
The Thermals: The Body, The Blood, The Machine (2006)
"Locus, Tornadoes, Crosses, and Nazi Halos" is a good summation of what you're in for when listening to 2006's The Body, The Blood, The Machine. Billed as a concept album about a young couple who must flee a United States governed by fascist faux-Christians this album was the most surprising listen of 2006. Lyrically, they remind me of classic Bad Religion. Where Bad Religion made their mark with speed, a big vocabulary, and earnest pleas for change, The Thermals get their point across with mockery, power chords, and handclaps (see "Pillar of Salt", "Return to the Fold", "I Might Need You to Kill"). As great as this record is, it does not contain my favorite Thermal's song. I found that song - "No Cultural Icons" - on their Myspace page. It's chaotic and messy sound coupled with how Hutch Harris falls apart at the end gives me chills every single time.
Tortoise: Millions Living Will Never Die (1996), TNT (1998)
Tortoise is all about the rhythm, the groove, and the atmosphere until they stop it all on a dime and deliver a moment of jaw-dropping beauty. I was in college when their third LP TNT dropped and it just exploded (oh bad pun) across the student-run media companies I was involved in. You couldn't escape it. After graduation, as I drifted uncomfortably between grad school, internships, and friendships, I clung to their sound as a reminder of more assured times. Millions Now Living is a split between their Krautrock roots and the more jazzy, polyrythmic sounds they would chase on TNT. That album, TNT, is one where favorite songs shift with every listen. Although the title song "TNT" is traditionally the focal point, "Swing From the Gutters", "I Set My Face To The Hillside", and "Jetty" round out what is a landmark album in the post-rock genre.

Team Dresch: Personal Best (1994), Captain, My Captain (1996)
Team Dresch was a punk rock that I'd never heard before. In high school, my punk was limited to the artists on Epitaph, Subpop, and Discord, but nothing they had was ever this brutally personal. Of course, how could it not be? Team Dresch sang about the very personal and social issues they experienced as members of the LGBT community. That topic aside, it was the anger and resentment of being judged when you barely understand who, what, or why you are the person you are that resonated with me as a sophomore in high school. 1994's Personal Best is various stories about being judged, confused, and angry set against a mix of punk, metal, and emo sounds. 1996's Captain, My Captain took on a different tone. The raw anger got replaced with a calculated outlook and cleaner sound. It seemed that two years later Team Dresch figured out how to dodge, defy, or deflect the many social land mines meant to fuck up people psychologically (see "The Council", "Uncle Phranc". This LP was released the summer that I headed off to college and I leaned on it's theme of focusing on what you believe is important and tuning out the rest while I embarked on reinventing myself for the second time inside a decade.

Titus Andronicus
Out of all the new music I listened to in 2008 Titus Andronicus stood out because it was a debut release that dropped with a fully realized and distinct sound. Titus Andronicus toss out literary and pop culture references like Belle & Sebastian, are earnest and strident like a hungry Springsteen, and sound as tight as another great NJ band, Lifetime. I'm sorry to drop so many references to other bands. Being a recent fan, I've not a lot of personal experiences with this artist. If any of the names I've dropped catch your interest check out Titus Andronicus.