Lowlights Lowlights (Darla)
There's a relaxed quality to Lowlights' debut that allows it to drift rather aimlessly into the ears, but its addictive pedal steel passages and reverb-washed vocal melodies beg for a pair of headphones and a beanbag chair.
Lee, along with harmony vocalist Angela Brown, multi-instrumentalist Dustin Reske, drummer Noah Wilson and a few guest contributors has created some 53 minutes of pure post-rock afterglow. Lowlights is the best record of the year.
Otis Taylor Truth is Not Fiction (Telarc)
Taylor's arrangements are sparse and serve the story rather than tell it. Truth is Not Fiction is built upon the rhythmic pulse of Taylor's impassioned strumming, with expertly placed dollops of electric bass, cello and ominous background vocals filling in the mix. The occasional guitar solos sound like the voice of God or the Devil himself.
Disconcerting yet eerily beautiful, Truth in Not Fiction is a triumphant recording. Taylor, through his sheer artistry, is able to master difficult subject matter and present it with a magic touch that's both compelling and tragically romantic. A bona fide masterpiece.
Rodney Crowell Fate's Right Hand (DMZ/Epic)
Aided by brilliant electric guitar playing courtesy of Will Kimbrough and Pat Buchanan, Crowell brings to life 11 songs that take us on an inner journey that's at once deeply personal and universal. What we're shown along the way often isn't pretty, but it's all necessary in getting from point A to point B. And between the bookends, we're treated to lessons in peerless progressive country music and a drama that unfolds in real time.
The last time country music was this compelling was Billy Joe Shaver's The Earth Rolls On. Prior to that, you'd perhaps have to go as far back as Red Headed Stranger to find as complete a single thought.
Smog Supper (Drag City)
Musically, Supper is more upbeat and hopeful than most Smog releases, but you can still count on Callahan's lyrical jabs to make you hurt all over. One of the more striking aspects of this record is that Callahan's supporting cast perform as an ensemble, at least more so than on the Smog catalog past. Sarabeth Tucek, who shadows Callahan's morose, carefree vocal style on several tracks, sounds perfectly suited to punctuate his signature penchant for dragging gentle melodies through the depths of bleakness.
Supper is not happy music for happy listeners, but regardless of your current emotional state, it's always good to know that you can count on Bill Callahan to be worse off than you are. “Butterflies Drowned in Wine” is worth the purchase price alone.
The Handsome Family Singing Bones (Carrot Top)
The Handsome Family write their perfect little gems in some far-off place, where mechanization is still in its toddlerhood and electric lights are yet to be taken for granted. Here, songs are heirlooms, passed down from generation to generation and, occasionally, harvested from the ether by just the right set of hands to shape them into taught melodies.
For Singing Bones, the Handsomes seem to have traveled farther than ever before to mine material and brush the dust from it. They put a wider variety of instrumentation to use in a museum—like chronology that serves their sound well. Yet another ghostly beautiful chapter in a book we should all hope never ends.
Scenic The Acid Gospel Experience (Hidden Agenda)
Death Cab for Cutie Transatlanticism (Barsuk)
Elf Power Creatures (spinART)
Corey Harris Mississippi to Mali (Rounder)
And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead The Secret of Elena's Tomb (Interscope)
Year In Music Ten Others You Should Buy Now
Hella Hold Your Horse Is (5RC)
Andrew Bird Weather Systems (Grimsey)
Electric Six Fire (XL Recordings/Beggars Group)
Lyle Lovett My Baby Don't Tolerate (Curb/Lost Highway)
Johnny Marr and the Healers Boomslang (iMusic)
Cracker Countrysides (iMusic)
Tim Easton Break Your Mother's Heart (New West)
The Shins Chutes Too Narrow (Sub Pop)
Robert Earl Keen Gravitational Forces (Lost Highway)
Mary & Mars Mary & Mars (self-released)
Danny Winn and the Earthlings Leap for Mankind (self-released)
The Friendly Mean (self-released)
Simulacrum One Side Remains (Formfit/self-released)
Milo de Venus Milo de Venus (Buckin' A/self-released)
Syd Masters and The Swing Riders Cowboys on the Moon É and Other Hillbilly Make-out Songs (Vision)
Civitas Blue Stone (self-released)
Mucho Buddha Dragonfly (self-released)
Liquification Chrysalis (DSBP)
Guajira Reflejos del Alma (La Merea)
Year In Music Five Others You Should Buy Now
Roger Jameson The Great Compromise (Red Rebel Records)
Larry Freedman Get Out and Stay Out (self-released)
Jason and the Argonauts Live in El Paso (self-released)
Ricardo Sombras (self-released)