints when they meet up, or else they talk of nothing else. I am really glad to hear yet another great Paul Kelly album.

9. The Bamboos - Medicine Man

This is the first spot I had to think really hard about filling and I wrote this list from top to bottom. A few albums have slipped into the lower half of my top 20 to make way for this. In the end I had to include it on the strength of the Tim Rogers collaboration alone. Plus, it is so good to see Australians putting out this kind of soulful rock music. I think if it was a US release, it would make a lot of international Top 10 lists.

8. Beth Orton - Sugaring Season

As an Orton fan since Sunky hipped me to her, I was eager to hear the new album. It has been a while between drinks for the "tall glass of water" (as she is referenced in Ryan Adams' English Girls Approximately). Worth the wait. Sugaring Season seems a lot more organic than previous efforts; meaning not as electronic - though I know there are plenty of keys in it. BO has managed to weave her distinctive voice through some very smooth piano and string lines. There's a bit of sadness in the lyric content, but it doesn't get too morbid. 

7. Seapony - Falling

What can I say about Seapony? I loved their 2011 debut Go With Me, so I jumped at the next release. The two sound very similar, in that there is a sound that is distinctly Seapony. I hear it as a loud punk band playing behind a shiny piece of not-quite-soundproof glass. All the edge is taken off the crunch and fuzz and you get this dreamy kind of hum. I suppose that's why it's referred to as Dream Pop. It's good, anyway.

6. First Aid Kit - The Lion's Roar

Emmylou was all it took to get me to buy this album. The harmonies, the reference to country's veteran royal couples, the sweet, sweet melody. I was blown away when I found out these girls were Swedish. They sound like mountain folk - and I suppose they are, just Scandinavian and not Appalachian. There's other great tracks on the album too though and they are all as Americana as the one that got my attention.  

When I first heard The XX with VCR, I expected more catchy pop tunes with a decidedly electronic backing. Listening to the whole album showed they were a little less shallow than they probably seemed at first. With Coexist, they've added a large ambient string to their bow and made a coherently whole album that sets a mood. Every song on it seems to have this ominous undertone like it’s the end of the world in a dance song – very fitting in these 2012 times, no?. I think it's just the keys, but whatever it is, it works and it definitely maintains a singular mood. I like it a lot.

4. Justin Townes Earle - Nothing's Gonna Change The Way You Feel About Me Now

Besides the unwieldy title, this is a very good release from JTE. I only discovered the man and his music with 2010's Harlem River Blues but have since acquainted myself with the back catalogue. This LP is as soul-searching and redemptive as Harlem, but it doesn't hide the sadness behind catchy jigs. Where Harlem was a bit of a romp, NGCTWYFAMN is subdued and lonely. Songs like Unfortunately Anna and Won't Be The Last Time sound like late night confessions and cries for help. He still puts a stomp in proceedings a little with Look The Other Way, but even that is a song about how his mother never recognises the good things he does, and only focuses on the many negatives. It seems that JTE is getting better with each release. Early stuff had a couple of good tracks, maybe one great one in Midnight at the Movies; while Harlem River Blues was outstanding and this album is superb in its own right. 

When The Only Place was released, I read a lot of good press, but just as many complaints by fans of their debut Crazy For You. The argument was that it was more of the same and that the repetitive choruses were now annoying. I'm of the opinion that this album is not more of the same, because the production of it and the ability of the band's lyricist and lead singer has exploded in a great way. Besides the deeper polish on the sound which gives it a 50s/60s feel, Bethany Constantino has developed a real voice. No longer the whiny LA surfy chick, she sounds more like Patsy Cline or Connie Francis on songs like Up All Night and How They Want Me To Be. This is a deserved Top 3 choice and I really should have bought the vinyl instead of the CD, but i cheaped out on the shipping. Silly me. Now I have to buy both anyway.

2. Dinosaur Jr. - I Bet On Sky

I'm probably a little biased here, because there isn't much I don't like from Dinosaur Jr. But I thought I Bet On Sky was better than Farm (2009), which I also enjoyed. What I prefer about Sky is the low end thump has been taken out of the sound, so it sounds less like Metallica and more like J Mascis lazily humming over a lovely warm and fuzzy guitar. So okay, maybe it all just sounded more like the 90s and I am a sucker for Slacker nostalgia. Whatevs. I really liked this album.


No surprises that probably one of the strongest releases from one of my favourite groups would make my Top 10 list. For me, Hilltop Hoods haven't put a foot wrong since The Calling. Since that breakthrough, they have been the undisputed high watermark in Australian Hip Hop, no argument. For me, the highlights on Drinking From the Sun are the massively hooky I Love It and The Underground; the out-of-left-field rapid fire rhythmic rhyming scheme of Rattling The Keys to the Kingdom, the awesome Joe Pesci sample in the Good For Nothing hook and the inclusive politics of Speaking In Tongues. 

    2012 Mixtape Tracklist  

    The Bamboos - I Got Burned (feat. Tim Rogers)
    Dinosaur Jr. - Don't Pretend You Didn't Know
    Seapony - Prove To Me
    Justin Townes Earle - Look The Other Way
    First Aid Kit - Emmylou
    Beth Orton - Dawn Chorus
    The xx - Chained
    Paul Kelly - Cold As Canada
    Best Coast - Up All Night
    Hilltop Hoods - I Love It

    Get the Mixtape

    And that's my whole year. I'm on leave until January 7, so no Work Tunes until then. If I get a spare moment, I might post a review over at Make Films Not Movies, but most likely I'll just be 'maxing and relaxing'.

    Have a great silly season. Whatever you do, be careful on the roads but more importantly in the shops - I've been there a lot lately and it is chaos! 

    As always and forever - hasala malakim brothers and sisters. 

    Saturday, September 15, 2012

    Poor Grizzly Choirgirl Romance (September 17th - 21st)

    Hello and welcome to Work Tunes.

    It's been a really, really, *really* long week and I'm still getting over the food poisoning from last weekend. All my hopes are invested in this weekend to recharge my dead batteries. Next week's music should help too. 

    There's a few new sets this week, namely from Grizzly Bear, Dinosaur Jr., The xx and Sea Wolf. I put a little funk in the trunk and added Sly & the Family Stone and Prince after watching a BBC doc on the Purple One. Evil Eddie's Golden Age made me think of some mid-90s rap from Poor Righteous Teachers and Down South. It is all rounded out with Led Zeppelin and Tori Amos (who is a massive Led Zep fan btw). 

    Check it out:

    1. Journey
    2. A Tribe Called Quest
    3. Something For Kate
    4. Kathleen Edwards
    5. Portishead

    Song of the Week : Evil Eddie - Golden Age



    I wouldn't normally give you two rap tracks in a row, but this selection just could not be denied this week as my SOTW. I don't listen to th radio much, but I assume that JJJ is already killing this Jamie? Evil Eddie's (of Butterfingers) latest solo track Golden Age.

    First and foremost what it has going for it beyond the lyric is the funky a$$ bass which sounds like a Stevie Wonder clavical riff fed through a bit of wah. But of course, the lyric itself is what suckered me in - its a self-confessed "old muthf$#@^a standing up for the golden age of Hip Hop culture. How could I resist?! It mentions coming through formative years with the very best that rap had to offer and laments the fact that "these days, every man and his dog's a f$#^#in rapper!"

    The track has been on pretty much endless repeat in my head and in my car. Hopefully you can dig the funk and enjoy the extended rant of the lyrics.

    Adios Muchachas

    Okey dokey, that's your lot. I've got to go and get myself some R&R or I'll be postal by this time next week. I am feeling a little better already, having relaxed a little watching The Toxic Avenger last night. Fingers crossed I'm over the slump. Go me. And...

    Go Eagles. Hasala malakim.

    Thursday, June 16, 2011

    Playlist : June 20th - 24th, 2011

    Hey there tunesters. Welcome to another week at Work.

    Last week I had my birthday. I'm 29 now (hey, 30's the new 20, okay!). It was on the whole unremarkable, except I played Hanging With Friends with Crazy Legs! If you haven't read my fanboy gushing tumblr post, it's here. This week I've picked the Brooklyn radio mixtape for 1983 in honour of that. The rest is some more Bowie, the seemingly well-liked The XX, some Hendrix thanks to Song of the Week, Buzzcoks, Radams, a free sampler from Josh Rouse (that you can download yourself) and some other stuff.

    Here it is;
    1. Everclear
    2. Kitty, Daisy & Lewis
    3. David Bowie
    4. Mathew Sweet & Susannah Hoffs
    5. Best Coast
    Song of the Week : Jimi Hendrix - All Along The Watchtower

    I was standing there in JB Hifi looking at foreign film DVDs which are unfortunately close to where they sell car stereos and speakers. There was some song playing, way too loud for what it was. Something about loving a stripper. Vapid, autotuned, over-produced crap with a doof beat and “r&b” “singing”. It was driving me mental. So much so, I actually said out loud “This is f$%#^ing shite”, attracting rolled eyes from some douche who worked there and was obviously in charge of the car stereos. So I left that section to get away from it.

    As I approached the space where the music DVDs are kept, they were playing something else on the AV receivers and home theatre speakers. It was Jimi Hendrix. I walked over there and two guys from JB greeted me with ‘hello’. I said “the music is waaaay better over this side of the store.” They laughed, not realising I was deadly serious and still pissed that on my birthday my ears had been raped by crap music.

    Now, the latest episode of South Park makes fun of how grownups don’t ‘get’ the music of the kids; and how it always sounds shit to older folks. But I’m sorry, there are some things that you just cannot deny no matter how much you go on about changing fashions etc. Because for a start, Hendrix was dead before I was born. This is not my generation’s music. But this fantastic song, written by one of the great songwriters and played by probably the greatest guitarist ever, is straight up superb and there’s just no comparison between it and the completely wrong shit I was forced to endure at JB yesterday.

    Adios
    This is where I have to leave you and head on over to MFNM to review a little film I saw Wednesday night. In the meantime, I hope you find new and interesting tunes to keep you happy and feeling good. Adios muchachos.