See previous posts for:
10. Kanye West – My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
9. Arcade Fire – The Suburbs
8. Women – Public Strain
7. Pomegranates – One of Us
6. Deerhunter – Halcyon Digest
5. Surfer Blood – Astro Coast
Part 3:
4. Caribou – SwimI recognize that I am predisposed to love Dan Snaith’s (aka Caribou) music. Ever since 2003’s Up in Flames made me weak in the knees (read: ears), I’ve anticipated and mostly cherished each release since as if it were nectar from the gods. Swim threw me for a bit of a loop, though. I didn’t anticipate the mutation of Snaith’s song sense toward a dance-ier, more angular direction as in tunes like “Found out” and “Sun.” What I’ve enjoyed so much about past Caribou albums is the saturation of melody. Songs like “Desiree” or the more psychedelic “Hendrix with KO” pushed the melodic elements to their limits. Restraint, or, perhaps more precisely, standoffishness, did not appear much in Snaith’s repertoire before. Upon hearing the first single, “Odessa,” I was skeptical about an entire album of this “watery dance music” (as Snaith has aptly called it). Later, after several listens through, I found that the more economical sound of the dance-ier tracks like “Sun,” “Leave House,” and “Odessa” left room for the more melodic-leaning tracks to stand out. “Kaili” swirls colorfully, growing and retreating, dancing between the ears, yet always spinning away. Listening to the “chorus” in headphones is an out-of-body experience, and the entrance of the saxophone near the end does inexplicable things to my body: I twitch, I shake my head, I squirm, I breath deeper… exhaling now – anything to FEEL all of this song. It may be my favorite song of the year. My hair stands on end; chills spring up and down my spine. “Lalibela” meditates further on “Kaili”s excellent melody. “Jamelia” reaches similar heights, climbing upward, surging chaotically before suddenly receeding. I cannot explain my connection to Snaith’s music, but it almost always makes sense to my ears. It gets me, and I it.
Must hear: “Kaili” Other highliths: “Odessa,” “Sun,” “Leave House,” “Jamelia”
3. Fang Island – Fang Island
“Fun” is not a word I have ever associated with shredding prog-metal bands, but there’s no mistaking the significance of the distant snapcrackling of fireworks as the album begins: Fang Island are here to celebrate. Fang Island have described their music as “everyone high-fiving everyone.” Pick any song here, and you’ll listen to a moment or two that made me jump off my couch, whip my air guitar around my back, catch that air guitar and go down on my knees in total RAWK OUT MODE. It’s an instinctual reaction. This album was made for guitar hero; it makes you feel like a rock star. I tried to control this response, but no: traveling with the fam in the car during the holidays did not stop Fang Island from sending my entire body into rock out mode alone in the back seat. Yes, I am 28. Yes, my parents asked what was going on, but I don’t think the metal fists I showed them really said much. You try listening to this circus of high-flying guitar shredding, death-defying drumming and lion-taming jams. It’s not hard to imagine the band smiling their way through all ten tracks. The only speed they know is EPIC-speed. Tenacious D must love these guys. Let there be rock.
Must hear: “Welcome Wagon” Other highlights: “Daisy (fav video of the year) ” “Sideswiper,” “Davey Crockett”
2. Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Before Today

Hey hey hey hey, a lot of those albums would show up on my top 10.. Hot chip is good stuff! I like how much \”brotherhood\” is part of that album. And who can argue with the dance groove!? 😉
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