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[idm] sean p's top ten of 2002

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2003-01-01 08:53Sean Padilla [idm] sean p's top ten of 2002
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2003-01-01 08:53Sean PadillaHello f(r)iends, This list was compiled rather quickly, simply because out of the piles an
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Sean Padilla
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Wed, 01 Jan 2003 08:53:49 +0000
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[idm] sean p's top ten of 2002
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Hello f(r)iends, This list was compiled rather quickly, simply because out of the piles and piles of music I bought, downloaded, or received, it was easy to remember the ten records that I listened to the most. 2002 was a very good year for music...but then again, EVERY year is a good year for music in my book! :-) 1) Deerhoof "Reveille" - No Wave played with Merseybeat melody, childlike abandon, and a serious found-sound fetish...and even THAT description sells its short, so I urge those interested to read the review I wrote at Mundane Sounds. This album was as noisy, unpredictable, and FUN as rock music could possibly get last year. 2) The Notwist "Neon Golden" - The best fusion of IDM and rock I've heard since Dntel's "Life is Full of Possibilities." An impeccably arranged headphone listen, with wistful melodies and lyrics that remain poignant even through its ESL handicap. What's so great about a record like this was that it wasn't the result of some radical stylistic shift; it was merely the culmination of three previous albums' worth of progress. Anyone who's kept up with the Notwist since "12" should have seen this album coming. 3) Sonic Youth "Murray Street" - It doesn't even matter that the first five songs on the record are all in the same key (a pet peeve of mine); for arguably the first time since "Daydream Nation," SY finally got the album thing completely and totally RIGHT. "Rain on Tin" ALONE would have made this album *at least* number ten. 4) Jason Loewenstein "At Sixes and Sevens" - A one-man tour de force recorded on eight-track that sounds like a professional recording from a power trio at the peak of its powers. Jason finally gets over his musical inferiority complex with this album, and it CRAPS on everything Lou Barlow's put his name on after "Bakesale." 5) Young People (self-titled) - in which the most dirge-like and backbeat-shunning moments of the Velvet Underground's third album are filtered through the innocence and sincerity of Beat Happening...or as one of my friends in Austin put it, "the best album Cat Power never made." "Stay Sweet" has moved me to tears NUMEROUS times. 6) The Books "Thought for Food" - an album that even harder to pin down than Deerhoof's, in which a guitar, a cello, and a computer form a love triangle to spew out the most random and beautiful sounds possible for thirty-eight minutes. I also wrote a review of this record at Mundane Sounds. 7) Sleater-Kinney "One Beat" - THESE ROCK GODDESSES JUST KEEP GETTING BETTER AND BETTER WITH EVERY ALBUM. YOU CANNOT DENY THEM. ANYONE WHO HAS NOT SUBMITTED TO THEM BY THIS POINT IS A TONE-DEAF PLAYER-HATER. :-P 8) Max Tundra "Mastered by the Guy at the Exchange" - the best fusion of IDM and rock I've heard since the Notwist's "Neon Golden." Contains what could possibly be the funkiest song EVER about the chemical makeup of margarine ("Lysine"). 9) Mclusky "Mclusky Do Dallas" - if the Pixies were fronted by Jello Biafra and had only one guitarist, they would sound like this. It also helps that every song on this record has at least one hilarious and utterly quotable couplet. They take more drugs than a touring funk band! 10) Xiu Xiu "Knife Play" - this album is so histrionic and depressing that when I first heard it during my Spring semester finals, I became nauseous by the fourth song (you know, the one where he sings about catching AIDS). One of the few albums that I have to psychologically prepare myself for before I press "play," the ONLY reason why I actually have the cojones to recommend it to other people is because of the sheer creativity of the arrangements (baroque gothic noise techno, anyone?) and the compassion injected into even the most morbid of character sketches. NOTE: The only reason why Guided by Voices, my favorite band of all time, didn't make it into this year's top ten is because I think some of the weaker songs on the otherwise stellar "Universal Truths and Cycles" should have been replaced by the better songs from their "Pipe Dreams of Instant Prince Whippet" EP. If the mix CDR that I made of my favorite songs from both releases was an official release, it would have beat Deerhoof as my top pick of 2002. Bob Pollard is still, like, the best songwriter ever, but he shouldn't be allowed to sequence his own records. :-) Yr. f(r)iend Sean P. http://www.mundanesounds.com np: Jazzanova "In Between" _________________________________________________________________ Protect your PC - get McAfee.com VirusScan Online http://clinic.mcafee.com/clinic/ibuy/campaign.asp?cid=3963 --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org