[Adam Eisenberg is a copy editor at Punknews.org]
The record I listened to most this year did not actually come out in 2014. Way back in 2013, Disney released
Frozen: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, and this year, there’s no doubt that I’ve heard it from
front to back more than any other album in my collection. I know all the words to “Let It Go.†I know what frozen
things do in summer. It’s not that I want to know these things, it’s that sometimes you learn things like this in
the course of listening to the only album that will get an 9-month-old to stop screaming in the car. That said, I
did have a small amount of time to listen to other records. This is what I thought of them.
My favorite LPs from 2014
20
Ivy: Ivy
Katorga Works
I generally find deliberately lo-fi production to be contrived, but there's something about how the
technique is used on Ivy's self-titled record that has me willing to look the other way. I think it's because the
songs are good and the production isn't used as a distraction. In fact, it actually adds tension to an already
tense experience.
19
Kepi Ghoulie: Kepi Goes Country
Kepiland/Eccentric Pop
Yes, we've heard these songs before, and no, I don't care, because Kepi Ghoulie continues to make them
feel fresh and lively with each new reinterpretation. It's a rare feat to take such simple songs and make them feel
new again, but Kepi accomplishes it, seemingly with ease.
18
Lagwagon: Hang
Fat Wreck Chords
Lagwagon's first full-length in nearly a decade could have gone two ways -- a sad rehash by a band
attempting to capture its former glory, or a ripping return to form that firmly re-establishes the band's place in
the punk rock pantheon. Luckily for us, it's the latter, and while I've never been a huge fan, it's still nice to
hear that Lagwagon hasn't lost a step.
17
The Gotobeds: Poor People Are Revolting
12XU Records
This is a weird record. Some of the songs bring to mind the earliest art-rock-influenced punk, while
other tracks sound like they could have come off a Bridge and Tunnel album. There are clearly a ton of influences
converging here, and the end result is an interesting and varied debut album.
16
Fucked Up: Glass Boys
Matador Records
The last thing I want to do is damn a band with faint praise, but the best I can say is that this album
is pretty good. As someone who is a huge fan of Fucked Up's earlier work, I don't find Glass Boys to be
quite on the same tier. It's all relative though, and compared to most of what came out this year, it's still a
solid release.
15
Hard Girls: A Thousand Surfaces
Asian Man Records
If you only know Hard Girls as the band that backs up Jesse Michaels in Classics of Love, you're missing
out. A Thousand Surfaces finds the band fully capable of standing on its own, and making a righteous noise
while doing so.
14
Various: Ten Years of Your Dumb Bullshit
Red Scare Industries
The days of seminal compilations are over, but that doesn't mean a good one can't come along once every
so often. In celebration of Red Scare's tenth anniversary, the label's trotted out new and unreleased tracks from
alumni like The Lillingtons, The Methadones and Enemy You, and that right there is enough to land it on any best of
list.
13
Creative Adult: Psychic Mess
Run For Cover
Not all hardcore has to be fast and loud. In fact, Creative Adult put those tropes aside to a great
degree on Psychic Mess and succeed by creating menace and tension in the spaces in between the riffs and
drumbeats.
12
Criminal Code: No Device
Deranged Records
Criminal Code combine hardcore urgency and post-punk tension to great effect on No Device. This
came out early in the year, but I didn't get my hands on it until recently, and I'm still lamenting the fact that I
missed out on enjoying this record all year long.
11
The Copyrights: Report
Red Scare Industries
If The Copyrights' previous record, North Sentinel Island, was a departure from the sound most are
familiar with, Report is most definitely a return, though a few of the elements from North Sentinel
Island remain. I'm always wary of describing bands as "mature," but Report is very much what a "mature"
Copyrights record should sound like.
10
Steve Adamyk Band: Dial Tone
Dirtnap Records
If last year's Third was the Steve Adamyk Band showing their pop-punk side, then this year's
Dial Tone is the grungy, garage-y other side. The songs aren't quite as catchy or upbeat, but the band is
just as tight as ever, and the album is just as good a listen.
9
Generacion Suicida: Todo Termina
Going Underground
I'm still not completely sure this is a full-length, but nine songs on a single-sided 12-inch is close
enough for me. Building on last year's Con La Muerte A Tu Lado, Generacion Suicida punch it up a notch with
a little bit of extra crunch to go along with their passionate lyrics, delivered entirely en Espanol.
8
Masked Intruder: M.I.
Fat Wreck Chords
I have no idea how long Masked Intruder's lovelorn lawbreaker shtick is going to last, but while it does,
I'm certainly going to enjoy it. M.I., the band's first full-length on Fat Wreck Chords, does everything
the first record did, and then some. It's got more sugary pop, more three-part harmonies and more songs about petty
larceny.
7
The Manges: All Is Well
It's Alive Records
The Manges have done something almost impossible on All Is Well. The self-proclaimed punk rock
veterans have managed to put together an album of songs about girls, leather jackets and all of those other pop-
punk tropes without sounding trite or derivative. In fact, their mature take on immature themes injects vitality
into a subgenre that sorely needs it.
6
OFF!: Wasted Years
Vice Records
Keith Morris continues to put contemporary lead singers to shame. At nearly 60 years old, Morris sounds
angrier, more direct and more purposeful than ever before on Wasted Years. It doesn't hurt that he's backed
by a band that brings many of the same qualities.
5
The Brokedowns: Life Is A Breeze
Red Scare Industries
I really, really like The Brokedowns, and Life Is A Breeze is their best work yet. Ergo, I really,
really like this record. It's angry, it's catchy and it's clever. In other words, it's everything we've come to
expect from The Brokedowns, and if it weren't for the advance copy I got, it would have come out too late to make
this list. Thanks Toby!
4
Swingin' Utters: Fistful of Hollow
Fat Wreck Chords
Fistful of Hollow finds the Swingin' Utters in top form, with 15 tracks that dart across genres
but remain rooted in the band's familiar sound. If you listen closely, you'll also hear some new tricks, all of
which come off flawlessly. That's pretty impressive for a band with the Utters' longevity.
3
Good Throb: Fuck Off
Super-Fi/Sabermetric/White Den
Good Throb's brand of hardcore-tinged post-punk is sloppy, angular and in-your-face, and all of those
attributes blend together nicely on the band's 2014 full-length Fuck Off. If you put early P.I.L., Fugazi
and Black Flag into a blender, the result would taste terrible, but it would sound a lot like Good Throb.
2
Neighborhood Brats: Recovery
Deranged Records
Neighborhood Brats combine the unhinged effects of baking in the California sun with the meat and
potatoes of the Midwest and the swagger of NYC and the result is a near-perfect distillation of American hardcore.
After a slew of shorter releases, Recovery shows a band that has no trouble performing over the long haul,
too.
1
Against Me!: Transgender Dysphoria Blues
Total Treble
I've never been a huge Against Me! fan, and I'm even willing to admit that I spent most of the year
trying to find a way to not annoint Transgender Dysphoria Blues as the best record of the year. In the end
though, I couldn't deny the truth -- there's no other record this year that's as personal and passionate, and
certainly no other record this year that can continue to elicit goosebumps on each listen.