This was the first A Grave With No Name track I ever recorded.
It was inspired by the amazing music of Khonnor, who made an album called 'Handwriting' 5 years ago, when he was 17 years old.
Some interesting things I’ve heard about Cold Cave this year:
1) Main dude Wesley Eisold not only used to be in Some Girls, and Give Up the Ghost, but more interestingly only has one hand.
2) He also has four houses and is a multi-millionaire as a result of suing Pete Wentz.
3) A friend of mine saw them live and described them as, “a bunch of goths in cagoules”.
I don’t care what percentage of these facts are true, because they all heightened my enjoyment of ‘Love Comes Close’ considerably this year.
08. 'Deeper Than Rap' - Rick Ross
As far as I can make out, this is a concept album about being rich and being very pleased about it.
07. 'Childish Prodigy' - Kurt Vile
Whilst focus seemed to fall on the high-volume of Kurt Vile’s output, more interesting was the quality and subtle radicalism of his music. ‘Childish Prodigy’, although bearing all the hallmarks of being tossed-off in a couple of days where he wasn’t drinking Buds and smoking packs of Lucky Strikes on his front-porch, is a total home-run, shaving the worthiness and conservatism from Classic American Rock and revealing the howling hurt beneath the demin.
06. 'Monoliths & Dimensions' - Sunn 0)))
Sunn 0))) could go on making the same record for the rest of eternity, and everyone would quite rightly shower them in adulation, whilst excitedly talking about their “intense” live shows. I’d never accuse them of coasting, but ‘Monoliths & Dimensions’, is an unexpected, mammoth step into new realms for Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson. This is a truly, (as the title suggests) monumental, record, adorned with choirs, strings, woodwind and organs, which perhaps for the first time in this band’s career, allow a crack of light to enter into their impenatrable black space.
05. 'Merriweather Post Pavillion' - Animal Collective
It’s likely that you have overplayed this record and are just as sick of hearing about it as I am, but nonetheless…
04. 'Only Built 4 Cuban Linx Pt.II' - Raekwon
Seeing as he’s no stranger to stealing from American-Italian culture, I don’t feel too bad lazily comparing Raekwon to Rocky. After being universally recognized as the heavyweight champion, with the release of his classic ‘Only Built 4 Cuban Linx’ in 1995, Raekwon took his eye off the prize, became fat(ter), complacent, and after a couple of very mediocre LPs, nearly coasted his way back into obscurity over the following decade and a half. Long mythologized for years, ‘Only Built 4 Cuban Linx Pt.II’ emerged in 2009 as a towering creative success; more than worthy of the ‘Cuban Linx’ tag and packed with the type of hard-boiled crime sagas and expansive, dusty, emotive soul beats that made every single one of those first wave of Wu solo albums so essential back in the early 90’s. I couldn’t really be bothered following that Rocky metaphor through there, but you probably know what I’m talking about if you’ve ever wasted 90 minutes of your life watching ‘Rocky Balboa’ hungover like I have.