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  • Favorite Albums -- Decade Edition

    My dad and wife agreed that last year’s list of 50 albums was just way too geeky. So, this year the lists (there will be two!) are getting cut down to 25. Condensing the decade to 25 records was not easy, as a lot of great music was put out over the past ten years. In many ways this decade of music was as exciting as music has ever been, given that music is more accessible than ever.

    The current music culture made for few – if any – albums that were complete smashes in the way we’ve seen in other decades; but it also meant more music in more genres than ever before was right at our finger tips. There was definitely more to sift through, but the quality was there and I think in that respect this list compares favorably with any list I could have come up with from the previous decade.

    Looking over the list there are some notable admissions. With limited spots available, some records that I really enjoyed were left off the list (Black Holes and Revelations by Muse, Turn On the Bright Lights by Interpol, Think Tank by Blur, Give Up by The Postal Service, Person Pitch by Panda Bear, The Animal Years by Josh Ritter, Veckatimest by Grizzly Bear, et al.). Also lamentable is the fact that several bands with very consistent output this decade did not make the list. Principal among them are Kings of Leon (their most recent album notwithstanding), Spoon, Okkervil River, Junior Boys, The Hold Steady, The Clientele, Modest Mouse, The Shins, and above all, Jack White/The White Stripes (Jack had a part in an astounding 8 albums this decade – 5 from the White Stripes, 2 from the Raconteurs, 1 from The Dead Weather, and as producer on Loretta Lynn’s Van Lear Rose).

    Anyway, I hope you enjoy…

    25. Is This It by The Strokes – I don’t have the same relationship with this album that most music fans this decade do. It came out while I was on my mission, and by the time I got serious about music again the backlash had begun and these guys already appeared poised to flame out. However, once I got around to really investing time in this album, it was evident that they had created a guitar pop classic with several blistering singles.

    24. For Emma, Forever Ago by Bon Iver – how or why this album ended up on this list is still unclear (I didn’t even put it in my top ten its year of release). All I really know is that the first time I heard it I thought “great, more inoffensive folkie guitar strumming,” and then at some point I couldn’t stop listening to it. The most striking thing about this album for me is that empty, echo-y background sound that Justin Vernon captures. The melodies are all upfront being played on guitar, but these added elements in the production give the songs such an intense depth of sound and feeling of loneliness.

    23. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah – this album highlights the best aspect of music this decade: freed from the necessity to have the major outlets deliver music to the public, bands were allowed to make creative use of burgeoning technology to get their music to the marketplace. Everything about this album was DIY (release, promotion and distribution), and what resulted was an album that was a bit raw, but better for having escaped deliberate attempts at overproduction. No band sounded like they were having more fun than CYHSY did on this debut.

    22. Third by Portishead – in the 90s these guys put out two very well received albums that blended electronica, jazz and hip-hop influences into pop/rock. After the initial success of their first two albums, they strangely disappeared from music. When they reemerged a decade later on 2008’s Third, they had maintained their hallmark touches (dark atmospherics, trippy beats, and the always alluring vocals of Beth Gibbons), but managed to update their sound by going heavier on the electronics and lighter on the hip-hop flourishes (for example, no more record scratching). Great to have them back.

    21. Everything All of the Time by Band of Horses – one of the first bands to really popularize the new sound of Seattle this decade (bands like Fleet Foxes, Grand Archives and The Moondoggies would later follows suit), BofH debut captures a lot of the sound My Morning Jacket was developing in Kentucky: roots rock punctuated by heavily reverbed vocals. What they added to that sound on Everything All of the Time was lush harmonies and a greater pop sensibility.

    20. The Marshall Mathers LP by Eminem – the full realization of all Em’s talents. On his two previous albums he had shown an ability to be witty, sadistic, pensive, violent, erratic, and about everything in between. Here he blends it all together with his one-of-a-kind lyrical dexterity and restless creativity. One of hip hops true tour de force albums this decade.

    19. A Ghost Is Born by Wilco – the task of following up a career defining record (Yankee Hotel Foxtrot) is never an easy one, fortunately Wilco was up to the task. With lead guitarist Jay Bennett leaving the group, Jeff Tweedy assumed his role, and one of the great things about this album is the kind of frail beauty Tweedy’s lack of confidence as a lead guitarist gives the album. Here Wilco cover all their bases, from experimental (the krautrock jam Spiders with its motorik beat) to Beatles inspired pop (Hummingbird).

    18. Z by My Morning Jacket – MMJ has made several good albums, but Z contains their greatest artistic vision. Their early records are roots heavy guitar adventures, and on Z they take that basic template while considerably expanding the scope of their sound. In the way Wilco did on Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, MMJ transformed Americana tinged rock and bended it into something more exploratory and adventurous.

    17. The Glow, Part. 2 by The Microphones – with a little editing this could have ended up one of my very favorite records this decade. When Phil Elvrum nails it on this record, the results are spectacular songs with dense and intricate compositions that reveal their creative nuance on repeated listens. Between those songs he gets a little lost with instrumentals that don't necessarily further the aesthetic. But this album’s high points are just too good and too numerous to deny.

    16. Fleet Foxes by Fleet Foxes – along with Band of Horses, these guys were responsible for ushering in the new sound of Seattle in the first post-grunge decade (or at least making it popular, Carissa’s Wierd was probably the starting point). That sound, strangely enough, was about as far away from the sludge and riff heavy sound of grunge as you could get. Instead, on the Fleet Foxes debut we were treated to pastoral sounds and gorgeous harmonies. Most had pegged these guys as a band to watch, but I think few were expecting such a fully developed album on their debut.

    15. Vespertine by Bjork – always a polarizing figure (she tends to truly be one of those love her/hate her type artists), Vespertine is Bjork’s most overtly sexual album to date. The chilly production and icy beats are a stunning vehicle for what has always been her greatest gift: that ethereal and otherworldly voice.

    14. The Blueprint by Jay-Z – I mostly fell away from hip-hop in the past decade, but Jay was one of the artists I continued to follow. In his second offering of the new millennium, Jay laid to waste the competition and established himself as music’s most gifted MC. From top to bottom this is Hova at the top of his game, and the best rap album of the decade.

    13. Rounds by Four Tet – in many ways this album represents the definitive approach to music this decade, which to me has been the blending of organic and inorganic sound. On this album, Four Tet takes man-made fashioned folk and jazz, and seamlessly blends it with laptop created electro flourishes. The album could have easily been an interesting but unapproachable exercise in experimentalism if not for his gift for pop melodies that keep the music grounded.

    12. Hot Fuss by The Killers – admittedly this album has lost some luster for me over the years. Upon its release, I listened to it over and over and over, and at one point may have considered it among my favorite five or six albums this decade. However, recent listens haven’t been quite as revelatory as those early listens, despite the fact that this album finds the band at their retro-pop best.

    11. SMiLE by Brian Wilson – lost in the annals of music history for over 30 years, SMiLE grew to almost mythic proportions before anyone had ever heard it. Intended to be the band’s follow up to Pet Sounds and their answer Sgt. Peppers, Brian Wilson more or less went crazy during this album’s creation. It seemed doomed to be lost forever until Wilson resurrected the project in the early 2000s. What emerged is an incredible work of restoration, and an album that could have sounded dated but instead remains fresh and intriguing. It stands alongside Pet Sounds as among The Beach Boys/Brian Wilson’s best work.

    10. Boxer by The National – a band that was extremely consistent over its four offerings this decade, on Boxer they perfect their brand of sullen yet oddly anthemic rock. Matt Berninger’s deep baritone is the vehicle for elaborate tales about urban alienation. Every song is a gut-wrenching killer.

    9. Neon Bible by Arcade Fire – drawing heavily from the sonic grandeur of U2 (yikes!) and Bruce Springsteen, the band’s second album finds them questioning religion, life, and the expectations of adulthood. Working from the multi-instrumental approach they honed on their debut, Neon Bible moves the band into a bit darker sound with thrilling results.

    8. The Crane Wife by The Decemberists – at one point I really loved these guys, though my enthusiasm for them has since waned (I haven’t even listened to their 2009 release). However, this remains their high mark for me, with lead singer Colin Meloy weaving elaborate and literate tales based on Japanese folklore into the band’s classic folk-rock inspired sound.

    7. Merriweather Post Pavillion by Animal Collective – perhaps the definitive statement from the 2000s American underground, MPP is classic pop in the vein of the Beach Boys, albeit in an extremely esoteric package. Vocally and texturally one of the most thrilling albums I’ve ever heard, it once again proves that Panda Bear is the most innovative figure in current music when it comes to harmony arrangements.

    6. Sea Change by Beck – Beck’s career has essentially seen him divide into two different personas: the fun loving party hipster, and the more introspective singer-songwriter. Here the latter emerges with tales of love, loss and despair. With an assist from uber-producer Nigel Godrich, Beck’s sound gets the hollow and spacey touches for which Godrich is known. Never has the undeniably morose sounded so inviting.

    5. Demon Dayz by Gorillaz – essentially a band with one constant member – Blur frontman Damon Albarn – the other three “virtual” members are a rotating group of musicians that help Albarn follow various styles and pursue whatever might be his creative zeitgeist for that particular album. On this, the band’s second album, the conceptual theme of anti-violence is held together through an eclectic mix of hip-hop, Brit-pop, dubstep and rock. It all works together flawlessly.

    4. In Rainbows/Amnesiac/Hail to the Thief – outside of my top 3, I listened to these albums more than any others this decade (and really probably more than even no’s 2 and 3). Choosing Radiohead’s second best outing this decade is impossible for me, so they get to share a spot. In Rainbows is the most consistently brilliant of the three, but the highs of Amnesiac (Pyramid Song, You and Whose Army?, Life In a Glasshouse) and HTTT (There There, Where I End and You Begin) outshine even the best moments on In Rainbows.

    3. Funeral by Arcade Fire – an album that I didn’t find immediately striking, Funeral slowly revealed itself over many listens. What those listens yielded was an extremely layered sound courtesy of the band’s many members (at most times they number 7) and their army of instruments. An album recorded in the wake of several family deaths, Funeral reflects the mournfulness of loss and the exuberance of life.

    2. Yankee Hotel Foxtrot by Wilco – unsurprising that this album should find itself so high on my list, given that it is often dubbed “America’s Kid A” or “Kid A for the boots and flannel crowd.” While YHF is more rooted in traditional music structure than its British counterpart, it similarly finds the band moving into more abstract sounds. YHF is Wilco’s most experimental album to date, and also its best. The fact that the band’s label rejected this album -- only to see the band release it for free on its website and go on to become a critical smash and Wilco’s best commercial showing -- highlights how inept the record industry became in this decade.

    1. Kid A by Radiohead – so much has been written and said about this album it’s impossible to add anything to the discussion at this point, and it’s likely to come as close as any album to being a consensus best album of the decade. As is well known at this point, the band abandoned the three guitar sound they had honed on their first three albums, and basically recreated their sound from scratch. Venturing into dense textures and heavy dissonance, the band races through ambient electronica (Kid A, Treefingers), IDM (Idioteque), abstract jazz (the National Anthem), classical (How To Disappear Completely, Motion Picture Soundtrack) and more traditional rock/pop (Optimistic, Morning Bell). From its opening cascading keyboard line to its closing moments of silence, Kid A is a trip to a bold world where possibilities are endless and expectations are meant to be confounded. A difficult and demanding album, Kid A proved that music could still be boldly artistic and commercially successful.
    Last edited by MarkGrace; 11-14-2009, 05:07 PM.
    So Russell...what do you love about music? To begin with, everything.

  • #2
    I thought I would revive this thread because I don't think it got the attention it deserved.

    Your list is good, but I think you have some glaringly absent albums:

    You fail to include any White Stripes stuff. Jack White released something almost every year in this last decade. Besides being a hard working maniac, he makes really good music. Out of all of their stuff this decade, I would probably list Elephant as the best work from them, with Get Behind Me Satan as a close second. Elephant would probably be in my top 10.

    Also, no mention of Sufjan Steven's Illinoise. A beautiful album from beginning to end; part of a project that will never be complete. The concept on its face doesn't seem particularly broad enough to cover really good music, but Stevens makes it work.

    No Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots by The Flaming Lips. This album resurrected them and brought a psychedelic/tech groove that was pretty influential on later sounds. Besides that, it's got great music. IIRC, Do You Realize is now the state song of Oklahoma.

    I get that you have Is This It low on your list because you didn't really experience it like a lot of people did, but when this cd exploded on the scene when I was a senior in HS it brought a sound that was totally different from what was being played around on almost any modern rock station. The end of the 90's and beginning of the 00's brought a bloated sound embodied by groups like Staind, Disturbed, Limp Bizkit, etc. Not a high point for most casual rock listeners. Is This It brought a clean, stripped down version of rock that hearkened back to a pop/punk aesthetic that had dropped off the map. A solid record from start to finish (in 35 mins!) that helped usher out some truly bad stuff.

    Comment


    • #3
      Thanks IJ, I missed it the first time around, even though I was waiting for it.

      Gracie, this is good work. Certainly less geeky . At first I was shocked that you had In Rainbows/Amnesiac/HTTT at three but had (apparently) left Kid A off the list. I was shocked, and then I was angry. But I decided to keep reading anyway, and to my delight, you weren't so boneheaded after all!

      I think I agree with most of your selections, or at least I agree that they should probably be in the mix. I probably would have made a few different selections, but this is the sort of thing that's difficult to argue.
      Ain't it like most people, I'm no different. We love to talk on things we don't know about.

      Dig your own grave, and save!

      "The only one of us who is so significant that Jeff owes us something simply because he decided to grace us with his presence is falafel." -- All-American

      "I know that you are one of the cool and 'edgy' BYU fans" -- Wally

      GIVE 'EM HELL, BRIGHAM!

      Comment


      • #4
        Nice to see Beck's Sea Change so high on your list. One of my favorites of the decade as well.

        Comment


        • #5
          What about some love for Muse? I would think Black Holes and Revelations would be on there.
          Ain't it like most people, I'm no different. We love to talk on things we don't know about.

          Dig your own grave, and save!

          "The only one of us who is so significant that Jeff owes us something simply because he decided to grace us with his presence is falafel." -- All-American

          "I know that you are one of the cool and 'edgy' BYU fans" -- Wally

          GIVE 'EM HELL, BRIGHAM!

          Comment


          • #6
            Thanks for giving YHF the credit it deserves. A friend had given me a copy of it and I had never heard of Wilco. I put the album in one day at work and listened to it all the way through but I could only have it on low volume since I didn't have earphones. Later that week I listened to it while running with earphones and it was amazing. The tones in that album are extraordinary. It seems every note/tone was put in a specific place and the placement is perfect. It is one of my favorite albums of all time.
            "Discipleship is not a spectator sport. We cannot expect to experience the blessing of faith by standing inactive on the sidelines any more than we can experience the benefits of health by sitting on a sofa watching sporting events on television and giving advice to the athletes. And yet for some, “spectator discipleship” is a preferred if not primary way of worshipping." -Pres. Uchtdorf

            Comment


            • #7
              You fail to include any White Stripes stuff. Jack White released something almost every year in this last decade. Besides being a hard working maniac, he makes really good music. Out of all of their stuff this decade, I would probably list Elephant as the best work from them, with Get Behind Me Satan as a close second. Elephant would probably be in my top 10.
              The whole time I was making the list, I kept thinking "I can't believe I don't anything from Jack White on here." In fact, I did note that up front:

              Also lamentable is the fact that several bands with very consistent output this decade did not make the list. Principal among them are Kings of Leon (their most recent album notwithstanding), Spoon, Okkervil River, Junior Boys, The Hold Steady, The Clientele, Modest Mouse, The Shins, and above all, Jack White/The White Stripes (Jack had a part in an astounding 8 albums this decade – 5 from the White Stripes, 2 from the Raconteurs, 1 from The Dead Weather, and as producer on Loretta Lynn’s Van Lear Rose).
              I thought about including Elephant -- which is my favorite White Stripes album, followed by Get Behind Me Satan -- but ultimately I don't love the entire thing enough to get it on a list of 25. Had I expanded it out, I would have got them in there somewhere. Songs like Seven Nation Army and Ball and Biscuit are some of the most blistering and flat out badass rock made this decade, but at some point on every album they get just a little too cutesy for me.

              No Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots by The Flaming Lips. This album resurrected them and brought a psychedelic/tech groove that was pretty influential on later sounds. Besides that, it's got great music. IIRC, Do You Realize is now the state song of Oklahoma.
              I've heard Yoshimi, and I like it, but I just don't looooove the Flaming Lips. And I know that's strange, because in theory they should be a band that I love, but I just can't get myself there. Not sure why.

              Also, no mention of Sufjan Steven's Illinoise. A beautiful album from beginning to end; part of a project that will never be complete. The concept on its face doesn't seem particularly broad enough to cover really good music, but Stevens makes it work.
              Also heard this one, but never paid enough attention to it. I'm guessing my experience would have be similar to that of For Emma (ie. didn't really grab me at first, but if I stuck with it it probably would have grown on me immensely).
              So Russell...what do you love about music? To begin with, everything.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by MarkGrace View Post
                Also heard this one, but never paid enough attention to it. I'm guessing my experience would have be similar to that of For Emma (ie. didn't really grab me at first, but if I stuck with it it probably would have grown on me immensely).
                You should go back to this album, its really fantastic. If i were weighing For Emma, Forever Ago and Illinois, Illinois would definitely tip the scales.
                Ain't it like most people, I'm no different. We love to talk on things we don't know about.

                Dig your own grave, and save!

                "The only one of us who is so significant that Jeff owes us something simply because he decided to grace us with his presence is falafel." -- All-American

                "I know that you are one of the cool and 'edgy' BYU fans" -- Wally

                GIVE 'EM HELL, BRIGHAM!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by SteelBlue View Post
                  Nice to see Beck's Sea Change so high on your list. One of my favorites of the decade as well.
                  Another album I'm indebted to my father for turning me onto. I knew Beck's 90s albums pretty well, and have some of his this decade, but I never really listened to Sea Change until my old man really started pushing me to do so.
                  So Russell...what do you love about music? To begin with, everything.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Very interesting. I have yet to crystallize my thoughts on this, but there are several on that list that are contenders for me. I'll have more to say on this later.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by falafel View Post
                      What about some love for Muse? I would think Black Holes and Revelations would be on there.
                      Looking over the list there are some notable admissions. With limited spots available, some records that I really enjoyed were left off the list (Black Holes and Revelations by Muse, Turn On the Bright Lights by Interpol, Think Tank by Blur, Give Up by The Postal Service, Person Pitch by Panda Bear, The Animal Years by Josh Ritter, Veckatimest by Grizzly Bear, et al.).
                      It's another one of those that was right on the cusp of my 25, and would have been next up on the list had I expanded it.
                      So Russell...what do you love about music? To begin with, everything.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by UtahDan View Post
                        Very interesting. I have yet to crystallize my thoughts on this, but there are several on that list that are contenders for me. I'll have more to say on this later.
                        Since you are starting to listen to more electronica (good on ya!), I can't stress enough how much I want you to hear Rounds by Four Tet. Soooo incredible.
                        So Russell...what do you love about music? To begin with, everything.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by MarkGrace View Post
                          It's another one of those that was right on the cusp of my 25, and would have been next up on the list had I expanded it.
                          Oops. I guess I just couldn't wait to get to the actual list and jumped over it.
                          Ain't it like most people, I'm no different. We love to talk on things we don't know about.

                          Dig your own grave, and save!

                          "The only one of us who is so significant that Jeff owes us something simply because he decided to grace us with his presence is falafel." -- All-American

                          "I know that you are one of the cool and 'edgy' BYU fans" -- Wally

                          GIVE 'EM HELL, BRIGHAM!

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by MarkGrace View Post
                            I've heard Yoshimi, and I like it, but I just don't looooove the Flaming Lips. And I know that's strange, because in theory they should be a band that I love, but I just can't get myself there. Not sure why.
                            I suggest spending a little more time with Yoshimi and throw At War With the Mystics in the mix. AWWTM doesn't get the attention it deserves, imo. It is almost a parallel to Hail to the Thief, at least conceptually.

                            Also, your list gives too much Radiohead love with the triple-combo coming in at #4, but since this is a personal list I won't hate on that too much

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I suggest spending a little more time with Yoshimi and throw At War With the Mystics in the mix. AWWTM doesn't get the attention it deserves, imo. It is almost a parallel to Hail to the Thief, at least conceptually.
                              Sounds good.

                              Also, your list gives too much Radiohead love with the triple-combo coming in at #4, but since this is a personal list I won't hate on that too much
                              Yeah, I couldn't figure out to do with the Radiohead albums (I almost put Thom's solo album in there as well), since any way you cut it I just listened to these far more than other albums this decade. Fortunately all four of their albums are showing pretty well, so I didn't feel that uncomfortable doing it. Both Kid A and In Rainbows are landing in about every top 20 I've seen so far, and Amnesiac placed in Pitchfork's top 35 and HTTT in a top 100 I saw the other day. These are music publications that are trying to be a bit more objective than I am, so I didn't feel bad about the overinclusion Also, I am quite undecided about which of the 3 I like most -- my opinion on that could vary by day.

                              With Wilco, Arcade Fire, and Radiohead, these are my three favorite bands by far and each got multiple listings. I was worried about having three bands taking up 6 of 25 spots, but in the end these albums are just really what I love, even if it would have been easy to cut out something like A Ghost Is Born in favor of Turn On the Bright Lights.
                              So Russell...what do you love about music? To begin with, everything.

                              Comment

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