5 Of The Best: 2012 Albums

1. Brian Jonestown Massacre - €˜Aufheben€™

Anton Newcombe, dictator for life to the Brian Jonestown Massacre (BJM) collective, has chosen well. Reverting to type, the word €œAufheben€ appears to have several contradictory meanings: among other things, it can mean €œto lift up€, €œto transcend€, €œto abolish€ or €œto sublate€ (the assimilation of a smaller entity into a larger one). Coming from a group that uses a clever portmanteau for their name, the deployment and manipulation of language and other elements must come as a second nature. The music released over the years also adheres to this philosophy of blending and subtle nuances; 60€™s psychedelic rock with an Eastern vibe. Think of 90s English public school rockers Kula Shaker, except more intense and heroin-addled. Their latest LP, the 20th in 19 years, remains true to the musical philosophy they have laid out since day one. Indeed, it€™s the music that does the talking for a good portion of the entire record. With founder member Matt Hollywood back in the fold, BJM have once again found a very rich vein of inspiration to mine. €œPanic In Babylon€, a transcendental instrumental, is a knockout of an opener. It is at once uplifting and dream-like; a mixture of instruments from the east and west cascading over and around a solid, unrelenting beat. Towards the end it begins to collapse in on itself before finally imploding amidst fading instruments and a veritable menagerie of animal noises; monkeys howling and dogs growling. €œViholliseni Maalla€, following immediately after, is led by Eliza Karmasalo, whose sultry tones are delivered in a foreign language. Remarkably upbeat, poppy even, its intrinsically enigmatic qualities should keep you coming back for repeat listens. It is unclear what language is being used in €œGaz Hilarant€, although the vocals and desert-in-the-moonlight music provide it with an air of wistfulness and desire. €œIlluminomi€, one of the album€™s highlights, is another track sans English lyrics. Much like the Socialist commune they share a part of their name with, BJM retains the mysterious cult image that attracts a few but repels many. With songs that seem to have been beamed directly from some alternate dimension, underpinned by a constant message of love and hope despite hardships and horror it€™s a shame the band plow on with far less recognition than they deserve. http://youtu.be/smogd7EuhJc So there you have it - five of the best albums of the year. What were your own favourite albums of 2012? Share your thoughts below in the comments thread.
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Currently undertaking NCTJ (journalism qualification), do a lot of music writing and very interested in literature, film, current affairs and anything else in between. Find me on Twitter - @jjviney