0 6D - Tuesday, September 8, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com BEST ALBUMS OF 2008 2008 saw a wide range of artists score big with some of their best-ever efforts. At the dawn of 2009, the Daily Music Staff took a look back with its picks for the best albums of the year. 0 TV ON THE RADIO Dear Science TVon the Radio, buzz band no more. With the release of Dear Science, TVOTR has entered into a rare and hard to define realm within the music world - part of a breed of bands that are respected by all, challenged by few and envied by their less-tal- ented peers. Radiohead is in this category; so was Pavement. Dear Science is an album with no unnecessary flourishes, no out-of-place instrumenta- tion and no moments that sound even remotely close to contrived. Every single note on the album is essential, like each individual brushstroke in a masterpiece painting. From the claps on "Dancing Choose" to the breezy synth swells on "DLZ" to Tunde Adebimpe's sweet falsetto "cry- i-i-i-ing," TVOTR has crafted 2008's best album, a brilliant work coming from a band in the infancy of its career. It's stagger- ing to even think what's to come. JEFF SANFORD FLEET FOXES Fleet Foxes The Fleet Foxes things-to-do list for 2008 might look something like this: release Sun Giant EP in Janu- ary; tour relentlessly ina run-down van through the spring, garnering much hype for the June release of the self-titled debut album along the way; win over audiences and critics nationwide with pastoral harmonies and deceptively simple folk-pop arrangements; get tapped by Wilco to open for a leg of the summer tour, circulating a spirited live collaboration of Bob Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" around the Web to show for it; appear on every late night program on network television; wind up near the top of nearly every year-end list known to humanity; and somehow manage to do all this in less than 12 months. Fleet Foxes' quick rise to fame outside ofthe Pitchforkinner circle is as much a rags-to-riches story as any, but the cult of the Foxes stems largely from the group's ability to turn any passerby into a believer. Needless to say, the Foxes can now afford to fix up their van. MIKE KUNTZ MGMT Oracular Spectacular From the haunting bubbles on the intro of "Time to Pre- tend" to the creepy children counting down on "Kids," MGMT's debut was not to be overlooked. It combines just the right amounts of creepy and cool to make for great elec- tropop. Equally suited to the club and to the car, Oracular Spectacular is full of anthems you can sing and dance to - so pick your poison. Maybe that's why the band broke its way into so many hearts (and parties) this year. Then again, maybe it's just the energy-intensive retro sound and incomprehen- sible lyrics that make MGMT so awkwardly lovable. SARAH CHAVEY Graceland, which apparently influenced their record a little too much. Ralph Lauren sweat- ers and classic rock idolatry aside, Vampire Weekend is a breathtak- ing synthesis of Afro-pop and indie-rock that will make the most uptight hipster loosen up from the arms-folded, at-atten- tion position. When it comes to Vampire Weekend, ignorance is bliss. So, tune out the critics, put onyour dancingshoes and bask in the simple elegance provided by a truly stunning debutalbum. DAVID RIVA PORTISH EAD Third After an 11-year hibernation, former trip-hop trailblazer Por- tishead has delivered something much greater than a serviceable "comeback album." Third is a rare instance of a band truly redefining itself. Portishead scraps its creepy/ sexy formula of yore for something closer to creepy/ugly. As Beth Gib- bons moans her trademark confes- sional lyrics over jarringly glitchy dreamscapes, the band achieves such hauntingly voyeuristic pathos that, at times, the album is almost uncomfortable to listen to. For a hint at the album's gutting abrasive- ness, the lead single is aptly titled "Machine Gun."With Third, Portis- head has birthed what could easily be the most innovative album of the year. And while it may not be pretty, it's anything but a misfire. JOSH BAYER VAMPIRE WEEKEND Vampire Weekend 2008's dubious "buzz-band" award goes to none other than (drum roll please) New York prep-rockers Vampire Weekend. These Columbia University grads have been condemned for their cleanliness in music and dress (which apparently makes them sonically and visually boring) and have been accused of having an obsession with Paul Simon's BON IVER For Emma, Forever Ago Given three months alone in a Wisconsin cabin, most would whittle the hours away by read- ing, drinking or maybe just bang- ing their heads against the wall. But songwriter Justin Vernon had loftier goals: He spent his time creating one of the best albums of the year and one of the best musical debuts in recent memory. For Emma, Forever Ago is a spare and ethereal alt-folk affair guidedby Vernon's anemic falsetto. Its deliberate pacing and dynamic control make the journey from the. plaintive chill of "Flume" to the triumphant thaw of "For Emma" a memo- rable one. JACK PORTER refreshing in a year suffering from a drought of good, old-fash- ioned indie rawk (in other words, it's good). There's always going to be a demand for well-crafted songs with sticky melodies, and Deer- hunter fills it here with confec- tionary aplomb. Oh, and Bradford Cox's wistfully milky tenor is cause enough for a love letter. JOSH BAYER 0 STEPHEN MALKMUS & THE JICKS Real Emotional Trash Inayearpackedwithcomplexand multi-layered albums, Stephen Mal- kmus and his backing Jicks seem- ingly decided to just sit down and record some really great jam-ses- siony tracks. Songs like "Real Emo- tional Trash" ramble on forever, but they never feel too long. And Malk- mus still has a talent for enveloping listeners in quirky, meandering tales ("Hopscotch Willie") andcommand- ing roars like Pavement on steroids ("Baltimore"). It's nothing too com- plex and nothingtoo astounding, but Real Emotional Trash is clearly one of 2008's most pleasing, seemingly simple albums, and it stands above a whole lot of others. MATT EMERY DEERHUNTER Microcastle Whatever the "X Factor" is, Deerhunter's got it. On paper, Microcastle isn't going anywhere indie music hasn't been a billion times before. Dreamy, delay pedal-smitten opener? Check. Swirly My Bloody Valentine tribute? Check. Lazy- river guitar balladry that explodes two-thirds of the way through into a surging coda of crystal- line noise? Check. But something about Microcastle is supremely Times New Viking Rip It Off With their densest serving of lo-fi squalor yet, Times New Viking proved just how listen- able pure cacophony can be. On the trio's third album, mel- odies, guitar riffs and synth licks bleed together into a swollen mass of tape-bursting sound. Still, the barely-distin- guishable, co-ed vocal attack of Beth Murphy and Adam Elliott is so fun that the entire affair is almost childish, but the feedback burst it pierces through is so abrasive it should be x-rated. Completely disre- specting basic audio conven- tions, the distorted bubblegum of Rip It Off relies entirely on energy for its thrills. And that energy is undepletable. DAVID WATNICK 4 - ' u:= w Master writing with reference books From interpreting Shakespeare's sonnets to composing a killer paper, our selection of grammar books, thesauri, and dictionaries will help you write with style. Order Your Textbooks Online Today www.whywaitforbooks.com Pierpont Commons Bookstore Pierpont Commons (North Campus) phone# 734.668.6022 Barnes & Noble at the University of Michigan 530 5. State Street phone# 734.995.8877 www.umichigan.bncollege.com email: bksumichiganunion@bncollege.com 0 0