Posts Tagged ‘beach house’

Best of 2010: Amanda

January 3rd, 2011 | By: Amanda Macchia

Our Editor Amanda Macchia shares her top 10 albums of 2010 as our album listings wrap for the year.

10) The Tallest Man On Earth - The Wild Hunt

Kristian Matsson stayed true to his folk roots on this sophomore record. Pairing his bright acoustics with his unconventional vocals, Matsson made The Wild Hunt an album not only a pleasure to listen to, but downright interesting as well.

9) Vampire Weekend - Contra

It’s probably true that Vampire Weekend is a taste which many people will never acquire, but it’s fair to say that the heightened quirkiness of their songs and the Ivy League lyrics featured on their second album make for a pretty fun record, whether you’re willing to admit it or not.

8) The Love LanguageLibraries

Unlike their first record and much of the work of their lo-fi peers, The Love Language found a perfect balance on Libraries of minimal audio quality and great pop songs.

7) Dum Dum Girls - I Will Be

Yes, their album cover is the poor man’s version of Contra, but beyond the record sleeve is an impressive collection of catchy shoegaze pop, all the way from California.

6) Best CoastCrazy For You

Although criticized for its overly-simplistic chord progressions and lyrics, Crazy For You clearly resonated with music-listeners this year as Best Coast took it easy with the reverb for their full length debut, and stuck to their redundant, but relatable, themes of the beach and boys.

5) Beach House - Teen Dream

It’s been said time and time again, but Beach House really hit the nail on its head this time around, producing an album consistent in its dreaminess and synthetic sounds, unheard in the same fashion anywhere else.

4) Arcade FireThe Suburbs

There were obviously high expectations for the release The Suburbs, and thankfully the Arcade Fire did not fail to disappoint. This album is one with an abundance of characters and plots – a thorough story set to quality sounds.

3) The WalkmenLisbon

Similarly to The Suburbs, The Walkmen demonstrated their undeniable ability to use songwriting as a vehicle for creating a picturesque collection of music, painting a different picture with each song on the tracklist.

2) Zeus - Say Us

With their debut LP, Zeus proved that it’s possible to bring The Beatles and The Band into the 21st Century and transform their sound into something that is still current and developed enough that it can stand on its own as an innovative spin on classic rock.

1) The Black Keys - Brothers

For 2010, The Black Keys take the cake. Brothers is evidence that sophisticated blues-rock is still very much alive, and that it is possible to sound cool for a 15-track duration.

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Best of 2010: Brian

December 30th, 2010 | By: Brian Vendiola

Contributing photographer Brian Vendiola shares his picks for the top 10 albums of 2010

10. Fang Island – Fang Island

9. Sleigh Bells – Treats

Catchy, distorted, and explosive. An amazing pop-rock album.

8. Local Natives – Gorilla Manor

7. Vampire Weekend – Contra

6. Broken Social Scene – Forgiveness Rock Record

It’s not their best work, and it feels like they’re maybe losing their punch, but Forgiveness Rock Record still has a place in my heart. This album is pretty much their “love letter” to their fans.

5. LCD Soundsystem – This Is Happening

Yo, you like to party? Put this album on and prepare for a good time. James Murphy, I don’t know how you do it, but you can sure make some simple electronic riffs and melodies into some of the greatest and catchiest pop songs.

4. Twin Shadow – Forget

If there’s an album this year that screams the 80s, it’s this one. Twin Shadow’s Forget has some of the most catchiest songs out there and he encompasses the 80s genre perfectly. George Lewis Jr. kind of sounds like Bowie too. Though if it’s not for its dark and eerie lyrics, all of this would all just be eye-candy.

3. Deerhunter - Halcyon Digest

2. Arcade Fire – The Suburbs

Arcade Fire’s The Suburbs definitely improves from 2007′s Neon Bible, being a more compelling and a more solid album than its predecessor. It’s hard-hitting, it’s emotional, it’s epic.

1. Beach House – Teen Dream


Beach House’s Teen Dream hit me the first time I listened to it. I instantly fell in love with the LP. So much so, I had to keep tweeting about how awesome this album is. This is ambient-pop at its finest, and this is an album I’ll be listening to for years to come. Beautiful, just beautiful.


Honourable Mentions:

Four Tet – There Is Love In You, The Morning Benders – Big Echo, Tallest Man On Earth – The Wild Hunt, Zeus – Say Us, Owen Pallett – Heartland

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Best of 2010: Melody

December 28th, 2010 | By: admin

The staff of The Singing Lamb is being so kind as to offer you our insight throughout the last week of 2010 as to what albums, singles, and shows were the best of the year. First off, creator Melody Lau/Lamb shares her top 10 albums. Check it.



10) Janelle Monae — The ArchAndroid


9) Spoon — Transference


8) Hooded Fang — Album


7) The Wilderness of Manitoba — When You Left the Fire


6) Vampire Weekend — Contra


5) Arcade Fire — The Suburbs
If you were oblivious to The Suburbs this year you were probably living under the world’s biggest rock. The only words to describe the year this Montreal collective had this year are triumphant and big. The Suburbs brought back a more-grounded affair, in comparison to the band’s second record Neon Bible, and successfully paired stadium rock hits with the same earnest indie appeal we first saw on Funeral. This band did no wrong this year. 


4) Best Coast — Crazy For You
We can sit around and debate the logistics of chillwave but I think we can all agree that California lo-fi rockers Best Coast reigned supreme above all other surf/beach/whatever you want to call it bands this year. Crazy For You was more polished than their previous singles but its lackadaisical ease was the perfect soundtrack this summer.   


3) Robyn — Body Talk
Unabashed, empowering and catchy as hell. Robyn is the modern day role model everyone should look up to. “Dancing On My Own” and “Call Your Girlfriend” are some of the year’s best dance songs and Robyn’s ability to narrate one’s heartbreak is spot-on. (Do I know this from personal experience? Maybe.) The beats literally burst out of her chest as she sings “I’m givin’ it my all/ but I’m not the girl you’re takin’ home/I keep dancin’ on my own” and she even tells you not to fuck with her alongside Snoop Dogg. Nuff said.


2) Beach House — Teen Dream
Ambient pop music does many things of the ambient variety – swooning, daydream and sometimes a bit lethargic (in the good sense). But what Teen Dream did upon first listen was knock you over the head. One of the most gorgeous records of the year, Teen Dream weaves song after song of dream-like earworms that will haunt you for days, weeks, and clearly in this case, months. Year-end list aside, this is an album I can listen to for years to come.


1) Owen Pallett — Heartland
Pop perfection from beginning to end, Heartland is Owen Pallett’s best work to date. Pallett doesn’t compromise his musical visions here, enlisting a complete orchestra for the first time and in turn he created a record that’s able to intellectually grab your attention while making you tap your feet. A fine balance between a cerebral masterpiece and a straight-up pop hit, Pallett’s formula is one that very few people can attempt let alone excel at. I’m not shy when it comes to being very proud of the music Toronto produces but this year’s pride and joy all rested on one record. In the span of a year, Heartland has already grown into a classic. (Original review)

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Beach House @ Opera House – March 30, 2010

April 2nd, 2010 | By: Guest Contributor

Beach House

There is no better way to celebrate the end of a painfully long and draining school assignment than entering into the delightfully sparkly dream that is Beach House. With an added drummer, the trio hypnotized the crowd into euphoria at the Opera House Tuesday night.

The crowd swayed to the melancholic rhythms and Victoria Legrand’s hauntingly beautiful voice in a set that drew heavily on their newest release Teen Dream.

The highlight of the night happened during “Zebra,” the infectious Teen Dream opener. Legrand, in her black and white outfit, pulled out some puppeteering skills and actually looked like a black and white horse marching among us as she mimed her way through the song.

The dreaminess of the night was perfected by the three-dimensional silver diamonds spinning behind the band. They reflected pink and green lights onto the stage and into the crowd to help bring Beach House’s dream to life.

For More Beach House,
MySpace:
http://www.myspace.com/beachhousemusic

***

Review By Jillean Kearney

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