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Thursday, 8 December 2011

Trotter's Top Ten Albums of 2011

So I've already told you all that it's not been a vintage year haven't I?  Don't get me wrong, I still like plenty of material to put in a top ten, but 'like' isn't normally strong enough to make the list.  What made it worse was the crushing disappointments from many a favourite act this year, mostly of the guitar band variety.  We can't really complain about guitar music not getting a fair hearing when the 'brightest hopes' are putting out such average offerings as Noah and the Whale, Bombay Bicycle Club, Arctic Monkeys and Coldplay.  Even the next big things, whilst decent enough and producing one or two tracks worth a listen, have a decidedly tired, been here before aura about them (hello The Drums, Mona, The Vaccines).  Actually The Vaccines went straight from being talked about as the new Strokes, bringing about a new guitar revival, skipped straight over releasing a debut to equal their forebears and put one out equal to The Strokes second album instead. This is not too much of a compliment.

Far more crushing for me was Radiohead's 'The King of Limbs' who seem dangerously close to taking the now-retired REM's title of 'Band who've now past their best but who's new album is being touted as the best since that big one they did 10 years ago'.  I do hope they prove me wrong.  At least a version of  'Lotus Flower' provided us with the funniest video of the year when spliced with Beyonce's 'Single Ladies'.  Go Thom!  Radiohead need to pull their collective socks up and stop sounding like parodies of themselves.

Out of the '10 (plus 1) for 11' I put together at the start of the year, only four in fact feature in this ten.  So no Friendly Fires, no Radiohead, no White Lies, no Vaccines etc.  The far more positive aspect of 2011 however was the great acheivements of (mainly UK) female singer-songwriters.  Six of the ten albums (and seven of the ten singles) of my year are female-led, which is great to see.  Not only that, but it's encouraging how diverse the talent is.  Whereas in previous years there's been a million Lily Allens or KT Tunstalls there is now a broad range of styles and artists that are their own people rather than copies of a small handful of well-known female singers.  Bodes very well for the future.  So on that more positive note...

(and at least it proves an all-male panel can select a female-dominated shortlist unlike the sports presonality judges)...

Number 10

The Joy Formidable 'The Big Roar'

UK Chart high : Number 31 in February

I put The Joy Formidable's cracking single 'Whirring' in my top ten.  Problem is, that was 2008's top ten.  Three years later and their debut album appears at an almost Stone Roses' pace of production.  That aside (and I'm not entirely sure why the delay) 'The Big Roar' is a confident sounding album from a band that have at least had the luxury to really flesh out their sound prior to releasing their debut.  There is one negative though in that they do sound like they should have released this a few years ago at the height of the last guitar-boom and then they would have reaped the benefits.  Today the style does start to sound a bit tired.  There's no denying however, what a great frontwoman they have in Ritzy Bryan and also how surprisingly hard they rock live.  I saw them at the start of the year and the show was absolutely relentless compared to what I was expecting from a 'mere indie band' full of powerful drums and heavy riffing.  Let's hope they follow this up quick smart and help kick start the guitar revival we've been talking about for a while.  Dave Grohl also rates them, what more do you need?

Look at Whirring ; Austere ; Cradle ; A Heavy Abacus


Number 9

Laura Marling 'A Creature I Don't Know'

UK Chart high : Number 4 in September

Firstly, Laura Marling was born in 1990.  That's born, not went to school or picked up her first guitar.  Born.  Secondly, this is her third album.  Third.  No wonder she won the Brit this year.  Thirdly, to be perfectly honest I've never been totally sold on her, being more admiring of her talent than loving what she does.  That all swiftly changed upon hearing 'Sophia' which must be the best tune created this year even if the guitar at the beginning sounds exactly like the intro to 'I Know Him So Well' by the mighty Elaine Paige and Barbara Dickson.  It's a stunning song, starting in such a low register as to be almost inaudible and building to a full band crescendo.  Highlight on the album though is 'The Beast' where Laura turns into a snarling narrator backed by dirty, sneering guitars - the likes of which I've not heard from her before - it's a great piece of work.  Sure, there are points where her music verges into 'fiddle-de-dee' territory, but luckily they are seldom.  Standing out more than the music or vocals however are her lyrics.  They're incredibly visual, evoking legends of old (though of what time it's never really clear - Greek myth, English folk-lore, perhaps a complete mix) and telling their own compelling stories.  It's this trait that sees her live up to the Joni Mitchell comparisons and it makes you marvel at how someone so young can conjure up such unique storytelling.  It's scary to think of where she'll go to next with all those years ahead of her.

Look at Sophia ; The Muse (Live on 'Later...')


Number 8

Adele '21'

UK Chart high : Number 1 in January

Number 1 in January and practically every other month to be fair.  Hard to remember now but there was a time when Adele wasn't so bloomin' ubiquitous (and that time was called 'before Jan '11').  She'd done well with the first single 'Rolling in the Deep', released in that comfy post-New Year slot when everyone's looking to latch onto the next big thing, but it was 'that' performance at the BRITs that really catapulted her into the stratosphere.  Now she clearly divides opinion, her detractors can point to overexposure (of the music if not the woman herself) and the fairly standard production on the record but, that aside, she has a seriously good voice and sings it like she means it.  I'd much rather have someone of her calibre selling truckloads of records than a Susan Boyle or Westlife and I'm sure you would too.  The album is filled with heartbreaking tales of betrayal and longing brought to life by her vocal delivery and is a perfect fit for radio as well as pleasing the producers of dozens of reality tv shows worldwide.  Away from all the hype and baggage this is still a fine album and worthy of its top ten placing.  She also can set fire to rain, which is rather impressive.

Look at Rolling in the Deep ; Someone Like You (Live at The BRITs) ; Set Fire to the Rain (live at the Royal Albert Hall)


Number 7

The Horrors 'Skying'

UK Chart high : Number 5 in July

An entire hemisphere away from Adele, the next entry is from those lovable ex-gothic punk scamps turned electro-psychedelia poineers The Horrors.  Crafters of my top album of a couple of years ago, in part because of their step-change transformation from a joke act to one of the country's brightest hopes in one bold move, the were never really going to match the sheer shock value impact that 'Primary Colours' had made with that of their third effort.  'Skying' sees them continue to follow the path they set out on, though granted, with a few forays into the undergrowth along the way.  'Skying' is aptly named, even if I didn't really get the connection at first.  There's a feeling of escape, of drifting off into space evoked by soaring keyboards layered with textured guitars and louche basslines.  Until that is, halfway through 'Endless Blue' where the peace is shattered and we get a glimpse of The Horrors of old in a fantastic tempo change.  'Still Life' and the epic 'Moving Further Away' get even mightier and grander, though in a more measured way until we're set adrift with the final track 'Oceans Burning'.  In a dire year for indie guitar bands, the boys done good again.

Look at Still Life ; I Can See Through You ; Moving Further Away (live)

Number 6

Yuck 'Yuck'

UK Chart high : Number 62 in March

Next is a compilation album called 'The Sound of Grunge Classics'...well not quite, but it could easily be the best bits of Dinosaur Jr, Sonic Youth, Pavement and the like all rolled into one via, er London.  That's a very blase way of summarising what is a decidedly brilliant debut album.  Yes, the band wear their influences on their plaid sleeves but they manage to sound fresh all the same - far fresher than many of their contemporaries of longer standing in fact.  There's an innocent charm on show throughout, whether it's on the slower tunes of 'Sunday', 'Shook Down' and 'Suck' which hint more toward Fanclub and quiet-day Pumpkins territory or the more immediate showstoppers of 'Get Away' (hello Kim Deal bassline) or 'Holing Out'.  This band more than any other are keeping my guitar hopes alive, even if they did still have to tune their own instruments and put up their own banner when I saw them play live in Newcastle.  They even end the album on the grunge era failsafe of pushing the listeners patience to the limit with feedback and off-kilter instrumentation during the seven minute 'Rubber' (in which a dog is groomed in the accompanying video obviously).  Perhaps more than any other act on this list, I can't wait to hear where they go next.

Look at Get Away ; Holing Out ; Rubber ; Shook Down

Number 5

Anna Calvi 'Anna Calvi'

UK Chart high : Number 40 in January

So one day Shirley Bassey, Bob Dylan and Hank Marvin form a supergroup and record the soundtrack to Ennio Moricone's life story.  Alternatively we just get Anna Calvi to do it.  Right from the intro to 'Rider to the Sea' the steel guitar whisks you off to the middle of the US desert tracking Eastwood on your trusty steed.  From there, the drama doesn't let up - a quality we've been lacking in spades this year.  Calvi's playing is a breath of fresh air, it's not a style I've ever really thought of as being exclusively male but it is so surprising to hear it from her that it makes you wonder why you've not heard it so often before.  The accordian-led 'Desire' is just wonderful and is the stand out track here (and yes, the opening shot of the video is the desert) but that's quickly followed up by 'The Devil' which soon has her proclaiming 'The Devil, the Devil will come' with such sincerity that it's always best to check over your shoulder just in case.  Yes, there's inevitable comparisons to PJ Harvey at times (maybe it's the bright red lippy, I dunno, or the gender role swapping lyricism) but there's more than enough here to set Calvi apart from Polly.  But even on the tracks where similarities are fair (such as the first half of  the sublime album-closer 'Love Won't Be Leaving') there's soon a unique spin taken to shake off any copycat claims.  In such a strong year for female singers, Anna Calvi stands head and shoulders above any other debutante this year.

Look at Desire ; Suzanne and I ; Blackout ; Love Won't Be Leaving (live)

Number 4

Chase and Status 'No More Idols'

UK Chart high : Number 2 in February

Just when I'd more or less given up on intelligent dance music, thinking that Pendulum would be as good as it would get from now on (crikey!) up pops Chase and Status.  Well, they popped up a few years ago apparently but I didn't really notice them until their collaboration with Plan B 'End Credits' which was a briliant slice of guitar and breakbeat splicing and before Plan B would go all 'geezer' on us to make a living.  Since then they released 'Blind Faith' which, if 'Sophia' is the foot-tapping, beard-stroking tune of the year, is the foot-stomping, hand-waving choon of the year.  It takes you straight back to the illegal-rave era Britain and even manages to freshen up that 'Sweet Sensation' sample we've all heard more times than fired Apprentice contestants have said 'Thank you for the opportunity Lord Sugar'.  'No More Idols' is easily the best dance album since The Prodigy's 'Fat of the Land' and even has a fierce animal on the cover to stretch comparisons even further.  There's a consistency here that is so often missing from the genre's long players.  And that's made even more remarkable when you consider they have Plan B, Clare Macguire, Cee Lo and Tiny Tempah as featured artists and they don't even sound annoying!  But it's the lesser known acts that steal the show, be it on the aforementioned 'Blind Faith' or the equally anthemic 'Time' and 'Let You Go'.  Yes they sometimes try a bit too hard to be 'worthy' - with Kyle-style chat shows and domestic abuse as frankly clumsy video subjects, but rather some of that than the usual gubbins we're served currently by the supposed inventive end of the musical spectrum.  They also allow Dizzee a chance to swear again...which is nice.

Look at Blind Faith ; End Credits ; Time ; Let You Go

Number 3

Florence and the Machine 'Ceremonials'

UK Chart high : Number 1 in November

Now I love a bit of Flo, me.  Great image, stage presence and voice as well as some cracking tunes.  The debut album though, not so keen.  How she managed to milk seven (yes, seven) singles from it is beyond me.  On hearing she was readying her second, I did think 'haven't we just started having a break from you?' and probably was less than enthused.  'What the Water Gave Me' is a barnstormer of a comeback tune though and very much like most of this album - bit too much going on at first listen and then on repeated airings just gets better and better as you unfold all the layers.  It's definitely the best track here, with an ending that defines the term 'crescendo' well and truly and the only place you'll probably hear a harp included in a wall of sound.  Everything is 'Florence turned up to 11' here, so you'd be in good company to think there's a lot of repetitive musicality and not enough variation at first but gradually you get accustomed to the tone and can appreciate the album for what it is.  So there's no 'Kiss with a Fist' or truly stripped back, simple songs that would have brought some light and shade, but then so what?  Let's have an album of OTT drama and uplifting, soaring emotions banging about all over the place even if you do sometimes envisage a travel advert to the Seychelles at times.  There's not so much a growth of a young artist here as an artist finding their niche and mining it really effectively.  Suspiciously, I have yet to see her in the same room as Noel Fielding though.

Look at What the Water Gave Me ; Shake it Out ; No Light, No Light

Number 2

The Strokes 'Angles'

UK Chart high : Number 3 in April

A large five year gap since their last album puts The Strokes in Stone Roses and Kate Bush productivity territory, though I guess if all the abuse and intra-band strife was anything to go by it's a wonder 'Angles' ever saw the light of day to begin with.  The five year wait also brings with it inevitably high expectations - mags like the NME expecting The Strokes to come back and save the planet seemingly.  Based on their last two albums (and lead singer Julian Casablancas' solo effort) that realistically was not going to happen and reviews, equally inevitably, sighed with the weight of serial disappointment.  For me though, 'Angles' comfortably surpasses albums two and three and is up there with their debut, though for different reasons.  Here's a band that finally seems to not give a damn about living up to previous heights and is just making music for the hell of it - that freedom resulting in a great sounding set of songs not just a shadow of their former selves.  The relaxed atmosphere filters through to the sounds on the record too - reggae style rhythms punctuating album opener 'Macchu Pichu' and early 80's keyboards on 'Two Kinds of Happiness' for instance.  They also continue to poke fun of themselves and play up on the (self) exaggerated band strife (as seen in the 'Julian is missing from the table' opening in the video for lead single 'Under Cover of Darkness') - that song proclaiming they were back to their winning ways.  The old Strokes staples are still here - particularly Nick and Albert's abilities to make their instruments sing (corny but true) and their mastery of economy by seeming to throw away killer riffs and noodlings by only playing them for five seconds and then moving on, where lesser bands would have made entire albums out of them.  'Life is Simple in the Moonlight' is also as perfect an album closer you could hope for.  Album five's apparently on its way already and on this basis that's very good news indeed.  Oh and they still look the absolute b0llocks.

Look at Under Cover of Darkness ; Taken For a Fool ; Life is Simple in the Moonlight (live)

Number 1

PJ Harvey 'Let England Shake'

UK Chart high : Number 8 in February

Sometimes my friends, the obvious choice is the only choice.  So just as last year saw me give the nod to 'The Suburbs' I'm giving PJ Harvey the TTT crown this year to accompany her Mercury Award, 10 out of 10 from the Observer and top honour from both NME and Q magazine.  Like The Arcade Fire's effort, 'Let England Shake' takes a theme (here, war) and crafts different songs around it from different perspectives - in other words it's a true concept album rather than a 'We Will Rock You' type affair (thankfully!).  That 2011 hasn't been a stellar year should take nothing away from what has been accomplished here.  You get tales from both WWI and WWII (such as 'On Battleship Hill') as well as more modern conflicts (the superb Iraq-evoking 'Written on the Forehead').  It's her lyrics that set this apart from other efforts though from either first or third person narratives starkly setting out harroring scenes on the battlefield during and after conflict or contrasting England's Empire-building past stature with where we are now (often through a folk music sound).  There's so many good examples to choose from but repeating a couple of lines here wouldn't really be doing them justice - go and look them up yourself.  Best track for me is the amazing 'This Glorious Land' with its repeating hunting bugle refrain which seems to work on two levels - to take you back to the 'tally-ho' upper-class spirit which led so many soldiers to their deaths in the Great War and also (maybe unintentionally) referencing Polly's own country upbringing which got her into such trouble when she defended aspects of foxhunting a few years ago.  They also crafted a video for each song which are all worth seeing, which often begin with someone reading excerpts from the lyrics in often less than reverential tones (and made all the better for it, not to make light of the subject matter but to humanise it).  Incredibly this is PJ Harvey's ninth studio album.  I can't think of another artist that has produced such a high point this far into their careers.  I'm afraid, Kate fans, that in my eyes at least, this achievement easily makes Polly Harvey England's premier female artist and, judging from the critical reception of this album, she's made England shake well and truly.

Look at The Glorious Land ; Let England Shake ; The Words That Maketh Murder ; Written on the Forehead

Listen to the Top Ten on Spotify - almost three hours of splendid music.

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

Trotter's Top Ten Singles of 2011

Hello.  Has it really been a year?  Yes. Yes it has.  And if only the musical output had been as exciting as the year itself has been I'd feel a lot prouder of my selections this year.  But it truly hasn't been a great year for music has it? (I know I seem to say this every other year).  That said, the Top Tens are still pretty reasonable, there's just not much quality stuff beyond them - so I guess at least it made the selection process easier.  How many of these choices will make it through to an end of decade countdown I'm really not too sure.  But anyway, now that I've either discouraged you from reading any further or completely lowered your expectations so you'll be pleasantly surprised, let's get on with the show...

We had the all conquering Adele kick off the year with 'Rolling in the Deep' and then never look back, Dinosaur Pile-Up's 'My Rock and Roll' herald the grunge revival that other bands would more successfully run off with (including Cage The Elephant's 'Shake Me Down') and, in the midst of a terrible year for guitars, Miles Kane release some cracking singles in the forms of 'Come Closer' and 'Inhaler' and cement himself as a 'one to watch'.  Maverick Sabre's 'Let Me Go' successfully answering the question 'I wonder what a squashed Plan B would sound like singing over that Glory Box sample that Portishead used?'  And US pop and R'n'B continue its quite frankly baffling fascination with mid-90's turgid Eurodance.  Even Rihanna got so bored with using sexuality to shift records that she started putting clothes back on again by the end of the year.

Against that backdrop though you did get some cracking tunes from a (mainly female) diverse range of existing and brand new talent.  It's just that you probably wouldn't find them in the charts unfortunately.  Good music then, I guess, isn't dead, it's just increasingly harder to find.

Number 10

Nicola Roberts 'Beat of My Drum'

UK Chart high : Number 27 in June

At one point it seemed that the entire music industry, journos and the general public were all wanting the ginge from Girls Aloud to succeed so much that we would have said her debut single was great even if she'd covered one of Nadine Coyle's tracks (still available at Tesco).  Fortunately, Nicola, with the help of several music producers on the kewl list, lived up to expectations.  Coming over all Missy Elliot/Timbaland-style, back when they were inventive, 'Beat of My Drum' looked and sounded like nothing around at the time - skittering rhythms and barking dog percussion, kooky styling coupled with lyrics designed to drum (ahem) into us how young and inexperienced Nicola was when she started out but  'hey! look at her now'.  Obviously it also helped that this was released around about the time that Cheryl was being made a laughing stock and replaced on the US Xfactor by the humourless, dead-eyed, fame hungry ex of Lewis 'I don't need you now to get in the tabloids' Hamilton.  Unfortunately it seemed that the inventiveness well was only 3 minutes deep, no-one actually bought it and subsequent singles haven't quite lived up to this one - but we're all waiting for the Girls Aloud reunion tour anyway aren't we?

Number 9

Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds 'AKA...What a Life!'

UK Chart high : Number 20 in September

Unlike his younger brother, Noel Gallagher it seems, isn't stupid.  If you know that your band's going down the swanny and you're going to leave sooner rather than later, best keep a few of the better tunes to one side and not waste them on the has-beens.  Although I have to say I'm in no real hurry to get the album I was very pleasantly surprised with this track on its release, not least because it's finally an uptempo number from the Gallaghers that takes you back to the days when Oasis were worth taking seriously.  Beady Eye also confirmed that its better to have an average voice and decent tunes than a brilliant voice and awful tunes.  That 'AKA...' starts off like peak-era Charlatans also gains it several brownie points in this household.  Nice to see he's keeping up the Oasis tradition of appalling videos too.

Number 8

Lykke Li 'Get Some'

UK Chart high : Did not chart

In a fairer world Lykke Li would be far more famous than she actually is (and her cracking singles would actually make the chart - shame on you Britain).  There just seems to be a blindspot over here for talented, intellegent, engaging Swedish pop singers (see also Robyn).  'Get Some' is a tribal, insistent, dare I say sexy, song that shows far more ubiquitous female solo singers how to tread the line between being provocative and maintaining your integrity (and being slightly unhinged without being Ke$ha).  The fact that she manages to pull that off whilst singing 'Like a shotgun needs an outcome...you're gonna get some' is no mean feat.  She was equally as great performing live on 'Later...' too, even without a shotgun.

Number 7

James Blake 'Limit to Your Love'

UK Chart high : Number 39 in January

I often wonder how many of the people featured at the beginning of the year in the 'Stars to look out for' lists actually sit there with their head in their hands and cry 'No, please no!'  I've no basis for thinking this but I suspect James Blake probably did exactly that.  The music press pounced on this frankly excellent 'cover' of the Feist track at the close of 2010 and waited impatiently and expectantly for the album to follow, all the while increasing the hype factor.  There's a definite reason to do that, the song is sparse, considered and yet incredibly emotive.  James' pure voice flowing over and around the heavy bassline and reverbs to great effect and making full use of the empty spaces in between.  Perhaps the fact that the last act to successfully take that approach were The Xx only added to the expectations that were, to be honest, deflated on the release of the album where you realised James was far more interested in experimenting than churning out hits.  To me that's absolutely fine, plow your own furrow young man and ta for this tender yet hard hitting track.

Number 6

The Go! Team 'Buy Nothing Day'

UK Chart high : Did not chart

It really does continue to amaze me when I hear tunes that are so obviously catchy and made for the charts but which then just disappear without a trace (actually that infers they appear in the first place which is often not true either).  Case in point being the high energy, bubblegum sheen of The Go! Team who seem to have a solid, if small, fanbase, really get the crowd going in an old-style way on the festival circuit and constantly make slices of blissful chart-friendly music that, despite all those ingredients, just don't seem to catch on.  Sad.  'Buy Nothing Day' is possibly the most full-on catchy tune of the year that doesn't even bother with the formalities of an intro or build up, just hits you straight between the ears with pure pop excellence.  Well okay, it starts with a '1,2,3,4' but then hits you straight away between the ears with pure pop excellence.  Every line is lifted straight from a chorus and the production is teleported directly from late '60's psychedelia.  It hit all the right buttons for me  - particularly the one marked 'I have to play this over and over 100 times until my eyes bleed'.  Review in a nutshell - sunshine.

Number 5

The Good Natured 'Skeleton'

UK Chart high : Did not chart

Okay, so plenty of things make me feel old these days, but perhaps the worst one this year was hearing that The Good Natured's frontwoman Sarah MacIntosh wrote her first EP  on her Grandma's 1980 Yahama keyboard.  1980.  Grandma.  I'll just let that sink in for a second there.  Right, nevermind that.  With 'Skeleton' you have a fairly straightforward lyric of comparing being stripped to the bone with opening up emotionally which is hardly a first; but it's the delivery and the tune that keeps it fresh.  Another superb female-fronted, tribal drum-driving piece of 80's tinged electro-pop with Flock of Seagull via La Roux hair-styling.  There's also more than a nod to Jane Wiedlin's 'Rush Hour' peppered within the song too - which of course only lifts it to further shimmering pop heights.

Number 4

Friends 'I'm His Girl'

UK Chart high : Did not chart

When you add the following into a song and video there really is no option other than to put it straight into your top ten.  Begin the song by playing a triangle, add a dirty 'Head on the Door' era Cure-like bassline, drop in breathy female vocals, strut around New York with a beatbox whilst being filmed in Super 8 and include a shot of Neneh Cherry's 'Raw Like Sushi' cassette in the vid as well as channelling her 'Bufallo Stance' attitude and you're all set.  Far too cool for school this lot, but all the better for it.  Despite daring to call themselves after a little-known US sitcom set in the same city, Friends project exactly that 'us against the world' vibe that the coolest bands just seem to have naturally.  Definitely one to watch into the new year I reckon (and so do the BBC).

Number 3

Lana Del Rey 'Video Games'

UK Chart high : Number 9 in October

There's been a fair bit of backlash already for dear Lana, commentators pointing to her already trying the mainstream music route and failing so now going all 'cool' and questioning her authenticity.  Does that matter?  Why not try a new direction (especially if it means you stop producing mainstream crud and instead release frankly beautiful music such as this - win:win!)  'Video Games' out of all this top ten stuff, probably stands the most chance of becoming a much-covered classic.  It has that feel of coming from its own universe, fully formed and perfected, not really fitting into any one time period or owing much to one style and yet evoking past memories with its considered production and gentle, country-tinged Loretta Lynn-style vocals.  Again out of all the list, this is the track that I can remember exactly where I was when I first heard it, its impact being so instant.  A gem.  And this one actually got into the real Top Ten.

Number 2

Foster the People 'Pumped Up Kicks'

UK Chart high : Number 18 in July

We did have a bit of a summer, I know it's hard to remember now, but it's true.  This soundtracked mine.  Laid back basslines, whistling and keyboard noodlings and scratchings blended with the even more laid back delivery from a trio of LA surfers to form a perfect summer pop song.  Quite surprisingly this even went to Number 1 in the States (which sort of ruins my 'you won't find these in the charts' theme but there's always an exception that proves the rule).  For such a blissful, summer vibe it's rather startling when you realise you're merrily singing along to the innermost thoughts of a mass shootist 'All the other kids with the pumped up kicks, you'd better run, better run faster than my bullets'.  I'm not saying it's especially deep but I do love those shiny pop songs with a dark underbelly.  And then O2 used it to sell phones and the band promptly turned into Orson on their new single (but I still rather like it).  Ah, well.

Number 1

Beth Ditto 'I Wrote the Book'

UK Chart high : 76 in March

Ironically there was a time when you couldn't move for Beth Ditto.  With The Gossip's  'Standing in the Way of Control' (which I won't link to cos I think we've all heard it enough now) she was on the airwaves and patronisingly featured on television in the same way as Susan Boyle was i.e. 'ooh look, someone who doesn't look like the media's definition of a singer who's actually got a good voice'.  Luckily for her she was bright enough to recognise this and used it to her advantage, pushing the boundaries of what she could get away with and what the press would stomach.  Unfortunately it seemed that the press didn't like being taken on at their own game and soon moved on to picking on someone else of a more 'conventional' nature.  All of which probably explains why this awesome track barely tickled the lower reaches of chartland.  Had Beth released this soon after shouting her way through '...Control' she'd stand a good chance of being as big as Madonna rather than having to impersonate her (intentionally and quite brilliantly) in the video to this tune.  It's not simply the brilliant apeing of 'Justify My Love' in the video that puts this head and shoulders above anything else released this year.  The production is pitch perfect and the lyrics (of a conversation between two lovers about infidelity along the lines of 'you can't kid a kidder') are written with intricacy.  Beth's vocal delivery never needs to get to previous overblown levels to show what a powerful force she can be.  In summary it's all smashingly excellent and (as regards Beth's vocals at least) proves that less is definitely more.

Listen to the Top Ten Singles of 2011 and a few more besides on Spotify

Thursday, 1 December 2011

TTTT - Trotter's Top Ten Tease

Oh hindsight is a wonderful thang.  Ahead of this year's Trotter's Top Tens I thought I'd right a couple of wrongs in the way of a single and an album from last year that I hopped on board too late to include in the 2010 list oh so long ago.  Truth be told they'd have both easily made the Tens this year if only they didn't have last year's date printed on them.

First, album-wise, 'The Fool' by Warpaint, a much-touted long player from a 'next big thing' whose hype as a new 'Hole', if I'm honest, put me off them all year until I saw them on the box playing their best song at Glastonbury. 'Undertow' builds slowly and seductively and shows off just how in sync they are both in terms of wonderful harmonies and great instrumentation.  The album couldn't be further from the ascerbic rock of Courtney Love's outfit at its peak, instead having more in common at times with the likes of My Bloody Valentine - all layered guitar and vocal wanderings.  They developed this further with their EP from earlier this year which was then added to reissued versions of 'The Fool'.  A classic case of remembering not to believe everything you read.

Look at Warpaint 'Undertow' @Glasto2011 ; 'Billie Holiday (Rough Trade Sessions)'

Next, a single that in a parallel universe would have been my best single of 2010 and sums up those heady (few) days of summer to a tee.  I'd obviously not heard it enough last year for it to become an earworm, but the release of their debut album this year pushed their signature track back onto the airwaves and well into my brain.  It also helped that they absolutely stole the show at Pulp's Wireless Festival day in Hyde Park, surpassing my expectations by how spot on they sounded live.  An absolute joyous blast of sunshine with an insanely catchy chorus and crescendo to end all crescendos, give The Naked and Famous 'Young Blood' a well-deserved hearing.

And now back to 2011...