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1. Fajar di Atas Awan - Suarasama [Drag City | August 11]
^ The wandering vocals, simplistic melodies, drones and offset
percussion mend my withering soul. Originally broadcast in 1997
by Radio France International, this collection of music is a
must for students of music, vocals or the droning beat. Trak
5, "Silang Bertaut Bunyi," is a mystifying puff of
smokey incense, freeform vocals and repetitious droning strings.
This is the music playing on Sandy Bull's transistor radio.
>
2. Human Bell - Human Bell [Thrill Jockey | January 29]
^ An atmospheric instrumental cocktail conjured up by Arboretum's
Dave Heumann and Lungfish's Nathan Bell. The guitar work, drones
and "quartz singing bowl" veil over you like incense
at the Great Stupa. Each trak is an altering experience. >
3. Black Mountain - In The Future [Jagjaguwar | January 22]
^ Psychedelia amplitude as defined by a fraction of the Vancouver
based Black Mountain Army collective. Heavy texture laden anatomy,
wafting vocals and just the right mix of mood. Play it loud
on the summer patio to draw in the locals for a drink or wait
out a deep winter blizzard inside your headphones. If you're
craving escape without the hassle of chemicals this one's the
ticket. Favorite traks: "Wucan" and "Bright Lights"
>
4. Neil Young - Sugar Mountain [Reprise | December 2]
^ Old is new. Folk rocks and ROCK unplugs. Recorded at Canterbury
House, November 9th, 1968. The wonderment of Neil giggles and
sparkles, "I don't even know what to play," as if
he's sitting crossed-legged at your kitchen table talking to
YOU. I'm not sorry to say that Neil is one of my heros. Is he
a Folkie or a Hippie? A Punker? Maybe Country? He's a legend.
This live acoustic release proves he's got the voice, lyrics,
and skill. To top it all he's got Hank Williams' guitar. My
fav trak is "I've Been Waiting For You." >
5. Fleet Foxes - Sun Giant EP [Sub Pop | April 8]
^ Simpatico harmonies draped seamlessly over instrumental laminations.
Digital decoupage to play as you pour the wine on a first date.
Keep in mind the runtime is only 19 minutes, so don't daddle
around. "Mykonos" stands strong, but all the traks
make the listen complete. >
6. Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks - Real Emotional Trash [Matador
| March 4]
^ The dialogue of distorted strumming. Kibitzing, ruminating
whines from a Portland alley riding a lapping wave as it thumps
an effects pedal. Malkmus plays it just like you want it on
his fourth release with the Jicks. Each trak is a keeper. >
7. Boris - Smile [Southern Lord | April 29]
^ Driving metal bound wah wah fuzz-fed guitars. Sound samples
and Japanese lyrics. Boris is real. Anything on their CDs can
be done live and that is exactly what you should strive for.
If you're unable to make the show Smile will do. Beware, some
riffs and feedback chaos could possibly blow the cones off your
speakers. >
8. Paul Westerberg - 49:00 [Dry Wood | July 21]
^ 49 cents can't get me much satisfaction these days, but a
Westerberg long-run album with a single trak can. My suggestion,
play this 49 minute trak to warm up the crowd at your daughter's
wedding rehearsal dinner and croon on the vibe both youngsters
and Xer's can agree. The tunes breed feel good, care-free-dom
while provoking lyrical wonder. Westerberg wrote all the snippets
and played all the musical devices. Even so he caught legal
hell from publishers wanting their CUT!!! Released as a digital
download only. Pulled from the worldwide inter-web, but you
may find it tucked away in some dark corner. >
9. Blitzen Trapper - Furr [Sub Pop | September 23]
^ The production is immaculate. Quirky sounds and beats fill
every corner of each track. The vocals blend smoothly with fitful
guitar jams, melodic organ and biotic soundscapes of bells,
whistles, steel guitar and bohemianite accents. If you're keen
to exploring without travel and see vivid colorized shapes from
your personalized porthole you will enjoy this release. Note
worthy tracks; "Furr", "War on Machines",
"Black River Killer". >
10. Hank III - Damn Right Rebel Proud! [Sidewalk Records | October
21]
^ Hank III's 6th release rasps thru lyrics like 60 grit paper,
twangs at the right time, then bleeds out in a puddle of raunchy
back woods punk. Throwing the finger at is his namesake's Country
genre, Hank Williams III has stuck it to the man in just the
right way, by proving the business chart wrong. Favorite tune:
"Stoned & Alone" Watch out for F bombs. >
Runner Ups:
^ The Black Angels - Directions To See A Ghost [Light In The
Atic | May 13]
I Should of Listened to but never did:
^ Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago [Jagjaguwar | February 19]
THE Concert of 2008:
^ Boris with Michio Kurihara - [Marquis Theater | Denver, Colorado,
July 25]
So good
it hurt. Permanent damage... the memories are mine.
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