The Best Albums of 2006

January 1st, 2007 at 14:50 (Music)

2006 was a pretty good year for music as far as I’m concerned. Lots of good releases from old and new artists. It feels like the best year in a long time, but perhaps it was just that I was more active in looking up new music this year? I say this because this was the year I realised the potential of sites like Last.fm. While the music press seems ever so busy hyping promising artists to self-implosion, I find that these places are much more useful for finding new music. By looking at what my “neighbours” listen to, I’ve found lots of new stuff, two albums of which have made their way onto my list of this year’s best albums (at #6 and #1). I have a feeling I will be using that site a lot more in 2007. Anyway, here’s my list of the top ten albums of 2006; entirely subjective and probably very different from yours. I’d love to hear other suggestions, though, so if I missed something you think I might like - or not - feel free to leave a comment! I’ll provide links to samples or videos when available. Some only have amateur-made videos, but put to high quality audio, so just ignore those videos and listen to the music. The point is to give those of you who are unfamiliar with an artist a chance to hear it.

Laibach - Volk#10
Laibach - Volk

I’m somewhat ambivalent about putting this one on the list, as it’s not really an album I can listen to like I would any other album. The best way to describe it is probably as an exhibition of political art in music form, and as such, it requires a lot more brain activity than “normal” music does. Thirteen national anthems have been interpreted in more or less typical Laibach manner, and each track appears to be a deconstruction of the current political state of the nation in question. The anthems’ actual lyrics are mixed with Laibach’s own additions which often appear to aim for drawing out the true, underlying meanings of the original anthems. It’s often confrontational, which should be of no surprise to anyone who’s ever heard of Laibach, but there’s no reason for anybody to be offended by their country being one of the targets of Laibach’s cold satire. This isn’t the place to do into detail on the political philosophy of this album, but it is a relevant commentary on how we live today; united in and divided by nations. The Slovenian industrial pioneers have created an album that is so much more than music, and for that, Volk (”people” in German, “wolf” in Slovene - both are appropriate titles) deserves to be mentioned among the best albums of 2006.

Video: Anglia (song based on God Save the Queen)

Bob Dylan - Modern Times#9
Bob Dylan - Modern Times

This was a really hard album to get into. I don’t know why, because I had a great time listening to several of these songs at a concert last year. Feeling bored during my first listen, I let it be for a couple of months, and it took a few more tries to really get into it. It’s still not often that I’m in the mood for Dylan’s new retro country blues, but when I am, it’s a glorious album to listen to. The old man still has it in him, but somebody should really tell him he needs to stop pretending he isn’t political. Working Man’s Blues #2 should be proof enough.

Thom Yorke - The Eraser#8
Thom Yorke - The Eraser

As one who really enjoys the more electronic and experimental Radiohead of recent years, how could I not enjoy this as well? I grew up listening to electro and ambient techno long before I became interested in guitar-based music, so I’ve had no reason to join in the rock crowd’s whining about Radiohead “not writing songs anymore”. Having said that, The Eraser is not nearly as good as Radiohead’s latest, but it’s still a pretty interesting solo effort. Analyse is definitely one of my favourite songs from this year, but the album does have a few weaker tracks as well. It’s an album that requires a certain mood to be enjoyable, but the same goes for most of the stuff on this list.

Video: Analyse (amateur video, but the clips from Requiem for a Dream fit rather well)

Stuart A. Staples - Leaving Songs#7
Stuart A. Staples - Leaving Songs

Probably one of the most overlooked albums of the year. Staples is more commonly known as the singer of Tindersticks, and considering how much this sounds like a Tindersticks album, it’s almost weird that he made it under his own name (as far as I know, the band is still together). In any case, this album features some really good songs, and the epic opening track Goodbye to Old Friends sounds like classic story-telling a là Tindersticks. Other highlights are the duets with female guest vocalists, including Maria McKee. If there’s anything that betrays this as not being a Tindersticks album, it’s probably the relative lack of strings in favour of more “country feeling”.

Video: That Leaving Feeling (bizarre video, but seems to be official)

Beirut - Gulag Orkestar#6
Beirut - Gulag Orkestar

The most unexpected album of the year? I would think so. Beirut, or Zach Condon, has taken the best parts of my favourite folk music, the Balkan/Romani kinds, and created his own somewhat poppier version. It’s a lovely sound he has created here, and a little more easy listening than the “genuine” folk I’m used to. As if the music isn’t enough to take me back, reading the story (at 4AD) of how Condon fell in love with this type of music while travelling in Europe as a teenager, I’m reminded of my own first encounter with the Balkans and its culture about a decade ago. For me, that was the start of a still ongoing love affair, so it’s easy to sympathise with Condon’s ambition. The only thing I don’t get is why on earth he calls himself Beirut with such obvious Central and Eastern European influences. But I suppose that’s just another ironic touch. I sense a lot of those on this album.

Video: Postcards from Italy (decent live footage)

The Knife - Silent Shout#5
The Knife - Silent Shout

This Swedish sibling duo was one of the critics’ favourites this year, and this album certainly is an excellent piece of electronic pop music. While I found their previous albums a tad too poppy at times, this slightly darker (some have said it’s very dark, but I wonder what else those people listen to) album is a real gem. Hard beats and soft melodies meet in alternating harmony and dissonance. Not much else to say but that this is a smart reinvention of 80s esque synthpop.

Videos: Marble House | Like a Pen | We Share Our Mother’s Health

Siddharta - Petrolea#4
Siddharta - Petrolea

Ok, so it’s a pretty straightforward alternative rock album, but it’s a damn good one at that. It’s less experimental than their last two albums, but all the energy is still there. Siddharta have been able to enjoy some success outside of their homeland in recent years, but, thankfully, this album is all in Slovene. I’ve never liked the English versions of their songs, as Tomi M’s voice sounds too hard and forced in English, not to mention that the lyrics are better and more complex in Slovene. It’s a beautiful language, so there’s no reason why people around the world with open minds shouldn’t be able to enjoy the music anyway. By the way, Plastika has what is probably the silliest video of the year, but it’s nice with a band that doesn’t take itself too seriously.

Videos: Domine | Plastika | Homo Carnula (last one fan-made, based on Dark Angel)

Current 93 - Black Ships Ate the Sky#3
Current 93 - Black Ships Ate the Sky

Of all the countless Current 93 albums released over the past twenty or so years, this one is definitely in my top three. Black Ships Ate the Sky revolves around an 18th century hymn, Idumaea, which is featured no less than eight times on the album, each time performed by a different vocalist. Now, in any other case, it would probably be a bore to have eight out of the album’s 21 tracks being versions of the same song, but that’s part of the genius of this album; every interpretation is so different that you could hardly tell they’re based on the same hymn had it not been for the lyrics. I probably like Baby Dee’s harp version the best, but they’re all good. Other guests include, among others, Marc Almond, Will Oldham (Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy), Antony (…and the Johnsons) and Cosey Bella Tutti (Throbbing Gristle). Still, my favourite parts of the album are the ones featuring David Tibet himself. His lyrics are as mystical and captivating as ever, and I still love the way his vocals sound more like he’s telling a story or reciting poetry than singing. Can’t say I’m too fond of this term, but Black Ships Ate the Sky really is “apocalyptic folk” at its best.

Woven Hand - Mosaic#2
Woven Hand - Mosaic

This is Woven Hand’s most intense album yet. The incredibly suggestive Winter Shaker makes me shiver of delight and uneasiness at the same time, and the mix of folkish arrangements give the album a very special atmosphere. David Eugene Edwards’ introspective lyrics dwell in the same realms as usual; salvation and damnation, hope and despair, faith and love. Split up into separate tracks, it feels like there are less real “songs” on Mosaic than on Edwards’ previous albums, but the album as a whole creates a tiny folkloristic world of its own, full of mystery. Gloomy as it may be, it’s a place I find myself wanting to return to often.

Video: Dirty Blue (live footage - unfortunately without the folk arrangements from the album)

Asobi Seksu - Citrus#1
Asobi Seksu - Citrus

Two weeks ago, I had never heard of Asobi Seksu (which I hear translates into something like “playful sex” or “sex for fun”), and while making this little list I thought a lot about if I could really bring myself to put such a newly discovered album as number one. Novelty sometimes wears off quickly. The thing is, though, that it’s such a rare occurence for me to hear something for the first time and think to myself “holy shit, this is good!” right away. The first song (not counting the 17-second intro track) already had me spellbound with its nostalgic sounding shoegaze, and it only got better from there. Sure, it can be argued that their sound isn’t very original as it’s very reminiscent of old shoegazers like My Bloody Valentine and Slowdive, but I love those bands, and Asobi Seksu feel to me like they’ve taken all the good things from their influences and created a faster-paced update of a genre I thought was long dead and forgotten. It also doesn’t hurt that Yuki Chikudate has the voice of an angel and blends in some Japanese vocals now and then. In fact, the only thing that could possibly make this album any better is if all the lyrics were in Japanese. I just love the sound of it. To sum things up, this is a brilliant collection of well-written songs with dreamy pop melodies. While most of the other music on this list is rather melancholic and, as such, quite reflective of my general mindset and personality, Citrus makes me happy. I thank the Internet community for my discovery of it - to think that I found such a gem just by poking around in one of my Last.fm neighbours’ playlist!

Video: Thursday (dull video, but the song makes up for it)


Honourable mentions (albums that were either in the running or that I would need to listen more to):

Tom Waits - Orphans
Belle and Sebastian - The Life Pursuit
Lisa Gerrard - The Silver Tree
Das Ich - Cabaret
Six Organs Of Admittance - The Sun Awakens

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Brimstone Rock

December 10th, 2006 at 2:56 (Music)

Woven Hand in Stockholm, December 4, 2006
Woven Hand at Debaser Medis, Stockholm, December 4. (photo from rockfoto.nu)

It’s a rare but wonderful thing when you can see the same band several times and yet be offered very different experiences every time. The first time I saw Woven Hand, it was just David Eugene Edwards alternating between a guitar and a banjo. The second time, he had found himself a drummer, and now, the third time, he was accompanied not only by his drummer and a second guitarist, but also by bassist Pascal Humbert from his old band 16 Horsepower. So as an old 16HP fan, I was in for a treat. And they didn’t disappoint. The sound was heavier than ever before, which gave the highly suggestive songs from the latest album a real edge. The only downside was that the massive sound drowned out Edwards’ vocals at times, and the real highlight for me was, after all, the first encore with just Edwards on stage, playing a couple of 16HP songs. The photo above does well to capture the mood of that part of the show. The only thing that bothered me was that some people got the idea to clap their hands through the intro to Black Soul Choir. I mean, seriously, despite the relative catchiness of that tune, this is not the kind of music you clap along with. Somebody posted a video of that first minute on YouTube in case you’d like to have a look. Anyway, all things considered, this was a terrific gig. I’ll be eagerly awaiting their return.

If you’re not already familiar with Woven Hand or 16 Horsepower, you’re missing out on some of the best music made since Joy Division were around. And don’t let yourself be put off by Edwards’ deeply religious lyrics. His approach is entirely different than that of any other Christian musician you’ve ever heard, and even I - the ultimate atheist - think it adds to the experience. For an introduction to 16HP via YouTube, check out this and this.

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