l0u1s jagg3r's 23 Best Songs Of The Decade!

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Songs, not albums. Don’t get me wrong; there will be an albums list at some stage, but it won’t get this treatment. Albums are written about, compared, dissected at the time of their release. The decade’s end only serves to herd up this criticism. Songs, however, are the self-contained, often elusive units which frequently slip by unnoticed, the unified documents of an artistic vision which demand close individual attention.

When writing about one’s 23 favourite songs of the decade, one must make a few difficult decisions. This can be illustrated by the fact that in my initial list, Hood’s track The Lost You was placed at number four, before slowly falling down and then out altogether as I realised that while it was an excellent bit of sampletastic art-pop, and while the noisy breakdown at the end was wonderfully managed, it was really quite a linear and unsurprising bit of music, one that had gotten into that position by nostalgic default, and which didn’t truly excite me any more (not to mention the fact that it didn’t measure up to Hood’s astonishing late-90’s output). Similarly, Spiritualized’s Won’t Get To Heaven (The State I’m In) barely squeezed into the initial line-up, before I gave it a few listens and realised that it was in fact completely irresistible.

What informs my approach to most music is narrative. I like a musical narrative to be strong, to be sophisticated, to challenge, surprise and delight me. More or less every single track here has an unorthodox, unique approach to songwriting. Most tracks here are unmistakeably their creator’s own work. Every artist featured has great integrity, resolve and originality. I have tried to order it according to how much I personally enjoy each song, but the qualitative decisions are flexible, and indeed some days, every track here can sound like the most righteous thing on Earth.

The majority of these tracks are pretty long, and require patience, not to mention repeat listens. Nonetheless, these are the songs which have settled in my mind as the most accomplished and fulfilling musical narratives produced this decade. If you would like to vote in the somewhat arbitrary poll I have provided, please feel free, but you are encouraged to somehow hear all the tracks which pique your interest first. If you would like, I may provide a Sendspace link or somesuch to requested songs. If you want to judge the tracks by the write-ups, feel free to do this also.

Above all, I am doing this to celebrate some masterful music which in all probability wouldn’t otherwise be celebrated in such a manner. I am aware that my tastes are often regarded as a little fruity; tonight I revel in this otherness, and provide a selection of songs which you may have heard some of, but most probably haven’t heard all of. They are without exception brilliant, and have not been chosen as part of a gratuitous and disingenuous desire to be different; they are l0u1s jagg3r’s 23 Best Songs Of The Decade, and they goddamn rock.

1) Ulrich Schnauss - On My Own (6.41) (2003)

This is the only conventional verse-chorus song in my entire list. It’s a clear and present attempt by Germany’s most geared-up Slowdive fan to write a straight-up club banger. But the thing about Ulrich Schnauss is that while he does not possess the crazed, original genius to revolutionise music as we know it, he is as devoted and caring a fan of the music that he likes as any in the business. He is not one of the intangible savants, he is one of us, and this song is for everyone. I cannot think of a single type of listener, a single musical taste, which would reject this piece of music. It is propulsive and instinctual. It is dense and layered. You can hear the love and attention to detail Schnauss imbues into every swoon, every flourish of his kaleidoscopic synthscape. The hooks are timeless, the production immaculate. Above all, On My Own has a killer pop narrative, all doubt, crescendo, and bittersweet release. And yet, I am not ranking it my Song Of The Decade because it is universal. I am ranking it so because I am obsessed with it, and will never grow tired of it. And because if it came on while I was dancing, I would go completely ballistic. I clearly need to visit the European mainland more often.

2) Cardiacs - Ditzy Scene (6.38) (2007)

Ah, Cardiacs. I won’t say much about them. They’re my favourite band. I think that even objectively speaking Tim Smith is the best songwriter of modern times, maybe the best pop songwriter ever. I wish him every benevolence in his ongoing recovery from heart-attack-induced brain damage. I treasure the moment I saw Cardiacs play the Astoria for the last time. I treasure the moment I actually got to embrace my hero and whisper into his ear that two of his albums are the best music that has ever been made. And above all, I treasure the fact that after an 8-year hiatus, Tim and friends put out a single which made a plain mockery of Cardiacs’ 30-year duration. Should a band who had been around since the 70’s have any right to release material which sounds this voracious, this mindbogglingly fresh? All I will say is that if they hadn’t, it would have been tremendously out of character. Fortunately, they do not care to let anybody down. Ditzy Scene is not simply another masterpiece; it is one of Cardiacs’ most substantial, thrilling songs. It is as ferocious in its attack as anything they’ve released, and practically as tuneful. It uses its beautiful 2-minute build masterfully, teasing and luring the listener, before with a genius’ instinct crashing down the walls, dazzling us with the sensory overload of bells, drums and female voices, all while the guitars vault into space. The tune, while cyclic, just seems to keep soaring. And the central solo is directly beamed to us from Paradise, I swear. I mean, it just plays the melody while a keyboard provides a simple counterpoint. But somehow it still sounds like the most righteous thing waveforms ever gave us. Bless this band.

3) Ulver – Christmas (6.15) (2005)

The best track on the best album. They didn’t play it at their first ever UK gig. Actually, they played the two least suitable songs from Blood Inside. They are tricky, uncompromising bastards, and it makes me love them even more. Blood Inside itself is a 45-minute descent into some inferno where music, religion, art, modernism, lore, confusion and humanity are collided at lightspeed and Kristoffer Rygg must somehow catch as much of the fallout as he can in his whirling arms. This song possesses one of the clearest and most powerful narratives on the album, partly because Rygg surrenders lyrical duties to a Portuguese modernist philosopher from the early 20th century, and partly because musically it seems to be built around the premise that no matter how much ass it is kicking at any one moment, it can really be kicking even more the next. Witness the pretty, twinkling intro. Those are not quite sleigh-bells; they’re more percussive, ominous; but they’re not far off. They are soon joined by a string-quartet, playing a beautiful, slight motif. The bells get tricksier. The rhythms blur. A melodic bell, more like a vibraphone, intrudes. It all gets too much. The song explodes. In a stunning transition, it becomes an impassioned avant-industrial vamp, all wail and thump, all violence and dread. This is just the start. You are encouraged to hear the rest. Then the rest of the album. Then the rest of Ulver’s astonishing discography. They are heroes, and what they perceive music as is precious.

4) Spiritualized - Won't Get To Heaven (The State I'm In) (10.33) (2001)

While I was thinking about my Top 23 entries, this is the one I spent the most time considering. Originally, I had it scraping in at number 20, dismissing higher claims on account of the fact it was an overblown gospel exercise, albeit one I unreservedly love. Then I listened to it a few times and just couldn’t ignore the fact that I loved it more than almost any other song you could care to name, or the fact that there are so many things to love about it. Religious devotion and music have always gone very well together. I may be a godless fiend, but faith has given so many creative individuals a focus upon which to concentrate their considerable powers. Not that this is simply the work of a particularly inspired Jason Pierce. He has a few folks alongside him, helping out. Actually, as a collaborative effort it is phenomenal. Not just the 100-piece orchestra. Not just the gospel choir. But look, Reg Dickaty, playing saxophone while seemingly possessed by angels. And look, Thighpaulsandra, being the secret weapon he must be while serving Pierce. However, the song is the star here, because it is a full rapture set to music. Rapture is a fascinating theme for music to take, because it is by nature an overblown, exhaustively expressive vision, and must somehow be matched by the exuberance, the unrelenting massiveness of its imitator. What rapture is also, however, is intelligible. It has the big, brash language of Christianity at its disposal. Won’t Get To Heaven (The State I’m In) uses the big, brash language of Christianity, and unlike Ulver, uses it in a completely unconflicted, forthright manner. Allow me to decipher. The song begins with a shaker, a ticking clock, and the ethereal outer-space synth-bloops of Mr Sandra himself. It is ambient, confused, directionless, floating in space as Spiritualized’s previous album hadn’t quite managed. Vibraphones. Swirls. Then, a piano motif. Unlike Ulver’s, it is wholly upbeat, positive. It is the opening of a flower. Enter guitars, enter a whole fucking orchestra, let commence a quite marvellous (and surprisingly airy) bit of gospel pop. Even at this early stage, one can sense the scale of the project, the army of musicians, the strength of Pierce’s conviction. He is begging to be let into heaven, and he thinks he can do it. This is some pretty damn serious stuff. But it is mellow, and comforting, rather than mindblowing or triumphant like a rapture ought to be. Then, without warning, the third verse is in three-time. No biggie. The tune gets a bit more yearning in this bit, but that is to be expected for a middle-eight. That is a middle-eight, right? The song’s gonna be four and a half minutes long, right? Wind chimes chime. The song slows. Thighpaulsandra’s keyboards bleep, screech and whirr in a decidedly unearthly manner. More of him later. It begins to sound more like it might be taking place in a space-station, where all the best raptures happen. One final chorus. “I believe my time ain’t long.” Still sounding a tad complacent. But then, turns out the song was four and a half minutes long, after all, but some higher power (who is probably called Thighpaulsandra, but more of him I promise very soon now) decided he’d let it go on a tad longer, under his own instructions. At exactly 4.30, Pierce’s guitar starts wailing; an unending, spaced-out drone. TPS’ keyboards emit a clinical pulse, at once pure and energising. The song doubles in speed. The backing vibraphone bass begins to undulate, thrillingly. Tension abounds. Dickaty begins to solo all over the song. He is the wild, unchained dancer at the back of the procession. He is always there. He is doing his own thing. It adds immeasurably to the experience, because he is exuding divine will. In this silly Rapture, he sounds like the most liberated musician on earth. Then, the choir comes back in, this time led by Pierce. “I’m hoping. Praying. Lord, I’m saying. I believe my time ain’t long.” Tens of people, all belting it out. And meaning it. It’s beautiful, this belief. And then, at the 7-minute mark, the unthinkable finally happens.

God appears.

And his name, as I’ve said, is Thighpaulsandra.

The tone TPS extracts from his synths at the 7-minute mark of this song is possibly the most holy tone anybody has extracted from any instrument ever. It’s such a jawdropping moment, Pierce even lets him have a full brass fanfare to introduce himself from. This fanfare is then repeated numerous times throughout the rest of the song, as if celebrating the fact that it still can and sound good doing so. This song is now in the fanfare paradigm. But that tone. God. And Pierce’s droning guitar. And the orchestra. And then the gospel choir comes BACK IN over the top. It’s too much. It’s Rapture. How do they end it? How can they end it? They’ve gotten to Heaven. How do they possibly end it? The strings take over. The song slowly retreats. The strings are playing something conciliatory, something humble. The guitar drones down, spins away into the sunset. A final fanfare. The chords now being played by the orchestra are darker, more elusive. Everything fades, retreats, beauty itself shuts down, the clouds merge again, but they merge over a saved man and a saved musical enterprise. The voices soften, to sleep. All that’s left is for Thighpaulsandra to make a few final bleeps, burbles, and swooshes. He has taken them to outer space; he might as well have the last word. But more of him…later.

5) Volcano! – Palimpsests (7.18) (2008)

This will be a slightly shorter entry than the previous one. Palimpsests has no obviously religious agenda, so I won’t be off on my metaphorical hobbyhorse. However, it concerns itself with the rather more corporeal concerns of everyday working life. I can confirm that Aaron With and his band are lovely, thoroughly intelligent people, and the moustachioed frontman contrives some truly stunning lyrical imagery, even as his three-piece maelstrom whips up a cathartic fury behind him. It comes from their 2nd album, Paperwork, which was up until its penultimate track a worthy but less challenging successor to their incendiary, brain-boiling debut, Beautiful Seizure. However, Palimpsests becomes their best track inside 7 runaway minutes. I would say ‘effortlessly’, but it is clearly a labour of love, a sort of two-part Bolero, somehow switching from 4-time to 3-time halfway through, whereupon the sad, austere morning glow becomes a full sunrise (it helps my lamentably revenant metaphorical cause that With is singing ‘son’ or ‘sun’ repeatedly at this point). Then, it launches into space on the back of Sam Scranton’s propulsive drumming, With’s ramshackle guitar lightning, and Mark Cartwright’s dazzling combination of keyboard bass and flickering electronic noise. The final roundelay is revelatory; With’s fevered exhortations to the worker become sermon; and oh shit sorry folks. Anyway, it ends by completely destroying itself in some sort of processed-beat sample hell, and THAT’S more the sort of religious symbolism these dybbuks might approve of.

6) The The – ShrunkenMan (4.55) (2000)

Matt Johnson has released quite a lot of music, most of it very good. When he released an album more than 20 years into his career, in the millennial aftermath, it was no surprise that it was an excellent suite of affecting love-songs, stern political rants, and industrial anguish. However, one song collected all three in one place, and by some bizarre alchemy wound up being one of the most righteous things anyone put out all decade. The narrative is gripping; no two verses are sung the same way, and the airy acoustic guitars are always offset with the gain and release of the menacing, droning, ever-threatening electric monsters. The beat is both organic and processed, sounding as natural as the weather and as controlled as Kraftwerk. The bassline is persistent in all the best ways. The lyrics are fantastic. The outro is wordlessly eloquent. And it ends with sleigh-bells! Real ones, this time.

7) Foetus – Kreibabe (12.53) (2001)

Ooh boy. This is probably the most controversial song in my Top 23 in the same way that Michael Vick is probably the most controversial man currently playing NFL. It’s the violent inner monologue of a paedophile, ferchrissakes. And yet, even as the first wavering “Is it too late to trade in my mind” filters in over the glockenspiel refrain of “Hush Little Baby” (a thoroughly menacing keyboard/cymbal sample loop has already started, and cruel electronic touches will be with us until the end), we realise that Jim Thirlwell, Aussie genius, has merely adopted another uncompromising persona. He stays in character throughout, and gives us probably his most psychologically devastating case-study yet. His lyrical duel with monstrous, chugging guitars is pure theatre. After a gripping, tumultuous 4-minute build-up, we see Hell. The guitars don’t retreat like they did before, but then explode into one of the most visceral refrains you could ever hear. And then Jim is back, screaming. When he yells what is according to the lyric-sheet “You were born to paedophile”, I prefer to think he is singing “You were born to be defiled”, because the pun is even more devastating that way. This aside, I cannot think of how the song could be more devastating. You see, after that assault (and it is an assault), the song still has seven minutes to run. I won’t go into them now. Suffice it to say that he attacks again, once, quickly, and then in the last third some extremely weird, sinister, and subtle things start happening. Jim Thirlwell is a master of electronic dread. He plays all the instruments. He is in command of his theatre, and the theatre is of the truly damned. There is no let-up. When he isn’t being as violent as the sword, he is as unsettling as the scabbard.

8) Kayo Dot - ___on limpid form (18.00) (2006)

Kayo Dot used to be maudlin of the Well, but Toby Driver who is by the way an extremely talented neo-classical composer decided that his band would stay metal but do it differently. He gave his girlfriend a more prominent role in the band, which never works unless you are Mark E Smith, and recorded Choirs Of The Eye, which was brilliant and revolutionary. However, Kayo Dot’s second album was if anything an even more interesting affair. This highly abstract, experimental form of metal, overdubbed and electronically processed into a studio creation for the initial record, was suddenly expected to flourish under recording circumstances that were as live as rehearsal and performance would allow. Usually I scoff at artists who consciously reject the studio process for a studio album, but in this instance, Driver was justified, because the work produced has a conceptual purity that in parts bewilders, in parts conquers. This song, the longest studio song Kayo Dot have released, does not merely conquer; it eviscerates. It slays. At first this is because Toby has written a beautiful slow-burning art-rock ballad about something or other (it is impossible to tell) with keynote contributions from his stunning(ly talented) girlfriend Mia on violin (she has not only chops but a truly out-there artistic sensibility to match Toby’s) and a host of characters on guitar, bass, horns, keyboards, and probably more. Yet for the first five minutes of the song, they are elegant, they are tasteful, and they are quiet.

Then, a thump. A hard chord. A hint of noise. Echoing feedback. More thumps. More feedback. Unpredictable rhythm. Evil chords. No longer elegant. Evil and developing. We are 6 minutes in now. The ordeal is about to begin. The song’s narrative unfolds a little like a descent into Hell. Plenty of the best songs’ narratives do. But not many of them spend 13 minutes taking you there, incrementally. To compare the amount of noise at the start of the journey to the amount at the end is stupid, however, because by the end, everyone except Toby has abandoned their instruments and is whacking a great big steel can in the middle of the studio with a different beat, as their great leader sends an incandescent guitar spiralling into feedback eternity. In between, we have a build-up as gradual as it is terrifying. I heard this on my iPod Shuffle once while walking through a city. I kept expecting it to change. It didn’t. It carried on down and down and down, pausing cruelly for seemingly longer each time before exploding (unless it decided to catch you unawares). The drumming became more infernally possessed. The noise more agonising. When you first hear that steel can, 13 minutes in, it seems nothing, but after three more people have joined in, it is Judgement.

9) Thighpaulsandra - Michel Publicity Window (26.58) (2001)

Nobody’s boss but his own now, Thighpaulsandra emerges from Jason Pierce’s tyrannical clutches and releases a debut solo album, I, Thighpaulsandra, which is over two hours long and listened to by approximately fifty people worldwide. You’d think being in both Spiritualized and Coil might count for more, but as I’ve said, he is a secret weapon. I, Thighpaulsandra should therefore be all secret weapon, should it not? It contains about 75 minutes of music I would describe as ‘utterly amazing’; three songs on Disc One are especially wondrous. Those three songs together last nearly an hour. Thighpaulsandra likes to stretch things out a little, you see. If I said that Michel Publicity Window (check that length!) wasn’t the longest track on the album, would you believe me? Because you’d be right to. Beneath The Frozen Lake Of Stars isn’t very good, but it is very long. Fortunately, the other behemoth (if the head-warping Lycraland and the Jhonn-Balance-featuring speed-sample-frightfest Optical Black don’t count as behemoths) is a work of priceless art. It’s also a fucking phenomenal pop song. That’s right. There is a truly brilliant bit of classical pop in here. You just have to wait eleven minutes to hear it. Then you have to stick around for twelve minutes afterwards. But it really wouldn’t be the same on its own. He sings about a bolshy-but-directionless young gay man in some sort of exploitative, shamanistic adult world. He has already given us a narcotic, ambient build-up hewn from synth-tones he created on Cloud Nine (he is good at synth-tones), all burbling, droning elegance, pulsing tectonically amid gentle modulations, while the occasional blurt permeates the mist. And then…a propulsive keyboard riff fades nobly in, a slightly more quixotic synth-bass fades in beneath, and we have our pop-song (even as the intro swoons onward, inexorable, glorious, enormous, putting Michel into perspective). The chorus even features rehearsal-room piano, playfully immediate as the musical subconscious pulses astronomy. After that it gets a bit weird and things turn nasty. Screams. Electronics protesting. Schism. Stasis. Ritual murder. Dark Masonic rite in what Sir Viv Stanshall might have called ‘Stockhausen tongues’. Travel there. It is the fullness of consciousness. It is Michel’s life from every angle. It is to be experienced.

10) Shining - In The Kingdom Of Kitsch You Will Be A Monster (5.40) (2007)

Jazz insanity corner. Hard-rock fuckabout album-opening same-title-as-the-previous-album staccato blaring synths drums-down-stairs insanity corner. Then, after beating us about the head and neck, a loping, piss-takingly assured verse. James Bond theme done by mad Norwegians with all the musical talent a person could want. Sirens. Bleeps. Electronics. Feedback. That loping verse. They taunt you. They are fifteen steps ahead of your mind. They have probably listened to some Cardiacs, some King Crimson, and some goddamn weird inner voices. It slows down again. The Mars Volta don’t get that this is how you structure chaos. The narrative is cruel, calculated, wild. This has been composed by people. Riffs at every angle. Woodwind. Woodwind! Electronics. One of the all-time basslines. Retreat, attack. Scant regard for 4/4. Theatrics. Heroics. All over too soon, but just the right length. What the fuck was that? Utterly indefatigable.

11) Lapsus Linguae - The Terse Crimp (3.44) (2002)

Nick Southall started a thread about songs which are ‘rooms with many doors’ and Mares Nest suggested Lapsus Linguae. I hadn’t heard them, so I bought their now-largely-forgotten mini-album. It’s 32 minutes long and basically slays. Anyway, the shortest song is The Terse Crimp, which is odd, because The Terse Crimp also has by far the most going on of all of them. I cannot overstate just how demented this fucking piece of music is. Made by four young Shellac enthusiasts with an aptitude for classical piano and composition, with some of the most aggressively intelligent lyrics Scotland has ever produced (Biffy Clyro? Haaaaaa), it begins with an electronic beat and an ominous little concerto, with some bleepy percussion. Then it launches into a fat, stupid bass pulse. Then Shellac enter the fray, and the guitars bite. The song speeds up. The piano starts to disintegrate. All is noisy. The song changes again. Slows down. So that it can speed up again. So that it can speed up ludicrously. Then back to the first bit. Speed up again. Then the concerto. Then a different bass pulse. Then the concerto, as played by squealing guitars, still ominous, still infected with a kind of righteous zeal. Then a kind of strange middle-eight bit with a taunting sing-song refrain. Then another bit with a catchy hook. The song slows down for about 10 seconds. At which point the singer yells “Kill! Kill! Die! Die!” and the catchy bit comes back except this time with unearthly synths. Then an outro where the faster verse is played back slowly in the background as distorted deep voices grunt. And then speed up. It is less than four minutes long. But, you ask, does it WORK? Ah, well you’ll have to find out for yourself. I’ll just say this. Whenever I hear it, the words ‘oh shit, this is REALLY HAPPENING’ flash into my head. It’s like watching a train-crash unfold in real-time. It’s no attention-seeking post-hardcore whinge. It’s genuine mania. The narrative, need I add, is that of some guilty Catholic lads discovering that they can smash the oppressor and self-flagellate at once.

12) Oceansize – Savant (8.07) (2007)

Oceansize are a great band who cannot quite make the big break their relatively populist art-rock deserves. If they do have a torch-song, this, from their brilliant third album Frames, surely deserves to be it. Message to bedwetters everywhere: you will never evoke a cloudless sky, a romantic escape, an instant of pure musical bliss with anything like the same grace which a single bar of this song possesses; I recommend you use Brian Eno more or something I dunno stop looking at me am I some kind of music doctor? Christ. Anyway, it really is a song of wide mental expanses, clear air and wistful thoughts. The sound is king here, more than melody or structure or performance; it is quite mellow by Oceansize’s often volcanic standards, but still massive in scope and almost unbearably beautiful. They use an odd time-signature at first, evoking elusive elegance, but halfway through, a chanted refrain adds certainty to the fluff, before being joined by skyscraping guitar and lapsing into a full-blooded yell from charismatic frontman Mike Vennart. This leads to a cycle where the chanted refrain is once more repeated, with feeling, and an orchestral breakdown takes us along a well-worn but completely righteous path. The song’s narrative earns its ornate pay-off, still soaring even as the guitars and drums fade away, leaving only a string-quartet which suddenly cuts off, stilling a heart which for eight minutes beat with ineffable valence.

13) Deathspell Omega - The Repellent Scars Of Abandon And Election (11.42) (2007)

Black metal was based on certain strict principles, such as screechingly loud guitar, ferocious blastbeat drumming, howled vocals, and dark religious subject-matter. It rapidly grew dull, so it was nice to see a few bands such as DSO fucking with the formula. Why, this song contains a kazoo quartet, and a Stylophone. It contains three marimba players in different tunings. There is a seven-minute digression involving piccolos. The way they integrate electronic beats into the percussion is truly humbling. Actually, it contains screechingly loud guitar, ferocious blastbeat drumming, howled vocals, dark religious subject-matter, and approximately fifteen megatons of manic malevolent kickass ‘tude. And hey – check out those last four minutes. That riff! That groove! The way it disintegrates! Holy god. The lyrics are all in English and the poor French guy can’t say half the words but it doesn’t matter because he is singing ridiculously intellectual Bataille-inspired theological argument. It may use all the tools of good old black metal, but it sounds more dissonant, more crazed, more unpredictable than anything else that genre produced. It’s about as prog as black metal can get without eating itself, but the ride is thrilling, bludgeoning, fearsome. Listen to it and tell me that modern black metal is boring. Oh ok, maybe there’s a piano in there SOMEWHERE. God.

14) My Computer - Pulling Myself Together (9.27) (2005)

My Computer were a brilliant failure, a devastating success. They were a two-piece band who fell apart spectacularly amid drug abuse, mutual loathing, poverty and despair. They were an acoustic singer-singwriter and a techno whizz, each as desperate as the other, and their dynamic was absolutely unique in the annals of rock music. They sang about drug culture, rave culture, working-class culture, break-ups, survival and destruction. Their songs were started by the songwriter and then twisted into horrendous corruptions by the whizz. This is the best of them all (a nose ahead of 2002’s All I Really Wanted Was A Good Time which is also over 9 minutes long and has probably the best title of any first track on a debut album ever) and it’s practically VDGG-esque in the manner it symphonically runs rampant over youthful emotion. Starting off as a beautiful acoustic ballad, about how ‘we have a future, I’m sure’ then ‘into my future I slide’, accompanied by pathos-ridden Vocodered backing echoes and eventually the most exquisite treated-guitar squelches, it reaches ecstacy after about 4 minutes before plunging into the inferno. First we are treated to a lovely albeit pessimistic piano aria, backed with keening electronics, before the horrors of life are revealed in all their sincere glory; the track descends into a breathless techno car-chase, all bleeping sirens, racing strings and desperate machine voices. And then, at the last, after everything has subsided, a new acoustic guitar-line is played, halting, staccato, on the cusp of vanishing entirely, as the singer concludes that ‘we have no future’. Then, a final synth wash, and twenty seconds of terrified silence. As a statement of existentialist dread and bathos, it’s amazing. As a tale of doomed artistic tension, it’s practically unbeatable. They split immediately after this record. The songwriter, Andrew Chester, recorded one more album under the My Computer name, a solo record called No Computer, and the whizz, David Luke, was barely heard from again. This is the legacy of a manic marriage that probably shouldn’t have happened, and we must be grateful for it.

15) Working For A Nuclear Free City - Nancy Adam Susan (5.58) (2007)

I described this as ‘timeless erotic space-poetry’ once and the aforementioned Nick Southall responded with ‘Fuck the heck, Louis’ but I would like to point out I was OTM in that post. Coming towards the end of Businessmen & Ghosts, WFANFC’s definitive double-length release, this is a three-part trip into something truly euphoric. Fading in amid samples and ethereal keyboards, it suddenly plunges into a guitar-riff as wide as the morning sky, as piercing as a sunbeam, underpinned by a quite lovely bassline. Then, we have the second ambient section, which contains a host of wordless voice-samples, all keening for some sort of communal contact, unable to express how happy this music is making them. The voices fade, the music swirls, and a descending drum-intro inevitably leads us down into a repeat of the riff, which is just as glorious upon second inspection. Then, something interesting happens. Leading us out of the second ‘chorus’ is a sort of club pulse, a subaquatic heart-monitor bleep which underpins a belated vocal section. WFANFC’s vocalist sings a fuzzy mantra (‘electric behaviour, generic procedure, this is your life’) about state control or freedom or something, all 8 lines of it, before we plunge into the third rendition of the riff, which is no longer the riff, but a pounding electro beat, and more wordless voices, this time sounding in gear with the music, energised, massed for action. It ends with a sample, and a discreet fade, and leaves the listener thoroughly sated. What’s with the title, though? Initially I thought each name applied to each section of the music (its subtitle is ‘Triptych’). Now I’m just confused. Maybe it’s a Thighpaulsandra tribute? Ah, would that that were so.

16) Super Furry Animals - (Drawing) Rings Around The World (3.30) (2002)

This isn’t SFA’s first song about telecommunications, but it’s the best, which is quite an achievement given the joyously anthemic qualities possessed by 1999’s Wherever I Lay My Phone (That’s My Home). Predicated on the discovery that if you have the catchiest fucking surf bassline ever, you can get away with ANYTHING and it’ll still be an enormous whopping great pop-song, this, quasi-title-track of the decade’s best and most forward-thinking pop album, is the band’s zenith, simplicity housing astounding sophistication. It fades in amid squeals, drones and garbled mass-communication, updating its predecessor’s synth sparkle into sampledelic mayhem. It has a verse-chorus structure, yes, but with one double-length verse, then one double-length chorus, then one extended outro. It doesn’t need any more. The main difference between the verse and the chorus is the stupidly brilliant bassline, which changes from tension to resolution in the blink of an eye while guitars, synths and samplers screech, hover, gargle and soar. There’s something so dynamic, so energising about the background instrumentation; it’s orchestrated with minuscule precision, each pitch-bend and blip timed with masterful tact. In the chorus, the vocals become even more manic, there’s a completely awesome keyboard solo with a terrific vibrato setting, and then everything collapses into the fading mess of satellites, conversations, mixed languages and incomprehension orbiting the planet, samples on top of samples even as the resolved bassline spirals out into the black. There haven’t been many hit singles conveying this much chaos, this much absently joyful oblivion, and barely any which have sounded this vibrant.

17) The Fiery Furnaces - Chris Michaels (7.54) (2004)

I refer to ‘narrative’ in quite a few of these write-ups, usually metaphorically. In this case, it’s apt in a good number of ways. 2004’s Blueberry Boat had its detractors, but it’s an astonishing record, a no-holds-barred voyage into the Friedberger siblings’ kaleidoscopic imagination (I hesitate to say ‘imaginations’). This is one of the poppier songs on the album, which is frequently a baffling listen to uninitiated explorers, but it’s still a headfuck. In the best possible way, as the terrible two take us on an extremely bizarre trip involving India, time-travel, break-ups, credit-card theft, and all the other things you’ll have read about in the reviews. They also hit us with about 6 different indelible hooks, they hire a truly excellent drummer to play some truly excellent hard-rock fills, and they make the whole thing flow like a spring brook. There are a whole host of potential ‘best bits’ but the moment where Eleanor sings ‘We’re on the top of a Naracan dam’ as not only the song’s best hook recommences but a bleepy, almost subliminal synth-wibble begins in the background is absolutely roof-raising. For me, at least. Choice of my favourite song on BB has wavered, but this has emerged as the most focused and thrilling demonstration of the rangy storytelling mayhem our Fieries never quite topped, despite some admittedly cracking later efforts.

18) Chrome Hoof – Tonyte (5.31) (2007)

This band is the kind of ‘indescribable’ band which is actually highly describable. They are a 10+ piece dance-metal act featuring violinists, horn players, two dudes who used to be in doom outfit Cathedral, a truly demented female singer, guitarists, keyboardists, and a 10-foot goat-demon. They are from London and play a mixture of doom-pop and disco-prog. They don’t half-ass any of their influences. They’re REALLY doom when they want to be, and REALLY disco too. Often at the same time. Tonyte has a 3-minute build-up, all racing beat, echoing saxes, and ultra-funky bass. The breakdown into the verse, when it comes, features some of the best synth-pad disco effects you’ll hear, some truly inspired drumming, and oh fuck what is that bassist ON. It’s pure funked-up metal sex. Then the singer opens her mouth and we go up a notch. We get TWO run-throughs of the verse, just to delay gratification even longer. Then at last, the chorus. One review described the choral refrain as sounding like ‘Oooooh aaaaaah let’s haul Gary Bushell in a bubble’ and I have been unable to hear it as anything else since, to the point of refusing to look up the actual lyrics. It is a mighty chorus indeed. Once that’s happened, the song ends quite quickly (I think we go round one more time then have a brief outro) but we’ve heard what we’ve wanted to hear. We’ve heard heavy funk climaxing all over our ears, micromanaged beautifully by a seriously substantial collection of players. It’s really quite overwhelming. But not indescribably so.

19) The Chap - Now Woel (3.54) (2004)

And now for something a bit simpler. This is a big heavy silly dumb kick-ass rock song, written by a twee, self-referential, semi-sincere North London-based art-pop collective. It’s one of their most straightforward, uncomplicated expressions of musical joy. The lyrics are odd and incomprehensible, but this is how they are and it does not matter. ‘I endanger the anus’ indeed. Anyway, the riff is unstoppable, and seeing as that’s more or less the whole point of the song, I’ll mostly leave it at that. Except to say that the bit in the middle where the riff drops out and there are loads of plinky sound-effects instead is really cool, and quite funny. You’re all ‘hey come back riff! There’s all these weird noises! They’re cool noises but I ONLY WANT YOU’ and then it comes back and plays itself out for ages and then the plinky sound-effects come back over the top of it and it is *awesome*. Also, their song Proper Rock from 2008’s Mega Breakfast is almost as good and you need to hear it.

20) Alexander Hacke - Sanctuary (13.07) (2005)

This is the coolest love-song of the decade. It is the title-track of an album which saw Hacke, bassist for a certain industrial band who enjoy pneumatic drills, travel the world in search of collaborators. Results varied, but this was the clincher, the centrepiece: an ode to his girlfriend Danielle which just happens to be a dark-as-fuck 13-minute industrial nightmare. Oh but it’s so goddamn catchy. He assembles an army of instrumentalists and electronics experts (one of whom has already has a track in this list; any guesses? Clue: he is Australian, slightly fucked in the head, and has no compunctions about exploring paedophilia in song…how those crazy industrial types get around eh?) to assist him in this devotional quest. If I was Danielle I’d be pretty chuffed at the results. The build-up alone is 5 minutes of mounting programmed dread, hovering sonics, screaming percussive synth-beats. Then Hacke starts singing his dirge. Dirge? Love-song? Yeah, it’s a love-song; it’s a trip deep into Hacke’s soul, where he battles all sorts of inner demons, sings in all sorts of discordant harmonies, finds some really pretty funky hooks, and gives a spoken-word monologue about how ‘we’ll spend each day…keeping rrrrats…where they belong’. When he says they’re going to be together forever, he bloody means it. It really is rather sweet, the extent of his passionate mania. And finally, that fade-out, totally austere in its ominous finality, sounding like the exit music of a fallen angel. Happy Valentine’s Day, sweetie.

21) Califone - Black Metal Valentine (6.17) (2006)

Why 23? Why not 20? Who even cares about Califone or gives GY!BE the time of day any longer? These songs deserve write-ups, however. They’re a cut above the pack. Califone is an excellent band who have just released one of the best albums of 2009, but this, from probably their poppiest album Roots & Crowns, manages to both contain their most dynamic, catchy hook, and some of their weirdest field-recording-populated soundscapes. The order in which is does this is inspired, beginning with 5 minutes of swirling oddness, before plunging us into cathartic bliss in its final act; the way in which the drums suddenly come in, playing one of the funkiest, most moving beats I’ve ever heard, right in the last 30 seconds of the song, is heartbreaking. The swirling oddness itself begins with an unsettling keyboard hit, before teasing us with what sounds like some speed-disco as heard from outside a club whose door briefly opens, recorded from an open field at night. The song continues in this distant, floaty, never unlistenable vein, until the final revelation. It’s an act of country-rock certainty when it does come, a sun-kissed paean to something or other, birthed out of modern technological insubstantiality. You want to sing along. You start singing along. The song ends. The effect is absolutely pathos-ridden. It really was too good to be true. But it still happened, and Califone are still a band whose hearts AND minds are open to all that is musical, and this is a rare gift.

22) Godspeed You! Black Emperor - Motherfucker = Redeemer Part 2 (10:11) (2002)

This is possibly the best final track on a final album of any band in history. GY!BE released about 15 tracks in their career, 14 of which were over 10 minutes. Yes, this is the second-shortest studio song they put out, only trumped by a 6-minute coda earlier on in Yanqui UXO, which is their crowning achievement and most focused, destructive realisation of their slow-burn long-build deafening-climax instrumental principles. They ditch the samples, lengthen the builds, and they make everything flow together. However, the truth about GY!BE is that they only needed one song to sum up everything about themselves, and this song is their last. It begins in silence, before swarms of marauding guitars pile on the dread. It grows. It finds two different, equally menacing sections, which it alternates between, the one brooding and melancholy, the other faster panicked, all done with screeching guitars, and all done, interestingly, in two different sorts of 7-time. It builds, flinging itself into the apocalypse it surely describes (check that album artwork!) and seemingly without resolution. But then, after the faster section repeats for longer than it had previously gone, reaching its peak of insistence, everything slows down, the bottom falls out of the music, and the death-drone suddenly becomes an agent of bittersweet idyll. Fearsome becomes utterly beautiful, final judgement becomes whale-noise, the pulse of redemption, and when the drums plunge back in, they do so in a righted 3-time, accompanied by the most optimistic bassline GY!BE could ever have contrived. Noise is deafening once more, but it is euphoric. The track has had to face abysmal horrors before finding its salvation. The narrative is maybe even a little corny, in this way, but GY!BE are a corny band, and it suits them perfectly to go out like this. Violins, guitar-shrieks, free-swinging rhythmless celebration, given a minute’s freedom, then all sucked up in an instant. Farewell, you Canadian anarchists. You tried goddamn hard and made some super music, and you knew when to call it a day.

23) Ulrich Schnauss – Medusa (6.27) (2007)

Ulrich Schnauss, as we now know, is a man who puts everything into his songs, and then if he’s unsure, puts a bit more in. He made a lot of very good music in the 00’s, such as the entirety of 2003’s A Strangely Isolated Place (one track of which may have been especially good), and precisely three songs on the otherwise bizarrely mundane or misguided Goodbye. The three songs justify the album; they are the album’s longest tracks, and they are the ones which demonstrate Schnauss’ obsessive love at its full pitch. He gets two songs in the Top 23 because Medusa couldn’t be left out of my list. Like On My Own, it is a definitive statement of sound and purpose. Schnauss deserves the honour. Unlike On My Own, it is imperiously dark, noisy, and confrontational. It will not appeal to everyone. It is the multilayered swarming electro-shoegaze hell I hadn’t even suspected he might come out with. It’s an absolute Curve-ball, if you’ll pardon the pun. But it isn’t really much like Curve at all, nor is it much like Slowdive or MBV or Seefeel or any other shoegaze band with electronic or avant-garde pretentions. It is absolutely a law unto itself, a unique slab of wonder. The sheer fervour of his construction is terrifying, the depth of the buzzing, shrieking, wavering layers astounding. From the ominous, echoed opening drumbeats to the eye of the storm, 4 minutes later, as a three-note synth motif appears atop the chaos, a motif which can only be described as ‘triumphant’, the whole thing is a work of staggering intensity and craft. Because it’s so noisy, so clatteringly abrasive, you could be forgiven for missing the detail, but it’s there in bucketfuls, from bell-effects to choral harmonies to background swooshes. Some days I think this is better than any shoegaze song ever. These usually happen to be the days I hear this song.

Bubbling under: …And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead – Will You Smile Again, Hood – The Lost You, The Electric Soft Parade – Silent To The Dark, Von Sudenfed – That Sound Wiped, Boards Of Canada – Dayvan Cowboy, The Dandy Warhols – (You Come In) Burned, Half Man Half Biscuit – Gubba Look-A-Likes, Shit And Shine – Toilet Door Tits, Late Of The Pier – The Enemy Is The Future, Radiohead – A Punchup At A Wedding, Youthmovies – Surtsey, Pulp – Wickerman, Silvery – Revolving Sleepy Signs, Of Montreal – The Past Is A Grotesque Animal, Caribou – Niobe, Thomas White – The Silence Stops Tonight, Grandaddy – Lost On Yer Merry Way, Earth/Mogwai – Teeth Of Lions Rule The Divine (Mogwai Remix), All Saints – Pure Shores, The Beta Band – Eclipse, Six By Seven – My Life Is An Accident, Neurosis – From The Hill, The Secret Machines – First Wave Intact, Wilco – Handshake Drugs, Murcof – Cosmos II, Anathema – A Natural Disaster, TV On The Radio – Young Liars, Esoteric – Circle, Portishead – Small, …And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead – Luna Park

Poll Results

OptionVotes
Won't Get To Heaven (The State I'm In) 14
(Drawing) Rings Around The World 5
On My Own 4
Motherfucker = Redeemer Part 2 4
Chris Michaels 3
Tonyte 3
The Terse Crimp 3
Christmas 2
Black Metal Valentine 1
Pulling Myself Together 1
The Repellent Scars Of Abandon And Election 1
Savant 1
Kreibabe 1
In The Kingdom Of Kitsch You Will Be A Monster 0
Ditzy Scene 0
Palimpsests 0
Sanctuary 0
Now Woel 0
ShrunkenMan 0
___on limpid form 0
Nancy Adam Susan 0
Michel Publicity Window 0
Medusa 0


joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 02:52 (fifteen years ago)

wb LJ.

ian, Monday, 9 November 2009 02:53 (fifteen years ago)

what the christ

NEW YORK DESERVED 9-11 (cankles), Monday, 9 November 2009 02:53 (fifteen years ago)

tl;sb'd

only joking.

Pedro Paramore (jim), Monday, 9 November 2009 02:55 (fifteen years ago)

lolololol

een, Monday, 9 November 2009 02:56 (fifteen years ago)

hi louis. i've heard three of these. but REALLY? that califone song?

call all destroyer, Monday, 9 November 2009 02:58 (fifteen years ago)

who has this kind of time?

oops i accidentally made it personal (surm), Monday, 9 November 2009 02:58 (fifteen years ago)

he has had 30 days to come up with this tbf

frank bananarama (electricsound), Monday, 9 November 2009 02:58 (fifteen years ago)

and i think he's on the dole.

Pedro Paramore (jim), Monday, 9 November 2009 02:59 (fifteen years ago)

yeah this must have taken MONTHS!

xxp

k3vin k., Monday, 9 November 2009 02:59 (fifteen years ago)

this took me a) one evening last week to come up with the first half, and b) a train-journey home from Bristol to complete the other

what can I say, I work quickly

I've also written 10,000 words' worth of NaNoWriMo, studied the entire structure of British politics for a test, and gotten a girlfriend this week, so it's not like I've been kicking my heels waiting for ILX to start again

and I fucking adore that Califone song, it's like sunlight from decay or something. deconstruction and then reconstruction of Americana. by far the weakest write-up, granted; I think I kinda rushed that one.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 03:04 (fifteen years ago)

ban l0u1s jagg3r

The Velvet Underground & Nico Rosberg (King Boy Pato), Monday, 9 November 2009 03:07 (fifteen years ago)

wb dude.

banned of bros. (darraghmac), Monday, 9 November 2009 03:14 (fifteen years ago)

ugh what is this shit

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 9 November 2009 03:53 (fifteen years ago)

an opening salvo.

estela, Monday, 9 November 2009 03:56 (fifteen years ago)

i guess this qualifies as "epic"

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:00 (fifteen years ago)

God appears.

And his name, as I’ve said, is Thighpaulsandra.

this is my fave part.

ian, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:02 (fifteen years ago)

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_MrUHzkuYVbo/ScLIcQWSUSI/AAAAAAAAA7o/ZarZ7ZUza9s/s400/Thighpaulsandra.jpg

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:05 (fifteen years ago)

that's actually the only song on the list i rate.

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:07 (fifteen years ago)

ugh what is this shit

i think experts call it 'regression'

banned of bros. (darraghmac), Monday, 9 November 2009 04:08 (fifteen years ago)

guys - he got a girlfriend this weekend - did you see that? I think this really bears repeating.

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:10 (fifteen years ago)

okcupid works!

ian, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:10 (fifteen years ago)

really sad there is no option in this poll for "got a girlfriend this weekend"

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:11 (fifteen years ago)

http://i36.tinypic.com/3308js5.jpg

frank bananarama (electricsound), Monday, 9 November 2009 04:12 (fifteen years ago)

some1 is jealous

k3vin k., Monday, 9 November 2009 04:12 (fifteen years ago)

that was really mean

oops i accidentally made it personal (surm), Monday, 9 November 2009 04:13 (fifteen years ago)

i am very happy for him.

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:13 (fifteen years ago)

its good he was unbanned so you guys could laugh at him.

bnw, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:15 (fifteen years ago)

lj knows i love him. i just can't read that much about, like, anything

oops i accidentally made it personal (surm), Monday, 9 November 2009 04:15 (fifteen years ago)

xp - come on, this is the epitome of affectionate teasing!

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:16 (fifteen years ago)

i'm happy for him, and for us too, this would have been l0u1s jagg3r's 100 best songs of the decade! but for the grace of her.

estela, Monday, 9 November 2009 04:17 (fifteen years ago)

ysi?

Nuyorican oatmeal (jaymc), Monday, 9 November 2009 05:03 (fifteen years ago)

you want someone to send you her grace?

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:10 (fifteen years ago)

i am very happy for him.

this is exactly what girls say when they are jealous

iatee, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:14 (fifteen years ago)

that is very far from what I said at the various points in time when i was jealous, though.

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:19 (fifteen years ago)

do me a favor though - and please collectively decide whether i'm supposed to be lj's mom or love interest (both is not an option). this is all very confusing to me. Please let me know when you've reached a decision.

thanks,

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:29 (fifteen years ago)

i like loujag

velko, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:30 (fifteen years ago)

does anyone not?

call all destroyer, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:31 (fifteen years ago)

missed u boo

mookieproof, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:33 (fifteen years ago)

I think you're his mom on M-W-F and his love interest on T-TH-Sat-Sun

iatee, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:47 (fifteen years ago)

that's too confusing, you can only pick one ... or none.

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:48 (fifteen years ago)

that's exactly what someone who is both his mom and love interest would say, though

iatee, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:48 (fifteen years ago)

look - I'm thinking of the wonderful ilxors who live in Australia & New Zealand here - who are almost always a day ahead - it just is not logistically possible to alternate days like that and have it be functional.

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 05:52 (fifteen years ago)

what if we compromised with 'sister who he hooks up w/ once in a while'?

iatee, Monday, 9 November 2009 06:02 (fifteen years ago)

i like Tonyte & Now Woel

jabba hands, Monday, 9 November 2009 06:05 (fifteen years ago)

xp - what if we dropped the subject and discussed the awesomeness of Deathspell Omega instead?

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 06:07 (fifteen years ago)

that thighpaulsandra track is awesome!

Dan S, Monday, 9 November 2009 06:10 (fifteen years ago)

:-)

I'm gonna put on an iron burt, and chase stanton out of urt (Curt1s Stephens), Monday, 9 November 2009 06:24 (fifteen years ago)

Awesome. Never even heard OF most of these.

exploding angel vagina (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 9 November 2009 07:22 (fifteen years ago)

Sweet Jesus LJ. Also lol at this entire thread.

bear say hi to me (ENBB), Monday, 9 November 2009 07:25 (fifteen years ago)

fwiw vahid i picked up TPS on a complete whim and don't know much else like it...if you cd suggest bands or artists who operate in a similarly esoteric electronic sphere then i would be extremely grateful. sorry we do not have similar tastes otherwise. this is as i say the subjective judgement of an indieprog loon.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 07:44 (fifteen years ago)

this'll give me some reading for the much-needed first coffee break this morning, likely with room to spare - great work LJ (On My Own ftw).

Bill A, Monday, 9 November 2009 08:36 (fifteen years ago)

Epic post, but needs more subjectivity.

Ismael Klata, Monday, 9 November 2009 08:45 (fifteen years ago)

Never heard any of these, but I'm voting for Super Furry Animals, because I think that's a good band name. Hopefully their music isn't actually Christian doom metal or something...

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 09:06 (fifteen years ago)

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/40675000/jpg/_40675324_little_203.jpg
l-r LJ, Tuomas

so says surgeon snoball (snoball), Monday, 9 November 2009 09:19 (fifteen years ago)

rather than sending it, i shall describe it for you.

A single horn (trumpet?) sounds.

Flourish of violins and other assorted strings. A low sound, much like a tuba, is also detectable.

The horn sounds again, a few semitones lower. It begins to play a slow tune.

Enter piano and some rain effects. The low tuba thing goes on.

Ethereal moans and wail permeate the song.

Suddenly, an oscillating, windy pumping noise fills the speakers, dying away as soon as it arrives. As it returns for the second time, however, a bluesy guitar riff bursts in unexpectedly.

Along with a distorted harmonica.

Some muted percussion is also audible.

Hollis begins to sing: "Oh yeah, the world's turned upside down..."

Shall I continue?

― unfished business, Wednesday, March 21, 2007 12:29 PM (2 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

No.

― Michael Jones, Wednesday, March 21, 2007 3:10 PM (2 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

I'm gonna put on an iron burt, and chase stanton out of urt (Curt1s Stephens), Monday, 9 November 2009 09:45 (fifteen years ago)

Snoball, who are those?

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 09:59 (fifteen years ago)

i have no words. maybe lj has used them all up.

lex pretend, Monday, 9 November 2009 10:04 (fifteen years ago)

Hi Louis! Nice to have you back.

Space Battle Rothko (Matt DC), Monday, 9 November 2009 10:10 (fifteen years ago)

Along with a distorted harmonica.

Curt1s's quote from the Talk Talk thread is surely a put-down for the ages. So good that it makes me wonder if unfished business was merely a sock for Michael to feed him the "shall I continue?".

Bill A, Monday, 9 November 2009 10:16 (fifteen years ago)

Okay, I've created a spotify playlist adhering as closely as possible to your selection. Will report back with some kind of verdict in due course.

I never saw the advantage of peeing while standing. (Upt0eleven), Monday, 9 November 2009 10:17 (fifteen years ago)

On My Own is a nice ditty.

George Mucus (ledge), Monday, 9 November 2009 10:20 (fifteen years ago)

Snoball, who are those?

― Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 09:59 (24 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

Little and Large, a comedy duo popular in the UK in the 80's.

so says surgeon snoball (snoball), Monday, 9 November 2009 10:24 (fifteen years ago)

best poll ever. nice work, LJ. know about a quarter of these songs, will check out the rest.

Okay, I've created a spotify playlist adhering as closely as possible to your selection. Will report back with some kind of verdict in due course.

link, pls?

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 10:30 (fifteen years ago)

These are some looong songs. Not a fan of skits, shanties and ditties, I take it?

Ismael Klata, Monday, 9 November 2009 10:32 (fifteen years ago)

19) The Chap - Now Woel (3.54) (2004)

I want to actively avoid ever hearing this.

Space Battle Rothko (Matt DC), Monday, 9 November 2009 10:36 (fifteen years ago)

As close as I could get without spending much time on it: http://open.spotify.com/user/nickupt0eleven/playlist/4b7RI66qIvFe9VB5UYXSub

I never saw the advantage of peeing while standing. (Upt0eleven), Monday, 9 November 2009 10:37 (fifteen years ago)

xp ha, it's prob the least irritating song they've got. it just sounds like MBV.

jabba hands, Monday, 9 November 2009 10:41 (fifteen years ago)

So far.... he has a taste for the flamboyant dunt he? Although the Spiritualized is relatively down-to-earth compared to the first two.

I never saw the advantage of peeing while standing. (Upt0eleven), Monday, 9 November 2009 10:48 (fifteen years ago)

Anyway ... I'm never going to hear any of these, but on the strength of these reviews and their titles it's between 'The Terse Crimp' and 'Black Metal Valentine' - the former takes my vote, basically because it made me think of a tense shrimp.

Ismael Klata, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:02 (fifteen years ago)

I'm listening to the Spiritualized song where God appears... I guess He isn't what He used to be. Otherwise this is an okay tune though; if only they'd gotten rid of the irritating rock hero guitar, and hired someone who can sing properly to do the lead vocal instead of the monotone-voiced dude who does it now, I might've actually liked it.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:02 (fifteen years ago)

He's supposed to sound like he's on the verge of death, that's kind of the point.

Space Battle Rothko (Matt DC), Monday, 9 November 2009 11:03 (fifteen years ago)

God, when I'm on the verge of death, I hope I don't sound like the dude from Metallica!

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:09 (fifteen years ago)

lol

I'm Still Stanning (onimo), Monday, 9 November 2009 11:10 (fifteen years ago)

I mean, why get a "gospel" choir to back you up, if you can't sing gospel yourself? That's why I don't like this type of rock singing: it's so colourless and lacking of passion.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:11 (fifteen years ago)

Ulver - Christmas

This tune has a nice and pretty intro, but then the "headbanging" part starts. What a waste of a good intro! Based on the title and intro I was expecting this to be a solemn Christmas tune, so I'm disappointed.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:18 (fifteen years ago)

I mean, why get a "gospel" choir to back you up, if you can't sing gospel yourself? That's why I don't like this type of rock singing: it's so colourless and lacking of passion.

You've answered your own question here.

Space Battle Rothko (Matt DC), Monday, 9 November 2009 11:19 (fifteen years ago)

Super Furry Animals - (Drawing) Rings Around The World

This quite okay! It's like 90s Britpop but funkier, and some psychedelic 60s stuff in it too. Definitely not Christian doom metal! I'm glad I voted for it.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:22 (fifteen years ago)

I have to go now, but I'll try to listen to the rest of the songs later on.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:23 (fifteen years ago)

This tune has a nice and pretty intro, but then the "headbanging" part starts. What a waste of a good intro!

based on this, I was eagerly awaiting the "headbanging" part. it never came. are we listening to the same song?

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:29 (fifteen years ago)

I would love a thread where Tuomas liveblogs listening to Status Quo for the first time.

Space Battle Rothko (Matt DC), Monday, 9 November 2009 11:31 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, it starts like it could be a pretty Christmas tune, but then it gets all of aggressive, a "grunge" voice begins to sing and there's some heavy guitars. Plus there's a bad, over-the-top usage of synth strings.

(x-post)

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:33 (fifteen years ago)

really? what I'm listening to is awash with david arnold-esque synth strings, but no heavy guitars or "grunge" vocals. the voice is more 80s synth pop, all clean throat and swooping falsetto.

starting to feel like I'm in rashomon.

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:40 (fifteen years ago)

Ulver - Christmas
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKc-GtnF7HU

this track = think Depeche Mode if they went avant-garde industrial with increased sonic art complexity.

djmartian, Monday, 9 November 2009 11:49 (fifteen years ago)

glory be, this foetus track is great.

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 12:01 (fifteen years ago)

welcome back, LJ... can get one blog maybe?

the not-fun one (Ioannis), Monday, 9 November 2009 12:24 (fifteen years ago)

only know 'On My Own' (amazing) and 'Rings Around The World' (MEEEEH) but will check the others out

modescalator (blueski), Monday, 9 November 2009 12:39 (fifteen years ago)

would like Tim F to do a thread/poll like this

modescalator (blueski), Monday, 9 November 2009 12:42 (fifteen years ago)

WB LJ, I was looking for something interesting to read whilst munching my Pret Artisan Baguette, nice work.

Will vote for LL of course, they deserve to be heard. Also I'm reminded that Ivnever sent you the demos disc! Sorry,
I will dig the thing out and send yer a copy, promise.

Free - http://www.lapsuslinguae.co.uk/mp3.htm
Amazon - http://www.amazon.co.uk/You-Got-Fraiche-Lapsus-Linguae/dp/B00005U0KD/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1257770083&sr=8-1

MaresNest, Monday, 9 November 2009 12:43 (fifteen years ago)

I had an awesome time watching Lapsus Linguae once but found the album rather pale in comparison, possibly because unlike the live show it did not offer the opportunity to see the band members' boxers through their held-together-with-peeling-duct-tape leather trousers

in honour of this list I will try to give it another blast this evening

welcome back Mr J

subtyll cauillacyons (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 9 November 2009 12:46 (fifteen years ago)

I'm surprised they wore that much. the one and only time I saw lapsus linguae the gubbins were on full display almost before a note had been played.

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 12:48 (fifteen years ago)

wb sir.

autogooner (a hoy hoy), Monday, 9 November 2009 12:51 (fifteen years ago)

Gut feeling says Kayo Dot but I probably need to relisten to the lot before deciding. Then forgetting to vote, as usual.

I thought I could make it work because you look a bit like a man (aldo), Monday, 9 November 2009 12:56 (fifteen years ago)

would like Tim F to do a thread/poll like this

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^this

Persian Pickle (Masonic Boom), Monday, 9 November 2009 13:04 (fifteen years ago)

Would like to wholly endorse the above sentiment.

Thanks for the feedback and encouragement guys, and especial props to the people checking these out! Keep going! They're all sleepers, I swear. (Quite a few of you, I believe, would especially enjoy that Shining track.) I will provide links if you're especially keen!

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 13:20 (fifteen years ago)

Tonyte FTW

American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Monday, 9 November 2009 13:23 (fifteen years ago)

the shining track is indeed superb. new album due in january, apparently...

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 13:25 (fifteen years ago)

Yes, I'd like more people to do this! Then I would not be embarrassed to do it too.

Welcome back Louis!

Gravel Puzzleworth, Monday, 9 November 2009 13:37 (fifteen years ago)

I will try and hear lots of these.

Gravel Puzzleworth, Monday, 9 November 2009 13:37 (fifteen years ago)

Awesome!

Struggling to work out where the 'rock hero guitar' in that Spiritualized tune is. Sure you're not confusing sax with guitar, Tuomas? :p

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 13:41 (fifteen years ago)

I know what a sax sounds like. I'm at school and can't listen to it now, but I'm pretty sure there was "rock" type of electric guitar in that song, even though it wouldn't have required any - the rest of the song wasn't "rock" at all (except maybe for the guy's vocal style). I think this is often the problem with rock people experimenting with other genres - they just can't give up the rock guitar noodling, even if it makes the tune worse.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 13:50 (fifteen years ago)

Though, to be honest, I think rock guitar makes every tune worse except for rock tunes.

Tuomas, Monday, 9 November 2009 13:51 (fifteen years ago)

I will try and hear lots of these.

how many times have you said this over the past few years greg!

lex pretend, Monday, 9 November 2009 13:54 (fifteen years ago)

There's some ambient drone-guitar wash, but it's really just part of the backdrop IMO. And I think it works really nicely! Synth, strings, horns and sax are the stars here, mostly. And I think that this kind of thing was what Spiritualized were always trying to do; this is essentially the most successful rendering (IMO) of their (Pierce's) musical principles.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 13:55 (fifteen years ago)

Every single one of these songs 'rocks' to some extent! I like things that rock. Especially if they don't rock all the time.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 13:57 (fifteen years ago)

I was in a pool hall on Saturday afternoon. There were lots of rockin' things coming out the jukebox, which some metal types had a monopoly on, but they sounded so drab that I realised I must be getting old. I put on some Phil Collins specifically to annoy those guys, and I did get some black looks, but to be honest 'Easy Lover' easily out-rocked any of their rockers.

Ismael Klata, Monday, 9 November 2009 14:05 (fifteen years ago)

I'm sure your rocking things would've slayed 'em too, l0u1s.

Ismael Klata, Monday, 9 November 2009 14:07 (fifteen years ago)

how unrockin' must some rock rock to be outrocked in a rock-off by something as unrockin' as 'easy lover'?

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 14:15 (fifteen years ago)

a summation.

most of the stuff I previously knew here is amazing (cardiacs, kayo dot, shining, deathspell, chrome hoof). not all though – I can't bear fiery furnaces any more, and the incredible oceansize live performance I saw a couple a months ago bears almost no relation to their recorded work, which I find ponderous in the extreme.

of the unfamiliar stuff I've managed to track down, foetus totally floored me, but the rest, not so much. 'come together' aside, I've never really been convinced by spiritualized. my computer was my idea of hell. sorry.

I'd normally expect cardiacs to claim my vote in any poll they're involved in, but 'ditzy scene' is for me not one of their strongest works - the sonics are beautifully dense and layered, but it's too plodding, too linear. cardiacs are at their best when they're very much neither of these things. this falls towards the relatively accessible 'is this the life?' end of their ouevre, rather than the vastly more enervating 'fiery gun hand'-type stuff. the b-sides to ditzy scene were better than the title track, imo.

much as I love kayo dot, they're almost too abstract for me to think about them in terms of SONGS, so their inclusion here is jarring. that said choirs of the eye is easily their most instantly accessible and least foreboding work. but even so, I can't divorce the song from the album, and I'm not sure it works that well in isolation.

this is tough. four-way tie. chrome hoof, deathspell, foetus and shining are all just stunning pieces of work. jim benefits from 'shock of the new' though, so maybe I should digest a little more before voting...

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 14:36 (fifteen years ago)

__olf is on Dowsing Anemone, not Choirs Of The Eye!

But cheers for the feedback! Glad you've made an effort. I can see your point re: Ditzy Scene, and the b-sides ARE phenomenal, but it's such a monumentally enormous-sounding piece of work, so fierce and driven, that I can only see it as a successor to Dirty Boy which might be my favourite song ever. Well, definitely one of. I think it's infinitely more soaring, complex and sublime a work than Is This The Life, a rare example of a band's worst song being their biggest hit.

Think you might enjoy LL muchly, although given your reaction to the similarly piano-involving My Computer, maybe I'm not so sure. The My Computer write-up is my best one IMO and I strongly believe it needs to be heard and understood by more people.

But yeah, that Foetus song. Jim found a moment there.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 14:49 (fifteen years ago)

glad you are back LJ

TGAAPQ (Mr. Que), Monday, 9 November 2009 14:52 (fifteen years ago)

yes great post tbh. i'm liking this kayo dot track. a lot to check out still. otherwise though im leaning to 'on my own' so far.

Michael B, Monday, 9 November 2009 14:55 (fifteen years ago)

i can only post staccato style as im late for class right now.

Michael B, Monday, 9 November 2009 14:55 (fifteen years ago)

'Fiery Gun Hand' enervating? The opposite surely.

MaresNest, Monday, 9 November 2009 15:01 (fifteen years ago)

xxp right you are, re: KD. got myself all confused there, as I was writing about 'the manifolfd curiosity', the replacement track on the spotify playlist.
oops.

piano is not a problem per se... I have liked what I've heard of lapsus linguae in the past, seen them live once, and at least one of their number has gone on to do great stuff with doneimagine and if you lived here you'd be home by now (and he has also got me drunk in his capacity as a cider slinger in a certain glasgow venue). haven't heard the song in question though. will redouble efforts to track it down.

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 15:02 (fifteen years ago)

xp YES! right you are. the opposite. fell into common linguistic trap there. this is not a good day.

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 15:03 (fifteen years ago)

Although that said, the mental chopped together guitar solo could wear you out!

MaresNest, Monday, 9 November 2009 15:06 (fifteen years ago)

Ooh, didn't see the Spotify playlist! When I get home from uni I'll check it out and praise/deride Nick accordingly ;)

Will maybe check out the LL spin-offs. That song will either explode your head or put you off your elevenses. Fiery Gun Hand is grugsome.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 15:08 (fifteen years ago)

xp no way...that's the best bit!

m the g, Monday, 9 November 2009 15:10 (fifteen years ago)

btw The Manifold Curiosity is Kayo Dot's second-best song, well chosen. Verily it bringeth the rock. Maybe not as hard as that solo.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 15:11 (fifteen years ago)

wb LJ! lol @ wallotext

Yeah~ I can flay~~~ (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 15:15 (fifteen years ago)

4 minutes in and I'm thinking I'm not going to be able to endure another 8 minutes of the Foetus track.

I never saw the advantage of peeing while standing. (Upt0eleven), Monday, 9 November 2009 15:29 (fifteen years ago)

hahahahahahaha dude that song is NOT for everyone

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 15:31 (fifteen years ago)

I'll Sendspace the Hacke song later, maybe. Can't think how else anyone's gonna hear it. Would be a shame if nobody did. Here's Youtube-quality MC:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1PMnvZ6_gBg

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 15:33 (fifteen years ago)

Kreibebe actually picked up around the 6 minute mark so I did make it to the end. God help me, I may be coming round to Oceansize.

I never saw the advantage of peeing while standing. (Upt0eleven), Monday, 9 November 2009 15:49 (fifteen years ago)

I want to hear the foetus track

I'm gonna put on an iron burt, and chase stanton out of urt (Curt1s Stephens), Monday, 9 November 2009 15:51 (fifteen years ago)

good grief, LJ, you have appalling taste.

welcome back!

caek, Monday, 9 November 2009 15:57 (fifteen years ago)

XD

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 16:03 (fifteen years ago)

pains me to vote against foetus (but not so much because his early stuff is just plain better), gotta give this one to Ulv3r (googleproofing thanks to the fact that Dan is a vengeful trickster btw)

someone has done something terrible OH NO (jjjusten), Monday, 9 November 2009 16:11 (fifteen years ago)

Dan's a vengefull trickster...
You know wot I mean!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYtb0xDWNh0

Mark G, Monday, 9 November 2009 16:20 (fifteen years ago)

^_^

Yeah~ I can flay~~~ (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 16:24 (fifteen years ago)

(lol I know regex and you don't)

Yeah~ I can flay~~~ (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 16:24 (fifteen years ago)

"a cut above the pack"?

Tracer Hand, Monday, 9 November 2009 16:30 (fifteen years ago)

anyway, i'm surprised there's nothing here from The For Carnation

Tracer Hand, Monday, 9 November 2009 16:53 (fifteen years ago)

I'm surprised there's nothing by Esoteric.

I thought I could make it work because you look a bit like a man (aldo), Monday, 9 November 2009 17:01 (fifteen years ago)

Never got round to hearing The For Carnation, probably ought to. There's an Esoteric track in the 'Bubbling Under' section, accompanied by loads of indie :D

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 17:04 (fifteen years ago)

you could, Louis, but it's not very good

Tracer Hand, Monday, 9 November 2009 17:07 (fifteen years ago)

I should make an attempt to listen to the 21 songs that I haven't heard, rather than immediately vote for the Deathspell Omega one and call it done.

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 17:10 (fifteen years ago)

Chris Michaels is and always has been amazingly good. Medusa comes second.

I am using your worlds, Monday, 9 November 2009 17:20 (fifteen years ago)

And welcome back LJ, until your next inevitable 51.

I am using your worlds, Monday, 9 November 2009 17:20 (fifteen years ago)

My Computer were always one of those bands i've been meaning to check out. a resounding 'meh' to that track upthread however.

Michael B, Monday, 9 November 2009 18:16 (fifteen years ago)

how many times have you said this over the past few years greg!

Lex I know! It is the same every time, I read something like LJ's list and it totally brings back how tremblingly important and exciting music felt aged 11-23 and I youtube a few things and just feel nothing and put on Early Winter again :(

Gravel Puzzleworth, Monday, 9 November 2009 19:09 (fifteen years ago)

i've hard one (1) of these songs, so i'm voting for that one. even though it's like the 20th best fiery furnaces song

k3vin k., Monday, 9 November 2009 19:29 (fifteen years ago)

Esoteric – Circle

I was hoping this was a track by the band Circle and not the other way round. Lou!s, do you like Circle?

subtyll cauillacyons (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:35 (fifteen years ago)

songs i was hoping u wld pick btw:

1. She will only bring u happiness

2. More than a woman

plaxico (I know, right?), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:37 (fifteen years ago)

1) is rly good, 2) i cannot remember

yes i like circle, i have the album prospekt and it slays especially the first track iirc

i'm oddly happy with this. i feel at peace with my music collection now. there's not much more that i need to say about 00's music.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:30 (fifteen years ago)

I would worry about you if there was!

a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:31 (fifteen years ago)

(kidding, but wow that was a large opening post)

a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:32 (fifteen years ago)

dammit dan seeing you here makes me regret not including 'the promise' in my 'bubbling under'

instead i will think about how smith howls 'noooooooooooo' at the end and feel well once more

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:33 (fifteen years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NLUthL6-BU

plaxico (I know, right?), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:33 (fifteen years ago)

dammit dan seeing you here makes me regret not including 'the promise' in my 'bubbling under'

TMI

TGAAPQ (Mr. Que), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:34 (fifteen years ago)

wait hang on, if 'bloodflowers' is '00 rather than '99 then '39' kinda belongs in that list

ahhhhh yeah i like aaliyah's stuff, i remember giving it A+ reviews

lolol que

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:34 (fifteen years ago)

No Provates, no cred!

sarahel, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:35 (fifteen years ago)

Kreibabe is the top track on last.fm for the "fucking madness" tag.

http://www.last.fm/tag/fucking%20madness/tracks

I'm Still Stanning (onimo), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:13 (fifteen years ago)

awesome!

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:22 (fifteen years ago)

anyway

get yourself some SANCTUARY right here: http://www.sendspace.com/file/a6sozt

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:29 (fifteen years ago)

Dude - you gotta listen to Provates - best fucking band ever!!!

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:31 (fifteen years ago)

OKOK but first YOU listen to THE TERSE CRIMP: http://www.sendspace.com/file/80p6ar

(clue as to why you should do this: it is brilliant)

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:35 (fifteen years ago)

Sex - thy name is Provates - but complexly structured sex, with acrobatic twists and turns

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:37 (fifteen years ago)

yah this is rly doing it 4 me more more plz dont stop--

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:38 (fifteen years ago)

wtf?

plaxico (I know, right?), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:38 (fifteen years ago)

and then the part with the breathy vocals atop jaunty polyrhythms going "loba loba loba loba" - powerful stuff.

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:39 (fifteen years ago)

LJ seriously--Provates rule hard

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:41 (fifteen years ago)

Provates have the intensity of that Haacke song, and the epic staying power of Van der Graaf Generator

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:42 (fifteen years ago)

you have swayed me, i shall listen. everyone d/l those sendspace songs.

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:44 (fifteen years ago)

the first track on the latest Provates album is subaquatic chaotic bliss - like dolphins on sex chemicals

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:46 (fifteen years ago)

yeah it's like dolphins pumping and writhing in a cage and then they are released from the cage

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:49 (fifteen years ago)

I think that even objectively speaking, provates are the best songwriters of modern times, maybe the best pop songwriters ever.

iatee, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:51 (fifteen years ago)

xp - that's track 2 - with the most exquisite rattling sounds and earthy yet springy animalistic fervor

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:51 (fifteen years ago)

missed y'guys <4

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:52 (fifteen years ago)

we haven't even gotten to describing the other 5 tracks on the album for you

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:53 (fifteen years ago)

it's like the dolphins are naked and yet they're not

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:55 (fifteen years ago)

lemme guess track 3 is a tart confection of auricular mascarpone oozing from the very fundament of arpeggio'd valhalla

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:56 (fifteen years ago)

loba loba loba loba
1-2-3 1-2 1-ee-and-a 3-4-and-5

and then it crumbles - post climax - into burbling, droning elegance.

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:56 (fifteen years ago)

auricular marscapone--goddamn LJ i missed you

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:57 (fifteen years ago)

the auricular mascarpone is the mid-section of track 7, actually

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:57 (fifteen years ago)

its all love dude, but shut the fuck up with that noise xxpost

GO THICK AMOS! (jjjusten), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:58 (fifteen years ago)

Great list, great post, LJ! Love a small handful of these but I will have to check out a the ones I've never heard. Thanks for reminding me of Lapsus Linguae who I was quite into for a while but completely forgot about.

everything, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:58 (fifteen years ago)

blended with a massive vibrato of oyster mushrooms and the juddering triumph of camembert xps

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:59 (fifteen years ago)

its all love dude, but shut the fuck up with that noise xxpost

LOL who is this for?

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:59 (fifteen years ago)

need i even ask

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 00:59 (fifteen years ago)

if jjusten's comment was directed at me - then the last i'll say about Provates, is that i bet that LJ's new girlfriend would also think they rule.

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 01:01 (fifteen years ago)

can i just direct some <3 at everything who introduced me to cardiacs and basically is indirectly responsible for half of this list what with that band's mind-expanding capabilities

joekin' phoenix (country matters), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 01:02 (fifteen years ago)

When Geir's ban is over I look forward to his top 50 melodic songs of the decade poll

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 01:29 (fifteen years ago)

nah my comment was directed at lj who, although i love him like a brother, is one step away from getting the word "oozing" added to my list of hilarious board substitutions.

GO THICK AMOS! (jjjusten), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 01:31 (fifteen years ago)

so what's the substitution associated with Ulver?

sarahel, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 01:42 (fifteen years ago)

i was just listening to the Kayo Dot song (which isn't my favorite song on that album) and there are some similarities between it and the Ulver song, that I'm trying to put my finger on, that could help explain to me specifics of how lj's taste and mine differ.

provates: feminine plural of provato (sarahel), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 05:34 (fifteen years ago)

use of the 'structured descent into intensity'?

the juddering triumph of camembert (acoleuthic), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 09:04 (fifteen years ago)

You know how I said that Shining 'have probably listened to some King Crimson'?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1eXUjfVPkGk&NR=1

the juddering triumph of camembert (acoleuthic), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 12:57 (fifteen years ago)

xp - no, that's a pretty common musical form/structure. The similarity had to do with vocal tonality, chord changes, and some similarity in notes/melodic lines.

provates: feminine plural of provato (sarahel), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:10 (fifteen years ago)

why yes i adore advanced chord-changes

the juddering triumph of camembert (acoleuthic), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:10 (fifteen years ago)

dude

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:11 (fifteen years ago)

xp - i think i've mentioned this before, but i have noticed that you tend to prefer "smoother" sounding vocals than i do.

provates: feminine plural of provato (sarahel), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:12 (fifteen years ago)

not always! i love the fall...and lots of cookie-metal...

the juddering triumph of camembert (acoleuthic), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:14 (fifteen years ago)

there's something to be said abt my melodic/tonal sensibilities tho

the juddering triumph of camembert (acoleuthic), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:16 (fifteen years ago)

. . .

jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:17 (fifteen years ago)

hey sarahel did u know that zach hill is the drummer in wavves just fyi

plaxico (I know, right?), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:19 (fifteen years ago)

i did not know this. zach hill is the michael jordan of drumming imo

provates: feminine plural of provato (sarahel), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:21 (fifteen years ago)

wavves r no monstars tho

plaxico (I know, right?), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:25 (fifteen years ago)

xp - lj: i'm not saying always - but it seems like the stuff you like the most has a similar vocal quality and there are certain melodic similarities.

provates: feminine plural of provato (sarahel), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:31 (fifteen years ago)

wavves r no monstars tho

I love you for this.

we are normal and we want our freedom (Abbott), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 20:33 (fifteen years ago)

sarahel my favourite band is cardiacs and the singer has an EXTREMELY abrasive albeit tuneful vocal style

the juddering triumph of camembert (acoleuthic), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 22:30 (fifteen years ago)

I need to stop seeing "Cardigans" every time someone mentions "Cardiacs"

a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 22:31 (fifteen years ago)

the fleeting hope whenever i enter a major music retailer and look at the name-cards

the juddering triumph of camembert (acoleuthic), Wednesday, 11 November 2009 22:33 (fifteen years ago)

hahaha my 7th-placed artist's cover of my sixth-placed song is AMAZING

my fave thing to do on the computer is what im doing right now (acoleuthic), Tuesday, 24 November 2009 15:18 (fifteen years ago)

Super Furry Animals - (Drawing) Rings Around The World (3.30)

This song is a bit short, isn't it?

I Poxy the Fule (Tom D.), Tuesday, 24 November 2009 15:24 (fifteen years ago)

it's true, they could have made it 15 minutes long and i'd have probably put it 9th

my fave thing to do on the computer is what im doing right now (acoleuthic), Tuesday, 24 November 2009 15:26 (fifteen years ago)

I wish him every benevolence in his ongoing recovery from heart-attack-induced brain damage

Fit of giggles here

I Poxy the Fule (Tom D.), Tuesday, 24 November 2009 15:29 (fifteen years ago)

re Cardiacs-related misreadings, I need to shop misreading the board on the pub next to my bus stop which says "LIVE MUSIC: Dave SMITH and the CADILLACS"

plus I suspect there have been approx 6000 bands called the Cadillacs in the history of music so maybe someone else in the bus queue is getting wrongly excited without having to misread it

subtyll cauillacyons (a passing spacecadet), Tuesday, 24 November 2009 15:39 (fifteen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:01 (fifteen years ago)

IMPORTANT POLL

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:02 (fifteen years ago)

the only song i know for def i've heard is chris michaels

plaxico (I know, right?), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:04 (fifteen years ago)

but that is pretty great

plaxico (I know, right?), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:05 (fifteen years ago)

i've heard four of these. i like the four i've heard, though generally prefer other songs on the albums - did i post that before?

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:06 (fifteen years ago)

To repost (hope these haven't expired!):

SANCTUARY: http://www.sendspace.com/file/a6sozt

THE TERSE CRIMP: http://www.sendspace.com/file/80p6ar

not afaik sarahel

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:06 (fifteen years ago)

wait, i was thinking of cousin chris, chris michaels is pretty good too tho

plaxico (I know, right?), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:08 (fifteen years ago)

cousin chris has some epic drums too

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:09 (fifteen years ago)

xp - maybe i just referred to it - your kayo dot pick would not be my kayo dot pick.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:09 (fifteen years ago)

agreed with plax

louis did you ever listen to the first FF album?

we be emi robin' (k3vin k.), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:09 (fifteen years ago)

i listened to the first FF album and it was good but i prefer blueberry boat, the ep, bitter tea and widow city...diff strokes obv

sarahel, there are several worthy KD choices, but that one is the one that rinses my mind clean and awes me into a quivering wreck

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:11 (fifteen years ago)

they never really topped their first single 4 me

plaxico (I know, right?), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:12 (fifteen years ago)

^agree

also terse crimp is my least favourite lapsus track

electrical audio's sm57 (electricsound), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:14 (fifteen years ago)

(woulda gone for parade or olestra)

electrical audio's sm57 (electricsound), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:14 (fifteen years ago)

haha esoj but we are at ODDS when it comes to schizo warped proggy fuckabouts...those two tracks are really good too mind, if not quite as brilliantly demented imho

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:19 (fifteen years ago)

i would have gone with the first one - Gemini becoming the tripod.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:28 (fifteen years ago)

that song is my 2nd-fave song on the album and maybe my 3rd-fave KD song - it begins dramatically, builds deliciously, and then in the last 2 minutes becomes this towering, out-of-control tidal wave of crazy music...beautiful

but it isn't the primal force of holy mother of god that is ___olf

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:32 (fifteen years ago)

see that's where we have our disagreements - the vocals are just so smooth and croony - it's hard for me to see something with smooth, croony vocals as "the primal force of holy mother of god" - I don't hate smooth, croony vocals - they just feel too mannered for me for a song with them to have that kind of power that you're describing.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:35 (fifteen years ago)

haha he is smooth and croony in the first bit, but in the climactic second section i *think* you can hear him screaming his lungs out. well, it might be a guitar. whatever it is, something is hollering, and it ain't happy. the 'mannered' vocals are nothing more than ominous but then they don't need to be.

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:38 (fifteen years ago)

for those who haven't heard it, this is an 18-minute song, and the first 5 minutes have 'croony' vocals. the remaining 13 minutes have hell on earth.

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:39 (fifteen years ago)

it's not really "hell on earth" compared to deathspell omega, tbh

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:43 (fifteen years ago)

well, not as LITERALLY as DSO would have it. and not quite as tortuous, frenzied or plain mentalist. but vast, and suffocating, and crushing. *i* think it's great.

just gave Gemini Becoming The Tripod a listen and yeah it's fabulous, as I remember.

other amazing KD trax: The Manifold Curiosity, The Antique, Blue Lambency Downward, The Awkward Windwheel

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:48 (fifteen years ago)

i like it too - i just think sometimes you are prone to exaggerate certain qualities when describing songs.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:52 (fifteen years ago)

prone to exaggerations in your descriptions - especially in the context of existing music.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:52 (fifteen years ago)

perhaps. i had a truly revelatory experience with that track on earphones tho, what can i say? it slayed me dead. my descriptions are based on my very personal reaction to the music and aren't exaggerations from my perspective. i use figures of speech a lot; take them with the intended pinch of salt! ___on limpid form is *a* descent into the inferno, not THE descent into the inferno.

not that that DSO song doesn't need near-equal amounts of love.

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 00:55 (fifteen years ago)

well - if it's a descent into the inferno, that inferno is actually not all that infernal - like it isn't all that raging.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 00:57 (fifteen years ago)

'it isn't all that raging'

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 01:00 (fifteen years ago)

dude - i have that song in itunes. i just finished listening to it 15 minutes ago!

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 01:00 (fifteen years ago)

this is for the benefit of others who might like to hear it themselves before leaping to judgement

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 01:01 (fifteen years ago)

look! they do it live too! and my, don't they forget to rage!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=173XU6OE55Q

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 01:01 (fifteen years ago)

you need to listen to more metal.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 01:03 (fifteen years ago)

oh believe me i have heard plenty of 'brutal' or 'heavy as shit' music - this song is IMO just about as brutal as any, but what marks it out for me is the pacing of its attack, the brilliant construiction

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 01:07 (fifteen years ago)

this song is IMO just about as brutal as any,

Uhh ... I really don't know what to say. Brutality is obviously in the eye of the beholder.

I can see what you mean about liking the pacing.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 01:08 (fifteen years ago)

Brutality truly is in the eye of the beholder. You might think something else is MUCH more brutal. DSO, Meshuggah, countless DM or grindcore bands, Sunn O))), blah blah de blah. Insert your own choice here. This stuff kicks ass.

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 01:13 (fifteen years ago)

I'm also trying to politely imply that your hierarchy of brutality might be at odds with that of connoisseurs of brutal music.

sarahel, Monday, 30 November 2009 01:17 (fifteen years ago)

OK, you asked for this

(it's in my Bubbling Under and is BRUTAL x50)

Puddle of Thudd (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 01:20 (fifteen years ago)

louis are you excited?

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Monday, 30 November 2009 23:53 (fifteen years ago)

What do you think will win?

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Monday, 30 November 2009 23:54 (fifteen years ago)

My money is on SFA

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Monday, 30 November 2009 23:55 (fifteen years ago)

i reckon ulrich might take it

a. cole, u thic (acoleuthic), Monday, 30 November 2009 23:57 (fifteen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Tuesday, 1 December 2009 00:01 (fifteen years ago)

haha kerr you have GOT to stop doing this

a. cole, u thic (acoleuthic), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 00:02 (fifteen years ago)

maybe all the votes were for the exhaustive write-up

a. cole, u thic (acoleuthic), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 00:02 (fifteen years ago)

3 for The Terse Crimp! OMG!

a. cole, u thic (acoleuthic), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 00:03 (fifteen years ago)

I was almost right

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 00:03 (fifteen years ago)

i reflexively voted for it because it was the only track here i'd heard xpost

electrical audio's sm57 (electricsound), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 00:03 (fifteen years ago)

john justen who did you vote for?

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 1 December 2009 00:07 (fifteen years ago)

gee i wonder who voted for deathspell omega?

sarahel, Tuesday, 1 December 2009 00:26 (fifteen years ago)

four weeks pass...

23 best albums (off the top of my head):

1) Ulver - Blood Inside
2) Lapsus Linguae - You Got Me Fraiche
3) Super Furry Animals - Rings Around The World
4) Thighpaulsandra - I, Thighpaulsandra
5) Ulrich Schnauss - A Strangely Isolated Place
6) Half Man Half Biscuit - Trouble Over Bridgwater
7) Oceansize - Effloresce
8) Volcano! - Beautiful Seizure
9) Thomas White - I Dream Of Black
10) Late Of The Pier - Fantasy Black Channel
11) Working For A Nuclear Free City - Businessmen & Ghosts
12) Godspeed You! Black Emperor - Yanqui U.X.O.
13) Grandaddy - Sumday
14) Youthmovies - Good Nature
15) Deathspell Omega - Fas - Ite, Maledicti, In Ignem Aeternum
16) Radiohead - Hail To The Thief
17) The Dandy Warhols - Odditorium Or Warlords Of Mars
18) The Fiery Furnaces - Blueberry Boat
19) Darkspace - Darkspace III
20) Six By Seven - The Closer You Get
21) ...And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead - Worlds Apart
22) The Fall - The Unutterable
23) My Computer - No CV

goodnight, and happy new decade

Louis Jagger (acoleuthic), Thursday, 31 December 2009 22:33 (fifteen years ago)

awesome list! i really want to hear this lapsus linguae now but they seem to be pretty impossible to track down in the states. the stuff i already knew + that spotify playlist is all top notch tho

sleepingbag, Thursday, 31 December 2009 23:15 (fifteen years ago)

do me a favor though - and please collectively decide whether i'm supposed to be lj's mom or love interest (both is not an option).

I don't know why both can't be an option.

striker, currently playing for Italian Serie A club Milan (King Boy Pato), Friday, 1 January 2010 08:30 (fifteen years ago)

Urgh, so much prog-wank! lol 00's

beautiful sunrise in the decade where i turn 30 (acoleuthic), Friday, 1 January 2010 09:03 (fifteen years ago)

If I had a bit longer to digest it, the St Vincent album might threaten this list, but precious little else from 2009. Maybe Gyratory System.

beautiful sunrise in the decade where i turn 30 (acoleuthic), Friday, 1 January 2010 09:34 (fifteen years ago)

When I saw your list I thought, 'Urgh, so little prog-wank!'

I X Love (Abbott), Friday, 1 January 2010 17:49 (fifteen years ago)

Haha! That was my first post of the decade, thought it might as well be a nice little self-deprecating jab! Albums with prog elements: 1-4, 7-19, 21, 23, hence there are 4 albums here that aren't at all 'prog'. I make that quite a decent ratio!

You'd go mad for Lapsus Linguae fwiw

agonising dusk in the decade where i turn 30 (acoleuthic), Friday, 1 January 2010 17:58 (fifteen years ago)

(and of those 4 albums, all 4 have songs with unorthodox structures that COULD be construed as 'progressive'...)

agonising dusk in the decade where i turn 30 (acoleuthic), Friday, 1 January 2010 17:59 (fifteen years ago)

one month passes...

louis, i think <a href="http://scramblerseequill.bandcamp.com/";>this</a> might be another band we can agree on. slightly dreamy pop with lots of out-of-left-field changes, and all the musicians can play their fucking asses off.

i'm not in love with the singer/songs or anything yet, but the music is really exciting.

rinse the lemonade (Jordan), Friday, 26 February 2010 22:22 (fifteen years ago)

oops

rinse the lemonade (Jordan), Friday, 26 February 2010 22:22 (fifteen years ago)

one month passes...

ooh didn't see this, Jordan! thanks, will check out! your last recommendation was sound.

LiveJournal (acoleuthic), Friday, 26 March 2010 14:22 (fifteen years ago)

three years pass...

my top 50 albums huh

cardiacs - sing to god
vdgg - pwn <3s

fuck

can I just give 2?

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Saturday, 7 September 2013 14:41 (twelve years ago)

an attempt at an UNRANKED remaining 48:

ulver - blood inside
mansun - six
cardiacs - the seaside
spratley's japs - pony
the fall - levitate
the fall - the unutterable
vdgg - still life
autechre - draft 7.30
foetus - hole
the cure - pornography
swirlies - they spent their wild youthful days in the glittering world of the salons
mercury rev - yerself is steam
soft machine - third
lapsus linguae - you got me fraiche
kayo dot - dowsing anemone with copper tongue (new one might join it when I finally get around to buying it)
william d drake - the rising of the lights
thumpermonkey - we bake our bread beneath her holy fire
neurosis - through silver in blood
talk talk - spirit of eden
wire - send
wire - 154
the the - infected
hood - rustic houses, forlorn valleys
mr bungle - disco volante (although their best two songs are on the debut)
deep turtle - there's a vomitsprinkler in my liverriver
magma - mdk
the fiery furnaces - blueberry boat (fuck you)
thomas white - i dream of black
neu - neu
dalek - absence (in your face whiney lol)
cannibal ox - the cold vein (faaaaaace)
duran duran - rio
volcano! - beautiful seizure
oceansize - effloresce
jute gyte - discontinuities
peter hammill - the silent corner & the empty stage
cardiacs - guns
cardiacs - heaven born & ever bright
cardiacs - on land & in the sea
tim smith - extra special oceanlandworld
the fall - hex enduction hour
youthmovies - good nature
to arms etc - to arms etc
thighpaulsandra - i, thighpaulsandra
half man half biscuit - trouble over bridgwater
boredoms - super roots 7
coil - musick to play in the dark

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Saturday, 7 September 2013 15:20 (twelve years ago)

proooooog

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Saturday, 7 September 2013 15:21 (twelve years ago)

List of 10 albums chosed by LJ that are good albums in my subjective estimation, ranked according to an objective sorting algorithm

autechre - draft 7.30
wire - send
wire - 154
boredoms - super roots 7
the fall - hex enduction hour
swirlies - they spent their wild youthful days in the glittering world of the salons
cannibal ox - the cold vein
neu - neu
the fall - levitate
the fall - the unutterable

2 ℜ 4 u (Nilmar Honorato da Silva), Saturday, 7 September 2013 15:38 (twelve years ago)

you're a swirlies fan? figures i guess but i'd have had them as too childish for you

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Saturday, 7 September 2013 15:45 (twelve years ago)

you missed "a little man and a house"!!

frogbs, Saturday, 7 September 2013 15:48 (twelve years ago)

their worst album frogbs. sorry but it's true. still great but less so. imo, obv

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Saturday, 7 September 2013 15:50 (twelve years ago)

its probably my 3rd favorite. I dunno, they're all worthy of laudation. What did you think of the Knifeworld album? (if you've heard it?) - it sucks that Tim obviously isn't on it, but IMO it's the next best thing

frogbs, Saturday, 7 September 2013 15:54 (twelve years ago)

knifeworld album was cool & had a couple of screamers (unwreckaged, me to the future of you). also their recept eps have been good, maybe even better than the debut album material. monsoon bassoon album was obviously very good

the william d drake album in the list is my favourite non-tim-smith spin-off, but his solo album & spratleys japs are amazing as well

thumpermonkey are also cardiacs-influenced, u shd hear them

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Saturday, 7 September 2013 15:58 (twelve years ago)

yeah it's very solid. "Pissed up on Brake Fluid" sounds like something that would fit on a later day Cardiacs album. that said I feel their second album is going to blow it out of the water.

if you could pick 5 of these for me to hear, what would it be?

frogbs, Saturday, 7 September 2013 21:55 (twelve years ago)

v difficult question that depends on what you've already heard. given what i know already

ulver - blood inside
mansun - six
kayo dot - dowsing anemone with copper tongue
william d drake - the rising of the lights
thumpermonkey - we bake our bread beneath her holy fire

^^^if you leave this with mind unblown you can have your money back idk. they're mostly available on youtube or bandcamp

but the foetus, lapsus linguae and neurosis are also exceptionally important

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Saturday, 7 September 2013 22:18 (twelve years ago)

voted Talk Talk...kinda boring choice, sorry!

going (to) hell for pleather (seandalai), Saturday, 7 September 2013 23:37 (twelve years ago)

I'd like to hear frogbs take on the Lapsus record.

Your description of The Terse Crimp is bang on LJ, I love that song.

I'm sure I've said this before, don't sleep on the Sea Nymphs records and also the Shrubbies record which was produced by Tim.

http://shrubbies.bandcamp.com/

many machines on ilx (MaresNest), Sunday, 8 September 2013 13:34 (twelve years ago)

Ah this is cool. Forgot to say that North Sea Radio Orchestra's last album (I A Moon) is really superb and not far from any Top 50 list I could make (it's also dedicated to Tim Smith, albeit a little folkier and mellower than Cardiacs usually are). Similar personnel to Shrubbies iirc.

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Sunday, 8 September 2013 14:32 (twelve years ago)

ah yes, the 'nice little songs then monster title-track wig-out' trick. tends to obscure the littler songs a bit

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Sunday, 8 September 2013 14:58 (twelve years ago)

good album tho

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Sunday, 8 September 2013 14:58 (twelve years ago)

last two tracks bringing the epic as well tbf

... Jenkinson ... ... military spending ... ... ... Özil ... ... (imago), Sunday, 8 September 2013 15:12 (twelve years ago)

I've heard the other two NSRO albums, both of them are pretty good. They sound a lot like Penguin Cafe Orchestra but I like NSRO better. You may like Birds a lot if you haven't heard it.

Just heard the Ulver album, metal isn't really in my wheelhouse (yet) but this is much different than that, very interesting and definitely not something I can really discern on one listen. I decided to listen to an earlier Ulver album too and it's very interesting, I can see why you like them.

Now listening to Mansun - Six...reminds me a bit of Mars Volta but not quite as over-the-top or obnoxious. Very good stuff so far.

frogbs, Monday, 9 September 2013 15:12 (twelve years ago)

lj what do you think of this

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K6GUq__yp24

Lama Bloody SwagYurt (Nilmar Honorato da Silva), Tuesday, 17 September 2013 00:50 (twelve years ago)

deeply melancholy, effective synth build, simple melodic themes; basically a 3-minute mogwai song without guitars

v pretty but without the complexity or subtlety of narrative that really sets me off

some solo eno does appeal to me; my favourite stuff is on 'here come the warm jets', especially the cataclysmic descent into misanthropy that is 'driving me backwards'

... Jenks ... Neu! military£ ... snkkt! pickles Özil JTUPFRONT njhtdgs (imago), Tuesday, 17 September 2013 07:37 (twelve years ago)

my favourite stuff is on 'here come the warm jets'

my man!

not some dude poking a Line 6 pedal with his dick (sarahell), Tuesday, 17 September 2013 08:31 (twelve years ago)

jets is the most lj friendly of the 70s song lps for sure

do you know on land? probably the most lj friendly of the ambient serie

Lama Bloody SwagYurt (Nilmar Honorato da Silva), Tuesday, 17 September 2013 08:51 (twelve years ago)

Not at all. May investigate. I'd like to get into electronic music more, but artists like NWW, Current 93 etc have punishingly enormous discographies, dissuading me from the whole enterprise. Even The Fall took a long time to click.

... Jenks ... Neu! military£ ... snkkt! pickles Özil JTUPFRONT njhtdgs (imago), Tuesday, 17 September 2013 12:05 (twelve years ago)


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