• Tomorrow: Surfing On Sine Waves @ Neurobeat Radio

    Mai 19 2009, 18h02 por TenebraeVision

    In Runde 2. befasst sich Surfing On Sine Waves Morgen mit Electronica und IDM. Das ganze wird eher ruhig und melancholisch ausfallen.
    Mit dabei diesmal: Flint Glass, SE, Talvekoidik, Beefcake, Bersarin Quartett, FLAQUE, Bitcrush vs. Dryft, Stendeck, Blackfilm, A Wake A Week und Aphorism...

    also bis Morgen wie immer um 19.00 Uhr
  • Some recent new albums I have discovered and grown to love!

    Mai 3 2009, 19h48 por purplevelvet

    Here are some great new albums that I have found recently and enjoy listening to! (In alphabetical order, to be fair!)

    Anhedonia - Ontology


    Aphorism - Surge


    Bersarin Quartett - Bersarin Quartett


    Coreline - Bone and Blood as Stone and Mud


    IP Neva - Symbiosis of Contradictions


    Marching Dynamics - The Workers Party Of Haiti


    S.K.E.T. - Depleted Uranium Weapons


    SE - Epiphora


    Submerged - Violence as First Nature


    Synth-Etik - Waiting For The Rapture


    Tapage - Fallen Clouds


    Tonikom - The Sniper's Veil


    Wisp - The Shimmering Hour


    There are a number of tracks for each artist that you can listen to here on last.fm. (simply click on the artist link above each album cover!) And if you do like them, go and buy the album/s! Support the artists! :D

    (This list is by no means comprehensive, however, if you check through my listening habits of the last 3 months, you will see that i have been playing most of them quite a lot! And they are all fairly recent releases!)

    Feel free to comment below if you have checked out these albums and tell me about your favourite tracks etc. Or maybe you found another album that is in a similar vein?
  • Headphone Commute Reviews (April)

    Abr 27 2009, 23h28 por liftmuziek

    I've been posting my reviews on last.fm for quiet some time now. I love going back to my original ramblings and then dusting off the albums that got me excited years ago... This is essentially the point. Besides my interviews and features, Headphone Commute Reviews are meant to be an archive of my favorite releases as well as recommendations for you. I do not have time to write negative words, so here's another batch of my latest finds that I hope will make it onto your rotations list. A lot of goodies in here for you. Not to mention another Record Label Profile. This month it's an in-depth interview with Evan Bartholomew of Somnia. Read Label Profile: Somnia only on reviews.headphonecommute.com. Here are 16 reviews and flashbacks, with many featuring my mini interview feature I call "Two and a Half Questions", so be sure to hit that. As usual, I would appreciate a comment or two, and would love it if you could Subscribe to RSS Feed.

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    The Refractors - 8 Year Sleep (Dynamophone)

    I first discovered The Refractors through their hand packaged and physically painted copy of All Colors Run EP, which they self released in 2008 and were kind enough to send over. I say "discovered" not because I want to take any credit for finding them before they got picked up by San Francisco based Dynamophone Records, but because stumbling upon this duo was a real pleasure, as it is whenever one uncovers a previously unheard artist. My initial reaction to the sound is worth repeating once again, and so I quote my previous review: The Refractors are Joseph and Kayline Martinez of Pacifica, California, who turn running colors, abandoned sounds, and loose threads back into art. The sixteen minute All Colors Run EP is a collection of vignettes and gentle sketches feeding analog instruments and field recordings into cold machines. The sound is described by the artists as "vegetation coming up through the cracks of man-made structures." On this debut full length album, 8 Year Sleep, The Refractors catalog their musical journal entries beginning with the year 2001. Eight years, eight memories, eight movements. Each track represents a collection of dreams, grievances and flashbacks, woven with the accompanied instruments, field recordings, and silence. With a nod towards political events taking place in the last eight years of American history (the first track, for example, is titled A Fall Disguised as a Rise), the duo captures emotions with a surreal juxtaposition of abandoned fragments. The album is made up of dying dusty microphones, acoustic attic guitars, kitchen drawer percussion, splattering water, scratched voices, and lost pieces of home. It is also worthwhile to mention that the tracks Lull and Inherit include contributions from a guitarist Clayton McEvoy, who has been recently signed to another favorite label of mine, Hidden Shoal. Watch for his upcoming release under the alias of Sleeping Me titled Cradlesongs (Hidden Shoal, 2009) in May. This is a great catch for Dynamophone Records, who snatched the Refractors and released this album in their Parcel Series - a limited edition 3" CDr, packaged in a beautiful compact box, with artwork by Eric Lacombe. Previous releases in the Parcel Series include The Lullaby League's Filia Melusine, Fjordne's Last 3 Days of Time, and A Lily's I Dress my Ankles in God's Sweetest Words, among the many others. And one more thing! The Refractors' 8 Year Sleep will be the first release on Dynamophone's new Lilian Series format, which will be released on a tiny 1G USB flash drive held in a slide-top tin with a tiny neodyne magnet. How cool is that? This version will come with six extended tracks, images, lyrics and additional information behind each track, like this little fact about Farewell Sister: "She was assassinated two months after retuning to Pakistan from exile". A great collector's item breathing life into the meaning behind a musical album as a concept.

    Two and a Half Questions with The Refractors

    http://www.myspace.com/therefractors | http://www.dynamophone.com

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    VA - Sound of Slow Flow Vol. 1 (Slow Flow)

    The shadows recede into their coldness. She shows up this morning. With her light breeze and the blue skies, Spring begins another cycle. The light synthetic chirping in my headphones joins that of the birds. And they all sing. On the train, I read Haruki Murakami's Dance Dance Dance (1994). The atmospheric swells and the ambient drones are the perfect soundtrack to the novel. All the more appropriate, since this disc arrived from Japan. On this compilation, Sounds of Slow Flow Vol 1, ten various artists contribute tracks that express their image of a "slow flow". Each is delicate and unique in its own way, but this conceptual theme joins the album together unlike any other scattered sampler. With this first release for Sapporo, Hakkaido-based Slow Flow Records, the label enters the minimal ambient scene with an eclectic roster of artists. This ethereal movement in between space and stillness is collectively comprised of compositions by Pawn, Celer, Ryonkt, Cloudburst, Elian, Segue, Porzellan, Glenn Ryszko, Entia Non, and Ian Hawgood. One of the familiar names on this bliss saturated collection is Celer, a husband and wife duo, with a deep discography, and the second release for this label, Cursory Asperses (Slow Flow, 2008). Compiled by Ryo Nakata (Ryonkt), the 70+ minute journey will take you through textures and tones designed to complement the impossibly persistent soundtrack of the daily life. Current Slow Flow releases include the above mentioned album by Celer, an album by Misound, Stanze di te, and an upcoming album by Jordan Sauer (Segue), Into the fall. Recommended if you prefer meditative sound over silence during any activity, except useless rambling thoughts. Filed under ambient and experimental releases, along with titles from 12k, Room40, Dragon's Eye, and Spekk. Looking forward to all future releases.

    http://www.myspace.com/slowflowryo | http://www.slowflowrec.web.fc2.com

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    Alva Noto - Xerrox Vol.2 (Raster-Noton)

    Alva Noto returns with a second installment in his five-part planned Xerrox series. On this follow up to Xerrox Vol. 1 (Raster-Noton, 2007), Carsten Nicolai turns up the volume in static electricity working with the concept of copying sounds. A copy of a copy of a copy in digital format may be flawless, so what does Nicolai do? For this feat, Nicolai along with Christoph Brünggel created a "sample transformer". This software manipulation device downsamples, chops and fragments the original source, until it no longer resembles itself, becoming an error prone original, becoming a copy corrupted with noise, becoming a newly created entity in itself. Here's Nicolai, giving us a little more color on the second volume on the label's website: "xerrox vol. 2 undertakes an intense journey and affords the luxury to take its time. while xerrox vol. 1 (r-n 78) referred to the ‘old world’ with its tradition deeply rooted in classical music, xerrox vol. 2 tries to access a ‘new world’. it works with samples that have been gathered and developed in the usa – the so-called ‘new world’ – where the album also has almost completely been recorded. the dramatic and dynamic approach of xerrox vol. 1 on vol. 2 has been replaced by a structural density. instead of working with individual musical entities the new album rather develops an overall, linear aesthetic that refers to musical strategies of film music. hence there are no implicitly singular pieces, but open musical structures – a journey without a predetermined target." On Xerrox Vol. 2, Nicolai turns to a roster of contemporary musicians, including Michael Nyman, Stephen O'Malley, and Ryuichi Sakamoto. This volume of work is more musical and warmer, while at the same time noisier and metallic. Organic instruments are re-sampled and drenched in scattered white noise, washed out with waves of bitcrushing storms, and pierced through with needles of errors. This is not a sound of a stretched magnetic tape. This is a sound of a laser disk passed through a Hollerith punchcard machine, stamping out valuable bits of binary data, daring your brain to fill in the rest. Strip away the conceptual process, and we are left with beautiful dark ambient and modern classical pieces that are haunting and melancholy in their nature, to the likes of Jóhann Jóhannsson, Max Richter, and Fennesz. Highly recommended if you enjoy the releases from the acclaimed Roster-Noton label. Make sure you pick up the first volume and watch out for the upcoming releases to complete your set. By the way, expect the entire set to spell XERROX through cover art, as the virst volume displays letter 'X', and this one, if you look closely, are letters 'E' and 'R'. While you're shopping around, I recommend you also pick up Alva Noto's Transform and Unitxt. Oh, and one last thing. Make sure to grab Byetone's Death of a Typographer and Kangding Ray's Autumne Fold.

    http://www.myspace.com/alvanoto | http://www.alvanoto.com
    http://www.myspace.com/rasternoton | http://www.raster-noton.de

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    Lulu Rouge - Bless You (Music For Dreams)

    When I posted the Headphone Commute's Best of 2008 list, I received a lot of emails that amounted to "You forgot Lulu Rouge!" What? Lulu who? Yes, I'm sure there was an album that I missed in 2008 (I missed hundreds of them). But with enough pokes in the same direction I was tempted to find out. And yes, I will admit: I did miss Lulu Rouge, because certainly this act belongs on HC's Best of 2008 list. I've been playing this album for months now, and have rated each track at five stars, so it's only fair that I finally give it some proper coverage. How can I describe the dubbed out techno beats that thump their way into my brain and beg to be repeated? How about this: if you loved Trentemøller's The Last Resort (Poker Flat / Rough Trade, 2006), you will certainly fall in love with Lulu Rouge... Especially since Anders Trentemøller co-produced a few tracks on Bless You. Lulu Rouge is actually two friends: Thomas Bertelsen (aka T.O.M and Tom Von Rosen) and Torsten Bo Jacobsen (aka Buda), who have been part of the Scandinavian electronic music scene for some time now. Bertelsen, for example, has been Trentemøller's partner since the beginning stages of The Last Resort. So there's that important synergetic connection. If that doesn't pique your interest, here are some pretty adjectives for you. On Bless You, the Denmark-based duo blend a refreshing concoction of Basic Channel sound with playful rumbling bass sweeps, pulsating IDM elements, delayed dub chords, catchy organic instrumentations, and DSP heavy vocals with contributors like Mikael Simpson, Alice Carreri Pardeilhan, Tuco, and Scott Martingell aka MC Jabber. The stylistic classification ends up falling somewhere between deep minimal and dub downtempo, but one thing is for sure - it's a unique album that will keep you cozy throughout all your moments. Maybe it's time you explored the Scandinavian side of electronica? Highly recommended!

    Two and a Half Questions with Lulu Rouge

    http://www.myspace.com/lulurougesoundsystem | http://www.lulurouge.com
    http://www.myspace.com/musicfordreams | http://www.musicfordreams.dk

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    Yagya - Rigning (Sending Orbs)

    It is raining. I drag myself out of bed onto the wet pavement for a daily crawl to work. The raindrops typewrite poems on my umbrella. Time to put on Yagya. After a certain point, I can't tell if the sound of the rain is coming from outside, or strictly from my headphones. And does it matter anyway? The subdued dubbed out bass patterns and swelling pad sweeps shove me towards the lazy train against my will. And I trot on, splashing in the water with the beat. On the train, the sleepy commuters fog up the windows with their indifferent morning breath. I wipe away their misery from the glass and stare at the rotation of the city life outside. The bus picks up its passengers. The lights change from yellow to red. People follow predetermined rules. People don't look at each other. Yagya carries the humanity forward. One beat at a time. Yagya carries me to work.Rigning is the long awaited third full length album from Icelandic producer, Aðalsteinn Guðmundsson. This is the second Yagya release on the Dutch label, Sending Orbs, which has released Guðmundsson's Will I Dream During the Process? in 2006. Sending Orbs is also a label which brought us such amazing artists like Kettel, Secede, Blamstrain and Legiac. So I always keep my eyes on their releases.Rigning, which, of course is "rain" in Icelandic, is one of the most beautiful ambient dub-techno compositions to date. But lets not put the emphasis on "techno", since the background pulsing beat exists purely as the rhythmic glue around the wet structure. From beginning to end, the album is a complete conceptual piece wrapped around variations on the main theme, from simplistic track titles (counting up from one to ten) to careful selection of atmospheric elements, to delayed dub minor chords in maintained perfect harmony. It is an album you must hear in its entirety. Over and over.This is an amazing start for great music in 2009, and I'm looking forward to the year if it will bring more sounds like this. After a three year wait, Yagya does not disappoint! Be sure to add this record to your collection along with Yagya's very first release, Rhythm of Snow (Force Inc., 2002), if you can find it. Highly recommended if you like Gas, Biosphere, Intrusion, Echospace and Basic Channel sound.

    Two and a Half Questions with Yagya

    http://www.myspace.com/steiniplastik
    http://www.myspace.com/sendingorbs | http://www.sendingorbs.com

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    Lissom - Nest of Iterations (Dragon's Eye)

    Descending down a steep slope, I slowly enter a cavern populated with dripping stalactites, swinging wind chimes, and wondering whispers. The dark atmosphere soaks up the humidity of a distant buzzing organism and spews it out through DSP filters and control voltage modulated synths. Through repetitive patterns, nested recursion, and looped iterations, Lissom experiments with data-structure-precise evolving soundscapes, that compile and burst into tiny binary sonic fragments, binding themselves to receptors in the membrane of the synapse. This purely ambient and atmospheric work is built on field recordings, acoustic sources, and synthesized sounds, all pulling me farther, deeper, and away from the perceived reality. In this cave I sit for hours, contemplating the harmony of the spheres and the dissonance of our souls. While the nature lives in agreement, the humanity is polluted by one unconscious thought: "I am not enough". With this exploration of sound, I descend to the most sacred base, where I am everything that I could ever be, one with being. Tana Sprague is an Oakland, CA based sound and video artist, releasing her debut album on Dragon's Eye Recordings under the Lissom moniker. Sprague's intention behind her work is indeed to "manipulate awareness of time, space, place, and scale." Her goal is accomplished through measured tones and hypnotic beatless rhythms. "Inspired by the elegant complexity of organic forms, she utilizes various electronic and digital devices to synthesize a similar enveloping intricacy". On Nest of Iterations, Sprague demonstrates her complete control of sound design, which she no doubt perfected through her studies in Interdisciplinary Computing and the Arts at the University of California. Nest of Iterations is an excellent addition to Yann Novak's collection of works on his Dragon's Eye Recordings label. Released as a 250 limited edition 5" CD-R, this work will surely become a sought after collector's item to those marveling in the works of Carsten Nicolai (Alva Noto), Taylor Dupree, Richard Chartier, and Evan Bartholomew. While browsing the label's catalog, don't forget to check out the work by Yann Novak, Marc Manning, Steve Peters, and previously reviewed Kamran Sadeghi.

    Two and a Half Questions with Lissom

    http://www.myspace.com/01lissome | http://www.sensory-perception.net
    http://www.myspace.com/dragonseyerecordings | http://www.dragonseyerecordings.com

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    Jega - Geometry (Planet Mu)

    Here's a brief history of Planet Mu, which is very much relevant to Jega. Planet Mu was born in 1995, and was originally setup as a sublabel of Virgin Records, on which it initially planned on releasing music by µ-Ziq (Mike Paradinas), and similar artists. The experimental electronic genre that initially was vultured upon by the major labels never took off in the United States, and Virgin gave up spending their marketing dollars on this back-shelf product. In 1998, Paradinas decided to take on the label single-handedly, and, prefixing the releases with ZIQ, released Jega's Type Xer0 as the very first 12-inch. This teaser was followed up with Jega's debut album, Spectrum (Planet Mu, 1998), and from that the rest is history. Prior to his signing on Planet Mu, the man behind the Jega moniker, Dylan Nathan, has already released material on none other than Skam Records. There, with his two EPs, Phlax (Skam, 1996) and Card Hore (Skam, 1997), Nathan fit along perfectly with such contemporary abstract and experimental IDM artists as Bola, Lego Feet, Freeform, Boards of Canada, and of course Gescom. On Spectrum, Nathan rips through melodic breakbeats with newly perfected IDM elements, fitting right at home with Paradinas' µ-Ziq style. Glitched out percussion draws influences from Aphex Twin and even some leftfield downtempo beats ala Amon Tobin, whose first release, Bricolage, came out a year prior on Ninja Tune . Two years later, and a few EPs in between, Nathan releases his sophomore album, Geometry (planet Mu, 2000). This album is much different in tone, and immediately made its impression on me. A lot darker, machine-like chopped up percussion, jitters its way through the cold corridors of sonic spectrum towards the experimental Autechre sound. Although a few atmospheric melodies remain throughout the album, the deep electro beats and metallic effects hold their solid ground. Geometry is definitely among my list of influential albums. In 2004, Jega showed up with a Theme From 1998 on Planet Mu's compilation, Children of Mu. Another track, Aerodynamic, appeared on the label's compilation, Sacred Symbols Of Mu, two years later, in 2006. In 2003, as Nathan was working on his third album, Variance, a copy leaked out onto the sharing networks, and Nathan had to scrap and rework almost all of the tracks. The album is definitely still in the works, and Paradinas mentioned that Variance Vol 1 and Vol 2 will be released as a double album sometime in July, 2009 (!!!). As a matter of fact, Jega showcased his upcoming work during his exclusive set on BBC Radio 1 Experimental on March 11th, 2009 (do your own digging on the planet-mu.com forums to grab a recording). I hope that bit of news got your juices flowing, as I'm sure I'll be reviewing the album once I get my dirty hands on it.

    http://www.myspace.com/dylanjeganathan | http://www.jega.com
    http://www.myspace.com/childrenofmu | http://www.planet-mu.com

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    Rival Consoles - Helvetica (Erased Tapes)

    From the label that brought you majestic modern classical music from Icelandic rising star, Ólafur Arnalds, comes a new installment in emotional... wait... what's this? My expectations for melodramatic orchestral stabs are shattered by explosive drums and drilling breaks. Completely unexpected and incredibly welcome, Rival Consoles catches me off guard with his cinematic progressions, which are complemented by breakcore elements a la Venetian Snares. And this is only after I hear a single track on Erased Tapes Collection I, which is available as a free download from the label's website. And so I reach out for some more. Helvetica is Ryan Lee West's second EP on Erased Tapes released under the Rival Consoles moniker. In only four tracks, the record is enough to grab your attention with delicate classical piano arpeggios, IDM influences deriving from the catalog of Rephlex artists, with acid bleeps, breaks, and beats palatable to fans of the above mentioned V-Snares, Aphex Twin, and Boxcutter alike. Yes, I can honestly admit that I'm excited about this artist, because all of these cutesy frequencies are skipping right down my alley, past the puddles of tears and walls punched with mud. Playful, adventurous, and confident, the tracks produced with intricate attention to detail, are only a teaser for the things to come from this Leicester (UK) based producer. The 7-inch vinyl is quickly selling out (already out of stock on some places I checked), but is still available directly from the label; and then of course there is the [mandatory] digital release. Be sure to also get your hands on Rival Consoles debut release, The Decadent EP (Erased Tapes, 2007). And don't forge to pick up the label's digital showcase compilation, commemorating its 1st anniversary, where, besides the track that tipped me off, Ryan Lee West contributes a remix and yet another track under his alter ego, Aparatec. Remember, it's free! Jump on this wagon. Quick!

    Two and a Half Questions With Ryan Lee West

    http://www.myspace.com/rivalconsoles | http://www.erasedtapes.com

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    Bersarin Quartett - Bersarin Quartett (Lidar)

    From the very few opening notes, I know that I'm in for a treat. As the album progresses, I get wide-eyed, and instead of paying attention to details [I know I will be coming back for more later], I spend time researching, tracing the steps that led me to accidentally miss this album, and calling all my friends to tell them about Bersarin Quartett. It's like I missed an entire year, while the self-titled album was there all along, spreading its loveliness across all open ears but mine. Well, I hope it's not too late to bluntly rant and rave about it, so that those who are asleep like me, can be awakened with this bliss. Because, kids, this is another one of those albums that rapidly wedges its way into the previously posted and now begging to be revised, Best of 2008 list. Bersarin Quartett is the solo project of Thomas Bücker, who for a while was hiding in the shadows under blank names in net-label releases Electronica Unplugged 1 (Aerotone, 2006) and its followup, Electronica Unplugged 2 (Aerotone, 2007). But digging deeper through a web of contributions and aliases, Bücker's discography reveals production work through an entire decade, when under the Jean-Michel moniker he released Marshmallow Rooms (Eleganz Records, 1999). OK, so at least I'm not drooling over a newcomer who completely blew me away with his production and composition. That is not to say that it underplays the work in any shape or form. On Bersarin Quartett, Bücker picks up the conductor's baton and draws all eyes upon him. With elegant gestures, he moves the modern classical progressions through ambient orchestral drones ala Biosphere's Shenzhou (Touch, 2002), to paced minimal pieces reminescent of Marsen Jules' Les Fleurs (City Centre Offices, 2006), to cinematic soundtracks and program music of Max Richter's The Blue Notebooks (130701, 2004), all beautifully complemented with a light touch of elements of jazzy experimental IDM to land among the fans of Murcof, Helios, and The Cinematic Orchestra. How is that for some name dropping? The man behind the music on Bersarin Quartett laughs at my attempt of making The Best of 2008 Compilation mix of my favorite tracks, and instead drops his entire album on my lap. "Here. Listen to this. How is that for summarizing your favorite music of the latter years?" The imaginary projection of his voice is right. This album has it all. Enough to fill a page with adjectives, comparisons, and clichés. Instead, I'm feverishly typing words into this box in a desperate attempt to get you to listen to the album at all costs and then judge for yourself. Seriously. Just get it. Bersarin Quartett is the second release on Dortmund based (Germany) Lidar Productions label which first put out Jasper TX's A Darkness, back in 2007. If you're having trouble locating Bersarin Quartett in the US, may I recommend our good friends at n5MD, who have a few copies in their excellent mail order shop. Recommended for the likes of the above mentioned artists plus Emanuelle Errante, Jacaszek, Julien Neto and Rafael Anton Irisarri.

    http://www.myspace.com/bersarinquartett | http://www.beatsbeyond.de
    http://www.myspace.com/lidarproductions | http://www.lidar-productions.net

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    Another Electronic Musician - Five (n5MD)

    It's about time that I got my hands on Jase Rex's fifth release, appropriately titled Five. Critics universally agree, that unlike his moniker suggests, Rex is not just Another Electronic Musician. And though the past releases by Rex were closer to subdued melodic electronica, this album clearly puts the D in IDM. Familiar playful glitchy percussion is complimented by strictly defined rhythmic structures, covering groovy dub beats with layers of pads, delayed jazzy chords, and sprinkles of digital errors. Five becomes more than a head bopping album, it begs for a loungy atmosphere and shoulder popping dance floor alike. These days Jase Rex is hanging out in Southern California, where he must surround himself by a vast influential musical library, from early pioneers of electronica to the latest craze of dubstep, as it clearly reflects in his music. This marriage of the old and the new is at once familiar and welcome, as the two favorite elements bridge together in the album that keeps on pumping catchy hooks in every track. Where sound becomes a story, and the story yields the sound. This is an interesting addition to n5MD, considering that this highly reputable and personally admired Oakland based label, tends to [lately] focus on less upbeat releases - from ambient neofolk by Last Days, to electronic dreamscapes from Near The Parenthesis, to post-rock shoegaze by the owner himself, Mike Cadoo (aka Bitcrush). It's an interesting avenue that is only applauded by at least this fan of the label. Although I tend to agree that IDM in its original incarnation may be long dead, and that the acronym is slapped and overused by many, we owe it to Another Electronic Musician for keeping it alive (even if it needs a little life support). Thank you, Jase, for a wonderful reminder of the times that are still yet to come.

    Two and a Half Questions with Another Electronic Musician

    http://www.myspace.com/anotherelectronicmusician | http://www.anotherelectronicmusician.com
    http://www.myspace.com/n5mafia | http://www.n5md.com

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    Interbellum - Over All of Spain the Sky is Clear (FlingcoSoundSystem)

    FlingcoSoundSystem is a relatively new Chicago based label spearheaded by Bruce Adams, who back in 1993 was one of the co-founders behind Kranky. OK, do I have your attention? Now settle down and keep listening. With this fourth label release, Over All of Spain the Sky is Clear, FSS is introducing us to Brendan Burke, aka Interbellum. On the album, we hear Burke behind the piano, while Fred Lonberg-Holm softly plays the cello. The tracks are recorded in their open ended form, following a minimal restraint digital and acoustic manipulation, with the help of applied mathematics and durational processing. I'd be lying if I said I really understood the mathematical formulations in this piece, but it is the end-result that's important here. And it speaks for itself. Fans of long form and improvisational modern classical pieces would be absolutely delighted to hear this duet. While none of the pieces overpower the mind with concrete melodical structure, the overall drifting experience is that of pure musical exploration. Throughout the album, the sound vibrates, travels, and floats in and out of our peripheral hearing, until the slightly audible voice becomes almost coherent, only to drown again in the harmony of bowed and struck strings, which flips between the major and minor scales, like a child laughing through the tears after a fall. This unobtrusive wondering through musical modes becomes especially apparent during the second track on the album, The Life and Death of Anne Zimmerman, which is over twenty minutes long. Add to that some distant crackling, echoed machine buzzing, and you've got yourself a requiem for the living. Interbellum [in its definition of the word], is a period of time between wars (World Wars I and II to be more specific). Perhaps such definition will explain the more somber mood of of this unfolding album, which, as with all other FSS releases, is meant to be listened to in one sitting, as a collection of sequenced tracks, making up a coherent album as a whole. Pick up this digital release from flingcosound.com available for download for only $5. Recommended if you like Richard Skelton, Machinefabriek and Sylvain Chauveau as well as some acoustic pieces by The World's End Girlfriend.

    Two and a Half Questions with Brendan Burke

    http://www.myspace.com/interbellumsound | http://www.flingcosound.com

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    Mechanical Steering - 10:10pm (self)

    It seems that bigger labels started to steer away from straight up IDM in the recent years. Perhaps the passing away of Merck, and the resurrection of Neo Ouija may be a testament to that. Even n5MD chilled out and turned towards emotional electronica. In my opinion it has to do with evolution of sound, and the perfection and polishing thereof. You pick a direction and you go with it. So it was a pleasure to stumble upon an exciting and innovative album by an unsigned artist who goes by the name of Mechanical Steering. As always, with amazing self released albums, there is a spark of excitement in the air, the standing waves of sound excited with organic electricity, the crackle of the processed bits bouncing off the porous walls into my body. You feel as if on the tip of discovery. And that discovery is this unknown album by an unsigned name.Designed from sampled urban environmental sounds and digital manipulation, 10:10pm is a poisonous cocktail of melancholic melodies and distorted beats. The sounds break through the web of suffocating percussion and shifting noise, bombarding your ears and mind with complex patterns that resolve into the beauty of their simplicity. Complimented with industrial mechanical sounds, dark passageways, and deep descends, the sound slowly rises to the surface where you find yourself catching 10:10 on the clock again. And again...Konin (Poland) based Mechanical Steering has ben producing electronic music since 1999. Initially creating a few albums under the alias Head, the music slowly matured into the sound of 10:10pm. It's a wonder that this artist has not been snatched by a prominent label yet, as I can totally see his releases on Ad Noiseam, Hymen and Tympanik alike. The album is currently self distributed on Amazon, iTunes, Rhapsody, and lala.com (note: 10:10pm is published under the Head alias). Recommended if you like Hecq, Gridlock, Subheim and Ginormous.

    Two and a Half Questions with Mechanical Steering

    http://www.myspace.com/mechanicalsteering | http://www.mechanicalsteering.com

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    :papercutz - Lylac (Apegenine)

    From digitally manipulated recordings of organic instruments, to organic interpretations of abstract digitalism, :papercutz presents his debut album, Lylac, for the fans of experimental leftfield pop music. Broken breathy vocals contributed by Melissa Veras intermix with thematic elements of chords, stabs, and plucked strings, all without taking on the lead in the arrangement; while glitched out beats and sprinkled multi instrumentation take to the forefront instead. :papercutz is Portuguese Bruno Miguel, who first appeared on the scene with his Ultravioleta EP on Montreal based Apegenine recordings [the same label that introduced us to Emanuele Errante and Julien Neto on Apegenine Volume 1 compilation (2004)]. On his site, among a more interesting explanation behind the concept of the album, Miguel defines: "To be papercutzed: to pursue your own way, to dream images in music, to like the light as well as the dark, to see all music styles as valid languages in which artists use to describe what's inside them, to find :papercutz's music and ideas a place where you can lose yourself... let's get lost!" Hmmm. I like that. I've always thought of our five senses as just receptors of various communication protocols through which we all attempt to send or receive a message. Albeit very much unsuccessfully, since all our visual and auditory sensors get corrupted with real and imaginary noise and do not have built in error correction. But I digress [feel free to ping me on this topic though]... On Lylac, Miguel does just that. He fans out the confetti of his shredded thoughts into our ears where they circle, float, and finally settle to cover the empty spaces occupied by silence. It's nice to finally get to know :papercutz on a more personal level after such a brief introduction via Ultravioleta EP, although be it with a few helpful remixes of The Sight Below, Neotropic, Spandex and Signer.

    http://www.myspace.com/papercutzed | http://www.papercutzed.com
    http://www.myspace.com/apeg | http://www.apegenine.com

    Two and a Half Questions with Bruno Miguel

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    Propellerheads - Decksandrumsandrockandroll (Wall of Sound)

    So whatever happened to these guys? You remember their hit single History Repeating, which at one point was played on every radio station back in 1997 after being featured in that hysterical film, There's Something About Mary. Then, there was the Spybreak! track which appeared in The Matrix. Meanwhile, the track Crash, was used in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. Even the Take California track from this same album was the first song ever used in an iPod commercial. So, by my calculations, these guys had it going for them, and then poof! Nothing! Did they just cash out? The only full length album to date is Decksandrumsandrockandroll released on London based Wall of Sound back in 1998. The big beat sound by Will White and Alex Gifford quickly took the world by storm. The groovy and repetitive beats which were perfected at the time by The Prodigy, The Chemical Brothers, Fatboy Slim, and The Crystal Method take on a jazzy, funky and playful spin, with a few vocal samples, turning on a few new mainstream listeners to breaks and breakbeat. On the track, 360° (Oh Yeah?), De La Soul contributes frozen-style urban rhymes that quickly flip the record to intelligent slow-groove loungy hip-hop sound. History Repeating is of course at the center of the album, featuring the vocals of '60s cabaret vocalist, Shirley Bassey. This is definitely a catchy tune that quickly got snatched up by a few advertising campaigns (including a Jaguar and a Pantene Pro-V commercial... heh). But the big beat sound proliferates the album, prominent with plenty of breaks, James Bond-like spy film themes, and the head-bopping sounds that still sound super fresh a decade later. Propellerheads are still quiet. No new tracks and no new albums since the one and only. Well, there was one new track, appropriately titled 10 Years, which appeared on the Wall of Sound's compilation double disk, Off The Wall - 10 Years Of Wall Of Sound, commemorating the labels, well... you guessed it, 10 year anniversary. Last I heard, Will White played the drums for Long Range during its live performances. Long Range, of course, is a UK group comprised of Nick Smith and Phil Hartnoll of Orbital. Meanwhile, I continue to enjoy this album time and time again... And until the duo decides to get back into the studio, I have only one thing to say: Bang On!

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



    The Prodigy - Invaders Must Die (Take Me to the Hospital)

    Should I even bother covering this? It's not like Liam needs my help. His 5th studio album, Invaders Must Die, barely hit the streets, and already all of the notable publications have lauded this long awaited album with more than favorable reviews. It's not like Liam needs my words to boost his career, although it's been five years since his last album, Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned (XL, 2004). And I do mean - his. Besides what you may hear or believe, the man... the only man... the musical genius, The Prodigy, is Liam Howlett. Yet while the words pour in, the shouts and murmurs accelerate in frequency, and a stack of promos from independent labels and unknown artists grows on my desk, here I am... writing about the album. I think the reason behind it is simple. And my woofers can attest. Invaders Must Die is a slam dunk. Period. No, it's not the anticlimactic return of the artist who blew out the speakers of my first owned car with Experience (XL, 1992). It's not the attempt of reinvention of the incredibly powerful and unprecedented underground sound of Music For The Jilted Generation (XL, 1994). It's not even the post-script of the pop-rising and slightly weathered return of The Fat of the Land (XL, 1997). While the rest adapt, remix, rinse, spit and swallow, Howlett bursts our comfort membranes with his own masterful style. Pop! Invaders Must Die opens up with a title track slamming into your face with saw toothed synths, distorted guitars, and extreme precision rhythmic programming of the genre that was invented by the man himself. Oh please, please, please let the album be as good as the first track! And so it goes! A collection of eleven songs [I'll call'em songs since some have the lyrics in that famous Prodigy style], pushes and jolts your brain as if strapped to a hot electrode until the very end. Acoustic drums are compressed and mashed up into pounding big beats, with deep riding bass lines, occasionally cut with a flashback to The Prodigy's older tracks. My favorite, of course, are the re-sampled old-skool rave stabs, which are implanted in my memory and in the history of Electronic Music. Here, Howlett skillfully wraps all the elements into a radio hit format, which no doubt will top the UK charts. Quick nod to Take Me to the Hospital, a sub-label of London based Cooking Vinyl, specifically created to put out this, and possibly other upcoming releases by The Prodigy. Although, as I said, all of the music is all Liam, the two original members of the act, Keith Flint and Maxim Reality, return, no doubt to wreak havoc on the upcoming UK arena tour with some support from Dizzee Rascal and Fight Like Apes. If you are a collector of all EPs, offshoots, and limited goodies, you absolutely must get the Omen EP where Noisia contributes a sick drum'n'bass remix. Play it loud!

    http://www.myspace.com/theprodigy | http://www.theprodigy.com
    http://www.cookingvinyl.com

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    Spleen - Where We All Fit In (Summer Rain Recordings)

    Beautiful melodic electronica will always have a slot on my shelf. Even if it's a digital only release. And here's one from a quickly gaining recognition netlabel, Summer Rain Recordings. And the label has a clear defined goal and purpose - all signed artists donate 5% of their royalties to NextAid (or any selected charity). And this is music you should be gladly paying for anyway. Spacey, euphoric, and melancholic - the sound of Where We All Fit In falls somewhere between downtempo and IDM. In fact, Spleen defines the style himself as melantronica. But it's not just sadness that saturates this four track EP. In many places it is up-beat, light-hearted and breezy, perfectly fitting on an appropriately named label. Spleen is the solo project of Antwerp (Belgium) based Lennart Vanstaen. His musical influences include Radiohead, The Album Leaf and a roster of Icelandic musicians like Sigur Ròs, Björk and Mùm. Mentioning those artists should give you a rough idea of Vanstaen's influenced style. It's easy to imagine this music accompanying a film, a lonely commute, a soundtrack to a passing life. In fact, Vanstaen has collaborated with Sophie Vanhomwegen to produce a soundtrack for a short film, Whatever Floats Your Boat, which was selected for the HDFEST film festival. This EP is Spleen's second release on Summer Rain Recordings. His previous contribution was 6 Moons Ago EP released in February 2008. [I want to make a quick note, that Lennart Vanstaen's alias Spleen, is not to be confused with Miro Merlak's Spleen, who released a self-titled electronic album on Phthalo Records in 2001].

    http://www.myspace.com/visitspleen
    http://www.myspace.com/summerrainrecordings | http://www.summerrainrecordings.net

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    last.fm artist and label cloud mentioned in the above post: The Refractors, The Lullaby League, Fjordne, A Lily, Sleeping Me, Pawn, Celer, Ryonkt, Cloudburst, Elian, Segue, Porzellan, Glenn Ryszko, Entia Non, Ian Hawgood, Carsten Nicolai, Alva Noto, Michael Nyman, Stephen O'Malley, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Max Richter, Fennesz, Byetone, Kangding Ray, Lulu Rouge, Trentemøller, Buda, Yagya, Gas, Biosphere, Intrusion, Echospace, Kettel, Secede, Blamstrain, Legiac, lissom, Yann Novak, Marc Manning, Steve peters, Kamran Sadeghi, Jega, µ-Ziq, Bola, Lego Feet, Freeform, Boards of Canada, Gescom, Autechre, Rival Consoles, Venetian Snares, Aphex Twin, Boxcutter, Aparatec, Ólafur Arnalds, Bersarin Quartett, Biosphere, Marsen Jules, Max Richter, Murcof, Helios, The Cinematic Orchestra, Jasper TX, Emanuele Errante, Jacaszek, Julien Neto, Rafael Anton Irisarri, Another Electronic Musician, Last Days, Near The Parenthesis, Bitcrush, interbellum, Richard Skelton, Machinefabriek, Sylvain Chauveau, The World's End Girlfriend, Mechanical Steering, Hecq, Gridlock, Subheim, Ginormous, :papercutz, The Sight Below, Neotropic, Spandex, Signer, The Prodigy, The Chemical Brothers, Fatboy Slim, The Crystal Method, Orbital, Propellerheads, Noisia, Spleen, Radiohead, The Album Leaf, Sigur Ròs, Björk, mùm, Dynamophone Records, Hidden Shoal Recordings, 12K, ROOM40, Dragon's Eye, Spekk, Sending Orbs, Force Inc., Basic Channel, Planet Mu, Ninja Tune, Erased Tapes, Rephlex, aerotone, City Centre Offices, Touch, n5MD, Kranky, merck, Neo Ouija, Ad Noiseam, Hymen, Tympanik Audio, Apegenine, Wall Of Sound, Take Me To The Hospital, XL, Summer Rain Recordings
  • 2008 \\ the music.

    Jan 12 2009, 21h51 por w0bbEL

    2008 \\ the music.


    What a year: School leaving examination, driving license (on second attempt albeit the first was better), first own flat (namely in a rooming house only, but the feeling is the same), first semester at college, a shared stage with A Wilhelm Scream (YES!), first semi-professional output of my band (begot next to nothing in terms of success, money and groupies, but it's a good record of course) and a Converge hoody plus an Isis hoody (YES!!!!). While the former happenings are somewhat ok but not life changing in any sense and of course not relevant for the topic this journal seems to deal with, the latter ones do a better job at hinting at the most important thing the year 2008 had to offer for me personally: music.

    While 2008 surely was no revolutionary year in music history (despite a new Guns N' Roses record), it's my personal highlight in terms of appreciating and also some kind of understanding today's music in all it's variety and aspirations. May sounds weird, but for me it's obvious that my musical sense and my ability to judge music in terms of quality, originality and professionalism evolved constantly since my first conscious perceptions of music as an object of art (year 2000, the acquirement of Hybrid Theory), with 2008 being it's logically peek at the moment. What I'm trying to say with this more than pretentious analysis is (next to the fact that Linkin Park still needs more love) that I got myself to listen to some Hip Hop and Beat based music in general, that I fully embraced my new love Post Rock and that the later following Top 50 list will do nothing but rule.

    While I get mocked for my new interest in Hip Hop by a guy who likes akissforjersey (FLAMETHISUSERHERE), I consider myself happy that awesome Instrumental Hip Hop releases like Late Night Cinema and Standing on the Shoulders of Giants, which were much more pleasant in terms of accessibility, primarily due to the Post Rock influence of the former, paved my way for some really good traditional Hip Hop (Black Milk, Scarface).

    Another genre that really stood out for me this year was Punk, great represented subgenres like Hardcore (with Verse, Ghostlimb) and Screamo (with Off Minor, Loma Prieta) aside. Whereas 2007 caught my attention with highlights in the Pop Punk territory (Say Anything, Paramore) and on the more technical and complex side (A Wilhelm Scream), this year delivered some truly great examples of emotionally driven and honest Punk Rock. Bands like The Gaslight Anthem and The Loved Ones therefore flirted with traditional sounds (Americana, Folk, even some Blues) on their sophomore records, while formations like How Dare You and Milloy recalled the legendary Gainesville Punk Rock scene to produce pure and sincere Punk Rock with heart.
    2008 also offered prime examples of ass kicking punk n' roll (The Bronx), infectious melodic punk-gone-radio Rock (Rise Against) and Latterman reminiscent Punk with DIY attitude (Argetti).

    I could continue my thoughts in the same style for donkeys years (I haven't even talked about Metal yet ... OPETH!!!), but I know that half of the "yeah another best of 2008 list i can spam"-users either don't even read this or are as tired of reading respectively writing as me at this point. So here is the list (and some others, but yeah you'll see).


    Top 50
    (a rough order)

    50. Youthmovies - Good Nature


    It's really hard to find an adequate classification for the music you'll find on Youthmovies' full length debut Good Nature; but for those this is essential: Mathy Post Experimental Progressive Rock with funk and jazz influences and yeah, some pop. Not cubed in confusion and non-boisterous in its execution, the songs flow effortless and change their direction incessantly and with purpose, showing that the Oxford 5 piece knows how to write ambitious songs that are original but approachable the same time. While there are catchy-through-infectious-singing songs like The Naughtiest Girl Is A Monitor and the beautiful If You'd Seen A Battlefield, Good Natures highlight is TocarArchive It Everywhere, a mini-monumental in variety and clever songwriting.


    49. Black Milk - Tronic


    The only true Hip Hop that made this list. Sophisticated and creative, producer Black Milk delivered a great example of ambitious Hip Hop. From the poppy Without U to the incredibly catchy Losing Out to the blazing The Matrix, Tronic both is so accessible and multi-variant in sound and beats, you could almost forget the excellent assistance of prominent rappers like Phaorahe Monch.

    48. The American Dollar - A Memory Stream


    After the first 4 songs rolled by I was sure I had found my favourite post rock of the year. The incredible harmonizing paired with the absolut gorgeous feeling provided by the warm instrumentation and layered production creates such an emotive and simultaneously chilled first passage, it's just "wow". While the Ambient-laden middle section gets a bit tedious by comparison, the epic closer TocarStarscapes combines the harmonization with the more Ambient feel, leading to the records final climax and closing the album on high standards.

    47. sgt. - Stylus Fantasticus


    Japan and Post Rock; two terms which go hand in hand in modern music scene at least since Mono's masterpiece You Are There. But while most other prominent J-Post Rock bands incorporate more and more Math Rock sensibilities to their sound (Toe, ), sgt. fiddle around with elements of modern Prog and Jazz-like jamming, mixing it into a refreshing attempt of Instrumental Rock with the sometimes chaotic rhythm section being thrown out of kilter every now and then. The random jams work pretty good as interesting filler material, holding the listeners attention right before Stylus Fantasticus turns into the more focused tracks, most noteworthy Destroy The Galaxy, Create The Power Plant, an epic 16 minutes tune full of pinging rhythms and cheerful themes that'll grab you from start to finish.

    46. Moving Mountains - Foreword


    One of the reasons I included EPs in my Top 50. Adding melodic vocals, electric ambience and acoustic guitars into a Post Rock skeleton, Moving Mountains delivers a brilliant follow-up of their great debut Pneuma and stokes their rising fanbase at the sight of a new full length all at once. The songs all being over 7 minutes in lenght, the New York based band pulls off thrilling build ups peeking in crushing walls of sounds (the final climax of TocarLights & Shapes is mad) and gorgeous melodious passages Explosions In The Sky (yes, I'm whoring) would be proud of. Supplying this effective formula with some cute surprises (screaming in the middle of With One's Heart In One's Mouth for instance), Foreword is a consistent and entertaining Rock album that only slightly suffers from the genericism of it's obvious influences.

    45. The Dodos - Visiter


    Brilliant Folk debut that offers it's charming congeniality not instantly but rather after some time of settling in. Even if it lacks some emotion and memorable writings in the somewhat overlong middle section of the album, the fantastic opener Walking and the whole ending, starting off with the rocking TocarJodi and culminating in the albums highlight TocarGod?, make Visiter a cute little gem of modern folk music.

    44. In Mourning - Shrouded Divine


    Even though In Mourning is around for over 8 years now, the release of Shrouded Divine in early 2008 was something special for the "newcomers" from sweden, being their first full length after recording countless demos. Never mind that the Progressive (Death) Metal genre not really needs a new generic effort (there's Opeth, right?), this debut comes up with a refreshing carefreeness, taking everything great the stale genre has to offer and stowing it in a tight package, while providing their sound with the right amount of Prog Rock and some Doom flavour. What comes to light are classy songs like Shrouded Divine and TocarBy Others Considered, both delivering captivating compositions with grooving rhythms, mighty growls and beautiful acoustic work accompanied by strong vocal harmonies.

    43. Jardín de la Croix - Pomeroy


    The Spanish band with the French name offers with their free-of-charge record Pomeroy a complex 70's Prog-tinged Math Rock experience that calls genre heavyweights like Don Caballero and even Rush to mind. Perfectly executed and written, their debut outing oozes of swirling guitars and permanently varying motifs, both highlighted through the complex drumming and the absence of any kind of vocals. The opener TocarPolyhedron being a convincing and stellar example of their everchanging sound, the highlight of the record is the more focused and prog-driven TocarAntioquia, which spacey and washy intro evolves itself into furious power-chord accentuated riffing and groovy bass runs while not losing the distinctive sound.

    42. How Dare You - Comfort Road


    Albeit I'm not really a fan of As Friends Rust and Hand To Hand, The Comfort Road, the first output from newcomers How Dare You, featuring members of abovementioned bands, is just plain awesome. Full of anthemic sing alongs, simple but effective lead guitar work with distortion drenched arpeggios and tight rhythms, highlighting the abrasive but melodic voice of vocalist Justin Goldmann in the best possible way, the Florida quintet delivers some of the best Gainesville influenced Punk of the decade. Notewothy fortastes are the midtempo banger TocarThe Bench, featuring rad hooks with infectious vocal work and an amazing, with delay refined guitar solo, and the raging TocarWeek of Heart Attacks, absolutely salient due to it's perpetual changes in tempo and dynamics.

    41. Butch Walker - Sycamore Meadows


    My first Butch Walker album I listened to in it's entirety, and it was really about time afterwards. Containing beautiful and light-hearted Pop Rock songs like The Weight of Her, the main focus of Sycamore Meadows is nevertheless on the full range of affecting emotions and aspirations. Albums highlight Here Comes The... is a moving song about an unlucky proceeding relationship, showing vulnerability and sorrow in every word while being incredibly catchy and addicting. Whereas most of the superb produced songs don't lose their poppy edge, the closer ballad TocarATL fully relies on an expressive use of a reverby piano, intensifying the touching words of Walker about finding your place in the world.

    40. Ocoai - Breatherman


    Serving as the saving grace of the Post Metal genre this year, Ocoai not pegs to the sound of genre idols Isis and Neurosis too much and creates a dense and atmosheric album that relies more on it's Post Rock influence than brutal sludgy riffing. Songs like the absolut fantastic title track TocarBreatherman with the gorgeous use of trumpets juxtaposed to soaring guitars remind more of the genre benders *shels while Tocarbabble stands as a typical but almost flawless in realization Post Rock / Post Metal hybrid in the vein of Pelican and new Isis.

    39. LITE - Phantasia


    While Filmlets was a groovy but somewhat inconsistent full length debut, LITE returns with a shining sophomore release that really lives up to its title. Phantasia is a brilliant collection of instantly accessible Math Rock songs with an undeniable fun factor, provided by almost danceable songs like the furious single TocarGhost Dance and the catchy opener TocarEf. Impelled by frantic but well arranged guitars and a nothing more than sick drumming, the Japanese 4 piece even bursts in Post Rock territory with the beautiful flowing TocarFade and delivers with TocarSolitude and TocarPhantasia two Math Rock epics with perfect intonations and a colorful rhythmic pathway.

    38. Sigur Rós - Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust


    The highly anticipated new LP of the Icelandic Post Rock idols starts off with a little surprise: Cheerful handclaps, larking singing, xylophones and driving piano accentuation as well as an all around folky and poppy feel during the first 4 songs are eye-catching and a totally new approach to the established Sigur Rós sound, opening the record with charming tunes and a wonderful light-heartedness. Succeeding with distinctive Post Rock sounds as in Festival or Ára bátur, the gorgeous beauty of in orchestral hymns peeking climaxes furthered by trumpets and strings comes to the fore and shows another time that Sigur Rós is one of the most impressive Instrumental Rock outfits in music history.

    37. Pygmy Lush - Mount Hope


    What started for me as a dragging folk album recorded by a band that features members of legendary pg.99 and debuted with a scattering mix of Noise, Folk and Hardcore in terms of Bitter River, is a disabusing grower. Being definitely not your typical Folk album with regards to songwriting and tone, it's more a feral droning approach to the singer / songwriter dominated genre, and a stunning one along with it. Beautiful acoustic patterns backed by toneless drumming get pierced through by the reverb drenched voice of Chris Jackson, creating a monotonous but the listener completely absorbing atmosphere that won't let you go until the record concludes.

    36. Hammock - Maybe They Will Sing for Us Tomorrow


    Even though my currently favourite Ambient musicians can't top their magnum opus Raising Your Voice...Trying to Stop an Echo with their new LP, it definitely is another awesome output that embodies the beauty music can radiate in every sense. Stripping down their already lush sound to the minimum, the duo once more bring off layered guitar / cello tracks which create subtle harmonies, sweeping across each other with facility. In doing so, Hammock weren't able to provide their songs with a vast amount of variety, but on the other hand with the full palette of emotions all the more.

    35. Kayo Dot - Blue Lambency Downward


    Firstly I wasn't sure whether to call Toby Drivers latest brainchild an odd dissappointment or an additional musically surprise. It's definitely another direction Kayo Dot dared to advance: The whole metal thing is gone, likewise the growls and largely the dense and dusky atmosphere that distinguished earlier master pieces like Choirs Of The Eye. Blue Lambency Downward is much more in the vein of newer Time Of Orchids, but with the typical Kayo Dot brand of a complex songwriting tinged with elements of classic compositions and jazzy instrumentation. Being not able to really describe Blue Lambency Downwards sound any further, I will tell you that this is surely different and maybe not as good as Kayo Dots previous releases, but awesome nonetheless. Oh, and Symmetrical Arizona is probably the best song of the year.

    34. Underoath - Lost In The Sound Of Separation


    With their latest output Lost In The Sound Of Separation, Underoath fully establish their new sound somewhere between intense Metalcore and dissonant (Post) Hardcore with stellar results. Not exactly being heavier as its sweet predecessor Define The Great Line, the more "epic" feel the band promised is quite felicitous, considering the highly captivating build ups of songs like the swelling The End Is Near and the hymnal Too Bright To See Too Loud To Hear. That's not to say that there aren't any crushing riffs and blasting tunes. TocarAnyone Can Dig a Hole But it Takes a Real Man to Call it Home starts off with a shattering riff in the mould of the iconic "In Regards To Myself", while TocarThe Only Survivor Was Miraculously Unharmed combines everything great of Underoaths proggy mixture of atmospheric hardcore, textured metal and sophisticated duo vocals into an unforgettable 3-minute ride.

    33. TV on the Radio - Dear Science


    The age of miracles.
    The age of sound.
    Well there's a Golden Age.
    Comin' round, comin'round, comin' round!

    - "TocarGolden Age"

    32. Mesa Verde - The Old Road


    Post Rock-tinged Screamo isn't something new anymore, thats for sure. Mesa Verde probably knows that too, maybe that being a reason why they delivered such an awesome LP with The Old Road. It's not very original or innovative, but it's so strong in execution and sophisticated in its ambiance that it'll captivate your attention right off being the first minutes in. Turning from the pure post rock opener A Deep Sleep Without Dreams into the furious hardcore attacks that are For the Tree That Fell and When the Canary Dies Run Like Fuck, the pure despair this record contains is audible and palpable in every fiber of the records musical body.

    31. Protest the Hero - Fortress


    One of the main reasons the year started out strong, Protest the Hero upgraded their already furious and chaotic mix of Progressive Metal and Post Hardcore to the next level and made Fortress more challenging but appealing the same time. Songs like TocarBloodmeat and Palms Read balance the string between anthemic hooks and complex instrumentation perfectly whereby keeping the track and not rambling without concept.
    [Note: Check out Fortress Instrumentals for a slightly different perspective of the songs.]

    30. The Loved Ones - Build & Burn


    Even if The Loved Ones didn't create something new for the punk genre with their sophomore album Build & Burn, they show the world what's possible when you combine the right influences (namely Hot Water Music or Alkaline Trio) with passionate vocals and a refreshing variety. There's some Folk and Country in TocarLouisiana, noticeable Pop sensibilities in TocarBrittle Heart, melodic Punk Rock in TocarDear Laura and so much more going on it's quite impressive. Crossing so much musical terrain without losing its distinctive character while pushing the boundaries of the genre in terms of catchiness and musically sincerity is a more than respectable achievement, and makes Build & Burn an exceptional record of todays punk music.

    29. Loma Prieta - Last City


    Dissonance and melody. Roughness and beauty. Anger and despair.

    I really could leave it at that, because it'll be the best description for Last City without generic genre jabbering. With a duration of only 23 minutes, Loma Prieta forced every instrument, every aspect of their sound to violent harmony, blending the loud/soft sections without noticeable changes in flow and theme. There's no dramaticism, no need for being epic or sophisticated. It's unaffected. It's raw. It's gorgeous throughout.

    28. Sun Kil Moon - April


    I feel oh so near
    When morning doves appear
    And ghosts of April ring
    Echo the refrain
    Soon finding a place
    In these lost verses

    - "Lost Verses"

    27. Bersarin Quartett - Bersarin Quartett


    Let me get this straight: Bersarin Quartett is not a quartet, it's Thomas from Münster, Germany. And with his self-titled release, he bends the Electronica genre to its most beautiful edges. Starting off with the string dominated TocarOktober and an overall classic feel, the record progresses into many different approaches. Thick ambient layered sounds rule in TocarInversion, while more electronica based songs like TocarDie Dinge sind nie so wie sie sind and the more colorful closer TocarMehr als alles andere focus more on vivid downtempo beats. It's minimalistic but epic the same time, having the ability to build up intensity while appearing non-threatening and restrained, and that's what makes this record so congenial and exciting.

    26. The Mars Volta - Bedlam In Goliath


    I guess that’s the most punk-rock thing about it; you could look like an idiot and sound like a fool, but that’s what humbles you and reminds you that you’re human.

    - Cedric Bixler-Zavala

    25. Metaform - Standing on the Shoulders of Giants


    Metaform alias Justice Aaron spent nearly 5 years for recording his magnum opus Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants, and it's perceptible in every particular song. Everything is highly detailed, packed full of variation and ideas, exploiting the relatively short song lenghts perfectly. Influenced by many styles such as Jazz, R'nB and even Soul, Aaron delivers 19 trip-hop tunes whose production is nothing more than grandiose. The integration of eclectic components, like saxophone submissions (TocarPch), horn samples (TocarBarbie Doll) or trumpet staccatos (TocarRock It Number Nine), is nearly flawless and interweaving, adding musically depth as well as highly enjoyable alternations to the already catchy main themes of the songs. Mostly relying on programmed beats and electronic synths as the rhythmic / melodic backbone of the songs, Metaform takes another route with TocarCrush as he's using a chilling, Red Hot Chilli Peppers' reminiscent clean guitar riff as main focus which is accentuated by a great mix of beats, flute, sax and some vocals, being a great example of Aarons creativity and his love for detailed and sophisticated arrangements.

    24. aussitôt mort - Montuenga


    Despite the fact that aussitôt mort's debut album 6 Songs flew under many radars of skramz fans (maybe caused by the slightly uninspired title), the French 4 piece follows the trend of high quality emo releases from Western Europe with their latest offering Montuenga. Blasting off with the heavyhanded riff of opener Mort mort mort, the band from Caen shows distinctly his roots and adds next to their frenetic love for delay and reverb effects some new ideas to the trendy but more and more unimaginative genre of European skramz. The intertwining guitars and excessive use of delay being a brand of aussitôt mort, they not overuse it in form of pointless scale running and impenetrably walls of cluttered effect layering, but more for complementary songwriting and a spacey but not too artifical feel, most successfull on the uplifting Une heure plus tard.

    23. United Nations - United Nations


    Maybe one of the most mystical supergroups ever, United Nations came out of nowhere and delivers an unforgettable ride into the history of genuine screamo.
    Being indifferent whether Daryl Palumbo (GlassJAw) or Ben Koller (Converge) or some other prominent musicians (all not officially confirmed besides Geoff Rickly from Thursday) are involved in this project, the music itself f**king rips, being a cocktail of mid-90s reminiscent screamo and some grind with a distinctive melodic edge. Absolutely pushing. Non-tedious. With songs that are both thrashing and immensely catchy (TocarResolution #9, TocarModel UN) or trashing only (TocarMy Cold War, TocarSubliminal Testing), United Nations includes one of the most impressive album closers of the year as well. TocarSay Goodbye To General Figment of The USS Imagination namely offers you next to the for this record exemplary cooperation of shredding guitars, powerful vocals (the screaming is insane) and adequate ***-kicking drumming, a jazzy saxophone solo that finishes the song and the record with a beautiul integrated jam.

    22. Verse En Coma - Rialto


    Containing ex-members of City of Caterpillar and Malady, the new Richmond formation Verse En Coma evolved the sound of its past into 5 songs bordering the line of Post Hardcore and Post Punk with some strong hints at Shoegaze. TocarThrough Ice Patches and Pine Trees and TocarIn A Factory are both meaningful anthems, with the former evolving from an uplifting drum pattern and a driving guitar to the songs pinnacle that already is its light-heartedly chorus. The latter, however, is a dynamic, story-telling tune that conveys its content with well-orchestrated songwriting that culminates in the youthful choruses, all being unforgettable due to their effervescing spirit and the provocative rebelling line 'we were the 'they don't know what life is really about' ones'.

    21. Asva - What You Don't Know Is Frontier


    It was a pretty intriguing experience I had with this record. Coming home from the pub very late, I was drunken enough to not fall asleep so I thought this will be a great occasion to check out What You Don't Know Is Frontier. Turning on my bass-laden headphones while lying on my bed and having the eyes closed, the first soothing noises introduce me to the grainy distortion, the droning ambience, the thick feedback layers, the brooding riffs, the in despair drenched mood, the sparse use of melody, the sublime organ, all in all the most enveloping thing happened to the Drone genre in very long time. I can't tell if I was in trance or something while listening to this, but it was a strange experience for sure. I can't remember anything else except for notional picture sequences passing by in my mind, brief moments that gave me some kind of epiphany, not making any sense after all. After I had gone physically, the last remaining thoughts were somewhat clearer; the cognition that this is one of the best records of the year.

    20. The Gaslight Anthem - The '59 Sound


    While Sink Or Swim wasn't a consistently good record, The '59 Sound is so much the more. The chubby and simple punk is almost gone, it's all dominated and carried by the use of a traditional mentality. Americana, Country, Folk and Blues are the pilings of the Bruce Springsteen reminiscent rock sound that internalizes the album title in the best possible way. With abrasive but mellow vocals, driving drumming, rumbling bass lines and inventive guitars, all highlighted by a reverb-laden production, the record evolves from hook to hook, from one wonderful arrangement to the next. It's authentic and autonomous, with a charming attitude that'll bring you the popular "Live fast, die young" sentiment to your mind.

    19. Burst - Lazarus Bird


    Some are pious, some cater to whims
    Some provoke
    But I am a labyrinth of layers
    Find only sense
    Without a compass

    - "TocarCity Cloaked"

    18. Verse - Aggression


    Aggression. I gotta break the mold. Aggression. Never let them take control. Aggression. Hands in shackles, Mind's confined to a cage. Aggression. I won't stop until I've broken every chain.
    - "TocarSons and Daughters"

    17. Mount Eerie - Lost Wisdom


    i will no longer hide it
    yes you move me to tears over and over
    every time i get it settled excite it
    every time i get my face dry you sing

    - "TocarVoice in Headphones"

    16. Ghostlimb - Bearing And Distance


    It's better to be pissed off than pissed on.
    - Shawn Michaels

    15. Grouper - Dragging a Dead Deer Up A Hill


    It's sheer brilliance what Liz Harris alias Grouper created with Dragging a Dead Deer Up A Hill. Wreathed in a mist of droning feedback, her latest offering is a wonderful melancholic piece of shoegaze music; dreamy, moody, airy, emotional, tension-filled, unpretentious, dramatic, gloomy and altogether beautiful in the sense of being a stunning achievement of art. The mindblowing Heavy Water/I'd Rather Be Sleeping, a song that perfects the balance between the hazy production that nearly eclipses the songs in their basics and the layered, consistent vocals borned by strong songwriting, is both the prime example and the albums highlight, being easily one of the best tracks of the year.

    14. These Arms Are Snakes - Tail Swallower and Dove


    It's just like... fire
    - "Lucifer"

    13. Thrice - The Alchemy Index: Vol. 3 & 4: Air & Earth


    [ ]… it's more about capturing the moment than capturing the perfect take ... [ ]
    - Dustin Kensrue

    12. Lights Out Asia - Eyes Like Brontide


    A billion stars go spinning through the night, blazing high above your head.
    But in you is the presence that will be, when all the stars are dead.

    - Rainer Maria Rilke

    11. Cynic - Traced in Air


    I have to confess that I really wasn't prepared for Cynics highly anticipated release of Traced In Air. Neither have been having experiences with their highly praised debut Focus nor having an idea what a mixture of Progressive Metal, Death Metal, Jazz and Alt Rock would even sound like, I actually didn't know what to expect. And after listening to this record countless times I can say that this is probably some of the best Metal for years, living up for the hype it received. Some of the most constructive guitar riffing (based on recent metal standards) teamed up with complex drum patterns and a mindblowing vocal dualism to create 8 songs conveying the impression that their beautiful melodies and the whole aerial atmosphere were really "traced in air". For proof check out Integral Birth and Evolutionary Sleeper, both being exemplary and instantly accessible.

    10. A Silver Mt. Zion - 13 Blues for Thirteen Moons


    so get fast / and get quick / with dum hearts / and swung hips /
    our dreams / deserve it

    - "Tocar1,000,000 Died To Make This Sound"

    9. Adebisi Shank - This is the album of a band called Adebisi Shank


    Fact: Adebisi Shanks full length debut embodies the party record of the year.
    Thesis: It's hotter than Katy Perry (music-wise, of course).

    So much awesomeness packed in 23 minutes of playing time is incomparable in terms of Instrumental Rock music, absolutely stunning in it's own way. Branding their sound with an incredibly catchy mixture of Math Rock and Post Punk, enriched with elements of Electronica, Funk and an overall dance music feeling, the 3 piece delivers 8 non-stop blustering songs, all screaming for the push on the repeat button. If you like excited handclapping (Snakeships), a yelling talkbox (TocarYou Me), two- handed tapping along with eclectic rhythms (Colin Skehan, Mini Rockers), chopped beatbox samples (Agassi Shank) or simply a song titled "Shunk" (Shunk), you really have to listen to this. At least thrice. If not, kill yourself.

    8. Extra Life - Secular Works


    I know what I want / but what I know won't stop me
    I know what I want / but what I know won't stop me
    I know what I want / but what I know won't stop me

    - "This Time"

    7. Blue Sky Black Death - Late Night Cinema


    DJ Shadow worthy heirs of instrumental Hip Hop. Absolutely stunning.

    6. Vessels - White Fields And Open Devices


    One of the main problems of modern post rock is the task to make a record with 60+ minutes in length that is interesting and attention grabbing from start to finish. Well, yeah, problem solved. Vessels full lenght debut is an entertaining trip through every aspect of instrumental rock music, flavoured with math rock riffing and somber but beautiful vocals. Proof? - TocarYuki!

    5. pg.lost - It's Not Me, It's You!


    The greatest treasures are those invisible to the eye but found by the heart.
    - unknown author


    4. Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago


    This is not the sound of a new man or crispy realization,
    it's the sound of the unlocking and the lift away.

    - "Re: Stacks"

    3. Off Minor - Some Blood


    This is not torture
    This is not surveillance
    This is not injustice
    This is poetic license permitted by a nations silence

    - "neologist"

    2. Daitro/Sed Non Satiata - Split


    French is the language that turns dirt into romance.
    - Stephen King

    Daitro and Sed Non Satiata are the bands that turn skramz into artistic ecstasy.
    - me

    1. Have a Nice Life - Deathconsciousness


    We kill everyone with arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads, arrowheads ... Thank god that's over.
    - "TocarBloodhail"


    Honorable Mentions

    The Tallest Man on Earth - Shallow Graves (the guy who sounds like Dylan but doesn't sound like Dylan at all)
    The Drones - Havilah (pretentious rock that's actually reeeeeally great)
    Spokes - People Like People Like You (sweetest post rock record ever)
    ... Who Calls So Loud - ... Who Calls So Loud (Funeral Diner with renewed enthusiasm)
    thisquietarmy - Unconquered (incredible dense ambient piece)
    The Ascent of Everest - How Lonely Sits the City (re-release, but so awesome it's worth to mention)

    Recommendations
    (aka the other good stuff of the year)

    Adolf Plays the Jazz - Stealth EP
    Amanda Palmer - Who Killed Amanda Palmer?
    Amon Amarth - Twilight Of The Thunder God
    Anaura - One Day in twothousandeight
    ARGETTI - Flags Of Karma
    Atmosphere - When Life Gives You Lemons, You...
    Balmorhea - Rivers Arms
    Because of Ghosts - This Culture Of Background Noise
    Beware of Safety - dogs
    Blacklisted - Heavier than Heaven, Lonelier than God
    The Bronx - III
    Capsule - Blue
    Dark Captain Light Captain - Miracle Kicker
    Deadly Avenger - Blossoms & Blood
    Deerhunter - Microcastle
    Ef - I Am Responsible
    Esoteric - The Maniacal Vale
    The Faceless - Planetary Duality
    The Flashbulb - Soundtrack To a Vacant Life
    Flying Lotus - Los Angeles
    Fuck Buttons - Street Horrrsing
    Glissando - With Our Arms Wide Open We March Towards... ("Floods" is so awesome)
    Grails - Doomsdayer's Holiday
    Her Name is Calla - The Heritage
    Innerpartysystem - Innerpartysystem
    James Dean - 7"
    Jesu/Envy - Split (because of the Envy side)
    The Kilimanjaro Darkjazz Ensemble - Mutations EP
    Killing the Dream - Fractures
    Krallice - Krallice (catchiest Black Metal ever)
    La Dispute - Somewhere at the Bottom of the River...
    Living With Lions - Make Your Mark
    Maybeshewill - Not For Want Of Trying
    Milloy - Creating Problems While Practising Solutions
    Mínus - The Great Northern Whalekill
    Minus the Bear - Acoustics
    Misery Signals - Controller
    Moonlit Sailor - A Footprint Of Feelings
    Mount Eerie - Black Wooden Ceiling Opening
    Murder by Death - Red of Tooth and Claw
    My Education - Bad Vibrations
    Nadja - Desire In Uneasiness
    Ólafur Arnalds - Variations Of Static
    Opeth - Watershed (because it's Opeth)
    Past Lives - Strange Symmetry EP
    Pig Destroyer - Natsha
    Port Blue - The Albatross EP
    Prolyphic & Reanimator - The Ugly Truth
    Red Sparowes - Aphorisms EP
    Rise Against - Appeal To Reason (contains some of RA's best songs to date)
    The Samuel Jackson Five - Goodbye Melody Mountain
    Scott Kelly - The Wake
    Shai Hulud - Misanthropy Pure
    Shugo Tokumaru - Exit
    Sleepmakeswaves - In Today Already Walks Tomorrow
    The Streets - Everything is Borrowed
    Steven Wilson - Insurgentes
    This Town Needs Guns - This Town Needs Guns
    Thursday/Envy - Split
    Torche - Meanderthal
    Trap Them - Seizures In Barren Praise
    The Week That Was - The Week That Was
    Upcdowncleftcrightcabc+start - Embers
    Yound Widows - Old Wounds

    Best EP from a German band out of Suhl, Thuringia in 2008

    With Nothing Underneath - Pancakeland?


    Stream it!
    MySpace

    Worst Records Of The Year
    (aka the "Yes, I do want to get flamed!!"-list)

    Part I: The ones I completely listened to
    Children of Bodom - Blooddrunk (first and last Cob album I listened/will ever listen to)
    The Human Abstract - Midheaven (meh ... meeeeeeeh)
    Senses Fail - Life Is Not A Waiting Room (yeah, well ... they're back on Let it Enfold You standards)

    Part II: The ones I didn't completely listenend to
    (aka the worst of the worst)
    Escape the Fate - This War Is Ours*
    I Am Ghost - Those We Leave Behind*
    Simple Plan - Simple Plan*
    Story of the Year - The Black Swan*
    Scars on Broadway - Scars on Broadway ("They Say" this sucks hard, even more than Serj)

    oh yeah, and Nickelback**
    __________________________________________________________
    *no explanations needed
    **Chad Kroeger

    Some Disappointments
    This Town Needs Guns - Animals ("Baboon" is really great but the whole album sounds the ****ing same)
    Fear Before - Fear Before (I was so stoked, but this is really average)
    Facing New York - Get Hot (some kind of totally different and more shitty)

    Some Surprises
    Irrelevant - New Guilt (sloppy production but so damn fun)
    The Sound of Animals Fighting - The Ocean and the Sun (their best work so far, much better than the crap that was Lover, The Lord Has Left Us)
    Kings of Leon - Only By The Night (yooooouuuuuu ... your sex is on fire)
    Disturbed - Indestructible (best Mainstream Rock/Metal of the year)
    Slipknot - All Hope Is Gone (see above)


    Some concluding thoughts of 2009
    Well, I'm really tired of writing right now and can't think of some words that'll express that I have high hopes for the next year in a more pretentious way. So here are some bands I'm looking forward to:

    Glassjaw
    Trophy Scars
    mewithoutYou
    Circle Takes the Square

    I know there are so much more but whatever.
    ___________________________________________________________

    So, this is it, a bit long and late and shitty, but yeah.
    I got lazy with my vapid descriptions very fast so I added some stupid quotes and some awesome lyrics to fill the gaps. I'm also aware of the lack of some other significantly bad records released this year but I only listed the ones with the biggest lasting impact on my stomach, so please be easy with me.

    Thanks for reading and (hopefully) commenting/flaming.
  • take stock to 2008

    Jan 2 2009, 19h27 por enigmapanda

    favourite albums released in 08 (abc)

    Aaron Martin: River Water
    Adem: Takes
    Antenne: #3
    Bersarin Quartett: Bersarin Quartett
    Ben Woods: A Collection of Thoughts
    Canon Blue: Colonies
    Cat Power: Jukebox
    Cousin Cole & Pocketknife: Tambourine Dream
    David Holmes: The Holy Pictures
    Detektivbyrån: Wermland
    Digitonal: Save Your Light for Darker Days
    Emiliana Torrini: Me and Armani
    Fredo Viola: The Turn
    Gregor Samsa: Rest
    Hauschka: Ferndorf
    Laura Barrett: Victory Garden
    Lulu Rouge: Bless You
    Max Richter: 24 Postcards In Full Colour
    Mr Cooper: What Else There Is
    Nitin Shawney: London Undersound
    Peter Broderick: Float
    Portishead: Third
    Russian Red: I Love Your Glasses
    Tape: Luminarium
    The Real Tuesday Weld: At The End Of The World
    Vetiver: Things Of The Past
    UNKLE: End Titles...Stories For Film

    homeland top 10 release in 08

    1. Ágnes Vanilla: Férfiszóval
    2. Csík zenekar: Ez a vonat ha elindult, hadd menjen
    3. Szalóki Ági: A Vágy Muzsikái
    4. Palya Bea: Adieu Les Complex
    5. Lovász Irén: Szerelmes Virág
    6. Kerekes Band: Fel a Kalappal!
    7. Kistehén Tánczenekar: Ember a Fán
    8. Pluto Project: One Dirt
    9. Barabás Lőrincz's Random Szerda: Small Talk
    10.Mitsoura: Dura Dura Dura

    15 most listened albums in 08

    1. Phelan Sheppard: Harp's Old Master (2006)
    2. Portrait of David: These Days Are Hard to Ignore (2005)
    3. Custom Blue: All Follow Everyone (2002)
    4. Pornopop: And The Slow Songs About The Dead Calm In Your Arms (2006)
    5. Ampop: Made For Market (2002)
    6. Peder: And He Just Pointed To The Sky (2007)
    7. Leaf: Made Into Itself (2005)
    8. Grails: Black Tar Prophecies Vol's 1, 2, & 3 (2007)
    9. Susumu Yokota: Symbol (2005)
    10. Mojib: Whimsical Lifestyle (2007)
    11. Bombay Dub Orchestra: Bombay Dub Orchestra (2006)
    12. Manyfingers: Our Worm Shadow (2005)
    13. Dustin O'Halloran: Piano Solos 2 (2006)
    14. Djivan Gasparyan & Michael Brook: Black Rock (2003)
    15. Teitur: Stay Under The Stars (2006)
  • Best of 2008!

    Jan 1 2009, 23h44 por iancorky

    Hello and a happy new year to anybody who may stumble upon this entry. Keeping with tradition, the following is my top 30 albums from 2008. Once again, I don't in any way claim these to be the 'best' albums from last year, for varying reasons, these are the ones that stuck out from the pile. There could have been many others that made the list, and maybe tomorrow I'll change my mind about the order. Oh well, here goes...

    30 - Eleanoora Rosenholm - Alä Kysy Kuolleilta, He Sanoivat
    29 - High Places - High Places
    28 - Aidan John Moffat - I Can Hear Your Heart
    27 - Damien Jurado - Caught In The Trees
    26 - Hot Chip - Made In The Dark
    25 - Matt Elliott - Howling Songs
    24 - Friendly Fires- Friendly Fires
    23 - Lawrence English - Kiri No Oto
    22 - Library Tapes - A Summer Beneath The Trees
    21 - Autechre - Quaristice
    20 - Xela - In Bocca Al Lupo
    19 - Sam Amidon - All Is Well
    18 - Cats In Paris - Courtcase 2000
    17 - Portishead - Third
    16 - The Advisory Circle - Other Channels
    15 - Ass - My Get Up And Go Just Got Up And Went
    14 - Bersarin Quartett- Bersarin Quartett
    13 - Peter Broderick - Home
    12 - Bohren & der Club of Gore - Dolores
    11 - Fennesz - Black Sea
    10 - Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Dig! Lazarus, Dig!
    09 - Flying Lotus - Los Angeles
    08 - Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago
    07 - Grouper - Dragging A Dead Deer Up A Hill
    06 - James Blackshaw - Litany Of Echoes
    05 - Neon Neon - Stainless Style
    04 - Laura Marling - Alas, I Cannot Swim
    03 - Elbow - The Seldom Seen Kid
    02 - Jacaszek - Treny
    01 - Why? - Alopecia
  • Best Albums Of 2008

    Jan 1 2009, 21h42 por slyve

    1 | Suffocate For Fuck Sake | Blazing Fires...
    2 | Have a Nice Life | Deathconsciousness
    3 | Max Richter | 24 Postcards In Full Colour
    4 | Mouth of the Architect | Quietly
    5 | Genghis Tron | Board Up The House
    6 | Copeland| You Are My Sunshine
    7 | Grouper | Dragging a Dead Deer up a Hill
    8 | The Faceless | Planetary Duality
    9 | Isengrind/TwinSisterMoon/Natural Snow Buildings | The Snowbringer Cult|
    10 | This Will Destroy You | S/T
    11 | North - What You Were
    12 | Burst - Lazarus Bird
    13 | Arrows - Arts And Politics
    14 | Maybeshewill - Not For Want Of Trying
    15 | Empire of the Sun - Walking on a Dream
    16 | Moonlit Sailor - A Footprint Of Feelings
    17 | The Severely Departed - S/T
    18 | United Nations - S/T
    19 | She Said Destroy - This City Speaks In Tongues
    20 | The Calm Blue Sea - S/T
    21 | Lights Out Asia | Eyes Like Brontide
    22 | Loma Prieta - Last City
    23 | Jóhann Jóhannsson - Fjordlandia
    24 | Peter Broderick - Home
    25 | Final Days Society - Noises Passes, Silence Remains
    26 | LITE - Phantasia
    27 | Vessels - White Fields and Open Devices
    28 | The American Dollar | A Memory Stream
    29 | M83- Saturdays = Youth
    30 | Attic Lights - Friday Night Lights
    31 | School of Seven Bells - Alpinism
    32 | Bleeding Heart Narrative |All That Was Missing We Never Had in the World
    33 | Bersarin Quartett - Bersarin Quartett
    34 | Mesa Verde - The Old Road
    35 | Hecq - Night Falls
    36 | Helios | Caesura
    37 | Hybrid | The 8th Plague
    39 | Burning Star Core - Challenger
    40 | See You Next Tuesday | Intervals

    And some others I may forget.
  • Best Albums of '08

    Jan 1 2009, 2h39 por nebuchadnezzar3

    This is a massive collection of all the albums this year that I liked; they are done in Album Title - Artist format. The asterixes denote albums I haven't actually been able to download yet for whatever reason, but are by artists I am familiar with and have been recommended highly by other people.

    Hope you enjoy! If there are ones you think I've overlooked or left out, PLEASE INCLUDE in the comments so I can listen myself. There are some that I know some people liked but I didn't include if I didn't like 'em, but whatever, that's why it's my list. Still though, it's kind of a master-list for me cuz it's practically everything that came out that I enjoyed this year, was a lot.

    Also include in the comments similar/upcoming artists to those listed here, especially ones with promising releases in 2009.

    Alegranza - El Guincho
    It's Not Something But it is Like Whatever - Errors
    Sworn - Anders Ilar
    Magic Monday - Michna
    Keeper's - Deastro
    Something for All of Us - Broken Social Scene presents...Brendan Canning
    Out My Window - Koushik
    Asa Breed (Black Edition)/Pom Pom Single - Matthew Dear
    The Sun and the Neon Light - Booka Shade
    God Is An Astronaut - God Is an Astronaut
    III - The Alps
    Congotronics 3: In The Seventh Moon The Chief Turned Into a Swimming Fish and Ate the Head of His Enemy by Magic - Kasai Allstars
    Let The Blind Lead Those Who Can See But Cannot Feel - Atlas Sound
    Various EPs (Including Weekend EP, How I Escaped The Prison Of Fractals mini album, Things I'll Miss EP) - Atlas Sound
    Logos (official release 2009 GET PSYCHED!) - Atlas Sound
    Microcastle / Weird Era Cont. - Deerhunter
    Caesura - Helios
    Convivial - Luomo
    Home and/or Float - Peter Broderick
    d_rradio - d_rradio
    Just A Souvenir - Squarepusher
    Topics for Gossip - Goddamn Electric Bill
    NYC - Kieran Hebden and Steve Reid
    A Memory Stream - The American Dollar
    Black Sea - Fennesz
    Challenger - Burning Star Core
    Glider - The Sight Below
    Osborne - Osborne
    Alpinisms - School of Seven Bells
    Violets - Twine
    Adage of Unknown - Jdsy
    Something Like Nostalgia - The Abbasi Brothers
    Litany of Echoes - James Blackshaw
    A Footprint of Feelings - Moonlit Sailor
    Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust - Sigur Rós
    Yearbook 1 - Studio
    Syclops - Syclops
    High Places - High Places
    The Whole Story of Glory - Do Make Say Think
    Water Curses EP - Animal Collective
    Reveries - Pacific!
    Songs in A&E - Spiritualized
    No Way Down - Air France
    Kleerup - Kleerup
    Saturdays = Youth - M83
    Two EPs - Final Fantasy
    Priest Lake Circa '88 - Slow Dancing Society
    These Promises Are Being Videotaped - El Ten Eleven
    Car Alarm - The Sea and Cake
    Neighborhood Suicide - Radius
    We All Inherit The Moon - we all inherit the moon
    Bad Vibrations - My Education
    Embers - Up-C Down-C Left-C Right-C ABC + Start
    Birds - Collections of Colonies of Bees
    Sand - Philip Jeck
    Variations of Static - Ólafur Arnalds
    Humus - Emanuele Errante
    SOOL - Ellen Allien
    The Airing of Grievances - Titus Andronicus
    Mothertongue - Nico Muhly
    Maybe They Will Sing For Us Tomorrow - Hammock
    Memory Drawings - The Drift
    Pyramids - Pyramids
    Ringer - Four Tet
    Rest - Gregor Samsa
    Bersarin Quartett - Bersarin Quartett
    Little Wars - Unwed Sailor
    Colorloss Record - Belong
    Los Musicos Perdidos - The Boats
    Street Horrrsing - Fuck Buttons
    Faint At The Loudest Hour - Alexander Turnquist
    Turning Dragon - Clark
    Sombunall - Beneva vs. Clark Nova
    Quaristice - Autechre
    Volume Objects - Autistici
    People Like People Like You - Spokes
    Rivers Arms - Balmorhea
    The Bees Made Honey In The Lion's Skull - Earth
    A Maze and Amazement - The Enright House
    Black Paris 86 - Arms and Sleepers
    Goodbye Melody Mountain - The Samuel Jackson Five
    Keep Your Eyes Ahead - The Helio Sequence
    Pleamar - Resplandor
    Uproot - DJ /rupture
    London Zoo - The Bug
    Silence In Everywhere - Euphoria
    Tanks And Recognizers - Lights Out Asia
    Tea Parties, Guns and Valor - Truckasauras
    Receivers - Parts and Labor
    Diary of an Afro Warrior - Benga
    Underwater Dancehall - Pinch
    Margins Music - Dusk + Blackdown
    Repercussions - Distance
    Doomsdayers' Holiday - Grails
    Vinyl re-releases - New Order
    Hold On Now, Youngster - Los Campesinos
    Fordlandia - Johann Johannson
    VOI - mudy on the sakuban
    LP- Holy Fuck
    The Very Best Mixtape - The Very Best (Esau Mwamwaya and Radioclit)
    Metamathics - High Dependency Unit
    High Places - High Places
    Devotion - Beach House
    This Is It And I Am It And You Are It And So Is That And He Is It And She Is It And It Is It And That Is That - Marnie Stern
    The Mixtape About Nothing - Wale
    Feed The Animals - Girl Talk
    Los Angeles - Flying Lotus
    Saint Dymphna - Gang Gang Dance
    Made In The Dark - Hot Chip
    You & Me - The Walkmen
    Where You Go I Will Go Too - Lindstrøm
    Hercules and Love Affair - Hercules and Love Affair
    In Ghost Colors - Cut Copy
    Nouns - No Age
    Third - Portishead
    Fleet Foxes and Sun Giant EP - Fleet Foxes
    Dear Science - TV on the Radio
    In Ear Park - Department of Eagles
    Visiter - The Dodos
    The Malady of Elegance - Goldmund
    What a Great Place to Be - Sumner McKane
    The Culture of Background Noise - Because of Ghosts
    The Metamorphosis Project - The Seven Mile Journey
    Eternal Return - This Is Your Captain Speaking
    It's Not Me, It's You - pg.lost
    Lagrange Points - Mooncake
    Ruido Blanco - Bosques de mi Mente
    Hatchback - Hatchback
    Vivian Girls - Vivian Girls
    *L'oceano Delle onde che Restano onde per Sempre - Neil on Impression
    *Dolores - Bohren & der Club of Gore
    *Wolf - Troubles
    *Out of Season - Anoice
    *Parallax Error Beheads You - Max Tundra
  • 2008 kedvencei

    Dez 31 2008, 14h21 por nebelhexe

    igen-igen, évértékelés, kedvenc lemezek, legjobb koncertek és egy-két csalódás.

    top 10 lemez 2008-ban. (sorrend nélkül)


    Meshuggah - ObZen

    Isten Háta Mögött - A Kényelmetlen Lemez

    Made Out of Babies - The Ruiner

    Cult of Luna - Eternal Kingdom

    My Sleeping Karma - Satya

    Daturah - Reverie

    Slipknot - All Hope Is Gone

    Portishead - Third

    Helios - Caesura

    Bersarin Quartett - Bersarin Quartett

    legjobb koncert:
    ebből több is kijutott. Isis + Jakob (bécsben, és igen, az Austerity Program szar volt :D), Cult Of Luna + The Ocean (bécs szintén), Made Out Of Babies, A Silver Mt. Zion, Caspian, szigetes Volbeat, Pozvakowski, Bohren + Alexander Tucker.

    csalódás:
    szigetes Meshuggah élvezhetetlen volt. a Pelican pedig nagyon langyos...

    jövőre is sok móka lesz, talán a legjobban a júniusi Rosetta-t várom.
    mindenkinek boldog új évet!
  • best albums of 2008

    Dez 31 2008, 9h36 por hafssol

    1. Balmorhea - Rivers Arms (Western Vinyl)
    2. July Skies - The Weather Clock (Make Mine Music)
    3. Small Town Boredom - Autumn Might Have Hope (Trome)
    4. Gus Black - Today Is Not The Day... To F#@k With Gus Black (Cheap Lullaby)
    5. Micah P. Hinson - And The Red Empire Orchestra (Full Time Hobby)
    6. James Yorkston - When The Haar Rolls In (Domino)
    7. Gregor Samsa - Rest (The Kora)
    8. Autistic Daughters - Uneasy Flowers (Kranky)
    9. Matt Elliott - Howling Songs (Ici D'ailleurs)
    10. Cocoanut Groove - Madeleine Street (Fridlyst)
    11. Adrian Crowley - Long Distance Swimmer (Tin Angel)
    12. The Sleeping Years - We're Becoming Islands One By One (Talitres)
    13. Lotte Kestner - China Mountain (Self Released)
    14. Peter Broderick - Float (Type)
    15. Beach House - Devotion (Carpark)
    16. Tex la Homa - Little Flashes Of Sunlight On A Cold Dark Sea (Acuarela)
    17. Benoît Pioulard - Temper (Kranky)
    18. Sun Kil Moon - April (Caldo Verde)
    19. Sigur Rós - Með Suð I Eyrum Við Spilum Endalaust (Emi)
    20. Helios - Caesura (Type)
    21. Scott Matthew - Scott Matthew (Glitterhouse)
    22. Neil Halstead - Oh, Mighty Engine (Brushfire)
    23. Willard Grant Conspiracy - Pilgrim Road (Glitterhouse)
    24. Boduf Songs - How Shadows Chase The Balance (Kranky)
    25. Takahiro Kido - Fleursy Music (Plop)
    26. Tindersticks - The Hungry Saw (Beggars Banquet)
    27. Bubblegum Lemonade - Doubleplusgood (Matinée)
    28. Jóhann Jóhannsson - Fordlandia (4AD)
    29. Daniel Martin Moore - Stray Age (Sub Pop)
    30. Jacaszek - Treny (Miasmah)
    31. Au Revoir Borealis - Dark Enough For Stars (Utter East)
    32. Bersarin Quartett - Bersarin Quartett (Lidar)
    33. Ed Laurie - Meanwhile In The Park (Dangerbird)
    34. Bird By Snow - Songbread_Another Ocean (Gnome Life)
    35. Hammock - Maybe They Will Sing For Us Tomorrow (Darla)
    36. Renfro - Mathematics (Meltwater)
    37. Mogwai - The Hawk Is Howling (Wall Of Sound)
    38. Windy & Carl - Songs For The Broken Hearted (Kranky)
    39. Mount Eerie - Lost Wisdom (P.W. Elverum & Sun)
    40. The Softone - These Days Are Blue (Awful Bliss)
    41. Okie Rosette - Leap Second (Monotreme)
    42. Fennesz - Black Sea (Touch)
    43. The Accidental - There Were Wolves (Full Time Hobby)
    44. Heidi Elva - Ships And Trees (Vitamin)
    45. Glorytellers - Glorytellers (Southern)
    46. The Declining Winter - Goodbye Minnesota (Rusted Rail)
    47. Retribution Gospel Choir - Retribution Gospel Choir (Caldo Verde)
    48. Library Tapes - A Summer Beneath The Trees (Make Mine Music)
    49. Damien Jurado - Caught In The Trees (Secretly Canadian)
    50. The Accident That Led Me To The World - The Island Gospel (Nobody's Favorite)
    51. Lorna - Writing Down Things To Say (Words On Music)
    52. Auburn Lull - Begin Civil Twilight (Darla)
    53. David Hurn - The Beautiful Trustful Future (Fire)
    54. Max Richter - 24 Postcards In Full Colour (Fat Cat)
    55. Noah and the Whale - Peaceful, The World Lays Me Down (Young And Lost Club)
    56. Ilya E. Monosov - Seven Lucky Plays, Or How To Fix Songs For A Broken Heart (Language Of Stone)
    57. Televise - Secret Valentine (Distant Noise)
    58. Tears Run Rings - Always, Sometimes, Seldom, Never (Clairecords)
    59. Band in Box - This Fiction (Stereo Test Kit)
    60. Tamas Wells - Two Years In April (Lirico)
    61. Denison Witmer - Carry The Weight (The Militia Group)
    62. Anoice - Out Of Season (Ricco)
    63. Elephant Micah - Exiled Magicians (Third Uncle)
    64. Grouper - Dragging A Dead Deer Up A Hill (Type)
    65. Matthew Robert Cooper - Miniatures (Gaarden)
    66. The Burning Hell - Happy Birthday (Weewerk)
    67. the static silence - Found (Distant Noise)
    68. John Shannon - American Mystic (Obliq Sound)
    69. Celestial - Crystal Heights (Lavender)
    70. con_cetta - Micro (Moteer)
    71. Secret Shine - All Of The Stars (Clairecords)
    72. Shoreline - Time Well Spent (Willkommen)
    73. Mia Doi Todd - Gea (City Zen)
    74. The Chapin Sisters - Lake Bottom (Plain)
    75. The New Year - The New Year (Touch & Go)
    76. The Lucksmiths - First Frost (Matinée)
    77. Chandeen - Teenage Poetry (Kalinkaland)
    78. Ef - I Am Responsible (And The Sound)
    79. The Battle of Land and Sea - The Battle Of Land And Sea (Notenuf)
    80. Portishead - Third (Universal)
    81. bobby & blumm - Everybody Loves (Morr)
    82. Right Away, Great Captain! - Eventually Home (Favorite Gentlemen)
    83. Immune - Not Until Morning (Eglantine)
    84. Marconi Union - A Lost Connection (Mu Transmissions)
    85. Our Broken Garden - When Your Blackening Shows (Bella Union)
    86. Pelle Carlberg - The Lilac Time (Labrador)
    87. Simon Breed - The Smitten King Laments (Re-Action)
    88. A Weather - Cove (Own)
    89. Absent Without Leave - Postcards From Nowhere (Distant Noise)
    90. Sam Amidon - All Is Well (Bedroom Community)
    91. Jeremy Jay - A Place Where We Could Go (K)
    92. Thousand & Bramier - Go Typhoon! (Arbouse)
    93. Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - Lie Down In The Light (Domino)
    94. Horse Feathers - House With No Home (Kill Rock Stars)
    95. Dark Captain Light Captain - Miracle Kicker (Lo Recordings)
    96. Rudi Arapahoe - Echoes From One To Another (Symbolic Interaction)
    97. Ass - My Get Up And Go Just Got Up And Went (Headspin)
    98. yellow6 - When The Leaves Fall Like Snow (Make Mine Music)
    99. Ida - Lovers Prayers (Polyvinyl)
    100. Detektivbyrån - Wermland (Danarkia)

    * links on album titles lead to reviews i wrote about them (unfortunately they're all in italian)
    ** these are only 100 of about 900 albums I listened from this year, so a low position in this list doesn't mean low appreciation.