<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<feed
    xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
    xmlns:at="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/at"
    xmlns:icbm="http://postneo.com/icbm"
    xmlns:rvw="http://purl.org/NET/RVW/0.2/"
    xml:lang="en">
    <title>Empire Records:  Open &#39;Til Midnight</title>
    <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" title="Empire Records:  Open &#39;Til Midnight (Atom)" href="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/library/posts/tags/donkey/page/1/atom.xml" />
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="Empire Records:  Open &#39;Til Midnight" href="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/library/posts/tags/donkey/page/1/"/>

    <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="Empire Records:  Open &#39;Til Midnight" href="http://www.vox.com/services/atom/svc=post/collection_id=6a00cd970fc7e14cd500d4141752f3685e" />

    <link rel="service.subscribe" type="application/atom+xml" title="Empire Records:  Open &#39;Til Midnight" href="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/library/posts/tags/donkey/atom.xml" />

    
    
    <link rel="last" type="application/atom+xml" title="Empire Records:  Open &#39;Til Midnight" href="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/library/posts/tags/donkey/page/1/atom.xml" />


    <category term="donkey" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/donkey/?_c=feed-atom-full" label="donkey" />

    <generator uri="http://www.vox.com/">Vox</generator>
    <updated>2009-01-08T09:48:56Z</updated>

    <author>
        <name>Gothic Lolita</name>
        <uri>http://casket4mytears.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
    </author>

    <id>tag:vox.com,2006:6p00cd970fc7e14cd5/tags/donkey/</id>

    <subtitle>Musings of a Music-Obsessed Mind</subtitle>


    
    <entry>
        <title>2008 In Music:  Reviews and Reccs</title>
    
    
    
        <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" title="2008 In Music:  Reviews and Reccs" href="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/library/post/2008-in-music-reviews-and-reccs.html?_c=feed-atom-full" />
    
        
        <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="2008 In Music:  Reviews and Reccs" href="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/library/post/2008-in-music-reviews-and-reccs.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments" />
    
        <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" title="2008 In Music:  Reviews and Reccs" href="http://www.vox.com/atom/svc=post/asset_id=6a00cd970fc7e14cd5010980c5c7f3000b" /> 
                <id>tag:vox.com,2009-01-02:asset-6a00cd970fc7e14cd5010980c5c7f3000b</id>
        <published>2009-01-02T18:55:51Z</published>
        <updated>2009-01-08T09:48:56Z</updated>
    
        <author>
            <name>Gothic Lolita</name>
            <uri>http://casket4mytears.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full</uri>
        </author>
    
        
        <content type="html" xml:base="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/?_c=feed-atom-full">
            <![CDATA[
                <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:at="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/at">
    
    
        
            
            <p>What music blog is complete without a
yearly wrap-up on the releases of the year that stood out, for
positive or negative reasons?</p><p>Admittedly, I have not been as in touch
with the releases of the year and must preface this entry with
stating that there are going to be glaring omissions from this list. 
Life has kept me from music this year, be it keeping me from concerts
I wished to see, keeping me from the time to listen to albums I want
to hear, or making it difficult to listen to certain artists without
feeling uncomfortable. However, I do have several albums upon which
to rave or rant, so here&#39;s what you get.</p><p>This was a year where my stalwart music
artists took the backseat for others, where single songs possessed my
devoted attention, while albums were generally shunned. It was a
year of nostalgia, as I turned to older favourites for comfort in
trying times. But beyond that, I found this year&#39;s music lacklustre
and not to my liking, perhaps due to the concentration of artists in
genres I&#39;m not fond of. For several months, I was “off music”,
something that has never happened before to me. It was disorienting,
to say the least.</p><p>The concerts I saw this year were fewer
than I would have liked, but none of them disappointed. All of them
delivered beyond my hopes and expectations. It was a year of seeing
new artists and old favourites. If I were to rank a top five of
shows I saw this year, it would go a little something like this:</p><p>5. <strong>Rilo Kiley at The Phoenix</strong>: Solid
set, great energy, tight openers including Thao Nugyen</p><p>4. <strong>Paramore with Jack&#39;s Mannequin at
The Kool Haus</strong>: Amazing energy, three solid openers, and Jack&#39;s
Mannequin renewed my love for Andrew McMahon</p><p>3. <strong>Melissa Etheridge at Massey Hall</strong>: 
Three hours of non-stop, high energy music with powerful and moving
banter between songs. A first time for me with Melissa and hopefully
not the last.</p><p>2. <strong>Matthew Good at Massey Hall</strong>: This
man never disappoints me with his intense delivery on every
song, his caustic wit and his genius songwriting. So grateful this
became a live album.</p><p>1. <strong>Amanda Palmer at The Mod Club</strong>: It
had every element going for it – incredible setlist, stellar
performance, fabulous openers, and incredible theatrics and stage
presence. Easily one of the best performances I&#39;ve seen Amanda give
(and I have 8 other points of reference).</p><p><br /></p><p>And now, without further ado, here we go with my personal &#39;awards&#39;
for 2008:</p><p><strong>Album That Sends Me Into Fits Of
80&#39;s Nostalgia: Saturdays=Youth by M83.</strong>
 This album is utterly fantastic, with tracks like Couleurs, Highway
of Endless Dreams and Skin of the Night leading the charge into a
soundscape that evoked Erasure meets Conjure One meets Arcade Fire&#39;s
intelligent layering and music craft. I easily find myself lost
within the tracks of this album in a way that lands on par with
Explosions In The Sky and Max Richter.</p><p><strong>The Album That Lived Up To The Hype:
 Donkey by CSS.</strong> I&#39;m not much
of a trend follower, and even the critical darling pieces often leave
me cold (see: You Say Party, We Say Die!; most of Radiohead&#39;s
post-OK Computer output; Coldplay&#39;s discography). CSS however live
up to the excitement, and Donkey is just so much fun to dance around
to, one can&#39;t resist it. There&#39;s not a single bad track, although
some are stronger than others. I&#39;m fond of Believe Achieve, Jager
Yoga and Let&#39;s Reggae All Night, myself.</p><p><strong>Reviving The Now Crowded Male
Singer-Songwriter Folkie Genre: Charmed and Strange by Yoav.</strong>
 I first had a taste of Yoav&#39;s music as he opened for Tori Amos&#39;
American Doll Posse tour in 2007. At first, I took one look at a
lone guy and a guitar and immediately wondered how Tori kept finding
Howie Day part nauseum. Yoav, however, is far more clever as a
lyricist, and his musical palette is more acoustic Red Paintings than
Jason Mraz. Adore, Adore, There Is Nobody, and the soulful One By
One set Yoav miles ahead of a crowded field.</p><p><strong>Bringing The LOLZ To Musicals: Dr.
Horrible&#39;s Sing-Along Blog.</strong> 
Joss Whedon remains my master after he cleverly proves that you can
give a product away for free and then sell it... and make a profit! 
Neil Patrick Harris singing about freeze rays? An Evil League of
Evil run by Bad Horse? Each song is so silly and fun, I can&#39;t help
myself. Once More With Feeling was one of Joss&#39; finest Buffy hours. 
Perhaps he should write an actual musical, complete with ridiculous
stage sets? I can dream!</p><p><strong>The Slightly Guilty Musical Theatre
Junkie&#39;s Pleasure: I Stand by Idina Menzel</strong>.
 Are some of the lyrics cliched? Sure. Are some of them
dripping with the saccharine Celine Dion is famous for? Hell yes. 
Does Idina kick ass and take names vocally, making the album
enjoyable all the same? You bet your (tattooed) ass. Check out
Brave, I Stand, I Feel Everything.</p><p><strong>Solid But Sorta Overrated: Third by
Portishead.</strong> This is where
gasps of indignant objection begin. I am not, let me stress <em>not</em>
implying Third isn&#39;t a solid album of quality music, good news for a
band that took such an extended hiatus. But on repeated listenings
over time, I can&#39;t say the album stands out enough as a whole to make
me want to listen to it over and over. Some tracks are absolutely
stunning (We Carry On; Silence; Nylon Smile), while the others are
solid but not worth the prostrating critics gave it. I coin this
Radiohead syndrome.</p><p><strong>Letdown
of the Year: Acid Tongue by Jenny Lewis.</strong>
 When Rilo Kiley&#39;s Under The Blacklight came out, my personal theory
for the album not being to par with their previous outings was that
Jenny and Blake were both &#39;holding back&#39; for their solo projects. 
Unfortunately, that may have not been the case with Jenny. It&#39;s not
a bad album, per se; tracks like Jack Killed Mom and Pretty Bird
resonate with me. It&#39;s just not memorable; each song blends into
the next, lacking the wordplay jabs and sonic shifts throughout
Rabbit Fur Coat.</p><p><strong>Best
Album That&#39;s Not Really An Album: No, Virginia by The Dresden Dolls.</strong>
 Consisting of outtakes and old live favourites finally recorded for
official release, No,Virginia feels rather all over the place at
times. But when viewed as a b-sides/rarities collection, this is
acceptable, and the quality of the material is enough to enjoy it. 
Dear Jenny, Mouse and the Model, The Gardener, Lonesome Organist
Rapes Page Turner... All the typical fun and punk cabaret you&#39;d
expect from the Dresden Dolls.</p><p><strong>Best
Return To &amp; Reinvention of Roots: The Slip by Nine Inch Nails.</strong>
 Is Trent in angsty form? Oh yes. Do I detect a strong flavour of
the 80&#39;s tinged Depeche Mode-ness of Pretty Hate Machine? Yes, yes I
do. Does this album deliver both rocking and despairing tracks with
a lyrical flavour that feel more self-aware and self-mocking than
self-loathing? Damn right it does. I love this album rather
passionately, and offer you 1,000,000, Discipline, Demon Seed and
Letting You as the places to start your love affair.</p><p><strong>Favourite
Local Album: Meeting The Future At Full Speed by Karen Kosowski.</strong>
 I&#39;ve already covered this album in extensive detail in this blog,
but it deserves its mention here. Karen remains one of my favourites
among the Toronto-area indie artists I&#39;ve come to know and love, and
this album only builds on her previous stellar album, Out Here At
Sea. Earnest and hopeful, its electro-pop vibe will leave you
humming your way through the day, even at its darkest.</p><p><br /><p>And now, *drum roll* the big awards...<br /></p><p><br /></p><p><strong>Best
Album of the Year (live): Live At Massey Hall by Matthew Good.</strong>
 After such an extensive catalogue, it was long overdue that the raw
emotional intensity of Matthew Good be captured for prosperity on CD,
and this disc is special in that, other than edits to correct lost
audio the night of, it is an uncorrected live album. Having been at
the show it was recorded at, it takes me back to one of the best
concerts I saw this year. The set strongly slants towards Hospital
Music material, which to me is one of his very best albums. In
light of the loss of my grandfather to cancer, 99% Of Us Is Failure
hits particularly hard and is one of the highlights of the 2 disc
set. Many songs are much richer live (She&#39;s In It For The Money is
painful to listen to because of the raw pain in Matt&#39;s delivery; A
Single Explosion closes on a haunting powerful note), which makes
this album a must have for fans and a fantastic introduction to his
genius.</p><p><strong>Best
Album Of The Year (studio): Who Killed Amanda Palmer by Amanda
Palmer.</strong>
 I&#39;ve been with Amanda since a friend encouraged me to download Girl
Anachronism in 2002, and I am with her for the long haul. I dearly
love her work within the dynamic of The Dresden Dolls, love the
playful cabaret feel of the drums and piano coupled with incisive and
something darkly amusing lyrics. This album bring those elements of
lyrical finesse and dark humour, but it also brings a more personal,
deeper look into the human condition with songs like Strength Through
Music and Have To Drive. Coupled with Ben Folds&#39; guiding advice (the
usage of a very raw demo vocal for Leeds United was a brilliant move
that only adds to the song) and the gorgeous strings created for the
album, Who Killed Amanda Palmer is the album Amanda was born to
write, and the one album that you must try, no matter what
preconceptions you may have of The Dresden Dolls or Amanda herself. 
Get started with Astronaut, Leeds United, Guitar Hero, Another Year
and Have To Drive.</p><p><br /></p><p>And now, a few older discs worth mentioning...<br /></p><p><strong>Rediscovery
of the Year: Act I: Goodbye Friends of the Heavenly Bodies by
Neverending White Lights.</strong>
 An album from 2005, it&#39;s always been one I have endorsed to fellow
music lovers. The ethereal moody feel of Daniel Victor&#39;s
compositions, complimented by haunting and heartbreaking lyrics
performed by a who&#39;s who of the Canadian alt rock scene, this album
crept up on me and demanded centre stage in 2008. The lyrics weave a
set of stories about loss and love that interconnect subtly, adding a
delicious cohesion. Sample The Grace, I Hope Your Heart Runs Empty
or From What I Once Was.</p><p><strong>Better Late To The Party Than Never:&#160; Kala
by M.I.A.</strong>
 I&#39;m not generally a girl who goes for hip hop, rap or R&amp;B; it&#39;s
just not my scene. The odd song will catch my ear, but nothing that
has me buying a CD, not since Salt N Pepa&#39;s Very Necessary. But with
Kala, M.I.A. has created something so utterly fun and sassy, one
can&#39;t help but be drawn in. Paper Planes caught me, hook, line and
gunshot sample, and that has led to an affair with $20, Come Around
and XR2. Where was I in &#39;92? Wishing for music this ridiculously
enjoyable!</p><p><strong>Better Late To The Party Than Never, Part Two:&#160;</strong> <strong>The
Awakening by Melissa Etheridge.</strong>
 Passed a copy of this by a friend prior to my live experience with
Melissa, it&#39;s fast become an album dear to my heart and almost a
metaphor for my entire year. While some may find the spiritual
elements a little off-putting (there is some God mentions, but most
of it is general spiritual belief), it&#39;s an incredible testament to
the journey Melissa went through emotionally as she battled breast
cancer. There are scathing political references as well, fitting in
light of this election year, and songs of regret and heartbreak. But
the end feeling is one of being able to rise above everything, if we
believe that all can be possible, and that there is something larger
than us. A solid,
well-written album that doesn&#39;t have a single dud to it.</p><br /><p><br /></p> </p>
        
    
                <p style="clear:both;">

    <a href="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/library/post/2008-in-music-reviews-and-reccs.html?_c=feed-atom-full#comments">Read and post comments</a>

 | 

    
    <a href="http://www.vox.com/share/6a00cd970fc7e14cd5010980c5c7f3000b?_c=feed-atom-full">Send to a friend</a>

</p>

                </div>
            ]]>
        </content>
    
    <category term="music" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/music/" label="music" />
    
    <category term="css" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/css/" label="css" />
    
    <category term="joss whedon" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/joss+whedon/" label="joss whedon" />
    
    <category term="concerts" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/concerts/" label="concerts" />
    
    <category term="live" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/live/" label="live" />
    
    <category term="best" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/best/" label="best" />
    
    <category term="rilo kiley" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/rilo+kiley/" label="rilo kiley" />
    
    <category term="jenny lewis" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/jenny+lewis/" label="jenny lewis" />
    
    <category term="dresden dolls" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/dresden+dolls/" label="dresden dolls" />
    
    <category term="donkey" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/donkey/" label="donkey" />
    
    <category term="portishead" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/portishead/" label="portishead" />
    
    <category term="jack&#39;s mannequin" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/jack's+mannequin/" label="jack&#39;s mannequin" />
    
    <category term="third" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/third/" label="third" />
    
    <category term="2008" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/2008/" label="2008" />
    
    <category term="neverending white lights" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/neverending+white+lights/" label="neverending white lights" />
    
    <category term="idina menzel" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/idina+menzel/" label="idina menzel" />
    
    <category term="amanda palmer" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/amanda+palmer/" label="amanda palmer" />
    
    <category term="matthew good" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/matthew+good/" label="matthew good" />
    
    <category term="m83" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/m83/" label="m83" />
    
    <category term="melissa etheridge" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/melissa+etheridge/" label="melissa etheridge" />
    
    <category term="paramore" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/paramore/" label="paramore" />
    
    <category term="kala" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/kala/" label="kala" />
    
    <category term="m.i.a." scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/m.i.a./" label="m.i.a." />
    
    <category term="music is my boyfriend" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/music+is+my+boyfriend/" label="music is my boyfriend" />
    
    <category term="karen kosowski" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/karen+kosowski/" label="karen kosowski" />
    
    <category term="the awakening" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/the+awakening/" label="the awakening" />
    
    <category term="i stand" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/i+stand/" label="i stand" />
    
    <category term="yoav" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/yoav/" label="yoav" />
    
    <category term="meeting the future at full speed" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/meeting+the+future+at+full+speed/" label="meeting the future at full speed" />
    
    <category term="no virginia" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/no+virginia/" label="no virginia" />
    
    <category term="saturdays=youth" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/saturdays%3Dyouth/" label="saturdays=youth" />
    
    <category term="dr. horrible" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/dr.+horrible/" label="dr. horrible" />
    
    <category term="acid tongue" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/acid+tongue/" label="acid tongue" />
    
    <category term="who killed amanda palmer" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/who+killed+amanda+palmer/" label="who killed amanda palmer" />
    
    <category term="act 1: goodbye friends of the heavenly bodies" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/act+1:+goodbye+friends+of+the+heavenly+bodies/" label="act 1: goodbye friends of the heavenly bodies" />
    
    <category term="charmed and strange" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/charmed+and+strange/" label="charmed and strange" />
    
    <category term="live at massey hall" scheme="http://casket4mytears.vox.com/tags/live+at+massey+hall/" label="live at massey hall" />
    
    </entry>

</feed>


