Grex Music3 Conference

Item 170: Favorite Albums and Songs of 2003

Entered by krj on Thu Jan 15 06:52:38 2004:

OK, music fans!  It's time to get those "Best of 2003" lists turned in!

By my rules, it's a 2003 album if you bought or downloaded it in 2003, 
but feel free to apply your own rules.

Please try to say something about each entry so this doesn't become
just a dry list of titles.  Music tastes are so fragmented these days
that few readers are likely to know much about any one person's 
favorites.
 
Previous years' lists can be found in the Music and Music2 conferences.
 
     (((   Linked between Agora and Music conferences.   )))
14 responses total.

#1 of 14 by krj on Thu Jan 15 06:59:23 2004:

Martyn Bennett, GRIT
     Samples of old recordings of Scottish traditional song, and old
     texts, given a sparkling dance pop setting incorporating some 
     folk instrumentation.  Yes, in spots that means Techno Bagpipes.
     Bennett's fourth top-quality CD in a row; he's doing the most 
     consistent work of anyone I follow.

FOURTOLD
     Cindy Mangsen, Steve Gillette, Anne Hills, Michael Smith;
     an album full of story songs and old-fashioned harmony singing.
     Anyone who loved 1960s folksinging needs this CD.  Their 
     live workshop performance at the Philadelphia Folk Festival
     was my best show of the year.

Richard Thompson, THE OLD KIT BAG
Richard Thompson, 1000 YEARS OF POPULAR MUSIC
     Like other midcareer artists, RT has blossomed since leaving
     the major label.  THE OLD KIT BAG was the first studio album 
     in a decade which I truly enjoyed and played repeatedly.
     1000 YEARS is a live musicology lesson ranging through 
     medieval song, folk song, Gilbert & Sullivan, music hall, 
     blues and rock.

Thea Gilmore, SONGS FROM THE GUTTER
     British singer-songwriter who I like best in her rock stylings.
     She's channelling The Pretenders, down to recruiting the old 
     Pretenders guitarist.

L'Ham de Foc, CANCO DI DONA I HOME
     Male/Female duo from Spain doing original songs in a folk
     idiom with an early music influence.

Dikanda, JAKHANA JAKHANA
     Second album from the most obscure great band I know.
     Polish folk group with a fabulous rhythmic sense does music 
     from all across Eastern Europe.

John Spiers & Jon Boden, BELLOW
     Accordion, fiddle and singing; English traditional song 
     delivered with energy and style.  Somewhere Peter Bellamy 
     is smiling.

Luigi Cinque & Tarantula Hypertext Orchestra, TANGERINE CAFE
     Moody late night jazz-roots stream-of-consciousness from 
     Italy.

--- Songs & Streams ---

Ketil Bjornstadt, GRACE
     Poetry of John Donne in a jazz setting.  The official CD release
     was overblown; the BBC-streamed concert from the London Jazz 
     Festival stripped the arrangement to one singer, piano bass and drums,
     and made it a classic beauty.

FRoots Radio, March 2003
     This show appears monthly, and for some reason the March show 
     is the one which really caught my fancy this year.   
     Alas, I'm not sure this one is still online.

Nuova Agricola Associazione, "Vacri"
     Italian folk band with contemporary influences.  This song was
     discovered on that March radio show, and I went to a lot of bother 
     to order the EP direct from the band.  Only this one song is 
     worthwhile, alas, but it *has* stuck in my head for ten months,
     down to the details of the final drum riff.

Coldplay, "Moses"
The White Stripes, "The Hardest Button To Button"
     I stopped paying attention to current rock music about five 
     years ago and these are the first rock songs to catch my ear
     since then.  Suddenly I developed a craving for electric guitars
     and started listening to BBC Radio 6; it will be interesting to 
     see where this leads in 2004.


#2 of 14 by md on Thu Jan 15 12:12:12 2004:

Mine are all new Naxos releases.  Sheila Silver's Piano Concerto and 
Six Preludes; Arnold Bax's 6th symphony, c/w "Into the Twilight" 
and "Summer Music"; Samuel Barber's Vanessa (first new recording since 
the original in the 1950s).  Sheila Silver is highly recommended.  I'd 
never heard of her before the Naxos CD came out but now I'm a fan.


#3 of 14 by ryan on Thu Jan 15 13:48:08 2004:

This response has been erased.



#4 of 14 by scott on Thu Jan 15 14:18:35 2004:

I've been exposed to music I liked, but I couldn't say for sure it came out
in 2003.

Howe Gelb
The latest Nick Strange Group CD (did come out in 2003)

and, um... I'll have think about it.


#5 of 14 by gull on Thu Jan 15 15:10:07 2004:

This was actually released in 2002, but I bought it this year:
"In Violet Light" by The Tragically Hip.  I think it's my favorite album
of theirs that I own.  (They have ten albums, and I only own four so
far.)  If you're not already a Hip fan, though, it may take a while to
grow on you; it'd be a bit like comining in in the middle.  It might be
better to start with "Phantom Power", which is also an excellent album.


#6 of 14 by happyboy on Thu Jan 15 23:40:56 2004:

ry cooder and manuel galban: mambo sinuendo


#7 of 14 by willcome on Thu Jan 15 23:47:40 2004:

HEY< I"VE GOt that eonee~!


#8 of 14 by krj on Mon Jan 19 19:53:08 2004:

Ryan in resp:3 :: so what did you like this year that came out before
2003?  It's like the NBC ads promoting old reruns:  "If you haven't heard
it before, it's new to you!!"


#9 of 14 by ryan on Mon Jan 19 20:17:35 2004:

This response has been erased.



#10 of 14 by jor on Sat Jan 24 20:05:00 2004:

        About a year ago, during the war buildup,
        WDET kept playing this strange kind of
        groove piece that I thought might have been Bjork.

        IIRC, it turned out to be Sinead O'Connor singing
        with 'Widespread Panic'.

        Well I must not recall correctly, because now
        I can find no trace of it:

        "Don't be afraid . . 
        Let your, heart, sing"

        Something like that. I need help.



#11 of 14 by mcnally on Sun Jan 25 01:27:36 2004:

  Probably that's "What Your Soul Sings", a track she did with Massive Attack
  on the last Massive Attack album, "100th Window".

  I very highly recommend Massive Attack's classic trip-hop albums "Protection"
  and "Mezzanine".  I personally found "100th Window" very disappointing.


#12 of 14 by bhoward on Sun Jan 25 04:05:17 2004:

Mezzanine is my favorite by them.  Love playing it when driving through 
Tokyo at night for some reason.


#13 of 14 by mcnally on Sun Jan 25 08:50:47 2004:

  "Mezzanine" is good but I prefer "Protection" and also "No Protection",
  a dub-remix album of the tracks on "Protection" done by British dub
  artist Mad Professor.  But if he liked "What Your Soul Sings" he really
  can't go wrong with either album..  "Blue Lines", their first album, is
  also good but different enough I would think "Protection" or "Mezzanine"
  would be better starting points.


#14 of 14 by jor on Thu Feb 12 18:37:10 2004:

        Thanks. No wonder I couldn't find anything under
        "Widespread Panic". Sheesh.


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