TLOBF Best of 2008: Jan - June

Posted on 15 July 2008 by The Line Of Best Fit

If we’re to quote The Cranberries (and why shouldn’t you?), “Everybody else is doing it, so why can’t we?”. As we’ve past the halfway point in this year of 2008, it seemed like a good time to look back. What have been the musical higlights of the year so far? We’ve had some absolutely corking albums released, from Fleet Foxes genre defying debut, to Elbow’s continued cultured and heartwarming release. It might surprise some of our readers what’s ended up on this list but one thing this exercise has made us realise, is that come the end of the year, there’s going to be a big pile of albums under the ‘Excellent’ heading…

So how did we decide on the final 10 albums? We asked all of our writers to email in their favourite 5 releases of the year thus far. Each album voted for was then given a point and entered into a highly technical spreadsheet - which left us with the following records…

The Wave Pictures Instant Coffee Baby [TLOBF Review]

Indie-rock as witty and consummately British as the erection you’re creepingly becoming aware of as you sit drunkenly a bit too close to a pretty girl on a couch.
Tom Whyman

This album still entrances, amuses and delights me, seven months after first hearing it. The naïve-yet-profound lyrics have a unique charm, perfectly matched by their jangle-indie setting. One of the most refreshing releases in many a year: wonderful stuff.
Jude Clarke

Instant Coffee Baby is the album that has probably received the most repeated plays so far this year. The songs are packed with witty, lyrical nuggets - with each listen you pick out ones you’ve previously missed. Perhaps not a perfect album (it could do with a couple of songs shaved off the end) - it is still totally satisfying, and one of the best indie pop records you’re likely to hear this year.
Rich Thane

Fleet Foxes Fleet Foxes [TLOBF Review]

Quite extraordinary, otherworldly lay ‘hymns’ from an amazing new act that are unlikely to be 5 minute wonders. This album beautifully showcases their gorgeous sound-drenched sound.
Jude Clarke

I have no doubt that in years to come, this flawless debut will appear amongst Revolver, OK Computer and Nevermind in those annoying ‘Best Album of All Time’ lists that crop up year after year. A band hasn’t excited me this much since…well, I really can’t remember. It truly is a work of art and without doubt, one of the greatest debut albums I’ve ever heard - and what excites me more, is that I strongly believe they have so much more to offer. Go and buy the album, see them in concert, buy the t-shirt. Whatever. Just let them into your life. Now!
Rich Thane

This is, without doubt, one of the best albums ever, let alone this year. An offering from a band that have found a huge place in my life.
Rich Hughes

Frightened Rabbit Midnight Organ Fight [TLOBF Review]

So, what’s so great about yet another white, male, 20-something, indie rock band, then? How about: Great production decisions, a concentrated lyrical direction, stellar songwriting, Scott Hutchinson’s voice walking the line between warble and sublime melody, melody and lyrics walking the line between bleakness and euphoria? My favourite music makes me giddy, supremely confident in myself, and in love with life, in all it’s ugly, beautiful, dreadful glory. And, I suppose, all of that is what makes Frightened Rabbit and The Midnight Organ Fight so great.
Simon Gurney

Utter perfection. These guys deserve to be fucking huge. But the foul language and dodgy subject matter will always prevent that from happening. Maybe that’s the point? The album also has my favourite lyric of the year so far: “You’re the shit and I’m knee deep in it”.
Rich Thane

Bon Iver For Emma, Forever Ago [TLOBF Review]

What more can I say about this mysterious, mystical, raw, emotionally epiphanical dream of a record? Its popular resonance has single-handedly revived my faith in the essential goodness of humanity - a sentiment I’m sure its creator would agree with.
Emily Moore

So I’ll forgive and forget the fact that it manages to sit next to Bon Jovi on my ipod. I’ll even forgive the fact its only 37 minutes long. Which may be a good thing, as the delicate, claustophoic beauty of this album has been unequalled by anything else so far in 2008, and is all the better for its brevity. No fancy tricks or gimmicks, just great songs packed with emotion and a fizzling intensity.
Simon Reuben

There are less than a handful of records from this decade that I could happily choose as a desert island disc. The fact that two have been released in 2008 (the other record being Fleet Foxes) that I would literally die for proves this year has been the best year in music in - well, god knows how long. For Emma, Forever Ago is a work of unadulterated genius. The sincerity and honesty within it’s nine songs floored me from the very first time I heard it - that was nearly 12 months ago and even now I’m still finding new sounds and textures and emotion to wrap myself up in. Justin Vernon has created a stone cold classic, and easily one of the greatest records of the 21st Century.
Rich Thane

Elbow Seldom Seen Kid [TLOBF Review]

Oh my. What an album. Has there been a more consistent band in recent times? Guy Garvey’s found love and want’s to tell the world about it, but he’s also lost a friend and discovering Richard Hawley’s perfect croon. This is an album to fall in love with everytime you listen to it. It’s not here for the shorthaul, but, like the rest of their material, it’s here to amaze and touch you on each repeated play.
Rich Hughes

Johnny Foreigner Waited Up Till It Was Light [TLOBF Review]

Best indie-pop record since Slanted & Enchanted or (at a stretch) Who Will Cut Our Hair When We’re Gone? And plus it manages to take in Cap’n Jazz too. I literally couldn’t ask for more, which is why I gave it (sort of) 100%. 100% is a score I suppose usually reserved for shimmering brilliance but to my mind its equally applicable to this sort of joyous, perfectly imperfect shouty pop amazingness. ” CAN’T LOOOOSSSE YOU IN CROWDED ROOMS!” etc.
Tom Whyman

And I thought they were amazing live! This is all that the Los Campasinos! album should have been. Full of energy and youthful vigour, I felt 10 years younger just listening to it. This is everything an indie-pop album should be about.
Rich Hughes

Bonnie Prince Billy Lie Down In the Light

Going back to the country, the bonnie prince lightens up and delivers an understated masterpeice.
Ro Cemm

It may have been released to a distinct lack of fanfare, and it’s no I See A Darkness. But it’s an intricate, warmly rewarding album, and an eighth note from Will Oldham is worth a career’s worth of songs by most bands around today.
Emily Moore

Sun Kil Moon April [TLOBF Review]

Mark Kozelek’s style of songwriting, from the early days in Red House Painters and then this most recent Sun Kil Moon album April, has always sounded to me like the aftermath of a broken nose. As strange as it may seem, that is always what his music evokes for me; a heady, muffled and painful throb. His soft, weak (but not in a bad way) voice dipping away into the rest of the instruments, guitar repeating it’s litany, calling to mind the slow powerful transformations found in minimalism, a thrumming quality that overtakes my mind, a style that gives me a temporary head cold, where just the music and melancholy survive, everything beyond that is a haze.
Simon Gurney

The Red house painter man returned to form on this melancholy work, the guitar work is right up there with his best work for a while, and moved away from the cover versions he had been known for.
Ro Cemm

Mesmerisingly beautiful. That’s all I’m going to say.
Rich Hughes

Beach House Devotion [TLOBF Review]

An otherworldly album that manages to wonderfully create its own atmosphere and feel. Shimmery summery haze-pop of the highest order.
Jude Clarke

In an age where second albums suffer from lack of ideas, imagination and focus - Beach House returned in 2008 with a renewed sense of vigour for their sophomore effort. The original ‘Beach House’ bluebrint still remains, but this time with an added pop sensibility and a more luscious production that you want to dive into and wallow around in for hours. When it comes to dream pop - nobody does it better than Beach House.
Rich Thane

Keyboard Choir Mitzen Head To Gascanane Sound

[TLOBF Review]

Like the sound of a thousand planets crashing into one another, this is one of the most adventerous and thought provoking debuts of the year so far. Their intelligent use of samples, spoken word interludes and their own sense of brooding power combines wonderfully to create an album that could best be described as a more accessible Fuck Buttons. But that does these guys an injustice. They’re their own band, creating their own fantastic sound.
Rich Hughes

Honourable mentions:
Stephen Malkmus and The Jicks Real Emotional Trash [TLOBF Review]
The Silver Jews Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea [TLOBF Review]
The Duke Spirit Neptune [TLOBF Review]
Los Campesinos Hold On Now Youngster [TLOBF Review]
HEALTH Disco [TLOBF Review]
El Perro Del Mar From The Valley to the Stars [TLOBF Review]
These New Puritans Beat Pyramid [TLOBF Review]
The Black Keys Attack and Release [TLOBF Review]
Portishead Third [TLOBF Review]
White Denim Workout Holiday [TLOBF Review]
Fuck Buttons Street Horrrsing [TLOBF Review]
British Sea Power Do You Like Rock Music? [TLOBF Review]
M83 Saturdays = Youth [TLOBF Review]

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14 Comments For This Post

  1. liveon35mm.com Says:

    I am amazed YOU left Narrow Stairs by Death Cab For Cutie out of this list!

    By the way, I was at Koko gig yesterday, despite some brilliant passages I am not completely sure I was amazed by the “indie sensation”.

    Out of this list, Fleet Foxes are no doubt on my top, but I haven’t listen many of these and I start being very curious about White Denim, the more they are compared to Jon Spencer the more I am willing a listening.

    ciao

  2. Rich Thane Says:

    looking back - narrow stairs was a huge let down for me. no one voted for it either which means that everyone thinks its rubbish, or there has literally been TOO much good music this year..

  3. Jude Says:

    Yay - does this mean my top two are the TLOBF top two too? (Too many toos!)

  4. Tom Whyman Says:

    I quite love how I can be both totally against the TLOBF editorial line in regard to Fleet Foxes and Bon Iver, and yet totally WITH IT in regards to The Wave Pictures. Win.

    The Keyboard Choir album is pretty great too, but I swear I bought it last year…

    Just as a side-note: though its not out until August, the Cats In Paris album is a kind of massive contender for album of the year too.

  5. Rich Thane Says:

    well…. there was no real ‘order’

    wave pictures fleet foxes and frightened rabbit all received the same amount of votes.. as did bon iver and johnny foreigner.

    so, i just listed them as 10 you should buy rather than a top ten..

    but as i made the list, im officially calling ‘fleet foxes’ best album of the year so far. *cackles*

  6. Rich Hughes Says:

    Narrows Stairs is good, but it’s not great. As for Keyboard Choir, I think it got an official release this year… perhaps Mr. Brainlove could help us out on that one!

  7. ro Says:

    saw cats in paris in stockholm the other week……they were ok, but nothing to write home about- or if i did write home i would say- ‘this tall finnish guy REALLY thinks he’s morrissey…..they were sweet, tho.

  8. AndrewD Says:

    Essie Jain
    Tindersticks
    Shearwater
    Or, The Whale
    in no particular order and ones I keep going back to.

  9. ro Says:

    the big record missed off for me is Rocket From The Crypt RIP…….which i am still going to maintain is one of the finest live albums ever…and certainly one of the better albums released this year

  10. ro Says:

    am on idiot- think i mean cats on fire…i cant keep up with all these cat bands….im looking forward to seeing cats in paris

  11. liveon35mm.com Says:

    good call for the tindersticks…despite not that innovative compared to her history it is a very surprising comeback.

  12. Andy Johnson Says:

    Coldplay’s Viva La Vida is still the best album I’ve heard this year - it’s so understated, and the title track has to be one of the best songs I’ve heard in a very very long time. Still, I am getting increasingly desperate to own a copy of the Fleet Foxes record, “He Doesn’t Know Why” is all I’ve heard but it’s fantastic.

  13. John Says:

    Ach, I forgot to hand mine in, I wrote it and everything.

    Keyboard Choir is out on September 1st officially. But we have sold a few at gigs since early this year…

    Xiu Xiu - Women As Lovers
    A violent, strange album with rich rewards to offer beneath the swathes of noise and darkness.

    Cats In Paris - Courtcase 2000
    Cats In Paris eschew guitars in favour of bleeping keyboards. create an album of brilliant, imaginative contemporary indie-pop.

    Fuck Buttons - Street Horrrsing
    The long awaited album completely delivered on their live promise. Fuck Buttons create inspiring, powerful melodic noise music with sense of purpose and wonder.

    Atlas Sound - Let The Blind Lead Those Who Can See But Cannot Feel
    This solo album from Deerhunter’s Bradford James Cox singlehandedly reclaimed the long history of shoegaze while opening doors for the dormant genre to move forward. A truly beautiful record, packed with soothing sounds, pretty drones and alternating textures.

    Au - Verbs
    The kind of album I always wish Animal Collective would make, this is a record full of ‘world music’ influences, drones, choral flourishes and a vast range of instrumentation, all combining into a dizzying trip of an album.

  14. John Says:

    Ignore the mistakes if you will. I guess it wasn’t quite finished.

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