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The
Best of 1999: Music
1
RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE , "The Battle of Los Angeles" (EPIC).
Because Tom Morello--who can make his guitar sound like a
harmonica, a pair of turntables or a street uprising--is the
most thrilling guitarist in rock today. Because rapper-singer
Zack de la Rocha mixes poetry and polemics into song lyrics that
would do Chuck D or Bob Dylan proud. Because in a year in which
a riot of rockers copped beats from hip-hop, no other band made
the rap-rock union resonate with such ferocity and intelligence.
Clips in RealAudio
2
THE ROOTS, "Things Fall Apart"(MCA). This Philadelphia-based
band named its CD after a novel by Nigerian writer Chinua
Achebe: very cool. And while other rap acts rely on canned
beats, the The
Roots play instruments (guitars, drums, etc.), giving
their work unique vibrancy and depth. Let the cartoon gangstas
cater to suburban stereotypes--the Roots are keeping it real.
3
BRAD MEHLDAU , "Elegiac Cycle" (Warner Bros.). A 29-year-old
pianist who displays not only promise but accomplishment. With
classical grace and jazz improvisation, he has created a
masterly album about loss; virtually every track has the liquid
warmth of a freshly shed tear. Moments of genius in music are
rare as diamonds. This CD sparkles like a display case at Tiffany.
4
NINE INCH NAILS, "The Fragile" (Nothing/Interscope). Into the
orgy of urgently escapist pop that ruled music this year, Trent
Reznor dropped this monument to loneliness and psychic angst. A
powerful and creepily beautiful rock-'n'-roll album, The Fragile
brought hope to alienated youth everywhere.
5 SANTANA, "Supernatural" (Arista). Let's face it: most '60s rockers
have headed out to pasture. But with a little help from his
friends (Lauryn Hill, Everlast), 52-year-old Carlos Santana stayed alive by renewing the formula that once took him to the top: blues, Hendrix-style guitar work and chugging Afro-Latin
rhythms. Rock history, written by lightning fingers.
6
FIONA APPLE, "When the Pawn..." (Clean Slate/Epic). Like shards from
a shattered mirror, the 22-year-old singer-songwriter's latest
album glitters with reflective surfaces and sharp edges. Apple's
songs, richly produced and intimately performed, explore the
opposite of romance: betrayal, breakup, failure to commit. Apple
has matured into more than a pop prodigy, more than a girl,
interrupted. She is now, as an artist, a woman in full.
7
KIM RICHEY, "Glimmer" (Mercury). "From the ashes some glimmer of
the truth appears," sings this veteran Nashville thrush. But her
wise, smoky voice doesn't languish in the ashes of self-pity or
revenge. There's buoyancy and gravity, musical variety and
sneaky lyric craft in this endlessly listenable set. Glimmer
glows.
8
LES NUBIANS , "Princesses Nubiennes."(OMTOWN/VIRGIN). Helene and Celia
Faussart, singing sisters from Bordeaux, France, boast a global
sound: they take African rhythms and American soul and top them
off with a cool, seductive delivery that's distinctively French.
A magical musical package tour.
9
CONSTANT LAMBERT, Tiresias/Pomona (Hyperion). Constant
Lambert's final ballet score was roundly damned by critics at
its 1951 premiere, then went unplayed for 40 years. This
recording (performed by the English Northern Philharmonia,
conducted by David Lloyd Jones and happily coupled with the
ballet Pomona) gives a second chance to a masterpiece.
10
REGINA CARTER, "Rhythms of the Heart"(Verve). A breakout album by
a violinist who's a veteran of the jazz scene. Drawing smartly on
the work of jazz violinists of the past--notably Stuff Smith and
Stephane Grappelli--Carter makes music that's wonderfully
listenable and, at times, breathtakingly daring. The devil never
played fiddle this well.
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