
11 Continuum
[Listen]
JOHN
MAYER
Mayer's sixth disc made one thing clear: Homeboy has his shit
together. Continuum is Mayer's most assured album yet,
channeling familiar gifts -- fluid guitar-playing, sexy white-boy
croon, strong tune sense -- with more subtlety, more focus and less
lady-baiting cheese than ever. The result is a breezy pop-rock
record that surrounds supremely crafted songs like "Vultures" with
soul like "Gravity" and weightier stuff like "Waiting on the World
to Change."

12 One Day It Will
Please Us to Remember Even This
[Listen]
THE
NEW YORK DOLLS
David Johansen is no longer twenty-four, so this reunion album
surprises by revealing the dirty little secret beneath the
Seventies Dolls' playful pansexuality: religious emotion. "Dancing
on the Lip of a Volcano" is explicitly pagan; "Take a Good Look at
My Good Looks" begins, "Spirit slumbers in nature and awakens in
mind" before asking, "So what if this old world is just artifice?"
Everywhere Johansen mourns mortality and celebrates contingency in
the most searching lyrics of the year -- lyrics deepened by how
much fun the band is having.

13 Pearl
Jam
[Listen]
PEARL
JAM
Pearl Jam's best studio album in a decade is like Vs. with
politics -- iron-rock riffing and a lyric righteousness forged in
real battle. "World Wide Suicide" and "Army Reserve" don't just
protest the Iraq War and its disastrous consequences. These are
songs about universal accountability (you need two sides to have a
war) and the still-revolutionary power of individual dissent. "I
will not lose my faith," Vedder sings on "Inside Job," a climactic
fusion of Zep and Seventies Who. Now that's classic rock.

14 American V: A
Hundred Highways
[Listen]
JOHNNY
CASH
The man in black was dying when he made this record, and he did not
hide the truth of his condition. It is shocking to hear Cash fight
to stay on pitch in "If You Could Read My Mind." But there is a
deep strength and dignity in his performances and in the wisdom of
songs such as Hank Williams' "On the Evening Train." V
also includes the last song Cash ever wrote, "Like the 309," on
which he growls and cracks wise like a guy on his way to a party
instead of his last reward.
15 Wolfmother
[Listen]
WOLFMOTHER
This wild-haired Australian trio flattened crowds all year with
organ solos, 'nad-crushingly tight pants and riffs heisted from
Zep, Sabbath and the Purp. Andrew Stockdale brings the Ozzy-Plant
screech, the lyrics are true metal poetry, and when "Joker and the
Thief" hits its power-drive climax, there isn't a bat in the room
with its head still attached.
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.