Feature / Music / Year End 2013
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2013)

December 30, 2013

Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2013)
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2013)

Another year, another year-end roundup from SPB. This is the tenth year of our existence and it's perhaps fitting that the album we've voted the best of 2013 is by a band which holds lots of significance for SPB. But no spoilers! Read on to see the list of the 30 best albums that came out in 2013 – be sure to let us know below which ones you think we've missed.

Overall sitewide list

1

AFI

Burials

Republic

As a zine built on the foundation of loving AFI, it would clearly be remiss not to talk about their new record. We try to pretend that Decemberunderground and Crash Love never happened - the first rule of AFI fandom is.... - but it would be silly to think that AFI made it to Burials without having to go through those two terrible albums. OK, I'll give them this, the songs they played live sounded great, but listening to the albums is a lesson in torture. Praise the Dark Lord then, that AFI have regrouped, re-energised and reclaimed their love of the dark. "The Face Beneath The Waves" closes Burials on suitably shadowy tones that bring the album full circle. The verses sit in subtle, minimal waves of vocal and slightly held back ambient noise (yes, really) while the chorus surges with a heady passion that surrounds and envelopes you in classic AFI tones. It holds a sense of finality in its closing moments and signals the rebirth and renewal of the much-loved band into one that is defiant in its outlook. AFI are back, make no mistake. – Cheryl

2

Cult of Luna

Vertikal

Density

Standing in stark opposition to the intimate warmth of their other releases like Somewhere Along the Highway or Eternal Kingdom, Vertikal is just so perfectly icy and bleak that you can't help but feel moved by it. The way the music makes you feel like an outsider, like the band is somehow removed from the listening experience itself, creates an almost paralyzing sense of distress in the listener, compelling you to continue listening just so that you can reach some kind of consoling resolution. This album is huge, powerful, menacing, and strangely intriguing all at the same time. If you're looking for what will assuredly be one of the best post-metal records this year, you need to hear Vertikal. – Sarah

3

Arctic Monkeys

AM

Domino

With an arbitrary approach to songwriting, Arctic Monkeys have developed infectiously. Are there dubious moments on AM? Sure. Amidst all the question marks, ender, "I Wanna Be Yours", eases hazily, resting ill placed at the close of a rock-strewn, eclectic collection of songs. But there's never anything worth entirely forsaking here. Despite their monkey business, these guys are a virtuous spectacle, keeping good company, and showing no signs of freezing. – Brennan

4

Johnny Marr

The Messenger

Warner Bros.

The Messenger is not The Smiths, The Cribs, or Modest Mouse; each track is unmistakably Johnny Marr's own. Seeming to unfold, there is no intent eagerness to please on any of the songs. This is undoubtedly the sound of a musician who knows what he's doing and couldn't care less about what's expected of him. At no point do the songs falter or sound repetitive, The Messenger offers a glimpse into the musical mind of Johnny Marr, and gives the distinct impression that there's a lot more to come. He may already have been officially crowned Godlike Genius, but it seems Johnny Marr will continue to remind us of exactly why he was so deserving of that title. – Aideen

5

Altar Of Plagues

Teethed Glory and Injury

Profound Lore

Often an album comes along that defies all genre constraints and challenges your own perception on life and reality. Sometimes that album makes you delve deep within the self and question your own outlooks. Teethed Glory and Injury is that album. And oh, how it ravages your being. The music is racked with an agony that no mere mortal should ever be privy too and it’s testament to their ability to hone that despair into painful inflections of guitar and voice that it never crosses into “woe is me” territory or trite angst. Closing with “Reflection Pulse Remains” and driven cries of “I am not here,” Teethed Glory and Injury is a decidedly uncomfortable process to bear witness to, but the rewards are thousand fold and the cleansing absolute. – Cheryl

6

Deafheaven

Sunbather

Deathwish Inc.

If there was ever an album to challenge Altar of Plagues' recent Teethed Injury and Glory for most divisive black metal record of the year, then Deafheaven’s sophomore effort Sunbather is surely the strongest challenger. The band split opinion in almost every circle – black metal fans, shoegaze fans, awful hipsters, critics – no one seems to know what to do with this group or where they fit within the black metal arena… and that’s ok. It’s clear that Deafheaven have learned a great deal since their beginnings in terms of manipulating their sound to maximise the effect on the senses and so Sunbather swirls in the heat of misspent youth and in the struggle to overcome the feelings associated with those mistakes and to move on to new, better and hopeful times. Deafheaven may be a young band, they may split opinion and they may not even really be black metal at all, but they are certainly a product of generation that was promised everything and received nothing and as such create haunting and personal work that resonates with desire and desperation alike. – Cheryl

7

El-P & Killer Mike

Run The Jewels

Fools Gold

Run the Jewels could easily have been a victory parade after the momentous 2012 that Killer Mike and El-P had. There are few negatives to be found here. Run The Jewels offers complex, lush and layered production, interesting and inventive wordplay, and it's free. The lack of any real "standout" tracks ("Sea Legs", if I had to pick a favorite) could be seen as a detractor to those more interested in cherry-picking songs, but the albums consistency does not drag it down. As prolific of a rapper as Big Boi is, his verse on "Banana Clipper" almost feels like it was tacked on as an afterthought. It's more of a testament to how natural and magnetic these two rappers are together and it's likely that anybody would be upstaged. Run The Jewels is not some sprawling, self-indulgent narrative, and it doesn't try to be. It's simply two MC's turning the volume up and going for the throat. – Josh G.

8

Lycus

The Tempest

20 Buck Spin

In a genre such as funeral doom, most bands choose to try and do things the easy way, relying just on the slow pace and heavy guitars. Well, Lycus are doing much more than that. They include influences from some of the best that doom/death had to offer in the early 90s and they are defiant enough to make the extra mile in order to get a sound that is a shade darker than the rest, and it works. Tempest is an album that shatters your mind, it creates a mesmerizing vortex of dissonance and sorrowful melody from which you will not want to turn away. – Spyros

9

Queens of the Stone Age

Like Clockwork

Matador

It has been 6 since Queens of the Stone Age released their album Era Vulgaris. An album this reviewer gave a favorable rating, but admittedly didn't fully understand at the time of reviewing for this site. I couldn't fully grasp what the band was trying to achieve at the time and when it finally dawned on me and it took everything in my power to not delete what I had written and start over with a new sense of enlightenment. Where once I was blind, I now can see, and the path is made clear with ...Like Clockwork. This is an album that is such a welcome sound for sore ears, it's almost enough to evoke tears of joy. ...Like Clockwork is the closest thing to a perfect album you're likely to hear all year. – Kevin

10

Darkthrone

The Underground Resistance

Peaceville

There's not a whole hell of a lot to be said about Darkthrone that is not already legend. Having survived the Norwegian Black Metal Scene relatively unscathed - both the chaos of the early 90's and all the cliches of the subsequent years, they are, with the exception of maybe Mayhem, the last band standing in the ashes of the genre. Darkthrone is a band that can be expected to evolve further as the years progress. Whether they take all of their fanbase with them remains to be seen as arguments within the genre over what is "true" and what isn't continue to rage on but whatever the outcome, Darkthrone remains a band that has earned the respect of us all. – Kevin

11

Portal

Vexovoid

Profound Lore

The only thing that would make sense of how this album came to be is the following scenario: Portal managed to somehow open a gateway to the realms of the Great Old Ones and were granted supernatural powers by malicious beings, such as Azathoth, Nyarlathotep, Yog-Sothoth, Tsathoggua and obviously Cthulhu. And soon enough, Portal decided to put their newfound powers into good use… and that is how Vexovoid came to be. If you have a more likely explanation please let me know. So if you think that you are an extreme music fan (better think again), this is an album that will challenge even you, we are probably talking about the most extreme kind of death metal that there currently is out there, it might not be the fastest or the heaviest record around but it is definitely one of the nastiest and the meanest that you will hear. – Spyros

12

Pelican

Forever Becoming

Southern Lord Records

The atmosphere that the band is creating in this case is truly unique and when the track finally breaks into a storm of heavy riffs you are left speechless with the ability of Pelican to create sonic trips out of their compositions. In their latest album, Pelican were able to once again re-invent themselves. It is as if at the time this is the same band and then it is not. It is quite weird in a sense but what matters mostly here is that Forever Becoming is an amazing album, filled with heavy riffs, emotion, melodies, solid grooves and great songs. – Spyros

13

Haim

Days Are Gone

Polydor

The three LA sisters released a debut mixing classic soft rock with 90s R&B rhythms, with more than a hint of Fleetwood Mac to proceedings. Synths, reverb, and glossy melodies give a hint of their 80s influence, leaving Days Are Gone feeling nostalgic and confident all at once.

14

Oranssi Pazuzu

Valonielu

Svart Records/20 Buck Spin

The dreamlike setting that the band has crafted is still present accompanying you constantly, while the sound is steadily becoming more and more aggressive, promising a forthcoming moment of shattering fate. And all that while the effects are creating a warp that seems to be sucking up the very essence of existence. The track keeps evolving, switching from soothing parts to heavy moments and reaches its true majestic form in the few last minutes. Oranssi Pazuzu, with their third album, basically show what a unique band they are. Just when you think that you get what they are doing and how they are bending sounds to their will, they transcend your expectations, revealing that it is actually your consciousness and logic that is bending. Psychedelic music, black metal, space rock and experimental music, all are put through the sonic kaleidoscope that is Valonielu. The effect is imminent and this album is inescapable. – Spyros

15

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

Push The Sky Away

Bad Seed LTD.

Nick Cave is an uncaring bastard. He doesn't care if you buy his new album Push The Sky Away, nor does he care if you like it. Of course, this is not what makes him a great artist. What makes him a great artist is the uncompromising nature of his work. The man does whatever the hell he wants to, and everything else are mere obstacles - Impediments to the work at hand. If Push the Sky Away is the portrait of an artist in the sundowning phase of his career, here's hoping the sun never sets. – Kevin

16

Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine

White People And The Damage Done

Alternative Tentacles

The winds of change haven't changed Biafra a bit. He's still the dissonant dissident - the sardonic, fearless court jester that doesn't give a shit about pissing off the king. Jello's greatest strength has always been his masterful understanding of parody. It's this innate ability thats kept him from turning into a parody himself after all these years. Others (I'm looking at you, Mr. Lydon) have not been as lucky. It would appear that after so many years of flirting with side projects and collaborations, Jello Biafra has finally found himself a home. Despite this newfound stability, it's a good thing we're talking about a man that won't ever let himself be complacent. – Kevin

17

Castevet

Obsian

Profound Lore

The huge sound that the band is able to produce, their even colder atmosphere and the way that they are leaning more towards their post metal side combined bring a truly magnificent moment. The way that they manage to bring together the dissonant parts, eerie leads and unwelcoming atmosphere show the influence of bands such as Godflesh on their sound. Obsian is an album completely beyond reason or madness. Despite its short length, about thirty-six minutes, the range and variety of sounds that you will find within is simply astonishing. At least now we have two full-lengths from Castevet to listen to until their next release. That should make the wait easier right? Probably not. – Spyros

18

Low Culture

Screens

Dirtnap

Low Culture packs a punch. Not an angry punch, but one that, upon hearing it, your foot taps and your head bobs. The songs all fall within that two-minute range, except for the closer (“Magical Thinking”), and they utilize a similar structure, yet they mix up the parts enough that no two songs sound alike. Mason has a nice rasp in his voice and there’s still a fuzzy tone across the board, but the mix is a lot more subtle, which plays to the melodic focus. Screens is only the second 2013 record I’ve reviewed thus far, but it will very likely place highly come year end. – Loren

19

The National

Trouble Will Find Me

4AD

Claiming that Trouble Will Find Me is as essential as air could be viewed as overly enthusiastic, perhaps even overdramatic, but to hear an album that wallows so openly in the often forgotten and underappreciated intrinsic beauty of sadness is a rarity. Everything makes sense, every gloomy bass line and hushed vocal has an essential purpose. Trouble Will Find Me is a masterclass in conveying the most palpable of emotions in a sea of music notes, with each song taking on a different meaning after each listen. It’s a musician’s album. It’s a music fan’s album. It’s an album that only The National could make, and it is unquestionably their best yet. – Aideen

20

Janelle Monáe

The Electric Lady

Wondaland Arts Society

As with all Monáe's efforts, The Electric Lady is a long and meandering journey, making its points with intent and deliberate care, rather than throwing out a bunch of sure-fire pop hits and hoping people will stick around for the less radio-friendly deep cuts. Monáe's storytelling and creative efforts here are huge and even if, like Sgt. Pepper's, the concept album schtick doesn't always inform every aspect of the record, it's a strong factor in the success of the album. If you have the patience, it's worth the watch. If you don't, stick with the singles and you'll still be richly rewarded. Go deep and this will stay with you for a while. – Matt

21

The Silks

Last American Band

Independent

The result of these live recording sessions are twelve songs that bust out of the gate and make you get your ass moving. The entire album is amazing and the closer "Learning How To Let Go" conjures up images of The Band with a sound that doesn't mimic them but somehow sounds familiar but different, this is an uncompromising record, showcasing the talents of each of the players and the sound and energy that is The Silks, I highly recommend picking it up as soon as you can. – Scott W.

22

Red Fang

Whales And Leeches

Relapse

I have no idea what the future holds for Red Fang, but goddamn, they prick up these tired ears, and I hope they do so for many years to come. Whales and Leeches is the band's third full-length, and if there's any justice on this spinning orb, this album will make Red Fang bigger than the sound that's coming out of these Motörheadphönes. This is music to conquer a country by. This is a fearless shock-and-awe campaign of an album that's deserving of your attention, and if you don't give it your due attention, it'll grab you by the throat and demand it anyway. – Kevin

23

Nö Pöwer

No Peace

Sorry State

No Peace is the debut LP by Charlottesville, NC’s Nö Pöwer. There are subtle elements of garage and psych at play here but it’s primarily raging hardcore punk, with a noticeable emphasis on the noise. It's a primitive and blown-out style of D-beat that’s been injected with a distinctive dose of artiness and then drenched in feedback. Nö Pöwer is still pushing the limitations of the big D beyond monotonous reiteration. Attention all other bands: start doing this now! No Peace is the perfect amalgamation of punk sub-genres and a furious goddamn record. How much art can you take? Exactly this much. – Nathan

24

Future Virgins

Late Republic

Recess

Future Virgins have mastered hyper-garage/garage-punk and it’s nothing but pleasant to put Late Republic on for a spin. It’s a steady stream of bouncy tunes that doesn’t let up. Live, it’s a little more on the blown-out side of things and the melodies don’t come through quite as powerfully, letting the guitar crunch do the talking but on the record, it’s pop-fuelled gritty rock ‘n’ roll. – Loren

25

Atoms For Peace

Amok

XL Recordings

Every so often an unusual group of veteran musicians gather to form what was coined in the late ‘60s as a supergroup. There have been exceptional creative ventures, from the early Crosby, Stills & Nash, to the more recent Them Crooked Vultures and various Jack White endeavors, while others were better left to inebriated jam sessions at rock star house parties. After four years of hearsay and ambiguity (performing a two week tour in 2010 known only as ??????), Atoms For Peace have released their debut Amok. What we have here is an alluring album from a group whose components are likely greater than their combined effort. – Brennan

26

The Dismemberment Plan

Uncanney Valley

Partisan

Their first record in twelve years since their recent reformation, Uncanney Valley sees the D-Plan back at full strength, and even–whisper it–maturity. Yeah, there are call-and-response parts and funny lyrics, but there are moments of tender poignancy and acerbic asides from expert Travis Morrison. Danceable, vaguely echoing punk rock still, and clearly the sound of a band having fun, this is one for the grown-up fans which might just work for newbies, too. – Matt

27

Gogol Bordello

Pura Vida Conspiracy

ATO

The touring band currently stands at eight members but, make no mistake, this is Eugene Hütz's show all the way. On tracks like "John the Conqueror" and "Lost Innocent World," he plays to one of his many strengths and becomes the storyteller, showing us a world of heroes and outcasts longing to be understood. Gogol Bordello aren't just a flash in the pan, nor are they to be dismissed as a novelty act. There's a method to this madness that's as valid and viable as any act that doesn't wear Beetlejuice pants. Remember, to appreciate the truly cool things in this world, you don't need to be crazy. Just crazy enough. – Kevin

28

Gensu Dean & Planet Asia

Abrasions

Mello Music Group

As evidenced by 2012's pairing of Apollo Brown with both OC and Guilty Simpson, Mello Music Group has a knack for teaming the right producers and emcees up with favorable results. The same can be said of this 2013 duo. Gensu Dean, who's gone largely unknown up to this point, crafts simplistic yet alluring loops rooted in boom-bap nostalgia. Fresno, CA's veteran underground rhymeslinger Planet Asia masterfully rocks the mic with his commanding presence and sharp rhymes. – Nathan

29

Bill Ryder-Jones

A Bad Wind Blows in My Heart

Domino

The former guitarist for the Coral releases this, a collection of singer-songwriter efforts and muted pop. It's simple and clean and home-recorded, giving an old-fashioned vibe alongside lyrics of sorrow and sadness. The craftsmanship and directness of the songs override the possible lack of innovation or fashionableness of the record.

30

Radioactivity

Radioactivity

Dirtnap

when the record hits the third song, “World of Pleasure,” the ball drops. The volcanoes erupt. The world may have ended; I’m not sure. I’m just bouncing my foot and rolling in joyous harmony along with Burke and co. The vibe of the record is an ever-present forward-driving motion. It’s like running in circles continuously, gaining speed each round, only when it peaks it doesn’t go off course and crash into a wall, it just shifts a gear and resets. This is to be the first of two new records for the new band, and it’s setting the bar high. – Loren

Individual staff lists

These are the individual lists submitted by our writers, which are then compiled together to form the sitewide list. You can click a record's name (where linked) to read our review of that album.

Aideen's list

  1. The National – Trouble Will Find Me (4AD)
  2. Arctic Monkeys – AM (Domino)
  3. Bill Ryder-Jones – A Bad Wind Blows in My Heart (Domino)
  4. Savages – Silence Yourself (Matador)
  5. Laura Marling – Once I Was An Eagle (Virgin)
  6. James Blake – Overgrown (Polydor)
  7. Emma Louise – Vs Head Vs Heart (French Kiss)
  8. AFI – Burials (Republic)
  9. Bleached – Ride Your Heart (Dead Oceans)
  10. Primal Scream – More Light (Ignition)
  11. Suede – Bloodsports (Sony)
  12. The Courteeners – Anna (Polydor)
  13. Sleigh Bells – Bitter Rivals (Mom + Pop)
  14. Chvrches – The Bones of What You Believe (Virgin)
  15. Haim – Days Are Gone (Polydor)
  16. Kodaline – In A Perfect World (RCA)
  17. Johnny Marr – The Messenger (Warner Bros.)
  18. I Am Kloot – Let It All In (Shepherd Moon)
  19. Villagers – Awayland (Domino)
  20. The Maine – Forever Halloween (Rude Records)

Cheryl Prime's list

  1. Deafheaven – Sunbather (Deathwish Inc.)
  2. Altar Of Plagues – Teethed Glory and Injury (Profound Lore)
  3. Darkthrone – The Underground Resistance (Peaceville)
  4. Year Of No Light – Tocsin (Debemur Morti Productions)
  5. AFI – Burials (Republic)
  6. Cult of Luna – Vertikal (Density)
  7. In Solitude – Sister (Metal Blade Records)
  8. Cult of Fire – ?????? ?? ????? ???????? (Iron Bonehead Productions)
  9. Lycus – The Tempest (20 Buck Spin)
  10. Pelican – Forever Becoming (Southern Lord Records)
  11. Falkenbach – Asa (Prophecy Productions)
  12. Uncle Acid and the Deadbeats – Mind Control (Rise Above)
  13. Aosoth – IV: An Arrow In Heart (Agonia)
  14. Castevet – Obsian (Profound Lore)
  15. Ihsahn – Das Seelenbrechen (Candlelight Records)
  16. Lake of Blood – Omnipotens Tyrannus (Cult of Melancholia)
  17. Imperium Dekadenz – Meadows of Nostalgia (Season of Mist)
  18. Germ – Grief (Eisenwald)
  19. An Autumn For Crippled Children – Try Not to Destroy Everything You Love (Aeternitas Tenebrarum Musicae Fundamentum)
  20. Portal – Vexovoid (Profound Lore)
  21. Beastmilk – Climax (Svart Records)
  22. October Falls – The Plague of a Coming Age (Debemur Morti Productions)
  23. Soror Dolorosa – No More Heroes (Northern Silence/Beneath Grey Skies)
  24. Oranssi Pazuzu – Valonielu (Svart Records/20 Buck Spin)
  25. Woe – Withdrawal (Candlelight)

Kevin Fitzpatrick's list

  1. Queens of the Stone Age – Like Clockwork (Matador)
  2. Red Fang – Whales And Leeches (Relapse)
  3. Atoms For Peace – Amok (XL Recordings)
  4. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Push The Sky Away (Bad Seed LTD.)
  5. Tomahawk – Oddfellows (Ipecac)
  6. Motörhead – Aftershock (UDR)
  7. Johnny Marr – The Messenger (Warner Bros.)
  8. Queensrÿche – Self Titled (Century Media)
  9. Pearl Jam – Lightning Bolt (Republic)
  10. Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine – White People And The Damage Done (Alternative Tentacles)
  11. Various Artists – Sound City - Reel To Reel (RCA/Roswell)
  12. Iggy & The Stooges – Ready To Die (Fat Possum Records)
  13. Mudhoney – Vanishing Point (Sub Pop)
  14. Darkthrone – The Underground Resistance (Peaceville)
  15. My Bloody Valentine – m b v (Independent)
  16. Sigur Rós – Kveikur (XL Recordings)
  17. Hank Williams III – A Fiendish Threat (Hank III Records)
  18. Cult of Luna – Vertikal (Density)
  19. The Dillinger Escape Plan – ...One Of Us Is The Killer (Sumerian)
  20. Ihsahn – Das Seelenbrechen (Candlelight Records)
  21. Stone Temple Pilots with Chester Bennington – High Rise EP (Play Pen LLC)
  22. Arctic Monkeys – AM (Domino)
  23. Kurt Vile – Wakin' On A Pretty Daze (Matador)
  24. Coffins – The Fleshland (Relapse)
  25. Nirvana – In Utero (20th Anniversary Reissue) (Universal)

Loren's list

  1. Low Culture – Screens (Dirtnap)
  2. Future Virgins – Late Republic (Recess)
  3. Radioactivity – Radioactivity (Dirtnap)
  4. Big Eyes – Almost Famous (Grave Mistake)
  5. The Night Marchers – Allez Allez (Swami)
  6. Rumspringer – Stay Afloat (Dirt Cult)
  7. The Blind Shake – Key to a False Door (Castle Face Records)
  8. Galactic Cannibal – We're Fucked (Hewhocorrupts Inc.)
  9. El-P & Killer Mike – Run The Jewels (Fools Gold)
  10. Shell Shag – Forever (Don Giovanni)
  11. Night Birds – Born To Die In Suburbia (Grave Mistake)
  12. Worriers – Cruel Optimist (Don Giovanni)
  13. Off With Their Heads – Home (Epitaph)
  14. Vacation – Candy Waves (Don Giovanni)
  15. Sundowners – The Larger Half of Wisdom (Dirt Cult)
  16. Bangers – Crazy Fucking Dreams (Beach Community)
  17. Worthwhile Way – Love Is All (ADD Records)
  18. Elway – Leavetaking (Red Scare Industries)
  19. RVIVR – The Beauty Between (Rumbletowne Records)
  20. Plow United – Marching Band (Jump Start)
  21. Swingin' Utters – Poorly Formed (Fat Wreck Chords)
  22. Kitten Forever – Pressure (Guilt Ridden Pop)
  23. Locrian – Return To Annhihlation (Relapse)
  24. Caves – Betterment (Bombed out)
  25. STNNNG – Empire Inward (Modern Radio)

Matt's list

  1. Janelle Monáe – The Electric Lady (Wondaland Arts Society)
  2. AFI – Burials (Republic)
  3. The Dismemberment Plan – Uncanney Valley (Partisan)
  4. Iron & Wine – Ghost On Ghost (4AD / Nonesuch)
  5. Daft Punk – Random Access Memories (Daft Life / Columbia)
  6. Saves The Day – Saves The Day (Equal Vision / Rory)

Nathan's list

  1. El-P & Killer Mike – Run The Jewels (Fools Gold)
  2. Nö Pöwer – No Peace (Sorry State)
  3. Gensu Dean & Planet Asia – Abrasions (Mello Music Group)
  4. Baltic Cousins – The Broken Horn (Self-Released)
  5. Guilty Simpson & Small Professor – Highway Robbery (Beat Goliath / Coalmine)
  6. California X – Self Titled (Don Giovanni)
  7. Ill Bill – The Grimy Awards (Fat Beats)
  8. Milk Music – Cruise Your Illusion (Fat Possum)
  9. Ghostface Killah & Adrian Younge – Twelve Reasons to Die (Relativity / Soul Temple)
  10. Broken Prayer – Self-Titled (Sorry State)
  11. Durag Dynasty – 360 Waves (Nature Sounds)
  12. Chelsea Light Moving – Self-Titled (Matador)
  13. Justin Timberlake – The 20/20 Experience (RCA)
  14. Roc Marciano – Marci Beaucoup (Man Bites Dog)
  15. Rough Kids – The State I'm In (Sorry State)
  16. Pusha T – My Name Is My Name (Def Jam)
  17. Much Worse – Macrocosm is a Wash (Forward)
  18. Ka – The Nights Gambit (Iron Works)
  19. Iceage – You're Nothing (Matador)
  20. A$AP Ferg – Trap Lord (RCA)
  21. Pissed Jeans – Honeys (Sub Pop)
  22. Destruction Unit – Void (Jolly Dream)
  23. Mudhoney – Vanishing Point (Sub Pop)
  24. My Gold Mask – Leave Me Midnight (Highwheel)
  25. Joint D ≠ – Satan is Real Again, Again, or: Feeling Good About Feeling Good About Bad Thoughts (Sorry State)
  26. Useless Eaters – Hypertension (Jeffery Drag Records)
  27. Quelle Chris – Ghost at the Finish Line (Mello Music Group)
  28. The Men – New Moon (Sacred Bones)
  29. Gateway District – Old Wild Hearts (It's Alive)
  30. Autistic Youth – Nonage (Dirtnap)

Scott Wilkinson's list

  1. The Silks – Last American Band (Independent)
  2. Arctic Monkeys – AM (Domino)
  3. Gogol Bordello – Pura Vida Conspiracy (ATO)
  4. Herra Terra – Hyperborean (Independent)
  5. The Young Leaves – Alive And Well (Baldy Longhair)
  6. Drivin' N Cryin' – Songs From The Psychedelic Time Clock (New!)
  7. Johnny Marr – The Messenger (Warner Bros.)
  8. Dawn McCarthy and Bonnie “Prince” Billy – What The Brothers Sang (Drag City)
  9. Broadway Calls – Comfort/Distraction (No Sleep)
  10. The Strokes – Comedown Machine (RCA)
  11. Haim – Days Are Gone (Polydor)
  12. Pretty & Nice – Golden Rules For Golden People (Equal Vision)
  13. Vampire Weekend – Modern Vampires Of The City (XL Recordings)
  14. Queens of the Stone Age – Like Clockwork (Matador)
  15. Black Sabbath – 13 (Vertigo)
  16. Low Culture – Evil (Drunken Sailor)
  17. The Dillinger Escape Plan – ...One Of Us Is The Killer (Sumerian)
  18. Modern Life Is War – Fever Hunting (Deathwish Inc)
  19. Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine – White People And The Damage Done (Alternative Tentacles)
  20. Cult of Luna – Vertikal (Density)
  21. Frank Turner – Tape Deck Heart (Interscope)
  22. They Might Be Giants – Nanobots (Idlewild Recordings)
  23. Hank Williams III – Brothers Of The 4x4 (Hank III Records)
  24. Alice In Chains – The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here (Capitol)
  25. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Push The Sky Away (Bad Seed LTD.)

Spyros Stasis's list

  1. Altar Of Plagues – Teethed Glory and Injury (Profound Lore)
  2. Portal – Vexovoid (Profound Lore)
  3. Deafheaven – Sunbather (Deathwish Inc.)
  4. Oranssi Pazuzu – Valonielu (Svart Records/20 Buck Spin)
  5. Lycus – The Tempest (20 Buck Spin)
  6. Infera Bruo – Desolate Unknown (Independent)
  7. Subrosa – More Constant than the Gods (Profound Lore)
  8. Cult of Luna – Vertikal (Density)
  9. Morne – Shadows (Profound Lore)
  10. Wolvserpent – Perigaea Antahkarana (Relapse Records)
  11. The Psyke Project – Guillotine (Swarm Of Nails)
  12. Uzala – Tales of Blood & Fire (King of Monsters Records)
  13. Fell Voices – Regnum Saturni (Vendetta Records)
  14. The Ocean – Pelagial (Metal Blade)
  15. Pelican – Forever Becoming (Southern Lord Records)
  16. Castevet – Obsian (Profound Lore)
  17. Kylesa – Ultraviolet (Season of Mist)
  18. Seidr – Ginnungagap (Bindrune Records)
  19. Ken Mode – Entrench (Season of Mist)
  20. Batillus – Concrete Sustain (Seventh Rule)
  21. Inter Arma – Sky Burial (Relapse)
  22. Locrian – Return To Annhihlation (Relapse)
  23. Corrections House – Last City Zero (Neurot Recordings)
  24. Aosoth – IV: An Arrow In Heart (Agonia)
  25. Eight Bells – The Captain's Daughter (Seventh Rule)

— words by the SPB team • December 30, 2013

Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2013)
Scene Point Blank's Favorites: Year End (2013)

Series: Year End 2013

It's the end of 2013, so here's our best-of roundup for the last twelve months.

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