Monday, December 9, 2019
THE TOP 100 SONG OF 2019 (PART ONE)...
As we close out the decade here are the strong batch that have made it:
81. Pressure To Party (Julia Jacklin): not that the environment is bad, it’s just you’re not in the mood to be in such environment. We’ve all been stuck in social scenarios where we’ve gotten the inevitable peer pressure to participate in ‘fun.’ Honestly, partying can be a chore and Julia’s disenchanted face captures our entire mood. (AUPIUM.COM)
82. My Name Is Dark (Grimes):the type of gem that she is now dropping at will.
83. The Greatest (Lana Del Rey):a kaleidoscope of classic-rock radio transmitted through Lana’s hushed, psychedelic lens. The drums roll in slow motion, the guitar solos are fuzzy, the piano is recorded so that you can feel the shag carpet beneath it. Instead of luxuriating in vintage textures, Lana is restless, eulogizing her listless youth while repeatedly incorporating the words “the culture is lit,” as if attempting to dance through the tears. (PITCHFORK)
84. Hard Times (The Last Internationale):the new stadium rock anthem that should be.
85. Hope To Die (Orville Peck):more resembles an ‘80s Mazzy Star-era shoegaze piece for the country purists to languish on. (THELINEOFBESTFIT)
86. A Calabasas Freestyle (Jaden Smith):the result of all the chatter of him manifest in lyrics.
87. Hello Happiness (Chaka Khan):one of the great reinventions in R&B this year.
88. Borderline (Tame Impala):delivers their warm brand of jangly psych-rock, Kevin Parker leading us one step further into his subconscious. It’s adjacent to Tame’s typical sound, yet otherworldly. Perhaps Parker has dropped the need to stick to his square of familiarity, branching out into more experimental, Brian Eno-esque soundscapes. There’s an inside-out effect to the track, whooshing synths dropping in and out to make us feel like we’re falling deeper into the psychedelic rabbit hole. (TREBLE)
89. Saw Lightning (Beck):Beck has found his mojo again.
90. Hey Gpy (Dig The Slowness) (The Raconteurs):Jack White pleading with his girl for love and he throws the funky kitchen sink it.
91. The Great Pixley Train Robbery (Cass McCombs):Cass takes us back to the scene of a Western robbery with his usual immaculate eye for detail.
92. Sleepwalkin’ (Better Oblivion Community Center):an apt summary of indie rock ennui if I’ve ever heard one. With their knack for peculiar lyrical observations, evocative melodies, and deeply felt lyrics, Phoebe Bridgers and Conor Oberst make the perfect songwriting team, churning out memorable melodies and phrases like these in spades. Standout track “Sleepwalkin” shows off the duo’s talent, with an outro that amps up the tension as the pair sings, “I want them to stop, the circular thoughts / Spinning a whirlpool of forget-me-nots.” Lines like these are grounded by airtight songwriting and the fact that Oberst and Bridgers sound great together as vocalists. A strong start to a collaboration that hopefully has many years ahead of it. (TREBLE)
93. Die (Stella Donnelly):runaway friend.
94. New Horizons (Ultima Thule Mix)(Brian May):May’s love for space exploration gets a stunning remix.
95. High Alice (Jenny Hval):given her oeuvre, it’s not hard to figure out that Hval would do her own spin on the Alice in Wonderland tale and it’s dreamy and fantastic.
96. Slow Love (Tender):it’s been a slow evolution but electronic acts are merging even harder with blues and I’m here for it.
97. Why Do You Believe Me? (Broods):the Kiwi family band spreads warmth into some chilling pop.
98. I Fought (Bob Mould):rock isn’t dead by a long shot when a veteran like Mould can be pulling out such fire.
99. Superbike (Jay Som): breezy fun.
100. Curls (Bibio):unfolds peacefully with a relaxed ripple of strings and is soon joined by Bibio's mellow vocal musings. It's an entrancing sound that should snare as many fans of Americana and folk, as it does electronic music fanatics. Call it dream folk if you will, as the gossamer multi-tracked vocals become their own instrument interplaying with the winding fiddle line and delicate plucks of the guitar. (POPMATTERS)
Friday, December 6, 2019
TOP 10 FAVOURITE TV SHOWS OF 2019...
While we are all trying to forget the aftertaste of Game of Thrones' final season, we also had a ton of great, fun-filled shows in the year and these warmed my heart the most:
BREXIT (TV MOVIE):two words: Benedict Cumberbatch!
GOOD OMENS (TV SERIES): when the nervy angel and suave devil get along on Earth.
POSE (SEASON 2): built an even better season, claws and all.
SILICON VALLEY (SEASON 6):still on but always quick to find its beat.
THE CROWN (SEASON 3):can we just hand Olivia Colman all the awards from now please?
THE GOOD PLACE (SEASON 4):the final season and, by the look of it, the best season. Devilishly innovative.
THE OTHER TWO (SEASON 1): fame-whore brother and sister realise the actual talent is the kid brother and things get complicated.
VEEP (SEASON 7):long live Selina, the second worst President of America!
WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS (SEASON 1):now this is how you turn a quirky yet fun film into a stunning tv series.
WHEN THEY SEE US (TV SERIES):Ava DuVernay retells the tragic circumstance of the Central Park Five and leaves no dry eye around.
Thursday, December 5, 2019
2019: Top 10 Most Overrated Albums...
Another year's batch of overblown praise on albums that are not that great:
1. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Ghosteen:yet another ghost record that the media just falls allover. METACRITIC 9.6/10
2. Tyler, the Creator Igor:the base is there for a higher level of art but he’s done better before. METACRITIC 8.1/10
3. Lana del Rey Norman Fucking Rockwell!!!: as I tweeted a few months before, Lana will never get back to that peak 2011-2012 era but this was a return to something close but no dice. METACRITIC 8.7/10
4. Blood Incantation Hidden History of the Human Race:the consensus metal pick being hyped to death. METACRITIC 9.1/10
5. Purple Mountains Purple Mountains: ode from the dearly departed but let’s not kid ourselves. METACRITIC 8.7/10
6. Black Midi Schlagenheim:well, it is noisy. METACRITIC 8.2/10
7. Angel Olsen All Mirrors: I still can’t believe how dull this is. METACRITIC 8.9/10
8. Big Thief Two Hands: ordinary at best. METACRITIC 8.5/10
9. (Sandy) Alex G House of Sugar: not sure why everyone has caught on to this so positively. METACRITIC 8.6/10
10. Billie Eilish When We All Fall Asleep…: it’s great that Billie is getting all the attention but she has much more left to give that will, surely, one day blow this album out of the water. METACRITIC 8.2/10
Wednesday, December 4, 2019
2019: Top 10 Most Disappointing Albums...
Another year of records that should have been on my best albums list. Alas, here we are:
1. Panda Bear Buoys:when the most creative artist releases an album that finds no footing or spots of joy, the world becomes a darker place.
2. Kanye West Jesus Is King:it could have actually been worse but that’s not saying much.
3. Divino Nino Foam:I’m actually foaming at the mouth at this aimless lump.
4. Chance the Rapper The Big Day:if ever an album title got it dead wrong then it was this one.
5. Blood Orange Angel’s Pulse:a mixtape but an unspectacular one.
6. Brother Ali Secrets & Escapes:weary braggadocio.
7. Schoolboy Q Crash Talk: the sound of Q finally flailing around.
8. Vampire Weekend Father Of The Bride: still baffled that this boring album took so long.
9. Solange When I Get Home: it’s as if she forgot the actual songs this time around.
10. Jesca Hoop Stonechild: decent effort but a little plain.
Tuesday, December 3, 2019
2019: THE BEST NEW/EMERGING ARTISTS...
This year was a rare occurrence: all of the artists that made the list have albums on my top 30 albums list. This means the year was stacked with talent and it was awesome to see that women lead the way.
Here goes:
TOP OF THE CLASS:
Jamila Woods:
been around a while and with acclaim but all that has been deservedly dwarfed by her fierce project this year Legacy! Legacy! Here
we have the great tribute to pioneering black men and women.
The best of the rest:
Weyes Blood:it takes courage to slowly find the inner voice that carries you to the direction where others in the genre are scared from going to. That's what Weyes Blood is doing right now.
Lizzo: while some cite Lizzo-fatigue, I can't get enough of it now. No matter how you feel about her it's undeniable that her album this year deserves every plaudit and award it's getting.
Nilufer Yanya:confidently carving out her own unique space in pop.
Koffee: a much needed shot in the arm for how women can defy reggae/dancehall odds to provide great quality music.
Nakhane:proving that even though forces around him tried to keep him down, with that angelic voice, he is simply soaring.
Lafawndah: giving an otherworldly spin on pop.
King Princess:the way she harnesses her gender fluidity into the spaces of her lyrical expression is totally for the moment.
Michael Kiwanuka: now he'll be able to get out from under being only known as the guy who sings the intro to Big Little Lies.
Marika Hackman: finally, a young woman singing about her unabashed queer experiences.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)