Best of 2011: Mike Priest

tUnE-yArDs unique sound has earned her a place in end-of year top lists worldwide

So, this year (or year-end) we're trying something a little bit different. We're handing the steering wheel to a group of Makshoof Music artists to tell us what made this year for them (musically). Read below to find out more!

From Cairo to Dubai, we look at the top ten 2011 (and sometimes 2010) records, which were the soundtrack to some of Makshoof Music artists along the last 12 months.

Mike Priest - Dubai

Our final top 10 of the year comes from Dubai-based punk enthusiast (and bassist/vocalist of Grand Hotel Paradox) Mike Priest. Check below to find out which albums made their way into Mike's list!

1. Restorations - Restorations

Restorations - Restorations

"This is my favorite record of 2011. Had it come out last year it would have been my favorite record then too. Same with 2009 - and so on. I generally dislike writing about music that I feel strongly for - because, how do you describe an emotional reaction to something that's coming from a place where the English lexicon doesn't have a hope of accurately communicating what it is you're feeling? Restoration's debut full length falls into that category for me. Their sound is often referred to as music for "grown-up punks" and while I can definitely see where that label comes from, I don't fully agree - I genuinely believe that this album does a tremendous job of transcending traditional genres, stereotypes and sits squarely in the realm of just good music. Lead singer/guitarist Jon Loudon's vocals are gruff and unsettingly earnest at times and there is a beauty to the instrumentation that is at once cleverly complex yet doesn't ever overstay its welcome. This record comes across like a group of friends forging out a new sound from the culmination of everything they've ever listened to before and presenting it to the listener in the most honest and unpretentious manner possible."

2. Wugazi - 13 Chambers

Wugazi - 13 Chambers

"I'm not sure whether the idea to merge the hip-hop stylings of the Wu-Tang Clan and proto-emo jams of Fugazi came about in a moment of madness or pure unbridled genius- but 2011's musical landscape was all the better for it nonetheless. Painstakingly crafted over a number of years by members of the Minneapolis, MN based Doomtree Collective, the amount of care that was placed into selecting the tracks (from the some of the most popular to far rarer, unexpected tunes) for this mash-up album really shines through and works on a level that's pretty freaking mind-bending when you consider the disparate nature of the source material."

3. Bomb The Music Industry! - Vacation

Bomb The Music Industry! - Vacation

"Jeff Rosenstock and his collective of vehemently DIY drunkards have always held a special place close to my heart - there's a strange knack that BTMI! songs have of being able strike a chord that speaks directly to the person I am at the particular time and place of listening. This record is no different, in fact Vacation is the glorious culmination of everything that has come before. It's equal parts hectic, earnest, hopeful, honest, moving and so goddamn fun it'll make you uncomfortable. Easily my favorite summer record of the year and it's available for donation-based download from the band's own label."

4. Joyce Manor - Joyce Manor

Joyce Manor - Joyce Manor

"One of my favorite records from 2010 was a 4-song demo released by this Santa Barbara, CA based quartet. It showed a ridiculous amount of promise for a band that was criminally too young to be this good. Their debut full-length dropped in January and it made that demo look like the not-so-good basement recording it should have originally been. With improved production values that still managed to capture the desperate earnestness of a band that at times recalls an early Jawbreaker, right out of the gate there was never any doubt that this record wasn't going to end up on this list."

5. The Decemberists - The King is Dead

The Decemberists - The King is Dead

"After what I (and I believe many others) considered to be the unfettered, messy disaster of 2009's "rock opera" The Hazards Love, I have this pet theory that lead singer (and band mastermind) Colin Meloy sat down and said something along the lines of "You want me to write a record that's going to destroy anything else out there? Fine, I will! and just to mess with you even more I'm going to make it Country." Whether this theory is true or not is moot, this is exactly what happened and now this album is nominated for a Grammy. Oh fickle critics of music industry, don't you ever dare cross The Decemberists again."

6. tUnE-yArDs - WHOKILL

tUnE-yArDs - WHOKILL

"Mixing vocal loops, saxophone and African rhythms - this record is such a good time. It's groovy as all get up and the composition process these songs must have gone through blows my mind a little and piques the interest of my inner recording nerd. Normally this sort stuff is a little out of my comfort zone but it's almost impossible to not want to get up and dance like you're having a mild seizure when you put this album on."

7. House Boat - The Thorns of Life

House Boat - The Thorns of Life

"The torch of snotty, down trodden & love lorn pop/punk that was carried by bands like Screeching Weasel and The Queers in the 90s has been squarely passed on to House Boat. Tongue-in-cheek to a tee, yet still honest and self-deprecating enough to make you stop and think about why you're pushing thirty and passed out drunk in a gutter at 6am with a half written txt msg to some girl that broke your heart. This would be hands-down my favorite record of the year if 2011 didn't have so many other strong contenders. It does however win the prize for for best album cover/title, that stuff is genius."

8. Astronautalis - This Our Science

Astronautalis - This Our Science

"I was very late to the party on Astronautalis having only discovered his sublime back catalogue a few short months before this record dropped. His unique brand of lo-fi indie hip-hop (think Eminem if he came up listening to Modest Mouse & Tom Waits instead of wanting to murder his wife) gets a decidedly more polished sound on his latest output but still manages to retain the honesty and thoughtfulness that sets him above so many watered down, bling-sporting modern day MCs."

9. Laura Stevenson & The Cans - Sit Resist

Laura Stevenson and the Cans - Sit Resist

"Bomb The Music Industry! alumni Laura Stevenson has put out one of the finest records of the year. There's no two ways about it, whether you're into indie, country, folk, punk, whatever, you will enjoy this record on some level, it's almost like it's genetically ingrained in our DNA. Her voice is completely out of this world and the songwriting varies from intimate guitar-lead pieces to all out all out marching band-style bombasticness."

10. The Mountain Goats - All Eternals Deck

The Mountain Goats - All Eternals Deck

"Anyone who's interacted with me for more than about 15 seconds knows that I believe The Mountain Goats can do no wrong. In my mind, John Darnielle is one of the great storytellers of our generation and i'm stoked to see him backed up with a full band and rocking a little harder after the sombre (albeit still beautiful) tone of his previous output. The world would be remiss to ever pass on a record by this band."

Laura Stevenson & The Cans - Master of Art

 


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