Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Favorite albums!

Because lists disguise the fact that I barely update this thing. Or at least not enough for my liking.

1. In the Aeroplane Over the Sea - Neutral Milk Hotel
A rumination on life, death, the afterlife, God, Anne Frank, love, alienation and who knows what else. This is my favorite album. As a whole it sounds like nothing I've ever heard while each individual piece sounds familiar (except the zanzithophone and singing saw, those were both new to me). There's your standard guitar, bass and drums and added onto that are an assortment of horns, organs, and the afformentioned singing saw and zanzithophone. All of it sounds pretty bad the first time you hear it, especially Jeff Mangum's singing. The lyrics are incomprehensible on first glance as well. If you do what I do and stick with it, hopefully you'll grow to love this as much as I have.
2. The Moon and Antarctica - Modest Mouse
Yet another rumination on life, death, the afterlife and God. This one stops at Anne Frank, though, and goes onto dehumanization and solitude. Isaac Brock's voice takes some getting used to, but it really carries across the desperation he tries to convey. My favorite part of Modest Mouse is their thematic dichotomy (I love that word): trailer trash and poetic musings. They break down when the trailer trash aspects take full force, but thankfully that doesn't happen here.
3. Agaetis Byrjun - Sigur Ros
A third musing on life, de- forget it. I've got no clue what this Icelandic band is singing about, but man is the singing good. These are really slow moving, ethereal sounding songs that, again, take a while to get used to. Sparse drums, simplistic basslines, cool piano and a guitar played with a cello bow, plus a string quartet and an awesome male falsetto.
4. Kid A - Radiohead
Paranoia reigns supreme with Radiohead! Also, good experimental rock music. These dudes are the innovators of rock. There's one truly ambient piece here, but the rest are mostly electronic/rock songs. They're the most accessible so far on this list.
5. Picaresque - The Decemberists
In order... a song about a child monarch, a double suicide by star-crossed lovers, the tragic death of a barrowboy, a song about a second-rate sports player, a love story about a secret agent and a government bureaucrat, a song about an old person waiting for a letter from their long lost love, an anti-war song, one about a novelist, child prostitutes, vengeful sailors in a whales belly and finally a plain old poetic song. All with big and archaic words and folk-rock instruments. Seriously good stuff if you're into that sort of thing.
6. The Runners Four - Deerhoof
Deerhoof! The best Deerhoof! An hour of it! They rock, rock and rock. Their drummer is awesome, their guitarists are awesome, even their high pitched Japanese singer is awesome (especially now that she can sing well)! Either you'll love Deerhoof or hate them.
7. If You're Feeling Sinister - Belle and Sebastian
Bluesy, folksy, rocksy songs. Sexuality, religion and love are covered here. The coolest thing about these songs is that they cover specific characters who are vividly drawn within a few minutes. "Judy and the Dream of Horses" is a definite favorite.
8. F# A# (infinity) - Godspeed You Black Emperor!
Pretentious, long songs that start slow, get fast, climax and then dissolve into ethereal sounding sounds, with rants and monologues put in for good measure. There are three songs on here, but that's still a good hour on the CD. A really good piece of music, if you ask me, but I wouldn't recommend it to most people.
9. The Lemon of Pink - The Books
I bought this on the title alone and I'm really glad I got it. The Lemon of Pink takes acoustic guitars, cello and "foundsound" which is basically voices from movies, TV, video games and wherever else they dug it up and mashes it together into really easy to like songs. As strange as it sounds, this is the kind of music I can relax to.
10. The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place - Explosions in the Sky
Guitar, guitar, bass and drums, all instrumental. More slow build ups to big climaxes. Instrumental music is tough for me to describe, it seems. They follow a pretty set pattern of the intro, build up, climax and rest but they do it so damn well!

So, that's the list of music I like! I think my descriptions petered out at the end. Ah well.

3 comments:

Tick-Tick said...

Nice list. It's a good idea. I should do something like that.

Anonymous said...

Never heard of a zanzithophone... I'll be Googling it in a minute. But a singing saw - that I know. I downloaded some saw tracks from www.SawLady.com/blog - you might like it, it's a blog of a saw playing subway performer.
OK, now I'm going to Google 'zanzithophone'...:)

Jennie

Jarne said...

Danke to Julia. I'd be interested to see what your list is like.
The zanzithophone was basically an electronic saxophone, if I'm remembering correctly. I don't think they're made anymore.

I've only ever come across or heard mentioned the singing saw in three places. One is Neutral Milk Hotel, the second was an opening band called Amiina (who used a glockenspiel or Xylophone mallet thingy to play it in addition to the normal way) and... a camp counselor I met apparently had a friend who made an entire CD of songs played on the singing saw. Or just the plain old saw, I can't remember which. I should track it down, actually.