BEST ALBUMS OF 2011

  THE WEEKND – HOUSE OF BALLOONS

You don’t visit this blog for it’s R&B expertise. However, you don’t need to be an expert to realise that this artist is making something special in a genre that’s drowned in it’s own self-obsession for years. For it’s cross-over appeal, blurred boundaries and excellent production, no other album this year has sounded so 2011.

  GOTYE – MAKING MIRRORS

It seems Walter De Backer finally located the pop sound that he was always searching for with this album. Whether he’s at a walking pace on tracks like Somebody That I Used To Know, or running along on Eyes Wide Open, he never lets go of your hand in a reassuring journey through his unique pop landscape.

  M83 – HURRY UP WE’RE DREAMING

Albums don’t get much bigger than this, not in the commercial sense, but in the epic, theatrical performance sense. It’s so bloody huge that it would have the 1980s that it’s so clearly channelling quaking in it’s little leg warmers.

  TUNE-YARDS – WHOKILL

As random as raindrops and just as refreshing, this album from Merrill Garbus is a spaghetti junction of ideas, in a recipe only she could create. Layered and multi-faceted, she’s a proper songsmith, as each tune comes bursting out of her in an explosion of creativity. This was the sound of an imagination in over-drive.

  WASHED OUT – WITHIN AND WITHOUT

Ernest Greene might have made us wait longer for his debut album, dowsed in the genre of glo-fi, or the ill-fated, more commonly used piss-take name, chillwave, but our patience was rewarded with a vibrant album that surpassed all others from the genre. By skipping the genre’s potholes of boredom, or it’s often pedestrian pace, he delivered a consistent album that glowed brighter.

HOORAY FOR EARTH – TRUE LOVES

You could argue that this style of synthetic indie is now a little dated, best left on the shelf with MGMT and Empire Of The Sun, but this is a far richer album, with a proper beating heart. They aim their synths at adults, rather than kids, and by doing so have designed a more palatable, mature piece of work.

  METRONOMY – THE ENGLISH RIVIERA

This band didn’t just change it’s members, by introducing Anna Prior and Gbenga Adelekan to the outfit, but the new additions also seemed to free up Joseph Mount’s slick song craft. It still feels like a less-is-more-policy, but although their signature moves of separating out everything are maintained, we still get pop warmth in Joe’s lament to his beloved country. By mixing up experimentalism and classy pop, this was 2011′s most Bowie moment.

  THE HORRORS – SKYING

This is a proper chrysalis album if ever there was one. The emergence from their style-over-substance gothic origins saw the band return with more substance than anyone else. This was the sound of a band discovering their integrity and, quite frankly, cheering up, leaving all the other pretenders, such as Munich, The Lyrebirds and Chapel Club, now looking like they’re driving in the wrong lane with flat tyres.

  WHEN SAINTS GO MACHINE – KONKYLIE

Mixing up fearless electronics with perfect pop, this album delivers with every listen. Like a Scandinavian swallow, it twists and turns, often soaring skywards. It’s an album that reveals many satisfying surprises throughout, and if your foot doesn’t tap along (involuntarily or otherwise) to the anthemic Kelly then we suggest you need re-wiring!

  AUSTRA – FEEL IT BREAK

Like all the best albums you are arrested from the first song. Opening with Katie Stelmanis’s solo vocals on Darken Her Horse was a fine introduction to an album that shines with her exceptional, individual skill. She’s in a class of one with her classically-trained vocals and they peak repeatedly throughout the album. What follows is a beautifully-balanced group of contradictions, that shine on several moments, even beyond the masterpieces that are the singles, Lose It and Beat And The Pulse. She mixes up light and shade in an album that perfectly juxtaposes the genres of gothic and pop. Often ice cold to the touch, like the best bits of The Knife, yet it isn’t without warmth either, as she talks of love and yearning. Beyond the vocal skills, we find a punchy industrial crunch, but it’s softened by keeping the pace at a thrilling disco beat. Their marriage of the synthetic with the ethereal delivers us an album that feels like the sound of a machine with a heart. It’s music for serious grown ups, who like to dance, and dance we did. We feel it’s a mature album that deserves celebrating, and just like all the classic albums of the past, it’s definitely one that we will return to time and again.

AU PALAIS

We’ve been monitoring the global music scenes for nearly four years on The Recommender. What we’ve come to notice is that cities and sometimes entire countries seem to randomly peak at the top of everyone’s attention from one year to the next, like an ever-changing economic graph of music. When we started music was buzzing on the back of France, and particularly Paris’, dominant electro scene. That was swiftly followed by Australia’s outpouring of electro pop bands. Scandinavia seems to spout new bands at an alarmingly high rate and New York is never far from the top but both of these places have enjoyed a real bulge over recent years. In 2011 our spotlight has regularly visited and re-visited Canada, and particularly Toronto.

We’ve given plenty of blog inches to the likes of Freedom Or Death, Grimes, and Austra, among others, throughout this year. The quality of these Canadian artists has been very high indeed, in a year where the bar was unattainably sent skywards. If 2011 is anyone’s then it surely belongs to these North Americans. What ties them together, if anything, is their ability to write at the sharpest edges of pop whilst still being accessible. Sometimes they’re experimental, sometimes the melody has you flowing with it’s every shift, but as ethereal and expressive as they are, they’re often-electronic productions are enjoyable and employable. Their music feels like it’s directing an intelligent future for pop music, mixing class and traditional boundaries up as every new artist drops anchor. Today we are showing the latest act through the arrival doors.

Au Palais are a duo. A brother and sister duo, Elise and David Commathe, who call London home and the buzz around them in recent months has been impossible to avoid, as they’ve played shows in key venues for emerging artists, such as The Shacklewell Arms, Camp, or Cargo, upon bills that included other hyped bands, like Outfit and Zulu Winter. As gooey as this makes the London crowd go, the pair actually come from – yes you’ve guessed it – Toronto, Canada. Bright spotlights such as NME and Pitchfork have waded in with coverage, as well as the blog world’s cornerstone commentators. Comparisons with Zola Jesus or the aforementioned fellow-Canadians Austra have correctly bounced around, as Au Palais dice elements of this year’s repeated penchance for electronic pop.

Next week they’re releasing their four-track EP, Tender Mercy, which arrives from the hot UK label, The Sounds Of Sweet Nothing on November 28th. Like their fellow countrymen, they’ve designed a set of tunes packed with sophistication. It turns many corners and around each one is a delightfully presented piece of pop architecture, with rigid edges and curves that draw you in. Beats throb like a pulse that sometimes races and sometimes relaxes, but what ever the track is doing it always carries you along smoothly like riding aboard a red blood cell. The title track is as arresting as a beautiful face emerging from the dark, taking in it’s features one at a time, patiently observing each perfect element one by one, before the full image is lit up at two minutes in. Waves of diaphanous synths glide over each other as if weightless, as Elise’s vocals move alongside, as if in a singular, perfectly-rehearsed dance move.

Pathos feels Canadian, in a way that would have Katie Stelmanis nodding with approval. All the signature moves are there, with similar instrumentation that’s equal parts heavy and light, particularly with the synthetic melodies. The beat is once again addictive, giving them a familiar special move, a trick that also appears on a remix they recently completed for The Golden Filter. That band’s Syndromes EP delivers us a set of songs designed as the soundtrack to a Kristoffer Borgli-directed short film. Within it is the track, Mother, of which Au Palais provided their exceptional remix. Like all the best remixes it maintains the key elements of the original, including the vocals, whilst introducing an electro funeral-march beat. It’s a very fine example of Au Palais’ craft and skills.

What strikes a note with us is that Au Palais decided to re-locate from Toronto to London, as no matter which place the music appears from, it’s the UK that has open minds and readied ears for it’s output. Canada’s loss may ultimately prove to be our gain, as we walk the duo’s first steps alongside them, but overall the lesson is one that teaches us not to reflect on the wonderful locations spawning emerging music, but to in fact ponder how lucky we are in the UK to be a culture of receptive people that act as a sponge for every new experience. Which ever city or country eventually dominates through 2012, one thing can be assured, if it’s good enough then the UK crowd will welcome it with open arms. We’re not suggesting that the homes of these artists shouldn’t be proud to be associated with the roots of music such as this, but it’s in the discovery that the pleasure’s been revealed, and this year we’d like to thank Toronto, although in all honesty the pleasures been all ours.  (MB)

AU PALAIS – TENDER MERCY

AU PALAIS – PATHOS

THE GOLDEN FILTER – MOTHER (AU PALAIS REMIX)