Common

Journal

  • 2009 Top Artists & Tracks [Listened]

    5 Jan 2010, 13:03 by e4groove

    1. Goldfrapp (462 plays)
    2. Thievery Corporation (343 plays)
    3. Bonobo (334 plays)
    4. Johnny Cash (261 plays)
    5. Quantic (250 plays)
    6. Waldeck (239 plays)
    7. The Herbaliser (237 plays)
    8. De-Phazz (228 plays)
    9. Alice Russell (225 plays)
    10. Bob Dylan (221 plays)
    11. Zero 7 (220 plays)
    12. Air (215 plays)
    13. 9 Lazy 9 (189 plays)
    13. Les Nubians (189 plays)
    15. Common (185 plays)
    16. Groove Armada (176 plays)
    17. 4hero (165 plays)
    18. dZihan & Kamien (163 plays)
    19. Me'Shell NdegéOcello (162 plays)
    19. Jazzanova (162 plays)
    21. Sarah Vaughan (154 plays)
    22. DJ Cam (153 plays)
    22. Tom Waits (153 plays)
    24. Nightmares on Wax (152 plays)
    25. VFSix (151 plays)
    25. Gorillaz (151 plays)
    27. Amon Tobin (150 plays)
    28. Moloko (149 plays)
    29. Tosca (147 plays)
    30. Talib Kweli (145 plays)
    31. Mo' Horizons (140 plays)
    31. The Quantic Soul Orchestra (140 plays)
    33. Mr. Scruff (135 plays)
    34. Wax Tailor (134 plays)
    34. Erykah Badu (134 plays)
    36. Blackalicious (130 plays)
    37. Bebel Gilberto (129 plays)
    38. Blockhead (128 plays)
    39. Morcheeba (124 plays)
    40. Michael Franti & Spearhead (121 plays)











    1. Zero 7 - PlayIn the Waiting Line (29 plays)
    2. Waldeck - PlayAddicted (27 plays)
    3. Thievery Corporation - PlayUntil the Morning (22 plays)
    3. Clara Hill - PlaySilent Distance (I:Cube Remix) (22 plays)
    3. Smoke City - Underwater Love (22 plays)
    3. VFSix - PlaySay What You Want (22 plays)
    3. Citizen Cope - Sideways (22 plays)
    3. Bonobo - PlayPick Up (22 plays)
    9. Koop - PlayCome To Me (20 plays)
    9. Moloko - PlayFun For Me (20 plays)
    9. Jazzanova - PlayFedime's Flight (20 plays)
    9. Waldeck - PlayMemories (20 plays)
    9. Goldfrapp - PlayBlack Cherry (20 plays)
    9. Mr. Scruff - PlayGet a Move On (20 plays)
    15. Meitz - PlayCan You Live (19 plays)
    15. Sofa Surfers - Sofa Rockers (19 plays)
    15. Asa - PlayJailer (19 plays)
    18. VFSix feat. Pat Appleton - PlayHighs And Lows (18 plays)
    18. I Monster - PlayDaydream in Blue (18 plays)
    18. Slow Train - naturally (18 plays)
    18. The Dø - On My Shoulders (18 plays)
    18. Jazzanova - Glow & Glare [Ame remix] (18 plays)
    18. FC/Kahuna - PlayHayling (18 plays)
    18. dZihan & Kamien - PlayHomebase (18 plays)
    25. VFSix feat. Pat Appleton - Playchances (17 plays)
    25. Rupa & The April Fishes - PlayMaintenant (17 plays)
    25. Waldeck - PlayWhy Did We Fire The Gun? (17 plays)
    25. Goldfrapp - PlayUtopia (17 plays)
    25. Thievery Corporation - PlayHolographic Universe (17 plays)
    25. Mr. Scruff - PlayBeyond (17 plays)
    25. King Britt & Tim Motzer - Ramblas (Album Version) (17 plays)
    25. Alice Russell - PlayMean To Me (17 plays)
    25. VFSix - VF'project (17 plays)
    25. Wax Tailor - PlayI Don't Know (17 plays)
    35. Alice Russell - PlaySomeday (16 plays)
    35. Goldfrapp - PlayPilots (16 plays)
    35. The Herbaliser - PlayThe Sensual Woman (16 plays)
    35. Goldfrapp - PlayYes Sir (16 plays)
    35. Goldfrapp - PlayUtopia (New Ears mix) (16 plays)
    35. Télépopmusik - PlayBreathe (16 plays)
  • 2009 Top Artists & Tracks [Listened]

    5 Jan 2010, 13:02 by e4groove

    1. Goldfrapp (462 plays)
    2. Thievery Corporation (343 plays)
    3. Bonobo (334 plays)
    4. Johnny Cash (261 plays)
    5. Quantic (250 plays)
    6. Waldeck (239 plays)
    7. The Herbaliser (237 plays)
    8. De-Phazz (228 plays)
    9. Alice Russell (225 plays)
    10. Bob Dylan (221 plays)
    11. Zero 7 (220 plays)
    12. Air (215 plays)
    13. 9 Lazy 9 (189 plays)
    13. Les Nubians (189 plays)
    15. Common (185 plays)
    16. Groove Armada (176 plays)
    17. 4hero (165 plays)
    18. dZihan & Kamien (163 plays)
    19. Me'Shell NdegéOcello (162 plays)
    19. Jazzanova (162 plays)
    21. Sarah Vaughan (154 plays)
    22. DJ Cam (153 plays)
    22. Tom Waits (153 plays)
    24. Nightmares on Wax (152 plays)
    25. VFSix (151 plays)
    25. Gorillaz (151 plays)
    27. Amon Tobin (150 plays)
    28. Moloko (149 plays)
    29. Tosca (147 plays)
    30. Talib Kweli (145 plays)
    31. Mo' Horizons (140 plays)
    31. The Quantic Soul Orchestra (140 plays)
    33. Mr. Scruff (135 plays)
    34. Wax Tailor (134 plays)
    34. Erykah Badu (134 plays)
    36. Blackalicious (130 plays)
    37. Bebel Gilberto (129 plays)
    38. Blockhead (128 plays)
    39. Morcheeba (124 plays)
    40. Michael Franti & Spearhead (121 plays)











    1. Zero 7 - PlayIn the Waiting Line (29 plays)
    2. Waldeck - PlayAddicted (27 plays)
    3. Thievery Corporation - PlayUntil the Morning (22 plays)
    3. Clara Hill - PlaySilent Distance (I:Cube Remix) (22 plays)
    3. Smoke City - Underwater Love (22 plays)
    3. VFSix - PlaySay What You Want (22 plays)
    3. Citizen Cope - Sideways (22 plays)
    3. Bonobo - PlayPick Up (22 plays)
    9. Koop - PlayCome To Me (20 plays)
    9. Moloko - PlayFun For Me (20 plays)
    9. Jazzanova - PlayFedime's Flight (20 plays)
    9. Waldeck - PlayMemories (20 plays)
    9. Goldfrapp - PlayBlack Cherry (20 plays)
    9. Mr. Scruff - PlayGet a Move On (20 plays)
    15. Meitz - PlayCan You Live (19 plays)
    15. Sofa Surfers - Sofa Rockers (19 plays)
    15. Asa - PlayJailer (19 plays)
    18. VFSix feat. Pat Appleton - PlayHighs And Lows (18 plays)
    18. I Monster - PlayDaydream in Blue (18 plays)
    18. Slow Train - naturally (18 plays)
    18. The Dø - On My Shoulders (18 plays)
    18. Jazzanova - Glow & Glare [Ame remix] (18 plays)
    18. FC/Kahuna - PlayHayling (18 plays)
    18. dZihan & Kamien - PlayHomebase (18 plays)
    25. VFSix feat. Pat Appleton - Playchances (17 plays)
    25. Rupa & The April Fishes - PlayMaintenant (17 plays)
    25. Waldeck - PlayWhy Did We Fire The Gun? (17 plays)
    25. Goldfrapp - PlayUtopia (17 plays)
    25. Thievery Corporation - PlayHolographic Universe (17 plays)
    25. Mr. Scruff - PlayBeyond (17 plays)
    25. King Britt & Tim Motzer - Ramblas (Album Version) (17 plays)
    25. Alice Russell - PlayMean To Me (17 plays)
    25. VFSix - VF'project (17 plays)
    25. Wax Tailor - PlayI Don't Know (17 plays)
    35. Alice Russell - PlaySomeday (16 plays)
    35. Goldfrapp - PlayPilots (16 plays)
    35. The Herbaliser - PlayThe Sensual Woman (16 plays)
    35. Goldfrapp - PlayYes Sir (16 plays)
    35. Goldfrapp - PlayUtopia (New Ears mix) (16 plays)
    35. Télépopmusik - PlayBreathe (16 plays)
  • Hindsight is Always 20/20: The 95 Best Albums of 2008 (yes, really) and the 5 Most…

    3 Jan 2010, 21:17 by MarcusAKAFatima

    Um, I'm kind of embarrassed about this, really. I'm pretty sure the calendar reads 2010 right now and here I am doing a year end list featuring a few albums that literally came out almost TWO years ago. But after I collected and listened to 100 albums throughout that whole year, I wasn't about to let this whole thing slip by.
    Things to note
    1) 5 of these qualify as disappointments. Similarly, I feel like just reading this first entry, you're bound to think my taste sucks. 90 more entries and there will be something you like, I promise.
    2) There is obvious hilarity that more than a few of these artists have released albums since the ones listed here. Quite a few have even broken up. Those will be covered on a scaled down 2009 list probably this summer when I'm gainfully unemployed.
    3) I know how stupid this is. On to the show.

    100. Common - Universal Mind Control

    I am not being hyperbolic when I say that my jaw actually dropped wide open the first time I heard “Announcement.” After all, here was Common, one of the last vestiges of the Afrocentric rap boom of the 90s suddenly spouting lyrics like “I still love her she be needing the dick/ when it comes to hip-hop it’s just me and my bitch.” Common has clearly been uncomfortable about his place in the genre for more than a few years now, and it’s a feeling that permeates this album down to its most cynical and miscalculated core. Whether it was the remarks about his music only being popular with white dudes (guilty), or the comments he made about how he feels suffocated by the “socially conscious” label long bestowed upon him by defensive hip-hop fans, it’s quite apparent that Common is having a major identity crisis. Suffering through his lifeless performances in movies like “Wanted” was one thing, but I simply cannot tolerate lyrics like “ I don’t mind being behind cause I’m gonna touch you where the son don’t shine,” on the completely ludicrous “Sex 4 Suga.” When he says on “Announcement” that he’ll “philosophize on toppa ya,” he’s obviously trying to subvert his own image, however his language and rhyme schemes are so unbelievably lazy and dated, his attempt at irony becomes muddled under a haze of non-stop stupidity and clunky metaphors.
    Musically the album is a dead fish too. Gone are the warm sun-bathed beats of “Be” and “Finding Forever.” Instead we get cold soulless synth crunches and bombastic beats courtesy of the Neptunes that Common sounds utterly lost and uncomfortable on. Cee-Lo livens up the bouncy “Make My Day,” however the skittering beat throws Common completely off his game, making him sound about 3 measures behind where he should be the whole time. The predictably titled Obama ode, “Changes” certainly hasn’t aged well (although it was never very memorable to begin with), and attempts at chart dominance courtesy of Kanye West and Autotune on “Punch Drunk Love” reek of desperation instead of offering any unabashed Top 40 joy. Just when you think things might be getting interesting on the spastic “Gladiator,” Common compares himself to Nelson Mandela and mentions breaking Michael Vick out of jail and the Underground Railroad in one breath. That I can barely bring myself to listen to classic Common anymore really shouldn’t surprise anyone.
    Choice Cuts: I can only direct you to “Like Water For Chocolate.”


    99. CSS - Donkey
    It’s hard to believe that there used to be a time in which phrases like “get this party started” or “shake your groove thing” actually served as a call to arms to frenzied youth everywhere. I’m not sure whether or not those are actually lines from the album (the lyrics are all too inconsequential to remember), but after slogging through CSS’s second CD, it’s easy to see why they’ve since fallen out of fashion. “Donkey” is a party album without a hint of Dionysian charm or sense of menace. If anything, it’s the musical personification of what you’d expect Lindsey Lohan’s wild nights to be like: paint by numbers escapades, blithe nubile bodies with arms extended to the heavens, eyes glazed and vacuous “wooooos” shouted only to interrupt crippling silence. In short, it takes a lot of work to sound this jazzed about nothing.
    Perhaps brainwashed by that long existing notion that a lot of guitars make a band automatically resonant, CSS seemed to have ditched a lot of the good-natured wide-eyed electro innocence that made their first album such an unusual treat. Sure they were often filthy, but CSS (short for Cansei de Ser Sexy) also had a knack for bringing a uniquely foreign perspective to their songwriting, positioning themselves as outsiders who knew America only through fringe pop culture that made naming themselves after a throwaway Beyonce soundbite and making lyrical references to Paris Hilton undeniably charming. On their follow up, we get a lot of vacant lyrics about shaking asses on tables, drinking in the afternoon, and a lot of oblique references to flying. The music is almost all of the generic dance-rock mold, leaving the listener to grasp on to the few melodies that stick as if they were the few remaining pieces of glitter shining off the cement floor of a basement party. “Rat Is Dead” is the catchiest song about domestic revenge since “Goodbye Earl,” and “Believe Achieve” and “Move” at least have great tunes, however both still lack the sense of lyrical oddity that made songs like “Music is my Hot, Hot Sex” so engaging. CSS will be on track the moment they actually want to party again.
    Choice Cuts: Rat Is Dead, Believe Achieve, Air Painter


    98. Janet Jackson - Discipline
    As much as we love them, we all know the Jackson family is pretty messed up. But while most look to the dearly departed Michael as the outlying example of damaged Jackson eccentricity, what with Bubbles, Jesus Juice and his tic-like “shamones,” however I always found something far more telling behind Janet’s wounded eyes and defensive mumbling. That she’s been able to alternate between stilted innocence and overt sexuality in her interview and stage performances makes me think there is a history far more painful than I am qualified to speak about.
    I find it quite mind boggling that after the commercial failures of “Damita Jo” and “20 Y.O.,” not to mention the fallout from 2004’s Nipplegate, that Janet hasn’t figured out that that her crass sexuality is becoming off putting to the public. Unlike most of her contemporaries who start and stop their public sensuality with a pair of hot pants, Janet goes uncomfortably far, naming songs things like “Moist” and literally orgasming on tracks. On her latest, Jackson is at her Freudian worst, the title track filled with lyrics like “Daddy I disobeyed you/ Now I want you to come punish me.” Considering the tabloid knowledge we have of Joe Jackson, the song is not only uncomfortably frank, but also highly disturbing. Elsewhere, Janet spoils the fantastic first single, “Feedback” with the line, “My swag is serious something heavy like a first day period.” Ew.
    When she’s not pushing the limits of good taste, especially for a woman now in her 40s, Janet actually delivers some of her best pop of the decade on a few of the earlier tracks. Just like “Damita Jo” had a few genuine soul treasures and “20 Y.O.” had a couple of “Control” era throwbacks, “Discipline” has Ms. Jackson once again placing her honeyed vocals on top of inventive beats. Standout track, “Rollercoaster” rides on a hypnotic jungle beat juxtaposed with Jackson’s breathy coo, while “Luv” brings a refreshing playfulness back to Jackson that seemed all but lost the moment she started sampling Carly Simon back at the beginning of the decade. “Rock With U,” the album’s best song, is dazzling in it’s blippy warehouse party sophistication. When I say that it sounded destined for Express soundtracks in malls nationwide, I certainly don’t mean it as an insult, as I’ve never heard a dance track as aesthetically soothing as this one. Despite the copious amounts of filler and icky imagery, it’s fair to say there’s hope for Jackson after all. It’ll just take a little discipline.
    Choice Cuts: Rock With U, Rollercoaster, Luv, Feedback


    97. Madonna - Hard Candy
    While we’re on the subject of ageing gracefully, I bring you the latest from Madonna. One look at the album cover, with its garish color scheme and Madonna’s spread eagle placement, should let you know that Madonna isn’t about to exit without kicking and screaming. That Lady Gaga wasn’t even a factor when this was recorded makes me extra nervous for the future.
    Madonna’s been a LOT of things in her 25 plus years of stardom, but a follower has never been one of them. Keenly aware of her own limited musical capabilities, Madonna has made a career out of reinvention, emerging year after year as a chameleon, always engrained in the pop culture pantheon as an icon over a true musician. It’s a depressing sign that “Hard Candy” finds Madge seeking out mega-producer Timbaland and Justin Timberlake to carry her for most of the album’s hour long running time, a clear sign that she’s desperate for hits, regardless of the fact that most of the beats are probably leftovers from the last Nelly Furtado album. One more calculated move like this and people are likely to forget why Madonna was such a big deal to begin with.
    That’s not to say there aren’t some truly transcendent moments on Esther’s 11th album. “Miles Away,” a song that now feels clearly inspired by her now defunct marriage to Guy Ritchie, is gorgeously affecting with its gentle guitar strums and its haunting “we’re always at our best when we’re miles away” refrain. “Devil Wouldn’t Recognize You” is predicable yet still terrific Timbaland, full of hiccuppy water drops and dramatic piano lines, and “4 Minutes” excels with its Sim City marching band and soaring chorus.
    Serviceable and easily digested dance pop is the name of the game for the remainder of the album, and while only a few fall completely flat (her odd obsession with the Spanish language reaches it’s embarrassing climax with “Spanish Lesson”), few standout the way they should for an artist of this magnitude. That she chooses to ape JT and stretch her songs out past the 6-minute mark in order to give them distinguishable B-sides is another puzzling choice of obvious imitation.
    No one wants Madonna to settle into blase faux-British domesticity like she threatened to years ago, however after hearing her talk about her “Turkish delight” on “Candy Shop,” one might hope she finds a way to make maturity exciting on her next disc. If anyone can do it, it’s Madonna.
    Choice Cuts: Miles Away, Devil Wouldn’t Recognize You, 4 Minutes, Heartbeat



    96. The Pussycat Dolls - Doll Domination
    I’d be lying if I actually said this album was a disappointment. Truthfully, I had no expectations for it whatsoever. After all this is The Pussycat Dolls we’re talking about, one of the most unashamedly manufactured groups in recent memory in which group members can literally disappear and no one knows the difference. It has all the genre-hopping tendencies of the worst Black Eyed Peas records and one of the most guffaw-inducing album covers of the decade, however there is something dorkishly endearing about the whole thing, even when you’re aware of its many, many faults. Call it a guilty pleasure.
    One gets the picture that some poor unfortunate record suit had the thankless task of collecting throwaway productions from as many “it” producers as possible, and the results are as spastic and ADD-riddled as you’d expect, however the odds are in Nicole’s favor that a few of the 17 (!) tracks will at least have the sticking power of even the airiest cotton candy. And some do: “I Hate This Part” is far better than it has any right to be, considering the only other ballad PCD ever released was “Stickwitu” back in 2005. Over a driving piano line, Nicole actually brings some emotion to the song, leading it to one of those gooey bridge climaxes that bring joy purely because they’re so comfortably routine. And amazing. “Elevator” lets us know that Nicole Shouldachangedherlastname isn’t the only capable singer in the batch, as now ousted Melody Thorton reaches an ad-lib duel culmination with Nicole so gleefully scenery chewing, it’s easy to picture the two literally shoving each other off stage. That the groups tries to remind us they started out with burlesque roots with the bizarre “In Person,” is almost sentimental if it weren’t so random (Imma kick him when I see him!”). Despite being filled with only vaguely sexy babydoll come ons, tracks like “Bottle Pop” and “Takin’ Over The World” have inventive enough production that resistance is all but futile.
    There are duds of course, mainly in ballad form, especially the one with R.Kelly, but did you ever really expect The Dolls to sustain over the course of a whole album? They’re single “artists” if there’s ever been any. Just make sure you listen with headphones on. This is our little secret.
    Choice Cuts: I Hate This Part, Elevator, When I Grow Up, Love The Way You Love Me


    95. Jennifer Hudson - Jennifer Hudson
    Taking a surprisingly long time to get on shelves, Jennifer Hudson’s self-titled debut album provides a wealth of scale-climbing vocal acrobatics for those looking to recapture some of the same majestic talent that led her to Oscar gold for 2006’s “Dreamgirls.” What it doesn’t do is offer a wholly consistent portrait of Jennifer as an artist. Facing a lot of the same problems that Whitney Houston struggled with (and still does), Hudsone is a TNT barrel of a voice likely forever searching for material that allows her to truly blow without becoming too bombastic. Overblown ballads are aplenty here, with songs like “Giving Myself,” “Invisible,” and “You Pulled Me Through” all sounding like they could be theme songs to movies starring Patrick Swayze. At least Tyler Perry fans will like them.
    Hudson’s voice is never not spectacular, and even when at its most dramatic, her control is reigned in and commanding here the way it sometimes isn’t during her live performances. When the ballads do excel, they result in a perfect storm of chest pounding absolution, full of sky-gazing triumph and genuine soul, such as on the gospel-tinged “We Gon Fight,” and the sublimely sleek “Spotlight” The Bacharach-esque “All Dressed In Love” proves Hudson is capable with uptempos, however it does suggest she might do better with sounds that aren’t exactly current. An embarrassing duet with T-Pain smacks of total wrongness, however the sassy and inventive “Pocketbook” places Jennifer over a beatboxed background and what could very well be a harpsichord. It’s a rare oddity and Jennifer pushes it forward with enough swagger that she outshines featured rapper, Ludacris in pure attitude. After a tougher year than most can even imagine, Hudson can be proud to know that when given the right material, she’s a force to be reckoned with.
    Choice Cuts: Pocketbook, We Gon Fight, Spotlight, Can’t Stop The Rain


    94. No Age - Nouns
    It probably seems comical that a band as critically loved as No Age is sandwiched within walking distance of The Pussycat Dolls, however it’s important to know that while I may be no stranger to indie rock, lo-fi noise punk is traditionally not my bag. However, after reading countless glowing reviews, I figured it was only appropriate I give the album a try. What drew me in, and I say this without any sense of forced revelry, is that “Nouns” is very clearly a battle between noise and beauty. While each song is drenched in amp feedback, grinding guitars and drum clatter, there is constantly a purveying sense of melody lurking in the each song’s shadows, waiting to be exposed upon each further listen. “Eraser,” despite an intimidating amount of audio distortion, reveals itself to be a calmly self-effacing folk song, filled with haunting and isolated lyrics. “Things I Did When I Was Dead,” sounds like an oil can come to life, filled to the brim with reverb and a driving squeaky rhythm that almost lets you sneak by without realizing just how gorgeous the whole thing actually is.
    Is this a musician’s record? Probably. I don’t play any instruments and in most situations with this album, I don’t even feel like I have the appropriate vocabulary to describe the different techniques going on. What I do know is that sometimes beauty comes in expected places. Here it is layered and nearly concealed under a filter of noise, however it peeks through in places you wouldn’t expect, catching you both off guard and challenging the very notion of what musical elegance is in the first place. High drama indeed.
    Choice Cuts: Things I Did When I Was Dead, Eraser, Impossible Bouquet, Sleeper Hold


    93. Black Kids - Partie Traumatic
    I’ve never seen a media spin cycle spit someone out faster than it did Black Kids. Hyped to high heaven by Pitchfork back in the fall of 2007 for their EP, “Wizard of Ahhhs,” the group was already experiencing a backlash of epic proportions before they even released their first album. When that moment did come in the summer or 2008 with “Partie Traumatic,” the results were not kind. Pitchfork, the very same outlet that caused there to be any anticipation in the first place, decided that the album wasn’t even worthy of a review, choosing to post a photo of pugs with the word “sorry” strewn over it. Ain’t fame a bitch?
    Did Black Kids deserve it? Yes and no. The main criticism I’ve seen for the group on message boards is that they’re simply trying too hard. I can certainly see it, chief among my complaints are the gender ambiguous lyrics and the grating sing along chants that remind us all why we don’t listen to Architecture in Helsinki for longer than three tracks, however the more you realize that Black Kids aesthetic is based purely on nostalgia and teenage-like rhetoric, the more you realize that trying too hard is actually a fairly focal part of their sound. It’s easy to picture all these songs playing as flaxen-haired youth sways back and forth at their junior proms, lending each a sheepishly romantic quality fairly in line with the teenage tendency to overcompensate.
    I kind of dug the lo-fi home studio sound of the EP more than I do the slightly overproduced studio versions, and yes it’s true that the best songs are still the ones that surfaced when the going was still good, however it’s unfair to say there aren’t other bright spots. “Hurricane Jane” is best with its staccato guitar riff and its gently picked bass line. The chorus (“It’s Friday night and I ain’t got nobody/ What’s the use of making the bed?”) is wickedly irreverent, full of enough youthful suburban woe to make John Waters crack a smile. “I’m Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How To Dance With You” and “I’m Making Eyes At You” both also fit the mold, giving the image of a kid awkwardly shuffling dirt with his Chuck Taylors. In the grand scheme of locked in my bedroom melodrama, Black Kids are somewhere in line with Morrisey and The Cure. They may try to impress you more than they need to, but they have “Kids” in their name for a reason.
    Choice Cuts: Hurrican Jane, I’m Not Gonna Teach..., I’ve Underestimated My Charm Again


    92. The Saturdays - Chasing Lights
    Perhaps fearing Girls Aloud and Sugababes would implode sooner or later (and they’d be right on at least one of those), The Saturdays were born somewhere in a musical lab, more than likely a batch of capable singers each of whom probably had countless unnoticed demo tapes floating around studio to studio. Together, they follow a longstanding tradition of British girl bands. And like most of their predecessors, the results are more capable than you’d expect.
    First single “If This Is Love” is the type of song you may enjoy in the moment, but chances are you’ll hear it again in a few years and you’ll ask yourself how we were ever so naive. Follow up, “Up,” a fidgety pop explosion, is about a million times better and just enough of an oddity to suggest that the Saturdays will likely experiment and find their niche on their second album the way Girls Aloud did (Spoiler Alert: It’s already out and they do).
    Nothing else is too remarkable on its own, however “Vulnerable” is so scattershot and curiously assembled that I’m willing to call it the weirdest pop song of the year, but nearly everything is so pleasant and cheery in that irony-free way that the Brits do so well that it’s hard not to smile and sing along. I much preferred “Issues” when I thought they were saying “don’t know if I should stab you or kiss you” (it’s really “slap”), however it and the title track both prove nearly irresistible in their guitar-strumming cheeriness. It couldn’t get any more eager to please, but it couldn’t really get any more comforting in well-written pop familiarity.
    Choice Cuts: Up, Chasing Lights, Issues, Set Me Off


    91. Little Jackie - The Stoop
    Fondly remembered by me for her 1997 one-hit-wonder, “Legend of a Cowgirl,” I was quite excited to see Imani Coppola moving on to new things with her new band, Little Jackie. Even odder was seeing her sparring with Tiffany “New York” Pollard on VH1’s “New York Goes To Work,” to which the group supplied the infectious “The World Should Revolve Around Me” as its theme song. Odd is usually the best way to describe Coppola, and it’s a reputation she keeps up as the vocalist for Little Jackie, a group that seems so singularly focused that they probably are a one-off project. Each track is shockingly similar in sound, all tinkling xylophones and Mark Ronsen-esque horns, and it’s an attribute that ends up causing the album to loose steam as it proceeds. It’s a pity really, since “The Stoop” is probably one of the most lyrically clever albums I’ve heard in a long time. Chock full of non-sequiturs, Coppola emerges as the queen of random, dropping lines as bizarre as “What came first, the chicken nugget or the Egg McMuffin?,” and as deceptively self-conscious as “I wanna save a kangaroo from a life in a zoo/ I wanna own a llama/ I want less drama in my life/ I think I really wanna be a happy housewife.” Things often get too cutsey and subject matter often careens into the cliche, such as it does on “Guys Like When Girls Kiss” and the text message breakup song, “LOL,” however one can never accuse the duo of being lyrically boring. There are a few biting moments to be had, both curiously directed at tabloid figures that no one really bothers anymore. “Crying For The Queen” aims its crosshairs at Amy Winehouse, unsympathetically telling her “people paid to see a show/ they didn’t just make a kind donation.” On the deliriously catchy “Black Barbie,” the target is Nicole Ritchie, who she slams with the line “I’m part Ethiopian that’s why I lose so much weight.” Honestly, I don’t get where a lot of this is coming from, but Coppola is a smart enough lyricist when she wants to be that she can elevate even the relative dud into something worth hearing at least once.
    Choice Cuts: 28 Butts, Black Barbie, One Love, The World Should Revolve Around Me
  • My Top 50 Favorite Albums Of The Decade 2000-2009

    2 Jan 2010, 04:33 by howisya


    1. Radiohead - Kid A (2000)
    It's been over nine years. Frankly, I'm all talked out and have been for some time. I didn't even put up a fight when my cousin dismissed it out of hand recently, having only heard it once, years ago. However, anyone reading this has probably heard Kid A already and formed their own opinion long ago, so what more could I add that hasn't been said too many times before?



    2. Björk - Vespertine (2001)
    It's her album, but it's also her songwriting album. Vespertine showed me how glitchy electronics could be warm, but harps, strings, and one of the most gifted and talented singers of all time help make this an immaculate listen. I think this is one of the most underrated albums of the decade and in her vast, impressive discography.



    3. Aphex Twin - Drukqs (2001)
    Although not a cohesive listen in the traditional sense, to take in Drukqs is to go on a wild ride through the mad genius of Richard D. James. Here, he revisits his classic of the early to mid ' (setting the stage for his return to in the mid to late ') but aided by every production skill and compositional strength he's developed since then. As if that were not enough, the modern day master let's us hear his beautiful, Erik Satie-inspired pieces and a series of acoustic workouts and freakouts. Never has one album offered so much and received so little appreciation and understanding in return. No wonder Aphex Twin stopped making albums.



    4. Hood - Cold House (2001)
    This album will always be dear to me because it helped get me through a difficult time. It also serves as an awesome example of the promotional power of the mp3, as I'd never heard Hood until browsing Audiogalaxy (R.I.P.) when they were a featured artist with three legal downloads from this album. I was quickly taken by Hood's fragile, gorgeous, melancholic sound, and today I own 12 of their discs. In an ideal world, this naturally flowing, genre-blending album would get at least half of the acclaim heaped on Kid A.



    5. dead prez - lets get free (2000)
    This is quite simply one of if not the most inspiring album I've ever heard. Listening to this gets me charged every time. I may not agree with every unabashed, radical political stance espoused by M-1 and Stic.Man, but how can anyone disagree with messages like PlayBe Healthy and PlayDiscipline makes things easier? Besides the raw, jaw-droppingly brilliant, poetically expressed lyrical content, the album is musically amazing. Few emcees have ever sounded this consistently sharp, focused, and hungry, and every beat knocks and sounds beautiful at the same time. The fact that dead prez had an active role in producing the album makes it all the more special.



    6. Deltron 3030 - Deltron 3030 (2000)
    This album is just a lot of fun, even if Dan the Automator's production makes an album set far into the future sound dated. Del tha Funkee Homosapien was seriously in the zone writing and recording this album.



    7. A Perfect Circle - Mer De Noms (2000)
    I don't think it's fair or accurate to call anything above a album, so that makes this debut release by Maynard James Keenan's side-project the best rock album of the decade and them the best new rock group, at least for my tastes. I love how their songs completely rock but are full of nuances and subtleties. The arrangements are great, and the production is perfect. Rock needs more of this.



    8. Deftones - White Pony (2000)
    The production may be a little cold on this album, but it works. The songs rock hard but sound delicate, too. There isn't a bad song on the initial release, which is what I have and is the intended tracklisting.



    9. Justin Timberlake - FutureSex/LoveSounds (2006)
    If you'd told me any time before 2006 that I'd be putting a singer from *NSYNC and former Mickey Mouse Club member ahead of most of my favorite artists in my top albums of the decade list, I'd have never believed you. Have you listened to this album though? It's incredible. Very rarely do I listen to an album and just envy the music the whole time as if I wish I'd made it, but this is one of those. No longer an industry puppet, Justin grew up (perhaps trying a little too hard in the process) and, with the able assistance of Timbaland and Danja at the height of their prowess, created a masterpiece.



    10. Madvillain - Madvillainy (2004)
    Rarely do dream combos work out as well in reality as they do in theory, but MF DOOM and Madlib even managed to exceed expectations. It may not be Doom at his deepest or 'Lib at his most , but it's a hell of an album. Here's to the next.



    11. Autechre - Confield (2001)
    The musical equivalent to every frenetic, weird, crazy thought I've had, this is still the most mindblowing album I've ever heard. I've learned this is also the worst place for newcomers to Autechre to start.



    12. Prefuse 73 - One Word Extinguisher (2003)
    This was one of two discs that served as the road soundtrack to the worst summer of my life (so far!). I loved how catchy, visceral, and busy this album sounded, which was just what I needed. I thought Prefuse was cool from his first album, but a couple tracks aside it was just another album to me, so I didn't have high expectations for this album. I was blown away by the tremendous growth in production, from the sinewy synths to the ambient textures (including vocals) to the assortment of other instruments and growing supporting cast. This album introduced me to the music of Diverse, Dabrye, Daedelus, and Tommy Guerrero, but Prefuse is the star of the show here. At the time it seemed like the perfect melding of and IDM, my two favorite genres then (and perhaps still). To this day, I still consider One Word Extinguisher Prefuse's magnum opus.



    13. Radiohead - In Rainbows (2007/2008)
    I had a long history with this album before I ever played it, but it's really not that interesting to recap, especially now. Suffice it to say that I'd heard nearly every song on here in its live incarnation long before the album was released and didn't expect much based on what I found to be second rate material compared to the songs they toured before the release of their three previous albums. I think it speaks to the power of an even, cohesive-sounding album that In Rainbows is as good as it is. In the right order, these songs complement each other flawlessly, and although I find the high points to be higher on Amnesiac and Hail To The Thief and the production of those albums to be more "interesting," this is truly a great, often addictive listen.



    14. Saul Williams - Saul Williams (2004)
    It was really difficult to rank Saul's three albums from this decade. Even his Rick Rubin-produced debut that sat on the shelf for two or three years before seeing a poorly promoted release is great. The margin between Saul Williams and the next album is paper thin, but I give self-titled the edge because the music, nearly all of it self-produced, seems to fit Saul a little better, which makes sense as some of NiggyTardust! is built on scraps from unreleased Nine Inch Nails material. Regardless, listening to him grow as a musical artist from Amethyst Rock Star to Saul Williams is remarkable. Here are fully fleshed-out, seriously heavy compositions sung more often than spoken or rapped, so it feels more organic than the spoken word over and debut.



    15. Saul Williams - The Inevitable Rise and Liberation of NiggyTardust! (2007/2008)
    Saul's Ziggy Stardust concept album produced by Trent Reznor hits all the right notes. Even more so than Saul Williams, NiggyTardust! signaled the arrival of a fully matured artist within the realm of music (as opposed to all those other creative arts Saul has mastered or at least dabbled in). Some of it does sound like NIN with another vocalist, but it also sounds global yet completely personal. Obviously the elements from the previous album are pushed even further to the forefront here, but the and hip-hop remain intact, and the sonic palate is greatly expanded, including everything from to gorgeous, credible ballads. I was down in front for three shows supporting this album, all spectacular.



    16. Cannibal Ox - The Cold Vein (2001)
    Dark, scary, depressing, and brilliant, I was a little late to Can Ox's unique brand of cerebral street rap, coming to it after falling in love with the production on El-P's Fantastic Damage. The music on The Cold Vein is just as tense if not more so, but the more accessible and adept yet creative and experimental flows and lyrics anchor the album. One of the other biggest disappointments of the decade in music is the revelation of just how unlikely it is that Vast Aire, Vordul Mega, and El-P will ever regroup for a sequel.



    17. OutKast - Stankonia (2000)
    Even for me, it's easy to take this album for granted because its singles are so deeply ingrained into popular culture and the disc itself is full of so many songs and interludes, but it's important to remember that this is Outkast still at their creative zenith, making it look so easy trading smooth, rapid-paced rhymes and taking influence from all over, something we haven't truly gotten again from them in the decade since. The title for their planned full reunion album, The Hard 10, has taken on a new meaning.



    18. Nine Inch Nails - Year Zero (2007)
    Trent Reznor's allegorical, politically dystopian, concept album consists of really catchy songs that formulaically devolve into glorious noise. It loses points for some generic -isms, but Trent delivers the goods for the most part, making this an exciting listen complete with some career highlights like PlayVessel and PlayIn This Twilight. The remix album is great, too, and you can remix every song on Year Zero with the multitracks posted online and in a DVD-ROM accompanying Y34RZ3R0R3M1X3D, further defining the concept of a DIY laptop musician future come reality.



    19. N*E*R*D - In Search Of... (2001/2002)
    The at their peak stretched out and created a fun, catchy album with a couple really beautiful heartfelt, serious songs. I had the European and promo release as a download in 2001, but the album didn't really hit me until later in the year when they posted a stream on their official site of what would be released to the U.S. in 2002. I much prefer this live instrumentation version, but that's a debate that has been ongoing among fans ever since.


    20. OutKast - Speakerboxxx/The Love Below (2003)
    Listening now I remember why I recommended this double album to everybody back then. While Andre 3000 experimented (and I say succeeded admirably) on his disc with singing, Big Boi delivered on what he does best, zany, funky, but street-credible rap. Between the two discs there are so many winners, yet this appears to be a Diamond-certified album that is actually underrated, at least among hip-hop heads.



    21. Common - Like Water for Chocolate (2000)
    This is another close call. I don't love this album as much as I did at the beginning of the decade, but I still find it one of the best rap albums I know, and I really do know every song on here very well. This is the album where Common joined up with The Roots Crew and Jay Dee, officially the Soulquarians, and it sounds like the best of all three worlds. It's also the last album where Com wasn't P.C. Note the homophobia on album highlight PlayDooinit and references to "bitches" peppered throughout the album. Nonetheless, Like Water For Chocolate probably has Common's most tolerable musical love letters to women, especially the breakout single, and still classic, PlayThe Light.



    22. Common - Electric Circus (2002)
    For my tastes, I prefer Electric Circus these days. I give LWFC the edge lyrically, but the weird, beautiful, seriously bumpin' (when's the last time you heard that? ha) /hip-hop/ music of EC appeals to me more. Despite what some say, I think Com spits hard on this album, too. I feel one of the most regrettable things in this decade in music was Com's audience convincing him that he was too different on this album, that it sucked, that he dressed weird. They got their wish because he's never been the same since, unfortunately.



    23. Mogwai - Rock Action (2001)
    A lush, beautiful album, and their last where I can remember the music just by the track titles. It is a tad short, but maybe it's just right. It's a bit of a departure not only in length, but also in content, as You Don't Know Jesus is the only song that rocks long and hard (pause?) like so many highlights on their first two studio albums, but I wouldn't trade Sine Wave or 2 Rights Make 1 Wrong.



    24. Boards of Canada - Geogaddi (2002)
    I love the paranoid effect derived from the obscure vocal samples, sinewy synths, and ambient textures married with insistent drums. The track titles and album artwork only add to the mythos. This freaky, psychedelic album has been imitated but never duplicated.



    25. El-P - I'll Sleep When You're Dead (2007)
    The hip-hop auteur grew in the many years between proper solo albums into a better emcee and even more formidable producer in the traditional sense, here drafting The Mars Volta, Cat Power, and Trent Reznor in addition to the usual help from his Definitive Jux roster. Every song here hits hard on some level emotionally and musically.



    26. Nine Inch Nails - With Teeth (2005)
    Although this wasn't another masterpiece that announced the triumphant return of Trent Reznor, I think this album is underrated. A lot of the quirks on past albums and Year Zero are replaced here by sludgy or jagged guitar riffs and pummeling drums, but it's a great performance.



    27. Slum Village - Fantastic, Vol. 2 (2000)
    This is a very fun hip-hop album with dope beats and catchy raps. The End.



    28. Portishead - Third (2008)
    This was my favorite album of 2008. I consider it nearly as good as the first two albums but in a completely different way. With Portishead having spent so much time away from music, no reasonable person could expect them to sound the same as they did before, back when was still alive, and I'm glad they didn't try to act like nothing happened, either to their band or the Bristol scene. What they give us instead on Third is their rock album (some may feel more comfortable seeing "kraut" or "psychedelic" prefixed to that, but it's rock nonetheless). The feel is thus different but familiar. Beth Gibbons still sounds fragile, lost, and distraught but resolute, and the music is still heavy and serious, except for the delightful breather on the album, PlayDeep Water, which always reminds me of Steve Martin's The Jerk. The band is in top form, and I am so pleased that more new material is on the way this year.



    29. J-Live - All Of The Above (2002)
    Perhaps too sincere for some, All Of The Above is nevertheless a tutorial on great hip-hop. J-Live has a sporty flow and clearly has fun kicking nonstop substance and creative concepts over serviceable beats. It's refreshing to hear someone put so much time and effort into his craft.



    30. El-P - Fantastic Damage (2002)
    This is the second, darker half of the soundtrack to the worst summer of my life and is a natural accompaniment to Prefuse 73's One Word Extinguisher as it, too, is a hybrid of hip-hop boom bap and electronics. This album is harder and uglier, however, in the most beautiful possible way, from the harsh sound of the beats to the subject matter of the songs. Very few albums are this well produced either.



    31. Massive Attack - 100th Window (2003)
    Nowhere near as good as Mezzanine, nowhere near as bad as many say. The intensity and paranoia here are aided by glitchy, icy electronics. This album is a heavy listen, not meant for dinner parties. My favorites are the songs where 3D sings lead.



    32. J Dilla - Donuts (2006)
    Despite how easy it plays, this album can be difficult to get a handle on intellectually if you love hip-hop and other music because of the length and treatment of the samples used. Is this technically a megamix? Are these even beats? These were among my first questions when I got into the album. As I listened, new questions arose. Is this Dilla's best album? Is this going to be a new trend in hip-hop? That last question was quickly answered in a resounding yes!, but the rest isn't so clear. I know this reads like the introductory paragraph of the pamphlet handed out at gatherings of the Cult of J Dilla, but just listen to the album. Closely. It has a message it speaks to you, if you listen.



    33. Quasimoto - The Further Adventures of Lord Quas (2005)
    This album is mad. It's musically all over the place and full of so many ideas it can be hard to keep up. A lot of people don't like the funny voice affected by Madlib as the character Quasimoto, but I love it both musically and conceptually. I think the voice and the Melvin Van Peebles samples fit the music perfectly, too, so much so that I've never wanted to hear the instrumental version of either album.



    34. Jay-Z - The Blueprint (2001)
    This is big budget, blockbuster rap in every sense. Jay-Z became a superstar here, but so did Kanye West and Just Blaze. This album has long reached Kid A levels of overdiscussion and overpraise, however.



    35. Kanye West - Late Registration (2005)
    I've always found this album to be complete and musically masterful. Time has shown this to be the last time Kanye rapped for a whole album with substance and conviction, and although he's grown as a producer and composer since, nothing has sounded this fleshed out (thank Jon Brion).



    36. Radiohead - Amnesiac (2001)
    With this following so quickly behind Kid A and consisting of songs recorded at the same time, it's a little too easy to dismiss Amnesiac. I don't advise it, as the highlights on this album are just as good as those on Kid A. I do find the "" to be a little overcooked here, to the point of ruining what was their best new song in their live set in years, PlayI Might Be Wrong, a kink they finally worked out on In Rainbows. The piano, strings, and horns that fill many of the songs here help make them some of Radiohead's finest moments.



    37. The Roots - Game Theory (2006)
    On their Def Jam debut, The Roots trade their feel-good vibes for sad times and tension, crafting a claustrophobic, dark, gritty masterpiece that stands among their best work.



    38. The Roots - Phrenology (2002)
    This is the third or fourth Roots album I heard and owned, but it's the first one I learned front to back and still some of their most creative work. I'd love to hear the Black Thought solo album, Masterpiece Theatre, that half of this album was versioned from. As diverse and well-produced as the music is, BT's solid command of the mic and songwriting development arguably make him the high point of the album, the group's first without Malik B sharing mic time (although he is the subject of the experimental album highlight Water).



    39. D'Angelo - Voodoo (2000)
    If Burial isn't ambient r&b, this is. I've always been attracted to the creeping tones of this album and how pretty melodies, simple but often profound lyrics, and even the funk would cut through the murk. This album is so good I can almost forgive D'Angelo for not releasing another one after.



    40. Blackalicious - Blazing Arrow (2002)
    This may have had too many hands in it, but I still find it a highly accomplished work and a rewarding listen. Gab has the same fun but substantive and conceptual lyrical content and dexterous delivery as J-Live but doesn't come across quite as naturally. Still, if you can tolerate a little geekiness and playful corniness in your rap music, this album was the best of its kind in the decade.



    41. Hood - Outside Closer (2005)
    There really isn't a noticeable dropoff in the quality of the music and lyrics between Cold House and this album. I think that, other than the two singles, the songs here are a little less catchy. If Cold House hinted at any hope for the future, it isn't really found here, as this is a sobering listen, with Closure being perhaps the most emotionally devastating song I've ever heard. This album isn't for everyone, but I find it a very rewarding listen. It's also another album that shows the similarities between and .



    42. Herbert - Bodily Functions (2001)
    This album is highly accomplished musically and contains some of the most sophisticated and fully formed songwriting in the electronic music genre. That, in addition to live instrumentation, so much of this album consists of samples actually sourced from the human body is remarkable. Matthew Herbert and his jazz singer wife Dani Siciliano make a wonderful team.



    43. Reflection Eternal (Talib Kweli & Hi-Tek) - Train of thought (2000)
    I think this is Talib Kweli and Hi-Tek at their individual best, and joining forces they created a classic with serious bars and serious bass. The mournful tone found in many of the songs adds even greater depth and resonance.



    44. The Notwist - Neon Golden (2002/2003)
    I guess I like this album in the same way other people like The Postal Service, but I find The Notwist's beautiful and quirky brand of "" music to have a lot more depth and lasting appeal.



    45. The Dandy Warhols - Thirteen Tales From Urban Bohemia (2000)
    This is the album of the decade as far as I'm concerned. Every song on here is good if not excellent.



    46. Talib Kweli - Quality (2002)
    Talib Kweli shocked the underground by releasing his first solo album without any assistance from Hi-Tek and with actually measurable swag. I've always loved this album. The songs are fun and meaningful. It's no mystery why Kwe broke through with this album and Get By in particular.



    47. Burial - Untrue (2007)
    Judging by my list so far, you'd never know ever happened, and Burial is probably the least dubstep-sounding artist associated with that movement, which is perhaps why I love him and this album so. Every song here is basically a stolen r&b over top of ambient music with a percussion set consisting of samples of a wood block, an aerosol can, a gun cock, and bullet shells hitting the floor. Burial's music also sounds like there's a room playing drum and bass and another playing r&b and you're in a room in-between. Or maybe it's just really good ambient . That's the thing with Burial, he's intriguing and hard to classify.



    48. Air - Talkie Walkie (2004)
    It's an album full of really pretty, catchy songs, some light, some serious. There's probably more variety in mood and instrumentation on this than any other Air album.



    49. Squarepusher - Go Plastic (2001)
    It's really good Squarepusher, easily some of his best work, a solid album, and fun to listen to. It hurt to exclude Ultravisitor, as that is a more interesting album, but consistency and cohesiveness made the difference.



    50. Daft Punk - Discovery (2001)
    I listened to this album a lot, and you probably did, too.



    Personally, I have a hard time taking seriously album recommendations from people who don't put their money where their mouth is (or their key-tappin' fingers, as the case may be). If you're like me, you should know that I bought every single one of these albums.

    All questions, comments, and recommendations are welcome. I only delete advertisements.
  • Top Albums of 2009

    31 Dec 2009, 16:52 by jasonweinberger

    1. Onra - Chinoiseries (761)
    2. Pete Philly & Perquisite - Mindstate (576)
    3. Onra & Quetzal - Tribute (558)
    4. Pete Philly & Perquisite - Mystery Repeats (430)
    5. Onra - 1.0.8 (327)
    6. The Foreign Exchange - Connected (310)
    7. J Dilla - Donuts (287)
    8. CéU - CéU (281)
    9. Flako - First Space Shit On The Moon (244)
    10. Madlib - WLIB AM: King Of The Wigflip (242)
    11. DJ Exile - Radio (231)
    12. De La Soul - Stakes Is High (230)
    13. J Dilla - Ruff Draft (230)
    14. Pete Philly & Perquisite - REMINDSTATE (224)
    15. Jaylib - The Rough Drafts (221)
    16. Marisa Monte - Universo ao Meu Redor (214)
    17. Brother Reade - Rap Music (202)
    18. Cool Calm Pete - Lost (201)
    19. The Cool Kids - The Bake Sale (192)
    20. DJ Mitsu The Beats - New Awakening (176)
    21. Yu - Before Taxes (166)
    22. Byron & Onra - The Big Pay Back (166)
    23. Madlib - Beat Konducta, Vol. 3 & 4: In India (161) 24. Mr.J.Medeiros - Of Gods And Girls (157)
    25. Jaylib - Champion Sound (153)
    26. Oh No - Dr. No's Oxperiment (151)
    27. Quasimoto - The Unseen (149)
    28. Common - Like Water for Chocolate (148)
    29. Madvillain - Madvillainy (147)
    30. The Roots - Things Fall Apart (137)
    31. De La Soul - Impossible: Mission (127)
    32. Blu - HerFavoriteColo(u)r. (125)
    33. De La Soul - Buhloone Mind State (118)
    34. Mayra Andrade - Navega (118)
    35. Diamond District - In The Ruff (115)
    36. Madlib - WLIB AM King Of The Wigflip (115) 37. Atmosphere - When Life Gives You Lemons, You Paint That Shit Gold (114)
    38. Adriana Calcanhotto - Maré (111)
    39. Thes One - Lifestyle Marketing (110)
    40. Rosa Passos - Rosa (108)
  • Top 125 Rap Albums of the 2000's - 25-1

    30 Dec 2009, 05:22 by gptp20

    1. A Piece of Strange- CunninLynguists – 2006

    The Gates


    Since When


    2. The Blueprint- Jay-Z – 2001

    Heart of the City


    Song Cry


    3. Train of Thought- Reflection Eternal – 2000

    Love Language


    Good Mourning


    4. The Renaissance- Q-Tip – 2008

    Life is Better


    Getting Up


    5. The Cool- Lupe Fiasco – 2007

    Paris, Tokyo


    Put You On Game



    6. Masters of the Universe- Binary Star – 2000

    Reality Check


    New Hip Hop


    7. Like Water for Chocolate- Common – 2000

    The Light


    6th Sense



    8. Mind Over Matter- Zion I – 2000

    Elevation


    Inner Light


    9. Graduation- Kanye West – 2007

    Flashing Lights


    Everything I Am


    10. Late Registration- Kanye West – 2005

    Gone


    Hey Mama


    11. Madvillainy- Madvillain – 2004

    All Caps


    Accordion


    12. Supreme Clientele- Ghostface Killah – 2000

    Nutmeg


    Apollo Kids


    13. Labor Days- Aesop Rock – 2001

    Daylight


    Save Yourself


    14. Hell Hath No Fury- Clipse – 2006

    Hello New World


    Chinese New Year


    15. Below The Heavens- Blu & Exile – 2007

    So(ul) Amazing


    Dancing In The Rain


    16. The Cold Vein- Cannibal Ox – 2001

    Vein


    Stress Rap



    17. The Marshall Mathers LP- Eminem – 2000

    Stan


    The Way I Am


    18. Stankonia- OutKast – 2000

    B.O.B.


    Ms. Jackson


    19. The Listening- Little Brother – 2003

    The Way You Do It


    Whatever You Say


    20. God's Son- Nas – 2002

    Thugz Mansion


    Made You Look



    21. Stillmatic- Nas - 2001

    One Mic


    Rule


    22. Food & Liquor- Lupe Fiasco – 2006

    Kick Push


    Daydream


    23. Fantastic Vol. 2- Slum Village – 2000

    Fall in Love


    Climax


    24. American Gangster- Jay-Z - 2007

    Roc Boys (And The Winner Is)


    Fallin’


    25.None Shall Pass- Aesop Rock - 2007

    None Shall Pass


    Fumes
  • My Top 25 Songs of the Decade

    28 Dec 2009, 19:39 by Sonik_Villa

    I can truly say that in this decade, I was able to absorb so much music into my brain. In the 90's, R&B and Hip-Hop dominated my playlists, but jazz, house, downtempo, rock, salsa, merengue, mariachi, dance hall, roots reggae, & so many other genres made a tremendous impact on what I list to. In no particular order, here are my top 25 songs of this decade:



    Koop - Waltz For Koop (2001)
    ----------------------------------------
    Even though this song came out in 2001, I first heard this song in the spring of 2004. Being a fan of San Diego's Smooth Jazz 98.1, I was looking for more jazz music to listen to. On that same radio station, artists like George Benson, Mindy Abair, & Paul Hardcastle get a lot of air play. I then decided to look for more music on one of those digital cable radio stations. The electronica station caught my ear when I heard this one song in particular. It was then when this one song came on that featured some great vocals by Yukimi Nagano & a very serene jazz beat with some seagulls in the background. It must have been fate that I found this song because it opened up a whole new world me. Right then & there, I knew that this was some of the best music I had ever listened to. This song takes me away from one of the most boring cities in the world (Chula Vista, cough-cough. Thank God I am not a native of here & I will leave this city one day) & gives me hope that I will one day travel the world to the most interesting places ever. This songs gives me a sense of hope that I world exists beyond The South Bay regional area of San Diego & that I have so much more to experience in my lifetime.



    Alejandro Sanz - No Es Lo Mismo (2003)
    -------------------------------------------------------
    I first heard this song in November 2003. This song came out at an appropriate time, when I was graduating from the university & a final turbulent semester. I though such songs from Alejandro Sanz like "Corazon Partio" & "El Alma al Aire" were not only classic songs, but anthems that would last for all eternity. Don't get me wrong, they still are. I was clearly mistaken when I thought those were his best songs because "No Es Lo Mismo" became my favorite. It's the lyrics of this song that resonated with me. When Sanz talks about no caring what others think, never selling out for what you believe in, living is the most dangerous thing, & "a mi me vale madre" (to me, I don't give a fuck"), they remind of how I was able to stand my ground against my political enemies of the time & prove that they could be outlasted with real heart, strong morals & values, never giving up, & that substance is more important than a hollow shell with fake accomplishments.




    Los Amigos Invisibles - Yo No Se (2006)
    -------------------------------------------------------
    I first heard this song when I was watching MTV Tr3s in Fall of 2006. Even though I am Mexican & my region is overly saturated with banda music, I was extremely relieved to hear something else from another part of Latin America - Venezuela to be exact. This is one of my favorite party joints ever. The disco & the funk are second to none. The guitar beat is very reminiscent of Nile Rodgers of Chic which clearly distinguishes this song from other Latin American party hits. The lyrics are cool and not corny as with many Latin America party songs and others that are played out, specifically in the Mexicali wedding scene. And since this band is from Venezuela, this songs always reminds me of my favorite Venezuelan actress, Gaby Espino. Damn, she's hot!




    Sade - Lovers Rock (2000)
    ------------------------------------
    Sade is one of my favorite bands, period. People probably think of Sade Adu as a solo singer like they did Gloria Estefan when she was with Miami Sound Machine. I remember listening to "Smooth Operator" as a little kid in the summer of 1985. I never realized that they were one of my favorite artists until this decade, when I educated myself by listening to their music. So when the Lovers Rock album came out, I was ecstatic. Even though "King of Sorrow" & "By Your Side" are classics, this song caught my ear the most. It is one of the greatest slow jams ever.




    Brand New Heavies - Sex God (2006)
    --------------------------------------------------
    The Brand New Heavies are one my favorite bands, ever. I remember first listening to "Never Stop" as a 9th grader in the fall of 1991. It wasn't til I began listening to more of their music that they were then dominating my play lists. This song is on my top 10 list of 2006 and the most played on my Last.FM charts. The bass line is still as infectious as when I first heard this song. And N'Dea Davenport vocals hook you in. This is also one of my favorite songs of all time. Simply, funk & soul at its finest.




    Jay-Z - Roc Boys (And The Winner Is).... (2007)
    ---------------------------------------------------------------
    This song was on my top 10 list of 2007. I first heard this song right before the start of the Jaguars vs. Chargers game at Jacksonville Municipal Stadium. By far, it is my favorite Jay-Z song and he has so many classic joints. This is a song that should be played after every big accomplishment in life, in the spirit of Johnny Drama. One of the ultimate party joints, ever.




    Lily Allen - LDN (2006)
    ------------------------------
    By far, this is one of my favorite Lily Allen songs. While this song seems happy-go-lucky & cheerful with its ska beat, I really like the irony it contains. Just dissect these lyrics - "When you look with your eyes/everything seems nice/But if you look twice you can see it's all lies." The thing I appreciate most about Lily Allen is her honesty & she never holds back. Before I ever leave Chula Vista, I hope to write something just as ironic. And if & when I go to London, I will use LDN in my text messages.




    Common - Break My Heart (2007)
    ----------------------------------------------
    This might be my favorite song of 2007. While "The People" & "The Game" convinced me to buy this album, this was my favorite song off his "Finding Forever" album. I really like the George Duke sample of "Someday". It really gives it a soulfulness that many of today's hip-hop songs seem to lack. I really like how this song is not a typical radio song that would be played out on San Diego's Z90.



    Amerie - 1 Thing (2005)
    -------------------------------
    I really like Amerie because she is not your typical R&B songstress. I like how she always incorporates a lot of live instrumentation, particularly percussion in her music. Plus I like how this song also has go-go rhythms in it even though it was a sample of The Meters song from the 70's. Shouldn't this sound take the world by storm and not just stay limited to D.C.? I prefer just Amerie on the song as opposed to bringing in Jay-Z & Eve for the remixes. If I would have created a list for my top 10 in 2005, this song would be on it.



    Gang Starr - Skills (2003)
    ----------------------------------
    Gang Starr is one of my favorite hip-hop groups. In my opinion, any song that DJ Premier touches is a certified classic and only Dr. Dre joins him as the greatest hip-hop producers of all time. I often wondered what happened to real hip-hop in this decade as it became watered down by mainstream pop sounds that work better for the likes of Lady Gaga & Fergie. Anyways, what I like about this song is that it really is what hip-hop should be about - breaking, deejaying, & emceeing (yes, graffiti was left out as another element). Everytime I listen to this song, I want to start doing Tang Soo Do or freestyle martial arts forms.



    M.O.P. - Ante Up (Remix) (2000)
    -------------------------------------------
    This is also one of the few real hip-hop joints that truly shined this decade. In my opinion, at the peak of hip-hop's reign, earlier this decade. I bought Funkmaster Flex's mixtape as soon as I heard this shit. Everyone that rhymed on this song spit some real rhymes & held nothing back. It was smart to have Busta Rhymes lead off & just fuck shit up. I remember playing this song at a Hell's Kitchen's party & everyone went crazy for this joint. Another song I just want to start doing some Tang Soo Do to just so I can fuck shit up as well.



    Dilated Peoples - Worst Comes To Worst (2001)
    ------------------------------------------------------------------
    Another great hip-hop joint from this decade. Dilated Peoples has always been one of the best hip-hop groups in my opinion. What I like about this song besides the emcee skills & the scratches, is how intelligent the song is & what this song represents. I am even going to go on record & say that I was the first in my shapter's history to get my pledge class (Beta Gamma) to reflect to a hip-hop song, which was this joint because of it's message.




    Arctic Monkeys - Bet You Look Good On The Dance Floor (2006)
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The Arctic Monkeys have become my favorite rock group. Usually, American rock groups, particularly those who leaned towards a pop sound & made it big on TRL turned me off to rock & reminded me of a boring suburban status quo. Their music is the shit & reminds why Britain rules when it comes to creating music. This by far is my favorite joint by them. Their lyric about the being a robot from 1984 that dances to electro & poplocks.



    The Hives - Hate To Say I Told You So (2002)
    -------------------------------------------------------------
    While the Arctic Monkeys saved my rock soul, The Hives were the ones who reminded me that I should have one. This is one of the best rock songs that I have ever heard. The lead singer reminds me of Mick Jagger.



    Julieta Venegas - Andar Conmigo (2004)
    -------------------------------------------------------
    Julieta Vengas just might be the best Mexican singer that I have ever heard. It might be blasphemy to many of my fellow countrymen, but there. I said it. I was surprised to find out that she is from Tijuana. Even though I despise & denounce TJ as an awful city, Julieta has shined some positive light on this border city. The guitar & accordion give this song a lot of character. This is also the type of song that would be great to sing to after getting faded to some tequila.




    Koop - The Moonbounce (2006)
    -----------------------------------------
    Koop Islands is probably the one album that most anticipated, even more than a Common, A Tribe Called Quest, Sade, or Brand New Heavies album. It was well worth the wait. This song is my favorite off the album. I feel that this song is layered with so many influences. Might it be Latin Jazz similar to Poncho Sanchez or Tito Puente? What about Glen Miller, Thelonius Monk, etc? I just know that this song is well crafted and it is perfection.



    Dwele - Truth (2003)
    ----------------------------
    Dwele first caught my attention when he came out with "Find a Way". Even though other R&B pretenders sing their nursery rhymes for middle school kids & their sex anthems about birthday sex or if your "down-down-down", they could never hold a candle to Dwele's soulfulness and the intelligence he brings to his music. He is up there as one of the best with D'Angelo, Maxwell, John Legend, & Musiq.




    Rhian Benson - Say How I Feel (2003)
    ----------------------------------------------------
    I first learned of Rhian Benson when BET still had the balls to play neo-soul artists (and lots of music videos) & this was the song. She is definitely one of the most underrated artists that I have ever heard of besides Adriana Evans. Besides the obvious vocal talents & great production this song has, it what the song is all about & I can truly relate to it except in my case, it it all about a girl or 2. It sure does remind me of the time I tried to ask a certain someone out even though she already had a boyfriend. Even though the results didn't go my way, at least I had the balls to go up to her & ask her out. I blame Musiq Soulchild for thinking that I had a chance. This same situation repeated itself a few years later and this some became even more relevant. Damn it Neisy & that other girl.




    Van Hunt - Dust (2004)
    -------------------------------
    This was one of my favorite songs of 2004. When I first heard this song, Van Hunt reminded of Prince. Also, I first learned of this song from the MTV2 website when first realized that I should stop looking for music through video channels and use other resources, plus I had a new computer which made this transition easier. I discovered this song right before I had a trip to Berlin, where it was on constant rotation. Looking back on this song, it is one of those songs in my life soundtrack that reminds of the joys of traveling the world. In addition, the lyrics to this song are truly soulful. I feel like I can relate to this song like "Say How I Feel" especially when he says he is insane & how it was no blow to my sophistication. Damn, I didn't have the winning hand.



    Common Market - Push (2006)
    ------------------------------------------
    Even though this song came out in 06, I didn't discover it until my friend, EJ told me about this group. EJ is one of the few people that I know that truly knows hip-hop. It is this song that has given me hope that real hip-hop lives. This has got to be one of the most intelligent songs that I have ever heard of, lyrically. If you have ever felt any pressure, this song will help you to reflect & find self-confidence. RA Scion can emcee.





    Koop - Summer Sun (2002)
    -------------------------------------
    I discovered this song when I was fascinated by Koop's music. Yukimi Nagano is truly brilliant with her vocals & compliments the band's sound. This song also reminds me that there is a big world out there that I need to see & explore. Even though this song is very jazzy, I don't want to limit this song or their music to a particular song, but I will say that they are the best.




    MF DOOM - Kon Queso (2004)
    -----------------------------------------
    In my life's quest to find the best hip-hop music out there is is nothing like the shit that these top 40 radio stations play, I found it. I first discovered MF Doom while listening to Madvillain. Whatever MF Doom is doing, he is doing his own thing. I like how he wears his mask as a tribute to Fantastic Four villain Dr. Doom. He is really aggressive when he spits rhymes over mid-tempo tracks. My favorite verses are:

    "Today on intense wreck week/We have the super villain in his own defense to speak/It's all a part of my mental techniques/available to freaks & pencil neck geeks".

    "Doom in love with Mary Jane/she's my main thing/Pulled her right from that web head/what a lame brain"

    I also like the samples he includes from the Marvel cartoons I watched as a little kid. He has done more for Dr. Doom than Julian McMahon did in live action. And he has the best album covers. And I also like how my Last.FM friend - Blkbetty pointed out that I was "one of a kind" listening to both MF Doom & Katy Perry.





    Madvillain - ALL CAPS (2004)
    ---------------------------------------
    This is one of my favorite joints from 04. I first discovered this song on MTV2. The video for this joint was sick. The verses that are spit are pure gold.

    Example:
    So nasty that it's probably somewhat of a travesty/having me daily total people you can call me your majesty/Keep your battery charged you know it won't stick yo/and it's not his fault you kick slow"


    Just a classic joint in my opinion.




    Aya - Slippin' (2004)
    ---------------------------
    I first discovered Aya on one of the radio stations I listened to from Last.FM. I forget which one of my friends had this song, but thank you for having listened to it and having it on your station. This is an amazing song. The acoustic guitar is off the hook. And Aya herself is very soulful. The lyrics are very poetic:

    "Haunted by what you lost/this melody dominates your thought/I feel I can touch the sun/"


    This has become one of my favorite slow jams. Naked Music records knows what they are doing.



    Calle 13 - Atrévete-te-te (2006)
    -----------------------------------------
    When reggaeton experienced a breakthrough in 2004, thanks to Daddy Yankee, the genre was doomed. I say that because the music was going to be played out and become a cliche at Latin American parties and in the club scene. I swear that if I hear "Gasolina" or some other played song at a Mexicali wedding or at a Chula Vista quincenera one more time, I fuckin' swear that I'm going to lose my mind and go insane like Patrick Bateman. With that being said, the only exception I've made to like any reggaeton whatsover in the post Daddy Yankee 04, is Calle 13. Hell, I don't even think Calle 13 is a typical reggaeton group. Their sound is way more different than whatever Telehit or Univision playout and their lyrics are actually good. Residente can rhyme with excellent word, charm, & charisma reminiscent to the type of humor Biz Markie is capable of. They are way more hip-hop than what they are probably labeled as. I'll end this review with one of their verses:

    ?Que importa si te gusta Green Day?/?Que importa si te gusta Coldplay?/Esto es directo, sin parar, one-way/Yo te lo juro de que por ley/Aqui to’a las boricuas saben karate/Ellas cocinan con salsa de tomate/Mojan el arroz con un poco de aguacate/Pa’ cosechar nalgas de 14 quilates



    Honorable mentions:
    ----------------------------

    Kinky - Sambita
    Sade - King of Sorrow
    La Oreja de Van Gogh - Muñeca de Trapo
    Kanye West - Stronger
    Musiq - Just Friends (Sunny)
    Notorious B.I.G. - Nasty Girl
    N.E.R.D. - Things Are Getting Better
    Santogold - Creator
    Common - Universal Mind Control (UMC)
    White Stripes - Icky Thump
    Louis XIV - Finding Out True Love Is Blind
    Kasabian - Club Foot
    Muse - Uprising
    Bloc Party - Banquet
    Franz Ferninand - No You Girls
    Kaiser Chiefs - I Predict a Riot
    Nicola Conte - Jet Sounds
    Erykah Badu - Bag Lady (remix)
    Gwen Stefani - Luxurious
    Jurassic 5 - Quality Control
    Sia - Insidiously
    Si*Sé - Bizcocho Amargo
    Belanova - Me Pregunto
    Erykah Badu - Honey
    Outkast - B.O.B.
    Solange - I Decided
    Pharrell - That Girl
    Daft Punk - One More Time
    Koop - Relaxin' At Club F****n
    Hadise - Milk Chocalate Girl
    John Legend - Save Room
    Anthony Hamilton - Everybody
    Maxwell - Pretty Wings
    LMFAO - La La La
    Akon - Ghetto
    DJ Cam - Summer in Paris
    Slum Village - Selfish
    Mos Def - Ghetto Rock
    Talib Kweli - Waitin' For The DJ
    Tony Touch - Return of the Diaz Bros.
    Jay-Z - Empire State of Mind
    Kardinall Offishall - Ol' Time Killin
    Jamiroquai - Seven Days in Sunny June
    Amy Winehouse - You Know I'm No Good
    Gwen Stefani - 4 In The Morning
    Teedra Moses - Be Your Girl
    N.E.R.D. - Laugh About It
    Amerie - Why R U
    Beyonce - Deja Vu
    Amerie - Why Can't We Fall In Love
    T.I. - Bring Em Out
    Wu-Tang Clan - Protect Ya Neck (The Jump Off)
    Blackalicious - Make You Feel That Way
    De La Soul - Much More
    Dead Prez - Hip-Hop
    Lightheaded - Pure Thoughts
    K-Os - Superstarr Pt. Zero
    Jay-Z - Big Pimpin'
    Juanes - A Dios Le Pido
    Gisselle - Jurame
    Charlie Zaa - Flor Sin Retono
    Seu Jorge - Te Queria
    Natalia y La Forquetina - Con La Hoja Las Hormigas
    Bacilos - Pasos de Gigante
    Julieta Venegas - Lento
    Jet - Are You Gonna Be My Girl
    Depeche Mode - Precious
    Ludacris - Stand Up
    Lily Allen - Fuck You
    Kanye West - Better Than I've Ever Been
    Keyshia Cole - Let It Go
    Michael Jackson - Butterflies
    Miguel Migs - Lionel's Jam
    Faithless - Mass Destruction
    Joe Budden - Pump It Up
    Alejandro Sanz - El Alma Al Aire
    Arctic Monkeys - From The Ritz To The Rubble
    White Stripes - Fell In Love With a Girl
    I Wayne - I Can't Satisfy Her
    Beenie Man - Girls Dem Suga (remix)
    Robin Thicke - Lost Without U
    Kanye West - Paranoid
    Natalia Lafourcade - Elefantes
    Lily Allen - Smile
    Shakira - Dia de Enero
    Chambao - Playas de Barbate
    DJ Cam - 6 Sense
    Common - Go
    Dave Hollister - One Woman Man
    Mya - Fallen
    Ronny Jordan - At Last
    Koop - Whenever There Is You
    Katy Perry - Waking Up In Vegas

    Koop

    Common

    Lily Allen

    Brand New Heavies

    Sade

    Alejandro Sanz

    Julieta Venegas

    MF DOOM

    Common Market

    Dwele

    Van Hunt

    Rhian Benson

    Madvillain

    Dilated Peoples

    The Hives

    Gang Starr

    Arctic Monkeys

    Amerie

    AYA

    Calle 13
  • Top 125 Rap Albums of the 2000's - 75-51

    28 Dec 2009, 03:01 by gptp20

    51. The Grind Date- De La Soul – 2004

    He Comes


    No


    52. Speakerboxxx/The Love Below- OutKast – 2003

    Ghetto Musick


    Hey Ya


    53. Dirty Money- UGK – 2001

    Wood Wheel


    Like a Pimp


    54. The Undisputed Truth- Brother Ali – 2007

    Ear to Ear


    Watcha Got


    55. 50 Cent- 50 Cent – 2000

    Qhetto Qu’ran


    Life’s on the Line


    56. Ink Is My Drink- Panacea – 2006

    Steel Kites


    Invisible Seas


    57. Will Rap For Food- CunninLynguists – 2001

    Lynguistics


    Missing Children


    58. Exit- k-os – 2002

    Fantastique


    Superstarr Pt. 0


    59. 4th Dimensional Rocketships Going Up- Gift Of Gab – 2004

    Way of the Light


    Evolution




    60. Man on the Moon- Kid Cudi – 2009

    Up Up and Away


    Pursuit of Happiness


    61. The Ecstatic- Mos Def – 2009

    Supermagic


    Casa Bey



    62. Bayani- Blue Scholars – 2007

    Joe Metro


    North By Northwest



    63. HerFavoriteColo(u)r- Blu – 2009

    Since


    Amnesia


    64. Mood Muzik 2- Joe Budden – 2006

    Are You In that Mood Yet


    3 Sides to a Story


    65. Be- Common – 2005

    Be


    Go


    66. Dilated Peoples- Dilated Peoples – 2001

    Worst Come To Worst


    Clockwork


    67. Monkey Barz- Sean Price – 2005

    Onion Head


    Monkey Barz



    68. Underground Kingz- UGK – 2007

    Int’l Players Anthem (I Choose You)


    Chrome Plated Woman


    69. Earth Tones- Crown City Rockers – 2004

    B-Boy


    Without Love


    70. Evolution Fight- Cyne – 2005

    Arrow of God


    Rappin


    71. Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101- Young Jeezy – 2005

    Bottom of the Map


    Soul Survivor




    72. I Phantom- Mr. Lif - 2002

    Live from the Plantation


    The Now


    73. THE HEALING- Strange Fruit Project – 2006

    Special


    Ready Forum








    74. The Old Prince- Shad - 2007

    I Heard You Had A Voice Like an Angel



    Out of Love Part II



    75. Country Grammar- Nelly - 2000

    Country Grammar



    EI
  • Favorite Hip hop albums of the 00's

    27 Dec 2009, 02:13 by Aaroneepap

  • 2009 Chart - Most played artists

    14 Dec 2009, 17:44 by tomdalenberg

    1. Phoenix (1029 plays)
    2. Franz Ferdinand (802 plays)
    3. Basement Jaxx (658 plays)
    4. Mando Diao (530 plays)
    5. The Rakes (514 plays)
    6. Wilco (506 plays)
    7. G. Love & Special Sauce (481 plays)
    8. Arctic Monkeys (470 plays)
    9. PAX & PRY (445 plays)
    10. The Kooks (439 plays)
    11. The Raconteurs (377 plays)
    12. Conor Oberst (351 plays)
    13. The Blue Van (291 plays)
    14. The View (269 plays)
    15. Beck (266 plays)
    16. Fleet Foxes (250 plays)
    16. Grizzly Bear (250 plays)
    18. Common (246 plays)
    19. Voicst (235 plays)
    20. Matt Costa (234 plays)
    21. The Virgins (226 plays)
    22. Röyksopp (222 plays)
    23. The Clash (219 plays)
    24. The Last Shadow Puppets (213 plays)
    25. The Rifles (205 plays)
    26. The Shins (195 plays)
    27. Passion Pit (187 plays)
    27. Esser (187 plays)
    29. Ladyhawke (180 plays)
    30. White Denim (175 plays)
    31. Friendly Fires (171 plays)
    32. The Fratellis (170 plays)
    33. Late of the Pier (169 plays)
    34. Cold War Kids (167 plays)
    35. The Whitest Boy Alive (164 plays)
    36. Bloc Party (158 plays)
    37. Patrick Watson (153 plays)
    38. Kaiser Chiefs (143 plays)
    39. Stephanie McKay (140 plays)
    40. The Subways (134 plays)