Best of 2008

Luca “Drop the Lime” Venezia tops our list for best artist of 2008, but there’s much more where he came from. We dig up the latest music coming out of Gothenburg, Sweden, chat with shoegaze bands of yesterday and today, go into the studio with Hot Chip and Matthew Herbert, and get the year-ending praise and jabs from Kid Sister, Telepathe, The Death Set, Vivian Girls, Cut Copy, Beach House, Matthew Dear, Santogold, and many more for our Best of 2008 feature.

Best of 2008: Drop the Lime

Best Artist of 2008: MGMT
This band brought out a beautifully fresh and nostalgic sound that painted mystery and lust.

Best Album of 2008: Metronomy Nights Out
Metronomy put together an amazing album this year. Nights Out had the perfect collage of pop and experimental dance music–wonky, wiggly, catchy melodies and pretty soundscapes.

Best Record Label of 2008: Greco Roman
This label’s whole vibe is fantastic, from their artists being illustrated into comic book characters in fighting arenas to the diverse collection of genres. This label is doing something new for underground music.

Best Live Event of 2008: Shambhala Festival, Kootenay Mountains, Canada
This festival is way deep in the woods middle of nowhere Canada. Ravers camp out for five days and party in treehouses nd fractal forests. The experience is majestically unreal, yet frightening at the same time with all those naked ravers running around come the last night.

Best Scene of 2008: The Tabac Crew parties in Tel Aviv
These kids are on some next-level bass with their soundsystems and party vibes. They manage to blend dubstep, bassline, and electro all in one night and keep the energy strong.

Best DJ of 2008: Boys Noize
His set at Coachella 2008 was one of the best DJ sets I’ve seen in years. Tricks, flips, slaps, drops, smacks –party was there and he was bonkering it up on that stage.

Best Music Trend of 2008: Kuduru
Cats like Buraka som Sistema are killing it at the moment. The amount of original attitude and energy coming out of this style of dance music is heavy. You can’t not shake to the percussive rhythm.

Worst Music Trend of 2008: The obsession with bass
Don’t get me wrong, I love bass, but let’s let the sucker breathe before we drain it from all its juice and it becomes a skinny little emaciated Chihuahua.

Best Music Hardware of 2008: Pioneer DJM-800 mixer
Gimme those cheeseball filters and roll delays for days.

Best Music Software of 2008: Logic Pro 8
The new layout on this software is incredible. Being able to stack all your windows into tabs and sequence/automate your tracks without any pop-up windows is brilliant and saves so much time when producing.

Best Shoe of 2008: SWEAR London
I am addicted to the Dean model. You can poke someone’s eyes out with those tips.

Best Book of 2008: The Road by Cormack McCarthy
This is an epic and beautiful tale of father and son traveling through the earth that’s been burned to dust to find shelter and safety.

Best of 2008
Drop the Lime
Abe Vigoda
Bradford Cox
Andrew Jeffrey Wright
eLZhi
Cut Copy
Fucked Up
Evidence
Vivian Girls
Matt Furie
dj/ Rupture
Telepathe
The Death Set
Holy Ghost
Mochipet
CTRL
Plump DJs
Jose James
Worship Worthy
Peter Beste
Hercules and Love Affair
Magda
The Alchemist
DC Recordings

Singing To The Earth

We frequently associate the word “fun” with Apollo Sunshine. When not gleefully discussing the Number of the Beast, the Leverett, MA-based trio is busy making upbeat indie rock, and colorful videos to go along with it. “Singing to the Earth” is off this year’s Shall Noise Upon, an album apparently made in a house “inhabited by spirits.” Nothing spooky about this video though, just colorful images of nature, paper, and other cheery items.

DJ Signify “Low Tide feat. Aesop Rock”

DJ Signify‘s talent as a hip-hop producer isn’t to be debated, given his infamous mixtapes from the mid-’90s, his spot in the legendary 1200 Hobos crew, and his work for Buck 65, Sage Francis, and the anticon. crew, but his latest release, Of Cities, is probably the best thing we’ve heard from him. He’s still pushing his drum-heavy style, which is tight as ever, but he’s also reeled in shades of glitch, new wave, Kraut-rock, and other genres for the tracks. Aesop Rock describing his nervous tic that involves whisting whilst he works adds a nice touch of humor to this track.

Of Cities
01 “The Sickness”
02 “Low Tide ft. Aesop Rock”
03 “Interlude #1”
04 “Costume Kids”
05 “Delight to the Sadist ft. Matt Kelly”
06 “Interlude #2”
07 “Vanessa”
08 “Interlude #3”
09 “1993”
10 “Interlude #4”
11 “Sink or Swim ft. Aesop Rock”
12 “The Gods Get Dirty”
13 “Interlude #5”
14 “Bollywood Babies”
15 “Interlude #6”
16 “Hold Me Don’t Touch”

DJ Signify – Low Tide Ft. Aesop Rock

Blackout Beach – Astoria, Menthol Lite, Hilltop, Wave of Evil, 1982

I Can See

Jazzanova‘s dreamy, freeform “I Can See” gets some delightfully quirky visual accompaniments with this Marie Alice and Brander-Woflszahn-directed video. Here, we find the six-man collective from Berlin lounging about in colorful rooms, singing from windows and picture frames, and staring at lots of two-dimensional shapes that float in and out of the screen intermittently. “I Can See” is off the group’s latest album, Of All Things, out this week.

Anthony Green Preps Tracks for Donation

On November 1, Anthony Green‘s cousin, Jacqui Haenn, was involved in an auto accident that left her in critical condition. In order to offset the extensive medical costs relating to the injury, Green has released two digital downloads.

Tracks include the previously unreleased “Ripped Apart” and a cover of the Monkees’ “Take A Giant Step.” Any donations made through PayPal will go directly to paying medical bills and the cost of medical helicopter transport to a Philadelphia hospital, where Haenn is being monitored 24/7 until she recuperates fully. Recovery may take up to a year.

Donations can be made at anthonygreenschildren.com/jackiehaenn.

Once a donation is made, a link will be provided for downloading the tracks.

Although this incident hits a bit closer to home, Green is no stranger to releasing tracks for a greater good. In early 2008, he and his band, Circa Survive, released another download titled “1,000 Witnesses,” a b-side off their most recent release, On Letting Go. The download benefited Invisible Children, Inc., a non-profit group that promotes global awareness of the civil war in northern Uganda, where children are often kidnapped and forced to join military brute squads. Circa Survive also released another download called “The Most Dangerous Commercials,” in order to help Siren Records relocate their offices.

Green released his first solo album, Avalon, in August of 2008.

Tracks:
01 Ripped Apart
02 Take A Giant Step (The Monkees Cover)

Guilt by Association 2 Announced

My Brightest Diamond has taken on “Tainted Love” and Takka Takka is singing Phil Collins, and those are just two of the 14 indie artists selected to participate in the second installment of Engine Room Recordings’ Guilt by Association series.

The basic concept is for contemporary bands to cover classic songs of days gone by, which generally end up being the ones you’d never actually admit to liking, yet have a secret soft spot in your heart for (come on, we know you tried to learn all the words to Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” too).

The compilation is currently available on iTunes. A physical version will hit record stores on February 17, and you can stream the entire thing via Engine Room’s site. Totally guilt free.

01 My Brightest Diamond: “Tainted Love” [Gloria Jones/Soft Cell]
02 The Bloodsugars: “Self-Control” [Laura Branigan]
03 Robbers on High Street: “Cool It Now” [New Edition]
04 Frightened Rabbit: “Set You Free” [N-Trance]
05 Matt Pond PA: “I’m Not Okay” [My Chemical Romance]
06 Takka Takka: “In the Air Tonight” [Phil Collins]
07 Kaki King: “I Think She Knows” [Justin Timberlake]
08 Francis and the Lights: “Can’t Tell Me Nothing” [Kanye West]
09 Lowry: “Africa” [Toto]
10 The Forms: “We Didn’t Start the Fire” [Billy Joel]
11 Rafter: “If You Leave” [OMD]
12 Cassettes Won’t Listen: “Need You Tonight” [INXS]
13 Jukebox the Ghost: “It’s a Beautiful Life” [Ace of Base]
14 Max Vernon: “I Kissed a Girl” [Katy Perry]
15 The Bloodsugars: “Lady in Red” [Chris de Burgh]

Various Artists Nublu Sound

Representing a fine array of artists that have launched their careers out of Nublu–an East Village club that has come to define innovative, independent music in New York–this 12-track collection showcases a far-reaching blend of global sounds. While the venue itself redefines “intimate” (acts set up across from the bar on the couch), to witness bands like the Brazilian Girls, Forro in the Dark, Otto, and Love Trio featuring U-Roy is a spectacle to behold. This collection, featuring all the above-mentioned acts and more, is merely a hint at the energy that circulates during their seven-night-a-week schedule. Spanning Brazilian forro and turntablism, quirky electronica, Turkish horn playing, and dub reggae, this collection, like this club, is borderless

Stefan Goldmann The Transitory State/Voices of the Dead

Berlin’s Stefan Goldmann resurfaces on his Macro label, bringing together the past and present with a rich double-disc release. Disc One, The Transitory State, compiles Goldmann’s exceptional techno works from the last few years, including minimalist gems like “Blood” and “Sleepy Hollow” from his Perlon and Innervisions outings. It’s the second disc, Voices of the Dead, that marks Goldmann’s current intrigue as the first in a three-part series of concept albums that delve into the “information lurking in he background” of all music. His explorations return some brilliantly crafted ambient pieces that take the listener through intelligently textured and spontaneously manifested soundscapes, one of which (“Turret”) was embedded by Richie Hawtin into his DE9: Transitions project. This guy’s packin’ some serious heat.

Hannah Stouffer: Wild Eleglance

Hannah Stouffer takes all the things girls are obsessed with–doodling, animals, flowers, curlicues, cute lettering, pretty colors, fancy pens, and diamonds–and turns them into sensual, elaborate watercolor-and-ink collages that are a feast for the eyes.

This 27-year-old Taurus, who recently transplanted herself from San Francisco, CA to Los Angeles, likes some things that are resolutely tough as well, including snakes, monster trucks, bad girls, talons, and skulls… essentially, all the stuff good tattoos are made of.

Stouffer’s elegant style has made her a fast favorite with the fashion and advertising crowds–her designs grace packaging for Benefit cosmetics and skate decks for Blood Is the New Black, ads for Camel cigarettes and Secret deodorant and even a Ludacris and Chris Brown video (“I Know What Dem Girls Want”). Does this cause her artistic conflict? No way! Not only is her personal work every bit as accessible and flourish-filled as her commercial stuff but, like Rick Ross, every day she’s hustlin’.

We caught up with this Denver-raised spitfire in the middle of playing her Casio SK-5 and daydreaming of performing during the Ice Capades, and talked to her about wild stallions and childhood crushes.

What do you find sexy?

The classics: red lipstick, fast cars, femininity, strong character, and stronger cocktails. Color, light, and contrast. Love, lust, and gore. All of those old pulp covers and adventure books about girls, heroism, torture, and passion-. Those are perfect.

What is the last art you saw that blew your mind?

Cai Guo-Qiang at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City, but I’ve only seen pictures. I think if I actually went to the show my mind would have been blown all over the walls, my face, and all the way down that huge spiraling terrace they have. There have been a few contemporary fantasy/metal painters that I’ve seen lately that make it hard to breathe.

Who was your childhood celebrity crush?

I think I remember having feelings for The Count from Sesame Street and definitely the bad guy from Rainbow Brite–I think I had a thing for villains–and of course Joey from New Kids on the Block. I don’t think I really had any movie-star crushes; I had pretty weird taste. I remember actually being scared that Superman was going to break through my window and kidnap me in the middle of the night.

Have you ever grappled with your work being identified as “feminine,” or do you see your gender as inextricable from your art?

I hate those generalizations. I guess my work is feminine but I don’t think I can help that… I really try to keep it neutral, and find a balance between the macabre viciousness and the feminine embellishment. I think that [my work] will always have that touch of elegance. I can’t help it–I wear a lot of gold.

What music do you listen to while you work?

A lot of hip-hop: Too Short, Lil Wayne, Shawty Putt, Eazy. Sometimes ’90s R&B slow jams, and some metal, like Heaven and Hell, Sabbath, Alice Cooper. I like mash-ups a lot too; either that or some type of streaming radio station, like Pandora, Thugzone, or Sactownradio.

What is your favorite pen?

Uniball Vision-Exact Micro black. And those stupid little Gelly Roll ones, the ones that make me feel like I’m eating donuts and wiping my greasy potato-chip fingers on some stained grey soft-pants.

What is your favorite animal to draw?

Snakes! My favorite thing is getting lost in the repetition of drawing something that never ends. I can work for hours on snakeskin. I really like bighorn sheep–I’ve got this childhood nostalgia for them, as well as most animals. I bring in animal skeletons and bones [to the studio] a lot and I love black panthers, carnivorous birds, and wild stallions.

A lot of your work marries organic and inorganic: trucks and lions, RVs and snakes. What intrigues you most about the opposing relationship between modernity and nature?

I consider it to be based on my upbringing, and the contrast and variance that I’ve encountered throughout my life. At the same time, I just love this distant connection, the opposition. I’ll match icons from subcultures and historical eras with elements that are totally irrelevant and examine the outcome and the feelings that develop. I’m constantly creating these stories, based on my own experiences and this endless collection of imagery and obsessions that I have built up in my head. I get overwhelmed with it all very easily, and I try to make lists categorizing everything. I’ll start out with a theme, like “Transylvania” or “Fox Hunting,” and note everything I can think of that’s relevant to that category on every level, all the way down to the sensory connections. It’s kind of insane the amount of research I do, and how deeply I feel like it’s all relevant.

How important is it to be aware of other people’s art?

I like to stay up on my contemporaries, but not too closely. It is important to know the basis of where ideas come from and what’s going on out there, though I do remain disconnected from a lot of it. I’ve found that in order to develop your own attractions and inspirations, you really have to meditate on your own self, not subconsciously drive towards things that have already been done. I think it’s tough for people to do that… There are so many things to look at these days, and it’s all so accessible.

If you weren’t making art for a living what would you be doing?

Well, I guess I could be making trouble. I think I could get pretty good at that too.

How did your parents encourage your interest in art?

My parents were very supportive when I was growing up and still are. They’re both very creative–my dad is a wildlife cinematographer and was my biggest influence. They encouraged me to pursue whatever it was that satisfied me, on a deeper level than what I think is normal. They always supported happiness rather than monetary success. I was always into art as a kid. I would get in trouble at school a lot for drawing but I managed to balance everything out and get my work done. I think I learned to delegate my time and work hard for what I wanted when I was pretty young.

What is your favorite piece of technology?

I do love my tape collection, VHS videos and VCRs, and my Cadillac. I have a beautiful DeVille–black leather, gold grill. I can’t escape that era, the late ’80’s–we made everything look so angular, bold, and beautiful. I did just get a pretty amazing Cintiq tablet; I’m not quite sure how to work it yet, but it seems like it might soon be up there with my other pieces of technology, and my Macbook.
What’s your spirit animal?
Marchesa Louisa Cassatti’s pet panther with a diamond collar.

You’ve got an SF phone number but an LA address. What’s up with that?

I just made the move to L.A. after six years in S.F. I miss you guys, but L.A. is a good hustle. I’m just trying to get some work done. I’m just trying to get comfortable. I want both. I want it all.

How has California shaped your approach to art?

It definitely allows people to be more liberal with their thinking, more abstract. Encountering and experiencing is a huge part of what drives me, and California has a lot to offer. If it wasn’t for the weather, the beaches, the trees, the flea markets, and all you suckers I’d be totally lost.

What’s one art piece/project that you’d like to do but haven’t because of money, time, complexity, etc.?

A series of really big, consuming works on paper that take me months and years to produce, I’m working on getting started on those, I bought the paper- its gorgeous, now all I have to do is make something amazing… any day now…

What are some of your favorite expressions?

“Booooya grandmaaaa!!” and “real talk.”

If you could travel through time, what era in history would you visit?

Timelines of evolution and existence are my favorite things in the world! Mesozoic? Cenozoic? Are you kidding me?! Freakin’ dinosaurs! I’d be like that kid in 10,000 BC that talked to the sabertooths. The beginning of time blows my mind! Then there is the whole Early Middle ages, the Dark Ages, and the Vikings! Vikings were amazing-; they were the original warriors. The end of the Middle Ages, the whole Renaissance movement, 17th century Rome when the baroque phases were taking place!! The Victorian Era, the Regency Era, the 1800s in the UK; the wigs and embellishments! These fashions and cultures were so gorgeous…

Which of your projects are you most proud of?

The ones I’m not finished with. Whatever I did today, the most current thing I’ve done, I usually feel the best about. If I look back at it tomorrow or next week I always feel like “God, I could do better than tha.”’

What do you find technologically mind-blowing?

I’m still waiting on some real future-type stuff, like where’s my breakfast maker alarm clock outfit chooser exercise bike? iPhones are cool and all, but they’d be a lot cooler if they could do my laundry.

What advice would you give to a young artist?

Don’t stop the hustle.

If you could take back anything that happened to you in the last year, what would it be?

Take back? No refunds. No regrets.

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