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Celeb News: NY Mag's Top 10 Albums of 2012
Member Since: 11/11/2010
Posts: 28,420
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NY Mag's Top 10 Albums of 2012

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1. Kendrick Lamar, Good Kid, m.A.A.d City (Top Dawg/Aftermath/Interscope)
Kendrick Lamar’s a questing, serious-minded kind of rapper, and on last year’s Section.80, he spent one track moralizing on a theme serious-minded rappers often address: “Keisha’s Song (Her Pain)” uses the story of a girl who turns to prostitution as an opportunity to shake his head at the evils lurking on the streets of his native Compton. There was something pat and condescending about it, especially compared with the riches elsewhere on the album. But if you listen to Lamar’s rapturously received major-label debut, Good Kid, m.A.A.d City, you will eventually run into something eye-opening—toward the end, you will hear him take up the voice of Keisha’s sister, laying into the rapper for writing a song about anyone else’s pain and glibly justifying why she’s following the same path.
The song is a twelve-minute centerpiece called “Sing About Me, I’m Dying of Thirst”; it also takes up the voice of a murdered gangbanger. The point isn’t just to paint bleak pictures. Somewhere along the song’s length, you realize that Lamar’s real fear is of spiritual emptiness, of “dying of thirst”—the dead-eyed, fatalistic tunnel vision that leads people around him into oblivion.
Good Kid, m.A.A.d City is subtitled A Short Film, and it presents Lamar’s origin story in a form as tautly organized as a good screenplay. It neatly hits its marks for action and humor, sentiment and entertainment; it’s scored with warm, mournful beats that sound like they’ve meditated their way to some calmer vantage point above the action. But what’s most striking is the depth Lamar brings to the story itself—a vision of his younger self always in danger of succumbing to that spiritual emptiness, and looking for things (religion, family, rap) rich and substantive enough to fill the hole.
2. Chairlift, Something (Columbia)
Chairlift could easily content themselves with being just another set of stylish Brooklyn New Wavers; it’s likely how they’ll be regarded anyway. But their second album is a real overachiever, full of meticulous, ambitious, and truly valiantly nerdy takes on the kinds of music that might have been flounced around to by late-eighties drama-club kids. They’re not afraid to send singer Caroline Polachek chasing hard after the ideas and emotions, and she makes some surprisingly risky catches.
3. Miguel, Kaleidoscope Dream (RCA)
Miguel spent 2012 dabbling with the sounds of R&B’s past and possible future, shading them together into gems like “Adorn”—a track that smolders as classically as “Sexual Healing,” even while oversize blots of sci-fi bass crawl around its underside. If the title Kaleidoscope Dream doesn’t tell you where he wound up, his interpolation of the Zombies’ “Time of the Season” on the second track will: This is R&B with a very psychedelic spin.
4. Death Grips, The Money Store (Epic)
In a year with no shortage of abrasive noise blasts, The Money Store was one of the most thrilling—a wild-armed drummer, a bug-eyed, hectoring shouter-rapper, and a delirious synth-abuser making music that feels shattered, scraped, stripped, and dedicated to its own sustained intensity. The surprise is how fun it gets.
5. Jessie Ware, Devotion (Island/PMR)
If you could monetize having your album compared to Sade, Ware would finish 2012 rich. The comparison’s not unreasonable: This English singer has the same smoky reserve and sophisticated languor. But tucked inside are fascinating threads of the hypermodern club music she got her start singing guest vocals for.
6. Mount Eerie, Clear Moon and Ocean Roar (P.W. Elverum & Sun, Ltd.)
Phil Elverum has spent a decade and a half making music that was singularly woodsy and exposed, all wide eyes, whispers, and shivery gooseflesh. But the two albums he released this year—the womblike Clear Moon and the immersive gales of sound on Ocean Roar—feel new and different, almost mystically so: Inspired by the meditative drones and dins of minimalist composers and black-metal records, he’s split the difference between contemplative songwriting and full-on mindfulness exercises.
7. Killer Mike, R.A.P. Music (Williams Street)
R.A.P. Music is one of the year’s most emphatic, committed, and pointed releases, right down to its title: Atlanta veteran Killer Mike encapsulates decades’ worth of fiery, stentorian hip-hop, rapping about the Reagan administration (and conjuring flashbacks to nineties firebrands) as effortlessly as he inhabits the sounds of the present day.
8. Evans the Death, Evans the Death (Slumberland)
It’s a modest row to hoe, this droll British guitar-pop about youthful ennui. But Evans the Death hoe it with lovable panache—much of it from singer Katherine Whitaker, whose ear for phrasing and wryly evocative lyrics are squarely in Morrissey’s tradition.
9. Elle Varner, Perfectly Imperfect (RCA)
The music world lined up this year to heap praises on R&B’s new crop of left-field songwriters and independent-minded auteurs—including Frank Ocean’s Channel Orange. But the straightforward pleasures on Varner’s colorful debut are just as rich: bright-eyed smiles, kitchen-table warmth, and arrangements that blast confetti every which way.
10. Cloud Nothings, Attack on Memory (Carpark)
Cloud Nothings are very much in touch with the power of negative thinking—Attack on Memory knows its way around feelings of frustration, failure, petty resentment, and general uselessness. It also knows its way around the kind of teeth-gritting indie rock that excels at exorcising those feelings, and turning them into something happily, catchily cathartic.
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Member Since: 6/1/2010
Posts: 65,177
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Member Since: 11/11/2010
Posts: 28,420
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It's nice to see so many "unknown" albums and artists receiving recognition.
Chairlift being #2. Wow. They deserve it!
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Member Since: 8/1/2012
Posts: 4,224
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Nice list! I listened to six of those albums and thought they were good. I wouldn't put most in my top 10 as they're not my style, but I can see why they made it 
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Member Since: 2/23/2012
Posts: 7,699
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 I like this list
 #3 and #5
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Member Since: 12/25/2011
Posts: 9,073
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I haven't heard any of these albums 
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Member Since: 11/4/2010
Posts: 34,287
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not channel orange being left off this list altogether 
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Member Since: 6/8/2008
Posts: 24,791
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Quote:
Originally posted by callum
not channel orange being left off this list altogether 
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One list doesn't matter, he just made TIME's list, so it's all GOOD.
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Member Since: 11/11/2010
Posts: 28,420
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I don't understand why Miguel is on here, though. 
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Member Since: 1/4/2009
Posts: 11,404
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I guess i'll be the first one to say this.. where's Born to die?
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Member Since: 9/4/2011
Posts: 22,946
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Jessie, Elle, and Kendrick.
Great list.
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Member Since: 7/22/2010
Posts: 16,134
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This list is a bunch of hipster silliness.
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Member Since: 9/21/2010
Posts: 29,122
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Miguel 
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Member Since: 11/11/2010
Posts: 28,420
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Quote:
Originally posted by KRL
I guess i'll be the first one to say this.. where's Born to die?
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Unfortunately, it's not going to make many year end lists. Critics are still afraid to love her, for whatever reason. I guess that they feel it would be too predictable to put her in the top 3 (where she deserves to be).
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Member Since: 10/28/2009
Posts: 26,465
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Chairlift >>> 
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