40 best: albums of 2010


From Tuesday November 30 to Friday December 3, we’ll be counting down our 40 favourite albums released this year.

We’ll be listing them in groups of ten, so today it’s entries 40 to 31, on Wednesday it’s 30-21, Thursday 20-11, and finally 10-1 on Friday.

Next week, we’ll be ranking our 100 favourite tracks of the year, and we’ll end the year on a list of our favourite reissues. If you’re still yet to read our rundowns of the best record labels, breakthrough artists and soundtracks of the year, then they’re collected in the bottom left of the FACT homepage, along with the rest of our end of 2010 features so far.


40: ARIEL PINK’S HAUNTED GRAFFITI
BEFORE TODAY
(4AD)


‘Round and Round’

Few artists’ legacies loomed larger over 2010 than Ariel Pink’s. A huge inspiration on the hypnagogic pop/chillwave wave of US indie artists, this year Pink, along with his band Haunted Graffiti, signed to 4AD, recording their first ever album with a proper studio set-up. The results were inconsistent, but as ever, when Ariel gets it right there are few pop songwriters close to his level.


39: MOUNT KIMBIE
CROOKS & LOVERS
(HOTFLUSH)


‘Mayor’

Mount Kimbie’s relationship to dubstep was, from the off, a tangential one; their music, though often attuned to the needs of the dancefloor, rarely prioritises them. The duo’s considered, painterly approach to music was always going to suit the wide canvas of the album format, but on Crooks & Lovers we would have liked to have seen fewer wispy watercolours and more of the lively oils that characterised their unassailable debut EP, Maybes. Still, when it’s good, this record is very good: a kind of garage-swung, R&B-sugared update of early noughties Kompakt.


38: DYLAN ETTINGER
NEW AGE OUTLAWS: THE DIRECTOR’S CUT

(NOT NOT FUN)


‘Shandor’s Dream’

The American underground spewed out an unbelievably high volume of lo-fi synthesizer records this year, most of them the worst kind of charlatan dross – especially when compared to Dylan Ettinger’s elegantly wrought New Age Outlaws. Originally released on cassette last year, this year’s “Director’s Cut” on vinyl and digital saw its maker return to his master tapes, adding new parts and altering the final track sequence. What makes Ettinger’s spaced-out analogue friezes so compelling is their jazz inflections, with Hassell-esque horns and sitar-like sounds adrift amid oscillating synth sequences in the tradition of Vangelis, Tangerine Dream et al. Hallucinatory and emotionally affecting, we won’t be surprised if the appeal of this LP outlasts that of more widely acclaimed offerings from Emeralds and Oneohtrix Point Never.


37: DJ RASHAD
JUST A TASTE VOL. 1
(GHETTOPHILES)


‘Ghost’

2010 was the year that juke and footwork broke the (relative) mainstream, mostly due to efforts from the UK’s Planet Mu. Back in Chicago, hometown label Ghettophiles released a steady supply of singles, and will close the year on a pair of albums from scene staple DJ Rashad. Just a Taste, due out on December 14, is our pick, sporting Rashad takes on Bobby Caldwell, Gil Scott-Heron and more with those ultra-padded basslines that you feel before you hear.


36: FRANK (JUST FRANK)
THE BRUTAL WAVE
(WIERD MUSIC)


‘Mr Itagaki’

One of the year’s most unexpected and durable delights, The Brutal Wave is the debut album by Parisian duo Frank (Just Frank), released on Peter Schoolwerth’s Wierd. Though crucially steeped in the aesthetic influence of both cold wave and black metal, F(JF)’s own music is richly romantic post-punk pop, sung in both English and French and based around song-structures and galloping guitar parts that consciously reference – among other things – The Cure circa Seventeen Seconds and Pornography. But there’s more than mere pastiche going on here: on songs such as ‘Mr Itagaki’ this band hit as hard, if not harder, than their heroes ever did.


35: THESE NEW PURITANS
HIDDEN
(ANGULAR)


‘Time Xone’

Ambition appears to be all but dead in British “indie”, so These New Puritans’ Hidden instantly piqued our interest. Working primarily – and improbably – with dancehall-inspired rhythms and, er, woozy colliery brass, this was the sound of a young band trying, shock horror, to make something original, and going about it with a commendable air of seriousness and self-importance. Frightfully earnest – and beautiful – instrumental opener ‘Time Xone’ sets the scene, and the sheer baroque gumption of ‘Orion’ is astonishing, but elsewhere the dense, fussy arrangements can mask a paucity of real songcraft, while the overall production sheen too often softens the hard edges that are, for us, the source of the record’s appeal.


34: YEASAYER
ODD BLOOD
(SECRETLY CANADIAN)


‘Ambling Alp’

One of the year’s first “big” albums, Odd Blood saw Brooklyn’s Yeasayer in gracefully psychedelic form, shot in higher definition than ever before. Some, such as FACT reviewer Joe Muggs couldn’t stomach the album’s glossy finish, but for us few records soundtracked the beginning of the year with the same combination of power and poise.


33: URBAN TRIBE
URBAN TRIBE [AKA PROGRAM 1-12]
(MAHOGANI MUSIC)


‘Program 1′

Returning with their first collective album release since 1998′s Mo’Wax classic The Collapse Of Modern Culture, Sherard Ingram’s Urban Tribe – featuring Carl Craig, Kenny Dixon, Jr. and Anthony Shakir – effortlessly affirmed their superhero status with a set of gritty, laconic beatdown futurism. Special mention goes to ‘Program 7′ and ‘Program 1′, two tracks that formed a kind of unwitting diagonal between Detroit house and UK funky, grime and dubstep.


32: BATHS
CERULEAN
(ANTICON)


‘Hall’

A milky dream of hip-hop, Boards of Canada-style electronica, ambient and indie, Will Wiesenfeld’s debut album as Baths was far from a perfect record, but in its imperfections lay its strength. This is an album where self-consciousness doesn’t exist; Baths frequently giving everything, good and bad, to his listeners.


31: SHED
THE TRAVELLER
(OSTGUT TON)


‘Keep Time’

A new album from this consummate Berlin producer was always going to rank among the best released this year; the real question would be how it compared to his remarkable 2008 debut, Shedding The Past. While even more impeccably sculpted, it must be said that The Traveller lacks – perhaps inevitably – some of the outsider passion and impertinence of its predecessor (Shed’s reappropriation of the breakbeat, for instance, now feels like a familiar part of his sonic signature rather than a radical gesture). But as suggested by the title, our man isn’t interested in analysing his music, and never has been, he just gets on with making it. And, when all’s said and done, who else on earth can build a beat as itchily compelling as ‘Keep Time’?

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  • http://www.lucymarx.at Lucy

    nice list

  • Gawagai

    Can’t beleive that The Traveller is so low!!!

  • Gawagai

    Can’t beleive that The Traveller is so low!!!

  • lopsidedsocialist

    just cannot believe youve put these new puritans at 35. They’re one of the best bands of the last decade.

  • lopsidedsocialist

    I reckon that shed album is pretty ordinay as well

  • Kirm

    when is the sandwell district album coming out? And is it going to be on CD or is it vinyl only?

  • Kirm

    no worries quick google serach answered my question! Looking forward to this!!

    “The album consists entirely of unreleased material and will see release on CD and triple-vinyl. Rather than committing to a specific release date, Sumner says the album will simply “appear” at some point this month.”

    http://www.residentadvisor.net/news.aspx?id=12933

  • DavyDMX

    Can someone do a spotify list please?

  • JamesHadfield

    It’s refreshing to read a best-of list that’s also prepared to acknowledge the shortcomings of the records featured, but it kind of begs the question: is this really all that 2010 had to offer? When a record as flawed as Love King is getting in at number 22, you’ve got to wonder. Rather than just rank the albums that Fact has chosen to review at length this year, as you appear to be doing here, wouldn’t it be more interesting to ask each of your regular writers to pick a few albums that they think got slept on?

  • Giles

    So far it seems to be very scewed towards albums released in the last quarter (the top 10 havent been announced) with a handful not even released yet. A really great album still holds your attention months down the line surely its hard to call on some of the very recent releases mentioned so far.

  • Giles

    So far it seems to be very scewed towards albums released in the last quarter (the top 10 havent been announced) with a handful not even released yet. A really great album still holds your attention months down the line surely its hard to call on some of the very recent releases mentioned so far.

  • Conall

    Stunning year for music, but not the best for albums…

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  • BN

    lol how is BATHS or PANTHA DU PRINCE better than Four Tet, Caribou………………..epic at SALEM… no crystal castles or gorillaz EPICEPICEPIC

  • Austenc

    Fang Island better be in there somewhere

  • trumper

    probably best if FACT sticks to news and track reviews from now on.

  • trumper

    probably best if FACT sticks to news and track reviews from now on.

  • Jean Michel Genre

    Quite a mainstream top 10, which isn’t a bad thing – I think 2010 has been a year where most of the more interesting music has maybe been in the single and EP formats. Looking forward to getting my copy of Fabric 55 though!

  • Andreas77

    This list is lazy. It reads as a re-cap of your reviews. It’s redeemed somewhat by the fact that Altered Natives and Actress made the top 10, but when in the company of Darkstar (imho the biggest disappointment of the year by far) and other unremarkables, it’s kind of like tonguing your sister.

    Hire some more writers / ears.

  • DaveQ

    put your hand in your pocket and pay for them then you fucking baby.

  • Anonymous

    matthew dear gets no love?

  • beetles

    RE James Ferraro’s album cover: Best Buy is not a supermarket, it’s an electronics store.

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  • Hoo

    Wow, no Demdike Stare at all? Really? That seems like quite an oversight.

    But at least Drake and Hype Williams are there. Sheesh…

  • TT

    Liumin > the entire list

  • Kaleel_jha

    a lot of dubstep here…:/

  • Sean

    Am I crazy or is this Blake-less? LPs only, I guess?

  • antidesigns

    flylo cosmogramma?

  • decidedlysubpar

    I too think Forest Swords’ album is one of the most brilliant (and somewhat underrated) albums of the year. Props for giving this guy some love.

    p.s. where is Cosmogrammma?!

  • Mackaybarnes

    Come on guys. I’m not sure were your picks came from. I agree with Andreas77 u=in that the selection is lazy. No mention of amazing work done by Luke Abbott, Senking, Shingeto, Matthew Dear, Gold Panda, Teebs, Trentmoller, !!!, Loscil, LCD Soundsystem, Hot Chip, The National, Christopher Rau, The Black Keys, Four Tet, Caribou and many others. Do you really think Salem belongs anywhere on that list? Very boring top 40 selection. You may want to follow bleep in 2011.

  • Beeeeen

    Glad to see Drake high, and with a great observation on what is the most startling moment on the album. Would of expected mount kimbie higher… Need to find out who the fuck forrest swords are.

    not surprised cosmogramma isn’t there tbh.

  • Sarge

    looooooooooooool at calling a list lazy and then suggesting gold panda, hot chip and lcd soundsystem

  • 303romance

    the drum sounds in “dancing in slow motion” come from a 707, not a 808… btw..

  • ▲▲▲▲▲

    Drake’s album is a one big joke, that no one will remember in 5 years time.

    Fly Lo’s “Cosmogramma”, Big Boi’s debut, and DeepChord presents Echospace – “Liumin” are all missing here, definitely

  • sugarpie

    Big Boi’s album is here, at no 12. ‘Cosmogramma’ sounded like a sprawling mess of ambitious ideas to me rather than a cohesive standout album. That, one suspects, is still to come from Flying Lotus.

  • http://twitter.com/ChrisScheben Chris Scheben

    The use of websites creating best-of lists brings in a huge amount of clicks for them while simultaneously making everyone hate them.

  • http://twitter.com/David_Crompton David Crompton

    Sorry, your superior list is where? I’m always amazed at how many dickheads can sit on the side and offer nothing but slag. I’m sure you won’t miss next years though…

  • Gman

    Although I might personally have put These New Puritans at no1, I can’t really argue with Forest Swords!

  • JjuujJ

    Well, darkstar’s album meant more to me and many of my friends than any other this year.
    More to the point, your post is snide as fuck and makes zero sense.

  • Appata

    Yeah Cosmogramma absolutely deserves some Top Ten placement, and it seems impossible for it not have made the list at all.

  • Morgan-hislop

    Interesting list, some very well made judgements and a few albums that have maybe been forgotten along the way. Glad that Teengirl Fantasy’s album is 4th! It is a brilliant album!

  • tztztzt

    Totally agree!

  • Alfred woo

    Surprised theres no Caribou, Four tet or Flying Lotus

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  • Mbroadbent

    “tonguing your sister” christ !

  • Benc395

    That darkstar record doesn’t deserve to be anywhere near as high as it is. It’s crazy crazy tedious – background music with lashings of hype. Good on you for Dagger Paths though, gotta agree with that.

  • Senor Poops

    Shame that so much current music is so fucking SLEEPY. I know that factmag is stuck in the dubstep doldrums, but FUCK, what happened to rocking out? Where are the melodies and/or choruses? THAT’S the fucking album of the year? It sounds like background music to a boring western . . .

    My girlfriend keeps telling me my musical taste has gone to shit — I tell her it’s the world around me. Fuck low fi nap music! SOMEBODY BRING BACK ELO!!!!!

  • Kickinajessiep

    I guess I can see why I never visit this website now.

  • cquintan

    cosmogramma????

  • Joe

    Like others here, I’d happily argue that Four Tet, Flylo and Caribou deserve to be up here, and I could take issue with a few of the more flawed albums here.
    What really surprises me, though, is the lack of Twin Shadow. I only heard of him because of the glowing 4.5 review Fact gave him. Where did he disappear to?

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