Reading Rainbow: Anniversary Blend

There’s been a flurry of solid writeups from the Stereogum staff lately on some excellent albums celebrating their birthdays, so thought I’d share before they stack up any further and give folks something to read with the morning paper tomorrow.  First up, appropriately, is this one on the 10 year anniversary of Kanye’s masterful monolith, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.  The ‘meds are on fire right now with the news that he’s getting a divorce from Kim Kardashian, so it’s only fitting to start here, looking back on an album that was a chaotic mix of love and hubris that was (and still is) his crowning achievement.

The article does a good job walking through both the music and the surrounding context — always a knotty affair with Mr West — and speaks nicely about the album’s importance (particularly in light of the subsequent decline). It was an absolute beast, landing at #4 on my 2010 list, and it’s held up well in the intervening years. As I wrote then, “In other hands such a variety of thoughts and styles could come off as cluttered, cloying, or catastrophic — every song has numerous guest stars, from rappers, to pop stars, to comedians, spoken word rebels, and indie boner-inducers like Bon Iver. Each song could have failed multiple times over their 5-9 minute lengths from all the dissonant styles packed in, let alone the album as a whole. And yet with Kanye they are a delight — a flawed, over-reaching affair at times, but one that’s quickly and consistently redeemed. In a word, pure genius.”

In light of the pair’s unfortunate separation, pop on the beautiful “Blame Game” as a soundtrack while you read:

Next comes this writeup on the 20 year anniversary of the New Pornographers’ classic debut, Mass Romantic. The article does a fantastic job trying to capture the utter joy and revelation that this album was. For me it’s always been the epitome of delirium, the equivalent of that unwieldy shot of adrenaline from Pulp Fiction, only being driven straight into your brain this time. It’s that instantaneous, that irresistible — the second you hear some of the songs, you bolt upright gasping like Uma off the floor.

“My Slow Descent into Alcoholism,” “Jackie,” “Letter From an Occupant,” the title track — there’s so much goodness here I defy people to listen and not succumb to their powers.  I used to listen to this album religiously back in college, driving around with the songs blaring from my windows, singing like I was trying to be heard from space (which is where I’m sure most of the pedestrians I passed wished they were to be out of range of all the noise). I just didn’t care — the songs were (are) so good, you couldn’t be unhappy when listening to them and didn’t feel like hiding it (or trying). The band has never come close to recapturing the pure joy of this album and I’ve subsequently lost the bead on them as an act, but I’ll always have this to go back to and revel in, daring the neighbors to call the cops. Try “The Body Says No” for a taste and see what I mean:


Next comes another 10 year anniversary, this of Radiohead’s ninth album, King of Limbs. The article makes this out to be a more divisive album than I knew it to be (or think it is now), but agree it has aged even better since its release. As I wrote then, when the album landed at #11 on that year’s wrapup, “[the band] sent forth their ninth disc in a similar vein to their previous two albums, In Rainbows (I & II). Those albums built upon the elements of their predecessors — lots of nervous energy and twitchy electro beats intermingling with Thom Yorke’s ethereal moan — while cutting in a new-found warmth and sexiness. This album continues the trend, combining that sensuality with an ever-intensifying complexity as the band piles layers upon layers to their songs, leading you incrementally towards that glorious moment where it all snaps into place.”

Interestingly, when we did the fan favorite “WHO’S ON TOP!” segment for these guys I had this album towards the bottom of the list, just above the disappointing A Moon Shaped Pool and their middling debut. When I think of this album, though, I always do so in positive terms — I like this album, while disliking those other two —  and am always reminded of the aforementioned moment when it finally made sense. For me that came while watching the Live from the Basement DVD of the sessions, which absolutely blew my mind — it was the first time I fully appreciated how much went into these songs and how important it was to really listen to them, as I watched them quietly layer instrument over instrument until that lightning striking the clocktower moment when they all line up and ignite.  It was (and is) one of my favorite music DVDs and one of the times I’ve been most impressed watching a band. Check out one such example from the Colbert performance I referenced back then, “Little by Little:”


We’ll keep the indie stalwart trend going and shift to Spoon’s fantastic third album, Girls Can Tell, which recently turned 20. This has forever been my favorite album of the band — and I’ve had a number of them show up on year-end lists over the years — but there’s just something about this one that keeps it arm’s length from the rest.  As the article says, it just SOUNDS cool. The attitude is palpable, Britt’s voice sounds wonderfully weathered and worn, and the playing is surgically precise — guitars growl, drums pop, but not a single note is wasted. To paraphrase the previous band, everything is in its right place.

Thanks to this and Britt’s lyrics, the album feels almost cinematic, more a collection of evocative short films than a series of “rock” songs. This isn’t a surprise — Spoon songs regularly show up in TV and movies (hell, sleeper fave Stranger than Fiction has almost nothing BUT Spoon songs — but that vibe began here. Songs like the opening “Everything Hits at Once,” “Me and the Bean,” “Lines in the Suit,” and “The Fitted Shirt” are all excellent examples, cramming a lifetime into 3 or 4 brisk minutes.  Even the album cover rules, just a blue-green photo of a spinning record with the name and title marching single-file — it could be the poster for any self-respecting indie flick, then or now. Besides the above songs, one of my perennial faves is the penultimate “Take the Fifth,” which grabs you by the ears before the album rolls credits with the aptly named instrumental “This Book is a Movie.”  Give it a listen here:


We’ll close with a couple quick notes to balance all the reading — first, Atlanta faves Manchester Orchestra recently did a livestream of their excellent 2017 album, A Black Mile to the Surface (which landed at #8 on that year’s list). They went back to the church they recorded at in Carolina for the performance and played the album start to finish, sounding great as always.  (They also teased a new album dropping in April — yippee!) Give it a watch/listen here:


Lastly, we started a new segment this week at the behest of my social media manager, Fuddge. In a fiery series of text messages she told me, “Sunshine, everybody loves your insightful and engaging posts, but there’s not enough of em — people need more of you, only with less words and less time required.” Thus were born Fuddge Pops — daily (or near daily) posts on the official Sunshine ‘Gram account where I’ll throw up the song of the day.  Some of them might end up meriting fuller engagement here on the site, others will just be random passing thoughts or jams to get (or keep) the day going. We’ll experiment with other material on there in the coming months — she’s got a very expansive campaign in mind — but for now figure a few songs should keep things going in between posts. So check it out and see what you think — in the meantime, stay safe, stay sane, and stay separate.

Until next time, amici…
–BS

Jose, Can You See — Songs of Kings and Rebels

It being the start of a long weekend in honor of the 4th, I figured what better way to commemorate the holiday than by revisiting the battle of our formation and pitting our former colonial masters against the scrappy upstarts here in the new world — musically speaking, of course.  So this week we’ve got a batch of stuff from bands in the UK, balanced with offerings from those here in the US — and since we won we get one extra (sorry, suckers) — but first we’ll start with my recent obsession, a funky band from Canada named Pottery. (It IS America’s hat, so maybe we get two extra…)

I first mentioned these guys a month or so ago thanks to the strength of their EP, which encompassed the first few singles from this album and I’d been wearing out on the regular. Now that the album is here I’ve been doing more of the same, listening to it front to back over and over again.  The previous singles are spaced out almost equally with one or two new songs in between, serving as familiar anchors while you get acquainted with the new surroundings — and boy, are they some fun new surroundings.

The album as a whole plays like a breathless, infectious frenzy, slowly whipping you into a lather before dousing you with some cool water at the end with the lovely closer, “Hot Like Jungle.” Up until that point, though, you’re in the unrelenting (and oh so fun) grips of songs like “Hot Heater,” “Down in the Dumps,” “Texas Drums Pt I & II,” and “NY Inn.” (Among others.) The full album deepens the feelings from the singles with the band really calling to mind early Talking Heads with all their frantic energy, jittery riffs, and irresistible motion.

As good as so many of the tracks are, it really deserves to be enjoyed in full — because quite honestly, when are you guaranteed to have nearly 40 minutes of unfettered fun these days? Rather than split out any of the frenetic fever dreams and diminish their impact, I’ll leave you with the finale and the sweet “Hot Like Jungle.” It’s a great song (there’s some strong satisfaction with singing the line “oooooh that’s nice, ooooooh that’s nice — hot like juuuuungleeeeeeeee” in its awkward, odd glory) and the perfect comedown to the rest of the album.  You’ll enjoy it even more once you’ve experienced the sweatiness surrounding it first — in the meantime, give it a ride here:

The other recent obsession has been the latest Run the Jewels album, which aside from absolutely ripping verses from Mike and El, includes a host of guest appearances from Josh Homme, Mavis Staples, Pharrell, DJ Premier, and Rage’s Zach de la Rocha. It’s a perfectly timed album — a) because with the world melting down, we need good music to keep us going, and (more importantly) b) because the guys are spitting some ultra relevant rhymes on the racial issues plaguing our country and contributing (rightfully so) to that meltdown. You can tell the two are serious, as almost all the dick jokes and horsing around are gone so as not to distract from the lyrical content.  It’s a monster of an album — it will definitely be showing up here at the end of the year, the only question is in what place — and aside from some of the best beats the boys have deployed to date, the verses are just top notch.  Examples abound, but none are more head exploding and poignant than the ones the guys rattle off in this one, “Walking in the Snow.” Crank it up, clean your ears, and take notice:

Next comes the latest from the erratic, at times odious, but almost always excellent Kanye who dropped a new song this week. (Two, actually, if you count his verse on Ty Dolla Sign’s track.) He’s been on a bit of a downward trend in my book, as the eight of you are likely already aware — his last album was the first I didn’t buy in its entirety and his five mini-disc spree in five weeks back in 2018 was a hit or miss medley best digested as a mixtape, as I wrote about then.  And then there’s the “I’ve gone gospel” and all the political stuff to deal with.  It can be a bit much (ok, a LOT, even for fans like me), so it’s not clear what we’re dealing with here — but just taking the song on its own terms, it’s pretty darn good.  Really good beat (almost Yeezus like in its heft), decent enough lyrics from Ye and Travis Scott — we’ll see what comes next, but for now this is a solid addition to the summer songlist. See what you think here:

We’ll close with a couple performances from the archives that were worth a watch/listen.  Now that Shaky Knees has joined the ranks of Lolla, Coachella, and all other major festivals — dashing my hopes for live music/fun anytime in the foreseeable future — it looks like livestreams and old performances are the only way we’re going to satisfy our urge for live music. (Save you taking up the ukelele and putting on sidewalk performances for me — give me a call if you are, Rizzo and I will watch from the window.) As a result, Pickathon extended its series pulling a new concert from its archives each day, and two I found noteworthy were from Kevin Morby and Blind Pilot.

Morby’s is from 2015 and despite being only five years ago he looks like a baby-faced troubadour, running through a set of early songs (including a ripping version of “Harlem River”) in his 45-minute set.  It’s from my favorite era of his so far, with the wondrous Meg Duffy playing alongside him on stage, so is great to go back and see this version of the band in full force. (Side note: I really miss Morbzahatchee streams — when are they coming back?!?)

As for Portland’s own Blind Pilot, their set was more of a surprise. I’d written about these guys back on the old site in 2015, but hadn’t really kept up with them since. Their set from the year prior was a really lovely, relaxing reminder that maybe I should, though, so see if it sparks the same in you:

With that we’ll jump across the pond to hang with the losers a bit (I kid — I’d live there again in a heartbeat, particularly as COVID swirls like pollen over here while they’re doing far better, among other deserved knocks on our homeland of late.)  We’ll start with the upcoming reunion of Doves, which has been in the offing for a while now.  I wrote about it back in April of last year when they’d announced they were recording new material, but it’d been crickets since then.

Thankfully they released the first song last week, and even more thankfully it sounds just like the rest of their stuff — no decay from years of disuse or dangerous new styles trying to capitalize on current trends. Just classic Doves — frontman Jimi Goodwin’s swooning vocals, Andy Williams’ sturdy drums, and guitarist Jez Williams’ swirling guitars. Let’s hope the rest of the album is as good as this — check out “Carousels” in the meantime:

Next comes the latest single from Irish act Fontaines D.C., who are set to release their sophomore album at the end of the month. (A Hero’s Death is due out 31 July.) They’ve showed up here before, thanks to their occasionally excellent debut, Dogrel. This one’s a bit more sedate than some of the stuff that showed up there, sporting a hypnotic riff from guitarists Conor Curley and Carlos O’Connell and some repetitive chants from frontman Grain Chatten.  It works well, though, so will be interesting to see if this is a new direction for the band once the full album arrives.  Check out “Televised Mind” while we wait:

It being the 4th we’ll close with some fireworks, courtesy of the brash boys from Bristol, Idles. They’re back with the second single from their upcoming third album, Ultra Mono (due out 25 Sept).  They’ve shown up a couple times here before, courtesy of their huge sound and the gonzo energy of frontman Joe Talbot, whose occasionally nonsensical lyrics are nevertheless tremendously satisfying to shout at high volumes while raging out with the band. (ALL ABOARD THE COCAINE GHOST TRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAIN!)

Their latest bottles up the tension, threatening to explode but never letting it get there, which is not to say this is a letdown in any form or fashion — Jon Beavis still lays down a pulverizing beat that guitarist Mark Bowen throws a wicked buzzsaw riff on, and Talbot is his usual winning self. Excited to see what else they’ve got in store for us — enjoy “Grounds” for now:

Before we go, wanted to throw one last thing out there for folks — I’m not sure where everyone gets their music news from these days (other than here for you eight beloved heroes), but one of my key sources, Stereogum, just sent out a crowdsourced plea for help thanks to COVID killing concerts, their major source of revenue. They’ve already raised over $230,000 (!?!), but still have another $20k to go in order to keep their writers on staff and keep the site going.

In addition to supporting a good cause (IMO) you’ll get an exclusive album of current bands doing covers of early ’00s classics (songlist to be revealed) among other goodies, so please share with others and support if you can/feel like it. Should be a good one once released — Car Seat, Death Cab, Hamilton, PUP, the National, Ty Segall, Waxahatchee, White Reaper, and others who’ve appeared here are all on there.

That’s it — hope everyone has a safe, quiet holiday.  Until next time… –BS

Groundhog Day and the Interminable Winter — The Best of 2018

If you feel like you’ve been here before, you’re right. This year was a stutter, a jerky repetition of words and events, offering the briefest feeling of progress before being ripped right back to the beginning. It was Sisyphus with his hill or that old joke about Pete and Repeat sitting on a log and we just could not keep Pete out of the water. (Who’s left? Repeat!) So it’s only appropriate the year ends exactly the way it began — I take a much needed trip back to my beloved city by the lake, am reminded how much I love it and need to get back for good, but then have to return to Sucksville, USA where scandal is plaguing the White House, key figures are fleeing the chaos, and the government is shut down. Who said variety is the spice of life — I want more white bread and water!

If last year was about surviving the follow on waves to 2016’s avalanche of shittiness, this year was just about hunkering down and waiting for the thaw. You did what you could for a while — change jobs, change routines, try to minimize the damage and avoid another cave-in. Watch some shows, build some fires, read some books and just unplug. After a certain point, though, insanity became expecting anything different, no matter how many times/ways you tried to avoid the final outcome. That snow was just not stopping, so you could choose to exhaust yourself in a futile attempt to dig out, or just wait for it to stop and hope you still had enough feeling in your limbs to stand up when it did.

It felt like lots of folks made the same decision to just George Michael and lay there — there weren’t many big name releases during the year, just a flurry of debuts and mid-level offerings, and that sort of exacerbated that feeling of fatigue. No marquee returns or thrilling discoveries to fill you with excitement and knock you out of your funk, just a creeping numbness from more of the same, both in music and the real world. Stupid tweet or insane policy decision? Meh. Mediocre concert or middling album? Blah. I’m too tired to get worked up — I’m just going to pull the covers over my head and go back to sleep.

It wasn’t all bad — the new job (or rather the people surrounding me in it) was a daily delight, in spite of the same raft of headaches and infuriating immobility, while the new companion (the furry snugglebug currently asleep on my lap) was an overwhelming, unrelenting joy. (I don’t think there’s a better demonstration of pure love and happiness than someone getting a raging erection at the mere sight of you every day when you come home. I’ve honestly never felt more loved.) Getting to see the beloved Lizard give a flawless performance in my favorite room in town for the first time in ten years was pretty great, too. For the most part, though, it was a race to the weekend when you could hole up and hide out in your house for 48 hours — sanctuary through separation, happiness through hermitry. Anything to avoid the cycle of the last few years and spare yourself some damage.

There were glimmers of hope things might be changing. The onslaught of men doing terrible things to women thankfully seemed to slow this year — but not before it claimed one of my absolute favorite bands (and last year’s top album), The Orwells. The tidal wave of celebrities dying also ebbed — but still swallowed two personal favorites whose loss affected me for months — Scott Hutchison and Anthony Bourdain. (Even now, half a year later, it’s still difficult to listen to that music or watch those shows.) Still the snow kept falling, though, no matter how slow or sparse at times. So you sit, and wait, allowing it to silently build up around you, knowing that it has to stop soon.

This year’s crop of crooners is the smallest in years — compared to last year’s 25 and the previous year’s 27, this year has a paltry 15. There’s three Scottish bands, three Aussies, two Chicagoans, and a skinny kid from Arkansas, with an almost even split between returning favorites and debuts (old faves get the slight edge with eight acts that have shown up on previous year end lists). That scarcity feels appropriate in light of the year, as everyone waits to see the ground again so something new can grow. Despite the diminished number, though, there’s still some really solid stuff here — some moments of punky brashness to soundtrack the resistance, but for the most part the list is filled with what the year was short of — prettiness and warmth. In order to do something — ANYthing — to break the pattern of the past few years, we’re also going to change things up and go low to high this year, hopefully mirroring our future trajectory and building towards our return to the top. I hope you enjoy the ride.

And like I said last year, remember — winter only lasts so long, and the weather is warming…

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jeff20tweedy_warm15. Jeff Tweedy — WARM: the most recent release on the list, it’s the latest offering from fave fellow Chicagoan Tweedy on what’s being billed as his first solo album. (I guess even though he wrote all the songs on 2014’s Sukierae that doesn’t count since his son played drums?) Regardless of categorization, it’s another solid outing from what’s turned into one of the most reliable and tireless American songwriters. (Who along with his normal companions, the ever-excellent Wilco, is also one of its best bands.) As a long-time fan — and as Tweedy outlines in his companion biography, Let’s Go (So We Can Get Back), which I hope to soon read (ahem — listening, Santa?) — this is something as a surprise, thanks to a history of fractiousness within his bands, public struggles with drugs, and a frustrating habit of warping songs until they’re almost willfully dissonant sometimes. And yet in spite of all that, he “leaves behind a trail of songs, from the darkest gloom to the brightest sun,” as he puts it on the opening “Bombs Above” — and the vast majority of them are really, really good.

The same holds here — songs like “Don’t Forget,” “Let’s Go Rain,” and “I Know What It’s Like” are instant winners, while slower, softer tracks like “Having Been Is No Way To Be” and the hypnotic “How Will I Find You?” also stick it in the net. Tweedy’s lyrics remain sharp, occasionally flashing a quiet menace that catches you off guard beneath the warm voice and pretty melodies — pushing back on folks encouraging him to revisit his substance abusing days in “Having Been” or an unnamed antagonist in “Some Birds,” sweetly crooning “I’d love to take you down — and leave you there.” Overall, though, the tone is in the title, and this album is the red brick Tweedy sings about — warm when the sun has died.

MI000442080314. Courtney Barnett — Tell Me How You Really Feel: the sophomore album from outback songstress Barnett is a trip back to the time when combat boots and flannel were king and cargo pants weren’t simply items you were allowed to wear once a year (who says youth is wasted on the young? #neverforget) Barnett perfectly captures that era’s angsty rage, sounding right in tune with previous strong female soloists of the era like Alanis Morrisette, PJ Harvey, and Tracy Bonham. What sets Barnett apart — aside from her thick, burned out accent, which makes numerous lines that much more enjoyable to sing/listen to (such as on “Nameless, Faceless” where she languidly stretches “I wanna waaaaaaaahk thru the paaaaahk afta daaaaaaaaaaaak” as if her mouth was full of taffy) — is the sarcasm and self-effacement she folds into her confessional lyrics.

On tracks like “I’m Not Your Mother, I’m Not Your Bitch” or “Crippling Self Doubt and a General Lack of Self-Confidence” you don’t have to go farther than the titles to get a sense of how she spikes her bitterness with a little levity. And in doing so she makes what could be off-putting or difficult to fully embrace (not that spending time with an angry woman isn’t enjoyable, like riding bareback on a porcupine) go down that much smoother. Tracks like “City Looks Pretty” and “Charity” are bright balls of energy, while “Need a Little Time” and “Walkin’ on Eggshells” slow things down to add a little soul. What shines through throughout is Barnett’s warmth, both in voice and personality, which keeps you coming back for more — that and that amazing accent (d-did I studdaaaaaaaaaa, maybe a liddle bit…)

HopeDownsArt-1529346058-640x64013. Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever — Hope Downs: the debut album from five more Aussies, these boys come in with a brisk ten song, thirty-odd minute winner owing equal debts to the Smiths and Television, showcasing the jangly shimmer of the former with the hypnotic, swirling guitar parts of the latter, while adding a touch of their homeland’s characteristic swagger to round things out. It’s technically their debut, though follows quickly on the heels of two really solid EPs of almost the same duration — 2016’s Talk Tight and 2017’s The French Press — and finds the band continuing to sharpen their attack.

I discovered them this year in Hotlanta at Shaky Knees and they put on a good performance — the triple guitar/vocal attack of Fran Keaney, Tom Russo, and Joe White worked really well with the three often meandering in different directions before snapping back together. Take tracks like the opening trio of “An Air Conditioned Man,” “Talking Straight,” and “Mainland,” which crackle with energy as examples. Songs like “Sister’s Jeans” and “Cappuccino City” show a slower, more languid vibe to round out the jittery sizzle. All in all a solid “debut” (or continuation of their previous EP run) — look to these guys for more in the coming years.

61J3O91OozL._SS50012. Welles — Red Trees and White Trashes: the debut album from a scrawny beanpole with a mop of wild hair from Ozark, Arkansas, this was the most unabashedly hedonistic pleasure of the year. Part sixties psychedelia, part southern blues and Seattle grunge, Welles (formerly Jeh Sea Wells) embraces the ethos of ZFG and the classic trappings of sex, drugs, and rock and roll so fully it could be comical — there are literally songs about sex (“Do You Know How to Fuck”), drugs (“Codeine”), and rock and roll (“Rock and Roll”) here — but the hooks are strong and the delivery sarcastic and self-aware enough to pull it off.

It’s a good thing he did, too — aside from those three winners, there’s tracks like the opening “How Sweet it is to Love,” “Seasons,” and lead single “Life Like Mine,” which besides being a great song has the year’s most flippant/funny question embedded as the chorus. (“How fucked up have you got to be to live a life like mine?”) As I wrote before, Welles is a sneaky good guitar player, showcasing his chops on tracks like “Hold me Like I’m Leaving” and the smoldering “Seventeen,” and his raspy roar goes well with both the lyrical content and mood of the music throughout. All in all another nice homage to the early nineties and definitely someone worth watching in coming years.

a.211. Kanye and Company — The Five Weeks, Five EP Mixtape: this one’s representative of a lot of this year. Kanye was running around saying/doing a lot, some of it great, some of it ridiculous; unfulfilled hype and unrelenting bluster were flowing in abundance, both from him and those around him; and amidst all the bombast and buffoonery there were still some moments to savor (though not as many as there used to be, and now with the question of cost thanks to what comes with them). As the eight of you already know, Kanye and friends holed up in Wyoming for five weeks last summer to go on a recording spree and what came out of it was five EPs-not-albums that had moments of greatness, but mostly felt undercooked and rushed. It accompanied another slow-moving trainwreck in public by the ringleader in chief (some portions of which occurred next to the clown commander in chief), which further heightened the backlash to the music and highlighted its flaws. And yet after the dust finally settled and we could focus on the music, we still had some pretty good tunes for our troubles.

From “Yikes” and “Ghost Town” on Ye to “4th Dimension” and the title track on Kids See Ghosts or “If You Know You Know” off Daytona, these were winners of old that had you reaching for the volume when they came on. The problem is most of what remained, like most of what’s out in the rap world writ large (or the real world, for that matter), is an underwhelming, hit or miss mess. Gone are the gods of the golden age who not only had something to say (more than their material possessions/obsessions, that is), but could also fill an entire album with those thoughts and an equal number of banging beats. Today’s “superstars” are a porridge of pale comparisons to those titans — either marrying a missive to a moldy beat or molding a monster hook to a missing message (or if they do manage to get both right, only do so once/twice vs throughout an entire album).

You might say it’s unfair to compare the Migos and A$AP Mobs of the world to forebears like Outkast and Wu-tang (or even modern Kanye and Nas to yesteryear Kanye and Nas), but that’s the cold, unavoidable reality. You watch things like Hip Hop Evolution on Netflix and remember what was possible — the number of outstanding albums from Pac, PE, Tribe, and Cube, or the untouchable debuts from Snoop, Biggie, and Dre. Try arguing that most of today’s acts fall anywhere near that level of quality or consistency, even for a single album. You can’t — and so we’re left with memories of what was, both in the genre and these guys’ previous material. That and a pretty good mixtape, in this case. Things done changed, indeed.

young20fathers20_20cocoa20sugar_20album20cover10. Young Fathers — Cocoa Sugar: back for their third or fifth outing depending on how you count, the Scottish trio of mad scientists continue their eclectic run, stitching together a wild array of sounds for the year’s most unique, exciting listen. Part hip hop, part R&B, part electro, part transmission from outer space, this one shifts styles with the rapidity of spinning the radio dial back and forth. Rather than sound scattered and chaotic, though, it feels more like a butterfly languidly flitting about the garden, sampling a thought here and a genre there. At turns lovely and loud, soulful and slamming, it also reinforces the power of the album format, rewarding the listener for digesting its twelve songs as a unit vs a series of random singles. (It also has a beautifully iconic cover, further pushing back on the disjointed, anonymous streaming life these days.)

Tracks like “Fee Fi,” “Wow,” “Wire,” and “Toy” crackle with jittery energy, while songs like “Lord” and “Picking You” are pure prettiness, shining with soulful vocals. Others fall somewhere in the middle, dancing between moods as that radio dial spins. “Tremolo” opens with an ethereal church organ before snapping almost immediately to a bleep bloop electro beat, with vocalists Alloysius Massaquoi, Kayus Bankole, and Graham Hastings sing-rapping overhead until the organ returns with a flourish a minute later, brightening the song like an old cathedral as the sun emerges from behind a cloud. Lead single “In My View” walks a similar line, slowly introducing pieces one by one before building them to a cohesive climax three quarters of the way through. It’s a powerful effect and an often thrilling listen as a result — another solid winner from these iconoclastic highlanders.

51J2B2z2yZbL._SY355_9. Mastersystem — Dance Music: Outside the near daily indignities or infuriations by those elected to represent us, one of the hallmarks of this year was an ongoing, dull drone akin to a ringing in your ears after an explosion. (That and a commensurate sense of anger and disorientation at what just transpired.) Day after day, you found yourself questioning one of three things — “what the fuck just happened?” “Am I going insane?” And “Why does no one else seem to care?” (If not all three simultaneously.) Most times it was the result of the idiotic things those people said or did in the news so you’d turn to music or other artistic endeavors for an antidote or escape, but sometimes you’d find yourself confronting those same questions there despite your best efforts.

It happened as you flipped through the channels, catching commercial after commercial about the final episodes of Anthony Bourdain’s Parts Unknown, for example, and it happened as you flipped through songs on your drive to and from work, catching song after song from the last few Frightened Rabbit albums and former frontman Scott Hutchison’s final project, this debut album. The barrage of bad news from current events was challenging enough, requiring the nightly fortitude of a recovering addict at an all you can eat bourbon and blow party, but unexpected reminders of these two’s untimely deaths were even more taxing. What the fuck just happened, indeed?

Those feelings take on additional weight on this album — in part a reflection of the wider world and a response to its exasperating events, Hutchison and his brother (along with brother duo number two-o, the Lockey brothers) drop an album that is at turns loud, brash, beleaguered, and bludgeoning. Over its brisk nine song, 35 minute duration, the Lockeys create a swirl of guitars over Grant Hutchison’s pulverizing drums, channeling the disorientation and frustration so often caused by the outer world, while brother Scott delivers some of his bitterest, bleakest lyrics yet. And that latter part is what made this album so hard to listen to for a long time — not only hearing Hutchison’s voice and remembering the awfulness of what happened, but also because his lyrics in light of that event take on a whole different meaning and twist the knife even more.

You could listen to lines like “There’s no good explanation for the road that I have taken — I used to want to fly, but now I don’t…I can’t wait to end the day, most the time; if the curtain dropped tomorrow, I wouldn’t mind” from the opening “Proper Home” and hear someone who’s content with where they’re at and could die tomorrow with no regrets. Unfortunately, you could also hear that as someone who’s all but beaten, begging for the blackness of the end. It comes up again and again — “In the race to lose I’m winning…It’s so hard man, just keeping time…if I make it to next year” on “Waste of Daylight.” “An appalling teacher, lessons learned, lost in a deep abyss. The voice gets weaker and weaker still, were we really born for this?” in “Notes on a Life Not Quite Lived.” And then the captivating, crushing closer, “Bird is Bored of Flying” — “There’s such a place as too far, there’s such a thing as too much…I’ve come as far as I can go…I’ve seen all that I care to see, become what I don’t want to be.”

Parsing these, and any countless cousins from Hutchison’s Rabbit albums, is a perilous, though unavoidable affair. Similar to when similarly troubled and beloved Elliott Smith took his own life, I found myself going back through the albums and catching lines that possibly foreshadowed the awful end. Also similar to Smith, though, who was reportedly doing better at the end than in previous years, most accounts in the wake of Hutchison’s passing talked of how happy and excited he was about this side project, eager to take to the road to show the fans what he’d been working on. The same goes for Bourdain — he had just been to Spain with his good friend Jose Andres and was in France with his best friend Eric Ripert at the end, none of whom noted anything out of the ordinary.

And that’s the danger of trying to make sense of the senseless — you can drive yourself crazy looking for cryptic cries for help in the songs/shows, just because you want the loss to be logical, the missing to have been caused by something that was missed. Unfortunately, I don’t think that was the case here — with Hutchison or with Bourdain. These were people who had lots of loving people around them who would have done anything to help if they could and who would know better than anyone if things were spiraling out of control — unfortunately their presence and their vigilance weren’t enough to beat back the feelings of pain and/or despair that these two felt. And so we’re left with their legacies — both of what they did while they were alive, and what their deaths meant to those who knew or appreciated them.

For me, it means we got one final album to enjoy Hutchison’s singular talents — another album mixing cynicism with optimism, defiance with defeat, and love with loss. We got more great lines (“It’s times like this we turn to hate as the fucks I gave evaporate” on “Teething,” for one) and several more great songs (“Notes” and “Old Team” are both winners, and the build of “Bored” is epic — by the time it gets to the end it’s a miracle Grant’s drums are still intact and you wish they had been able to have this as a setlist closer night after night it’s so good. I listened to this one obsessively the past few months.) It’s a lot more intense than regular Rabbit records, which again is probably due to the world it was made in — the big one showering down on you in the nightly news, and the small one beating down on you in the shower — but in both those aspects it’s a perfect distillation of those ingredients and a worthy capstone to a career. It still hurts to think of it in those regards — a capstone instead of a stepping stone — but like so much else that’s been happening, just or fair doesn’t seem to make much difference. So take it for what it is and enjoy it as you can — it’s a solid, sludgy little brute of an album and a fitting farewell for a flawed friend.

71ZiRPBeh2L._SY355_8. Gregory Alan Isakov — Evening Machines: after touring with his homestate Colorado Symphony Orchestra playing gussied up versions of his already pristine songs, Isakov took the last two years to write new material, his first since 2013’s outstanding The Weatherman. And what he returns with shows the benefit of that time on the road, fusing his characteristically lovely melodies with an added lushness that brings the songs further weight and beauty. You hear it from the outset with the opening “Berth” — aside from the strings that glide in midway through, there’s the symphonic swell with a minute to go that just wallops you and leaves you swooning.

The rest of the album mirrors that majesty and beauty. Songs like “San Luis,” “Southern Star,” and “Bullet Holes” are all stunners, and “Caves” is so stirring you might run through the wall in your zeal. Even softer, statelier songs like “Wings in Black” and “Chemicals” — or “Was I Just Another One,” which is so delicate it floats along like milkweed on the breeze — are winners. Isakov always sounds like he’s singing by moonlight — aside from the title’s reinforcement of that point, he asks the listener “won’t you sing me something for the dark, dark, dark” on the song of the latter phrase’s name — but this is not a cold or dreary album. It, like his voice, is warm and inviting, while also shot through with exhaustion. It’s the equivalent of a couch next to the fire after hours shoveling snow — you could stay there for hours, and in fact might never get up. Enjoy the glow.

1055067. The Boxer Rebellion — Ghost Alive: this one’s an aptly named phantom, one I missed when it was apparently released back in March only to appear like an apparition thanks to my little musical savior, Numu, which valiantly stepped into the gap with the demise of Record Bird. (Sidebar: Numu is a great little app — I highly recommend downloading it since the Bird flew the coop and iTunes is stupid and removed the “new by my artists” alerting feature.) Even the usually infallible AllMusic still doesn’t have it listed in the band’s discography, so I don’t feel bad for sleeping on it. Thankfully ole Numu helped me stumble onto it, though, because it’s another solid listen. The band’s sixth album and first since 2016’s Ocean by Ocean (number eight on that year’s list), this one finds the band returning to their roots and jettisoning the synthy sheen of their last outing (which this notorious hater of said instrument allowed under the “one and done” clause of his strict Antithesynth Laws).

It opens with lead single “What the Fuck,” which came out last September, almost precisely on the anniversary of the previous November’s events that had so many muttering that phrase over and over. (And still does on a near daily basis…) In spite of its applicability to current events it’s instead sung to an apparent lover and you can hear the venom dripping off the words despite lead singer Nathan Nicholson’s dulcet croon. The album moves to calmer waters after that — whether literally on tracks like “River” and “Rain” or metaphorically on soaring swooners like “Love Yourself,” “Here I Am,” and “Don’t Look Back.” It’s another lush, lovely affair from the London foursome — hopefully this ghost materializes for more soon.

Nation_of_Two_album6. Vance Joy — Nation of Two: the aptly surnamed Australian lovebird is back with his second album, his first since his solid debut four years ago, 2014’s Dream Your Life Away (number five on that year’s list), and despite that normally meaning a change in administration, there’s no such shift in what’s running his world. Love’s still the leader, and Joy celebrates it in almost each of this one’s thirteen tracks. Similar to his debut, Joy writes as someone still in the heated throes of a burgeoning romance, with that sense of urgency and desperation (and thus at times an embarrassing overbearing, but because of that underlying sincerity and sweetness you let it pass), and doesn’t do much to change the formula here. Which is not to say it’s a stale retread or attempt to recapture lightning in a bottle — people have been singing to/about their heart’s captors for hundreds of years, so he’s got PLENTY to work with before things get old.

Similar to some of the big hitters from his debut, songs like “Lay it on Me,” “Saturday Sun,” and “Take Your Time” are upbeat winners that work like wildfire on a crowd. I caught him again this summer and there’s something perfect about seeing thousands of people singing in full-throated unison on a sunny lawn — Joy’s one of the few acts that’s meant to be seen in full daylight and open air instead of the dark confines of a club. And while those songs live up to his last name, it’s the album’s slower stuff that really hits hard. Tracks like the opening “Call if You Need Me,” “I’m With You,” and “Crashing Into You” are all beautiful little gems. It’s a simple, yet winning recipe — warm Aussie accent and voice, sweet lyrics about love, winning melodies and hearty hooks that will have you singing along — and a ukelele. What’s not to like about that? Here’s hoping he’s got at least another four years in office.

Father20John20Misty20GodE28099s20Favorite20Customer5. Father John Misty — God’s Favorite Customer: This one marks a thankful return to form for former fave Misty who had lost me completely after the bloated, self-important bombast of his last album, Pure Comedy. That album found him endlessly sermonizing on a range of topics, half-heartedly sing-speaking long-winded lyrics that continually reminded you how smart/funny/amazing he thought he was — and if there was one thing the world needed more of this year, it was an oblivious bloviator telling everyone around him why he was the best/smartest around. Thankfully Misty jettisons the sanctimonious self-fellation for some straight-forward sincerity here, getting back to what worked so well on his first two albums. It only took a near-divorce and mental breakdown to get him there.

Thanks to that heartbreak — a separation from his wife, the Honeybear whose courtship and romance was so memorably, lovingly captured on his second album (number five on 2015’s list) — Misty stops prattling on about everyone else’s perceived inadequacies and focuses on his own. In doing so he gives us ten really solid songs — songs that showcase the sometimes dark, sometimes laugh out loud humor of his early efforts, mixed with the sincerity and self-effacement that was so sorely missing last time around. Which is not to say this is a light-hearted album — the opening song is titled “Hangout at the Gallows” and has a “chorus” line of “I’m treading water as I bleed to death” followed by a wail that sounds like he actually might be dying. After that frolic in the flowers come nine more beauties, songs about being holed up in a hotel dealing with the break from his wife, as well as reality, while possibly careening towards suicide. (“Mr Tillman,” “The Palace,” and the nakedly honest “Please Don’t Die,” among others.)

It’s not all doom and gloom — songs like “Date Night” have Misty singing with some swagger (despite lamenting within that his mojo’s gone), while “Disappointing Diamonds Are the Rarest of them All” has him juxtaposing a buoyant melody with hilariously oddball ways to describe his relationship. (“Like a pervert on a crowded bus, a glare of love bears down on us…like an oil tanker tipped at sea, this love’s contaminated me.”) The majority of the album finds him in a far more fragile state, though, probing his inadequacies in “Just Dumb Enough to Try” (“You can take what I know about love and drown it in a sink…you can take what I know about you and maybe fill a small balloon”) and even turning to the man upstairs in desperation on the title track (someone he notably doesn’t believe in, as he winkingly suggests with the “favorite customer” tag.) It’s unfortunate it took this upheaval to get such a lovely return to form, but you hope the process and pain got him to a better place (personally and professionally).

1058464. We Were Promised Jetpacks — The More I Sleep the Less I Dream: the fourth album from this excellent quartet, the boys from Scotland are back with their first album in four years (2014’s Unraveling, which I somehow missed on that year’s list — I apologize to each of you for the oversight, as it’s a great album). In line with the title, this one’s a dreamier affair than previous outings — instead of characteristically roaring guitars, they’re cloaked more in reverb this time, creating a gauzy haze for frontman Adam Thompson’s thundering howl to punch through like a siren through the fog. Opener “Impossible,” along with later tracks “Hanging In,” “Not Wanted,” and the title track (which adds an ominous edge to the dreaminess) highlight the new approach well.

There’s still some rippers — tracks like “In Light,” “Make it Easier,” and the frenetic “Repeating Patterns” are all excellent examples of just how hard these guys can hit — but overall it’s a more muted, mature affair. It works really well, though — the softer shimmer lulls you into a fugue, allowing the louder parts to land all the harder, like being awakened by a punch to the jaw. I got a chance to see these guys again when they came through town recently, headlining for the first time in the big room, and they left us wanting much more, keeping their set at almost exactly an hour with no encore, and despite the disappointment for not hearing more it reiterated two things — one, these guys are outstanding live — their enormous tempo shifts hit like monster waves crashing on your head — and two, they have a ton of great songs, of which these fit in seamlessly. A really solid outing from a real fave, these guys are worth adding to your arsenal.

Parquet20Courts_Wide20Awake3. Parquet Courts — Wide Awaaaaake!: back for the first time since 2016’s Human Performance (number three on that year’s list), the tireless band of Tex Yorkers storm in with another baker’s dozen for their catalog, this time adding a groove to their punky repertoire that was previously unseen. If the next two albums on this list are the antidote to all the awfulness around us, this one represents the attitude it often invokes first — a hearty “GOFY!” and an urge to punch you in the jaw. Recorded with hipster porn producer Danger Mouse, it’s the band’s most eclectic outing yet, evidence of both their restlessness and their producer’s kitchen sink approach to recording. And it mostly works — “Violence” marries a 70’s cop drama riff with Frontman I Adam Savage’s shouted verses before transitioning to the simmering “Before the Water Gets Too High” and the shimmering “Mardi Gras Beads,” the latter of which finds Frontman II Austin Brown crooning of love and the titular trinket.

These new wave outings are bookended by classic Courts, the opening “Total Football,” which breaks into an invigorating sprint 23 seconds in, and the irresistible “Almost Had to Start a Fight/In and Out of Patience,” which breaks into one twice during the chorus, frantically sending you running around the room before easing you into the lovely “Freebird II.” (Which sports one of the most satisfying moments of the year, shouting “freeeeeeeeeee, I feel freeeeeeeeeee, like you proooooooomised I’d beeeeeeeee” at the soaring end.) The rest of the album bounces between these modes, the vintage and the voyage — “Normalization, “NYC Observation,” and “Extinction” fall in the former camp, while “Back to Earth” and “Death Will Bring Change” form the latter. The title track is the most Mouse-ian alien of them all, something that sounds nothing like its surroundings yet somehow works (and somehow found these miscreants playing on Ellen, which has to be a sign of the apocalypse). It’s a bold move for the band, placing their more experimental impulses typically explored as the band’s alter ego Parkay Quarts right alongside their more excellent, in-character offerings as the Courts, and while I personally want more of/solely the latter, they fuse enough of that essence into the former to make it more palatable and enjoyable than it often is on those side projects. Good on em for pushing the envelope.

51oRReFVchL._SS5002. The Hunts — Darlin’ Oh Darlin’: the sophomore effort from the seven singing siblings from small town Virginia (their debut landed at number nine in 2015), this album was a precious commodity over the course of the year. It is pure, unadulterated heart — painfully earnest, beautifully crafted, and so openly loving it’s almost too much to bear, like a puppy who’s whimpering because he just wants to sleep on your lap. As with that pooch, you find yourself feeling protective of that honesty and love, so rare have they become in this current state of affairs. And so I found myself feeling similarly protective of this album, unable to turn to it too often for fear of sullying its pristinity, like a field of freshly fallen snow — that and a fear of potentially damaging myself as if staring into an eclipse, being ill-equipped for such unadulterated warmth and emotion.

It’s a pretty remarkable thing — listening to it you constantly wonder how these seven kids a) can write about such issues with the gravity of someone decades their seniors and b) how they haven’t had this amazing loveliness beaten out of them a hundred times over by now. It’s a bit like finding a dinosaur wandering around your backyard — this shouldn’t exist in the modern world. Writing this on the day of the former president’s funeral, it’s the perfect accompaniment to that backdrop, something you could picture coming from the radio in his barracks during WWII. Not only the sentiments of love and companionship, but calling each other “darlin” and “dear” in the process. This is an album that makes you miss your grandparents, as well as the way they (and the former president) talked to each other and treated folks.

The title is comprised of the album’s bookends, the opening “Darlin'” and the closer ten songs later, “Oh Darlin’,” and aside from the similar name they’re sonic companions, featuring a slightly different use of the core melody. They’re both lovely, as is everything else here — “Along the Way” and “Heaven Knows” are should-be hits in the vein of the Lumineers, “Peace be Still,” “Far,” and “Love of Mine” are uplifting winners, while songs like “Travel,” “Standing Small,” and “Years” are more stately, subdued gems. I honestly can’t say enough about this thing — the harmonies are knee-buckling, the sentiments are lovely, and the melodies are instantly memorable. Simply put, I wish there was more of this in the world — we’d be a lot better off if there were.

DIGITAL_NRNS_5x5_600dpiRGB_8705e1cb-d9e4-47c2-b934-a5e160b08630_1024x10241. Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats — Tearing at the Seams: if the previous album was all heart, this one represents pure joy. From the first time I listened to it I knew it was going to be here come year’s end, and likely at the top, so deep and instant a connection did it forge. Back for the first time since their amazing debut (2015’s eponymous album, which landed at six on that year’s list), they walk you in slowly on the lead track “Shoe Boot,” innocently shuffling along with a little drum beat and bass groove as if nothing was amiss. By the time they count in the horns twenty seconds later and blow away your resistance (and possibly bad mood), you’re done. What follows is twelve songs of soul, swing, and sunshine that borders on the spiritual at times. It hearkens back to 60s-era Stax and Motown, at times Wilson Pickett or Booker T and the MGs, others a medley of Smokey, Sam, and Otis — all without sounding derivative or hackneyed.

As the album title implies, this one’s stuffed almost to overfilling with honest, earnest emotion, updating the sound of those ancestors without merely replicating it, all while making you forget the world around you — if only for 45 minutes. It’s a blissful spin while it lasts — “Boot,” “Be There,” “Intro,” and “Baby I Lost My Way (But I’m Going Home)” live up to the band’s name as sweaty party starters, while “A Little Honey,” “Say it Louder,” “Coolin’ Out,” and “Still Out There Running” shimmer like sun off the water. Rateliff has an amazing voice, shifting effortlessly from soothing croon to stirring wail, and songs like “Hey Mama,” “Babe I Know,” and the title track show the power in the progression, leaving you (and him) a breathless heap by the end. It’s a fantastic ride, one I took over and again this year. We caught them live a couple times this year and each time it was a celebration, people reveling in the music and the band reveling in the response. Here’s to more of the same in the coming years.

Embrace the Whirlwind: Random Offerings from the Windy Shores

It’s been a wild couple of weeks — I successfully survived a weekend in New Jersey (although DID nearly die in a creek in the woods) and another in South Carolina (my kidnappers missed the hurricane by a week or so — NICE try, suckers), spending the remaining time stuck at the office dealing with one crisis after another. Thankfully there were a few musical items of note caught in the nanoseconds available between sleep and work, so in the spirit of the typhoons and hurricanes pummeling various parts of the planet right now, here’s a swirl of songs to sample this Sunday.

First up comes from eighties icons Echo and the Bunnymen who are releasing an album reinterpreting their biggest hits in a couple weeks. It’s an interesting concept — it’s something bands like this naturally do when you see them live. If you’ve got to play the same songs for decades, you inevitably are going to change elements up as you go along so you don’t go insane — but it’s rare to put those changes down officially. It’s the difference between a rub-on tattoo and a sleeve — one’s nice to try on for a while, sorta spice up the day a little, but the other’s a much more lasting commitment. Always the outsiders, the lads are opting for the ink and permanently putting down the products of their playtime, along with a couple new tunes to boot. I’ve heard a couple of the re-envisioned tunes so far and they’re not bad, but odds are I’ll stay with the originals after this much time (no offense, guys). The first original song I’ve heard is pretty good, conjuring the same sweeping feel the band is known for — check out “The Somnambulist” here:

Next comes a lovely cover of Richard Swift’s “Most of What I Know” by Death Cab’s Ben Gibbard. As the faithful eight of you know, Swift recently passed away unexpectedly and a slew of musicians have paid tribute to him in the intervening weeks, including Hamilton Leithauser, Dan Auerbach, and the War on Drugs. Add Gibbard to the list, who took time from promoting his band’s latest album (the pleasant, yet underwhelming Thank You for Today) to perform his tribute, a poignant pick as the refrain of “your love will keep my heart alive” seems apropos. Give it a listen here (and check out Swift’s The Atlantic Ocean for another lovely Sunday spin):

Last up from the softer side of the aisle comes the first single from Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke’s score for the upcoming horror film Suspiria, a remake of the 70s cult classic of the same name. It might seem an odd choice at first — both the movie and who’s soundtracking it — but when you remember Hollywood has no new ideas and just re-purposes every good (and mediocre) idea from previous generations, and that Yorke almost willfully picks projects seemingly intent on alienating his legions of followers (of which I am one), then it makes perfect sense. So I considered it a victory when I heard this first offering and it wasn’t six minutes of robots bleeping and blooping or chainsaws distorted alongside drum machine sounds — there actually were words and a pretty melody. It’s a minor miracle! We’ll see how the rest of the songs sound, but this one’s a winner — just Yorke’s lovely voice atop a delicate piano. Check out “Suspirium” here:

Now it’s time for a walk on the wild side, first with the skatepunks of FIDLAR, who despite being known for hilarious, catchy songs about drugs, drinking, and partying (as written about here before), are back with a pointed swipe at our current situation. Taking a swing at the government, politicians on the left and right, and our obsession with our phones and technology, it’s a surprisingly mature song from the California kids. (Their biggest hit — the fantastic “Cocaine” — sported Ron Swanson running around w/ a boner peeing on things, after all.) It’s a promising step forward, and has a pretty sweet little riff riding along throughout, too, which makes this a double win. See what you think (and watch the Swanson video from my old post for another flavor) here:

Speaking of Kanye (whether you followed that link or not, someone’s ALWAYS talkin’ ’bout ‘Ye so is not a non sequitur), he popped up again this week, thankfully for his music and not for some fool fucking thing he said about Chump (again). This time it’s for a song/video that debuted during the Pornhub awards (which, apparently is a thing? What are the categories — “most convincing groan” and “most creative use of an orifice?”) and it keeps with Kanye’s trend of late of dropping tracks that seem like throwaway thoughts in need of a little polish. As seen on his recent spate of five EPs (NOT albums) in five weeks, sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t, and appropriately this song falls in both camps. The meat of the song, the line “you’re such a fucking ho — I love it” is both stupid and tin-eared in the #metoo era (or just generally if you’re not into the whole “demeaning women” thing), and Lil Pump’s opening verse is similarly weak (though apparently he’s got quite the SoundCloud following, so what do I know). But then Kanye comes in, and despite not dropping any signature lines (four of his first ones are identical), something about his verse gets stuck in your head. (WOOP!) And the video, which looks like an homage to the Talking Heads and Minecraft, is visually interesting, too. So while only two minutes long, built around an idiotic/misogynistic line, and debuting at a porn gala — somehow I can’t get it out of my head. See what it does for you here:

We’ll close with the kings, hometown juggernaut punks The Jesus Lizard, who I miraculously got to catch again last week, which would have been memorable enough after ten years not touring, but the fact that I got to see them in my favorite venue in town, the Cat, made it even better. That the band played nearly thirty songs and sounded incredible, starting with frontman David Yow leaping into the crowd from the opening song and closing with a double encore, made it hands down the best thing I’ve seen this year (and rivals the first time I saw em ten years ago). These guys aren’t for everyone — wifey hates them and I understand why they’re not everyone’s cup of tea — they are loud, heavy, and often involve Yow screaming unintelligibly at the top of his lungs, but they are a force of nature and one of my absolute favorites.

They’re a perfect representation of the principle of the gestalt, a band where every member brings something so singular to the table that when you combine them as one, it’s absolutely devastating. Few bands can say that — another that immediately springs to mind is Sleater-Kinney (who wifey also hates) — but when it happens it’s undeniable. For the Lizard, it’s a potent mixture of Yow’s primal screams (and insane energy live), Duane Denison’s buzzsaw guitars, David Sims’ thundering bass, and Mac McNeilly’s Animalesque smashing of the cans that almost literally bowls you over. There’s nothing like these guys — most punk bands can nail the noise or energy to get you whipped into a frenzy, but do so at the expense of actual melody — something you can grab onto and get stuck in your head, bringing you back for more. It’s the difference between a sportfuck and a relationship — one’s good for three to five minutes of sweaty chaos (or hours, if you’re young/Sting), the other keeps you satisfied for years.

That’s how it is with these guys — they’re sledgehammer heavy, don’t worry about that — but the stuff Denison and Sims (or both) throw out there actually has melody. Whether it’s the guitar riff from “Boilermaker” or the bass line from “Blue Shot.” Or from “Glamorous” and “Monkey Trick.” Or umpteen others. It sounds like music — you can hum it, it’s catchy, you could play a snippet and the Jeopardy! answer would be “What is a song, Alex?” instead of the pointless screaming and shredding of so many other punk/metal bands. These guys are actual musicians — that they’re also loud/heavy AF makes it even better. So while I understand why some of you won’t like em, they have a special place in my heart — ever since I discovered em ten-odd years ago at fan’s night back home, where the audience picked the setlist and I was duly blown away (coincidentally ALSO the night I discovered similarly beloved Built to Spill, so despite being well on my way to a busted engagement at that point and spending the trip there/back in total silence is still a night I look back on as one of the best), these guys always amaze.

Looking up and down the setlist I can’t get over how many good songs they’ve got (and honestly can’t think of m/any they missed), but if I had to pick one to start you out, I think it’s best to go with what they used the other night — with a punch in the “Puss” from the get go. If you don’t like this, you probably won’t like anything else, but if you survive the first salvo you’ve got a bunch more winners to work through. Give it a try and see if it sends you into the crowd like Yow — I’ll GET. YOU. SOMETHING TO STOP. THE BLEEEEEEEEEEEDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIING!:

Star-Spangled Sunshine: Swift Sheen, Fat(boy) Beats, and the Chaos of Kanye

As today will find many of you celebrating our nation’s independence, sweltering in the heat giving thanks for our many freedoms (such as seeing how much barbecue and Bud Light one patriot can consume in a single day), I thought I’d give you one more thing to be thankful for — thoughts and recommendations from yours truly. So without further ado, here’s how I’m making America greater today…

First up is a solid article from Pitchfork on the passing of indie artist Richard Swift, who while not being a household name likely has played in or produced bands who certainly are for you (including many who’ve shown up here over the years). He was a touring member of the Black Keys and the Shins in recent years, a member of the Arcs, and a producer/contributor for Hamilton Leithauser, Kevin Morby, Nathaniel Rateliff, and others. If that wasn’t enough, he also was a relatively prolific solo artist, releasing five albums of his own since his 2005 debut. The article does a good job mixing the latter offerings with his behind the scenes efforts, effectively introducing his wide-ranging talents to a mostly unknowing public. Sad to hear he passed so young…

Next we’ll honor the oeuvre of another and jarringly shift styles/mood in the manner he is so well known for, that of Fatboy Slim and his enormous, convulsive breaks. While Swift’s work is more introspective and subdued, Slim’s is pure, throbbing id, synonymous with sweaty masses of shirtless youth simultaneously losing their shit in some field or club to Slim’s sample-laden songs. Billboard is commemorating the 20th anniversary of his monster sophomore effort You’ve Come a Long Way Baby (exhibit #12493 I am O.A.F.) by running down the ten best songs from Slim’s career.

It seems like forever ago, but Slim was part of, if not the key driver, behind the tidal wave of electro that first hit the States in the late 90s. Along with Prodigy and the Chemical Brothers, these three dealt out wrecking ball after wrecking ball over that four/five year span, destroying the minds and inhibitions of the broods of beach bros on TRL and more reserved folks such as myself. That first wave eventually ebbed, with those three all but disappearing by the late 2000s (only the Chemicals still pop up with any regularity/quality), but you could hear their influences in the second wave that washed over the country at that time with acts like Diplo, Aoki, Afrojack, and others. The list does a good job capturing the hits, but does leave out one of my favorites (and his first true hit), “Going Out of my Head,” which harnessed the power of a classic Who riff (much like “Rockafeller Skank” did with the Stones) and makes you hear it in a whole new light. (While also shakin’ your ass and dancing.) Check it out here:

We’ll close with one more list, this one courtesy of Stereogum, and their reassembling the recent spate of offerings from Kanye into a single cohesive album. As you’re likely already aware unless you live under a rock (which if so, FYI Drake also released a double album this week — it’s been pretty hush hush so not surprising you’d miss it) Kanye recently completed his run of releasing five EPs-not-albums in as many weeks, items he either produced or starred on (or both). It started with Pusha T’s Daytona, was followed by the much ballyhooed one-two of Kanye’s solo Ye and his tandem affair with Kid Cudi, Kids See Ghosts, and then closed with offerings from Nas and Teyana Taylor. Five “albums” in five weeks sounds cool on paper and a good way to generate marketing buzz, but in reality is just another entry in the Stupid Human Olympics, dumb things we do for no reason other than we can. (Like taking the cinnamon challenge or running a marathon.)

Ever since week two I had been telling people “I wish he would have taken longer and just put out one really good album instead of (what would turn out to be) five mediocre mini-albums — sort of the follow up to Cruel Summer he’d been talking about doing for so long.” Well apparently I wasn’t alone, as Stereogum has gone and done just that, pulling the best two or three songs off each album (and aside from Taylor’s, which I didn’t really get into, each EP does have two or three really good songs worth listening to/downloading). They do a good job, too — aside from the three Taylor songs, which I can take or leave, they picked almost every other song from the five I would have selected. Only thing I would have also included was the opener from Ye (minus the three minute gibberish prelude), which has a pretty solid back end (just like yours truly). So give it a look and see what all the fuss is about.

And enjoy your day off! America loves you (and so do I…) –BS

Serious Reservations: Mourning the Loss of Anthony Bourdain

I hadn’t planned on checking in again so soon — I know all eight of my readers are still hungrily digesting the many layers of last week’s post — but in light of the sad, surprising news yesterday of Anthony Bourdain’s passing, it felt somewhat necessary. It’s the second time in less than a month I’ve found myself dealing with the loss of someone whose work I really respected and enjoyed. Who was incredibly talented, loved by thousands worldwide, and seemingly doing great, both professionally and personally. Who was funny, charming, and who’d survived rocky moments in their past and come out stronger and wiser on the other side. Who I found parallels to in myself in terms of personality and approach to life and who part of me wished I could become. And yet unfortunately for the second time in less than a month, none of those things mattered as this person ultimately felt so alone or overwhelmed by their demons that they took their own lives.

Which leaves the rest of us to sit stunned, searching for reasons why or ways to have detected and stopped it. You listen to the music or read the words or watch the footage looking for clues. You try to square the surface appearance with the subterranean turmoil and struggle when there’s no success. You search for reason in the unreasonable, sense in the senseless. And mostly you feel the loss — of a life gone too soon, of a talent that will provide no further offerings, and of an inspirational voice and spirit that will no longer rage against ignorance, intolerance, or the dying of the light.

And that’s the cruelest part, the one that will take the longest to scar over. If Scott Hutchison was the sentimental side of Sunshine, Bourdain was the snarky cerebral one. The one that loved food and the simple pleasures of preparing it for others, that loved learning about new places and people, that loved music, liquor, and the dark, dingy scene where those two so often mingle. He hated pretension, self-importance, and stupidity, and especially loathed the people who showcase or embrace all three. He seemed like the guy you’d love to be stuck in an enclosed space with, be it plane, train, or even an elevator between floors. He just seemed like someone you’d like to get to know — or already sort of did, thanks to his unvarnished books, shows, and interviews. (He also looked pretty similar to my old man, which I’m sure subconsciously heightened the connection.)

And yet — this person still felt like they couldn’t take it anymore. Couldn’t find the happiness or quiet they needed to get through the night. Couldn’t find that reason to keep trudging forward and trying to do better tomorrow. And so for the second time in less than a month, we find ourselves here. In a week where famed designer Kate Spade also took her own life. Where the CDC released their shocking report on the issue, which notes at least 45,000 Americans die by suicide each year, over half of whom have never shown signs of depression or mental illness. And where another famous artist released a much anticipated EP (I’m not calling something with seven songs and a 24 minute duration an album) almost exclusively about his mental illness.

One whose first track is titled “I Thought About Killing You” and talks about killing both himself and others. Whose cover says “I hate being bi-polar it’s awesome” and whose other tracks reference his bipolarity as his “superpower.” Which, like the rest of the EP-not-album, is both good and bad. The EP-not-album is ye and the artist is, of course, the relentlessly frustrating Kanye West. An undeniably talented person, one who has shown up on multiple year end lists here, and also a person whose narcissistic, at times odious personality gets in the way of that. He also happens to be someone who has had very public struggles with mental illness recently, canceling his sold-out 2016 tour after several on stage meltdowns that ultimately led to his hospitalization.

In this aspect West represents the other side of the coin, the person/icon whose struggles are well-known, in almost excruciating detail. If Hutchison and Bourdain suffered in silence (at least to outsiders like us), West suffers in plain sight, trumpeting his tribulations to the stratosphere, which as I mentioned before is both a good and bad thing. The good part is that he talks so openly about his illness and his struggles. Despite its brevity, West manages to talk about feelings of suicide and harming others, feelings of fear and overwhelming, and feeling that his illness is actually a strength and the source of his brilliance here. Bringing these thoughts, feelings, and conditions into the open and talking about them both removes the stigma around them and highlights how common some/all of them are, which is critical to breaking out of this horrible cycle.

The bad part is how flippant he is about it, celebrating his diagnosis while simultaneously using it as a defense, if not an outright discounting, for the worst of his actions. On tracks like “Yikes” and “Wouldn’t Leave” he references the recent outcry he caused in the news and talks lovingly about his wife’s not leaving him as a result, offering an almost “bros will be bros — I shoulda listened to my wife” rationale. Unfortunately what he’s glossing over were incredibly tone deaf and hurtful comments about slavery being a choice, the #Metoo movement, and defenses of the President’s worst impulses and actions that sparked the uproar in the first place. To use his illness as an excuse for things like this is cheap, inaccurate, and distracts from getting people the help they need. (It also ignores the thousands of people who suffer with this and DON’T do morally/socially repugnant things…)

The rest of the EP-not-album walks a similar line between good and bad, sometimes in the same song — the front half of the opening track is an unvarnished, rather alarming cry for help with West detailing his suicidal/homicidal thoughts, while the back half is a catchy, compelling little trap banger. Tracks like “All Mine” have some of West’s best recent lines (“I love your titties cuz they prove I can focus on two things at once”) and worst (“None of us would be here without cum”). Tracks like “Ghost Town” have great new samples and expansions of West’s soulful style, while also blatantly recycling snippets from his previous work. (The chorus/outro from “Runaway,” for one.) And tracks like “Violent Crimes” and “Wouldn’t Leave” take honest, heartfelt sentiments (love of a daughter and wife, respectively) and taints them with clumsy, clueless, and/or cringe-worthy comments. (In the case of “Crimes” West explores (somewhat uncomfortably) his daughter’s growing up and highlights his new understanding that women are to be nurtured and not conquered, both of which leave you asking “what the fuck, dude?”)

The EP-not-album perfectly reflects the mind of the person who made it, showing the rough edges and almost chaotic sensibility alongside some characteristic brilliance (caveats aside, “Yikes” and “Ghost Town are pretty fantastic, and the rest of the tracks have grown on me over the course of repeated listens this week), its warts and winners duality serving as a solid sonic example of its author’s bipolarity. Which gets back to the central question of what are we to do with people who are suffering like this to get them the help they need? Whether it’s people like West with his in your face struggles or those like Hutchison and Bourdain who fall in the other half of the population, potentially showing no signs at all despite grappling with the same feelings.

There’s hotlines and help groups and those are wonderful, critical things. There’s also a piece that falls to us, though — to be more aware of those around us and how our words/actions affect them. To ask more questions and listen to the answers instead of talking at or over people. To live up to slogans like “Do Unto Others” and “If You See Something, Say (/Do) Something.” And just generally to give a shit about the people passing their days in your town/country/planet. Remember that for every soft-spoken sweetheart like Scott Hutchison there’s a loudmouthed narcissist like Kanye West — both people can deliver brilliant, beautiful things and still be dealing with demons and therefore need your help. So channel your inner Bourdain — be curious, be kind, and learn about those around you, so maybe one day we won’t find ourselves here quite so often: struggling to explain the inexplicable and the loss of another individual who felt they had nothing left to live for.

–BS