Ten Music Resolutions For 2012

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PR Firms
Quit sending e-mails letting other blogs know that a track is premiering on another site.  This does nothing for those other blogs.  You're basically saying "go steal this track from the site we just gave the premier to and rehost".  A bunch of blogs don't rehost or steal tracks so this e-mail is worthless to us.  Just send us an e-mail when we can post legally and cleared.  We don't send your PR firm an e-mail letting you know I just posted about an artist you don't represent because why the hell would you care.  Don't do the same to us. 


Independent Labels
Get creative.  It's tough out there for independent labels, but it's also the best time ever for trying something new, something bold, something that makes your label standout in a crowded sea of music releases.  The old model isn't gone, it's been blown up, so keep adjusting and don't be afraid to think outside the box.


Music Fans
Make 2012 the year you quit illegally downloading music.  I made this pledge a few months ago and haven't missed it once.  With Spotify, streaming sites like Bandcamp or Soundcloud, and early album listens on NPR and other sites, the excuse of illegally downloading to determine if you want to buy an album is no longer valid.  Illegal downloading has become a habit that only has the purpose of getting art a few weeks before it becomes available everywhere legally.  People started downloading because the industry worked on a buy it if you want to listen, but now we're basically stealing ice cream samples at a store that gives it away for free.


Record Store Owners
Keep going.  You're better then all of us and vinyl fans are grateful for your dedication.  Most are struggling and the ones making money aren't going gangbusters.  Remember everyday that you're directly shaping music fans and are one of the last vestiges of physical music consumption.  Your resolution is to be proud of what you're doing and keep doing it for as long as you can.


Concert Goers
Camera phone etiquette.  I know that you want to get a shot of a band and then post it to instagram, twitter, facebook, etc so that everyone knows that you exist and do cool things, but how many photos do you need to take?  The resolution for concert goers is take one photo per set and put your phone away.  During the break in between bands, then send it to all your social media networks.  Remember why you're at the show and if you're there to take photos with your phone, remember that you are disrupting the experience for others.


Music Festivals
The last few years this ugly trend has spread across the major music festivals: THEY'RE ALL THE SAME!  Same headliners, same medium acts, and same up and comers.  I respect the Pitchfork music festival because the lineup is a direct reflection of their tastes, this should be adopted by all the other festivals...why is your festival special or unique?  With the same lineup being repeated in various locations across America, how can any music fan feel like they're participating in something special? They can't.  Have a vision and take chances on variety.


Music Bloggers
Write this down on a post it note and put it next to your computer:  "What is the one thing your blog offers that no other site does."  Two years ago I put this note on my workspace and while Hank and I are still working to be better each year, it really focused us on trying to create new content rather then reblog the same track as everyone else.  Here is the thing, it's not an either or resolution.  If you reblog buzz tracks for hits, there is no reason you still can't have a unique section that delivers something fresh to your readers.


Blog Readers
Take the time to comment on a post.  Most of us music bloggers do this for free and one of the things we love the most is connecting with our readers.  I'm not saying be fake or always post positive comments, just add to the discussion, let us know how you feel about the content and add to it.  Most bloggers hit a point where they're not quite sure why they're doing it, a simple comment from a reader can snap them back into understanding the purpose of running a music blog.


Bands
Quit worrying about signing to a label.  You're existing in the best time where a band can find a fan base without money or label support.  Focus on dominating your local music scene, create an Internet presence, and put the quality of your art as priority number one.  If you do these things and realize that overnight success only happens for a few, everything else will fall into place.  Work hard and pr firms, booking agents, and labels will come to you when you've put in the work and become the best band you can be outside the worrying about things you can't control.


Everyone
Create something and share it.  I have tons of friends who all have creative passions but deny them because of doubt, fear, or a number of excuses.  If you have a creative dream, go for it, and realize that it might not reach the level of success you imagined, but at the very least the Internet is positioned for your art to at least be shared properly.  Be it making your first album on your laptop, starting a blog, or making something and putting it up on Etsy...just create and be passionate, doubt yourself or ask questions later.


We hope you had a great 2011 and wish you an even better 2012.


-WLFY

SPOTWLFY MIX: NYE 2011

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When making this mix my goal was to create a collection of songs that would act as a great lead up to the parties of New Year's Eve.  You will assuredly be bombarded with loud dance music and the clamoring of excited voices ready to bring in a new year filled with possibilities.  For me, the turning of a new year has always been about reflection and contemplation, so why not make a ten track mix to aid these moments.

The mix is not all about ball drops, countdowns, or celebration...every track is about time, because for me time is the core of New Year's Eve.  I hope you throw on this mix today or tomorrow before you go out. Just spend some time with the songs and yourself, thinking about the year you had, the year to come, and how fortunate we are to have the gift of reflection and this wonderful music to complement the thoughts.

And if that doesn't do your holiday right...

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...Just Spotify this.

Happy Holidays From WLFY

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Hank's Top 25 Albums of 2011

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25.
Lia Ices
Grown Unknown

25a.
Josh T. Pearson
Last of the Country Gentlemen

24.
Low
C'mon

23.
ARMS
Summer Skills

22.
Nerves Junior
As Bright as Your Night Light

21.
Shabazz Palaces


Black Up


20.
St. Vincent
Strange Mercy

19.
Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks
Mirror Traffic

18.
The Mountain Goats
All Eternals Deck

17.
Jonathan Wilson

Gentle Spirit


16.
Bill Callahan
Apocalypse

15.
Marissa Nadler
Marissa Nadler

14.
Kurt Vile
Smoke Ring for My Halo

13.
The ACBs
Stona Rosa

12.
Radical Dads

Mega Rama


11.
Gillian Welch
The Harrow and the Harvest

10.
Atlas Sound
Parallax

When Bradford Cox put out a series of demos and home recordings last year, what was impressive wasn't only the amount (some 3 discs) but the quality.  Cox, on Parallax, takes the remains of last year's impressive Deerhunter album (Atlas Sound's side project or the other way around) Halcyon Digest and crafts exquisite apathetic gems.  I wouldn't be surprised if this guy makes great sandwiches out of the ends of the bread.

09.
White Denim
D

White Denim earns its place this year with a fantastic EP as well as D, which emerges from your speakers like a 1970s gem gone all futuristic.  Tight, enveloping instrumentation coupled with down-home rock and a garage rock aftertaste, it was a great year for 70s inspired albums (see Wilson's Gentle Spirit above) -- White Denim's release is the pinnacle.

08.
Beirut


The Rip Tide



07.
Wild Flag

Wild Flag



06.
The Antlers
Burst Apart

You split up the books.  You fight over the toaster.  You get an area rug.  You put it in the new place. You hook up the speakers.  You listen to Burst Apart.

05.
Vetusta Morla
Mapas

When you buy Madrid-based Vetusta Morla's Mapas, it comes with a bunch of postcards with arcane lines, lyrics, and places for you to sign your name.  It's a genius bit of album artwork that will totally fly under the radar.  However, the meaning is implicit -- you can put yourself in these songs.  To any of my friends who regret Radiohead moving on from The Bends, the answer is Vetusta Morla.  Once you bridge the language barrier, what awaits you is some of the most melodic, crisp, emotive music out there.  Unfortunately, when it comes to the USA, we're generally far too xenophobic to listen to Spanish music much less put something like this on a list.  So, consider this a political act.  Like all great political acts, it comes from a place of personal pride and admiration.

04.
Radiohead
King of Limbs

I'm surprised this is up here, too.  When In Rainbows arrived on my best of list a few years ago, I wrote what I considered to be the greatest Radiohead review of all time:  "Ho hum, another FANTASTIC Radiohead album."  This record was anything but ho hum, and the reception proved it.  A lightning rod for fans and critics alike, King of Limbs was totally unlistenable the first time I heard it -- an arhythmic mess that sounded more like a Thom Yorke album than a Radiohead album.  Perseverance, friends, pays off.  And, yeah, if it wasn't Radiohead, I wouldn't have set it on repeat in the office and finally after the fifth or sixth spin finally heard "Codex."  Like any good key, it lead to a different world.

03.
Tom Waits

Bad as Me



02.
Other Lives
Tamer Animals

If you asked me for a winner of the year, it'd be Sufjan Stevens.  Though there was no album from the (formerly?) prolific Michigander, his fingerprints can found all over Other Lives' phenomenal Tamer Animals.  As Zach points out, this record is as close to landscape painting as music can get.  Probably, if you've read us before, you know that this blog's genesis was a way for Zach and I share music over long distances.  If I were driving one to see my co-creator, this is the record I would listen to, not only because he recommended it, but because like the great expanse of terrain, it seems to cover everything.  Grandiose and lush, each moment seems to defy characterization.  A tribute to the strength of this record is how difficult it is to write about.  A definition as description limits on an LP that feels euphoric, haunted, and ultimately limitless.

01.
Glen Campbell
Ghost on the Canvas

I'll let you in on a secret:  best of lists are meaningless.  I mean, they're great for checking off Christmas lists and making you appear smarter to your friends and family, but ultimately -- what do they do?  For the past couple years, I've taken my own spin on this top spot, placing what I considered to be my favorite record of the year here.  This year, I place what I consider to be the most important.  Don't deride us as Grammy voters yet.  Ghost on the Canvas's import isn't only in the summation of a career but in tireless personal struggle that created it.  An illness and struggle that is remarkably missing from each song.  Like those big fat books that you haven't read and those super long movies that look boring but turn out to be anything but, Campbell's work is monumental and exceptionally touching.  Memories and harmonies in every track, we revel in another's life through each song.  The past doesn't seem to be slipping away, it is painted more and more vividly, making us aware of our own precious mortality and the jubilation.

Zach's Top 25 Albums Of 2011

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25.
Caveman
Coco Beware

24.
Radical Dads
Mega Rama

23.
Wild Flag
Wild Flag


22.
Marissa Nadler
Marissa Nadler

21.
Ty Segall
Goodbye Bread

20.
tUnE-YarDs
w h o k i l l

19.
Deerhoof
Deerhoof vs Evil

18.
Unknown Mortal Orchestra
Unknown Mortal Orchestra

17.
ARMS
Summer Skills

16.
Youth Lagoon
The Year Of Hibernation

15.
Tom Waits
Bad As Me

14.
Glen Campbell
Ghost On The Canvas

13.
Bonnie 'Prince' Billy
Wolfroy Goes To Town

12.
Eleanor Friedberger
Last Summer

11.
Bill Callahan 
Apocalypse

10.
Mother Mother
Eureka

The most fun album of 2011, Mother Mother's Eureka is the closest thing we'll come to recapturing the sound of The Pixies.  Utilizing pitch perfect harmonies, huge percussion, spacey synths, and one of the best current frontmen in indie rock, Mother Mother crafted a record that reminds us that indie rock isn't all about ambient expression or trying to fit into whatever current trends marks a band as cool.  Eureka is about writing great rock songs that make you want to move without sacrificing the artfulness or unique qualities that makes Mother Mother such a special band.  

09.
Kurt Vile 
Smoke Ring For My Halo

Kurt Vile proves that singer/songwriter music still has a lot of room to be tampered with. People for decades on top of decades have sat alone in rooms with an acoustic guitar and tried to write great music.  That makes it all the more impressive that Smoke Ring For My Halo sounds unlike any record before it with its driving guitar riffs wrapped around hazy backing instrumentation and Vile's cutting vocals that start and stop on a dime.  Every word is carefully considered and positioned with such genius that even the simplest expressions from Vile can slice its own meaning in half.   

08.
The Deloreans
American Craze

2011 will be known as the reemergence of 90's rock with bands like Yuck or Pains of Being Pure At Heart and 60's pop vocal music with bands like Cults or Tennis.  Even though I loved the debut release from Cults, The Deloreans took a crack at 60's pop music nostalgia and did it better than everyone else in 2011.  Frontman, songwriter, and producer Jeremy Perry might be the smartest musician on this list with his talent, extensive knowledge of music history, and ability to mimic production moves from greats like Joe Meek.  This is a band without a team behind them, no pr, no label (independently released), so a lot of people slept on this record, or never heard it in the first place.  If you're reading this, I'm begging you to check out "American Craze" from start to finish, you might be surprised what this band accomplished in a basement and with the talent to make one of the best records of the year.

07.
Other Lives
Tamer Animals

Earthy.  That one word says everything you need to know about Other Lives.  Every vocal moment or piece of instrumentation feels like thick dirty roots sprawling from the ground, bending, shedding, and eventually creating this beautiful finished product above the surface. Tamer Animals has this natural feel that encases a raw power and emotion that can't be denied. Oh, and there is also so of the most impressive vocal moments of 2011 complimented by a band that has each member exploring the boundaries of their respected instrument.  Similar to Fleet Foxes in genre, Tamer Animals embarrasses Helplessness Blues with its creativity and organic feel.

06.
Atlas Sound
Parallax

I can't name another person that is having the kind of run Bradford Cox is currently on from 2007-2011.  I will be happy to look back on these years and point out that our generations John Lennon was Bradford Cox.  He's crafting music that transcends the listen and dispose of way that we treat music today with streaming services and a constant stream of "now you need to listen to this".  On Parallax, Cox fills his tracks with beautiful melodies that contradict that  downright evil imagery he focuses on with his lyrics.  The album doesn't have a weak moment and once again shows that Cox understands what an album is, a collection of tracks that has to work perfectly from one to another, a notion that seems simple but is being quickly forgotten by many in the current state of music that revolves around singles. 

05.
Mountain Goats
All Eternals Deck 

Calling All Eternals Deck one of my favorite Mountain Goats albums is a bold statement considering how extensive John Darnielle's discography is.  The album has this wild west narrative that is supported by expansive songwriting that compliments the notion of a large land unexplored.  Darnielle seems very comfortable in his music, allowing the songs to develop without ever pushing forward or trying to make emotional moment happen.  Rather, they just occur, and Darnielle's natural talent shines, making All Eternals Deck a huge achievement for a songwriter who could easily put his career on cruise control.  

04.
Shabazz Palaces
Black Up

I've said it a hundred times, but here is goes once more: Black Up is the best hip-hop album I've heard in years.  Shabazz Palaces is much more interested in exploring the artistic abilities of the medium of hip-hop, rather than bombastic production and lyrics focused on vanity or self-imposed titles of greatness.  I implore any young musicians considering an attempt at making hip-hop music to study Black Up and understand that the medium of hip-hop can be explored, manipulated, and improved by artistic expression just like every other genre of music or art.  Shabazz Palaces focus on making a great record and not building a persona or side story that informs the music.  That seems incredibly rare today and their mission to create an amazing record that stands alone is an impressive feat in 2011.


For the top three albums of 2011, I point you to my reviews of their records.  

03.
Radiohead
King Of The Limbs


02.
Nerves Junior
As Bright As Your Night Light


01.
The Antlers
Burst Apart

WLFY Top Ten EPs Of 2011

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click on album art for website/bandcamp/etc

10.
Mina Tindle 
Mina Tindle

09.
Marvelous Toy
Moving

08.
White Denim 
Takes Place In Your Work Space

07.
Airlines
Visions

06.
The Henry Clay People
This Is A Desert

05.
Alden Penner
Odes To The House

04.
Kurt Vile
So Outta Reach

03.
Conveyor
Sun Ray 

02.
Alabama Shakes
Alabama Shakes

01.
Beach Fossils
What A Pleasure

WLFY BEST VINYL OF 2011

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all listen buttons jump to Spotify

Rarities / Subscriptions

05.) Stephin Merritt - Obscurities

Compiling rarities from the 1994-1999 Merge Records years, this collection spans tracks from Stephin Merritt, The Magnetic Fields, The 6ths, Gothic Archies, and Buffalo Rome...basically all things Magnetic Fields, Merrit's solo work, and band side projects.  Instead of spending ridiculous amounts of cash on Ebay for these rare 7"s or out of print cassettes, you get everything your heart desires for under twenty bucks.  Even though the track order scatters the various groups/solo works, amazingly, the album works from start to finish and never feels disjointed.  

Listen / Purchase

04.) Jean-Claude Vannier - Electro Rapide

My favorite contemporary composer, Jean-Claude Vannier released a fourteen track collection of super rare tracks from his "private vault" to make "Electro Rapide".  These works exist before and during his time with creative collaborator Serge Gainsbourg and display some of Vannier's best instrumental works and the rare occasional vocal accompaniment.  The collection ranges almost every texture of sound and shows off Vannier as one of the greatest musical minds of our time.

Listen / Purchase

03.) Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin - Tape Club

A twenty-six song collection curated from ten years of SSLYBY material never released on proper albums.  What's shocking is how time has tied these songs together rather than pushing them apart and resulting in one of my favorite SSLYBY albums to date.  No longer available, Polyvinyl offered a beautiful marbled maroon 2xLP pressing that might be one of the most visually appealing pieces of wax this year.  

Listen / Purchase (ltd 500 is Out Of Print)

02.) Van Dyke Parks - 7" Series

Van Dyke Parks is a legend and is currently doing some of his best work in decades with six 7" records sent out through a subscription service.  His first 7" includes the track "Wall Street" which has become one of my top five Parks song of all time.  His music is grandiose and feels like a genius composer playing within the rules of a Broadway musical.  While the series is expensive, $75 for the six 7"s, it has been one of the better purchases I've made in 2011.

Listen / Listen / Purchase
  
01.) Matthew Friedberger - Solos

Matthew Friedberger's six solo vinyl only LP subscription (plus two bonus LP's and wooden box) is easily my favorite music related purchase of 2011 and by far the best vinyl release of the year.  Every two months a new vinyl would arrive at my door and grace my turntable with the most interesting and ambitious music of 2011.  The idea behind the project was for Friedberger to limit himself to one instrument per album including the guitar, piano, harp, percussion, organ, and strings.  I like to compare this project to the span in Alfred Hitchcock's film career where he self imposed restrictions to challenge his own art.  Be it shooting an entire film in a life boat or doing a feature in ten minute takes, Hitchcock discovered that by complicating the artistic process his final products were a breath of fresh air because of the restrictions.  The same is true for "Solos" which can be spun for hours and with each new spin there is something new to discover.  This collection has been the ultimate treat for music fans and if it was released as a single album would probably be at the top of WLFY's album of the year list.

Vinyl Only / Out Of Print (can find a few pieces in stores)

Reissues

03.) Mississippi John Hurt - The Immortal

This Record Store Day reissue of one of the best folk/blues album of all time features a far superior sound then the flimsy original vinyl pressing.  It's one of those albums I've had forever but never felt the pressing did the music justice, but now the sound on this reissued wax tops all cds, digital, or other pressings.  Limited to 1,000.

Listen / Out Of Print


02.) Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - S/T

If you didn't start collecting until recently, you may have noticed that most of your favorite indie rock albums from the mid 90's to mid 2000's are out of print and going for ridiculous amounts on eBay.  CYHSY's wildly popular self-titled release was one of these hard to find indie gems and the band corrected that by repressing the record and making the reissue pressing much better than the original.  A must own for fans of the band, fans of vinyl, or even broader, fans of indie rock.  



01.) Magnetic Fields - Holiday 

Made in 1999, it's been twelve years waiting for the second best Magnetic Fields record to finally be pressed to vinyl.  I actually wrote hand written letters to Merge and the band themselves asking for a vinyl pressing several times over those twelve years and it finally happened.  I couldn't be happier with the crystal clear synths and Merritt's low voice radiating from this well pressed piece of wax.  It will forever sit in my collection as one of my favorite vinyls.  



7"

03.) Oregon Bike Trails - High School Lover 

One of the most beautiful vinyl packages of the year.  A stunning cover complimented by a crisp snowy white vinyl pressing limited to 500.  Oh, and the track is wonderful as well.  A nice piece of wax for any collection.


02.) Radical Dads - "Recklessness"

2011 was the year of 90's lo-fi rock pop.  Even with bands like Yuck or Pains Of Being Pure At Heart gnawing on the old sounds, nobody did it better than the Radical Dads.  The vinyl art is handmade and limited to 100.  One more time....LIMITED TO 100.  This is the first piece of wax for the band which makes it an extra special piece.  Radical Dads are only going to get bigger and bigger...if you their sound as much as me, grab this wax quickly.


01.) The Deloreans - "Buffalo"

Not only the run away best 7" of 2011, this piece of wax is one of my favorites in my collection of all time.  Pressed on bright pink vinyl and cased in a painstakingly handcrafted cover (with a gold tin foil buffalo in the center), this 7" houses two of the best songs of the year.  "Buffalo" was just named our number five track of the year and the side B track, "Starfish", is an incredible track that won't be found anywhere but on this vinyl.  It's also very limited, only 150 pressed, and still not sold out.  This is not just the best 7" but wins the WLFY vinyl best in show, a must have.  




12" EP/Single 


03.) Joanna Newsom - "What We Have Known"

Joanna Newsom fans have been clamoring for this track to find its way onto vinyl after it appeared on a   CD b-side for the track "Sprout and the Bean" years ago.  Drag City heard the cries and made a beautiful 12" for the rare track.


02.) Conveyor - Sun Ray 

I loved this EP from Brooklyn's Conveyor so much that we made it our first ever Record Club pick.  Pressed on bright orange vinyl, limited to 500, and individually hand numbered, the pressing does justice to an EP that will definitely find its way onto my top ten EPs of 2011.


01.) Angel Olsen - Strange Cacti

Even though this EP was written in 2010 and released on a very limited cassette run, Angel Olsen is my breakout artist of 2011 with the Strange Cacti EP being pressed to a 12" vinyl, her hypnotizing smoky voice, and work with Bonnie 'Prince' Billy on his new album.  Her songs aren't over complicated, but Olsen has a voice that comes around once in a lifetime, every word that is whispered or shouted breathes a life into her songs that melts into the darkest parts of the listeners soul.  

Listen / Purchase (This was Out Of Print but a few copies now remain.  Hurry.)  


12" LP

03.) Shabazz Palaces - Black Up

The best hip-hop album of the year received the perfect pressing treatment from Sub-Pop records.  The outer cover is made out of a rubbery/velvet all black cover with a nice red sleeve inside.  I mean, just look at that beast above you.  I'm not sure what it is, but Sub-Pop always has the best center vinyl labels, they look amazing still or spinning on your turntable.  Pressed on thick vinyl, the record sounds amazing and is a near perfect packaging job (has to be single gatefold to get a 10/10 from me).


02.) Mountain Goats - All Eternals Deck

Dear Merge Records,
I'm broke because of you.
Love,
WLFY

This is far and away the best vinyl packaging of the year (#2 because, once again, no gatefold) and they made a game out of the pressing by scattering 120 limited blue and 880 clear limited pressings at random.  I've bought twelve of these puppies so far and I'm 12/12 black standard pressing.  My roommate bought one....clear...bastard.  I'll continue to stock pile the largest collection of these vinyls in search of the elusive blue whale pressing because this pressing is the best example of why you should buy vinyl, this album sounds 100% better on wax then on any other format I've heard.  It feels like it was made for vinyl.  Beautiful insert sleeve and a heavy wax pressing marks this as one of the best vinyls of 2011.  Merge, please send me a blue vinyl and make my 2011...or at the very least let me come down to your office and hold one for a few minutes.


01.) Glen Campbell - Ghost On A Canvas
(image by Unboxing Vinyl)


SINGLE GATEFOLD!  Not only that, the 24" gatefold inner section contains my favorite music related image of 2011.  It's Campbell standing in front of charcoal backdrop and presented in two forms bled into each other to convey his newly diagnosed alzheimer's.  It's a perfectly crafted vinyl package for one of the best albums of 2011 and will always be a gem in my collection.  



Here is a list of some of my favorite and most trusted independent vinyl labels.  Check them out and remember to support these small companies and your local record store.

Tympanogram Records
and many more...