• Tuesday Twenty: My top 100 tracks 1990-99 Pt.01b: 180 to 161

    Nov 10 2009, 18h20 por amodelofcontrol

    As explained earlier, here's the second half of the first part of my rundown of 90s songs.

    Previously: My top 100 tracks 1990-99 Pt.01a: 200 to 181

    180
    dEUS
    Sister Dew
    The Ideal Crash
    1999

    An impossibly sad song, a slow, minimalist track that lyrically deals with a man confessing to the titular character his crime. dEUS have never come close to the naked emotions of this track since, or to that matter before it, either, and it's such an affecting track that I can only listen to this once in a while.

    179
    The Dandy Warhols
    TocarEvery Day Should Be A Holiday
    ...The Dandy Warhols Come Down
    1997

    Way back before they were soundtracking Vodafone adverts, this band of American slackers were writing wonderful summer pop songs like this, psychedelic electro-pop that hooked me from the first moment I heard it (and I ended up buying the album on import months before it was eventually released over here).

    178
    They Might Be Giants
    TocarBirdhouse in Your Soul
    Flood
    1990

    One of the greatest and most enduring indie pop songs, perhaps, the reason it is a bit further down this list is that it does every now and again grate if overplayed. But still, it's probably the only song ever sung from the point of a nightlight, has a quirky video and the kind of chorus that bolts itself behind a sturdy door in your head...

    177
    The Future Sound of London
    TocarMy Kingdom
    Dead Cities
    1996

    The lead single from FSOL's darkest album, this beautiful, elegant track brought together Blade Runner samples and a feeling of a decaying London on a soft bed of electronics that carries the listener along for five blissful minutes. The video, with London being invaded by all kinds of computer-generated aliens, is well worth a look, too, even if some of the effects have dated a little.

    176
    Downset
    TocarEmpower
    Do We Speak a Dead Language?
    1996

    A little surprised, I have to say, that this band lasted as long as this year. But then, seeing as they were formed originally from the ashes of one of the very first rap metal bands (Social Justice) I guess it's kinda apt that they should outlive most of their followers, too. This song also has the "honour" of being the first song I saw performed live in London once I'd gone to Uni (and also that was the first gig I ever reviewed, too. Happy days...), and that makes it a little special to me - but either way, this is searing stuff that like much of Downset's material, features lyrics that are considerably less destructive than many other rap-metal acts. Vocalist Rey Oropreza instead chose lyrics that encouraged listeners to make a positive difference to their life - and this song's message was no different, as it simply burns with it.

    175
    Roni Size / Reprazent
    TocarBrown Paper Bag
    New Forms
    1997

    When drum'n'bass kicked off in a big way in the mid-to-late 90s, it was remarkable that each of the names that broke through to the dance mainstream all had such different styles within the same broad remit. Roni Size may not have had success on the same level as Goldie, but his winning of the Mercury Music Prize twelve years ago for the extraordinary New Forms perhaps gained him greater musical recognition. And it was tracks like this that were really special - the broad, jazzy sweeps fused perfectly with the charging drum'n'bass, and the full nine minute version passes in a flash.

    174
    Snog
    TocarHooray!!
    Buy Me... I'll Change Your Life
    1997

    David Thrussell's strange, strange band welcomes the end of world…in pop form. Well, I say pop. This is twisted, strange stuff, but it does have a habit of burrowing into your head and becoming one of those earworms that won't quite shift. For all it's apocalyptic lyrics, too, it's bright and summery as his songs go - but then, perhaps that's the point...

    173
    Marion
    Time
    This World And Body
    1996

    To some, this fact that this band never had the success of other bands lumped in as "Britpop" was criminal - and I'm one of them. Infinitely more talented than certain other north-west based peers, with a clutch of killer singles, they sadly vanished into a haze of drug problems, and their (also brilliant) second album limped into view some years later with barely a wimper, and sank without trace. Something of an unlucky band, really, and tracks like this remind me of what could have been: a glorious, aching lament to lost love and reflections on past mistakes, and Jaime Harding's vocal performance is something to behold.

    172
    Mercury Rev
    TocarChasing a Bee
    Yerself Is Steam
    1991

    Way back in the mists of time, before Mercury Rev cleaned up, kept off the drugs, kicked out original singer David Baker and turned to (blissfully great) Americana, they were a very odd band indeed, drenching completely "out there" pop songs in masses of fuzz and feedback. And sometimes, those pop songs would fight to the forefront - and Chasing A Bee is one of those moments. It's epic, beautiful and wonderfully mental.

    171
    Apoptygma Berzerk
    Deep Red
    7
    1996

    One of Apop's earlier singles, I have to admit that I didn't know this even had a video until I was trying to find a link for this. With the changes this band have gone through stylistically in the past ten years or so, this sounds like almost a different band entirely - a thumping electro-goth track that rightly is still part of Apop live sets even now (and it reminds me, I must use it in a DJ set again sometime...).

    170
    Rocket from the Crypt
    TocarMiddle
    Scream, Dracula, Scream!
    1995

    RFTC: one of the greatest rock bands of the 90s. Fact. Also a fact: one of my biggest regrets is never seeing them live. Anyway, rather than choosing perhaps one of the more obvious singles, this is the short (minute-long) opener to their breakthrough album Scream, Dracula, Scream. A torrent of gang vocals, a surging beat, and a clever pacing that steps up the track each verse until it bursts into life...before stopping way too quickly. Either way, if you ever wanted a reminder as to whether rock'n'roll can still be great decades after it first began, here's your pointer.

    169
    Jocasta
    Change Me
    No Coincidence
    1996

    Not all mid-90s indie in the UK was Britpop. One of the bands on the fringes for a while were Tim Arnold's first stab at the pop world, followed by a prolific solo career that has seen some unusual influences. Not that Jocasta were particularly normal - although like other bands I'm mentioning here, both my girlfriend and I are struggling to remember anything other than this song (I did have the album way back in the mists of time) - mixing in poetry influences (the lyrics are marvellous) as well as a harder, rockier sound than many other indie bands of the time. Anyway, this song is simply a perfect example of why there was so much more to the mid-90s indie scene than Blur, Oasis and Pulp.

    168
    Evil Superstars
    B.A.B.Y.
    Boogie-Children-R-Us
    1998

    I can remember little about this band, other than this track. What I do recall - they were a Belgian band who supported both dEUS and Girls Against Boys over here at some point, and they had a handful of great songs, of which this in particular stood head and shoulders above the rest. A strange, really quite sleazy drawl over an electronic backing, this was good fun if nothing else.

    167
    Meat Beat Manifesto
    Radio Babylon
    Original Fire
    1990

    An absolute stone-cold electronic classic, the year it comes from depends on which version you have. I have it on Original Fire, which dates from 1997, but sonically it's obviously older, and in fact dates from around 1990. A dub-influenced, quasi-breakbeat underpins things, and it's tracks like this that make me wonder how exactly they were ever lumped in as industrial (signing to Wax Trax! seemed to be the main reason!). MBM's influence is huge, though, and while they may have had better songs, to me they never made a better dancefloor track than this, period.

    166
    Stone Temple Pilots
    TocarSilvergun Superman
    Purple
    1994

    A band perhaps somewhat unfairly maligned at the time - seen as riding on the coattails of the grunge bands, and perhaps also because they ended up with greater success than many of them. Whatever the reason, their mix of hard rock, whimsical pop and much, much darker moments certainly caught the ear of many. This was always my favourite song, though, a perfect balance of the elements above, the brusing verses and melodic, lighter chorus contrasting well. It was the opener on their comeback tour in the US, too (a shame they never came over here).

    165
    Pulp
    I Spy
    Different Class
    1995

    1995 was Pulp's year in Britpop terms, without a doubt - Different Class was probably the finest album of the Britpop period, and that wasn't just down to the singles (as great as they all were). It was down to tracks like this - the 60s film-soundtrack sweep, and the fuming, spiteful lyrics detailing a tale of suburban jealously and revenge. In fact, I'm not sure Jarvis Cocker ever wrote lyrics better than this.

    164
    Primal Scream
    Come Together
    Screamadelica
    1991

    No, not the truncated and butchered single version, but the original, epic album centrepiece. Screamadelica may have been endlessly dissected over the years, but at it's heart it is simply an awesome fusion of rock and dance that perhaps just came along at the right moment. This track's blissed-out dub textures and gospel samples (and, perhaps, it's oh-so-slightly hippyish tendencies) make it a glorious summer track - so writing this in a cold mid-November perhaps it loses a little of it's impact. Still, the fact that I'm still listening to this eighteen years on perhaps helps to explain just how good this is.

    163
    Monster Magnet
    TocarPowertrip
    Powertrip
    1998

    Where Dave Wyndorf proclaims his desire to become a full-time rock star, and let's be honest, this sure as hell sounds like the deal worked out well for him. A massive, stadium rock track, a world away from their more stoner rock beginnings, but frankly the sound suits Dave and the band well. The over-the-top video is a hoot, too...

    162
    The Delgados
    Pull the Wires From the Wall
    Peloton
    1999

    A now long-departed indie band from Glasgow, who were much more spiky than their sometimes dreamy sound often suggested. Often it was Emma Pollock's casually detached vocal delivery - and caustic lyrics - that made the difference, as here. Although the sweeping orchestral backing helps too.

    161
    Autechre
    Second Bad Vilbel
    Anvil Vapre
    1995

    Nearly fifteen years old, and probably still ahead of it's time, this track's mechanised, pounding rhythms thrilled then and they still thrill now. I've never dared try to play this in a DJ set at an industrial club, perhaps I should sometime - but it's steadily shifting pace probably would scare the dancefloor away. Shame, as enjoyed really loud this track is extraordinary.

    Friday: My top 200 tracks 1990-99 Pt.02: 160 to 121
  • walking around with that egg on your face

    Nov 5 2009, 16h42 por korni-szon

    Monthly Top Artists

    Jan-2007
    blink-182 (140 plays)
    Feb-2007
    Evans Blue (520 plays)
    Mar-2007
    System of a Down (1217 plays)
    Apr-2007
    Nickelback (337 plays)
    May-2007
    Slipknot (951 plays)
    Jun-2007
    Sunrise Avenue (690 plays)
    Jul-2007
    30 Seconds to Mars (876 plays)
    Aug-2007
    Evans Blue (703 plays)
    Sep-2007
    Billy Talent (986 plays)
    Oct-2007
    Art of Dying (723 plays)
    Nov-2007
    Evans Blue (692 plays)
    Dec-2007
    Jimmy Eat World (844 plays)
    Jan-2008
    The Rasmus (339 plays)
    Feb-2008
    Placebo (1632 plays)
    Mar-2008
    Placebo (413 plays)
    Apr-2008
    Evans Blue (686 plays)
    May-2008
    Slipknot (757 plays)
    Jun-2008
    Small Mercies (485 plays)
    Jul-2008
    BROKEN DOOR (301 plays)
    Aug-2008
    Evans Blue (608 plays)
    Sep-2008
    Evans Blue (403 plays)
    Oct-2008
    The Rasmus (609 plays)
    Nov-2008
    Placebo (657 plays)
    Dec-2008
    Apoptygma Berzerk (536 plays)
    Jan-2009
    Apoptygma Berzerk (899 plays)
    Feb-2009
    LostAlone (432 plays)
    Mar-2009
    Placebo (563 plays)
    Apr-2009
    Placebo (769 plays)
    May-2009
    Placebo (688 plays)
    Jun-2009
    Placebo (1368 plays)
    Jul-2009
    Placebo (310 plays)
    Aug-2009
    Placebo (763 plays)
    Sep-2009
    LostAlone (426 plays)
    Oct-2009
    Placebo (1024 plays)


    Monthly Top Tracks

    Jan-2007
    Evans Blue : TocarQuote (26 plays)
    Feb-2007
    Breaking Benjamin : TocarThe Diary of Jane (67 plays)
    Mar-2007
    Breaking Benjamin : TocarBreak My Fall (61 plays)
    Apr-2007
    Slipknot : Vermilion, Pt. 2 (85 plays)
    May-2007
    Evans Blue : TocarThe Pursuit (461 plays)
    Jun-2007
    Sunrise Avenue : Choose To Be Me (102 plays)
    Jul-2007
    Rise Against : TocarPrayer of the Refugee (176 plays)
    Aug-2007
    Blue October : TocarHate Me (220 plays)
    Sep-2007
    Billy Talent : TocarThe Ex (53 plays)
    Oct-2007
    Handsome Devil : TocarMakin' Money (102 plays)
    Nov-2007
    Evans Blue : Q (80 plays)
    Dec-2007
    Relient K : TocarThe Best Thing (196 plays)
    Jan-2008
    Counting Crows : TocarAccidentally In Love (76 plays)
    Feb-2008
    Placebo : I Do (97 plays)
    Mar-2008
    Draco and the Malfoys : Voldemort Is Awesome (57 plays)
    Apr-2008
    The Killers : TocarRomeo And Juliet (189 plays)
    May-2008
    Blue October : TocarA Quiet Mind (77 plays)
    Jun-2008
    Go:Audio : She Left Me (156 plays)
    Jul-2008
    BROKEN DOOR : Moment of truth (132 plays)
    Aug-2008
    Evans Blue : No One Looks as Good as You in That (290 plays)
    Sep-2008
    Automatic Loveletter : August 28th 3:30 am (116 plays)
    Oct-2008
    Rise Against : TocarSavior (272 plays)
    Nov-2008
    The Killers : TocarSpaceman (206 plays)
    Dec-2008
    Apoptygma Berzerk : Cambodia (131 plays)
    Jan-2009
    Marilyn Manson : Tocar(s)AINT (172 plays)
    Feb-2009
    LostAlone : Our Bodies will Never be Found (145 plays)
    Mar-2009
    Evans Blue : TocarSick Of It (212 plays)
    Apr-2009
    Trophy Scars : TocarAssistant. Assistants. (191 plays)
    May-2009
    Evans Blue : Right Now (181 plays)
    Jun-2009
    Placebo : TocarKings of Medicine (242 plays)
    Jul-2009
    Kill Hannah : Love You to Death (53 plays)
    Aug-2009
    Placebo : Twenty Years (191 plays)
    Sep-2009
    Placebo : Fuck U (147 plays)
    Oct-2009
    Placebo : Lazarus (152 plays)
  • Turing Radio @ Sunday, November 1st, 2009

    Nov 2 2009, 3h01 por kahht

    Playlist:
    Tyrondai Braxton - Dead Strings (From the brand new Central Market album, out on Warp September 14)

    Black Devil Disco Club - Dangerous Mix (From The Strange New World Of Bernard Fevre out on Lo Recordings September 11th)

    Martial Canterel - Hausmann (Off the album Refuge Underneath on Wierd Records)

    Contra - TocarObsessionism (From their new release on DTrash Technologies called Enter the Winter)

    Rotersand - Waiting To Be Born (From their brand spankin' new album Random Is Resistance, out on Metropolis October 27th)

    Gatekeeper - optimus maximus (Out on Fright records, a brand new imprint of Kompakt. This single just came out on Halloween, yay)

    Apoptygma Berzerk - Non-Stop Violence

    Automelodi - Buanderie Jazz

    royksopp - This Must Be It (Apparat Remix)

    Yeah Yeah Yeahs - TocarHeads Will Roll (Tommie Sunshine Remix)

    Zero 7 - All Of Us

    Things Kat's Excited For:
    Seeing Skinny Puppy in Vancouver this week!

    I also can't wait to here more from Mesh's new album, A Perfect Solution. I've been hearing bits here and there but I can't wait to receive the album in its entirety. It's truly going to be awesome (unlike the disappointment I have felt over Assemblage 23's new one... don't get me started)

    New Releases October 12th, 2009 - November 1st, 2009
    October 13, 2009: Hudson Mohawke - Buter (Warp)
    October 13, 2009: Terrorfakt - RE/Evolution (Metropolis)
    October 13, 2009: My Robot Friend - Soft-core (Double feature/Worried Rainbow)
    October 20, 2009: Assemblage 23 - Compass (Metropolis)
    October 20, 2009: Electic Six - Kill (Metropolis)
    October 23, 2009: Raz Ohara & The Odd Orchestra - II (Get Physical)
    October 23, 2009: Mesh - A Perfect Solution (Metropolis)
    October 27, 2009: Velvet Acid Christ - The Art of Breaking Apart (Metropolis)
    October 27, 2009: [:SITD:] - Rot (Metropolis)
    October 27, 2009: Rotersand - Random Is Resistance (Metropolis)
    October 31, 2009: Gatekeeper - Optimus Maximus (Fright)
  • If my life was a movie what would the soundtrack be?

    Out 31 2009, 0h05 por WarriorWithin84

    Opening Credits
    X-Perience - I Don't Care

    Waking Up
    Savage Garden - TocarTruly Madly Deeply

    First Day At School
    Bertine Zetlitz - TocarFake Your Beauty

    Falling In Love
    De/Vision - What You Deserve

    Losing Virginity
    No Angels - Too Old

    Fight Song
    Jewel - Intuition (Ford's Radio Mix)

    Breaking Up
    The Hoosiers - TocarRun Rabbit Run

    Prom
    Mike Oldfield & Maggie Reilly - TocarFamily Man

    Life
    P!nk - TocarSo What

    Mental Breakdown
    Papa Roach - TocarTake Me

    Driving
    De/Vision - Dinner Without Grace '98

    Depression
    Kosheen - Blue Eyed Boy

    Partying
    Apoptygma Berzerk - Mourn (APB remix)

    Happy dance
    Sarah Brightman - TocarSnow on the Sahara

    Betrayal
    Sophie Ellis-Bextor - Lover

    Regretting
    Kelly Clarkson - TocarNever Again

    Long night alone
    Timbaland, Keri Hilson & Nicole Scherzinger - TocarScream

    Flashback
    X-Perience & Joachim Witt - The Meaning of Life

    Getting Back Together
    Apoptygma Berzerk - Deep Red

    Wedding
    Jem - Just a Ride

    Birth of Child
    Cascada - TocarReady for Love

    Final Battle
    a-ha - There's a Reason for It

    Death Scene
    Enya - Eclipse

    Funeral Song
    MIA. - Mein Freund

    End Credits
    Roxette - It Hurts

    ------------------

    Here's how you do it:
    1 > Open your library (iTunes, Winamp, Media Player, iPod, etc)
    2 > Put it on shuffle
    3 > Press play
    4 > For every question, type the song that's playing
    5 > When you go to a new question, press the next button
    6 > No cheating!
  • Playliste „Steelworker-Retro-Classics 1980 – 2000″

    Out 28 2009, 22h21 por INTOX-Matze

    Am 09.10.2009 war ich als Gastaufleger bei den Steelworkern eingeladen. Thema waren die Retro-Classics und das war gut so Dumm war nur, dass ich den Platz am DJ-Pult einnahm, der mit Wünscherstkontakt verbunden war, so dass immer ich die Agonoize-, Combichrist- und Feindflugwünsche abwimmeln musste. Aber das krieg ich ja hin

    Hier die Playliste des Abends:

    Maddin

    din_fiv – Piss Christ
    Cyber Axis – The Chase
    Ashtrayhead – Homemovies
    The Overlords – Near Dark (Campfire Mix)
    Die Form – Silent Order

    Andy

    Genital A-Tech – Dich Zu Lieben
    Suicide Commando – Sheer Horror
    Abscess – Delusion
    The Eternal Afflict – Agony I Like
    Plastic Noise Experience – Moving Hands (Live)

    Matze

    Project Pitchfork – Storm World
    Calva Y Nada – Rascheln (Live)
    DAF/DOS – Dein Körper
    Die Krupps – Tod & Teufel
    Ministry – I’m Falling

    Maddin

    Apoptygma Berzerk – Backdraft
    Dance or Die – Psychoburbia
    Syntec – It Takes A Word (Club Mix)
    Evils Toy – Natures Revenge
    Velvet Acid Christ – Futile (Nazi Bastard Mix)

    Andy

    Front 242 – Until Death Us Do Part
    Schnitt Acht – Rage
    Paracont – D-Ranged
    X-Marks the Pedwalk – Abattoir
    In Strict Confidence – Become An Angel

    Matze

    Skinny Puppy – Testure (S.F. Mix)
    Bigod20 – The Bog (Short Mix)
    Dupont – Behave (Total)
    Leæther Strip – Prying Eyes
    Front Line Assembly – Millennium

    Maddin

    Oomph! – Das Ist Freiheit
    Dive – Sidewalk Sinner
    Liaison Dangereuses – Los Niños Del Parque
    Covenant – Figurehead
    :wumpscut: – Is It You

    Andy

    And One – Die Mitte
    Die Krupps – Machineries Of Joy
    Terminal Choice – Black Rubber
    E-Craft – Die Stahl AG
    Shock Therapy – Hate Is A 4-Letter Word

    Matze

    Hunting Lodge – Tribal Warning Shot (Live)
    Noisex – Tarantula Danza
    Esplendor Geométrico – Sinaya
    Benestrophe – Sensory Deprivation
    Hocico – Odio En El Alma

    Maddin

    B-Ton-K – Possesed
    Calva Y Nada – Alicia
    Haujobb – Maternal Instinct
    Delay – Working In The Factory (Underdog Edit)
    Second Decay – Hinter Glas

    Andy

    Project Pitchfork – Alpha Omega
    Evils Toy – Make Up
    No More – Suicide Commando
    Joy Division – Love Will Tear Us Apart
    Ptyl - Drag Dorks In Vampire Suits

    Matze

    A Split-Second – Mambo Witch (Album Version)
    Depeche Mode – Work Hard
    Nine Inch Nails – Down In It
    Lights of Euphoria – Subjection
    yelworC – Blood In Face (Terror Mix)

    Maddin

    Cyberaktif – Nothing Stays
    Snog – Corporate Slave
    De/Vision – Your Hands On My Skin
    Mesh – Trust You
    Blind Passengers – Small Town Night

    Andy

    Front 242 – Quit Unusual
    Welle:Erdball – Starfighter 104
    The Fair Sex – Not Now Not Here
    Silke Bischoff – On The Other Side ‘93
    Sisters of Mercy – Dominion/Mother Russia

    Maddin

    Fusspils 11 – So Bist Du



    Dank an das Steelworker Team!
  • Tuesday Twenty-Five: My top 50 albums 2000-09 Pt.01: 50 to 26

    Out 20 2009, 14h08 por amodelofcontrol

    Ok, so following on from my rundown of my top 100 tracks of the decade (see previous entries linked below), it's now time for my top fifty albums of the decade, which starts today and will be concluded next week (I wanted this done by Whitby, and the end of the month).

    Previously:
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.01: 100 to 81
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 80 to 61
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.03: 60 to 41
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.04: 40 to 21
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.05: 20 to 01


    50
    Marilyn Manson
    The Golden Age of Grotesque
    2003

    Maybe it was the company, maybe it was the gorgeous (now ex-)wife, maybe it was just an accident of timing. Whatever happened, for the first time in a while the artist Brian Warner dresses up as and taunts Middle America with had an album of quality tunes to match the scandal and image. Yes, TocarmOBSCENE was overplayed, but it wasn't as if it was the only track to filled the club here. Every track without exception up to track nine (ignoring the intro) is pretty much MM at the top of his game, and while it dips a little for the second half, it's this first half that carries it through. It has malice, it has sneering humour, and it has sleaze in spades. In fact, pretty much MM always should have been, but with the exception of Antichrist Superstar never really carried it off apart from this. Obviously, things went seriously downhill since, but I'm happy to stick with this.

    49
    Killing Joke
    Killing Joke
    2003

    A vicious, take-no-prisoners kind of comeback that was the sign of a reconvened band chomping at the bit to take things further. A very, very loud production suited this album fine, as the only way to appreciate it was to play it just as loud. There aren't any bad songs, but some are certainly head and shoulders above others. Like opener TocarThe Death & Resurrection Show, whose menacing opening is swept away by that monstrous, tribalesque drumming. I've not been mad-keen on the material since, but I'd love to hear some of the older stuff recorded with this kind of power and production...

    48
    Alice in Chains
    Black Gives Way To Blue
    2009

    I thought long and hard about including this, with it being so new, but repeated listens have simply confirmed what I thought the first time around - this is one of the most extraordinary comback albums I've ever heard. It simply bristles with defiance, of respect for what came before but also of what can happen now, and is a surprisingly positive sounding album in light of what the core of the band have been through. And then, the new vocalist, William DuVall, fits perfectly into the mix. There aren't really highlights here, as all of it is. In time, I'm sure I'll place this higher, but for now it deserves it's place here.

    47
    Mastodon
    Leviathan
    2004

    This should never have worked. "Prog-influenced, ultra-technical metallers release concept album based around Moby Dick" should, really, have had punters running for the hills, but then we all heard lead single Blood and Thunder, and all bets were off. How they pulled this off I'll never know, but the concept works, and pretty much all of the songs stand on their own, too, which is always the sign of a concept album that was a success.

    46
    The Dillinger Escape Plan
    Ire Works
    2007

    Sell out? Hardly. A couple of songs here may have sounded a little less abrasive (TocarBlack Bubblegum was nearing pop), but one listen to the vicious fury of opener TocarFix Your Face should have been enough to remind you who exactly we are dealing with here. Their infinitely complex "math-rock"/hardcore hybrid is still present and correct, just perhaps with a better set of actual songs rather than just blasts of noise as they have occasionally done in the past.

    45
    Nine Inch Nails
    Year Zero
    2007

    The best NIN release in years, this, and also the beginning of Trent Reznor's various experiments in widening the appeal of the band by being more creative with marketing the album, and by simply offering more to the fans - the clever, multiple websites and USB stick tricks being notable at the time. The other notable thing about this album, of course, was a different lyrical angle - rather than the dark introspection of previous albums, this was, in the main, a thinly veiled attack on the Bush administration - and the fury this invoked helped to shape a great album.

    44
    Daft Punk
    Discovery
    2001

    Four years on from the techno-house mastery of Homework, Discovery surprised a lot of people, including me. Not quite what I was expecting, really - lead single TocarOne More Time was euphoric, vocal house music, and much of the rest of the album had 70s AOR-influences all over it. It's perhaps a credit to the musical skill of Daft Punk that they managed to pull this off, and it perhaps makes all the more sense when you watch Interstella 5555, which the album soundtracks (in order).

    43
    Apoptygma Berzerk
    Welcome to Earth
    2000

    Perfect timing, maybe, but following 7 a few years before, Stefan Groth took things into a far more electro territory than the gothic/darkwave leanings of before, and hit upon his best album by miles. Basically eight songs linked by a number of lengthy soundscapes, much of the album had a space or alienation theme, and even managed to take in Metallica and the Twin Peaks theme along the way. It also probably features three of Apop's greatest songs (the incredible opening one-two of the trance-futurepop masterpieces of Starsign and Eclipse, and then the lengthy Paranoia), not to mention probably their best-loved ballad in Kathy's Song (Come Lie Next to Me). Groth's desire to move on musically has seen him leave this kind of material far behind, and while his keenness to try other things is admirable, it's never been the same.

    42
    The Dresden Dolls
    The Dresden Dolls
    2004

    Sounding like no-one else before or since musically, lyrically and vocally Amanda Palmer of The Dresden Dolls is much like many female-singer songwriters, in that many of the songs are extraordinarily confessional. But to add to that well-thumbed book comes a wicked sense of humour and that very different musical backing, and a set of songs that are memorable for many different reasons. It's not hard to see why the band have gained such a devoted set of fans, that's for sure.

    41
    Imperative Reaction
    As We Fall
    2006

    IR had always been good, but nothing more, in my opinion - until an early version of the title track from this arrived on a Das Bunker compilation, and suddenly it was IR taking their sound to another level entirely. The thing is, when the album arrived there were a number of other songs on it that plainly and simply knocked the title track into the shade. They don't do anything too unusual - dancefloor-friendly electro-industrial (or hard EBM, if you wish) - but what they do, they do very, very well indeed. The follow-up album to this - Minus All - continues in the vein of high quality, too.

    40
    Combichrist
    Everybody Hates You
    2005

    Love it or hate it - and I'd say of people I know there are probably equal numbers of each - this was Combichrist's breakthrough album, moving a little from the aggressive, heavy-duty, and mainly instrumental, industrial of debut album The Joy of Gunz towards a more accessible, more vocal-based dancefloor attack, and it paid off in spades. I can think of few other albums in the wider industrial scene where of thirteen songs, no less than ten of them will fill the club dancefloors still, four years after release. Yes, bits of it are grossly overplayed, and people in clubs could really do with requesting other things once in a while, but perhaps this never-ending torrent of requests for tracks from it suggests one thing, at least - Andy La Plegua delivered exactly what the punters on the dancefloor wanted, and that was pounding industrial-electro to dance to, and not to have to think about too much while doing so.

    39
    Rotersand
    Truth Is Fanatic
    2003

    This album - in fact, the band - kinda snuck up on me and a fair number of others, as many of us discovered them as support for Assemblage 23 way back in the mists of time. They were quite a find, too - somehow balancing the fine line of heavy-duty club beats with a sense of melody and songcraft that had tripped up so many in the past. And pre-Dalek-sampling days, they were still a fascinating proposition, with a debut album full of dancefloor epics that frequently actually engaged brain as well as body, a rare commodity in the scene nowadays, sadly. I could take or leave the acoustic ballads, frankly, but rest of the album is so sodding good that I'm beginning to wonder if they will ever top it - and that's saying something seeing as they've barely put a foot wrong since, either.

    38
    Opeth
    Ghost Reveries
    2005

    This release, much like the rest of Opeth's output, was met with euphoric reviews, but this album deserved them more than any other they've done. Despite the album's vast length, not a second is wasted, and the songs move effortlessly between sections and genres without any jarring. The return to the crunching guitars from the mellow middle-section of TocarGhost of Perdition is one perfect example (the soaring guitar solo that follows is simply glorious), but there are any number of moments that have you just mouthing "wow", and everything - while musically complex - seems so effortless. Not noly that, it may be verging on prog, but it's an utter joy to listen to.

    37
    Rammstein
    Mutter
    2001

    It's taken until their comeback this year - and three albums - to even come close to matching the enormity of this album. By the time this album was released, anticipation was, to put it mildly, pretty fucking high. It had been nearly four years since the release of Sehnsucht which had brought the band worldwide attention and notoriety for their spectacular, fiery live show, and the great thing was that Mutter delivered on every level. It had the crunching, stadium-sized metal tracks, it had the ballads without sounding too twee, and then it had tracks like Zwitter that reminded us of their wickedly dark sense of humour. Probably one of the few bands to crack America while rarely straying from singing in their native German, that very fact perhaps speaks volumes about their appeal, and this album is without a shadow of a doubt the place to start if you've not really heard them before. But then you need to work back to the early material, before coming back to the new one...

    36
    Glasvegas
    Glasvegas
    2008

    It took me ages before I really paid much attention to this band - having long been wary of "indie" bands being hyped to a ridiculous degree by the music press - but by the time I did I was kicking myself for not having paid attention sooner. Somewhere between Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine's more melodic moments and sixties doo-wop, the entire album is an enthralling listen, it's gritty tales of life in Glasgow all really quite affecting. Top moments? The impossibly sad tale of the boy who hasn't come home in Flowers And Football Tops, never mind it's use of You Are My Sunshine, Geraldine's tale of a social worker, and most of all, the devastating, withering Daddy's gone, that in some respects I can relate to far too much (although more about my mother, obviously). Quite how they follow this, of course, is another question...

    35
    Gogol Bordello
    Gypsy Punks: Underdog World Strike
    2005

    An album so unhinged at points that it's a wonder that it doesn't all fall apart, the majority of this album sounds like it was recorded at one of the best parties of all time. And that's one of the things that is so great about this band - a motley gang that sound like they are having the time of their lives, and the songs simply jump out of the speakers at you and drag you into the maelstrom. Obviously material like this is best experienced in the live environment, but even on record it's a whole bag of fun, and at points - TocarStart Wearing Purple, I'm looking at you - it's madder than a box of frogs, too...

    34
    Explosions in the Sky
    The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place
    2003

    One of the more interesting "post-rock" bands, and arriving a little later than many of their peers, this lot could have been written off as mere copyists were it not for the fact that so much of their material is so heart-stoppingly gorgeous. Working within the confines of the usual "rock" set-up of guitar-bass-drums, they somehow create lengthy soundscapes that evoke strong emotions, admittedly mainly of sadness and loneliness, but there are parts that are sheer, total joy. But it's that almost wilful manipulation of emotions that is the most remarkable thing here - proof perhaps this is music that really does transcend it's humble origins and make you feel part of it. And all without vocals.

    33
    Goldfrapp
    Black Cherry
    2003

    I mentioned the other week that this was the band's real breakthrough to the mainstream, and in retrospect it's filthy lyrics and sound make it somewhat miraculous that it wasn't censored in some way. But then, the overt sexuality of the album it part of the attraction, and, er, stripped of it this album wouldn't be half as good, or as fun. It's the full-on, uptempo electro numbers that are the core of the album (the domination/submission of TocarStrict Machine, the sexual demands and orgasmic heights of TocarTwist, the barely disguised innuendo of TocarTrain, for starters), but the ballads are equally deserving of your attention.

    32
    ohGr
    welt
    2001

    It's worrying me to realise just how old this is, particularly as, I seem to recall, that many songs on this album had been kicking around for a few years previously, too. One of those classic examples of an album ahead of it's time, perhaps, freed from the confines of Skinny Puppy nivek ogre and Mark Walk clearly let things take some very different directions to the parent band. This is, at least in part, extremely twisted synthpop, and up to the point of it's release sounded like pretty much nothing SP had done. Subsequent album SunnyPsyOp was not half as rewarding as this, but then, little else has been since either: there is simply so much going on that it's fun going back and listening again and again. Quite a trick, really.

    31
    Tool
    Lateralus
    2001

    It was a long, long time coming, this, but it was worth it in the end. A staggering technical achievement, of course, but the songs are what made it so good, not just the musical mastery on show. It's not just a rehash of Ænima, either, instead having a very different atmosphere and feel and perhaps that is what made it so successful as an album. Like all Tool material, it rewards repeated listening to the whole album, rather than individual songs, trying to get your head around the songs, their complex construction, the insane time signatures (TocarLateralus itself is apparently based around the Fibonacci sequence both musically and lyrically!) and deep lyrical detail. So, not one for the casual listener, but worth it all the same...

    30
    Interlock
    [album artist=Interlock]Crisis%252F%252FReinvention

    2005

    Call them a British Fear Factory if you must, but Interlock were always perhaps a little more varied than that tag might have suggested. Despite something of an unstable lineup in their later years - and then splitting for good on the eve of the second album's release (which never did ever see the light of day, sadly) - the one full album they did deliver is awesome. From the full-on industrial roar of TocarSkinless and TocarStraight to the surprisingly tender ballad of TocarThis Waking Moment, they managed to cover far more bases than I ever would have expected, and as a result ended up with an album that was pretty special. Nowadays, by the way, my favourite track is the last one - the stomp of TocarIn Stasis that gets better with every listen. Gone, and missed, this lot.

    29
    Draconian
    Turning Season Within
    2008

    A glorious album of romantic doom metal, that didn't put a single foot wrong and perhaps was never quite as appreciated in the UK as it should have been. A shame, really, as it was easily a match for anything the homegrown kings of the genre have put out in recent years, and indeed went one step further by including dual vocalists, with the sweet tones of the female vocalist being used to spectacular effect and adding that extra dimension that many of their peers so sorely lacked.

    28
    Alter der Ruine
    The Giants From Far Away
    2009

    There was a marvellous sleight-of-hand pulled off by ADR here. The previous album State of Ruin was dark, and pre-occupied in part with a bleak present and future. The follow-up, going on press releases and apparent theme, seemed to suggest more of the same, so it was something of a surprise to say the least when it turned out to be a blast of bouncing, *fun* noisy electro-industrial, riddled with humorous and cleverly-placed samples - oh, and the best use of Chris Morris in music for a while, too. And along the way, they've managed to widen their fanbase, too, if the reaction to this band's material in clubs (and my girlfriend loves this album, too, which was a little bit of a surprise) is anything to go by...

    27
    16Volt
    FullBlackHabit
    2007

    Nine years had elapsed by the time this, the follow-up to Supercoolnothing finally arrived, and remarkably, perhaps, it was well worth the wait. More electronics, more crunch, more tunes, in fact it was the archetypal "turn up to 11" that worked in spectacular style. Ok, so there were a couple of tracks that I wasn't especially keen on, but an album where I like every song on it is bloody rare. Either way, it's worth it alone for tracks two through to four, which are probably three of the best industrial rock tracks ever recorded.

    26
    Icon of Coil
    Serenity is the Devil
    2000

    Back in the days BC (that's, Before Combichrist), Icon of Coil were one of the most thrilling of the "Futurepop" bands by some distance, and this reputation was plainly and simply thanks to the early singles and the extraordinary first album. Starting out with the lengthy, Strange Days-sampling intro to Activate, the icy, detached vocals perfectly matched the smooth, sleek music that at points was nearing trance-techno, but always had that extra gear to shift into that set so many of the songs apart. The use of female vocals (in the form of the sultry tones of Computorgirl) on a handful of songs was a good move, too, as it provided some variety (even if the single version of Situations Like These, remixed with a slamming beat and Andy on vocals, was even better). None of La Plegua's projects have sounded as unique, or as brilliant, as this since.

    Next week: My top 50 albums 2000-09 Pt.02: 25 to 01
  • Alternative Judder Playlist - October 2009

    Out 18 2009, 15h55 por syknyk



    October 9th 2009 - Lee Chaos Playlist.

    Young Parisians - Jump The Next Train
    The Bird & The Bee - Please Don't Stop The Music
    Late of the Pier - Space & The Woods
    Goldfrapp - Happiness
    Moby - Every Day Is 1989
    Does It Offend You, Yeah? - Weird Science
    Kissy Sell Out - Bethnal Green Cafe
    Chris Corner - We Rise
    Hadouken! - Declaration Of War
    VNV Nation - The Farthest Star
    Placebo - Pure Morning
    Orbital - Halcyon & On (Plejik Remix)
    Stabbing Westward & Wink - Torn Apart
    The Faint- Agenda Suicide
    Zombie Nation - Kernkraft 400 (Dave Clarke Mix)
    Chemical Brothers - Electronic Battle Weapon 7
    Depeche Mode - Corrupt
    Delerium - Silence (Airscape Remix)
    Adele - Hometown Glory (High Contrast Mix)
    Bjork - Big Time Sensuality (Fluke Minimix)
    Muse - Supermassive Black Hole
    Deadmau5 - Ghosts N' Stuff
    VNV Nation - Beloved
    Apoptygma Berzerk - Kathy's Song (Ferry Corsten Remix)
    Combichrist - What The Fuck Is Wrong With You People?
    Prodigy - Invaders Must Die
    TC - Rockstar
    John B - Tainted Love
    Fischerspooner - Emerge
    N-Trance - Set You Free
    Panacea - Chartbreaka
    VNV Nation - Chrome
    Combichrist - This Shit Will Fuck You Up
    Alec Empire - Addicted To You
    Mindless Self Indulgence - Straight To Video
    Dan le Sac VS Scroobious Pip - The Beat That My Heart Skipped
    CSS - Let's Make Love And Listen To Death From Above
    La Roux - In For The Kill
    Depeche Mode - Personal Jesus (Boy's Noize Mix)
    Prodigy - Warrior's Dance
    Drumsound & Simon Bassline Smith - Harder
    Pendulum - Blood Sugar
    Mistabishi - Printer Jam
    Qemists - Drop Audio
    TC - Where's My Money?
    Mindless Self Indulgence - Shut Me Up
    Pitchshifter - Genius
    Slayer & Atari Teenage Riot - No Remorse
    Prodigy - Omen
    Chemical Brothers - Hey Girl, Hey Boy (Soulwax Remix)
    Panacea - Found A Lover
    Fatboy Slim - The Rockerfeller Skank
    2 Unlimited - No Limits
    Muse - Plug In Baby
    A-D-D - Shack My Bitch Up
    Utah Saints - Something Good (High Contrast Mix)
    C J Bolland - Sugar Is Sweeter
    Underworld - Born Slippy





    Listen To My Alternative Playlist On Spotify
  • MIXTAPES for OCTOBER 2009-Covers & Halloween

    Out 8 2009, 5h22 por beautifulwaste

    Covers Mix




    14 Covers


    1. Calexico - Dance of Death (John Fahey)
    2. Bat for Lashes - A Forest (The Cure)
    3. Momus - Don't Leave (Jacques Brel)
    4. Gene - The Ship Song (Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds)
    5. Marsheaux - New Life (Depeche Mode)
    6. Crooked Fingers - Mansion On The Hill (Bruce Springsteen)
    7. Ride - Sight Of You (Pale Saints)
    8. Dave Gahan - A Song For Europe (Roxy Music)
    9. Joe Henry & Madonna - Guilty By Association (Vic Chesnutt)
    10. Joel Gibb - That’s Us/Wild Combination (Arthur Russell)
    11. Justin Townes Earle - Can't Hardly Wait (The Replacements)
    12. M. Ward - Story Of An Artist (Daniel Johnston)
    13. Iron & Wine - Love Vigilantes (New Order)
    14. Ulrich Schnauss - It's Raining Today (Scott Walker)


    Download:
    http://www.divshare.com/folder/611073-419



    The Original 14


    1. John Fahey - Dance of Death
    2. The Cure - A Forest
    3. Jacques Brel - Ne Me Quitte Pas
    4. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - The Ship Song
    5. Depeche Mode - New Life
    6. Bruce Springsteen - Mansion On the Hill
    7. Pale Saints - Sight of You
    8. Roxy Music - A Song For Europe
    9. Vic Chesnutt - Guilty By Association
    10. Arthur Russell - That's Us/Wild Combination
    11. The Replacements - Can't Hardly Wait
    12. Daniel Johnston - Story Of An Artist
    13. New Order - Love Vigilantes
    14. Scott Walker - It's Raining Today

    Download:
    http://www.divshare.com/folder/611100-ea8





    Halloween Mix





    One Halloween Night ...


    1. Silver Jews - Candy Jail
    2. Cut Copy - Visions
    3. Arab Strap - Haunt Me
    4. Boards of Canada - The Devil Is In The Details
    5. Apoptygma Berzerk - Paranoia
    6. Cabaret Voltaire - If the Shadows Could March?
    7. Jeniferever - A Ghost In The Corner Of Your Eye
    8. Amon Düül II - Three-Eyed Overdrive
    9. Pnau - Bloodlust
    10. Barry Adamson - Crackula Has Risen From The Grave
    11. Duran Duran - Hungry Like The Wolf
    12. Coil - Panic
    13. Frank Zappa - Zomby Woof
    14. The Residents - Dead Man
    15. Brian Eno - Spirits Drifting


    Download:
    http://www.divshare.com/folder/611113-979
  • Tuesday Twenty: My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.04: 40 to 21

    Out 6 2009, 17h19 por amodelofcontrol

    And now, onto the next instalment of my tracks of the decade. Next week will see the top twenty...

    Previously:
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 100 to 81
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 80 to 61
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 60 to 41

    40
    Landmine Spring
    The Jaded And The Eager
    Elephantine
    2001

    51 seconds of metallic hardcore fury, tearing out of the speakers like a pack of slavering dogs from the off, somehow stuffing in two verses, a lot of screaming, and then the last ten seconds preparing to rip into the second track (which is pretty fucking good, too). Not sure what happened to this lot, but just for a short while they were awesome, like Helmet on a force-fed diet of steroids that weren't quite as reserved, either, as this track proved nicely.

    39
    Interlock
    Further From Reason
    Death by Design
    2002

    Older than this, but it only ever got a proper release in 2002, so I believe it counts, and anyway, I set the rules for this! Whatever the date it comes from, this remains Interlock's finest moment. Somehow balancing perfectly the chugging metal, industrial electronics and dual (male/female) vocalists who both had (and still do) have incredible range, from screams and snarls to melodic passages, this was a track that in some hands could have been a mess due to the sheer amount of ideas contained within...but instead became Interlock's greatest moment by far.

    38
    Everything Goes Cold
    TocarI've Sold Your Organs on the Black Market to Finance the Purchase of a Used Minivan
    Prepare To Be Refrigerated
    2008

    For one, one of the best song titles ever, and the song itself is awesome fun, too. A sneering, raging blast of industrial rock with great lyrics, samples, and a sense that nothing is being taken too seriously. The rest of the EP is great fun, too, and the album - due at last in December - also sounds like it is shaping to be just as good.

    37
    Dragons
    TocarHere Are the Roses
    Here are the roses
    2007

    One of the latest in a long line of bands I was really late in catching up with, and even more remarkable in that this was the band formed from the remnants of Dark Star, one of my very favourite bands from the end of the 90s. This band are a very different beast, though - rather than the dreamy, proggy rock that Dark Star made their own, Dragons are firmly rooted in muscular, driving gothic rock. While at points making their influences a little too clear - one song sounds almost exactly like Interpol, another nods towards Depeche Mode, while the spectre of Joy Division is never too far away - there are some tracks that are just simply astonishing. And the opening, title track is certainly that. A swirling, roaring rush underpinned by David Francolini's powerful drumming, it's peak is saved for near the end, when it does a melodic about-turn in a similar fashion to the change that worked in such incredible fashion in Alice in Chains' Would?.

    36
    Assemblage 23
    decades
    Meta
    2007

    This track was initially released - in an early, apparently incomplete, version a year before, but it was the majestic album version that opened Meta that is the one featured here. Opening with the sound of a ticking clock, which continues in the background for much of the track, it's a lengthy track that - appropriately, perhaps - is about taking the chances that come your way and making a difference before time runs out, and not a second is wasted. No matter what the subject, it also happens to be one of the best A23 tracks ever, if not perhaps the best.

    35
    Covenant
    Tour De Force
    United States of Mind
    2000

    United States of Mind may have had two dancefloor monsters in Dead Stars and One World One Sky, but the rest of the album was pretty handy too, and indeed Tour de Force for me was by far the best song on it (although Afterhours runs it close, as the best ballad Covenant ever wrote). Comparing the gambles taken in life to those taken on a roulette wheel, it's freewheeling melodies make for a marvellously thrilling, fast-paced track that has never seemed to get the credit it deserved in the band's now-lengthy back catalogue.

    34
    In Strict Confidence
    Emergency
    Holy
    2004

    This album was where ISC changed direction a little more, from the ultra-dark industrial-electro of before to a more-darkwave sound that seemed to suit them so much better. Adding permanent additional vocalist Antje Schulz was a masterstroke, too, as tracks like this proved. Her beautiful, crystal-clear vocals were pushed high in the mix above a deceptively simple beat to make probably the closest to a perfect pop song that the band ever made. A new - much delayed - album is coming very soon, and I've got my fingers crossed that they can scale the heights of this again.

    33
    Rotersand
    TocarDare To Live (SR Version)
    Dare To Live - Perspectives on Welcome to Goodbye
    2006

    The original version of this track - along with the intro track - opened breakthrough album Welcome to Goodbye, and it's condensed version, with elements of the intro merged in and removing much of the lengthy buildup, made it into a much more dancefloor and listener-friendly track, finally making just about everyone realise that this was Rotersand's best track all the long. Everything that is great about Rotersand is in this one track - it's anthemic, melodic, very heavy on the beats but with an emotional heart that is sometimes missing from their peers.

    32
    Esa
    TocarPrincipals Of A Paradisic Resolve
    How Pure Would Your Utopia Be?
    2008

    Three albums of astonishing industrial-noise have been supplied so far by the seemingly never-ending well of creativity that is Jamie Blacker, and he has lent his talents to various other acts in the form of guest appearances or remixes (some of which have been astounding, too). The track chosen here, though, features a guest of it's own - Nikki from Prometheus Burning, who lends her evil-sounding vocals to the churning maelstrom of noise later in the track. The electronics bubble, churn and then explode like a looming volcanic eruption, and the climax, when it arrives, it jaw-dropping. The video, by the way, is not worksafe...

    31
    The Dresden Dolls
    TocarGirl Anachronism
    The Dresden Dolls
    2003

    Not the first DD song I heard - like many, that honour falls to the quirky TocarCoin-Operated Boy - but this was certainly one of the more striking tracks on their impressive debut. Being fast and punky is some feat, when all the band have is drums, piano and vocals, but the band manage it, with it all sounding insanely chaotic and on the verge of falling apart at any moment. Much like the girl Amanda Palmer details in the lyrics - the kind of girl that you probably should think twice about getting involved with, and is somewhat out of time...

    30
    Apoptygma Berzerk
    Starsign
    Welcome to Earth
    2000

    Stefan Groth and Apop may have left the industrial/EBM world far behind in search of poppier planets nowadays, but it's perhaps telling that their live shows are still stuffed full of the older, bleepier tracks. A good number of older Apop songs - some of which are nearing their teens in age - are still dancefloor staples, and with songs the quality of Starsign, it's perhaps a mystery that they didn't become pop megastars long ago. Opening with urgent beats and sweeping synths, and a gloriously euphoric, hands-in-air chorus that still packs dancefloors nine years on, it's outwardly-positive sound masks the yearning of Groth to go and investigate somewhere "where no-one knows [his] name".

    29
    16Volt vs. Cyanotic
    AmericanPornSong (Glitch Bitch Mix v1.0)
    h0rd3z ov thee el33t
    2006

    The "studio" version of this track has finally landed - a good many years since the first live version surfaced on the "best of", and three years since this monstrous remix/retooling. It's still a great song underneath the reworking - proved by the recently-released album version - but the work that Cyanotic did with this, treating the vocals, crowding in effects and samples, beefing up the beats, giving the chorus even more ooomph, adds up to one of the best remixes of the decade.

    28
    Leechwoman
    Tool
    Three Zero
    2001

    Opening with an uncompromising sample source - from the vicious Scum - sets the scene perfectly for this band's most brutal moment (which really is saying something). Pure industrial power that consumes everything before it, live it turns into a wall of noise that can get quite uncomfortable, but then, that's the way I suspect Alex and the band would like it.

    27
    Lucidstatic
    Blackout
    Gravedigger
    2008

    An album I picked up on spec, without hearing a single second of it - something I rarely do nowadays - and I made the right choice. In fact, I knew I'd made the right choice all of about ten seconds into this, the opening track as it exploded out of the speakers at me. Four-and-a-half-minutes of mental, angry breakcore riddled with samples, breakdowns and more breakcore - it's almost daring you to even try and dance to it. The rest of the album is great, yes, but really, it never reaches the dazzling peak that is this track.

    26
    Modulate
    TocarRevolution
    Detonation
    2008

    It might be TocarSkullfuck that took all the plaudits, and indeed was the track that brought Modulate to a big audience by being played to death on industrial dancefloors everywhere, but my favourite track is about as old as it. TocarRevolution is the rabble-rousing, sample-heavy call to arms that sounds absolutely immense live and on dancefloors, and somehow has never quite caught on like TocarSkullfuck.

    25
    Goldfrapp
    TocarCrystalline Green
    Black Cherry
    2003

    Goldfrapp's breakthrough, this - a dirty electro album that was a fun, and at times x-rated, tumble between the sheets for forty-five minutes, opening with this slithering, pulsing track whose lyrics suggest a night of fun under the stars. While Goldfrapp have perhaps moved onto greater success since this album, it - and this track, for me - remain career highlights.

    24
    Katatonia
    TocarEvidence
    Viva Emptiness
    2003

    A band that have always seemed to be hidden in the shadows of their peers, both in reality and metaphorically, just for a moment they took a little of the limelight here and created their best song full stop. A song about dark obsession, gently simmering fury and ice cold revenge, it's such a tense song that you can almost hear Jonas Renkse shivering with anger as he calmly delivers the devastating vocal. The song, remarkably, simply gets better and better before it fades out - the repeated refrain that closes the song out is just heartstoppingly sad. A new album is imminent, but the band are never, ever, going to top the clout of this.

    23
    Drumcorps
    Botch Up and Die
    Grist
    2006

    Take old grindcore and metal tracks, put them in a blender with very, very angry breakcore, and you end up with something that we were amazed hadn't been tried before. The album is reasonably short, exceptionally heavy, and surprisingly listenable, too. Part of the fun, of course, is working out the tracks that he sampled from, and good luck trying to headbang to most of it. This track in particular is the mighty opening track, with appears to start in mono, get quieter for a moment and burst into stereo (and about ten times louder than before) with no warning like a JCB crashing through your lounge wall. In other words, it's fucking awesome, and if played loud enough is pretty much guaranteed to annoy the neighbours.

    22
    dEUS
    TocarBad Timing
    Pocket Revolution
    2005

    Some six years or so since the last album, dEUS reconvened for Pocket Revolution, and while I wasn't a huge fan of all of the album (the album since, Vantage Point, is much better overall, IMHO), this opening track was quite possibly one of the bands very best moments - seven minutes that gradually, and almost imperceptibly, builds to an astonishing climax that creeps up on you in glorious fashion. Sadly, this band have never had the mainstream acceptance that they always deserved, but all that means in my view is that those of us who have kept the faith simply hold them as ever more precious.

    21
    Mind.In.A.Box
    What Used To Be (Short Storm)
    What Used To Be CDM
    2008

    My track of the year for 2008, and with good reason - the first time a single MIAB track was successfully seperated out from the lengthy narrative that has tied in all of their songs so far, making them, in the main, a far better "album" band rather than a "single" one. That all changed, though, with this edited release. Dispensing with the lengthy buildup that the eight-minute album version has, and by polishing the production somewhat - more than anything by removing much of the effects on the vocals that have long been the band's sonic trademark - it turned this into a glittering dancefloor-friendly track that I'm pretty sure gained the band a whole host of new fans.

    Next week: My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.05: 20 to 01
  • Мой топ альбомов

    Out 2 2009, 13h45 por L_u_c_i_a