|
‘Shallow Grave’
by The Tallest Man on Earth
label: Gravitation Records
genre: folk
suitable for: saying goodbye to 2008
A
totally stirring album by this Swedish folk singer, “Shallow Grave” was
released earlier this year overseas but did not see wide release in the
United States. I wonder if that’s because The Tallest Man on Earth,
a.k.a. Kristian Matsson, plays American roots music better than any
American in recent memory. There’s plenty of pluck and twang on these
lo-fi recordings, making Matsson’s songs more Mississippi than
Scandinavia, but most of all there is a ton of soul. With a booming,
gravelly voice, Matsson rips through 10 tracks with grit and wisdom,
just like the best bluesmen, and ends up with some of the most
emotional music of the year.
This is one of the best albums I heard
this year. It has the feel of a contemporary indie-folk record (he
toured with Bon Iver earlier in the year) but nails the sound of the
old South without sounding archaic. Kind of stunning, actually. Limited
edition label Mexican Summer is issuing an LP version of “Grave” in
early 2009. Can’t wait.
Visit www.thetallestmanonearth.se.
‘The Breadwinner’
by Graham Lambkin and Jason Lescalleet
label: Erstwhile Records
genre: pots & pans
suitable for: fixing the boiler
Easily
one of my favorite albums of the year, “The Breadwinner” is either very
dull or very intense, depending on your perspective. This is pretty
much a recording of everyday sounds moving through open spaces, but
it’s the way in which these two draw out the beauty in those common
sounds that is so compelling. Like an inviting old chair, this record
just feels right. And I’d like to sit in it all day.
Graham
Lambkin (formerly of The Shadow Ring) and Maine-based sound artist
Jason Lescalleet recorded this over two days at Lambkin’s home in
upstate New York. Door hinges, spoons, snoring, creaky floorboards,
wind blowing through empty rooms—these are the instruments the two use,
recording each onto reel-to-reel and editing them into gorgeous
vignettes. “The Breadwinner” is a celebration of ordinary life, a
reminder of why we live the way we do even when it seems like the
repetition could drive us crazy. Is this meaningless background noise
or music? Why can’t it be both?
Visit www.erstwhilerecords.com/catalog/052.html.
‘Radioland’
by Stephan Mathieu
label: Die Schachtel
genre: a nice ride
suitable for: going to sleep before the ball drops
Stephan
Mathieu captures shortwave radio transmissions and melds them into
blissful drones for this disc, his follow-up to 2004’s computer music
masterpiece “The Sad Mac.” Mathieu is a master of drone and “Radioland”
is full of it. Tones transmit across the sound spectrum, tumbling into
each other until they form a soothing stream of sound so crisp and
clean, so expertly crafted that it’s actually easy to distinguish
Mathieu’s drones from his less skilled counterparts.
Although
it opens solidly, it’s actually after the so-called archangel suite
(“Raphael,” “Gabriel” and “Michael” are the first three tracks) that
“Radioland” turns the corner into greatness. Quiet and warm, the last
half of the record kills you with beautiful fuzz and shimmering
ambience before the whole thing fades out into dead air. On its second
limited edition pressing, “Radioland” is kind of hard to find, but
comes with artful packaging, the beauty of which rivals that of the
music inside.
Visit www.bitsteam.de.
some other memorable music from 2008
Hospital
Records put out two of the best albums of the year in quick succession,
Burning Star Core’s “Challenger” (LP version was released on Plastic
Records) and Kevin Drumm’s “Imperial Distortion.” “Challenger” is a
cosmic, hallucinatory, and sublime album that, by displaying some
serious composition skills, vaults Burning Star Core’s C. Spencer Yeh
to a new level. “Imperial Distortion” is a two-disc set of meditative
guitar drones by a master of the f’d up guitar.
One of my
favorite artists, Tim Hecker, collaborated with fellow Canadian Aidan
Baker, known for his work in ambient doom-metal band Nadja, on
“Fantasma Parastasie” (Alien8 Recordings). Ghostly piano notes, swells
of granular noise, distortion—pretty much classic Hecker. For those
playing on the Baker/Nadja team, this project did have a nice dose of
evil, with demons on the album art and the movements divided into 666
tracks across the CD. A good fix before Hecker’s next full-length, “An
Imaginary Country”—which, based on an early listen, could be some of
his best work ever—comes out on Kranky Records in March.
Not
exactly under the radar, but Bruce Springsteen put out “Magic,” his
best album since “Born In The U.S.A.,” and I also caught The Boss for
the first time at Gillette Stadium this summer. Pretty awesome show,
but a lot of drunks stumbling around—about 50,000 of them. And just in
case he’s reading, here’s a special thank you to Joe Accountant, who
was standing in front of me. Your pointer finger dance and sloppy
make-out sessions with your wife were a great addition to the evening.
I guess if you can’t cut loose at a Springsteen concert, where can you?
As
for the best album of the year, I’m not sure there was anything better
than Deerhunter’s “Microcastle/Weird Era Cont.” (reviewed in the last
UTR). It’s just totally brilliant psych-pop stretched over two albums
for the price of one, making it a smart choice in these tough economic
times.
Here’s to 2009, and let’s hope there’s plenty of great music to pull us through.
|