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Spoon
Kill the Moonlight (Matador) - 45
If there is anything America still has to be proud of in its music scene it’s these guys from Austin. This is why rock’n’roll was made and still exists today. Stripping their sound and laying their magnificent production skills bare, Spoon turned in a thoughtfully arranged and stunningly composed rock record.
- Mark Skipper |
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Liars
They Threw Us All in a Trench and Stuck a Mountain on
Top reissue (Mute/Blast First) - 44
I’m not a huge fan of including reissues when
composing year-end lists, but the summer of ’02 really
belonged to the Liars (if you were riding around in my
van, that is). With a sound that rumbles like the New
York subway system beneath their feet, the Liars are the
type of band that not only start a party, but put an end
to it with one noisy, grinding, halt. - Ryan Allen |
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Wilco
Yankee Hotel Foxtrot (Nonesuch) - 36
The songs of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot showcase yet another move in an interesting new direction for Wilco
as they continue to push the boundaries of their genre by creating an album that is experimental yet very accessible and recommended for fans of The Beatles, Mercury Rev, Uncle Tupelo, and Jim O’Rourke.
- Lyle Hodges |
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And
You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead Source Tags
& Codes (Interscope) - 27
Major label money thrown at a band unwilling to disassociate their brains from their rock equals an instant classic.
- Mark Skipper |
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Notwist
Neon Golden (City Slang) - 24
Beautiful and amazingly intricate album of pre-ambient post-folk indie electrocoustica that I was really pulling hard for in the year-end poll. Similar to the also excellent Point by Cornelius, the German outfit Notwist combine baroque sentiments with bleeps, blips, strings and samples to create a complex piece of pop music that adheres to no boundaries.
- Eric J Herboth |
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Beck
Sea Change (Geffen) - 22
Sad Becky Beck makes a sad album of sad songs sung in a sad voice, that no matter how happy you might be, can manage to make you sad as hell. What might be truly sad, however, is not owning this brilliant recording of our generation’s most creative mind taking one for himself.
- Ryan Allen |
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The Walkmen
Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone (Startime
International) - 19
It's rare that an album challenges you to become a better listener. This year we were blessed with at least two - The Walkmen and Wilco. The Walkmen blend '60s garage rock with militant minimalism and one wicked-sounding piano on the way to creating a record that truly sounds like none of its peers. The best of the current crop of Brooklyn bands.
- Doug Hoepker |
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Bright Eyes -
Lifted or The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground
(Saddle Creek) - 19
This kid would be nothing more than a lyrically compelling but wholly average singer/songwriter if it weren’t for the support of the community of musicians and production team that surrounds him. Still the fact remains, he has them and other singer/songwriters don’t, therefore his record rises above
the rest. - Mark Skipper |
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Sigur Ros
() (Fat Cat) - 18
Artsy and pretentious pandering, perhaps, but somehow
it’s okay. Somehow it makes sense. Would it really
matter anyway, given that presumably the titles would be
written in Hopelandish, the nonsensical, made-up
language in which vocalist/guitarist Jonsi Thor
Birgisson sings in his waiflike manner, high above the
swirling e-bowed guitars and glacial paced brushed
snares? - Jonah Flicker |
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Pedro the Lion
Control (Jade Tree) - 18
Like a great novelist, Bazan exhibits great vision with Control,
from the developed storyline behind the concept to the
positioning if the key tracks. Control
plays out from beginning to end, with a strenuous
buildup, a satisfying climax, a few vicious last gasps,
and an exit. This album is an opus, and anyone who
doesn't sing Control's praises is either stupid
or just plain mean, and more than likely both. - Eric J
Herboth |
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Q And Not U
Different Damage (Dischord) - 18
Surviving a major member loss and one-upping your previous effort…priceless. |
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My Morning
Jacket / Songs:Ohia Split EP (Jade Tree) - 17
My Morning Jacket has finally mastered the art of production and written songs
that are more emotionally complex than ever before, while Jason Molina belts out his
best number. - Jonah Flicker. |
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Doves
Last Broadcast (Heavenly) - 17
Epic rock songs bathed in digital melodicism. It’s a testament to all that can be good about 21st century pop music.
- Mark Skipper |
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Clinic
Walking With Thee (Domino) - 15
Possibly the coolest rock and roll band to come out of
England in the past five years. The atmospheric
qualities of Ennio Moriccone; the trance-inducing
rhythms of Radiohead; the distorted organ of Suicide;
the psychedelic guitar tone of 13th Floor Elevators; the
ghostly, slightly detached vocals of Thom Yorke filtered
through a mumbly punk rock tic; a decidedly garage-rock
aesthetic; the subtleties of the Velvet Underground.
It's all here. - Doug Hoepker |
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Flaming Lips
Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots (Warner Bros.) - 15
While not as instantly great as their masterful “The Soft Bulletin,” the Flaming Lips keep on proving that there is a better life beyond one-hit-wonder land. Yoshimi can function on various levels, whether as the perfect soundtrack for a science project, or for the moments when one’s mortality is truly realized. Do you realize?
- Ryan Allen |
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Queens
of the Stone Age Songs For the Deaf (Interscope)
- 15
Queens of the Stone Age make their rest of the
stoner-rock crowd look like a bunch of blank-faced Cheech & Chongers holding a bong when the party is over.
This new album time-warps the band from the days of their sophomore release R into a new world of sensational offbeat chugga-chugga riffs and overt drug references.
Dave Grohl guests on drums. - Eric J Herboth |
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Sparta
Wiretap Scars (Dreamworks) - 14
From the beginning of Wiretap Scars, Sparta make
it clear that they aren't afraid to sound exactly how
they want to sound. There is no watered down punk to
claw through, just as Wiretap Scars is void of
any overly cheesy lines about love lost and broken
relationships. - Seth Fein |
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Aloha
Sugar (Polyvinyl) - 14
Ohio’s Aloha combine voice, guitar, vibraphone,
synthesizers, and varied percussion to establish a
sub-genre with attributes that could be applied to many
styles with good results. But Aloha didn’t just throw
in a vibraphone and claim to be the new thing –
they’ve shown it. Their sound is a jazzy mix that is
light, uplifting, and sometimes quite cathartic. - Lance
Birch |
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Godspeed You Black Emperor!
Yanqui UXO (Constellation) - 13
I think Yanqui UXO
is the best stuff they've done so far. The music seems set to some type of imagery such as
Koyaanisqatsi or something. It would definitely be cool to hear Godspeed to a movie soundtrack for an
IMAX film or something like that. I think the band's music alone creates its own imagery. Who would've thought instrumental music could pack such strong social commentary.
- Matt Bendett |
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Interpol
Turn on the Bright Lights (Matador) - 13
The thin white dukes of Interpol prove that a band can simultaneously make a deliciously dark, daring, and dangerously catchy record of early R.E.M. like mood-pop AND dress like runway models. This band not only gets it, but they get away with it too.
- Ryan Allen |
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Mountain Goats
Tallahassee (4AD) - 13
Darnielle pieces together a lurid portrait of a husband
and wife in constant battle (with each other, with
alcoholism, with the rest of the world) in Florida’s
savage, lush and bright capitol, the perfect location
for his characters even though he relates their story
not with harsh criticism but in a subtle and
understanding manner, while still portraying their
struggle with the violence and hatred of life which
results in an oddly suitable clash between style and
content. |