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Best albums of 2025: #2 The Limiñanas “Faded”

I trust that those of you who celebrate had an enjoyable Christmas holiday. I passed a great couple of days with my lovely wife but now I’m back to continue this countdown of my fave albums of the year. So let’s go.

Seven years ago I fell in love with an album. It was called “Shadow people” and it was by this band that I’d never heard of before: The Limiñanas. I placed it at the number eight position on the list of my top ten albums of 2018 when I sat down to put it together. But the album continued to grow in my esteem over the months and years that followed and it would likely place even higher if I were ever to redo said list.

Strangely and sadly, I was never able to learn much more about this band. I can tell you that The Limiñanas were formed in 2009 in a small town in the south of France by husband and wife duo, Lionel and Marie Limiñana, but that’s nearly all I can say for sure. I went back and tracked down a handful of their previous albums and found that there’s much to like there as well. So I then set to waiting impatiently for a new album, an album that didn’t immediately appear. Instead, they focused on scoring and soundtracking a bunch of films and collaborating on material with some of their friends, including actress Emmanuelle Seigner and Brian Jonestown Massacre’s Anton Newcombe*. I was almost starting to expect that a new album would never materialize, especially after the release of their retrospective compilation, “Electrified”, back in 2022, but then, I was surprised yet again.

Somehow its February release escaped my notice and I came at “Faded” from behind. From the opening notes of the instrumental intro track, I knew the album I had been waiting for had arrived. The double album is cinematic in scope and heavenly dramatic. The duo enlist likeminded guest vocalists to lead certain tracks, adding to their own shared duties, giving the proceedings a compilation feel, albeit one with a shared vision and a droning, retro psychedelic rainbow coloured coat of paint. It’s music as haunting and indelible as the blanked out faces draped across the album’s cover. The mood is late-night art-house film or darkened, half-empty, wine soaked dive bar.

The thirteen tracks are hard to separate and dissect as distinct entities apart from the delicious whole and I wouldn’t bring myself to do so if it weren’t the tradition with these posts. I’ve perservered, however, and managed to come up my three picks for you to peruse.


“The dancer”: Track seven is an instrumental beast. It starts with a steady drum beat. It is quickly layered with an arpeggiating bass line that just climbs up in down your spine like a fit athlete on a rope ladder. Pretty soon you’re deep in a jungle of organ chords and effects, easily lost to the sounds. The fuzzy guitars are the last straw. Queue the smoke machine and the retro coloured light show and you’ve somehow forgotten there’s no words to sing along to. Your whole body is absorbed in the delicious washes of sound. You can almost picture the scene in the film to which this could soundtrack, a mass crowd on the dance floor, soft filters, the protagonist succumbing to the lateness of the hour and the alcohol levels of her umpteenth cocktail.

“Shout”: “Shout shout, until you lose your soul.” The vocals on track four are provided by Timothée Régnier (aka Rover), a French musician that grew up in New York City and sings mostly in English. A haunting voice that echoes bouncing down an infinite hallway, ominious and foreboding. Set against a punishing beat, hammering keys, layers of guitars, you almost feel like this could be a lost outtake from the self-titled Velvet Underground debut album. Yeah, another insatiable track yanked firmly from another time and another place. An anachronistic journey from beginning to end.

“Prisoner of beauty”: “Poor little diamond crashed out on the rocks again.” Apparently, the advanced single and second track on the album was inspired by Primal Scream’s “Rocks”. It certainly has a similar driving beat as the Scottish psych rock band’s 1994 hit single and of course, “Prisoner of beauty”’s vocals are perfectly and unmistakably delivered by Primal Scream’s frontman, Bobbie Gillespie. It’s an almost perfect collaboration and feels like it was fated, written in the sparkling stars. I couldn’t imagine any other way that this song could have been delivered better, the man and myth sounds like he’s cozying right up to fuzzy guitars and screaming organs and wrapping them around himself like the most comfortable robe. This is without a doubt one of the greatest indie rock singles to see the light in the last year** and one that I could see dragging these sorry old bones of mine out on to any dance floor, at any time to shake a leg and slap a thigh. So great.


*Who produced the aforementioned “Shadow people”.

**Though in truth it was released as a single near the end of 2024.

We’ll be back on New Year’s Eve with the final post in the countdown. In the meantime, here are the previous albums in this list:

10. Snocaps “Snocaps”
9. Nation Of Language “Dance called memory”
8. Robert Ascroft “Echo still remains”
7. Doves “Constellations for the lonely”
6. Miki Berenyi Trio “Tripla”
5. Suede “Antidepressants”
4. Wet Leg “Moisturizer”
3. Pulp “More”

You can also check out my Best Albums page here if you’re interested in my other favourite albums lists.

Categories
Albums

Best albums of 2018: The honourable mentions (aka #10 through #6)

Happy Friday, November 23rd everyone! Black Friday, to boot. And happy belated Thanksgiving to our American friends!

Yep, it’s that time of year again. The best of the year lists are going to start pouring in from all over. It was actually around this time last year that I kicked off my Best Albums series with an end of the year list for 2017. I then travelled back in time through the decades, with stops at 2007, 1997, and finally, 1987 (you can find all of these completed lists here). It was a fun exercise and I’ll endeavour to do the same over the next year, starting with this 2018 list.

The drill is this. You’ll get albums ten through six, a sort of honourable mentions collection, today, and then, I’ll run through my top five albums of the year over the next five Fridays. If all goes well, the number one album will be revealed on the final Friday of the year.

For 2018, you’ll likely find that my list won’t resemble many of the lists from the real music sites. In fact, if you’re hoping for spoilers in the photo at the top of this post, you’ll be disappointed. None of those albums will appear in this series. As I get older, I find my tastes don’t line up as often with what is hip and new. I did check out a few of the buzz bands and some of them were quite good (hello, Shame and Starcrawler), just not top ten good in my opinion. And well, the ten albums that will make up this list may not be everyone else’s best. But they’re mine.

As always, I welcome hearing your own favourites and thoughts on my choices in the comments section of each post.

Let’s get started…


#10 David Byrne “American utopia”

To be honest, the only reason this album made this list at all is because I got to see the former Talking Heads frontman this fall at Ottawa’s CityFolk festival. I had only given “American utopia” a cursory glance prior to the festival and wasn’t even sure I would stay for his whole set because of a scheduling conflict with another artist but I was glad, in the end, that I did. His was probably one of my favourite sets in recent years and I’ve been listening to this album regularly ever since, it growing in my esteem with each play. Yes, it’s varied in sound but not in theme. For his first solo album in fourteen years, Byrne is as fresh and quirky and intelligent as he ever has been.

Gateway tune: Everybody’s coming to my house


#9 James “Living in extraordinary times”

As some of you may undoubtedly already know, I’ve been a pretty big James fan for a couple of decades now but the appearance of their fifteenth (!!!) studio album here has nothing to do with loyalty. In fact, I wasn’t much of a fan of their last album, 2016’s “Girl at the end of the world”, as a whole, disagreeing with a bunch of people who made it the band’s highest charting album to date. “Living in extraordinary times” is at times as big as the best of James’s hit singles but it also has its quiet moments. At its core, though, it’s an album that has Tim Booth and band trying to find a forward in these crazy times, with more than a few nods and kicks at the current US president.

Gateway tune: Coming home (pt. 2)


#8 The Limiñanas “Shadow people”

Okay. So I had never heard of this band before this year. I don’t even remember how I originally came across their sixth studio album, “Shadow people”, but I know it hooked me from the beginning. It took some doing to figure out what they were about, including reading a Wikipedia entry written in French. My French is improving but far from perfect. Still, I was able to ascertain that they are a duo, Lionel and Marie, indeed from France, that were performing in other groups for many years, before forming The Liminanas in 2009. This latest album checked a lot of my boxes with its droning and driving psychedelia and then mixing it with laid back and cool Serge Gainsbourg sounds. That it includes contributions by Anton Newcombe and Peter Hook is just topping on the cake. I can’t wait to dig into their earlier work.

Gateway tune: Istanbul is sleepy


#7 The Essex Green “Hardly electronic”

For a band that hasn’t worked together in over a decade and an album whose players reside in three different states, The Essex Green and their fourth studio album, “Hardly electronic”, sound pretty slick indeed. I got into this group after seeing them open for Camera Obscura in 2007 and bought their album “Cannibal sea” based on their performance. I have now been salivating while listening to that album and waiting over eleven years for new material. Now that’s in my hands and spinning on my turntable, I am not disappointed in the least. They picked up the 60s and 70s inspired indie pop right where they left it and they quite possibly might have improved on their sound in the intervening years. Hopefully, it’s not another decade before we get album number five.

Gateway tune: The 710


#6 Colter Wall “Songs of the plains”

Who is this Colter Wall? He definitely does not sound of this time and place, singing somber and slow-burning numbers about the plight of the plainsmen in the 1800s and the legend of Wild Bill Hickok. Amazing, then, that this kid is but 23 and hails from Saskatchewan, Canada. It was my brother Mike that alerted me to him when he saw his name on the lineup for Ottawa’s CityFolk festival. His was definitely one of the highlight sets of the festival for me. Not only are his songs well written and of a different sensibility in today’s pop world but Wall has a voice that has been compared to the likes of Johnny Cash, though I for one would say it is even more profound than that. This is his sophomore album and builds upon the fantastic work laid out on last year’s fine debut. I think we’ll be hearing lots from him in the coming years.

Gateway tune: Saskatchewan in 1881


Check back next Friday for album #5 on this list. In the meantime, you can check out my Best Albums page here if you’re interested in my other favourite albums lists.