By way of providing a definitive, incontestable answer to the question niggling the head-holes here and now – i.e, What, for Holy God’s sakes, might be the best record of 2006? – I had a friend of mine, a fella well-renowned for his knowledge regarding, amongst other things, the life and works of Niccolo Tartaglia, to compose for me some manner of system whereby I might rate one record off of the other, weigh and counter-weigh the worth of individual tracks (or, in certain particularly close cases, of individual notes and the application thereof), the composition of the inlays, the measure of the disc itself and so on and so forth, all so as the question would be answered in a way pleasing to both the ears and also the strictest demands of science. What we discovered, (although, I admit, I was fairly sure of the outcome beforehand), was that Rabbit-Fur Coat by Jenny Lewis And The Watson Twins was, without doubt, the very best record released this year.
A transcendent patchwork of country, folk, and pop, of defiance and longing and harmonies you could bathe your children in and with even blessed Conor Oberst showing up through a sort-of cover of “Handle With Care”, it’s a perfect record. At times it sounds, understandably enough, like a Rilo Kiley album with all the guitars replaced by fiddles and all the keyboards swapped for dungarees, but at other times (even, on occasion, at exactly the same time), it sounds like some distant, angel-spun lament let rise from the throats of a half-dozen Baptists stood bathing in the waters of some Nebraska river in 1937.
It’s a unique, intoxicating, haunting piece o’ work, and even in a year that spawned Plan B’s debut, the glorious Bright Eyes compilation Noise Floor, the half-brilliant Back To Basics by Christina Aguilera, Springsteen’s incredible folk record, even in such a year as saw all of these, still it waltzes dreamily past with the greatest of ease for to sit on the stool reserved for only the very best record what came out in the past 12 months.
A big year. Truly. Tom Petty. The Who. Paul Simon. Ornette Coleman. Regina Spektor. Cheap Trick. Dixie Chicks. Robert Randolph. Bob Dylan. Tom Waits.








Article comments
1 - Mark Saleski
hey, great job and almost happy new year everybody.
2 - handyguy
Deserving of some kind of mention:
Love, by The Beatles
and
The Avalanche, by Sufjan Stevens, as well as Sufjan's Songs for Christmas boxed set
3 - Glen Boyd
Looks like a pretty decent list from here. Yeah, I think we all did okay with this. Round of drinks for the house I say. I'll also join Sir Mark in wishing all a happy new year.
-Glen
4 - zingzing
oi. you guys missed it on this one. taste is taste, i suppose, but you people sound ooooollllddd.
in the year of the hold steady, wolf eyes, scott walker (old, i know), the knife, clipse, junior boys, joanna newsom, grizzly bear, liars, excepter, destroyer, current 93, coil, ekkhard ehlers, swan lake, ooioo, herbert, subtle...
meh. it was a long year. things happened.
5 - manny hernandez
Dear Blogcritics colleagues:
Here's my list of Top 10 albums for 2006.
Happy New Year, everybody!
6 - Tom Johnson
No, not old (I'm 33,) zingzing, it was just a good year for old musicians. The problem with a lot of the newer musicians' albums this year is that I didn't find that a lot of them had that ring of "classic" to them that I've found in previous years. I've seen a lot of lists already this year that are putting a lot of names on your list there, zingzing, and for a certain subset of people I'm sure those are great albums, but I've also heard a number of those and I don't see those being albums that have the mark of being classics - that's what it takes to be a best of the year.
I chose Tom Waits' box because it will be something that I will and people in general will return to in 5, 10, 15 years and it will continue to be as fresh and relevant as it is today. The best should be timeless. Maybe some of your list qualifies as timeless because they are so unique - I think maybe Grizzly Bear is close, maybe Liars, and while I don't particularly like him, Scott Walker has certainly earned his keep. But I have my doubts that most of the other names on your list will be considered classics worthy of being named albums of the year many years down the line. At least that's how I look at this - maybe I take this a lot more seriously than most listeners.
7 - El Bicho
If it had been which album rocked my socks off, it would have been Wolfmother; however, I'll stand by my pick and somehow find a way to live with myself.
8 - Triniman
From Vancouver, "Destroyer's Rubies" by Destroyer stands as one of my favorite albums of the year. It's always tough to pick just one, but I will stop at Destroyer. The songs, vocals and the guitar playing are distinctive and appealing.
Destroyer is essentially Dan Bejar, one of the members of The New Pornographers, one of Canada's top indie-pop groups. Canada's new national anthem? A Letter To An Occupant.
9 - DJRadiohead
I gotta say, I think we got a nice cross section of musical genres and styles. I also think it says at least as much about the state of music as it does the writers that so many of these selections come from "classic" artists as opposed to contemporary artists.
I can't wait to do my Top 10. I am surprised Thom Yorke's great solo album got no mentions.
10 - Glen Boyd
DJR --
Thom Yorke's album would probably make a personal top ten, possibly even a top five. However, I admit it took me quite awhile to warm to it. In my original review, I didn't quite dismiss it, but I did bemoan it's general lack (at least on the first few listens) lack of melody (in the traditional sense) or memorable songs.
I've since come around to it. I think it was about the time I realized I couldn't get "this is fucked up...fucked up" outta my head that I realized hooks can indeed come in many different shades.
-Glen
11 - Mark Saleski
old? how dare you! ok, i'm old.
but still, i enjoyed both Joanna Newsome's Ys and the record by The Decemberists. the thing is, if i'd have picked one of them, somebody would have accused me of leaning too far towards the Pitchfork crowd.
besides, tom johnson drove down the average age both by being young and by picking John Ma.....
12 - Matthew T. Sussman
What's music?
Anywho, it just needs to be said once more that I was using "big bowl of wrong" long before Mr. Head was using it -- months before, really -- although I never used it as religiously as he.
13 - Steve C.
Work having swallowed me up, I don't think I'll be posting a Top 10 for music this year. Best album of the year? In my more contemplative moods, it's Destroyer's Rubies; at all other times, it's Young Machetes by the Blood Brothers.
However, when we get around to the top films of the year, somebody give me a holler.
14 - Brian aka Guppusmaximus
No offense to Mr. Beaumont, because I usually like his reviews,But his pick for the best of '06 in the metal catagory just shows that the watered down sing alongs of Hardcore along with the dull & drudging drop-D of Nu-Metal are still the favorite taste of the oh-so boring Metal scene here in the US!! Unfortunately, Killswitch Engage sounds like a poor rip from an old God Forbid album though their lastest effort is rather catchy. BUT,catchiness is not the criteria for a brilliant Metal album...
As for my pick, it would come to us all the way from France. Gorod Leading Vision was a breath of fresh air pumped into a genre that hasn't seen much since Opeth's latest release which wasn't their best effort. Though, Arsis United in Regret is a close second and deserves a listen by anyone claiming to be a metal fan!!
Happy New Year BC...
Peace!
15 - A.L. Harper
Knowing that DJRadiohead lives in the arse of Guster I decided to write my own Guster free list and dedicate it to the memory of you DJRadiohead. But I know you won't approve!
16 - Brian
Sparks' "Hello Young Lovers" and Man Man's "Six Demon Bag" were both tragically overlooked!