The Humpty (Dumpty) Dance — The Best Music of 2022

This year was something of an experiment. One that started with a massive leap of faith and morphed into a daily exercise in making sure the pain that jump caused (and continues to) was worth it and not wasted. It was an example of endless iteration and tinkering, of living one’s own words and leaning into the opportunities life presented vs fixating on the mental plan you may have had (#improvrules), of trying to make sense of what was still standing and salvageable amidst the wreckage and what was lost forever.  It was a year that started with a separation and a pair of invasions — one peacefully of my beloved Chicago, the other horrifically and cruelly of Ukraine — and ended with a sad stalemate in both.

“Things that died in the fire…” That phrase came to mind repeatedly the past three years — whenever a restaurant closed or a business shuttered, whenever a person passed or a relationship shattered, whenever an old way of thinking or doing was made obsolete by the realities of the new COVID world. It would pop in my head with a sad, bitter finality as I updated my internal tally sheet and I’d take a moment to remember what was lost. It became something of a ritual — a far too repetitive one as the body count for all of these things became mountainous — but one that was mostly kept at arm’s length, able to be brushed past in most cases with a solemn shake of the head. Until this year, that is. This year I joined the ranks of those whose doorstep the damage darkened firsthand and spent the year making sense of it.

If last year’s themes were “interruption and incompletion, balanced by hope and healing,” this year was all about rebuilding. Rebuilding, relearning, reorienting — just plain remembering. What did you used to be — when you were young, when you were on your own, when you were in a place that didn’t poison you (or piss you off) at least once every single day? What did you like to do — to start the day, to end it, or to fill the free time in between? Who were you before things went sideways and are there any elements of that you think are worth — or even able — to be resurrected? Grappling with these questions became a daily exercise, part of my workout routine alongside the regular weights and runs, with the goal of besting the King’s horses and men and putting Humpty Dumpty back together again. (Fittingly Google’s search phrase of the year was “can I change,” another inspiring little clip worth a watch.)

For me attempting to answer them meant digging in the archives — literally, closing down a storage locker I’d stupidly been paying for for over two decades and unpacking boxes that had sat untouched since the Twin Towers still stood and Pops was still alive. Slowly going through things — at least some of which dated back another two decades — to see what was worth saving, what was worth selling or giving away, and what might hold secrets about that first question on what I used to be (or even better, who my parents/grandparents used to be before they all passed)? It could be (and still is — cuz I sure ain’t done) a bit overwhelming at times — seeing faces long since gone in a hundred plus photo albums, seeing things you’d created/written before your world started getting destroyed piece by painful piece, and instinctively slotting each of those pieces on that terrible timeline. (“Oh this was right after this, no wonder it’s so sad” or “oh boy — this is right before that, shame that happiness and optimism is going to get eradicated in a few days/weeks/months.”)

That exercise led to more digging and more deciding — what do I do with this insight or item I just found? Is it worth incorporating to the new routine (or new version of myself) or should I let it go and try something else? I started going back into my ancestry again, using my old detective skills to further map my family tree and unearth missing relatives instead of terrorist networks and kingpins. I started reading again each morning, tearing through a slew of old books that were sitting in those boxes and finishing more than I had in the last few years combined. I started plowing through restaurants and breweries I hadn’t tried and reconnecting with old favorites that were finally at my disposal again (breakfasts of cold deep dish and hot tamales were a frequent fave). I started dreaming again — something I hadn’t done for so long the first few times it happened I’d wake up and think it might be a sign I was getting sick. Each of these experiences was turned over and assessed — scrutinized like a jeweler staring through their loupe, weighing the various flaws and features — and while that person tends to focus on the former to ensure they don’t overpay for paste, I tended to focus on the latter and the positives these discoveries brought to light.

Some things worked out better than planned, some not at all (the initial plan to shuttle back and forth never materialized and despite repeated attempts I’ve literally had one instance of reconnecting with anyone from my old circle in person this year — friends or family who still live here). Rather than stew or lament these developments, though, I did what I (and so many others) always do — I made lemonade. I leaned into those improv rules I always talk about and went with what was presented.  I supplemented the gap of the old guard with less intimate, more frequent linkups with dog owners I see at the park. Or with folks from the softball team I stumbled onto or those at the corner bars as I reestablished a weekend ritual of tipping a pint or two in some of my favorite holes. (One of which allows Rizz to tag along, who loves hamming it up at the bar.) And while they may not have been what I’d hoped or expected in some cases, they’ve been solid stand-ins to build upon. (“Yes and…”)

Almost every one of these moments this year (and dozens of others) were backed by a single sensation as loud and unavoidable as a trumpeter’s fusillade — gratitude.  For being back in the place I love after over 20 years and having it not just live up to, but often exceed, my constant daydreams. For interacting with a nameless range of nice people day to day — who look you in the eye and (gasp) don’t ask what you do for a living, but instead how you’re doing. (?!?!?!?!!) For my softball league and our post-game hangs at the Corner Bar.  For my weekend walks running errands or exploring while listening to Smartless and laughing like a loon. (The number of times I had to look like an absolute nutcase to passersby were near infinite, which only made me laugh harder.) For my neighborhood and the walks I’d take with the Rizz, looking at the fantastic holiday decorations that would crop up throughout the year (a surprising number of which have hilariously stayed up since Halloween, only to morph into “merry” ghosts/skeletons/witches with their Santa hats, garland, and lights). For having snow! More than once every six years and more than six millimeters each instance. Even for stupid stuff like my new Waterpik. Over and over again I found myself shaking a kissed fist towards the sky in overwhelming, satisfied thanks.

As always these insights and events were mirrored by a range of comparable gems unearthed in the music world. I started every single day with it, listening with a cup of coffee while I puzzled and slowly woke up — a COVID ritual I’ve kept up for three years now. I burned through over 46k minutes on the Spots, according to my year end review (a really enjoyable treat every year — so hats off to them), plus an unknown number listening to old stuff I already own. My archetype according to the Spots was adventurer — someone constantly searching for new songs and bands, characterized by “exploration, variety, and uniqueness.” I’d say that was a pretty fitting description for both sides of the fence this year — personal and musical — and it shows in the contents that follow.

It’s a bit of a boom year with 31 acts arriving on the list compared to 26 for each of the previous two years. They shake out into tiers again, with the top three albums being the ones I listened to (and connected with) the most, by a pretty healthy margin. The next tier comprises the albums in slots 4-6 and both the top tiers were predominantly filled with reliable old faces I could turn to over and over again (there’s only one first-timer in there, in fact.) The last batch encompasses slot 7 and above and is largely filled with exciting new faces, ones that thrilled me in bursts before being supplanted by another new discovery. In the end, though, it’s almost a wash — the total breakdown is 16 old timers who’ve made these lists before and 15 newcomers, the closest margin in years.

It feels fitting for year one of a rebuild — something we’re sadly all too familiar with here with our sports teams. You don’t want to cut too much of what got you to this point, relying on some of those old faces to form a foundation to build around, while hopefully energizing them with the surge of new blood you bring in. Same goes for the effort to rebuild Humpty Dumpty — you’re going to need a mix of old and new pieces to even attempt to repair the damage (or to change yourself, as folks employing the Google search will know). And while we may not be where we want to be yet in that endeavor, we’ve made some solid progress, and as all good Cubs/Bears/Hawks/Bulls fans perpetually think (logic and/or data be damned) there’s optimism for what the coming year may bring. So say hello to the familiar faces below and get excited to meet the newcomers — let’s hope the sparks fly and we can build some more momentum to make year two really memorable.

Enjoy, my friends…
–BS


12. Peter Matthew Bauer — Blossoms; Mr Sam & the People People — People People People People!; Bonny Light Horseman — Rolling Golden Holy; Dehd — Blue Skies:  we’ll start out with a bit of a sonic hodge podge, both in terms of the four bands represented here, as well as within their respective albums. First up comes the third album from former Walkmen bassist/organist Peter Matthew Bauer (who thrillingly are reuniting for a few shows this year that I now have multiple tickets to as they kept adding shows before the one I’d already bought for opening night) and it was a pleasant discovery earlier this year. Bauer’s pinched voice is reminiscent of his former band’s frontman Hamilton Leithauser at times and whether it’s the signature sound of his keys on tracks like “Skulls” or the urgent drumming and guitar on the title track and the closing “Chiyoda, Arkansas, Manila,” there are moments that definitely remind you of that former outfit’s sound. Others, meanwhile, call to mind the music of another Peter — Gabriel, in this instance, with a more world music vibe as heard on tracks like “Knife Fighter,” “Mountains on Mountains,” and “East.” It all adds up to a really nice listen.

Up next comes the debut album from New Orleans’ Sam Gelband (the titular Mr Sam) and his band of happy ruffians, the People People. They were a discovery from the weekly #FridayFreshness competition over on the site’s ‘Gram page and one of the few whose album lived up to the promise of that initial single. (There are a few others on this list, too — so buckle up.) This one’s tough to pin down, sonically — there’s elements of honkytonk jams and Laurel Canyon sunshine, but the mood and tone are simple — positivity, warmth, and a mission to luxuriate in the little things. Whether that’s the morning cup of coffee, a few minutes with a loved one, or even Conan O’brien (yes, that one) this one defies the popular books and sweats the small stuff, almost to an absurd degree, but it mostly works. (Even the aforementioned ode to the former late show host, which I wanted to hate (and still do a little) has a melody that’s too pretty to completely ignore, in spite of the ridiculous lyrics.) The title track, “Get up Early,” and “Hey You!” are unfettered blasts of brightness while “Pictures of Us” and the closing “Sal” are quieter, prettier fare. Earnestness this unrestrained doesn’t always work, but I much prefer it to unfeeling/insincere artifice and respect the effort. Here comes the sun…

Speaking of, another album blessed with healthy doses of said stuff is the second album from indie folk “super group” Bonny Light Horseman, which sports Fruit Bats’ Eric D. Johnson, Muzz’s Josh Kaufman, and folkster and frequent indie vocalist Anais Mitchell. It takes the concept of their debut, which found them reinterpreting folk standards with Johnson’s and Mitchell’s lovely harmonies floating over top, and instead does so over original material this time. What worked so well there again shines here — the pair’s voices intertwine really well and Kaufman is a talented, if understated musician adding just the right accompaniments to the mix — and there’s a number of really nice tracks to enjoy. Opening “Exile,” “California,” and “Summer Dream” are all lush, lovely affairs, while “Gone by Fall” and “Someone to Weep for Me” are slightly sadder (yet still pretty) tunes. The lyrics’ repetitiveness grates after a while on some of the tracks, but all in all there’s more pluses than minuses here.

Last up comes the fourth album from hometowners Dehd, their first since 2020’s Flowers of Devotion. That was one I stumbled on in my annual scanning of others’ year-end lists and I found myself enjoying their surf rock guitars and xx-style harmonies between singers Emily Kempf and Jason Balla. This one’s got more of the same, only at a more abbreviated clip — that one had several songs that stretched out past the 4-minute mark while this one scarcely has one that tops 3. That doesn’t mean the songs sound half-baked, though — they’re super hooky in spite of their brevity and the pair’s harmonies alternate between slightly snotty and sweetly sincere. “Bad Love,” “Clear,” and “Window” are full-throated winners while tracks like “Memories” and “Waterfall” are more subdued, swimming songs. Lots of good stuff in here.

11. Wilco — Cruel Country; Arcade Fire — WE; Kevin Morby — This is a Photograph; The Smile  A Light for Attracting Attention: this slot’s for slightly imperfect outings from old faves. There’s not a lot to say about these guys that I haven’t said 100 times already over the years — they’ve each shown up on previous year-end lists multiple times (four times a piece for Wilco and Arcade Fire, five times for Mr Morby, and once for Radiohead — a reflection of how infrequently the latter release music, not the quality of their albums, obviously) and there’s nothing wrong with these albums either — the emphasis is decidedly on “slightly” here — but for whatever reason they didn’t captivate me as much as previous outings did. That’s likely due in part to how this year shook out and the constant hopscotching I did as referenced in the lead, but also a bit due to the material here — these are albums from folks who have been around a loooooooooong time and as a result they’re not pushing any boundaries. This is the sound of seasoned pros in their comfort zone — still really good stuff to be had, just not my favorite from any of them, but that shouldn’t deter folks from listening to these albums as there are some really great songs amidst the so so.

For Wilco the band are back for their eleventh studio album (not including numerous side projects and collabs) so it’s not surprising they’re well-ensconced in a canyon-sized groove at this point. This outing finds them trying on some country-style sounds for a double length album (hence the reference in the title) and the knock here is not on the experiment or its effectiveness, but on how similar the songs start to sound by the time you get through all 21 of ’em. That similarity cuts both ways — on the plus side it gives you a cohesive experience front to back (although the country bit does toggle in and out, really only impacting maybe half the songs), but on the down side it can kind of wash over you and have the listener tune out by the time it’s finished — so guess it just depends what mood you’re in when it comes time to listen.

And while having a slightly more aggressive editor might’ve helped some, there’s plenty of great tracks to be had here — “Hints,” “Ambulance,” “Tired of Taking it Out on You,” “Hearts Hard to Find,” “A Lifetime to Find.” They’re all really solid songs and have plenty of comparable friends on the album — plus a few that could probably been left for a B-sides collection. Don’t let that dissuade you, though — judicious use of the skip button here and there won’t hurt anyone’s feelings.

Another example in need of a few skips is the sixth album from Canada’s Arcade Fire — an album that got more problematic as the year went on. Unfortunately this only partly has to do with the band’s recent tendency to be ears deep up their own asses, trying too hard to be meaningful or deep or funny and forgetting the simple pleasures of their earlier albums, but now those frustrations are joined by the series of sexual harassment allegations that emerged against frontman Win Butler. Those reports first led tourmate Feist and then Beck to leave the band’s tour and again raised the difficult question of what we’re supposed to do when artists whose work we enjoy are accused of wrongdoing. (A question that’s been even more inescapable in recent weeks as former fave Kanye has become indefensibly toxic and offensive with his series of anti-Semitic comments and pro-Hitler nonsense.)

For his part Butler denies the allegations and says all encounters were consensual, but it casts a definite pall on the music and makes it difficult to know whether to punish the other six members of the band by refusing to discuss it at all or anxiously do so in heavily caveated pieces such as this. (I’ve obviously opted for the second path again, but dutifully restate the obvious in doing so — sexual harassment, racism, sexism, anti-Semitism, bigotry of all forms: they’re all inexcusable, guys. FFS — how many times do we have to go through this nonsense…)

The album itself has its flaws, as I wrote about this summer — it suffers from “the same bloated sense of self-importance that’s plagued recent efforts, the one that forces you to qualify every statement/thought you have about them (“I like this song, but…” “I liked that album, but…” “I like the band, but…”), but there are enough good lines, hooks, and melodies that it kept me coming back. “Anxiety II,” “Lightning I/II,” and “Unconditional I” are all really catchy songs, and they improve their surroundings over time. (Notable exception being “Unconditional II,” which I still skip every listen.) As with the others on the list, it’s definitely not their best, but you’ll miss out on some goodness if you avoid it completely.

Up next is the latest from Kevin Morby who’s back with his seventh album (his previous landed at #8 on my 2020 list) and it’s another solid outing. Morby wrote each of the tracks during lockdown, holing up in a hotel in Memphis to escape a cold winter in his hometown Missouri, and reportedly polished them with an eye for his eventual return to the stage. Thankfully that doesn’t mean the album is overstuffed with horns or a gospel choir (not that either of those are a bad thing in small doses — he’s actually used them both well in the past), more that the energy on several  gives you the distinct impression of someone champing at the bit to be back amongst the crowd.

The title track and “Rock Bottom” are two excellent examples, both crackling with a joyous buzz, while songs like “Bittersweet, TN” (sporting a lovely duet with Erin Rae) and “It’s Over” showcase Morby’s slower, more soothing side.  Some of the lyrical allusions and similes are a little clunky at times, serving as unfortunate (albeit momentary) distractions, but on the whole it’s another strong outing from one of the Midwest’s best. If you haven’t paid attention to him yet, you’re definitely missing out.

Last up is the debut from The Smile (or the tenth album from Radiohead, depending on how you view this one) and as I wrote about this summer, this sounds a LOT like a Radiohead record — aside from Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood’s signature sounds, it’s produced by longtime helmsman Nigel Godrich and a lot of the tracks could easily be mistaken for B-sides from earlier albums, which makes this “a bit like breaking off a long relationship and starting to date someone with the same hair color, clothing, and physique as your ex.”

Not sure what the impetus is or what this means for the flagship band, but in the meantime we get to enjoy an album full of some really good songs. Tracks like “The Opposite,” “The Smoke,” and “A Hairdryer” all sizzle, while “Pana-Vision,” “Open the Floodgates,” and “Skrting on the Surface” showcase the vintage soothing cool of Yorke’s croon (the first two with him sitting alone at the piano, which is always a bucket list fave). As Yorke sings in the penultimate song, “We Don’t Know What Tomorrow Brings” (for life or the regular band), but in the meantime we’ve got Radiohead-lite to keep us company.

10. Cola — Deep in View; Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever — Endless Rooms; Aldous Harding — Warm Chris; Fontaines D.C. — Skinty Fia: this slot’s for some quirkiness from the kids in the kingdom and a quartet of albums that were short, yet sweet listens. For the Canadian Cola it’s the debut album from the former members of Ought and it’s a really good half hour of knotty post-punk songs. The mood is slightly dark and the lyrics somewhat opaque (bits about solars and righting stones alongside cryptic bits about consumerism and technology (I think?)) It’s all delivered in frontman Tim Darcy’s unblinking deadpan, which suits the material well as it deepens the intrigue.

The riffs remind me of early Strokes at times, as on “At Pace” and “Gossamer,” while others call to mind Spoon (“Met Resistance” and “Fulton Park”) or that amorphous Joy Division element that’s a little darker and groovier once Ben Stidworthy’s bass takes charge. (Excellent singles “Blank Curtain” and “Water Table” serving as two great examples.) It’s a really tight little album — looking forward to more from these guys.

Up next comes the third album from the scrappy pack of Australians RBCF, their first since 2020’s Sideways to New Italy, which landed at #13 on my year-end list. (Their debut two years prior also landed at #13 on my list.) The band’s thankfully done nothing to change their formula since then — they still deploy a “sturdy triple guitar attack with swirling riffs and jangly chords, all built to make you move” as I wrote then — and we get another sterling set of examples on this album’s 11 songs. (Opening instrumental “Pearl Like You” is a pleasant, but unnecessary prelude to the jangly “Tidal River” with its lurching groove and defiant refrain (“Ceiling’s on fire, train’s leaving the station, it’s January and we’re on vacation — take your complaint to the Uuuuuuuunited Nations…”))

There’s the dreamy, leggy riffs at the end of “Open up Your Window,” the breathless runaway truck speeding downhill on “The Way it Shatters,” and the furious, irresistible swirl of “My Echo.” (One of my most reliable go-to’s this year for a fist-pumping pick me up.) I don’t often know what they’re singing about — there’s lots of mentions of rivers and lakes and canyons and the like — but I’m certain I don’t care. These guys show how infectiously powerful a guitar band can still be these days, wielding one of the fiercest (and only) three axe attacks out there, their tightly interlocking parts diving all over the place like a swarm of drones.  It’s a fantastic treat to behold — one I regularly do. These guys thankfully show no signs of slowing down.

Coming in from the island next door is Kiwi Aldous Harding, back with her fourth album. (Her first since 2019’s Designer.) Her voice is something of a chameleon, at times husky and assured, others wispy and vulnerable. Still others she sounds like a frog-throated foreigner singing in a thick, sultry accent like Nico, as on “Staring at the Henry Moore,” “Passion Babe,” or the utterly odd yet oh so catchy closer “Leathery Whip.” Aside from the range of voices and characters she conjures, she also has some nice lyrics to latch onto. “Passion must play or passion won’t stay” as on “Passion Babe.” “One day you won’t have to prove your love in any other way – but not today” as on the plaintive piano ballad “She’ll be Coming Around the Mountain.” “I’m a little bit older, but I remain unchanged and the folks who want me don’t have the things I’m chasing– no way” as on that strange “Whip.”

Her more vulnerable moments find her in the throes of love, recounting the “11 days in the city surrounded by stars” as on lead single (and one of my year’s faves) “Fever” or cooing to a love in powerless exasperation when they make “that impossible face” as on the title track. This one came out of left field for me, but I’m really glad I found it — it sounds like literally nothing else out there, in all the good ways.

We’ll close by heading to the palace and the land of kingdom HQ, which is where we find the Fontaines, back with their third album (their first since 2020’s A Hero’s Death.) It finds the London-based lads from the Emerald Isle less abrasive and leaning into the downtempo, dreamy drones they started deploying so effectively on that last outing and it hits you from the outset with the hypnotic and haunting opening track “In ár gCroíthe go deo” (sung partly in Gaelic).  It’s a fantastic song, one that set the tone for the rest of what’s to come and is still captivating dozens of listens later. From the swimming guitar of “Big Shot” to the stately and seductive single “Roman Holiday,” there’s an icy cool to the proceedings that works really well. (“I will wear you down in time. I will hurt you, I’ll desert you — I am Jackie down the line” on the track of the latter phrase’s name.)

These serve as powerful contrasts to the moments the boys decide to amp things up — tracks like the funky title track with its galloping beat and Cure-style riff (the trancelike “I Love You” also sports a nice little Cure riff, serving as a brief cool down right before the epic closer “Nabokov” brings things to a furious boil one last time.) That last track is definitely one of the highlights (they did a smoldering performance of it on Seth Meyers) with its rumbling groove and swirling guitars that devolve into a glorious stew by the end. These guys just bleed cool…

9. Joe Purdy — Coyote; Christian Lee Hutson — Quitters; The Lumineers –BRIGHTSIDE: this slot’s for a trio of albums of minor key heartache, two-thirds of which come from newcomers to the list. First up is new New Mexican Joe Purdy, who I spent a lot of time listening to this year – more than 99.9% of the folks on the Spots, according to my year end recap! He’s quietly prolific (he released four albums this year if you count the three outtakes compilations he put out) and I didn’t realize how much catching up there was to do since I lost the thread on him a few years back. There were half a dozen albums from the back half of the 2000s that I’d missed (this is what led him to be my most listened to artist this year), but then the releases started to become a bit more sporadic. Two years between them. Four years. Six years between this one and the last, a stretch broken by a brief stint as an actor (in 2018’s lovely American Folk, whose soundtrack he did a few songs for as well). It seemed like Purdy was trying to find himself a bit and it turns out he had a bad case of writer’s block that was jamming him up. To fix it he took his dog to the desert, recorded a bunch of demos around the campfire, and liked that experience so much he moved to Taos, New Mexico the following year (last year) to build the momentum and finish them up.

Those recordings form the bulk of what we hear here (this and the three outtakes albums) and while he may have liked the songs he found out by that fire, he hasn’t done much to gussy them up. All ten sound as intimate and confessional as if Purdy was singing them to you by that fire (or sitting quietly on his porch, strumming out his heartache with just his dog and the breeze to listen). The album and several of the subsequent songs start with the sound of that breeze or a hushed quiet, really heightening the effect that Purdy is sitting right next to you, softly (and maybe reluctantly) pouring his heart out to you. The mood and lyrics both conjure a sense of loss — almost all of the songs are about the departure of a lover and/or a sense of trust and optimism.

From “Loving Arms” and “Girl Like You” to Where you Going” and “I Will Let You Go,” these are plaintive, ACHING songs, ones that hit all the harder because of how understated his delivery is. Purdy cuts the dourness with brief moments of levity (“Spider Bite,” which finds him hallucinating and bruised from said bite, or doing an excellent impression of Roger Miller to call out an unfaithful lover on “Heartbreak in the Key of Roger Miller”) but they’re only momentary breaks in the melancholy. The rest is just you, Purdy, and his dog sifting through the ashes of his broken relationship. It’s dark, yet beautiful stuff. Plenty of good tracks here and on those companions to nurse a wounded heart.

Next up comes the fourth album from LA’s Hutson, which serves as a bookend to his 2020 major label debut (the aptly titled Beginners.) It’s another batch of slightly funny, slightly sad stories that are chock full of really good lines. (And melodies.) “I’m a self-esteem vending machine” and “if you tell a lie for long enough then it becomes the truth — I am going to be OK someday, with or without you” from “Rubberneckers.”  The uncertain ambiguity of Hutson (or his protagonist) “peeking thru the bandages to see if I can handle it — I hope I don’t remember this, I hope I don’t forget again” on “Endangered Birds.” The lovely notion that “pain is a way you can move through time and visit people that have gone in your mind from “Strawberry Lemonade.” Or the encouraging (or ominous — I choose the former) foreshadowing of “something big is coming, don’t know what it is yet” from “Cherry,” which served as something of a motivational mantra this year.

Apparently a huge fan of one of my all-time faves, the Elliott influence is evident everywhere here — the dual-tracked vocals, the quietly plucked guitar on “Black Cat” and the pleading question “what if I don’t want it anymore,” which can be read a dozen different ways depending on your mood at the time, as on so many of Elliott’s best.  It’s an effective homage to a departed great rather than uninspired thievery and Hutson carries the legacy on well. Pals Conor Oberst and Phoebe Bridgers produced the album and it sounds great, but the lyrics are the real stars here.  Another solid set of memorable songs to enjoy.

Last up is the latest from the Lumineers who return with their fourth album, their first since 2019’s aptly named III, which landed at #3 on that year’s list. It’s a little tough to make sense of initially — unlike the last one there’s no overarching construct guiding the songs (other than all-caps titles, which I guess is something) and maybe it’s because of how ambitious that one’s was that this one feels somewhat slight in comparison. Whether it’s that missing motif or the spartan arrangements here — often just frontman Wesley Schultz on a piano or guitar for the majority of the song — this one almost feels like a collection of demos vs a fully realized studio outing. (The somewhat repetitious nature of some of the lyrics as on “WHERE WE ARE,” “BIRTHDAY,” and “REPRISE” doesn’t help.)

And yet in spite of these things the album kept getting stuck in my head. It was on those return visits that you started to appreciate the subtler things — the flourishes when bandmate Jeremiah Fraites finally comes into the songs, which fleshes them out and gives them added heft. The impact of the band continuing to explore some of the darker moods and topics as on the previous album (substance abuse, poverty, broken homes and hearts, all relayed in luxuriant, melancholy tones). The contrast of these elements with the band’s Beatles influences, which shine through proudly as on tracks like “BIRTHDAY” and “A.M. RADIO,” work well, as do signature moves like the piano-driven gem “ROLLERCOASTER,” which is the high point of the album for me. Might not be their best effort, but still plenty of good stuff here from the kids from Colorado. (The B-sides “a little sound” and their reinterpretation of the Cure classic “Just Like Heaven” are equally worthy of repeated listens.)

8. Plains — I Walked With You a Ways; Elizabeth Moen — Wherever you Aren’t; Julianna Riolino — All Blue: this slot’s for the country queens and three really catchy affairs. We’ll start with the debut side project from one of my faves, Katie Crutchfield (aka Waxahatchee), who pairs with pal and occasional touring mate Jess Williamson on a one-off (at least for now) outing as Plains. The backstory is they’re both kids who grew up on country tunes and wanted to reconnect with that part of themselves again, so recorded an album full of them. It’s a natural fit as their recent material has veered in this direction (most notably on Ms Katie’s last album, the excellent Saint Cloud, which landed at #8 on my 2020 list) and the pair’s voices harmonize beautifully across the album’s ten tracks.

It’s bookended by images of candles (the titular summer sun melting them in the opening track while the narrator clings to one’s guttering light in the closing gem and title track — a lovely little gut punch) and sports some wonderful lines aside from the aching harmonies. (“I remember the air when I drove out of town, crying on the highway with my windows down” on the whalloping “Abilene,” as well as “she swore like a dry county welder,” one of my favorite lines of the year on “Bellafatima.”)  The Katie-led songs are unsurprisingly my faves (her voice in full thunder is just one of those that grabs you and won’t let go) so tracks like lead single “Problem With It,” “Easy,” and “Last 2 on Earth” shine, but Williamson more than holds her own and the songs where the two trade verses shimmer with a radiant heat. (“Line of Sight” and “Hurricane” being two excellent examples.) Here’s hoping they don’t leave this one by the side of the highway…

Next comes one of two in this slot discovered during the weekly Friday Freshness competition on the site’s ‘Gram, both of which were late-year additions to the list. And while I may not have had as much time to spend with them as some of the other albums, I’ve been doing my best to make up lost time, listening to them endlessly since their release. Moen’s is the most recent, dropping in November (her third overall) and it’s almost worth including on the strength of its closing track alone. It’s a bit of an anomaly on the album, with Moen sounding more like Lucius and Feist while delivering some absolutely wrenching lyrics about a lost love. (The devastating opening line of “You will never be a stranger in a crowd, I could describe every inch of you, even now” sets the bar and it only gets more painful from there.)

The majority of the preceding time Moen reminds me of another southern-inflected powerhouse of a voice, that of the great Brittany Howard, and the vibe in several of the songs is undeniably of early Shakes. Just try to fight the groove they establish on songs like “Headgear,” “Synthetic Fabrics,” or the irresistible “Emotionally Available” (which I honestly want to hear Brittany sing if she/the Shakes tour again. It’s so good…) Slower, more R&B tracks like “Soft Serve” and “Clown Show” work as contrasts to the more uptempo tracks, but it’s those chest bursting, windows down songs where Moen is just belting the lyrics out that prove impossible to ignore. (“Differently” and “You Know I Know” being two other excellent examples). A super little album from another hometown pal.

The second example from this slot’s Friday Freshness winners comes from Canada’s Riolino and is a slightly more subdued affair in comparison. She’s less roadhouse barn burner than regal theater queen — which is not to say this is a wimpier, wispier affair (her voice reminds me of Dolly a lot, actually, who NO one in their right mind would accuse of being weak) — just that there’s a quiet elegance to her approach that would seem out of place in a dingy dive.

Riolino still belts it out once she gets going — tracks like “Lone Ranger,” “Why Do I Miss You,” and “You” all sizzle — while more introspective tracks like “If I Knew Now,” “Hark!,” and the chicken-fried instant classic “Queen of Spades” serve as nice contrasts to the uptempo tracks. Similar to her slotmates, she too closes with an understated gem, the quiet wallop of “Thistle and Thorned,” which has Riolino pouring her heart out over a simple acoustic guitar. It’s a great tune and a nice close to another really solid album.  Excited to hear what she has in store for us in the coming years.

7. Wilderado — Wilderado; Caamp — Lavender Days; Vance Joy — In Our Own Sweet Time: this slot’s for the lovers and a trio of albums that aim straight for the heart, exploring the many aspects of amor with an unflinching (at times uncomfortable) earnestness.  First up comes the debut from the Tulsa band Wilderado and while it might technically have come out late last year, I’m still including it here. (The Spots has it dated as 2022 so feel like we’ve got some backing here). Regardless of when it came out it’s an earworm of an album, full of nice guitar work, bright energy, and meaty hooks that get lodged in your brain. Opening track “Stranger” and “Mr Major” have big singalong sections that are tough to refuse, while “Surefire” and “Worst of It” have a leggy War on Drugs feel that works well.

As with anything that’s more pop oriented don’t expect to constantly be blown away by the lyrics (“drying out like a histamine?” as in “Surefire”), but the hooks are what you’re here for and they give us some really good ones. Revved up anthems like “Head Right” and country pop “Outside my Head” are head back belters, while quieter, more introspective fare like “Help me Down” and the lovely, subdued “Window” balance the attack and shine.  It’s not all good times and glimmer — references to mental health and getting back to a better state are scattered throughout, as on “Astronaut” and “Head Right” — but they mostly keep it light, feeding us a steady stream of winning melodies to latch onto and enjoy. (Ironically it was a slow, emotive acoustic version of the latter that led me to this album and not the bright, high energy pop that’s everywhere here.) The band confesses “I’m a sucker for some harmony” in “Surefire” and they don’t disappoint the rest of us that share that sentiment — a solid little album.

Up next is the third album from Columbus trio Caamp and they haven’t done anything to change their formula this time around — it’s twelve more songs of warm positivity and love that waltz amongst various Americana and folk styles.  The album actually works best when listened to in pieces — frontman Taylor Meier’s breathy delivery can grate as the album wears on and the lyrics can be a little clunky at times, similar to the slot’s previous album — but individually the songs stand up well and showcase some really nice harmonies and melodies. Opening “Come With me Now” with its repetitive refrain builds to a blissful banjo break courtesy of Evan Westfall, “Lavender Girl” is a bright folk blast, and “Snowshoes” delivers a warm little hoedown towards its tail end.

The band jumps around a bit musically, trying their hand at bluesier fare (the smoldering “Fever,” which sports guest appearances from faves Nathaniel Rateliff and the aforementioned Katie Crutchfield in its booming chorus), country vibes (“Apple Tree Blues”), and pure pop (the soaring “Believe”). The album’s slower moments shine brightest for me, though — whether its “The Otter” with its tale of being overcome by love, the sentiment of love lost (but assuredly to be found again per the narrator) on “All my Lonesome,” or the lovely closer “Sure Of” whose opening lines raise a nice little thought that I like quite a lot. There’s a lot to enjoy here — small sips are the name of the game.

Last up is the aptly surnamed ambassador of love and joy from Australia, Vance Joy, who’s back with his third album, his first since 2016’s Nation of Two, which landed at #6 on my year end list. At this point you have to imagine Joy can write love songs about anything (I honestly can’t imagine how jarring it would be to hear him sing something negative or angry. It’d be like seeing Tom Hanks cuss out a waiter and call them a fucking dummy.) And while lyrics as unabashedly gooey as those in “Every Side of You” or “Looking at me Like That” (“when you’re this close, every touch is amplified — I don’t know when we’ll be here again, so I memorize every inch of your body, show me every side” on the former or “every time you love me, every time you take my hand — can you tell I’m praying you won’t stop looking at me like that?” in the latter) could come off as overheated and ridiculous, you can tell Joy is being totally and utterly sincere. (Part of me pictures him sitting at his kitchen table in the morning cooing odes to his waffles and coffee mug. )

It’s that sincerity (along with genuinely pretty melodies) that earns him a pass as he pens love letters to places and people around the world. There’s odes to Barcelona and northeastern Spain in “Daylight” and “Catalonia” (the latter of which should soundtrack a tourism video for the region or a La Liga ad for those teams), there’s beating heart anthems like “Missing Piece” and “Boardwalk” (and the lovely ode to his wife “This One”), and the pure pop perfection of tracks like “Clarity,” which is tailor-made for festivals, girls pumping their fists while on their boyfriends’ shoulders as the crowd sings and dances along.

Joy lives in a different world than I do (than most of us, I suspect) but it’s a world I want to believe exists — one of unbridled, undeniable warmth and love — and one I can maybe be a part of again one day. Listening to his albums is almost like PT for me — something that feels silly that I subject myself to in order to rehabilitate a damaged muscle (in this case my hardened heart) and to convince my cynical self that an existence like this is possible. I might not always believe it, but I’m glad to have the reminder and motivation.

6. Guided by Voices — Crystal Nuns Cathedral and Tremblers and Goggles by Rank; The Black Keys — Dropout Boogie; Built to Spill — When the Wind Forgets Your Name: this slot’s emblematic of the old adage “if it ain’t broke…” and more solid submissions from some stalwarts of the site. First up comes the indefatigable boys of Dr Bob, back with yet another multi-album year under their belts. They’re taking it a bit easy on us this time, only giving us TWO albums after dropping three on us in each of the previous two years. (Although they did release a rarities compilation, too, and have another new album due out in January, so maybe they did keep the streak going.) That slight dip in productivity thankfully doesn’t indicate any dropoff in quality as these guys continue their ridiculous hot streak, dropping another twenty-plus songs on us to enjoy. (Last year’s entries landed at #13 on the year end list.)

Sludgy dirges “Eye City” and “Climbing a Ramp,” the sparkling “Never Mind the List” and “Come North Together,” and the soaring “Excited Ones,” “Mad River Man,” and title track are all highlights from the first release, while the second one somehow sports even more. There’s the fuzzy thunder of opening “Lizard on the Red Brick Wall,” the knotty, shifting song suites “Alex Bell” and “Focus on the Flock,” and vintage crunchers like “Unproductive Funk” and the (half) title track, which build to a pair of booming refrains. I know I shouldn’t be surprised anymore — that someone could release this much material every year, let alone this much GOOD material (these are their 34th and 35th albums — an absolutely absurd number) — but I still am. These guys are amazing (and yet still somehow unknown to the masses). Pour yourself a double and enjoy…

For the Keys’ part they’re back hot on the heels of last year’s Delta Kream (which landed at number #12 on my list) and it finds them recapturing the laidback vibe on display there. The main difference between the two is this one’s return to original material in lieu of covers (although not all of the songs are written by Pat and Dan — they share writing credits on half the album’s tracks), but the spirit of collaboration and comfortable, well-worn grooves is evident across both. From the funky stomp of lead single “Wild Child” to the glimmering soul of “It Ain’t Over” (or “Baby I’m Coming Home,” which captures both) the guys sound totally relaxed, like they and a bunch of friends just got together and had fun playing music. That energy comes through the speakers, giving us one of the more reliable good time generators on the list this year.

There’s a hearty helping of vintage, swampy blues, too — squarely in the band’s wheelhouse and something they do better than almost anyone (and have for a very long time now).  From footstompers like “For the Love of Money” and the aptly named “Burn the Damn Thing Down” (which threatens to do so to your speakers/house/head on every listen) to more stately, smoldering grooves like “Didn’t I Love You,” “Happiness,” and “Good Love” (which features legendary ZZ Top frontman Billy Gibbons) the guys are firmly ensconced in their comfort zone. There may “only be so much you can do as a bluesy twosome singing about lovin’ and losin’,” as I wrote this summer, but that don’t mean it ain’t still really fun to listen to…

Also returning to original material after an album full of covers — one which also landed them on my year-end list — are beloved band from Idaho BTS, back for the first time since that album covering the late Daniel Johnston. (It landed at #10 on my 2020 list.) It’s their tenth album overall and while it finds frontman Doug Martsch feathering in some new sounds to the mix — a Cyndi Lauper-style riff on “Elements” (it reminds me of “Time After Time” every listen) or a reggae vibe on “Rocksteady” — it mostly sticks to their old trademarks of Martsch’s shaky, nasal warble and fiery guitar. His guitar heroics on “Spiderweb” and the epic, ripping closer “Comes a Day” are phenomenal and remind you why Martsch is just magic — both are guaranteed to be setlist staples for a while. (Ones I hope to see live in person soon, having missed them the last time they came through town.)

Lyrically Martsch delivers some of his stickiest lines in years — “I’ve come to realize time’s all wrong — answers materialize then they’re gone” in “Gonna Lose.” “It don’t matter what they say, I’m gonna break my heart someday” in “Fool’s Gold.” “The blind can’t see, the deaf can’t hear — finding out what is my greatest fear. You wanna move around, you want stay still, you wanna have a life, but not too real” on “Understood.” And that’s just the first three songs. There are tons on here that get stuck in your head on a rotating basis and bring you back for more. “I don’t want to be constantly taking these long hard looks at myself” on “Rocksteady.” “I’ll open up for you, but I’m not a parachute — can’t keep you from falling” on “Alright.” “I am not a shirt, I am not a shoe — you don’t ever have to put me on. And for the record, I am not a record — don’t put me ooooooon,” as well as this classic rhetorical question, “Isn’t there something we can bide besides our time?” on that epic final track.  Martsch said he wasn’t very motivated during the recording of this album, but you sure can’t hear it — some really solid songs again from Idaho’s finest.

5. Band of Horses — Things are Great; Alt-J — The Dream: this slot’s for former list members who had slipped into the ether a bit and are back with a solid return to form after several years (and/or albums) away.  First comes the more surprising of the two, South Carolina’s Band of Horses.  Back with their sixth album — their first in as many years — these guys had been in a somewhat steady decline since their excellent first two albums. (The second of which landed at #4 on my inaugural list/post in 2007.) There frontman Ben Bridwell’s earnest lyrics paired perfectly with the band’s high energy, roots rock sound.  Unfortunately those lyrics got more forced and tension in the band led to several lineup changes and them losing the thread a bit in the subsequent years, by Bridwell’s own admission. Thankfully they seem to have found it again on this one — though it unfortunately sounds like it took a divorce, depression, and panic attacks to bring Bridwell there to reconnect with the honest, heartfelt lyrics of old.

There’s simple, unemotional lines that shine (“hot dinner on a souvenir plate, the part of town where the money ain’t… we don’t want help, don’t want take handouts…” on “Warning Signs”) and a whole host of painful ones that do as well. “You deserted me in the hard times — home is here now.  It’s too latе to turn it around” on “In the Hard Times.” “Feelin’ the walls around me closin’ in, trying to make it til the morning” as he fights to regain his old seat at the table on “In Repair.” Fighting panic attacks (and what he says as a result) after winning that loved one back in “Aftermath.” (Also after falling down the stairs with his kid, which apparently really happened and must’ve been a VERY scary moment, as referenced in the same song.) They use the time-honored trick of deceptively bright melodies and energy to distract from the darker material and it keeps this from being a crushingly depressing listen (the appearance of cops at the house and the anxiety that causes on “Lights,” or the closing postcard from the lovely sounding Coalinga, where things are great – “Yeah, things are great in a cow-shit smelling hellhole called Coalinga” (book your tickets now!) being two of the non-relationship focused sunbeams.)

The lion’s share of the songs deal with that divorce, though, and the anguish it causes makes for some really compelling songs (and lyrics). “I’ll keep living in the frame where you left me, love, I’ll keep picking up the pieces of us…Space gets smaller, cash is shorter, past is catching up” on “Ice Night We’re Having.” “I couldn’t hide it — it’s been a hell of a hard time… I’m unwell, I’m unhappy all the time” on “You are Nice to Me.” It’s really unfortunate to hear how much he’s apparently struggled, but it’s made for some really identifiable, embraceable songs as you sympathize (or empathize depending on your life experience) with Bridwell. Really solid return to form.

For their part Britain’s Alt-J are back with their first album in five years, their last being 2017’s disappointing Relaxer. (Their first two remain faves, though – their debut landed at #4 in 2013 and their follow up landed at #3 the following year.)  As for their latest, as I wrote this summer, it’s a maddening affair — “At turns brilliant and others an eye rolling exasperation,” this is easily the year’s most vexing album. On the one hand you’ve got the idiotic lyrics and subject matter that sully several of the songs — from Coke (“Bane”) and coke (“The Actor”) to crypto (“Hard Drive Gold”) and cased meat  (“U&ME”), these are just a few of the things that pop up on the album and make you wonder whether you’re being pranked. And while I haven’t figured out how to purge these from the album (or my memory) yet, the good news is they got a lot less annoying as the year went on. (Except “Gold,” which I still skip every time.)

These offenses are offset by the album’s beautiful melodies and production, which turn out to be its saving grace. I can’t overstate just how pretty and potent those two are — this is easily the best headphones album I listened to this year, with an avalanche of little details to bury you in (even today I heard something I hadn’t before, despite dozens and dozens of listens — the music box twinkling of “Yankee Doodle Dandy” at the end of “Philadelphia”), and the impact of the album’s sincere, sweet moments only intensified as the year wore on. Whether it’s telling someone he’s happier when they’re gone on the song of the same name, admitting he’s coming apart a bit in “Losing my Mind,” or talking about a love at first sight in “Powders” (perhaps the same one he’s trying to get over in the powerhouse “Get Better”) these moments of unguarded honesty are quiet devastators and the highlights of the album. This one definitely has its flaws, but the upsides are too good to be missed.

4. Silverbacks — Archive Material; Wet Leg– Wet Leg: this slot’s for a flippant, finger in the air attitude and the year’s most reliable dose of instant energy. A guaranteed good time, I put these two on whenever I needed a jolt to get going again or just to jam at the end of a long day/week. The ‘Backs are back with their sophomore album (their debut landed at #14 on my 2020 list) and it came out almost exactly a year ago at this point. It was the first thing I fell for, listening repeatedly through the coldest part of the Chicago winter, but because it came out so long ago it got buried in the snowdrifts at some point and I almost forget about it completely. Every time I almost did, though, one of its lines or riffs would come back to me and I’d be sucked right back in. Like today, for example, it was the opening title track with its slightly ominous groove and gleeful shouting about digging in the mysterious archive that got it spinning again. (“At a proper nine to fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiive, whilst digging in the archiiiiiiiive….AAAAAAARRRRCHIIIIIIIIIVE!” deedoodoodoooooo…der-der-DER-DER!)

Other times it was the simple joy of shouting along with the titles of the tracks  when they came up in the songs, as on “They Were Never Our People,” “Recycle Culture,” or “Econymo.” Or the swirling guitar magic of “Rolodex City” and the bratty funk of “Different Kind of Holiday” (which also let you gleefully shout “sliiiiiiiiiiiide to the leeeeeeft” and “same toooooooown but a different kind of holiday!” respectively — there’s lots of gleeful shouting to be had here. It’s fantastic…) Or the thundering riffage of “Wear my Medals,” three minutes that will leave you flat no matter how often you hear it. Even the slower burns work really well, like the closing “I’m Wild.” (These guys may be known for their knotty, nervy interlocking guitars, but their secret weapon is singer Emma Hanlon who takes the lead here and brings several other tracks to new heights when she jumps in.) This one is a total blast, one that’s stood up to a full year of listening without ever letting me down.

Turning to Wet Leg, the hype machine was working overtime for these two this year — they appeared on every late show, music rag, and festival bill you could think of, but thankfully they more than live up to the billing. The “f#$k off” attitude is multiplied tenfold from their slotmates and it adds even more punch to their already infectious attack. From singing about sitting on the shays long (all day long), trying to escape parties with lasagna (but no free beer), or chastising men for fantasizing about them, these ladies are absolutely ruthless and I love it. Note: they do NOT care if you’re in a band (or on the ‘Gram), do not want to marry you, or hang with you while you get blazed spooning mayonnaise. (Side note: they DO want to take you to the supermarket and if they fuck this up they WILL take you down with them.)

The two toss off sharp, scathing, and occasionally hilarious lyrics throughout the short 36 minute duration (“Would you like us to assign someone to butter your muffin?” off “Chaise Longue” remains one of my favorite lines of the year), but besides all the bratty bravado they’re just as vulnerable as the rest of us. Whether it’s dealing with boredom (“I Don’t Want to Go Out”), body image issues (“Too Late Now”), or self-doubt (“Being in Love”) they show flashes of defenselessness that’s endearing before the force fields go back up and they’re back to destroying anyone dumb enough to step in their path. (One need only listen to “Loving You” for a textbook example of the old adage “a woman scorned.” Absolutely withering…) A great debut — can’t wait to see what the two lasses from the Isle of Wight cook up for us next!

3. Mt Joy — Orange Blood: back with their third album are Philly band Mt Joy, returning with their first since 2020’s Rearrange Us, which landed at #13 on that year’s list. It finds the band back in more upbeat, optimistic territory for the most part, having explored slightly darker subject matter in their last one. (That one’s lyrics dealt with depression and adultery, among other things.) It’s obviously a significant level up for them in terms of placement, but they aren’t doing much different sonically, which is a definitely good thing. There’s still their customary blend of warm, sunny music and bright, winning melodies — which might be why it was such a consistently enjoyable listen throughout the year, as I found myself in a better mood day to day having returned to my beloved city by the lake.

There’s the cozy embrace of the title track, which winds along like the song’s duo on their interstate acid trip, the glimmering yacht rock vibe of “Phenomenon,” which coos to a prospective love, “So, if you’re gonna lie to me, give it to me sweet, give me something every memory needs” (a great line), and the joyful “Johnson Song,” whose ode to the loudest band he’s ever heard sounds like the tape was left to melt in the sun. (Perhaps dropped there accidentally by the improper tambourine playing or terrible dancing referenced in the song.) There’s also a handful of nods to the bud, which amplifies the good time vibe — an “itty bitty hit of weed” and its escapist powers show up on the lovely “Lemon Tree,” while frontman Matt Quinn tries to go “up up up” and tries holding on in the otherwise down (yet lovely) “Bang.” (They also rhetorically touch on the reefer asking, “Don’t it feel good? Don’t it feel alright to get a little stoned and push the mess aside?” on the track named after the initial question.  (Answer? No. It feels fucking incredible...))

As on the last outing there’s still a few clouds that slide over the sun, with some deceptive songs of heartbreak (I love the image from the otherwise bouncy “Roly Poly” of someone rattling around your brain like the titular bug, a maddening sensation I certainly can identify with) and tracks that glancingly touch on gun violence (I think) and the environment, as on the aforementioned “Bang” and “Ruins,” respectively. (The latter’s image of “this old engine, it just gliiiiiiiidеs throuuuuugh the ruuuuuuins” is one I love.) The clouds don’t tarnish the mood for long, though, as the overarching vibe here is of bright, upbeat positivity, all loving warmth and sun.

The star for me is the stripped back seduction of the closing “Bathroom Light,” which is partly about a hookup in the can, but also about allowing yourself to be open to those improbable, maybe abnormal or “off” moments your daytime brain might veto because they don’t fit your notions of what’s acceptable or “right.” Aside from sporting a lovely melody I think the song makes a fair case for the value of my mantra of playing by improv rules as much as you can. “I don’t question it, I don’t mess with it, I just go, go graaaaaab iiiiiiiittttt.” (I also love the line “Cause someday we must return the movies in our brains, and thеse moments we can’t fake — yes, the angels never leak the expiration date.”) It’s a really nice close to another really nice album from these guys.

2. Andrew Bird — Inside Problems: hometown fave Bird is back and unsurprisingly finds himself on another year-end list, and while the number next to the title has him at 2, for all intents and purposes this one could just as easily have earned the top spot as I listened to it a TON over the course of the year.  Bird is no stranger to these lists, having appeared on one with every album he’s released since our inaugural post fifteen years ago. (#9 in 2016, #5 in 2012, #5 in 2009, and #3 in 2007.) He’s clearly on a hot streak and this one finds him well within his comfort zone, drawing on all of his characteristic tricks to masterful effect.

There’s still his trademark mix of violin and whistles dancing merrily amidst another batch of beautiful melodies, as well as references to boulders and Sisyphus from his last album (2019’s My Finest Work Yet, which landed at #1 on that year’s list). There an old-timey track that sounds like an extension of his excellent album last year with Jimbo Mathus (These 13, which landed at #8 on my year-end list) — “Faithless Ghost” with its images of screen doors, kitchen floors, and silver combs.  His love of numbers shows up several times (despite claiming he “was never one for maths” in “The Night Before Your Birthday”) — there’s the invitation to “pick a random number, making sure it’s prime” (and between 1 and 109)” on “Fixed Positions” and the steadily escalating counting on “Eight,” which finds Bird coming as close as he ever does to jamming out with its hefty six and a half minute duration and raucous tail end.  His love of literary references and poetic, yet somewhat impenetrable lyrics are back, too, as on “Lone Didion” (Joan, who he name checks in the punny title and quotes later in “Atomized”) or the Caribbean-inflected “Stop n’ Shop.” (“Thought the wall was a gun and that the gun was a flag, that the flag was a truck and that the truck a mighty bird of prey.”)

When he’s not being elliptical (or elusive, depending on your perspective) Bird paints some wonderfully vivid pictures (“Every Saturday night she came in with him. Table six in the back, tall beer and a gin. Now she comes in alone, Lone Didion” on the aforementioned track of the same name) and there’s an encouraging joy and optimism on display throughout.  Whether celebrating the awkwardness of adolescence (there’s references to teenage/juvenile plumage on the majestic title track (“Every inch of us — every inch of us — every inch of us a walking miracle”) and to “never mind the braces (love you anyhow)” on the snappy “Make a Picture”) or generally singing the praises of a loved one (“I could counnnnnnnt the waaaaaaaaays I looooooooove youuuuuuuu” on “Birthday” with its almost 60s garage-style shouted chorus backing things up) it’s a lovely, uplifting listen.

It all culminates with the outstanding closer “Never Fall Apart,” which continues Bird’s pattern of putting some of his prettiest tracks on right before you walk out the door. (“Three White Horses and a Golden Chain” from his album with Mathus and “Bellevue Bridge Club” from Finest being his two latest examples.) This one is one of his best, with its knee-buckling melody and chest-bursting entreaty to “strike up the band” and “neeeeeeeeeever faaaaaaaaall apaaaaaaart agaaaaaaaaain.” Could just as easily be a theme song for humanity coming out of the COVID crisis as it is an encouraging song to a significant other. Great song, great album, great artist — another flawless winner from an absolute fave.

1. Spoon — Lucifer on the Sofa: back with their first album in five years (2017’s Hot Thoughts, which landed at #9 on that year’s list) Austin’s Spoon show they haven’t lost a step and start things with a bang, a thrilling surprise cover of Smog’s “Held,” which has a taut urgency and fire compared to Bill Callahan’s looser, brighter original. The band make the song their own, imbuing it with a sense of danger that’s totally captivating, and follow it with the equally combustible single “The Hardest Cut,” which aside from sporting a furious, knotty solo run from guitarist Alex Fischel also showcases possibly the best little guitar effect since Radiohead’s chunka-chunka scratch on “Creep.” (The distorted one chord hitch here, slammed over and over into the body of the guitar rather than played, just SLAYS.) And it’s off to the races from there.

These first two songs capture the indelible mood of the album, one of absolute confidence and power. The band has never been one you’d describe as sheepish or overly angsty — frontman Britt Daniel exudes a perpetual sense of middle finger in your face flippancy — but as I’ve written about them before, the thing that’s stopped them from conquering hearts and minds (or at least mine) is “there’s a distance and detachment to everything they do that prevents you from fully embracing them.” All too often it’s “brain food, not heart smart sustenance.” And while that “curtain of interference” has plagued some of the recent releases (although not enough to stop them from making the list three previous times) that is definitely not the case, here. Whether it’s the sauntering “The Devil and Mr Jones,” the ebullient “Wild,” or the equally uptempo “On the Radio,” this thing has fu#$ing SWAGGER. Fischel’s and Daniels’ guitar parts swing, the latter roars on the mike with zero posturing or preening, and perpetual secret weapon Jim Eno’s drumming is a thundering, shapeshifting delight.

Even the softer stuff works flawlessly, in part because of how straightforward and sincere they are this time around. Daniels sings straight up love songs — LOVE SONGS! — instead of the more cryptic, elliptical allusions to it he’s made so many times in the past. (Or still does occasionally here, as on the sultry “Astral Jacket” and title track.) Listen to him on songs like “Satellite” or “My Babe” — the former finds him pouring out his feelings without deflection (“You got them that love you, got them that you adore. I see angels above you, but I know I love you more”) while the latter has him belting out the chorus, “I would get locked up, hold my breath, sing my heart out, beat my chest for my babe.” You can almost picture him pounding on his pecs as punctuation as he does, it’s so unvarnished and intense. It’s irresistible.  This album and Bird’s were easily the two I traded turns with most frequently over the year, and it was this one’s unabashed “fu#$ yeah” energy that gave it the slight edge. Easily my favorite since their classic Girls Can Tell — this one’s a blast.

 

Music For Mom: Misty, Maxinquaye, and More

I’ve been spending more time posting over at the other site lately (Fuddge’s bet to write less more is proving hard to shake), but didn’t want to neglect my duties here for too much longer, so thought I’d pop in with a few recs. And since it’s a day that encourages taking a moment to look back to celebrate all our mothers have done for us, thought we could share a little of that shine for a few albums who have done their fair share over the years as well.

First and foremost being Father John Misty’s debut, Fear Fun, which turns ten this year. As described nicely in this article from Stereogum, this marked one of many reinventions by the man behind the mask, Josh Tillman.  He’d spent years releasing quieter, darker singer/songwriter style albums as J. Tillman (give Singing Ax a try to start) before leaving that behind to become the drummer for Fleet Foxes right as they began their ascent into indie stardom. In the midst of all that, Tillman decided to blow it all up again, walking away from the fame to assume the persona he’s donned for five albums over the past ten years, that of the aforementioned Misty.

This in turn has spawned several internal recalibrations of which Misty would come to the forefront on the various albums — whether it’s the romance-addled ladies man or exhausting blowhard and know-it-all to now showtune spinning revivalist apparently? — but it’s never been more perfectly in tune than on this debut. Tillman gives us glimpses of those other aspects of his persona here, but they’re never as overblown or insufferable as they can get on those later albums. (This is not to say these subsequent albums are all terrible — I Love You, Honeybear landed at #5 on my list in 2015, while God’s Favorite Customer did the same in 2018.)

It works here because everything isn’t turned up to 11 and Tillman isn’t yet living with his head fully up his own ass — the weariness, the sarcasm, the silly swagger in spite of it all, even the simple admission that every man (including the only son of a ladiesman) needs a companion.  It’s lovely and endearing in a way that his later attempts all too often miss the mark on — in large part because the sincerity hasn’t yet shifted to a schtick. He seems to be singing from the heart instead of his overactive (and I would argue overconfident) head and it’s why this remains such a fantastic listen 10 years in.

“Funtimes in Babylon,” “Hollywood Forever Cemetery Sings,” “Misty’s Nightmares 1 & 2,” and “Well, You Can Do It Without Me” remain classics in his catalog and I vividly remember when I was traveling in Jordan years later and one of the album’s songs strangely (and irrepressibly) came to mind. I was hiking through Petra, admiring the mind-frying beauty on display throughout, as the sun was starting to set. It was a windy day and something about the pitch of the wind’s howl sounded just like the ethereal wail from “This is Sally Hatchet.” Once my mind made that connection, every gust of the wind tearing through the canyon reminded me of that song and I spent the remaining hour or so making my way back to the car with that eerie moan running through my head (the song’s slight hint of danger matching that of the darkening skies). It was a strange connection, but one that felt appropriate in a place so isolated and out of time. Tillman can manifest both these elements to his detriment at times, but when he keeps them in check like he does here he’s unstoppable.

Enjoy that otherworldly wail from one of my faves, “Sally,” here:

Another album that’s gotten a nice retrospective recently is Tricky’s  Maxinquaye, which was written about well by Pitchfork. It follows the trend of the previous album in two ways — it was a debut (one which would prove to be even more impossible to follow and match on subsequent outings) and it sounded so original and unique it could have been unearthed at that ancient place in Petra for all we knew. (That latter part is something that did continue on subsequent albums — for better or worse, no one really sounds like Tricky — and when it works (as it so often does here) it’s incredible.) And while the two share those things in common, how this singular achievement came to be was very different.

As noted previously, Tillman had years of experience as a solo act under his belt, which helped inform his pivot to the Misty persona (an homage to the old Seinfeld adage of “if every instinct you have is wrong, just do the opposite” perhaps). Tricky, on the other hand, didn’t have that body of work and muscle memory to rely on (or reject) — aside from hanging around with the Massive Attack lads (first as part of the Wild Bunch and then for the recording of their classic Blue Lines, his contributions being heard most compellingly on the title track with his still sizzling verses) he was a clean slate. Which makes the end product all the more impressive — as the article describes, Tricky was essentially just making it up as he went, chasing the sounds in his head and trying to translate them to record, often to the frustration of those around him.

What he manages to capture is a smoldering, sensual mix, equal parts sexy and sinister that owes no small debt to the interplay between Tricky and Martina Topley-Bird (another neophyte that Tricky plucked off the streets to magical effect). The dynamic between the pair is irresistible, like mixing two volatile chemicals and waiting for the kinetic response. (This was no manufactured studio effect either, but something that spilled over into real life as the two have a child together.) This swirling tension grabs you from the outset and scarcely lets you go, with some absolute hammer blows dealt before the end.

The opening quartet of “Overcome,” “Ponderosa,” “Black Steel,” and “Hell is Around the Corner” cement the album’s impact immediately, casting an almost impossibly high bar to maintain. That the album comes close more often than not is a testament to its quality and why it remains a favorite for fans of this genre nearly 30 years later. (ie trip hop, as administered by giants like Massive, Portishead (who use the same Isaac Hayes sample as “Hell” on their “Glory Box,” sparking the first of many “who did it better” debates between that band and Tricky over the years), and others.) Later tracks like “Aftermath,” “Brand New You’re Retro,” and “Strugglin'” keep the momentum going, but by that point it’s almost all icing.

That opening salvo was enough of a head wrecker to catapult Tricky into the limelight and the plaudits for the album were something he struggled with mightily in the coming years. He increasingly turned to the grittier, more paranoid side of his sound, becoming less embraceable and more insular as the albums wore on. (Pre-Millenium Tension and Nearly God released the following year have several good tracks, but as Topley-Bird left the fold and Tricky navigated things on his own, the songs got rougher sounding and more claustrophobic, suffocating the sensuality and heat that had made his earlier work shine.) Thankfully we’ll always have this one to come back to — check out “Ponderosa,” an absolute mind-melter of a song that I’ve listened to a ton lately (it’s incredible on headphones and substances):


We’ll close with a couple quick hits that’ve been piling up on my browser tabs. First comes a cover from Kevin Morby (whose new album is out soon — get excited!) of the elusive cult-favorite Bill Fay. The Dead Oceans label is doing a series of releases covering old Fay songs and Morby’s is a good one of his “I Hear You Calling.”  Morby explained his interest in a statement, saying, “Bill Fay exists as a secret handshake amongst us musicians. Those of us familiar with his body of work are obsessed with it. When I first heard him, years ago, I felt as if I was rediscovering something I had lost and had long been looking for.” It’s an apt description that sums up the found treasure feeling I had years ago when I stumbled on him. I was turned onto Fay thanks to Jeff Tweedy who used to cover Fay’s “Be Not So Fearful” beautifully in some of his solo shows and it remains one of my favorites. Morby’s is a nice addition to the canon and a good reason to go check out Fay if you haven’t already — give it a listen here:

(And just cuz I like you, here’s Tweedy’s version too):

Sticking with the found treasure vibe, Folk Implosion recently surfaced for the first time in 19 years with some new tracks (and the promise of more to come), which was a very pleasant surprise.  They still sound the same (another pleasant surprise) so I’m very excited to see what else they turn out. (The Kids soundtrack was obviously excellent, but some of the tracks on One Part Lullaby are pretty great, too, including the smoldering “Kingdom of Lies,” which is a long-time fave.) No word on when the rest of the songs (or album) will be out, but in the meantime we can enjoy the lead single “Don’t Give it Away” here:

(And cuz I can’t help myself, here’s “Kingdom,” too):

Next comes the latest single from Andy Shauf who continues his torrid pace of recording and releases. This time it’s a double single, fronted by the lovely “Satan,” which is a great little tune in spite of the sinister title. No word on whether this is building towards a bigger release or a standalone (Shauf’s surprise EP/LP Wilds landed at #10 on last year’s list) but nothing seems off the table these days, so hopefully he’s got an album coming soon. In the meantime, give the latest one a ride here:

And we’ll close with a longer listen, the recent mini concert that beloved Jesus and Mary Chain did on French TV that I stumbled on now that YouTube serves as my cable. Its magic algorithm suggested it as part of my nightly perusing and I’m glad it did because the boys deliver a pretty fiery set (in spite of the subdued, almost antiseptic surroundings). They sound great throughout, but particularly on their version of “Darklands,” which really jumped out. Give the whole thing a listen and then check out the original underneath. Solid stuff from the stellar Scots.


Until next time, amici…
–BS

Fright Night — A Soundtrack to the Screams

In honor of today’s holiday, I thought what better way to celebrate than swooping in with a much delayed post (what better way to scare the bejeebus out of someone than seeing my face at your door/posts in your stream, right? “Oh god no — IT’S HIM AGAIN!!!) And to keep it festive we’ll run another round of everyone’s favorite game — SUNSHINE SPEED DATING! (Halloween edition) So without further ado, get your patented one-liners and heartbreaking nostalgia ready, cuz it’s time to roll!

DING! “Why hello there — look at all of you! You look like the sweetest group of grandmas and grandpas I’ve ever seen, with your pressed guayaberas and lovely dresses.  You must be out celebrating the 25th anniversary of the amazing Buena Vista Social Club album!  That album was SO good — I remember when I traveled there around that time, those songs were everywhere.  Coming out of bars, the hotels, even random performers on the street would play some of the songs.  Not that I’m complaining — those songs were and still are amazing and it’s nice to hear you all humming them still. Your voices harmonized together so beautifully.  It’s really an honor to meet you all.

I have to admit, though, I’m a little surprised to see you all at a speed dating event. What’s that? Yes, I know 80% of those over 65 are still sexually active. And yes, I know I wouldn’t be here if folks like you didn’t “get your grind on” when your “plums were howling” back in the day.  You don’t need to be so graphic, senor.  I’m just saying, you gotta be careful — STDs are rampant in your age group. Like, out of control — historically high rates of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis! That sh#$ can drive you insane — it killed Al Capone, ya know. Napoleon too! Oh don’t get offended, I’m only trying to protect you. Just cuz you’re 90 doesn’t mean you shouldn’t wrap it up, that’s all I’m saying!  Oh cmon, don’t be like that…  Well, I still love the album and really enjoyed the extra disc full of unreleased songs. “La Pluma’s” one of my faves! Have a good day — stay safe!”


DING! “Oh hey! Kevin Morby and Hamilton Leithauser!  So cool to meet you guys — you are two of my favorites!  Did you guys come dressed as each other? That’s pretty funny — is that something you guys are doing as part of the joint tour you’re on now? Cuz that’d be pretty funny.  Ham, you’d come out in a long, wavy wig and sing Kevin’s songs and he’d come out in a suit and tie and sing yours. And then in the third act y’all could switch back and just trade songs as yourselves and close things out with a bang. It could be pretty epic — really live up to that “Fall Mixer” title, ya know?

Speaking of — have you guys come up with a cool combo name now that you’re touring together? Like Bennifer or Morbzahatchee, like when Kevin was doing the weekly virtual shows/rodeos with Ms Katie? You could go indie band and be Leitby, or more ad slogany like 2021 — In Need of Mor Leit. Or play up the academic angle and call yourselves Morhaus University. OOH! Maybe go truly extreme and call it the Hammorb of the Gods. That’d be pretty sick. What’s that? No, you’re right — I guess  Fall Mixer’s good, too…   Just kind of… plain. Anyway — don’t get offended.  I’m excited to see the show in a few weeks. Really like the new song — the intro reminds me of “Blackout” a little.  In a good way!”


DING! “Hey! Eddie Vedder! SO cool to meet you — I LOVE your costume. Tom Petty from the Alice in Wonderland video! That’s so cool. I love Tom Petty. And that was such a fun/weird video. Yeah, can’t believe he’s been gone so long — four frigging years?! I don’t know how that’s even possible. What’s that?  Oh yeah — I’m really looking forward to watching that new documentary on the making of Wildflowers. That was such a good album…

You know it’s funny you came dressed as him because the first thing that popped into my head when I listened to your new song from the upcoming album was that it totally reminded me of a Petty track. Just out on the open road, big hooks and melody — I really liked it.  Eager to see what else you’ve got in store for us.  Hey remember that time you climbed into the rafters at those early shows and were hanging there above the stage?  You, like, totally could have died, man.  Do you ever think about that? And now that dude who’s banging Megan Fox copied you and did it at a show recently. Does it annoy you that people like him are stealing your moves and not somebody cooler? Oh it does. And you didn’t know that’d happened? Oh. Ohhhhhhh now I feel bad. Oh man, um, don’t….don’t feel bad, I’m sure it was a sincere homage and not a desperate cry for attention. You still rule? Really! Ed Ved! Don’t despair!”


DING!  “WHOA! Speaking of dudes who rule — the Coug and the Boss! You guys are legends! What’s that? Sorry, Mr Mellencamp, I know no one calls you the Cougar anymore. That’s just what I grew up knowing you as, didn’t mean to offend you. And I’m sorry Mr Springsteen, I know I should show more respect to you, too. Yes, I know you hang out with the former President, sir.  No, I don’t think HE calls you the Boss (although to be honest, I’m pretty sure he could if he wanted to, right? Cuz he’s, like, THE Boss? And if THE Boss wants to call the OTHER Boss The Boss, theennnnnnnnn…. ya kinda just gotta go with it, right? Yes, I know I’m not the President. Yes, not even close, sir. And nobody cares that we’re from the same city — got it. Sorry to offend….)

AAAAANYway — off to a really good start here… I gotta say, it’s so funny you two came dressed as each other, too — did you see Leithauser and Morby did the same thing?  Great minds, I guess. You should think about keeping your hair that way, Mr Springsteen — that upswoop looks really fun. Gives you a more lighthearted feel.  Not that anyone would think you’re a bit prickly. Nooo….. Hey, I dig the song you two did together — really gives off a classic Mellencamp vibe.  What’s that? No I don’t think it overshadows you, Mr Boss, your part holds its own. It’s just the music sounds more Mellencampy to me — not in a bad way, Mr Cougar! What now? No I don’t think the President overshadows you either — he just has a lot to say and kind of talks slower so it SEEMS like he might be taking more time. And you know, like you said, he IS the former President and all, right? So it’s kind of an honor to be cut off by him, right? Leader of the free world!  Oh cmon, don’t be like that — you’re still the Boss, right? Bruuuuuuuuuuuce.  BRUUUUUUUUUCE! Cheer up!”

DING! “Oh wow, Mr Yorke, I didn’t expect to see you here! You flew all the way over here just for the event? That’s pretty impressive.  They don’t have things like this back in the UK? Oh you just love costumed celebrations? I guess that makes sense. Only — what are you dressed as?  You just look like a random mix of words on a poster. Kind of like someone swirled those magnetic poetry things around on the fridge into an unintelligible mess. Oh it’s a protest board. Got it. So all the things you despise.  Makes sense.  Ah yes, I see now — capitalism, technology, government… Definitely picked those up from you over the years.

I gotta say, there’s a LOT of words on here, Mr Yorke — almost too many to make sense of them. What’s that? Yes, I know there’s a lot to be upset about these days. Yes, the past five years HAVE been exceedingly difficult. Almost overwhelming at times — completely agree.  Hey I was glad to hear the band was releasing a bunch of unreleased tracks for the anniversaries of Kid A and Amnesiac next month! That’s got to be pretty exciting right? “If You Say the Word” was really good — really excited to see what else is on there.  What’s that? Yes, I know it doesn’t make up for all the things we’ve got to fix in the world and at best offers “scant few seconds of solace,” you’re right. I gotta say, though — some of these things on your board seem sort of trivial. Like wearing black socks with gym shoes?  Or white bean chili? None of those things seem worth losing sleep over. And cargo shorts — are they really that offensive? I mean seriously.  Oh alright — there’s no need to shout, Mr Yorke. I can see you feel strongly on this issue. “Unholy abomination” seems a LITTLE excessive, but let’s agree to disagree here. I still love your guys’ music (even if the last album was a disappointment — that’s right, I said it! Stick THAT in your single set of pockets and sulk!) Byeeeeeeeeee!”

DING! “Oh wow, Aaron Dessner and Justin Vernon!  Cool to see you guys here! Did you….BOTH….come dressed as Bruce Hornsby?  Wow. That’s, uh….a weird choice, but yeah, I guess it makes sense.  Yes, I know he’s a huge influence and you love his music. Can TOTALLY tell.  (Particularly you, Mr Vernon… Yes, I did see you had him come onstage to play a song or two with you on your last tour.  That….rocked?)

Um anyways… so I saw you two recently released the second album under your Big Red Machine moniker. Some nice stuff on there.  Now that you mention it, I actually think you might have more guest stars than tones on the album! What’s that? I mean — Sharon Van Etten, Fleet Foxes, Michael Stipe, Ben Howard, Taylor Swift… All give nice contributions, it just sounds a little….monotone after a bit.  Kind of like….no — I won’t say it… No, don’t tear up Mr Vernon, I just don’t like him as much as you two do. He’s fine in small doses — I just wouldn’t have used him as the template for like half of my recent material. But that’s just me — what do I know?! It’s fine — you two have fun out there. I bet you’ll get a ton of candy. Nothing gets the people pumped like midtempo piano crooners….

DING DING DING!


We’ll close with a couple live tunes, since I’m slowly filling the biggest hole I’ve had for that stuff since I started going to shows ~25 years ago. The first one comes from hometown hero Jeff Tweedy, who recently did a solid Neil Young cover with his sons and a few other musicians at the beloved hole in the wall the Hideout back home. It’s this super weird/cool bar that’s basically in a house in this industrial part of town — totally out of sorts with its surroundings (“one of these things is nooooot like the other!”), but also totally cool. You can sense the warm, welcoming vibe in the clip — check out Tweedy doing “Old Country Waltz” here:

Lastly wanted to highlight a show that My Morning Jacket did the other night as part of its ongoing tour. I’ve been obsessively listening to the album since it came out a week or two ago, and each day or two a new song gets lodged in my head like an unrelenting earworm. They played a couple of the tracks when I got to see them recently (pretty much the best return to live music I could have expected after all this time away), but this set has several more I didn’t get to hear that night (including current faves “In Color,” “Complex,” and “Never in the Real World.”) They also deliver some scorching versions of old favorites, such as “Mahgeetah,” “Evil Urges,” and “Lay Low.” They even did a ripping version of “Dancefloors,” which they haven’t played regularly since like 2015! You can watch the entire ~2.5 hour set here — it’s definitely worth your time.

That’s it for now — hope everyone enjoys their circus peanuts and Almond Joys! Until next time, amici!

–BS

Welcome Home: The Best Music of 2020

When I think back on this year — this strange, uneasy year — several things spring to mind. There was the fear of the unseen and the stomach-churning disbelief that came from watching numbers rocket higher and higher as the months wore on. (“One million new cases in FOUR DAYS?! How is that even possible?!”) There was the constant low grade anxiety packed into previously thoughtless activities and the neverending risk-gain analysis required as a result. (“Should I go buy groceries or have them delivered to the house? Can I workout in my basement rather than go to the gym? Do I REALLY need to hangout with Socks and Fudge or should we just drink beer over Zoom?”)

There was the head-wrecking plasticity of time — the work week blurred into the weekend, days merged into months without distinction, and were it not for the rising and setting of the sun I’m not confident I could distinguish between day and night with any accuracy. (Was this year really only 12-months long? I feel like I missed a global edict and we extended the calendar for some antiquated reason based on farming schedules like daylight savings. And are we sure there are only seven days in a week right now? I’d attempt to prove it but I’ve lost the ability to count higher than the number of hands currently on my keyboard…) And yet it also feels like this year has flown by — like I just started the new job, like the world is still trying to figure out what to do with this virus and how to respond — somehow managing to be both the most interminable and ephemeral year on record.

And there was the staggering variety and volume of loss — of jobs, of lives, of simple life experiences. There’s now over 5M people unemployed, with over 700,000 applying each week. There’s over 300,000 dead from the virus, with nearly 20,000 dying each week. (That’s the equivalent of nine 747s crashing every single day.) There’s missed holidays with the family, lost nights out with friends, and the inability to even go for a run without a mask on. There’s the closure of beloved bars and restaurants and the shuttering of shops near and far. (RIP Granville’s, Chupa, Rock & Roll Hotel, U-Hall, and so many more.) And there’s the slew of missed shows to think back on — front row seats for an acoustic Nathaniel, floor tickets for a Rage reunion with RTJ as openers, getting to see Carseat play their fantastic new album or watch Idles start a fire with theirs.

All of this has added up to a tremendously trying year and as a result the overwhelming instinct this year has been to find solace and comfort, refuge and respite. With rare exception, almost everything that captivated my ears this year seemed oriented towards the creation and protection of those things. That’s not due to a dearth of things to be angry about — we just recapped a dozen things that should spark a response and spike your blood pressure (oh yeah — there was an election too!) — but with one notable exception the overwhelming majority of the music that kept calling to me centered on maintaining a much mellower mood.

That applied to the personal and professional spheres, as well, not just the music that filled them. So looking back on this “year” what I’ll remember most (assuming the pandemic doesn’t fully turn my brain into pudding) are things like listening to Prine on the patio (or 60s era Willie) while I hammer away at the laptop with a snoring pooch in my lap. Going on long adventure hikes with Mad Dog and the Rizz to enjoy some fresh air and break the solidifying shutdown routines. Starting each day with the Tweedys to laze in their living room and bask in their banter (and songs). Ending the day once a week with Morbzahatchee (and early on with Death Cab Ben) for more singing and smiles. And the numerous times I turned to these albums below to soundtrack those moments (and countless others in between).

Say what you will about this year — exhausting reminder of the old adage “it can always get worse,” unequivocal champion of the shittiness Olympics (take THAT, 2016!) — there was a lot of good music that came out, serving as much-needed life preservers for us to cling to in these tumultuous seas. Compared to last year’s list there are 8 more entries overall (18 to 26, respectively) and surprisingly the majority of them are first time appearances. Where these lists traditionally tend to balance out between old favorites and new, this one skews far more heavily towards the latter with a whopping 17 noobs to 9 measly dinosaurs, respectively. (Not counting folks going solo from bands who’ve appeared here before.)

In a year where almost everything was upended and discovery was a constant companion — of personal resolve and resistance (mentally, physically, and financially), of new habits and routines (puzzling, gaming, and working from home), of the depths of our collective compassion or indifference (towards those hit hardest by the pandemic, towards systemic racism and injustice, or towards the ever-inclusive cagefight that is modern politics), and (possibly most importantly) of a vaccine, one that will hopefully combat COVID and get us back to a new version of normal soon — this seems fitting and an alternate anthem for the year. In the wake of all that it seems only natural these things would spill over to the music we spent our days with, particularly when those other themes — solace and comfort, refuge and respite — probably had never been as primarily important to us before.

So take a look and listen to the bounty of great tunes below — may they give you as much back as they did me this year. Here’s to hoping 2021 gets us closer together and closer to normal than 2020 did. Stay safe, sane, and separated in the interim, my friends… — BS


15. Tre Burt — Caught it From the Rye / Gerry Cinnamon — The Bonny: this slot’s for a couple of harmonica-wielding first timers, one a soothing folkster from Sacramento, the other a full throated belter from the highlands. Starting with the former, I discovered Burt this summer and have enjoyed his brisk 30 minute debut a lot in the intervening months. His voice bears the wear and tear of your old man’s winter coat, scuffed up but still warm and comfortable, and his melodies stick with you once the songs have faded. Highlights include the title track (“Caught it From the Rye”), “What Good,” and two reprises from his debut EP, “Franklin’s Tunnel” and the gutpunching “Only Sorrow Remains.”

As for Mr Cinnamon, I found the native Glaswegian late this spring and have spent many months returning to his sophomore outing, which walks the line between traditional folk songs and raucous barroom anthems, both sold convincingly with his untamed energy and accent. In a year where so much left you feeling downcast or disoriented, Cinnamon’s songs actually manage to rouse you into a bit of a fervor. It’s one of the many shames this year to have missed seeing him perform these at a festival, singing them out loud along with hundreds in the open air and sunshine. Doing so solo at the house works just as well — try gems like the title track (which sounds like something my ancestors in the old world might have sung), “Dark Days,” “Sun Queen,” and the killer “Canter.”

14. Catholic Action — Celebrated by Strangers / Silverbacks — Fad / Idles — Ultra Mono: we’ll keep the trend of the previous slot going, both in terms of first-time entrants for the year-end list and hailing from the UK. (We’ve got three quarters covered — you gotta want it, Wales…) We’ll start where we ended with another batch of Scotsmen (Glaswegians to boot) and the sophomore album from Catholic Action. As I wrote this summer, these guys are the spiritual children of Franz Ferdinand, all cheeky attitude and infectious groove, and that spell hasn’t diminished in the intervening six months. Similar to their debut, it’s just a fun bunch of songs — from opener “Grange Hell (South London in D)” to later tracks like “Yr Old Dad,” “People Don’t Protest Enough,” and the deliriously irresistible “One of Us,” these guys are guaranteed to make you move. (Which as my watch continually reminds me is apparently important.)

Speaking of moving, we’ll shift to the emerald isle for another buoyant affair, this time the full-length debut from Irish five piece Silverbacks. I’ve written about these guys several times before, thanks to a handful of really strong singles released up til now. (Only a couple of which show up here.) Bolstering those familiar faces come some interesting divergences — a trio of instrumentals (one of which actually isn’t throwaway, the lovely “Madra Uisce”) and a pair of more new wave tracks sung by Emma Hanlon (vs traditional vocalists Killian and Daniel O’Kelly). They show the band’s range nicely, but their undeniable strength is still the songs bearing their traditional triple guitar attack and their jittery, catchy riffs — tracks like the aforementioned singles “Dunkirk” and “Pink Tide,” along with “Drink it Down,” “Muted Gold,” and the freight train “Just in the Band.”

Hitting with the proverbial power of said locomotive comes the final member of this slot, British punk band Idles. Here for the first time with their third album, Ultra Mono, this was one of the rare releases to address the endless outrages swirling around us this year, from racial injustice to gentrification, gropey guys, and more. You can argue with the lyrical effectiveness of the attacks, which alternate between nonsensical word collages and simple sloganeering (and whether this is deliberately done tongue in cheek as suggested in songs like “Mr Motivator” and “The Lover” or inadvertently remains at best unclear if not wholly beside the point). What you cannot deny, though, is the power and catchiness of the songs, which have always been the band’s strong suit. Part Jesus Lizard war machine, part vintage British punks, it’s on balance a solid set of songs — with tracks like “Reigns,” “Danke,” the blistering duo “War” and “Kill Them With Kindness,” and lead single “Grounds,” which sported my hands-down favorite line of the year (“I say what I mean, do what I love, and fucking SEND it…”) it felt good to get a little fiery.

13. Mt Joy — Rearrange Us / Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever — Sideways to New Italy / Woods — Strange to Explain: this slot’s for bands who routinely conjure the shine of our sunny friend in the sky (and the namesake of everyone’s favorite blogger), brightening otherwise dreary days with their music. First up is the sophomore album from Philly band Mt. Joy (named after a proverbial place I think ALL of us hoped we could find this year), returning for the first time since their self-titled 2018 debut. That album was pure, unadulterated sunshine — positive sentiments wrapped in a hippie hemp blanket, their melodies and cheer strong enough to win over even the most calcified, jaded hearts. (Not speaking about anyone in particular here…) This one allows a few storm clouds to darken the horizon (lyrics occasionally touch on things like depression and adultery this time around) without sacrificing the underlying optimism. Songs like “My Vibe,” “Death,” “Strangers,” and the beautiful “Witness” all glow, warming the windshield as you glide on down the highway.

Another band built for the open road is Australia’s RBCF who are also back with their sophomore album, their first since their 2018 debut, Hope Downs. Thankfully the Blackouts haven’t changed the formula that landed them at #13 on that year’s list — sturdy triple guitar attack, swirling riffs and jangly chords, all built to make you move. (When it works this well, why change it?) Songs like the opening “The Second of the First,” “Falling Thunder,” “Cameo,” and lead single “Cars in Space” are like shots of adrenaline straight to your beleaguered heart, while tracks like “Not Tonight” and “The Cool Change” balance things out with some of the referenced chill. (The former of the two sporting my new favorite term for ice cube.) Another solid outing from this scrappy batch of newcomers.

Lastly comes the similarly evocative Woods (back for the first time since the overly cheeseball 2017 Love is Love), though the locale they call to mind is often tougher to pin down. At times pastoral homestead, others a spaced out dreamscape, this one bridges the gap between the ethereal aspects of the latter and the lush warmth of the former. Calling to mind the slinky, almost African rhythms of their 2016 album City Sun Eater in the River of Light (which landed at #5 on 2016’s list) it’s a solid return to form by these favorites. Songs like the title track, “Next to You and the Sea,” “Where do You go When You Dream,” the propulsive jam “Fell so Hard,” and the lovely lullaby “Just to Fall Asleep” are all highlights.

12. X — Alphabetland / Magnetic Fields — Quickies: this slot’s for those showcasing the benefits of brevity, albeit using two VERY different palettes. The former takes the sounds of revved up rockabilly and singsong harmonies that made the LA punks famous and brandishes them again to terrific effect. Back for the first time in 17 years and the first in 35 with the original lineup, the band fires off 10 rapid winners in a brisk 27 minute sprint to the finish. (The spoken word piece at the end is forgettable.) The interplay between frontman John Doe and frontwoman Exene Cervenka’s voices has always been a signature, and their breathless delivery of numerous lines get stuck in your head again here. Guitarist Billy Zoom’s riffs remain pristine, rattled off with the effortless flair of someone who’s been at it for close to 40 years, and DJ Bonebrake’s drums haven’t lost any of their pop. Songs like “Water & Wine,” “Strange Life,” “Goodbye Year, Goodbye,” or the pair of old tunes finally properly recorded (“Delta 88 Nightmare” and “Cyrano De Berger’s Back”) all smoke. This one’s every bit as good as the band’s early classics.

The Mags return for the first time in three years with yet another concept album, this one requiring all songs be under three minutes long. (Previous themes required all songs have fuzzed up guitars or start with the letter I, to name just two recent ones.) Beyond that frontman Stephin Merritt was free to roam and he covers a ton of ground over the course of the album’s 28 songs. Visiting castles (twice), spinning yarns about Shakers, bikers, Jesus, and Beelzebub, celebrating historic tits (not what you think) and outstanding coffee, or simpler things like his favorite watering hole or his musical neighbors. Merritt’s limitless imagination and wicked sense of humor are both on display, presenting some of the best material since the band’s unparalleled classic, 69 Love Songs. The highlights are almost too numerous to recount — “The Day the Politicians Died,” “When She Plays the Toy Piano,” “(I Want to Join a) Biker Gang,” “Let’s Get Drunk Again (And Get Divorced), “I Wish I Were a Prostitute Again,” “The Best Cup of Coffee in Tennessee,” “My Stupid Boyfriend” (which is laugh out loud funny). They all shine, full of Merritt’s characteristic heart, humor, or wonderful melodies — a great return to form.

11. Doves — The Universal Want / Bright Eyes — Down in the Weeds, Where the World Once Was: this slot’s for a pair of improbable reunions from bands I’ve really enjoyed over the years, but who’d been in hibernation for a good chunk of time, seemingly gone for good. Thankfully they’ve returned, both with lavish, kitchen-sink style albums that add layers to their signature sounds. Doves add the least flourishes between the two, but have been away the longest so get to go first.

Back for the first time in 11 years, this trio of Britons ALWAYS sound stately on their albums, so saying they’ve added the least flourishes is a bit like saying the latest Aston Martin is underwhelming because it doesn’t fly or have a pool in the back. These guys just OOZE opulence, their albums always feeling like the back of that aforementioned car (“Hey, there’s a pool!”) and despite being away for over a decade return without missing a beat.

The band’s ability to immediately create a mood — dark, slightly disorienting, but DAMN if it doesn’t sound good — is undiminished, thanks in large part to frontman Jimi Goodwin’s signature swooning delivery. (Honestly, he could be singing about something as basic as his breakfast and it would sound luxurious. “I ate a baNAAAAAAAAAAHnaaaaaaaaah and some POOOOOOOOOOORRiddddddddddge!”) Songs like “Broken Eyes,” “For Tomorrow,” “Prisoners,” “Cycle of Hurt,” and lead single “Carousels” are just huge, soaring songs — as majestic and glittering as their older material. I’ve never understood why these guys were always bigger in the UK than here — just rich, rewarding stuff.

Gone for a mere 9 years, Bright Eyes are another band that slipped away into the night and were seemingly forgotten. Frontman Conor Oberst remained busy, releasing several solo albums and pairing with other artists like Phoebe Bridgers for side project Better Oblivion Community Center, but the rest of the band (Mike Mogis and Nate Wolcott) were much more quiet. So it was a surprise when there was news they’d signed to a new label (“why does a dormant band need a label?”), which was quickly followed by talk of reunion shows and ultimately an album. And it’s a good one — an ambitious, reach for the stars type outing where everything is taken up a level.

Oberst recruited some ringers to record with — Chili Peppers bassist Flea and Queens thunder god Jon Theodore on drums, pairings almost as unexpected as the reunion itself, but like every other embellishment here they’re not overpowering or out of place. And there were a lot of the latter — bagpipes, orchestras, a full choir — but somehow they only add to the richness of the songs. Tracks like “Dance and Sing,” “Calais to Dover,” “Comet Song,” and the trio of singles — “Mariana Trench,” “Persona Non Grata,” and “Forced Convalescence” all shine as a result. Similar to their slotmates, we might not have needed these albums, but damn if I’m not glad they arrived anyway.

10. Built to Spill — Built to Spill Plays the Songs of Daniel Johnston / My Morning Jacket — The Waterfall II: this slot’s for some long running bands opting to run in place for a minute rather than charge forward with some new material, utilizing two of the four universal indicators for “we’re taking a bit of a break right now.” (Not represented — greatest hits or live albums, or the fabled ultimate phone-in signal, the live album of OTHER people’s greatest hits.) Thankfully they’re both entirely pleasant outings, so no real complaints here.

First up are my beloved band of Idahoans who opted for a cover album this time around. For a band known for sticking inspired selections in their sets or even doing entire cover shows from time to time this isn’t a huge stretch, but instead of compiling studio versions of their best picks (I’ve seen em do everything from the Smiths and REM to CCR, the Kinks, and Elton John over the years) they opted to do an entire album from just one artist. And not any artist, but cult indie fave Daniel Johnston — known in part for his weird, at times childlike qualities (and lyrics).

Aside from sharing a similarly shaky, nasal voice, it’s not an obvious fit — sure, frontman Doug Martsch often sings of dreams and the occasional brontosaurus, but he’s primarily known for his incredible guitar heroics, with parts flying wildly through the stratosphere before snapping back into place with mind-wrecking force. So stripping back to a three piece, silencing the solos and largely sticking to a strum while singing about dogs and fish seems a strange choice. Somehow it works, though, and the sweetness sometimes buried in Johnston’s lyrics are allowed to shine. Songs like “Tell me Now,” “Honey I Sure Miss You,” and “Heart, Mind, and Soul” are pleasant throwbacks to the sock hop era, while the tandem of “Life in Vain” and “Mountain Top” surpass the originals.

For their part of the equation, MMJ decided to mine their archives and put out an album of previously recorded material rather than hit us with some new songs. It’s not a traditional outtakes set, filled with one off demos or rarities scattered from throughout their career, but rather an entire album they decided not to put out until now. Originally recorded as part of the 2015 Waterfall sessions, the band initially debated releasing the material all at once, but for whatever reason balked. Thankfully they finally decided to share the other half of those sessions and the fully restored duo work nicely when played back to back.

This one’s got some quintessential blissed out moments (frontman Jim James can still surreptitiously kneecap you with the beauty of his voice or the sweetness of his sentiment) — tracks like the opening “Spinning my Wheels,” “Feel You,” and “Welcome Home” are all soft-spoken gems, while “Climbing the Ladder,” “Wasted,” and the funky “Magic Bullet” show the band flexing their jammy muscles. Had really looked forward to seeing them play this stuff live — there’s something perfectly symbiotic between these guys and summer festivals. Thanks yet again, 2020…

9. Jeff Tweedy — Love is the King / Matt Berninger — Serpentine Prison: this slot’s for a couple old favorites stepping out on their own, temporarily leaving the comforts of their beloved bands (Wilco and the National, respectively) to uphold one of the pandemic’s primary edicts, that of isolation. For Tweedy this is nothing new — he’s been sporadically taking breaks from the band to do solo tours for years, and truthfully I enjoy those shows even more than the full family affairs. (No offense to the guys — there’s just something about the intimacy of Jeff and an acoustic guitar that is incomparable. Watch Sunken Treasure if you need convincing…)

He’s also released two official solo albums the past two years alone (2018’s Warm and 2019’s Warmer, which landed at #15 and #9 on my year-end lists, respectively), so it’s only natural he’d use all the free time he received from not touring this year to record some more material. (Oh he also wrote another book AND did a nightly hourly livestream at the start. I think he probably also built a couple cabins and dredged some nearby waterways in between just to kill time.) Though he changed up the title this time (it could easily have been Warmest), the material is in line with those previous two outings, as worn-in and comfortable as the robes and pajamas he so frequently appears in on those livestreams. Songs like “Opaline” and “A Robin or a Wren” are country-fried goodness, while tracks like “Bad Day Lately,” “Save it For Me,” and the beautiful ode to his wife “Even I Can See” (yet again making all the rest of us look bad in comparison) are hushed gems.

For Berninger this is the first time he’s given it a go on his own — there have been one-off tracks here and there and the El Vy side project, but this is the first time he’s hanging a shingle entirely of his own. Initially intended to be a covers album, he went into the studio with producer Booker T (sadly sans MGs) and instead ended up recording an entire album of originals. (Allegedly the covers that started the fruitful sessions still exist and will be released later.) The interplay between the two is noticeable on a number of tracks, albeit subtle — there’s no Booker T of old whipping folks into a funky frenzy (although picturing Berninger trying to do so is comical to envision, like your kind uncle rattling off some Death Certificate-era Cube in an attempt to look hard), just understated keys gliding lightly through the background to buttress the songs.

Lyrically Berninger stays with what he does best — songs about relationships and instrospective flagellation — all sung with his cabernet-soaked baritone. Tracks like the opening “My Eyes are T-Shirts” (great line), “Loved so Little,” “Take me Out of Town,” and “Collar of Your Shirt” are all subdued beauties, well-matched by the trio of solid singles, “Distant Axis,” “One More Second,” and the title track. A really strong outing top to bottom — hopefully he brings some of this focus back to the band and gets them back to basics after their disappointing last album.

8. Waxahatchee — Saint Cloud / Kevin Morby — Sundowner: this slot’s for two independent faves who somehow prove even more enjoyable together. Ladies coming first (both in courtesy and release order), we’ll start with the latest from Ms Katie who’s back for the first time since 2017’s Out in the Storm. Having previously dealt with the pain and insecurities surrounding love and loss, giving us three excellent albums bursting with vulnerability and quiet honesty, that album was all fiery guitars and full throated resilience, letting everyone in earshot know she had finally found her footing and was no longer going to be dominated by those ghosts — which while great from a personal perspective was not what drew me to her music. Thankfully she seems to have come out of that phase of overt trumpeting and settled into one of more comfortable confidence, giving us an album that exudes warmth and beauty. Songs like the title track, “Fire,” “The Eye,” and “War” all shine, while the twin singles of “Lilacs” and “Can’t Do Much” rank among the finest things she’s written.

For Morby’s part he continues his prolific pace of release, having just put out the full length Oh My God last year. (It landed at #7 on that year’s list.) Similar to Ms Katie’s previous, that album marked the first time I didn’t unabashedly love the material — there were some divergences in tone and technique that gave me pause, but while hers proved too powerful and uniform to win me over, Morby surrounded his with enough characteristic winners to have that album make the cut. Thankfully there’s no concessions or worries necessary this time around — it’s just an album of some beautiful songs. Recorded before his previous one, Morby decided to sit on the songs until the time was right — which turned out to be the world slowing down and his moving back to Kansas with Ms Katie in tow. Similar to her latest, that comfort and warmth permeates almost everything it touches here — songs like the title track, “Valley,” “Campfire,” and “Provisions” positively radiate with them, while “Don’t Underestimate Midwest American Sun” is an absolute gem and one of the best things he has written.

I spent a ton of time with these two over the course of the year and really enjoyed ending the night with them once a week at the beginning of the lockdown listening to their livestream (and then subsequently watching them individually play each of their albums in full). Their banter was pleasant, their songs always excellent, and getting to spend an hour or two basking in their clear love for each other was a necessary remedy to the outside world steadily tearing itself apart. It’s only fitting that sentiment spilled into their songs, yielding some of their strongest, sweetest material to date. And while it’s easy to love the music, what makes these two special is they just seem like good people — extremely talented, yes, yet humble, humorous, and personable — the kind of folks you’d like to spend hours virtually hanging with in their livestreamed living room. I STILL have an alert that pops on my phone every Thursday to check and see if they’re resuming their so-called rodeo. Sadly they’ve yet to return, but in the meantime we’ve thankfully got these albums to keep us warm.

7. Guided by Voices — Surrender Your Poppy Field / Mirrored Aztec / Styles We Paid For: in a year where there was so much upheaval, so many confusing experiences and terrible firsts, it was nice to have at least one reliable thing to count on, something as steadfast and unrelenting as the virus’ case count and death toll — only positive! That comes to us from our old friend Dr Bob, who may not be able do anything to cure us of the disease, but CAN do a lot to improve our pandemic playtime. That’s because — yet again — the beloved band of Ohioans are back with another album — THREE of them. Which would sound impressive or improbable if they didn’t do the exact same thing LAST year! THAT trio of albums landed at #5 on the year-end list and while they’re down a couple spots this year that doesn’t mean the quality has diminished at all — it’s mostly due to the exceptionally strong stuff sitting at the top, which invariably is going to crowd solid outings like this down a touch.

By their own insane measure, this year’s hat trick is slightly down in overall numbers — while each year sports three albums, there are a fraction as many songs this year — 48 to 78 (which admittedly is a stupid amount of material in comparison to every OTHER band, but this is what happens with the bars these guys set for themselves). The final piece of the triptych just arrived a few days ago, too, so it’s too soon to really tell how it compares to last year’s triple. (Early listens are positive, though, albeit similar to the final album last year, it’s probably the weakest of the three.)

That means the majority of the year was spent with the first two albums, and those definitely held up to repeated listens. There’s just a TON of good songs — it’s honestly mind-boggling how Dr Bob and the boys keep coming up with this much stuff month to month, let alone year to year. (And I will NEVER understand how the fu#$ they remember all the words/chords to play this stuff live for 2-3 hours at a time. I can’t remember why I walk into rooms these days…) Tracks like “Year of the Hard Hitter,” “Arthur Has Business Elsewhere,” “Physician,” “Man Called Blunder,” “Bunco Men,” “To Keep an Area,” “Please Don’t be Honest,” “Haircut Sphinx,” “Thank You Jane,” and the unofficial pandemic anthem, “I Think I Had it. I Think I Have it Again” are all classic GBV. Even songs that initially underwhelm get under your skin as snippets of Dr Bob’s lyrics get stuck in your head — things like “Cul-de-Sac Kids,” “Stone Cold Moron,” or “Whoa Nelly” will now just pop into my head and I’ll find myself singing them to whoever might be around (usually just the Rizz). “[S/he’s a] STOOOOOOOOOOOONE COOOOOOOoooooold MOOOOOOoooorooooooon! Get out of my WAAAAAAAAAAAY!” Just a ton of enjoyment as always here…

6. Cut Worms — Nobody Lives Here Anymore / Andy Shauf — Neon Skyline: this slot’s for a couple first-timers that I discovered thanks to Spotify’s spot-on suggestion algorithm, which was on a tear earlier this year. Thanks to the lockdown keeping us stuck in place, the need to get away was a growing concern as time (but not much else) oozed onward. Some turned to travel shows on Netflix, some wandered down memory lane looking at old photos, while I found myself time traveling to earlier eras musically to stave off the stasis. One of the more frequent vectors for that was Cut Worms, a discovery from the first month of the pandemic. And while just discovering their debut album would have been a sufficient enough win in any year, let alone this one, learning that they had a new one coming out — and a double album to boot! — was almost as good as it could get. (Like hearing there were three effective vaccines good almost…)

Frontman Max Clarke doesn’t change the recipe here — it’s still spot-on early Everlys sound, all shining melodies and warm guitar, leaving you in a luxuriant swoon in the wake of his ethereal voice. It’s just PRETTY. Almost debilitatingly so, like seeing someone so hot they short-circuit your brain and make you forget how to speak. There are over a dozen they-don’t-make-em-like-that-no-more style songs here, meticulously crafted and delicate as a Faberge egg. Some of the melodies are almost painful they’re so lovely — songs like “Last Words to a Refugee,” “All the Roads,” “Walk With Me,” and lead single “Veteran’s Day” are all backbreakers in that sense, the melodies matched by the sharpness of Clarke’s lines, which pierce the skin despite the delicacy of his delivery. (“Need another lifetiiiiiiiiiiiiime, baaaaby…to get to all the things that need sayin’…”) This is as vintage as it gets and every bit the treasure as that dusty bottle of decades-old wine you unearthed in the cellar — drink it in and enjoy the glow…

For his part Shauf takes you a decade or so later to a Paul Simon of the 70s sound on his fifth album, a brisk 35-minute gem that nails Simon’s narrative songwriting and sing-speak style of delivery. Covering the exploits of a single night out, this is the second album in a row that Shauf dedicates substantively to a specific theme (his last outing revolved around a night at a party, 2016’s aptly named The Party.) And while the thought of 11 songs about a night at the bar (the titular Neon Skyline) might seem suffocating or bland, Shauf finds plenty to keep you interested.

As he hails from Saskatchewan there’s no debaucherous tales to titillate or offend, just unrequited love, banter among old friends, and jokes about bad accents and missing jackets. It’s an eminently Canadian affair — polite, pleasant, and charming in its earnestness. Shauf’s voice works as effectively as Simon’s at drawing you in and his signature clarinet warms up a number of the songs here, as improbable as that might sound. (Honestly, it’s almost a revelation the first time you hear it — alien, haunting, yet somehow still warm and inviting.) It’s not a novelty, though — similar to someone like Andrew Bird with the violin it’s used judiciously yet effectively, becoming an integral part of the overall sound. The trio of “Where Are You Judy,” “Clove Cigarette,” and “Thirteen Hours” are excellent examples, as are the buoyant “Try Again” and “Fire Truck” towards the end. Leaves you wanting more every time you listen…

5. Nathaniel Rateliff — And It’s Still Alright: released before the world shutdown, this was the first album I knew would be showing up at year’s end and was the front runner for a long time. Coming out waaaaay back in February, this marks a return to pre-Night Sweats Nathaniel — softer and more introspective, working on his wounds with his acoustic guitar in hand — but with a few more flourishes this time around. The substance is still the same — the tried-and-true stalwarts of love and loss — but what’s new is what surrounds them: sweeping orchestral sections, forlorn horns, and the occasional choir. It all adds up to a grander affair than before, while still representing the most naked, heartfelt album of the year.

Dealing with the loss of both his marriage and his best friend, there’s a number of songs that sound upbeat despite the emotional damage — the sauntering “What a Drag,” the soaring title track and “Mavis,” the resilient “Expecting to Lose” with its ebullient doodood-d-DOOOOOOd-d-dooos in the chorus. They all serve as effective counterpoints to the more devastating quiet songs, the ones whose music matches the mood as Rateliff addresses the agonies head-on. Tracks like “Tonight #2,” “You Need Me,” “Kissing Our Friends,” and the resolute “Time Stands” each bear a lovely melody alongside some pointed, painful lyrics.

Nothing tops the album closer, though, in power, prettiness, or pain. Written as an ode to his aforementioned friend, the departed singer/producer Richard Swift, it’s an absolute sledgehammer of a song, one that reduced Rateliff to tears in one incredible performance I saw this year. (Don McLean crying at the end of “Vincent” marks the only other time I’ve seen a singer brought to tears by one of their own songs.) It’s as clear an indicator as you can get that his healing is still a work in progress and you empathize and applaud him for his openness and honesty, as well as his ability to make something so lovely as tribute in spite of it.

4. Muzz — Muzz: this was one of the year’s most unexpected surprises, a return of components from some of my favorite bands, specifically Interpol’s frontman Paul Banks and the Walkmen’s former drummer Matt Barrick, here with indie hopscotcher Josh Kaufman. Together the trio delivered one of the year’s best debuts, an endlessly engaging album that exemplifies easygoing. If the previous album was emblematic of the year’s emotional anguish, this one was all about staying calm, cool, and collected — the absolute epitome of “chill.”

Scarcely raising his voice above a 3, Banks spends the majority of the album murmuring in your ear, lulling you into a foggy state of bliss somewhere between waking and dream. Tracks like “Chubby Checker,” “Summer Love,” and “Patchouli” or the excellent bookends “Bad Feeling” and “Trinidad” all radiate, their lovely melodies inducing a red wine warmth and glow. These serve to emphasize the rare eruptions like lightning tearing through an otherwise darkened landscape — the galloping “Knuckleduster,” the majestic “Red Western Sky,” or the simmering “How Many Days,” which boils over at the end in a fiery guitar freakout. Each reminds you of the guys’ previous bands without disrupting the album’s overall vibe, rather filling out its richness and reward.

The band also recently released a covers EP, which upholds the tenor of their full length outing, sporting a solid version of Mazzy Star’s classic “Fade Into You” and an outstanding one of Arthur Russell’s “Nobody Wants a Lonely Heart” that surpasses the original. They’ve definitely landed on a winning combination here — let’s hope these guys stick together and keep recording. This is excellent stuff…

3. Car Seat Headrest — Making a Door Less Open: if the last two entries represented opposing sides of the emotional spectrum, one tumultuous, the other tranquil, this one slides squarely in the middle and maps its effervescent peaks. Arriving just as the lockdown was settling its jaws into the globe, frontman Will Toledo and company are back with their first batch of new songs since 2016’s excellent Teens of Denial and what should have been the album of the summer. In any normal year going to hear this live would have been one of the hotter tickets in town, captivating concert-goers with its infectious melodies and soaring spirit, a self-assured danceparty waiting to happen. Instead, like everything else we were left to enjoy it from the confines of our homes, attempting to approximate that communal release from our couch.

For the second album in a row, Toledo leans more towards the electronic elements that filled his 2018 remake of his earlier Twin Fantasy album vs the lo-fi indie guitar of Denial. And while that departure made Fantasy harder to swallow on initial listens, it’s a lot easier to accept this time around now that we know what to expect. Toledo fills a number of songs here with droning keys and samples — from opening “Weightlifters” to “Hymn (Remix),” “Deadlines (Thoughtful),” and the closing “Famous,” the songs seethe with jittery energy like your appendages after four or five espressos.

Others are more straight-forward — the vibrant singles “Can’t Cool Me Down” and “Martin,” the affirmational “There Must be More than Blood” and the anthemic “Life Worth Missing.” All shine, but no Car Seat album would be complete without at least one massive earworm, a song whose buildup and climax are so satisfying they border on exhilarating. Denial had “Drunk Drivers/Killer Whales,” Fantasy had “Bodys,” and this one has “Deadlines (Hostile),” a song I must’ve listened to about a hundred times this year and yet never failed to have me shouting along at the end. Another solid outing from Will the Wunderkind…

2. Run the Jewels — RTJ4: aside from the unending pandemic and the lack of live music, the real reason the previous album didn’t rule the summer was because just after its release, video of George Floyd’s murder in Minneapolis came out and the country exploded in protest — at a man’s excruciating extinguishing under authority’s knee (8 minutes and 46 seconds of absolute agony to watch), at years of systemic racism and injustice that enable things like that to happen, and at the overall deluge of difficulties that hit people this year, sparking a sense of righteous indignation and outrage that spilled into the streets around the world. Arriving a mere one week later, THIS album — with its focused fury and awakened anger gave folks the music they were looking for and the soundtrack to the summer.

As I mentioned way back at the top, this album was the noteworthy exception to the rule this year — while there was a seemingly inexhaustable list of things to be angry about, almost no one except these guys manifested it musically and tackled those topics head-on. Mike and El proved they were up to the task for everyone, though, dropping all the dick jokes and jocular asides scattered across their previous outings for an unflinching, unapologetic assault on everything from racism and slavery to resistance and religion here. It’s an absolute steamroller of an album, again arriving at the perfect moment and representing the best the pair have offered to date. (Their 2017 album also had impeccable timing, released in the aftermath of the 2016 election and capturing some of the national bleakness and despair that resulted — that one landed at #2 on 2017’s list, while their 2014 album landed at #4.)

This one sports a murderer’s row of hard-hitting highlights — from the opening one-two of “Yankee and the Brave” and “Ooh La La” to “Holy Calamafuck,” “Ju$t,” and “The Ground Below,” Mike and El are unsparing, endlessly pummeling you with their verses and their thundering beats. There’s no skimping on the side dishes, either, with some top shelf talent helping them out — from DJ Premier and Pharrell to Zach de la Rocha, Josh Homme, and Mavis Staples, among others. It all adds up to an unrelenting tour de force, one built around the hammer blow centerpiece that is “Walking in the Snow,” which addresses the aforementioned Floyd murder with undeniable power. Another outstanding outing from one of modern rap’s few bright spots…

1. Pottery — Welcome to Bobby’s Motel: having come through the previous four stages of tumult, tranquility, exhilaration, and indignation, we arrive at the end and the thing that will ultimately get us across the finish line — pure, unadulterated adrenaline. This is the album I listened to more than anything else this year by a country mile. (As evidenced by almost each of its 11 songs being in my 2020 Wrapped playlist on Spotify.) Whenever any of those previous stages threatened to tip out of balance and overwhelm, this album was there to give you the energy to keep going — to push thru the pain or manage the anger, to snap out of the fog or keep driving towards that daydream future — the one where you can dance amongst friends, drink amongst strangers, and deliriously drift back and forth between the two.

I found these guys by fluke, seeing the name of their upcoming album on Stereogum and thinking it was a funny way to introduce people to my house, thanks to the moniker of my alter ego. (That and the comedically cheesey cover art, with all its finger gun and mustachioed glory.) Once I heard that first song, though, the gloriously gonzo freak fest that is “Texas Drums Pt I & II,” I was in. Part early day Talking Heads, part weirdo preacher whose choir keeps imploring you to “play those fuckin’ drums for me,” it commanded your attention and got you moving. The rest of the album operates the exact same way, switching styles and speeds like they’re a band possessed.

From the rapid fire drum roll on the opening title track, you’re off on a breathless, joyous sprint for the next 40 minutes. The songs are chameleonic, shifting grooves and melodies two to three times a piece, giving things a fever dream sense of intensity and color. Your temperature fluctuates as frequently as the tempo, oscillating between hot heaters, cooooooooool waaaaaaaaater, and “ooh that’s nice” spaces in between. It’s one of the many regrets this year not getting to see these guys perform this album live — in my head it would be the most frantic, festive variety show you could conjure. Tracks like “Hot Heater,” “Down in the Dumps,” the aforementioned “Drums” and “NY Inn” would all sizzle, while songs like “Reflection” and the swooning gem “Hot Like Jungle” would give you a second to catch your breath and bliss out. Hands down the most reliable good time of the year, this one’s meant to be consumed in its entirety — over and over again…

Echoes of the Past: Old Friends, New Songs

I’ve been having some really strange dreams lately — the other night I was supposed to play in a five on five basketball tournament, but got distracted in the building’s museum separating bales of cotton and missed the game (my dream machine was foot operated, but somehow not otherwise off when I looked up how the f#$k a cotton gin worked on Youtube).  Then last night I was making a mound visit to the Yankees pitcher for some reason when I suddenly, urgently needed to use the bathroom and was worried I was going to sh#$ myself on the diamond.

No idea where any of these things came from — haven’t been studying Southern agriculture or watching the NBA lately (and fu#$ the Yankees) — but suppose it’s just further proof that the prolonged lockdown continues to rot my brain. Thankfully I’ve had some calming companions to ride out the decline with the past few weeks, in the form of new material from a bunch of old favorites.

We’ll start with a half measure, new songs from old albums, and a couple of B-side collections coming out soon.  First up is the upcoming collection from the Kills, who plan to release their album Little Bastards just before Christmas (are we still doing that this year? I’m honestly not sure…) The first single is a demo that dates back to their Midnight Boom days and sounds perfectly in line with all their other stuff (no sitar-laden sidetracks here, thankfully).

Would be cool to hear a more powered up, polished version with Hince’s guitars cranked to the heavens as he stalks the stage live (are we ever doing that again? Not if we don’t save our stages… #RIPUHall), but this is as good as we get right now.  Give “Raise Me” a ride here:

Next comes the surprising news that departed legend Tom Petty (#RIPTP) recorded an entire additional album’s worth of songs back in 1994 when he released the great Wildflowers. Apparently Petty always envisioned that being a double album, but the label didn’t think that would sell so refused to put it out that way.  Petty was thus forced to use some of the material on the She’s the One soundtrack (also solid), while the rest was left to gather dust in his sizeable archives.

Until now, that is.  Petty’s family is thankfully putting the material out as he originally intended next week, with the Wildflowers & All the Rest box set. It will contain not only the original album, but all the missing pieces (including a bunch of alternate versions for songs previously released). His family has released several of the unheard tracks so far (including one only after taking a quiz on Petty’s website) and it really makes you wonder why the label was so resistant.  I’m really looking forward to hearing it how Petty wanted next week — in the meantime take that quiz and listen to “Leave Virginia Alone” here:

We’ll transition now to a trio of updates from three favorites, Kevin Morby, Jeff Tweedy, and Matt Berninger.  Each has new albums coming out soon (some of which we’ve already posted here), but they’ve released more material in recent weeks and two of the three sat down with Stereogum for lengthy interviews in the run-up to the albums.

We’ll start with Morby, whose upcoming Sundowner (due out next week) is a bit of a bridge to the previous two albums in that he recorded most of the songs a while ago, but is only releasing them now.  Reading the interview there’s no disputes with labels that prevented him from doing so, it just didn’t feel like the right time to him then.  (Morby instead recorded and released Oh My God, which landed at #7 on last year’s annual list.)

It took the world shutting down and his going into hibernation in rural Kansas to give the songs their due. We’ve already heard the lovely “Campfire,” as well as the equally outstanding “Don’t Underestimate Midwest American Sun” (which I first heard him play for Willie Nelson back in April — what was that, like two years ago now at this point?) and this week he released the title track, which might be my favorite so far.  It’s simple, stripped down, and pretty — which is just what the doctor ordered these days.

We got to catch Morby and Nathaniel Rateliff doing a livestream from Red Rocks last week, which was pretty fantastic.  Ms Katie was there, too, so a couple songs had all three singing together, which was as close to perfect as I think we’re allowed to get right now.  Next week’s gonna be a good week (at least musically…)  Check out “Sundowner” until then:

Next comes another King of Quarantine, Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy, who in addition to STILL doing his nightly livestream (albeit more sporadically now), has not only found the time to write another book (How to Write One Song, due out this week), but another album as well (Love is the King, due out the following week).  Really makes you question how you’ve spent your lockdown, doesn’t it? (“I’ve cleaned the windows 77 times and………listened to a podcast on illegal fishing…….and…….um…….went for a run……twice?”)

Tweedy just released a Wilco album and solo outing last year (both of which landed at #9 on the annual list), so it’s slightly surprising he’s back so soon — but this being the year of constant, shitty surprises, it SUUUUUUUURE is a welcome alternative!  Tweedy’s released a couple tracks so far (the title track and “Guess Again”) and they’re both solid outings, but thought this one was worth posting based on the cool/comical video.  It sports appearances (albeit only from the nose down) of several famous friends, everyone from Jeff Garlin, Nick Offerman, and Jon Hamm to Seth Meyers, Abbi Jacobson, and Courtney Barnett. It’s a good song, too — see who you can spot in the video here:

Last up in the lineup of old friends is National frontman Matt Berninger, who’s set to debut his first solo album, Serpentine Prison, next week as well. (I TOLD ya next week’s gonna be a good one!) Berninger walks through the recording of the album (produced by soul icon Booker T), as well as a range of other topics in this interview, which is worth a read as it’s a good career retrospective.

As for the album, we’ve heard a couple tracks so far, including the lovely “Distant Axis” and the title track, but wanted to throw this one up, too, since it’s another soft, soothing affair. (We really gotta take it easy on ourselves, guys — sh#$’s getting crazy out there…) It’s right in Berninger’s/National’s wheelhouse, both melodically and lyrically, all merlot glow and tenderness. Embrace the warmth here:


We’ll close with a couple new faces and songs from bands I’ve never really gotten into, despite an inordinate amount of hype.  First up comes the lead single from Buck Meek’s latest solo album, Two Saviors (due out in January).  Meek is the guitarist for indie darling Big Thief, who critics adore, but I’ve never really gotten into. (Although I do like the track “Masterpiece,” for one.)

Meek’ solo stuff is more in the folksy Americana vein, which works a little better, his warbling voice pairing nicely with his acoustic guitar.  The lead single “Second Sight” is in line with his previous outings, calling to mind Avett Brothers and Clem Snide at times with its harmonies.  It’s also lyrically in line with our theme of “take it eaaaaaaaasy, man,” all sunshine, hugs, and loving affirmations.  Just lie back and bask in the glow here:

Last up comes a song from a recent Daniel Johnston tribute concert, which starred several of the folks mentioned above — Morby, Waxahatchee, and Tweedy, as well as Beck, Lucius, and more.  Johnston’s another who’s beloved in the indie world (as evidenced in part by that lineup), but one I’ve never really enjoyed on his own.  His lyrics occasionally veer too far into the nonsensical or overly childish, while my ears almost always fight his thin, shaky voice.

That said — when others perform his songs, I tend to hear what I’ve been missing and understand the fuss.  Built to Spill’s album of Johnston covers from this year is really good (sporting tracks like “Life in Vain,” which we wrote about before), while Tweedy’s rendition of “True Love Will Find You in the End” is one of my absolute, all-time favorites. (Particularly when he does it solo.)

For some reason I need to hear it through others’ ears to get it.  Another case in point is Cut Worms’ version of “To Go Home,” which was the highlight of the tribute concert for me.  Repackaging the melody and allowing the slyly funny chorus to shine in a way it just doesn’t in the original, this one’s a real winner.  Give it a listen here:

That’s it for now — until next time, amici. Stay safe, sane, and sequestered…

— BS

A Wonderful Life — Antics of the Idle(s)

After a few weeks away — what was I doing, you ask? Off on a multi-week journey into the hinterlands, road tripping in search of adventure and a deeper spiritual connection to myself? Long shore fishing off the coast of Maine, bonding with my grizzled shipmates whilst hunting the most dangerous (and delicious) of catches? Ensconced in a remote learning program, studiously discovering the treasures of Portuguese painters or the peccadilloes of Postgres? Sadly, no. It’s pandemia — I’ve done largely the same sh#$ I’ve been doing the past six months — what have you been doing??? (NOT staying home, distancing, and/or masking up? Oh that’s right — that’s why we’re gonna be stuck with this thing until next Christmas…)

Anyway — after a few weeks in hiding, I wanted to make sure the eight of you didn’t worry about me, so am surfacing with a sign of life. (I also found a few items worth sharing, so if you don’t really care about the first part you at least can have a few new tunes to listen to for your troubles…) One recent discovery in my perpetual search for things to keep me interested/occupied was Boston-based Vundabar, whose debut album Antics came on recently and immediately caught my ear. Sounding a bit like Voxhaul Broadcast, Voxtrot, and the Districts (to ruin the Vox-only comparisons), the album sports solid melodies, bright, jangly guitars, and frontman Brandon Hagen’s slight, wispy voice soaring atop it all.

It’s actually an older album — it dropped way back in 2013 — but is a solid listen top to bottom. There’s surf rock instrumentals (“Troubadour”), revved up indie rockers (“Plains,” “Sad Clown”), and more mellow, melodic tracks (“Kalidasa”), along with the occasional splash of punk (“Hives”). They all flow together nicely, as do the tracks on the band’s follow up album, 2015’s Gawk. That one strips some of the variety and remains more monochromatic, but is also a really good listen with some solid, catchy hooks. (“Oulala” and “Darla” being but two examples.)

Their most recent album is a bit of a disappointing departure as they stripped away all the muscular guitars and rawer bits for a smoother, softer (and I would argue “safer”) feel, but I’ve been enjoying the heck out of their first two. See if you agree, with the one that got me hooked in the first place — “Holy Toledo,” off their debut:

Next comes another discovery, again from an older album I missed the first time around. This one’s courtesy of London-based Shopping whose debut album Consumer Complaints came out the same year as Vundabar’s debut, but that’s where the similarities end. The sound is divergent, much more straightforward, energetic post-punk, with grooves that’ll almost get you dancing on occasion. This was another one that crept into my stream somehow, but I’m glad it did. It’s a good mix of attitude and melody, and while later albums watered that down and got repetitive, this one’s got a lot to keep you happy. Check out “In Other Words” here:


We’ll close with some quickies, first with the sad news that Justin Townes Earle, the son of Steve Earle, passed away last week. The singer/songwriter had long struggled with drug addiction and even overdosed several times before, but in recent years seemed to have been on the mend, so his passing is doubly disappointing.

Earle became known for his storytelling lyrics (similar to those of his namesake, Townes Van Sandt, or even his father) and his songs easily walked between more traditional country fare and softer, sadder songs. I always preferred the latter, which always felt more confessional — tracks like “Someday I’ll be Forgiven for This,” “Rogers Park,” or “Mama’s Eyes” each showcased his songwriting skills and his heart. Try the latter, off his 2009 Midnight at the Movies:

Next comes the latest from another singer/songwriter, this time in the form of fave Kevin Morby.  It’s been several months since I had the pleasure of spending time with Morbzahatchee, the two headed treat formed by Kevin and his lady, Ms Katie Crutchfield. Their many livestreams formed the beginning of my lockdown life, but sadly they’ve been away the past few months.  Ms Katie took some time to do a weekly concert series where she’d play one of her albums start to finish, and it sounds like Sir Kevin is planning to do the same soon — including songs from his surprise upcoming album, Sundowner, which should arrive in October.

Morby just released Oh My God last year, which landed at #7 on the annual wrapup.  Somehow he’s got another batch of tunes ready to roll, though, which is in line with his rather prolific pace. (He’s released six albums the past seven years, all of which are really quite good.)  It sounds like a portion of this material (if not all) actually precedes his last album, he just hadn’t felt the time was right for it yet.

Thankfully that time has come, and if the first single is any indication we should be in for more of the same solid songwriting and melodies he’s given us to date. Looking forward to it — check out “Campfire” and its video (which shows some very sweet glances and interactions between the halves of Morbzahatchee) here:

We’ll stick with the singer/songwriter theme one last time, this time for Father John Misty, who’s been busy releasing a bunch of covers lately. (A couple Leonard Cohen tracks, in addition to a T Rex cover this week.) He also dropped a couple new songs in between, one of which is the lovely “To R.,” which sports Misty and a plaintive piano. There’s no news of an impending album, so we’ll have to ride out the tide with these while we wait — give it a listen here:

We’ll stay under the covers a moment longer as White Reaper got into the act, too, recently, doing a version of 80s band Cleaners from Venus’ song “Only a Shadow.” It’s a bit of a surprising choice — despite being from the decade where Reaper finds most of their influences, Cleaners skew much more towards the idiosyncratic, isolationist side of the dial instead of the arena-friendly anthems the band is known for. (Cleaners being the side project of Brit eccentric and solo artist Martin Newell.)

They make it sound like a natural fit, though, soaking the guitars in layers of reverb, while otherwise staying true to the original’s early Cure vibe. It’s a good listen (and like all well-executed covers, a good excuse to explore some of the source material) — give it a ride here:

We’ll close with the latest from Idles, whose upcoming album Ultra Mono should be a perfect soundtrack to the ongoing deluge of dick punches this year has been doling out. The band recently did a trio of live streams from fabled Abbey Road studios, similar to GBV’s plugged in, full band, no crowd offering a month or so ago. And similar to that band’s outing, it was kind of awesome.

The guys mixed up three brisk, brawling sets with songs from each of their albums, along with a couple throwaway covers. (Their homage to their location and the Beatles “Helter Skelter” being a notable exception.) They sounded really tight live, shifting tempos and grooves with all the force and fury of frontman Joe Talbot’s customary delivery.

The new material in particular sounded good, including previously unheard tracks “War” and “Kill em with Kindness,” which finds the band channeling their inner Lizard more than ever to powerful effect. The latter track is an instant favorite, with Talbot’s nonsensical lyrics bouncing off an absolutely irresistible riff — can’t wait til the rest of the album arrives. Enjoy this one in the meantime — I’ve sure been wearing it out this past week.

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

Songs for the Dead — The Drawing of Three

On this week’s edition of Home School Hibernation we find our fabled author doing much the same as before — passing the days logging hard-earned miles on the hunkered down highway with his snoring, farting sidekick asleep on his lap, taking the occasional break to work from his now award-winning toaster oven standing desk instead of the porch or couch, while streaming one of the many daily concerts put out there by similarly shutdown artists.  There’s been solid one-off mini-sets from Hamilton Leithauser and Waxahatchee this week, along with more recurring highlights like the nightly Tweedy Show (which is basically just the Wilco frontman hanging out in his living room while he and his sons crack jokes and sing songs — a space that’s every bit as calm and enjoyable to lounge in as that sounds) or the weekly Thursday night stream from Waxahatchee and Kevin Morby (which finds the couple doing duets, solo tunes, and a bunch of covers).  It’s been a welcome reprieve from what’s otherwise been a really bad news week — aside from the usual corona-related news, which saw us somehow DOUBLE the global death toll in THREE DAYS (?!?!?) while also adding 600,000 confirmed cases in the same time span (stats that are as alarming as how little fanfare they generated in the news), we also lost three music legends — Kenny Rogers, Bill Withers, and John Prine.

Each of these men had a slew of iconic songs — songs almost everyone knows, whether you love them or not — Rogers had “Lady,” “We Got Tonight,” “Islands in the Stream,” and the titanic “The Gambler,” among others.  Withers had “Just the Two of Us,” “Ain’t No Sunshine,” “Lovely Day,” and “Lean on Me,” just to get started. Prine is the lesser known of the three — at least to the general public — but he’s got both a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Grammys and membership in the Songwriters Hall of Fame for tunes like “Illegal Smile,” “Far From Me,” “Spanish Pipedream,” and “Sam Stone.” Perhaps that underdog, everyman status is why so many artists recorded tributes for Prine this week, instead of for Rogers and Withers — he belonged to them, whereas the latter two belonged to everyone.

Rolling Stone had a really good obituary/retrospective on him that’s worth a read — he used to be a mailman in the town my old man was born in, which is wild — but pop on these tributes while you do.  There were three that were quite good, two coming from our aforementioned recurring delights.  The first of those is Kevin Morby singing Prine’s classic “Angel From Montgomery” on last week’s stream (they reprised it as a duet this week after he passed), while the second is Tweedy singing “Please Don’t Bury Me” on his nightly show.  The third is probably the most poignant — Dave Matthews singing “Speed of the Sound of Loneliness” on Colbert, which he gives a mournful, melancholic tone missing from the original.  It’s quite lovely and all three give folks a reason to pay more attention to Prine — his solid storytelling and straightforward, sometimes funny lyrics almost glide by unnoticed with his simple, nonchalant delivery.  May he, Rogers, and Withers all rest in peace.

Three other isolation-related items before leaving our living rooms — first, another highlight from last week’s Thursday night stream was Waxahatchee covering Emmylou Harris’ “Where Will I Be.”  Crutchfield is an Alabama native and she tends to like doing country covers in her shows/streams, so this one’s right in her wheelhouse.  She does it justice, with just a beautiful rendition of the song — give it a listen here (and tune in to them Thursdays — it’s pretty endearing to see such talented individuals interacting just as a couple hanging out, bantering while singing a bunch of great songs, so check em here at 9PM EST):

Next comes a somewhat surprising acoustic offering from PUP frontman Stefan Babcock and the new song “Waiting for Something to Happen.” He and his band of Canadian punks aren’t known for quieter fare (his amped up wail is one of their signatures), so this is an interesting departure.  It’s even got a French horn, for chrissakes?!  It’s a good tune, though — will be curious to see if he shows more of this side in the coming months.  Give it a listen here:

Lastly we’ll close with another plug for the monster quarantunes playlist I wrote about a couple posts ago. Since that time I’ve added another 40 hours’ worth of songs, going waaaaaaaaaaaaaaay further down the rabbit hole than I initially expected, but once you get started it’s kind of a fun little game. (Besides, what the hell else do I have to do with my time?) It’s now over 100 hours and counting, so PLENTY of stuff in there for you to listen to.  I’ve had it on all week while I work and only occasionally get a repeat, so think you should be fine for a good long while.  It’s pretty fun, if I do say so myself — give it a shot if you haven’t already here.


We’ll delve out into the big, bad world now for a few new songs, carefully trying to avoid The Invisible Enemy… (cue scary music and reverb, but DON’T necessarily put on a mask when you go — I mean you can if you want to, but I’m not going to. Sincerely, POTUS.) First comes a song from Kills frontwoman Alison Mosshart who for the first time is having a go as a solo artist.  It’s a slow burning song about recovering from a breakup — not too different sonically from her work with the Kills and Dead Weather — but works just as nicely as a little pandemic anthem. Listen to “Rise” here:

Next comes a little musical version of a home and home series (aw, remember when we had sports? Sniff…) between unexpected opponents — in this case indie band Rogue Wave and underground rap fave Aesop Rock.  A few months ago the latter put out a song with the name of the former — it wasn’t about the band, just a coincidental use of the phrase — but it caught the band’s attention and they decided to respond in kind, releasing a song in Aesop’s name this week.  It similarly is not about the rapper (best I can tell it’s sorta about the fables?), but it’s got a nice little guitar riff and melody.  Give “Aesop Rock” a ride here:

For his part Aesop was busy this week, too, releasing a soundtrack for a video game he did for a friend.  It’s mostly instrumentals, but a couple songs have him dropping verses, the best of which is this one, “Drums on the Wheel.”  Also not sure what this one’s about (something about a pilot in space talking to Major Cigar?), but who the hell cares — it’s a video game. It’s got a good beat and Aesop’s signature flow, that’s all I need.  See what you think here:

We’ll close with a little warmth, from the voice of Nathaniel and the heart of the Hunts, two frequent visitors to the list. For the former Rateliff released a pair of outtakes from his bigger band, the Night Sweats, this week, an instrumental along with this one, whose title earned it immediate entry to the aforementioned playlist.  It’s a statelier affair than the band’s more high energy offerings, which is nice in this climate — I can’t afford to get too excited, that might invite The Invisible Enemy in (no one’s quite sure how he attacks…) — so pour yourself a tall glass of somethin’ tasty and enjoy this one:

Last comes the latest from the brothers and sisters in the Hunts, back with yet another unabashedly earnest song about love. These kids write such pretty, heartfelt songs with such knee-buckling harmonies, it’s really quite remarkable.  They feel like such anomalies — both in the pre-pandemic music scene and the wider world — because of their lyrics, their optimism, and their pure prettiness.  I’m constantly amazed they haven’t had that beaten out of them yet, but every song like this reminds me I’m very thankful they haven’t.  Just close your eyes, pop this on, and picture what life would be like if it was this blissful and serene:

Stay safe out there… –BS

Double Shot Saturday — Andy and a Bunch of Punks

Phew — quite a week we just had there. As the wider world slowly started to shut down — professional sports, music festivals and concerts, marathons, movie theaters, and parades, travel to or from entire continents, etc — it was only fitting that I was concurrently closing up my current job, home to so many heartaches and frustrations over the years. (Nothing says “post-apocalyptic disaster” better than a career in the USG…) So for the first time in nearly a decade as a non-government stooge (and only the second time in nearly 15), I thought I would stop in as a regular human and highlight some new discoveries. (Maybe that’s what’s been holding the readership down all these years!)

There have been a bunch recently — most of the loud, punky variety thanks to my mood as I was winding down my service — but we’ll start with the soft one, a Saskatchewanian named Shauf.  Andy Shauf, to be exact, and I stumbled on him thanks to a recent recommendation list from Esquire.  I didn’t like anything else on said list, but was really happy to find this one.  Back with his fifth album overall, Shauf’s latest follows the model of his previous one and focuses all of the songs on a single theme — his last one was songs about one night at a party, told from the perspectives of the various attendees (aptly titled The Party), while this one centers around one night at a bar, the titular Neon Skyline.

It’s a simple concept, but one that works well as you bounce between the lives and eyes of the various individuals. Shauf’s narratives (and melodies) are at times reminiscent of Paul Simon’s, while others call to mind my beloved Elliott Smith.  Add to that Shauf’s thick Canadian accent (“I’m soary I’m from another port of the country,” instead of “sorry”/”part,” for one example) and his penchant for throwing in clarinet (he grew up playing the instrument, among many others, in his family’s Christian rock band) and you’ve got quite a charming, interesting mix.  It works well, though — both those albums are top to bottom winners, as are his earlier ones.  Warm, calming, and oh so pretty — exactly what we need to take the edge off weeks like the last.  Start with the Simon-y lead single “Neon Skyline” and see if you get similarly hooked, and then jump to the more Elliottesque “Alexander All Alone” from his last one:

For you fellow Dylan Thomas fans not quite ready to go quiet into the night, there’s a trio of brasher bands I came across to fuel your fury (or fever, if you’re infected with corona).  First comes one I got to too late, the defunct LA post-punk band Corners. I came across their debut (and unfortunately only) album, Maxed Out on Distractions, when its lead single “Against It” slipped into my Spotify feed.  It’s a great tune, all jangly guitars and nervous energy, and that got me to explore (and ultimately enjoy) the entire album.  Over the course of its too brief 30 minutes it calls to mind Joy Division moodiness and Rapture-like freneticism, which unsurprisingly makes for a great listen, so it was a real bummer to learn they broke up back in 2016. Seems like the four members grew apart over their two years of touring for the debut and wanted to focus on their solo projects instead of sticking with the band, so this is all we’ll be getting. (They somewhat strangely put out a four track EP last year with leftovers from that 2014 recording session, but nothing else seems forthcoming.) Thankfully we’ve at least got this — start with that first single, “Against It,” which is reminiscent of that Joy Division sound before jumping in “The Spaceship” and riding it to the Rapture:

Next comes another California punk band, this one hailing from the northern part of the state in San Francisco, and another throwback to that 70s sound, albeit more on the early side when The Clash and Sex Pistols were raining fire on everyone. Spiritual Cramp is the band, and while the name may be terrible, the music sure isn’t.  Mixing the aforementioned influences with more modern ones like the Hives, their debut album Television is a blast.  It puts their first two EPs alongside six new tracks (two of which are covers — one from the Pistols, the other from Billy Bragg, oddly enough) and there are a ton of winners in there.  “Television” and “I Feel Bad Bein’ Me” really bring out those Clash reggae elements and driving beat, while “Upset Stomach” and the eponymous “Spiritual Cramp” surface those Hives-ian elements. And then there’s lead single “The Erasure,” which is something else entirely (lead singer Michael Bingham’s mumbled vocals and the bouncing beat almost call to mind early Talking Heads).  It’s a winning mix — start with the lead single and then jump to the burning flame of the band’s name:

Last stop on the Discovery channel takes us to the Emerald Isle, which is fitting with St Patty’s Day right around the corner. The band is another crummily named one — Girl Band — but similar to the others, the quality of their craft is high.  These guys take elements of LCD Soundsystem (frontman Dara Kiely sounds a lot like James Murphy, while their best songs are eminently danceable) and smash them into the noise punk pieces of bands like METZ, which works really well.  The band has released two full lengths — 2015’s Holding Hands with Jamie and last year’s The Talkies — which are solid, if sometimes meandering affairs.  Their first EP, the aptly named The Early Years, though, perfectly captures their sound — fully focused, no fucking around, it’s buttressed by two monster tracks — “Lawman” and the techno cover “Why They Hide Their Bodies Under my Garage?”  Both of them sport infectious beats to draw you in, as well as minute-plus noise-filled freakouts to drive you away, before bringing you back home at the close.  They’re both irresistible, building to a frenzy that’s almost impossible to ignore — off-putting noise explosions or not. Kiely does nothing more in the latter track than hypnotically chant the song title with increasing intensity before unleashing in exhilarating fashion at the end — it’s fantastic. Check both of em out and see for yourself:


We’ll close back in familiar territory with a couple recent releases from some old friends — first comes Kevin Morby with a couple tracks from the recording sessions from his last album, Oh My God. (Which landed at #7 on last year’s list.) There’s nothing drastically different here — just the same winning formula that’s made him such a favored find the past few years — and there ain’t nothin’ wrong with THAT! Check out “Gift Horse” here:

Next comes the latest from Woods, fresh off their supporting role on David Berman’s outstanding Purple Mountains album last year (which landed at #2 on my list). It’s the first single from their upcoming album — Strange to Explain is due out in May — their first since their disappointing 2017 cheeseball, Love is Love. Thankfully this sounds like a return to their more normal fare — still a little folksy, but less overtly hippie dippy than that last one. Let’s hope for more of the same come May!  In the meantime, check out “Where do you go When you Dream?” here:

Up third comes the second single from former Walkmen frontman Hamilton Leithauser’s upcoming album.  Since we last checked in we’ve gotten a release date and title from Ham — The Loves of your Life will be out April 10 — and another song to enjoy. Seems like we’re going to be in for another lush, winning album based on the first two tracks.  Check out “Isabella” and relish Ham’s wondrous, timeless voice:

We’ll stick with Walkmen alum for this next one, too, and the intriguing new side project for that band’s former drummer, Matt Barrick.  Teaming with Interpol frontman Paul Banks and indie hopscotcher Josh Kaufman (he’s played with Bonny Light Horseman, the National, Craig Finn, etc), they’re calling themselves Muzz.  And while the name doesn’t necessarily make a ton of sense (short for muzzle? slang for a morphine buzz? nickname of their best friend Pete Remuzzi?) the music sure does.  Channeling the more languid, laid back vibe of his former band’s later days, Barrick and Co stretch out luxuriantly on the lead single “Bad Feeling.” There’s no word on a broader album yet, but I’m sure hoping one is coming — check out the appetizer here:

And we’ll close where we started, back in the midst of a tumultuous global crisis and at the end of a long, frustrating chapter in my professional life.  What better soundtrack than the newly reunited Rage for such fare? I’ve been listening to these guys a lot lately, thanks in part to the news of their upcoming tour (which, assuming the world doesn’t end I shall be attending), but particularly as I wrapped up my service to Uncle Sam and finally decided to leave.  The first time I tried this ten years ago I left feeling a lot more optimistic — I’d suffered less battle damage, was moving back to my favorite place on earth and planning to get married, and while disappointed the job didn’t work out, I didn’t feel as let down — it was more unfortunate than anything else.  My walkout song therefore mirrored those sentiments — the joyous climax of the Pumpkins’ “Rocket” perfectly captured that feeling of breaking free from what was holding you down and shooting off into the blissful expanse of the unknown.

This time, I’m a lot angrier.  I’ve got ten more years of incessant battling, ten more years of frustration, bitterness, and disappointment — and the resulting damage they’ve inflicted — coursing through my arteries. Ten more years of momentary highs and major letdowns clogging my brain. The analogy I’ve kept using is one of an abusive relationship — you still care about/love the person (or in this case, place), still feel like just maybe it’ll be better tomorrow, maybe it’ll be that thing you fell in love with and felt so fulfilled by again, that thing that formed such a large part of your persona and an even bigger part of your life.  If only they would stop ignoring you, or worse, beating the ever-loving shit out of you.  Over. And over. And over.

Just like those relationships, though, at some point you reach a point where you know that’s likely not going to happen.  Where you know you have to put yourself, your happiness, and your safety first.  Where you finally decide you no longer want to deal with that and walk away.  (And that in walking away you are not a quitter, or a pussy, or avoiding work because it’s hard, but have done everything you possibly could to salvage things and it still wasn’t enough — and that’s ok — because some things aren’t fixable, and some things aren’t yours to fix.)

Just like those relationships, everybody’s tolerance is going to differ and so, as a result, will their breaking point.  I reached mine this year — and then a hundred times over again — so knew it was time to go.  That chapter came to a close yesterday — with a final toast from the person I respect most from my time there — before playing this walkout song as I drove away from the building.  It aptly captures my current mood and comes courtesy of the aforementioned Rage — for as Zach sings with increasing intensity and anger, I ain’t gonna work on Maggie’s farm no more…

Until next time, amici… (BTW, added another location to the travel pages on the right — Philly in tha house!)

–BS

 

And the Beat Goes On (La Dee Da Dee Dee) — The Best Music of 2019

What the fuck just happened? That’s mostly a rhetorical question – I’m up on the smorgasbord of smiles that are our current events and know I engorged myself like a feudal tsar for the holiday yesterday — but it’s also a question that’s emblematic for the year we just completed.  Because, honestly – what the fuck just happened?

If you had to tell someone about 2019, what would you say? Or worse, if you had to differentiate it from 2018, could you even do it?  Almost non-stop political nonsense? Check. Ongoing punishment and infuriation at work? Check. Equally unstoppable joy and happiness from my farting furball? CHECK. (The dog, not Mad Dog — although…) Some good concerts and gatherings with friends? Yep.  A few good trips and meals? You know it.  Attempts to get out of this glorious place successful for almost everyone but me? You know it, buddy! And so that’s why I struggle to sum up what the fuck actually happened this year – it just feels like a blur, a fuzzed up, foggy image of the one that came before it. 

If last year was about hunkering down and waiting for the thaw, finding sanctuary through separation and happiness through hermitry, this year was about perseverance and perspective, continuing to confront last year’s themes while trying to find silver linings, momentum, and your footing after falls. For unfortunately (though not surprisingly, sadly), there were many — personally, professionally, as a sentient human being alive on this planet.  The variety and bounty for all three could feel overwhelming at times. Truth be told, most days I feel I’d need a rocket to clear the sides of the ruts I’m in. That’s where the back half of the duo comes in — it wasn’t enough to merely smash through the impediments as has been the habit of recent years (just grind it out and wait for the thaw, Bobby!), there were simply too many setbacks for that.  You’d be like the plow driver blasting through snowdrift after snowdrift, one right after the other, who ends up in a ditch because they’d lost sight of the road.

No, this year required something extra, something more nuanced than brute force or capacity for punishment – perspective.  The window by my desk at work is the perfect example – if you look out it one way, all you see is dumpsters and mountains of trash.  (None of which are actually on fire, it only feels that way based on how the days go…) If, however, you shift your gaze slightly to the left, you see far better things – trees, bushes, and behind them the parking lot, which contains the car that will take me away from all the misery in a few short hours.  That’s the half I choose to focus on each day and the choice I explain to people who often come by and comment on the crummy view — you can focus on the trash, or focus on the stuff surrounding it (particularly the path away from it). That choice cropped up over and over and that mindset was repeatedly tested this year.

The trick was to find ways to make some of the losses seem like victories – continue to flail away at work, despite rising in the organization and gathering more and more support for your projects/ideas?  That’s ok, I don’t need (or want) to work for you guys anymore – time to find myself another crew.  Didn’t get the job I wanted (slash created for myself — again) overseas?  That’s alright, I didn’t really want to work there anyway – time to redouble my efforts to GTFO and get us back to the Chi. Wifey similarly frustrated with her job and the city we’re stuck in? That’s cool – she’s just about to launch her side hustle as a way of getting out of both. (And now that I’ve told all eight of my readers she’ll HAVE to stop procrastinating and launch her dang website already!)

Latching onto those silver linings and seeing those losses in slightly different terms was critical because this year the disease spread and even the things you loved most started to disappoint — be it at work, outside, or in the music world.  There were an inordinate number of albums by beloved bands that really let you down — the National, Kanye, Foals, Bon Iver, Local Natives, Brittany Howard, Silversun Pickups, the Raconteurs, Local Natives, and the absolute devastator – the synth-pop blob (and partial subsequent breakup) from titans Sleater-Kinney — to say nothing of the ones who made the list that equally tested you initially (as you will read about shortly).  That said, if you were able to find the aforementioned perspective — that elusive flashlight rolling on the floor while the monsters bear down on you in the darkness – there were an equal number worth enjoying for what they were.

That’s what you’ve got in front of you – the seventeen albums from our six newcomers and nine returnees that may not represent perfection, but show the value of that extra effort. Because aside from the top three, which are uniformly excellent (honestly I think there’s one song between the three of them I don’t really like) almost all of the remaining entries had something about them that either annoyed or disappointed on first listen.  Whether it’s pointless instrumentals or tracks that contain nothing but nature sounds, somewhat clunky lyrics or odd stylistic departures – each had something that stopped me from loving them immediately, but with time and the year’s two themes I was able to get there in the end. So essentially what you’ve got below is the audio version of the window near my desk – eleven entries that take a little work to see the right way; that may initially look more like disappointing throwaways than winning views of nature and the way home. Or in other words, pretty perfect reflections of the year that was and what it took to get through it.


14. Cage the Elephant – Social Cues: after discovering what all the fuss was about a few years ago when I caught these guys live, with their unbridled energy and giant sing-along hooks that sent tens of thousands of onlookers into a tizzy, it’s an even more jarring juxtaposition to hear the band on this album.  With its open embrace of the 80s, both in style and instrumentation (yes, the reviled synthesizer shows up more prominently here), it seems expected that I not like this album – particularly in a year where so many previous favorites had dropped disappointments – but somehow this one held up. Truth be told, I still prefer albums like Melophobia and Tell Me I’m Pretty, but this one has enough of the key Cage elements to latch onto over time.  

There are less unvarnished, high tempo guitar songs than on those outings – opening “Broken Boy” and “Tokyo Smoke” are probably the only ones that make that cut – with the bulk of the rest falling into a more languid dance groove that’ll have you swaying, arms flailing loosely like noodles rather than jumping around in a pique.  Songs like “Social Cues,” “Skin and Bones,” “The War is Over,” lead single “Ready to Let Go,” even “Dance Dance,” whose title tells you exactly what they ostensibly want you to do – they all fall into this midtempo, woozy vibe like you’re day drunk in the summer and struggling to stand upright in the heat.  It still works, though, as enough of those other elements are there (however muted) over time – the winning melodies, the infectious hooks, singer Matt Shultz’s lyrics, which despite being about divorce this time, will still have you wanting to shout them along with him.  That relationship’s demise likely informed the change in style and tone, but the band handles it well – even the quietest, most stripped back songs “Love’s the Only Way” and “Goodbye” draw you in, with scarcely more than Shultz and his wounds to keep you company.  It’s an interesting evolution, one that could have gone horribly awry, but the fact that it didn’t speaks to the band’s mettle and the merit in keeping an eye on them.

13. Guards – Modern Hymns: arriving unexpectedly like a Christmas card from your childhood neighbor is the latest from these guys, the band’s first sign of life in over six years. When we last heard from them they’d just dropped their debut album, In Guards We Trust, which landed at #17 on 2013’s list. After that, though, the band all but disappeared — absent a rogue single or two, they went silent.  I’m not sure what was going on (the venerable Allmusic’s last update has their “sophomore album expected in 2015,” so even they’re in the fog), but thankfully the band seems no worse for the wear with their return.  There’s no dramatic style change — no marimbas and ukuleles, or whale calls reverberating in the background — just another batch of bright, sunny psychedelic pop to make your eardrums smile.

From the opening “Skyhigh” to “Take my Mind,” “Destroyer,” and “Last Stand,” frontman Richie James Follin belts out one soaring sermon of positivity after another, channeling that early MGMT sound from their debut.  Tracks like “You Got Me” and “Away” add a little guitar-based edge to the mix, but nothing clouds the daylight over the album’s 11-song duration – just blue skies and sunshine for as long as it lasts. Pop it on and bliss out for a bit…

12. Chemical Brothers – No Geography: This hasn’t been a year where I’ve felt much like dancing – more like punching every person or thing I’ve encountered repeatedly in the face – but that’s not a knock on the Chems and the quality of their work.  The Brothers are back with their 9th studio album – their first since 2015’s Born in the Echoes, which landed at number 10 on that year’s list – and it’s more of a throwback to their late 90s/early aughts heyday than any of their recent outings.  Gone are the big name guest stars and more ambient explorations of the last few albums and in their stead are a back to basics mix of choice samples and simple hooks, which result in a solid (and at times stellar) set of songs to fuel your workout (or housecleaning, as the case may be).

You hear it from the outset, as the bass line from opener “Eve of Destruction” instantly calls to mind tracks like “Leave Home” or “Block Rocking Beats” from the duo’s first two albums.  This seems intentional since they reportedly dusted off the gear used to record those two albums for this one, so those touchstones are prevalent throughout.  “Eve” drops seamlessly into “Bango,” which is another vintage turn (“I won’t back down, give me my thunder” was quite a fun phrase to shout along this year), songs like “Got to Keep On” and the title track have some of the classic, cathartic breaks of yesteryear, while things like “The Universe Sent Me” harness a smoldering intimacy not normally seen from the big beat boys. (Thanks in no small part to Norwegian singer Aurora’s vocals, which burn like brushfire through the track.)

Being masters of sequencing and knowing how to work a setlist, the brothers save the best three tracks for the climax, the triple threat of “We’ve Got to Try,” “Free Yourself,” and “MAH,” which send you into a blissful tizzy before the downbeat fade of “Catch Me I’m Falling.” (“MAH” might be the best thing they’ve recorded in years, in fact – an irresistible gem guaranteed to get you jumping, no matter the time or place.)  Another solid outing from the boys from Britain – keep em coming, lads.

11. White Reaper – You Deserve Love; PUP – Morbid Stuff: this slot’s for the brash young whippersnappers and a healthy dose of good old fashioned rock and roll.  Heavy on the guitars and even moreso on the attitude, both of these are unvarnished delights for those nights where you don’t want to think about much of anything, you just want to let your hair down and thrash about a bit.  The front half belongs to the Kentucky boys of Reaper and their third album, which doubles down on the swagger and the arena style rock of the 80s. (One thing this band has never lacked has been confidence as their first album was titled White Reaper Does it Again, only to be outdone in terms of braggadocio by their second album title, The World’s Best American Band.) The rougher edges of their earlier albums have all been sanded down at this point, replaced by a high studio shine characteristic of that era’s cocaine laden polish, and it mostly works. 

Songs like the opening “Headwind,” along with singles “Real Long Time” and “Might Be Right” are head to the rafters howlers, while ones like “1F,” “Eggplant,” and the title track are buoyant, bouncing winners.  The band pulls it off thanks to their unbridled energy and absolute earnestness – what could come across as campy or insincere instead screams like a siren through the fog (or a double-necked axe cranked all the way to 11, as it were).  These guys 100% believe rock is going to save you, and they’re here to administer an enormous, life-altering dose. Frontman Tony Esposito’s nasally voice remains a polarizer, but is perfectly suited to the material, squeaking and squealing clear as day above the howling din of guitars. This one’s a textbook simple pleasure – it’s not going to light the world on fire lyrically or emotionally, but fuck if we don’t need something this purely fun, particularly these days.

PUP’s album keeps that vibe going, leaving behind some of the 80s sheen and sonic cheese in lieu of a slightly rougher, punkier feel and some sharper lyrics focused on death and depression. (The opening line is “I was bored as fuck, sitting around and thinking all this morbid stuff — like if anyone I’ve slept with is dead,” to give one example.)  Which is by no means to say this is a mopey, sad sack affair – frontman Stefan Babcock (whose high volume scream-sing is also a polarizer) retains his snarky sense of humor (the lead single off their last album was titled “If This Tour Doesn’t Kill You, I Will”), which pairs with a similar “pedal to the medal” velocity as Reaper and makes this another unvarnished blast of energy.

Lead singles “Kids” and “See You at Your Funeral,” as well as the title track, “Closure,” Sibling Rivalry,” and “Bloody Mary, Kate and Ashley” are all infectious updates to “Tour” and unbridled sprints towards the finish line. You wouldn’t necessarily expect this much spunk and gusto from a bunch of Canucks, but these guys make it seem effortless and automatic — they’re three for three at this point.  Another winning addition to the arsenal and another 30-odd minutes of pure fun.

10. Catfish and the Bottlemen – The Balance; Liam Gallagher – Why Me? Why Not.: this pairing’s for the unchanging anthemics from the island, a pair of acts from England who do what they do, don’t care if you like it, and don’t change it for anyone. Back with their third album (and their third on these lists – their debut landed at #11 in 2015 while their second landed at #10 the following year), Catfish returns from three years away sounding almost exactly as they did on previous outings.  Which as noted in reference to other bands straying from their characteristic sounds this year, is welcome news.  Some bands have the wherewithal and/or insatiable need to shed their previous incarnations like last season’s pantsuits.  Others, however, are quite happy to continue exploring the range available within their current wardrobe (“what if I pair it with this sexy new turtleneck or – GASP – this white belt!”) – Catfish fall squarely into the latter category, and thankfully for us there’s still a considerable amount of room in their closet for them to maneuver. 

The recipe remains the same – high energy, guitar driven songs with enormous, anthemic hooks powered by frontman Van McCann’s booming vocals – and the winners remain bountiful.  From lead single “Longshot” to tracks like “Fluctuate,” “2all,” “Conversation,” and “Mission,” it’s almost impossible to not get caught up in the soaring swells. It’s also almost impossible to get the band to slow down – minus the brief calm of “Intermission” and the slow open to the closing “Overlap,” the album is essentially a sprint.  Brisk, high tempo, and every bit as invigorating as an early winter jog, this one’s another solid entry from the boys in Britain.

As for Liam and his second solo album, the former Oasis frontman shows he’s not messing with the formula that earned him legions of fans across the globe – hard-charging rockers, punch you in the face attitude, and that singular voice (familiar to millions, indeed, and one of the best rock ones around). Throw in the occasional big-hearted ballad and you’ve got a winning mix – one his former band rode for well over a decade.  As on his debut (which landed at #11 on 2017’s list), Liam shows while some of the spark will always be missing when not paired with his brother (who released two solid EPs himself this year with his High Flying Birds), he’s plenty strong enough to stand on his own.

Songs like “Shockwave,” “Halo,” “Be Still,” and “The River” are all straight-ahead, pedal to the medal winners, while tracks like “One of Us,” “Once,” and “Now That I’ve Found You” find Liam in more wistful waters, singing to his family about the early days or his unvarnished love for them.  These highlight one of the distinctions between Liam and his brother – you aren’t going to get “champagne supernovas” or other lyrical flourishes to deftly describe emotions here.  You instead get sometimes clunky odes about going down as easy as a glass of wine or being someone’s mittens and coat to combat the cold.  And that’s ok – you don’t go to Liam for subtlety or nuance, you go to him for blunt, open honesty (he’s called his brother “one of the biggest cocks in the universe” – as well as a potato, for some reason – and Bob Dylan a “miserable cunt,” for example). So similar to some other entries on the list, if you take it for what it is and not what you want it to be – ie a simple, solid rock album vs an Oasis-like masterpiece  – then you’ll find plenty to enjoy here. Keep it comin’, Liam…

9. Wilco – Ode to Joy; Jeff Tweedy – Warmer: in what’s largely become the sonic equivalent of church bells ringing on the hour, Tweedy and his merry band of hometown heroes are back with more music and back on another year end list, as tireless and reliable as clockwork. For the broader band they’re back with their first album since 2016’s Schmilco (which landed at #9 on that year’s list) and their fifth overall placing on these annual wrapups. (They were #9 in 2007, the top album in 2009 and #11 in 2011.) As for Tweedy on the solo front, he’s back with the companion piece to last year’s Warm, which landed at #15 on that list. Both are solid, if somewhat subdued affairs, as warmly soporific as a half bottle of cabernet in front of the fire. 

Here as on last year’s solo outing Tweedy sings with all the force of someone facedown on the floor, whether from emotional fatigue or the aftermath of that metaphorical foray with the bottle.  Either way it fits the overall mood nicely, with songs like “Before Us,” “One and a Half Stars,” “White Wooden Cross,” and lead single “Love is Everywhere (Beware)” shimmering like heat waves in that aforementioned hearth.  Tracks like “Everyone Hides” and “Hold Me Anyway” are only slightly more energetic (though equally lovely) before simmering back into the punchdrunk haze and the same pattern holds on the solo album.  Songs like the opening “Orphan,” “And Then You Cut it in Half,” “Sick Server,” “Landscape,” and “Evergreen” are all gorgeous glowing embers, while “Family Ghost,” “…Ten Sentences,” and “Empty Head” blaze hotter momentarily before dying back down. Both albums will help beat back the blackness of the day – bask in the glow and embrace the heat.

8. Vampire Weekend – Father of the Bride; The Orwells – The Orwells: this slot marks a first – not in terms of appearance on the year end lists here (Vampire landed at number 7 in 2013 and just outside the cut in 2008 and 10, while the Orwells landed at #1 in 2017 and #8 in 2014), but in terms of making the list despite my never actually buying the albums.  The first of two such albums, I never pulled the trigger on purchasing either of these (though for dramatically different reasons) and yet still found myself captivated by them to varying degrees throughout the year.  For Vampire I shied away in part for trivial personality principles (I was annoyed at the higher than normal price point), in part because the sight/sound of HAIM members triggers me like a strobe does an epileptic (and we’ve got one on at least five songs here), but primarily because the quirky, hyperliterate indie band I used to love seems long since gone.  In its place is this weird amalgam of children’s songs and soundtrack music, and the combination of those caveats left me avoiding buying the album.

The band had experimented with the latter sound on 2013’s Modern Vampires, balancing it with their characteristic (at the time at least) island guitars and clever wordplay, but they’ve almost completely purged that old sound since then for this new direction. And so upon initial listens I rejected it like a donor kidney. I kept coming back to it, though – fragments of the already fragmentary songs would get stuck in my head on waking.  The strange children’s chorus in the opening “Hold You Now,” snippets of lyrics from “Bambina,” “Big Blue,” or “2021,” or those gorgeous melodies on songs like “Harmony Hall” and “Unbearably White.” I’d keep streaming the songs and before I knew it I’d listened to the album’s 18 songs a dozen times over.  And minus one exception (I still hate “My Mistake” and skip it every time) they’re all pretty damn good songs.  Not what I necessarily want from Vampire Weekend or anything I’m going to put on to plumb a particular mood, but whenever the songs come on, they’re always pleasant arrivals. 

That speaks to that cinematic quality the band has harnessed – similar to Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, you’re never going to think of this when you’re mad/sad/ready to rock, but you could easily see a number of the songs playing perfectly over your random indie flick or range of commercials.  They’re not emotionally resonant on their own, tying into feelings you’re already having or sparking them anew (pick your random Elliott song for sadness or heartbreak or Rage/NIN for anger or intensity, say), but they conjure impressions of them well, similar to the difference between an Ansel Adams and a Manet. Clearly there’s merit and beauty in both, they’re just different ways to tackle a subject.  And while it wasn’t what I wanted/expected (or felt like paying for – fuck you Ezra and your $12.99 asking price.  I wasn’t married in the gold rush!) it sure was an enjoyable soundtrack to plenty of passing moments throughout the year.

As for the other half of this slot’s “streaming only” tandem, the Orwells’ album represents the year’s most problematic entry. Initially one of the biggest surprises, as I was not expecting any new music from these guys – ever – having broken up in an ignominious swirl of accusations of sexual assault and rape, I was overjoyed to see the brief mention online linking to the YouTube channel of the new material (one of the very few times I saw anything written on the album – more on that later). That initial surprise at even existing quickly shifted to surprise over what I was listening to – aside from the keyboard announcing the very first song (which may have caused as much stomach-dropping anxiety as the plane suddenly losing thousands of feet in altitude mid-flight (“FUCKFUCKFUCKFUCK…”)), this was decidedly not the same band whose guitar-driven, bratty gems had made them such a runaway personal favorite.  THAT band was the spinach to my Popeye – something that flipped a switch in my brain whenever I got a taste and made me feel like I could tackle a Toyota.  THIS band…….well, this sounded like some sort of lounge act you stumbled in on in a dingy old dive bar – at least at first.

There were a couple tracks that sounded sorta like the old band – “The Boxer” and “Silver Medal” were probably the closest examples – but most of the other songs were completely different.  They either were full on crooners (“Nightclub,” “Interlude,” “Last Days in August”) or these hybrids where you could hear the guitars, but they had a more muted, nightclub swing to them vs the untamable bolts of lightning they were before (“No Apologies,” “Aisle #10,” “REC”). The image that kept coming to mind while I listened was of Michael J Fox playing the Enchantment Under the Sea dance – you know he wants to drop some unbridled, high energy Chuck Berry on you, but he’s being forced to keep it under wraps so as not to piss off Principal Strickland.  That image made me wonder whether the band was doing the same thing here, deliberately reining in their wilder impulses and “fuck you” attitude in an attempt to show some contrition (or at least fog their former image some – “what? We’re not wild boys, we’re just a wholesome little lounge act!”) in the face of those horrible allegations. 

And that’s why this entry is so problematic.  I’ve written about it several times this year already, but aside from the initial announcements of the album’s existence, virtually nothing has been written about the band or the album, and that pisses me off.  It pisses me off because of the double standard for how others with comparable claims are treated in the media.  It pisses me off because there’s nothing more ON those allegations and what, if anything, is happening with them.  It pisses me off because if they’re true and these guys were such well-known terrible people, as is often noted in the articles from the time of their breakup, the venues they regularly played at should be held accountable, too, for seemingly doing nothing to warn or protect the patrons about the danger they might be in. (How many of the girls went to the shows in places where “everyone knew” what shitbags these guys were and then found themselves in positions they couldn’t get out of?  Subways post signs about the danger of touching the third rail and nuclear facilities highlight the threat of radiation – if this REALLY was such a well-known danger, then why the fuck was nothing clearly said or done?) And it pisses me off because, despite it not being what I wanted (there’s that theme again!), I really came to like the album for what it was and would like to read others’ thoughts/analysis of it and how it came to be.

What were the recording sessions like? Was the whole band there or just portions and that’s why it sounds different?  Was it a deliberate decision to change the sound up so much or did it just happen spontaneously?  Were you alluding to the allegations in some of the lyrics or something else? (“I’m a broken record talking about my past…”; “Go ahead and keep me out of mind – no one here’s what you’re sayin’…”; “All year long getting manic with regret – never seen him this upset…”) Also (and most importantly) – WHAT THE FUCK IS UP WITH THOSE ALLEGATIONS? That we get no answers to any of these questions, instead just treating the album, the band, and the very serious alleged crimes like they don’t exist or didn’t happen, is extremely frustrating – particularly in an age where people talk about EVERYTHING.  Unceasingly, unintelligently, and unapologetically in most cases – but they at least talk.  Trying to ignore things like this is like trying to deny the existence of oxygen. And yet here we are – so I will continue to wonder why this band is held to a different standard and why we’re ignoring the contents of every inhalation, I will continue to wonder what the band is doing and whether they will be made to pay for their alleged crimes or be exonerated, and I will continue to listen to this album (only streaming – I still can’t quite convince myself it’s OK to buy it), enjoying it for what it is, and wonder what everyone else thinks.  Mario aptly captured my sentiments, while perhaps alluding to some of the others’ silence – “I’m only resting – still on your side, but it’s getting messy…” Indeed.

7. Kevin Morby – Oh My God: if the theme of the year was trying to meet people/things on their own terms instead of with your own preconceptions/notions, Morby’s is a case study of how/why that can be so difficult.  Back with his fifth full length, Morby is one of my favorite finds in recent years and someone I’ve written about a bunch here. Each of his previous three albums made these year-end lists – they landed at #4 in 2017, #6 in 2016, and #10 in 2014, respectively. So when I heard he was recording an album all about God (not the only perennial favorite to do so this year) I didn’t panic initially. I did, however, have plenty of expectations that initially prevented me from really embracing this album.

First, there’s the aforementioned topic, which is never going to capture my heart or mind, whether it’s Kevin, Kanye, or the King himself singing about it. Second, there’s a lyrical laziness on certain songs that’s jarringly uncharacteristic (multiple songs find Morby chanting/singing some variation of “oh my god/oh my lord” over and over again.) And then there’s all the seemingly pretentious “artistic” flourishes and twists – the sudden stop of “OMG Rock and Roll” that breaks into a choir, the spoken word talk out to the previously lovely “Savannah,” the sax and piano instrumental “Ballad of Kaye,” and the literal song about the weather, “Storm (Beneath the Weather),” which is a minute and twenty seconds of thunderstorm noises.  Each of these were minor, persistent annoyances that kept getting in the way of unfettered enjoyment, like someone howling atonally amidst a dozen carolers. (Voice immodulation is a cruel disorder – donate generously…)

Eventually, though, I began to gloss over those annoyances and find myself able to focus on the album’s many strengths – the album’s opening singles “No Halo” and “Nothing Sacred / All Things Wild” are both great, the run of “Seven Devils,” “Hail Mary,” “Piss River,” and the front half of “Savannah” are all lovely, and then deeper cuts “Sing a Glad Song” and “O Behold” close the album on a warm, winning note. They don’t absolve the aforementioned annoyances or make this into something it’s not (one of Morby’s best, for example), but for what it is, it’s pretty fantastic – another solid batch of beautiful songs, courtesy of that amazing voice and artist.

6. The Black Keys – Let’s Rock!: back with their ninth full length album (their first since 2014’s Turn Blue, which landed at #2 on that year’s list), Dan and Pat offer yet another entry in this list that established the theme.  In part because of who the band is – a favorite duo (they’ve showed up on three year end lists, including #1 in 2008 and #1.5 in 2011, aside from the aforementioned 2014) who’ve offered years’ worth of fuzzed up gems – and in part because of what I’ve been craving after the past few years of near constant punishment – pure, unadulterated rippers to blow off some steam – I was eagerly looking to this album to give me one guaranteed win.  Once I saw the title of the album (corny as it might be) I thought for sure I was safe — as you’ve seen so many times so far, though, it wasn’t that simple.  Instead of the untethered rock album I was looking for, what I got needed to be taken on its own terms and appreciated accordingly.

And what it is is essentially an audible Arnold Palmer — half a Keys record, and half an Auerbach solo album.  So while what I really wanted was just a tall, cool glass of sweet tea (fresh from the delta and the blues that inspired the band’s sound), like almost everything this year, I ended up having to take a little lemonade (which is no knock on Auerbach’s solo stuff – his last one landed at #12 on 2017’s list). Similar to that drink, though, once you get past a potential singular craving for either of its component parts, what you’re left with is still pretty damned refreshing. From the sweet tea side, the opening triple of “Shine a Little Light,” “Eagle Birds,” and “Lo/Hi,” along with later tracks like “Every Little Thing” and “Go” are solid stompers, while “Walk Across the Water,” “Tell Me Lies,” and “Sit Around and Miss You” are tasty treats from the land of lemons. The band’s time in Nashville (Auerbach’s Easy Eye studio is there) shines through on tracks like “Get Yourself Together” and “Fire Walk With Me,” which are among my favorites and are so infectious they should have a line dance associated with them. (I may have constructed one myself when moved by the tunes, which Wifey is convinced is going to spontaneously break out across the audience at a show and help us become best friends with Dan and Pat.) It’s a solid listen – maybe not what I wanted/needed, but an enjoyable collection of songs showing the band do what they do best, while also adding some new elements to the mix.

5. Guided by Voices – Zeppelin Over China/Warp and Woof/Sweating the Plague: here to challenge this year’s theme by pummeling you with sheer volume, GBV put out a remarkable SEVENTY EIGHT songs this year across THREE distinct albums. The amount isn’t really the surprise here – GBV has always been exhaustingly prolific, almost to the point you can’t keep up with them (by their own count they’ve released over a 100 albums/EPs, including four the past three years NOT including these three, and that total doesn’t count the numerous side projects and solo albums of frontman Bob Pollard that pop up with almost the same frequency as the sun). What is a little surprising is how good so many of the songs are. Normally GBV albums are a hit or miss affair, as Dr Bob definitely subscribes to the quantity over quality side of the time-honored debate. (Or to be more generous, he’s much more concerned about capturing moments in time – thoughts, melodies, performances – as they happen, rather than trying to force or mold them into something artificial and “perfect.” It’s the same as those who try to stage the perfect photo, everyone staring at the camera and smiling just so, vs those who like the candid, unannounced shots (I’ll let you guess where I fall…))

And while he may not be as good or strict an editor on the albums, he certainly is in person.  That’s why for years my way of keeping up with their prodigious output was to go see the band live – because one thing Dr Bob knows how to do is craft a killer setlist.  The band’s trademark epic performances – often barking on the heels of three hours long – contain none of the filler or weaker songs from the albums. (They actually used to have a quota system in the early days for the EPs – “two hits and four throwaways” – but thankfully that seems to have disappeared.) Live the guys come ready to deliver a knockout, every single night, which means they’re only bringing their choicest material – so if they include it in their set, you know it’s the best of what’s available. 

When I saw them earlier in the year for Zeppelin, they played several new songs that immediately caught my ear (“My Future in Barcelona,” “The Rally Boys,” “Step of the Wave”), but they were mostly mixed in with older material at that point.  By the time I saw them last month, though, there was a solid 30-40 minutes where I didn’t recognize any of the songs, but they were good so kept trying to remember lines/titles so I could listen to them later. When I looked at the setlist the following day and saw that exactly half of the show was songs from these three albums (including virtually all of Plague), that tells you everything you need to know about how the band views these things.  They see it as some of their strongest material, and listening through I can’t really argue with them. 

There are a TON of really good songs scattered across them — “Bury the Mouse,” “Dead Liquor Store,” “Cohesive Scoops,” “Photo Range Within,” “Blue Jay House,” “My Angel,” “Cool Jewels and Aprons,” “Coming Back from Now On”  — and that’s just some of the best songs from Warp!  It’s a staggering amount of goodness from any band, let alone a band that’s been going as long as these guys.  That they still have this much fire and freshness at this stage in their career is amazing – and they allegedly have at least two albums on tap for next year, so we’ll hopefully see a lot more of them soon. In the meantime, settle in and stroll through the forest of these three – it’s a hell of a hike.

4. Tool – Fear Inoculum: if GBV tested the year’s theme in song volume, these guys test it in song duration, as this puppy has some serious playtime across its six songs. Aside from the recent Gang Starr album (which despite the head-scratching mechanics of delivering an album with a vocalist who’s been dead for nearly ten years, was sadly underwhelming), the reappearance of these guys was the year’s most pleasant surprise.  It’s been thirteen years since their last album, 10,000 Days (a title that unknowingly seems to have been foreshadowing the approximate amount of time until the next one), and in the interim the band’s legions of fans endlessly speculated on whether they’d ever return or if frontman Maynard James Keenan was more content to spend his days fiddling with the grapes on his vineyard in Arizona rather than the ornate time signatures and twisted imagery of his band.  Thankfully, he opted for the latter and they came back with a doozy. They tried to fuck it up, throwing in derailers like aimless instrumentals (three of them) and the epitome of rock pretension, a standalone five minute drum solo. (It’s even more ridiculous live, with drum deity Danny Carey standing at a giant gong for several minutes, playing various rhythms with no other accompaniment, before shifting to the full kit and bashing away for several more minutes. Note — there is only one drum solo ever recorded that people want to listen to more than once – John Bonham’s “Moby Dick.” Everything else is just gratuitous, pointless racket, regardless of the skill of the drummer (and Carey is exceptional).)

That said, similar to several other list mates that challenged your ability to take things on their own terms and not get caught up in what you wanted them to be, this was both the ultimate test of and payoff for succeeding at that this year. Because while there were only six actual songs on the album once you stripped out the aforementioned nonsense, each of them was over ten minutes long, so had as many twists and turns as the California coastline to enjoy. What’s more, each of these mini epics was host to some of the most mind-shredding moments you could ask for – from the ominous open of the title track and its shivering guitar part by Adam Jones, which sizzled similar to the circuitry in your brain that was frying, to the back half explosions of almost every other song on the album – “Pneuma,” “Invincible,” and “7empest” being but three examples (the latter of which showcased both the dumbest lyrics – see? There’s that test again! – about tempests being just that (wha?), in addition to the absolute best break of the year, a visceral release that liquefies your knees and destroys your brain every single time.) Yes, Maynard’s lyrics are mostly ridiculous gibberish about warriors and spirits and other nonsensical psychobabble – but if you push past those and focus on the music, it’s an outstanding listen. Each of these songs became obsessions at some point during the year – the quieter “Culling Voices” was a personal favorite for its delicate riff and slow building smolder – and I’ve gone back and forth through the rotation about a hundred times since.  Here’s hoping they don’t wait another 10,000 days before bringing back some more.

3. The Lumineers – III: on the band’s aptly titled third album, the former trio (original member Neyla Pekarek left prior to this album to go solo) offers an ambitious set of songs exploring the lives of three generations of the fictional Sparks family, told over the course of three three-song cycles.  Loosely based on people from frontman Wesley Schultz and drummer Jeremiah Fraites’ lives, the songs detail darker material than the band is known for – alcoholism, gambling, drugs, and depression – and while the tone may be more melancholic than normal for the “Ho Hey!” kids (a merciless gang of killers back in the 30s and 40s) it doesn’t come across as cloying or maudlin. 

Schultz’s voice remains as warm and winning as ever, and the melodies the band unleashes are among their best.  (“My Cell” and “Salt and the Sea” sport particularly strong ones, among others.) Similar to previous albums, the narratives that Schultz spins are engaging, and despite the darker tone the lives of the characters here are interesting enough to keep you coming back.  From the more direct songs like “Donna,” “Gloria,” and “Jimmy Sparks” to more oblique material like the middle triptych “It Wasn’t Easy to be Happy For You,” “Leader of the Landslide,” and “Left for Denver” – these are really pretty songs dealing with some serious, real life stuff. I give the band credit – it would have been far too easy to keep churning out feel good singalongs like their aforementioned mammoth debut single.  That they’ve continued to expand upon their sound without sacrificing the quality, care, and warmth it exudes (while still offering some solid singalongs in the meantime) is testament to their craft.  Hopefully they’re back with more soon…

2. Purple Mountains – Purple Mountains: this was the year’s most unfortunate discovery.  Unfortunate not because of the quality of the music – sporting some of the most breathtaking lines of the year, whether from the sharpness of wit or eviscerating emotion (or both), this album shows how potent good songwriting can be and why it’s a commodity to be treasured, as rare as it is these days. What’s abundantly unfortunate is by the time I discovered this album its brilliant creator was gone, having been unable to find the peace or help he needed to remain among us.  And that outcome colors everything on this album – not making it a morose or gloomy affair, but more by sharpening the already scalpel fine lyrics to make them cut even deeper.  By the time you’ve made it through the album, you feel like you’ve been sliced apart like a paper snowflake, the remnants of your defenses (and intestines) scattered on the ground like so much confetti.

You know it from the opening verse, the first of many of the aforementioned kneecappers:

“Well I don’t like talkin’ to myself, but someone’s gotta say it, hell.  I mean, things have not been going well — this time I think I finally fucked myself! You see the life I live is sickening — I’ve spent a decade playing chicken with oblivion. Day to day, I’m neck and neck with giving in – I’m the same old wreck I’ve always been…”

That there are at least three or four other sterling gems (“When I try to drown my thoughts in gin, I find my worst ideas know how to swim” and the bit about the ant hill, among others) – and that’s just THE FIRST SONG – shows you just what an amazing album this is.  Pocket faves Woods provide the music, but it’s frontman David Berman’s unbelievable lyrics that keep you captivated throughout. There’s literally dozens of lines, images, and emotions packed into its too-brief 45 minutes, so potent they sear your brain like an eclipse burning your retinas. 

There’s “mounting mileage on the dash, double darkness falling fast, I keep stressing, pressing on. Way down deep at some substratum, feels like something really wrong has happened – I confess I’m barely hanging on…” from “All My Happiness is Gone.” There’s the opening lines of “Darkness and Cold” – “The light of my life is going out tonight as the sun sets in the west.  Light of my life is going out tonight with someone she just met. She kept it burning longer than I had right to expect – light of my life is going out tonight, without a flicker of regret…” There’s the devastating open to “Nights That Won’t Happen” – “The dead know what they’re doing when they leave this world behind, when the here and the hereafter momentarily align.  See the need to speed into the lead suddenly declined, the dead know what they’re doing when they leave this world behind.” Or the hilariously self-effacing “Maybe I’m the Only One for Me,” whose line “if no one’s fond of fucking me, maybe no one’s fucking fond of me” might be the best one-liner of the year.

There’s so many options you could pick any handful of lines from each of the songs and rarely find anything less than exceptional.  (Like the slew of images from “Snow is falling in Manhattan, in a slow diagonal fashion…the good caretaker springs to action – salts the stoop and scoops the cat in, tests an icy patch for traction…” for yet another example.)  Berman’s voice is one of many “take it or leave it” options on the list this year, but something about his beleaguered croak gives his lyrics even more poignancy – this isn’t some superstar, polished talent whose life seems filled with effortless glamour, this seems like the beat-up guy sitting next to you at the bar, all rumpled clothes and battered nerves, pouring his soul out for anyone willing to listen. That it ended the way it did makes it all the more tragic – tragic because of how talented he was, tragic because this will be the last thing we get to hear, and tragic because he felt that leaving was his only option.  This is an incredible way to remember him, though – drinking down the colors of the rainbow while contemplating life at the mall, saying what he soon would find — his final peace…

1. Andrew Bird – My Finest Work Yet: whether meant as a self-fulfilling prophecy, a sarcastic self-aggrandizement, or an honest self-assessment, Bird’s latest album was easily the album I listened to most this year.  This isn’t entirely surprising — every album he’s released since I started doing the blog 12 years ago has made a year-end list — #9 in 2016, #5 in 2012, #5 in 2009, and #3 in 2007 (in what was the inaugural post – the call still stands, Sunbeams…) – and he’s unapologetically one of my favorite musicians.  (Plus, he’s from the GPOE, so it’s indecorous (and usually unwarranted) to speak ill of another Chicagoan…) That title’s extra gravity and grandeur, though – whatever its motivation – accurately clues you in that these 10 songs are a little different from the ones that preceded them. 

There’s still his trademark mix of violin, whistles, and cryptic lyrics dancing merrily amidst another batch of knee-buckling melodies and harmonies. What’s new, though, is the political edge that runs throughout the album.  It’s never quite overt – everything with Bird comes with elliptical allusions and esoteric codes to decipher – but it’s threaded through roughly two-thirds of the songs, depending on how you interpret the lyrics.  Sure, his references might sometimes be dated (he calls out the Spanish civil war and J Edgar Hoover here), but his call for resistance (and civility) goes down rather easily when nestled among those lovely tunes.

So whether it’s the opening “Sisyphus,” whose mythical hero decides to “let the rock roll,” the titular “Olympians” who’re exultantly “gonna turn it around,” or the anonymous narrator in “Archipelago” and “Don the Struggle” who asks us to question the energy we invest in our enemies and how we engage one another, respectively — each are lovely reflections of the current day and age, while still asking the listener to engage them in a slightly different way. (The unifying opening verse from the latter should be every person’s morning wakeup call – “Cmon everybody, let’s settle down – we’re all just stumbling down in an unnamed struggling town.”) The apolitical love songs on the album are also outstanding – from the naked sweetness of “Cracking Codes” to the singsong juxtaposition of “Bellevue Bridge Club,” whose menacing lyrics melt under the loving sentiments (“And I will hold you hostage, make you part of my conspiracy.  You will be witness to carnage – you know there’s no you without me.” – would be a perfectly twisted marriage vow.) – they’re two of my favorites on an album overflowing with gems.  Bird may have been joking with the title, but he makes a hell of a case for taking him seriously. One of the most dependably great things of the year – fantastic album.