• 50 Songs (wk 50-13.12.2009)

    18 Dic 2009, 15:22 de verdena



    LW TW WI Artist - Title [Chart History]
    =======
    01 01 05 Adam Lambert - EscucharTime For Miracles [17-16-7-1-1]
    02 02 05 The Swell Season - EscucharLow Rising [46-33-10-2-2]
    03 03 09 Dashboard Confessional - EscucharBelle Of The Boulevard [23-20-15-12-6-4-2-3-3]
    04 04 08 Florence and The Machine - You've Got The Love [2-2-2-2-1-1-4-4]
    06 05 05 Lady GaGa - EscucharBad Romance [50-5-3-6-5]
    05 06 05 Norah Jones - EscucharChasing Pirates [4-2-4-5-6]
    11 07 05 Michael Jackson - EscucharThis Is It [9-10-11-11-7]
    08 08 07 Skunk Anansie - Squander [1-1-3-7-6-8-8]
    07 09 06 Pearl Jam - Just Breathe [11-1-3-5-7-9]
    09 10 07 Chris Brown - I Can Transform Ya (Featuring Lil' Wayne & Swizz Beatz) [50-40-35-8-9-9-10]
    ======
    14 11 06 Robbie Williams - EscucharYou Know Me [16-15-14-13-14-11]
    13 12 10 Miike Snow - EscucharBlack & Blue [47-7-5-3-3-5-11-15-13-12]
    10 13 07 Rihanna - EscucharRussian Roulette [39-37-32-6-8-10-13]
    12 14 09 Beyoncé - EscucharBroken-Hearted Girl [9-6-5-5-10-12-12-12-14]
    16 15 11 Athlete - Black Swan Song [1-1-3-4-7-7-13-18-16-16-15]
    18 16 05 Stereophonics - Innocent [45-29-21-18-16]
    17 17 09 Snow Patrol - EscucharJust Say Yes [24-18-12-8-8-9-14-17-17]
    15 18 09 Death Cab for Cutie - Meet Me On the Equinox [48-40-30-29-24-20-19-15-18]
    20 19 03 David Gray - Full Steam (Featuring Annie Lennox) [28-20-19]
    34 20 02 Lady Antebellum - EscucharNeed You Now [34-20]
    =======
    21 21 09 Foo Fighters - EscucharWheels [16-14-9-9-12-17-22-21-21]
    38 22 03 Alicia Keys - EscucharTry Sleeping With A Broken Heart [47-38-22]
    26 23 03 John Mayer - Who Says [35-26-23]
    29 24 03 Biffy Clyro - The Captain [42-29-24]
    19 25 05 Lily Allen - EscucharFuck You [14-13-17-19-25]
    22 26 08 Paolo Nutini - Pencil full of lead [32-29-27-28-28-23-22-26]
    24 27 15 Leona Lewis - EscucharHappy [3-4-6-8-9-11-1-1-4-6-11-19-20-24-27]
    23 28 12 The Twilight Sad - Seven Years Of Letters [46-20-14-14-10-8-4-7-15-18-23-28]
    25 29 10 Nneka - EscucharHeartbeat [3-2-3-6-10-16-21-24-25-29]
    31 30 09 Kasabian - EscucharUnderdog [46-38-25-22-20-22-25-31-30]
    =======
    32 31 05 Lifehouse - EscucharHalfway Gone [42-39-36-32-31]
    ne 32 01 Lily Allen - Who'd Have Known [32]
    27 33 12 Newton Faulkner - If This Is It [17-14-10-10-9-13-15-22-23-26-27-33]
    30 34 16 Florence and The Machine - Drumming Song [10-10-8-7-6-3-5-6-13-19-24-31-37-31-30-34]
    28 35 14 David Gray - EscucharFugitive [29-20-11-4-4-4-7-11-14-21-27-27-28-35]
    ne 36 01 Taken By Trees - Sweet Child O' Mine [36]
    36 37 13 Whitney Houston - EscucharMillion Dollar Bill [49-40-37-34-37-36-26-23-26-30-33-36-37]
    33 38 09 Alicia Keys - EscucharDoesn't Mean Anything [49-49-45-36-34-32-30-33-38]
    49 39 02 Depeche Mode - EscucharFragile Tension [49-39]
    35 40 10 Arctic Monkeys - Cornerstone [21-17-15-16-18-26-29-35-40]
    =======
    37 41 11 Pearl Jam - The Fixer [49-42-33-25-21-19-23-25-34-37-41]
    43 42 08 Calvin Harris - Flashback [41-38-32-30-31-37-43-42]
    ne 43 01 Charlotte Gainsbourg - Heaven Can Wait [43]
    39 44 11 Placebo - EscucharAshtray Heart [21-9-8-8-10-13-18-24-32-39-44]
    42 45 04 Mika - EscucharRain [46-44-42-45]
    41 46 16 Miley Cyrus - EscucharThe Climb [7-11-10-11-13-18-23-12-12-17-20-33-38-39-41-46]
    44 47 15 Skunk Anansie - Because Of You [50-3-3-2-2-2-5-11-14-17-25-34-38-44-47]
    47 48 14 Paloma Faith - EscucharNew York [47-44-38-35-32-32-31-33-33-40-44-48-47-48]
    46 49 19 Kasabian - EscucharWhere Did All the Love Go? [33-18-12-8-1-1-2-3-7-7-13-21-23-28-37-43-46-46-49]
    45 50 15 Robbie Williams - EscucharBodies [22-21-19-16-15-18-19-17-18-21-27-36-41-45-50]
    =======


    out this week...
    Kelly Clarkson - EscucharAlready Gone [1-1-1-1-1-4-2-2-1-1-6-8-15-16-20-25-29-35-40-40]
    Erik Hassle - Don't Bring Flowers [6-4-3-5-7-9-9-10-13-16-21-23-28-31-36-42-43-48]
    The Twilight Sad - I Became A Prostitute [33-29-24-20-18-18-18-20-26-31-34-36-38-42-44-41-41-41-45-50]
  • Dibder's New Music Series: Entry 12

    18 Dic 2009, 12:19 de CvaldaVessalis

    So here we are, as Bloc Party would sing... The end of the year... The end of the decade... The end of an era... The fucking end of it all!!!! Seriously, this year has been the most horrid one so far for me personally; this journal has kind of been one of the only things keeping me sane and with-it, so for those patient enough to read through it, thank you! And for those who've commented, thanks for your feedback! This will be one of a handful of entries for me this month, it being The End and everything, so keep 'em peeled for some more chart/award-based malarkey. But I digress, without further ado, let's crack on with December...

    I Dreamed A Dream by Susan Boyle
    Like quite a few UK TV viewers and YouTube subscribers, I got caught up in the whole Susan Boyle farrago in the early months of this year; the first time I saw her audition on Britain’s Got Talent, I too was quietly overwhelmed at the emotional turnaround that a humble, lonely woman achieved in the face of a viewership of millions, who were ready to scold her only to end up on their feet cheering for her still-stirring rendition of I Dreamed A Dream. A good part of a year later, Boyle and her team have finally dropped her debut album in time for Christmas, to the tune of record-breaking first-week sales, seemingly taking the time to prepare it with carefully chosen favourites for Boyle to sing. And whilst at least a couple of choices offer some moving moments (found on her polarising cover of EscucharWild Horses and her rather lovely version of EscucharYou'll See), the majority of the album’s songs bear the hallmarks of various Reality TV competition winner debuts masterminded by Simon Cowell, with most songs feeling cynically-engineered as to manipulate more suggestive listeners inescapably taken in by gospel choirs and syrupy crescendos. For some it will most likely do a disservice to Boyle’s enigmatic presence, her ardently religious nature in particular exploited rather ruthlessly on EscucharHow Great Thou Art and EscucharSilent Night.

    Graffiti by Chris Brown
    Sure, given that his past efforts have never really struggled past the most general standards of mediocre R&B pop aside from his duet with Jordin Sparks, Brown’s third album was probably never going to break through to a new audience, but it still held a certain semblance of morbid curiosity following his arrest and resultant probation and community service for beating up his then-girlfriend, global R&B starlet Rihanna. Would it reveal something a little deeper about the man who once implored us to ponder whether we can breathe without oxygen, why his good-kid next door image was suddenly soiled by a moment of violent rage or if he could deliver on his promise of a genre-blending record reminiscent of his heroes, Prince and Michael Jackson among them? In a word: No. Though his songs feature some wonderful production by illustrious deck hands such as Swizz Beatz and Brian Kennedy (the latter sampling Eric Prydz’s EscucharCall On Me for some serious guilty pleasure on Pass Out featuring Eva Simons), Brown himself is distinctly devoid of charisma as a vocalist, and it doesn’t help that the songs are either pungently sex-obsessed (check out the passion-killer groaning on Take My Time) or find the poor star moaning about being famous (key offender being EscucharLucky Me). It’s everything his ex’s new record isn’t...

    For Your Entertainment by Adam Lambert
    Adam Lambert at once represents everything that should be right and wrong with gay politics in celebrity culture. Unashamed, defiant and in possession of an undeniably powerful voice, there’s no doubt that the man fans like to call Glambert did well to avoid catcalls from the blogosphere and tabloid print media regarding his sexuality with a classy “go figure” attitude whilst performing on American Idol, where he finished as runner-up and capped off the contest performing a duet with KISS, of all music outfits. Unfortunately, his performance on this year’s American Music Awards revealed Lambert to be just yet another so-called music artist relying on controversy surrounding an over-sexed, über-decadent persona and the tired old adage of violent sexual dry-humping to get his point across, even if the fallout surrounding it provided plenty of food for thought regarding conservatism in media coverage around the world. It’s a shame because, when he isn’t shrieking about how horny he is with such flagrant petulance (as on the title track), Lambert is still a phenomenal vocalist, proven on this debut disc with next single EscucharWhataya Want From Me and the rueful EscucharA Loaded Smile, though he is prone to overegging the key-vaulting on certain tracks (such as 2012 ballad EscucharTime For Miracles).

    Out Of Ashes by Dead by Sunrise
    A sort-of solo project for Linkin Park frontman Chester Bennington alongside Orgy members Amir Derakh and Ryan Shuck, Dead By Sunrise plays a lot like Linkin Park with the hip hop/dance influence completely removed and replaced with a more traditional hard rock perspective, with Bennington’s enormous vocals more than taking up the whole of centre stage. There’s enough raucous screaming guitars and grandiose walls of noise to fill several stadiums, and Bennington’s vocals are never less than passionate, particularly on opener Fire; but it all amounts to little more than what Linkin Park have ever already done before now. It’s interesting as the same problems befall Derakh and Shuck’s Julien-K album, though both are working within different sub-genres of rock music; the formula starts off pleasurable enough, but grates too much in the long going and provides little in the way of imagination and versatility to keep the listener interested. In spite of Bennington’s still-impressive caterwauling, all the while you’re waiting for a breakbeat, distorted sample or Mike Shinoda himself to pop up and lay down some rhymes. You can find out how Derakh and Shuck’s own such project fared futher down the journal...

    Kaleidoscope by Tiësto
    This year has positively bristled with songwriter/producers keen to seemingly out-glamour their peers with the amount of star wattage permeating throughout their own personal releases, be it within the hip hop dancehalls (see N.A.S.A.’s The Spirit of Apollo), the urban-glitter dance clubs (hear Simian Mobile Disco’s Temporary Pleasure) or even out-of-leftfield alternative electronica (the quite brilliant effort from Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse that will never see official release). What surprises on Tiësto’s latest release though is not so much the amount of guests on his effort, but the seemingly-loftier profiles of some of them; what could Jónsi of Sigur Rós, Bloc Party’s Kele Okereke and Emily Haines of Metric possibly be doing on a cheesy Eurodance album? Still, it’s a good thing that the Dutch DJ/producer has managed to coral these disparate names into the mix, otherwise there would be nothing of keen interest to recommend on his fourth LP, which is prone to lapsing into the kind of grating cheesiness that has given dance music a more questionable profile from some music fans (though truth be told it never plumbs depths further than the likes of Scooter). Highlights here include Priscilla Ahn’s appearance on I am strong and Kele’s duet It's Not The Things You Say (as ever though, avoid the Calvin Harris track).

    Death To Analog by Julien-K
    Beginning life in 2003 when Orgy members Amir Derakh and Ryan Shuck developed a side-project concentrating more on electronic rock music than their previous ventures, Julien-K’s debut album release arrives not just after several well-received DJ sets and assignments for computer-game scores, but also amidst a 2009 resurgence in electro-clash that has seen similarly themed releases from the likes of Fischerspooner, Peaches, Jeffree Star and many others this year. Though it leans a lot more heavily on hard-rock noise than the aforementioned artists' releases, Death still tries to straddle the line between Marilyn Manson-esque hard rock metal and ‘80s dance-pop signatures with a liberally swathed influence of Depeche Mode (frontman Shuck giving his best Dave Gahan impression on the enjoyably sleazy Systeme de Sexe in particular). It’s not nearly as revolutionary and kick-ass as the official website proclaims it as though, proving more of a guilty pleasure of bleak keyboards and guitars as opposed to the kind of grand opus the revolutionary-themed promotional prose would want you to believe, and by halfway through even that feeling starts to wear off as Derakh and Shuck insist on punching the same production buttons relentlessly, offering little respite or changes of scenery amidst the sullen goth-electro rock.

    Broadcast and The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults Of The Radio Age by Broadcast and The Focus Group
    What with the Birmingham-based duo having enchanted ardent fans with their brand of psychedelic indie pop for the good part of fifteen years and graphic designer/composer Julian House’s sycophancy for archived sounds and ditties from ‘70s British TV and radio bordering on Father Dougal-style delirium, Broadcast and The Focus Group couldn't appear to be better matched in aesthetics and moods when it comes to their music. And this collective tumble through at-times gorgeous, sweetly-disturbed psychedelic bucolia doesn’t offer anything less than beguiling results, the trio working together quite so well that it is hard to discern where Broadcast end and House begins. Essentially it finds them performing their way through a horror story with ominous supernatural trimmings, evidenced already by the titles but also drenched in the kind of distorted, reverb heavy miasma made eerily alarming by muffled voices and jolt-inducing sound effects (not to give anything away, but there are at least several in the divinely sinister a seancing song). The main niggle though is that these pieces for the most part are incredibly short, the trio seemingly eager to move into the next room of the haunted house ride they’ve created; still, it’s a ride any horror movie/alternative music fan should get themselves on at least once.

    Til The Casket Drops by Clipse
    Finally released from their contract at Jive Records after causing friction amidst claims of being overlooked in favour of more pop-friendly acts, Virginia Beach’s hip hop duo’s fourth album (their third to actually see release) arrives via their own Re-Up label working in conjunction with Chad Hugo and Pharrell’s Star Trak Entertainment. The Neptunes’ presence on the album isn’t as galvanising as the duo’s previous work though, with Malice and Pusha T actually working with a couple of different collaborators this time around, the most welcoming being the ruminative, almost downbeat sounds laid by Sean "P Diddy" Combs and LV on opener Freedom and Never Will It Stop. That’s not to mention some great guest spots from the likes of Kanye West, Keri Hilson, Kobe and Kenna (how’s that for hip hop/R&B artist allitteration!), and Pharrell can’t do well to keep away either, featuring on four out of eight of the cuts produced by himself and Hugo. Whilst not as rapturously received as their last LP Hell Hath No Fury, Clipse still do enough to cement their status as one of the more high profile acts in hip hop working in the world today, be they rhyming with Cam'ron about the haters on Popular Deman (Popeyes), flirting with disaster on Counseling or looking to the future on Footsteps.

    Jukebox by Priscilla Renea
    The second track on YouTube star Priscilla Renea’s debut album, EscucharLovesick, opens with a pop platitude of the most risible order (“If loving you is wrong/I don’t want to be right...”); yet Renea manages to turn this into something cute by following it up with a wink and a nudge as she admits “I bet y’all knew I was gonna say that... But it’s true!” It’s this self-effacing charm that permeates throughout Jukebox, featuring production wares from established hitmakers such as Soulshock & Karlin and Power Entertainment, and also what helps her transcend her hip pop sound into something tangibly her own rather than blandly anonymous. On first listen, EscucharDollhouse and EscucharPretty Girl sound like little more than knock-offs of Katy Perry and Jordin Sparks, but Renea sells them with a unique enough charm for the listener to appreciate them as pop hits in their own right. It may be a little too winsome and cute for some (particularly on the absurdly cute EscucharMr. Workabee and it’s dog-whistle pitched intro), but it is nice to hear someone trying to make a pure pop record that is light, lithe and not especially up on being salacious and raunchy, whilst still summoning up enough likeability so as not to sound overly preening to the kiddie crowd.

    No Ceilings by Lil' Wayne
    The big winner at the year’s Grammy awards (four including a mention for his featured spot on EscucharSwagga Like Us), you can forgive Lil’ Wayne for being in more than a good mood on this fourth mixtape collection, rapping over tracks first brought to life by Beyoncé, Jay-Z, Black Eyed Peas and Kid Cudi, smoking blunts continually throughout and prone to exclaiming that his state of mind and profile in the rap world as of now knows no limits, even if it’s obvious that this compilation (his first such work without the aid of DJ Drama) was signed, sealed and delivered before he pled guilty to attempted criminal possession of a firearm in October, which may see him do time before his rock album ReBIRTH drops next year. Offering witty retreads of D.O.A. (Death of Autotune) and EscucharI Gotta Feeling as well as making way for some new MC’s to ply their wares (star among them Shanell, featured here on That's All I Have and Wayne On Me), it’s not hard to hear why even Barack Obama himself has been prattling on about his skills as an MC; sure, his songs concern themselves with typical hip hop macho tropes of guns, bitches and self-aggrandising, but Wayne doesn’t just shoot them through with enough wit and cadence to make them listenable, but also to make listeners sit up, take notice and enjoy the show.

    Gorilla Manor by Local Natives
    For fledgling artists and bands, the pop world can be a dangerously anonymous place, the latest would-be casualties being this charming five piece from Los Angeles, already pegged as this year’s Fleet Foxes, just because they sing alt-pop-folk songs with a particular penchant for lovely harmonies. Now, not only does this statement give the inkling that Fleet Foxes are either a) a venerable enough institution in the world of rock to be compared in cornerstone terms to a new band or b) are already after a year so past it that the latest model has come to usurp their Next Big Thing crown (which are both, in fact, very wrong) it also robs these lovely fellows of any defence against being written off as cynically introducing themselves as soundalike noiseniks with nothing new to add... That may very well be true, but at least they have more than a few good tunes with which to back the yeasayers up, certainly being a couple of notches above the morbid gorgeousness of Foxes’ debut in terms of elation, stand outs being the rabble of Camera Talk and the warmly inviting harmonies of World News; or rather, an introduction to a band who need a fair bit more credit than lazy plaudits will strictly allow.

    Real Estate by Real Estate
    Some soothing, spaced-out surf rock now courtesy of these New Jersey natives, another indie act to capture a Next Big Thing plaudit courtesy of the ever-elusive Best New Music tag from buzz-tracking critics site, Pitchfork. Thankfully, there are enough whimsical melodies drifting throughout this debut disc to provide a justifiable inkling as to what should surely turn into something of a minor hit over the next few months; nothing strictly new or revolutionary going on here, but effortlessly keyed in to the kind of timeless indie rock that boozy nights in with recreational substances seem to be made for. A lot keener than most bands of their ilk to let the instrumentation do most of the talking before lead singer Martin Courtney’s vocals soothingly moan away in a woozy haze (the best example being the six minute EscucharSuburban Beverage), their eponymous premier work is one where all of the elements flow accordingly thanks to the emotional synchronicity of each of the members, bereft of the isolating grandstanding that normally occurs when lesser bands wish to draw attention to themselves. A worthy first effort from a band to most certainly catch live before the future reveals the promises made by that ever-increasing buzz...

    Glee: Season One - The Music, Volume 2 by Various Artists
    The second soundtrack compilation for this breakout comedy/musical TV hit to see release in as many months, the second volume of Glee’s first season’s music should feel a little thin on the ground with regards to the amount of quality arrangements, given that it covers half of the amount of episodes that the first collection did. Fortunately, that’s not the case, not only because the last four shows were seemingly crammed-to-bursting with so many performances from its robustly talented cast anyway, but also due to the shrewd choices made by the music supervisors with regards to the pieces chosen. Even the obvious selections (John Lennon’s Imagine and Dreamgirls anthem And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going among them) are simply performed with too much pep and good feeling to instantly dismiss. This disc features a few more welcome lead vocals from the supporting cast (from Kevin McHale and Jenna Ushkowitz in particular), but much like last month’s release, this show belongs to Lea Michele, who powerhouses as if her life depended on it on Barbara Streisand-standard Don't Rain On My Parade only to follow up with as much prodigious likeability on Rolling Stones classic You Can’t Always Get What You Want. And anyone who doesn’t even smile at the kids’ version of Van Halen’s Jump is officially dead inside, is all I’ll say!

    Central Market by Tyondai Braxton
    Having been propelled into indie-rock stardom with his bandmates from Battles after their rapturously received debut Mirrored was unleashed in 2007, Braxton has been said to have had more than a few reservations with regards to how well his sophomore solo effort would be received, given his background in avant-garde classical/jazz music was characterised by sounds and pieces quite different from the muscular avant-rock of the supergroup’s work. However, Central Market does well to marry both the classical and avant-rock genres to give a unique bent on Braxton’s loop-heavy symphonies, marrying orchestral scores with bewildering samples and effects that often sound like Looney Tunes scores at their most darned weird (specifically that episode where Porky Pig flew across the world to find the last Dodo!), whilst also suggesting just how overt an influence his work was on the math-rock collective; key pieces here that suggest Braxton’s influence on Battles was certainly more than a factor include the tumultuous Platinum Rows and the wild peaks and valleys ravaged through on closer Dead Strings. It may be a little too idiosyncratic for some Battles fans, (The Duck and The Butcher is just yearning for a Tom & Jerry style music video though), but it’ll certainly sate the appetite before the band’s return next year.

    The Fame Monster by Lady GaGa
    It says a lot about a pop star’s ascendancy in the international consciousness when, after less than a year, you honestly couldn’t tell what the rest of the months past would have been like without them. 23 year-old Stefani Germanotta (,’:^/) can pretty much claim 2009 as her year, starting out with a golden bullet of a debut single and supporting New Kids on the Block for their reunion tour and finishing up a world tour of her very own, five Grammy nominations, unit-shifts in their millions and a knowing sass that has defiled the umbrage from even the most snooty music fan (even if her attempting to out-glam Beyoncé in their new video together falls down epically flat!) Either as a triumphant riposte to those who doubted her pop authority or as a gracious kiss to those who’ve helped her achieve global pop infamy, GaGa has bestowed her own gift for Christmas in this mini-album, which would normally reek of cynical cashing-in if the songs weren’t actually better than anything on The Fame (yes, even EscucharJust Dance or EscucharPaparazzi!) EscucharMonster and EscucharDance In The Dark are the kind of fool-proof disco hits that would get anyone spinning on the tiptoes and, with EscucharSpeechless, Germanotta gives us her most tantalising taster for the future; a semblance of empathetic soul... A very dramatic turnaround from January, certainly!

    Rated R by Rihanna
    Her first album out of the gate following the intense publicity surrounding former beau Chris Brown’s attack on her, 21 year-old Robyn Fenty was faced with what would surely be the most critically-scrutinised work of her already-prolific career, most keen to find out the of the album’s overall mood and emotional pull as well as whether or not it contained hits to rival Good Girl Gone Bad’s EscucharUmbrella and the underrated EscucharTake A Bow. A sigh of relief must be felt then because Rihanna belies her years with an album so consistent, assured and even impressive in its intensity and emotional shades that it will mark a turning point in her development as an artist as opposed to just a singer. Gamely breathing in her darker hues from the likes of The-Dream, Ne-Yo and English producers Chase & Status, with critic-baiting allusions to violence, gore and gun culture, it’s an album steeped in regret, anger and wounded pride, grandly giving those interested in her private life food for thought and then plenty more (even the upliftingly arranged EscucharFire Bomb is strewn with more than its fair share destructive imagery and EscucharRussian Roulette is one of the most legitimately distressing singles to see release this year); in short, it’s more daring, emotional and crystal clear in its motives and darkness than any hip pop princess album has any right to be.

    The Element Of Freedom by Alicia Keys
    Not that we needed any more proof as to how awesome she indeed is, but with the assistance of the Jiggaman himself Jay-Z, Alicia Keys arguably gave 2009 its finest single with Empire State of Mind (feat. Alicia Keys); what a fabulous, stirring surprise then that her own solo version EscucharEmpire State Of Mind (Part II) Broken Down that closes her fourth album trumps even that, Keys sounding more alive and in rapturous love with her city and its inspirations than she probably ever has done. And up until that beautiful moment arrives, the rest of Keys’ LP still stands as a finely made, elegant and sexy piece of work in its own right, the title being particularly apt in that Keys hasn’t sounded so confident and serene, especially captivating moments being found on the lovely EscucharDoesn't Mean Anything and her collaboration with Drake, EscucharUn-thinkable (I'm Ready). As ever, she’s best when behind the piano tinkling away as the production hitmakers mix their state-of-the-art beats underneath as she softly sings above it all, key collaborators this time around including Jeff Bhasker (fresh from his work with Jay-Z and KiD CuDi) and the seemingly ubiquitous Swizz Beatz, who whips Keys and a certain global superstar of the moment into a sultry pout-fest on Put It in a Love Song (feat. Beyoncé).

    Warm Heart of Africa by The Very Best
    One of the most enjoyable mixtapes to be released last year was from this exultant trio, comprised of brother dance DJ outfit Radioclit and singer/songwriter Esau Mwamwaya, one which saw them tackling on hits of Vampire Weekend, M.I.A., Akon and Michael Jackson with a truly lovely bent on Afrobeat mixed with the finest studio effects today’s pop music can offer (their version of Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa in particular is something of joyous wonder). Now on their own with original material, The Very Best have one heck of a namesake to prove to their listenership, and its a minor shame that Warm Heart Of Africa doesn’t quite reach the heights of their earlier doodling; truth be told though, it still knocks several shades and teeth out of most pop music around today, infusing the warm harmonies and buoyant instrumentation and arrangements found in Mwamwaya’s traditional Malawi roots with beauteous pop hooks and effects to make a truly refreshing combo. Highlights on here include the sun-drenched Mfumu, the gorgeous opener Yalira and the childrens choir backing of Nsokoto; not to mention a couple of high profile alt-pop celebrity guests from the Western world to help stir things up. You’ll be hard pressed to find a more uplifting record this year, that’s for sure...

    Number Ones/The Best by Janet Jackson
    Though her later career has been relatively quiet compared with the success enjoyed in the late ‘80s and all of the way through the ‘90s, one need only to glance over the track list of this latest compendium of her hits to be reminded of just how impressive her work has consistently been for over twenty years; granted, most would have been thinking about her dearly departed brother in one way or another this year certainly, but it’s not taking anything away from Michael’s star when merely suggesting that Janet is an icon in her own right also. Numbers Ones, or The Best as those residing outside of North America would know it to be (especially in the UK, where she has never actually had a number one at all), not only gives an overview of an accomplished body of work, but perhaps most impressively, sees Janet portray a degree of versatility, sexiness and strength no matter what genre she decides to tackle, be it the friendly R&B pop of The Best Things In Life Are Free, the dirty rave-up of EscucharGo Deep or the slow-burn swoon of EscucharThat's The Way Love Goes. Granted, the most recent work doesn’t register quite as strong (particularly the duet with Nelly), but as proven with new song EscucharMake Me, Janet may yet have a few more surprises up her sleeve in the next few years.

    Seek Magic by Memory Tapes
    And it’s back over to New Jersey for another debut album, this time from electro musician Dayve Hawk, who has also been enjoying a steady head of hype over the past year thanks to his well-received remix assignments and independently released singles. Like the better debut releases to see light this year, Seek Magic is one that is at once completely cohesive in its vision and signature sound, but doesn’t do well to sit still in just one designated genre, taking in light guitar-led indie pop, ambient electronic sequences and moments of gossamer-light pop mastery, often within the same song, the best example being the disturbed disco-based slow-build of Stop Talking, which deals with a particularly acrimonious break-up. It’s a lovely, ruminative, serene and spiky record that always manage to offer up something new every time that you listen to it and an immensely accomplished debut from a singer/songwriter/producer who defies the blogpop generalising afforded by so many solo-producer albums with assured talent and credibility.

    And that is why Seek Magic is my Album Of The Month For December...

    So, 2009 is approaching a close; for those who've bothered to read all of the way through this and are interested enough to maybe read a little bit more (you masochists, you!), I will be putting up my Top 100 albums of 2009 very shortly over the next couple of days, as well as the final part of my Best Of 2009 CD set and a few other knick-knacks... Don't say I don't spoil you!!!

    Until then, Merry Christmas (FFS!!!!) and Happy New Year... I can actually safely say that without fear of how horrible next year would be because, seriously, IT CAN'T GET ANY WORSE!

    On that note... Keep listening! xxx
  • Best of 2009

    18 Dic 2009, 6:39 de unddercharlezz

    Best of 2009

    1. Perfume - ( 1.125 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 8.8
    Tema Favorito: edge (⊿-mix)
    Género: Electropop

    2. Pet Shop Boys - Yes ( 127 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 8.2
    Tema Favorito: love etc.
    Género: Synthpop

    3. Tiga - Ciao! ( 108 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.7
    Tema Favorito: Shoes

    Género: Electro
    4. Fever Ray - Fever Ray ( 87 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 8.0
    Tema Favorito: I'm Not Done
    Género: Ambient

    5. ATB - Future Memories ( 72 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.8
    Tema Favorito: Summervibes with 9PM
    Género: Trance

    6. Lily Allen - It's Not Me, It's You ( 68 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 8.0
    Tema Favorito: Not Fair
    Género: Electropop

    7. Capsule - FLASH BEST ( 62 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.5
    Tema Favorito: 人類の進歩と調和
    Género: Electropop

    8. BoA - BoA ( 52 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.6
    Tema Favorito: I Did It For Love (Feat. Sean Garrett)
    Género: Pop

    9. David Guetta - One Love ( 50 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.2
    Tema Favorito: It's The Way You Love Me (Featuring Kelly Rowland)
    Género: House

    10. Aira Mitsuki - PLASTIB ( 47 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 4.9
    Tema Favorito: プラスティックドール
    Género: Electropop

    11. La Roux - La Roux ( 44 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 6.9
    Tema Favorito: Bulletproof
    Género: Electropop

    12. Röyksopp - Junior ( 43 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 8.1
    Tema Favorito: The Girl And The Robot
    Género: Electronic

    13. Basement Jaxx - Scars ( 41 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 8.5
    Tema Favorito: Twerk
    Género: House

    14. Meg - BEAUTIFUL ( 38 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.0
    Tema Favorito: LIES
    Género: Electropop

    15. Sean Paul - Imperial Blaze ( 37 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 5.4
    Tema Favorito: So Fine
    Género: Dancehall

    16. Calvin Harris - Ready For The Weekend ( 37 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.7
    Tema Favorito: Ready For The Weekend
    Género: Dance


    Calificación: 8.1
    Tema Favorito: Starstruck
    Género: Pop

    18. Sr. Amable - CUU LP ( 29 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 6.6
    Tema Favorito: Feliz Cumpleaños, Amable
    Género: Experimental

    19. Depeche Mode - Sounds Of The Universe ( 28 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 6.9
    Tema Favorito: Fragile Tension
    Género: Synthpop

    20. Gus Gus - 24/7 ( 28 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 8.4
    Tema Favorito: Take Me Baby
    Género: Downtempo

    21. Natalia Lafourcade - Hu Hu Hu ( 28 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.2
    Tema Favorito: Hu Hu Hu
    Género: Alternative

    22. Air - Love 2 ( 26 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.8
    Tema Favorito: Missing The Light Of The Day
    Género: Downtempo

    23. Fey - Dulce Tentación ( 24 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 3.3
    Tema Favorito: Provócame
    Género: Pop

    24. Frankmusik - Complete Me ( 24 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 6.7
    Tema Favorito: Better Off As 2
    Género: Electropop

    25. Armin van Buuren - Imagine ( 23 Scrobblings )

    Calificación: 7.5
    Tema Favorito: Imagine
    Género: Trance

    :D
  • teriyaki's Best of 2009! :P

    17 Dic 2009, 19:08 de os_teriyaki

    Well 2009's not quite over yet, but I probably won't get a chance closer to New Year's to do this, so here ya go. And yes, this took forever. I don't mind though ^__^ Means I had something to do whilst scrobbling! \:D/

    So here we go, my top 40 most scrobbled artists of the year, accompanied by their most scrobbled albums and tracks. Knock yourselves out xD


    DNC = "Did not chart"
    NTY = "New this year"
    IC = "Incomplete" i.e. I don't have the full album yet. This is usually because I've downloaded two or three songs so that I can listen to them a fair few times before deciding whether or not to buy the full album. If I just research on youtube, I wouldn't be giving a band enough time to grow on me (or to grow old, in fact!)

    Chart positions determined 5:30 p.m., Thursday 17th December 2009. As if that matters xDD


    =#40 - Circa Survive (103 plays)
    > One of the best bands I've listened to. They're just not my genre xD
    Top Album of 2009: On Letting Go (#75, 57 plays)
    > An almost flawless album
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    =#40 - Genesis (103 plays)
    > Grew up with these guys, one of the only bands that both my parents like xD
    Top Album of 2009: We Can't Dance (#136, 28 plays)
    > The final track, Fading Lights, is just pure amazingness
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #39 - Depeche Mode (112 plays)
    > They seem to have inspired everyone somewhere along the lines, and for good reason xD DM are one of the main reasons for English pride!
    Top Album of 2009: Playing The Angel IC (#101, 38 plays)
    > A superb album, really superb :)
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #38 - Amorphis NTY (114 plays)
    > Initially interested, I slowly realised that it all sounded the same ¬__¬
    Top Album of 2009: Silent Waters NTY (#84, 49 plays)
    > What a disappointment. It's so mediocre, easily my worst buy of 2009.
    Top Track of 2009: House of Sleep NTY (#105, 36 plays)
    > See, this was interesting. It's just that the rest is either boring or a boring clone >__>

    #37 - 下村陽子 NTY (121 plays)
    > Because I like the Kingdom Hearts game >w<
    Top Album of 2009: KINGDOM HEARTS Original Soundtrack COMPLETE [Disc 1] NTY (#121, 31 plays)
    > Same as above, really xD
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #36 - Metallica (130 plays)
    > The influence of the great 'Tallica just can't be ignored, nor escaped :)
    Top Album of 2009: S&M (#97, 41 plays)
    > The first time I heard a proper orchestra used in metal - in other words, the set-up for Nightwish ;)
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #35 - Korpiklaani NTY (135 plays)
    > A pure last.fm discovery, this was. My first taste of folk metal too, I think.
    Top Album of 2009: Korven Kuningas NTY, IC (#62, 76 plays)
    > I still want to buy this at some point...
    Top Track of 2009: Kipumylly NTY (#94, 38 plays)
    > I love this song! I even learned the Finnish lyrics, though I forgot them before too long... xD

    #34 - Indica NTY (138 plays)
    > I got into Indica because they were one of the support bands for the Nightwish gig. They're a pretty fun little group ^__^
    Top Album of 2009: Valoissa NTY, IC (#71, 60 plays)
    > Ah, the infamous Tuomas-produced album. If I ever buy an Indica album, it won't be this one xD
    Top Track of 2009: Vuorien taa NTY (#100, 37 plays)
    > Easily the best out of the few I know. Jonsu's fiddle *makes* it :)

    =#32 - Deadlock (144 plays)
    > I've known about them for ages but last.fm rekindled my drive to investigate their music :) and MAN they're good! :D
    Top Album of 2009: Manifesto NTY, IC (#82, 52 plays)
    > Getting this album for Christmas :D It was a hard choice which to get, though, this or Wolves...
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharMartyr To Science NTY (#206, 25 plays)
    > What a great track @__@ I'm not sure you can get much better than this, the guitars are great and Sabine's voice... wuaaah!

    =#32 - Evanescence (144 plays)
    > This artist had the single greatest influence on my musical (and personal, thinking about it) life. Evanescence showed me that I liked rock/metal combined with classical styles, which has paved the way for the vast majority of what I listen to today. And they're still fun to listen to occasionally, even after six years x) (Feels like longer...!)
    Top Album of 2009: The Open Door (#108, 36 plays)
    I actually prefer this to Fallen, I really do. Fallen is too boring and samey - there's some fail on The Open Door but there's much more win too to make up for that.
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #31 - Kate Bush (157 plays)
    > Probably one of the greatest solo artists ever. She's just amazing @__@
    Top Album of 2009: Aerial: A Sky of Honey NTY (#130, 29 plays)
    > Easily, *easily* my favourite Kate Bush album. The way it just flows as if it's just one massive, chaptered song... amazing, and so calming to listen to ^__^
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #30 - For My Pain... NTY (162 plays)
    > I listened to these guys because of Tuomas being in the band and to be fair, I do like their music, but... it's just so incredibly emo!! @___@ And emo in a very unemotional way, which is... just weird xD
    Top Album of 2009: Fallen NTY, IC (#42, 129 plays)
    > I nearly bought this. I'm glad I didn't xD Though maybe one days... *shrugs*
    Top Track of 2009: My Wound Is Deeper Than Yours NTY (#214, 24 plays)
    > Not my favourite FMP song xD It's good, but not the best :P

    #29 - Green Day (165 plays)
    > I got really fond of these guys again during the summer x)
    Top Album of 2009: International Superhits! (#89, 46 plays)
    > It's my top album mostly because it has the most tracks xDD
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #28 - Eluveitie NTY (172 plays)
    > Another last.fm discovery. I really love their brand of folk metal, especially since they're not afraid to put down their guitars and stuff and just play pure folk.
    Top Album of 2009: Evocation I: The Arcane Dominion NTY, IC (#69, 62 plays)
    > This is probably the album I'd buy, if I get round to it. Like I said, the "pure folk" element is what makes me respect Eluveitie the most...
    Top Track of 2009: Bloodstained Ground NTY (#177, 27 plays)
    > ...even though what made me fall for them was the combination of metal and folk on this here track x) Bloodstained Ground is pretty close to perfect :P

    #27 - Galneryus (173 plays)
    > Shock horror! A Japanese band that I discovered, not my sister! xD I really want to buy some albums of theirs but you know... postage from Japan is a killer T^T
    Top Album of 2009: One For All - All For One NTY, IC (#82, 52 plays)
    > When I eventually buy a Galneryus album, this is the one I want most!
    Top Track of 2009: Cause Disarray (#118, 33 plays)
    > My first Garu track :3 It struck me as similar to Sonata, and that was enough to investigate them further x3

    #26 - Jamiroquai (182 plays)
    > Aww, Jamiroquai :D *smiles at them in fondness* They were my favourites for a long, long time back at school and college, and I'll always have a soft spot for them :)
    Top Album of 2009: The Return of the Space Cowboy (#97, 41 plays)
    > THE best Jamiroquai album. There's no question - greatest sound, greatest consistency, just a great funk album :)
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #25 - The Gathering NTY (191 plays)
    > They make very nice, calm music, but that's the problem xD It's so nice and calm that I got bored of it very quickly ^__^;; Still, it's good for relaxing every now and then :)
    Top Album of 2009: The West Pole NTY (#31, 179 plays)
    > A good solid album, if you don't mind music that doesn't really pack a punch.
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharThe West Pole NTY (#94, 38 plays)
    > The song that made me pay attention to The Gathering, and probably still my favourite. It just transports you to another world~~

    #24 - Sydänpuu NTY (192 plays)
    > *flails arms in totally fangirly way* I love Sydänpuu!! \:D/ I got into them because I found out that Jani Liimatainen (ex-guitarist of Sonata, of course) does everything but drums for this project. I listened, not seriously expecting anything of Jani's voice, and OH MY GOD. BLOWN AWAY @___@ Jani, stop messing around with Cain's Offering and get your butt back to Sydänpuu! This project shows so much promise!!
    Top Album of 2009: Sydänpuu NTY (#29, 192 plays)
    > Well, it's not really an album xD It's six demo tracks, the only Sydänpuu stuff we have ;____; In a way that makes it more precious but at the same time I WANT MORE DANGIT!
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharHautaa Minut Tänään NTY (#33, 53 plays)
    > The first track I listened to, the one that made me fall in love with Jani's voice, and I still can't get enough of it. REPEATREPEAT.

    #23 - Michael Jackson (204 plays)
    > Believe it or not, most of those scrobbles were from before his death. I've always loved this guy, for my whole life; a great man and a great musician. Rest in peace, dearest, rest in peace. *moonwalks*
    Top Album of 2009: HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I Disc 2 (#84, 49 plays)
    > Bad is actually my favourite album, but this one has more tracks so it gets more scrobbles :P
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #22 - Finntroll NTY (250 plays)
    > Got into these guys because of the Nightwish-Tapio Wilska-Finntroll connection x3 Just gotta love the sound they create, trolls partying into the night x)
    Top Album of 2009: Nattfödd NTY (#52, 94 plays)
    > I finally bought this at Halloween, and it's absolutely perfect for that time of year x) And, oddly, Christmas xDD (don't know how that works... O.o)
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharHel Vete NTY (#108, 35 plays)
    > This was my self-righteous anger song at some point, and I really don't know how I got that from the song xD It's great, in spite of my odd usage of it :P

    #21- Elias Viljanen NTY (259 plays)
    > Yeap, Sonata Arctica's current guitarist! I've only discovered his solo stuff really recently but OH MY GODD I absolutely adore his work!! @__@ Ahh, so amazing... Elias' music is just so great to listen to, because even though he's a fantastic guitarist, the album isn't just one long solo - he really thinks about the music. It's so heartfelt, and so uplifting, there's almost nothing that's better to listen to! :P
    Top Album of 2009: Fire-Hearted NTY (#20, 259 plays)
    > Got this for my birthday just over a week ago and it's already my third favourite album for this year :3 I could listen to it all day and night; I know I wouldn't get tired of that warm fuzzy feeling ^w^ And it doesn't hurt at all that this album features my two favourite male singers of all time, Tony Kakko and Marco Hietala :P
    Top Track of 2009: Kiss of Rain NTY (#2, 101 plays)
    > The song that features Tony Kakko x) For about a month or two, this was the first song I listened to when I woke up and the last song I listened to before I went to sleep. My god, it just doesn't get better than this. This is my official song of 2009 :)

    #20 - Dark Moor NTY (295 plays)
    > Since my sister's friend Harry is addicted to Dark Moor, I ended up inheriting seven albums at once xD It was pretty difficult to get my head around at first, and I was very scathing for a long time, but I'm at last enjoying and appreciating their somewhat... "not-perfect" style of symphonic power metal xD
    Top Album of 2009: The Gates of Oblivion NTY (#76, 56 plays)
    > Definitely one of my favourites. Elisa's great here, and the instrumentation is better than on post-Elisa albums, I think.
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #19 - Machinae Supremacy NTY (297 plays)
    > I got these beauties from Chris x) They're good fun but to be honest the guy's voice kind of bugs me, which is why I'm not listening to them as much as I used to.
    Top Album of 2009: Overworld NTY (#28, 194 plays)
    > I actually like this pretty much the same as Deus Ex Machinae, but I got Overworld earlier.
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharViolator NTY (#206, 25 plays)
    > I still love this song :D It's one of those where the guy's voice doesn't annoy me, and I love the lyrical content >w<

    #18 - Patrick Doyle (317 plays)
    > Paddy! \:D/ Actually I'm in a bit of a rut with him - at one point he was my favourite Harry Potter composer and now he's my least favourite ^__^;; His themes are okay, but... not *Harry* enough I guess :P
    Top Album of 2009: Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire (#16, 317 plays)
    > Correction: ONLY album of 2009 xDD
    Top Track of 2009: Harry in Winter (#177, 27 plays)
    > I do still love this one :) Learned to play it on the piano, too!

    #17 - 北出菜奈 (327 plays)
    > Yay for Nana! \:D/ Probably my favourite solo singer (we'll have to see how Anette can do, hmm? x3) although I don't listen to her so much.. She was also the first step into the world of Japanese music for me and Chrissi, so we'll always be grateful to her for that :)
    Top Album of 2009: BONDAGE NTY (#52, 94 plays)
    > This new album is easily Nana's best. Sophisticated but fun at the same time. Hopefully if Loveless (her new project) sounds like any of her solo albums, it'll sound like this one :)
    Top Track of 2009: 鏡の国のアリア NTY (#409, 16 plays)
    > Easily, easily the best song Nana has produced. Now why the hell didn't you put it on an album, eh? This is too good for a b-side!!

    #16 - Tarja (338 plays)
    > The bitch is back! \:D/ Okay, I don't really mean that, it's a reference to a Sinergy song, but the point is that Tarja's back in my good books again (about time!). In fact, right now, she's my favourite female singer to listen to, which is JUST WEIRD xD (I phase with her like you wouldn't believe!! @__@) Looking forward to What Lies Beneath anyways! :3
    Top Album of 2009: My Winter Storm (#19, 260 plays)
    > Such a hit-and-miss album, and again I phase with it constantly, but I'm enjoying it for now :)
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharOur Great Divide (#230, 23 plays)
    > Yey! \:D/ My favourite song, at least from MWS - "sounds of waves" indeed, and I can't help but think it's about the friendship lost between her and Tuomas... It feels like we're actually seeing *Tarja*, rather than her "brave face" or her "ice queen" mask.

    #15 - Stewart Copeland NTY (339 plays)
    > HELL YEAH!! >8D Well, it says "new this year" but that's only in terms of scrobbles. I've actually been listening to Stewart Copeland for about two-thirds of my life since he made the.greatest.soundtrack.of.all.time for the original Spyro the Dragon game :P It's still my favourite game and the music has a huge part to play in that :3 And unlike most soundtrack music, it actually passes for popular music too, instrumental-style. The only reason he's not my highest soundtrack artist is because the Harry Potter OSTs are Harry Potter, I mean, what do you expect? ;D
    Top Album of 2009: Spyro The Dragon OST - Disc 1 NTY (#32, 176 plays)
    > ... which just means that I play the first half of the OST more than the second, which I guess makes sense. After all, Magic Crafters homeland is in the first half, and ALL the Magic Crafters levels have good music :D
    Top Track of 2009: Ice Cavern NTY (#290, 20 plays)
    > You can't really pick a favourite track from this OST but this is definitely one of the strongest ones :3

    #14 - My Dying Bride NTY (342 plays)
    > Oooh, dour and gloomy! I went and found MDB because Tuomas loves them, and I'm glad I took the effort. They're easily one of the most mature bands I've listened to. Their music is elegant and yet very rough at the same time. I can't listen to them for long periods of time, not because they're depressing but because I get a little bored, and that's why they don't have more scrobbles. (Plus that their songs are ridiculously long @__@)
    Top Album of 2009: Like Gods of the Sun NTY (#40, 145 plays)
    > The first of the two albums I've bought so far. There are a handful of really great tracks but the rest I can kind of overlook without even the slightest feeling of guilt .___.
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharCatherine Blake NTY (#127, 32 plays)
    > It would probably actually have been For You if it wasn't for the fact that For You was mistagged originally. But Catherine Blake deserves this spot, because it was the song that made me fall for MDB. And Aaron's voice @__@ Aaron's VOICE!

    #13 - In Flames (343 plays)
    > I listened to these guys loads when I first came to last.fm, I think because I wanted to boost scrobbles of such a non-mainstream band. I lol at my innocence back then xD I don't listen to them so much these days simply because they're a little *too* heavy for my tastes.
    Top Album of 2009: A Sense of Purpose (#29, 192 plays)
    > Of course, the trve fans hate this album. I care not. It's good ^w^
    Top Track of 2009: The Chosen Pessimist (#167, 28 plays)
    > Easily the best In Flames song. It shows such maturity, skill and emotion.

    #12 - John Williams (359 plays)
    > And the magic that is Harry Potter returns! :3 Johnny is the classic sound of HP :) I have mixed feelings about this guy coming back for the last two movies, though... on the one hand, Philosopher's Stone is my favourite HP score, but on the other, Prisoner of Azkaban was just two and a half hours of WHAT WERE YOU THINKING?!
    Top Album of 2009: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone NTY (#25, 213 plays)
    > *The* Christmas album :D I love this so much, and it would be higher in the charts but the scrobbles are split because I had it mistagged initially ;____;
    Top Track of 2009: Leaving Hogwarts (#177, 27 plays)
    > This track always makes me want to cry xD Seriously, if they end the final movie with this piece, I will absolutely fall apart in the cinema. I promise ;D

    #11 - HIGH and MIGHTY COLOR (379 plays)
    > I am AMAZED that Haikara got that many scrobbles this year @__@ I've been a fan of them for a long time but I really hit a wall with them this year; I haven't got anything out of listening to them for ages now. They put on a good live show, though, I enjoyed watching the latest DVD :)
    Top Album of 2009: ROCK PIT (#54, 89 plays)
    > Yeah, this is my favourite, I think. I mean, it has MEKIMEKI. What more do you want? \:D/
    Top Track of 2009: DNC

    #10 - Nicholas Hooper NTY (392 plays)
    > And thus completing the Harry Trinity of composers! \:D/ Nicky did the score for the most recent two movies, and whilst I was unimpressed by Order, Half-Blood was AMAZINGsauce. One of my favourite movie scores of all time! \:D/
    Top Album of 2009: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince NTY (#12, 367 plays)
    > Freakin' love this xD It's so good. I could listen to it for years but I'd miss my other music xD
    Top Track of 2009: Fireworks NTY (#214, 24 plays)
    > Ironic, then, that my most played track is not from Half-Blood xD Well, actually it is, because they re-used it but didn't put it on the HBP OST. So there! :P

    #9 - Pain NTY (444 plays)
    > These guys also supported Nightwish and man were they amazing! \:D/ Such a good live band, and I totally fell in love with Peter's voice. I plan to go right through the back catalogue eventually :)
    Top Album of 2009: Cynic Paradise NTY (#22, 256 plays)
    > A good, solid album :) For some reason it's really good music to listen to when you're cleaning ovens O_o Anyway, it's the only album I have at the moment but that'll change! :D
    Top Track of 2009: Play Dead NTY (#23, 62 plays)
    > This is easily, easily my favourite Pain track. In fact, it's one of my favourite songs everever! :D I was so surprised when I found out it was a cover, but both this and the original are amazing pieces of music, and the way that Peter altered it to suit his own voice and style whilst keeping all the best parts of the original... just perfect evidence of his genius! \:D/

    #8 - Versailles NTY (519 plays)
    > Definitely my favourite new discovery this year :D No thanks to me though ^__^;; I got the free download from last.fm and didn't really think much of it... THANK GOD Chrissi picked it up herself and decided to investigate them further or we would have missed out on one of the greatest bands of all time @__@ They haven't put a foot wrong so far so I can't wait to see what comes next with Jubilee. And it's important to mention the sad loss of Jasmine You (rest in peace, you crazy witch, rest in peace ;___;) and the unbelievable strength the other members have shown in the wake of his passing. I have nothing but the utmost respect and admiration for those guys T^T
    Top Album of 2009: Noble NTY (#17, 294 plays)
    > The only full-length album so far. I actually prefer Lyrical Sympathy, but hell no am I complaining, because Noble is awesome as well :D
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharSUZERAIN NTY (#118, 33 plays)
    > This ends up being quite random because when a Versailles song comes up, I just can't skip it, ever xD They're just all so good and we have so terribly few! @__@

    #7 - Dir en grey NTY (734 plays)
    > The second-best new discovery of the year, and again it's thanks to Chrissi :D I used to think Diru were a complete waste of space before she came across the DOZING GREEN PV on youtube. Now I absolutely love this band! Kyo may be a bit (a lot xD) masochistic but if he wasn't, we wouldn't have Dir en grey. He's like a martyr for the exorcism of our darkest feelings >3
    Top Album of 2009: UROBOROS NTY (#11, 378 plays)
    > By far and away my favourite Diru album so far. It's pretty much perfect (aside from STUCK MAN and the incomprehensible decision to make the album versions of GLASS SKIN and DOZING GREEN in English) and it's my third favourite album by anyone at the moment :)
    Top Track of 2009: GAIKA, CHINMOKU GA NEMURU KORO NTY (#88, 39 plays)
    > This was the song that really made me fall in love with Dir en grey, and it's still one of my favourites ^__^ Although it's hard to pick favourites with Diru... they're just not a "this is my favourite song!" kind of band! ^__^;;

    #6 - Kamelot NTY (746 plays)
    > It's thanks to Cerefi that I went and looked up this band, and I'm glad I did. I was wayy over-obsessed with them when I bought my first albums from them, but thankfully a period of really not liking them calmed all that down, and now I'm enjoying them at levels I consider appropriate xD Musically, I love 'em, but Khan, not so much. I seem to be the only person who thinks this besides my sister, however @__@ (Also: Boo at Glenn leaving! :( I loved Glenn...)
    Top Album of 2009: The Black Halo NTY (#14, 326 plays)
    > Hands down the best. Best quality, best consistency, best album feel. And Khan's voice is sometimes very nice. O.o
    Top Track of 2009: EscucharWhen the Lights Are Down NTY (#52, 47 plays)
    > Not my *favourite* (that's Serenade) but one of my "preview" songs for Kamelot, which is why it's so dominant in the charts.

    #5 - Tarot NTY (749 plays)
    > I literally looked these guys up the very first day I got last.fm :D I actually love Marco more in Tarot at the moment than in Nightwish, he just seems more at home here. And I'm really getting fond of Zachary too, which is cool :)
    Top Album of 2009: Suffer Our Pleasures NTY (#9, 390 plays)
    > One of my favourite albums ever (it's just full of so much win) which leads me to wonder what the hell went wrong when they made that hit-and-miss oddity, Crows Fly Black o_O
    Top Track of 2009: Tides NTY (#7, 76 plays)
    > Haha xD Shall I tell the story of its dominance? I think I shall. It was one of my preview songs but more than that I listened to it about 30 times in one night when I was writing my Marco/Tuomas fanfic :P It really helped get the mood for that last scene, and also helped me get into Marco's head more. Add that to the fact that it is, of course, one of the greatest Tarot songs. Marco's voice is truly beautiful on it *__*

    #4 - Fightstar (776 plays)
    > In my opinion Fightstar is the one of the best English bands we have right now :) I really haven't listened to them that much recently (about half these plays probably came from the new album and when I wrote my Fightstar fanfic) I guess because they're not heavy enough, but I'll always support these guys. I love 'em so much, I shall always be a fan! >w</~~
    Top Album of 2009: Alternate Endings (#27, 197 plays)
    > I kind of wish my top album wasn't a collection of b-sides, but hey xD It can't be denied that many of the best Fightstar songs come from this collection :)
    Top Track of 2009: The English Way NTY (#118, 33 plays)
    > ENGLISH PRIDE!! \:D/ This song appeals to my patriotism and it is just raw awesome anyways :)

    #3 - Within Temptation (802 plays)
    > It's a miracle these guys hung onto third place, what with the fact that I'm... well... completely and utterly bored of them at the moment @__@ They're good (that's why they were my third favourite for about half the year) but there's just not enough substance to them. However, I'll always stay fond of them since they were part of my original eurometal trinity that started everything x)
    Top Album of 2009: The Heart of Everything NTY (#24, 222 plays)
    > The scrobbles for this are actually split because I had the album mistagged for ages before I actually did something about it and fixed it :P It's technically the best WT album in my opinion, but not always the most enjoyable to listen to.
    Top Track of 2009: Sounds of Freedom NTY (#136, 31 plays)
    > Mwahaha, I am unusual! \:D/ I just loved this song when I first got it, listened to it over and over again ^^ It made me feel like I could do anything >w<

    #2 - Sonata Arctica (3,457 plays)
    > Holy.... right, I'm going to have to be really careful not to talk forever about these guys. Because, over the course of this year, Sonata Arctica have truly earned the right to be called my favourite band :D Along with WT and Nightwish, they formed my original eurometal trinity but they always played second fiddle to Nightwish. Living in their shadow, they gradually grew on me more and more. Earlier this year I fell in love with them properly, but it was only with the release of Flag in the Ground video and the anticipation of The Days of Grays album that I realised the truth - Sonata were displacing Nightwish as my favourite band. I resisted the change at first, claiming they were equal favourites, but now Sonata is so far ahead Nightwish doesn't even figure. The simple fact is that I enjoy Sonata's music over and above everyone else's! And of course seeing them live earlier this month merely intensified my love for Sonata Arctica :) Five magnificent musicians (eight, including old members) and a ridiculously impressive back-catalogue of sensational music covering the whole spectrum of life... for me, right now, it just doesn't get better :)
    (I didn't do very well at not writing much xD)
    Top Album of 2009: Unia NTY (#2, 775 plays)
    > This is the album that really made me fall in love with Sonata :) I was ridiculously late buying it but I'm actually really glad I waited. If I hadn't, I might have reacted like a lot of other Sonata fans and hated it. Instead, it became my favourite on the first listen :) It's second favourite now, after The Days of Grays, but seriously, by about *this* much *demonstrates tinytiny distance with fingers*
    Top Track of 2009: In Black and White NTY (#6, 80 plays)
    > Holy crap @__@ Could there *be* a more deserving top Sonata track? This song is the reason I bought Unia and thus really it's this song that made me fall in love with Sonata properly. When I first heard it my only thought was, "Why the hell do people hate Unia so much? THIS IS FUCKING GENIUS!!!" I listened it over and over again before I got my paws on the album and it still hasn't been beaten from the top spot :) Add to that that they used it as an encore song at our gig and oh my days, I can't help but say that this is one of my favourite songs of all time! :3

    #1 - Nightwish (3,670 plays)
    > What a surprise to see you here! */sarcasm* Until these last few months when Sonata displaced them, Nightwish were my most favouritest and bestest band of all time from the moment I first heard them :D That means two solid years at the top of my favourites list which, for someone as fickle as me, is really saying something @__@ I had a low with them recently, poking them and shouting at them, "WHY AREN'T YOU BETTER? DX" Mostly I was annoyed with Tuomas (he's suffered from negative comparison with Tony Kakko :P) which obviously meant that I was unable to help passing that annoyance on to the music. But thankfully (partly due to getting From Wishes to Eternity DVD for my birthday! thanks Chrissi! \:D/) I recovered my love and affection for that most magnificent of bands, Nightwish - I just don't love them *quite* as much as I did before. But you know what? I'm cool with that :) It was high time things changed around here :)
    Top Album of 2009: Dark Passion Play (#1, 900 plays)
    > The whole time that Nightwish were my favourite band of all time, this was my favourite album of all time. Now that Nightwish are less stable, so is DPP (Wishmaster and Oceanborn are fighting with it for first place) but all things told, I think I will still say that Dark Passion Play is my album of the decade. It just changed so much of the way I thought about music and really, despite currently boring me in places, it's a masterpiece of modern popular music. Let's see how the next album fares!
    Top Track of 2009: The Poet and the Pendulum (#1, 110 plays)
    > And all the time Nightwish were my all-time favourite band, Poet was my all-time favourite song. And just like DPP, with Nightwish being less stable, Poet has been displaced by Last of the Wilds and Over the Hills and Far Away. Nonetheless this is still one of the greatest songs ever written. This musical acheivement is something that I'll always, always respect Tuomas for :)


    Finally, some predictions for 2010:
    > Sonata Arctica for #1
    > less symphonic metal, more power metal
    > older Nightwish albums to become more dominant
    > less listenings of old favourites and "classic" bands
    > less listenings of British and American bands
    > an even higher bias in favour of Finland xD
    > fewer new discoveries. I'm taking a well-earned break ;)



    If you read all that you deserve a medal @__@ And unfortunately I don't have any medals so you'll just have to make do with this virtual cookie. Don't eat it all at once now! \:D/
  • Highlights 2009

    17 Dic 2009, 14:45 de ButziBaerchen

    same procedure as every year !!!

    was ich damals mit meinem alten profil gemacht habe, führe ich nun auch als ButziBaerchen weiter ... hier meine besonders liebgewonnenen releases aus diesem jahr ... mit einer kleinen neuerung ... ich teile einmal in international, einmal in national und ich präsentiere euch "meinen song 2009" :)

    internationale highlights '09

    A Fine Frenzy - bomb in a birdcage
    La Roux - la roux
    Moby - wait for me
    Mando Diao - give me fire!
    Port O'Brien - threadbare
    Depeche Mode - sounds of the universe
    Sea Wolf - white water, white bloom
    Zoey Van Goey - the cage was unlocked all along
    Passion Pit - manners
    Robbie Williams - reality killed the video star
    Melody Gardot - my one and only thrill
    Nouvelle Vague - 3
    Eskimo Joe - inshalla
    David Gray - draw the line
    Papa Roach - metamorphosis
    The Prodigy - invaders must die
    Lady GaGa - the fame
    The Big Pink - a brief history of love

    nationale highlights '09

    Element of Crime - immer da wo du bist bin ich nie
    Jupiter Jones - holiday in catatonia
    Muff Potter - gute aussicht
    Olli Schulz - es brennt so schön
    Rammstein - liebe ist für alle da
    Selig - und endlich unendlich
    Wirtz - erdling
    Sportfreunde Stiller - mtv unplugged in new york
    [:SITD:] - Rot
    The Baseballs - strike!
    Ruben Cossani - alles auf einmal
    Barbara Schöneberger - nochmal, nur anders


    mein song '09

    ich musste nicht wirklich lang überlegen ... was schon eher ne überraschung bei meiner wenigkeit ist - wer mich kennt weiss auch warum :P ...
    hier ist er also, mein song des jahres:

    Jupiter Jones feat. jana pallaske - nordpol / südpol


    abschließend bedanke ich mich bei last.fm wieder einmal für ein weiteres jahr voll von tollen neuen musikentdeckungen und ich sage danke an alle die meinen blogeintrag vielleicht sogar mit interesse gelesen haben :)

    ne schöne weihnachtszeit wünscht euch

    ButziBaerchen
  • The Best Of 2000-s: my version

    17 Dic 2009, 10:41 de Onlygleb

    100. Roisin Murphy - Owerpowered/ 2007
    99. Otep - Confrotation/ 2007
    98. Земфира - Прогулка/ 2004
    97. Ленинград - Дороги/ 2003
    96. Infernal - Self Control/ 2006
    95. Duffy - EscucharMercy/ 2008
    94. The Gossip - EscucharLove Long Distance/ 2009
    93. t.A.T.u. - Не верь, не бойся не проси/ 2003
    92. Infernal - Ten Miles/ 2007
    91. Evanescence - EscucharCall Me When You're Sober/ 2006
    90. Adele - EscucharHometown Glory/ 2008
    89. Goldfrapp - EscucharTrain/ 2003
    88. The Ting Tings - Shut Up & Let Me Go/ 2008
    87. Linkin Park - Numb/ 2003
    86. Верка Сердючка - Гоп-Гоп/ 2002
    85. FRATELLIS - Chelsea Dagger/ 2006
    84. Филипп Киркоров и Анастасия Стоцкая - И ты скажешь да/ 2004
    83. Beirut - Nantes/ 2007
    82. Depeche Mode - EscucharWrong/ 2009
    81. S Club 7 - Don't Stop Moving/ 2001
    80. HIM - EscucharThe Sacrament/ 2003
    79. Rihanna - EscucharUmbrella/ 2007
    78. Воровайки - Вороваечки/ 2001
    77. Muse - Supermassive Black Hole/ 2006
    76. Город-312 - Останусь/ 2006
    75. Florence + The Machine - EscucharRabbit Heart (Raise It Up)/ 2009
    74. KT Tunstall - EscucharSaving My Face/ 2007
    73. Little Boots - Remedy/ 2009
    72. Lasgo - Lost/ 2009
    71. Yeah Yeah Yeahs - EscucharHeads Will Roll/ 2009
    70. Кристина Орбакайте - Перелётная птица/ 2004
    69. Gwen Stefani & Akon - The Sweet Escape/ 2006
    68. Ladyhawke - EscucharBack Of The Van/ 2009
    67. Jennifer Lopez - EscucharGet Right/ 2005
    66. Ida Maria - I Like You So Much Better When You're Naked/ 2008
    65. Alanis Morissette - Underneath (Josh Harris Radio Mix)/ 2008
    64. Kaiser Chiefs - EscucharRuby/ 2007
    63. Fragma - EscucharEverytime You Need Me/ 2001
    62. Bob Sinclar & Cutee B - Rock This Party (Everybody Dance Now)/ 2006
    61. Depeche Mode - Enjoy The Silence/ 2004
    60. Safri Duo - The bongo song/ 2002
    59. Воровайки - Хоп, мусарок/ 2001
    58. Muse - Uprising/ 2009
    57. Shakira & Wyclef Jean - Hips don't lie/ 2006
    56. Gwen Stefani - Wind It Up/ 2007
    55. Goldfrapp - EscucharRide A White Horse/ 2005
    54. La Roux - EscucharBulletproof/ 2009
    53. Amy WinehouseRehab/ 2003
    52. Booty Luv - Boogie 2 Nite/ 2006
    51. Bodyrox & Luciana - What Planet U On/ 2007
    50. Bloc Party - Flux/ 2007
    49. Black Eyed Peas - Let's Get In Started/ 2004
    48. Kylie Minogue - I Believe in You/ 2004
    47. Bloc Party - EscucharBanquet/ 2005
    46. Надежда Кадышева - Широка река/ 2004
    45. София Ротару - Белый Танец/ 2003
    44. t.A.T.u. - Я сошла с ума/ 2000
    43. Kanye West - EscucharStronger/ 2007
    42. Armand van Helden - EscucharI Want Your Soul/ 2007
    41. Crystal Castles - EscucharAlice Practice/ 2008
    40. Groove Armada - EscucharGet Down/ 2007
    39. Маша Распутина и Филипп Киркоров - Роза Чайная/ 2003
    38. t.A.T.u. - All About Us/ 2005
    37. The Chemical Brothers - EscucharGalvanize/ 2005
    36. Shania Twain - Ka-Ching
    35. Freaks - The Creeps/ 2007
    34. Red Hot Chili Peppers - Californication/ 2002
    33. Benny Benassi - No matter What to you do/ 2003
    32. Lasgo - EscucharSomething/ 2002
    31. The Ting Tings - EscucharThat's Not My Name/ 2008
    30. Lady GaGa - EscucharJust Dance/ 2008
    29. P!nk - U & Ur Hand/ 2006
    28. Nelly Furtado - Turn Off The Lights/ 2001
    27. Yeah Yeah Yeahs - EscucharGold Lion/ 2005
    26. Infernal - I Won't Be Crying/ 2007
    25. Cansei de Ser Sexy - EscucharAlala/ 2006
    24. Arctic Monkeys - Brainstorm/ 2007
    23. Nelly Furtado - EscucharSay It Right
    22. Amy Macdonald - EscucharThis Is The Life
    21. Gwen Stefani - What You Waiting For/ 2004
    20. Madonna - EscucharDie Another Day/ 2002
    19. Boogie Pimps - Somebody to Love/ 2004
    18. Camille Jones - The Creeps/ 2007
    17. Nickelback - Rockstar/ 2007
    16. Depeche Mode - EscucharPrecious/ 2005
    15. Evanescence - EscucharGoing Under/ 2003
    14. MGMT - EscucharKids/ 2008
    13. Despina Vandi - EscucharGia/ 2003
    12. Cansei de Ser Sexy - Let's Make Love and Listen Death to Above/ 2007
    11. The Gossip - Standing in the Way of Control/ 2007

    10. Bloc Party - Signs (Armand Van Helden Remix)/ 2009

    9. t.A.T.u. - Нас не догонят/ 2001

    8. Lady GaGa - EscucharPoker Face/ 2008

    7. Madonna - EscucharHung Up/ 2005

    6. Воровайки - Шмон/ 2002

    5. September - EscucharCry For You/ 2008

    4. Лолита - EscucharОриентация Север/ 2007

    3. Mason - Exceeders/ 2006

    2. Bodyrox & Luciana - Yeah Yeah/ 2006

    1. Amy WinehouseEscucharBack To Black/ 2006
  • Best non metal albums of 2009

    17 Dic 2009, 2:05 de coiled122

    Some may wonder why Alcest, Amesoeurs and Alice in Chains are here. Well, the first two really aren't metal IMO, and AiC are more hard rock or whatever. Plus, it's my list. Go complain to somebody else. Here we go

    20.) Afterlives-A Ticking Clock I Couldn't Stop-Creepy Lo-Fi dirges, sparse guitar passages, and a genuinely personal feeling all come together in this impressive debut from a member of Have a Nice Life. Definitely worth a listen.

    19.) Splinterskin-Wayward Souls-Nature loving Pagan Neo-Folk with a somewhat experimental slant. Fans of the genre should check it out

    18.) TwinSisterMoon-The Hollow Mountain-A mix of Drone, Free Folk and more from a member of Natural Snow Buildings. At times, it brings to mind Pink Floyd at their most pastoral, as well as Grouper's Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill.

    17.) Wardruna-Runaljod - gap var Ginnunga-A hypnotic Pagan Folk/Ambient album that uses violin, chanting, throat singing, found sounds, drones and instruments made from the skin and bones of animals. The description may make it sound like something you'd here on Hearts of Space, but it's much better than that.

    16.) Les Discrets/Alcest-Split-A pretty good split that features some damn catchy Post Rock from Les Discrets, while Alcest continues to do it's thing. What more do you want?

    15.) A Minority Of One-Bathe In Fiery Answer-Probably the most criminally overlooked album of the year, BIFA is a great, earthy ambient album with some noticeable Folk (not Neo-Folk though) influences. A great "walking through nature" album.

    14.) The Horrors-Primary Colours-The first album from these guys to impress me, PC is a catchy revamp in sound that embraces Shoegaze without sounding like a mistake.

    13.) Chris Connelly-Pentland Firth Howl-Connelly's latest is a personal work (though many of his albums are) that deals heavily with his homeland Ireland. It's also a fairly minimal affair-the only other musician present it guitarist Zak Boeger.

    12.) Natural Snow Buildings-Shadow Kingdom-No, it's not for anyone (two discs at 2 plus hours) and it's not as good as "The Dance of the Moon and the Sun", but this is still a rewarding trip for fans of Drone, Free Folk, and Experimental music.

    11.) Depeche Mode-Sounds Of The Universe-No, it won't beat past releases, and "Wrong" makes me cringe, but it's still good, and shows that after all these years, they've still got it.

    10.) Russian Circles-Geneva-The best album from the band yet, and the best Post-Rock album of the year, "Geneva" takes the crushing riffs from "Enter" as well as the atmosphere of "Station" and adds even more energy than before, putting many of their peers to shame as far as the genre is concerned this year.

    9.) J.G. Thirlwell-The Venture Bros.-The Music of J.G. Thirlwell-It makes perfect sense for Thirlwell to do a soundtrack, especially when one hears his Steroid Maximus and Manorexia albums. So with this album (which is also Vol. 1), the long awaited release of the soundtrack for the excellent Adult Swim cartoon "The Venture Bros.", Thirlwell does the show and listener proud, while paying tribute to the masters (Morricone, Barry, Mancini and others) in his own way. An essential album for Thirlwell fans.

    8.) Antony and the Johnsons-The Crying Light-While it doesn't top "I Am a Bird Now", TCL still combines the honesty, theatrics and beauty that makes AATJ one of the best bands around today.

    7.) A Place to Bury Strangers-Exploding Head-Really loud Shoegaze that packs a melodic punch, EH might not be the most original album, but it more than makes up for it with it's energy and enthusiasm, as well as some great songs.

    6.) Alice in Chains-Black Gives Way To Blue-While "Private Hell" and the title track didn't win me over, BGWTB is a great comeback that offers enough to make long time listeners like myself proud. Also, "Acid Bubble" is a great song.

    5.) Amesoeurs-Amesoeurs-It's not as great as their debut EP, and it's going to be their only LP, but it's a hell of a way to go. Post Punk Inspired Rock/Shoegaze with a noticeable Black Metal influence (not a shock though), it's one of the catchiest albums I've heard all year. Great title track too.

    4.) Mount Eerie-Wind's Poem-Phil Elverum (of The Microphones fame) gave us the best Mount Eerie album so far. While the Lo-Fi Indie Folk Sound is still evident, the influence of Black Metal makes it's way in too, only without the screeches associated with said genre. The end result is a melancholy but engrossing album that reveals more with each listen.

    3.) Rome-Flowers From Exile-Sure, Martial lyrics and rhythms are nothing new to the Neo-Folk genre. But no other album this decade has used such content and sound to such perfection as FFE did. Adding exotic instrumentation (notice the use of flamenco) and brilliant lyrics to the equation, Rome have hit gold with this one. Even those who don't like the Neo-Folk genre might enjoy this.

    2.) Current 93-Aleph at Hallucinatory Mountain-Abandoning the Apocalyptic Folk sound he's famous for, David Tibet delves into Psychedelic and Hard Rock with AAHM. Featuring an inspired list of guests (Andrew W.K., Porn Star Sasha Grey, Rickie Lee James, and more), this is a monolith of an album that is unlike anything he's done before.

    1.) Raekwon-Only Built 4 Cuban Linx 2-How do you follow up a classic? That's a question many artists suffer through. After several other releases, Raekwon finally releases the long awaited sequel to his album "Only Built 4 Cuban Linx" (still my favorite Wu solo effort) with a real rarity in music today-an instant classic. Boasting a bevy of producers, excellent rhymes (like you'd expect anything less), the best song of the year in "House of Flying Daggers", and a whole lot more, OB4CL2 is an album I can't stop listening to, and is tied with Sunn 0)))'s "Monoliths and Dimensions" as my favorite album of the year.
  • Na żywca widziało i słyszało:

    17 Dic 2009, 0:37 de willscarlet

  • THAT WAS 2009 – THE YEAR IN CHARTS

    16 Dic 2009, 21:52 de Addicted2Melody

    THAT WAS 2009 – THE YEAR IN CHARTS

    2009 draws to a close and yet again my all-embracing, all-inclusive and all-rambling review of the year’s electronic music returns – wordier than ever before... Slightly earlier than I'd planned, but isn't that always the way.

    On a personal level, it’s been a strangely disappointing year, so, this year more than ever, it’s been music and DJing keeping me going and giving life its colour. Trance, in particular, has been truly stunning this year, maybe better than it’s been since the “golden era” of 98-01. And that high standard itself has both kept me sane and yet at times driven me to states of embarrassing over-excitement and needless intoxication – something I’m sure most of my fellow trance addicts, Shpongloids and borderline paranoiacs can relate to. Whether this is my prediction that trance would improve in the final years of the decade coming true or just me looking a lot harder I’m not sure, but I’m still convinced trance fans, from both uplifting and techy ends of the spectrum, have been thoroughly spoilt this year. Anyone out there reading this that’s getting into trance for the first time or coming back to it after many years away, believe me, you couldn’t have picked a better year to join/rejoin the party.

    And, for me, albums-wise at least, 2009 will be remembered as the year that some real electronic heavyweights stood up, some after years away from the scene, to deliver their latest offerings - a couple of artists even promised 2 albums.... the question is, who delivered and who impressed?

    As always, we begin with the albums in reverse order...


    -----------------------------------------------------


    20. PlanisphereCyborganic
    (April / Green Martian)



    Arguably more of an extended EP with a few remixes than a “proper” album, but like his 2007 album, Solarism, Cyborganic was a well-crafted, textured and intelligently delivered progressive trance record, complete with those lush, bright melodies, futuristic touches and flurries of breakbeat – the forgotten middle ground where old progressive meets new progressive.

    Favourite Track: EscucharJarresque

    19. MahamudraSimplicity Of Complexity
    (July / Tactic Records)



    Sounding strangely reminiscent of Infected Mushroom’s material from the early 2000s, this album from Israeli psytrance trio Mahamudra dared to be that little bit more psychedelic than most full on albums around at the moment. For that reason alone, it stood out. Something to get your body moving and your brain melting.

    Favourite Track: EscucharSexy Body Move

    18. Between IntervalThe Edge of a Fairytale
    (April / Spottled Peccary)



    Stefan Strand’s 4th album as space-music project, Between Interval, was as graceful, intelligent and engaging as pure ambient gets, and actually much more diverse in approach too - a vast and compelling soundtrack to the void between stars.

    Favourite Track: EscucharThree Years Ago

    17. Richard DurandAlways The Sun
    (May / Magik Muzik)



    An album which slightly perplexed to begin with – beyond the final 4 tracks or so (Silver Key through to Dr. Gorgo), where was the Richard Durand we remember from the days of Ledged Up, Inside My Brain and Any Time? What I realised pretty quickly was that this is actually a really refreshing and original approach to progressive trance music – rich, melodic and warm, building seamlessly and steadily towards those harder sounds we’ve come to expect from tech trance’s rising star.

    Favourite Track: EscucharInto Something


    16. Cosmic GateSign of The Times
    (March / Black Hole Recordings)



    Another evolution for German duo, Cosmic Gate – leaving the hard trance of Rhythm & Drums and No More Sleep firmly behind them and taking the moodier tech of Earth Mover in a more progressive/vocal direction, typical of trance’s current trends. A very solid collection of buzzing basslines, simple hooks and plush vocals.

    Favourite Track: F.A.V.

    15. Day.DinA Place To Be Real
    (February / Spintwist Records)



    Hamburg isn’t just home to dance music funsters turned jumpstyle charlatans, Scooter; thankfully, it’s home to some top notch progressive psy as well. In A Place To Be Real, Deniz Aydin delivered some highly atmospheric and textured trance music alongside some funkier, electro-fused numbers.

    Favourite Track: EscucharDance With Me

    14. SoliquidTransportation
    (March / Baroque Records)



    An outstandingly diverse mixture of progressive material from 24 year old David Biczók, containing some really obvious Orbital and Chicane overtones in places. This was a debut album that showed bags of ideas and production flair – this Hungarian really is one to watch in progressive trance music, as he understands his genre down to the very last detail.

    Favourite Track: EscucharMosquito

    13. Gui BorattoTake My Breath Away
    (March / Kompakt)



    Direct from São Paulo, this was an effortless blend of minimal, tech house and chilled moods which had a beautiful balance between shades of darkness and light. Sometimes quite sunny, sometimes moving into the shadows, but consistently calming and restful.

    Favourite Track: Ballroom

    12. OvnimoonGeometric Poetry
    (August / Iono Music)



    An exceptionally, and I mean exceptionally, deep and cerebral progressive psy record from Chilean, Hector Stuardo. Hypnotic music that just melts into the atmosphere.

    Favourite Track: EscucharSacred Earth

    11. Phony OrphantsComputer Music
    (November / Iboga Records)



    A very late entry from my point-of-view, and an album I picked up on by chance when I randomly decided to search on discogs.com for new Iboga releases. And I’m thoroughly glad I did because Iboga have outdone themselves yet again. Carefully straddling that hazy line between straight- down-the-middle progressive and psychedelic progressive, this album is impeccably clean sounding, full of character and incredibly danceable.

    Favourite Track: Party Girl

    10. Zombie NationZombielicious
    (March / UKW)



    I feel slightly sorry for Munich-based producer, Florian Senfter. While most artists would be delighted to have had a hit as big as Kernkraft 400, the DJ Gius remix of that track that went on to become such a huge chart hit has criminally overshadowed the rest of his work ever since. Those less familiar with his discography see the name Zombie Nation as a complete and utter one hit wonder. Funnily enough, apparently, it wasn’t even a remix Senfter fully approved of himself. Way back in 2000, as a musically underdeveloped 13 year old, I bought ZN’s first album, Leichenschmaus, simply on the strength of Kernkraft 400. In truth, that first record, produced alongside Emanuel Guenther, was far too weird for any 13 year old to fully appreciate. It really is a twisted, gothic trip, like the soundtrack to some fucked up, and deliberately amusing, vampire B-movie. And it took many years of listening to the delicately freakish rhythms of EscucharAbflex User and EscucharRythm Box, endlessly mulling over the absurd lyrics of EscucharTV Control and reading the sleeve note’s stories of women queuing up to give zombies blowjobs before I began to grasp what it was ZN was offering as a concept. Psychologically, this went way way deeper than Kernkraft's simple, but very effective, Commodore 64 hook.

    Since going it solo, Florian has grown a lot. After producing his finest album, Absorber, which was faintly disturbing but nowhere near as screwed up as Leichenschmaus, at the end of 2006, the project shifted into more “dancefloor-friendly” territory. Still dark, still sinister but something more capable of getting a club crowd moving – the Frankenstein’s monster of electronic music had picked up its glow sticks. But not all of Black Toys grabbed me in the same way the first two albums had.

    This year’s release, Zombielicious, is a clear and unmistakable continuation of Black Toys. Techno-fused house music with a freakishly contorted but playful smile – full of stabs, filters and distortions – and, what’s more, even more conducive to the workings of a dancefloor. And, overall, it’s just a higher quality, more consistent record than Black Toys. It borrows more subtly from Absorber than its predecessor and yet, in the shape of tracks like Worth It and EscucharForza, goes for the jugular more. So, for long-term followers like myself, Zombielicious is Florian’s most exciting record for a while and the start of Zombie Nation realising its potential as a more dancefloor orientated project; For newcomers, it’s probably his most accessible record to date.

    Favourite Track: EscucharGet It

    9. Depeche ModeSounds Of The Universe
    (April / Mute Records Ltd.)



    I have a strange relationship with Depeche Mode. For a lot of people they are the pinnacle in electronic music. They were one of the first groups to successfully marry electronic music production with genuine, meaningful song-writing in the traditional sense. But I actually find Depeche Mode a little hit and miss. Their best tracks – let’s say, my favourite 20-30 songs – are incredible, top-of-the-shelf, song writing. Songs I can enjoy again and again and again. The rest of their material, for me, ranges from listenable right through to insipidly forgettable. By the same token, while I can pick out great songs from all their albums, only Violator, Some Great Reward and maybe Construction Time Again really move and shake me from the first to last notes. For that reason, I awaited Sounds Of The Universe more in hope than expectation.

    And at first, it did have that hit and miss quality, where half the tracks were amazing and the other half were let down by either weak choruses or disappointing verse parts. But there was something about this record which kept drawing me back and the more I gave it chance the more it revealed itself. And I think that’s the key thing with this album. It’s not an “obvious” album. So, unless the mere sound of Dave Gahan’s voice automatically and instantaneously melts you to your knees, which let’s face it is something reserved for the more fanatical, female echelons of DM’s fan base, then this album was unlikely to have you singing its praises after one listen. But it still contained all of those classic DM trademarks, including that unique sense of rejoicing in cynicism, hidden sadism and confused moral ambivalence which bubbles under the surface - idiosyncrasies that sum up the human condition. And, who knows? Maybe this is the album that will eventually convince me to give some of their older albums more of a chance. Maybe they aren’t so hit and miss after all.

    Either way, as I see things now, Sounds Of The Universe was their finest effort since the mighty Violator, an album that will be 20 years old this coming April.... Oh, and I suppose the most puzzling thing about Sounds Of The Universe, something I shouldn’t neglect to mention, was the fact that Ghost didn’t make it onto the main album. How the fuck it only ended up as a bonus track I will never know!

    Favourite Track: EscucharWrong

    8. Infected Mushroom - Legend Of The Black Shawarma
    (September / HOM-Mega Productions)



    Dividing opinion is becoming quite a serious habit for Infected Mushroom. And it seems clear it’s something they enjoy doing. Vicious Delicious was a record that struck that divide more definitively than any IM album before it. It was an album I had mixed feelings about, both when it was released and now. A number of tracks hit the pleasure points harder than ever before; a couple of tracks were a tad painful to listen to. And, while it has grown on me massively over the course of the last year or so, I've always felt as if there was some magic IM ingredient missing. Strangely, I still can’t quite put my finger on what that ingredient is.

    But, even more strangely, IM’s 2009 offering, Legend Of The Black Shawarma both pushes in stylistic directions that I wouldn’t normally welcome yet, at the same time, actually has that mystery ingredient that was missing from Vicious Delicious. More so than ever before, there are strong metal overtones in Infected Mushroom’s material, overtones which go beyond the heavy use of guitars, and it continues to “mess around’ with the accepted rules of trance music, so much so that it almost isn’t psy-trance anymore. But it’s also surprisingly trippy in places, and in a way that is more intelligent and mature than people give them credit for. In other words, it’s trippy in a way that is in keeping with the rest of the album’s style and, in keeping with a trend they set on IM The Supervisor, the most psychedelic sequences are normally saved for the final 2 minutes or so of tracks. And there are parts of the track Project 100 that almost have something of Juno Reactor about them, while at the same time showing some of IM’s typically playful touches amongst all the satanic guitar riffs. Killing time aside, from about Can’t stop onwards, and even more so from Project 100 onwards, Legend Of The Black Shawarma takes you on more of a journey than Vicious Delicious did. And maybe it’s that combination of tougue-in-cheek playfulness along with that sense of being taken on a psychedelic journey, a psychedelic journey which is of course a million miles away from the kind of psychedelic journey Simon Posford might take you on, that is the main component of the magic that I can’t quite put my finger on in Vicious Delicious.

    Many have said it’s getting closer to “pop music”. Well, maybe the lead single Smashing The Opponent, a collaboration with KoЯn front man, Jonathan Davis, is a lot more radio friendly than anything they’ve ever produced, but, despite the added accessibility factor that using metal overtones is always going to give, for me, this record is still far too twisted, humorously fucked up and aggressive to be called “pop music”. Not strictly trance, maybe, but still far too weird to be “pop”.

    Favourite Track: Slowly


    7. The QemistsJoin The Q
    (January / Ninja Tune)



    2009 had barely kicked off and Brighton trio, The Qemists, landed sharply and explosively with their debut album, Join The Q. I was already a massive fan of the group’s earlier singles on Ninja Tune, the likes of Stompbox, Iron Shirt and EscucharLet There Be Light. I’m always in the market for drum & bass with those big, rocky, Pendulum-esque qualities, so those earlier Qemist singles really wet my appetite. Thinking back, I reckon I must have heard The Qemists were producing an album as early as the summer of 2008, so I’d been digging about on the net looking for information about its released for at least 6 months. But despite the wait, its arrival was still explosive. Admittedly, some tracks like Stompbox, When Ur Lonely and Drop Audio were already very familiar, and it is a disappointingly short album, but still, its high energy fusion of jump up, rock and dancehall really hits the spot.

    The comparisons people draw between this album and Pendulum’s In Silico are perfectly fair, yet the fact that it features a number of guest vocalists (rather than just the voice of Rob Swire) and its dancehall/hip-hop moments do separate it from In Silico and give it its own distinctive feel. Strangely, these guys, as far as I can see, haven’t managed to attract the same kind of scorn that seems to follow Pendulum around. Maybe Pendulum hitting the limelight first has taken some of the pressure off. Maybe the touches brought by the likes of Wiley, MC Navigator and, the human drum machine that is, BeardyMan make it an album more in keeping with the “London-centric” mainstream trends in the UK. Maybe, as some have suggested, Join The Q is the “real” drum & bass-rock combo that Pendulum failed in producing with In Silico. Personally, I wouldn’t say Pendulum failed. In fact, I probably slightly prefer In Silico over Join The Q, but only slightly, and I still love the latter’s intensity, vigour and full sound. It was everything I expected and more. And at least we can say, if Pendulum do ever dissolve into “just another rock group”, we’ll still have the boys from Brighton.

    Favourite Track: Lost Weekend

    6. PushGlobal Age
    (June / Armada Music)



    There was once a time in melodic trance music when it was much more fashionable to be delicate and understated. Nowadays, “uplifting” or “melodic” trance music tends to be fairly loud, brash and upfront, with high tempos, pulsing basslines and kickbacks that hit you between the eyes. I don’t mean that as a criticism at all – I myself am a big fan of the likes of Sean Tyas, Activa and JOC. But there is a sense now that everyone making trance music is doing it in that “clean cut” way, with the same formulas, and by being subtle or just more "housey" putting themselves in the progressive camp or by being harder and more upfront putting themselves in that so-called “uplifting” camp. Very few are pursuing older sounds and creating trance music that is both progressively layered and yet highly melodic throughout.

    That is why, for me, Push’s Global Age was such a refreshing musical experience. It’s like reliving the “golden era” all over again. Tracks like Back To The Essence, Trance Indicator, Trance-Tastic and, lead single, Interference are so carefully layered and constructed, building towards fantastic high points of euphoria without frenetically racing to get there. Its trance music that is capable of totally filling a room with rich, full and uplifting sound without pounding away frantically for its entire duration. In fact, the track title Back To The Essence pretty much sums this album up. Global Age really does capture something fundamental about “proper” trance music – if there is such a thing – trance music as it was originally conceived. Simple melodic sequences made extraordinarily moving through the complex layering of those sequences. Interestingly, there is actually a Sean Tyas remix of Interference on the album which, if you compare to the rest of Push’s original works, clearly marks the difference between what’s going on in trance today and what trance started out as... But, having said that, because it’s a remix of Interference it’s probably as subtle and as layered as we’ve ever heard from a Tyas remix. All in all, an album that those of us who are old enough to remember listening to trance back in 1998/99 were absolutely crying out for, some of us without even realising it.

    Favourite Track: Back To The Essence

    5. YagyaRigning
    (January / Sending Orbs)



    Few albums have generated as much hype amongst my last.fm friends and neighbours as this record by Icelandic producer Aðalsteinn Guðmundsson. In electronic circles, everyone seemed to be talking about it. And, as it turned out, with good reason. I must admit, Yagya was a completely new name for me. And looking at Rigning’s bland artwork and strange track titles, counting from one to ten in Icelandic, I was not filled with optimism. But the music itself is truly spell-binding. It reminded me of so many other artists I’ve grown to love over the last few years, like a much more ambient but less dark alternative to Burial, with touches of Boards of Canada, some of Biosphere’s ambient house and even some of Pete Namlook’s material.

    Rigning literally means “rain” in Icelandic, and, without doubt, that is the album’s theme. The sound of soft rainfall moves in and out of earshot, mingling with delicate pads and distant pulsating bass. You know that feeling of comfort you get when you are safe inside a warm house and you look outside a window to see a downpour outside, the puddles forming as anoraked figures, made anonymous by their plastic hoods, walk steadily and aimlessly down the weather-beaten coastline. That, for me, is exactly what Rigning is the soundtrack to. And I think it tackles its subject matter in a pleasantly positive way. Although some of the tracks are strangely haunting, it still gives you a bizarre optimism and confidence, a sense that if you were to go out into the rain and become one of those anonymously anoraked rain-walkers you would remain safe, dry and comforted. Us lot in the UK are always talking about the weather and always moaning about the relentless rain we get. After listening to Rigning, I couldn’t help but think, “Bring on the rain.”

    Favourite Track: EscucharRigning Sex

    4. Marco VPropaganda v2
    (November / In Charge)



    The V-man promised 2 albums of new material in 2009 and the original master of tech trance duly delivered. I didn’t see the point of using up 2 spots in this list to chart them both, so I’ve decided to just choose the better of the two. Part 1 of Propaganda impressed me pretty much straight away and the style of that installment, as well as his two recent collaborations with Sander van Doorn, had me convinced that he and Van Doorn were now singing pretty much from the same song sheet. Like Sander’s Supernaturalistic from last year, Part 1 was percussively tight, distinctly groovy and ever so slightly dark. I loved it. But with v2 Marco not only turned up the heat, but gave us a truer reflection of the Big V’s musical world; Ever so slightly less percussively driven, less overtly groovy but even darker, even moodier, even louder, even more of an attack on the senses, loaded with big tech synth lines – raw, aggressive and dancefloor rocking.

    Having said that, the differences between parts 1 and 2 shouldn’t be overstated, because overall they aren’t a million miles from each other. They are opposite sides of the same coin, so to speak. But at the same time, specific tracks like How You Feeling? and Fantastic Damage are so much more reminiscent of the classic Marco sets which made the Dutchman such a household name in trance music. Part 2 is just that little bit less like Sander and more like himself. And the fact that Marco has not just thrown out 2 albums of mediocrity studded with the occasional single-worthy gem and instead carefully showcased both sides of his versatile musical persona is testament to his hard work and impeccable standards.

    To me, it’s interesting how the likes of Armin van Buuren, Ferry Corsten and Markus Schulz, in particular because of their popular radio shows, stay in the consciousness of trance fans week-in-week-out. Whereas with Marco, he tends to slip off our radar... but when he releases an album as epic as 200V or Propaganda, or whenever we see him DJ, we are instantly reminded that he is as much of a heavyweight as any of the other trance dons. With Propaganda v2, Marco V essentially says, “Don’t worry, guys – The V-man’s still here.”

    Favourite Track: How You Feeling?

    3. The ProdigyInvaders Must Die
    (February / Take Me To The Hospital)



    In electronic music, there hasn’t been a more widely anticipated album... maybe ever. Liam Howlett hadn’t released a record since 2004 and hadn’t produced one alongside MCs Maxim and Keith Flint since 1997. I’m actually one of the few electronic music fans out there that appreciated Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned for what it was; a fresh and different direction for Liam Howlett and an expertly produced electro-fest which gave us “Nu-Rave” sounds before the disgusting phrase had even been coined. But, even the most hardcore Prodigy fans out there had to admit, there was definitely something missing. So, for many it was almost as if this was the first “real” Prodigy album since The Fat of the Land... we had been waiting over 11 years.

    And was it worth the wait? Fuck, yes! I won’t be as bold to say this is the best album The Prodigy have ever produced, but it is by far the most intense. It’s more frantic than ever before, more violent than ever before and, for the most part, nosier than ever before. And, for me, it really is a quite deliberate amalgamation of old and new. It’s the early rave synths of Experience meets the aggressive coolness of The Fat of the Land meets the more cutting edge production of Always Outnumbered Never Outgunned. And I think the main reason a small section of breaks fans shunned this new offering was that the only Prodigy record which cannot really be heard on Invaders Must Die is the much cherished and venerated Music for the Jilted Generation. So it wasn’t long before the widely predicted criticism of “too much like Pendulum” got wheeled out. But, I suppose, there was only so much you could have squeezed into this “discographical melting-pot” before it started sounding contrived and disjointed – thankfully, this record is neither of those two things. Personally, the only real criticism I could find for Invaders Must Die was ... well, it’s too short. Minus the bonus tracks, it’s barely 46 minutes long – even shorter than The Qemists’ Join The Q. But it’s a high octane 3 quarters of an hour, 3 quarters of an hour that I struggle to sit still for. Once again, testament to the old adage that good things come to those who wait...and great things come to those who wait even longer.

    Favourite Track: EscucharTake Me To The Hospital

    2. Solar FieldsMovements
    (January / Ultimae Records)



    In 2007, Swedish producer Magnus Birgersson moved out of his comfort zone and produced one of the most surprising records of that year. Earthshine was very much a progressive trance album, something you don’t necessarily expect from either Magnus or Ultimae Records. But, thankfully, it was a pleasant surprise. It showed the man’s versatility and got some people appreciating a genre they never thought they would. With Movements, however, Birgersson moved back into his comfort zone, back to his blissful brand of epic chillout. And he, once again, showed why he is one of the most important producers in electronic music today; producing what is, for me, his finest piece of work to date. In fact, it’s head and shoulders above anything he’s ever produced, containing all his usual elements and nuisances but with less of the glitch/IDM and a more obvious dose of idyllic melody. Its melodies are so distinctive and so well executed. By Solar Fields standards, it is a relentlessly positive and uplifting collection of tracks. It ebbs and flows more effortlessly, there’s a greater sense of “progression” and, while it’s still deep, it isn’t quite so dark. And, in a way, that sense of “progression” almost feels like the most important and lasting legacy of EarthShine. It’s almost as if EarthShine, while not being everyone’s cup of tea, has really helped Magnus grow as a producer. And I seriously believe that in 5-10 years time we’ll be talking about Movements as one of the finest out-and-out chillout records ever produced (in the same company as Substrata, Dreamtime Return and 76:14), and maybe the finest record ever released on Ultimae… And that’s saying a lot because we all know how life-changing and genre-redefining Carbon Based Lifeforms, Asura and Aes Dana’s releases on Ultimae have been.

    Favourite Track: EscucharThe Road to Nothingness

    1. ShpongleIneffable Mysteries From Shpongleland
    (November / Twisted Records)



    After listening to Solar Fields – Movements for the first couple of times way back in January, I knew straight away that it was going to take one almighty album to beat it to my album of the year slot. And looking at the list of albums due for release that year, I also knew that the only man capable of delivering such an album was Simon Posford of Twisted Records. A fresh trip into the fucked up world of Shpongle had been on the cards for a while and we all knew when it arrived it would be worth its weight in gold.

    The thing that struck me about this new album was that it seemed to be an album of extremes. In other words, the album seems to drift quite effortlessly between music that is absolutely the most psychedelic Posford has ever produced and passages of music which aren’t particularly psychedelic at all. Some will say that that is the case with all Shpongle albums, but to me it’s even more evident on this album. And I don’t necessarily mean that as a negative – it actually provides a key element of balance. Because, while glitchy openings like the one in EscucharShpongolese Spoken Here are mind-fuckingly unbelievable, an hour of such intensely psychedelic music could really cause your head to cave in. Posford has continued to push the technological boundaries with Ineffable Mysteries but not pushed them for the sake of pushing them. Shpongle has thus retained its extraordinarily multi-dimensional texture; the juxtaposition of beauty and weirdness, of the subtle and the obvious, of the simple and the complex, of worldliness and otherworldliness. This album also has some surprising shades of Ott and Younger Brother, at least surprising in the sense that these shades have never really fully materialised in Shpongle’s previous records. Yet, as always, Raja’s mesmerising flute solos, those familiar ethnic vocal touches and Posford’s insane manipulation of samples make Ineffable Mysteries as Shponglised as ever. And, of course, there is a new sound that reoccurs briefly in tracks 4 to 6 which can only be described as “the Marching Brass Section of the Elves and Goblins”, which feels oh-so fresh, but is oh-so weird and oh-so Shpongle.

    Once again, electronic music production in a different stratosphere, on a different planet. Extraordinary, utterly discombobulating music – music that conveys a universe you can’t even begin to vocalise. Psyshop.com rather aptly described it as being “like separating water from its wetness.” Reality has well and truly been ripped at the seams and we’ve been sucked through the resulting cosmic schism into Shpongleland. If that last sentence sounded like anti-scientific, pseudo-religious nonsense to you then clearly... you are yet to be Shpongled.

    Favourite Track: EscucharNo Turn Un-Stoned

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    ALBUMS - THE HONOURABLE MENTIONS

    10 albums that deserve a shout... in no particular order:

    Marco TorranceDreamland Society
    (February / Cardamar Music) (Chillout / Downtempo Trance)
    John O'CallaghanNever Fade Away
    (May / Armada Music) (Trance / Tech Trance / Chillout)
    Marcus SchossowOutside The Box
    (September / Tone Diary Recordings) (Progressive Trance / Tech Trance)
    ActivaThis World
    (October / Discover) (Trance / Chillout)
    Blue Pilots ProjectReboot
    (August / Klik Records) (Chillout / Lounge)
    Bio-TonicMusic For Animals
    (May / Planet B.E.N. Records) (Full-on Psychedelic)
    MinoruMinoru
    (January / Iono Music) (Progressive Trance)
    Dash BerlinThe New Daylight
    (October / Armada Music) (Progressive Trance / Trance)
    Union JackPylon Pigs
    (September / Platipus) (Progressive Trance / Chillout)
    LogisticsCrash Bang Wallop!
    (September / Hospital Records) (Drum & Bass / Dupstep)

    -----------------------------------------------------

    TOP 20 TRANCE, PROGRESSIVE AND TECH TRANCE TUNES OF 2009

    1. Jochen Miller – Brace Yourself
    (August / High Contrast Recordings)
    2. Richard Durand – Into Something (Fall Down Mix)
    (February / Magik Muzik)
    3. Sander van Doorn presents Purple Haze – Bliksem
    (July / Doorn Records)
    4. Randy Katana – The Hype
    (June / Reset Records)
    5. Redd Square – Digital Acoustics (Onova Remix)
    (August / Monster Tunes)
    6. Jan Oostdyk – Out Of The Box
    (April / High Contrast Nu Breed)
    7. DJ Eco – Lost Angeles (Breakfast Remix)
    (February / Lunatique)
    8. Gaia – Tuvan
    (October / Armind)
    9. Marcus Schossow – Kaboom
    (July / Tone Diary Recordings)
    10. Claudia Cazacu feat. Audrey Gallagher – Freefalling
    (June / Armind)
    11. Simon Patterson – Thump
    (February / Reset Records)
    12. Karanda – Karanda (Astuni & Manuel Le Saux Remix)
    (September / Inov8 Recordings)
    13. Josh Gabriel Presents Winter Kills – Deep Down (Alex M.O.R.P.H. Remix)
    (September / Different Pieces)
    14. Gareth Emery – Exposure
    (May / Garuda)
    15. Rex Mundi feat. Susana – Nothing At All
    [August / Coldharbour Recordings]
    16. Lange vs. Andy Moor – Stadium Four
    (September / AVA Recordings)
    17. Ron Hagen & Pascal M - Riddles In The Sand
    (September / A State Of Trance)
    18. Thomas Bronzwaer - Look Ahead
    (July / A State Of Trance)
    19. Tritonal – Cloudbase (Air Up There Remix)
    (June / Levare Recordings)
    20. Dr. Willis – What Goes Up (Nick Larson Remix)
    (October / Traffic Tunes)

    Producer Of The Year 2009:

    3. Tritonal
    2. Jochen Miller
    1. Marco V

    Superstar DJ Award 2009:

    3. Jordan Suckley
    2. Sander van Doorn
    1. Armin van Buuren

    Label Of The Year 2009: High Contrast Recordings
    "One To Watch" for 2010: Jordan Suckley

    N.B. - If you’d like a copy of my “That Was 2009” trance mix, which features the 20 tracks charted above plus more of my trance and progressive favourites from this year, don’t hesitate to drop me a message - either in the comments section of this entry or via PM. I would be happy to upload it for people.

    ----------------------------------------------------

    TOP 20 UK HARD DANCE TUNES OF 2009

    1. Trevor Dans & The Trance Bunny - Peak Start
    (September / Pitch Bend Digital)
    2. Sebastien – Implosive State
    (October / Electrik Shandy Recordings)
    3. John Ridout & Adrenaline Dept. – E-motion
    (November / Encoded)
    4. david ding – Batter
    (February / Electrik Shandy Recordings)
    5. Ben Townsend – Bump In The Night
    (July / Vicious Circle)
    6. Rich Resonate - Cydonia Nights
    (March / Toolbox Recordings)
    7. LD Concept – Backlash
    (January / Inertia Digital)
    8. Louis Fernio – Underground
    (June / Toolbox Recordings)
    9. Rednoise - Shining In The Ecstasy
    (March / Experimento Digital)
    10. Sambo – Imagination
    (April / Electrik Shandy Recordings)
    11. ROCKIN RUSS – Warehouse Party
    (March / Toolbox Recordings)
    12. John Ridout & Ross Self - And The Demons Come (Carl Nicholson's Broader Remix)
    (January / Ringleader Interplanetary Productions)
    13. Scott Genetik – Hybrid
    (October / Pitch Bend Digital)
    14. Emilio – Immense
    (August / Audio Hedz Recordings)
    15. Tom Parr – Ladyboys
    (November / AWsum)
    16. Sheldon Ives – 4 Letter Word
    (July / Impact Recordings)
    17. Elements vs. Alex Mac & Zeebra Kid - Harmonise (Iridium Remix)
    (April / Encoded)
    18. Paul Maddox - Phaserblade
    (April / Vicious Circle)
    19. LD Concept – Rise Above
    (January / Inertia Digital)
    20. April & Technikal – Mad Glow
    (June / Traffic Records)

    Producer Of The Year Award 2009:

    3. Rich Resonate
    2. Iridium
    1. Adrenaline Dept.

    Superstar DJ Award 2009:

    3. Karim
    2. Rodi Style
    1. Proteus

    Label Of The Year 2009: Electrik Shandy Recordings
    "One To Watch" for 2010: Kye Shand

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    TOP 20 FULL-ON PSY TUNES OF 2009

    1. Bio-Tonic – Disco Boss
    (May / Planet B.E.N. Records)
    2. Save the Robot – So Real
    (March / Farm Records)
    3. Infected Mushroom – Slowly
    (September / HOM-Mega Productions)
    4. sick addiction – Cleaning Up The Place
    (January / Trance Karma Records)
    5. Mahamudra vs. White Noise – Sexy Body Move
    (July / Tactic Records)
    6. Infected Mushroom – Smashing The Opponent (XI Remix)
    (June / HOM-Mega Productions)
    7. War – Low Rider (Save The Robot Remix)
    (March / Farm Records)
    8. Soniq Vision – Outer Universe
    (June / Utopia Records)
    9. Bio-Tonic – Bufferfly
    (May / Planet B.E.N. Records)
    10. Perplex vs. Intersys – Switchback
    (March / Utopia Records)
    11. Bliss - Funksick
    (July / Drive Records)
    12. Mahamudra – Logitech
    (July / Tactic Records)
    13. Infected Mushroom – Sa’eed
    (September / HOM-Mega Productions)
    14. Freaked Frequency – Everything Seems Unreal
    (September / Utopia Records)
    15. Soniq Vision – MelodiX
    (June / Utopia Records)
    16. Infected Mushroom – Can’t Stop
    (September / HOM-Mega Productions)
    17. sick addiction – Monkey Business
    (January / Trance Karma Records)
    18. Future Prophecy – Dracula
    (January / Phonokol)
    19. Vibe Tribe vs. Protoculture – Electrified
    (April / Com.Pact Records)
    20. DNA vs. Meital MD – Turn Me Off
    (March / Phonokol)

    Psy-Trance Compilation of 2009: Genesis



    Producer Of The Year 2009: Infected Mushroom
    "One To Watch" for 2010: Faders

    -----------------------------------------------------

    TOP 20 ELECTRO-HOUSE TUNES OF 2009

    1. X-Press 2 – Lazy (Lazy Rich Remix)
    (November / Serious Beats)
    2. Electrixx – Tetris
    (June / EXX Records)
    3. Ultra Flirt - The Time Is Now 2009 (Dany Wild Remix)
    (March / Mental Madness)
    4. Frederik Olufsen - Ball (Lazy Rich Remix)
    (November / Big Fish Recordings)
    5. Funk K - Dirty Cash 2009 (Extended Mix)
    (March / Digidance)
    6. Wolfgang Gartner - Wolfgang's 5th Symphony
    (September / Kindergarten)
    7. Mike Candys & Jack Holiday - Push The Feeling On (Electro Vectro Remix)
    (October / Wombatmusic)
    8. Dirty Poilitics - Call Of The Wild (Lazy Rich Remix)
    (October / Audio Planet Recordings)
    9. Dabruck & Klein feat. Stafford Brothers - Open Up Your Arms
    (April / We Play)
    10. Paul van Dyk - For An Angel (Spencer & Hill Remix)
    (September / New State Recordings)
    11. Klaas meets Haddaway – What Is Love 2k9 (Klaas Impact Mix)
    (July / Coconut Music)
    12. Che DuBois - Freaky To Me (Soundpusher Remix)
    (March / Bugeyed Records)
    13. Stonewash & Fagault - Hey Lady (Miles Dyson Remix)
    (July / Plasmapool)
    14. Laurent Wolf - No Stress (Ortega & Gold Remix)
    (May / All Around The World)
    15. Kurd Maverick - Blue Monday (Vandalism Remix)
    (March / Data Records)
    16. PH Electro - San Francisco
    (November / YAWA Recordings)
    17. Rustler – Around The World (Mark Simmons Remix)
    (September / Tiger Records)
    18. Comiccon - Luvstruck
    (January / Zooland Records)
    19. Stefy De Cicco feat. Tom Stone - Keep It On (Avangarde)
    (July / Move Rec.)
    20. Aurum Beats - Square (Electro House Beat Mix)
    (March / Sundesire Records)

    Producer Of The Year 2009: Lazy Rich
    "One To Watch" for 2010: errrr.... Lazy Rich?
    -----------------------------------------------------

    And that was 2009... A truly blinding year for music, particularly for trance. Not necessarily full of surprises, but, more than ever, diverse and full of quality – Well, the New Years’ Resolutions have been made, review journal and mix done.... Bring on 2010!

    Merry Christmas one and all....... See you next year!
  • My Best Artists of 2009

    16 Dic 2009, 13:24 de nesterka

    1. Franz Ferdinand (316 plays)
    2. Garou (191 plays)
    3. Muse (133 plays)
    4. Kelly Clarkson (124 plays)
    5. Сплин (99 plays)
    6. Hard-Fi (88 plays)
    7. Snow Patrol (77 plays)
    8. Сегодняночью (72 plays)
    9. Би-2 (71 plays)
    10. 30 Seconds to Mars (70 plays)
    11. Kasabian (69 plays)
    12. The Script (61 plays)
    13. Depeche Mode (59 plays)
    14. Paul Oakenfold (56 plays)
    15. Gorillaz (49 plays)
    16. Alesha Dixon (47 plays)
    17. Delta Goodrem (46 plays)
    18. Keane (42 plays)
    18. Serebro (42 plays)
    20. Starsailor (40 plays)
    21. Linkin Park (37 plays)
    22. The Prodigy (36 plays)
    23. Kubb (35 plays)
    24. Maroon 5 (34 plays)
    24. Jet (34 plays)
    26. Chris Cornell (31 plays)
    26. Emmanuel Moire (31 plays)
    28. Santana (30 plays)
    28. Anggun (30 plays)
    28. Daughtry (30 plays)
    31. Ciara (28 plays)
    31. Black Eyed Peas (28 plays)
    31. Бумбокс (28 plays)
    34. Ночные Снайперы (26 plays)
    34. Lily Allen (26 plays)
    34. Gérald De Palmas (26 plays)
    37. Lacuna Coil (25 plays)
    37. OK Go (25 plays)
    37. Conjure One (25 plays)
    40. M. Pokora (24 plays)