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The
Lullaby Pit's Best CDs of 2000
by Sam Smith
12.31.00
I’ve
been doing this annual CD review for several years now, even
though few people notice, let alone care. So lately I’ve been
pondering why I’m so obsessive about this ritual of seeking
out new music, listening, buying, evaluating, ranking, and
reporting, especially in a world gone so relativistic that
we’re afraid to suggest that one thing is actually better
than another thing. We’re comfortable enough saying we like
this or that, but the idea of excellence as an absolute that
transcends mere taste seems fascist to us. And when I assert
my opinion that a particular CD is something you might like,
and ought to listen to, that probably strikes some as more
than a little arrogant.
So
why do it? Part of the answer is simple enough – I love music
and find the process both challenging and fun. But there’s
more to it than that – I feel like we’re all caretakers of
our culture. Ideally, everybody has a corner lot somewhere
that we feel responsible for maintaining. Some people teach,
some work tirelessly for the poor, some volunteer for the
arts, some collect stamps, some coach little league, some
sing in barbershop quartets.... You could argue that certain
of these activities are more noble than others, but the point
for me is that music is a powerful, affirming force, and a
lot of really talented musicians are out there busting ass
trying to move the culture along in a meaningful way. That’s
their corner, and I’m genuinely grateful to them, even the
ones whose music I despise, when they sing and play from the
heart.
My
self-imposed responsibility is to pay attention, to chronicle,
and to evangelize, even though the corner I’m on may be only
sparsely traveled and all within earshot may dismiss me for
just another crank. A Top 20 list ain’t Mother Teresa stuff,
but if I can introduce a few people here and there to an artist
they’ve never heard of (and likely never would), maybe the
music will speak to them in a way that will make their lives
a bit brighter. Then I feel like I’ve accomplished at least
a little something.
The
frustrating part is that I can only rate what I hear, and
there are so many great bands out there that it’s impossible
to hear even a fraction of them (especially since radio these
days refuses, seemingly as a matter of policy, to play any
band worth listening to). For each one of the artists in my
2000 Top 20, there are probably 20 more I’d love if I were
only exposed to them.
So
this column honors the best music I heard this year (CDs released
in 2000, and a few that came out in 1999 but didn’t hit my
radar screen in time for last year’s list). However, I’d like
to dedicate the ritual to all those bands I didn’t
hear, but would have liked if I had. May they each find a
larger and more appreciative audience in 2001.
The
Top 20
1.
Don Dixon, The Invisible Man (Gadfly)
In 1985, former Arrogance frontman Don Dixon released
Most of the Girls Like to Dance, but Only Some of the Boys
Do..., one of the greatest expressions of hormone-drenched
teenage/young man verve guitar pop has ever seen. In three
subsequent efforts Dixon confronted the tragic inevitability
of adulthood and maturation, and in all cases he did so with
remarkable eloquence and wit. Now, on this year’s The Invisible
Man, Dixon accomplishes something special, marking the
turn onto the back nine with, of all things, a concept album.
These 11 dramatis personae, featuring characters ranging
in age from 18 (Mitch Easter’s “Decline and Fall”) to 85 (“All
I Wanted,” a bitter lament of unfulfillment), find Dixon reflecting
on the forms and foibles of life through the eyes of people
he perhaps once was and someday might be. In the hands of
a lesser artist this could quickly get ponderous, but Dixon’s
dry sense of humor keeps him (and the listener) honest, allowing
him to explore the serious and tragic without bogging down
in self-absorption. It’s hard to describe a CD like this one
without making it sound too intellectual to be enjoyable,
which is sad, because Invisible Man is hooky, funny,
and tuneful, and I didn’t conclude this all by myself. I loaned
my copy to a lot of people, including new music-savvy types
and folks who never venture beyond the bland safety of Adult
Contemporary, and the verdict was pretty much unanimous. The
fact that almost nobody has heard it is a black mark on the
souls of radio programmers everywhere. Click here
for more
on The Invisible Man.
2.
A Perfect Circle, Mer de Noms (Virgin)
APC features Tool frontman Maynard Keenan, although the
creative driver is former Nine Inch Nails and Tool guitar
tech Billy Howerdel. But let’s not dismiss the band with the
old “side project” kiss of death just because of Keenan’s
presence. If Tool never plays another note, but A Perfect
Circle stays together, I’ll survive just fine, thank you.
APC’s brand of Metal is dark and brooding, as we might expect
from the backgrounds of Howerdel and Keenan. But where Tool
has a nasty, alienated edge to their music, APC’s darkness
is lush and atmospheric, shot through with seductive glimpses
of color and light. Maybe it’s me, but lately many Metal artists
seem to have abandoned any pretense at songcraft and musicality,
and the result is simply unlistenable. But Howerdel (who did
all the composing) seems to understand that the iron fist
is more effective when wrapped in a velvet glove. As of this
writing the CD is performing quite nicely on the charts, too,
and hopefully that success will breed influence with other
Metal bands out there.
3.
The Catherine Wheel, Wishville (Columbia)
Over the past decade or so The Catherine Wheel has been
one of rock’s most consistently outstanding and innovative
bands. Unfortunately, a meltdown with their former label cost
them valuable momentum after the release of 1995's Happy
Days, their commercial highwater mark in the States, and
the brilliant Adam and Eve (1997) might as well not
have been released for all the attention it garnered here.
But circumstances haven’t slowed the band musically, as evidenced
by this year’s superb Wishville. Even more spartan
in its arrangements than Adam and Eve, the disc nonetheless
crackles with energy and nuance, and the spare, thoughtful
moments are interspersed with soaring anthemic highs (as in
“What We Want to Believe In”) that stand on a par with anything
the band has done since Chrome.
4.
Elastica, The Menace (Atlantic)
Noisy, careening, playful – this disc has more pounce
and strut than a puppy with a new squeak toy. The Menace
retains the minimalist neo-New Wave ethic of the band’s self-titled
debut, but this time around it sounds like bandleader Justine
Frischmann has been listening to more B-52s and less Wire.
There’s a dizzying energy level to the disc, which bounces
off the walls so hard it seems constantly on the verge of
discombobulation. Somehow, though, Frischmann manages to hold
things together. I wondered, after that marvelous 1995 breakout,
where the band would go next. The whole New Wave movement
of the late 1970s flared up and died away in three or four
years, with even the best of the crop feeling the need to
branch out a bit in order to remain creatively viable. Failure
to find directions for growth might lead Elastica into stagnation
and obscurity (as it did scores of promising bands at the
dawn of the ‘80s). But Frischmann has twice now demonstrated
a keen knack for infusing old ideas with new life. There being
nothing new under the sun, there are worse talents to have.
5.
Eels, Daisies of the Galaxy (Dreamworks)
Eels frontman E is like Michael Jordan – even when he
has an off year (by his standards) he’s still better than
most everybody else. When I began this year-end review I had
Daisies much further down the list. Basically, it seemed
rather pale compared to 1998’s stunning Electro-Shock Blues
(which I still can’t believe I only rated #10 – where
the hell was my head that day?), and without really
thinking about it I sort of pegged Daisies for the
second ten somewhere. Then I listened to it four or five more
times, and it moved up the list each time. The tunes are so
consistently engaging that no one or two really stand out,
and E is one of the smartest and most sensitive lyricists
working anywhere in popular music today. I try not to toss
words like “genius” and “superstar” around lightly, because
they’ve been so overused that they’ve lost their power to
signify. But they absolutely apply with E – he’s brilliant
beyond all reason, and is one of the three or four brightest
lights in this generation’s music pantheon. Radio might ignore
him, but the music history books won’t.
6.
U2, All That You Can’t Leave Behind (Interscope)
I don’t know if U2 has any more landmark albums in their
future, but I find great comfort in their unwillingness to
lay down and become bad parodies of themselves. Albums like
War, Unforgettable Fire, and Joshua Tree
defined an era, and when the band was left for dead after
Rattle & Hum all they did was surge back with Achtung,
Baby! They were left for dead again after Pop,
a project that was as unsatisfying viscerally as it was clever
intellectually. Perhaps this is the band’s Achilles’ Heel
– sometimes they’re a bit too smart for their own good, and
when their work climbs up out of the gut and into their heads
they lose their audience (for which I personally blame the
audience, but that’s another argument altogether). If so,
All That You Can’t Leave Behind should win that audience
back, being a wonderfully feeling, rather than thinking, album.
I don’t mean this in a disparaging way (obviously, at #6 on
the list). Instead, it’s compelling how, after several years
of moderately interesting experimentation with electronica,
the band can come home again and, as if nestled among family
and friends, kick back and just be themselves for awhile.
My favorite moment on the disc, for all sorts of reasons,
is the “Brown-eyed Girl”-ish “Wild Honey,” a worthy homage
to Van Morrison.
7.
Superdrag, In the Valley of Dying Stars (Arena Rock)
This Knoxville Power Pop outfit’s 1996 debut was pretty
damned good. Their 1998 followup was significantly better.
And this year’s effort blows them both away. Frontman John
Davis’ songwriting is more consistent, with hooks galore and
more thoughtfully turned lyrics, and the whole band has benefitted
tremendously as it has moved past the British Invasion pose
so evident four years ago. Their guitar pop influences are
still plenty evident, but now they have developed a strong
enough identity of their own that the subtle Cheap Trick references
and Big Star covers (from a recent concert appearance) seem
natural, not self-conscious. The Power Pop genre breeds bands
that are too frequently captive to their influences (Beatles,
Badfinger, Raspberries, etc.), and while it’s laudable that
the great masters are reverenced, you’re never going to forge
a legacy of your own by following closely in the footprints
of those who came before. Superdrag excels in a predominately
retro style because they transcend those from whom they have
learned – which, of course, is the hallmark of a great band
in any genre.
8.
Delerium, Poem (Nettwerk)
Poem is very much in the mold of Karma,
Delerium’s gorgeous 1995 release, and while it breaks no new
ground, it does feature a host of beautiful songs, lush arrangements,
and nicely-envisioned vocal performances from a series of
collaborators (including Matthew Sweet, whose contribution
to “Daylight” rivals Sarah McLachlan’s sumptuous turn on Karma’s
“Silence”).
9.
Supreme Beings of Leisure, Supreme Beings of Leisure
(Palm)
The Supreme Beings’ self-titled debut introduces a fresh
L.A. vibe to Trip-hop, a distinctly European techno style
(until now, anyway). In the hands of artists like Tricky,
Portishead, DJ Shadow, and Mono the genre oscillates between
down-tempo breakbeat Hip-hop and cool, lounge-inflected Anglopop,
but SBoL broaden the mix with dashes of Indian, Middle Eastern,
and Latino flavor. The poly-ethnic infusion is subtle, but
the effect is distinct.
10.
Richard Ashcroft, Alone With Everybody (Virgin)
I’ve resigned myself to the notion that nobody associated
with Verve is ever going to do anything that stacks up to
their full-length debut, Storm in Heaven. But that
said, former frontman Richard Ashcroft has launched his solo
career in admirable fashion. This collection is even stronger
in spots than Verve’s much-heralded swan song, Urban Hymns,
and the lead track, “A Song for Lovers,” displays the same
kind of anthemic grandeur than made “Bittersweet Symphony”
such a monster hit.
11.
Aimee Mann, Bachelor #2, or The Last Remains of the Dodo
(SuperEgo)
Bachelor #2 is Mann’s best work since Whatever
(which was easily one of the best CDs of the last decade)
but sadly, she remains a poster child for what’s wrong with
the music industry. At the same time she was receiving massive
acclaim for her contributions to Paul Thomas Anderson’s 1999
film Magnolia, she was working without a label. Now,
a lot of talented artists can’t score a decent record deal
these days, but artists who are garnering significant popular
press coverage you’d think would attract some major label
attention. So Mann released the disc herself, making it available
online and at shows. Bachelor #2 contains some material
also found on the film soundtrack, but these songs work much
better in the context of the album than within the context
afforded by the film (and as great as I thought the film was
generally, I also found the use of “Save Me” to be self-conscious
and distracting).
12.
Fuel, Something Like Human (Epic)
Fuel’s 1998 debut had both a melodic and a sonic side,
but the two weren’t as integrated as we might like. If I might
oversimplify for a moment, on Something Like Human
the band has seemingly worked harder on making its pretty
songs rock and its rocking songs prettier. The effect is encouraging,
chiefly because “Hemorrhage” (the lead single) is actually
getting some airplay, and deep in my heart I still harbor
fantasies of a day when once again I can listen to the radio
without utter despair. The radio question notwithstanding,
Fuel has now released two solid albums of driving sonic pop
that remind me, in their best moments, of Bob Mould (although
Mould’s music is rarely as slickly produced). That’s a pretty
high compliment.
13.
Supergrass, Supergrass (Island)
I admire the craft and ambition of bands like Radiohead
and Oasis, but as a rule the Britpop movement strikes me as
a bit sterile. Now that Verve has split, the lone remaining
exception to that rule is Supergrass, a band that never seems
to lose touch with how much fun rock and roll can be.
The trio continues to grow creatively, with several songs
here matching the highest spots from 1997's In It For the
Money. In this respect, they sort of strike me as the
U.K. equivalent of Superdrag – a tight combo, steeped in a
proud pop lineage, that keeps getting better with every effort
and apparently enjoying themselves while they’re at it.
14.
Green Day, Warning (Reprise)
Sometimes it’s hard to know what to say about a record.
Green Day makes smart, hook-infested punk pop records. Every
time. This one is like their other records, which are all
pretty good, end of review. Okay, maybe I can add this: If
Warning stands out in some way, it’s perhaps in the
lyrics, which are as socially-aware as ever, but are a bit
more craftily constructed. Of course, we rarely regard Green
Day for its social commentary because the tunes are so deceptively
accessible (Billy Joe told a Denver crowd a few years back
that, “we’re not a punk band, we’re a melodic California pop
band”). Which is a shame, because Warning has at least
as much to say as any self-indulgent wank you’re likely to
hear from Rage Against the Machine.
15.
Fiction 8, Chaotica (Nilaihah)
Some of the more interesting bands I’ve heard in the past
couple years have emerged from the corner of the music universe
that includes Goth and Industrial, and for lack of a satisfying
term I tend to lump it all together under labels like “Darkbeat,”
“Dark Pop,” or the more widely used “Darkwave.” Denver-based
Fiction 8 doesn’t fit neatly into any of these categories,
although on their Web site frontman Mike Smith does reluctantly
admit that F8 is a “dark pop band.” They’re also a great dance
band with an emerging knack for haunting ambient undertones
(due in large part to the addition of bassist/vocalist/violinist
Mardi Salazar). Chaotica is F8's third full-length
release, and hopefully the personal and creative dynamics
of the new lineup, coupled with a supportive label relationship,
will allow the CD to reach a larger audience than its predecessors.
More
on Fiction 8.
16.
Leisure McCorkle, American Ghetto Pop Machine (Second
Blue Moon)
Charlotte’s Leisure McCorkle is the latest in a long line
of outstanding guitar pop artists to hail from the Tar Heel
State, but his vocal delivery and songwriting style are more
likely to remind you of British New Wavers Graham Parker,
Elvis Costello, and Joe Jackson than of Don Dixon, The Spongetones,
or the dBs. Regardless, American Ghetto Pop Machine
(his first full-length release – Leisure’s debut EP was a
Lullaby Pit Honorable Mention in 1997) is a virtual primer
on Power Pop chops. These 10 tracks run the gamut, from the
cerebral (“America Says”) to the “too drunk to think” (“Alcohol”);
the rollicking (“Because of You”) to the gentle (“If I Had
My Way”); and the celebratory (“Julie Everybody”) to the heartbroken
(“You Are”). Jamie Hoover and Jolene’s Mike Mitschele do a
nice job helping shape the album, but in the end it’s all
about the songs. While McCorkle is still a long way from the
star status he seems intent on attaining, he has a gift with
words and melodies that will serve him well as he plots a
2001 move to a much bigger pond, Los Angeles. More
on Leisure McCorkle.
17.
Hooverphonic, The Magnificent Tree (Epic)
I can’t make up my mind about this one. Intuitively The
Magnificent Tree doesn’t strike me as powerfully as did
the group’s first two releases, and perhaps it’s because they
seem to be migrating toward a more mainstream sound. TMT
isn’t as quirky as A New Stereophonic Sound Spectacular,
nor does it soar quite as splendidly as Blue Wonder Powder
Milk (which gave us “Battersea,” the soundtrack for one
of the prettiest car commercials ever). But when I listen
closely to the disc I find nothing in particular to justify
the flatness of my response. The songs are nicely constructed,
the performances richly textured, and the production polished
and spot-on. To be fair, Hooverphonic has once again given
us a delicious serving of smoky, Trip-tinged techno-pop, and
while it doesn’t sweep me off my feet, it’s certainly a lovely
diversion.
18.
VNV Nation, Empires (Metropolis)
If the whole was somewhat less than the sum of the parts
on the Hooverphonic disc, the inverse is true of the new VNV
Nation release, which is one of the best dance albums I’ve
heard in some time. Empires is at its best when it
settles into a dark, trancy groove and lets the clutch out,
but it wants to be something more serious, and the momentum
bogs down a tad when the focus shifts to the lyrics. I’m probably
being too picky, though – while it may be hard to decide which
individual track to stick on a compilation for a friend, as
a unified whole Empires is one of the best end-to-end
listens of the year.
19.
Saint Etienne, The Sound of Water (Sub Pop)
What I said about Hooverphonic above goes double for Saint
Etienne’s latest effort. The Brit electronica trio has reeled
off a string of trippy pure pop gems, including the exquisite
Good Humor (which occupied the #6 slot in the Lullaby
Pit’s Best of 1998 list), and while The Sound of Water
comes off as a nice, well-executed collection, it doesn’t
quite rise to the standards the band has set for itself in
recent years. But this is the curse of talent and innovativeness
– as soon as you produce something that’s only moderately
wonderful the self-appointed Cool Police (that’d be me, in
this case) get all bitchy.
20.
Godspeed You Black Emperor!, Lift Your Skinny Fists Like
Antennas to Heaven! (Kranky)
GYBE!’s first two efforts were like steel-toed boots to
the teeth, alternately introspective and expansive, and constantly
thrumming with intimations of menace. Here the Montreal-based
collective have taken some of the edge off. The four-song,
two-disc set is more structurally varied than their previous
releases – a good thing – but the apocalyptic tone lent by
spoken word and found audio elements on F#A#Infinity
is missing and sorely missed. Performatively, though, LYSFLAtH
is arguably the group’s most accomplished work to date.
Honorable
Mentions, and Other Stuff That Was Worth the Money
Raison
d’Être, The Empty Hollow Unfolds (Cold Meat Industry)
A superb effort from the Swedish Dark Ambient artists.
This CD is more ominous than previous releases (if that’s
possible), owing more this time around to soft industrial
echoes than to medieval church influences.
Walter
Clevenger & the Dairy Kings, Love Songs to Myself
(Permanent Press)
I liked Walter’s last release a lot, too, although I thought
it was perhaps a little too indebted to Nick Lowe. On this
release the band branches out stylistically, with rave-ups
that echo everything from the Beatles to Buddy Holly to latter-day
Roy Orbison to the Everly Brothers.
VAST,
Music for People (Elektra)
This sophomore release would probably be top 15 material
if it didn’t follow so closely in the conceptual footsteps
of the debut.
Paul
Oakenfold, Perfecto Presents Another World (Sire)
I don’t consider compilations in my annual review, especially
DJ compilations, but this two-disc set nevertheless merits
mention. The progenitor of Trance remixes everything from
Led Zeppelin to Vangelis to Delerium to Dead Can Dance on
this wonderful dance groove.
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