December 1, 2014

The D Man's Top Twenty Albums of 2014

Concerts are a referendum on living.  Are you present?  Can you be swept up in a moment?  Will you lay aside needless inhibitions?  Not only can a great show lift you up, help you feel the buzz of life, it can let you in on your own secret pulse marking the beat of time.  This year was no different for The D Man, as a slate of shows reminded me to grab fleeting moments, hold them by the collars, and shake the life out of them.

In the spring, The D Man flew to L.A. to catch the Sting/Paul Simon show, which delivered polished musicianship and decades' worth of culturally significant pop hits.  Sting’s voice sounded better than ever, Simon was still light on his feet, and the wealthy Jewish couples sitting next to me shared my overreaction when “You Can Call Me Al” burst to life like, yes, angels in the architecture.

Rizzo and The D Man hit Kip Winger's solo acoustic set at some SLC dive.  Kip freaking Winger.  The people watching was simultaneously sublime and depressing, but we believed it our hair-metal duty—with free tickets in hand—to check this one off our bucket list.

Mrs. D Man escorted me to the Matt Pond show, where the veteran power-pop statesmen played Emblems in its entirety on the album’s tenth anniversary.  Real Estate wielded their ambient suburban guitars while Stark the Vinyl Shark nodded approvingly, solidifying the band's place as unassuming indie rock royalty.  My brothers and I sat at a back table as The Antlers’ nocturnal dirges wafted over the club; as Peter Silberman’s falsetto floated over stately horn arrangements, an intimate shared experience was inevitable.  Later in the summer, Rizzo's date bailed on him and so we snuggled together for The Avett Brothers' usual hard-stomp Appalachian affair.  I am a human time machine!

Future Islands were the year’s high-water mark.  The Baltimore band's Twilight Series appearance was a testament to earnest showmanship and groovy synth-rock.  Samuel Herring sweated, danced, and preached the righteousness of romantic relationships, his hand open in conversational invitation to both live and love better.  Beck closed out the evening with a festival-worthy set of drop-out alt-rock, retro pop, and honey-voiced folk.  Two turn tables and a microphone gave way to lush harmonies and then circled back again to bottles and cans, and it was readily apparent that the ageless musical chameleon is an authentic American original.  

While celebrating our wedding anniversary in SoCal, Mrs. D Man and I hit The Forum for a massive-sounding Arcade Fire show, experiencing the fulfillment of the band’s prophetic march to arena sing-along greatness.  During our man trip over Labor Day weekend, we teamed up with Bones and enjoyed the hilarious riot of a Spazmatics show in a hopping Hermosa Beach club.

In the fall, The D Man survived the icy assault of Interpol alongside Rizzo, Rip, and The Deuce. The band’s unironic guitar swells left our ears ringing.  With an even larger group of friends, including an unobservant Hans pushing right past us to grope next to the stage, we enjoyed the double bill of The Pains Being Pure at Heart/The New Pornographers.  We met Kip Berman by the merch table and watched Dan Bejar slink around on stage like a backstreet prophet teeming with poetry and urban living tips.

With over a hundred shows in the books, 2014 added fun new chapters to The D Man's collection. Hey, if my knee holds up, there is still a chance to catch Billy Idol this month.  It's a nice day to start again . . .

1. Benji / Sun Kil Moon

Benji

Oh Carissa, when I first saw you
You were a lovely child
And the last time I saw you
You were 15 and pregnant and running wild

With these opening lines to the year's best album, deeply personal and striking poetry redound into something unforgettable.  We learn that Mark Kozelek left Ohio years ago and had pretty much "forgotten all about" his "little second cousin," though he had likely seen her at a family funeral among so many other relatives.  One morning he wakes up to a number of missed calls from his mother.  When he calls her back, she explains through tears that "Carissa burned to death last night in freak accident fire," her daughter finding her body outside after coming home late from a party.  Shockingly, Kozelek reveals that she died the "same way as my uncle who was her grandfather; an aerosol can blew up in the trash, goddamn what were the odds?"  She "was just getting ready to go to her midnight shift as an RN in Wadsworth" when she "vanished up in flames."

Carissa was 35
You don't just raise two kids
And take out your trash and die

This is what passes for a chorus hook in Benji's cosmology, a line that is jaw-droppingly, achingly empathetic.  "Carissa" may be the most heartbreaking song in a catalog filled with heartbreaking songs, the personal nature of her death too tangible, too close to home.

She was my second cousin,
I didn't know her well at all
But that doesn't mean that I wasn't
Meant to find some poetry
To make some sense of this
To find a deeper meaning
In this senseless tragedy
Oh Carissa, I'll sing your name across every sea

So Kozelek returns to Ohio "to get a look at the landscapes, to get a look at those I'm connected by blood and see how it all may have shaped me," but most of all, he returns to "find out as much as I can about my little second cousin Carissa," because "it is her life and death that I'm helplessly drawn."  Thus begins an unflinching journey almost unparalleled in American songwriting.  A parade of death and solace and more death that leaves one breathless, crushed, and bewildered.  But it is only by returning home, by acknowledging those moments and people that have touched our lives, that we can connect with some deeper meaning.

On Sun Kil Moon's sixth album, Benji, Kozelek chronicles his roots in Ohio, his emergence as an artist, and his everyday life in the here and now.  The record is a staggering aesthetic achievement, the sharp-edged culmination of his recent shift to diaristic, seemingly tossed-off lyrics, a beat poet with a nylon-string guitar.  From his world-weary, unmetered cadences, he unravels the sweeping and small moments of his life--the tragic, the painful, the touching--and moves his lyricism into peerless songwriting territory.  After the painstaking and elegant poetry of Admiral Fell Promises, his plainspoken approach first emerged on 2011's Among the Leaves and has since produced some of the finest songs of his career on Perils from the Sea, Mark Kozelek & Desertshore, and the incomparable Benji.

We hear about the untimely death of Kozelek's uncle, ("Truck Driver"), the senseless death of boys and girls at Newtown Elementary School ("Pray for Newtown"), the assisted death of Jim Wise's wife ("Jim Wise"), the death of the Night Stalker's victims and the serial killer himself ("Richard Ramirez Died Today of Natural Causes"), the death of a classmate ("I Watched the Film the Song Remains the Same"), and the death of his grandma and his friend Brett ("Micheline"), among others.  Kozelek even worries about his mother's death even though she is very much alive ("I Can't Live Without My Mother's Love").

My mother is 75
She's the closest friend I have in my life
Take her from me, I'll break down and ball
And wither away like old leaves in the fall

The resulting collage is fierce art.  Consequently, this album is not for everyone, and it is certainly not for every occasion.  After hearing "I Can't Live Without My Mother's Love," Mrs. D Man could not bear to listen to another word.  The world is a colder place without your mother, and while Kozelek anxiously worries about the day he loses his closest friend, Mrs. D Man actually experienced such loss in 2014 with the passing of her dear mother, Susan.  Mrs. D Man was troubled by the emotionally direct (depressing!) subject matter, and the tragedies of strangers, in the wake of her own tragic loss, were an extra, unbearable load.  Her reaction is entirely understandable.

Yet Kozelek's keen observations about the difficult subject matter is what gives life and force to his art. The integrity of the album is in his detailed descriptions, his ability to find the shared humanity in every person that has passed through his life; his relatives, his friends, and, yes, even strangers are treated with unvarnished dignity.  The ability to fully transform someone from "other," to see them as a subject rather than object, is only possible through the revelations of humility and love.  Rarely has a songwriter written in such a profoundly empathetic fashion about other people, which here, pass through his life like a film or a dream.

The ephemera is also vital.  Benji's wordcount comes in at 5,287, surpassing most rap albums; the exhaustive references even spawned a glossary.  Kozelek manages to sing about Scrabble, grandfather clocks, Kentucky Fried Chicken, wasp stings, Dominos Pizza, Happy Days, serial killers, Ronald Reagan, the Ayatollah, Stevie Nicks, baked beans, Led Zeppelin, albinos, Paul McCartney, aneurysms, lizards, Young Americans, sports bars, and, of course, the lovable dog in the movie Benji, to name just a few.  In his unfurling narratives, the necessary and the mundane are all necessary; he refuses to distinguish between the two.  As a result, the art is in the unexpected and emotional collisions, when the mundane becomes the necessary.  His minute observations often frame the ambiguities of his crucial experiences, and by doing so, the stuff of his life somehow becomes more than just stuff.

Kozelek's guitar playing is, as always, exquisite.  His patient and nuanced finger patterns over his nylon-string guitar are transfixing, and in some songs, like the gloriously hazy "I Watched the Film the Song Remains the Same," it is all that is required.  Other songs enjoy small flourishes in production, such as the Rhodes piano in "Jim Wise," the menacing percussion in "Richard Ramirez," or the lush saxophones in "Ben's My Friend."  The album's sequencing is impeccable; no song is out of place.

It is near impossible to pick a favorite moment.  "Carissa" hung with me for weeks.  "I Can't Live Without My Mother's Love" caught me in the throat more than once.  On "Pray for Newtown," Kozelek writes his most topical song ever, as he describes a series of violent shootings that have followed him all over the world; "it was everyday America and that's all."  He keeps turning on the television (don't turn on the television, Mark!) to hear about another senseless slaughter.

December 14th, another killing went down
I got a letter from a fan he said Mark say a prayer for Newtown
I ain't one to pray, but I'm one to sing and play
For women and children and moms and dads and brothers and sisters and uncles and aunts

December 25th, and I was just laying down
I picked up a pen, I wrote a letter to the guy in Newtown
I said I'm sorry about the kids and the teachers who lost their lives
I felt it coming on, I felt it in my bones and I don't know why

So when Christmas comes and you're out running around
Take a moment to pause and think of the kids who died in Newtown

On "I Love My Dad," Kozelek switches gears and displays his biting humor in a ramshackle tribute to his father, who, though far from perfect, taught important life lessons.  When young Mark came home from school crying because they sat him next to an albino, his father explained to him that "you gotta love all people, pink, red, black, or brown," and "then just after dinner he played me the album They Only Came Out at Night by Edgar Winter."  Sometimes, the lessons were a little more painful:

When I was young my father taught me not to gloat
If I came home too proud of myself I'd get wrestled to the floor and choked
But I forgive him for that
He was an eighth grade drop out and I was being a brat
I forgive him, I do
I know that he loves me and he knows I love him too

On "I Watched the Film the Song Remains the Same," Kozelek sweeps across his life with the delicate picks of his nylon-string, remembering the inspiration he received from watching the Led Zeppelin film at a Canton mall with friends, apologizing for the time he punched a classmate during recess, describing his lifelong bout with melancholy, and thanking the former head of label 4AD "for discovering my talent so early, for helping me along in this beautiful musical world I was meant to be in."

On "Richard Ramirez," after an intense stream-of-consciousness rant, he finishes the song with a savage, off-kilter, Modest Mouse-inspired guitar solo.  On "Micheline," he sweetly acknowledges the lives of his handicapped neighbor, his friend Brett, and his grandmother, and his chorus refrains are moving in their sincerity.  My grandma, my grandma, my grandma, my grandma, my grandma!  On "Ben's My Friend," the year's best album closer, he provides the perfect palette cleanser, a saxophone-infused change of pace and direction after so much guitar-strewn heaviness.  The song is a hilarious description of middle-aged ennui and a rare glimpse of male friendship, as Kozelek relays his experience attending his close friend's concert, Ben Gibbard of Death Cab for Cutie.

And though I'm contented, there's a tinge of competitiveness
But Ben's my friend and I know he gets it
Then in a couple days my meltdown passed
Back to the studio doing twelve hour shifts
Singing a song about one thing or another
Another day behind the microphone this summer

No doubt that Kozelek will continue to sing songs about one thing or another.  His output during the last five years has been prolific.  As a result, longtime listeners have been slightly amused with Benji's universal acclaim and widespread reach into new audiences, so there is an urge to remind everyone of prior masterpieces, such as the haunting elegies of Ghosts of the Great Highway or the graceful introspection of April, to say nothing of the Red House Painters 90's heyday.  That said, however, Benji is unlike anything he has produced, arresting and devastating.

If albums were contending for the equivalent of the Great American Novel, Benji would be on the shortlist.  Along with the likes of Blonde on Blonde, Bridge Over Troubled Water, Red Headed Stranger, Nebraska, Rain Dogs, and Illinois, to name a handful, Benji is a cohesive, thematic whole, both a literate masterwork and musical achievement.  Its forceful, internal consistency, and its lively lyrical content--sprawling and off-the-cuff--is unlike any other album.  Dylan's literate coyness would never allow him to be so self-deprecating.  Simon's spry grace could never unleash such a flurry of unkempt observations.  Springsteen lacks the imaginative powers to believe that standing in line at Panera Bread is anything more than standing in line at Panera Bread.  Even tough "indie" lyricists like Tom Waits or Issac Brock would be hard-pressed to match Kozelek's autobiographical poignancy.  These observations are not criticisms of other artists, but an attempt to demonstrate just how aesthetically original Benji is in America's rich songwriting landscape.

2. Lost in the Dream / The War on Drugs

Lost In The Dream
Hands down the best in-song moment of the year: at about the 1:48 mark in "Red Eyes," when Adam Granduciel releases his demons and finds healing in the form of a triumphant, whooooooo!  He then rips into a sweetly ferocious guitar run that rains down relief and all but washes away his watery eyes.  Even after hearing this transition a dozen times, it can still fire you up, help ease your own burdens via the power of a righteous cry.  But you abuse my faith!  Losing every time but I don't know where.  You're on my side again.  So ride the key wherever it goes.  I'll be the one, I can't, whooooooo!

When rock music doubles as spiritual suffering and rejuvenation, it is both surprising and soul-stirring.  Guitars and drums and vocals can make listeners feel many things.  But when they simultaneously explore dark personal hallways and illuminate the path of faith, however faint, it is an empathetic, immersive experience.  Lost in the Dream walks through the mist, uncertain but reaching, walking, hoping, and stretching for an outstretched hand.  Will you grab hold of it?

Much has been made of Adam Granduciel's personal paralysis as he recorded his masterpiece.  His struggles are worth celebrating here, if only because he lets us into his private world, honest and searching, and then pushes us forward with the force of wide-open, powerful, and beautiful rock songs.  Given that strange calculus which produces some of our best records, his sorrow is our good fortune. When someone else holds the candle, we can always see a little bit better.

Lost in the Dream is the sound of American rock music, right here, right now.  Some have described its sound as Bossgaze, which is shorthand for the spacey way that Granduciel grabs Springsteen, Petty, or Fleetwood Mac and distills them through an alt-rock guitar web.  When darkness begins to creep too far, the piano and saxophone provide warmth and clarity.  Dylan is another obvious influence, especially in the way Granduciel draws out and emphasizes his long vowels.

But none of those touchstones can play the guitar like him: sprawling, dexterous, anthemic, spiritual. He uses negative space as another substance, revealing striking contours in between his notes, and allowing for the possibility that a simple chord change can shift the entire direction of a song.  His leads are a meandering revelation.

Without hyperbole, this is one of the best records of the past decade.  It taps into a universal vein of American rock music while sounding fresh and inspired.  It is generous and cathartic; an hour of epic, open-road, big-sky dreaming.  It also influenced one of my own personal triumphs during the past year, a combination of physical and mental success.  As I climbed for three hours and 4,000 feet on my road bike to the top of American Fork canyon, Lost in the Dream propelled me in a very real and tangible way.  It was electric.  The music framed every vista, every tree-lined passage.  It carried me forward and gave me vitality when I needed it most.

3. Singles / Future Islands

Singles
Future Island were the zeitgeist in 2014.  The band's performance on Letterman broke the Internet, and it is easily one of the best television performances, ever.  It encapsulated everything great about the Baltimore band.  The spacious, Nu Wave groove.  The nocturnal bass lines and expressive synth cascades.  The romantic, lyrical immediacy.  But most of all, the emotional tour-de-force that is lead vocalist Samuel Herring, scouring the scene for meaningful connection, urging us to embrace each other with the healing powers of love and discovery.  Bono recently called "Seasons (Waiting on You)" a miracle.  Have you seen them?  That song, Seasons?  A miracle, that is.

Though the band is thankful for the meme-inducing popularity of their Letterman appearance, they also worried that it might be a one-trick pony, which was never their intention.  Indeed, Herring was simply performing as he has always done, wringing out sweat, passion, and black-metal howls from the depths of his person.  "For it to have garnered so much attention is amazing.  We were expecting maybe 20,000 or 25,000 views.  It wasn't just music fans but fans of late-night television.  Creating that response, that reaction, there's something really good about that.  It's really wild.  It really did change our year."

Herring continued. "The fear is that it becomes the bane of our existence.  You don't want to be the band who did that one thing on Letterman and then everyone forgot about you.  You can be the great band, but even after something like that, you want people to come back."

No worries, there.  People will come back.  Pitchfork named "Seasons" the #1 Song of the Year, and Future Islands' potent live performances have triggered increasingly large audiences as they have toured worldwide.  Forget Herring's seriously entertaining showmanship, his ability to hold your gaze for 120 minutes.  The band's songs are communal elevators, they lift and send masses soaring, anthemic, cinematic, splendid.

The messages are intended to stir the soul to action or to appreciate the beauty of those around you.  Be more than words.  Be more than strength and kind.  Be love and blind.  To those who come for you.  ("Spirit").  My sun every morning.  She feeds me daily soul.  She talks right to my soul.  ("Sun in the Morning").  And I wanted you to know.  I was thinking about you.  And you look like a rose.  Especially, when I'm a long way from home.  ("Back in the Tall Grass").  I showed you the dark.  And you said to me:  You know what you know is better, is brighter.  ("Lighthouse").  She looks like the moon.  She says, it's your eyes.  She sees everything.  She knows me too well.  ("Like the Moon").  I wrestled by the sea.  A loneliness in me.  I asked myself for peace.  And found it at my feet.  Staring at the sea.  ("A Dream of You and Me").

You get the point.  Herring even wrote a song for their grandfathers, called, yes, "A Song for Our Grandfathers."  In lesser hands, such sentiments would sound tired or trite.  Clichéd, even.  But when Herring sends his gaze across the divide, he eyes his listeners with soul-splitting urgency.  His sincere invitations are refreshingly bold in an era of overwhelming skepticism and irony.  After watching and hearing him live this past summer, I left the show wanting to be better.  How many pop shows can do that?  What strange musical uplift!

4. Days of Abandon / The Pains of Being Pure at Heart

When we were at the merch table after the show, I told Kip Berman, you write really great songs.  His response was genuine appreciation.  I explained that I was a longtime fan and already owned everything at the table.  He scrambled around and snagged a tote bag from somewhere underneath.  "You should have this," he said.  "Thanks for being here."  Since then, my family has used my indie-rock swag as a Sabbath day church bag, carrying everything from scriptures to lesson plans to baby wipes.  It also serves as a gentle, cursive reminder that striving for righteousness demands our hearts and therefore hurts sometimes.  Not unlike poignant pop music.

This album is arguably five or six spots too high, but The D Man relishes the band's warm and fuzzy hooks, which drip with nimble songwriting and saccharine melodies.  The band's first two albums scored coveted spots in my year-end Top Ten, and Days of Abandon is no different.  The record releases some of the Flood-produced fuzz of Belong and settles into sparkling jangle pop circa 1987 (think a softer, bouncier version of The Cure, The Pastels, and Johnny Marr's guitar).  Your wife will love this record, so there's that.

Jen Goma (from A Sunny Day in Glasgow) provides lovely backing harmonies, and her leads on "Kelly" and "Life After Life" may be the record's best moments.  Of course, from the indie-folk opener "Art Smock" through the swooning closer "The Asp At My Chest," there is not a single letdown among the ten tracks, which are awash in vivacious and sunny power-pop.  "Eurydice," "Massokissed," or "Until the Sun Explodes" could also easily be your favorite songs on the record.  Without any pressure to kiss up after a show, my stance is still the same: Kip Berman really does write great songs, simple and sure.

5. The Take Off and Landing of Everything / Elbow

The Take Off and Landing of Everything
Elbow’s sixth album, The Take Off and Landing of Everything, is a well-polished token of master songsmithing.  The record is a triumph of craft, melody, understated emotion, and clever lyricism.  The music romanticizes the everyday, embellishes the mundane.  With a vivid and varied songscape—and Guy Garvey’s role as your wry Mancurian guide—this collection invites deep exploration, listen after listen.

Garvey summed up the album’s fitting title:  "It's to do with the fact that there have been [so many] life events.  There are five members of the band—people have split up, got together, had children.  It never stops, this stuff.  Especially round the [age of] 40 mark . . . and yet I wanted to remain celebratory about that.  Everybody's feeling relief, with remorse, next to joy, next to loss.  But I think laughing very hard and worrying very little is a good way to keep young.”

Elbow confronts mortality with eloquent courage; it is difficult for Garvey's lyrics to be anything but well-considered and articulate.  The band’s classic musicianship is the sound of aging gracefully, accepting what must be accepted, but leaving enough room for a kind of respectable defiance, a type of self-actualization in the face of the coming night.  Be brave, dear souls, we are all in this together.

So it goes on the moving nostalgia of “My Sad Captains,” which is carried by a lilting waltz and repeating refrain of sad-eyed trumpets.  The title is taken from a line in Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra, in which Antony speaks about his drinking partners (“Come, let’s have one other gaudy night; call to me all my sad captains; fill our bowls; once more, let’s mock the midnight bell.”). Garvey’s vocal prowess, a British treasure by now, chronicles the whimsies of all-too fleeting alliances.

Over the past decade, The D Man's fondness for the Mercury Prize-winning band has increased with each album.  This is decidedly adult, hipster-free fare, so there is no reason to argue with rock critics who find the band too staid or polished.  When you find me a band that has written songs as strong or touching as this, this, this, or this, we can then have a meaningful conversation.

6. They Want My Soul / Spoon

They Want My Soul
Spoon guts full-bodied production (again), leaving behind only thin membranes of guitar, piano, and Britt Daniel's pointy vocals.  The result is minimal, brainy rock'n'roll, consistent with their best work, if not downright subversive in its barebones construction.  The Austin band's post-punk and garage-rock come unadorned, yet, as always, bursts of groove and space give way to seriously funky moments.

In honor of the Buckeyes and their improbable run to college football's inaugural playoff, The D Man presents his seeding for the four best songs on the tight, 38-minute album.
  • 1.  "Do You."  Doo do do do do do do!  Kick in the drums.  I was on 45th, I was half out of a bag!  Such a killer vibe, the slinky buzz of guitars, with Daniel's confrontation front and center:  Do you? Do you?  Something this simple is deceptively difficult to make, no doubt.  Dave Fridman's (The Flaming Lips) first-time work with the band as producer pays big dividends on this and other tracks.
  • 2. "Inside Out."  Boing.  Boing.  Boing.  I have no clue how guitars make that exact sound, whatever.  Time's gone inside out!  The reverbed backdrop of synth.  I don't got time for holy rollers!  The song just feels spacey and dark, as if the band is performing in a black box, and every time they pluck a key or strum a chord, a light goes off on their instruments.  And then they add some sort of harp arpeggios?  Sheesh.
  • 3.  "Outlier."  Indeed.  With its glimmering synth runs emerging from the night, the song is the perfect change of pace on Side Two.  New band member Alex Fischel (keyboardist/guitarist) has his fingerprints all over this track, which pulses with a subtle menace.  Mmm, nah nah nah!  That's all you really need for a good chorus when the fundamentals are this sound.
  • 4.  "New York Kiss."  With stiff competition for the fourth seed (see "Rainy Taxi" and "Knock Knock Knock"), The D Man gives the nod to the luminous album closer.  Go buy the album if you want to hear the rest of these tracks, cheapskate.

7. Morning Phase / Beck

Morning Phase
When Beck turned into Gordon Lightfoot, his horizon changed forever.  Sea Change was a surprising turn in 2002, abandoning the chameleon playfulness of Mellow Gold, Odelay, and Midnight Vultures for an emotionally direct singer-songwriter record.  The Nigel Godrich-produced album was sad, gorgeous, and arguably the best release of that year.  By trading in sly eyebrow raises for earnest folk-rock, Beck marked his unique place in the pantheon of American songwriters and performers; few artists could ever go from "Loser" to "Devil's Haircut" to "Golden Age" in one fell swoop.

Fans have long hoped for a return to Sea Change's acoustic handiwork, so many listeners were excited when word leaked that, a dozen years later, Morning Phase would be Sea Change II.  Or at least it comes close in parts.  Though Morning Phase is a worthy attempt to capture Beck at his most folkie or forlorn, it never quite matches the emotional resonance of its predecessor, which was written in the wake of his breakup with his longtime girlfriend.  There are no tracks here that equal the heart-tugging confessions of “Lost Cause” or “Guess I’m Doing Fine.”  To expect as much may have been too much.

But Morning Phase is still an achievement, garnering five Grammy nominations including Album of the Year.  The timbre in Beck's voice is very pleasing in a folk/harmony setting, and this may be a career best vocal performance.  The album is lavishly produced, channeling golden 70s radio, and it emphasizes harmonic textures and backing vocals, resulting in a more immersive listening experience than Sea Change's spare melancholy.  The production sounds expensive, a nod to that bygone era when bands camped out in studios for months and enjoyed massive recording budgets.  Beck's father, David Campbell, provides the orchestral arrangements just as he did on Sea Change, and at least 18 musicians lend their talents to the record's multi-layered production.

Any lingering sorrow is tempered by warmth and beauty.  Beck seems to have his jaw set, moving forward with a seasoned optimism.  While making a beautiful, traditional pop record may be seen as a step backward, Morning Phase actually feels like the start of a new day--and an accomplishment worth hearing.

8. Atlas / Real Estate

Atlas
Atlas is another hazy, nostalgia-riddled guitar record with no ambition beyond self-reflection.  The ambient quality to Real Estate’s guitar interplay is sublime and reassuring.  The quiet songs are not intended to build and climax; they slowly unravel like a homemade kaleidoscope, offering glimpses of fleeting moments as they pass.  Warm, shimmering, golden.

The New Jersey band sounds more confident and direct on their third record, even as they tackle themes of leaving youth behind and experiencing the excitement and anxiety of adult relationships. "Talking Backwards" may be the sweetest take on the conversational conundrums every newlywed shares, as lead vocalist/guitarist Martin Courtney can now attest.  Though there is no single moment as transcendent as “It’s Real” from Days, this is the band's strongest effort to date, assured, cohesive, and radiant.

Guitarists Courtney and Matt Mondanile are childhood friends, and when they lock in on lustrous, intricate rhythms together, it is apparent they have a tightly-knit bond with each other, musical or otherwise.  Watching them play a small room this year was special; their chord progressions and complicated fingerwork are capable of placing listeners in a trance, and the resulting tones appear to be effortless.  Take your hand at "Crime," as they are nice enough to provide you the guitar tabs.

9. Familiars / The Antlers

Familiars (2xLP+CD)
The Antlers have secured their third Top Twenty appearance.  On fifth album, Familiars, the Brooklyn three-piece create a richly-layered inner world, showcasing the band's wholly original sound and presence.  Lead vocalist and guitarist Peter Silberman wrings out his personal hangups and frustrations, which are gracefully rendered by his singular voice and enhanced by David Lerner's subtle percussion and Darbi Cicci's sophisticated work on the the trumpet, bass, synthesizer, piano, and organ.

2009's Hospice scattered emotional wreckage with disjointed guitars and noise-rock flurries, while 2011's Burst Apart infused spare keyboards and drum rhythms into the band's growing oeuvre.  Familiars is notably more intricate than either of those records, gloriously weighty and dense, the interplay between voice, guitar, piano, and trumpet a profoundly involved listening experience.  You will not be released without being submerged.

Silberman still breaks your heart with his falsetto, of course (see "Hotel"), but his evocative guitar playing is equally impressive here, understated, tonal, sinewy, and spiky.  (See "Directed" and "Revisited").  Cicci's stately trumpet arrangements are textured and heavyhearted (see "Palace" and "Parade"), while his elegant key and bass work is dark-hued and deft (see "Refuge").  During the band's live show this past summer, two things were striking.  First, Silberman carries the vocal torch with aplomb; his falsetto is full and unforced, and his lower register is strong.  Second, Cicci's lead trumpet was superb, if not the highlight of the entire show.

The fierce emotional and lyrical content on Hospice depicted both fictional and autobiographical accounts of then 23-year sold Silberman's isolation and depression.  But the music's aural power--and his ever-reaching voice--developed into something astonishing and soaring.  On Familiars, it feels as if Silberman is in a better place, healed up and hopeful, although the record is still uncertain and nocturnal, best suited for a lonely apartment or a late-night and solitary walk through the city.  If you are looking for a deep and rewarding listening experience, this is your kind of record.

10. Ryan Adams

Ryan Adams
“Ryan Adams is very much Ryan Adams being Ryan Adams.”  This observation sums up the vibe of his 14th solo studio release.  The self-titled record is classic Adams, brooding through a series of personal reflections, heartbreaks, and missed opportunities, albeit after 2011’s folk-tinged Ashes & Fire, the record is carried forward by power-rock riffs culled from the bargain vinyl bin.  His touchstones here are 80s-fueled rock, and his straightforward hooks are the closest he has come to making a Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers record.

Opening tracks “Gimme Something Good,” “Kim,” “Trouble," and “Am I Safe” will push you out the door and serve as the perfect soundtrack for wearing your denim jacket, bumming a smoke on Hollywood Boulevard, and ruing the day you met your ex-girlfriend.  When you are driving back to your empty place, "Feels Like Fire," "I Just Might," and "Tired of Giving Up" will smolder and keep you company.  “Let Go” is another strong album closer in a career filled with them, and the song just might get you out the door tomorrow.  You can live and feel all of these songs.  Take dips in the pool of self-pity.  Dry yourself off and start again.  The end result: a record that ranks somewhere in the top half of his output, which is no small feat.

“Wrecking Ball” sits in the middle of the rock record, a slow-burning acoustic strum worthy of classic ballads “Come Pick Me Up,” “La Cienega Just Smiled,” or “Desire.”  As always, Adams’s songs are sturdy.  His construction and delivery can handle seemingly endless listens, and it makes little difference if he is alt-country Adams, folk-rock Adams, or classic-rock Adams.  It is near impossible to grow tired of his best work, especially when you can toggle through his ever-increasing catalog and find well-crafted songs at almost every turn.  Perhaps this is my favorite thing about him: his songwriting commands attention and rewards lifelong fandom.

11. Our Love / Caribou

Dan Snaith has a doctorate in mathematics from Imperial College London, and as the son of a math professor, he had an uphill battle convincing his parents that he could earn a living making music. Fortunately there should be no family drama; Snaith is a chilled-out electro wizard.  His lo-fi, DIY psychedelia on 2003's Up In Flames, when he still went by Manitoba, spawned a successful cult following.  Since then, under the moniker Caribou, Snaith has taken his compositions to ultra-deluxe places, and Our Love is no exception.

Caribou's 2010 breakthrough, Swim, contained cool liquid disco, a fluid take on house, hip-hop, garage, and jazz.  Our Love expands on those influences, contemporary and high-gloss, but with a strangely warm, soulful glow.  The record's vibrant sound and negative space invites feelings of both euphoria and melancholy.

"Can't Do Without You" is one of the most memorable singles of the year, its obsessive refrain grafting into your cerebral cortex until you admit your interdependence and the song can finally explode into starry celebration.  "Silver" throbs with funky little pulses, Snaith's voice hovering over the mix, while strange female vocals squiggle throughout the track.  It is trippy, heady stuff.  "All I Ever Need" snaps forward with a steady, metallic beat, a perfect club track for brainy minimalists. The title track is another spare and spacey triumph, with bass bumps, string flourishes, and synth runs all intended to send one message across the night skyline:  Our love . . .

Snaith's unique embrace of dance music is welcoming and inclusive.  Though this is his most accessible record to date, his experimental edge is still intact:  "Second Chance" employs R&B singer Jessy Lanza; "Mars" incorporates weird tribal vocals and flutes; and "Back Home" builds into a laser light-show finale.   He said "the primary impulse on this record was to make something that was generous in the sense that it was for everybody, not just for me locked in a studio by myself."  Done and done.

A final note from Snaith on the interplay between math and music:

"At university, I signed up for a real calculus class, and it was a revelation, because it was totally different than anything I'd done before.  It was all self-directed: They gave you a problem and you had to deal with it.  All of a sudden, there was this analogy with creating music.  Math was now creative in the same way: It was about being intuitive and exploring an idea until something became clear.  It was one of those moments when I finally started to understand what my dad liked so much about math, too.  For me, music has always been about the thrill of starting with nothing and ending up with some melody or sound that connects with me in some way."

12. The Moon Rang Like A Bell / Hundred Waters

Moon Rang Like a Bell
The Moon Rang Like A Bell is spellbinding.  Nicole Miglis's vocals are vulnerable and strong.  She moves from whispers to emphatic statements, her searching pleas heartrending and always pretty. At times disembodied and desperate, her unusual voice loosely holds the record together, while the band's grasp of organic technology fills the atmosphere with unavoidable apprehension.

Hundred Waters have created a sophomore record you might expect to come from Iceland or England ala Bjork or Bat for Lashes, however, the four friends recently attended the University of Florida together. The unpredictable movement is one of the best aspects of the record, as the piano chords, percussive explosions, and skittering electronics flow into unexpected swells and silences.  The songs unfurl, build, and then collapse, hanging in the air like moonlit shadows, just out of reach, before they dissipate into the night.

Miglis's voice is seamlessly embedded into the record's fabric, her lyrics almost indiscernible at times, more instrument than message.  She has toured the world as a concert pianist, but listeners are well served by her fronting this imaginative band and its contemporary take on disparate styles drawn from synth-pop, EDM, and folktronica.  

13. El Pintor / Interpol

El Pintor
Turn on the Bright Lights was a monumental record that most turn-of-the-century hipsters embraced, its icy guitars and joyless vocals a nod to Joy Division, Echo & The Bunnymen, and nocturnal Dark Wave that spills into the darkest corners of late-night Manhattan.  The guitars of "Untitled" are still enthralling, and then "Obstacle 1" jolts alive with electricity, creating one of The D Man's favorite album-opening combinations.  In hindsight, the band’s signature sound is more wholly their own than they are given credit for, regardless of the obvious influences.

Antics was an excellent follow-up, which resulted in large crowds during the early 2000s and opening slots with The Cure and U2.  The band’s grip on its aesthetic loosened, unfortunately, and their next two albums were met with a discernible lack of interest.  Bassist Carlos D—with his famous comb-over intact—left the band and a much-needed hiatus was taken. Four years, to be exact.

The band’s fifth album, El Pintor, feels reinvigorated, a notion that lead vocalist and songwriter Paul Banks has discussed.  "As a kind of compound, we were a four-atom molecule [with Carlos D] before and now we're a three-atom molecule. The chemical structure of a three-atom molecule doesn't mean it's weaker. It could be a stronger compound or a more radioactive compound. So I feel like we're a new animal, and I think that makes this record pretty exciting."  A little esoteric, perhaps, but you get the point.

Not surprisingly, the formula hasn't changed much, and there is little escaping the band's somewhat narrow sonic spectrum.  But there is no denying that Daniel Kessler's guitar playing is impressively intricate, and Interpol actually sound bigger than they ever have, a three-piece be damned.  The songs rock hard, and are even grand in parts, as experienced during an incredibly hypnotic performance of the awesome track "My Desire" at their recent show.

A couple of weeks ago, during heavy snows outside of Buffalo, the band was marooned on the road for more than fifty hours in their tour bus.  So The D Man could say that, in the search for a nice closing line, Paul Banks and his mates were finally met with something as cold and forceful as their gleaming guitar squalls.

14. Salad Days / Mac DeMarco

Salad Days
Mac DeMarco’s Salad Days is stoner music.  No other way to say it.  It is reggae for white people but without the reggae.  It is not psychedelic or acid rock, which you might have guessed, but laid-back guitar pop that bounces, bubbles, and squiggles its way to buzzy enjoyment.  Sluff English class, grab some headphones, and hit your basement couch.

DeMarco's slacker bona fides do not interfere with his sprightly, unique songwriting.  At only 23 years-old, he is strangely self-assured, and Salad Days sounds like a career-defining record from an artist that has toiled for decades.  His handle on the unspooling aesthetic is firm, and his guitar tones should make more seasoned players blush.  He works hard to eschew any sense of ambition, which reminds me of Stephen Malkmus’ 2001 solo debut, another weird record equally interested in strange character sketches and creative guitar doodles.

DeMarco was recently detained at his own show at the University of California-Santa Barbara for climbing on the scaffolding above the stage.  According to campus police, officers didn't realize DeMarco was the performer until they questioned him outside.  Clearly, he left the show with his cigarette-hanging, ball-cap wearing, chilled-out reputation intact.

15. Everyday Robots / Damon Albarn

Everyday Robots
Blur.  Gorillaz.  You know this guy.  The uber-talented Brit's solo album, Everyday Robots, is a down-tempo pop record musing on our isolation and interconnection via technology. Though he touches on some themes of alienation, this is not a screed.  Albarn is a brilliant modernist and boundary-pushing musician.  He fronts a band of cartoon apes, after all, and he demonstrates his futurism here by using his own iPad to shoot the videos for "Lonely Press Play" and "Heavy Seas of Love."

We are everyday robots on our phone, he sings on the title track.  His downcast voice deepens the album's themes and reveals the nature of his personal reflections; he is concerned, self-aware, but very much plugged-in.  Backed by strings and muted percussion, "Lonely Press Play" expresses his desire to connect emotionally, but he only finds solace in hitting the play button.  When I'm lonely, I press play / Because you're not resolved in your heart / You're waiting for me to improve.

Albarn handled the singing, piano, and guitar parts.  Co-producer and XL Recordings boss Richard Russell programmed the drums, and his occasional live percussion comes from a metal and plastic instrument that he picked up in the Congo.  Although there is a loose concept and consistent feel to the record, Albarn cannot help but meander, an eclecticist at heart.  Backed by the Leytonstone City Mission Choir, he sings over jaunty world rhythms about a little orphan elephant he met in Tanzania, "Mr. Tembo."  The choir's presence on the record, including on the optimistic closing track "Heavy Seas of Love," was a nostalgic addition for Albarn, who would often hear the choir singing from the Pentecostal Church at the end of his boyhood road.

Brian Eno contributes synthesizers and backing vocals on "You & Me/Heavy Seas of Love" and Natasha Kahn (Bat for Lashes) appears on "The Selfish Giant."  Unlike Albarn's recent efforts with Gorillaz, however, this is very much a solo record, allowing him to explore his love for soulful singing in an often minimalist context.  The spare environment suits him just fine, as Everyday Robots debuted at #2 on the UK album charts (proving the country's oft-superior taste) and was nominated for the 2014 Mercury Prize.

18-16. Hodgepodge

The following three albums were just easier to discuss all at once.  Lazy writers love lists, and if you can do a list within a list, then The D Man says go for it, hack.
Seeds
  • 18.  Seeds / TV on the Radio.  I just picked up the band's fifth studio album and I've only listened to it twice.  So far so good, but I'm in no position to write intelligently about the record, especially when it appears to be jittery, multi-layered, textured, and strange, obviously requiring multiple listens.  There are some immediate standouts like "Happy Idiot" and "Test Pilot," but it is unclear at this stage where the record should fall on my list.  Bookmark it here, I have a feeling it belongs.

  • 17.  Brill Bruisers / The New Pornographers.  Read my review of the band's recent show.  It gives you a decent enough idea.  A.C. Newman + Neko Case + Dan Bejar = fun pop music.
It's Album Time
  • 16.  It's Album Time with Todd Terje / Todd Terje.  The D Man knows nothing about Todd Terje.  I hope he wears leisure suits during the day and has mean chops to accessorize his mustache and gold chains.  But all I really know is that his album is a killer buffet of glittering, 70's inspired, loungey electro-pop.  Bryan Ferry (Roxy Music) makes my favorite guest appearance of the year on “Johnny and Mary,” a weary morsel of worldly after-party resignation.

19. Migrations of Glass / Desertshore

Desertshore’s fourth full-length is another all-instrumental affair.  Last year’s superb Mark Kozelek & Desertshore was largely a vehicle for Kozelek’s songwriting, though Phil Carney’s shimmering guitars and Chris Connolly’s piano flourishes strongly reinforced the storytelling.  On Migrations of Glass, the two Bay Area musicians create another excellent collection, and this time Kozelek makes only a brief appearance playing bass on one song.

Carney played guitar in Red House Painters and later in Sun Kil Moon, while Connolly is a classically-trained pianist and biochemist graduating from UC Berkeley.  The duo’s style and strengths seem to perfectly suit each other.  Carney’s  textural approach to the guitar produces a tactile but translucent atmosphere, his playing hanging over songs like see-through draperies.  On the lustrous “Crosstown Seven,’ which is an instrumental version of “Katowice or Cologne,” the flowing interplay between Carney and Connolly is nothing short of mesmerizing. 

On gorgeous tracks like “Until Morning Comes,” “Forevermore,” or “Tempest Armada,” Carney’s  varied skills are impressive, fluidly moving from little revelation to little revelation.  The unpretentious beauty of “Echoes De Honfleur” and “Enduro Nocturno” can linger long after listens, lovely and celestial.  Connolly is the perfect foil, picking his spots, restrained but always lively.  His piano lines seem to appear and transition at just the right moments, as demonstrated on the moving “The Morning is Open.”

This is thought-provoking post-rock, well-crafted and unflashy, occasionally dazzling, worthy of company like Mogwai or Explosions in the Sky, but ultimately offering more subdued contemplation.

20. Songs of Innocence / U2

Songs of Innocence cracks the Top Twenty because of three glorious weeks during the summer.  My boys and I listened to the album everyday—they loved it—and the opportunity allowed me to introduce them to Bono, The Edge, Adam Clayton, and Larry Mullen.  Though Songs of Innocence is much better than 2010's No Line on the Horizon and reveals noteworthy autobiographical sketches about Bono and the band's ascendancy, it is a middling U2 album when compared to their canon.  It goes for big and falls somewhere short.  But it was the perfect portal to the legendary band for my boys, and it made me happy that the Irish rockers were still making music in their fourth decade.

There are some solid tracks, of course.  “Every Breaking Wave” is a good U2 song and bears repeated listens, with the understated and sun-kissed guitar licks following up on Bono’s plaintive wails.  "California (All You Need Is Love)" starts to grow on you—indeed, it is difficult to dampen the optimism of a vintage Bono refrain: There is no end to love!  "Song for Someone" is a lovely track written for Bono's wife Ali Hewson.  And Cedarwood Road” finally gives some life to The Edge’s ringing ax, which is somewhat subdued throughout the record.  The song highlights the band’s formative years—the street Bono grew up on—and it could have fit in with politically-charged songs on albums like War and October.  Unfortunately, "The Miracle (of Joey Ramone), "Raised by Wolves," "Sleep Like A Baby Tonight," and "The Troubles" are largely forgettable.

My boys loved “Volcano,” not surprisingly, and even longtime listeners will begrudgingly rock to its chorus when it fills a stadium.  Thankfully, their excitement drowned out my misgivings, especially the nagging feeling that this album did not push the band hard enough, drive them down new roads in an age where EDM-inspired pop music has swallowed up many attention spans.  Given that Danger Mouse produced the record, the pre-release word was that we might be hearing a twist on the all-time classic Achtung Baby, or at least something approaching its glittering and danceable rhythms.  We do not get that with Songs of Innocence.  It is middle of the road.  But the album can certainly be used to point the next generation in the right direction.

November 12, 2014

Five Things

The D Man is on the mend after knee surgery.  Good thing no moshing on the horizon.  Enjoy some of the tracks and videos that I have, well, enjoyed.
  • Mark Kozelek Sings Christmas Carols.  Yes, it's true. The D Man is saving his complete immersion into the new album until after Thanksgiving.  That said, it was hard to avoid the sneak preview of the opening track, a cover of Charlie Brown's "Christmas Time is Here," which is the perfect selection to pair with Kozelek's warm brand of melancholy.  He even includes the spoken word exchange between Charlie Brown and Linus, but here a friend accurately remarks instead:  Of all the Mark Kozeleks in the world, you are the Mark Kozelek-iest.
  • Arguably the best track from Days of Abandon, check out the video for "Kelly."
  • On Halloween, The D Man watched a live stream of Future Islands' performance at the Pitchfork Festival in Paris.  Check out "A Dream of You and Me."  Costumes included.
  • Belle & Sebastian released the single "The Party Line" from their forthcoming album, Girls In Peacetime Want to Dance.
  • Jose Gonzalez shared "Every Age" from his forthcoming album, Vestiges & Claws.

October 11, 2014

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart, Neko Case, Destroyer, etc.

(Rip and Kip)

The D Man and Mrs. D Man enjoyed a solid show on Friday night.  Familiar faces dotted the crowd*: Rip, Stark the Vinyl Shark, Hans, and Sjoblom found ways to stay hip and classy among the disposable-income throng.  Hearts were light; heads were clear.  The music was uplifting in that strange communal way that only pop music can deliver, sending your soul slightly aflutter.
  • The Pains of Being Pure at Heart.  The D Man has been a big fan from the beginning, relishing the band's warm and fuzzy hooks, which drip with clever songwriting and saccharine melodies.  The Brooklyn-based band's first two albums, the self-titled debut and Belong, scored coveted spots in my year-end Top Ten.  The band's third album, this year's Days of Abandon, is another fine record, releasing some of the Flood-produced fuzz of their last album and settling into sparkling jangle pop circa 1987 (think a softer version of The Smiths, The Cure, and The Pastels).
    • The band played a fun 45-minute set and mixed in songs from all three records.  We missed Peggy Wang on the keyboards, so their touring sound was noticeably leaner without the synth lines to undergird the buzzy guitars.  Highlights included new cuts "Simple and Sure," "Kelly," "Until the Sun Explodes," and "Eurydice," in addition to Belong's "Heart in Your Heartbreak" and the debut's "Young Adult Fiction."  Don't check me out, don't check me out, don't check me out ah-out out out!
    • After the set, we said hello to Kip Berman, the band's lead singer and songwriter.  He has a distinctive voice--high and scattered--and an eagerly sincere presence that is unsurprising given the earnest music he creates.  Rip had him sign a record for Bones, and Kip flipped out when he learned that he was signing an autograph for a favorite baller.  "No way!  I love Brent Barry!"  I told Kip he is a great songwriter (he seemed genuinely appreciative) and that I already owned everything at the merch table.  He scrambled around and hooked me up with a free tote bag that will be perfect for taking to church:  The Pains of Being Pure at Heart is scrawled in big cursive letters.
  • The New Pornographers.  The band name is still terrible.  But The D Man is a big fan of Dan Bejar aka Destroyer and his evocative, literate take on Big Questions and anything and everything.  Mrs. D Man loves Neko Case and her knockout vocal confidence.  With the Canadian super-collective (including the power-pop glue of A.C. Newman), there is something for everyone: melodic folk and country giving way to a jaunty sort of pop that is galvanized with a harmonic indie sheen.  Though the band is unlikely to be anyone's favorite group, and it likely hasn't equalled the individual output of some of its members, the seasoned musicianship offers plenty of excitement with their considerable talents.
    • The vocal interplay was hands down the most enjoyable part of the set.  With such distinctive voices at work--Newman's clear tenor, Case's soaring magpie strength, and Bejar's slinky backstreet croon--it was amazing how tight their harmonies were, and almost every song was designed to showcase their vocal togetherness.
    • Bejar moved on and off the stage in between songs, only performing when he was needed to provide vocals.  He couldn't be troubled with picking up a rhythm guitar or tambourine on other songs, and we wondered what he might be doing backstage in between special appearances.  The best track of the night was "Spidyr," which sounded like it could have been an outtake from Kaputt, especially when the band broke things down into an extended, groovy late-night synth jam.
    • Other highlights included songs from this year's Brill Bruisers: "Champions of Red Wine" (Case's crystal vocals over the cascading laptop synths!), "Dancehall Domine," and "War on the East Coast"; "Moves" and "Crash Years" from Together and closer "Sing Me Spanish Techno" from Twin Cinema.
*The next day we learned via a series of texts (and underlying miscommunications) that Rizzo was, in fact, back from Vegas and game for a show.  We missed you, Robert!

September 29, 2014

25 Bands That I (More Than) Like

The D Man has been asked recently "what bands do you like" or "what type of music do you listen to?" Though I am certainly well versed in who I like and what I am listening to, I am usually at a loss of how to respond to such questions.  I figured that I need a quick link, a shorthand of sorts, that I could easily share with people.  Just check this out.  It explains enough.

I like a lot of artists (big circle).  I love many artists (smaller circle within big circle).  I adore and worship at the feet of a few artists; artists that capture my aesthetic imagination in profound and prolonged ways (smallest circle within the two bigger circles).  This list captures artists within my two smallest circles.

If you have not engaged with any of the following folks, you are simply missing out.  So in alphabetical order, and limited only to artists/bands that have been creative from 2000 to the present, here you go.  The short descriptions are hardly necessary.  Just listen and explore.*
*Sincere apologies to Andrew Bird, Bat for Lashes, Death Cab for Cutie, Iron & Wine, The Pains of Being Pure At Heart, Josh Rouse, and numerous others.