And so another year passes, a musical roller coaster for me in which I almost totally lost faith in new music and returned to the comfort of the sounds of the nineties that I grew up with, wrapped in nostalgic bliss yet not quite so blind as those who obstinately argue that the music of the (insert appropriate decade here) was far and away the best with a 100% guarantee that this decade will coincide with the said individuals teenage years.
Last Fm always surprises me, again this year with Johann Johannsson feauturing so highly, i expect this is due mainly to his excellent Copenhagen Dreams, a collection of short piano and drone pieces perfect for soundtracking the cold winter. Nice also to see a healthy presence from two long terms favourites Belle & Sebastian and Brigitte Bardot.
For some reason I have been wondering along in plain ignorance of the fact of such mediums as The Hype Machine, Soundcloud, Spotify and more recently Ex.Fm, all of which have recently played a key part in restoring my faith in modern music, offering a plethora of sounds and a continual stream of related tracks. And so my musical philosophy has taken a dramatic shift away from having to hear a full album, after all, if we are honest most albums and most "good" albums at that only really have two or three "killer" tracks, and isn't it almost always the case that a bands first few EP's and album are the ones that you cherish the most, it's a rare thing that a band will go on to make album after album of tracks that have that quality and creativeness of the early offerings. Clearly there ARE bands that do this, but compared to the vast amount of music out there its a clear minority that succeed.
Hence my new focus is on individual tracks, quality over quantity and this in turn has led to my move from here to Tumblr yourdrums.tumblr.com for a more track based blog which shares a love of art and music alongside tumblr's delightful interface. Time is hard to come by these days so why not fill it with only the best and most exciting new music.
Instead of the normal end of year album list here are some of the tracks that have hit the spot for me over the last 12 months.
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Single of the Year
Having already impressed with the Yeah Yeah Yeahs infected Wait, Airhead put out an absolute killer follow up on the always reliable R&S Records. Pyramid Lake backed with the equally fantastic Black Ink were two of the best and freshest tracks I heard all year round...
Boomkat: "'Pyramid Lake' is about as daring as straight-up club killers come, its grimy flow propelled by insane, chicaning drum edits and a mutant energy that reminds us a little of Untold's early material. "
Joy Orbison, Boddika & Pearson Sound produced an equally fantastic and stripped down piece complete with Missy Elliot (?) sample...very nice
As far as catchy pop songs go, there were few tracks out there that had the instant appeal of Grimes rubbery Oblivion, it staked its claim for a place in your heart from roughly 0.01 seconds into the track and by the time you reached the girl band "ooo-ee-ooo"s at 50 seconds you were well and truly sold, a delightful pop song that you're better off not knowing the lyrics to.
On the subject of catchy pop, Charli XCX treated us to at least two tracks that were pretty much the audio alternative to love at first sight. The excellent Valentine and You're the One had us reaching for the repeat button and will no doubt live on for many more plays.
Nite Jewel's stripped down charity shop sound came good on the wonderful One Second of Love
Perhaps more mainstream than the territory this blog would normally venture towards is a lovely piece of friday night feel good. Undeniably great, so catchy.
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I'd tampered with "Chillwave" / Hypnagogia or whatever they're calling it these days, Toro Y Moi/ Rangers et al but this year thanks mostly to the excellent Portals Blog and much more recently Hearing Gold there seemed to be no end to the wave of bands creating this lovely skittery, sleepy music. For anyone not in the know the Portals monthly mixtapes would be a very good place to start.
Again undoubtedly you will have probably heard this track by now, if not i'm sure you will be play it at least five times in a row as soon as you hear it. Purity Rings Fineshrine was one of those songs, much like Grimes Oblivion where you felt like you'd known it years even before the intro had finished. Amazing track.
At perhaps the furthest possible end of the spectrum to Purity Ring are xxyyxx who completely stole my heart with the really quite wonderful woozy dream of a track About You, sounding like one last ditch effort at saving a memory, all the colours slowly blending together, the details blurring into one fuzzy mess, ridiculously good.
Patchwork carved out similar goods
Summer Occasion too...
Lapalux continued to impress with their beautiful artwork and music (of course)
Blue Hawaii's In Two ventured along similar paths
Leapling's Seventeen was delightful in its simplicity and honesty.
My favourite Portals Mixtape discoveries
A little more you may wish to investigate
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Voices. The female voice is a magical instrument and as always there were a number of great tracks that utilised it in its barest format not least the wonderful Born Whole by Brooklyn based Doe Paoro, vocal rollercoaster, occasionally belting out vocal lines that could well take the place of a lead guitar. Born Whole was a truly special track.
First Aid Kit have long been a source of quality and this years album The Lions Roar did not disappoint, my favourite track by them however was one that has a very scarce internet presence, the wonderful country inflected B-Side to Emmylou, I Just Needed a Friend was a delightful piece of Country that you simply could not ignore, although it seems the rest of the world did with its only presence being the below youtube video.
Returning from an indefinite length of obscurity was New Yorker Fiona Apple, her track Every Single Night from the critically acclaimed and strangely titled The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than the Driver of the Screw and Whipping Cords Will Serve You More Than Ropes Will Ever Do, was lovingly remixed by the ever impressive, yet poorly named LOL Boys to give us a fantastic 4 minutes of pop.
Empress Of teased us with a collection of 1 minute...ish tracks entitled Colorminutes and slowly leaked to youtube before blowing us away completely with the epic and really quite majestic Don't Tell Me.
Wall. perfected the term Minimal with the delicate Magazine, perhaps one for those disappointed by the latest offering from the XX.
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Chromatics were the most classy band of 2012, slick to the end from the press shots to the beautifully produced sounds, very Drive-esque but as I've always found over an album the quality tends to fall short, but when they are good they are so so good.
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For straight out indie the following hit all the right spots for me.
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Elsewhere Moons remix of DIIV's How Long Have You Known made the original completely redundant
Kitty Pryde's Okay Cupid took bedroom pop and teenage
obsession to a whole new level
Still Corners and Chvrches have been blogged to death but both tracks are undeniably brilliant
I feel i've barely touched the surface...all the below are great too...enjoy!
And lest we not forget, see you in 2013!
Somehow managed to go without posting this, one of my favourite songs of the year.
Stereogum:
"On paper, "I Know This (Can't Be Love)" is the type of song title that would be released in some awful, tabloid-reproted post-breakup haze by some fading young Disney star. In reality, it's actually an incessant earworm track form British producer xxxy, in advance of his Everything EP. It splices and repeats a sped-up sample of the titular phrase over the top of warped synth phaser chords, breezing pleasantly along until the three and a half minute mark, where the beat really kicks in, ratching the song's groove another level. Listen below. [Stereogum]"
xxxy - I know this (can't be love) by Well Rounded Records
Stereogum:
"On paper, "I Know This (Can't Be Love)" is the type of song title that would be released in some awful, tabloid-reproted post-breakup haze by some fading young Disney star. In reality, it's actually an incessant earworm track form British producer xxxy, in advance of his Everything EP. It splices and repeats a sped-up sample of the titular phrase over the top of warped synth phaser chords, breezing pleasantly along until the three and a half minute mark, where the beat really kicks in, ratching the song's groove another level. Listen below. [Stereogum]"
xxxy - I know this (can't be love) by Well Rounded Records
Posted by
ben
at
14:47
Took me a while to get my head around this, a little r & b sounding to start with, on deeper inspection its a beautiful track that exposes Doe voice, set against solo piano and gentle beats to be an instrument in itself, creating something both haunting and otherworldly, chillingly beautiful.
Remix
Remix
Posted by
ben
at
14:37
Literally just discovered, a gloriously stretched out dream piece...very beautiful
Posted by
ben
at
14:24
No doubt old news, but quite possibly my favourite song of the year.
Even further behind the times...
...
Even further behind the times...
...
Posted by
ben
at
14:12
#like
‘Bounce 4 Life’ finds Monolithium offering the perfect mixture of club-ready footwork snare rolls and low swung hip hop, a glossy get-together of pitched vocals and super-melodic synth chords. Lead single ‘Bounce 4 Life’ is an undestroyable hymn that DJs have been rinsing all summer long. The back-stabbing ‘Lancashire Hammer’ slows down dance to rap tempi, while ‘Pavillionaire’ (featuring Prison Garde) joins boogie with high-pitched vocal samples and sickly-sweet synthesizer arpeggios. On ‘Spiral Face’ and ‘Sleepy Beauty’, Monolithium takes a slightly more ambient and elegiac approach to tech beats, with the former paying clever tribute to classic jungle and the later focussing on melodic sophistication a bit more. Remix support on ‘Bounce 4 Life’ comes from fellow Canadian Ryan Hemsworth (Wedidit), UK producer KingThing (Infrasonics), and our own H-SIK.
Released by: Error Broadcast
Release/catalogue number: ebc020
Release date: Dec 10, 2012
Release/catalogue number: ebc020
Release date: Dec 10, 2012
Posted by
ben
at
14:09
A lovely twinkling piece of ambience that reminds me of that great Textile Ranch/Charles Atlas split that I always used to bang on about with an added coating of the downtempo chillwave that finds it way onto those brilliant portals compilations.
mp3 and video reposted from Silent Shout
Kool Music – Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
mp3 and video reposted from Silent Shout
Kool Music – Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
Posted by
ben
at
14:02
Can't think who the flip this reminds me of, maybe a little Hot Chip heavily baked in swirls of sixties psychedelia delightful bass and a vocal hook that I still can't place almost a whole sentence later, maybe a touch of Sufjan, you know, that kind of effortlessly brilliant sound.
Classic in sound and instantly loveable.
Classic in sound and instantly loveable.
Lovely little video from the great band Tops.
“Shot on location at Northern Secondary School’s dance class for deaf students taught by Tracy Hsu. Using large speakers to transfer vibrations through the dance floor, and a soft glass mirror which mimicked the rhythm of the song visually, the kids in Tracy’s class showed us how they like to experience and dance to music.”
“Shot on location at Northern Secondary School’s dance class for deaf students taught by Tracy Hsu. Using large speakers to transfer vibrations through the dance floor, and a soft glass mirror which mimicked the rhythm of the song visually, the kids in Tracy’s class showed us how they like to experience and dance to music.”
Posted by
ben
at
01:08
Probably my favourite out and out pop song of the year to date, stupidly catchy and obscenely repeatable, a heart felt love song that will embed itself on your mind.
Posted by
ben
at
01:03
#awesome
Katy Goodman of Vivian Girls fame goes all Best Coast on us...but much cuter..enjoy
Get the mp3 from the excellent Gorilla vs Bear blog
One of our favourite Ambient/experimental artists Johann Johannsson returns with a gorgeous soundtrack to the film and ode to Denmarks capital city, short piano pieces that recall Max Richter's 24 Postcards Series. A welcome accompaniment to an early rise.
Read full review of Copenhagen Dreams (Limited Vinyl Edition) - JOHANN JOHANNSSON on Boomkat.com ©
Another release on Fika that is indie pop through and through, Allo' Darlin throwing a house party with Bob Marley, reggae infused dancey brilliance a bit like what Los Campesinos! could've done if they'd taken a holiday to the Caribbean after that brilliant first album or Comet Gain with bass lines to die for. Looking forward to the album.
Posted by
ben
at
14:42
Freshly back from Indietracks, totally blown away by the experience after finally attending the greatest gathering of Indie pop in England each year. Some lovely new discoveries..Tigercats were especially wonderful and some welcome old faces, Darren Hayman, Allo' Darlin and the really quite wondeful The Smittens a band that had impressed me with their great album The Coolest Thing about Love, an album that I had played on repeat for the days preceding the festival, re-familiarising myself with those great melodies, "The Interstate", "Gumdrops", "H&M (+A)" and many more. And so it was slightly disappointing that they focused more on new songs instead of the familiar tunes we love and cherish.
Having now had chance to digest their brand new album, I can't wait to see them again, (how did i not know they played Nottingham on Tuesday!!) each song a bundle of fun, catchy as can be and laden with hook after hook.
The lead single "Burning Streets of Rome" is not typically Smittens-esque, the intro is wonderfully 80's, soft synths and short couplets, a bassline that recalls a hundred songs , none of which I can put my finger on but maybe it's College's A Real Hero from the incredible Drive, but Burning Streets of Rome carries none of the droney darkness of that film, instead it carries one of the most catchy choruses you'll hear in years and will be singing all summer long.."Bubblegum Bubblegum panic attack/ It's a cute boy who likes me back".
Where the Smittens really excel is when they alternate lines between the hugely talented roster of members within the band (including Colin Clary of Let's Whisper and Colin Clary, surely the greatest voice ever, you need to chat to this guy!), each taking a line one after the other, like on the delectable Pavement meets Yo Gabba Gabba of The First Bus "I DISAGREE WITH YR THEORY / ARE YOU KIDDING, REALLY? / EVERYONE I KNOW AGREES " and then later on with the weight watching paranoia of Dream World, a march of a song that should soundtrack Slimming World drop outs across the world..."All the weight I just put on is never gonna come off/ never gonna come off"
I've been craving a new indie pop love after too many years all wrapped up in (still quite wonderful drone) and I think this album might be the one that gets played as frequently and as loudly as Of Montreal's Hissing Fauna. Simply Brilliant.
Posted by
ben
at
05:10
A delightful track of Ice Cream jingley-ness and adolescent rebellion...it's worth the minute wait before it really kicks off.
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