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01: LCD SOUNDSYSTEM
TBC
(DFA/EMI)
Expected early 2010

James Murphy can surely feel the pressure. Having sated the hipsters with album #1 and conquered the world with #2, god only knows what he’s got up his sleeve for #3. LCD have come a long way from their origins as a smart punk-funk jam band to become a genuinely paradigm-shifting pop band; as such, anything less than a masterpiece will be declaimed by fans and haters alike. The low-key cover of Alan Vega’s ‘Bye Bye Bayou’ which came out last month gave absolutely nothing away; indeed, all we really know at this stage is that the album was recorded in LA. We’ve not long to wait to find out if it meets our frankly ridiculous expectations.


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02:  KLAXONS
TBC
(BECAUSE/UNIVERSAL)
Expected mid-2010

Who remembers nu-rave? That particularly silly media meme helped Klaxons rise to fame, but the band were canny enough to disentangle themselves from it before their sporadically excellent – and Mercury Prize-winning – debut album was released. Since then, there’s been all kinds of nonsense talk about the direction that the follow-up would take – at one point it was alleged that Dr fucking Dre had been approached to handle production duties – but it seems now prudent to expect something along the lines of Myths of The Near Future Pt. 2. How come? Well, earlier this year came the depressing news that the band had finished work on a full-length set only to be told by their label that it was too weird; they ended up agreeing, and returned to the drawing-board to have another go. Only time will tell if they were right to do so.


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03: BURIAL
TBC
(HYPERDUB)
Expected late 2010

Ok, so we have no real evidence that Burial’s third album is imminent, but it’s about time, right? Having made FACT’s favourite album of the decade in Untrue, the poor boy has much to live up to. His 2009 output – the Four Tet collaboration and ‘Fostercare’, a contribution to Hyperdub’s 5th anniversary compilation  – suggests he’s going to have no problem blowing our minds again.


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04: SANDWELL DISTRICT
TBC
(SANDWELL DISTRICT)
Expected early 2010

The world’s foremost purveyors of stripped-down, Berghain-shaking techno are set to release a collaborative album in the new year. Recorded largely in Berlin and helmed by Birmingham’s Karl ‘Regis’ O’Connor and New York’s Dave Sumner AKA Function, we expect the LP will also feature contributions from SD regulars Silent Servant (pictured) and Female. Having proved their aptitude at making absolutely killer dancefloor 12”s, we’re eager to find out how the SD crew have expanded their sound to meet the demands of a full-length; it seems likely that their well-documented appreciation of drone, industrial and post-punk electronics will figure somehow.


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05: METRO AREA
TBC
(ENVIRON)
Expected mid-2010

It’s now almost eight years since Darshan Jesrani and Morgan Geist released the first Metro Area album, a compilation of the duo’s singles up to that point. They’ve reportedly been working on the sequel throughout 2009, though we don’t know whether it too will be, essentially, a singles collection. If it is, we’ve got no complaints: ‘Proton Candy’, ‘Nerves’, ‘Honey Circuit’, ‘Read My Mind’ and ‘Erodyne’, the highlights of Metro Area’s post-2002 12″ releases, would all be worthy inclusions indeed. Expect the classic Metro Area sound – a kind of postmodern, techno-savvy take on disco and boogie – but more extravagantly arranged and rendered than ever before. Oh, and here’s hoping a new Kelley Polar LP will drop on Geist’s Environ label in 2010 as well.


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06: GORILLAZ
PLASTIC BEACH
(EMI)
Expected early 2010

Following Monkey: Journey To The West and a resoundingly successful – if shortlived – Blur reunion, Damon Albarn returns to the serious business of Gorillaz, promising an album suffused with a kind of “dystopian, British melancholia” and featuring guest contributions from Bobby Womack, Barry Gibb (The Bee Gees), Snoop Dogg, Mos Def and the Syrian National Orchestra.


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07: SCUBA
TBC
(HOTFLUSH)
Expected early 2010

As the figurehead and resident DJ of Berghain’s groundbreaking Sub:Stance night, Scuba has done perhaps more than anyone to get Berlin techno-heads into dubstep. Oh, and he also discovered Joy Orbison and Mount Kimbie, releasing their debut records on his Hotflush label. Cheers Scuba. In February he’ll be delivering the first instalment in Ostgut Ton’s new Sub:Stance mix CD series, and then shortly after he’ll be unleashing his second LP.


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08: HOT CHIP
ONE LIFE STAND
(EMI)
Due February 2010

Hot Chip’s eagerly awaited fourth album drops in January, and finds the group further honing their unique blend of bittersweet songcraft and natty dancefloor rhythm. If lead track ‘One Life Stand’ is anything to go by, the album is going to be a good one; it remains to be seen, though, whether it will represent a great leap forward for the band or a consolidation of what’s gone before. Either way, you know its singles are going to be totally inescapable.


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09: MADVILLAIN
TBC
(STONES THROW)
Expected mid-2010

The follow-up to the already legendary Madvillainy reunites two of underground hip-hop’s most singular talents, Madlib and MF Doom. Entirely produced by Madlib, with alleged involvement too from Dave Sitek and Mos Def, it’s hard to imagine this record being anything other than brilliant. Fingers crossed, anyway.


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10: VAMPIRE WEEKEND
CONTRA
(XL)
Due January 2010

The excitement surrounding Vampire Weekend’s Contra has been a little more muted than we expected, but then hey, we thought their Discovery side-project was going to take over the world. Certainly, the band face a similar problem to that which vexed The Strokes a few years back – having made an almost supernaturally well-formed and massively popular debut album, how the hell do you follow it? Well, you know what, Room on Fire was actually a pretty good album and Contra is as well. So go figure.

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11: ACTRESS
TBC
(HONEST JON’S)
Expected early 2010

Darren ‘Actress’ Cunningham’s Hazyville, released at the tail-end of 2008 on his own Werk Discs imprint, was fantastic: a dense and endlessly rewarding work that could be interpreted as a South London take on Detroit techno and beatdown. He’s signed to Honest Jons for the follow-up, and while we suspect it’s going to be one of 2010’s best, in truth we have no idea what it’s going to sound like. His recent laptop sets have traversed boogie, garage, hardcore, electro, house, dubstep and future-funk of all shapes and stripes, so rule nothing out.


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12: STEVE MASON
TBC
(BLACK MELODY)
Due March 2010

The Steve Mason revival is long overdue. Following the collapse of The Beta Band, the Scotsman has released music under a number of aliases, including King Biscuit Time and Black Affair, each time hinting at brilliance but not quite wholly delivering it. We reckon it’ll all come together on new album Boys Outside, the first material Mason has ever recorded under his own name. We’re promised “beautiful melodies and simple songs”, all produced by everyone’s favourite pop provocateur Richard X, who will also be releasing the album on his Black Melody label.


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13: RUSTIE
TBC
(WARP)
Expected mid-2010

No one’s willing to confirm it, but it’s pretty much common knowledge that Rustie will release his debut album on Warp Records in 2010.  His devastating Jagz The Smack and Bad Science EPs, not to mention a plethora of remixes and edits, have shown the Glaswegian to be one of the most exciting young producers on the planet, capable of condensing the disparate sounds of post-Jerkins/The-Dream R&B, crunk, techno, dubstep, hip-hop and Drexciyan electro into a lean, bugged out sound all his own. We’ve not a heard a single note of it yet, but as far as FACT is concerned this album might just be the single biggest deal of 2010.


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14: MASSIVE ATTACK
HELIGOLAND
(EMI)
Due February 2010

A Massive Attack album is always an event, and Heligoland is unlikely to prove an exception. With 3D and Daddy G now back together in a fruitful working partnership, and with an array of guest contributors including Damon Albarn and Hope Sandoval on board, vital signs are good. The recently released Splitting The Atom EP indicates that the Bristol collective has been building on the dark, cinematic and very busy sound that’s been its trademark since 1998‘s Mezzanine.


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15:  ROSKA
TBC
(RINSE RECORDINGS)
Expected early 2010

2009 was a massive year for Roska, and he enters 2010 as one of the most name-dropped and talked-about producers to come to prominence on the back of UK funky. As well as increasingly high-profile remix work and a collaborative EP with Untold, 2010 will see the Norwood-hailing likely lad release his debut album on Rinse Recordings. We can’t wait to hear it.


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16:  LATE OF THE PIER
TBC
(EMI)
Expected mid-2010

2010 could be the year that Late of The Pier eclipse Klaxons as the most dazzling synth-n-guitar-pop enterprise of their generation; god knows that their debut album, Fantasy Black Channel, was positively dripping with potential. We’ll say no more right now, but seriously – watch out.


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17: PANTHA DU PRINCE
BLACK NOISE
(ROUGH TRADE)

Due February 2010

Pantha Du Prince’s sophomore album This Bliss was one of the noughties’ very best, an almost unbearably beautiful work that rightfully reinstated techno as the most romantic of all musical modes. Black Noise has a lot to live up to, then, but we’re pretty confident that it will acquit itself nicely. Oh, and Noah ‘Panda Bear’ Lennox is on vocal duty, which can’t be a bad thing.


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18:  HERBERT
ONE TRILOGY
(ACCIDENTAL)
First part due March 2010

2010 will see Matthew Herbert release three albums as part of a trilogy entitled One. The first, One One, is a solo album in the purest sense, and was entirely written, performed and produced by Herbert himself (he even sings on it). It will be followed by One Club, a more typically Herbert record constructed using only atmospheric sounds recorded over the course of one night at the Robert-Johnson club in Frankfurt. Really, though, our eyes – and those of animal rights activists – are fixed on One Pig, due out in summer, and made entirely of sounds sourced from – yes – a pig that Herbert is shadowing from birth through to death as we speak.


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19: YEASAYER
ODD BLOOD
(MUTE)
Due February 2010

Brooklyn trio Yeasayer recently told FACT that they wanted to make a “sparer sounding”, more minimal album than their acclaimed debut All Hour Cymbals, obsessing more “over all the little sounds and arrangements”. At the same time Odd Blood is a brighter, more accessible affair than its predecessor, and it quite honestly deserves to be a massive hit in the post-Merriweather pop universe.


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20: DARKSTAR
TBC
(HYPERDUB)
Expected early 2010

Says Darkstar’s James Young of their as yet untitled Hyperdub LP, “the majority of work completed is full vocal tracks and ranges in tempos and moods. But it has strayed significantly from the sound of ‘Need You’ and ‘Aidy’s Girl[‘s a Computer]’.

“We’ve worked with one singer for all of the album and designed a sound similar to that of the ‘Videotape’ cover we did for Radiohead. All of the music and production has been done by Aiden and myself and I’ve written all the lyrics apart from one Human League cover. There was much more of a conventional approach to writing the new stuff…we tried to write full songs on a guitar or piano before even beginning to record and produce.”

Sub-bass and heartbreak? Bring it on…

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