1. Ian Moore & the Lossy Coils - El Sonida Nuevo (I'm not an Ian Moore expert, but this seems the most pop he's ever been. Though I'm sure no one else will see the comparison, my mind went to the Small Faces as a reference point.) 2. Jesse Malin & The St. Marks Social - Love It To Life (I love his slurring (Brooklyn?) drawl, and this may be the best collection of songs he's ever put together.) 3. Belle and Sebastian - Write About Love (I came to the B&S party pretty late...but I'm staying late!) 4. Superchunk - Majesty Shredding (Again, not a band that I have a history with...I've checked a little since this came out..."Crossed Wires" is a killer song, but only if you touch him!) 5. Elvyn - The Decline (Love the harmonies, the jangle, the songs...really quite majestic!) 6. Guster - Easy Wonderful (I didn't like their last one at all...this is a real return to form.) 7. Edward O'Connell - Our Little Secret (I think I can say this is the best rock album ever recorded by a lawyer who has argued before the Supreme Court. A batch of great jangly songs.) 8. Fran Healy - Wreckorder (My fave collection of Fran Healy songs since Travis" "Invisible Band". 9. Greg Pope - Blue Ocean Sky (Very late-period Beatles. By the way, I just stumbled on the fact that he now has to put up with another Nashville singer named Greg Pope - a guy who fits the traditional Nashville mold....) 10. The Sadies - Darker Circles (Earlier, they seemed too much in a hurry for my taste...now they've harnessed their talents to a varied set of powerful songs.) 11. Jakob Dylan - Women + Country (Though I miss the Wallflowers energy, that band had certainly run its course. In the NPR story on this, Jakob said he wrote the whole album in a matter of a (very) few weeks. It feels like Jakob has fully matured as an artist.) 12. Nada Surf - If I Had a Hi-Fi (I'll take the plunge and put this on my list.) 13. The Like - Release Me (So different from the last one...among other things, I absolutely love producer Mark Ronson's Motown-esque drum sound. I do wonder what their next album will sound like....) 14. The Well Wishers - Post Modern Romantic (Jeff's put together a great combo of jangle and rock-out...the yin and yang of power-pop. Great songs too!) 15. Michael Carpenter & The Cuban Heels - The Incomplete Cuban Heels (Though much of this got released in 2009, the fine print on the finished album does read 2010, and since a Top 20 without Michael Carpenter just feels wrong to me, I'll sneak this Alt-country offering on.) 16. Nigel Stonier - Notes From Overground (Husband/producer of Thea Gilmore...I've always said he's the equal of her...he gets the nod this time for the fabulous song about leaving their relationship for awhile, "In The Time Of My Running". I wish his albums would get released on this side of the pond, but it seems that the decision has been made to push her above him. To wit...the week before this album came out, he wasn't prepping to do promotion or play, but in the studio finishing up the album listed below!) 17. Thea Gilmore - Murphy's Heart ("You're The Radio" gave Thea her first hit - in GB - since "Juliet (Keep That In Mind)" back in 2003...I'm told the album gets released in the US in February.) 18. The Sails - A Headful Of Stars (Like many others on this list, I dig most of what Rainbow Quartz releases. Sometimes, though, their bands get their style together before their substance. With this album, the Sails have achieved the [proper balance.) 19. Bastards Of Melody - Hurry Up and Wait (They've "cleaned up their act" - lessened the garage-iness - enough for me to fall for all the songs here.) 20. Steven Page - Page One (Yeah, I do love clever, though not all examples of the style. Steven's rhymes surprise and are meaningful at the same time.) One tribute album...I don't count the Nada Surf as an actual "tribute album"..."Through A Faraway Window...A Tribute To Jimmy Silva". This is perfectly in tune with Jimmy's work. One hidden powerpop song on an Americana album..."Rockin' Monophonic", by The Molenes on their latest album, "Good Times Comin'". "50,000 watts of sound will tell you all you need to know," indeed! Adelsheim