Month: December 2010 Page 3 of 4

2010 in Music: #12 Los Campesinos! – Romance is Boring

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[#8-12 on this countdown are basically tied. I’ve put them in order of release date.]

When I saw Los Campesinos! in late 2009, I lamented to Gareth that they’d released both Hold On Now, Youngster and We are Beautiful, We are Doomed in 2008, and that their next one wasn’t scheduled until February 2010, leaving me unable to put any Los Camp! on my 2009 Best Of list. His response: “But see, the new one is all set to be your favorite of the 2010s, the whole decade.” Well, it won’t quite make that, but I pretty much love everything Los Campesinos! does, and Romance is Boring is no exception.

All of LC!’s albums are pretty much of a piece; you’ll find the same manic orchestration and vocals, the same clever, intellectual, self-pitying lyrics (with just enough irony and humor to keep them from being hopelessly annoying), and the same nearly cacophonous sound that somehow resolves into something awesome. But you’ll also find a growing maturity and experimentation with other sonic planes, on some songs more than others, but especially on “The Sea is a Good Place to Think About the Future,” which has absolutely heartrending lyrics and music to go with them.

I’ve moved this album up and down on the list a lot – I get tempted to move it down simply because other than a few glimpses of evolution in certain songs, it is so very similar to their other albums (I can almost literally put all three on random and not know which album any given song is from immediately), but then I listen to it again and realize I still love listening to it a lot, similar or no. It’s liable to move up and down in my estimation a lot more. But overall, I love LC! to pieces, and this album does nothing to change that.

2010 in Music: #13 She & Him – Volume Two

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DISCLAIMER: I have a huge girlcrush on Zooey Deschanel. On the other hand, I liked but didn’t love Volume One – it was one that I enjoyed listening to but never really captured me beyond being pleasant background music. I pretty much assumed that Volume Two would be the same way, but bought it anyway because pleasant retro music is often welcome.

Then a couple of months ago a few of the songs got randomly stuck in my head and I ended up listening to the album on repeat for days. Since then I’ve gone back and gained more appreciation for Volume One, but I do think Volume Two is a more assured, more confident effort from Zooey and M. Ward. They’re growing into their style, doing some really catchy originals and some really attractive covers.

Retro stylings have been a big thing this year in LA indie rock, and She & Him have definitely managed to carve out their own niche even among all the other retro bands – they wouldn’t sound out of place in a 1960s film, but there’s a great freshness and immediate exuberance to Zooey’s vocals and Matt’s arrangements. The album didn’t grab me immediately, but it’s the kind that worms its way into my head and gleefully refuses to leave.

2010 in Music: #14 Charlotte Gainsbourg – IRM

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#14. Charlotte Gainsbourg – IRM

Charlotte Gainsbourg is pretty well-respected as an actress, and that’s primarily how I’ve thought of her up until now – I’m especially a fan of her magnificent and horrifying turn in Antichrist – but she’s also fairly established as a singer. I’ve kind of known that in the back of my head for a while, but for some reason never thought to check out her music career until this year, likely when one of the music blogs posted the video for “Time of the Assassins” (see below). I’m very glad I finally got around to it.

IRM is a bit off the track from what I usually listen to, with unusual rhythms and melodies, yet even the tracks that I would consider quite outside my usual comfort zone (like the title track with its spare but almost overpowering percussive elements) somehow capture me and won’t let go. Tracks like “Time of the Assassins” had me instantly with the lush instrumentation and evocative melody. I can’t say all the songs connect with me totally, but throughout them all Charlotte’s voice is such a lovely combination of fragility and determination that it’s hard to turn your attention away from it. Much like Charlotte the actress in that way.

2010 in Music: #15 Kathryn Calder – Are You My Mother?

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So there’s this thing where I’m dumb and masochistic and decided that instead of doing one post listing my favorite ten or fifteen albums of the year, I’m going to do A POST EVERY DAY until the end of the year, each one highlighting the next in my list of favorites. This may not end well. But I’m excited about the idea right now, so I have to try. Since I’m posting them all separate instead of as a huge list, I’ll note the trends I noticed here: 1) Bands I’ve loved for a long time coming out with new albums I love as much or more than their previous work. No slackers or disappointments this year, really. 2) New or new-to-me bands coming out of nowhere and overwhelming me with awesome. Last year only one album snuck on my list at the end of the year; this year several did. 3) Canadian and Los Angeles bands. Even LA bands I didn’t know where LA bands until I became a fan, so I can’t credit it to hometown bias. 4) Female singers. That’s been pretty constant with me for a few years, though. Okay, let’s get to it!

#15. Kathryn Calder – Are You My Mother?

Kathryn-Calder.jpgKathryn Calder is often relegated to status as “the girl in The New Pornographers who isn’t Neko Case,” but that’s hardly fair. She’s also their full-time keyboardist, backup singer all the time, sings Neko’s parts on tour when Neko can’t join them, and on the last couple of albums has done a lot of second and first vocals of her own. She may not have Neko’s brazen power, but she’s got a lovely voice and certainly deserves the greater prominence that The New Pornos are starting to give her.

Releasing her first solo album this year can only help with her reputation, because it’s a very fine debut that foregrounds both her pure vocals and her substantial piano skills, while being so vastly different in sound from The New Pornos that it allows her to establish her own songwriting style and sound.

The opening track “Slip Away” (also the first single) is a great example of the rest of the album – it starts off very quiet and spare with a single piano line and vocal backed by hand claps as percussion, then moves into an exuberant and fully orchestrated chorus of pure vocals, no words. Moving back and forth between these two is exhilarating, and Kathryn handles both with ease, as she will handle both wildly uptempo songs like “Castor and Pollux” and very self-contained numbers through the rest of the album. Overall it’s a pretty light and poppy album, but with enough subtle melancholia that it feels perfect for those days when you’re enjoying a cup of hot cocoa and watching the rain drip down the window.

Plus the videos so far are wonderful animated affairs (in different styles), both starring the same bunny that appears on the album cover. I kind of hope they do videos for the rest of the songs and include the bunny in all of them. That would be awesome.

The Films of 2010 Retrospective

There’s not much I love more than a well-done montage, and this is one of the best I’ve seen recently. A thematically and visually arranged collage of 2010 releases, both big and small, both good and not-so-good, giving a pretty comprehensive overview of the films of 2010 in a mere six minutes. And it’s truly a case where the whole becomes more than the sum of its parts, as the editor (genrocks on YouTube and Twitter) uses snippets of dialogue here and there to create a great thematic rhythm and at times almost a narrative of the year. This is some incredible work. There’s a full list of the films used here, but watch it first – it’s pretty cool to see how some of the clips you’ll recognize are used.

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