- Artists:
- The National »
- Perfume Genius »
- The Knife »
- These New Puritans »
- Emeralds »
- Shearwater »
- Yeasayer »
- LCD Soundsystem »
- Sufjan Stevens »
- Deftones »
After a week of teasing, confusing and enraging some of you, our countdown of the albums we have loved the most in 2010 concludes with this top 10.
In the 10th year of Drowned in Sound's existence, you would think, given the practice, that putting together the annual best albums of the year list would be a breeze. We wish we could say that was true. Sure, we've refined the formula (details here) and now know exactly how to survey the year and sum it up in a list but how to order it to best represent everyone really wasn't easy this year. To be fair on ourselves, maybe we have figured out the perfect mix for the year-end elixir but with all its great records, the year twenty-ten has totally thrown us.
Some might say 2010 wasn't the greatest year for music. Some of you have even started threads throughout the year saying as much but, respectfully, we totally and utterly disagree. This year we've seen some of our favourite artists return with records that have not only found their proverbial fiddles in fine form but consolidated years of goodwill into mainstream media attention and a whole lot of love. Sufjan Stevens and The National, in particular, have found themselves beneath the hot lights in major American TV studios and clogging up the radio airwaves throughout the globe. In doing so, they are slowly winning over a whole new audience and perhaps expanding and enriching the depth and breadth of 'our world'.
You can feel the incorrigible spirit of independence looming large across the entire length of the 75 albums in this years list. Theorists and philosophers will pinpoint landmarks such as the ability to skip tracks on CDs and how Google has replaced our need for information retention, as reasons why we are freer than our elders. I have a theory that we're living through such an explosion of creativity, not just because of the (pro) tools and outlets available to musicians but perhaps, just maybe there's one single chorus line to blame. We now have a generation of artists who were quite likely conceived to and grew up hearing Fleetwood Mac's insistence that "you can go your own way", who have since seemingly not been burdened by concepts of relevance and fitting in. In fact, across this top ten (and none moreso than in our choice for number one this year) this unshackled spirit can be felt, and its an inspiring force to be reckoned with.
As I pointed out in earlier parts of this countdown, this single-mindedness extends to our writers, community members, and to music fans as a whole, where a definitive single album everyone loves or coherent patterns of passion, incredibly hard to find. If 2010's year-end listing season marks anything, it's a strange but apparent death of consensus. Nearly every top 10 list from staff members was taken into consideration when compiling this list featuring not just different number ones but over 240 different albums! There's even a record that one staff members scored 10/10 in his review earlier this year which didn't get a single vote from any other member of our staff. These are increasingly fractured times we're living in, with people experiencing their own adventure, taking totally different paths that don't cross with users on even the very same website, through the year's editorial, discussion and releases. To add to this, nearly every publication and blog's top 10 we've seen so far has totally different albums of the year and some top 75s do not include some of our top 10. Who's right, who's wrong? - it doesn't matter, music always wins. This list will not reflect every writer nor every reader of the site, the positionings may even seem somewhat arbitrary but this is our top 10, they could all be number one but - much-like the Highlander - there can be only one...
10
Sufjan Stevens
Age of Adz

Having wrong-footed us earlier this year with his somewhat disappointing All Delighted People EP (4/10 Review), following last year's song-of-the-year contender 'You Are The Blood' on that Dark Was the Night compilation (8/10 Review), the baffingly beautiful non-narrative piece The BQE (7/10 Review) and some talk of a serious existential crisis (News story), Sufjan Stevens returned with his first proper album in five years. The pastoral brass and supple tear-jerkers of Illinoise were nowhere to be found and in their place we found a sci-fi hue that seemed to have crowd-surfed at a Kanye concert and fallen in love with Bon Iver's post-808 autotune adventures. Having said that, for every brave skip forwards Sufjan has taken with Age of Adz, this is still defiantly him, it's just that he's a man of various personas and we love him for it. Read James Skinner's full review...
9
LCD Soundsystem
This Is Happening

Any other year and James Murphy would have walked away with the album of the year title, no questions asked. However, This Is Happening finds itself as one of LCD's finest long-players to date, suffering, perhaps, from the weight of expectation that a Zeitgeist-bothering backlog begets. Despite the unfair benchmark, 'Drunk Girls', 'You Wanted a Hit' and 'Pow Pow' are easily three of the finest songs released this year, yet they too sort of distract from the fact that there's more to this record than a cursory listen suggests. Repeated spins of this third LCD LP reveal just how sophisticated and ornate this body of work is. At times This Is Happening is an understated, almost lethargic listen, from a man renown for floor-fillers but don't be fooled by first impressions because, we'll happily wager our rare Motown collections that when those rock history books are written years from now, this will be heralded as one of the finest records of the 21st Century. Read Micheal Wheeler's full review...
8
Yeasayer
Odd Blood
As 2010 drifted by, January and February's releases either slid by the wayside (Hello Delphic!) or picked up airplay and plaudits aplenty. Firmly in the latter camp, Yeasayer had what can only be described as a triumphantly successful year - you could say the exact year MGMT or Klaxons would have had if they released a record as garish as this. Kicking down January's frosted doors - probably wearing one of Karen O's outfits - was 'Ambling Alp', a track which saw the band, in a blink of an eye, transform from a world music-ish conceptual thing for earthily hipsters to Prince's cyborg ragtag rugrats. The meandering middle eights of All Hour Cymbals became anthemic choruses ripe for daytime radio and the big stages of the world's biggest festivals. Everything sort of fell into place. What a year, what a record. Read Andrzej Lukowski's full review...
7
Shearwater
The Golden Archipelago

James Skinner: Shearwater have always made gorgeous, evocative music, but when Jonathan Meiburg sings of taking a long drive into the evening amid “burning days of unnatural light” on ‘Meridian’ – and when you realise he’s referring to the irradiation of Bikini Atoll by the United States of America – the effect is chilling, spine-tingling; utterly couched in sorrow and terrible beauty.
The Golden Archipelago is a magnificent, weighty work that still yields fresh snippets of brilliance some ten months down the line, but it is also inviting and accessible in a manner that can’t quite be said of the band’s previous albums, fine though they are – there’s something intangibly special and unique that makes it such a personal favourite. Harnessing its contemplation of the world around us to the broad theme of life on remote islands, it is at once warm, spacious and serene; cold, tight and deranged; passionate without laying it on too thick; genuinely epic in scope without overreaching. Lauren summed it up pretty fine in her original review:
“It makes its statement simply by describing the things we stand to lose, their power and yet their precariousness. And that is surely one of music’s greatest abilities, when it is done well – rather than over-complicating and abstracting our surrounds, it can simply help us see what already exists as though we are looking, for the first time, with clear sight.”
6
These New Puritans
Hidden

It seems almost pointless to remark that this is the highest placed record by an act from the UK as Hidden sounds more like it was born in some deep corner of outer space where Aztec tribes use the bones of their ancestors to collectively thud transcendental rhythms. You won't experience another record like this in 2010 because no-one else has found a way to drag together the tectonic plates of Wu-Tang and J.Dilla's continent of futuristic hip-hop with the Liars-via-Velvet Underground indie land, and on this newfoundland built a castle fit for Eno and Byrne. Or to put it another way, here are some of the words from Bruce Porter's review...
Hidden announces its extravagant aspirations on the opening track, ‘Time Xone’, where somber classically-arranged oboes, clarinets and bassoons act as an overture to the upcoming ten-track symphony. The instrumental piece makes a hasty exit for the aptly entitled ‘We Want War’, which sets the stage for the darkly romantic production you’d expect to soundtrack the cinematic battlefields of Middle-Earth. Big drums reverberate and ominous keyboards lay the groundwork for a struggle of epic proportions. Barnett’s vocal cadence alternates between rapid-fire urgency and world-weary sighs. Choral harmonies, majestic horns and plinking pianos complement the latter half of the song perfectly and despite this brilliant introduction, the best is yet to come. Discordant piano chords, xylophones and snare-drum spackle move in weird concentric circles around Barnett’s soaring vocals on ‘Hologram’. Hell, there’s even a duck whistle thrown in for good measure...
5
The Knife
Tomorrow, in a Year

The first time an opera has made the DiS end of year list.
Here's what albums editor Andrzej Lukowski had to say about the album on release in a rare 10/10 review:
"It might seem perverse to use machines to conjure the Earth's first biological fumblings, but actually it makes sense, the music’s complete lack of warmth distancing Tomorrow, in a Year from any sense of humanity (Wahlin sounds alien and near incomprehensible). Much of the sound is generated by computer programmes, which may have been written by humans, but were modelled on animal calls and studies, rhythms a human musician couldn’t play and wouldn’t think of, rhythms from outside humanity, rhythms that exist in spite of us.
That, in a nutshell, is the appeal and triumph of Tomorrow, in a Year, a coldly overwhelming record built on algorithms Olof Dreijer spent two years tinkering with, modelled on both field recordings made on a trip to the Amazon, and Darwin’s own scientific data. Save for a few sparks at the end, Tomorrow, in a Year doesn’t romanticise or even demonstrate affection for its subject, and nor should it. It is simply a dispassionate electrical negative of a portion of nature's pitiless immensity, sculpted and tweaked for atmosphere by musicians who are masters of such things."
Read Andrzej Lukowski's full review here...
4
Perfume Genius
Learning

A more complete, grainier, barely-there album you will not hear in 2010. As part of our look back at 10 Years of Solo/Singer-Songwriters, Alex Denney wrote the following which sums this record up perfectly: There are many reasons why you need Perfume Genius’ debut Learning in your life, but for now we’ll content ourselves with this: you absolutely will not find a better lyrical passage - this year, or any - than the one which furnishes ‘Mr Petersen’ with its heart-stopping climax:
He made me a tape of Joy Division
He told me there was part of him missing
When I was sixteen, he jumped off a building
Mr Petersen, I know you were ready to go
I hope there’s room for you up above, or down below
The story of a schoolboy’s questionable relationship with a teacher who subsequently commits suicide, the words here represent a tour-de-force of smart simplicity; a lesson to the dullards that now litter the singer-songwriter’s landscape with their ritualised neediness and GCSE student’s feel for the wondrous gift of metaphor.
It’s a great, great moment, but by no means unique - Learning is a frequently shocking canvas filled with brave, intuitive strokes that draw heavily for lyrical content on the troubled history of one Mike Hadreas, a 26-year-old department store attendant prone to bursting into tears while doing the washing up.
Moving back to his mother’s home in Everett, Washington after a stint in New York found him flirting with personal disaster, the previously self-conscious Hadreas suddenly found himself able to face down his demons and write through his pain: “Something cracked. I didn’t give a fuck anymore and I had this really clear idea of what I wanted to say, regardless of how it sounded.”
Mixing broadly hymnal stabs of piano and grief-stricken synths, Perfume Genius’ music comes off like an inspired mix of Daniel Johnston and Atlas Sound without the trick-bag of FX, but it’s Hadreas’ bare-bones approach to storytelling and insistence on beauty in this cruellest of all possible worlds that lingers longest. A work of demolishing beauty.
3
Deftones
Diamond Eyes

Last year, DiS sipped a coffee with Chino & co. and had a pad full of questions regarding their forthcoming record. Pleasantries dispersed with, we then discovered that the entire record had recently been scrapped. Whilst the new songs, which would eventually become Diamond Eyes, were still in their gestation period, the band wanted to talk about nothing but M83 and Kode9, which isn't what usually happens when we natter with 'metal' bands. We were hardly shocked as the band's love of everyone from Mogwai to The Smiths, is no big secret. If you really listened out for them, you could feel the influence of Depeche Mode, Peter Gabriel and The Cure casting shadows over Deftones career triumph White Pony. Two records later and Diamond Eyes sees the band returning to the drawing board, cross-pollinating these wide-screen electronic influences in ways that once again, are there, if you really listen out for them. Stepping back, as this record ravages every crevice of your being, there's something beyond any rock, metal or indie-influenced album we've ever heard. Diamond Eyes has some of the bands trademark brutality, sure, they have hardly mellowed but there is also such a palette of subtle and vivid almost-post-rock textures that you're sucked into the records universe and dragged around until it spits you out, breathless, wondering whether to listen to it again or have a bit of a lie down. Read Brad Barrett's review...
2
The National
High Violet
Debate about whether or not this is better than Boxer is utterly futile. In fact, you might as well argue whether cheesecake is nicer than carrot cake or whether brown kittens are cuter than black kittens, the fact of the matter is, all answers point to things better than anything else on earth. DiS' love of The National's life-lifting misery-dwelling intensity knows no real limits. In fact, as I type this I wonder why we didn't just make it album of the year in the first place because, all arguments aside, this is one of the best records released this year and the best record they've ever made but we'll probably only realise this three or four years from now. Read James Skinner's 9/10 review and Alexander Tudor's amazingly in-depth but truly fascinating First Listen piece.
1
Emeralds
Does It Look Like I’m Here?

"Who?" "What?" And if you're not mouthing that to yourself, you're likely doing one of those knowing nods. As noted in much of the pre-amblings for these year-end list pieces, 2010 was an incredibly fractured year, with people exploring various different sub-genres and spirally down to the depths of niches. Whichever way people were exploring, time and time again this electronica with a dash of drone record was highlighted on blogs, in quality magazines but especially in threads on the boards of this very website. In previous years the upper echelons of DiS end of year lists have featured the likes of Fuck Buttons and Electrelane but rarely has a record come from the instrumental leftfield and burrowed its way into so many record collections and been so quietly celebrated by those lucky enough to have stumbled across it. This is our album of the year because from start to finish, your ears are awash in digital detritus whilst your hyper-accelerated mind relaxes. Maybe the love stems from its ambience, which drifts from computer games soundtrack to Pink Floyd-fuelled late night road trips to woozy, hazy, dreamy guitars at the crossroads of post-rock and shoegaze. Perhaps it's more simple than that: Does It Look Like I'm Here? is perfectly crafted and, whilst seemingly indulgent, takes you wherever you want it to.
Drowned in Sound's Favourite Albums of 2010: Top Ten
1) Emeralds Does It Look Like I’m Here?
2) The National High Violet
3) Deftones Diamond Eyes
4) Perfume Genius Learning
5) The Knife Tomorrow, In a Year
6) These New Puritans Hidden
7) Shearwater The Golden Archipelago
8) Yeasayer Odd Blood
9) LCD Soundsystem This Is Happening
10) Sufjan Stevens Age of Adz
50-11 is here
75-51 is here
...previous albums of the year 2001-2009
More
You can hear a track from each album via this Spotify playlist and hear the (available) albums in full via this Spotify playlist. Check back next week for our tracks of the year and singles of the year from Wendy Roby who does our hugely popular singles column every Monday. Plus we have a guide to 2011 coming your way next week.
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And we're also on Tumblr with our Audio-only blog http://drownedinsoundcloud.com, which features samples of tracks from every album on this list, as well as irregular recommendations.
Amazon: Buy The Top 25 on Vinyl
- The National - Trouble Will Find Me
- A Scream and an Outrage: Win tickets to Barbican weekend of music curated by Nico Muhly
- DiS Does Singles 15.04.13: Cat Power, Jessie Ware, The National, Bibio
- ATP The National: the DiS review
- The DiS Community's... 101 Favourite Albums
- Watch: Sharon Van Etten in session + she chats about Tramp and getting stuck in the mud
- Half-Year: DiS' Most Read Articles, Reviews and Threads of 2012 (so far!)
- DiS meets Bryce Dessner of The Long Count & The National
I can't get behind the Emeralds album in the same way I can others in this top 10
have tried though. One more go.
btw
no Titus Andronicus and no Wavves = kinda criminal, imo
The
Emeralds album is brilliant, nice one. Not a fan of most of the top 10 but cant please em all!
Deftones, you say....
I used to be a huge fan of theirs... until Saturday Night Wrist, then I lost touch with them. I actually found out they had released an album this year about 2 months ago, during the busiest time of the year no less! Needles to say, it's on my wishlist, probably the first of 2011.
Not really a fan of this list
thought the 50 - 10 list was much better
At least three of these albums I outright dislike (High Violet, for instance, is shit), and another two or three I just find ineffectual (emeralds, perfume genius..)
Not that it matters much. Still thought this year was brilliant.
The Perfume Genius
album is fantastic... beautiful songs.
sorry, we can't hyper-personalize this list to each user. would be great if you and everyone else who disagrees could tell us and the 100k+ people who'll read this list over the next few days your top 10 and which records they should have been listening to instead.
Emeralds
Is a great and unexpected choice. I lean slightly more toward the OPN stuff, although I think they're both pretty different in their ways. A great year for the Editions Mego label.
I like it.
Very solid top ten there. By that I mean, I like most of those records and there aren't any megalolz in there...
Emeralds and Deftones...
are truly brilliant albums. I'd say Baths deserved to be somewhere in the Top 75, for me a Top 10 album of the year. Also The Wants is the equal to High Violet, if not better.
Way to ruin the list
by putting their album cover as the link on the home page.
Any else not really care for This Is Happening?
Perhaps it'll grow on me (I just picked it up recently), but for now, it's like a pretentious stranger I don't really like put on Side 2 of Low and proceeded to talk about himself over top.
Emeralds' album is great.
Wouldn't have it as my personal number one, but it's a sterling choice and is probably going to end up being quite an interesting one compared to all the other end of year lists.
:D wasn't having a go sean
just don't really like your top 10. Horses for courses and all that.
Interesting top 10!
Nice to see a 'heavy' record in there as well.
Good explanation of the fractured nature of this list...
...and intelligent, incisive points on the specific records.
Let's be honest; even if we disagree, we love these lists...don't we? What else are we all going to argue about for hours?!!
Great list...
...except Yeasayer. Love the love for Emeralds, Perfume Genius. The Knife was amazing, totally underrated. My own top ten includes Owen Pallett (underrepresented) and Titus Andronicus (I get why people don't like this but I think it's plum)
Yeah - so happy to see Shearwater, The National, Perfume Genius et al
so high, kind of gutted that Titus and Anais Mitchell didn't have the editorial support needed to ensure spots, but they're both very special and clearly appreciated records nonetheless, and this is a great, expansive list.
it's good to be brave..
and a little different. the same list of albums (in basically the same order) X 30 does nothing for no one..
plus, it think it behooves DiS to reflect the nuances in taste of its staff combined with the passion and ridiculously broad knowledge of its readership.
one gripe, probably not enough hip hop, RnB and world music.. little bit white and safe..
but even if you can't agree with the *shocked face* #1, it's not particularly hard to appreciate the greatness of High Violet
I haven't actually heard any of that Emralds record yet...
Probably best get off my arse and do so. None of the albums in my top 10 made this list but I guess that just proves what Sean was saying about 2010 being sucha great year for music. That and everyone else on here sucks!! Kidding!! Probably.
Got to say I'm extremely surprised by Emeralds,
but 3 of the records I'm a big fan of, 4 I like quite a lot and I haven't actually listened Deftones, Emeralds or Shearwater.
Agree that a bit more hip hop would have been nice in the list
The Strong Arm Steady and Big Boi albums were nailed on top 10 contenders for me. But, lets face it, its great to disagree with the list because debate makes the music nerd world go round don't it?
My top 10 read's as follows, for anyone who maybe interested:
10 - The Ruby Suns
9 - Deerhunter
8 - Scuba
7 - Big Boi
6 - Mount Kimbie
5 - Strong Arm Steady
4 - Pantha du Prince
3 - Gil Scot Heron
2 - Caribou
1 - Gorillaz
If anyone is even more interested in my wisdom, they can read my explanations of why I chose each one here
http://drownedinsound.com/releases/15174/reviews/4139298
Sorry for the minor JAG
..do find it odd
that Four Tet got a bit forgotten (generally.. NME/DiS/Clash so far). there aren't many more satisfying electro albums this year..
also, a shout for Jack Rose's Luck In The Valley; a posthumous release that really does carry the man's soul
Surprised by Emeralds
But how many people who missed it first time around are now going to give it a (re)listen? Hopefully more than a few.
Baths and Warpaint are probably the most notable omissions, but clearly other writers weren't feeling them as much as me.
Excellent! So nice to see Emeralds up there!
A lot of people will say 'it's not as good as the S/T'. And that may be true. But... it's just so damn good! And although it share similarities of sound with Oneohtrix Point Never, I think that Emeralds make the far more pleasing records, more coherent and driven (You can tell it's a whole band rather than one guy and I think it's better as a result).
Anyway better go before I get all tl;dr about it, but... hell yeah!
Ha!
Great to see some Shearwater love, great album, second only to High Violet for me ;)
This seems a pretty good list.
It's nothing like my own (in fact, I've only heard one of the top 10) but I really want to hear some of these records now.
Emeralds is a bold choice for #1
Too bold, perhaps. The great thing about this year is that I generally like all the records in the Top 75...and can still think of a dozen records that should have been there!
four tet is in there, at number 47 http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4141664
great to see shearwater there and emeralds definitely deserved it but
no lone wolf or j. grant ?
deftones, seriously?
Never heard of Perfume Genius until now
That album has destroyed me - incredible.
emeralds is an excellent choice!!
yea excellent list team, not a fan of deftones or weezer but each to their own! anyway here´s what the list would look like in my world
1. Walkmen 2. Tallest Man on Earth 3. Mystery Jets 4. Deerhunter 5. Caribou 6. Hot Chip 7. LCD 8. Emeralds 9. Beach House 10. Wolf Parade
and on the shame list is that bloody carl barat album...absolute shit show!!
I know...
It's tremendous in all its imperfection.
yeah spotted it :)
kinda meant why isn't it higher? ..same old "where's my fave album??" moan..
it's far too good to be one of 2010's nearly men
Perfume Genius
is definitely pretty special. There's something sentimental in me that is happy to see Weezer up there, too.
So . . .
<i>"There's even a record that one staff members scored 10/10 in his review earlier this year which didn't get a single vote from any other member of our staff.</i>
I take it this would be Hadestown then? While I wasn't expecting it in the top 10 to not even see it in the top 75 seems a bit off. Such a fantastic album.
Good to see The National and Sufjan placing high as well.
Seems like brave and different for it's own sake to me.
This list is not the 10 best records of the year by anyone's view - DiS contributors or the readers.
If the same list of albums come out across multiple publications / websites then it indicates a broad consensus, something some people seek out when looking at lists like this and reviewing the year.
I think DiS has got this wrong this year, wrong time and place for championing the records it has.
I really like the Emeralds record, but....
it doesn't really feel 'record of the year' material does it? More an interesting top ten contender. I imagine that everyone voting for this list chose their top ten and the votes were aggregated - I bet very few chose Emeralds as their top album but it featured somewhere in enough lists to get to the top.
You're looking for the record of the year to be one that you know will still have an impact and resonance years down the line. I can't really see that with Emeralds.
The only real contenders for the title are Arcade Fire, Kanye and The National, with Shearwater, Deerhunter, Caribou and a few others in the next best category.
Agree about Hadestown being the great missing record in this list.
Emeralds
is a nice record for sure, but hard to see it as the number 1 record of such a great year. Was it top of any individuals' list? Not sure if it's a compromise choice or a statement, maybe both? Oh well, you were one off ;)
Wrong place?!
What the HELL does that even mean?!
Having just bought the Emeralds album..
..this only intrigues me more. Really good list though - this is what all of this list lark should be about. DiS has been brilliant with it - dusting off some forgotten gems and long may that continue. NOW - to try and forget that Saturday Night Wrist even happened...
hi "bornin69" and others who've made similar remarks.
As it says in earlier parts of the list, this wasn't a tallied up, democratic thing. staff voted to get a sense of editorial love (more like a committee, with a sort of "house of lords" editorial team making the final yay and nays) and, as per my pre-amble, there was no consensus.
To add to which, defining "best" is near impossible but our favourites of the year, is what this list is all about. Does It Look Like I'm Here is the record that every time a member of our community recommended it, heaps of people started replying saying how much they love it. The passion of our community factored as much in this decision as the staff list. Sure, it was no-ones number one but it was on a lot of staff lists and a lot of reader lists, and with no clear definitive winner, I think a record like this defines 2010 and what DiS is about, much better than whatever the most popular choice might be. Not everyone will love it, and like I said, nearly all of this top 10 could have been number 1, of which, 2 of the records you suggest are in the top 2 and 2 more just outside of it. Thanks for your comment and I hope this helps to make better sense of this decision.
Best,
Sean
Titus
I love this record is getting even more attention than it being in the list at 71 or something. it was very nearly in the list but not a lot of our staff loved it - perhaps because of the caveat I've heard a few times "you have to see them live, the records pale in comparison" is why it was one of the 140 or so records that could have gone in the list but sadly just missed the cut.
Or to put it another way, we do like Titus, so much so they recently played our DiS night in Sheffield. http://drownedinevents.tumblr.com
THIS IS AN OUTRAGE
No, just kidding. Any list with Perfume Genius, Yeasayer and LCD is a good one by me. Now for the real purpose of these lists, new music. I'm off to spend the afternoon with Deftones and Emeralds.
Emeralds is a great choice for no1
Almost makes up for having Deftones so high.
Overall a very good list.
Something for everyone, No? stuff to yay, nay, and huh at...
I like the mixture of democracy and subjective editorializing... how else would Emeralds get this kind of promotion? They need it more than The National / Shearwater / Yeasayer / The Knife, much as they deserve the high placings.
I can't imagine Uncut or Mojo ever naming more than 2 records I haven't heard - it's always 30 records by has-beens, and 20 (low-placed) records by people yer DiS readers quite like. This has given me at least a dozen to check out.
Shame about Titus & Final Fantasy missing out, but there's always someone lost to a Spring release, and Owen still hasn't captured his live sound... which is why we're all shouting out for him here.
This kind of confirms my point...
I say again, I like the Emeralds record, and there is a certain charm in a comparatively left field choice being at the top...but how can a record that was 'no-one's number one' be record of the year?
It's a record that everyone likes but no-one really, really loves. I'd rather have an album that loads of people love and some people hate.
Very surprised not to see Hadestown in the Top 75
I think if it had half the label help of most the albums in that list, it would've featured in a lot more writers' top 10s. I just don't think that many people have actually listened to or even heard of it.
Do people..
really seek out consensus? i don't know if they do.. i think when people look at a best-of list they are very prepared for each list to reflect the nature of the publication that's hosting it.
I don't think at all that DiS "got it wrong." there's nothing conclusively right or wrong with any list, or these lists in general. they are far from being examples of a perfect art/science.
i think there has been a greater emphasis put on editorial judgement with this year's DiS List - which I think is positive. like i said earlier, doesn anyone want the same list again and again? the whole thing then just becomes a ridiculous race between publications to see who publishes their list first.
ultimately, i repeat what i said before. this was a brave list. it's not super-impotant. it doesn't "change" anything (except possibly the lives of Emeralds, which is no bad thing at all). it doesn't particularly mean anything. but what this list is, is refreshing/shocking/different.. an alternative. and isn't that really the philosophy/point of DiS (in a glib nutshell)?
And hey, there's bravery and there's sticking Take That's Progress as your 20th best record of the year. fuck it, I'm off to Q..
http://www.albumoftheyear.org/list/42-qs-50-albums-of-the-year-2010.php
I absolutely agree that it's not a question of 'getting it wrong'...
there's no such thing as 'right or wrong' in this, it obviously just a matter of opinions.
The fact is though that if you choose to put a 'best album of the year' up on a website then that's bound to lead to a debate about whether you should have chosen something else.
If you don't want that debate, then you wouldn't put the list up.
What I like about the list is in fact the debate - it's interesting to hear what other people like, and great to discover new stuff (Perfume Genius for me, with this list). I still don't think Emeralds made the 'record of the year' though, and nor, apparently, did any of the DIS staff or contributors.
Maybe just a list of 75 great records would be better than a 1-75 chart.
Conspiracy Theory Time
These New Puritans was actually album of the year but when the NME came out DIS wanted to be different so they pushed releasing the list back a day (technical difficulties/weather my arse) and went with a more obscure, bold choice. Swapped Emeralds at 6 to 1 and vice versa. Very possible theory.
The LCD Soundsystem album sounds like a parody of the last record. I'm surprised it's appeared on so many lists elsewhere.
Yeasayer...really?!
Thanks for Emeralds, I hadn't heard the album and it sounds really good.
ha, I wish we were that malleable. the album of the year was decided over a week ago as we Does It Look Like I'm Here defines 2010s fractious nature.
sadly, it was as boring as VirginMedia 50meg broadband continuing to be rubbish (they seem to be blaming the weather). Have had issues for month and spent all of Friday trying to get artwork files and embed videos but my connection was on-and-off, down about 60% of the time.
Awesome Number 1
that is all really. Congrats. A good list is one that makes me happy when it peaks, and this one definitely did.
re: the #1:
its just 2 hours of burbling noises.
Great to see
Emeralds and Deftones so high - both brilliant albums.
I'm going to check out the latest Shearwater album, that record slipped past me a bit.
The Emeralds record is pretty great
but not Record of The Year material for me. I concur that the absence of Titus Andronicus from yet another end-of-year list (see also NME) is a travesty. I'm in the process of compiling my top 20 albums for my blog, and rest assured it will be there.
^this (the LCD point)
..and it isn't nearly as good
I don't know, I just listened to it through really loud
and it was pretty glorious - Home, All I Want and One Touch in particular. It's a different kind of record to Sound of Silver, but for me there's not much in it...that might just be because I finally saw them live this year and EVERYTHING sounded brilliant, but I don't think so.
The Yeasayer album justifies its placing via Ambling Alp and O.N.E. alone. Well, maybe not, but what songs they are.
Hmmm
"As 2010 drifted by, January and February's releases either slid by the wayside (Hello Delphic!) or picked up airplay and plaudits aplenty"
So what you're saying is that unless albums from the early part of the year received good coverage as the year progressed, you'd ignore them from your list? Funny, because 5 of my Top 20 albums of this year were released in January or the first week in February. Time shouldn't really be a factor, should it? It's precisely now, at the end of the year, when you're conducting these polls and producing these lists that you should be revisiting stuff from the beginning of the year, stuff that you might have overlooked.
Oh, and the Delphic album is brilliant.
nice to see emeralds up there
only just discovering it for myself now, 'candy shoppe' is beautiful
that wasn't what i was saying. just that some stuff get forgotten and the year is front loaded with good and hyped releases relevant to DiS.
Re the lack of consensus
here's Simon Reynolds talking about that very thing last year: http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2009/dec/07/musically-fragmented-decade
No Hot Chip?
No cigar.
Robbed at least 75 times. Poor show.
I`ve only just got around to listening to that Emeralds album and it`s beautiful, stunning and accessible, and very Psychedelic. It definately deserves to be up there, and it`s good to see this type of Electronic music becoming popular and getting some recognition. Nice one.
While I agree with Reynolds
and did last year when I read that comparing *now* to previous decades. I'm not buying 'death of consensus' line. There's plenty of consensus at the top of these lists (Arcade Fire, Kanye, Janelle Monáe, The National, Beach House and LCD Soundsystem are this year's Animal Collective, Dirty Projectors, Phoenix, Grizzly Bear and YYYs appearing on near every list) and the pool that these lists are taking from is the same 50-75 albums at the top and the same 200 or so overall.
I've gone over 16 or so UK and US lists and only found one that doesn't have The Suburbs on it. Likewise you pull out everything that only got voted for in one publication and I bet the pool is down to 150 albums filling 600 or so slots.
I don't get it
How did Hadestown not make this list. It got a 10/10
No Dimmu Borgir?
I'm outraged! ;-P
Other Stuff
For those of you digging the Emeralds album then check out Mark McGuire's solo album 'Living With Yourself'(more guitar based) and also the Skyramps stuff which is McGuire and Daniel 'Oneohtrix Point Never' Lopatin
Just realized
that Antony and the Johnsons is missing and is missing from a lot of the other lists as well. Also what the hell happened to Scissor Sisters this year?
Interesting top ten
I was pleased that Perfume Genius and Deftones got in, and yet to hear Emeralds, but look forward to it if the review is to be believed. My own personal favourite was The Besnard Lakes. Stunning record. Emma Pollock, Errors, Beach House, Calories, Pulled Apart by Horses, Glasser and Grinderman score highly too...interesting year definately.
High Violet shite?!
You're shite.

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