Best of 2001
by James Beaudreau
1.
Miles Davis, Live at the Fillmore East (March 7, 1970) It's About That Time (Columbia)
When I began to think about this ranked year-end list, one of the first discs that I thought of was this one, but in organizing this little hierarchy I've been reluctant to place a recording of a 30-year-old concert it in the first spot. Would that be sensible, since the rest of the list is occupied by living, breathing bands that could perhaps (some of them) more use the attention? But then, pleasantly, after all, my list should be expected to have little bearing on the world it describes. Thusly, here is Miles Davis at the top of my list, since it's been my favorite of the year, overall, and because it's just so fresh and powerful. I feel comfortable recommending Live at the Fillmore East to anyone who will tolerate a recommendation, and who has something of a voracious appetite for rock and/or jazz, as I do. Musical taste is, of course, entirely subjective, but if they don't like this one, well, I guess I just don't understand that at all.
2.
Of Montreal, Coquelicot Asleep in the Poppies: A Variety of Whimsical Verse (Kindercore)
Yes, there's a variety of whimsical verse and some incredible pop songs too. Kevin Barnes, Of Montreal auteur, is a master of delaying the resolution of a musical phrase past its expected destination. To do it, he ties phrases together with connecting bits (maybe a note or two, a piece of a scale, a pause or a swoop) and connects them to other distinct phrases, rendering an encyclopedic collection of tunes that sound both familiar and strange. And very original. Coquelicot is a worthy successor to 1999's sunny epic, The Gay Parade, and tops it in ambition and in the lending of a proud dignity to the weird and wonderful. Add to this the best packaging of the year, which features beautiful illustrations of the disc's musical happenings, and it's an audio-visual experience and one of the most satisfying of the year.
3.
Circulatory System, Circulatory System (Cloud)
I can't say enough about this disc -- I was taken with it the first time I heard it, and like it more the more I play it. It's an enveloping psychedelic that calls for close listening -- to the music, and to ourselves and each other. I bought Circulatory System's nameless, spray-painted remix CD at a show. It's got drastic re-castings of some of these songs, and the "sound treatments" Olivia Tremor Control was famous for. Now I can't do without either. Highly recommended.
4.
The Kingsbury Manx, Let You Down (Overcoat)
Let You Down fits in nicely with some of my more revered rock albums:
Led Zeppelin III and Buffalo Springfield Again, and it fills in the holes
that were never filled by post-Barrett Floyd and the Moody Blues. But
there's nothing old or musty about Let You Down, I think it's just
that bands aren't generally bold or talented enough to make a record that
sustains the dreamy pace that this one does for an entire album. It
sustains a mood like Sketches of Spain or Kind of Blue does.
You can put it on and settle into it and you won't be jarred out of it until
the Kingsbury Manx let you down at disc's end.
5.
White Stripes, White Blood Cells (Sympathy for the Record Industry)
Wow. White Blood Cells has gotten a lot of good reviews this year,
and for good reason. It's utterly lean, and survives on its wits and
character where other music needs to be dressed up in all kinds of ornament
to feel good about itself. And it's about as sparse as you can get: guitar
and drums and the odd keyboard. Jack White's got a real rock star's voice
and he and Meg White's songs are so smart, catchy, and rocking that White
Stripes are beyond imitation. Of course they will be imitated. I listen to
this and I think about Bon Scott and AC/DC, The Doors, Led Zeppelin I, Bad
Company, Black Sabbath, Nirvana, and more. And none of them too. I hope
Jack White can save his voice for a bunch more records.
6.
Radiohead, Amnesiac (Capitol)
Well, it’s not the seamless masterwork that Kid A is, but it’s a fine
collection of songs which can only be criticized in the light of that
recording’s amazing cohesiveness. Amnesiac is a well-paced and
thoughtfully balanced disc, despite popular criticism that it’s a collection
of Kid A leftovers. I’ve heard more obscure, but not less
challenging music than "Like Spinning Plates" and "Pulk/Pull Revolving
Doors" this year, and I don't think I've heard anything as cinematically
haunting as "Pyramid Song". There also hasn't been a more convincing
wedding of rock songwriting and electronic IDM production. For a very
expensive but truer outtake collection, the B Side companion to Kid A
and Amnesiac can be culled from the CD single issues of "Pyramid
Song" and "Knives Out" -- I like this sequence: "Fast-track", "Fog", "The
Amazing Sounds of Orgy", "Kinetic", "Worrywort", "Cuttooth", "Trans-Atlantic
Drawl", and "Life in a Glasshouse (Full Length Version)". You'll find some
textures not to be found on the proper full releases, and a couple of great
songs you won't want to have missed.
7.
Summer Hymns, A Celebratory Arm Gesture (Misra)
Summer Hymns may share keyboard and woodwind player Dottie Alexander and
bassist Derek Almstead with Of Montreal, but the group puts their talents to
much different use. Where Kevin Barnes' (see above) songs are tightly
arranged and complex, Summer Hymns' songs are loose and scenic, creating
variety out of layered textures. Of Montreal songs surprise with
disorienting melodic turns that seem simpler over time, while Summer Hymns'
unfold patiently and possess the mysterious quality of inevitability.
Singer Zachary Gresham reminds me of Neil Young in the quality of his voice
and his easy phrasing. Philip Brown is a standout drummer, and Derek
Almstead emerges, on this disc and on Coquilicot, as the most
creative and distinctive bass player around. He also contributes a
beautiful lap steel solo on "I could Give the World Away". But enough
details, Arm Gesture is the sleeper of the year. Comfortably warm
and hazy; an unpretentious recording that's easy to love.
8.
Keith Jarrett, Inside Out (ECM)
There isn't a musician I admire more than Keith Jarrett. I love a lot of
records he's played on, especially 1970's Live/Evil (under Miles'
leadership), 1974's Treasure Island, 1999's The Melody at Night,
with You, and now this. I never before settled comfortably into the
so-called "standards trio" discs, despite an appreciation for each members'
playing. Maybe it was the material, because my wait for a "standards trio"
disc to embrace is over. There are extended soulful cadences, muscular
grooves, and prickly outer-edge feats of strength. But it's most prominent
characteristics are poise and depth. Jarrett has come through his "serious
music" recordings (the influence is here) and a personal bout with Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome to present the most profound music of an already great
career.
9.
Autechre, Confield (Warp)
Confield is a collection of sonic illustrations of robot life. There
are prayerful robots, robots driving recklessly, and the terrible sounds of
robot warfare. There's a robot's train-related obsessions, an instructional
piece on robot system maintenance, and some exotic robot mood music. They
all parade by with masterful assurance, as if pulled by their creators from
a folder called "easy pieces". Not for the delicate of sensibility.
10.
Set Fire to Flames, Sings Reign Rebuilder (Alien 8)
This is about as far as you can get from Of Montreal's playful surrealism:
it's dark and creepy music, and strangely alluring. Perhaps Set Fire to
Flames has the nightmare so you don't have to. And the nightmare is set to
string and sound-effect heavy rock, about half spooky ambient environments
and half groove-based. The disc peaks near the halfway point with "there is
no dance in frequency and balance" which sounds like the underworld's
marching band rallying the troops. The house on the cover of Sings Reign
Rebuilder is most certainly haunted, and the music on the disc is
certainly the music that plays in that house. I would think it would be
unbearable, as it is made not only of grave stuff, but is interspersed with
cracked monologues from some frantic sounding folks who are called "lying
dying wonder body #s 1, 2, and 3". But overall, it is actually kind of
soothing, especially in the pretty drone sequences. Odd? Yes. Do I claim
to know exactly what's going on here? No. But it stands up with the best
of the year -- as the most inviting to your imagination.