Procrastinators'
Gift Guide 2007
Bopping
Around the Holiday Shrub
EW's
music fiends on some of the year's best
Swift
Reads Cute,
weird, funny gift books
Not
Too Late for Toys A
last-minute tour of Eugene's non-toxic toy options
Bleeding
At the Holidays Giving
for exceptionally good reasons
Last Call Wine
advice for the final days of 2007
Bopping
Around the Holiday Shrub
EW's
music fiends on some of the year's best
Out with top 10 lists! In with … something
else. We're changing the format this year. EW's regular music
contributors were asked to write a few words about three to five
2007 releases that they hadn't had an opportunity to write about
over the course of the year, thus creating a list of cool stuff
we didn't already tell you was cool. The resulting list looks like
a wishlist: Dear bands, please come to Eugene next year! But we're
offering it up as a shopping list instead. There probably isn't
something here for everyone (for more options, check Brett Campbell's
column on page 33), but we remain confident that every record on
this list deserves a listen or two. Or three. Or maybe 12. Seriously.
LILY ALLEN Alright, Still (Capitol)
I still wonder whether I would have loved Lily Allen
as much if I hadn't first heard her while watching the video for
"Smile," in which a saucy Lily gets revenge on a cheating boyfriend.
I like to think, though, that her combination of infectious songwriting,
attitude and heart would have made me fall for her Alright, Still
regardless. Songs about her little brother being too stoned, her
grandma being too old, boys being too stupid and London being, well,
London? All with a perfect balance of brightness and bitching? Awesome.
— MT
ARCADE FIRE Neon Bible (Merge)
If Funeral was their cry in the night, Neon
Bible is Arcade Fire's awakening to a new dawn. Apocalypse has
passed; the angels have risen. The demons are Biblethumping on street
corners, and the band finds their footing in the dark spaces of
anthemic salvation. Halfway through Bible, "Ocean of Noise"
twists a chord of such crippling beauty, its plea is only hopeful
to the overly optimistic: "This time we'll work it out." —
CA
BAND OF HORSES Cease
to Begin (Sub Pop)
As driving atmospheric guitars make room for the
Carolina twang of Ben Bridwell's vocals, pushing "Cigarettes Wedding
Bands" to its zenith, it becomes clear why Band of Horses' Cease
to Begin has shown up on Best of 2007 lists everywhere. Combining
steady alt/rock with country-accented leanings, the gang doesn't
travel far from last year's Everything All the Time. But
I don't think anyone is too concerned when there's a single like
"Is There a Ghost" out there. — ZK
Some reviewer questioned whether you'd have to be
as stoned as Band of Horses sound to truly appeciate "Is There a
Ghost," a song with an endless build and very few lyrics. The answer?
No. Just close your eyes and let those eerie vocals carry you away,
and float through the rest of the record as you would through a
warm summer lake. Thoroughly buoyant, with a ripple of cold at the
core, Band of Horses' second album is as irresistable as the first
(though sure, that's partly 'cause they didn't tweak their winning
formula much). — MT
DR. DOG We
All Belong (Park the Van)
Listening to this Philadelphia fivesome is like
finding that perfectly faded T-shirt at Goodwill on a lazy summer
day. Their loose, lo-fi pop has all the familiar, raggedy charm
of a secondhand shop without the thrift-store film left on your
hands. Instead, they leave you humming their infectious Beach Boys-meet-the
Muppet band hooks and harmonies for days. On their sophomore release,
Dr. Dog sound like they're having the greatest time making music.
And you'll have an even better time listening. — JO
Broken Social Scene presents KEVIN DREW
Spirit If... (Arts & Crafts)
Kevin Drew has described his "solo" effort as a
"What if?" album, where questions of potential are probed but not
necessarily pushed to such incohesive splendor as on that last Broken
Social Scene record. Less jammy with more tuneful, stronger vocals,
Spirit If… sneaks under your fingernails and, on repeat
listens, grows you a golden beard of fuzzy Canadian warmth. The
sleeper track, "Bodhi Sappy Weekend," is quintessential Drew, with
BSS backup all the way. — CA
FIELD MUSIC Tones
of Town (Memphis Industries)
When a band makes a significant splash with its
debut album, as Field Music did in 2005, the follow-up often drowns
in comparisons. But the second record from this Sunderland, England,
trio simply got lost at sea, which is a damn shame. Tones of
Town is brimming with effortlessly smart and catchy moments,
and, with a tip of the hat to herky-jerky early XTC, Field Music
quietly made one of the best pop albums of the year. — JO
FIERY FURNACES Window
City (Thrill Jockey)
The world of Matt and Eleanor Friedberger is like
a play acted on a set designed by M.C. Escher. Albums span generations
and continents, single vocalists carry on epic three-way conversations,
characters appear as fresh, radiant hopefuls and reappear moments
later as aged, embittered malcontents. Like spoken-word dream sequences,
the songs on Window City can at once be taken as literal
and impressionistic experiences, encapsulating both the mind-boggling
word play and layered musical minimalism that this brother-sister
"garage rock" duo has made their signature sound. — AV
FREEWAY Free
at Last (G-Unit/Roc-a-Fella/Def Jam)
On "It's Over," Freeway spits, "Things just ain't
the same for gangstas but I don't give a fuck / I'm back without
a Jus track." It's true Jus Blaze is a ghost on Free at Last,
but Freeway doesn't care and neither should you. Free's street-worn
rasp and cast of lesser-known producers power the soul samples and
boisterous orchestral brass loops, making the album as catchy as
a cold in winter. As DJ Khaled says — listennnn. — ZK
GRINDERMAN Grinderman
(Anti-)
Nick Cave has always come across as the patron saint
of dark impulses, and this brooding behemoth of an album is his
official canonization. Grinderman is a snarling, sinister
set of songs that gets back to the singer's damaged punk roots.
With half of the Bad Seeds backing him, Cave gnashes his teeth on
his favorite themes — love, death and violence — but
this time it feels even dirtier and more disquieting than normal.
This is rock and roll for your sinful side. — JO
EMILY HAINES AND THE SOFT SKELETON
Knives Don't Have Your Back (Last Gang)
The crackly-voiced Haines is probably better known
as the singer for Metric, whose wry, electro-rock Live It Out
also got a lot of time in my CD player this year. But her solo album
is something else: subdued, reflective, delicate and fragile. "I
only wanted what everyone wanted since bras started burning up ribs
in the '60s," Haines sings plaintively on "The Lottery," while on
"The Maid Needs a Maid," she notes, dryly, "Bros before hos / Is
a rule; read the guidelines." Her lyrics are often like a journal
that's missing pages, emotional but obscured, evocative though you're
not sure exactly what they're evoking, nostalgic but aware that
nostalgia isn't getting anybody anywhere. — MT
HIGH ON FIRE Death
Is This Communion (Relapse)
Harkening back to old school metal with great riffs
and hooks, "Rumors of War" is one of the best pieces of thrash metal
that's been recorded since the 1980s. High on Fire are the three
horsemen of the apocalypse, and this CD provides the tribal-influenced
soundtrack. — VS
JESU Conqueror
and Lifeline (Hydra Head)
The godfather of grind (Napalm Death) and industrial
(Godflesh) has enough street cred to do anything he wants. He's
chosen the path of crushing weight and sweeping beauty. —
VS
LES SAVY FAV Let's
Stay Friends (French Kiss)
Let's Stay Friends, the first all-new release
in nearly six years from Brooklyn stalwarts Les Savy Fav, begins
with the rather self-mocking lines, "There was a band / Called the
Pots and Pans / They made this noise / That people couldn't stand."
But this is music to fill a void for those of use who still love
our late-'90s/early-aughts indie/postpunk/college/whatever rock:
rich, raucous, jaunty, layered, danceable, angular, energetic, full
of piercing guitar lines and the occasional bit of electro-pop.
LSF hasn't messed much with what works for them, but they've managed
to make it sound new all the same. "Back before Babylon, shit was
cool," Harrington says accusingly on the mood-swinging "Patty Lee."
But this shit still is cool. — MT
M.I.A. Kala
(Interscope)
Like previous M.I.A. concoctions, Kala contains
tracks that are at once jarring and appealing, catchy and off-putting,
raw and sophisticated in the extreme. Every ounce an artist (visual
as well as musical), this Sri Lankan globetrotter collaborated with
producers all over the world (including golden boy Timbaland) to
craft her art-hop, dance hall, politics-and-poetry infused mosaic
of percussion and genius sampling. Maybe not love at first listen,
but give yourself a chance to acquire a taste for M.I.A. and you
won't be sorry. — AV
NEUROSIS Given
to the Rising (Neurot)
The best from the Bay Area bonecrushers since 1999's
Times of Grace. "Hidden Faces" and "Water Is Not Enough"
may be the heaviest songs of the year. When Scott Kelly screams
"Feeders seething, woe is them," I have no idea what the fuck he
means, but I like it, and I want to sing along. — VS
OF MONTREAL Hissing
Fauna, Are You The Destroyer? (Polyvinyl)
The year has been fraught with breakups galore.
On all sides, formerly stable tenements (including my own) have
collapsed of their own weight. Through it all, Hissing Fauna
has been a primal scream, a salve, a way to simply cope. Upon hearing
Kevin Barnes (who wrote the entire album) whine "I need help, c'mon
mood shift shift back to good again," suddenly it feels as if breaking
up is, dare I say, a creative boon. — CA
OM Pilgrimage
(Southern Lord)
Continuing in the same musical direction as the
last two Om CDs, this one has more dynamic variation yet retains
the metaphysical lyrics and trance-inducing melodies. — VS
PETER BJORN AND JOHN
Writer's Block (Almost Gold)
This release from Peter Morén, Björn Yttling
and John Eriksson is a testament to the creative indie/rock constructions
imported from overseas and introduced to this nation's scenesters.
The first single, "Young Folks," is a modern pop duet that reflects
the dealings of requited love between Morén and Victoria Bergsman
while wrapped in subtle melancholic tones. Throughout the album,
the simple lyrical assemblies become a perfect foil to the lo-fi
and often up-beat instrumentation. — ZK
SHOUT OUT LOUDS
Our Ill Wills (Merge)
When the Shout Out Louds missed their WOW Hall billing
last October due to motor vehicle breakdown, we all missed out.
The bad news is Sweden is a long way from Oregon. The good news
is Our Ill Wills will keep us comforted through the dark,
dreary winter (as any Scandinavian recording should). One sip of
"Impossible" and you're hooked. Sure, Adam Olenius' vocals sound
like Robert Smith incarnate, but that's unfailingly a good thing,
no? — CA
SPOON Ga
Ga Ga Ga Ga (Merge)
Spoon frontman Britt Daniel may have sat on my sweater
at a cocktail party in Portland last June, but that didn't influence
my choosing them for this list. Spoon has been a workhorse
throughout this year's tour circuit, appearing at literally every
major festival, on every latenight talk show, in the pages of The
New Yorker (and every other music rag). Luckily (for overexposure's
sake), Ga Ga is one of their best yet. — CA
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
Magic (Columbia)
While other songwriters of The Boss' generation
threaten to sink into the shameful mire of "adult contemporary,"
albums like Magic can restore a music lover's faith in the
greats. Catchy hits like "Radio Nowhere" remind us of why Springsteen
has remained swoon-worthy since he first rolled up the sleeves of
his white T-shirt in the '70s while jammin' ballads like "Last to
Die" and "Long Walk Home" remind us why we should never turn our
backs on an artist who has managed to capture the rock 'n' roll
essence of American life successfully for decades while never neglecting
the quiet agony that lies beneath. — AV
ROCKY VOTOLATO The
Brag and Cuss (Barsuk)
The Brag and Cuss is the 2007 release from
Rocky Votolato — who by all rights should be heir to the sorta-alt-country-but-sorta-not
throne, were there such a thing — but I fell in love with
his songs this year on account of something older: the title track
from 2003's Suicide Medicine, an emotional throat-ripper
of a song that really tore Votolato's throat out at a homecoming
show in Seattle last April. It was raw and bare and stark and dark,
and with it Votolato leapt into both my current rotation and my
list of favorite singer-songwriters. This album, last year's Makers;
just pick one — they're all worth a try. — MT
CD
picks chosen and written by Chuck Adams, Zach Klassen, Jeremy Ohmes,
Vanessa Salvia, Molly Templeton and Adrienne van der Valk
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