HONORABLE MENTIONS
Fire Engines
"Hungry Beat" (Acute)
O.P.G. -- Original Postpunk
Glaswegians indulge unnatural sense of rhythm ("Meat Whiplash," "Discord").
Shelby Lynne
"Just a Little Lovin'" (Lost Highway)
She sings some of
these Dusty Springfield covers so torchy and tasteful you'd think
they were on "Dusty in Memphis" to begin with ("Just a Little Lovin',"
"You Don't Have to Say You Love Me").
Yeah Yeah Yeahs
"Is Is" (Interscope)
Sex and groove and icy hot ("10 X
10," "Rockers to Swallow").
Life Without Buildings
"Live at the Annandale Hotel" (Absolutely Kosher)
Glasgow
art girl ends punk fling in Sydney, five years ago now ("The Leanover," "New
Town").
Bob Frank & John Murry
"World Without End" (Bowstring)
Nicely unexistential
murder ballads, including several garden-horror lynchings, a Reconstruction MD
mob-killed for healing all races, and righteous Mexican revenge ("Jesse
Washington, 1916," "Joaquin Murietta, 1853").
Herbie Hancock
"River: The Joni Letters" (Verve)
Follow up with either no
singers at all and more Wayne Shorter (plus Roy Hargrove maybe?), or all Joni all the time doing as many early classics as will bear
the harmonic burden ("Tea Leaf Prophecy," "River").
The Sirens
"More Is More" (Musick)
If only glam had actually liked
girls -- if only the Runaways had written better songs -- if only all-covers CDs
didn't fall a little flat -- if only revivalists didn't overrate Girlschool
("High School," "Tumble With Me").
Mike Doughty
"Golden Delicious" (ATO)
Lower East Side vet makes
jam-band folk-rock cool ("Fort Hood," "More Bacon Than the Pan Can Handle").
Bob Frank
"Red Neck Blue Collar" (Memphis
International)
Hard-drinking ditch digger chronicles many pipeliners, one
heroic truck driver, and a hash-smoking Jesus unwisely adored ("Judas Iscariot,"
"One Big Family").
Willie Nelson
"Moment of Forever" (Lost Highway)
More songs for an old
man, though as ever he's sly about it ("Gravedigger," "The Bob Song").
Pharoahe Monch
"Desire" (SRC/Universal Motown)
Keeping the conscious
faith for seven years in the corporate wilderness, he remained relevant by
leapfrogging bling and ringtone imperatives altogether ("Push," "Hold On").
Joy of Cooking
"Back to Your Heart"
(Njoy)
Outtake keepsakes and cooking jams from the Berkeley hippies who
invented a "women's music" that was never so fast, smart, or soulful again
("Brownsville/Mockingbird," "Bad Luck").
Parts & Labor
"Mapmaker" (Jagjaguwar)
Speed-freek noiseniks kick it into
gear behind mad new drummer ("Vision of Repair," "The Gold We're Digging").
Tab the Band
"Pulling Out Just Enough to Win" (North
St.)
Aerosmith: The New Generation ("Secretary's Day," "CYT").
CHOICE CUTS
Billy Joe Shaver
"Played the Game Too
Long"
"If You Don't Love Jesus"
("Everybody's Brother" [Compadre])
Little Big Town
"Evangeline"
("A Place to Land" [Equity])
Melissa Etheridge
"Threesome"
("The Awakening" [Island])
Kid Rock
"So Hott"
"All Summer
Long"
("Rock N Roll Jesus" [Atlantic])
Barry Louis Polisar
"All I Want Is
You"
("Music From the Motion Picture Juno" [Fox Music/Fox
Searchlight
Pictures/Rhino])