buffaBLOG's Best of 2012: Staff Picks - Jeannette Chin



Top 4 Electronic Albums of 2012 *

This was a nutsy year in music; a lot of big acts released albums. Maybe the idea of having an album out in 2012 (the end of the world) was particularly appealing. So, to narrow down the list of favorite albums, I decided to make my list purely electronic. I like listening to different genres of music but I am absolutely infatuated with experimental electronic stuff.  Here are four albums I thoroughly enjoyed listening to and why.

4. Andy Stott - Luxury Problems


Listening to this album evokes a sense of having been been transported to an autocratic dystopia in some parallel universe. Under this regime- the citizens who like to go clubbin must do it very secretly. One by one they trickle out of their respective apartment buildings in the middle of the night, and they have to dodge the view of hidden cameras throughout the streets in order to finally get to an isolated building in the outskirts of town. There, they enter the basement, and then another basement underneath the first basement. In the sub-basement, through the almost entirely dark room, this album is pulsing through. The place is crowded beyond occupancy, everyone is dripping in sweat and dancing in music-video slow motion. Okay I'll stop.

Thus, it's not the sort of music that I would like to listen to all the time. And despite the analogies I just made, it's not music that would be easily received in a dance club. But to sum it up, under the list of "most impressive upon a first listening" (and also "most inappropriate to listen to with lap-top speakers") this debut definitely tops the list. The entire album teems with the intriguing combination of  gritty & deep instrumentals (think abandoned factories, or better yet, Eraserhead by David Lynch) and operatic vocals (think angels singing lullabies to you through the sky).  As Luxury Problems proves, the two starkly contrasting elements merge seamlessly when paired together, or at least when paired together by Stott.


3. Actress - R.I.P.

I came to appreciate this album because it directly skips elements of electronic music that make it a popular target of criticism. The sort of criticism from people who purposely don't listen to it. Either because they assume that (1) its attempt to imitate "real" instruments  results in sounds that have less character and musical properties that somehow feel cheaper or (2)  it's music that is only suitable for dancing partying.

Instead, as you can hear immediately upon putting the album, Actress skips over any sort of attempt to make his sound feel "organic". He focuses instead on exploring possibilities of digitally synthesized sounds.  Listening to this album will not tempt you to get up and dance, nor will it invite subconscious comparisons to traditional indie-rock. It translates the nostalgically personal feelings that indie-rock can translate without tempting you to compare the two palettes of sound. I read an interview where Actress used the metaphor of being a "sculptor" while describing his approach to music production. Reading this lead me to the idea of thinking of the compilation of tracks as  "sound sculptures", and maybe more importantly, opened me up to thinking of music in general as sound sculpture.


2. Holy Other - Held

This debut from Holy Other utilizes very recent electronic music trends to create a mood that parallels the dark visceral atmosphere that someone like Burial is notorious for channeling. The album brings the words - "haunting" and "otherwordly" to a whole new level. And that's clearly what he was shooting for, but I mean seriously. If you image-google the guy, you'll come across photographs of what appears to be the grim reaper playing DJ. Well, he succeeded in materializing this vision.

Lyrically ambiguous vocal samples are weaved in and given the  reverbed-out, delayed, pitched-low treatment. But to say that Holy Other makes this common formula "work" would be an understatement, he does it in a way that makes the air echo, or, better yet picture the vocal equivalent of a life-saver floating over a lake, bobbing up and down (listen to "Nothing Here"). All in all, it's music that somehow translates to the listener a sense of comfort despite its densely dark exterior. 


1. John Talabot - ƒIN

Oh baby. Just about every track in this album (except for 'Journeys' in my opinion) is (1) catchy (2) musically innovative and (3) emotionally evocative. It's also very "colorful". Colorfully infectious as in, if I had synthesia and epilepsy, listening to this album could potentially induce a seizure within me. And "colorful" is definitely not an adjective that I would use to describe some of the other albums on this list. If I had to spit out a quick label to describe what genre it falls under, I'd probably blurt out something along the lines of "very tribally house".  They're not words I would have associated with an album that I would assume myself to most consistently gravitate to in any given year, but in 2012 that's exactly what this album became to me.


Other [non-electronic] albums I loved: Porcelain Raft - Strange Weekend, Grizzly Bear - Shields, Dirty Projectors - Swing Lo Magellan, Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - Mature Themes

Top Tracks of 2012

10. Grimes - "Skin"

9. Diplo - "Move Around" (Ft. Elephant Man)


8. Four Tet - "Pyramid"


7. Frank Ocean -  "Crack Rock"


6. XXYYXX - "Good Enough"


5. Burial - "Kindred"


4. How To Dress Well - "Running Back"

3. Burial & Four Tet - "Nova"


2. Porcelain Raft - "Unless You Speak From Your Heart"


1. Grizzly Bear - "Half Gate"


Jeannette Chin

3 comments

  1. Great top electronic album picks Jeannette. Glad to see somebody giving HTDW recognition, and the Burial EP is amazingly/hauntingly good. With The Field, Tim Hecker, Oneohtrix Point Never, and Sepalcure releasing incredible albums in 2011, 2012 had a lot of catching up to do. Actress and Talabot definitely deserve to be up there, but where's the love for Flying Lotus? Sure, Until The Quiet Comes is no Cosmogramma, but it could have rounded out your list nicely to a solid 5 count. I mean, 4 albums? Why 4? Why not 4 and a half (EPs only get half credit) while you're at it Jeannette? I jest, I jest.

  2. I can appreciate Flying Lotus for sure but I'm personally not the hugest fan, I listened to Until the Quiet Comes but never put it on too much. My favorite artist from the brainfeeder fam is definitely Nosaj Thing.

    There were 4 because from what I listened to only 4 became my favorite, another album added would have been sort of contrived. I'm not trying to gauge what I think will become "classic" albums by any means, they're just what I personally enjoyed listening to most this year.

  3. Ha, and The Field, Oneohtrix & Sepalcure were definitely my favorite from 2011, maybe add SBTRKT to the list. I'll check out Tim Hecker though cause I've never even heard of him, ha.

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