December 12, 2006
Our top 20 albums that made 2006 a most awesome year in music. Downloads of our favorite songs are our holiday gift to you. By Jonathan Forgang
Here at Refinery29, we take our independent fashion seriously.
And perhaps running a distant second to always being kind to strangers, great, great music informs everything we do, especially when the nights are late (which they almost always are). As our holiday gift to you, we've compiled the ultimate ode to 2006 in our top 20 Albums of the Year. If you're a devoted Refinery29 music follower, you've seen many of these albums make an appearance on our site at some point this year.
And each of these albums, along with some of their best singles, succinctly confirms why every artist is a keeper. Download a song from each album on our list, and then forward it on to all those folks who have been good to you this year. Best of all, you don't have to wrap a thing.
This topped our list because it's an album that's been haunting us since we first heard it. The soulful harmonies, impeccable songwriting, and overall warmth of the record are sure to stay with you for some time to come. The beauty of this album is its infinite playability.
It's one of the most innovative and enjoyable straight-forward pop albums of the year, and, like their hit single, you can play this one "Over and Over." Almost indescribably good, we love this band's harmonies and the way the addition of the rhythm section has made an already good band into a great one. Brother-Sister Swedish duo The Knife have turned up gold on their third album, which is brimming with unstoppable beats and pitch-shifted hooks that sound like an angry drag queen (in the best possible way ever).
We came to this album for the rootsy blues we've come to love Califone for, but then we found their cover of the Psychic TV song "The Orchids," and its a contender for the most hypnotic three minutes we've been privy to all year. A final masterpiece from Dilla, one of the most influential hip hop producers of all time. At times it gets sloppy and meanders in a million different directions.
But at its heart, it's a deeply soulful record. She's sort of twee, but when push comes to shove her songs have an almost insulting simplicity to them. It's not the structure here, but the voice and melancholy beneath, making it distractingly addictive, as all great things should be.
At first we were worried this album was going to be all about the hit of the year "Young Folks," but the other songs hold up on their own, too. Once again, Sweden makes great pop. A hardcore hip hop album like we haven't heard since the mid-90s, and some of the Neptunes best production in the past few years.
Yeah, we're sort of a sucker for all things Erlend Oye, but putting him at #10 isn't just us being fanboys/girls. It's really a fantastic album of indie pop songs mdash;really. In the past, we've found Camera Obscura to have a limited appeal, something that goes in, and one week later comes out of your CD player.
This time around, the Scots provide a much more meaningful, substantial album with melodies both to remember and sing along to. JT is a genius for getting Timbaland to produce most of this album and Timbaland is a genius just for being himself. Yeah yeah, you've all heard about this guy and his buzzy, out-of-nowhere rise to blogger stardom, but he's not only about aping the musical stylings of the Balkans.
He's also got an amazing voice and the uncanny ability to write memorable odes to various far-off lands he's never even been to. A boy, his violin, and dozens of accolades later, Final Fantasy's sophomore full-length is not only sweeping Canada by storm but making a run for it stateside. Give thanks to his unique compositions and penchant for Dungeons and Dragons, for we have another winner.
Thoughtful and transcendent ambient house music that subtly shapeshifts and surprises. We love. Creating an album of 15-minute songs with no rock instrumentation and succeeding is one of the most impressive things we've witnessed this year.
Dreamy metal or metallic dream pop, either way this is the year's best rock-n-roll record. Atlanta boys Snowden give us the dark power-rock anthems we've been craving in today's over-Sufjaned universe. A criminally overlooked record and one of the year's best.
Sofia Coppola is one lucky lady, bagging the lead singer of France's hottest musical export since Air. A band with consistently catchy yet semi brainless foot tappers. Who said there's something wrong with mindless pop?
Mash me up Greg Gillis because you are both cute and insanely talented and making me shake my booty. Yes, it's a bit spastic and frenetic, but that's how I like to move on the dancefloor while playing guessing games of the 100s of pop samples used in your classic "Night Ripper." Call Me.
All MP3s are for sampling purposes only. Please go out and buy the artists' records. If anyone would like for us to remove a track, please email us at .
