Each year I think “I’m going to post my top ten albums of the year before Pitchfork posts theirs,” and each year I’m too late. And then I read their list, thereby skewing my own perspectives, right? Right. Well – truth be told I am constantly re-shuffling my own list inside of my head, and I’ll be damned if my top two albums of the year didn’t match theirs. But hey, at least I know what I enjoy. So, without further ado, my list for 2005 (in ascending order):
Sleater Kinney – The Woods
I’ve made mention of The Woods previously and even previously-er, and in the intervening 6 months, my love of that album has yet to wane. Sleater-Kinney have always been on the cusp of something – always consistently at the top of the indie heap, but they never seem to be able to escape the orbit of the underground. Perhaps that is what spurred their self-imposed exodus from their native Washington State to the East Coast to record this album in the woods, quite literally. What came out was an album heavy with conviction and the best album of their 10 year career.
The Heartless Bastards – Stairs and Elevators
I first heard from these guys on a great album called Sunday Nights – The Songs of Junior Kimbrough, doing his “I Done Got Old”, and it blew my mind. Like a two-ton Janis Joplin — frontlady Erika Wennerstrom just stomped my brainpan with equal parts rock and blues. Between these guys and The Black Keys, is there anything that Akron, Ohio can’t do? Is there? Keep an eye on their website for tour dates and go and see them up-close before they are playing bigger venues. (ealier mention: the listening hour – fall 2005)
Blind Willie McTell and Buell Kazee
Death from Above 1979 – You’re A Woman, I’m A Machine
Explosions in the Sky / …And You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead
Sufjan Stevens – Illinois
Kanye West – Late Registration
Honorable Mention
Franz Ferdinand – You Could Have It So Much Better With…
Bloc Party – Silent Alarm
Wilco – Kicking Television (Live in Chicago)
The Decemberists – Picaresque
M. Ward – Transistor Radio
Think Differently Music Presents: Wu-Tang Meets the Indie Culture