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100 best: tracks of 2009

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  • These are our 100 favourite tracks of the past 12 months.
  • published
    14 Dec 2009
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80: ROJ
‘INHALE. EXHALE. LOVE!’
(from THE TRANSACTIONAL DHARMA OF ROJ, GHOST BOX)

Essential listening for worshippers of early electronics gurus and radiophonic romantics like John Baker and Bernard Parmegiani, the debut album by ex-Broadcast member and tireless sonic tinkerer Roj Stevens was hard work for the less dedicated. That work paid off though, and sitting through its nuttier passages only made us appreciate magical, open-hearted miniatures like ‘Inhale. Exhale. Love!’ more.


79: 40 THIEVES
‘DON’T TURN IT OFF’ (BRENNAN GREEN REMIX)
(CHINATOWN)

In a year when the wide range of music made under the “nu-disco” banner bored us near to death, we made an exception for Brennan Green’s mix of ‘Don’t Turn It Off’. Originally released last year on Permanent Vacation, 40 Thieves’ melody is naggingly familiar (nicked?) and inarguably wonderful; Green rinses the most out of it with the addition of some sweet acid licks, snap-claps and disco-owl noises. If you need a reason to wish you were hanging out in New York with a nose full of good coke, this should do it.


78: MS DYNAMITE
‘BAD GYAL’
(FREE DOWNLOAD)

In a perfect world, ‘Bad Gyal’ – the first track former chart star Ms Dynamite and UK garage producer Sticky have made together in years – would have been properly released, made number one and marked the year’s most triumphant return. In the real world, it was given away as a free download from Dynamite’s website. Whether that’s due to the rumoured break-in at Sticky’s studio or not we don’t know, but the fact that this string-filled epic wasn’t bigger is a minor tragedy.


77: HUDSON MOHAWKE
‘OVERNIGHT’
(from POLYFOLK DANCE, WARP)

Incredible space age hip-hop from one of the genre’s current innovators; so grandiose in its guitar intro, operatic vocal snippets and hummingbird synths it’s almost obnoxious.


76: jj
‘FROM AFRICA TO MALAGA’
(SINCERELY YOURS)

One of 2009′s best newcomers took the form of jj: a pair of mysterious Swedes who released several singles and a self-titled album – on Sincerely Yours, the label run by the Tough Alliance. ‘From Africa to Malaga’, the duo’s second single, saw them leave the candlelit chambers of the previous ‘My Life, My Swag’ and step outside for a steel drum-heavy summer song about death.


75: NARCOSSIST
‘SUNBLIND’
(MINDSET)

Bristol’s Narcossist may have received wider recognition with his productions as Kowton – particularly ‘Stasis (G Mix)’ on Dusk and Blackdown’s Keysound label – but this debut 12″ [released in late December '08, so considered eligible] is still his best work to date: a shuffling, techno-influenced cut that also featured the best donk breakdown of the year. Seriously.


74: STRANGE BOYS
‘NO WAY FOR A SLAVE TO BEHAVE’
(from STRANGE BOYS & GIRLS CLUB, IN THE RED)

Backwater garage rock jams were the order of the day on The Strange Boys’ debut album, and although it largely fell under the radar, one listen to anti-war jam ‘No Way for a Slave…’ combined with the news that the Texas quartet have signed to Rough Trade should be evidence enough that next year could be theirs.


73: JOKER & GINZ
‘PURPLE CITY’
(KAPSIZE)

OK, so Bristol’s dubstep wunderkind might have ended the year with all those remix commissions forcing him to spread his creativity thin – not that we blame him; it’s good money and he’s presumably saving the good stuff for his album – but ‘Purple City’, released in the second half of this year, was where Joker’s two favourite things – massive drops of square wave bass and syrup-thick synthlines – rocked out for their biggest party of the year.


72: N/A
‘VARIANCE IV’ (REGIS EDIT)
(SANDWELL DISTRICT)

What the output of Sandwell District lacks in genuine innovation is compensated for by the master craftmanship that goes into its production. Helmed by UK techno stalwart Regis and New York’s Function, the Berlin-moored label distils the stern, minimalist bleeps of Sakho and Sleeparchive, the dub orientation of Chain Reaction, the warehouse flex of Ostgut Ton and the rough industrial aesthetic of Regis’s own Downwards imprint into razor-sharp, fat-free and gleaming dancefloor weapons; its deadliest 2009 issue was Regis’s swung, suavely malevolent edit of N/A’s ‘Variance IV’.


71: KARIZMA
‘NECCESSARRY MADDNESS’
(R2)

Along with Anthony ‘Shake’ Shakir, Karizma was one of a select number of veteran US producers who were adopted by a new generation of UK house DJs in 2009. Of course the Baltimore native has always just got on and done his thing: making broken, bolshy dancefloor cuts with twisted tribal drums and jabbing synthetic basslines. Nonetheless, ‘Neccessarry Maddness’ finds him at the very height of his powers.

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