SNL 2/18 Guest Announcements: Reactions

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2/18/12: Maya Rudolph/Sleigh Bells: When predicting SNL hosts, one maxim I go by is that stars of TV shows usually don’t host during the first season of their shows.  With Maya now and Zooey Deschanel before her, there will be two stars from hit shows in their 1st seasons two weeks in a row.  Anwyay, this will hardly be a triumphant return for Maya, as she left the cast only four years ago and has had guest appearances on eight shows between then and now, most recently two months ago in the Steve Buscemi/Black Keys episode.  Since Fred Armisen is still in the cast, I’d like to see Nuni and Nuni Schoener.
Thank you for booking Sleigh Bells, SNL.  You pushed me over the edge into realizing that I need to start listening to them.  Following Lana Del Rey, Bon Iver, and Karmin, Sleigh Bells will make it four musical guests in a row that old people have never heard of.

Best of Film 2011: Best Movies of the Year

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As I look at my choices for the best movies of 2011, one thought comes to my mind: “Nobody’s perfect.”

1. Bridesmaids

With all due respect to Paranormal Activity 3 and Insidious, Bridesmaids may just have been the scariest movie of 2011.  During the food poisoning scene, while the rest of the theatre roared with laughter, I was rendered paralyzed as I was terrified and profoundly disturbed.  To lose control of one’s bodily functions in a situation full of social mores strikes me as one of the frightening possibilities of life in the 21st century.  That scene served a microcosm of the whole movie, as the stress of being a maid of honor led Annie to lose control of everything in her life.  As she sank to her lowest point, with no job, no money, no friends, no reason to leave the house – it was deeply scary to witness such a change over the course of only a few months.  The life changes depicted in Bridesmaids are hardly unusual – everybody grows up, or at least gets older.  The people in our life move on, life goes by, and it is all hard to handle if we do not have anybody to support us.  That is why occasionally it is a good idea to get in somebody’s face and declare, “Hey!  Guess what?  You do have friends!”
Memorable Line: “You know what I find interesting about that, Annie?  It’s interesting to me that you have, you have absolutely no friends.  You know why it’s interesting?  Here’s a friend, standing directly in front of you, trying to talk to you and you choose to talk about the fact that you don’t have any friends.”

2. Moneyball

I’m not the only who’s said it (Rolling Stone’s Peter Travers is among those who mentioned it before me): Moneyball is about baseball the same way that The Social Network is about Facebook: not really at all.  It was about questioning the conventional wisdom – a pursuit that can be meaningful in any field.  In fact, it is, simply put, how to gain knowledge.  With its focus on statistics and its antiestablishment attitude, Moneyball could have been a preachy lecture.  But thanks to its fully fleshed-out humanity – Billy Beane’s managing style was driven by his skepticism regarding the conventional wisdom after it did not help his playing career; amalgam character Peter Brand introduced statistical analysis to the baseball office because he loved the game, and wanted to make it better – Moneyball presented a lesson that was easy to take in, thanks to the personal connections it offered.
Memorable Line: “It’s a metaphor.” “I know it’s a metaphor.”

3. Crazy, Stupid, Love.

The confluence of almost every major character of Crazy, Stupid, Love. in that climactic scene may have been unlikely, but the improbable is often the most entertaining.  And what, if not love, is one of the most improbable things of all?  It would often be sensible to not give in to what love demands.  Perhaps it strains credulity to accept that a middle schooler would be allowed to make a graduation speech about how love doesn’t exist, or that his dad would be allowed to interrupt him and give an alternative, just as dramatic, speech.  But that scene did accurately represent the bigness of feelings regarding love and life, as displayed in Crazy, Stupid, Love.  So much of C, S, L. strained credulity.  But to live life lovingly, straining credulity is often a necessary strategy.
Memorable Line: “It’s easy to just look at a thirteen-year-old and say, ‘You don’t know what you’re talking about.  You are wrong.’  But I’m not so sure.”

4. The Muppets

The Muppets is a rare breed: a movie about itself that is successful at being so.  Prior to the release of this film, the Muppets had lost much of the luster of popularity, just as they were down and out in the fictional world in which they are living, breathing creatures.  There are plenty of real fans of the Muppets as devoted as Walter, and most people who are not huge fans are at least familiar with them.  But in the 21st century, they have only been popular in legacy terms.  Because it had been so long since the Muppets had even attempted something significant, it did not even seem like it was worth trying.  But, sometimes you just have to ask your friends for help, and you may just be surprised at the response.  Usually, I consider box office performance to be beside the point when determining a film’s quality, but The Muppets kind of needed to be a hit to prove its point, and that kind of worked out.  Oh, and the songs are fun, Fozzie Bear’s puns are stupidly hilarious as always, Chris Cooper raps, and there are plenty of celebrity cameos (including the number one star in the world.  You hear me? Bang! – The world).
Memorable Line: “And we’ll keep giving the world the third greatest gift: laughter!

5. The Descendants

Our lives are not always what they seem.  In fact, they are never exactly what we think they are.  George Clooney has made a career out of playing himself.  He has taken on an array of characters, but he has generally imbued them all with some degree of that unmistakable George Clooney persona that says, “I know what I’m doing.”  As Matt King, he backs off, and offers his most vulnerable, and best, performance yet.  Vulnerability is the shared quality for every character in The Descendants, as everyone has lost or stands to lose something important: a wife, a mother, faith in a spouse, mental faculties – even seemingly the entire state of Hawaii worries how the fate of the King family property will affect them.  As Matt eventually realizes, he is not in control of everything, but he knows what he does have, and he knows that he better cherish it.
Memorable Line: “Elizabeth is dying.  Wait… Fuck you!  And she’s dying.”

6. Midnight in Paris

When a character from a realistic world enters a fantastical setting, it is best if his surprise is only temporary.  Gil Prender does remain excited after the initial shock of experiencing 1920’s Paris wears off, but the time travel does also become a part of his routine.  (The first scene with the Surrealists offers a strange sort of grounding for this situation.)  But allowing the fantasy to become too much of a routine can be a problem.  1920’s Paris has been Gil’s to romanticize about and learn from, but that lesson is worthwhile only if he realizes that he has his own life that he can make just as romantic and meaningful.  Also, Adrien de Van as Luis Buñuel does a great job listening.
Memorable Line: “A man in love with a woman from a different era.  I see a photograph.”  “I see a film.”  “I see an insurmountable problem.”  “I see rhinoceros.”

7. Rise of the Planet of the Apes

A B-movie particularly in the sense that it never wanders far from its primary geographic settings, Rise of the Planet of the Apes is plenty ambitious otherwise.  In the previous Apes installments, the apes were already people – as far as souls, free will, what have you are concerned – just hairier.  The apes in this edition have the sort of humanity that has been shown to us by the likes of Jane Goodall – we know that they are a lot like us, but we don’t know exactly what it is to live as an ape.  We have never been able to fully articulate what that essential difference is.  No matter what the difference, if human experimentation is risky, then no doubt ape experimentation is as well.  The next round of evolution is going to catch many people off guard.
Memorable Line: “NO!”

8. Margin Call

The investment bank employees in Margin Call stayed up all night to figure out a solution to a catch-22, but it was essentially all for naught.  Every other major financial company was going through basically the same situation.  The financial crash of 2008 was already inevitable.  Writer/director J.C. Chandor sets Margin Call to the tone of a thriller, and for those involved, the stakes are as high and as grueling as those in any action movie.  These particular Wall Streeters do not always want to care about this situation as they do; their faces display the wear and tear of the weight of inevitability.
Memorable Line: “You will never sell anything to any of those people ever again.”  “I understand.”  “Do you?”  “Do you?!  This is it!  I’m telling you, this is it!”

9. Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol

The plot (insofar as it makes sense or not) of an action movie does not always matter, but characterization does.  Sure, the set piece at the Burj Khalifa in Dubai was the buzziest moment, and it is the major reason why M:I 4 was as great as it was.  But it must be noted that Tom Cruise always gives it his all as Ethan Hunt.  He is a man driven by family and loyalty, unafraid to show his true humanity even when he is in disguise.  Bet let’s talk about that Dubai scene.  It did really look like Tom Cruise was actually acrobatically maneuvering about many miles up in the air.  The camerawork, editing, and choreography were all stunning.  My palms are clamming up just thinking about it.
Memorable Line: “Oh, that’s high!”

10. The “I Wanted to Include Each of These Films But Something was Holding Me Back But Together They Can All Make It” Spot: Hugo/Warrior/Win Win/Young Adult

The middle of Hugo was not particularly adventurous, but I did enjoy the fanta-historical account of Georges Méliès.  Warrior’s inspirational sports tale has been told many times before, but the performances of Tom Hardy, Joel Edgerton, and Nick Nolte burned with a frustrated intensity that felt appropriate for the less glamorous realm of the sports world.  Win Win felt inconsequential, but that was only because it did not care to be any showier.  Its characters were respectable and generally trying to do the right thing in their own ways: a rousing, honest morality tale.  Some of Young Adult’s most powerful scenes felt a little staged, but life does not always make sense when you’re drunk all the time: a subjective investigation of the mind of a seriously depressed individual.
Memorable Lines: Hugo – “I was forced to sell my movies to a company that melted them down into chemicals.”
Warrior – “All I’m saying is, I’m happy to keep your boy warm for you.”
Win Win – “Why did Daddy hit Kyle?”  “I have no idea.”
Young Adult – “I would keep all of this to yourself.  I would find a therapist.”

Honorable Mentions (A.K.A., I liked these movies, too!)
These aren’t necessarily numbers 14-22, but for whatever reasons, I did want to mention them.
Beginners, Drive, Fast Five, Final Destination 5, Hanna, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, Tabloid, The Tree of Life, X-Men: First Class

But wait!  There’s more!  (I hope.)
I haven’t seen these movies yet.  I hope they’re good:
Coriolanus, The Guard, Jane Eyre, The Interrupters, Pariah, Poetry, Project Nim, Rampart, A Separation, Senna, Take Shelter, 13 Assassins, The Trip, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, We Need to Talk About Kevin

VH1 Top 20 Countdown – 2/11/12

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Is that music?

Original Version
1. Adele – “Set Fire to the Rain”
2. Bruno Mars – “It Will Rain”
3. Jessie J – “Domino”
4. Foster the People – “Don’t Stop (Color on the Walls)”
5. Kelly Clarkson – “Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)”
6. Pitbull – “International Love”
7. Gym Class Heroes ft. Neon Hitch – “Ass Back Home”
8. Daughtry – “Crawling Back to You”
9. Katy Perry – “The One That Got Away”
10. The Fray – “Heartbeat”
11. Outasight – “Tonight is the Night”
12. David Guetta ft. Usher – “Without You”
13. Gotye ft. Kimbra – “Somebody That I Used to Know”
14. Gavin DeGraw – “Not Over You”
15. Rihanna ft. Calvin Harris – “We Found Love”
16. Scars on 45 – “Heart on Fire”
17. Young the Giant – “Cough Syrup”
18. The Black Keys – “Lonely Boy”
19. Safetysuit – “These Times”
20. The All-American Rejects – “Beekeeper’s Daughter”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. Somebody That I Used to Know
2. We Found Love
3. Lonely Boy
4. Tonight is the Night
5. The One That Got Away
6. Domino
7. Don’t Stop (Color on the Walls)
8. Cough Syrup
9. Without You
10. It Will Rain
11. Set Fire to the Rain
12. Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)
13. Ass Back Home
14. Heart on Fire
15. These Times
16. Beekeeper’s Daughter
17. International Love
18. Heartbeat
19. Not Over You
20. Crawling Back to You

Fuse Top 20 Countdown – 2/7/12

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Oh, that’s what that song is.

Original Version
1. Kelly Clarkson – “Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)”
2. Adele – “Set Fire to the Rain”
3. Tyga – “Rack City”
4. Flo Rida – “Good Feeling”
5. Snoop Dogg and Wiz Khalifa ft. Bruno Mars – “Young, Wild & Free”
6. Jessie J – “Domino”
7. Pitbull ft. Chris Brown – “International Love”
8. David Guetta ft. Nicki Minaj – “Turn Me On”
9. Rihanna ft. Calvin Harris – “We Found Love”
10. LMFAO – “Sexy and I Know It”
11. Yelawolf ft. Kid Rock – “Let’s Roll”
12. Gym Class Heroes ft. Neon Hitch – “Ass Back Home”
13. Maroon 5 ft. Christina Aguilera – “Moves Like Jagger”
14. Bruno Mars – “It Will Rain”
15. J. Cole – “Work Out”
16. Big Sean ft. Nicki Minaj – “Dance (A$$)”
17. Katy Perry – “The One That Got Away”
18. Lil’ Wayne ft. Bruno Mars – “Mirror”
19. Hot Chelle Rae – “I Like It Like That”
20. Nicki Minaj – “Stupid, Stupid”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. We Found Love
2. Sexy and I Know It
3. Good Feeling
4. The One That Got Away
5. Domino
6. Set Fire to the Rain
7. It Will Rain
8. Stupid, Stupid
9. Turn Me On
10. Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)
11. Moves Like Jagger
12. Rack City
13. Young, Wild & Free
14. Ass Back Home
15. Let’s Roll
16. Mirror
17. Dance (A$$)
18. Work Out
19. International Love
20. I Like It Like That

SNL Video Recap February 4, 2012 Channing Tatum/Bon Iver

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Best 2012 Super Bowl Commercials

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As I said in my review of The Artist, it was “the year of the dog!”  The producers of some of this year’s best Super Bowl commercials certainly seemed to feel that way as well.  But my top choice reminds us that it was also the year of LMFAO.  Everybody was party rocking, even the talking M&M’s.

2012 was not the best year ever for Super Bowl commercials, but it was almost certainily the best year for the music featured in the commercials, as several otherwise mediocre, just plain bad, or inscrutable (Bud Light Platinum, anyone?) clips featured inspired musical choices.  Check it out: Kanye West’s “Runaway” (Bud Light Platinum), Echo and the Bunnymen’s “The Killing Moon” (Audi), Avicii’s “LE7ELS” (Bud Light Platinum), The Animals’ “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood” (H&M), fun.’s “We Are Young” (Chevrolet), Richard Strauss’s “Also Sprach Zarathustra” (Toyota), The Cult’s “She Sells Sanctuary” mashed up with Flo Rida’s “Good Feeling” (Budweiser), Ray Charles’s “What’d I Say” (NFL), Yello’s “Oh Yeah,” of course (Honda), and The Darkness’s “I Believe in a Thing Called Love” (Samsung).  Some of the good commercials also featured great songs, and I point out the great songs that appeared in my Top 5 picks.

1. M&M’s – “That Kind of Party” (w/ LMFAO’s “Sexy and I Know It”)
Gawd, this song is everywhere.  But, hey, folks, let’s all let it be that kind of party, because we are all sexy and we know it.

2. Volkswagen – “The Dog Strikes Back” (w/ James Brown’s “Get Up Offa That Thing”)
Not only do I love the fact that the chubby dog worked off his weight, but that he did it to a James Brown song that wasn’t “I Got You (I Feel Good).”  Then the Star Wars coda … happened.

3. Sketchers – “GoRun Mr. Quiggly” (w/ Tone-Loc’s “Wild Thing”)
That dog has a lot of personality in his face.  I mean that in a good way.

4. Bud Light – “Rescue Dog”
I appreciate going the extra mile, but that dog looks like he’s been worked down to the bone.

5. Fiat – “Seduction”
That Penelope Cruz-lookalike would get anybody’s heart running.

My Analysis of Lana Del Rey on SNL

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Here is the be-all, end-all version (for now) of what I have to say regarding Lana Del Rey’s appearance on SNL on 1/14/12:

And for those who have no patience and/or prefer brevity, here is the short version:

SNL Recap February 4, 2011: Channing Tatum/Bon Iver

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Cold Opening – Newt Gingrich: Moon President
It is always gratifying to see something a little unusual, particularly when it comes to political cold opens.  This was a clever idea as well, as it sprang from an actual Newt Gingrich idea.  As for the execution, the jokes were on target, but flatly delivered. B-

Channing Tatum’s Monologue
So often lately, when the hosts interact with “audience members” during the monologue, it can feel so forced.  But as Channing’s past customers, Kristen, Vanessa, Fred, and Andy all actually had something to build a performance around.  Fred’s line, “I’m not sure yet, but you should keep trying” was gold, and Andy’s Yikes-I-better-get-out-of-here reaction was also worth a quick laugh. B

It’s Getting Freaky with Cee-Lo Green
Not even Bill as Colonel Nasty could make this rendition of “It’s Getting Freaky” worthwhile, as he offered little more advice than, “Touch her in the right place.”  He didn’t even laugh enough!  Some of Cee-Lo’s aside comments – “searching for my neck” – were worth a chuckle. C

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VH1 Top 20 Countdown – 2/4/12

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Not much movement on the countdown today – I can’t say the same about myself.

Original Version
1. Jessie J – “Domino”
2. Adele – “Set Fire to the Rain”
3. Bruno Mars – “It Will Rain”
4. Kelly Clarkson – “Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)”
5. Daughtry – “Crawling Back to You”
6. Foster the People – “Don’t Stop (Color on the Walls)”
7. Katy Perry – “The One That Got Away”
8. The Fray – “Heartbeat”
9. Pitbull ft. Chris Brown – “International Love”
10. Rihanna ft. Calvin Harris – “We Found Love”
11. Gavin DeGraw – “Not Over You”
12. Gym Class Heroes ft. Neon Hitch – “Ass Back Home”
13. Outasight – “Tonight is the Night”
14. Gotye ft. Kimbra – “Somebody That I Used to Know”
15. Scars on 45 – “Heart on Fire”
16. David Guetta ft. Usher – “Without You”
17. Florence + the Machine – “Shake It Out”
18. The Black Keys – “Lonely Boy”
19. Mary J. Blige ft. Drake – “Mr. Wrong”
20. Young the Giant – “Cough Syrup”

Jmunney’s Revision
1. Somebody That I Used to Know
2. We Found Love
3. Shake It Out
4. Lonely Boy
5. Tonight is the Night
6. The One That Got Away
7. Cough Syrup
8. Don’t Stop (Color on the Walls)
9. Without You
10. Domino
11. Set Fire to the Rain
12. It Will Rain
13. Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)
14. Ass Back Home
15. Heart on Fire
16. International Love
17. Heartbeat
18. Mr. Wrong
19. Not Over You
20. Crawling Back to You

Best of Music 2011: The Best Albums of the Year

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2011 was the year of the rookie. Three of my top selections and two of my honorable mentions were debut albums. It was also one of the best years for new music in recent memory, and I must confess, dear readers, that I was not quite able to listen to every great album in its entirety. But among those I did hear from beginning to end, these were the best.

1. My Morning Jacket – Circuital

When I first heard of My Morning Jacket, before I ever really listened to them, I thought they were a folk band. Then I saw the American Dad! episode “My Morning Straitjacket” and realized that they were in fact a psychedelic band. And when I saw them perform “I’m Amazed” on SNL in 2008, it was quite clear that they were a jam band. As Circuital makes abundantly clear, they are all these things, and so much more. Along with all the elements already mentioned, this album features R&B-quality horns, Satanic black metal (sort of), a song tailor-made for weddings, and some face-melting solos. If it were the seventies, MMJ would be the biggest rock band in the world.
Key Tracks: “Victory Dance,” “Holdin’ on to Black Metal,” “Circuital,” “First Light”

2. The Naked and Famous – Passive Me, Aggressive You

The classic album that Passive Me, Aggressive You most resembles is Dark Side of the Moon: a handful of tracks with single potential mixed with a bunch of atmospheric, mood-setting pieces. Like most great mood-setting pieces, it all adds up to one massive dreamscape. Alisa Xayalith and Thom Powers’ vocals crisscross over each other, creating a sort of whispering that flows throughout much of the album and thereafter does the same in your head. This is the sort of lightness of being that romantics want existence to be like, and it is like that when listening to The Naked and Famous – quite possibly the best (non-comedic) band to ever come out of New Zealand.
Key Tracks: “Young Blood,” “A Wolf in Geek’s Clothing,” “Punching in a Dream”

3. Foster the People – Torches

Foster the People embody what people mean when they use the descriptor “alternative” in the most positive connotation possible. Their sound is unusual when compared to most hits in today’s pop world, but it is also patently catchy – the most important criterion for being played right alongside those Top 40 hits. Thanks to that catchiness and their sunny SoCal attitudes, Mark Foster and company have managed to sneak themes of gun violence, young adult malaise, and social conformity into mainstream radio, dancing the whole time. If it were the nineties, this would have been the biggest album of the year.
Key Tracks: “Pumped Up Kicks,” “Helena Beat,” “Call It What You Want”

4. The Joy Formidable – The Big Roar

The Joy Formidable’s The Big Roar is not the biggest roar that rock music has ever roared (though standout single “Whirring” may just be the biggest roar of 2011), but would we really want fifty minutes of that? But it is “big,” not “biggest” in the title, implying that this is the big mode for The Joy Formidable specifically, and on that count, it certainly delivers. On every track, Ritzy Bryan roars with her vocals and guitar, Rhydian Davies roars with his bass, and Matt Thomas roars with his drums, but they never go unbearably over-the-top. It is rhythmic and melodic – hell, there is even an oxymoronic heads-down shoegazing sensibility in there for good measure.
Key Tracks: “Whirring,” “Austere,” “A Heavy Abacus”

5. Florence + the Machine – Ceremonials

This big voice that is residing in the throat of Florence Welch has decided that everything about Florence must be just as big. Those high and clean, perfectly pitched blasts of raw vocal power that we came to love Flo for are still here, and they are in great supply. Her titles – “What the Water Gave Me,” “Seven Devils,” “Heartlines,” and even something so big as “All This and Heaven Too” – consist of natural and supernatural elements that suggest all that life is made of. Even lines like “What the hell” are pitched at full blast. As Ceremonials approaches an hour, it becomes a bit overwhelming, but I can excuse lengthiness as long as the ambition is plenty evident.
Key Tracks: “Shake It Out,” “Spectrum,” “Heartlines”

6. The Black Keys – El Camino

At first glance, it may seem appropriate to call El Camino a minor effort from the Black Keys, as it arrives hot on the heels of their mainstream breakthrough Brothers, and it is nearly twenty minutes shorter than Brothers. But such a claim would demonstrate a severe misunderstanding of the Black Keys. Brothers is unique in their discography; most of their full-length albums, like El Camino, are around forty minutes, which tends to happen when most of their songs are three-minute, bare-bones blues-rock scorchers. This is just the Keys running in their wheelhouse; some carefully placed distortion is the only ornamentation they allow themselves. (I do feel like I should point out the irony that I am praising the brevity of this album, when one spot above is an album that I slightly criticize for its length, and I thought that Brothers was better than El Camino.)
Key Tracks: “Lonely Boy,” “Hell of a Season,” “Little Black Submarines”

7. Adele – 21

When Adele first broke out with “Chasing Pavements,” I thought, “Well she’s got an incredible voice, but the musical arrangement is only about half as good.” In the three years between 19 and 21, the music caught up. 21 is carried along by the incredible, undeniable strength of two of the biggest hits of 2011 (“Rolling,” “Someone”) and buoyed by a couple of other notable singles (“Rumour Has It,” “Set Fire to the Rain”). Most of the rest of the album does not quite reach those heights, but they still feature Adele’s voice, and with the standout tracks as amazing as they are, the rest only had to be passable for 21 to be a success.
Key Tracks: “Rolling in the Deep,” “Someone Like You,” “Rumour Has It”

8. Rihanna – Talk That Talk

Talk That Talk may or may not be Rihanna’s best, but it is definitely da one that is most devoid of filler, or at least a certain kind of filler: the ballad. While some of her ballads have been basically successful (“Take a Bow,” “California King Bed”), they cannot touch the superb production of her more upbeat and more danceable best (“Umbrella,” “Disturbia,” “Rude Boy,” “Only Girl (in the World)”). Even when she went dark (Rated R) and then loud (um, Loud), she still made room for the ballads. With Talk That Talk, she finally realizes the sort of “talk” that she is best at: the simple cooing and mildly taunting demands repeated over and over, without growing tiresome, as only she can.
Key Tracks: “We Found Love” (featuring Calvin Harris), “You Da One,” “Cockiness (Love It)”

9. Feist – Metals

Feist’s Metals can serve as the perfect soundtrack for a series of commercials featuring young people traveling the world. There is an outdoors, exploratory sort of vibe, with a good deal of indie cred, and, besides, “Home” by Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros has already been used to soundtrack enough. For the most part, the instruments are very contained and controlled, mostly serving to propel the momentum of the album forward, encouraging the listener to do the same. Occasionally, the music breaks through, as in the guitar breakdowns in “The Bad in Each Other” or the percussion accompanied by the background vocals in “A Commotion” – and these moments are more satisfying for their infrequency. Feist does not overwhelm the music with her quirky voice, but finds a kindred spirit in those subdued arrangements, all culminating in a subtly attention-demanding collection.
Key Tracks: “The Bad in Each Other,” “The Circle Married the Line,” “A Commotion”

Honorable Mentions:
The honorable mentions were great but not as brilliant as those that made the top 9; some had a few excellent standout tracks but weren’t as great from top to bottom.
Mayer Hawthorne – How Do You Do, Raphael Saadiq – Stone Rollin’, Drake – Take Care, Childish Gambino – Camp, Foo Fighters – Wasting Light

I Haven’t Heard These Albums in Their Entirety, But I’ve Heard That They Are Quite Good:
Bon Iver – Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues, Lykke Li – Wounded Rhymes, Mastodon – The Hunter, Frank Ocean – Nostalgia, Ultra, Radiohead – The King of Limbs, St. Vincent – Strange Mercy, TV on the Radio – Nine Types of Light, Tom Waits – Bad as Me, Wilco – The Whole Love, Wild Flag – Wild Flag, Yuck – Yuck

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