Tim’s 2003
I’d be doing myself and my bandmates a disservice if I didn’t put our debut album at #1. What a weird year to be a recording artist – charts filled with the dregs of Britpop, fringe dance music, novelty indie, ghastly pop and a pervasive feeling of rudderlessness! A year later, things started to make sense, but 2003 is a lost year for music IMO.
Albums
- Good Science/Friendly Gods (Donderevo) – highly acclaimed upon release and championed by no less than John Peel, Steve Lamacq and Tom Robinson, our debut disappeared before it achieved it’s purpose: to destroy the universe. For years I’ve worried that it’s too scattered and unfocussed, jap-pop, Ambient, Folk, Pavement, Weezer and Grandaddy, but it’s actually very much a product of it’s time – post-rock-post-modern toe-tapping space-pop for a schizophrenic and disillusioned era in British music. Turned out to be pretty influential on our hugely successful label mates The Killers, Franz Ferdinand and others.
- The Lemon of Pink (The Books) – Perhaps the best album of the decade. Inspired, disquieting and beautiful from start to finish.
- Dear Catastrophe Waitress (Belle and Sebastian) – this band of Scots have always appealed to me, but this was a complete departure from their previously lo-fi indie records. A muscular and dimensional pop album with astonishing production.
- A Strangely Isolated Place (Ulrich Schnauss) – simply the perfect ambient album. Perhaps my #1 desert island disc.
- Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts (M83) – the debut album from one of the most influential artist of the millennium. Every epic pop song you hear on the radio with a massive washy synth pad owes a debt to Anthony Gonzalez innovation to create My Bloody Valentine-esque soundscapes that would make Eno shudder.
- Sumday (Grandaddy) – Jason Lytle is one of my favourite songwriters, and this is his most consistent work to date. Though his lyrics remains in the realms of bleak sci-fi and Ballardian dystopic modern life, Sumday is a joyful album, perfect for a summer drive through forests of discarded computers and broken down androids.
- Apple O’ (Deerhoof) – Deerhoof seem almost normal now that every indie band in the world has embraced experimental instrumentation and recording techniques, but in 2003 this was a very shocking loud noise, still is.
- Analord (Aphex Twin) – Aphex Twin’s music is uncategorizable, and this sprawling project covers everything from ambient and electro to drum & bass, though none of those genres can truly claim him as their own. A huge section of Analord is devoted to the infamous ‘Amen’ break, heavily used in early Jungle and Drum & Bass, and a direct ancestor of contemporary Dubstep. The album was released in installments over two years, its final form containing 62 tracks and running for four and a half hours. Aphex Twin is insane.
- YosepH (Luke Vibert) – Equally genre-defying in the world of electronic music is Aphex Twin’s mate Luke Vibert aka Wagon Christ aka Amen Andrews. He’s among my favourite producers, and his ultra-tight beat making starts with Yoseph. Vibert pays tribute to the heyday of Acid House with this album, but tinged with his signature dischord of uneasy pads and super-tight beats.
- Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place (Explosions In The Sky) – very special ambient music with heart.
Songs
- Questions and Answers (Biffy Clyro) – Scottish 3-piece Biffy Clyro have never quite lived up to this, their Sebadoh-esque debut single. They are masterful arrangers, and this song contains some of my favourite backing vocals.
- I Went To A Wedding (Half Man Half Biscuit) – Nigel Blackwell had been writing hilarious satirical songs for 20 years before this came out – he’s still writing, and still hilarious. This is a particularly pretty example.
- Eple (Röyksopp) – an incredible piece of quirky electronic music that, at least in Europe, was the soundtrack to the optimistic futurism of the 2000s. If we could’ve gotten a penny out of our record company we’d have commissioned remixes from these Norwegian bleepers, with whom we shared a music lawyer.
- Hysteria (Muse) – I remember seeing this song on Top Of The Pops and feeling my jaw dropping as I watched Christopher Wolstenholme hammer out that insane bassline. Stunning track from a great British band and one of the greatest basslines of all time.
- Jessica (Adam Green) – I’d pretty much gotten over the novelty of The Moldy Peaches when I heard this album, and realized that Adam Green is a master songsmith. ‘Jessica’ still makes me laugh – so horribly disrespectful to poor Jessica Simpson!
- Strict Machine (Goldfrapp) – innovative synth-glam – a huge shift for this strange band.
- Danger! High Voltage! (Electric Six) – One-hit-wonder? Novelty-band? Yes – and so much more. Just watch the video!
- I Believe In A Thing Called Love (The Darkness) – another flash-in-the-pan novelty act, but a great song! Check out other singles ‘Get Your Hands off My Woman’, and ‘Growing On Me’.
- Oh God, Where Are You Now? (In Pickeral Lake? Pigeon? Marquette? Mackinaw?) (Sufjan Stevens) – I feel as though I should hate Sufjan Stevens and all he stands for, but I can’t because he’s just fantastic. This self-recorded debut album, is a work of genius. Sadly, it ushered in an age of bland, uninspiring nu folk, but I think this track still stands up despite the twittering rabble of wannabe folkies.
- זה רעיון טוב (The Apples) – Israeli car-chase funk with sweet cutting? Hell yeah!