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HMV's annual Poll of Polls has, for the second year running, agreed with musicOMH's pick for album of the year.
Elbow's The Seldom Seen Kid topped the list drawn up from critics' favourites this year. LCD Soundsystem's Sound Of Silver was the winner in 2007. The full chart looks like this: 1) The Seldom Seen Kid - Elbow 2) Third - Portishead 3) DIG!!! LAZARUS, DIG!!! - Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds 4) Fleet Foxes - Fleet Foxes 5) Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend 6) Dear Science - TV On The Radio 7) Oracular Spectacular - MGMT 8) For Emma, Forever Ago - Bon Iver 9) Glasvegas - Glasvegas 10) Made In The Dark - Hot Chip
So the top selling albums in the UK in 2008, according to the Official Charts Company, were:
4) Spirit - Leona Lewis
Two of these made our Top 50 Albums Of 2008 list - Kings of Leon, contentiously, given its 2.5 stars rating, and Girls Aloud. (Duffy, for the record, would have been No 55, but given Top 50s only go as far as 50 by definition, she didn't make it.)
Six of the Top 10 were North American imports.
Duffy sold 1,685,000 copies of Rockferry, which was produced by Bernard Butler and released through A&M, part of Polydor. The major label group, owned by Universal, was also responsible for Take That, Girls Aloud and the million-selling Mamma Mia! soundtrack, the year's bestselling compilation album.
Critics' favourites Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes, TV On The Radio, Amadou & Mariam and Elbow (Polydor's Mercury winners) were nowhere to be seen. Nor, in fact, were any releases from independent labels.
For the record, the two biggest selling tracks of the year helped line Simon Cowell's pockets a little more. The top 10 were:
1) Hallelujah - Alexandra Burke 2) Hero - X Factor finalists 3) Mercy - Duffy 4) I Kissed A Girl - Katy Perry 5) Rockstar - Nickelback 6) American Boy - Estelle/ Kanye West 7) Sex on Fire - Kings of Leon 8) Now You're Gone - Basshunter 9) 4 Minutes - Madonna/ Justin Timberlake 10) Black & Gold - Sam Sparro
Are you thrilled? Surprised? Despairing? Did you buy any of these?
 Eartha Kitt, the singer, cabaret star and actress once described by Orson Welles as "the most exciting woman in the world", died on Christmas Day, aged 81, after a battle with colon cancer.
In a wildly varied life Kitt, born in the cotton fields of Carolina, played Catwoman in the Batman TV series, starred opposite Sidney Poitier on the silver screen, played both the Fairy Godmother and Wicked Witch Of The West in stage productions of Cinderella and The Wizard Of Oz respectively, voiced Kaa the python in a BBC radio adaptation of The Jungle Book, worked with Bronski Beat on the 1989 hit Cha-Cha Heels and gave several benefit concerts supporting HIV/AIDS organisations.
The woman who defined the term "sex kitten" performed her final London shows in 2008 at the Pigalle Club in Piccadilly.

Zavvi, the music retailer formerly known as Virgin Megastores, has been placed in administration, adding further woe to an already miserable year for high street shops and music retailing.
Zavvi's website has been unable to sell anything since the collapse of the Woolworths-owned EUK distributor, Zavvi's main supplier. It has been reported that Zavvi owed a substantial sum to EUK. Administrator Ernst & Young have said they'll try to keep the chain running until a buyer can be found for the business.
In the same week as Whittard of Chelsea and The Officers Club folded and Woolworths' administrators began to close their shops, Zavvi's failing will leave even more shopworkers concerned for their 2009 outlook; the company operated 125 shops across the UK.
If Zavvi closes it would leave the record industry with just HMV, owners of Fopp and Waterstones, as the last major music chain selling their physical products on the high street. It's unlikely that pressure from supermarkets and the internet, in particular Amazon, will let up on the business, but the failures of Woolworths and Zavvi in quick succession should at least give His Master's Voice a breathing space.
In better news, independent record seller Rough Trade, celebrating its 30th birthday in 2008, reported its business growing by an impressive 7% year-on-year despite being caught up in the failure of the distributor Pinnacle earlier this month. If big chains failing offers hope to the likes of Rough Trade, perhaps there's some semblance of a silver lining to the gloom. Here's hoping so at least.
The BBC have published their longlist of 15 acts that they think could be the 'sound of 2009'. No matter whether you think these sort of polls are a bit pointless or a vital barometer of the land's musical taste, there's no denying that the BBC's 'sound of' annual poll has proven unerringly accurate. Adele was last year's winner, and the top ten also featured names such as Duffy, The Ting Tings and Glasvegas (we'll draw a veil over Joe Lean & The Jing Jang Jong, shall we?).
This year's longlist has a variety of names, some obvious (Florence & The Machine, Little Boots) and some not so obvious (Empire Of The Sun and The Temper Trap).
Personally, I'm rather delighted to see Passion Pit (pictured) in the running - imagine if Iron & Wine had been raised on a diet of slightly barmy electro. This time next year, Better Things will be the anthem at all the Christmas parties...
There's also La Roux, Seb Chew's latest discovery. Mr Chew was the man who, of course, first discovered Lily Allen, so her synth heavy pop will no doubt be big news next year. Look out for Quicksand, her first single being released this month.
Although the list has the obligatory Interpol-alike in White Lies (currently supporting Glasvegas on tour), the longlist does seem to hint at 2009 being a more eccentric, electro-heavy year. Victoria Hesketh of Little Boots and Florence Welch of Florence & The Machine already seem like born performers and future stars, and they'll no doubt be joined by VV Brown, albeit in a more straightforward pop-soul direction.
So what do you think? Who will be the 'sound of 2009'? Who has the BBC forgotten all about (ahem, Emmy The Great, maybe?) Tell us your predictions below.
As you'll know unless you've lately been orbiting Saturn, Woolies went into administration a week ago, taking the distributor Entertainment UK with it.
The knock-on effect on the high street went well beyond Woolworths. Zavvi, formerly Virgin Megastores, was reportedly unable to stock new albums by Britney Spears and Take That on their Monday release date as a direct result, and a statement on their website zavvi.co.uk today says Entertainment UK's demise has "made it very difficult for us to secure availability of products", as the distributor was Zavvi's main source of music, DVDs and games.
Heading into the main Christmas shopping period, that would be bad enough for the UK music industry.
But now one of the largest indie distributors in the UK, Pinnacle Entertainment, has also gone into administration, with the loss of 94 jobs. Pinnacle's warehouse will hold stock from indie labels who can ill afford their CDs to be out of the retail loop even in the best of times, let alone in the run up to Christmas, against a backdrop of digital downloading and economic malaise.
This failure could also affect WHSmith and HMV, who rely on Pinnacle for their supplies from indie labels including Bella Union, Dramatico, One Little Indian, FatCat and Lex.
The Association of Independent Music (AIM) is holding an emergency meeting today about it all.

It's that time of year again, when everybody starts making lists of everything. Our first list for the closing out of the year, voted on by musicOMH's writers from a longlist of 110 albums, is
Every day this week we'll be publishing 10 albums that made the list. Today (Monday) is the turn of numbers 50-41. Have we included something you would rather was never released? Have we missed your favourite? Can you guess who's made it to Number 1? Tell us here. I'm quite happy to say I find some of the inclusions - and exclusions - bizarre. Hence the picture here. It's the nature of such lists that they can't be all inclusive of everyone's tastes. We'll publish the longlist at the end of the week along with the Number 1.
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