If there's anything which will rouse this sleepy blog, it's the annual (
2004,
2005,
2006,
2007)
borborygmus track list - songs from record albums released in 2008 (or from 2007 which did not hit my radar until 2008). This should give a pretty good overview of what I've enjoyed this year; some of my long-suffering friends and acquaintances get a fully realised CD.
1.
Meeting PlaceThe Last Shadow Puppets from
The Age of the Understatement2.
Great ExpectationsThe Gaslight Anthem from
The '59 Sound3.
MykonosFleet Foxes from the
Sun Giant EP4.
The Opening ActDrive-By Truckers from
Brighter Than Creation's Dark5.
Oxford CommaVampire Weekend from
Vampire Weekend6.
SingGlen Campbell from
Meet Glen Campbell7.
Rivers RunKarine Polwart from
This Earthly Spell8.
Constructive SummerThe Hold Steady from
Stay Positive9.
RosalieEliza Carthy from
Dreams of Breathing Underwater10.
Supernatural SuperseriousR.E.M. from
Accelerate11.
Chasing PavementsAdele from
1912.
We'll Get ByGary Louris from
Vagabonds13.
Frankie's Gun!The Felice Brothers from
The Felice Brothers14.
DomesticoPeter Bruntnell from
Peter and the Murder of Crows15.
KidsMGMT from
Oracular Spectacular16.
Solomon BrowneSeth Lakeman from
Poor Man's Heaven17.
re:stacksBon Iver from
For Emma, Forever Ago18.
River SongDennis Wilson from
Pacific Ocean Blue19.
Fareweel RegalityRachel Unthank & the Winterset from
The BairnsTwelve of these were hardcopy CDs I bought, the balance downloads from
eMusic.com. I saw nine of these acts live during the year.
Super-talented monkey Alex Turner makes the list for the third year in a row, this time with
The Last Shadow Puppets and a record of an almost 60's pastiche of orchestral pop which is also right up to date.
The Gaslight Anthem are new, punk-Springsteen - I have a ticket to see them next month.
Fleet Foxes pushed all the right critics' buttons and were a huge success this year; this track actually comes from their EP, not the eponymous album. The EP was released first, but recorded after the LP - both are excellent.
The
DBT's are old favourites and a superb live band (they toured in the USA in 2008 in tandem with The Hold Steady, which had to have been fantastic and shattering). The 2008 record was quite a mixed bag, with a more eclectic range of song styles, and although they lost interesting songwriter Jason Isbell, it holds up well.
Vampire Weekend are a fresh New York band playing "Upper West Side Soweto". Following a path blazed by Johnny Cash and Neil Diamond,
Glen Campbell put out a hugely enjoyable CD of covers, including this version of
Sing which knocks spots off the original. Listen out for some of the arrangements which are reminiscent of the glory days of Campbell with the Jimmy Webb songbook. Glen sings and plays guitar belying his age.
Karine Polwart is an artist new to me this year, but became a firm favourite with her warm but sometimes hard-hitting Scottish folk. I saw her at the Cambridge Folk Festival. It was a positive year for
The Hold Steady - a co-headlining tour with the Drive-by's and a good follow-up record to the brilliant
Boys And Girls In America. A busy year for
Eliza Carthy, arguably the leading English folk artist playing today.
Dreams of Breathing Underwater is a wildly catholic original recording. It didn't quite work out live when I saw her this summer, although she was charmingly and bumptiously pregnant. Eliza was also part of
The Imagined Village, folk-fusion which almost made it onto the list, albeit a 2007 release.
Arguably, a return to form for
R.E.M.. To me,
Adele is the best of the "new Dusty"s thrown up in the last year or two, robust and natural.
Gary Louris is the erstwhile leader of the (now defunct?) Jayhawks, and this solo record displays obvious similarities to their latter days. Louris also released a CD with Mark Olson, another original Jayhawk, re-united after over 10 years.
The Felice Brothers have a fun, raw Americana which steeps into their music and their stories. I saw
Peter Bruntnell at a small, solo gig - he was patently a good songwriter. The record shows another side, however - pop and psychedelia. New York has thrown up lots of great bands in the last year or so;
MGMT another good example. There are three or four brilliant electronica pop songs on the album;
Kids was a highlight of their set at Glastonbury, with thousands of uplifted ravers leaving the Park Stage post-gig singing the riff - doo-doo-doo-doo-doo-do-do-doo doo doo.
A couple of chances to see hunky fiddler
Seth Lakeman this year - he is popular and exuberant live. I don't think this year's CD is as strong as
Freedom Fields, but it has attracted a wider audience. The most listened to album this year was by
Bon Iver, recorded solo in a remote snow-bound cabin in the woods, fueled by the deer he hunted and broken relationships. Perhaps thought of as the least talented Beach Boy,
Dennis Wilson proves his chops with
Pacific Ocean Blue. Originally released in 1977, this "lost classic" was re-issued in 2008 combined with
Bambu and other unreleased material. Dennis' ravaged voice oozes soul and raw emotion.
Finally,
Rachel Unthank & The Winterset bring us to a classic northern English folk close - simple, beautiful harmonies. Fareweel!
Labels: music