FACTmag

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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30: WASHED OUT
‘NEW THEORY’
(from LIFE OF LEISURE, MEXICAN SUMMER)

Of all the fine “glow-fi” artists that emerged in 2009 – you know, Ducktails, Best Coast and the like – it was Washed Out who made the most immediate and accessible music. His Life of Leisure EP reminded us variously of Studio, Italians Do It Better, New Order and early Cut Copy; ‘New Theory’ was it’s stand-out track, with a melody so pure and resonant that we couldn’t believe we’d never heard it before.


29: DRAKE
‘BEST I EVER HAD’
(CASH MONEY)

With two Grammy nominations, over ten remixes and an (absurd) video directed by Kanye West; Drake surely didn’t expect ‘Best I Ever Had’ – an ode to his girlfriend Camille – to make him 2009′s hip-hop success story when it debuted in the bottom five of the Billboard 100, but that’s what happened, and he enters 2010 with the weight of the rap world on his shoulders. Let’s face it, he should’ve known he was on to something special with “when my album drop bitches will buy it for the picture “, let alone the amazing “call me the referee ’cause I be so official / My shirt ain’t got no stripes but I can make your pussy whistle”.


28: VIOLENS
‘ALREADY OVER’
(from VIOLENS EP, RED DISTRIBUTION)

Released last October digitally but not available physically until this year, ‘Already Over’ was the first track we heard from New York four-piece Violens, and it ultimately worked against them – let’s face it, how do you live up to a chorus that good? ‘My Girls’, ‘Two Weeks’, ‘Summertime Clothes’ – there’s not much else that came out this year that was this hummable.


27: INSTRA:MENTAL
‘WATCHING YOU’
(NONPLUS)

Next-level, minimalist drum ‘n bass that explodes received notions of what drum ‘n bass even is. It’s on some futurist R&B-dubstep tip, a refreshing advance on the skittish dream-weaving of Mount Kimbie, James Blake and Darkstar, as haunting as Burial and as trippy as Peverelist.



26: DEADBOY
‘U CHEATED’
(WELL ROUNDED)

“Everyone can relate to a little heartache on the dancefloor”, South East London’s Deadboy told FACT this year, and it’s an aesthetic that crops up throughout this young producer and DJ’s work. Take away the longing vocal of ‘U Cheated’, and it’s one of the year’s heaviest tracks, with massive sinewave bass hits that rival Joker’s loudest. But once gutted – in both senses of the word – by Deadboy, these foundations become a base for something much bigger; a track that appeals to the lonely corners of the dancefloor as much as it does the frontline.


25: BLANK DOGS
‘TIN BIRDS’
(from UNDER AND UNDER, IN THE RED)

Like most things, Mike ‘Blank Dogs’ Sniper kept the subject matter of ‘Tin Birds’, the centerpiece of this year’s Under and Under album, close to his chest. “There’s definitely failure in there”, and the idea that the birds are “metallic toys you buy in Chinatown. They look like they’re from another era, not new looking at all” is about as much info as you’re ever likely to get. You can’t make out many lyrics from ‘Tin Birds’, but they seem beyond the point: the resignation in its chorus is amorphous; these birds’ metallic wings can take on whatever shape you wish.


24. OMAR-S
‘BUSARU BEATS’
(from BLOWN VALVETRANE EP, SOUND SIGNATURE)

It’s tough choosing a single stand-out from Omar-S’s unwaveringly brilliant ’09 output, but this track – released on his pal Theo Parrish’s Sound Signature label – was an industrial-strength, funked-out headfuck that embodied his unique and uncompromising vision of electronic dance music.


23: CIRCLESQUARE
‘ALL LIVE BUT THE ENDING’
(from SONGS ABOUT DANCING AND DRUGS, !K7)

This grave and opium-paced post-pop ballad was the highlight of Jeremy Shaw’s criminally underrated Circlesquare album, Songs About Dancing And Drugs. With shades of Tuxedomoon, Nick Cave, Matthew Dear and Matias Aguayo’s Are You Really Lost, it’s a haunting but hopeful lament for the the E-fried and directionless denizens of Shaw’s Berlin hometown, an anthem for doomed youth and those, like he, who are old enough to know better.


22: LA ROUX
‘IN FOR THE KILL’ (SKREAM’S LET’S GET RAVEY REMIX)
(WHITE LABEL)

It makes us a bit queasy thinking about it now, but for around four weeks back in Spring this cheeky remix of La Roux’s signature tune was irresistible and all-conquering. Released on white label and blog-leaked mp3, it was that rare thing: a dance track loved by pop fans, hipsters and ravers alike, and no “best of” 2009 would be complete without it.


21. DAM-FUNK
‘SEARCHIN’ 4 FUNK’S FUTURE’
(from TOEACHIZOWN, STONES THROW)

Damon Riddick ain’t just searching for funk’s future, he’s gone and bloody found it. Funk’s future is: sublimely smacked-out and hypnotic, with synths that hit you like the glare of low sun on a December morning and a bassline as warm and comforting as one of those teddy bears with a wee hot water bottle zipped into its belly (remember them?). 2009 was Dam-Funk’s year, and this track – along with the excellent, more rugged Wavelength 7″ – represents his finest offering.

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