Allmusic’s Favorite Electronic Albums of 2007, Pt. 1
December 11th, 2007 | 5:00 pm est |
Air - Pocket Symphony
Ever since Moon Safari was hailed as an instant classic, Air has swung back and forth between the experimental and accessible sides that Nicolas Godin and Jean-Benoît Dunckel united so perfectly on their debut. 10,000 Hz Legend might have been too grandiose and aggressively experimental for some Air fans, but Talkie Walkie sometimes felt as if the duo was presenting the most widely palatable version of their music possible. On Pocket Symphony, Dunckel and Godin find a balance between pretty and inventive that they haven’t struck since, well, Moon Safari, even though it isn’t nearly as immediate — even by Air’s standards, this is an extremely introspective and atmospheric album. Read more >>
Daft Punk - Alive 2007
Timed to perfection, Daft Punk’s second live album landed exactly ten years after the first, and provides a fitting complement to Alive 1997, easily the best live non-DJ electronica record ever released. While the original featured only a handful of tracks (but found them transformed and tweaked ad infinitum), Alive 2007 is packed with productions, most of them short and many of them getting a big crowd response (all recorded at one show in Paris in June of 2007). As on their first two classic full-lengths, Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo display excellent crowd control, pacing the record well, spacing the hits, and building the mood like the good crowd-pleasers they are. Read more >>
Echospace - The Coldest Season
The Coldest Season compiles and fuses the eight tracks from a four-part 12″ series released during mid 2007 on England’s Modern Love label, adding one beat-less/bass-less piece to help assemble a steadily flowing, discreetly stimulating, 80-minute whole. This is breathing ambient dub techno, just as exemplary of the form as anything made by Mark Ernestus and Moritz Von Oswald (Basic Channel), Andy Mellwig and Thomas Köner (Porter Ricks), René Löwe (Vainqueur), and Stefan Betke (Pole). Rod Modell, who has been producing ambient electronic music for over ten years — with well-regarded solo releases on the Silentes label, as well as feverishly collected singles as half of Deepchord — came up with the raw source material, including loops made from Detroit field recordings, while partner Stephen Hitchell made point-perfect sense of it all. Read more >>
Thomas Fehlmann - Honigpumpe
After Visions of Blah was released, Thomas Fehlmann went nearly two years without issuing any solo material on Kompakt. However, he was as occupied as ever during this period, working with the Orb, producing the excellent downtempo/abstract hip-hop album Lowflow for Plug Research, and continuing to cross the planet with his laptop sets. Less reliant on previously released 12″ material than Visions of Blah, Honigpumpe — or “Honeypump,” an homage to German artist Joseph Beuys, who used honey to symbolize social force and the transfer of thoughts and ideas — nonetheless uses the 12″ releases Little Big Horn (2004) and Emo Pack (2006) as its foundation. Like Visions of Blah, this album supplies a combination of dubby techno, slightly gnarled shuffle-tech, and open-sky ambient. Read more >>
Jazzanova & Gerd Janson - Computer Incarnations for World Peace
Jazzanova’s reputation for quality control is virtually insurmountable, and the mix album Computer Incarnations for World Peace doesn’t disappoint. It’s an unmixed set, curated by Jazzanova’s Alex Barck plus Gerd Janson of the Running Back label, focusing on post-disco of several stripes, Italo- or new wave or jazz or even Latin. (Unlike most Sonar Kollektiv compilations, it has nothing from the label’s catalogue.) Virtually every track is a CD debut, and for anyone with an interest in Arthur Russell or Giorgio Moroder or My Life in the Bush of Ghosts (i.e. ’80s disco or new wave experimentalism), this is one of the more necessary extravagances available. Read more >>
Justice - Cross
French boys Xavier de Rosnay and Gaspard Augé originally got their start in the music scene playing in bad Metallica and Nirvana cover bands, and the album art of Cross makes it look like a doomy metalcore release, but the record is anything but metal. In fact, it’s almost everything but metal. It’s a grimy mix of dancehall, techno, ’80s R&B, and lounge with Clockwork Orange synths, deadly static crunches, hard-hitting kicks, grinding groans, and a spliced slap-popping bass that recalls Michael Jackson’s disco classic, Off the Wall. The songs are scattered and chopped to all hell, but they often feel revolutionary. This is partially due to the duo’s “anything goes” attitude. It’s as if Justice is reacting to complacency in latter-day electronic music and seeing how far they can take their slicing and dicing before the chopped up compositions fall apart. Read more >>
LCD Soundsystem - Sound of Silver
Compared to the first LCD Soundsystem album, Sound of Silver is less silly, funnier, less messy, sleeker, less rowdy, more fun, less distanced, more touching. It is just as linked to James Murphy’s record collection, with traces of post-punk, disco, Krautrock, and singer/songwriter schlubs, but the references are evidently harder to pin down; the number of names dropped in the reviews published before its release must triple the amount mentioned throughout “Losing My Edge.” There’s even some confusion as to which version of David Bowie is lurking around. One clearly evident aspect of the album is that Murphy has streamlined his sound. All the jagged frays have been removed, replaced by a slightly tidier approach that is more direct and packs more punch. Read more >>
Max Rouen - The Magnetic Wave of Sound
Max Rouen describes the collage of music that he’s created on Magnetic Wave of Sound as an audio take on Belgian Surrealism, which isn’t too far off. Just as Rene Magritte challenged boundaries in his paintings by placing common objects in unfamiliar surroundings, Rouen uses a similar juxtaposition to cut and paste reverberated vocals that sound like they’re from the ’60s with modern breakbeats. By using analog tape and digital manipulation, he mixes a turn of the century electro style reminiscent of Massive Attack’s Mezzanine or Air’s 10,000 Hz Legend with moody old blues and jazz singers to concoct songs that sound simultaneously futuristic and timeless. Dark basslines intersect with distorted drum patterns and dirty synths in slow motion and hammer down cavernous slide guitar and imitation Serge Gainsbourg spoken vocals. Read more >>
Tobias Thomas - Please Please Please
Please Please Please follows 2000’s Für Dich and 2003’s Smallville, closing out a trilogy of Tobias Thomas mixes for Kompakt. Listeners familiar with the first two chapters might not be surprised that Please Please Please also diverges from the expected path of a customary dance mix. Again, Thomas uses the format not as an attempt to condense an ahead-of-the-curve, three-hour set into 80 minutes of nonstop intensity; instead, he challenges the ears of the most open-minded techno fans, designing a set that plays out more like Sonic Youth’s Daydream Nation or Wire’s 154 than Jeff Mills’ Live at the Liquid Room or even Michael Mayer’s Immer 2. Having previously used a monologue from one of Blumfeld’s albums, nearly half of Vladislav Delay’s 22-minute “Huone,” and 12 minutes of beat-less ambience, Thomas evidently couldn’t care less about doing the expected. Read more >>
Von Südenfed - Tromatic Reflexxions
Mouse on Mars and Mark E. Smith enjoyed working together on the 12″ version of “Wipe That Sound” so much that they decided to give their collaboration its own full-fledged identity, Von Südenfed (a witty mash-up of Germany’s süden — that is, southern — region and the decongestant Sudafed). Though much has been made of how strange this pairing of artists is, it’s really not that unpredictable: Smith, Andi Toma, and Jan St. Werner all like to defy expectations. More to the point, Smith has made a career of breaking and re-forming language in his own image, and in much the same way, Toma and St. Werner keep reconfiguring their music. Besides, getting hung up on the “quirkiness” of Von Südenfed’s origins overlooks just how enjoyable Tromatic Reflexxions really is. Read more >>






Hi, thank you for this list, and “Air” really cool!
Interesting list, but I think you kind of missed off The Field - From Here We Go Sublime and Burial - Untrue. Modeselektor, Chloe and Simian Mobile Disco are also worth a mention… IMHO, with the explosion of Berlin/minimal techno (call it what you will) this year, many of the best electronic albums are DJ mixes. Respect is due to Ame, Henrik Schwarz, Ellen Allien, Fabric records, DJ Kicks series, Moon Harbour Records, Modeselektor (in DJ mode), Booka Shade, Hot Chip (again, in DJ mode), Ricardo Villalobos, Radio Slave and Mr C for laying some wonderful musical journeys on us in 2007.
Hi Andy,
You’ll see some of those albums in the second part.
Neat! Really love the releases from LCD Soundsystem and Daft punk indeed! But for me, THE best albums of the year are
Burial - Untrue
Venetian Snares - My Downfall
Though the latter is for a more select audience (due to it’s outbursts of rapid speed Amen breaks and breakcore-ish passages) the album is a consistent work of art, a sometimes bombastic, sometimes quiet piece of mood with a hungarian flavour. Really reccommendable.
The latest release by Burial is called “Untrue” and it’s a gem. Beautiful and shadowy.
Apart from those two missing, I totally agree with this list. Justice is a nice addition to the French techno scene, whilst the veterans (daft punk) bring up a really enjoyable live record!
Looking forward to next year’s releases :)
Happy new year everyone!
Found lots to love in “This Bliss” by Pantha du Prince. Infinitely more listenable than The Field and another example why Kompakt is one of the best labels on the planet.
Selection misses out the best 2 of the year by far which are by The Field & Burial. Allmusic have not even bothered to review The Field. Come on guys, pull your fingers out.
The Burial album is a big miss, and an album that was even better (no, really) is Whisper me Wishes by Kettel. Utter electronic emotional neo-classical brilliance.
Too many non-mainstream artists (ie not on a big label) get ignored by this site..
Daft Punk - Alive 2007 is fantastic, better even as a live document than Kraftwerk’s Minimum Maximum, better than the studio originals and mixed together in a totally innovative way. I am already on my second copy having given the first away to a deserving friend - “Play loud!”.
Daft Punk’s Alive 2007 is absolutely fantastic album! It is like an orgasm for your ears. Daft Punk truly masters the art of mixing in this fantastic blend of all their past and current greats. I was at the July 27th Alive 2007 Concert @ Berkeley and this really brought me back to it. I relived the concert when listening to this CD. The crowd cheering, clapping, and singing along really adds to the ambiance of the recording. The One More Time / Aerodynamic mix was really something special and you could feel the energy of the crowd exploding! The deluxe edition is worth the extra money because you get this really nice case which includes a booklet with pictures from the Alive 2007 tour which featured the most amazing light show I have ever seen. And the second CD has such a great mix. When you pop the second CD into your computer it goes to fullscreen and you can watch the awesomeness that was the Harder Better Faster Stronger Alive 2007 performance live; it is even cooler because it is shot from close to a hundred angle (Daft Punk handed out video cameras before the concert and told people and then compiled and mixed them into this great video!).