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12-19-2010, 12:37 AM | Topic Starter |
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Reaper's Top 30 (plus Honorable Mentions) Favorite Albums of 2010
This year, a very deep year for music, I will post a top 30, complete with descriptions and YouTube embeds to a song I really like from each album.
My top 30 isn't quite complete yet. I anticipate posting everything for that list tomorrow. But in the meantime, this thread will begin with a handful of Honorable Mentions, listed alphabetically, for people to mull over. Honorable Mentions: Brotha Lynch Hung - Dinner and a Movie Enforcer - Diamonds Iron Maiden - The Final Frontier LCD Soundsystem - This Is Happening Manticora - Safe Oceansize - Self Preserved While the Bodies Float Up Overkill - Ironbound Pain of Salvation - Road Salt pt. 1 Sleigh Bells - Treats Sufjan Stevens - The Age of Adz Tech N9ne - Collabos: The Gates Mixed Plate Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Mojo Bobby Watson - The Gates BBQ Suite Kanye West - G.O.O.D. Fridays Top 30: 30.) The National - High Violet 29.) Kutt Calhoun - Raw and Un-Kutt 28.) Joanna Newsom - Have One on Me 27.) Gayngs - Relayted 26.) Johnny Cash - American Recordings VI: Ain't No Grave 25.) Burzum - Belus 24.) Blind Guardian - At the Edge of Time 23.) High on Fire - Snakes for the Divine 22.) Karnataka - The Gathering Light 21.) Ihsahn - After 20.) Das Racist - Sit Down, Man 19.) Kvelertak - Kvelertak 18.) Enslaved - Axioma Ethica Odini 17.) Heathen - The Evolution of Chaos 16.) Briton Rites - For Mircalla 15.) Glasser - Ring 14.) Big Boi - Sir Luscious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty 13.) Borknagar - Universal 12.) Sigh - Scenes from Hell 11.) Gil Scott-Heron - I'm New Here 10.) Alcest - Écailles de Lune 09.) Robyn - Body Talk 08.) Ces Cru - The Playground 07.) Triptykon - Eparistera Daimones 06.) Janelle Monae - The ArchAndroid 05.) The Lord Weird Slough Feg - The Animal Spirits 04.) Angra - Aqua 03.) Kanye West - My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy 02.) Dessa - A Badly Broken Code 01.) Agalloch - Marrow of the Spirit Thanks for reading/listening! Feel free and discuss the albums mentioned or the albums snubbed. Last edited by Reaper16; 12-20-2010 at 05:15 AM.. |
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12-19-2010, 12:40 AM | #2 |
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Enforcer - Diamonds:
Enforcer play traditional heavy metal. Reeeeallly traditional. From the songwriting, to the aesthetic, to the production, the whole album sounds like it could have been released in 1984. So why would a band even bother playing this kind of NWOBHM in 2010? They only reason I can see is because you can make it worth it. Because you have timeless riffs and vocal hooks out the ass. Enforcer has these things. This is not an ironic album. The Swedish members of this band consider straight-up heavy metal to be "timeless." Catchy as all Hell, very fun, worth a listen. If this album had come out in 1984, we'd be hailing it as a classic. Iron Maiden - The Final Frontier: Iron Maiden continue to stay relevant. They might be old, but they still kick ass live. And they continue to grow as artists, amazingly enough. This album sees the band experimenting with incorporating American rock & roll into their recent progressive-tinged version of their trademark sound. I think this album could use some trimming, but ultimately it IS a new Iron Maiden album. It is something to be thankful for. Brotha Lynch Hung - Dinner and a Movie: Yeah, I already screwed up alphabetical order. So what. Brotha Lynch Hung, for the uninitiated, raps about murder and cannibalism and death and gross stuff. He's a clever lyricist, but his project doesn't move past horror. Why listen to him? Because, despite his lyrical content, dude is one of the best rappers on the planet. His flow is utterly unique, and it moves with a precise, lusty loop. It sounds like how the eyes of a serial killer move around a room full of potential victims. This is Brother Lynch's first album on Strange Music (Tech N9ne's label), and he holds nothing back. The only reason it didn't make the top 30 is because it has A LOT of skits filling up the album length. Way too much story. The rapping that's here though is largely excellent. LCD Soundsystem - This Is Happening: It's an LCD Soundsystem album. You know what to expect. This one is a massive step down for me from 2007's momentous Sound of Silver. This album feels tired in places, bored with itself. Still though, it's LCD Soundsystem. |
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01-22-2011, 03:23 AM | #3 |
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I didn't see it as that much of a step down from Sound of Silver at the higher points at all. Four of the nine tracks were Murphy at his best but would agree that the album had some flat moments. Probably my vote for album of the year despite the imperfections.
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12-19-2010, 12:43 AM | #4 |
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Manticora - Safe:
Manticora released their 8th album this year. It ****ing rules. The only reason it doesn't make top 30 is because it doesn't show much growth. Manticora, at this point, have found themselves a formula. They play blistering progressive/thrash metal with vocals out of German power metal. They love riffs. They love songs around six minutes. This new album has prominent keyboards on many of the songs, which is a new wrinkle for them. If you like metal, you have to listen to this. Oceansize - Self Preserved While the Bodies Float Up: Oceansize is not a band that is content to rest on its laurels. They are constantly exploring new soundscapes, new modes of expression. I doubt they'll find an improvement on the songwriting found in their album Frames, but I love that they try. This album is in turns technical, beautiful, happy, melancholic, patient, restless. I love the diversity, but the album doesn't ever truly cohere into a single vision. As far as prog releases go, there weren't many better this year. The two-song combo or "Build Us A Rocket Then" and "Oscar Acceptance Speech" proves that. Overkill - Ironbound: This is Overkill's 16th album. They've been thrash stalwarts for as long as thrash has existed. I don't know why, but they picked 2010 to put out perhaps their best album. Ironbound blew me away. The band is so committed to their craft here; the riffs are as explosive and the pace as frenetic as it has ever been in the band's discography. Any time the world can get a legitimately good thrash album these days is a good time indeed. I'll let the song speak for itself. Pain of Salvation - Road Salt pt. 1: Pain of Salvation is one of my favorite bands. They are largely tremendous. Singer Daniel Gildenlow is, without question, one of the top 5 vocalists on the planet. His voice will bring you to real, honest tears. Their last album saw a evolution away from progressive metal and towards a more rock-based sound. This new album is almost entirely rock. Yet... it's pretty fantastic still. Hard to get into? Yes, especially for long-time fans. Fret not; the album has a couple of songs -- "Sisters," and "Of Dust" -- that rank among the best the band has recorded. |
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12-19-2010, 12:44 AM | #5 |
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Sleigh Bells - Treats:
Oh snap, Barry puts a hipster record on his honorable mentions. Sleigh Bells was a big buzz band this year, and not without merit. Yeah, the album is REALLY loud. Yeah, it's kinda' simple. But man, is it ever danceable. As far as dance music goes, this is pretty damn heavy. It is practically the doom metal of dance music. I would never have figured it, but I've seen the crushing, stuttering, "Crown on the Ground" bring a dancefloor to a state of thrall. Sufjan Stevens - The Age of Adz: Man, Sufjan didn't withhold a single idea from this album, did he? This album is ****ing crazy. All of the restraint shown on Illinoize has been replaced by utter bombast. In a lot of ways, this is the indie rock equivalent of Kanye's My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. Sufjan's talent for a vocal hook and a guitar lick keep this album from derailing. It's a slow-grower that will yield new things over multiple listens. Tech N9ne - Collabos: The Gates Mixed Plate: Instead of mixtapes, Tech gets a bunch of original beats together w/ a bunch of features and releases full albums under the "Tech N9ne Collabos" moniker. This year's Collabos album, a tribute in part to old-school KC hip hop, doesn't have the depth that previous ones did, but it is a solid listen. Tech himself is always on-point, after all. The track "O.G." (short for Ollie Gates) is polarizing; if you don't love the sort of Bay Area beats and Roger Troutman-style Vocoder hooks that were a staple of early 90's KC rap then you might not like the song as much as I do. |
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12-19-2010, 12:46 AM | #6 |
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Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Mojo: It physically pains me to leave the first Heartbreakers album since 2002 off of my top 30. This album didn't fully connect with me, though. This is because it is a 100% blues album (guitar-driven blues though it may be). I love some of the tracks, like the rest. This album is most notable for guitarist Mike Campbell, a truly bad-ass, criminally underrated guitarist, going apeshit. He's usually so restrained and tasteful, but this material called on him to unleash himself. And he does. And the results are pretty damn fun.
Bobby Watson - The Gates BBQ Suite: Jazz legend and UMKC professor Bobby Watson released an album this year very important to Kansas City. It is, as the title suggests, an entire jazz suite dedicated to Kansas City barbecue. That's right: KC BBQ legend Ollie Gates had TWO albums named after him this year. If Arthur Bryant were still alive, he'd be pissed. Obviously, I get a boner over the inspiration of this album. But I was also supremely impressed with the record itself. I don't listen to a lot of modern jazz, so I can't really say for sure if this is the most vital jazz album of 2010. But it sure feels like it. Kanye West - G.O.O.D. Fridays: This is a cheatyface inclusion, I suppose. Kanye recorded a lot of music this year. A lot of it was great, but didn't fit the artistic project of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. So Kanye released those killer tracks once a week, each Friday. So I'm giving an honorable mention to the whole collection. For those people who wanted more pure rap out of MBDTF, these tracks will be all the balm they need. 2010 is the Year of Kanye in many ways, and these tracks are a large part of that. |
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12-30-2010, 03:23 AM | #7 | |
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Quote:
Whoah! Warrant has returned with marginally better music!
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12-30-2010, 11:28 AM | #8 |
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You ever hear the Warrant cut "Uncle Tom's Cabin"? That track slays.
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12-19-2010, 01:10 AM | #9 |
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You hear J Cole Friday Night Lights?
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12-19-2010, 01:27 AM | #10 |
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Yeah. I liked it fine enough, but I didn't find to good enough to warrant special mention. There's a lot of hip hop that found itself on the chopping block just before the honorable mentions. There's a lot of good music across all genres that fell just short of honorable mentions status for me.
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12-19-2010, 01:48 AM | #11 |
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No Freeway with Jake-One or the J.Cole mixtape? Fail.
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12-19-2010, 01:50 AM | #12 |
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There's 30 spots left to be revealed. Will The Stimulus Package make Reaper's top 30? Stay tuned.
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12-19-2010, 01:55 AM | #13 |
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I'd be surprised Freeways style is really hit or miss but Jake One really makes some beautiful beats on that album. I only know a lot about hip-hop so I cant guess what else makes your list. You seem to be a variety guy.
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12-19-2010, 02:04 AM | #14 | |
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Quote:
Variety guy indeed. I try to listen to just about everything. There are certain genres where I am a complete n00b (electronic-based genres, mostly), but even then I find albums that I like (and can defend why I like them). Since this is a favorites list (and not an objective "best" list), my genre preferences will really shine through. I know what my top 30 is, I'm just not 100% on the order of a few of them yet. Looking at the albums though, the genre breakdown goes like this: Metal (all subgenres): 15 albums in the top 30 (half!) Rap/Hip-Hop: 6 (a lower number than most years) Pop: 3 Rock: 2 Electronic: 2 Country: 1 Other: 1 |
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12-19-2010, 02:34 AM | #15 |
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I bet the Roots made your list
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