8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 30, 2006 even McGARVEY Though we're getting to it a bit late, it's still impos- sible to sum up 2005, the year of Pitchfork. The infamous indie-music website (www.pitch- forkmedia.com) made millions throughout the country feel like music snobs. Their stamp of approval dictated sales as if Editor-In-Chief/founder Ryan Schreiber was Fidel Castro. Their "Best New Music" designation broke groups like Clap Your Hands Say Yeah and Wolf Parade - bands that 10 years ago wouldn't have gotten much press at all. Pitchfork also stood strongly behind Kanye "More Righ- teous than Jesus" West as he grabbed Time covers and the hearts of frat boys everywhere with Late Registration. They cham- pioned M.I.A. and sent the prices of Arular promo copies on eBay well into triple digits. They also helped turn Sufjan Stevens from your secret crush to NPR fodder by exposing Illinois as the instant American classic it truly is. But not every indie hit the bigtime: Pitchfork-championed bands such as Animal Collective and My Morning Jacket's excellent efforts slipped below the radar. Whether it was the South (Who? Mike Jones!) overtaking New York City for the hip-hop capital of the world or Coldplay tanking with X& Y things are changing in our wonderful world of Ameri- can pop music. Here's our way of pulling out the albums that made 2005 memorable for us. For the rest of our music writers' lists, check out www. michigandal/y.com. 1 M.I.A. Arular The woman who makes syntax difficult. Party fire starter. Revolution music. Sweet lover of Brazilian funk. Listen to it again. 2 The Wilderness The Wilderness When a group of intellects and bleak '70s post- punk zealots form a band, they usually don't rumble so hard under the radar. Each huge guitar stoner jam becomes a constellation. Each shouted lyric sounds vaguely like a hymn. 3 Spoon Gimme FictiOn I'd try to give Stephen Malkmus's crown to Britt Daniel, but I've finally realized that he's had it for a few years. 4 The Hold Steady SeparationSunday I used to think the Midwest was obsessed with God. After hearing lead singer Craig Finn bliss- fully howl about the holy trinity of rock - God, Girls and Growing Up (as a good friend once taught me) - over polished bar-band rattle, I think that if God is anywhere, he might be in Minneapolis. 5 Lil' Wayne ThaCarterl Everyone says the South is finally rising again, but Weezy's been acting like the chosen one since he was 16. With the most aged and elegant beats of his career, he gets off on the hate as much as the love: "With the eye of a tiger, the heart of a fighter, yeah / Start 'em ignite 'em I walk through fire!" 6 Jamie Lidell MUltiplI Almost-as-pale-as-this-reviewer Brit falling in love with Al Green and the Isley Brothers equals sparks. Waterfalls of electronic tinkering make it a brushfire. The utter lack of irony makes it a blaze. 7 My Morning Jacket Z They'll never admit to being druggies, but My Morning Jacket enjoys stretching their seven-minute guitar waltzes out with a bunch of fun house bridges filled with ferris wheel clanks, languid handclaps and whammy bar makeout sessions. 8 Young Jeezy Lets G IliugM ltoiUeftl01 Seldom does a greenhorn in the rap world sound both self-assured and drained. He said it best: "The streets is watchin', the name is warm / The product's white, a star is born." 9 Clipse WeOttg f OrChpVOL2 The Virginia rap duo who found a thousand similes for cooking crack just made a pair of mix-tapes where they steal a bunch of blockbust- er beats G-Unit and Cassidy thought they had on lock. Dropped from their label a year ago, the pair of MCs tear the mic as only men driven by hunger and pride can. 10 Three 6 Mafia MoStKNOWN UnOWimn The Memphis horror-core mongers took their creature-feature sound to the major-label studio this year and found uses for sound loops (viola, harpsichord, the Woody Woodpecker voice) others would deem insane. And if that doesn't convince you, I can say this: "Stay Fly" will be played at my funeral. loyd CARGO 1Sufjan Stevens Illinois Michigan was fragile; Illinois is transcendent. The addition of a string quartet to Sufjan's one- man orchestra and a unique approach toward writ- ing songs about a foreign place make this an instant American classic. Here's hoping that Sufjan can do the same justice to New Jersey, Rhode Island and Oregon in 2006 ... 2 Bob Drake Shunned Countri Let's get this out of the way - you probably haven't heard this. But you should. Shunned Country is 52 tracks, 40 of which are less than a minute, with the longest clocking in at a whopping three minutes. It's proggy pop with an absurd, gripping narrative arc, and oh yeah, Drake plays every instrument. 3 Angels of Light Sing "Other People": Michael Gira has been around a long time, but no Swans release has ever sounded quite like this Johnny Cash-meets-Fairport Convention affair. Gira plays the role of the dark narrator, wallowing in shit and coming up roses. debut caught pretty much everyone off guard. With four-part harmonies and unconventional instru- ments, they out-psych/folk everyone - even Ani- mal Collective. 5 Black Dice Broken Ear Record A friend introduced this album to me as "Throb- bing Gristle meets Autechre." Broken Ear Record is much different from the Black Dice of yore, but its cut-up, looped riffs are as astonishing as ever. 6 Caribou Milk 0f Human Kindness I wonder if Handsome Dick Manitoba knows that forcing Dan Snaith to change his moniker from Manitoba to Caribou was the best thing he's done for music since the Dictators broke up in 1981. Freed from the lofty expectations set by Manitoba's spectacular Up In Flames, Snaith as Caribou was able to meld Kraut rock with driv- ing pop to create a singular vision. I M.I.A. Arular What is there to say about this album that hasn't been recycled and regurgitated already? For me, it's somewhat of an enigma; I loved it when it came out, but now it's hard to listen to. What does that mean? This could be a brilliant, and unique artistic statement, or it could be a novelty that M.I.A. is never able to match. Ask me in 10 years. 8 Psychic Paramount Gamblan into The Mi i Supernatural Gamelan Into The Mink Supernatural is a real face melter. Raucous guitar grooves and unrestrained psych-riffing combined with blasts of noise sound even more stoned than the album title reads. S al 9 Animal Collective Feels Cliches about the Beach Boys and acid aside, Feels is another sun-drenched exploration into the world of indie's most melodic freaks. It's as if Buddy Holly's plane crashedinto a lake of LSD and then Brian Wilson became obsessed with the Incredible String Band. 10 Cass McCombsPrtfwCmin Prefection finds this singer/songwriter fromBalti- more picking up an electric guitar. The result is clas- sic 4AD, subtle, moody, yet humorous Echo & The Bunnymen-esque Brit-pop miles from his stripped- down debut, A. All the darkness is still here, but simi- lar to Bob Dylan and his famous foray into the world of amplification, McCombs handles a Stratocastei with grace and a great sense of humor. 4 Akron/Family AkronFamihy Akron/Family gained notoriety as Gira's backing band in Angels of Light,1 Michael but their - Lloyd Cargo Daily Music Editor Caitlin COWAN aaron KACZANDER Wolf Parade Apologies to the Queen Mary It's the half-immigrant lovechild of Isaac Brock and Win Butler after a sleazy night of whiskey, cow bells and a Fisher Price Mini- Mellotron. Wolf Parade tackled the hype machine in 2005 and left it wallowing in its Bloc Partyed hipster dust. 2 Sufjan Stevens HlilnIS Say Sufjan will take a break to work on a children's book in 2006. At least we have a textbook's worth of Illinois tales and antidotes to wait while he indulges his inner author. Why not just play his quiet, dignified, austere tunes for elementary school kiddies? 3 Sigur Rs Tali Here are your directions: Drink one large cup of strong-arse coffee and enter a local Borders. Commence listening to Takk and observe other patrons. See if you can pin- point everyone's hopes and fears, dreams and dark secrets. 4 The National Alligator Even the moodiest tunes by Matt Berninger make this a slowcore masterpiece that touches on biblical brothers, psychological woes and an underappreciated Manhattan history. 5 Clap Your Hands Say Yeah Clap Your HandsSayYeah The need for this incredibly imagined and innovative piece of indie pop forced a tiny Brooklyn apartment to be backed up with orders for months. With a voice on the verge of annoyingly whiny, Alec Ounsworth has made the future of smart-kid pop music. 6. M.I.A. Arular Are any of these obligatory? It's another insanely talented female Sri Lankan MC with impeccable vintage beats and a politically aware conscious? Who picks these things ? 7 Vashti Bunyan 1o100trng As the oldest mother to make a stunning folk record this year, Bunyan is in a class of her own. Fortunately, her choice to abandon her music career in the late-'60s left her a few decades to write some of the most intimate songs of the year. 8. Stars SetYourselOn Fire Probably the most theatrical album of the year. Canadian pop collective and honchos in the Arts and Crafts label explore dream pop and dual vocal duties somewhat akin to an orange Creamsicle. 9 The Mountain Goats TheSunsetTree John Darnielle has hidden under the Moun- tain Goats' mantra for way too long. The Sun- set Tree is his cautious peek at the outside world - his irresistibly nasally storytelling fixed with tales of tortured childhood make for long- deserved recognition. 10 Art Brut Bang Bang Rock and Roll Art Brut, named after art by insane asy- lum inmates, boast the traditionally boundless energy, silly lyrics and British ambiance that shows why they really are that much cooler than Americans. 1 Bright Eyes I'm Wide Awake,It's Morning Though Conor Oberst has been praised inces- santly from the moment he warbled and shuddered onto the scene, he's still worthy. And when one of his lyrics hits hard, it feels as if you've had that very thought before. 2 M.JAArUf The Sri Lanka-born MC has rightly been atop many lists this year. M.I.A. takes everything great about American hip hop and molds it into her own, powertpackedpolitical bup and grind. 3 Wolf Parade Apologies to the Queen Mary Remember how awesome the Arcade Fire was? I do too. Enter Wolf Parade and Apologies to the Queen Mary. With tight, fused rhythms, kooky gui- tar licks and growling lyrics, the band beats the pants off their predecessors any day. , 4 Gorillaz Demon Days A true summer album if there ever was one, bass- laden tracks produced by DJ Danger Mouse such as "Kids With Guns" and "Dirty Harry" all pulsate with style and swim with ex-Blur honcho Damon Albarn's signature howl. 5 Death Cab for Cutie P1aN5S Plans is more oblique than the Seattle Cuties' 2003 release Transatlanticism, and a few shades darker. But there's still a matchless emotional power to songs like "I Will Follow You Into the Dark" and the shimmery "Brothers on a Hotel Bed." 5 Sufjan Stevens IInois Stevens's sweet voice captures both the quieter aspects of places like "Decatur," "Jacksonville" and the cacophony of "Chicago." He even manages to make a song about serial killer, "John Wayne Gacy, Jr.," sound poignant. -r ^" - -un.4 '--'AtM..Vnn...nd.ae.. how enhances splendor of songs like "Home on Ice" and "Lost and Found" 8 Beck ero Beck returns to a Brazilian-influenced record reminiscent of his earlier sound on Guero. The "Hey, they've got the new Yanni cassette!" in the middle of "Qu6 Onda Guero" is reason enough to check out the album. 9 The Go! Team Thunder, Ughining, Strike The Go! Team's U.S. release bursts with borrowed samples, blaring trumpets and even cheerleader chants. It's an undeniably happy record that smacks of the patchwork funk of The Avalanches. Thunder, Lightning, Strike makes happiness artistic again. 10 John Vanderslice PixelBevolt nivo 1?nlti ara--- - - n r~.fn nv 0 alexandra 1 Belle and Sebastian Push Barman t0 0UId Wounds The best album released in '05 - and the coilec- tion of songs that best illuminates Belle and Sebas- tian's career - is the first disc of this '90-spanning b-sides collection. Stuart Murdoch's songwriting and the music's dulcet moonbeams show their impact on the music of the last decade, let alone 2005. 2 The Decemberists Picaresque The most compelling aspect of The Decem- berists' third full-length release is that they've finally worked their current formula - sea chan- ties, melancholy period narratives - to its most powerful incarnation yet. 3 Fiery Furnaces EP The down-to-earth, pop-driven songs on EP have the potential to endear listeners like nothing they've ever released. This is the kind of effervescent, off- the-wall music every DIY-driven indie chick (or me, at least) wants to make. 4 New Pornographers TWin Cinema off day, the New Pornographers still sound better 0 Sleater-Kinney The WOOds than almost three quarters of the music released S-Kpulls back fromdance-inducing rock anthems this year. for this one, focusing instead on expressing more carefully nuanced emotions and working in allego- 5 The White Stripes Get Behind Me Satan Jack White is back in the business of making us care about him (in a good way). After a year of making more tabloid than music news, the Stripes came back with a blues-inspired album that foretold a phenomenal new direction. OK, Jack: We're listening. 6 Silver Jews TangleWood Numhers While it's not the lit-nerd cowboy story told with the same painful beauty as American Water, Dave Berman has finally taken control of his band, and he's combined his poetic prowess with an alt-coun- tryish band quite well. 7 Broadcast Tender Buttons Ever wake up in the middle of an utterly inscru- ries and first-person narratives. It's mature but can still kick your ass in a knife fight. 9 Sufjan Stevens IlIlInoI Michigan's indie native son followed up the ode to his home state with the whole of his 50 States project in mind: After the innocent joy and almost folksy modesty of the banjo-driven Michigan comes a high-art tribute to the state that holds the Midwest's metropolis. 10 Mountain Goats The SunsetTree John Darnielle is bringing soulful introspection back into indie music: This stuff sounds so un- pretty, so real, so emotionally arresting that you'll be embarrassed to listen to, say, "Dance Music" with anyone else. chris GAERIG 6 I 1 M.I.A. Arular She's from Sri Lanka, her father was considered a terror- ist, she moved to England and she released the best album of the year. M.I.A.'s disorienting flows lend themselves perfect- ly to her sound. Even without its underlying political mes- sages, Arular would still be an outstanding release. 2 Animal Collective Feels It's about time Animal Col- lective released an album wor- thy of their talent. Avey Tare's tribal percussion and Panda Bear's airy guitar and vocals finally pinpoint their strengths and puts together one of the best psych-folk albums of the mock, but his ability to make everything seem personal is unmatched. Illinois is the sec- ond installment in his musical America tour, and he ups the ante once again. 5 The Hold Steady SPS- raton Sunday Rock is dead, eh? Tell that to The Hold Steady. They return with bombasts of gui- tars, thunderous drums and Craig Finn's unforgettable croons. The Hold Steady is the doctor; Separation Sunday is the defibrillator. 5 My Morning Jacket Z Less Southern influ- enced and more straightfor- Led by John Darnielle's wit and speak/sing vocal style, The Goats released another album of infectious pop songs. Teenage angst, heartbreak, drugs: What more could we ask for? 8 Lady Sovereign Vert- caly ChallengedEP Lady Sov went from a virtual unknown to getting signed by Jay-Z in a year. Vertically Challenged EP was Lady Sov's time to shine and she did so accordingly. 9 Slim Thug Already Platinum How did a well known mixtape MC from Houston 1 Mike Jones feat. Slim Thug & Paul Wall hSil TIppin' My mom knows who Paul Wall is. We all dance a little slower when the first comatose bars hit the speaker. White styrofoam cups: the essential item for 2006. 2 Three 6 Mafia feat. Young Buck, 8-Ball & MJG "StayFly" Like a blunt passed around a big living room, everyone comes out to get a hit of this monster. 8-Ball and MJG, long- time vets, come out the hardest, gobbling up the melody like excess smoke. It truly does "taste like soup when you hit it." 3 Young Jeezy feat. Jay-Z "GoCrazy(Remlx)" Books will be written about Jay-Z's Mafioso introspection. For now, let's just be happy Jeezy holds his own. We can't keep Jigga around forever, can we? "Trapped" saga is his Here, My Dear: 6 M.I.A. "Galang" God, we're putting a lot of pot anthems on our list this year, aren't we? Oh, and another hot, foreign pop star. We're pre- dictable. 1 Feist "Mushabem" A gorgeous girl with a guitar? Can never have too many of those, eh? i :.+ ' I