December 22, 2009

AZLTRON BEST OF 2009!

Another year, another year end list. Crazy that this is the third I’ve compiled. Has it been three years already? Crazy! Anyway here is my list of the top 30 albums of the year. Granted, I am just one man and I may have not had a chance to listen to every album ever made this year. I am speaking from my bubble of experience so if your fave isn’t on here, it doesn’t mean it sucks, it just means maybe I haven’t heard it. Or that I didn’t like it. Ha! Well get to those mp3′s and enjoy! Never say I never gave you anything.
30. Moby – Wait For Me

This album was a return to the heightened emotionality that makes Moby songs like “God Moving over the face of the water” instant classics. Moby stumbles into some of his familiar potholes of opaque lyrics and repetitive song structure but he continues to move in positive directions.

29. stellastarr* – Civilized

stellastarr* returns with their third album sans major label and with plenty of well written songs. The band takes a lo-fi old school approach opting to forgo a lot of the gloss that stamps most modern rock releases. stellastarr* doesn’t have any out of the park home runs here, but the sheer enthusiasm the band exudes on this album makes it worth a listen.

28. Digits – Hold it Close

Digits combine electronic beats and mellow vocals and synths with all kinds of cut up acoustic and electric guitars. You could call it synth-pop, you could call it electro-acoustic, but mostly it’s just good solid music.

27. Katsen – It Hertz!

Cats keyboards and Kitch are what Katsen is about. Their album of synth-pop, “It Hertz” rides the border of seriousness and satire and along the way the group shows their diverse influences from Kraftwerk, the Cure, Kate Bush and others. “It Hertz” is an unabashed guilty pleasure.

26. Yeah Yeah Yeahs – It’s Blitz

The Yeah Yeah Yeahs returned this year to a mountain of hype and turned in a few good singles and some slower keyboard tinged numbers. The ample reverb and slick production heralds a marked difference in the bands sound. Some hailed it as a beautiful transformation, like a butterfly out of a cocoon, from raw to polished, but others just recognized it for what it was, the group aping the popular girl fronted new wave band that others have been doing for years. The Yeah Yeah Yeahs got to the party a little bit late, but at least they kept it going.

25. Little Dragon – Machine Dreams

I was just talking about those female fronted new wave bands that have been at it a while and here we find one, Sweden’s Little Dragon who fuze unique vocals, electronics and a Bjork-like sensibility. Sounding like bossanova meets ambient electronica funk “Machine Dreams” is a laid back psychedelic groove fest that works its way up to a few freak outs. The only downfall is that the tracks tend to get a little repetitive in their structure. Perfect for a mixtape a long drive or a night on the town.

24. Broken Spindles – Kiss/Kick

Joel Peterson of the Faint returns again with his side solo project Broken Spindles. In this adventure he works on combining his good lyrical ideas with his good sound ideas and produces some of his best Broken Spindles songs yet. The vocals are still pretty monotone but the songs feel a lot more cohesive than past releases. If anything the album feels like good ideas that could be expanded upon.

23. Fischerspooner – Entertainment

Fischerspooner marks their return to music land with their third album “Entertainment” and the album is less dancefloor ready and more heady than their previous releases. Nonetheless there are some cool experiments to be found here and a slight return to the approach that helped their first album make a splash to begin with.

22. Danger Mouse & Sparkle Horse – Dark Night of the Soul

Technically this album was never released, but that didn’t stop it from getting out there. With input from David Lynch and guest spots from the Flaming Lips, Black Francis, Iggy Pop, Julian Casablancas and more it’s bound to have something for everybody. Well everybody looking to have a bit a dark good time that is.

21. Crystal Method – Divided By Night

America’s preeminent techno producers return to the keys and the decks to bring you a relatively diverse album with tons of guest spots from the likes of Peter Hook (New Order) Emily Haines (Metric) and Matisyahu. The album hits in ways that “Legion of Boom” only hinted at. The Crystal Method is getting better cleaning up their sound and finding ways to still sound like themselves while adapting themselves to the times. Above all they are proving themselves to be a member of an elite group, techno producers from the 90′s who are still relevant today.

20. The BPA – I Think We’re Gonna Need a Bigger Boat

Norman Cook’s latest incarnation in a seemingly endless list of pseudonyms and band names. This project continues his focus on song structure over the top of his well known big beats. There are a couple stutters (literally) on the album, in particular one about a toad, but the album evens off with some mid tempo tracks and a few spectacular ones. Like the one featuring David Byrne AND Dizzee Rascal. Feels like a bargain huh?

19. Lonely Island – Incredibad

At what point will pop and rap just give up and let the comedians take over the airways? Seriously with Tenacious D, Flight of the Concords and now the Lonely Island putting out releases that are just as strong musically as they are comedically poppers and rappers might want to look for a day job. But then again with nothing to make fun of, those previously mentioned groups might not have a career. Either way, this star studded affair features invigorating guest vocals from Jack Black, Julian Casablancas and Norah Jones in addition to all those SNL Digital Short Songs that everyone loves to sing.

18. Calvin Harris – Ready for the Weekend

Calvin Harris’ disco stylings return with a tad bit more variety and arrangement. Bass pumps, synths soar, Divas sing about shoes and piano hooks will get stuck in your head. Is it as good as the first album? In spots. Is it better than the first album? In Spots. Is it worse in spots? Yes. Is it entertaining from multiple viewpoints all the way through? Yes. Get this for it’s potential in your car speakers as you go out or on a road trip with your friends.

17. Little Boots – Hands

To continue with the streak of British synth pop is Little Boots, who writes songs so catchy that I’m willing to risk others’ perception of my masculinity by listening to them. Seriously in a world where we can have Brittanys and Lady Gagas churned down our throats would it be possible to have one pop songstress who writes and performs all her own songs get popular in the states? Just this once? Please? No? Ok then, more for us.

16. Frankmusik – Complete Me

Completing the triforce of British synth pop darlings is Frankmusik, who has been teasing us with samplers, demos and EPs for what seems like forever finally released a full album. It didn’t dissapoint. Although it was a little more polished and tame than what I’d expected, but this only enhanced the songwriting. Plus his music videos are entertaining.


15. Portugal the Man – The Satanic Satanist

Sometimes you just need some good old fashioned rock & roll. Portugal the Man has that in spades. Take that classic guitar led classic rock sound and update it with a bit of an alternative and r&b take and that’s roughly what Portugal the Man has to offer up on the Satanic Satanist. Put in a pinch of a psychedelic touch and you’re spot on. Every track exudes that classic 70′s anthem feel that you’d expect from Bowie in his heyday. Plus they put on a great show.

14. Julian Plenti is… Skyscraper

Julian Plenti, for the uninitiated, is Paul Banks from Interpol in his solo vehicle. The album is filled with somber tunes that one might expect from the frontman of the well dressed NYC quartet but the instrumentation is a bit more varied and includes a horn section, acoustic guitar, and even strings. Banks does crank it up a notch for a few tunes and rock out on the old guitar, but the melodies and atmosphere of the quieter tracks are where he really shines.

13. Julian Casablancas – Phrazes for the Young

After looking at the Julian Plenti cover and the Julian Casablancas cover one can’t help but wonder, “Which came first?” Surely the gents must know each other. Is Paul Banks mocking Casablancas? Or Perhaps they are both in on the joke. Perhaps it’s just cool to have a dude sit in a room on the cover of your album, like in the Spoon “Transference” album cover. Either way, Casablancas’ first solo outing is a fun romp through influence from The Doors, New Wave, even Flock of Seagulls. The album as a whole is pretty uneven, but the highs are pretty spectacular and earn the record a place on this list.

12. James Yuill – Turning Down Water for Air

Sometimes it’s awkward for some artists to move back and forth from folk rock territory into electronic beats. James Yuill is not one of those artists. He assimilates electronic elements and beats into his beautifully written acoustic songs. Fans of the Postal Service or even derivatives like Owl City will find a lot to like here.

11. Franz Ferdinand – Tonight

Franz Ferdinand took a break after whipping out their second album “You Could Have it so much better…” and the break has done them well. While their sophomore album had some nice high points, it was too wired, too anxious, too spikey. With “Tonight” the group mellowed out and recaptured some of that timeless cool that made them ones to watch in the first place.

10. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix

In their search to define themselves as something other than Air’s back up band or the French Strokes Phoenix found a sound that they can truly claim as their own. “Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix” has elements that have marked their previous releases like the slightly roughed up sounds of “It’s Never Been Like That” and the electronics of “Alphabetical” except this time it sounds like they were melted together and shot out of a canon. Wait, make that a Cadillac.

9. Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band – Outer South

Conor Oberst and Co. return with an even more egalitarian mix of songs where Conor doesn’t even sing lead all the time. He lets his stalwart bandmates take the reigns multiple times and the songs really benefit from it. This feeling of brotherhood that must inherently be within this group really adds to the cohesiveness of the sound as well. When this band is cooking, they crank it up to 1000. Take a listen, I dare you.

8. Sally Shapiro – My Guilty Pleasure

There’s no guilty pleasure for me here at all about Sally Shapiro’s latest release. Everything about this release, from the ambient opener to some of the jazzy jams that erupt toward the end of the album is awesome. To this day I can’t believe that I missed when this album came out over the summer. Dang you day job.

7. Monsters of Folk – Monsters of Folk

Conor Oberst cannot get enough of collaboration. Uniting with M. Ward, Mike Mogis, and Jim James the quartet produced some of the finest folk-rock of the year. Avoiding nearly all the pot holes that “supergroups” fall into perhaps by making sure that they play all the parts on the album to keep them humble by pointing out their weakpoints. Which is ironic since there’s not many weak points that you can find here. Like Oberst’s Mystic Valley band this band oozes euphoria when they’re all together. Oh, also they’ve got some bangin harmonies.

6. Muse – The Resistance

Muse’s latest effort feels like bits and pieces of their previous albums glued together. The electro stomp of “Uprising” and radical Queen flourishes on “United States of Eurasia” wouldn’t be out of place on their previous album “Black Holes and Revelations”. “Unnatural Selection” right down to the track title could fit right in on “Origin of Symmetry”. Then somewhere along the way an orchestra drops in on the band and things get really classically bombastic. The great thing about all this though, is that Matt Bellamy and company are so talented that they can take this rag tag collection of tunes and turn them into a masterpiece.

5. Echo & The Bunnymen – The Fountain

Echo & The Bunnymen rose from the ashes again this year to compile their best album in over ten years. Most critics will continue to write them off as shot, but The Fountain features a vigor and life that we haven’t seen from the group in quite a while. Not only that, but the songs are tight and full of hooks and even a bit of play with their song structure. Don’t expect another Ocean Rain, but to compare it to the 1987 self titled would be appropriate and I thought that album was criminally underrated. Which is how I imagine this album will go down too. That aside, The Bunnymen are back in a big way. Definitely one of the best of the year.

4. Wilco – Wilco the Album

Those Wilco fans who felt there wasn’t much to chew on with “Sky Blue Sky” sure got a mouthful of tasty layered Wilco on their latest release. From the opener “Wilco the Song” which is all about the comforts of listening to Wilco songs, to “You & I” featuring Feist, the album is full of equally energetic and expansive songwriting. Jeff Tweedy and Co. are having a blast and that translates even to the recording.

3. Passion Pit – Manners

Passion Pit delivered on their great expectations from their EP which was almost universally loved. The songs on Manners are sure to be the sugary Cafe Mocha to the processing center of your brain as they are covered in saccharine synths and freaky falsetto that are sure to wake you up and make you move. Even Corporate America is catching on.


2. Hockey – Mind Chaos

Hockey has some of the most fully formed classic sounding rock and roll I’ve heard in a long time. These chameleons have been paying attention, imbuing their tunes with flourishes reminiscent of The Strokes, LCD Soundsystem, The Beatles, Rolling Stones, Talking Heads and others. The next time you run into somebody telling you that no one makes good rock & roll anymore, make sure you throw this CD at them. Hard.

1. The Sounds – Crossing the Rubicon

The Sounds took a lot of risks with Crossing the Rubicon, opting out of a lot of the Kitch that was found on their previous album “Dying to Say this to You” and went for broke with honesty and earnestness. Kind of like how The Killers changed their sound with Sam’s Town. The earnestness paid off in spades as there’s not an unlistenable track to be found here. As much as it would make me feel uncomfortable to see sorority sisters singing their songs, I think The Sounds deserve some top 40 success.

February 8, 2009

Dan Black of the Servant Returns!

Filed under: Clor,dan black,Electro,Franz Ferdinand,moby,notorious BIG,The Servant — AZLTRON @ 11:45 am

Dan Black of the Servant has returned with a new single called “Alone”, and I’m glad he’s back. I didn’t even know that The Servant had broken up, luckilly Mr. Black made up a substantial amount of the band’s sound so his solo efforts are thoroughly satisfying. Let’s hope that he doesn’t leave us alone for a good long while.

January 26, 2009

Franz Ferdinand Get Down on Their New Album "Tonight"!

Franz Ferdinand is back (as if they ever left) and they have a new album coming out on the 27th of January. The disc is entitled “Tonight”, and embodies the feelings that come from a night time of elation and debauchery according to Kapranos and company. The new disc shows off the bands progression; the guitars are less brash, the bass funkiness is cranked up and keyboards add to the slinky grooves of each song. This song unabashedly activates some of those latent disco tendencies that Franz have been flirting with since their smash hit self titled album in 2004. Don’t think for a second that this album has a neutered sound, there is more swagger on “Tonight” than perhaps anything else they’ve done.

There’s always been an air of class and timelessness in the world that they create musically. Even when they delve into darker themes, there’s a quirky nobility that oozes out of Kapranos’ croon, which was addictive on their first album and I think wore somewhat thin on their second album “You Could Have It So Much Better”. On “Tonight”, there’s a clash between the idealized world of that the Franz crew has created and reality. This comes out in songs like “Ulysses”, where singer Kapranos mumbles about whether or not he is Ulysses and where his next high is coming from. A little dirtier and muddled than their usual polished sound, but not too off the mark for the subject of one of their songs, it’s the tone that differs more. The tone is more like a combination of their previous sound and the dancier songs of The Kills from their recent “Midnight Boom” album. One song even abandons guitar totally for several minutes and focuses on a full out bass synth assault. Franz Ferdinand have added some danger to their sound and it’s just what the doctor ordered. The flurry of funk from song to song will have you reeling, like a night out free of responsibity, not totally aware of what’s happening, but focusing on any and all opportunities to keep the party going and chasing them until they end. If you have Franz Ferdinand’s “Tonight” as your guide you might find yourself still partying even as the sun comes up.

December 18, 2008

The Rakes Ring in the New Year with "KLANG"! New Album and Tracklist!

The Rakes are set to release their third album entitled ‘KLANG’ on the 23rd of March and will release the album one week earlier (March 16) on 7″ and download through V2/Co-operative. The album was recored at Planet Roc Studios in Berlin by Chris Zane who has produced Les Savy Fav, The Walkmen and Passion Pit.

The Full Tracklisting is:

You’re In It
That’s The Reason
The Loneliness Of The Outdoor Smoker
Bitchin’ in the Kitchin’
The Woes Of The Working Woman
1989
Shackelton
The Light From Your Mac
Muller’s Ratchet
The Final Hill
Never Get Married

The band also managed to film a bike/walking tour of the recording facilities where they recorded the new album and set it to the first single from the album ’1989′! The new single comes complete with jittery rhythms, neurotic lyrics, and shambly harmonies. For sure, a preview of good things to come!

December 2, 2008

Mr. Vega Remixes Franz Ferdinand and Crystal Castles!

Mr. Vega, arguably the hardest working remixer in the biz, returns again with mixes of Franz Ferdinand’s as of yet unreleased single “Ulysses” and Crystal Castles’ haunting jam “Vanished”. The perfect electro-caffeine to kick off your Tuesday morning.

Franz Ferdinand – Ulysses (Mr. Vega Remix)

Crystal Castles – Vanished (Mr. Vega Remix)

September 27, 2008

The Killers Return, and seem more… Human.

The Killers have been controversial figures for me, their first album was one of the first in an onslaught of the return of the synthesizer in modern music. They are arguably one of the primary forces in modern contemporary music that energized me to go out and find out what was happening in the world of music these days. It was The Killers, Modest Mouse, Interpol, Franz Ferdinand, stellastarr*and The Faint that reminded me that good music is still being made out there, you just have to look beyond the top 40 sound and production style.

The Killer’s Hot Fuss was a smorgasbord of delicious pop music accessible to many, and delectable for me because of the focus on the use of the keyboard and post punky rhythms, plus a smidge of vocoder on “Smile Like You Mean It”. It sounds cliche, but I was definitely one of those people who “Liked them before they got really popular”, but I did, they opened for stellastarr* back in the day and I liked stellastarr* so I checked them out, and lo and behold they were pretty good. Their debut album stands as one of the biggest stylistic statements, and certainly one of the most commercially successful albums of the mid 2000′s that didn’t depend on a gutteral moan and drop d tuned plucking and grunging or power chords and a whiney voice echoing the frustrations of the pre-teen upper middle class. As that, they need to be commended, but somewhere along the way, they found themselves and mutated into a country/classic rock version of themselves leaving an army of fans saying “Bruce Springsteen?” and wishing for “David Bowie”. “Sam’s Town” wasn’t a bad album by any means, and stylistic progression is commendable. Novelty moustaches are always good for a laugh, but where are The Killers that stole my heart and my money to become one of the biggest bands in the world?

Those Killers stand poised to reclaim their throne, Brandon is de-moustached and once again clothed in lounge-chic sport coats and dress pants. They have a new single, and ,if anything, “Human” brings the electronics and dance beats back into play without sacrificing their newfound sound and Brandon’s new, more earnest, vocal style. This could be the second coming of The Killers. Brace yourselves, only time will tell.

The Killers – Human

June 5, 2007

Relationship Self Destruction

Filed under: David Bowie,Franz Ferdinand,The Servant — AZLTRON @ 7:23 pm

I first heard about the Servant through their single “Cells” being used in commercials for Sin City back in 2005. Their hair brained inventiveness crafted some of the most memorable pop songs in recent memory. Although, aside from the Sin City tie in they didn’t really catch on all that well. Even though I thought that their string accented electro guitar stomps were great.

Either way, they released a new album last year that featured a much more guitar oriented sound. At times calling to mind the work of Franz Ferdinand on “I wish I could stop Wishing for Things” (9) and David Bowie on “Moonbeams” (6). While I missed the strings and effects, I have to say that there are some excellent rock songs here. It took me a while to get into lead single “How to Destroy a Relationship” (1), but it’s descending vocal melody has been working it’s way into my cranium for months now. I would have to say that the most addictive cut on the album is “Sleep Deprivation” (2), it’s hook is so catchy I am actually shocked that it didn’t get any radio play, or at least some love in the form of a music video. Some tracks get repetitive, and the wordplay of “Girlfriend” (8) gets kind of awkward even though I can appreciate what they’re doing because just thinking of it now gets it stuck back in my head. Overall, a tighter sound emerges this time around, sans electronics, the unmistakable vocals of Dan Black are as good as ever, and the guitar work of Chris Burrows has really stepped up. With this being a more guitar oriented album if he had let up any you would have known, but throughout the album there is no slack to be found. The Servant move forward with another surprising and enjoyable album, I hope more people pay attention the next time they put something out.

The Servant Myspace

MP3 – The Servant – Sleep Deprivation

MP3 – The Servant – Brains

Bonus MP3 – The Servant – Biro

Video for “Hey Lou Reed”

May 9, 2007

LCD Soundsystem à Montréal ce soir

Filed under: Franz Ferdinand,John Cale,LCD Soundsystem — AZLTRON @ 2:23 pm

LCD Soundsystem is playing a sold out show tonight at Le Spectrum in Montreal, and unfortunately I am in the middle of the final week of classes. There is a silver lining though, as James Murphy and co. released a new single of off their sophomore album “Sound of Silver”. The single in question? The excellent dance ballad “All My Friends”. The single features covers by Franz Ferdinand and John Cale and some new material, but the most exciting thing about this release, for me, is their superb new video. Shot all in one take.

Take a look:



Buy “All My Friends”

MP3 – All My Friends – LCD Soundsystem

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