Top 5 Metal Albums
I thought this year would go much differently. All the bands that I love were releasing albums this year, I thought I'd see them all here. But Children of Bodom returned to their classical ways at the expense of hooks and In Flames made album of mediocre radio-friendly snorers. Opeth's album is solid, and has some great songs (Burden, The Lotus Eater), but lacks the overall memorability that marks their previous efforts.
This was definitely the year for black metal Pink Floyd worship. I thought Nachtmystium had taken the cake with Black Meddle, opening with a cover of One of These Days. Then Enslaved reminded us why they're the kings of experimental black metal. They take floydian harmonies into dark realms they've never seen before, but retain the darkness and dirtiness that made their straight black metal efforts so great.
Burst and Cynic are the kings of progressive metal this year. As impressive as Cynic's reunion is after 14 years, Burst's album is perfect. Each of the songs holds a very specific place in the album. The fierceness of it is something that's been missing from prog, since Metallica abandoned their long form efforts. The drama, too, reminds me of the classic metal that came from Cliff Burton and Dave Mustaine, it's not like Gojira, where you're pummeled with one sound for an hour - Lazarus bird swings from beautiful intro into full assault into spacey breakdown, uncoiling and tightening, and never losing your attention. Meanderthal is a similarly tight effort, in a different way: the album is metal, but all of the songs are hook-laden pop songs that stick in your head and won't leave. They'd be radio friendly, if mainstream metal existed in any way that wasn't insulting to the genre.
5: Nachtmystium - Assassins: Black Meddle Pt. 1
4: Torche - Meanderthal
3: Enslaved - Vertebrae
2: Cynic - Traced in Air
1: Burst - Lazarus Bird
Top 5 non-metal albums
I know, it's a weird distinction. Nonetheless, combining my favorite metal albums into this list would result in a very odd top 10, that would only hold value for people very close to my musical taste. Cloud Cult's most epic album to date needs to be recognized in a stronger way. Their secular mythologies (he served us communion of cola and twinkies
), fit the sound perfectly. It's absurdly artsy, but in a good way. Why?, too, is overly artsy with his prose, set against an organic hip-hop background of xylophones and simple drum kits. The songs suck you in, seeming bigger than the sparce instrumentation that holds them.
Nine Inch Nails released 2 albums as free downloads this year. While The Slip is easily passed off as Radiohead-wannabe-marketing, Ghosts squarely frames all of the issues with what the recording industry has become. Not only does the first quarter play loss-leader to the remaining 3 parts, but the music itself would never be released on a major label. The songs are short experiments, hanging pieces of the various incarnations of NIN, the acoustic intimacy of Still, the angry glitch of their heyday, and the dark groove of the last few years. The songs play against each other, any sense of atmosphere is gone, you're forced to pay attention to each piece individually. A record company would want a single, and they would want similar songs to sit near each other to form some coherent whole, some marketable aesthetic. The album isn't about that, it's about experimentation, and experimentation doesn't sell. Except it did, to NIN fans, many like me, who've wanted to see Trent flex his writing outside of pop formulas.
Fleet Foxes and Dengue Fever belong to a resurgence of psychadelia, both in warm happy tones (especially as compared to the floyd worship referenced above). The aesthetic is certainly pop, but not in a formulaic sense. Fleet Foxes rely on complex harmonies and lush instrumentation, crafting music that's endlessly interesting, while staying hook-y and memorable. Dengue Fever writes Cambodian pop ditties, led by an iconic female voice, but the songs wind far afield.
5: Dengue Fever - Venus on Earth
4: Fleet Foxes - (s/t)
3: Why? - Alopecia
2: Nine Inch Nails - Ghosts I - IV
1: Cloud Cult - Feel Good Ghosts
Top 5 EP's
EP's are a weird space - Some of these bands (Mogwai, The Gaslight Anthem, Jesu) released full albums that either had too much filler, or just lacked the punch of the EP tracks. Agalloch and Cassettes Won't Listen just left me begging for more. Agalloch's EP shows their neo-folk influences without their black metal ones. The White EP is finely tuned, including the paired Birch White/Birch Black. Unfortunately the EP is truly limited edition, it's completely out of print and unavailable. The Gaslight Anthem's gruff vocals over catchy punk sound marries perfectly to their increasingly Americana/nostalgic songs on Senor and the Queen. Unfortunately, The '59 Sound, released later this year, relies too heavily on classic storytelling, and waffles in mediocre. Mogwai's Batcat EP snatches the heaviest song from Hawk is Howling, and adds a collaboration with Roky Erikson that's absolutely beautiful. Their full length doesn't have the punch that this EP has, or that Mr. Beast had. Jesu tends to be too precious in large doses, but paired against the heaviest output from Battle of Mice, they make sense.
5: Mogwai - Batcat
4: Jesu/Battle of Mice split
3: The Gaslight Anthem - Senor and the Queen
2: Cassettes Won't Listen - Small Time Machine
1: Agalloch - The White EP
Songs To Check Out:
- Cassettes Won't Listen - Paper Float
- Battle of Mice - The Bishop
- Cloud Cult - When Water Comes To Life
- Agalloch - Birch White
- Dengue Fever - Tiger Phone Card
- Burst - We Watched The Silver Rain
- Torche - Across The Shields
- Why? - The Hollows
- Cynic - Evolutionary Sleeper (live)
- The Gaslight Anthem - Senor and the Queen
























One Comment
i loved those…downloaded now,thanks
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