Sunday, January 11, 2009

Mx4's Top 50 Albums of the Year

Firstly (perhaps finally?) I present to you, my top 50 albums of 2008... in alphabetical order... BY ARTIST!!!
 
(pausing for the oohs and aahs)
 
  1. Adele - 19
  2. Black Milk - Tronic
  3. British Sea Power - Do You Like Rock Music?
  4. The Bug - London Zoo
  5. Butch Walker - Sycamore Meadows
  6. Cut Copy - In Ghost Colours
  7. Death Cab for Cutie - Narrow Stairs
  8. Drive-By Truckers - Brighter than Creation's Dark
  9. Elzhi - The Preface/Europass
  10. eMC - The Show
  11. Erykah Badu - New Amerykah Pt. 1: Third World War
  12. Estelle - Shine
  13. Fall Out Boy - Folie a Deux
  14. The Fireman - Electric Arguments
  15. Firewater - The Golden Hour
  16. The Felice Brothers - The Felice Brothers
  17. Foxboto Hot Tubs - Stop Drop and Roll!!!!
  18. Guns N Roses - Chinese Democracy
  19. Hercules and Love Affair - Hercules and Love Affair
  20. The Hold Steady - Stay Positive
  21. Jazmine Sullivan
  22. Jenny Lewis - Acid Tongue  
  23. Kanye West - 808s and Heartbreak
  24. The Knux - Remind Me in 3 Days...
  25. The Kills - Midnight Boom
  26. Koushik - Out my Window
  27. Lil Wayne - The Drought is Over Pt. 6: The Reincarnation
  28. Los Campesinos! - Hold On Now, Youngster
  29. Love Is All - A Hundred Things Keep Me Up at Night
  30. Nas - The Nigger Mixtape
  31. Neon Neon - Stainless Style
  32. Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds - Dig!!! Lazarus Dig!!!
  33. Nine Inch Nails - The Slip
  34. No Age - Nouns
  35. Old 97's - Blame It on Gravity
  36. Pink - Funhouse
  37. Portishead - Third
  38. Q-Tip - The Rennaisance
  39. Quiet Village - Silent Movie
  40. Raphael Saadiq - The Way I See It
  41. Santogold - Santogold
  42. Shugo Tokumaru
  43. The Silver Jews - Look Out Mountain, Look Out Sea
  44. Times New Viking - Rip It Off
  45. TV on the Radio - Dear Science
  46. The Very Best - The Very Best Mixtape
  47. Wale - The Mixtape About Nothing
  48. Weezer - Weezer
  49. Why? - Alopecia
  50. Wolf Parade - At Mount Zoomer

In total in 2008, I purchased (or downloaded, in the case of a lot of mixtapes) something over 100 albums (iTunes says 122, but it includes both discs of some albums, some reissues and the occasional career-spanning boxed set, which I don't count). This was an interesting year - the album is dying, slowly and painfully. People aren't buying them (except me). Record stores are slowly going the way of the dinosaur and record companies the way of Lemmings when I play that game on the SNES (hint: I suck at it).
 
If anything, the state of the music industry has given artists chances to experiment with promotion and distribution.

Lil Wayne and Nine Inch Nails were the most successful (and in Wayne's case, ubiquitous) at this, as both promoted themselves in the form of free music (seriously - raise your hand if you actually bought one of Weezy's mixtapes). It's these models and streaming albums before the street date on MySpace that might be seen more in the future.
 
But enough about the business end of things -- if I were about business, Tha Carter III would be on my list. Here's some music I think deserves a highlight:
 
Butch Walker - Sycamore Meadows
I've said my piece about this one before, but I think I should take the time to say that it's my favorite album of 2008. The critics at Slate.com treat 2008 as a mediocre year in music, and I almost agree with them. Like I said, this is my favorite album of the year, which is not to be confused with my choice for the best. It hits some higher points than most other releases this year ("ATL," "The Weight of Her," "Ponce de Leon Ave"), to the point that its one bum track ("Song for the Metalheads") is forgiveable.
 
Song for the Metalheads
This might become an extended rant sometime in the future, but I was on RollingStone's news blog and noticed a lot of people bemoaning that they cover - gasp! - pop music and things other than "rock." One person wrote that they should put Pearl Jam, the Foo Fighters and the White Stripes on the cover (as though none of those artists have had any covers on the mag). Granted, their current cover story (a fictional, satirical interview with George W. Bush) is probably something that they should leave to The Onion, but the fact is "rock" as it was defined in the 90s is just about dead. Music moves on, and 2008 is no exception. Looking at my list, I don't think any of the rock albums there would play nice with the Pearl Jam crowd, except maybe No Age or Times New Viking. Maybe Portishead, since they're contemporaries... Maybe Guns N' Roses.
 
Weezer toured with the Foo Fighters once, but everyone thinks Weezer sucks*.
 
As though to prove this, no one gave a damn about Chinese Democracy. If it wasn't made in the 90s or by Jack White, I guess it sucks in the public conscience.
 
Weezer and the Art of a Helluva Pop Song
I will never fault Rivers Cuomo for not writing another Pinkerton. Why? Because people usually move on. Lennon only wrote one John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, Dylan only has one Blood on the Tracks. Another Pinkerton or blue album from Weezer might sound like an All-American Rejects album. So Weezer has been doing the right thing for their entire career trajectory, pumping out killer single after killer single and solid, if not all-time classic, albums to go with them. Seriously -- does anyone realize how great a singles collection by Weezer would sound? How well-crafted and deceptively simple (yet skillfully nuanced) the latter-day singles would sound? Especially when put up against the singles from the first two albums?

But Weezer aren't the only band I would credit for having great pop sense: Green Day-- err, I mean, Foxboro Hot Tubs-- have also been told to cut the pop shit out when the topic came up on Digg. Yet their past two projects? A challenging rock opera about the post-9/11 America featuring 9-minute suites and obliquely political lyrics and an homage to garage rock. Indeed, there is nothing more pop than that. What exactly makes "Longview" less pop than "American Idiot?" Because it's about masturbation? I sigh at post-1980s rock more than anything.
 
Meanwhile, in the same corner, Los Campesinos! and Love Is All released three albums between them that probably could've held their own against Weezer (the blue one) or Dookie on any day in 1994. Love Is All reminded me of some old Stiff Records sides -- goddammit it's good to be alive!
 
2008: The Bippinest' n' the Boppinest'?
I will admit, firstly, that Lil Wayne's The Drought is Over Pt. 6: The Reincarnation is not by itself one of the top 50 albums of the year, but I felt that I have to acknowledge the awesomeness of the continued existence and success of Weezy. Also, it has the best album cover of the year.

Yeah, sure, no albums/mixtapes he does are particularly consistent, but this, Tha Carter III and The Dedication 3 all had killer tracks: when the man is on, he is ON. Yes, he has a penchant for embarrassingly lame lyrics occasionally, but over all, he's probably the poster boy for how music might get distributed or recognized in the future. It's not the albums that matter, it's individual songs. 

Remember: even if you're ankle-deep in shit and knee-deep in cold water, you can still be shoulder-deep in ice cream sundae and have your head encased in a pizza with your favorite toppings.
 
At least, that's how I feel about Wayne's output.
 
But hip hop had a great year, with Kanye (arguably - and I argue "hell yes" and rest my case) putting out a helluva breakup/conceptual album and The Knux releasing an amazing debut. Q-tip came out of the wilderness. Black Milk and Elzhi between them have 3 awesome albums (I counted Europass and The Preface as one because a lot of songs overlap). eMC is the best supergroup since the Wu... The Show is both hilarious and moving and thought-provoking. It's possibly my favorite hip hop album of the year. Finally, Wale's The Mixtape About Nothing is probably the best use of Seinfeld since syndication.

And men weren't the only ones kicking ass! Estelle's Shine, Jazmine Sullivan's Fearless and especially Erykah Badu's New Amerykah Part 1: Third World War were absolutely spectacular. I especially love Sullivan's Motown-throwback sound that still comes on as hard as any rap music released in the past decade. New Amerykah is something else, though, an absolutely amazing piece of work that is at once foreboding, fearful yes resilient and strong.

New Year's Resolution: Post more often. Ideally, once a day at minimum.

And now I kick off the new year with a video by Shugo Tokumaru:



*Everyone. Is. Wrong.

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