Charmingly titled Best of Musique 2011 (an apt mix of English and French) and accompanied by a CD of 16 of the mag’s favourite tracks, entitled La bande-son 2011 (Soundtrack of 2011), Les inrockuptibles’ top 100 discs, 50 reissues and 100 tracks certainly offers a cornucopia of sonic richness. But I was especially intrigued by its deviations from Uncut and Mojo’s top of the year lists. Generally of the top 50 albums cited by those British music mags, about half or so of the CDs chosen differ from each other. They shared a common preference for such albums as Gillian Welch's The Harrow and the Harvest, Wilco's The Whole Love, Fleet Foxes' Helplessness Blues, Tinariwen's Tassili and Radiohead's The King of Limbs but Mojo also picked Glen Campbell's Ghost on the Canvas and Nick Lowe's That Old Magic as among their best discs of the year while Uncut went for the likes of Ry Cooder's Pull Up Some Dust and Sit Down and Gil Scott-Heron and Jamie XX's We're New Here. But Les inrockuptibles went even further in charting its own path with some surprising choices on tap. I would expect them to choose some home-grown discs, from French artists François & the Atlas Mountains and Daniel Darc – the Brits tend to ignore most non-English music outside of Africa – but how did they come to focus on an Oklahoma group called Other Lives, which I don’t recall being mentioned by either Uncut or Mojo (who supposedly keep a close eye on the musical output of their Anglo cousins). Other Lives was not the only American band whose album (Tamer Animals) was mentioned by Les inrockuptibles as among the year’s best; other choices included both predictable ones from Bon Iver, Tom Waits and Fleet Foxes as well as left field choices, not picked by the Brits, like M83, Hanni El Khatib and Salem, American artists whom I’ve never heard of. Surprisingly, Paul Simon’s So Beautiful Or So What, though featured on both Mojo and Uncut's best lists, was absent from Les inrockuptibles's chart They also focused on Canadian artists like Drake and Timber Timbre who were shut out of the British magazine lists. (Feist's Metals made both the French mag and Uncut's top list but was overlooked by Mojo.) And of course being neighbours and all, lots of British choices, including the releases from Arctic Monkeys, PJ Harvey, Gruff Rhys, The Horrors, James Blake and Cat’s Eyes, not all of whom placed high in their local lists. Interestingly, Harvey's (overrated to my mind) Let England Shake was Les inrockuptibles's eighth best disc but placed number one with both Mojo and Uncut.
The Black Keys |
I’ll admit to being jaded enough to dismiss most movies as not worthy of my time but I’d also bet that I haven’t missed too many good movies because of my prejudices in the process, either. Consider that I might have foolishly passed on three or four movies I should have seen, then add a couple of films that I never got to because they vanished from Toronto screens before I could check them out and then tally a handful of movies from 2011 that showed at the Toronto International Film Festival, which I no longer cover, and which didn’t get commercial release later. There’s also the odd movie like Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy which would have made my Best of 2011 list if I had seen it when it came out instead of early in 2012. But tops, maybe there were a dozen or so films that I would have written about favourably if I had caught them last year.
That’s not including artists not featured on magazine discs that I might discover on my own or be on the lookout for. Last year my favourite albums included strong follow ups to fine albums (The Black Key’s El Camino; Bon Iver’s Bon Iver, Bon Iver; Arcade Fire’s The Suburbs), a return to form after recent disappointments (Paul Simon’s So Beautiful Or So What, Lucinda Williams’s Blessed, The Decemberists’s The King is Dead), fantastic reissues (Pink Floyd’s aurally brilliant editions of The Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here), major compilations, such as the superb Late Night Tales series of modern jukeboxes (Midlake, MGMT, Trentemøller) and reliable stalwarts like the World Music CD releases from the English Rough Guide label (The Rough Guide to African Guitar Legends, Klezmer, English Folk etc.). Then there were releases coming to CD for the first time such as the amazing Opika Kende, Africa at 78 RPM box set and other CDs featuring Cumbia music, Indonesian punk and numerous other world music compilations. If I didn’t discover any new artists or groups to fall in love with in 2011 (as I did with Bon Iver, Midlake, The National, Espers and others in the past), it’s because I didn’t have that time to check out the entire albums, whose single tracks, from Metronomy or Jonathan Richman, sounded so enticing. But my estimate is that there may be (each year) perhaps 100 worthwhile releases that I may or may not find out about. By any artistic standards, and more so in an age when we have access to more music than anyone in history, this is remarkable. Is it any wonder that I’d rather seek out new sounds then check out what’s playing at my local move house?
– Shlomo Schwartzberg is a film critic, teacher and arts journalist based in Toronto. He teaches regular courses at Ryerson University's LIFE Institute, where he will be teaching a course on 70s American cinema, beginning on May 4, 2012.
Music now a days is really good but in my point of view i really prefer listening to the old ones around 90's
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