End of Year Lists - 2006

NPR:

Music
The Best CDs of 2006


NPR.org, December 5, 2006 · All Songs Considered host Bob Boilen counts down NPR listener picks for the ten best CDs of 2006, with reviewers Robert Christgau, Will Hermes, Meredith Ochs and John Richards. They also share some of their own favorites from the past year and take comments from listeners.

Below are the top ten CDs of 2006 as chosen by NPR listeners in an online poll, with select comments from some of the listeners who loved them.


10. Regina Spektor
Regina Spektor: Begin to Hope

"Fidelity" from Begin to Hope
"Regina sounds like Regina. Her voice is unmistakable â?? gorgeous, lithe, far from timid. Her songs are richly textured with unexpected yet accessible arrangements, and the variety of moods begs for many repeat listens. Her playful and sometimes theatrical way of addressing the human condition is the best melding of sugar and medicine Iâ??ve been served up since Nellie McKay. Thanks NPR for introducing us." – Barbara


9. Tom Waits
Tom Waits: Orphans

"Bottom of the World" from Orphans
"Way back in 1972 The Rolling Stones released Exile on Main St. That album was a tour through various styles and genres: blues, country, gospel, etc., but with all of them filtered through the Stones' musical identity. Well, it's taken 34 years, but someone has finally created another record of equal breadth, stylistic adventurousness and power. There's something here for everyone, and yet it's unmistakably Tom Waits. Only real artists can pull something like this off, and Waits not only pulls it off, he makes it seem easy." – Steve


8. Jenny Lewis
Jenny Lewis and the Watson Twins: Rabbit Fur Coat

"The Charging Sky" from Rabbit Fur Coat
"It touches the soul. It is both irreverent and uplifting. Her version of 'Handle Me With Care' gives me goose bumps. And I can just listen to Jenny Lewis sing forever." – Randal


7. Cat Ppower
Cat Power: The Greatest

"The Greatest" from The Greatest
"Chan Marshall follows through on the promise of earlier albums You Are Free and Moon Pix, which â?? no pun intended â?? only flirted with greatness. Her latest album, recorded in Memphis with a host of veteran soul and R&B musicians, is a giant leap forward for this ever-intriguing songwriter. Sad, hopeful, lovelorn, romantic, regretful, sweet â?? Marshall's voice and lyrics convey emotions and feelings that most songwriters only pay lip service to. Quietly but confidently – and I mean that figuratively and literally – Marshall indeed delivered the greatest album of 2006." – Jake


6. Joanna Newsom
Joanna Newsom: Ys

"Emily" from Ys
"Joanna Newsom is definitely an acquired taste. But once you settle into her world, you become addicted. She may caterwaul and screech her schwas, but for my money she has the most emotive voice going in music… a voice you can fall into like a well worn chair. Ys makes me feel as if Iâ??m being physically lifted into the air – the first album in a long while to evoke 'real world' sensations." – Chris


5. TV On the Radio
TV On the Radio: Return to Cookie Mountain

"I Was A Lover" from Return to Cookie Mountain
"Simply put, there is no independent rock/pop band emerging anywhere on the scene pushing the boundaries of sound in such an imaginable, intelligent and stylish way. They embody all that is good about popular music: uncompromising standards and a radical sound that neither overwhelms the listener, nor underestimates them." – Nathan


4. M. Ward
M. Ward: Post War

"Poison Cup" from Post War
"M. Ward's Post War has a mysterious and seductive quality that never grow tiring. The songs are never too long, always a little elusive, yet insistent and memorable. Not only are the songs little gems in their own right, they are set perfectly against each other. The record has that rare quality that makes you feel as though you are in a conversation in which everything said came at just the right moment." – Mark


3. Bob Dylan
Bob Dylan: Modern Times

"Spirit on the Water" from Modern Times
"This is a high point for an artist whose high points redefined modern music. There is no irony in this album's title if you view history in a panoramic sense as Dylan seems to do. Dylan takes literary modernism to its next level, interspersing the lyrics of a confederate poet among blues forms that are rooted in African American tradition. His voice is worn but dances through this album. The album begins with the voice of God on the mountain and ends with a proclamation that Dylan 'ainâ??t talking.' Brilliant. This is a no brainer." – Chuck


2. Neko Case
Neko Case: Fox Confessor Brings the Flood

"Margaret Vs. Pauline" from Fox Confessor Brings the Flood
"Neko Case has made another album shrouded in dark beauty. Fox Confessor's music sounds the way old black and white celebrity stills look. Confessional lyrics like, 'The most tender place in my heart is for strangers / I know it's unkind, but my own blood is much too dangerous,' make Case perfect for late night listening. She restrains herself from the melodrama that her popular country counterparts can't seem to avoid. She's content with making music that is truly entrancing. This is what modern country should sound like: thoughtful, evocative, all wrapped in a package that sounds oddly like home." – Bertha


1. The Decemberists
The Decemberists: The Crane Wife

"The Crane Wife 3" from The Crane Wife
"The Decemberists manage to do something completely new from their previous album while retaining all the wonderful thigns that make them unique: Colin Meloy's fantastic storytelling, the ability to be incredibly creepy and yet entirely beautiful at the same time, not to mention the use of fun words. I'm torn between 'dirigible' and 'parallax' as my favorites, though Iâ??m not sure either competes with 'palanquin' from their last album. Even if you put all that aside, this is just wonderful music, that makes me laugh, cry, join arm in arm with my fellow man." – Felicity

"First, the music is phenomenal: the band moves away from its older, quieter sound into an eclectic, bold style. They veer from folk-rock to prog rock to funk to hard rock and back around again with ease, and it all sounds excellent. 'The Crane Wife' song cycle stands out, but so do the epic run-on 'The Island,' the Led Zeppelin-esque 'When the War Came,' and the mournful 'Yankee Bayonet.' Second, despite the range of genres, the album comes together as a cohesive whole. There's no filler on the album, and from the opening chords of 'The Crane Wife 3,' to the closing chants of 'Hear all the bombs, they fade away,' the album flows together perfectly. In short, one of the best bands producing music today outdid itself in spectacular fashion and nothing else quite matched it." – Evan
NME - Albums

50 The Kooks - Inside In / Inside Out
49 Absentee - Schmotime
48 Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly â?? The Chronicles of A Bohemian Teenager
47 Wolfmother â?? s/t
46 Semifinalists â?? s/t
45 Bob Dylan â?? Modern Times
44 Isobel Campbell and Mark Lanegan â?? Ballard of The Broken Seas
43 Beck â?? The Infromation
42 The Automatic â?? Not Accepted Anywhere
41 The Gossip â?? Standing In The Way of Control
40 Midlake â?? The Trials Of Van Occupanther
39 The Young Knives â?? Voices Of Animals and Men
38 Metric â?? Live It Out
37 Be Your Own Pet â?? s/t
36 Datarock â?? Datarock Datarock
35 Forward Russia â?? Give Me A Wall
34 Albert Hammond Jr. â?? Yours To Keep
33 The Bronx â?? s/t
32 Lily Allen â?? Alright, Still
31 The Sunshine Underground â?? Raise The Alarm
30 Cat Power â?? The Greatest
29 The Spinto Band â?? Nice and Nicely Done
28 Morrissey â?? Ringleader of The Tormentors
27 Clap Your Hands Say Yeah! â?? s/t
26 Jarvis â?? That Jarvis Cocker Record
25 Mogwai â?? Mr Beast
24 Secret Machines â?? Ten Silver Drops
23 The Knife â?? Silent Shout
22 The Flaming Lips â?? At War With The Mystics
21 The Raconteurs â?? Broken Boy Soldiers
20 The Streets â?? The Hardest Way To Make An Easy Living
19 The Longcut â?? A Call And Response
18 The Rapture â?? Pieces of The People We Love
17 The Futureheads â?? News and Tributes
16 Amy Whinehouse â?? Back To Black
15 Thom Yorke â?? The Eraser
14 TV On The Radio â?? Return To Cookie Mountain
13 Panic! At The Disco â?? A Fever You Can't Sweat Out
12 The Killers â?? Sam's Town
11 Howling Bells â?? s/t
10 My Chemical Romance â?? Welcome To The Black Parade
09 Kasabian â?? Empire
08 The Strokes â?? First Impressions of Earth
07 The Long Blondes â?? Someone To Drive You Home
06 Gnarls Barkley â?? St. Elsewhere
05 CSS â?? Cansei De Ser Sexy
04 Hot Chip â?? The Warning
03 Muse â?? Black Holes and Revelations
02 Yeah Yeah Yeahs â?? Show Your Bones
01 Arctic Monkeys â?? Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not
man, that is one hella fauxhemian list.
SO glad that my 3 favorite records of the year aren't on either of those lists.
Amazon Editors' top 100

1. Neko Case - Fox Confessor Brings the Flood
2. Bob Dylan - Modern Times
3. The Decemberists - The Crane Wife
4. KT Tunstall - Eye to the Telescope
5. Gnarls Barkley - St. Elsewhere
6. John Mayer - Continuum
7. Silversun Pickups - Carnavas
8. Los Amigos Invisbles - Superpop Venezuela
9. Sparklehorse Dreamt for Light Years In The Belly of a Mountain
10. Belle & Sebastian - The Life Pursuit
11. Pet Shop Boys - Fundamental
12. Drive-By Truckers - A Blessing and a Curse
13. Sondra Lerche and the Faces Down Quartet - Duper Sessions
14. The Wreckers - Stand Still, Look Pretty
15. Beck - The Information
16. Gotan Project - Lunatico
17. TV on the Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain
18. Destroyer - Destroyer's Rubies
19. The Black Keys - Magic Potion
20. Wolfmother - Wolfmother
21. Ali Farka Toure - Savane
22. Alejandro Escavado - The Boxing Mirror
23. The Who - Endless Wire
24. Toumani Diabate Symmetric Orchestra - Boulevard de l'Independance
25. Rodrigo y Gabriela - Rodrigo y Gabriela
26. The Hold Steady - Boys and Girls in America
27. Badi Assad - Wonderland
28. T Bone Burnett - The True False Identity
29. Band of Horses - Everything All The Time
30. Justin Timberlake - Futuresex/Lovesounds
31. The Flaming Lips - At War With the Mystics
32. Corinne Bailey Rae - Corinne Bailey Rae
33. The Ark - State of the Ark
34. Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I am, That's What I'm Not
35. My Chemical Romance - The Black Parade
36. Alexi Murdoch - Time Without Consequence
37. The Raconteurs - Broken Boy Soldiers
38. Pearl Jam - Pearl Jam
39. Gomez - How We Operate
40. Matthew Sweet and Susanna Hoffs - Under the Covers, Vol 1
41. Jamey Johnson - The Dollar
42. The Go Betweens - That Striped Sunlight Sound
43. Soul Jazz Records Presents Tropicalia: A Brazilian Revolution in Sound
44. Badly Drawn Boy - Born in the U.K.
45. Weird Al Yankovic - Straight outta Lynwood
46. Jerry Lee Lewis - Last Man Standing
47. Todd Snider - The Devil You Know
48. CSS - Cansei de Ser Sexy
49. Mark Knopfler and Emmylou Harris - All the Roadrunning
50. Kieran Kane - Lost John Dean
I figured NME would go with the Monkeys, or Muse, as #1. Only niggling point is that it came out so long ago, and their star has seemed to fall a bit as Alex Turner gets more and more cranky.

So, what will the grumpsters at Pitchfork call #1? I'll bet its Clipse – PF always falls all over itself trying to be street. Gnarls is another one that will surely be very high on their list.
Originally posted by ggwâ?¢:
9. Sparklehorse Dreamt for Light Years In The Belly of a Mountain
That's a refreshing choice.
That NME list is pretty terrible. As for Pitchfork, my guess is that they'll go with the Hold Steady for number one.
Id say Joanna Newsom. Didn't that, the Holdy Steady and the Clipse all tie for the highest ratings of the year? 9.4, maybe?

Originally posted by thingsfallapart:
That NME list is pretty terrible. As for Pitchfork, my guess is that they'll go with the Hold Steady for number one.
Looks like I need to put together a year end best of list as very of the albums I was excited enough to buy and listen to made any of these lists….
catbirdseat image
This has a few of my top ten pegged, but most of the albums on here that don't make mine are albums I REALLY don't like/get (Newsom/Furnaces/Liars).

I can't believe anyone has had enough time to absorb those Waits albums to put them on a list.
Send in your personal favs of 2006 to brightestyoungthings.com, we have a little contest going on, details:
BYT Best of 2006

PS. we just do this web site for fun and don't make any money off it, and certainly don't care about using your email or personal info in any way.
The Catbirdseat.org

Tier Three

Modest Mouse - We Were Dead….

Cleary a 2007 album thrown in to establish cred. Stupid.
Originally posted by vansmack:
The Catbirdseat.org

Tier Three

Modest Mouse - We Were Dead….

Cleary a 2007 album thrown in to establish cred. Stupid.
i think it's supposed to be mocking someone who would throw a 2007 album in to establish cred :roll:
Originally posted by BookerT:
man, that is one hella fauxhemian list.
i half expected to see edie brickell on there
Here's the top 10 list of that great music writer (heck he's even written some books) Stephen King:

In 1957, I was 10 years old and my mother worked at a laundry in Stratford, Connecticut. She came in one afternoon while I was watching American Bandstand. The kids were dancing to something by Chuck Berry â?? maybe ''Roll Over Beethoven.'' She watched in silence for a while, then said: ''The man singing that is a Negro.''

''How do you know, Mom?'' I asked. I had simply assumed that Chuck Berry must be as white as…well, Pat Boone.

''Because,'' she said, ''he swings too hard to be white. Come here, Stevie.''

And then, with her feet almost certainly yelling for her to take a load off after her eight-hour shift, she taught me the basic bop-turn-and-dip step that I still use, when the music moves me.

Between Chuck Berry and Nirvana, I had a passionate 40-year love affair with the kind of music my mother called ''hard swing.'' I fell out of touch for a while, during that time when all the pop singers on the radio â?? female as well as male â?? had started to sound like Michael Jackson, and guitars were banished in favor of synthesizers.

What brought me back were two radical innovations: satellite radio (my brand happens to be XM) and iTunes (also my iPod, but for me that came later still). These were digital honky-tonks where I found â?? to my joy â?? that hard swing was alive and well. I've been listening, usually with the volume turned up to 11, ever since. These are the tracks that moved me in 2006…quite often enough to get up and shake my increasingly elderly ass.

10. ''Drunk All Around This Town,'' Scott Miller & the Commonwealth/''My Drinkin' Problem,'' Hank Williams III (tie)
I no longer drink, but I love songs about boozing, and these are beauts. The Hank III album is called Straight to Hell, and I imagine the Nashville establishment wishes young Mr. Williams would go there, posthaste. Me, I hope he sticks around. This is the real country: hollow of eye, pale of face, and bursting with the rhythm of the damned. Also, check out Hell's ''Low Down.''

9. ''Over My Head (Cable Car),'' The Fray
Old-school pop; for me, there's nothing better. Another of its ilk is ''Rudebox,'' by Robbie Williams.

8. ''Face the Promise,'' Bob Seger/''Real Mean Bottle,'' Bob Seger and Kid Rock
Not all of Seger's new album is great â?? ''Wait for Me'' is schmaltz â?? but these tracks are magnificent. They're part of a specific hard-swing genre; see below.

7. ''I'm a Rat,'' Towers of London
There is something to be said for straight puke-on-your-Dingo-boots rock & roll. Towers of London are mostly a joke, but this track â?? beginning with the shrieking air-raid siren â?? is, like those two priceless tracks on the Seger, the real deal.

6. Snake Farm, Ray Wylie Hubbard
Hubbard, an alt-country Southern rocker (his most memorable tune is called ''Screw You, We're From Texas''), is one mean motorcycle. Snake Farm is a double-wide load of blues guitar and sly humor, your basic old-school boogie. Best tracks: ''Heartaches and Grease'' and ''Live and Die Rock and Roll.''

5. Zoysia, The Bottle Rockets
The Bottle Rockets are often categorized as alt-country â?? by people who need categories â?? but what they really are is America's premier bar band. Zoysia (I don't know what it means either) is their best album ever â?? tuneful, soulful, and best of all, loud. Primo cuts: ''Better Than Broken,'' ''Feeling Down.''

4. ''Chasing Cars,'' Snow Patrol
Call me a sloppy sentimentalist if you want; I love this song. In fact, I never met a Snow Patrol song I didn't like (runner-up: ''You're All I Have''). If that makes you want to call me a sap, I can take it; that's why they pay me the big bucks.

3. ''Hey Valerie!'' The Derailers
The best country single of the year (from the album Soldiers of Love), but of course it got no airplay on the Top 40 country stations (duh). Country runner-up: a gorgeous love song, ''Would You Go With Me,'' by baritone Josh Turner.

2. ''God's Gonna Cut You Down,'' Johnny Cash
You could argue that Cash saved the best for last and get no disagreement from me. This is the voice of an Old Testament prophet on his deathbed, eerie and persuasive, full of power and dust and experience. The entire album (American V: A Hundred Highways) is a masterpiece, but this and ''Like the 309'' are the ones I keep coming back to.

1. The Animal Years, Josh Ritter
The best album of the year in a walk, and maybe the best album I've heard in the last five. Mysterious, melancholy, melodic…and those are only the M's. Songs like ''Girl in the War'' simply do not leave the consciousness once they're heard, but the album's real gem is the strange and gorgeous ''Thin Blue Flame.'' This is the most exuberant outburst of imagery since Bob Dylan's ''A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall,'' in 1963. The Animal Years is an amazing accomplishment.

That's my list of the best â?? all of it legally downloadable. My mother might have winced away from Towers of London, but as for the rest, I think she'd approve. After all, most of it swings hard â?? turns out that white people (everyone on this list is, in case you hadn't noticed) can do that after all. It only took us 50 years, but hey…we're gettin' there.
I don't understand the obsession with Chasing fucking Cars. It's far from the best song on that album, even. Jesus H.
Originally posted by you be betty:
I don't understand the obsession with Chasing fucking Cars. It's far from the best song on that album, even. Jesus H.
its on the radio though, isnt it? that means its the song that even people who dont actually have the album know.
Originally posted by HoyaSaxa08:
i think it's supposed to be mocking someone who would throw a 2007 album in to establish cred :roll:
I agree - my statement was half tongue in cheek. Of course I would have included it in the "place these three anywhere category" but teir three is acceptable.