Monday 31 December 2007
Canada: 2007
Happy New Year, everyone, and thanks for making 2007 a blast. QBiM rounds out the year that was with a look at our favourite music from the Great White North in 2007. Some of these artists and albums have already appeared on our other lists (albums and songs) for 2007, but here they get recognition with their fellow countrymen. True patriot love, indeed. See you in 2008!
The Acorn ~
Glory Hope Mountain (Paper Bag)
A song cycle that doesn’t suck, but sucks you into its remarkable journey. The Acorn’s delicate songs are bolstered by the strongest playing and arrangements on this list. Beautiful music.
Arcade Fire ~
Neon Bible
(Merge)
It really is a great album, isn’t it? I mean, you can backlash and bully it all you like, but you can’t take away it’s passion and power. “No Cars Go” and “Keep The Car Running” remain breathtaking.
Attack In Black ~
Marriage
(Dine Alone)
Marriage is the partnering of
emo-core’s bombastic assault and
indie’s pop sensibilities; it is the start of what should be a long and gorgeous career for a distinctly Canadian act.
Basia Bulat ~
Oh My Darling
(Hardwood/Rough Trade)
Funky folk, finger-plucking and hand claps galore. You’d be hard pressed to find a more unique sounding record this year.
The Details ~
Draw a Distance. Draw a Border.
(Parliament of Trees)
Like The
Weakerthans, The Details deal in smart, snappy power pop that rocks your speakers and moves your sneakers. The difference, though is in the details so to speak:
Draw A Distance… is peppered with delicate beauty and country-tinged balladry.
Feist ~
The Reminder (Arts & Crafts)
It will outlast the
iPods it’s currently hocking as a classic singer-songwriter album. Here’s hoping the next album distances itself from its predecessor and take
Feist in a new direction and not repeat success.
Vivek Shraya ~
If We’re Not Talking (self-released)
More eclectic, electronic-minded pop styling from a bedroom recording maverick. If there were any justice in the world,
Shraya would have himself a recording and distribution deal by the end of the year. His cover of the White Stripes “Seven Nation Army” is awesome.
Stars ~
In Our Bedroom After the War
(Arts & Crafts)
More direct that Set Yourself On Fire,
IOBATW saw Stars stretch their sound to extremes, be it the stirring balladry of “Barricade” or the straight-ahead rock of “Take Me To The Riot”.
Rufus Wainwright ~
Release the Stars
(
Dreamworks)
It may be the only album on the list with major label backing, but
Release The Stars is very much an indie album in the sense that it sets out on it’s own trajectory and carves out a comet tail of stardust across the
musical sky that seems to run in the opposite direction of everything else. The title track is a heartbreaking beauty.
by J. Di Gioia | Comments Off
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