2012 Albums of the Year (#20-1)

Here it is — the list of my 20 favorite albums of 2012. Please keep in mind that my opinions regarding these records are just that — opinions. That said, I hope you enjoy my choices and my writing. If you haven’t seen it yet, be sure to read over the first part of this list, featuring my #50-21 favorite albums of the year. Also, you can keep up with all of my year end lists for 2012 HERE or at the “2012 Lists” tag. Check back here tomorrow for the list of my Top 25 Favorite Songs of the Year!
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20. The Human Fly - Everything Feels Bad All At Once
Experimental Folk

Original review HERE
The Human Fly came into being much like many solo projects. After moving to Virginia for college, Connecticut native Robert Mathis formed a band, they broke up, and he got sad. But Everything Feels Bad All At Once, the debut record from Mathis’ first post-Chest Piece project, is not your ordinary solo album from a prominent member of a now defunct band. Working with a singular concept and extremely minimal means — a laptop microphone, an acoustic guitar, and other instruments when he could find them — Mathis embraced his solitude in the creation of this humble but overwhelmingly depressing album. Because of its humble origins and its rather miserable lyrical content, this is the kind of album that you want to root for. Thankfully for Mathis, enough people seem to have picked up on this as well. Next year, he will be working with Enemies List Home Recordings, the Connecticut label run by Giles Corey/Have A Nice Life mastermind Dan Barrett. The two are definitely kindred spirits, and I wish them both the best in the coming year.
19. Hostage Calm - Please Remain Calm
Pop Punk, Power Pop

The boundlessly ambitious Connecticut punk group Hostage Calm set out to write “the punk album of the Great Recession” with Please Remain Calm, their third and best album by a country mile. This is politically motivated power pop rooted in the struggles of the modern post-adolescent, something like The Clash for American millenials. That said, you will find no indictments of the neo-yuppie ruling class on here, nor will you find aggro, anti-Republican lyrical rants in frontman Chris Martin’s lyrics (although the band’s twitter feed has plenty of those). In fact, Please Remain Calm succeeds precisely because of its lack of ideological directness. It expresses its thesis through appeals to emotion — personal vignettes that detail the uncertainty of everyday life under the circumstances of economic stress and political turmoil. As wars rage on in foreign lands, we continue to struggle on our own, and life can be really confusing from a globally-aware perspective. Hostage Calm knows that better than anybody, and they’re more than capable of spreading that knowledge on Please Remain Calm.
18. Teen Suicide - I Will Be My Own Hell Because There Is A Devil Inside My Body
Noise Pop, Emo

Original review HERE
In contrast to the previous entry on this list, Maryland’s Teen Suicide have no political motivations. In fact, it seems like they have no real motivations of any sort. They didn’t even have the motivation to remain together only four months after releasing their nihilist-punk masterpiece I Will Be My Own Hell Because There Is A Devil Inside My Body in September. What they do (or, perhaps, what they did) have is energy — a raw, unstable current that surges through these 25 brief minutes like a live wire of angst and self-hate. The band does take time to wind down and reflect on tracks like the somber “Cop Graveyard” and the piano-led Sam Ray solo cut “Grim Reaper,” but for the most part, I Will Be My Own Hell… is defined by searing guitars and strings, crushed out drums, and achingly desperate vocal moans that all but transcend the tape-tracked limitations of the production. Perhaps it’s appropriate that the band announced plans to break up so shortly after the record’s release. These songs are like an exorcism; the devil is gone, and I Will Be My Own Hell… is all that remains.
17. Cat Power - Sun
Electronic, Indie Pop

Chan Marshall has had a rough time over the past fifteen or so years. Every one of her albums as Cat Power since 1996’s What Would The Community Think has made me cry on separate occasions, largely because I can somehow tell that she was crying a lot during the writing and recording process of each one. By contrast to any of her other records, 2012’s Sun is Marshall’s long deserved vindication — a brilliantly self-aware LP that not only invalidates any and all criticisms about her character on a lyrical level, but also transcends any cliched notions of her musicianship and aesthetic tendencies. She is, appropriately, her own harshest critic, but Sun projects a kind of constructive self-deprecation that suggests that the new Chan has much more to offer the world than her previous depressing ruminations may have indicated. It’s also very ambitious on a musical level, mixing Marshall’s distinctly soulful voice with synthetic drums, bright keys, and plenty of multi-tracked, vocal-filtered bliss.
16. The Mountain Goats - Transcendental Youth
Contemporary Folk, Indie Rock

The Mountain Goats are the sturdiest band in independent music, consistently delivering album after album of good songs, great lyrics, and occasional conceptual brilliance. Transcendental Youth is their best LP since 2008’s Heretic Pride, and it aligns with that record on a conceptual level as well. This is an album about kids growing up, breaking hearts, getting hurt, and ultimately struggling to postpone the inevitability of death. “Just stay alive,” frontman John Darnielle sings at numerous points throughout the record. Old time fans might miss Darnielle’s willingness to holler and shout, but will appreciate the lyrical coherence and references to past characters (All Hail West Texas’ “Jenny” makes an appearance in the album standout “Night Light”). On a musical level, Transcendental Youth is simply the most adventurous album Darnielle has put out since he made the switch to a full band style with 2002’s Tallahassee. Electronic inflections blend with Jon Wurster’s sturdy drums and a full horn section blares skyward throughout the record, willing the record’s post-adolescent characters to fulfill the implications of the album’s title.
15. Dirty Projectors - Swing Lo Magellan
Psychedelic Pop, Experimental Folk

Just about the last move you could have expected Dirty Projectors to make after 2009’s Bitte Orca was to slow things down. In the past, the Brooklyn band has been wildly and uncompromisingly experimental, channeling African pop melodies, dynamic polyrhythms, and David Longstreth’s savagely amelodic howl through a series of bizarre conceptual lenses. Their new LP Swing Lo Magellan still bears some of the hallmarks of older Dirty Projectors albums, such as the distorted guitar leads on the skronked-out opener “Offspring Are Blank” and the eerily precise 3-part vocal harmonies. For the most part, however, Magellan is decidedly more low-key. Gentle pianos plink on the title track, while Longstreth and guitarist/girlfriend Amber Coffman trade off cutesy, romantic rhymes on the love song “Impregnable Question.” On tracks like the stuttering “About To Die” and standout lead single “Gun Has No Trigger,” there is still a kind of manic energy present, but it’s hemmed in and restrained by the simpler instrumentation and arrangements. To me, those tracks are all the more powerful because of it.
14. Elvis Depressedly - Mickey’s Dead
Indie Pop, Twee Pop

After abandoning his Coma Cinema moniker for the time being, South Carolina singer/songwriter Mat Cothran brought a renewed focus to his Elvis Depressedly project this year, dropping two releases under that moniker. Mickey’s Dead is something like the quieter, younger brother of Coma Cinema’s last LP Blue Suicide, and although it lacks the scope of that record, it actually benefits a lot from its intimate, homespun aesthetic. Mickey’s Dead feels something like twee pop’s response to Elliott Smith. It’s got miserable, occasionally very blunt lyrics (“this world is a torturer, nature gets off on pain”), and hushed, multi-tracked vocals overlaid upon instrumentation that ranges from cheap drum machines to strings and toy pianos, power pop electric guitars to somber acoustic plucking. For an album that only clocks in at just over 20 minutes, it’s remarkably diverse from a musical perspective, and surprisingly coherent from a lyrical one. For Cothran, it seems, sweeping ambition is not his prerogative. Concision, clarity, and compactness achieve great things from meager means on Mickey’s Dead.
13. Sharon Van Etten - Tramp
Indie Folk, Indie Rock

Original review HERE
As someone who’s followed Brooklyn singer/songwriter Sharon Van Etten for years, I really do want to root for her with each successive album. Tramp is her latest and, from a certain perspective, best full length album. It’s certainly her fullest full length, comprising 46 minutes of often edgy, mostly full-band material. With production from Aaron Dessner and guest vocal/instrumental parts from Wye Oak’s Jenn Wasner, Beirut’s Zach Condon, The Walkmen’s Matt Barrick and more, Tramp swirls tornado-like around Van Etten herself, who occasionally struggles to find singularity within the chaos. That struggle makes Tramp all the more evocative though; as a listener, one can actually hear Van Etten maturing and learning to assert herself, which is also a central theme of the album’s lyrics. From the female perspective, there was no singer/songwriter record more ambitious or more sweeping in scope. Although Van Etten never completely actualizes that ambition by the end, her remarkable effort makes Tramp’s occasional flaws forgivable.
12. Burial - Kindred
Electronic, Dubstep

UK producer William Bevan — aka Burial — is a ghostly, formerly anonymous godfather of British dubstep, but his two-step beats and moody bass rumblings have little in common with the maximalist thump that many typically consider dubstep. His new EP Kindred, one of two records that he released in 2012, is his best release yet, featuring a condensed, updated version of the grayscale urban soundscapes that he introduced the world to with his self-titled LP and 2007 followup Untrue. With just three songs in around 30 minutes, Kindred is never overbearing or tiresome, but it’s just long enough to allow the listener to warily enter its lonely, late night world.
11. Frank Ocean - channel ORANGE
R&B, Electronic, Soul

No year in music is ever entirely predictable, but I never would have guessed that Odd Future’s lonely, fatherly crooner Frank Ocean would be this year’s biggest breakout star. In retrospect, however, it makes sense. Ocean, for all his solemn twitter introspection and psychedelic style sense, was always the most level-headed member of his ragtag collective, to the point that it seemed as though he wasn’t really a member of OFWGKTA at all. His new full length channel ORANGE doesn’t eschew connections to Odd Future, given that it features a guest spot from Earl Sweatshirt (on “Super Rich Kids”) and production from Tyler, The Creator on one track, but it certainly doesn’t encourage those connections either. Channel Orange is a bonafide solo album at heart, and despite its gorgeously layered pop soul production, hugely ambitious arrangements on tracks like “Pyramids,” and major label budget, the focus is perpetually on the immensely talented Frank Ocean throughout. Much ink has been spilt regarding the circumstances of this album’s release and certain conceptual themes behind it, but I actually maintain that even without the context of Ocean’s now famous letter, channel ORANGE would still be just as great. Albums this good can simply stand on their own.
10. Converge - All We Love We Leave Behind
Post-Hardcore, Metalcore

All We Love We Leave Behind is the eighth LP from Massachusetts hardcore legends Converge, and it shows. No, this is not some phoned-in, tepid rehash of the tried and true aesthetic of their earliest records. Rather, this album sounds the way you wish more legendary punk groups would continue to sound — adventurous, forward-thinking, but anchored and empowered by the experiential conviction that 20+ years of making music provides. From a group that has always been on the cutting edge of post-hardcore, All We Love We Leave Behind is envelope-pushing even by their standards. Incorporating the scorched-earth, emotional extremity of recent Deathwish, Inc. acts like Touche Amore with Jacob Bannon’s distinctively harsh vocals and their collectively honed musicianship, Converge demonstrate on this album that perhaps it’s better to age ungracefully. On this LP, they do so in the absolute best way possible.
9. Sidewalk Dave - Hard On Romance
Garage Rock, Indie Rock

Original review HERE
The CD version of Sidewalk Dave’s new album Hard On Romance comes with an insert that includes a brief analytical essay regarding the album’s (painfully obvious) concept, along with a set of nude photos of Dave Van Witt himself holding a sparkling Danelectro guitar with photoshopped honey bees covering up his exposed genitals. In a way, that alone merits the record’s place on this list simply for making the Hard On Romance CD the most ridiculous piece of physical music that I owned this year. I almost wish the music was terrible, just so that I could file this away as 2012’s strangest, most anomalous release. Unfortunately, this album is completely brilliant. Dave channels the aggressive, sexual energy of garage rock through a philosopher’s lens, demanding physical fulfillment in one moment and questioning the morality of his sexual pursuits the next. This physical/mental conflict results in Dave’s best, most complicated songwriting yet; “Happiness Is An Art: We Must Learn While We’re Apart” drones on in confused sadness, while “Wait Forever” throbs and clanks, perfectly conveying frustration through its distorted guitar thump.
8. Sun Kil Moon - Among The Leaves
Contemporary Folk, Slowcore

Original review HERE
Few singer/songwriters are in the position that Sun Kil Moon mastermind Mark Kozelek is in. At 45, Kozelek has just enough diehard supporters to fund his near-constant touring, but few enough young people who give a shit such that he is actually forced to tour constantly. It must be frustrating to be him, especially given his rumored short temper and penchant for perfectionism. Unlike everything else that he’s released within the past decade, his new LP Among The Leaves is a deeply flawed, largely inconsistent record, riddled with technical imperfections throughout its rather taxing 1 hour 17 minute length. It’s also the best, and by far the most human album he’s put out since at least 2003’s Ghosts of the Great Highway. By this point, Kozelek has earned his right to be jaded, and he expresses his frustration with surprising comedic brilliance on tracks like “Sunshine In Chicago” and “Track Number 8.” He almost always comes across like an asshole, detailing numerous pathetic hookups and fuckups throughout his storied career on the road, but he does so with notable self-awareness. It’s almost as if he feels bad. Either way, this is a side of Mark Kozelek that we have never seen before, and because of that newfound openness, Among The Leaves succeeds tremendously.
7. Perfume Genius - Put Your Back N 2 It
Chamber Folk, Slowcore, Electronic

Original review HERE
Mike Hadreas raised the stakes on Put Your Back N 2 It, the second album under his Perfume Genius moniker, increasing production values tremendously, crafting arrangements with much more diverse instrumentation, and refining his lyrical focus more onto himself. Longtime readers of this blog may remember that his debut LP Learning was my second favorite album of 2010, and although Put Your Back N 2 It doesn’t break my heart as forcefully or as immediately as that album did, the notable improvements from a technical standpoint, plus a set of solid songs, merit this album’s place on my list. In the past, Perfume Genius sounded thoroughly wounded, cracked open, and left for dead. Here, there are certainly moments of similar vulnerability and desperation, but there are also some impressive indications of newfound confidence on this record, such as the demanding piano thumper “Take Me Home” and the somber, synth-led empowerment anthem “All Waters.” In the future, it will be interesting to see how Hadreas accepts his new popularity and position of power, and whether he plays to his strengths as a tearjerker or continues to strengthen his conviction.
6. Kendrick Lamar - good kid, m.A.A.d city
Hip-Hop

Honestly, I’m so happy that Kendrick Lamar is in the position he’s in right now. I liked Section.80 a fair bit last year, but I really wished he would learn to balance his Profound Statements About Racial/Economic/Social issues with some lightheartedness and maybe even some fun. Section.80 was too uncompromisingly conscious for me, but I knew that Kendrick was onto something great there. Then good kid, m.A.A.d city came along, and with it, all of my wildest expectations were surpassed. This album is so powerful — so perfectly expressive of modern oppression and struggle — precisely because it’s so personal and real. At its core, this is an album about Kendrick’s life and Kendrick’s world; any broader, transcendent statements that good kid, m.A.A.d city makes come from that world, because Kendrick lived it. It’s honest and real and heavy and evocative. It’s party music and it’s also socially conscious rap. It’s got the best, most hi-fi beats and production of anything that was released this year, hip-hop or otherwise. Best of all, it’s got Kendrick Lamar, 2012’s most talented, most dexterous rapper, who can sell a song about being a horny 17-year old with as much grace, candor, and lyrical proficiency as he can sell a 12-minute album centerpiece about life in Compton, told from the conflating perspectives of a brother, a friend, a dead prostitute, and himself. Yeah, this guy is talented.
5. The Act of Estimating As Worthless - Amongst These Splintered Minds//Leaden Thoughts Sing Softly
Chamber Folk, Indie Folk

Original review HERE
Remember the movie Once? It’s a tale of two creative people who come together under unusual circumstances and end up falling in love and producing beautiful folk music together filled with gorgeous harmonies. I don’t know how Matthew Van Asselt and Zoe Grant met each other, nor do I have any idea whether they’re romantically involved, but they definitely have the beautiful music part covered. The Act of Estimating As Worthless delivered a staggeringly beautiful chamber folk album from humble origins this year, recording and producing it in the SUNY Purchase music studios in which so much great music from this year came to be. Amongst These Splintered Minds//Leaden Thoughts Sing Softly may be among the more obnoxious album titles this year, but the music within makes up for it. These songs are lush, beautifully produced, and achingly nostalgic, calling to mind the innocence, whimsy, and overwhelming wonder of childhood through Van Asselt and Grant’s warmly intertwining voices. It’s a vision of the childhood that you wish you remembered, staring into the night sky and crying at the beauty of the stars.
4. Serengeti - C. A. R.
Experimental Hip-Hop

Original review HERE
When it comes to my favorite hip-hop albums of 2012, Kendrick Lamar may take the cake with respect to ambition, expectation-fulfillment, and self-actualized, singular brilliance. But in terms of originality, a quality so eternally vital to great hip-hop, I have to give the award to the underdog. Chicago rapper Serengeti has been kicking it on the indie rap circuit for a decade, constantly bending traditional rap tropes in his continuous pursuit of an original product. C. A. R. is the validation of all that work, featuring the perfect combination of Odd Nosdam/Jel beats, great hooks and flow, and Geti’s depressing but evocative vignette portraits of American life. Unlike Lamar, David Cohn is making no attempts at political grandstanding or transcendental statements, nor does he offer much insight into his own mind and life the way that Kendrick does, save for the humorous highlight “Geti Life.” Instead, working like hip-hop’s response to The Mountain Goats, Cohn portrays society from the perspective of a series of unique characters — a jaded couple of married hipsters, a prepubescent Peeping Tom, a crack-addicted uncle, and more — who, when taken in together, say something much more profound and open to interpretation than any other record from 2012, in hip-hop or otherwise.
3. Waxahatchee - American Weekend
Contemporary Folk

Original review HERE
Every year, something like this album ends up around this place in the list. Last year it was House of Wolves‘ Fold In The Wind. The year before that, it was Perfume Genius’ Learning. I can’t help but love miserable, exceptionally lo-fi folk music, and I’m so happy that every year seems to deliver a record of this style that breaks my heart harder than the last. American Weekend, the debut full length from former P.S. Eliot frontwoman Katie Crutchfield (aka Waxahatchee), is sadder than any breakup album and more romantic than any love song. It is a broken heart that is growing increasingly tired of the world telling it to cheer up. It is a story about two people who find themselves alone together, happy for the first time in forever, until they realize that despite being together, they are still individually alone. Except it isn’t just a story — it’s Katie Crutchfield’s life, and it’s the saddest, most accurate musical self-portrait you’ll listen to this year. Ultimately, American Weekend is an album about the failure to transcend individuality, one muted guitar strum and cracked falsetto vocal at a time. Sadder still, it seems as if Crutchfield is convinced that the worst is yet to come. “Someone will hurt me so bad one day,” she sings on the album highlight “Bathtub,” as if to prophesy the next Waxahatchee LP. For my sake and hers, let’s hope she’s wrong; I don’t think I could handle an album sadder than this.
2. Japandroids - Celebration Rock
Garage Punk, Indie Rock

Original review HERE
Contrary to what some blogs and major music publications will tell you, Celebration Rock isn’t the saving grace for rock music. Rock music doesn’t need to be saved, precisely because albums like this will, for the foreseeable future, always exist. Japandroids are this year’s Nirvana, and this is their Nevermind. They are 2012’s Replacements, and this is their Let It Be. They are The Rolling Stones and The Clash and the Pixies and The Strokes and Green Day and Titus Andronicus and every other rock band that you know you love because they understood at some point that great music can be made with little more than distorted guitar, heavy drums, and a beating heart. This isn’t about irony. It’s not about what’s cool or relevant or bloggable. It’s about what means something, and no album made me feel that indefinable, vague, but incredibly powerful something more than Celebration Rock this year. Its appeal may have faded the smallest amount as the initial shock of Brian King and David Prowse’s pummeling drums, huge guitars, and incessant “Oh yeah!”s subsided, but the lifeblood of Celebration Rock remains thick months later. Familiar and unoriginal though it may be, I will always retain a connection this album. I laughed, I cried, I moshed, and I screamed along — alone, and with hundreds of other fans — to Japandroids with greater intensity than any other artist or band this year, and I’ll never forget those experiences.
1. Jens Lekman - I Know What Love Isn’t
Indie Pop, Chamber Pop

Original review HERE
Of course, from the moment I found out that he was putting out a record this year, it was always going to be Jens Lekman. The Swedish singer/songwriter stole my heart with Night Falls On Kortedala, but he blew my mind with I Know What Love Isn’t, the near-perfect followup that manages to improve on nearly every aspect of that 2007 record’s brilliance. Like Dirty Projectors did with Swing Lo Magellan, he achieves this marked improvement by actually scaling things back on the instrumental side, trading in heavy electronics, a full horn section, and an orchestra for a much simpler chamber pop aesthetic. Drawing from flamenco music on “Erica America,” American country on “I Want A Pair of Cowboy Boots,” and disco on “The World Moves On,” I Know What Love Isn’t is just as musically ambitious and stylistically diverse as anything in Lekman’s ouvre, but more intimate, personal, and more conservatively arranged and produced. This instrumental backdrop allows Lekman to speak as plainly as ever, divulging tales of love lost and hearts left lonely and confused, all set against the exotic background of Melbourne, Australia, where Lekman wrote and recorded the LP.
As a lyricist, Lekman’s strengths lie not just in sweeping statements (although this record has many of those), but in the smaller moments — the individual lines and images that make I Know What Love Isn’t a personal and human album. I’ll never forget hearing the line in “Erica America” about “the air [smelling] like popcorn and ladies perfume” and wondering how anybody but a non-native English speaker could come up with something so simply evocative. So too will I remember almost breaking down in tears after first hearing the final verse of the title track, in which Lekman sings from the perspective of a strictly platonic best friend about how she hates going to shows because “they’re always packed with men spooning their girlfriends, clutching their hands, as if they’d let go, their feet would lift from the ground and ascend.” As someone who really, truly doesn’t know what love is, I can say that Lekman at least has a better grasp than I do. Wow.
Typically, the “Best Album of the Year” title comes with an implication of transcendental significance, and although Lekman certainly has a lot to say about life and love on I Know What Love Isn’t, he actually strives (and succeeds) to prove that love ISN’T “the end of the world” on this album. It’s a remarkable admission for him to be making, especially as someone who one sang in complete earnestness, “I would cut off my right arm to be someone’s lover.” I Know What Love Isn’t is by no means a lighthearted album, but it is an album about successful acceptance. Sometimes, Lekman suggests, the only way to move on in life after love is to abandon everything else. After all, “You don’t get over a broken heart,” he asserts on “The World Moves On.” “You just learn to carry it gracefully.”
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Thanks for reading this list and supporting Lewis and his Blog! In the replies, let me know what you think of this list. What were your favorite albums of 2012? What is my list missing? Let me know!
Left of the Dial Radio Playlist - 11/16/12

Thanks for tuning in to another broadcast of my radio show last night on WNHU. The full playlist is below, including a few pretty stellar requests. Thanks everybody! As a head’s up, I won’t be doing my radio show next week. Like about 2/3 of Connecticut, I’ll be seeing Bomb The Music Industry! in New Haven on their final tour. If you’re in the area, you should come.
Left of The Dial will be back the following week on November 30th. Until then, enjoy this playlist and stream it via Spotify at the embedded link at the bottom of this post.
- 1. Townes Van Zandt - “Be Here To Love Me”
- 2. A.C. Newman - “I’m Not Talking”
- 3. WHY? - “Sanddollars”
- 4. Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti - “Mature Themes”
- 5. Dirty Projectors - “Simple Request”
- 6. Sharon Van Etten - “Give Out” (Requested by oceanofantics)
- 7. Mac Demarco - “Ode To Viceroy”
- 8. Great Caesar - “Rearview”
- 9. Jeff Rosenstock - “Twinkle”
- 10. The Babies - “Moonlight Mile”
- 11. The Human Fly - “Moth” (Everything II version) (Requested by playingmakeupwearingguitar)
- 12. Sufjan Stevens - “Carol of St. Benjamin The Bearded One”
- 13. Sam Cooke - “Nobody Knows The Trouble I’ve Seen”
- 14. Eels - “P.S. You Rock My World”
- 15. Tom Waits - “Ol’ 55”
- 16. Madlib - “Slim’s Return”
- 17. Crystal Castles - “Violent Youth”
- 18. Zomby - “Get Sorted”
- 19. Portishead - “Silence”
- 20. Ólafur Arnalds - “Near Light”
- 21. Sufjan Stevens - “Christmas In The Room”
- 22. Samuel Bass - “A Holiday Din”
- 23. Andrew Jackson Jihad - “Guilt: The Song” (Requested by withlugosi)
- 24. Sun Kil Moon - “The Winery”
- 25. Jenny Owen Youngs - “Voice On Tape”
- 26. The Microphones - “I Felt Your Shape”
- 27. How To Dress Well - “Set It Right”
- 28. The Magnetic Fields - “No One Will Ever Love You”
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Stream via Spotify:
Lewis and his Blog October 2012 Mix

Welcome to the latest edition of my Monthly Mix series, where I compile ten of the best new tracks that I’ve heard each month. With early college applications and lots of other work, October has very hectic for me, but it has also delivered some great new music. Check out all the previous monthly mixes from this year HERE and stream this month’s mix at the embedded link below via 8tracks.
Lewis and his Blog//October 2012 Mix
1. A.C. Newman - “I’m Not Talking”
The New Pornographers’ frontman’s latest solo outing is a relatively subdued affair, featuring autobiographical lyrics and a soothing palette of AM radio instrumentation and production elements. First single “I’m Not Talking” is one of two particular highlights; its gentle synth loop quickly gives way to a warm combination of acoustic guitar and horns that highlights A.C. Newman’s terrific, understated melodies. Purchase the new album Shut Down The Streets via Matador.
2. Titus Andronicus - “Ecce Homo”
The first track from Titus Andronicus’ solid new album Local Business is also one of the best. It’s a wordy, high-tempo slice of existential angst that displays the band’s lean, new, 70s-punk influenced aesthetic while making it very clear that Patrick Stickles has lost none of his anger. The track’s quotability is matched only by its catchiness; Stickles and Co. went full-on power pop this time around. Local Business is out now via XL Recordings.
3. Donovan Wolfington - “Hell”
The new single from New Orleans-based five piece Donovan Wolfington is just as punk rock as the name “Hell” suggests. It’s loud, brash, full of riffs and shouts, and is indebted as much to the past decade’s great garage rock bands like Japandroids as it is to the emo revival rabble. Download the single for free on bandcamp and look out for Donovan Wolfington’s debut LP Stop Breathing on Broken World Media in the hopefully near future.
4. Converge - “Sadness Comes Home”
Believe the hype: the new album All We Love We Leave Behind from hardcore legends Converge could very well be there best record yet. For an indication of this, look no further than “Sadness Comes Home,” which features the most punishing guitar riffs I’ve heard in ages along with frontman Jacob Bannon’s signature shrieks and shouts. It’s the most compelling post-hardcore record I’ve heard in at least a year, and it’s available for purchase from Bannon’s label Deathwish, Inc.
5. Cerce - “Weary”
While legends like Converge are slowly getting even better with age, excellent hardcore newcomers this year seem to be springing right out of the gate. Cerce is one such new band, and they dropped their official debut EP last month on bandcamp. “Weary” is one of the best tracks, featuring frontwoman Becca Cadalzo delivering incendiary, barb-toothed lyrics in her distinctively shrill voice. The track also has a pretty stellar breakdown, if that’s what you’re into.
6. Hostage Calm - “Woke Up Next To A Body”
Hostage Calm’s latest album Please Remain Calm is everything that the group has been building up to since they released their first demo in 2007. On “Woke Up Next To A Body,” the record’s immediate standout track, the Connecticut group blends winsome power pop melodies with a punk rock backbone to make one of the catchiest, most loveable pieces of Ted Leo-worship this side of Shake The Sheets. Please Remain Calm is out now on Run For Cover Records.
7. Sharon Van Etten - “Sychophant”
Although Sharon Van Etten’s new album Tramp did not manifest her ambition as precisely as I had hoped, the Brooklyn-based singer/songwriter has still had a very good year. The fact that her b-sides and bonus tracks have been nearly as good as any of the material on the album indicates this. “Sychophant” is one of my favorite songs to come from the Tramp sessions — an electronic dirge with eerie, Radiohead-reminiscent atmospheric noise and backing vocals. Tramp is available now via Jagjaguwar.
8. Death Grips - “No Love”
Today, Death Grips officially parted ways with their major label Epic, who released their album The Money Store earlier this year. All of this came after the band unexpectedly leaked their new LP No Love Deep Web to the internet, complete with an erect penis on the cover. I would think that this method of release and flagrant opposition of the label’s wishes was obnoxious if it weren’t for the new album being so good. The five-minute “No Love” is one of the best and most pummeling tracks, featuring MC Ride’s distinctive shout-babbling and Zach Hill’s aggressive live electronic drumbeats. Download No Love Deep Web for free HERE.
9. Kendrick Lamar - “Compton” (feat. Dr. Dre)
In the context of rapper Kendrick Lamar’s amazing modern classic good kid, m.A.A.d. city, the closing track “Compton” is a celebratory validation of a life of hardship and hard knocks. On its own, however, the Dr. Dre-featuring banger is simply an awesome party song, featuring self-aggrandizing lyrics and an awesome talkbox solo that unmistakably harks back to Tupac’s “California Love.” Pick up Kendrick’s new LP now from iTunes.
10. The World Is A Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid To Die - “Gig Life”
Fans of the CT-based atmospheric emo group The World Is A Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid To Die will have to wait until 2013 to hear their full length debut Whenever, If Ever, but this track should hold us over until then. Though brief, the gentle folk song “Gig Life” is one of the more touching moments in TWIABP’s ever-growing discography. The band recently pressed it to vinyl in a limited edition 7” /50 run, so try to get a copy of it if you see them on tour!
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Thanks for reading and listening! November’s mix will be up at the end of the month.
Lewis and his Blog Presents: A Hurricane Relief / Industrial Collapse Party Playlist

I could get used to this whole ‘Northeast hurricane’ phenomenon becoming an annual thing. I made a playlist for myself during Hurricane Irene last year, and this time around I thought that I’d share one with all of you. I chose 17 tracks of moody, contemplative music, ranging from elegiac folk to reverberant surf rock and pummeling drone. Alternatively, you could just listen to Mount Eerie’s Ocean Roar and Wind’s Poem on repeat. Either method should provide anybody living in Hurricane Sandy’s path with a fitting soundtrack over the next couple days.
Stream the whole mix at the embedded link below via 8tracks, and check out the full tracklist below that. If you’d like, you can download it as well HERE or at the bottom of the post.
Tracklist:
- 1. Rilo Kiley - “The Good That Won’t Come Out”
- 2. The Microphones - “I Want Wind To Blow”
- 3. Bright Eyes - “Jejune Stars”
- 4. The Hiya Dunes - “Storms & Pipes”
- 5. Grizzly Bear - “Sleeping Ute”
- 6. Robert Plant & Alison Krauss - “Killing The Blues”
- 7. The Rural Alberta Advantage - “Tornado ‘87”
- 8. The Wrens - “This Boy Is Exhausted”
- 9. Sharon Van Etten - “Sychophant”
- 10. Grinderman - “When My Baby Comes”
- 11. Duster - “Earth Moon Transit”
- 12. Converge - “Coral Blue”
- 13. Alcest - “Souvenirs D’un Autre Monde”
- 14. Mount Eerie - “Waves”
- 15. Godspeed You! Black Emperor - “Moya”
- 16. Built To Spill - “Things Fall Apart”
- 17. Bob Dylan - “Shelter From The Storm”
Enjoy the mix and stay safe during the storm, East Coast friends!
Sharon Van Etten - “Sychophant”

Brooklyn singer/songwriter Sharon Van Etten displayed so much songwriting talent and musical ambition on her latest LP Tramp that it’s almost not even surprising that she has released such an abundance of great bonus material from those sessions. I imagine this is what it must have been like when Weezer released Pinkerton in 1996; the album was incredible, and every b-side and rarity they put out that year was equally terrific. Sharon Van Etten’s recent b-sides “Mike McDermott” and “Life of His Own” were nearly as good as anything on the new record, and with the addition of more non-album tracks in the brand new deluxe edition of Tramp that Jagjaguwar is releasing soon, Van Etten continues to drop stellar material.
“Sychophant” is one of the tracks packaged in with the deluxe edition of Tramp, and it continues down the electronic rabbit hole that Van Etten began flirting with on tracks like “Mike McDermott.” Structurally, the minor key dirge should be familiar to any fans of Van Etten’s work, but the ominous synths and reverberant programmed beats convey her trademark despair in an exciting new manner. Featuring Thom Yorke-reminiscent male backing vocals, the chill-inducing chorus is a particularly highlight;
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Stream “Sychophant” above and pick up Tramp from Jagjaguwar.
Left of the Dial Radio Playlist - 10/12/12

Thanks for tuning in to last night’s broadcast of my radio show Left of the Dial on WNHU. Last night’s show was of the autumnal musical persuasion, featuring some perfect fall songs by artists like The Tallest Man On Earth and Yo La Tengo. This is the kind of music that Mr. Autumn Man probably listens to this time of year.
The full playlist is below, and most of the songs are available to stream via Spotify at the embedded link at the bottom.
- 1. Jens Lekman - “Black Cab”
- 2. Belle and Sebastian - “Come On Sister”
- 3. The Velvet Underground - “Sunday Morning” (Live at Max’s Kansas City version)
- 4. A.C. Newman - “There’s Money In New Wave”
- 5. Benjamin Gibbard - “Bigger Than Love”
- 6. Jason Lytle - “Matterhorn”
- 7. Lower Dens - “Brains”
- 8. Poliça - “I See My Mother”
- 9. Purity Ring - “Saltkin”
- 10. S O H N - “Oscillate”
- 11. Sharon Van Etten - “Sychophant”
- 12. The World is a Beautiful Place & I am No Longer Afraid to Die - “Gig Life”
- 13. Elliott Smith - “Son Of Sam” (Requested by blueshadedays)
- 14. Perfume Genius - “Dark Parts”
- 15. The Tallest Man On Earth - “The Wild Hunt”
- 16. Violent Femmes - “Hallowed Ground”
- 17. Wilco - “Jesus, Etc.”
- 18. Yo La Tengo - “Tears Are In Your Eyes”
- 19. WHY? - “Kevin’s Cancer”
- 20. The Mountain Goats - “Steal Smoked Fish”
- 21. Titus Andronicus - “In A Small Body”
- 22. LVL UP - “TOPSIDER”
- 23. Destroyer - “Your Blood”
- 24. Morrissey - “Speedway”
- 25. Radiohead - “Let Down”
- 26. The Microphones - “I Felt Your Shape”
- 27. Okkervil River - “John Allyn Smith Sails”
- 28. Ted Leo and the Pharmacists - “Biomusicology”
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Stream via Spotify:
Left of the Dial Radio Playlist - 9/14/12

Thanks to everybody who tuned in and/or requested songs during my radio show on Friday. It was a nice way to get back in the swing of blogging; I’ll have new posts up within the next few days. Here’s the full playlist from the show, along with an embedded link at the bottom to stream it via Spotify.
- 1. Tilly and the Wall - “Love Riot”
- 2. Algernon Cadwallader - “Spit Fountain”
- 3. The Undertones - “Teenage Kicks”
- 4. Titus Andronicus - “My Time Outside The Womb”
- 5. Cymbals Eat Guitars - “Hawk Highway”
- 6. Swearin’ - “Fat Chance”
- 7. Sharon Van Etten - “Serpents”
- 8. Talking Heads - “And She Was”
- 9. Elijah and the Lions - “I Would” (Requested by anonymous)
- 10. The Act Of Estimating As Worthless - “Massive Windows” (Requested by gigglepeas)
- 11. Sufjan Stevens - “Enchanting Ghost”
- 12. Prairie Empire - “Song For You”
- 13. David Byrne & St. Vincent - “Who”
- 14. Lemuria - “Lipstick” (Requested by humancentipedehz)
- 15. Title Fight - “Head In The Ceiling Fan”
- 16. Iron Chic - “Bustin’ (Makes Me Feel Good)”
- 17. Cloud Nothings - “Our Plans” (Requested by rainbowsrillusions)
- 18. How To Dress Well - “& It Was U”
- 19. Burial - “Loner”
- 20. The Mountain Goats - “Night Light”
- 21. Grizzly Bear - “Yet Again”
- 22. The Love Language - “Stars”
- 23. Vampire Weekend - “M79”
- 24. Elliott Smith - “Angeles”
- 25. Zoo Kid - “Out Getting Ribs” (Requested by blueshadedays)
- 26. Waxahatchee - “Grass Stain”
- 27. Cat Power - “Colors and the Kids”
- 28. Animal Collective - “Amanita”
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Stream via Spotify:
Left of the Dial Radio Playlist - 5/18/12

Thanks to everyone who tuned in to last night’s show! I got a lot of requests through tumblr, some of which I didn’t get around to playing, so thanks well for that! Check out the full playlist from last night immediately below, and stream all the tracks that were available on Spotify below that.
- 1. The Smashing Pumpkins - “Zero”
- 2. The Hold Steady - “Soft In The Center”
- 3. Japandroids - “Adrenaline Nightshift”
- 4. The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart - “Young Adult Friction” (Requested by anon)
- 5. Screaming Females - “I Don’t Mind It”
- 6. The Hiya Dunes - “Black Fur”
- 7. Fang Island - “Asunder”
- 8. Iron Chic - “Cutesy Monster Man”
- 9. Animal Collective - “Honeycomb”
- 10. St. Vincent - “Cheerleader”
- 11. The Act of Estimating As Worthless - “Black Fly”
- 12. Margot & The Nuclear So and So’s - “Dress Me Like A Clown”
- 13. Sun Kil Moon - “Among The Leaves”
- 14. The Tallest Man On Earth - “1904”
- 15. The Smiths - “That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore”
- 16. Sean Milo - “Eyes So Small”
- 17. Sharon Van Etten - “Leonard”
- 18. Sea Snakes - “Forget-Me-Not Night”
- 19. Owen Pallett - “Lewis Takes His Shirt Off” (Requested by whileyouweresleeping)
- 20. The Rural Alberta Advantage - “North Star”
- 21. Spiritualized - “Too Late”
- 22. The Men - “Candy”
- 23. The Replacements - “Swingin Party”
- 24. Joy Division - “Atmosphere”
- 25. Built To Spill - “The Weather”
- 26. My Heart To Joy - “All Of Life Is Coming Home” (Live 05/14/12)
Left of the Dial Radio Playlist - 3/16/12

By this time tomorrow, I’ll be staying in an apartment in Paris, France. On last night’s Left of the Dial radio program, I geared up for my trip by playing a little French music. I also played some new tracks, including a song from Port of Morrow, the new album from The Shins. I wrote a pretty thorough piece about The Shins yesterday as well, and I think that’s worth reading if you’re into them. Other new music on the playlist included the new b-side from Sharon Van Etten and a track from the new Saddest Landscape album After The Lights, which the legendary post-hardcore band is releasing officially tomorrow in Hamden, CT. Unfortunately I won’t be able to go, but you should if you’re in the area. Find more information about the record release show HERE.
Below is the full playlist rom last night’s show, plus youtube links to each song. Thanks for tuning in!
- 1. Cloud Nothings - “No Future/No Past”
- 2. Cheap Girls - “Ft. Lauderdale”
- 3. Hostage Calm - “The ‘M’ Word”
- 4. Dikembe - “Scottie Spliffen”
- 5. The Thermals - “A Pillar of Salt”
- 6. New Year’s Revolution - “Long Drive Home”
- 7. Baby Grand - “Blame”
- 8. The Shins - “The Rifle’s Spiral”
- 9. God Help The Girl - “God Help The Girl”
- 10. The Magnetic Fields - “The Nun’s Litany”
- 11. Sharon Van Etten - “Life Of His Own”
- 12. Feist - “L’Amour Ne Dure Pas Toujours”
- 13. Pink Martini - “Je ne veux pas travailler”
- 14. Bjork - “It’s Oh So Quiet”
- 15. Belle and Sebastian - “The Boy With The Arab Strap”
- 16. The Shins - “New Slang”
- 17. The Smiths - “Reel Around The Fountain”
- 18. Vampire Weekend - “M79”
- 19. The Flaming Lips - “The Spiderbite Song”
- 20. Feist - “The Limit To Your Love”
- 21. The Magnetic Fields - “Andrew In Drag”
- 22. Fishing The Sky - “You Just Got Niced!”
- 23. Alcest - “Summer’s Glory”
- 24. Built to Spill - “Kicked It In The Sun”
- 25. The Saddest Landscape - “Desperate Vespers”
Tune in now!

Click the link above now to tune in to this week’s broadcast of my weekly radio show Left of the Dial live on WNHU. Tonight’s show will feature material from Baby Grand, Dikembe, and The Thermals, in addition to new stuff from Alcest, The Shins, Fishing The Sky and more. It’s a really eclectic mix of music that I’m planning to play tonight, so be sure to tune in from 6 to 8 PM.
To leave a request, head over to my ask box. The full playlist will be up tomorrow. Thanks for listening!
Sharon Van Etten - “Life of His Own”

Brooklyn songstress Sharon Van Etten recently released the beautifully desperate single “Leonard” (along with its accompanying music video) from her new LP Tramp, and debuted a brand new b-side along with it. The b-side “Life of His Own” is classic SVE. Like the album standout track “Kevin’s,” this song manages to be incredibly moving by practically staying still. In contrast to the instrumentally rich, bouncy a-side, “Life of His Own” slows things down and keeps it simple with a reserved mix of lightly strummed guitar, piano, and eerie violin. Then of course there’s Sharon Van Etten’s voice, characteristically multi-tracked and touched up with just a hint of natural reverb to emphasize the wounded longing expressed in her lyrics.
Oh, I’m sorry, am I being too flowery in my praise of Ms. Van Etten? Don’t mind me, I’m just falling deeper and deeper in love with her each time she releases new music.
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Download the “Leonard” b/w “Life Of His Own” single from iTunes HERE. Purchase Tramp from Jagjagawar Records HERE.
Video: Sharon Van Etten - “Leonard” (Official music video)

The ukelele-led “Leonard” is one of the most personally critical and self-observant tracks on Sharon Van Etten’s excellent new album Tramp, a record that mostly aims its target outwardly, at a former abusive boyfriend. “Leonard” stands out because it’s so inwardly focused, and with its soothing melody and aching chorus (“I am bad at loving you” ad infinitum), the song is a definite highlight on the album.
If you, like me, can’t get enough of “Leonard” or Ms. Van Etten, you’re in luck; she just dropped a new music video for the track. The video takes the viewer on a kaleidoscopic journey through suburban sprawl and city streets. Van Etten herself maintains a visual presence through a overlaid black and white filter, but she resigns herself to the background. I don’t blame her; with a voice like hers and lyrics as powerful as those of “Leonard,” the music speaks for itself.
That’s the lineup for this year’s Newport Folk Festival, which goes down in Newport, Rhode Island on July 28th and 29th. I never thought I’d say this about this festival, but I actually really want to go this year. Conor Oberst, The Tallest Man On Earth, Sharon Van Etten, First Aid Kit, and Tune-Yards are especially exciting additions.
Find out more information about this year’s Newport festival HERE. Single day passes and 2 day passes are available now.
(Source: kristennnm)
Left of the Dial Radio Playlist - 1/20/12

Here’s the playlist from last night’s broadcast of Left of the Dial on WNHU. I tried to play some positive music to counteract my general unhappiness and I guess it worked, at least for the two hours during the show. Notable songs included Sharon Van Etten’s beautiful “Kevin’s,” from her new album Tramp, which I reviewed earlier today HERE. I also played a track from the new One Hundred Year Ocean EP Poison Smoak, and the new Bruce Springsteen single. I hope those of you who tuned in enjoyed what I had to play.
- 1. The Hold Steady - “Positive Jam”
- 2. Hallelujah The Hills - “It’s All Been Downhill Since The Talkies Started To Sing”
- 3. The Shins - “Simple Song”
- 4. Free Energy - “I’m Going Down” (Bruce Springsteen cover)
- 5. Girls - “Heartbreaker”
- 6. Chestpiece - “Cassius Clay”
- 7. The Flaming Lips - “Do You Realize??”
- 8. Grandaddy - “Hewlett’s Daughter”
- 9. Sharon Van Etten - “Kevin’s”
- 10. Belle and Sebastian - “Seeing Other People”
- 11. The Microphones - “The Moon”
- 12. Laura Stevenson and the Cans - “Master Of Art”
- 13. Spraynard - “We’re Pretty Nice Guys”
- 14. Suns - “Machine”
- 15. Rivers Cuomo - “There Is No Other One”
- 16. Hour of the Star - “Steeplechase”
- 17. One Hundred Year Ocean - “1576”
- 18. Sinforiano Diaz - “Congregation”
- 19. Bruce Springsteen - “We Take Care Of Our Own”
- 20. Okkervil River - “Black”
- 21. of Montreal - “Dour Percentage”
- 22. Cloud Nothings - “Wasted Days”
- 23. The Music Tapes - “The Minister of Longitude”
- 24. Neutral Milk Hotel - “A Baby For Pree/Glow Into You”
- 25. Neutral Milk Hotel - “Little Birds (studio)”
- 26. Neutral Milk Hotel - “In The Aeroplane Over The Sea”
Tune in next Friday for another broadcast on WNHU.