Top Ten Albums, 2011 – Part II, 10-8
10. Unknown Mortal Orchestra (self-titled)
I’m a smiling alligator and I tell lies that ring true later. – “Thought Ballune”
I like all of my life, all of my life, all my funny friends – “FFunny FFriends”
A last-minute entry that edged out a lot of other things by virtue of it capturing my attention every time it comes on. It reminds me, variously, of Of Montreal and Barrett-era Pink Floyd and, when it’s not reminding me of those, feels wholly original, whacked out, and I don’t understand what they’re saying half of the time but it’s buried in a myriad of other interesting sounds and I am a-ok with that. I can tell this one is going to grow on me. “Nerve Damage”, with its off-kilter four-note main riff and oddball intro/outro vocoder-thingy, is already worming its way into the heavy rotation.
This album gets two quotables because this one’s a quick entry but I’ll just say that if you like Piper at the Gates of Dawn, you should give these Portland kids a shot.
9. Dum Dum Girls – Only In Dreams
I can’t live without your warmth. I just want to be adored. – “In My Head”
The subject matter behind these songs sounds bleak: the death of the lead singer’s mom as well as a bit of touring separation anxiety from her husband. And the record hits those notes eloquently, in that saturated Dum Dum Girls sound that comes off as just the right amount of melodramatic. I tend to shy away from reading record reviews, especially before I’ve heard a record, but for some reason was unable to avoid the reviews for Only in Dreams. The complaints of the album being very mid-tempo and overall kind of same-y are probably warranted but either you’re in the mood for an album like this– in which case, put it on and wash away in it– or you’re listening to it in the shuffle along with a few hundred other songs. It doesn’t feel like a flaw to me.
My favorite track would be “Wasted Away”, which to my mind captures perfectly the band’s aesthetic and has a up-beat rhythm and guitar contrasted against the albums themes of pain and loneliness: A song to rage your blues away.
8. Black Keys – El Camino
You know me, I had plans but they just disappeared to the back of my mind. – “Little Black Submarines”
Lead off by an advance stellar single (“Lonely Boy”) with a gimmicky record (it spins from the inside outward), I pre-ordered this album on the strength of the single and it did not disappoint. It’s a solid rock record with a lot of sorrowful lyrics to hang one’s solemn soul upon. A terse album— eleven songs, and only one is longer than four minutes— there’s a valid complaint in there about it all sounding much the same, but if it weren’t good then that might matter more. The album is still fairly new so it hasn’t sunken its roots into me yet, and these feelings may change, but outside of the first single, both “Little Black Submarines” and “Hell of a Season” really grab me, even if the vocal line for the latter song is, yes, incredibly similar to that of “Lonely Boy”. Still, this is my first real exposure to the band (despite their apparent prolificness as well as winning no fewer than three Grammys this year). As a first-time enjoyer of their music, it’s pretty damn enjoyable. Then again, I’m a sucker for a swaggering guitar riff, a pounding drum line, and a sad rock song.
Add comment December 28th, 2011


