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BRITT ROBSON

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    The 64 best albums I heard in 2011



    By Britt Robson | Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011

    Welcome to my third annual orgasmic roundup of the best music I heard that was released in this calendar year. This time, in response to previous (and justified) complaints that there is no way of knowing the style or feel of these records when put in a massive scroll, I have managed to jot down some (pretty slapdash) impressions to provide some clues. I hope that will help this become more of an informed consumer guide.

    The usual caveats apply. I'm sure I have missed out on many spectacular records and welcome input on those omissions (also on where you think I am off the mark or otherwise wrong-headed). I also will be slapping my head over records I heard, loved, and somehow forgot about when compiling this collection. Finally, my taste is thankfully ever-changing from day to day: The order here would be different each time I compiled it. But rest assured that I endorse all 64 selections, which are actually fewer than my two previous years' choices.

    Look forward to your responses. And God bless music, which ranks somewhere between air, food and water (and sports!) in my list of necessities.

     

     

    1) Robbie Robertson, How to Become Clairvoyant

    Here's where I forfeit my (already outdated) hipster credential. Not even die-hard Robertson or Band lovers cared for this as much as I did. But the hypnotic, whispery ambiance (it could have been produced by Daniel Lanois) and Eric Clapton's choice, muted guitar seized hold and I couldn't stop playing it for about four months.

    2) Wild Flag, Wild Flag

    Thrilling straight-ahead, only slightly riot-grrl rock from alumni of Sleater-Kinney, Helium and The Minders.

    3) Brooklyn Rider, Plays Philip Glass

    Lush renditions of five string quartets that are both mesmerizing and intellectually engaging, upholstering my impressions of Glass' music in a more enjoyable and illuminating light.

    4) tUnE-yArDs, WHOKILL

    Merrill Garbus is the year's most original creative spirit, a hilarious, mischievous soundscaper who administers sage social commentary masquerading as whimsy amid her battery of low-fi pop riffs and textures.

    5) James Carter, Caribbean Rhapsody

    Neither "Third Stream" nor "Latin jazz," Rhapsody alternates Carter's collaborations with the Puerto Rican classical composer Roberto Sierra with awesome extended solo interludes on tenor and soprano sax.

    6) Big K.R.I.T, Return of 4Eva

    The best of his various mixtapes in wide release. Because K.R.I.T. is both rapper and producer, he creates organic songs of razor-sharp wordplay enveloped in a gauzy, "Dirty South" mesh.

    7) Captain Black Big Band, Captain Black Big Band

    A hard bop big band that swings with a vengeance and lets the soloists rip and holler.

    8) Tom Harrell, The Time of the Sun

    In which Harrell's indefatigably consistent quintet finally overtakes Dave Holland's group as the best working ensemble in jazz. Don't let the opening title track dissuade you — it is a failed experiment that uses magnetic sounds from the sun's outer atmosphere.

    9) Foo Fighters, Wasting Light

    Their best and most ferocious record. Dave Grohl is setting up an interesting debate over his ultimate legacy relative to that of Kurt Cobain.

    10) Trio 3 + Geri Allen, Celebrating Mary Lou Williams

    Oliver Lake, Andrew Cyrille, Reggie Workman and Geri Allen are names that promise a memorably wild, woolly, soulful and bluesy jazz ensemble — and make good on that promise while bolstering the legacy of Mary Lou Williams.

    11) Bradford/Dresser/Ferris, Live In L.A.

    A fabulous brass and bass jazz trio with inventive exchanges and ample space allowed for trumpet, trombone and bass. 

    12) Gretchen Parlato, The Lost and Found

    Parlato is a jazz vocalist who manages to blend the narrative virtues and modern songbook sensibility of Cassandra Wilson with the late, great Betty Carter's concept of the singer-instrumentalist as another improvising soloist in a great jazz ensemble.

    13) Gillian Welch, The Harrow and the Harvest

    Some days the coffee tastes just right and the walk to the mailbox at the end of the dirt driveway invites profundity. Through all the hurt and sorrow on this disc, there is that kind of glorious, happenstance beauty and revelation at work. 

    14) Anthony Hamilton, Back to Love

    Hamilton's a delicious southern gospel-soul singer who can sound like Al Green on "Woo," Bill Withers on "Mad," and yet is utterly himself all the time.

    15) Marcus Strickland, Triumph of the Heavy, Volume 2

    A gruff and tough piano-less trio, with Marcus blazing on tenor while drumming twin brother E.J. Strickland and bassist Ben Williams provide ornery counterpoint like a dog gnawing on a bone.

    16) William Parker, Crumbling in the Shadows Is Fraulein Miller's Stale Cake

    Bold, avant-garde solo bass from one of the preeminent jazz masters.

    17) Roy Haynes, Roy-alty

    The ageless drummer unfurls another great disc, with extended guest appearances by Chick Corea and Roy Hargrove along with his sharp Fountain of Youth band.

    18) Shelby Lynne, Revelation Road

    An intimate, harrowing, self-recorded collection from this increasingly deep country singer.

    19) Sonny Rollins, Road Shows, Vol. 2

    Tenor sax delirium. Even at 81, Rollins remains the only musician alive who can outperform Bruce Springsteen in concert.

    20) Pat Martino Quartet, Undeniable

    Stroked soul-jazz that goes from toe-tapping to joint-bending to gleeful-hollering crescendos, courtesy of guitarist Martino and special special guest saxophonist Eric Alexander.

    21) Rene Marie, Voice of My Beautiful Country

    Her "covers" album. The patriotic songs are heartfelt without too much schmaltz, but her "Imagination" medley, concluding with the Temp's "Just My Imagination," is transcendent. ("White Rabbit" not so much.)

    22) Matthew Shipp and Darius Jones, Cosmic Lieder

    23) Darius Jones, Big Gurl (Smell My Dream)

    Darius Jones is one of the more exciting talents to come along in jazz in the past five years. His duets with Shipp, in which the august pianist frequently defers to Jones and they pursue titles based on comic books, are durably satisfying, and his second disc as leader finds him honking and squealing the blues with his trio.

    24) Smith Westerns, Dye It Blonde

    Chiming alternative rock with some nifty guitars.

    25) Dessa, Castor The Twin

    It's been a treat to hear her grow from a solid piece of the Doomtree collective into a full-fledged spoken-word artist-singer, building on her rap foundation without betraying or diluting her essence.

    26) The Civil Wars, Barton Hollow

    Vocals harmonies as rich and detailed and sustainably simple as a heirloom quilt.

    27) Muhal Richard Abrams, SoundDance

    AACM founder and pianist Abrams duets with the blips and honks of trombonist George Lewis, and with the late Chicago saxophonist Fred Anderson in one of Anderson's final performances.

    28) Drive-By Truckers, Go-Go Boots

    A solid return to form — sprawling, messy, topical, surprising — by this thinking man's southern rock band.

    29) Ernesto Cervini Quartet, There!

    Rollicking Canadian drummer has the good sense to turn saxophonist Joel Frahm loose on his compositions in this live outing that is just right as house-cleaning music.

    30) Various Artists, Miles Espanol

    The Miles Davis legacy just keeps on giving. A few years after some fabulous Miles-goes-to-India interpretations, his songbook gets a Latin twist with folks like Chick Corea, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Ron Carter, John Scofield, Antonio Sanchez, John Benitez .

    31) Cults, Cults

    Retro-60s rock through the looking glass — think the Zombies and the Dave Clark Five with modern echoes and girl group vocals.

    32) The Roots, Undun

    They keep morphing, growing, sprawling. A concept album and not their best — just really, really good. The back-to-front narrative is too clever by half, but it can be languorous or thought-provoking as your mood warrants.

    33) Bill Frisell & Vinicius Cantuaria, Lagrimas Mexicanas

    34) Bill Frisell, All We Are Saying…

    Our intrepid guitarist was typically busy in '11, engaging Brazilian guitarist Cantuaria in some gorgeous multi-culti folk-jazz tunes and unpacking the John Lennon songbook with a more uptempo group of top-drawer jazz folks.

    35) Random Axe, Random Axe

    The raps are merely above average, but I can't get enough of that cavernous, old-school production.

    36) Terell Stafford, This Side of Strayhorn

    The trumpeter honors the composer with the best playing of his career.

    37) My Morning Jacket, Circuital

    A stylistic tour de force masterfully sung by Jim James.

    38) Mayer Hawthorne, How Do You Do

    Effervescent and plush blue-eyed soul, even better than his sparkling debut. If this is a guilty pleasure, you're thinking too much.

    39) DJ Quik, The Book of David

    Living proof that a middle-aged hip-hopper can keep honing his craft, expanding his vision and adding depth and weight to his emotional heft.

    40) Thao & Mirah, Thao & Mirah

    21st Century folk-pop.

    41) Rene Marie, Black Lace Freudian Slip

    Her "originals" album, brimming with sass and playful self-revelation — check especially the title track and "Rim Shot."

    42) Gang Gang Dance, Eye Contact

    I run hot and cold on tightly produced dance music (not so much an M83 fan, for instance), but this stuff hooks me whenever I put it on.

    43) 3 Cohens, Family

    As in the Anat, Avishai and Yuval Cohen — Jewish jazz kin who nail the complex soul of Mingus and the beguiling froth of "Tiger Rag."

    44) Eleanor Friedberger, Last Summer

    I like this better than anything by the Fiery Furnaces, the band she shares with her brother.

    45) The New Gary Burton Quartet, Common Ground

    A perfect title for a vibraphonist whose playing is like water in that it seeks its own level in the natural order of things, here alongside emerging guitarist Julian Lage and a rhythm section of Scott Colley and Antonio Sanchez.

    46) The Chiara String Quartet and Matmos, Jefferson Friedman: Quartets

    Modern classical quartet music lovingly rendered by Chiara and deconstructed by Matmos.

    47) Raphael Saadiq, Stone Rollin'

    Of a piece with 2008's retro-soul keepsake, The Way I See It, the ex-Tony!Toni!Tone! leader Saadiq has vintage Motown in his DNA.

    48) Lupe Fiasco, Lasers

    Supposedly, at least for the sake of his cherished street cred, the record company ruined this record. But I saw him work it hard live in New Orleans, and it sounds nearly on a par with his best work.

    49) Miguel Zenon, Alma Adentro: The Puerto Rican Songbook

    MacArthur "genius" grant winner and alto saxophonist Zenon continues his fascinating meld — begun on Jibaro and Esta Plena — of the unique music of his native Puerto Rico with sharp writing and arranging in accordance with the bop and post-bop jazz tradition.

    50) Jay-Z and Kanye West, Watch The Throne

    It's lonely at the top of African American musical aristocracy. But Kanye's production and Jay-Z's flow make any complaints less tedious.

    51) Hiromi, Voice

    A dynamo on the piano, she keeps churning out great discs and is criminally underrated by critics.

    52) Dawes, Nothing Is Wrong

    Instantly familiar SoCal-style rock, they wed the hooks with the riffs in seamless fashion.

    53) Paul Simon, So Beautiful or So What

    Overhyped, but still his best collection of songs since Graceland.

    54) Kenny Werner, Balloons

    The composer's best record, with a great band featuring saxophonist David Sanchez and trumpeter Randy Brecker in the front line and John Pattitucci and Antonio Sanchez in the rhythm section.

    55) Atlantis Quartet, Lines in the Sand

    This ever-evolving local jazz band features four strong writers and players who give generously to the ensemble cause, and are perfectly showcased on this sprawling live set.

    56) Patrick Cornelius, maybe steps

    Saxophonist-composer who writes autobiographical tunes that stick to head and the soul, partly because his playing is fresh and so simpatico with both the song and the ensemble.

    57) Adele, 21

    I'm sick of it by now, but I can't deny it.

    58) Gregg Allman, Low Country Blues

    A weather-beaten, deliberate blues-roots-rock record from the Allman Brothers band survivor and singer who has earned his liver transplant.

    59) David S. Ware/Cooper-Moore/William Parker/Muhammed Ali, Planetary Unknown

    Speaking of transplants, Ware's new kidney is up to snuff as the saxophonist engages with three other free-jazz luminaries in a wide-ranging and playfully intense, by turns taut and meandering, outing here.

    60) Rebirth Brass Band, Rebirth of New Orleans

    Partay! Beer-soaked ‘Treme blowing, complete with anthem for the football Saints.

    61) Brian Lynch, Unsung Heroes

    The Art Blakey Jazz Messengers alumnus honors some of the more obscure but important jazz trumpeters with his typically stirring blend of hard-bop and latin jazz.

    62) Dave Alvin, Eleven Eleven

    Slightly clichéd but firmly grasped roots-rock from an ex-Blaster whose heart and soul are in the right place.

    63) Kendrick Lamar, Section.80

    This young dude can certainly spit rhymes — he's got a tremendous future. I just wish the tunes lived up to the flow.

    64) R.E.M., Collapse Into Now

    RIP to one of the all-time great bands of my lifetime.


    Britt Robson
    Illustration by Hugh Bennewitz


    minnpost.com/brittrobson



    Britt Robson has written about all forms and styles of music for over 30 years, for magazines such as Rolling Stone, Spin, Downbeat, Entertainment Weekly and No Depression, and daily newspapers that include the Washington Post and the Cincinnati Enquirer. He can be reached at brobson [at] minnpost [dot] com.  

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