Another incredible year is finally behind us, with plenty of music left behind to document the journey. Plenty of news discoveries this year, as always, and a few surprising efforts from more established musicians like Matt Elliott, Burning Star Core, Kemialliset and Grouper. Looking forward the the new labels, artists, genres, and sounds I’ll discover in 2009. In the meantime, I hope you enjoy my list of 2008’s ten best albums.
The latest year-end podcast should be coming tonight or tomorrow afternoon. After the new year, I’ll publish a couple additional retrospective posts, namely a look back into overlooked 2007 releases, possibly a collection of the year’s best music videos, and some additional year-end reading from a variety of trusted labels, djs and artists.
In case you missed rest of my list, here are the previous best-of-2008 countdown posts – Last 13 of 50, The Middle Bit: 11-37.

10. Marnie Stern – This Is It And I Am It And You Are It And So Is That And He Is It And She Is It And It Is It And That Is That [Kill Rock Stars]
Listening to Marnie Stern leaves me itching to buy a bra, just so I can burn it. This isn’t Marnie Stern’s first solo effort, but it’s the first I’ve heard, so the novelty factor might have something to do with my high opinion of this album. This Is It… is thoroughly nostalgic, but completely free of the sickening kitsch that haunts many throwback projects. Its plucky electric guitar riffs are exhilarating, capable of producing miniature adrenaline buzzes. Marnie Stern’s latest is the sort of album that can only be properly experienced with help from excessive pyrotechnics, anything less and the music seems to outsize its surroundings. (Marnie Stern @ youtube — Primer, Ruler)
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9. Emeralds – Solar Bridge [Hanson]
Emerald’s slow growth drones build into a melodic wave of solar radiation. This Cleveland, Ohio trio has been active for nearly two years, but wider releases and consistent quality brought them to a much wider audience this year. (Emeralds @ youtube — live @ No Fun Fest ‘08)
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8. Peter Broderick – Float [Type]
Peter Broderick’s Float, his first of two releases for the year, is a more melancholy affair than the pop-minded Home. Max Richter’s song-sized contemporary classical is close match to Broderick’s work here, filled with aching strings, pattering pianos, guitars and banjos.
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7. Matt Elliott – Howling Songs [Ici d'ailleurs]
Howling Songs, the conclusion to Matt Elliott’s three part songwriting series, rivals his groundbreaking 2005 Drinking Songs debut. This album of drunken, Dickensian folk songs must have been composed in a salty harbor pub, the sort of establishment seared with the steam, grit and stinking sweat of the broken urban spirit. (full review)
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6. Zomes – Zomes [Holy Mountain]
Asa Osbourne’s Zomes is an other-wordly collection of looping, psychedelic 8mm cinematography. Insular tracks leave the album without much cohesion, but this doesn’t turn out to be much of a problem. Instead, these isolated, evolving melodies evoke their own miniature galaxies, each cut recycling and refurbishing the ideas into its own psychedelic tone-poem. (full review)
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5. Burning Star Core – Challenger [Hospital Productions/Plastic]
While I often enjoy the genre, I often wonder how capable noise and drone artists would be if tasked with producing something vaguely recognizable as music. On Challenger, C. Spencer Yeh has somehow managed to redirect the same portion of his brain that develops musical textures from feedback, static and walls of sound to compose an accessible, heady ambient. Even with a lighter step, Challenger is still an imposing beast, its familiar metallic bulk cut and shaved of abrasive edges. This is still noise music, but genuine restraint focuses Burning Star Core’s tectonic sized melodies into a stunning display.
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4. Grouper – Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill [Type]
Distortion, oscillating vocals, a cavernous electric guitar, and long, echoing harmonics have been characteristic elements of Grouper’s haunting droning folk. After lifting the thick fog of effects and moving away from purely textural drones, Liz Harris finally develops a more accessible style of songwriting, but without completely abandoning Grouper’s characteristic brittle melodies and washed-out pedal effects.
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3. Larkin Grimm – Parplar [Young God]
Larkin Grimm was raised on a hippie commune, ran off to live alone on a mountain in Alaska, before returning to civilization on the advice of a Native American “shaman and… pitbull breeder” named Jezebel Crow. From this sort of individual, you’d expect a raucous album. Parplar is like a musical dime novel, filled with adventures and rugged glamor, all retold in a jaunty, frontier folkrock.
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2. Kemialliset Ystävät – Harmaa Laguuni [Secret Eye]
Tampere’s godparents of the freak folk invasion recast their musical communalism in Moog. with harmaa Laguuni, Kemialliset has continued to hone their synth-laced avant-folk, first appearing in fully realized form on the group’s 2007 self-titled release. (full review, video)

1. Evangelista – Hello, Voyager [Constellation]
Guitars crack wide open on relentless electric notes, gargantuan drums run wild, while the frantic Carla Bozulich wails, whispers, and sings, in complete command of the whole beautiful mess. Hello Voyager’s noisy and delicate songs alike vibrate with seismic intensity. Evangelista is Carla’s raucous masterpiece, a wrecking-ball of prickly, electric songwriting. (Evangelisa @ youtube)
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p.s.
Late Entry for Album of the Year, Portishead – Third [Island/Mercury]
I avoided this album until very recently, just assuming it would be another retread of their well-worn sound. In fact, with Third Portishead has managed to preserve the best of their recognizable sound, and simultaneously reinvent themselves. Within seconds of hitting play, when that plodding, high-altitude kraut melody unfurls, the group’s determination to reinvent is made plain. This is jarring, at first; I think to myself, what the hell is happening here? Gradually, those iconic Gibbons vocals sweep in, and it quickly becomes clear Third is a weird and wonderful record, one that will surely be remembered as some of the group’s best work.


















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