Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
And, by the by, since we haven't seen much of you lately, how's things going?
Typical Day in Tina's Life
Work 10 hours
Bar/Gym (depending on which I did the day before)
Sleep
Weekends
Sleep
So, my life is boring and repetitive but not bad by any means. I am so busy at work I never see the internets at all - so I miss out on lots of buffista wittiness.
Definitely in my top ten. Definitely. It's such a freaking good album.
SA, Have you heard his other albums? I think the reason I am having trouble putting it in my Top 10 is because I am comparing it to
Transistor Radio
and
Transfiguration of Vincent,
which are still better albums in my opinion. But it is a great album.
So mine turned out to be a top 33
Post that sucker. I am excited to see it.
On edit:
Last night I heard the new Jay-Z (official release is 11/21). A lot of it is much better than the single out now would lead you to believe, and some of it is much, much worse (the duet with Beyonce - blech). Nicely done song about Katrina ("Yeah I gave a mil/But I didn't give my time/So in reality I didn't give a dime"). Not his best - not even better than the black album - but very good in parts.
Ok. Top 20 feels pretty certain right now, but 30-33 might change a little. Not much.
01. Thea Gilmore - Harpo's Ghost [Sanctuary]
02. Regina Spektor - Begin To Hope [Sire]
03. The Coup - Pick a bigger weapon [Anti]
04. The Black Keys - Magic Potion [Nonesuch]
05. William Elliott Whitmore - Song of the Blackbird [Southern]
06. The Zutons - Tired Of Hangin' Around [Deltasonic]
07. Hellwood - Chainsaw of Life [Munich]
08. Deltahead - Deltahead [Peace & Junk & Drums]
09. Tingsek - World of it's own [V2]
10. Jenny Lewis and the Watson Twins - Rabbit fur coat [Team Love]
11. Hamell on Trial - Songs for parents who enjoy drugs [Righteous Babe]
12. Danko Jones - Sleep Is The Enemy [Aquarius]
13. TV on the Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain [4AD]
14. Sparklehorse - Dreamt for Light Years in the Belly of a Mountain [Capitol]
15. The Flaming Lips - At War With the Mystics [Warner]
16. Jeffrey & Jack Lewis - City & Eastern Songs [Rough Trade]
17. The Dead Brothers - Wunderkammer [Voodoo Rhythm Record]
18. Comets On Fire - Avatar [Sub pop]
19. Cat Power - The Greatest [Matador]
20. Motörhead - Kiss of Death [Sanctuary]
21. Howling Bells - Howling Bells [Bellaire]
22. Greg Graffin - Cold As the Clay [Anti]
23. Ghost Buffalo - Ghost Buffalo [Suburban Homes]
24. Heartless Bastards - All this time [Fat Possum]
25. The Raconteurs - Broken Boy Soldiers [XL]
26. Nisse Hellberg - Snackbar Blues [Bonnier Amigo]
27. Emm Gryner - Songs of love and death [Dead Daisy]
28. Johnny Cash - American V: A Hundred Highways [Lost Highway]
29. Primal Scream - Riot City Blues [Columbia]
30. Frank Black - Fast Man Raider Man [Black Porch]
31. The Fiery Furnaces - Bitter tea [Fat Possum]
32. Anna Ternheim - Separation Road [Universal]
33. Emily Haines - Knives Don't Have Your Back [Last gang]
03. The Coup - Pick a bigger weapon [Anti]
I was really excited when this came out because I liked
Party Music
a lot. Not sure what happened, it just never clicked with me.
Other than that and Jenny Lewis (in the end, that album was a big let down for me) - I'm not familiar with any of the artists in your top 10. Which is
awesome.
Thanks for posting it. It strikes me that an especially awesome thing would be for you to make a Best of 06 mix based off this list and post it to the gmail account. But, you know, no pressure. (Do it!Do it!Do it!)
Off to eat dim sum with my mom...
PaBW was the first thing I heard with the Coup, never been that much into hip hop before. The Jenny Lewis was with me the whole year, and while the album is far from perfect, the good parts won out.
Tingsek, Deltahead, Nisse Hellberg, and Anna Ternheim are Swedish bands/persons so I don't think that many of you have heard them.
Oh, and sure, I'd love to do a mix. I don't have access to buffistarawk, so I'm not entirely familiar with how you do it. But no big deal.
That list reminds me that I completely forgot to pick up Avatar. I love Comets on Fire! I keep hearing good things about Regina Spektor, too, but I've never heard anything.
Anyway, this inspired me to start an early list.
Best:
Yo La Tengo - I Am Not Afraid Of You And I Will Beat Your Ass
Mastodon - Blood Mountain
The Pipettes - We Are The Pipettes
The Decemberists - The Crane Wife
Mission of Burma - The Obliterati
Isis & Aerogramme - In the Fishtank 14
The Fiery Furnaces - Bitter Tea
Ratatat - Classics
Belle & Sebastian - The Life Pursuit
Beach House
Contenders:
Tortoise & Bonnie Prince Billy - The Brave and The Bold
Six Organs of Admittance - Sun Awakens
The Hold Steady - Boys & Girls in America
Neko Case - Fox Confessor Brings The Flood
Mountain Goats - Get Lonely
Hella - Acoustics
Gnarls Barkley - St. Elsewhere
The Flying Luttenbachers - Cataclysm
El Perro del Mar
Danielson - Ships
A little disappointing:
Eric Matthews - Foundation Sounds
Calexico - Garden Ruin
Akron/Family - Meek Warrior
Scott Walker - The Drift
Free WFMU stuff:
Marie Osmond Does Hugo Ball
"Marie Osmond became co-host with Jack Palance. In the format of the show, little topic clusters (like "weird language") were introduced by one of the hosts. In this case, the frame was Cabaret Voltaire. Marie was required to read Hugo Ball's sound poem "Karawane" and a few script lines. Much to everybody's astonishment, when they started filming she abruptly looked away from the cue cards directly into the camera and recited, by memory, "Karawane." It blew everybody away, and I think they only needed that one take. A year or so after it was broadcast, Greil Marcus approached me, wanting to use Marie Osmond's rendition of Hugo Ball for a cd produced in England as sonic companion to his book Lipstick Traces; so I was delighted to be able to arrange that."
Faust's Lost Album V + TV footage
Wow, gawd bless the internet for serving up recordings of legendary Kraut pioneers Faust that I'm sure many of us hadn't heard before (or knew existed). Turns out that after the band recorded their album IV for Virgin and had a somewhat chaotic tour, Richard Branson had his fill of their shenanigans and cut them loose once again in 1975. Although, at this point the band had gone ahead and run up some expensive hotel and studio bills at Giorgio Morodor's Araballe studios....
Cool lists!
I was wanting to check out that Thea Gilmore too. Just the prompt I need.
The Pipettes - We Are The Pipettes
I had way too high expectations on this record. I loved the early singles and their radio gigs -- and then this came and... I just have a really hard time getting past the tin shed aesthetics on the vocals.
Nicklas, buffistarawk info has been sent to your profile address.
Your list gives me much to consider, CI. For instance I am going to download this:
Isis & Aerogramme - In the Fishtank 14
right now.
I love end-of-the-year best-ofs!
Btw, I tried a new dim sum place tonight - boo. Everything was salty and yet still bland.
I didn't know about this:
22. Greg Graffin - Cold As the Clay [Anti]
either, but I am downloading it now as well. Sounds great:
Following a solo album released in 1997 under the alias American Lesion, Cold as the Clay comes as the first effort from Bad Religion frontman Greg Graffin issued under his own name. Unlike the simple singer/songwriter approach of American Lesion, this album finds Graffin -- backed by members of the Weakerthans, among other musicians -- paying homage to his early upbringing in Wisconsin (where family singalongs were prevalent) with what the album sticker proclaims as "a heart-rending collection of old-timey American folk." And essentially, that's exactly what Cold as the Clay is. Recorded and mixed in a week with players sitting in the studio as though around a campfire, the reflective songs range from mere acoustic numbers to ones that further incorporate banjo, mandolin, harmonica, and more.
[link]