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by Tom Breihan | email: tbreihan@villagevoice.com

The Quarterly Report: Best Albums of 2008 Thus Far

Posted by Tom Breihan at 3:41 PM, March 31, 2008

VampireWeekendCD2.jpg
You stand corrected

First quarters are traditionally show, and in certain respects this one was no exception. I didn't, for instance, hear a single good rap album, though I did hear a few mixtapes worth talking about. Still, looking at my list, it's pretty amazing how many great records I've heard over the past three months; 2008 is shaping up to be a year worth remembering. Apologies to Foals, Fuck Buttons, Erykah Badu, Crystal Castles, Blood on the Wall, and Young Dro, all of whom came close to making this list. It's also worth noting that Da Beginning, the new Lil Boosie mixtape, would've probably ended up high on this list if I'd been able to spend a little more time with it.

1. Vampire Weekend: Vampire Weekend

Yeah, go ahead, get mad. But find me another youngish band within the entire chaotic sphere of indie-rock whose hooks are this sharply slippery, whose beats are this effortlessly, precisely sidelong, and whose sense of self is this fully realized and deeply entrenched. Even if you don't care about the particulars of the Ivy League layabout world they profess to inhabit (and I still have basically no idea what a mansard roof is), Ezra Koenig has managed to conjure an image of that world with the same sort of artful specificity in, say, the portrait of the bullet-torn Virginia on display in this list's #4 entry. And VW's Afropop fixation works less as cultural imperialism than as a move away from yelpy jagged indie-rock status quo and towards the sort of angrily clever and defiantly polished early-80s new-wave sophistipop that only Spoon gets right anymore. I get the same rush from the snap back into the beat on "A-Punk" and the lovelorn half-articulate chorus on "Bryn" that I got the most well-placed and searingly self-pitying pop-punk choruses when I was 15. Another album like this one and maybe it'll be possibly to rave about these guys without coming across defensive.

Voice review: Mike Powell on Vampire Weekend's Vampire Weekend
Voice review: Julianne Shepherd on Vampire Weekend's Vampire Weekend

2. Disfear: Live the Storm

So: scuzzed-up galloping old-school hardcore, all thunderous bass fuzz and claustrophobic peals of feedback and riled-up gang-chant choruses about how completely wrong the world is (with special bonus Dawn of the Dead quotes!), cranked out by a band two decades deep into this basement-show crustcore shit. Except now two fifths of this band consists of Swedish melodic death-metal legends, and they've got the throat-ravaging fuck-the-world screams and the triumphantly cheeseball guitar solos to prove it. Someone in my comments section compared this to NOFX, "except they sound more sober and shout a lot." He's right, and that's a good thing. If you went to the sorts of VFW-hall punk shows I went to in high school, this is your superhero music. Certain nights, this album feels like it was specifically concocted in a lab to make me want to get smashed on cheap whiskey and scream incoherent cusswords at passing cop cars. If some high school kids somewhere are using Live the Storm to soundtrack dumbshit high-school hijinks, there is some justice in the world.

3. Kelley Polar: I Need You to Hold On While the Sky is Falling

I pointed this out in an earlier entry, but the first part of this year has been absurdly rich in streaky lovestruck whiteboy synthpop and disco. What sets Kelley Polar apart from his contemporaries (Hercules & Love Affair, Hot Chip, Sebastien Tellier) is also what vaults him past them, at least for me: a sense of ambition that verges on pretension. Polar is a Julliard-trained violinist and a part-time neoclassical composer whose delicate dance tracks come drowned in layers of impressionistic strings and overbearing conceptual stuff about space and art and the trancendental oversoul or whatever. This should make him unbearable, but instead it has the paradoxical approach of rendering him flawed and approachable, an actual human being rather than Hot Chip's cartoon Urkel lovermen or Tellier's French-pimp stereotype. Polar sings in a matter-of-fact Bernard Sumner downbeat murmur, and he renders ideas in the sort of plainspoken language that at least lets us know he's taking them seriously. And his tracks are about lush, gorgeous disco-house of the highest order, his gushy synths and airy strings and twitching drums all pushing each other toward something bigger and dreamier.

4. The Re-Up Gang: We Got It 4 Cheap, Vol. 3

A few days after I wrote about this mixtape, Malice contacted me to talk about my writeup. In particular, he wanted to clarify a line I'd called cheesy. When he says, "Here I am standing with open arms like Journey," he apparently means that he's standing with guns, which fair enough. The line still stands as being a bit (likably) cheesy to me, but it says something that this guy cares so much about his lyrics that he'll reach out to a writer just to make sure nobody's misunderstanding him. I get the feeling that all three guys in this group feel the same way. These lyrics bear the marks of obsessive rewriting, lines in notepads scribbled out, rhymes tightened, everything extraneous eliminated. Mixtapes don't get this hard vividness by accident. After enough listens, it becomes apparent that Vol. 3 isn't quite touching the greatness of Vol. 2. The voices don't have the same urgency, there's a bit of Drama-sanctioned filler, and the scarcity of flipped recent beats means the tape doesn't give that idea that these guys are twisting the best stuff on the radio to their will. But that sense of writerly competition, of four great rappers collectively pushing each other, is still very much there. And Vol. 3 has its own merits; I've never heard anyone describe the feelings that come when a great album flops commercially the way Malice does here. And then there's "Scenario 2008," where all four guys hit the ground running and never let up, one of the best things they've ever done.

5. Genghis Tron: Board Up the House

This one caught me by surprise. This Philly art-metal trio has been kicking around the DIY-show circuit for a minute now, cultivating a rep for fusing jittery malfunctioning-laptop IDM with mathematical grindcore, and nothing in that description looks remotely like anything I'd listen to voluntarily. But even if there's a little blip-scream insanity at work here, Board Up the House finds them more into huge, thudding dirges with huge, terrifying Dario Argento synth-drones and bloodcurdling screams and crushing walls of stoner-metal guitar. Board Up the House is a remarkably pretty album, certainly not what I was expecting, and the way the band leaps abruptly from moody downbeat synth atmospherics to expressionist hardcore pummel carries this sense of deep sadness that I wish I could describe better. Now that Trent Reznor is no longer beholden to any major label contracts, this is the type of music I want to hear from him, not the drizzly video-game-soundtrack mush he's currently churning out.

6-10. Black Mountain: In the Future; Mountain Goats: Heretic Pride; High Places: 03/07-09/07; Grand Buffet: King Vision; Hercules & Love Affair: Hercules & Love Affair.

comments

Yeah, for some reason Ghengis Tron works even though on paper its nothing too special. Mixing hardcore/metal to Warp type electronics is different but not...alot of their 8-bit freakouts aren't too far removed from Dillinger Escape plans little wierd jazz arpeggio's during their chaos. But, as an overall product it's very listenable, and has been sticking with me.

They still need a drummer live tho, for such hard hitting music it comes out a little limp wristed live.

Posted by: Reg! at March 31, 2008 4:31 PM

People still listen to albums?

Posted by: djsoulstar at March 31, 2008 4:48 PM

People do, Soulstar... People do.

Posted by: ondioline at March 31, 2008 5:07 PM

Wait, Tom, didn't you say that Ego Trippin' was a good album?

Posted by: cashclay at March 31, 2008 5:26 PM

Wait, Tom, didn't you say that Snoop's Ego Trippin was good?

Posted by: cashclay at March 31, 2008 5:27 PM

great shit as usual.
hey tom u should really check out the new curren$y's (u know,the guy who was 'sposed to be the first artist off "YOUNG MONEY") new mixtape "higher than 30,ooo feet".its way better than i thought it could be,...for some weird reason......he also uses west coast beats.....

Posted by: Big Baloney Tony at March 31, 2008 6:02 PM

More inane blathering about Vampire Weekend's entirely mediocre and utterly dull album. Yes, it *should* be a sign that every review for this album (which is consistently ranked as one of the best) must rate the album in a defensive tone. I can only conclude that the reviewer feels guilty that his self-indulgent craving for trivial pop has led him to rank a merely passable display of musical competence as the next great thing.

One can like an album and still be aware that the album is not great or even good, but simply satiates some personal craving. Confusing the two, however, shows a decided inability to analyze on more than one plane at a time. And when that happens you get reviews like this, of no more weight than a schoolchild yelling at another "I like them cos they're awesome, so nyah!"

Posted by: L.A. at March 31, 2008 7:43 PM

L.A. has an above average IQ and he's not afraid to use it.

Posted by: BubsDepot at March 31, 2008 8:21 PM

Recently, when I was visiting my dad (who is a big music fan and has a pretty impressive breadth and scope of music knowledge and experience), Vampire Weekend came on Saturday Night Live. Now mind you, my dad's very open open minded to new music and I love exposing him to every thing from german techno, to fabric live mixes, to Float era Aesop Rock. He eats it up and likes some of the stuff sincerely. He's had his brain melted by Hendrix, Frank Zappa, and the Who like 15 times in his day to the detriment of his hearing. All I know is that when Vampire Weekend finished up, he turned to me and jokingly asked me who that bunch of dorkwads was. I laughed and told him and thought to myself how that basically kind of sums it up for me as well.

Posted by: panthro at March 31, 2008 8:31 PM

Interesting point on Nas from the brilliant Nas blog, escobartheory.blogspot.com, which obliquely points up why the Clipse suck:

Interestingly enough, while both similes and brags are found throughout Illmatic and the whole of Nas' catalog, they have never been a real staple of his career. But it seems as if early Nas, the one found especially on Live at the Barbeque and Back to the Grill, Halftime and here was more "like"-minded and boastful, in the spirit of a punchline rapper almost. In fact, using "like" to test for the appearance of similes, in doing a search on Illmatic's nine songs, plus Nas Will Prevail, you can see the change in his style from 1992's Halftime days to later 20th birthdays (of course, Life's A Bitch, for example, is only one verse compared to Prevail's three, but the ratio is still clear):

Number of Appearances of the Word "Like" on Illmatic (songs roughly listed in order of composition, from later to earlier):


Memory Lane: 0
Life's A Bitch: 2
Represent: 2
One Time 4 For Your Mind: 2
The World Is Yours: 4
One Love: 5*
NY State of Mind: 7**
Halftime: 9
It Ain't Hard To Tell: 14
Nas Will Prevail: 18


This is not to suggest that the tracks with a high count of like's are somehow less lyrically credible than the rest [However, I, Tray, will suggest it]; however, they do point to the evolution of Nas' rhymes.

_________________________

Imagine how long it would take to count usage of the word 'like' on WGIFC 1, 2 or 3.

Posted by: Tray at March 31, 2008 8:49 PM

The Crystal Castles album tops my quarter year list. Great song after great song. Courtship Dating is my favorite though.

Posted by: Card at March 31, 2008 9:11 PM

Once again, for the benefits of the slow bus...

Mixtapes are not albums. They don't belong on anybody's best albums list.

Completely...different...medium...

And I LIKED We Got It 4 Cheap 3.

Posted by: DocZeusX at March 31, 2008 10:53 PM

So you bump Erykah Badu, (who, along with Disfear, Origin, and Arghoslent) made the only decent record so far this year? For Vampire Weekend?

LA is pretty astute on the front. Too many people focus on the band members and all the anti-hype, hype, cultural discussion, bio, etc, and not how awful their first album is. Are we really plumbing the bottom for music now? I guess so.

Also, Vol. 3 sucked. I like the Clipse, but they are at once dense and the musical equivalent of sugar substitute.

Posted by: Chris at April 1, 2008 2:59 AM

Any list that puts Vampire Weekend first is automatically forfeit.

Posted by: no at April 1, 2008 9:59 AM

Tom, what's your opinion of Guilty Simpson's debut album? Cats are really sleeping on dude. Why don't you break down an album like that instead of Rick Ross' and defending Lollipop?

Posted by: chedda at April 1, 2008 10:47 AM

Where's the MALKMUS?

Posted by: dirtydishcloth at April 1, 2008 11:30 AM

no erykah badu? no gnarls barkley?

i'm so populist...

Posted by: MML at April 1, 2008 1:56 PM

"Someone in my comments section?" That's twice now, SAY MY NAME BITCH! SAY IT! Props for including Black Mountain though, but I'm still unsure about those Vampire Weekend cats. I wasn't too impressed with their myspace offerings but maybe I'll give the album a try.

Posted by: MK at April 1, 2008 3:46 PM

Mansard roof: picture McDonald's and you've got it. Very popular in the late 1800s as well. There were lots of them in the town where I went to college. Vampire Weekend was an excellent choice, so here's one person who isn't mad

Posted by: andrea at April 1, 2008 4:09 PM

My top 3 at the moment are Have a Nice Life's Deathconciousness (Think Kid-A era Radiohead, but with sicker riffs), Evangelicals sophmore album The Evening Descends, and Fleet Foxe's debut, Ragged Wood. I'd recommend all 3, and after hearing them, I'm sure your top 10 will shift a bit.

Posted by: at April 1, 2008 5:24 PM

When quality hip-hop albums are scarce, mixtapes (good ones) take their place. While I liked Vol. 3, it's by far the weakest of the series. And I'm not sure about that sugar substitute reference before.

Posted by: Encyclopedia Black at April 1, 2008 9:29 PM

Tray: Please, no charts in hip-hop. I think your chart made me a bigger clipse fan.

Erykah Badu's CD: Remember every song you didn't like on "Mama's Gun"? This is a CD composed entirely of those songs. Sure it's charming and different and unlike anything else out there and that's compelling exactly once. I am positive I will never listen to it again.

Posted by: greg. at April 2, 2008 2:09 PM

well, i've been caning that clipse mixtape, more or less nonstop, for the past 3 weeks now. and y'know what's amazing--i still only know about a tenth of the lyrics, if even that. blows my mind, those absurdly intricate rhymes, the flawless delivery and intonation. and on every single track, from every mc. if you're a writer, you can't help but to love that shit...damn shame they lost p's backing and industry juice. the topical cul de sac probably doesn't help either. whatever. for my money, that's the greatest cllxn of mcs doing it today.

Posted by: jtilla at April 2, 2008 7:37 PM

What the fuck does a "sharply slippery" hook sound like? And how does one measure it in degrees, as in "find me an album with MORE sharply slippery hooks than this?"

Posted by: Jayson Greene at April 3, 2008 1:01 PM

Nicolay & Kay 2008 Time Line > this list

Posted by: No Mames Buey at April 26, 2008 11:46 AM

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