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Jim's
Top Ten (or Twelve) Picks of 2004
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1.
Thirdimension "Permanent
Holiday" (Hidden Agenda) [more]
A dazzling second album and my favorite of the year. Biased?
Yup. Patting ourselves on the back a little and proud we got
to put this out? Hell yes. To think these gentlemen endured getting
their first album (the awesome Protect
Us From What We Want)
getting more-or-less shelved by Warner Sweden upon release back
in 1998 and then six years later produce this life-affirming
new album, an incandescent gem…without missing a beat…as
if they'd never been away. Astounding.
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2.
The Chrysler "Failures And Sparks" (Flora & Fauna) [more]
This crosses over in so many myriad ways: exquisite fractured
pop, heartwarming bonfire Americana, intimate acoustic
folk. One the best albums in recent memory, and a close
second to Thirdimension. Good news: likely to be released
here early this year in expanded form.
Re-released
by Parasol/Galaxy Gramophone in the US, September 2005.
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3.
Leopold "Dreaming
Is For Anyone" (Take
One More Take) [more]
A perfect "Parasol" style pop album. Lush piano-driven
arrangements, melancholy lyrical moods, spectacular songs,
compelling Nordic understatement... Pretty sure (checking
my notes again) that this is one of the most beautiful
albums of the century. Yep. New album coming soon.
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4.
Hip Whips "Self-Titled" (Dubious/Brass Button) [more]
The first of a handful of guitar-less bands in my awesome column
this year... The Hip Whips employ a soul-drenched chameleon voice
(think Jagger, Van Morrison, and Stevie Winwood), a huge Hammond
organ and a crack rhythm section… A late-sixties throwback
of the highest order.
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5.
Eskju Divine " Darkness All Around EP" (Imperial
Recordings) [more]
Usually I keep EPs and full-length albums separated, but this
EP is so woven with sonic wonderment that it has become an album-like
feast to our ears. Dramatic, bombastic, anthemic keyboard-driven
art-pop. No guitars. Humongous arrangements. Four righteous songs.
I can't imagine the upcoming album being better, seriously, but
being just as good would be mindblowing.
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6.
Peter Bjorn And John "Falling Out" (Planekonomi) [more]
A smashing guitar pop record, hands down the best of
the genre for me this year. Perhaps it's The Jam influence
that crosses over bigtime for me. Pretty damn brilliant
any way you slice it.
Re-released
by Parasol/Hidden Agenda in the US, September 2005.
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7.
Elope "The No Name Album" (Gravitation) [more]
My infatuation with 60s and 70s recording values and that
era's nuancing is fully enabled by this ultra-melodic not-so-stoner-rock
outfit. More Beatles that Queens Of The Stone Age, but
you get a bit of both. Like the Hip Whips a lovely throwback
to an age of sturdy songwriting and exemplary craftsmanship.
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8.
Franke "Optimismens Han" (Service Records) [more]
Immense echoing dissonant rock from the little band that
could, did, and then disappeared. Filled the gap between
Citizen Bird/Silverbullit albums at very least.
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9.
Bjorn Olsson "Self-Titled [the crab]" (Gravitation) [more]
This collection of home demos (third in the four volume
seafood series) is a fantastic voyage into the ethereal
rock-n-roll psyche of Bjorn Olsson, includes apparent early
demos for what would become some classic TSOOL songs. "The
Lobster" is coming soon to complete the quadrilogy.
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10.
The Soundtrack Of Our Lives "Origin Vol. One" (WMI) [more]
Easily contains 5 of the best rockers of their career,
channeling their Union Carbide Production days if you ask
me. Looking forward to Volume Two and hoping for a bit
more of the band's canny/uncanny trademark psychedelia.
U.S. release (March 2005) features two bonus tracks.
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11.
22-Pistepirkko "Rally of Love" (Bare Bones Business
Oy) [more]
The 17-year
retrospective DCD for this freaky Finnish synth-pop/guitar-rock/swamp
blues trio hooked me, but it was this 2002 release, their most
recent proper studio album, that totally won me over. New album
will land in 2005 and could change the world if Rally of Love
is any indication.
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12.
David Fridlund "Amaterusa" (Adrian Recordings) [more]
Debut solo album from David Fridlund, frontman for David & The
Citizens, with his lady Sara Culler. Not officially even released,
with an eleventh hour December 22nd release in Sweden. If you
want a head start check out the truly charming video for the
first single "April & May" right here.
Re-released by Parasol/Hidden Agenda in the US, April
2005.
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Mention 2004
It
was a heartbreaker, paring down my stacks of
favorite
Scandinavian
titles from the past year or so.
The releases below didn't make
my Top Twelve
above but they still mean the world to me.
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Where
would I be without my favorite album to wash dishes by? Sole
Love, by Vega, released earlier this
year, is a hopelessly romantic collection of baroque pop
duets between Vega mainman Nils-Erik Sandberg and Ellekari
Larsson. Comparing this to The Delgados and Dream Academy
is not much of a stretch.
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The
weirdest album of the year award goes to The Knife,
a brother sister duo engaged in thee most perverse non-stop
erotic cabaret this side of well, nobody. Their second
effort Deep
Cuts (arriving at Parasol later this month) is a freaky
electro-punk groover from start to finish. Oddly enough
the song “Heartbeats” from Jose Gonzalez’s
debut is a cover of The Knife’s most amazing single
to date. In the meantime their discombobulating Self-Titled debut
is worth checking out.
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A
close second to Vega in the dishes washing arena would
be Stockholm rockers Mazarine Street.
Their 1997 album Thirteen
Reasons To Believe is one of the best rock records
to come out of Sweden in the last decade, in my opinion...
Imagine a slightly more futuristic Union Carbide Productions
(with turntables, killer samples, more horns, etc), unequivocally
badass with a real sense of menace at times.
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KVLR’s
new Self-Titled album
(released by my pal Avi Roig at It’s A Trap!) is
all-the-best-reasons-to-love-indie-rock resurrected. With
its monumental 90s bombast the single “Slow Clapping” is
a incandescent rock track, worth the price of admission
alone.
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23-year-old
wunderkind Jens Lekman restored my faith
in dramatic, theatrical, campy pop in one fell swoop…or
rather three genius EPs. Three lusciously lo-fi short-form
releases (You
Are the Light, Maple
Leaves, and Rocky
Dennis) that might rival his full-length, When
I Said I Wanted To Be Your Dog… Morrissey, Scott
Walker, Divine Comedy fans should get your hands on
anything and everything this young man offers.
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The
Shout Out Louds full-length album isn’t
available from Parasol any longer (they’re shopping
it to labels in the States) but you owe yourselves a
taste of their bristling guitar-and-synth-pop majesty.
Their Oh,
Sweetheart EP might be their three best songs yet,
so go for it.
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The
Gravitation label's Spring In Paris released
their debut album Hope
There Is A Morning After This earlier this year, and
it continues to pluck at my heartstrings... A highspirited
Jonathan Richman-esque, Ray Davies-ian guitar-pop romp,
slinky songs and plaintive vocals wrapped in Bjorn Olsson's
wooly
production.
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I had
been waiting for the debut by Swedish faves bob hund’s
English-lyric alter-ego Bergman Rock for
years, stoked by a CDR full of demos. While BR’s Self-Titled full-length
took the songs in wild and novel directions, I do miss
the lo-fi aspect of the demos. Still a marvelous and idiosyncratic
new wave record, polished and peculiar in ways other music
isn’t.
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Combining
the boyfriend/girlfriend talents of members of two of my
fave Swedish bands, Heikki features Jari
from The Bear Quartet and Maria from The Concretes. Their
second album, entitled Heikki
2 is laden with rollicking pop grandeur and intimate
whimsical folksiness, and Jari is one of the best guitarists
in the world to boot.
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Imperial
Records has presented gifts like Jose Gonzalez and Eskju
Divine and their latest release by Melpo Mene, Holes,
follows in the label’s royal tradition. Subliminally
awesome pop quietude with some lovely Elliott Smith things
going on, otherwise hard to describe…believe it or
not. Highly recommended, listening to it right now in fact.
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Although
I’ve been suitably enamored with David & The
Citizens’ latest album Until
The Sadness Is Gone, it took mainman David Fridlund’s
magnificent 11th hour solo album Amaterasu (new
in stock) to really connect the dots for me. A truly brilliant
pop band.
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Likewise,
D&TC labelmates Laakso are a feverishly
poetic Swedish/Finnish pop group of unbridled intensity.
Their most recent album, I
Miss You, I'm Pregnant, is a bohemian bonfire folkrock
crescendo that easily falls into Jeff Mangum, Connor Oberst,
Thom York territories.
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Also
coming soon, before Xmas hopefully...the new single "Speak
To Me" by precision-rock dance-punk quintet CDOASS,
who I predict will soon give The Hives a run for their
major label money. And I'm pretty sure Howlin' Pelle agrees
with me! Think Gang of 4 meets Franz Ferdinand meets The
Pop Group meets The Homosexuals, and then kiss your OASS
goodbye!
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The
recent Remastered
to Be Recycled collection by Union Carbide
Productions (the late-80s, early-90s pre-Soundtrack
of Our Lives Stooges-rock juggernaut) is exceptional for
many reasons: unreleased tracks, new mixes, a super-rock
mastering job. One of the greatest rock bands ever. Ever.
Swedish Rock wouldn’t exist without them.
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Another
blast from the past, Blissful, released
about 30 songs during their short but sweet career in the
mid-90s. A cataclysm of hyperkinetic punk, jazz-drenched
pop and colossal dynamics, the band’s Greatest ain’t
a greatest hits collection, but it is their best album.
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And
if anyone out there is still without the DCD retrospective
from Finland’s 22-Pistepirkko, The
Nature of…1985-2002, I must ask why oh why? This
is the perfect overview for these Finnish freak-pop phenoms
and rather inexpensive for an import double-album. Absolutely
alluring guitar pop, warped new wave, and bristling blues
rock, what’s not to love?
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Looking
for the two best Swedish music collections at Parasol to
fill in the gaps? The Accelerator comp
from Startracks is loaded with favorites like The Bear
Quartet, Radio Department, Laakso, Moneybrother, and loads
more...
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...while
It’s A Trap’s very recent Reader’s
Companion Volume One, while equally loaded has not surprisingly
introduced me to so many more great bands, like CDOASS, Jim
Stark, Thirdimension, Jose Gonzalez, Peter Bjorn & John,
KVLR, and many more essentials.
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Best
news of late 2004 is…2005 is shaping up nicely.
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Jim's
Pick Archive |