37. Delain - 'Apocalypse & Chill'

February seems a very long time ago. Back in those heady days of live entertainment and drinking long after ten o’clock, Delain had the World in their hands. “Apocalypse and Chill” had been unleashed to universal acclaim and they were in the midst of their most ambitious tour yet, eliciting rave reviews from all and sundry (including me). Then, well we know what happened next.... the rug got pulled well and truly from under their feet.

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35. AC/DC - 'Power Up'

By far, the biggest release of the year. This is comparable with the second coming. Four years ago, AC/DC looked dead and buried. Brian Johnson had to unceremoniously and suddenly bow out of live duties due to chronic hearing loss (and was bizarrely but rather brilliantly replaced by Axl Rose), Cliff Williams had retired, Phil Rudd was battling personnel problems (including an ‘intention to kill’ charge) and Malcolm Young was dead. The biggest bar band in the world was no more.

It was last year that rumours of life after death started to circulate. We all tried not to get too over excited, but leaked photos of the Phil, Brian and Cliff huddled together outside a recording studio seemed to confirm that the old dog (eat dog) was stirring. Confirmation came in October this year and “Power Up” finally dropped last month.

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29. Intronaut - 'Fluid Existential Inversions'

Well, this certainly has been the year of the dense complex swirling cacophony of an album hasn’t it? I’m sure I have already written a dozen paragraphs describing dense layered sonic soundscapes. Well here is another, but before I hit you with descriptive similia, can I just say that this album is gorgeous. Utterly gorgeous.

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26. Uada - 'Dijnn'

et more Black Metal and yet another band intent in stretching its boundaries and borders as far as they can push them. I can hear the Nordic purists in the mum’s spare rooms rattling their bullet belts as I write, crying “Not kvlt”. The simple fact is that it has very little to do and in common with the music that the Norwegian founding fathers created in the early nineties.

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21. Mr. Bungle - 'The Raging Wrath Of The Easter Bunny Demo'

Mr. Bungle will forever be known as Mike Patton’s other band. It was from there that he was plucked in 1988 to front the mighty Faith No More and it was Mr. Bungle that he used to channel his frustrations of the commercialism of his day job. The more successful and mainstream that Faith No More became, the more experimental and avant-garde went Mr. Bungle.

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