Lou's Top 40 of the Decade, Part 2
Here's the second in a two-part series listing my top albums of the 2000's. If you don't have these yet, it's about time you get them.
1.) & 2.) Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – The Letting Go (Drag City, 2006) and Lie Down In the Light (Drag City, 2008)



This album seems to get less credence from the cognoscenti than almost anything else this band has done, but in my estimation it is by far their most beautiful and accomplished release. Will Sheff’s songs achieved a perfect balance of raw emotion and poetic lyricism here that has sometimes tilted too much one way or the other, and are perfectly colored by expertly crafted instrumentation whose power lies in its ability to swell from unassuming to ebullient all while exuding sheer authenticity.
4.) & 5.) Unbunny – Black Strawberries (Two-Ton Santa, 2002) and Snow Tires (Hidden Agenda, 2004)
Jarid del Dio makes imaginative indie-folk approaching the intensity of Neil Young’s finest output with an even greater gift for crafting truly crushing melodies. A truly awe-inspiring and unjustly obscure talent.
6.) Ryan Adams – Heartbreaker (Bloodshot, 2000)
Across a prolific, erratic, occasionally brilliant decade Ryan Adams has yet to reprise the consistent earthy beauty of his solo debut. “To Be Young” provides a rollicking rockabilly kickoff with a wistful interlude. Emmylou Harris harmonizes on “Oh My Sweet Carolina,” recreating her timeless partnership with Gram Parsons more closely than anything before or since. Adams’ despairing howl and bleating harmonica slice through the boozy lament “Come Pick Me Up.” Along with plenty more stark portraits of human emotion delivered on the broad and uniquely effective canvas the Americana genre.
7.) Janet Bean and the Concertina Wire – Dragging Wonder Lake (Thrill Jockey, 2002)
Bean, best known as a principal of the great alt-country outfit Freakwater, stepped out on her own to make a magnum opus here. She combines the homespun charm and vocal grace of Emmylou Harris with the whimsy of Joni Mitchell throughout this brilliant but overlooked record.
8.) The Minus 5 – Let the War Against Music Begin (Mammoth, 2001)
Scott McCaughey’s finest effort as leader of this side-project-cum-supergroup showcases just about everything this man has done better than anyone else in the past three decades: The Beach Boys-inspired bliss of “Got You,” the fuzzy psych-garage of “Ghost Tarts of Stockholm,” the British Invasion ecstasy of “You Don’t Mean It,” the clever country shuffle “One Bar At A Time,” and so much more.
9.) & 10.) Arlo – Up High In the Night (Sub Pop, 2001) and Stab the Unstoppable Hero (Sub Pop, 2002)

11.) Belle and Sebastian – The Life Pursuit (Matador, 2006)
Effortlessly great songwriting mingles with beautiful harmonies and ebullient instrumentation as this band establishes itself as among the best of a second consecutive decade. Tracks like the Byrds-ian “Another Sunny Day” leave no doubt that they rank among the true legends.
12.) – 14.) Holopaw (Sub Pop, 2003), Quit +/- Fight (Sub Pop, 2005) and Oh, Glory. Oh, Wilderness. (Bakery Outlet, 2009)
Perhaps no band has begun its career with a trio of releases as impressive as Holopaw’s. John Orth’s beautifully strange vocals carry otherworldly melodies that seem to materialize from nowhere, creating hooks where they shouldn’t be, and wildly creative arrangements always sound wholly organic.
15.) Jesse Malin – The Heat (Artemis, 2004)
Malin’s vocals and hooks always exude raw motion, but this—his second lp—is his only one so far where the backing tracks have the same quality. The melange of Byrds, Stones, E Street Band, and NYC proto-punk is the perfect base for his uniquely expressive voice and aching melodies.
16.) Christian Kiefer – Dogs & Donkeys (Undertow, 2007)
Noted avant-gardist Kiefer creates nothing more ambitious here than a platter of great indie-folk tunes hearkening to some of Young and Dylan’s most revered moments. While subsequent projects like his song cycle on U.S. presidents have their appeal, another more straightforward set is anxiously awaited.
17.) The Minus 5 – Killingsworth (Yep Roc, 2009)
To make a record not only among his best but also breaking new artistic ground 25 years into a brilliant career may be truly unprecedented, but Scott McCaughey did it here. This is the rootsiest record in McCaughey’s canon and the most realized manifestation yet of this genius songsmith’s darker side, while keeping sterling melody the inviolable rule.
18.) Hal (Rough Trade, 2005)
This Irish band disappeared after releasing this set of some of the finest ‘60s-inspired pop in recent memory, along with a few rootsier numbers recalling the Jayhawks’ finest work.
19.) & 20.) The Darkness – Permission To Land (Atlantic, 2003) and One Way Ticket To Hell…And Back (Atlantic, 2005)

4 Comments:
YES! yes.
Where's Radish?
any list with that janet bean record on it is clutch.
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