Your Best of 2004
Chris Baroner - talent booker, Metro
BEST ALBUMS (in no particular order)
-French Kicks - The Trial Of The Century
-TV On The Radio - Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes
-Spektrum - Enter The Spektrum
-The Changes – S/T EP (self-released)
-Lansing-Dreiden - The Invisible Triangle
-DFA – Compilation #2
-Saul Williams – S/T
BEST SHOWS (in no particular order)
-The Walkmen & French Kicks @ Metro – March 11
-The Faint & TV On The Radio @ Metro – October 6 & 7
-2 Many DJs & James Murphy @ Smartbar – April 28
-The Decemberists @ Metro – June 4
-Ted Leo/Pharmacists & The Changes @ The Hideout – June 19
-Q and Not U & El Guapo @ Logan Sqaure Auditorium – October 10
-The Futureheads & The Changes @ Empty Bottle – November 10
-Sufjan Stevens @ Schubas – November 18
BEST SINGLES (in no particular order)
-Bloc Party – Banquet
-Franz Ferdinand – This Fire
-The Walkmen – The Rat
-LCD Soundsystem – Yeah (Pretentious Version)
-The Faint – Paranoiattack
-Saul Williams – List Of Demands
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Rob Mentzer - RFC reader
Best Albums
1. Dizzee Rascal -- Showtime
2. Madvillain -- Madvillainy
Blazingly brilliant as a whole album without offering especially good singles, making it something of a relic. But damn it is fine. A leftfield concept album with warm Madlib beats and woozy, chorusless rhymes from MF Doom, it filters Kool Keith, De La Soul and Otis Redding.
3. Modest Mouse -- Good News for People Who Love Bad News
4. Kanye West -- The College Dropout
5. Brian Wilson -- Smile
Not for the record that could have been, for the record that is: weird, high-spirited, funny, beautiful.
6. DJ /Rupture -- Special Gunpowder
7. Talib Kweli -- The Beautiful Struggle
Beats the hell out of Mos Def's weak genre-straddling The New Danger; it is Kweli's slickest, most mainstream album, and also--hey hey!--his best. Sacrifices no IQ points at all, liberally tossing out literary references and political analysis in polysyllabic rhyme. My choice for Year's Most Underrated Album.
8. The Streets -- A Grand Don't Come for Free
Showing novelistic attention to detail, this record is a comedy of manners, a singer-songwriter album in rap idiom, an unmopey, uncorny song cycle about trying to read other people's signals. 9. The Roots -- The Tipping Point
10. RJD2 -- Since We Last Spoke
Top 11 Songs (no particular order):
- "Float On," Modest Mouse
Completely omnipresent and completely exhilarating, all Weltschmerz and pop perfection. The year's best song by a wide margin. Portland Oregon, Loretta Lynn (with Jack White)
-"Ch-Check it Out," Beastie Boys
-"Yeah," Usher featuring Lil Jon & Ludacris
-"Star," The Roots
This song's wonderful, enveloping Sly & the Family Stone sample ought to shut up anyone who disparages "easy" loops.
-"Mosh," Eminem
-"Take Me Out," Franz Ferdinand
-"Through the Wire," Kanye West
I could list at least four others, but this one, the album's first single, was also my favorite.
-"Why," Jadakiss
-"Where is the Line," Bjork with Rahzel
-"Drop it Like it's Hot," Snoop Dogg
Reports of the Neptunes' death have been greatly exaggerated.
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