Sunday, December 19, 2021

The Top 30 ALBUMS of 2021: Part Three (#1--10)...

 


We reach the end of a great year in music and crown a brand new AOTY winner:



1. Genesis Owusu SMILING WITH NO TEETH: 





born in Ghana but based in Australia, Owusu’s music represents the type of dynamism and international flourishes one would expect from him given his life circumstances. But, even though he is from a very musical family—his older brother is Citizen Kay—the stunning thing about Smiling With No Teeth is how affirmed it is in its versatility and soul brother appeal. His is a style of the global chameleon: more soulful and funky than the super duo Silk Sonic on a track like Don’t Need You, more punk worthy than Injury Reserve on Drown and downright spellbinding than any contemporary US rapper on the stand-out The Other Black Dog. And that’s just the first half of a masterpiece album that doesn’t let up, ending on another album high Bye Bye. No year-end best albums list can be legitimate without including this tour-de-force and can only marvel what he has planned for what’s coming after this opening blast from him. 








 

2. Remi Wolf JUNO:





 it would be easy to initially discount Wolf’s aesthetics or to pin-hole her into kitsch pop but Juno is an army full of one woman’s pop vision juxtaposed to her every day battles just to exist and thrive. There’s a feminist streak here, even if’s not put forth like guerrilla tactics (think M.I.A.) but Wolf is smack down in the middle of Santi White’s politics and Tune-Yards’ outlandish pop odes. Yes, she is that modern cool bitch. 




  

3. serpentwithfeet DEACON: 






on Deacon, serpentwithfeet presents Black queer love and joy more as a series of little everyday moments than an all-consuming, mystical force. While vivid details and a Black queer foundation are nothing new for the Ty Dolla $ign and Björk collaborator—on “fragrant,” from his 2018 debut LP soil, he recalled asking all of his ex’s exes one by one to kiss him—the presence of unbridled joy and love on his sophomore album is a striking sea change. Where serpent mourned fizzling loves on soil and debut EP blisters, here, he hails the simple glories and everyday little moments of thriving Black queer romances. His perspective, though a stretch to read as some sort of overt or grand political statement, is a beaming needle in the ever-cluttered, often redundant haystack of romantic music. (PASTE) 






 

4. Tyler, the Creator CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST: 





when that piano and brass section pulsates behind Tyler on “RUNITUP,” you might think of the lingering horror orchestras that engulfed Wolf. Or when his vocal delivery on “LEMONHEAD” rushes and thrashes, you’re transported back to listening to a kid figuring himself out on Goblin. That’s the crowning achievement of this record—the way it sharply reminds every listener that the early entries in an artist’s discography are not parts of their past meant to be forgotten. For Tyler, the recklessness of his 20s did not leave him among the ruins of early-2010s hip-hop, but rather has helped make him a 30-year-old with a multi-million-dollar confidence and a Rolls Royce collection to flaunt—in an industry praying just to catch up. (PASTE) 







5. Slowthai TYRON: 





what can you do after being involved in controversy? You can fight and fuss about it. You can apologize. Or you can make an album that’s at least partially inspired by it. A year to the day after Slowthai was kicked out of the NME Awards, he chose the final option, and it worked. Childhood, adulthood, and regret are among the themes of the project, which encompasses two drastically different halves: the first, characterized by songs with ALL-CAPS titles, is aggressive, and the second, featuring songs with lowercase names, is more tranquil. In doing so, he creates a complete self-portrait of someone reckoning with the fire and ice of their soul, seeking out another chance inspired by the mistakes that they’ve grown from. (COMPLEX) 







6. Taylor Swift EVERMORE: 





allowing her own biography to fall to the background, Swift loosens her need for narrative resolution and emotional clarity, sometimes letting the music speak for her. (An uncharacteristic retraction in “Happiness”—“No, I didn’t mean that/Sorry, I can’t see facts through all of my fury”—suggests she’s striving toward more stoic, distanced writing.) The climactic “Marjorie” is named after her maternal grandmother, an opera singer who died during Swift’s adolescence. Over Dessner’s pulsing keyboard arrangement, her lyrics are fragmented, almost chant-like, composed from bits of memories, advice, and regrets. As Swift considers how legacy works, she offers the album’s most forthright summoning of a ghost: “You’re alive/So alive,” she sings. “And if I didn’t know better, I’d think you were singing to me now.” (PITCHFORK) 








7. Snail Mail VALENTINE: 





referring to the process as the deepest level of catharsis and therapy I have ever experienced would be a huge understatement,” Snail Mail’s Lindsey Jordan said of making her new album. That healing comes packaged in a blend of blistering rock and pensive singer/songwriter product that isn’t too far off from what we first heard of Jordan on Lush and even her Habit EP from 2016. The main difference on Valentine is Jordan’s newfound vocal confidence: She has perfected her singing voice to match her musical maturity, making Valentine more like Lush’s cool, assured older sister than simply a sequel. Undoubtedly one of the best songs of the year, the triumphant title/opening track, also the album’s lead single, finds Jordan beyond frustration while yearning for the ex who dumped her, or maybe just someone out of reach. The song’s grand scale works because it’s so easy to believe Jordan is as desperate as she sounds. Breakups aren’t just sad—they’re rage-inducing. “So why’d you wanna erase me?” she hollers through the tears, before adding, “You won’t believe what just two months do / I’m older now, believe me / I adore you.” (PASTE) 





 

8. Clairo SLING: 





Clairo writes music that finds you in places – geographical and mental – and takes you out of them for a few minutes. They are songs that follow you around, that play on the radio as you're driving on the motorway, or in a warm flat amongst a gathering of friends, something that sweetly permeates your stream of normalcy. (THE QUIETUS)  






 

9. Big Red Machine HOW LONG DO YOU THINK IT’S GONNA LAST





What’s interesting about the second Big Red Machine album is how un-experimental it sounds. Whereas the first Big Red Machine record consisted of esoteric sketches that felt like excerpts from long, heady jam sessions, How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last? includes some of the most approachable and pop-oriented material that Aaron Dessner or Justin Vernon have ever produced. This can partly be attributed, of course, to the involvement of Taylor Swift, who along with suggesting the album title appears on the album’s most immediate track, “Renegades.” But the rest of the record is similarly melodic and warm, evincing little of the electro-indie dissonance of the recent output by The National and Bon Iver. (ENGLISHTIMES.UK) 






 

10. Japanese Breakfast JUBILEE


Michelle Zauner’s third album as Japanese Breakfast finds her shedding the sadness and trauma of her past, embracing joy and celebrating Jubilee. Upon its announcement, Zauner said of her follow-up to 2017’s Soft Sounds From Another Planet in a statement, “After spending the last five years writing about grief, I wanted our follow-up to be about joy. For me, a third record should feel bombastic and so I wanted to pull out all the stops for this one.” The soaring, yet densely layered Jubilee lives up to that billing: Zauner’s palette boasts more colors than ever—the yearning strings that conclude “Kokomo, IN,” the regal horn outro on “Slide Tackle,” the noise-rock crescendo of closer “Posing For Cars,” so much more—and her new masterpiece is abundantly vivid as a result. (PASTE) 




THE TOP 100 SONG OF 2021 (PART FIVE)...

 


My picks for the best twenty songs of the year. So many emotionally-packed great tracks that tug at your heart in their simplicity yet undeniable beauty and genius:





1. Free (Sault): 



 the mysterious collective continues its winning streak with this effortless, breezy global pop track that serves as the perfect background filter for their pop/funk intentions. 






2. wyd (Remi Wolf):




 co-produced by Jared “Solomonophonic” Solomon, it features the grooviest bass and most electric synths, and compared to the rest of the album, it moves fast as hell. The track is a great example of Wolf’s ability to create an upbeat vibe yet remain introspective at the same time where Wolf weaves in her struggles with alcohol dependency while sounding as happy as can be. (NYULOCAL) 






3. Gated Windows (Twin Shadow): 




we’ve been awaiting his return to Bowie-esque pop for some time and here it is, in all its triumphant glory.



 



4.Vex (Slowthai): 




that, “calm down darling/ your pum pum’s loose…” line is the zinger of the year. 





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5. Sailor’s Superstition (serpentwithfeet): 




near the album’s midpoint, dark forces arrive to interrupt Wise’s reverie. In “Sailors’ Superstition,” he sees the beginning of the end on the horizon, bidding his partner to keep their love low-key, not to “whistle on [their] ship” and tempt the “rascals of the air.” Anyone who’s seen a horror movie knows this is the moment when something finally goes wrong. (PITCHFORK) 






  

6. The Other Black Dog (Genesis Owusu): 



a sultry, uptempo synthwave track with a constantly rising tension. The beat warbles as we meet the first of the story’s two black dogs. This hound is representative of depression, and it’s a damn menace. Owusu relentlessly delivers fear and a sense of the walls closing in, to great effect. The song is alluring and danceable, and even though the darkness is palpable, it’s irresistible to turn away.  (STILL LISTENING MAGAZINE) 



7. Herald (Odette): 



showcases Odette’s new sonic palette and situates her on the verge of epiphany. The track possesses a modern-meets-medieval style of production with its bouncy rhythm harps, wind instruments and piano. “I wondered if this was death / And I thought it was happiness,” she sings, realizing she wants freedom from a stagnant relationship. It is a terrific starting point for the album. (BEATS PER MINUTE) 






8. Sierra Nights (Kevin Abstract feat. Ryan Beatty): 



a hazy, slow-building song. Abstract does a little rapping near the end, when the energy really builds up, but this is mostly a mellow and expansive pop song about love. Abstract tells his whole origin story — growing up in Texas, moving to California with his friends, doing a bunch of drugs, getting famous — but he does it through the point of view of someone who’d in love and who can finally really talk about it. (STEREOGUM) 






9. Paprika (Japanese Breakfast): 



you can feel that specific buzz in the opening track “Paprika,” which layers martial snares, bubbling orbs of synth, and horns that practically announce “I’m here!” The lyrics colorfully illustrate the blessing and the burden of getting to express yourself creatively for a living: “How’s it feel to be at the center of magic/To linger in tones and words?/I opened the floodgates and found no water, no current, no river, no rush.” But Zauner clearly had no trouble finding inspiration for the song itself, which comes to life with a playful sense of grandeur that’s hard not to get swept up in, waltzing yourself around the house, tingling with wonder. When she’s on, her energy is completely infectious, and the beginning of the album thrives on this current while accommodating numerous styles. (PITCHFORK) 






10. Aye (Sam Fender): 



an immersive ditty. Fender calls out the comfort people with power find in being just a bystander. The song references many tragic images such as watching Jesus get nailed to the cross and watching the horror of kids being assaulted by Jeffrey Epstein. (THE POSTATHENS) 






11. Strange Love (Cautious Clay feat. Saba): 



"This song is about the push and pull of identity in late capitalism," says Cautious. "We're constantly told we need x, y or z to let the world know who we are, inundated with information about what the latest and greatest and coolest is. I love fashion and clothes and putting them together to telegraph myself to the world, but sometimes it's hard to separate what I like from what I'm being told to like. I think it's a struggle lots of people can relate to." (BROADWAY WORLD.COM) 






 

12. Juniper (Katy Kirby): 




originally included on a self-titled release three years ago, Kirby reinvigorates “Juniper” with an even keener production this time. The song was inspired mainly by Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird and the mom-daughter bond and though that historically ties into so many conflicting emotions,  it’s a thrilling rush as musically it explodes towards the end. 



 



 

13. New Heart Design (Turnstile): 



feels like a homage to punk and new wave but the riffs are so fresh and crunchy that it’s like a whole new genre explosion to the ears. 






14. Put It Down (Jazmine Sullivan): 



the new standard for hood soul hook-up rules. 



15. OG! (JPEGMAFIA):



 though he makes ditties to stand out, OG! literally is pulled out from a different hat with its old-school beats and bragging.  



16. Ivy (Taylor Swift): 



overrun with metaphors but mostly in an enticing, thematically fitting way, full of good Swiftian dark-fairytale grist. It’s fun to puzzle out gradually the secret that all the images are concealing—an engaged woman being drawn into a clandestine affair. And there are several very good “goddamns.” (SLATE) 






 

17.  Bye Bye (Genesis Owusu): 



the ease to which Owusu swivels so many styles in one track is mind-boggling. 



18. Cosmic (Denzel Curry & The Alchemist feat Joey Bada$$): 



sometimes all a good song needs is a revisionist take with the homies to ascend to greatness. Here’s a stunning example. 



19. Brown Shoulders (McKinley Dixon feat. Ms. Jaylin Brown): 



would probably fall victim to some degree of forgettability too, but Ms. Jaylin Brown’s feature on the track gives Dixon’s relatively lower energy flow room to breathe and create a pleasant sonic symbiosis towards the track’s closing moments. It’s a high note to go out on, too, considering the gloomy atmosphere its successor employs, with suspenseful sax, gloomy piano, and a really haunting effect curated by some excellent strings. (STILL LISTENING MAGAZINE) 



20. Chemical Romance (Gallant): 



embodies what it feels like to realize you’ve caught the feels for someone—a complicated concept, slightly embarrassing, exhilarating, and scary all at the same time. This natural feeling arises upon attraction, which is why Gallant reassures his significant other, “Baby, butterflies are justified.” Marvin Gaye once sang “half a love is all I feel,” and Gallant continues singing about such unrequited love as he sings, “You won’t let no chemical deceive ya / It’s only gonna leave you brokenhearted.” (BC HEIGHTS.COM)