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Muse

Blog

12…743Siguiente
  • Albums of the Year 2009

    27 Nov 2009, 11:42 de snowdog62

    My top 5 of 2009

    1. Octahedron - The Mars Volta
    2. The Incident - Porcupine Tree
    3. The Pariah, The Parrot, The Delusion - dredg
    4. The Resistance - Muse
    5. Night Is the New Day - Katatonia
    Leer más Escribir comentario
  • My Top Albums of the 2000s

    27 Nov 2009, 8:31 de kcwyckoff

    I will update this when the actual end of the 2000s arrives,
    although, first should really just be a tie between Elbow's Seldom Seen Kid & Shpongle's Ineffable Mysteries of Shpongleland, but that would be cheating

    1. Muse - Origins of Symmetry
    2. Wolf Parade - Apologies to the Queen Mary
    3. Autolux - Future Perfect
    4. Arcade Fire - Funeral
    5. Queens of the Stone Age - Songs For The Deaf
    6. Secret Machines - Now Here Is Nowhere
    7. Interpol - Antics
    8. Death From Above 1979 - You're A Woman, I'm A Machine
    9. Manchester Orchestra - Mean Everything To Nothing
    10. Tallest Man On Earth - Shallow Grave
    11. Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not
    12. Grizzly Bear - Veckatimest
    13. Muse - Absolution
    14. Radiohead - Hail To The Thief
    15. Kasabian - Kasabian
    16. Wolfmother - Wolfmother
    17. Interpol - Turn on the Bright Lights
    18. Black Lips - Good Bad Not Evil
    19. Portishead - Third
    20. M83 - Saturdays=Youth
    21. Spoon - Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga
    22. Guillemots - Through The Windowpane
    23. The Hives - Tyrannosaurus Hives
    24. The New Pornographers - Twin Cinema
    25. Wolf Parade - At Mount Zoomer
    26. Bright Eyes - Digital Ash in a Digital Urn
    27. Bright Eyes - I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
    28. Wild Beasts - Limbo, Panto
    29. The Vines - Highly Evolved
    30. The Black Keys - Rubber Factory
    31. Modest Mouse - Good News for People Who Love Bad News
    32. Cold War Kids - Robbers & Cowards
    33. Justice- †
    34. Elbow - The Seldom Seen Kid
    35. Dr. Dog - Fate
    36. Manchester Orchestra - I'm Like a Virgin Losing a Child
    37. Radiohead - In Rainbows
    38. Grizzly Bear -Yellow House
    39. Queens of the Stone Age - Lullabies To Paralyze
    40. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
    41. MGMT - Oracular Spectacular
    42. Man Man - Rabbit Habits
    43. The Libertines - The Libertines
    44. The Dresden Dolls - Yes, Virginia...
    45. Liars - Liars
    46. Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago
    47. Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Fever To Tell
    48. Klaxons - Myths Of The Near Future
    49. Tapes 'n Tapes - The Loon
    50. Silversun Pickups - Carnavas
    51. System of a Down - Toxicity
    52. Spoon - Gimme Fiction
    53. Dirty Pretty Things - Waterloo to Anywhere
    54. Plants and Animals - Parc Avenue
    55. Two Gallants - What the Toll Tells
    56. Arctic Monkeys - Favourite Worst Nightmare
    57. Death Cab for Cutie -Transatlanticism
    58. The Vines - Winning Days
    59. Franz Ferdinand - Franz Ferdinand
    60. Kings of Leon - Aha Shake Heartbreak
    61. Secret Machines - Ten Silver Drops
    62. Kaiser Chiefs - Employment
    63. The Black Keys- Attack & Release
    64. Coachwhips - Bangers vs. Fuckers
    65. The Cloud Room - The Cloud Room
    66. A Place to Bury Strangers - A Place To Bury Strangers
    Leer más 2 comentarios Escribir comentario
  • My Top Albums of the 2000s

    27 Nov 2009, 8:31 de kcwyckoff

    I will update this when the actual end of the 2000s arrives,

    1. Muse - Origins of Symmetry
    2. Wolf Parade - Apologies to the Queen Mary
    3. Autolux - Future Perfect
    4. Arcade Fire - Funeral
    5. Queens of the Stone Age - Songs For The Deaf
    6. Secret Machines - Now Here Is Nowhere
    7. Interpol - Antics
    8. Death From Above 1979 - You're A Woman, I'm A Machine
    9. Manchester Orchestra - Mean Everything To Nothing
    10. Tallest Man On Earth - Shallow Grave
    11. Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not
    12. Grizzly Bear - Veckatimest
    13. Muse - Absolution
    14. Radiohead - Hail To The Thief
    15. Kasabian - Kasabian
    16. Wolfmother - Wolfmother
    17. Interpol - Turn on the Bright Lights
    18. Black Lips - Good Bad Not Evil
    19. Portishead - Third
    20. M83 - Saturdays=Youth
    21. Spoon - Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga
    22. Guillemots - Through The Windowpane
    23. The Hives - Tyrannosaurus Hives
    24. The New Pornographers - Twin Cinema
    25. Wolf Parade - At Mount Zoomer
    26. Bright Eyes - Digital Ash in a Digital Urn
    27. Bright Eyes - I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
    28. Wild Beasts - Limbo, Panto
    29. The Vines - Highly Evolved
    30. The Black Keys - Rubber Factory
    31. Modest Mouse - Good News for People Who Love Bad News
    32. Cold War Kids - Robbers & Cowards
    33. Justice- †
    34. Elbow - The Seldom Seen Kid
    35. Dr. Dog - Fate
    36. Manchester Orchestra - I'm Like a Virgin Losing a Child
    37. Radiohead - In Rainbows
    38. Grizzly Bear -Yellow House
    39. Queens of the Stone Age - Lullabies To Paralyze
    40. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
    41. MGMT - Oracular Spectacular
    42. Man Man - Rabbit Habits
    43. The Libertines - The Libertines
    44. The Dresden Dolls - Yes, Virginia...
    45. Liars - Liars
    46. Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago
    47. Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Fever To Tell
    48. Klaxons - Myths Of The Near Future
    49. Tapes 'n Tapes - The Loon
    50. Silversun Pickups - Carnavas
    51. System of a Down - Toxicity
    52. Spoon - Gimme Fiction
    53. Dirty Pretty Things - Waterloo to Anywhere
    54. Plants and Animals - Parc Avenue
    55. Two Gallants - What the Toll Tells
    56. Arctic Monkeys - Favourite Worst Nightmare
    57. Death Cab for Cutie -Transatlanticism
    58. The Vines - Winning Days
    59. Franz Ferdinand - Franz Ferdinand
    60. Kings of Leon - Aha Shake Heartbreak
    61. Secret Machines - Ten Silver Drops
    62. Kaiser Chiefs - Employment
    63. The Black Keys- Attack & Release
    64. Coachwhips - Bangers vs. Fuckers
    65. The Cloud Room - The Cloud Room
    66. A Place to Bury Strangers - A Place To Bury Strangers
    Leer más Escribir comentario
  • How varied is your music taste?

    27 Nov 2009, 5:12 de synthsncupcakes

    First, make a list of your top-20 artists overall. Then, for each of these artists, add the 8 most similar artists to your list. Delete any duplicates, count up the number of entries on your list and this will give you some idea of how eclectic your listening habits are. A score of 9 represents an extremely unvaried musical taste while a 160 represents an extremely varied one.

    1. Tokio Hotel
    Devilish
    Cinema Bizarre
    LaFee
    Nevada Tan
    Killerpilze
    Panik
    Aloha From Hell


    2. Imogen Heap
    Frou Frou
    Kate Havnevik
    A Fine Frenzy
    Jem
    Regina Spektor
    Florence + The Machine
    Sia
    The Bird and the Bee

    3. Lady GaGa
    Britney Spears
    The Pussycat Dolls
    Space Cowboy
    Ashley Tisdale
    Katy Perry
    Ke$ha
    Little Boots
    Madonna

    4. Paramore
    Hey Monday
    VersaEmerge
    Flyleaf
    Boys Like Girls
    Automatic Loveletter
    All Time Low
    Fake Number

    5. Coldplay
    Keane
    Snow Patrol
    Travis
    The Killers
    Radiohead
    Oasis
    The Fray
    Thirteen Stones

    6. Muse
    Franz Ferdinand
    Placebo
    Kasabian
    Arctic Monkeys
    Kaiser Chiefs


    7. The Beatles
    John Lennon
    George Harrison
    Paul McCartney
    Paul McCartney & Wings
    Wings
    The Who
    The Rolling Stones
    The Kinks

    8. MGMT
    The Management
    Klaxons
    Vampire Weekend
    Passion Pit
    Black Kids
    The Kooks
    Empire of the Sun
    Late of the Pier

    9. Johan Palm
    Kevin Borg
    E.M.D.
    John ME
    Anna Bergendahl
    Erik Hassle
    Alice Svensson
    Lasse Lindh
    Simon Norrsveden

    10. Los Campesinos!
    Johnny Foreigner
    Dananananaykroyd
    Sky Larkin
    Slow Club
    Titus Andronicus
    The Cribs
    Ra Ra Riot
    Matt & Kim


    11. Panic at the Disco
    Fall Out Boy
    The Academy Is...
    Cobra Starship
    The Cab
    Forgiven Durden
    The Hush Sound
    My Chemical Romance
    This Providence

    12.Mars Argo
    The Golden Revelry
    fun.
    Mark Gardener and Andy Bell
    The Soft Hills
    Slowlands
    Nelson Bragg
    The Homophones
    Eureka Brown

    13.Hayley Williams
    Low Shoulder
    Zac Farro
    Death in the Park

    14.Owl City
    Swimming With Dolphins
    Lights
    A Rocket To The Moon
    Breathe Carolina
    nevershoutnever!
    The Secret Handshake
    Breathe Electric
    PlayRadioPlay!

    15.Bat for Lashes
    My Brightest Diamond
    Patrick Wolf
    St. Vincent
    Lykke Li
    Fever Ray
    Cat Power
    PJ Harvey

    16.Simon & Garfunkel
    Paul Simon
    Cat Stevens
    Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
    Bob Dylan
    Art Garfunkel
    Peter, Paul & Mary
    Donovan
    The Mamas & The Papas

    17.Jim Sturgess
    Evan Rachel Wood
    Dana Fuchs
    Joe Anderson
    T.V. Carpio
    Dana Fuchs & Jim Sturgess
    Martin Luther McCoy
    Dana Fuchs & Martin Luther McCoy
    Carol Woods & Timothy T. Mitchum

    18.Fräulein Wunder
    Debbie Rockt!
    Eisblume
    Jennifer Rostock
    peilomat
    Queensberry

    19.Crystal Castles
    You Love Her Coz She's Dead
    HeartsRevolution
    Kap Bambino
    Bondage Fairies
    Does It Offend You, Yeah?
    Metronomy

    20.School of Seven Bells
    A Sunny Day in Glasgow
    Lotus Plaza
    Telepathe
    Asobi Seksu
    M83
    The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
    Maps
    Beach House


    147 :D
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  • How varied is your music taste?

    27 Nov 2009, 5:11 de synthsncupcakes

    First, make a list of your top-20 artists overall. Then, for each of these artists, add the 8 most similar artists to your list. Delete any duplicates, count up the number of entries on your list and this will give you some idea of how eclectic your listening habits are. A score of 9 represents an extremely unvaried musical taste while a 160 represents an extremely varied one.

    1. Tokio Hotel
    Devilish
    Cinema Bizarre
    LaFee
    Nevada Tan
    Killerpilze
    Panik
    Aloha From Hell


    2. Imogen Heap
    Frou Frou
    Kate Havnevik
    A Fine Frenzy
    Jem
    Regina Spektor
    Florence + The Machine
    Sia
    The Bird and the Bee

    3. Lady GaGa
    Britney Spears
    The Pussycat Dolls
    Space Cowboy
    Ashley Tisdale
    Katy Perry
    Ke$ha
    Little Boots
    Madonna

    4. Paramore
    Hey Monday
    VersaEmerge
    Flyleaf
    Boys Like Girls
    Automatic Loveletter
    All Time Low
    Fake Number

    5. Coldplay
    Keane
    Snow Patrol
    Travis
    The Killers
    Radiohead
    Oasis
    The Fray
    Thirteen Stones

    6. Muse
    Franz Ferdinand
    Placebo
    Kasabian
    Arctic Monkeys
    Kaiser Chiefs


    7. The Beatles
    John Lennon
    George Harrison
    Paul McCartney
    Paul McCartney & Wings
    Wings
    The Who
    The Rolling Stones
    The Kinks

    8. MGMT
    The Management
    Klaxons
    Vampire Weekend
    Passion Pit
    Black Kids
    The Kooks
    Empire of the Sun
    Late of the Pier

    9. Johan Palm
    Kevin Borg
    E.M.D.
    John ME
    Anna Bergendahl
    Erik Hassle
    Alice Svensson
    Lasse Lindh
    Simon Norrsveden

    10. Los Campesinos!
    Johnny Foreigner
    Dananananaykroyd
    Sky Larkin
    Slow Club
    Titus Andronicus
    The Cribs
    Ra Ra Riot
    Matt & Kim


    11. Panic at the Disco
    Fall Out Boy
    The Academy Is...
    Cobra Starship
    The Cab
    Forgiven Durden
    The Hush Sound
    My Chemical Romance
    This Providence

    12.Mars Argo
    The Golden Revelry
    fun.
    Mark Gardener and Andy Bell
    The Soft Hills
    Slowlands
    Nelson Bragg
    The Homophones
    Eureka Brown

    13.Hayley Williams
    Low Shoulder
    Zac Farro
    Death in the Park

    14.Owl City
    Swimming With Dolphins
    Lights
    A Rocket To The Moon
    Breathe Carolina
    nevershoutnever!
    The Secret Handshake
    Breathe Electric
    PlayRadioPlay!

    15.Bat for Lashes
    My Brightest Diamond
    Patrick Wolf
    St. Vincent
    Lykke Li
    Fever Ray
    Cat Power
    PJ Harvey

    16.Simon & Garfunkel
    Paul Simon
    Cat Stevens
    Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
    Bob Dylan
    Art Garfunkel
    Peter, Paul & Mary
    Donovan
    The Mamas & The Papas

    17.Jim Sturgess
    Evan Rachel Wood
    Dana Fuchs
    Joe Anderson
    T.V. Carpio
    Dana Fuchs & Jim Sturgess
    Martin Luther McCoy
    Dana Fuchs & Martin Luther McCoy
    Carol Woods & Timothy T. Mitchum

    18.Fräulein Wunder
    Debbie Rockt!
    Eisblume
    Jennifer Rostock
    peilomat
    Queensberry

    19.Crystal Castles
    You Love Her Coz She's Dead
    HeartsRevolution
    Kap Bambino
    Bondage Fairies
    Does It Offend You, Yeah?
    Metronomy

    20.School of Seven Bells
    A Sunny Day in Glasgow
    Lotus Plaza
    Telepathe
    Asobi Seksu
    M83
    The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
    Maps
    Beach House


    147 :D
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  • Top Albums XD segun lo que escucho O_O

    26 Nov 2009, 18:17 de shadow_me

    shadow_me's top albums (overall)
    1. The Rasmus - Black Roses (1205)
    2. Enter Shikari - Take To The Skies (565)
    3. Lostprophets - Liberation Transmission (562)
    4. HIM - Venus Doom (460)
    5. Nightwish - Dark Passion Play (435)
    6. The Rasmus - Dead Letters (396)
    7. HIM - Dark Light (322)
    8. Lady GaGa - The Fame (301)
    9. Britney Spears - Blackout (255)
    10. Lostprophets - Start Something (229)
    11. HIM - Razorblade Romance (222)
    12. The Rasmus - Into (218)
    13. Hilary Duff - Dignity (200)
    14. Tokio Hotel - Zimmer 483 (192)
    15. The Rasmus - Hide From The Sun (191)
    16. Tokio Hotel - Scream (175)
    17. Daddy Yankee - Talento De Barrio (170)
    18. Paramore - RIOT! (169)
    19. Placebo - Meds (157)
    20. Christina Aguilera - Stripped (149)
    21. Britney Spears - Circus (126)
    22. Britney Spears - Womanizer - Single (119)
    23. Muse - Black Holes and Revelations (119)
    24. The Rasmus - Hell of a Collection ( Greatest Hits) (116) 25. Paramore - Twilight Soundtrack (116)
    26. Christina Aguilera - Keeps gettin` better - A decade of hits (114) 27. Muse - Absolution (106)
    28. My Chemical Romance - The Black Parade (105)
    29. Britney Spears - In the Zone (103)
    30. Linkin Park - Meteora (99)
    31. HIM - And Love Said No (94)
    32. The Pussycat Dolls - When I Grow Up - Single (90)
    33. Nightwish - Eva (88)
    34. Janet Jackson - Fama a bailar (81) 35. The Rasmus - First Day Of My Life (80)
    36. Christina Aguilera - Back to Basics (80)
    37. The Killers - Sam's Town (79)
    38. Kudai - Nadha (76)
    39. Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not (72)
    40. Flo-Rida - Low CDS (72) 41. Apocalyptica - Bittersweet (71)
    42. Dido - No Angel (71)
    43. Simple Plan - Simple Plan (70)
    44. Depeche Mode - Enjoy The Silence '04 CD Single (70) 45. Placebo - Battle For The Sun (69)
    46. Arctic Monkeys - Favourite Worst Nightmare (69)
    47. Ashlee Simpson - Bittersweet World (68)
    48. Lady GaGa - The Fame Monster (68)
    49. Lost Prophets - Start Something (65)
    50. AFI - DECEMBERUNDERGROUND (64)

    Top albums generator
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  • NME's "The top 100 greatest albums of the decade" and me [100-51]

    26 Nov 2009, 16:53 de leelaa

    NME published a list of the top 100 albums of the start of this century along with a top 100 tracks one and now instead of just reading it, I decided to also do some thing with it.
    My problem with NME lists is, that they're pretty narrow minded with their focus on mostly british and US music. But since this was the first list I came across, I'll use this one, starting with the places 100 till 51.


    The top 100 greatest albums of the decade
    http://www.nme.com/list/albums-of-the-decade/158049

    100 MGMT Oracular Spectacular *
    (2007)
    I like(d) some songs of it?

    99 The Maccabees Colour It In
    (2007)
    who?

    98 Gorillaz Demon Days
    (2005)
    I love DARE, I didn't listen to the album though.

    97 Sigur Ros Agaetis Byrjun *
    (1999)
    should be much much higher up this list!

    96 Shellac Excellent Italian Greyhound
    (2007)
    nope

    95 Björk Vespertine *
    (2001)
    not my favourite Björk album

    94 Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster Horse Of The Dog
    (2002)
    I know they exist, but I really can't remember them anymore

    93 Clap Your Hands Say Yeah Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
    (2005)
    wasn't really that much interested

    92 The Sleepy Jackson Lovers
    (2003)
    Sleepy Jackson argh!! Reminds me of a great birthday actually, but muscially...nope!

    91 Les Savy Fav Let’s Stay Friends
    (2007)
    I know the name...

    90 Gallows Orchestra Of Wolves
    (2006)
    another case of I know the name, but never gave them a dedicated listen

    89 Frightened Rabbit The Midnight Organ Fight
    (2003)
    who?!

    88 Bonnie Prince Billy The Letting Go
    (2006)
    I tried it, but no.

    87 Bon Iver For Emma, Forever Ago
    (2003)
    doesn't ring a bell

    86 The Twilight Sad Forget The Night Ahead
    (2009)
    nope

    85 Roots Manuva Run Come Save Me
    (2001)
    not exactly my cup of tea

    84 Regina Spektor Soviet Kitsch *
    (2004)
    I gave it a chance, it didn't work

    83 Laura Marling Alas, I Cannot Swim
    (2008)
    nope

    82 mclusky Mclusky Do Dallas
    (2005)
    I know they exist and that's it.

    81 Field Music Field Music
    (2005)
    nope

    80 Danger Mouse The Grey Album
    (2004)
    I know it exists, but I never checked it out, because I grew tired of bastard pop like 2 minutes after it turned up.

    79 Kings of Leon Youth And Young Manhood *
    (2003)
    the best was yet to come, but it was a good start

    78 Belle & Sebastian Fold Your Hands Child, You Walk Like A Peasant *
    (2000)
    I lub B&S, so there's no way I can be objective about this. :D

    77 Isobel Campbell Ballad Of The Broken Seas
    (2006)
    didn't check it out despite B&S love. wooops!

    76 Capdown Civil Disobedients
    (2000)
    who?

    75 The Shins Chutes Too Narrow *
    (2003)
    me likey who says I!

    74 Brand New The Devil and God Are Raging Inside Me
    (2006)
    nope

    73 Broken Social Scene You Forgot It In People
    (2002)
    BSS are one of these bands I actually like (been to a concert even), but don't know much of their music.

    72 M.I.A. Kala
    (2007)
    I love EscucharPaper Planes

    71 Brian Wilson Smile
    (2004)
    No Beach Boys nutter so I didn't give it a shot

    70 Glasvegas Glasvegas
    (2008)
    I know them, but didn't sit down to listen to them

    69 Biffy Clyro Puzzle
    (2008)
    uhm.... no!

    68 The Horrors Primary Colours
    (2009)
    too tired of listening to NME's band of the moment, sorry if I'm missing something?!

    67 Botch We Are The Romans
    (1999)
    Never heard of them.

    66 Mogwai The Hawk Is Howling
    (2008)
    Don't know the album

    65 Muse Black Holes And Revelations *
    (2006)
    the thing with muse is, that first I don't like their new album and then I end up loving it. Same story here.

    64 The Radio Dept. Lesser Matters
    (2003)
    I know the name

    63 Godspeed You Black Emperor Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas To Heaven
    (2000)
    No big fan of Godspeed

    62 Queens of the Stone Age Rated R
    (2000)
    whatever you dooooooo don't tell anyone!

    61 The National Alligator *
    (2005)
    I love the album and their concert with it was one of the best I've ever been to.

    60 Green Day American Idiot
    (2004)
    haha no. Dookie will stay the only Green Day album I own (though my sister stole it!)

    59 The Hold Steady Boys And Girls In America
    (2006)
    don't know them

    58 Liars Drum's Not Dead
    (2006)
    I gave up on them before this one came out, so nope.

    57 OutKast Stankonia
    (2000)
    so fresh and so cleeeean!

    56 My Morning Jacket Z
    (2005)
    so not my cup of tea

    55 Hard-Fi Stars Of CCTV
    (2005)
    I'm working for the cash machine! not so keen on the rest

    54 The Golden Virgins Songs Of Praise *
    (2004)
    Wow, I'm really surprised to see them on this list! I think they got kicked off their label after this album and split up in 2006. I guess they just weren't stylish enough for 2004. :(
    It got great songs about unrequited love and needs to be known much more broadly!
    <3 Staying Sober

    53 Jamie T Panic Prevention
    (2007)
    nope

    52 Rufus Wainwright Poses *
    (2001)
    I still can't decide if I like or dislike Mr Wainwright, but I like this album...

    51 The Good, The Bad and the Queen The Good, The Bad And The Queen
    (2007)
    Not a big Damon Albarn fan, so I didn't give it a shot.
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  • Dibder's New Music Series: Entry 11

    26 Nov 2009, 12:34 de CvaldaVessalis

    Just one more month to go after this, then my ludicrous monthly assignments can finally calm down... I don't mind listening to all of this music, but writing, linking and tagging all of this stuff can be very tiresome. Still, November's been a good month thus far, but before I get started... X Factor, despite not having any really good contestants this year (Stacey is adorable but not strictly an international star, same going for Olly and Joe, Lloyd shouldn't have been in the finals in the first place really and Danyl is quite clearly so unlikeably loathsome with his big voice as to make me try to scratch my eyeballs out), is still as galvanisingly awesome as ever, what with everyone FINALLY coming around to appreciating how lovely and astute Dannii Minogue is compared to the others; Christmas is nearly here, which means I'll have to unearth both versions of Black Christmas for yuletide merriment (and on top of that both versions of the remake, featuring two different death scenes for Michelle 'I Nearly Ruined Buffy' Trachtenberg); and my talent show performance is nearly here!!! Will post a P.S. comment below to let anyone who cares know how it all went, rest assured I don't have a chance in Hell, but should still be fun... Wish me luck!

    And with that, on with the show...

    JLS by JLS
    Given her amazing success after last year’s shenanigans, we can all be in agreement that Cheryl Cole was the winner of The X Factor last year, eclipsing Alexandra Burke's debut both in terms of unit shifts and the quality of the tracks themselves (it still bemuses me, to be honest). And to be honest, given the continued media frenzy surrounding the supposed runners-up of last year's competition, it seems that poor Alexandra has been relegated to third place, which is a shame (still ahead of Eggnog Prick and Die In Her Knickers though... it's not much but still!). Song-wise, JLS have the weaker album; it’s positively awash with the same amount of cynical button-pushing as Burke's and it offers up a handful of decent guilty pleasures (One Shot will probably be their next single for sure); but there is not enough of a distinct personality present to warrant this band’s following and exposure compared to Burke, who at least tries to make the songs given her own. Admittedly, they’re still very cute though!

    Echo by Leona Lewis
    And the Reality TV juggernaut continues, this time with the UK's first such worldwide crossover star (as lovely as Will Young may be, he’s still yet to attain worldwide platinum sales and Grammy nominations, isn’t he?) delivering an album which, by its title alone, dispiritingly suggests more of the same kind of material found on her major debut. And whilst the familiar formulas of power ballads with major key changes and trendy beats is still present and correct throughout (lead single EscucharHappy, though more warbly, is but a lesser sequel to her smash EscucharBleeding Love, and Oasis cover EscucharStop Crying Your Heart Out isn’t remotely as genius as her version of Snow Patrol's Run), Miss Lewis sells it with enough vocal authority to out-caterwaul every other R&B-pop diva to emerge in the charts right now, breathing life into songs that register as less-than-fluff from girls bestowed with lesser pipes (particularly the uplifting EscucharI Got You and EscucharBrave).

    DJ Stupac Presents... Super Lupe Bros. 1st Coin & 15th Credit Edition by DJ Stupac and Lupe Fiasco
    (P.S. Sorry, but cannot find a legit site anywhere, so a pic file will have to do on the link to assure its existence...!)
    This mixtape certainly receives the prize for Best Artwork Of The Year so far from me, my fondness for all Super Mario adventures pretty much hardwiring that sentiment to my brain. But of course, this is just a promotional appetiser for Mr Fiasco’s upcoming Lasers album, collating a few new cuts (particularly his latest collaboration with Matthew Santos, Shining Down) with older wares and remixes, such as Pharrell's quite lovely re-do of Paris, Tokyo featuring special guests Q-Tip and Sarah Green. As mixtapes go though, DJ Stupac doesn’t really interpolate as well as some of his peers (nothing is really remixed here, rather compiled), and I’m personally a little disappointed that he didn’t carry on the Super Mario motif all of the way through, seeing as those games feature some of the most highly-regarded scores in video game history. But as a precursor to Lupe’s upcoming opus, it whets the appetite wantonly.

    Sainthood by Tegan and Sara
    Ten years after their full-length debut release, identical twin sister duo Tegan and Sara Quin are still plying their trade of pop-flavoured indie rock, this year seeing the release of their sixth effort despite taking time out to collaborate with other artists. Sounding a lot like how Gwen Stefani could have sounded if she was content to write good pop songs rather than collaborate with production-line hitmakers, both girls are in fine voice here as well as sharing disarming chemistry, particularly on lead single Hell and the longing surge of The Ocean. It’s light, lithe, pretty, knocks shades out of other over-produced pop-rock girl bands permeating the airwaves these days (hear The Veronicas, or not) and proof once again that these girls are far more interesting than the pigeonholes ascribed to them.

    In And Out Of Control by The Raveonettes
    More timeless pop-punk-rock from The Raveonettes with their fourth full length album, following through on their New Wave homages with some spiky-yet-lovely soft rock that takes as many cues from ‘60s girl group pop as they do from New Wave icons, the spirit of Debbie Harry looming especially large amidst the sweet harmonies of EscucharBoys Who Rape (Should All Be Destroyed). It happens to steer on just the right side of honorary homage to not appear overly cynical or soulless in its mimicry for most of the time, the fuzzy guitars and Sharin Fo’s hazily demure vocals summoning enough proving to disarming to resist on the likes of lead single EscucharLast Dance and especially on closer EscucharWine. To make modern-day misery sound this lovely and gossamer light takes as much gravitas as it does panache, and this likeable duo do more than enough to keep their fans happy; it’s not going to blaze the trails of pop-rock, but its still a fine pop album in its own right.

    5 : Five Years Of Hyperdub by Various Artists
    In celebration of its emergence as the hip genre of choice for the end of the decade, bolstered by the likes of The Spaceape and Burial who feature prominently on this compilation, London-based label Hyperdub has seen fit to give to the world a double-disc set that collates some of the finer contributors to the world of dubstep, disc one featuring more recent work from Kode9, Martyn and Samiyam whilst disc two includes past work entrenched in the 16-bit sounds that summoned such a cult following in the first place. Comprehensive isn’t the word to describe this set, and there’s plenty to enjoy, though admittedly the first disc edges out the second for listenability, if only because the wealth of sounds being explored by these artists now seems to promise something a lot more epic and amazing than the humble-yet-enjoyable offerings found on disc two, despite some great tracks from The Bug featuring Warrior Queen and Kode9 collaborations with The Spaceape.

    Strict Joy by The Swell Season
    Musicians Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová's path to breakout success is one of the most heartwarming of the decade; a well-received debut album of ornate folk music followed by a small independent film that happened to break big in America and reward the songwriters with their very own Academy Awards for for their rather lovely piece, Falling Slowly. Being the first album out of the gate for the pair since that win, Strict Joy is one that feels positively alive with hushed wonder, of filling up with irrepressible happiness and feeling as if you’re about to burst, only to rein it in at the last second (which is possibly down to Hansard and Irglova’s actually becoming a couple shortly after the film Once’s release after years of knowing one another and making music together). Though Hansard is a damn fine singer (evidenced here best on Feeling The Pull), it’s the Irglová-helmed songs that strike the chords most resonantly, highlights of hers including Fantasy Man and I Have Loved You Wrong.

    Glee: Season One - The Music, Volume 1 by Various Artists
    Debuting during the final week of this year’s American Idol competition, Glee is the brainchild of Nip/Tuck creator Ryan Murphy, charting the ongoing trials and travails of a high school glee club (like a choir, but singing more contemporary pop songs), and plays like High School Musical for anyone over 12-years-old, but with actual pop standards rather than especially-written, sound-alike drivel. So, we have winsome, precocious high schoolers letting rip on hits by Rihanna, The Supremes, Jill Scott, Kanye West, Queen and Neil Diamond, to name a few. Some are a touch derivative and add nothing new (particularly Amber Riley's take on Jazmine Sullivan's Bust Your Windows), but it’s fabulously produced and when it hits (like on take-no-prisoners cheese-fest Don’t Stop Believin’ or the Broadway Diva-Off between Kristin Chenoweth and Lea Michele on Cabaret’s Maybe This Time), it’s the stuff of drama queen dreams. You have been warned; it will be HUGE...

    Whip It - Music From The Motion Picture by Various Artists
    Pinned as a possible teen hit in the vein of Juno (featuring star Ellen Page on Oscar nominated form), Drew Barrymore’s directorial debut Whip It stalled at the American box office in spite of its good-natured goof-ballsiness and boasting one of the cooler ensemble casts of the year (as well as Page and Barrymore, you had Oscar winner Marcia Gay Harden, Saturday Night Live alumni Kristen Wiig, the ever-watchable Juliette Lewis, even Har Mar Superstar himself!) Charting one high school girl’s self-discovery as a jammer for her local Roller Derby team, the soundtrack released to coincide with the movie could have been a little edgier; though there’s some lovely stuff from Jens Lenkman, Dolly Parton (the classic EscucharJolene, natch!) and Gotye in particular, slow schmoozing from the normally-raucous Superstar and The Ettes dull the mood a little too much.

    Phrazes For The Young by Julian Casablancas
    It takes someone of questionably high self-esteem and swaggering intent (or perhaps oblivious homage) to invite comparisons to the legendary Oscar Wilde with their debut solo effort after spending a good decade at the undeniably hip end of the international indie pop spectrum. But, with Phrazes, this is what Casablancas has done; that he’s pretty much gotten away with it won’t surprise his fans as much as the music within, however, his being content to concoct a diverting pop record with various wide-reaching influences that would belie his rockier credentials if he hadn’t spent the past couple of years collaborating with seemingly out-of-leftfield cohorts (Santigold and Pharrell, Danger Mouse and Sparklehorse). Highlights include lead single Escuchar11th Dimension, which is just shy of being a pop-rock stunner, its strident synths striking through the soundscape with unabashed joy, and finale EscucharTourist, which enmeshes Eastern and Western influences brilliantly.

    Only Revolutions by Biffy Clyro
    Claiming by the band to have been informed by frontman Simon Neil’s recent marriage as well as Mark Danielewski’s novel of the same name, Only Revolutions sees the Scotch three-piece rockers as ebullient as ever, following the breakthrough success of their third album Puzzle in 2007 and Neil’s side-project with Sucioperro’s JP Reid, Marmaduke Duke. The result is a slightly off-kilter rock album full of warm vibes and joyous rabble, played by a band brimming with confidence and more than up for a good time; lead single Mountains is still as enjoyably over-the-top as it was on first listen during the summer months, whilst quieter moments such as God & Satan are proof enough that they are capable of straight-faced sincerity despite their goofball interview techniques. It may not provide as dramatic a sucker punch as efforts from The Horrors and Muse earlier this year, but Biffy’s is still a fine rock album for ‘09.

    Them Crooked Vultures by Them Crooked Vultures
    Rock supergroups intimidate me somewhat, especially those without a lack of artistic concept, such is the case for this latest venture featuring Queens of the Stone Age's Josh Homme, Foo Fighters' Dave Grohl and Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones, seemingly thrown together just to see what rock and roll majesty is brought forth. And I suppose if the results were as reliably full throttle as what these three musicians have wrought on this debut; unquantifiably epic, heartfelt, nonsensical and featuring some of the most exemplary rock instrumental moments of the year. True, it crunches the pedal into the ground a little too often, though there is some versatility in the late going from the one-two of EscucharInterlude With Ludes (which grinds drunkenly away on a looped sample as Homme delivers a woozy monologue) and the slow-burn frenzy of EscucharWarsaw Or The First Breath You Take After You Give Up.

    Kingdom of Welcome Addiction by IAMX
    Now happily ensconced in Berlin, wherein he claims he can work outside of the music industry much better, Sneaker Pimps founder Chris Corner delivers his third full-length album, self-described as a tour through “Disney World, with lipstick, cynicism and wit”. Of course, many can level that all things Disney are pretty much cynical by design (and the amount of makeup caked upon those pre-teen princesses suggests no shortage of lipstick whatsoever!), but that shouldn’t deter from the dark delights followed through by Corner on this disc. Going it alone without cohort Sue Denim on vocal duties (though receiving welcome help from Imogen Heap on standout track My Secret Friend (Feat. Imogen Heap)), Corner heads in a more relatively commercial direction this time; the influences of Depeche Mode are inescapable (as with pretty much any electro-rock album released these days), but give Corner his due in being able to sweep you into his industrial miserabilism so effectively anyway (hear An I For An I).

    Turning The Mind by Maps
    Riding high off of garlands from those fickle music critics and a Mercury Prize nomination for his debut album We Can Create, Northampton native James Chapman continues on his electro-pop pledge with this fine sophomore album, which embraces elements of rock, house, trance and pop to create a nebulous whitewash of at-times inspired electro symphonies. Described by Chapman himself as being of a darker hue that his previous effort (which comes to the fore most ominously on the opening title track and EscucharPapercuts), it eventually gives way to an understanding Zen-like attitude to existence, cheerily exemplified by penultimate number EscucharDie Happy, Die Smiling. For those who are a little dismayed by how perky and bright most of the electropop this year has been, this one is most certainly for you.

    Everybody by Ingrid Michaelson
    If ever there was a pop singer for whom the term “under the radar” applied, none could be better suited to the phrase than modest little Ingrid, an American pop-folk songstress who’s quietly sold nearly half a million records (on her own label too), enjoys sold-out shows all over the world, takes in professional songwriting assignments (the latest being for a certain X Factor judge) and whose work has featured on nearly as many soundtracks as Moby's Play album. Now, with this fourth album charting respectably in the Top 20 in the US, it would appear Michaelson’s finally ready to breakthrough properly; she’s certainly not hampered by a lack of bustlingly enjoyable ditties, sounding more like Aimee Mann's protégé rather than Taylor Swift's moody older sibling. Be it on the childlike singalong of the title track, the multi-layered vocals on The Chain or the adorable entirety of Once Was Love, it’s hard to not be taken in by her charms.

    Greatest Hits by Foo Fighters
    There are normally hoots of derision from the press regarding a Greatest Hits compilation for rock acts whose fanbases provide some of the most fervent examples, but it’s always worth noting when the respective musicmakers themselves join in on calling out such a cynical moneymaking exercise. Dave Grohl and company are the latest band to make such a fuss, this single-CD playlist timed for just before the Christmas rush and without the consent from a single band member. The dispiritedness is more than valid; Grohl is quoted as saying that the band would have sooner waited for the band to retire and then release a retrospective, something more indicative and expansive of the band’s back catalogue rather than an hour-long CD with half of their singles. The only reason it’s high on my list though is the fact that all of the songs here are worth their weight in rock gold, and there’s no arguing about that!

    Beast Rest Forth Mouth by Bear In Heaven
    It’s not hard to hear why this four-piece rock collective from Brooklyn scored a recent Best New Music plaudit from Pitchfork for their sophomore album, for the most part straddling the line perfectly between radio-friendly indie pop and reverent electronic homage. Coming across as a slightly more downtrodden cousin to The Pains of Being Pure at Heart's debut earlier this year, it keeps the sonic indulgences to a minimum and never outstays its welcome (running time is a trim forty minutes for ten songs). One could accuse it of never really announcing its presence and going for the rockier jugular compared to other electro-flavoured indie releases this year (one case in point being The Big Pink's A Brief History of Love), but that shouldn’t detract from what is at times the most thoughtfully calibrated pop release of the year, making up for a lack in passion, perhaps, with plenty of intelligence.

    Hospice by The Antlers
    Boasting a production history so hideously melodramatic it inspires a certain kind of awe (progenitor Peter Silberman locked himself away from family and friends in Brooklyn for two years to write a musical narrative wherein a man says goodbye to his loved one whilst she succumbs to bone cancer), it would be easy to dismiss The Antlers’ debut album as the kind of pretentious claptrap the alt-art rock world is famous for. However, Silberman’s work isn’t so easy to wipe clean from the memory, summoning up comparisons of Jason Pierce's similarly-themed Songs in A&E from last year as well as Atlas Sound's debut that create a sound that is mournful, angry, delicate, forgiving and ultimately very moving, especially when the lullaby qualities of EscucharBear segueing into the kind of feelgood raucousness that makes the tragedy all the more horrible. An assured, startling debut, but Lord knows where they could possibly go from here!

    Don't Stop by Annie
    Its release postponed for over a year because of now-infamous differences with Island Records as a result of the more-shocking-than-assumed performance of would-be lead single I Know Ur Girlfriend Hates Me, this Norwegian popstrel’s sophomore effort arrives a little late to the party after the successes of Little Boots, La Roux and Pixie Lott. Which in the end, is more than a shame, because Annie’s album is arguably the better out of the four (yes, even Boots’ album!), benefiting from production wares from established hitmakers Xenomania (including another source of some controversy, the Girls Aloud-featuring My Love Is Better), Paul Epworth and old friend Richard X, Songs Remind Me of You in particular reminding listeners just how well these two work together. For sophisticated Europop, it’ll be hard not to find anything better this year; shiny, danceable, classy and delicious.

    Lovetune for Vaccuum by Soap&Skin
    I’m a little late to the party with adorning 19-year-old Anja Plaschg with plaudits like “debut album of the year” and such, but hey, I’m glad I took the time to listen to her striking premier work at all, never mind seven months after its release. Influences from the likes of Xiu Xiu, Björk and Aphex Twin in particular find plenty of room on her debut, which is a mix of layered vocals (at times anguished, at times sultry, never less than swoonsome) and frankly gorgeous piano work spliced with surging electronic beats and bass synths that never ceases to impress among the thirteen tracks on offer here. “Prodigious” is a word often tossed around when writing about breakthrough artists, but the assured hand with which she composes and produces these works (standout moments being the instrumental EscucharTurbine Womb and the mounting industrial glitch of EscucharDDMMYYYY) promises an interesting future ahead of her.

    And that is why Lovetune For Vaccuum is my Album Of The Month For November...

    Now, don't worry, the review next will be quite a bit shorter, but that is in a vain effort to make up for the usual end-of-year malarkey involving Top 100 charts and all that gubbins...

    Watch this space, December should be journal-tastic!!

    In the meantime, keep listening... x
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  • muse almighty

    26 Nov 2009, 9:04 de aamuch

    .Muse is bloody amazing.
    and i will be witnessing their awe.. LIVE
    big day out 2010.
    yess
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  • My Stats - Over a Year and a Half Later

    26 Nov 2009, 3:20 de SaberMoon

    Total number of tracks: 6302
    Total Length of Music: 16 days

    Sort by Song Title:
    -First Song:The ⅢD Empire - Dir en grey
    -Last Song: 99 Red Balloons - Goldfinger

    Sort by Time:
    -Shortest Song: Flip Strings - Kill Bill Soundtrack
    -Longest Song: Dark Side of the Moon - Pink Floyd

    Sort by Album:
    -First Album: A.M. by Wilco
    -Last Album: † by Justice
    Sort By Artist:
    -First Artist: The Academy Is...
    -Last Artist The 5.6.7.8's


    Top 10 Most Played Songs:
    1. The Missing Piece - Forgive Durden
    2. Two To Tango, One To Miss - The Apathy Eulogy
    3. Love Is... - Bo Burnham
    4. Tony The Beat - The Sounds
    5. New Math - Bo Burnham
    6. Gimme Sympathy - Metric
    7. Boss DJ - Reel Big Fish
    8. With A Little Help From My Friends - The Beatles
    9. 24 Hours- The Sounds
    10. Ain't No Rest For The Wicked - Cage the Elephant

    First five songs that comes up on Shuffle:
    1) Sausalito - Conor Oberst
    2) Hell is Chrome - Wilco
    3) Ocean Breathes Salty - Modest Mouse
    4) Siamese Cities - Metric
    5) Falling Away With You - Muse

    Search ....
    "sex", how many songs come up? 30
    "love", how many songs come up? 293
    "you", how many songs come up? 885
    "death", how many songs come up? 95
    "hate", how many songs come up? 48
    "wish" how many songs come up? 32
    Leer más Escribir comentario
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