15. Yo La Tengo - I Am Not Afraid of You and I Will Beat Your Ass They've taken their near-folk base and laid on diverse melodies and emotions, in this tightly-arranged album. Hoboken's pride have crafted the kind of piece that even the hippest NYC hipster would go to Jersey for. |  |
14. Peter Bjorn and John - Writer's Block Swift, cool throwback pop that made it ok to want to chill on a shag carpet and listen to records all day. Laid-back harmonies and carelessly upbeat rhythms with an old charm that only Swedes could pull off so easily and without irony. |  |
13. Muse - Black Holes and Revelations An epic by all standards, this bombastic, alt-classical romp of expansive production goes through mountains and valleys with gritted teeth and projected shouts. Couldn't be any stronger. |  |
12. The Foundry Field Recordings - Prompts/Miscues A lonesome, post-apocalyptic portrait of mankind, it features soft, rolling vocals, and shimmering atmosphere that are as both light and all-consuming as the sea of radiation it portrays. |  |
11. Love Is All - 9 Times That Same Song Lo-fi and punk, Sweden's Love Is All is a rambunctious set of clanging, romping instruments, led by Josephine Olausson's fresh vocals that inspire a feverish party scene and freedom only Scandinavians would know. |  |
10. Scott Walker - The Drift Unequivocal humor and painstakingly elaborate art-rock are what make Scott Walker as enigmatic as he's been for so long, and this is just another reason why. This is one of those albums you just have to admire from a distance. |  |
09. Joanna Newsom - Ys On this album, Joanna Newsom transcends the label 'female singer-songwriter'. She combines stripped-down folk and Bjorkish variety with a sweet, poignant voice that can't be ghettofied.
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08. Hot Chip - The Warning This album, full of bounce and electrostatic energy, illustrated how seemingly easily five cheeky guys could make infectious jams and adhesive ballads with just a couple of guitars some keyboards. |  |
07. The Hold Steady - Boys and Girls in America While the story-telling rolls, the rock skips around like a drunk bouncing between walls using huge riffs to emphasize the weight of the stagger. There's something of the '70s still alive here, and thankfully for them, history repeats itself. |  |
06. Danielson - Ships Amazingly well-connected, Daniel Smith has created a mountain of sound instead of a field of sounds. There's a coordinated genius, unity, and fun mixed into an album that has it all. |  |
05. Sonic Youth - Rather Ripped Tuneful yet intense, complex without being dense, it sees Sonic Youth consistently relevant without slavery to fashion. With all the fanfare over the reunions of 80's alternative bands, no one should overlook the one band that's been delivering for the past twenty-five years. |  |
04. Band of Horses - Everything All The Time Carving out a more accessible southern rock sound than even My Morning Jacket can, and with all of the comparisons, this debut shone with mellowness chasing inspiration down the highway - a spectacle few could turn away from. |  |
03. Liars - Drum's Not Dead Powerfully erratic and impressively evolutionary, the pulse of this album beats heavily and with irregularity, creating a thunderous adventure that has a heaping amount of both brain and brawn. |  |
02. The Knife - Silent Shout Hauntingly creepy, and smoothly catchy, it sounds less like two people than two machines producing as dark and robo-melodic an album as possible. And having no cheesy moments in a such an electronic album is an amazing feat in itself. |  |
01. TV on the Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain As soon as it leaked, it was lauded for its out-of-control alt-art sound of beautifully organized chaos and stood head and shoulders above everything else in 2006. Vigorous, complex, anthemic, and even danceable. It was everything an album should be. |
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