Best of 2004

Written by Tom Johnson
Published January 17, 2005
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I link above to the two-disc version offered only at the official Marillion store. Purchasing the edited-down one-disc edition available in stores is a waste - one of the best songs Marillion has ever recorded is available only on the two-disc version, the 17 minute "Ocean Cloud," along with a number of other songs exclusive to this version of the release.

Careful readers may have noted that these are not numbers 1-3 on my list, but that all of them occupy the number 1 spot. I have put this list off over and over again because I couldn't make up my mind, until now when I realized that there are no rules with regards these lists, and I can make three albums number 1 if I damn well feel like it. And so I did.

The rest, in no order because it doesn't really mean anything:

Einsturzende Neubauten: Perpetuum Mobile

Industrial music wore out its welcome about 10 years ago, so it's unfortunate to have to label the pioneers of the genre (along with Throbbing Gristle and a few others) with the "industrial" albatross, because while Einsturzended Neubauten (EN from now on) may wield, as instruments, tools against sheets of metal and industrial-strength springs, and even employ the sound of compressed air, the results resemble nothing you'd associate with Nine Inch Nails, Ministry, or even Skinny Puppy. What EN coaxes from non-musical instruments is a varied, subtle, and exotic sound, over which ex-Bad Seed Blixa Bargeld croaks out his baritone musings in equal parts German and English. A challenging, but extremely rewarding and beautiful album.

Grant Lee Phillips: Virginia Creeper

This is an album I grew so comfortable with so quickly that it nearly slipped my mind that it came out only in 2004 and is actually not an album I grew up listening to. Granted, Phillips has hardly changed his MO since disbanding Grant Lee Buffalo (which brings to mind the question "why not keep the band going if your solo material sounds just like the band bearing your name?") So warm and inviting is Phillips' brand of country-ish twang that it seemed to carve out a little niche in my life and made itself a part of my internal soundtrack.

Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds: the Lyre of Orpheus/Abattoir Blues

Nick Cave seems to have found his lighter side on this double-release (packaged in the same box,) shunning a bit of the dark murder themes he's been known for. In fact, this is a downright uplifting album, a complete anamoly in his catalog, full of gospel choirs and upbeat, energetic songs that verge on Christian in subject matter. It may be perplexing to some old fans, but if you can get past what Cave used to be, this is a gorgeous piece of work.

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Best of 2004
Published: January 17, 2005
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Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Metal, Music: Pop, Music: Rock
Writer: Tom Johnson
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#1 — January 17, 2005 @ 13:59PM — Eric Olsen

wildly interesting and informative list Tom, thanks! Ihad no idea the Trash Cans were still around and I had almost completely forgotten Grant Lee

#2 — January 17, 2005 @ 14:53PM — DJRadiohead [URL]

Tom,
Interesting list- particularly Helmet. I expected so much less and was pleasantly surprised. I can't say I like the album as a whole, but there are a couple of very good songs ("Throwing Punches" has been a favorite of mine since I heard it on the 'Underworld' soundtrack).

#3 — January 17, 2005 @ 21:36PM — Tom [URL]

Eric: do check out both the Sinatras as well as the Grant Lee Phillips album - if you liked what they did in the past, you'll like what they're doing now, and probably more, from my perspective. They're that good.

DJRadiohead: I went into the Helmet album with low expectations, too, and still found it to be a disappointment. I'd much rather listen to pretty much anything than this, sadly. I really thought I might like it, as I even like Aftertaste, which I think is unfairly slagged by fans who might have been expecting Betty II.

#4 — January 17, 2005 @ 22:59PM — Henry Porter [URL]

I must say you do check out the hard, cold, strange and unusual shit. No Dick Dale and the Deltones for your funky ass. I find your tastes peculiar but your means of expression are immaculate, and I don't think I've had as much fun with a single post since I went skinnydipping with the Bundchen sisters.

#5 — January 17, 2005 @ 23:01PM — Bill Lamb [URL]

Fascinating list...I didn't know Einsturzende Neubauten were still around either. I'll have to look that up.

Keep listening to Arcade Fire. It is a truly beautiful album and they are starting to build a buzz.

#6 — January 18, 2005 @ 14:11PM — Mark Saleski [URL]

as usual, tom provides a varied list, almost none of which is on mine.

...which is a good thing because now there's more stuff to check out.

particularly that intrumental Mike Keneally cd. yummy.

i do have the Wilco cd and it's pretty cool. is is alt.country? it is music concrete? uhm, yes.

#7 — January 18, 2005 @ 18:24PM — Aaron, Duke De Mondo [URL]

tom, excellent stuff. i never thought i'd enjoy reading about Marillion, but there you go, suprised am i, as yoda would say, if he too were reading about marillion.

I somehow managed to miss the whole Modest Mouse thing, and it was only after my own list was up that someone reccomended it. It blew me away, is what. Fantastic.

I would add the libertines, of course, to any list of best records of 2004, but thats why we all got our own, i guess.

Brilliant stuff, and whilst i'm wary of instrumental rock opera shindigs, you write about it brilliantly.

#8 — January 18, 2005 @ 18:26PM — Aaron, Duke De Mondo [URL]

and as a fairly long-time fan of nick cave, having enjoyed pretty much all of his back catalogue, i gotta say the new record (s) is the best thing i've ever heard from the dour sonabitch.

#9 — January 18, 2005 @ 18:45PM — Tom Johnson [URL]

Good sir Duke, never fear, the Libertines released a much-enjoyed album, but I had to make a cut-off point somewhere. As I mentioned, it was a really tough job just picking these, and the Libs weren't the only thing I had to sadly leave out of this meandering list.

I may have a "honorable mention" list for those things that just didn't quite make the cut. I realized in retrospect there were a number of things that I really enjoyed that, for whatever reason, the listening tapered off toward the end of the year and they plum got forgotten. ANd there are things like the new U2, which came out so late in the year that I have a hard time calling it a "2004 album," as the majority of it's first full year of life will be spent not in 2004 but in 2004. Anything released in the last couple months of the year is pretty hard to list as a best-of for the entire year, I think. I know my tastes change pretty quickly, and what I favor immediately after buying may well disappear from my listening queue by year's end.

#10 — January 18, 2005 @ 19:44PM — Aaron, Duke De Mondo [URL]

Anything released in the last couple months of the year is pretty hard to list as a best-of for the entire year

I totally agree. I left Eminem's Encore off my list, but i've been listening to it constantly for the last month. It's hard to get a handle on things overnight.

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