• 5th Anniversary: Top 50 Artists now and a year ago

    Nov 7 2009, 2h06 por hilarion

    Just like last year (and the year before that), it's time to compare the artist stats of this year to the previous one. The first number in parantheses is the position in the last year's top 50 and the second number in parantheses is the play count for past 12 months.

    01 (01) Swans 3,086 (+297)
    02 (02) Depeche Mode 2,374 (+471)
    03 (03) Current 93 2,002 (+159)
    04 (04) Nine Inch Nails 1,889 (+155)
    05 (07) The Legendary Pink Dots 1,722 (+295)
    06 (06) Coil 1,668 (+207)
    07 (05) Covenant 1,531 (+40)
    08 (08) Death in June 1,301 (+69)
    09 (10) CMX 1,046 (+114)
    10 (11) KMFDM 1,034 (+200)
    11 (09) Icon of Coil 1,033 (+21)
    12 (18) Sleep Chamber 849 (+272)
    13 (15) Einstürzende Neubauten 848 (+203)
    14 (12) Front Line Assembly 823 (+96)
    15 (14) Combichrist 739 (+46)
    16 (16) Project Pitchfork 723 (+119)
    17 (13) Deine Lakaien 717 (+22)
    18 (19) :wumpscut: 669 (+94)
    19 (17) The Angels of Light 635 (+45)
    20 (26) The Tiger Lillies 630 (+184)
    21 (22) Coph Nia 597 (+129)
    22 (21) Assemblage 23 (+41)
    23 (20) VNV Nation 581 (+22)
    24 (27) Ordo Rosarius Equilibrio 540 (+97)
    25 (23) Paradise Lost 519 (+53)
    26 (29) Black Sun Productions 505 (+73)
    27 (25) Diary of Dreams 492 (+38)
    28 (24) Rammstein 487 (+31)
    29 (28) Mesh 481 (+41)
    30 (32) Rotersand 448 (+52)
    31 (30) Diorama 444 (+14)
    32 (31) Pet Shop Boys 435 (+34)
    33 (33) Dead Can Dance 429 (+37)
    34 (36) Bauhaus 423 (+75)
    35 (34) Siouxsie and the Banshees 412 (+24)
    35 (35) Gary Numan 412 (+31)
    37 (58) Foetus 408 (+140)
    38 (38) This Morn' Omina 403 (+66)
    39 (37) Velvet Acid Christ 378 (+33)
    39 (50) The Doors 378 (+73)
    41 (41) Lustmord 373 (+42)
    42 (54) Ulver 366 (+78)
    43 (40) Skinny Puppy 363 (+31)
    44 (39) Joy Division 361 (+26)
    45 (43) Sara 360 (+36)
    46 (106) Dernière Volonté 358 (+182)
    47 (53) Cabaret Voltaire 355 (+67)
    48 (46) Woven Hand 352 (+40)
    49 (47) Ladytron 348 (+37)
    50 (59) Der Blutharsch 345 (+83)

    Well, that was a boring year... at least looking at the changes in top 50. Everything was very static. The hottest climber of the year was Dernière Volonté by 60 positions straight to #46 outside of the 4th anniversary Top 100. Also Foetus and Ulver entered Top 50 for the first time. Cabaret Voltaire and Der Blutharsch returned after being absent from Top 50 for a while. The biggest mover that was in Top 50 last year was The Doors, up by 11 positions.

    The static nature of my Top 50 is easy to explain because my listening habits have changed if the chart hasn't. I listen to a bigger amount of artists but a smaller amount of songs per artist. My overall listening amounts have stayed pretty much the same but now they are more divided between more bands. The same has happened to tracks a lot earlier: I rarely listen to a single track for a lot of times. This means that both my tracks and artist Top 50 charts aren't changing that much these days.

    The overall charts are so static that sometimes I even think about resetting the statistics. But that would be a waste because I can set my default layout to show the stats for last 12 months which I think also represents my current taste in music a lot better. It's becoming more and more diverse each year, concentrating less and less on repetition of individual tracks or artists. It's also becoming less focused on , and related genres, as you may even notice from the slight changes in positions of my top 50 artists.
  • 5th Anniversary: Top Artists and Tracks for each month

    Nov 4 2009, 0h24 por hilarion

    On November 7th, just a few days from now, it will be exactly five years since I signed up with Audioscrobbler/Last.fm. In order to celebrate, I have planned several historical statistics posts. Here's the first, all the top artists and tracks for each month that I've been scrobbling. As for all stats that are based on weekly charts, the data is available only from February 2005 onwards.

    Monthly Top Artists

    Feb-2005
    Icon of Coil (307 plays)
    Mar-2005
    Icon of Coil (69 plays)
    Apr-2005
    Nine Inch Nails (162 plays)
    May-2005
    Icon of Coil (52 plays)
    Jun-2005
    KMFDM (16 plays)
    Jul-2005
    System of a Down (117 plays)
    Aug-2005
    Combichrist (131 plays)
    Sep-2005
    KMFDM (74 plays)
    Oct-2005
    Depeche Mode (198 plays)
    Nov-2005
    The Legendary Pink Dots (141 plays)
    Dec-2005
    Project Pitchfork (84 plays)
    Jan-2006
    Regina (88 plays)
    Feb-2006
    Project Pitchfork (136 plays)
    Mar-2006
    Covenant (193 plays)
    Apr-2006
    Depeche Mode (88 plays)
    May-2006
    Mesh (112 plays)
    Jun-2006
    Current 93 (244 plays)
    Jul-2006
    Swans (221 plays)
    Aug-2006
    Swans (272 plays)
    Sep-2006
    Swans (435 plays)
    Oct-2006
    The Angels of Light (162 plays)
    Nov-2006
    Depeche Mode (144 plays)
    Dec-2006
    The Dresden Dolls (198 plays)
    Jan-2007
    Coil (207 plays)
    Feb-2007
    Swans (146 plays)
    Mar-2007
    Swans (117 plays)
    Apr-2007
    Nine Inch Nails (186 plays)
    May-2007
    Nine Inch Nails (120 plays)
    Jun-2007
    SPK (99 plays)
    Jul-2007
    Coil (77 plays)
    Aug-2007
    Swans (132 plays)
    Sep-2007
    Swans (131 plays)
    Oct-2007
    The Angels of Light (140 plays)
    Nov-2007
    Marissa Nadler (81 plays)
    Dec-2007
    Sleep Chamber (171 plays)
    Jan-2008
    Sleep Chamber (180 plays)
    Feb-2008
    The Doors (98 plays)
    Mar-2008
    Nine Inch Nails (101 plays)
    Apr-2008
    The Tiger Lillies (125 plays)
    May-2008
    Nine Inch Nails (55 plays)
    Jun-2008
    Ladytron (93 plays)
    Jul-2008
    Psyche (54 plays)
    Aug-2008
    Dead Can Dance (66 plays)
    Sep-2008
    Coil (67 plays)
    Oct-2008
    The Tiger Lillies (161 plays)
    Nov-2008
    Black Sun Productions (41 plays)
    Dec-2008
    Triarii (59 plays)
    Jan-2009
    Ordo Rosarius Equilibrio (66 plays)
    Feb-2009
    Crash Worship (114 plays)
    Mar-2009
    The Legendary Pink Dots (90 plays)
    Apr-2009
    Depeche Mode (234 plays)
    May-2009
    Depeche Mode (112 plays)
    Jun-2009
    The Young Gods (80 plays)
    Jul-2009
    Militia (91 plays)
    Aug-2009
    Swans (51 plays)
    Sep-2009
    Die Form (62 plays)
    Oct-2009
    Einstürzende Neubauten (78 plays)

    Monthly Top Tracks

    Feb-2005
    Sara : Sydän (27 plays)
    Mar-2005
    Death in June : TocarDeath is the Martyr of Beauty (12 plays)
    Apr-2005
    Nine Inch Nails : The Hand That Feeds (54 plays)
    May-2005
    Combichrist : Blut Royale (32 plays)
    Jun-2005
    Talk Talk : TocarSuch A Shame (3 plays)
    Jul-2005
    System of a Down : TocarViolent Pornography (18 plays)
    Aug-2005
    VNV Nation : Chrome (16 plays)
    Sep-2005
    Dupont : TocarMotel lover (28 plays)
    Oct-2005
    Depeche Mode : TocarFree (28 plays)
    Nov-2005
    Rammstein : Wo bist du (16 plays)
    Dec-2005
    Katatonia : TocarMy Twin (50 plays)
    Jan-2006
    Code 64 : True Faith (23 plays)
    Feb-2006
    Covenant : TocarRitual Noise (edit) (35 plays)
    Mar-2006
    Covenant : 20 Hz (34 plays)
    Apr-2006
    Depeche Mode : TocarBetter Days (26 plays)
    May-2006
    Heijala : Korkeus (25 plays)
    Jun-2006
    Pet Shop Boys : Integral (23 plays)
    Jul-2006
    Swans : Failure (26 plays)
    Aug-2006
    Boyd Rice and Friends : TocarPeople (37 plays)
    Sep-2006
    Swans : TocarWhere Does a Body End? (18 plays)
    Oct-2006
    Tuhat kuolemaa sekunnissa : Heräää (16 plays)
    Nov-2006
    Seize : TocarDon't Let Me (Diskonnekted mix) (21 plays)
    Dec-2006
    The Dresden Dolls : TocarSex Changes (26 plays)
    Jan-2007
    Coil : TocarHeaven's Blade (34 plays)
    Feb-2007
    Nine Inch Nails : TocarSurvivalism (29 plays)
    Mar-2007
    Nine Inch Nails : TocarIn This Twilight (24 plays)
    Apr-2007
    Black Sun Productions : TocarPimp Ballad (18 plays)
    May-2007
    Triarii : Heaven &Amp; Hell (22 plays)
    Jun-2007
    Coph Nia : TocarSympathy For The Devil (11 plays)
    Jul-2007
    Coil : Sex with Sun Ra (Part One - Saturnalia) (17 plays)
    Aug-2007
    Paradise Lost : Missing (15 plays)
    Sep-2007
    CMX : Vallan haamut (13 plays)
    Oct-2007
    Antony and the Johnsons : Cripple and the Starfish (24 plays)
    Nov-2007
    Suruaika : Kartanon pihalla (8 plays)
    Dec-2007
    Victoria : Like Rats (Rattus Rattus) (12 plays)
    Jan-2008
    Eleanoora Rosenholm : Maailmanloppu (10 plays)
    Feb-2008
    Blutengel : Lucifer (8 plays)
    Mar-2008
    Underworld : TocarBeautiful Burnout (5 plays)
    Apr-2008
    The World Of Skin : TocarYou'll Never Forget (15 plays)
    May-2008
    Nine Inch Nails : TocarCorona Radiata (10 plays)
    Jun-2008
    Ladytron : TocarDeep Blue (11 plays)
    Jul-2008
    Nouvelle Vague : Dance With Me (12 plays)
    Aug-2008
    Antlers Mulm : Painted Grave (6 plays)
    Sep-2008
    Antlers Mulm : Filth in several styles (7 plays)
    Oct-2008
    The Tiger Lillies : TocarBanging in the Nails (11 plays)
    Nov-2008
    Black Sun Productions : The Milky Intro (5 plays)
    Dec-2008
    Triarii : Europa (7 plays)
    Jan-2009
    Coph Nia : Levitation (16 plays)
    Feb-2009
    The Legendary Pink Dots : TocarThe More It Changes (17 plays)
    Mar-2009
    The Tiger Lillies & Justin Bond : Life's A Cunt (9 plays)
    Apr-2009
    Depeche Mode : Oh Well (15 plays)
    May-2009
    Depeche Mode : TocarPeace (12 plays)
    Jun-2009
    Ministry : TocarWork for Love (7 plays)
    Jul-2009
    Sixth Comm : Sonfelte (8 plays)
    Aug-2009
    Snog : Love Power (8 plays)
    Sep-2009
    Lama : Turpa kiinni ja nussi (16 plays)
    Oct-2009
    Teurastamo 5 : Eläviä ruumiita (8 plays)
  • My (semi)anniversary tracks

    Out 31 2009, 23h32 por krechetalo

    500: (2007-09-20 20:36:13): Michael Andrews - Mad World
    1000: (2007-09-27 10:05:14): blablacio - Tocaron 4.33
    1500: (2007-10-29 17:55:15): Moonspell - Opium
    2000: (2007-12-02 08:47:50): Ostava - Sex In The Morning
    2500: (2007-12-20 17:06:32): Hooverphonic - We All Float
    3000: (2008-01-13 00:35:59): Europe - TocarOpen Your Heart
    3500: (2008-01-31 21:21:12): Nest - Call of the Wild
    4000: (2008-02-12 12:58:08): Red Hot Chili Peppers - TocarTell Me Baby
    4500: (2008-02-24 22:57:04): Gary Moore - Spanish Guitar
    5000: (2008-03-14 17:20:49): Pure Reason Revolution - TocarBullitts Dominæ
    5500: (2008-03-29 22:52:07): Macy Gray - I Try
    6000: (2008-04-20 23:18:03): Nouvelle Vague - Dance With Me
    6500: (2008-05-05 22:28:07): Conjure One - Tears From the Moon
    7000: (2008-05-28 16:04:57): Zeromancer - TocarDie of a Broken Heart
    7500]: (2008-06-19 16:54:20): Nick Cave & Warren Ellis - Song For Jesse
    8000: (2008-07-15 20:07:42): Jem - TocarFalling for You
    8500: (2008-08-12 20:33:39): Heart - Alone
    9000: (2008-09-11 15:45:06): Halou - TocarHoneythief
    9500: (2008-10-01 20:38:10): Halou - Present Tense (Different)
    10000: (2008-10-27 14:07:32): Nest - A Winternight Visage
    10500: (2008-11-22 09:36:22): Yann Tiersen - La Valse Des Monstres
    11000: (2008-12-21 11:13:37): E-Type - Angels Crying
    11500: (2009-04-21 20:28:32): Lisa Gerrard & Patrick Cassidy -The Absence Of Time
    12000: (2009-05-08 15:35:28): Covenant - Bullet (Club Version)
    12500: (2009-06-18 16:54:07): Live - Pillar Of Davidson
    13000: (2009-07-11 10:52:47): Live - TocarPillar Of Davidson
    13500: (2009-08-01 11:03:08): De/Vision - Heart-Shaped Tumor
    14000: (2009-08-23 19:46:42): Ace of Base - Don't Turn Around
    14500: (2009-09-18 17:35:58): Peter O'Toole - The Impossible Dream
    15000: (2009-10-22 06:34:11): R.E.M. - TocarMake It All Okay
  • Playliste „Steelworker-Retro-Classics 1980 – 2000″

    Out 28 2009, 22h21 por INTOX-Matze

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

    Hier die Playliste des Abends:

    Maddin

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

    Andy

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

    Matze

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

    Maddin

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

    Andy

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

    Matze

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

    Maddin

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

    Andy

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

    Matze

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

    Maddin

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

    Andy

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

    Matze

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

    Maddin

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

    Andy

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

    Maddin

    Fusspils 11 – So Bist Du



    Dank an das Steelworker Team!
  • Tuesday Twenty-Five: My top 50 albums 2000-09 Pt.02: 25 to 01

    Out 27 2009, 17h32 por amodelofcontrol

    Today marks the last part of my rundown of the decade's music. Next week will be the usual rundown of the month's best tracks, and then I'll be starting at some point after that with a rundown of the 90s in a similar style - after all, this autumn marks twenty years since I first got into/was exposed to "alternative" music, and this is a good time to do this, I feel. Anyway, on with the show.

    Previously:
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.01: 100 to 81
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.02: 80 to 61
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.03: 60 to 41
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.04: 40 to 21
    My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.05: 20 to 01
    My top 50 albums 2000-09 Pt.01: 50 to 26

    25
    The Axis of Perdition
    The Ichneumon Method (And Other Less Welcome Techniques)
    2003

    "Industrial Black Metal from Middlesborough" is perhaps not the way to sell yourself as a band. But if you are looking for something extreme, heavy, and most of all dark, you've come to the right place. A viciously loud, murky production, with the vocals treated to resemble beasts emerging from the pits of hell, and the music itself is black metal as you may not have heard it before. Riddled with samples, programming and savage riffs, this such a fascinating spin on the genre that if you have any interest in it, it's worth giving it a listen.

    24
    Doves
    Lost Souls
    2000

    We perhaps have a fire to thank for the way this album turned out. After a studio fire destroyed years of their work for dance act Sub Sub, they changed direction and ended up with this. A beautifully understanded, mellow album, in the main, it has moments though that are utterly extraordinary, and is also imbued with a surprising warmth, too. Some people have dismissed this band as dullards, but really, they are anything but, and are vastly more talented and interesting to listen to than a number of their peers.

    23
    Gojira
    From Mars to Sirius
    2005

    An intriguing, unusual band in the metal scene - "progressive death metal" is about as close a description as I've seen, but frankly they cover so many genres that trying to nail it down too closely is all but impossible - they are a band who actually have something to say. Most of their lyrics have an environmental theme, some of their songs become epic soundscapes, but then they also rock like bastards. This was the album that I, and probably many others, discovered them on, and as concept albums go it's really pretty fucking special.

    22
    Deftones
    White Pony
    2000

    The whole genre termed nu-metal hardly seems to have had much of a shelf-life, and to be frank I'd be happy never to hear some of those bands ever again (*cough*Crazy Town*cough*), but Deftones were always different and a cut above their peers. It wasn't just the astonishingly abrasive sound, or the use of actual tunes, but the way that Chino Moreno managed to include all of his influences, including bands like The Smiths and The Cure, in amongst the metal grooves. This all came together to amazing effect on this album, considerably darker and at points more experimental than ever before (or since).

    21
    Panic DHH
    Panic Drives Human Herds
    2004

    Nowadays Robbie Furze has left this band behind for a perhaps more mainstream band in the form of The Big Pink. A damned shame, really - this, the only studio album Panic DHH ever released, is a brutal exercise in using power electronics to bolster what at points is otherwise somewhere in the realms of punk. The sheer savagery of this album really cannot be understated, particularly in the opening few tracks (Leader and Spare are pure power noise), and live they incredibly upped the ante even more. I only wish more material got released, although I really should check out The Big Pink.

    20
    Emperor
    Prometheus: The Discipline Of Fire and Demise
    2001

    The last new material from the greatest of the black metal bands, and what a way to finish. I've already mentioned the jaw-dropping closing track, but the rest of the album is hardly bad. In fact the rest of the album is nearly as astounding. Opening with a harpsichord intro (no, really), it explodes into the appropriately-titled TocarThe Eruption, before taking you on a nine-track, hour-long journey through an incredible, ultra-technical symphonic black metal masterpiece. It's probably a good thing that they never recorded anything more following this - they were never, ever, going to top this.

    19
    Six by Seven
    The Closer You Get
    2000

    I'm not really certain that many people knew what to make of Six By Seven when they first appeared. Their debut single, European Me was lauded like the second coming in the music press, but in my view there are a number of far better songs on that album. But then, the barely disguised contempt for the world at points in it got unleashed in full on the follow-up, which really was quite a shock. Gone were the epic songs of the first album, instead a number of shorter, snarling beasts of tracks that were a torrent of fury and hatred. Opener Eat Junk Become Junk had psuedo-industrial beats and programming to add to the punch, while Ten Places to Die suggested a list of ways to finish it all. But then on the flip side was the joyous New Year, and the giddy rush of Another Love Song. While schizophrenic in mood at points, this remains an essential listen.

    18
    65daysofstatic
    The Fall of Math
    2004

    In the development of the "post-rock" scene, 65DoS deserve more than a footnote, perhaps, judging on some of the bands that are now appearing here and there. More than anything else, they could be seen perhaps as trailblazers in realizing that the genre had so much more scope, and mixing in disparate influences, clever and targeted use of glitchy electronics, and an astonishing focus that came across in the quite staggering technicality and emotions that their music invokes. Obviously, they are even more astounding live, and you may have seen me wax lyrical about that before. But even so, on record they are still a thrilling experience.

    17
    Arcade Fire
    Funeral
    2004

    I still don't quite understand how this album passed me by for over two years, maybe more. I don't think I'd ever noticed them on regular viewings on MTV2 or wherever else, never followed any links…and then one day, I did listen. And was sat there scratching my head. It sounded great, heartfelt, driving rock that was instantly memorable, and I had the tune (I think it was Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)) in my head for days. Once I got my hands on the album, I quickly realised that there was so much more to the band than what I had heard. There are elegant, beautiful ballads, songs that just demand to be sung by a huge crowd (Wake Up, I'm looking at you), songs that evoke extraordinary atmospheres (Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)), and more than anything a general feeling that life is too short, in an urgency to enjoy life to the fullest in the time we have. Maybe that's why this band are so loved. They somehow take cliched ideas that would feel like cheap shots with other bands, and make them into things that sound brand-new and life-affirming. And a great album to listen to, too.

    16
    Esa
    The Sea and The Silence
    2008

    Released right at the end of 2008, this is yet another astounding step forward by Jamie Blacker, to the point of it probably eclipsing his two previous, really quite remarkable albums. Taking the basic premise of reasonably extreme, powerful industrial electronics, and stretching them into shapes and sounds that other contemporaries probably haven't even thought of trying yet. Again there is a concept, but this time rather more abstract, but musically this album destroys any idea of boundaries that might constrain it. There are elements of world music, of live instruments, of pitch dark black metal, dark ambient, and straight up industrial power. Either way, an absorbing listen that rewards repeat listens in spades.

    15
    In Strict Confidence
    Exile Paradise
    2006

    This decade was an extraordinary one for ISC: they released four extraordinary albums, all of which showed a distinct growth and evolution, culminating in this absolutely exquisite darkwave/gothic/electro meisterwerk. A shimmering production, some of the greatest songs they've ever written, and a visually stunning theme that enveloped everything to do with the album (lyrical themes, videos, images, even the music at points). We're still awaiting the follow-up, but tracks from it are finally due to be unveiled in the coming weeks, I understand.

    14
    Aesthetic Perfection
    A Violent Emotion
    2008

    As I noted when awarding this album of the year for 2008, this album's concept is seemingly all about channelling violent energy to make a positive difference, and in that respect - and in it's brilliantly varied musical conception - it works brilliantly. Yes, it has dancefloor-friendly tunes, but really this is all about so much more than that, and works equally well as an album to listen to at home miles from any dancefloor.

    13
    Collide
    Some Kind of Strange
    2003

    Amazing to think that this is now six years old, really. An ageless sound that gently seduces your ears for just shy of an hour, it's an album to luxuriate in. Little on the album goes faster than languid, but then that suits Karin's vocals perfectly, as the songs unwind around her voice, sometimes used to great effect wordlessly. The opening pair of tracks are absolute belters, but the rest of the album takes it's time to work it's magic...

    12
    Amanda Palmer
    Who Killed Amanda Palmer
    2008

    My girlfriend disagrees with me on this, I think, but I still believe that this AFP album is better than all her albums with The Dresden Dolls. Rather than being constrained by the stylistic and musical influences they made such a play of, here AFP and producer Ben Folds allow free reign for everything to come out, resulting in joyous blasts where everything and probably the kitchen sink too are chucked in (Leeds United, Guitar Hero), covers of show tunes, very, very dark ballads, and just generally a broader musical palate. And she even manages to crowbar in a jaunty, bright 60s-influenced pop tune about rape and a subsequent abortion (Oasis), and just about get away with it.

    11
    Edgey
    Flawed
    2007

    An album that really took me by surprise, this. A staggering mashing of drum'n'bass, breakcore, glitchy electronics, and industrial/dark ambient atmospheres, it sounded like no-one else at the time, and it's still pretty damned unique now, too. A rare album in these realms, too, for me that I can happily listen to the whole thing in one go, too, rather than dipping into bits of it every now and again. Hardly one for the dancefloor - I'd love to see rivetheads try and dance to the seemingly-calculus-derived time signatures of Cohesion - but it is an awesome album to listen to at a hefty volume.

    10
    Stromkern
    Light It Up
    2005

    Still a regular album to listen to in my house, Stromkern remain probably the only band in the industrial scene to successfully hip-hop stylings to their music. That and their searing, highly-charged political lyrics have them stand out as a band with something to say, even if they refuse to publish the lyrics, leaving you to interpret them for yourself. Some might still only know Stand Up following it's playing everywhere in recent years, but delve deeper and you'll find a great album too - even the shorter, intermission-esque tracks don't feel out of place, and both of the tracks with guest vocalists are awesome. Still waiting for that follow-up, though, and with changes to the political landscape since this, it will be interesting to see what they do do next.

    9
    Seabound
    Double-Crosser
    2006

    The opener to this (Scorch The Ground (Version)) I named my track of the decade the other week, and really the album is not far behind. All about lust, obsession and revenge-best-served-cold, it's icy, gently-seething façade only breaks a couple of times to let some warmth in, and it's perhaps notable that these couple of tracks are the weaker songs here. Where the album really, really scores spectacularly is when Frank Spinath let's his hate and bitterness really spill out in the lyrics, devastating lines delivered with a lightness of touch that almost wrongfoot you every time. Also, musically, it's electronics fit the mood perfectly, and never intrude on the words taking centrestage - and when they are this good, as they should, too.

    8
    The Knife
    Silent Shout
    2006

    Drenched in darkness in just about every way - not only musically, but in the look of the group, the artwork, the videos…this was an unsettling listen that was to begin with, pretty much inpenetrable to me. But I kept plugging away at it, and eventually just how brilliant this album is became clear. There isn't a single bad song here, but sometimes it can become all a bit much. Where they go from here should be interesting, but seeing as the recent Fever Ray album is almost a pitch dark as this, I'm not expecting it to be a ray of sunshine. I'm not sure being exposed to that much light would suit them, anyway...

    7
    Converter
    Blast Furnace
    2000

    My entry into anything noisy-rhythmic-industrial came from this album, and I'm still not sure it's actually been bettered by any of his peers, although some have made a bloody good go. At points extraordinarily extreme (TocarRed Crystal in particular), it perversely also spawned a massive industrial dancefloor hit for a while in the lengthy form of TocarDeath Time, and perhaps also was in some respects one of the most "commercial" "noise" albums yet released. Those who listened in casually, purely because of that track were in for a shock, though, but it was worth persevering. The Blast Furnace title was no accident, as metallic effects were all over the place, in samples, machine-like rhythms and even the atmospheres created. Little humanity was allowed a look in, but then why should it? The machines simply crushed all that out, and this is the soundtrack to that very event. Be afraid.

    6
    Rico
    Violent Silences
    2004

    I noted the other week that five years have now elapsed since the last recorded output from Rico, and I'm increasingly of the fear that this was the last word from him on record. Shame. Also as I noted then, the second half of the album is much the stronger, some feat when the first half features contributions from both Tricky and Gary Numan - also a sign of the wide appeal of Rico's music. Unfairly pigeonholed early on as the "British Trent Reznor", he was never quite that, but deserved far more success than he ever got.

    5
    Machine Head
    The Blackening
    2007

    Best. Comeback. Ever. Those three words are going to be endlessly associated with this - the hackneyed tale of a band fallen on hard times, the creative well empty, or so we thought, and then they roar back with this. Fucking hell. That was pretty much what most of us said once we'd heard the monstrous, ten-minute opening track, never mind the rest of the album. The good thing was, the rest of it was just as good. Making no concession to trends in metal, this was just simply the metal album that Robb Flynn and his band wanted to make, and not a minute was wasted in creating a brilliant, brilliant hour of thrash metal. They are still touring it now, mind, and while they are fucking ace live, it would be nice to hear something new soon...

    4
    Covenant
    Northern Light
    2002

    The single most enduring and remarkable album to come from the futurepop/EBM/electro-industrial/call-it-what-you-like period in the early couple of years of this decade, this album transcended the usual limitations of the genre in some style. At first listen a cold, aloof creation (to go with the frozen figures and icy landscapes that dominate the sleeve), a few listens thaws it to an astounding effect. There are belting dancefloor monsters (TocarCall the Ships to Port), astonishing pop songs (Bullet), choral-backed ballads (Invisible & Silent) and also one of the most euphoric, uplifting songs ever released in this scene (We Stand Alone). Oh, and not to mention the many, many references to Greek Mythology scattered through the album that makes the lyrics worth listening to (and fun to work out what on earth they are on about, too).

    3
    Battles
    Mirrored
    2007

    I loved this band from the moment I first heard Atlas, and I've still not stopped loving it yet. An endlessly fun album, that twists and turns, playing with the structures of rock music, dance music and twisting them into a hugely enjoyable take on post-rock that pretty much immediately made everything else look deadly serious. That few bands have dared to tread the same path is telling - it took four seriously talented and respected musicians to even approach music this complex-but-accessible - and perhaps they will remain standing alone in a musical universe bathed in a bright spotlight.

    2
    Prometheus Burning
    Beyond Repair
    2006

    I remember being played a couple of tracks from this as my first exposure to the band, and being bowled over to the point that it didn't take me long to go and hunt out the album. Starting with the template of industrial-noise - and at points, this band are unbelievably harsh - but adding in twisted, heavily treated vocals and rhythms, and emotional outpourings based on pure rage, this sounds different. Very different to what has gone before. Slowly twisting the knife further as you go into the album (the last couple of tracks being the harshest and closest to pure noise), before ending in an unsettling silence, this was an album that I'm not sure you were ever meant to unlock a deeper meaning to. The followup album, based much more on old-school industrial, was great, but never quite had the sheer visceral power that this one has.

    1
    Cyanotic
    Transhuman
    2005

    I could equally have made a case for the reworked Transhuman 2.0 to be in the top spot with this, but there are reasons why this album makes it to the top spot on it's own. Firstly, for me this album gave my interest in industrial music a shot in the arm. In 2005, there wasn't a lot for me to be excited about. Most of the albums I was bothered about around that time were either not industrial, or were older bands making comebacks. So to hear this, a new band doing interesting stuff with a genre I was beginning to fear was stagnating badly, was seriously exciting to me. That and the fact that this album made a perfect synthesis of industrial and metal influences, nodding back to the past and Sean Payne's formative years listening to Ministry, Nine Inch Nails, Numb and others, but also looking to the future and fusing other, outside genres to the sound to create a hybrid that sounded both familiar and new, and tremendously exciting, all at the same time. I'm not going to pick highlights from the album, as it's all great, and indeed as I've been DJing industrial to a greater extent in recent years, Cyanotic remain the one band I can play and get asked "who is this?" by punters more than anyone else. In addition, Sean Payne's ceaseless promotion of his peers on compilations, remix work, just linking to others, and high quality of all his musical output have opened my eyes to a whole scene across the Atlantic that gives me hope for industrial music in the future. There is so much more out there, we just need to look for it. And I'm glad I found this. I'm still a regular listener to this album now, as my play charts on Last.fm will attest, and with the medication generation finally nearing release, I'm sure I'll be playing this band for some further time to come yet, too.
  • Upcoming and Most Wanted Releases '10

    Out 20 2009, 23h56 por BrunoEngel

    ??.01.2010 Suicide Commando - Implements of Hell

    ??.??.2010 Covenant - Modern Ruin
  • She Wants Revenge and Goth rock ;)

    Out 18 2009, 0h02 por eoooe

  • Milestones

    Out 16 2009, 22h38 por Indigo_Ice

    Just another nice metrics on my music taste (*nerdy*):

    Last.FM Milestones1st track: (09 Feb 2007)
    Iris - TocarAppetite
    1000th track: (28 Feb 2007)
    Mind.In.A.Box - Lost Alone 2
    2000th track: (14 Mar 2007)
    De/Vision - Ride on a Star
    3000th track: (01 Apr 2007)
    Project Pitchfork - TocarThe Touch
    4000th track: (19 Apr 2007)
    Audioslave - TocarThe Last Remaining Light
    5000th track: (05 May 2007)
    Covenant - Invisible & Silent
    6000th track: (26 May 2007)
    Iris - TocarSentimental Scar
    7000th track: (09 Jun 2007)
    Mind.In.A.Box - Loyalty
    8000th track: (24 Jun 2007)
    Solitary Experiments - Soldiers Of Fortune (Self-Defence Mix by Megadump)
    9000th track: (08 Aug 2007)
    Nek - La Vida Es
    10000th track: (07 Sep 2007)
    Rob E C - TocarAll That We Had
    11000th track: (03 Oct 2007)
    Télépopmusik - TocarInto Everything
    12000th track: (17 Oct 2007)
    Depeche Mode - Condemnation
    13000th track: (30 Oct 2007)
    Nek - Se Una Regola c'e'
    14000th track: (11 Nov 2007)
    Stendeck - TocarFrames And Teardrops
    15000th track: (22 Nov 2007)
    And One - Military Fashion Show
    16000th track: (09 Dec 2007)
    In Strict Confidence - Manchmal Redest Du Im Schlaf
    17000th track: (22 Jan 2008)
    Lowe - Falling Star (Diskodiktator)
    18000th track: (28 Feb 2008)
    CherryVata - TocarSummer Time
    19000th track: (08 Apr 2008)
    Alphawezen - TocarOut of Sight
    20000th track: (03 Jun 2008)
    Apparat - Exponent
    21000th track: (11 Jul 2008)
    Róisín Murphy - Primitive
    22000th track: (05 Aug 2008)
    Plastyc Buddha - Rhodes Royce
    23000th track: (18 Sep 2008)
    The Cure - Just Say Yes
    24000th track: (07 Oct 2008)
    Camouflage - TocarMotif Sky
    25000th track: (29 Oct 2008)
    Apparat & Raz Ohara - Holdon (Chris De Luca Vs Phon.o Remix)
    26000th track: (19 Nov 2008)
    Kylie Minogue - Tocar2 Hearts
    27000th track: (07 Dec 2008)
    Apparat - Hailin From the Edge
    28000th track: (29 Dec 2008)
    Jazzamor - TocarChildhood Dreams
    29000th track: (18 Jan 2009)
    Kylie Minogue - Diamonds Are A Girls Best Friends
    30000th track: (04 Feb 2009)
    A Camp - TocarLove Has Left the Room
    31000th track: (16 Feb 2009)
    Ellen Allien & Apparat - Leave Me Alone
    32000th track: (06 Mar 2009)
    Dragonette - TocarAnother Day
    33000th track: (16 Mar 2009)
    Jeff Beck feat. Imogen Heap - Rollin' and Tumblin'
    34000th track: (27 Mar 2009)
    Flunk - TocarOn My Balcony
    35000th track: (08 Apr 2009)
    M83 - Until the Night Is Over
    36000th track: (23 Apr 2009)
    Saint Privat - Mademoiselle
    37000th track: (08 May 2009)
    Elsiane - TocarAssemblage Point
    38000th track: (23 May 2009)
    Rose Berlin - TocarCoraline
    39000th track: (07 Jun 2009)
    Nor Elle - Oriental Fusion
    40000th track: (26 Jun 2009)
    Angela McCluskey - Hey You
    41000th track: (18 Jul 2009)
    Télépopmusik - TocarDon't Look Back
    42000th track: (11 Sep 2009)
    Kings of Convenience - TocarI Don't Know What I Can Save You From (Röyksopp remix)
    43000th track: (14 Oct 2009)
    Nate River & Monkey D Luffy - Kid's Dirty Words (Original Mix)
    Generated on 16 Oct 2009
    Get yours here
  • Tuesday Twenty: My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.05: 20 to 01

    Out 13 2009, 19h13 por amodelofcontrol

    And now, onto the final instalment of my tracks of the decade. This took ages to compile, write about and in particular decide on this final top twenty. Obviously, I'd love to know what you, the reader, thinks are your favourite track(s) of this decade.
    Next week will see the start of my top fifty albums of the decade.

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

    20
    W.A.S.T.E.
    TocarSuburban Crime Scene
    Violent Delights
    2007
    Full-on, rhythmic-industrial noise seems to be in short-supply nowadays, so thank god W.A.S.T.E. are here to assault our ears. Just about everything they have released so far seems to have declared war on my speakers, my ears, and dancefloors if I dare play them when DJing, and I fucking love it. Bring a level of industrial rage that few other acts seem to even dare aspire to, this track is the centrepiece of the Violent Delights EP, with a writhing mass of samples that fill the gaps behind a jackhammer beat that could quite likely rip holes in the floor. Oh, and add to that the high-pitched squeals that some find desperately uncomfortable (I'm all but banned from playing this in my girlfriend's presence)...and you have one hell of a confrontational track. But then, isn't this what this genre is supposed to be about?

    19
    The Strand
    I Hate My Fucking Job (Rmx by Imperative Reaction)
    Rmx01
    2004
    A curious lot, this band - slightly odd industrial with the band choosing to pursue a steampunk image (just check this live version of the original of this track). The lyrical theme, as the title suggests, is rather more rooted in the present, a seething tirade at shitty, dead-end jobs - and features unexpected sample use from Red Dwarf episode Timeslides. While the original is interesting, it's the Imperative Reaction remix that gets the nod, for it's beefing up of the beats and generally tweaking the track to make it much, much more snappy and immediate...

    18
    Ladytron
    TocarDestroy Everything You Touch
    Witching Hour
    2005
    The one time this band have reached near-perfection, this icy synthpop track was one of those rare tracks that seemed to appeal right across the spectrum. Shorn of the experimentalism that the band are sometimes guilty of indulging in on their albums, this was simply a straight-up pop song that mystifyingly never became a massive hit (despite being re-released). Some people have no taste, clearly...

    17
    A Perfect Circle
    TocarMagdalena
    Mer de Noms
    2000
    There was more than a little fuss when this band first appeared, mainly I think down to the appearance of Maynard James Keenan as vocalist. Needless to say, his vocals are immediately recognisable, but what he brings here is very different to his work in Tool, and in other subsequent side-projects. There was a dark, gothic heart to many of the songs, and in addition the lyrics were a little less cryptic and perhaps more nakedly emotional. That said, debate still appears to rage over what this particular song is about - I'm going with the religious imagery/allegory explanation, myself - but whatever it is about, its an astonishingly tense lesson in musical control, as the verses are reserved, before a whole torrent of emotion is unleashed for the chorus and the climax of the song, too. Not only the best APC track by a country mile, it's probably up in the top handful of tracks Maynard has ever been involved with, as far as I'm concerned.

    16
    Emperor
    TocarThorns On My Grave
    Prometheus: The Discipline Of Fire and Demise
    2001
    The last recorded word by the greatest black metal band of them all, this was the staggering closing track to their most experimental album, an album that probably gained them a whole lot of new fans in their quest to expand their sound. It wasn't in vain, either, in my view - this was the best Emperor ever sounded, a dense, orchestral-Black Metal sound that at the same time never allowed any element to be buried in the mix, and when you ended up with songs like this, it was hard not to want to bow to it and salute what a fucking amazing job they had done.

    15
    Neurosis
    TocarStones From the Sky
    A Sun That Never Sets
    2001
    The jaw-dropping, bleak closer of A Sun That Never Sets, this is the deepest, darkest blues updated as only Neurosis can - complete with the tolling of a funeral bell heralding the opening of the track, before the riffs rain down from the black clouds that gather over them. Many have problems categorising Neurosis, and it's not hard to see why. Not quite doom metal, not quite blues, not quite stoner metal, hell, they even include industrial electronics and production methods at points. Whatever they are, though, they stand alone above so many other bands who have never quite nailed the sheer depth of emotion and reach of their musical experimentation, and for me, with this track in particular, they remain utterly, utterly peerless.

    14
    Left Spine Down
    TocarU Can't Stop The Bomb
    Fighting for Voltage
    2008
    So, maybe, this is what cyberpunk actually is, in sonic terms. Punk song structures and attitude, with a sleek industrial production and effects. Oh, and kick-ass songs like this, too. With links to various other north american industrial bands, they've got themselves quite a fanbase in a short space of time, and it's not hard to see why. When they are done releasing a seemingly endless set of remixes of their songs - and notably, perhaps, this track has been released a lot less than some of their other output - their next new material should be worth hearing. But if you need somewhere to start with this band, you need to start with this.

    13
    Mastodon
    Blood and Thunder
    Leviathan
    2004
    It was definitely this track that made me really sit up and notice what Mastodon were doing. The first album was good, solid metal, but it was Leviathan where the staggering scope of Mastodon's influences and aims were laid bare. And it was the opening track, Blood and Thunder - surely the first metal track ever about Ahab and his hunt for the great whale - that stormed into being one of the most played metal tracks in some time. With good reason, too - it's storming, driving metal with an unusually clear narrative, and a massive, massive whale-sized chorus. Although for reasons probably best known to the band, the video involves a lot of clowns.

    12
    Collide
    Euphoria | Emirian Mix
    Vortex
    2004
    Collide are one of those bands that many people have heard of, but may not have actually heard. At least, that used to be the way. Nowadays they seem to have a little more of a profile, and there can be no doubt that it is this track that has had a significant hand in that. The original, languid version on Some Kind of Strange was good, but once Charlie Clouser got it's hands on it, it was transformed into a slow-burning, sensual epic that brought to mind all kinds of fun things, and also helpfully summed up all that was great about this band. More based around atmosphere than anything else, their intricately constructed tracks are frequently soundscapes that reward repeated listening, and this was exactly that - this remix, though, just helped to make it that much more accessible. The subsequent video edit is pretty much a merging of elements of the Emirian mix and the original, too, hence why I'm linking to that here.

    11
    Pendulum
    Blood Sugar
    Blood Sugar Single
    2007
    Inexcusably shorn of it's trademark voiceover intro for the re-release of Hold Your Colour, I've seen this titanic, armour-plated track obliterate dancefloors in clubs all over the place, from drum'n'bass clubs to metal clubs, industrial/goth clubs, indie clubs...this and the act's appeal seemed limitless to start with once they caught on, but it never quite seemed right once they turned into a full band and started adding vocals. Nothing on In Silico comes close to the mastery of Hold Your Colour, but then this is one step further on from that too. Pure fun-loving, jump-up drum'n'bass with a horrendously catchy - and yes, cheesy - synth hook, I now know what "the sonic re-creation of the end of the world" sounds like - this.

    10
    Stromkern
    TocarTerrorist
    Armageddon
    2001
    Stromkern may have finally got the recognition they deserved with the highly-political album Light It Up a few years later (and in particular the single Stand Up), but those who were already fans surely most have known what was to come following tracks like this. A devastating critique of the suicide bomber, asking whether it is really worth killing yourself for a belief, it literally explodes - pun intended - into the chorus. Probably Stromkern's most nakedly hip-hop moment, too, it was also the opener for their set at Infest 2006, and was just as effective then.

    9
    Rico
    Forward Motion
    Violent Silences
    2004
    Five years have now elapsed since the last recorded output from Rico, and while the website and myspace remain live there has been precious little word to suggest that there might be more material coming. More's the pity, as his second album was even stronger than the first, even if it didn't seem like it at the time. An album that grew and grew in stature, revealing it's many charms listen by listen, it was also unusual in that all of the strongest tracks - without exception - were in the second half of the album, almost as if the tracklisting was back to front. It culminated in this slowly unfurling call to grasp the here-and-now and do something, anything, before you waste your life wishing it away. An unusually uplifting track from Rico, in some respects, if this was the last word, it's an impressive way to finish. On the flipside, closing on a high like this only makes me hope all the more that another release will follow.

    8
    Front Line Assembly
    Buried Alive
    Artificial Soldier
    2006
    By 2006, and the impending arrival of this album, I was not alone in fearing that FLA were a spent force. It had been years since they have released a decent album, with only the odd hint that they still had something worth listening to. This album changed my view - along with the staggering live shows that accompanied it - but more than anything it was this immense track. FLA finally picked up on drum'n'bass, having barely even looked at it previously, and created one of their most anthemic tracks ever based around a thumping, urgent beat that had fucktons of bass, too. A new album is now in the works, apparently, and if Bill Leeb's interviews from a year or two back are to be believed, this could be a last hurrah. Well, if it reaches anywhere close to this, it's going to be a hell of a way to go...

    7
    Covenant
    TocarCall the Ships to Port
    Northern Light
    2002
    In the end, it was a straight decision as to whether to include this or We Stand Alone, and I think that in terms of pure impact it really has to be this. It may be a stretch to say that it revitalised their career, but what it did do was to make many realise that there was much, much more to them than trashy electropop like Dead Stars. This was deep, thoughtful stuff, with lyrics alluding to Greek myth and legend, pounding, club-bound beats and a synth hook that was simply divine - the step up through the gears after the first chorus, particularly in the live version, has to be seen/heard to be believed. Endlessly played and requested since, but it never feels like a trial to listen to it again and again - instead it's always a pleasure.

    6
    65daysofstatic
    TocarAren't We All Running?
    The Fall of Math
    2004
    It's amazing to think that it's only five years since I first discovered 65DoS (thanks, Kelly!), and I've been an avid fan ever since. As they have progressed, and added more and more electronic textures, though, I'm still finding my preferred listening being their first album, which is a fantastic mix of post-rock, glitch and electronics. Amongst the many great moments, though, it's this - the closing track - that is still the unassailable peak. Opening with a mournful, but urgent piano melody, before twinkling electronics and the merest hint of guitar join in...and then a gulp of air before the whole, majestic track comes crashing in - a trick pulled more than once. It's the ending, though, that gets me every time. The gulp of air is stretched out for four, five seconds, before it rips back in one more time, then stopping dead and leaving you, the listener, to contemplate just how a band that are almost entirely instrumental could ever get so utterly thrilling to listen to.

    5
    Primordial
    TocarThe Coffin Ships
    The Gathering Wilderness
    2005
    There is a not a single song in this list that comes even remotely close to the sheer emotional punch that this song possesses, and I'll be surprised if I ever hear another that does. A lengthy, elegaic track about the humiliation the band's Irish forefathers suffered in attempting to escape the Irish Potato Famine, it's powerful sweep never fails to send shivers down my spine. A band that, perhaps, have never quite got the coverage they deserved in the metal scene in the UK at least, they nowadays are a slightly more restrained doom-folk-metal band, quite a difference from their black metal roots, but at times the fury and anguish they unleash is staggering - and this is one of those tracks.

    4
    Amanda Palmer
    Astronaut: A Short History of Nearly Nothing
    Who Killed Amanda Palmer
    2008
    The shooting, screaming star of AFP's solo album, and as far as I'm concerned still the best moment she's put on record so far - and that includes all of The Dresden Dolls stuff, too, hence why this comes in higher than my DD inclusion in this list. Written while a relationship was/had disintegrated/ing - although the full story is far more complex than that - having more than just vocals, piano and drums makes AFP sound like the larger-than-life, brash and ballsy star that she really should be. Shamefully Roadrunner Records fucked her over in a big way, barely promoting the album and leaving it to die, but a massive online following and AFP's happy involvement with them seems to have done far more good. Anyway, this track is awesome, and if you haven't heard it, shame on you - and watch the video.

    3
    Cyanotic
    TocarOrder Out Of Chaos
    Transhuman
    2005
    Some of you may be surprised to see this not at number one in this chart, but there is no doubt that it deserves it's place in the top three. This was the first track by the band that I heard, after I bought the album without hearing it following a glowing review on Music Non Stop. "That sounds just like the kind of band I'm looking for", I thought - and so it proved. Four years on, it's still a staple track in my DJ sets, and is probably the one track I play that I get asked "what is this" more than any other. If you've been reading my blog for all this time and still don't know what it sounds like, here's a quick version - stomping, drum'n'bass-infused industrial metal with Slayer-esque breakdowns that sounds like an awesome apocalyptic future. Now you know, and if you like, go watch the video and perhaps even order a copy of the second version of the album...

    2
    Battles
    Atlas
    Mirrored
    2007
    A still extraordinary track even now, well over two years since release, that unveiled Battles as a band that were doing something very different to just about everyone else. A infectious, technicolour blast of *fun*, built around, of all things, the Glitter beat, it was probably the catchiest song of the year and most other recent years, and yet was light years away from being mainstream pop. Which is probably a good thing, as these guys are far too good to lose to the mainstream, right? Electronic music played live, with an endless sense of invention and curiosity, I'm never going to get tired of this.

    1
    Seabound
    Scorch The Ground (Version)
    Double Crosser
    2006
    I debated long and hard as to what the top track on this list was going to be, and certainly the number one slot only got decided for sure earlier today, when I heard this track again. I've already mentioned how brilliant Seabound are, but this is their standout moment. A mid-paced, electro-pop track with a heart of pitch black, this is a tale of revenge, of wanting to be every perceived threat and fear to whoever it is that inspired this song. The tune is memorable in itself, but it would be nothing without the lyrics and the vocal delivery - Frank Spinath's air of calculated calm throughout the song is, perhaps, a little unnerving. But then, that is most certainly the aim, at least if you are the subject. To me, it's simply the most well-rounded, and therefore best, song of this decade.

    Next week: My top 50 albums 2000-09 Pt.01: 50 to 25
  • Tuesday Twenty: My top 100 tracks 2000-09 Pt.04: 40 to 21

    Out 6 2009, 17h19 por amodelofcontrol

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

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

    40
    Landmine Spring
    The Jaded And The Eager
    Elephantine
    2001

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

    39
    Interlock
    Further From Reason
    Death by Design
    2002

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

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

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

    37
    Dragons
    TocarHere Are the Roses
    Here are the roses
    2007

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

    36
    Assemblage 23
    decades
    Meta
    2007

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

    35
    Covenant
    Tour De Force
    United States of Mind
    2000

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

    34
    In Strict Confidence
    Emergency
    Holy
    2004

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

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

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

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

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

    31
    The Dresden Dolls
    TocarGirl Anachronism
    The Dresden Dolls
    2003

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

    30
    Apoptygma Berzerk
    Starsign
    Welcome to Earth
    2000

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

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

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

    28
    Leechwoman
    Tool
    Three Zero
    2001

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

    27
    Lucidstatic
    Blackout
    Gravedigger
    2008

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

    26
    Modulate
    TocarRevolution
    Detonation
    2008

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

    25
    Goldfrapp
    TocarCrystalline Green
    Black Cherry
    2003

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

    24
    Katatonia
    TocarEvidence
    Viva Emptiness
    2003

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

    23
    Drumcorps
    Botch Up and Die
    Grist
    2006

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

    22
    dEUS
    TocarBad Timing
    Pocket Revolution
    2005

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

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

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

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