The Bacon Review

An annual Top 31 countdown of the best albums of the year

  • Home
  • About
  • Top 31
  • Search
  • Bluesky
  • Instagram
  • RSS

#1 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — boygenius

January 31, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

the record by boygenius

“Give me everything you’ve got”: the first words you hear, sung in glorious three-part harmony by Julien Baker, Phoebe Bridgers, and Lucy Dacus. And “everything” is exactly what boygenius, the group formed by these three already-plenty-accomplished singer-songerwriters, has given us. Ladies and gentlemen, the record by boygenius is the Bacon Review #1 album of 2023.

You have likely heard of these three — each of the individual most recent albums from Baker, Bridgers, and Dacus have appeared in past Top 31s (Little Oblivions at #6 in 2021, Punisher at #2 in 2020, and Home Video at #23 in 2021, respectively (but none of their earlier albums because I had my head in the ground, apparently). And while I do love the music from each of them individually, there is something “super” about the music produced by this supergroup.

I first fell in love with boygenius on their self-titled 6-song 2018 EP. The three women met while Bridgers and Dacus both opened for Baker on separate tours in 2016, and joked about the “pipe dream” of the three of them forming a band. They booked a co-headlining tour in 2018, and sat down to write one new song that they all could perform together on stage. The EP came out of that initial energy, written, recorded and produced in four days. While the EP was well-received, it didn’t appear on the Top 31 that year because I had stupid restrictions about what could make it onto the list, and EPs didn’t qualify. 1

As time went on, signs were pointing to them doing something more together. All three performed on each others’ 2020 and 2021 albums mentioned above, contributing mostly backing vocals to a handful of songs. And then in late 2021 they performed together as boygenius again at a benefit show in San Francisco. They separated throughout 2022 to allow themselves to headline on their individual tours to promote their Covid-released albums from the years prior. In the fall of 2022 they got back together and secretly recorded what would become the record. The official announcement of the album came on January 18, with a release of the trio of tracks, “$20,” “Emily I’m Sorry,” and “True Blue” as the lead singles from the album. (the film, featured above, is the accompanying video that was released a couple months later. Directed by actress-cum-director Kristen Stewart, it focuses on each of the three women on the song in which they were the lead writer on: Baker, Bridgers, then Dacus.)

The pre-release hype continued to build with the release of a fourth single, “Not Strong Enough,” along with an accompanying video shot by the three singers and edited by Bridgers’ brother Jackson (who also directed the video that features Bridgers for The National’s “Your Mind Is Not Your Friend,” mentioned in yesterday’s #2 album review). All four singles were instant, ear-worm classics, on repeat in the Bacon Review home up until March 31 when the record finally saw full release. It was an easy transition from listening to the four singles back to back, to listening to the full album on repeat, and it continues through to today.

Each individually known for their command of deep, emotive lyrics, and each with their own singing / vocal style, the record plays well to their strengths. Some songs have a clear lead throughout, with the other two women singing harmonies. And some songs, such as “Not Strong Enough”2 and “Cool About It” (and it’s great animated video) feature each singer separately taking a verse or bridge all to themselves. Their voices are distinct between them – Bridgers higher and raspier, Baker full-bodied, and Dacus lower with all the edges filed down.

Not only did I love this album,3 it resonated well with my family, and that always factors into what gets played in the household. One of the beauties of this album in particular is my son, who is fifteen and has broken free from my musical clutches to form his own tastes, came to me one day and asked “have you heard of boygenius?” I’d be hard-pressed to find a parenting moment as rewarding as having my child discover a band himself and love it independent of my direct influence (while clearly having been indirectly influenced by living under my roof for 15 years).

There are many moments in this album where the lyrics are so heartfelt and gorgeous, paired with the perfect rise in volume or culmination in instrumentation that it causes chills. The chorus of “True Blue” (“and it feels good to be known so well, I can’t hide from you like I hide from myself”). The third verse of “Cool About It” (with its interpolation of Paul Simon’s “The Boxer” so strong they thanked him for the inspiration on the liner notes), that goes “Once, I took your medication to know what it’s like, and now I have to act like I can‘t read your mind.”

The climax of “$20” is particularly brilliant, with Baker on lead singing “Gas, out of time, out of money, you’re doing what you can, just making it run” while Dacus sings “Take a break, make your escape, there‘s only so much I can” and Bridgers slowly repeating “Can you give me twenty dollars” over and over building to a screaming crescendo. Each of their voices weave in and out, all layers and words, yet entirely distinct to the careful listener.

None of the members of boygenius are yet 30. While I can’t say for sure there will be more songs/albums to come from the band, they each have literal decades in front of them to continue to blow us away. From what I’ve seen, the tour videos, and the instagram posts, the three of them have been having a blast writing and performing together. It feels impossible that they won’t be able to figure out how to keep that energy going well into the future. Maybe they’re establishing a pattern – get together, record and tour, then break for some solo replenishing, only to reconvene four years later. Or maybe they’ve truly given us everything they’ve got. We’ll continue to get solo music from each of them for sure, so if we’ve gotten all the boygenius songs we’ll ever get, the ep, the record, and the rest, would be more than enough.

1. You can watch their Tiny Desk Concert or their Live on KEXP performance if you’d like a little snippet of what they all sounded like 5+ years ago.↩
2. Watch their SNL performance from November, backed by their all-girl band, to see how this plays out across “Not Strong Enough.” Baker taking the “Always an angel, never a god” bridge to its full climax is awe inspiring.↩
3. The band released an additional EP in October, called the rest. It featured four slower songs recorded during the sessions for the record. “The Voyager” from the rest is particularly great, featuring additional writing from Conor Oberst.↩

__________________________________________

  1. First Two Pages of Frankenstein / Laugh Track by The National
  2. Strange Disciple by Nation of Language
  3. Desire, I Want to Turn Into You by Caroline Polachek
  4. PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation and The Silver Cord by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  5. Live at Bush Hall by Black Country, New Road
  6. Volcano by Jungle
  7. Javelin by Sufjan Stevens
  8. The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We by Mitski
  9. Radical Romantics by Fever Ray
  10. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  11. Blondshell by Blondshell
  12. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  13. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  14. Sundial by Noname
  15. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  16. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  17. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  18. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  19. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  20. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  21. The Window by Ratboys
  22. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  23. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  24. Pollen by Tennis
  25. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  26. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  27. everything is alive by Slowdive
  28. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  29. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  30. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 31, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, boygenius, phoebe bridgers, lucy dacus, julien baker, paul simon, the national
Top 31
Comment

#2 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — The National

January 30, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

First Two Pages of Frankenstein and Laugh Track by The National

The National are back near the top of the Top 31, surprising no one. Unbelievably, it’s been four years since they released their last album, the fantastic I Am Easy To Find, in 2019 (#6 that year). Granted, a lot of non-music stuff happened in those ensuing years (remember Covid?). Additionally, a lot of tangential work to The National came out during this period of “down time”: Taylor Swift’s Aaron Dessner-produced albums folklore and evermore came out in 2020 (#4 that year); lead singer Matt Berninger released his solo album, Serpentine Prison, that same year (#8); Aaron Dessner’s not-a-band-but-more-a-“project” collaboration with Justin Vernon of Bon Iver called Big Red Machine released How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last? in 2021 (#2)1 2022 was the only year in that four-year span that lacked music to fill the massive void left by having no new album by the National.

The band has made up for that time by releasing two great new albums in 2023, First Two Page of Frankenstein on April 28, and Laugh Track on September 18. These two albums more than make up for “lost” time. The band prepared us fans for Frankenstein by putting out four singles between January 18 and the album’s release three months later. Laugh Track, on the other hand, was a complete surprise (aside from the inclusion of Bon Iver collaboration, “Weird Goodbyes,” which was originally released in August 2022).

The National have been long-time staples here on the Bacon Review. Including the albums mentioned above, they’ve always produced music that has been in my Top 10: Sleep Well Beast was #4 in 2017, Trouble Will Find Me was #2 in 2013, and High Violet inadvertently prevented all future albums from defaulting into the top spot by being #1 in 2010.

Where Easy To Find was a true departure for the band, seeing Berlinger relinquish the lead-singer role to a bevy of female guest stars on a number of songs, Frankenstein and Laugh Track are a return to form, quintessential National albums. There are some repeat guest stars here (the aforementioned Justin Vernon, and Sufjan Stevens), and some new great ones as well. Phoebe Bridgers sings beautiful harmonies on three songs across the two albums. Rosanne Cash shows up on “Crumble” from Laugh Track. And by far the biggest name, the Taylor Swift, joins Berlinger on the absolutely perfect duet called “The Alcott” on Frankenstein. After having spent a long time singing the Vernon/Swift duet “Exile” from her album folklore, I am glad my 6-year-old daughter and I have a Berninger/Swift duet to sink our teeth into for Car Karaoke2

Check out the video above, for “Your Mind is Not Your Friend,” one of the songs Phoebe Bridgers is on. The band have released a number of other nice music videos from the two albums, but this one, directed by Bridgers’ brother Jackson, really gets to the heart of what makes the band special. Over National-trademarked Sad Dad lyrics about trying to pull yourself out of depression, Matt Berninger and his brother Tom cavort around comically. Tom shows the depressive side of Matt’s lyrics literally, moping around and being sad, and Matt portrays the happy side of his brain, with flowers attached to his suit as he leads Tom around a park playground. Bridgers makes a brief appearance, appearing in the playground to take her character’s baby away from the grown men playing on the structures. That’s The National to a tee: cathartic depression. And that’s why I love them.

You can watch the rest of the videos they’ve released, too:

  • “Eucalyptus”
  • “Dreaming”
  • “Laugh Track” featuring Phoebe Bridgers
  • “Alphabet City”
  • “Deep End (Paul’s in Pieces)”
  • “Space Invader”

These are The National’s ninth and tenth albums in 24 years. It is now officially impossible to say any one of those albums is their best, as the answer will shift from day to day. No other band in my lifetime has been able to put out as much consistently great music as these five men have. Every new album they put out, I feel “whelp, this must be it, no way they can keep up this pace,” and every time I’m proven wrong. Who knows what’s next for the band? Whatever it is, it will be amazing.

1. Dessner produced Ed Sheeran’s 2023 album, _–_ (otherwise known as “Subtract”), which I’m listening to for the first time as I’m writing these words – too late to include in the Top 31, and too early to say if I would have even tried to include it. If it’s anything like his collaboration with Taylor Swift, I’ll have made a huge mistake not hearing it earlier. (Update – still listening, but struggling. In Swift’s Dessner-produced albums, there’s an easily recognizable Dessner influence. Despite him having touched every song on Sheeran’s album, Ed’s voice and lyrics pull things far enough away from anything related to The National that I lose the thread entirely.)↩
2. If you want a real thrill as a parent, sing fantastic songs as a duet with them on repeat while driving around town. Rarely can I get through “The Alcott” with my daughter without choking up.↩

__________________________________________

  1. Strange Disciple by Nation of Language
  2. Desire, I Want to Turn Into You by Caroline Polachek
  3. PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation and The Silver Cord by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  4. Live at Bush Hall by Black Country, New Road
  5. Volcano by Jungle
  6. Javelin by Sufjan Stevens
  7. The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We by Mitski
  8. Radical Romantics by Fever Ray
  9. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  10. Blondshell by Blondshell
  11. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  12. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  13. Sundial by Noname
  14. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  15. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  16. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  17. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  18. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  19. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  20. The Window by Ratboys
  21. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  22. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  23. Pollen by Tennis
  24. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  25. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  26. everything is alive by Slowdive
  27. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  28. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  29. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 30, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, the national, aaron dessner, bryce dessner, sufjan stevens, phoebe bridgers, rosanne cash, taylor swift, tom berninger, matt berninger, bon iver, justin vernon
Top 31
Comment

#3 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Nation of Language

January 29, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Strange Disciple by Nation of Language

“I’m dubious they can continue in this same direction without bringing something new to their sound” is how I ended my review of Nation of Language’s 2nd album, A Way Forward (at #4 in 2021). Not only have they continued in the same direction as that great album, they’ve somehow managed to surpass its greatness, all while staying true to their synth pop gods. Strange Disciple, the trio from Brooklyn’s third album, is their best yet.

They first announced the album back in April, along with the first track, the unbelievably catchy “Weak in Your Light.” For the next five months they slow-rolled three more fantastic songs, bringing my excitement for the full album to a fever pitch by the time it came out on September 15. It was very much worth the wait.

In a way, the band hasn’t changed all that much since their 2020 album, Introduction, Presence (#15 in 2020. Those 10 songs mix well with the 10 songs on A Way Forward and the 10 songs on Strange Disciple, making for one hell of a >2 hour block of songs (Introduction is 43 minutes long, and Forward and Disciple are both 44 minutes each. The band is the definition of “consistent”). If you listened to either of their past albums, then this new album will feel like you discovered an entirely new wing on your home behind a bookcase, complete with neon-colored, gorgeously-decorated spaces and a dance floor.

Check out the amazing video for their song “Too Much, Enough” above. Directed by Robert Kolodny (director of Netflix’s The Featherweight), it features Jimmi Simpson (from Always Sunny and Westworld) and a slew of other actors and musicians (Reggie Watts, Kevin Morby (#3 in 2022), Tomberlin, Adam Green from The Moldy Peaches, LVL UP’s Greg Rutkin) all acting like members of a local news production while lip syncing to the song. It’s absurdist qualities align well to those of the song, which is “a song born out of an exhaustion with the 24 hour news cycle and the outrage bait it uses to get everyone permanently wound up,” according to the statement the band issued when the video came out. They’ve released two other videos from the album, for “Sightseer” and “Sole Obsession.”

Nation of Language are just hitting their stride. I fully expect their next album to be #1 on the Top 31 — they’ve proven their formula works, it’s expandable, and I absolutely love it.

__________________________________________

  1. Desire, I Want to Turn Into You by Caroline Polachek
  2. PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation and The Silver Cord by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  3. Live at Bush Hall by Black Country, New Road
  4. Volcano by Jungle
  5. Javelin by Sufjan Stevens
  6. The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We by Mitski
  7. Radical Romantics by Fever Ray
  8. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  9. Blondshell by Blondshell
  10. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  11. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  12. Sundial by Noname
  13. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  14. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  15. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  16. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  17. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  18. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  19. The Window by Ratboys
  20. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  21. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  22. Pollen by Tennis
  23. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  24. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  25. everything is alive by Slowdive
  26. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  27. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  28. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 29, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, nation of language, advented
Top 31
Comment

#4 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Caroline Polachek

January 28, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Desire, I Want to Turn Into You by Caroline Polachek

Every year for the past few years the Bacon Top 31 family has latched onto a single dance/pop-driven woman-led artist that has carried us through the year. Last year it was Beyoncé, the year before that, Japanese Breakfast, Sylvan Esso in 2020, 2019: Lizzo, 2018 had three, with Chvrches and Janelle Monáe and Christine and the Queens all in the Top 10. 2023 was no different. Caroline Polachek’s unbelievably good Desire, I Want to Turn Into You is the Bacon Review’s most-loved pop album of 2023.

Caroline Polachek has been around the music scene for quite some time, but only in the last 4 years or so has she started to see the kind of attention her presence deserves. You may remember her from her ’00s and ’10s band Chairlift, whose biggest hit was in 2009 (“Bruises,” which you may recognize thanks to its repeated refrain “I tried to do hand stands for you.” Just watch that video and see a mid-20s Polachek doing her thing). While remaining in Chairlift, Polachek released her first solo album, Arcadia, under the pseudonym “Ramona Lisa.” Chairlift released their final album in 2016 and broke up after their final tour in 2017, but not before Polachek had released her second solo album, Drawing the Target Around the Arrow, this time under her initials, CEP, while also appearing on other artist’s work, such as Charlie XCX.

But it wasn’t until 2019’s Pang, released finally under her full, given name, where Polachek started to find her real niche. I haven’t listened to Pang, yet, but my sources (aka: online music sites and wikipedia) tell me it was “well-received” and “critically acclaimed.” My first recognition of the “Caroline Polachek” version of Polachek came in 2021, shortly after she released the single “Bunny is a Rider.” It’s a fast-paced, ear-worm of a song, and if you watch the video you’ll hear why I instantly fell in love with it. Throughout 2022 she released a handful of additional singles: “Billions,” “Sunset” (featured above), and “Welcome to My Island.” By the time Desire, I Want to Turn Into You was released on Valentine’s Day, 2023, thanks to those early-released singles I’d already played a third of the album on repeat for the better part of a year.

“Sunset” is the standout for me. Flamenco-inspired, the song features an auto-tuned Polachek singing an otherworldly, wordless chorus. The song came out just two weeks before Season 2 of one of my favorite shows, White Lotus, came out on October 30, 2022. I don’t remember which I heard first: “Sunset” or the theme song to the show, but the two songs will forever be entwined in my brain. Listen for yourself (the video for “Sunset,” above, and the theme song to White Lotus Season 2), and I dare you to not feel the two songs were both made by some alien intelligence trying to seduce us.

A lot of the songs on the album put some affectation on Polachek’s voice that may make you think she couldn’t possibly produce the range on her own. Thankfully, we have her Tiny Desk Concert from October 2023 to prove us otherwise. She has the range and the talent — the affectation played into the album is there merely for added affect.

Despite her age (38) and the length of time she’s spent in the industry, there’s still some subtle awkwardness in how she moves in her videos. Watch the only other video she’s released from the album, for her song “Smoke,” and maybe you can see it, too. That extremely-subtle-but-still-there uncomfortableness in dancing for the camera reminds me of Taylor Swift. No matter how big or comfortable with they get with being in the spotlight, there’s something endearing about that little bit of “I’m just a regular person like you.”

Polachek may very well just be getting started with Desire. But after a nearly 20-year career in the music business, this could very well be the mountaintop that she chooses to exit the spotlight from, going out very much on top. That would be ok, too. She has proven to be a chameleon, capable of multitudes, and I am here for it.

__________________________________________

  1. PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation and The Silver Cord by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  2. Live at Bush Hall by Black Country, New Road
  3. Volcano by Jungle
  4. Javelin by Sufjan Stevens
  5. The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We by Mitski
  6. Radical Romantics by Fever Ray
  7. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  8. Blondshell by Blondshell
  9. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  10. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  11. Sundial by Noname
  12. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  13. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  14. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  15. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  16. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  17. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  18. The Window by Ratboys
  19. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  20. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  21. Pollen by Tennis
  22. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  23. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  24. everything is alive by Slowdive
  25. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  26. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  27. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 28, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, caroline polachek, beyonce, japanese breakfast, sylvan esso, lizzo, chvrches, janelle monáe, christine and the queens, chairlift
Top 31
Comment

#6 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Black Country, New Road

January 26, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Live at Bush Hall by Black Country, New Road

In last year’s review of Black Country, New Road’s amazing sophomore album, Ants From Up There (#11 in 2022), I shared that their deep-voiced lead singer, Isaac Wood, had left the band due to mental health reasons just four days before the release of the album. The band’s future was summarily thrown into the unknown. How does a band move on from something as impossibly disruptive as losing their lead voice?

Well, I couldn’t be happier to report that they’ve gone and done the impossible. BC,NR, from Cambridgeshire, England, went from a seven-piece ensemble with one lead singer to a six-piece group with four alternating leads, to magical effect. Shortly after Wood’s departure, the band had regrouped but knew their road to recovery wasn’t straightforward. Tyler Hyde, bassist for the band and de facto lead, shared that the band's next release might not take the form of a studio album, saying at the time, “I know it's not going to be an album in its normal form. It would be cool to work with an orchestra; it would be cool to do a film score. These are just some of the ideas we're bouncing around at the moment.” Just under a year later, the band took the natural next step: they put together three separate experience-driven performances at Bush Hall in West London, filmed them from multiple angles (including fans in the audience who had been tasked as part of the AV Club), edited those performances together into one cohesive whole, and then released the result as a film and subsequent album, the amazing Live at Bush Hall.

I don’t usually feature live albums in the Top 31, because live albums, no matter how nicely produced, tend to be mere “best of” collections of songs. The songs on Live at Bush Hall are all entirely new for BC,NR, written and performed live in the aftermath from Wood’s departure. In the span of 8 months in 2022, the band worked out the full set that would make up the three performances, with none of their earlier work with Wood being featured. In fact, the band has said they will never perform songs from their first two albums, out of respect for Wood, but should he feel strong enough to make a return to the stage, they would welcome the opportunity to do so.

The six piece are an eclectic mix, not unlike former indie darlings Arcade Fire. Tyler Hyde (bass), May Kershaw (keyboards), and Lewis Evans (horns and woodwinds) all take turns singing lead on two or more songs. And Charlie Wayne (drums), Georgia Ellery (violin), and Luke Mark (guitar) all lend their voice in harmony and background throughout the album.

When watching the film (linked above), you get a little insight into the three themes they chose for the performances. As reviewed in NME back in February, each performance “has its own unique theme, for which the band (under the collective pseudonym Hubert Dalcrosse) penned a brief synopsis for a different fictional theatrical performance. They are, respectively, “When The Whistle Thins,” about a council of Somerset farmers’ quarterly harvest summit, “I Ain’t Alfredo No Ghosts,” about a beloved pizza chef’s encounter with a poltergeist, and “The Taming Of The School,” a 1980s prom-themed caper. Each performance involved DIY art and stagecraft set, costumes and face paint, and, at least in the case of the pizza story, what appears to be a complete dining experience with actual pizza served. There is no attempt to make these three performances feel like one single performance in the film, by design. This is a collection of the best of the bunch from all three, and presented as such.

Having only heard Ants, but knowing Wood was no longer in the band, I had the immense pleasure of seeing BC,NR perform in the afternoon sun on the main stage at THING 2023. I didn’t know a single song (as I hadn’t known what had gone into Bush Hall and the stellar performance album that came from it), but I left feeling elated. Watch my personal recording of the band’s gobsmackingly lovely performance of “Turbines/Pigs,” led by pianist Kershaw. You can sense a real hush fall on the crowd – 95% not sure what we’re in for – as the song starts, and we all stand in rapt attention for 9 minutes of pure emotion. I saw more than one person crying at the end of it, no joke.

I cannot wait to see where BC,NR go next. Something tells me they won’t simply record these songs in a sterile studio environment. I expect the next record to be a full, studio-recorded album of new songs. Or maybe they’ve found their groove as a live-only band, and that’s what will form their next recorded work. One things for sure, they’re nowhere near “done.” They’ve faced a kind of adversity that bands never come back from, and they weathered the storm. I’ll be waiting here with bated breath for whatever comes next.

__________________________________________

  1. Volcano by Jungle
  2. Javelin by Sufjan Stevens
  3. The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We by Mitski
  4. Radical Romantics by Fever Ray
  5. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  6. Blondshell by Blondshell
  7. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  8. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  9. Sundial by Noname
  10. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  11. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  12. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  13. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  14. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  15. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  16. The Window by Ratboys
  17. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  18. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  19. Pollen by Tennis
  20. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  21. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  22. everything is alive by Slowdive
  23. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  24. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  25. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 26, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, black country new road, georgia ellery, jockstrap
Top 31
Comment

#7 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Jungle

January 25, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Volcano by Jungle

I had no expectation that when I first heard Jungle in 2018 (For Ever, #28 in 2018) that they’d have the staying power to not only kick out another, even better album (Loving in Stereo, #15 last year), but they still had another notch on the dial to turn to. Volcano, Jungle’s fourth album, is by far their best yet. They keep growing, keep surprising the listener.

Jungle are two London-based producers, Josh Lloyd-Watson (“J”), and Tom McFarland (“T”), backed by a sea of singers and musicians who are in turn backed by a sea of fans who can’t possibly sit still while Jungle are playing music. Since their first self-titled album in 2014, the band has been making the most consistently good dance music out there. Volcano was released two days shy of a year after their previous album — by far the fastest the band has ever written, recorded, and released a record. They actually wrote the album while touring for the previous album. It’s exciting to think when I saw the band perform as one of the headliners at Thing in 2022, they were busy writing an even better album in the in-between times.

In addition to releasing phenomenal music, the band tends to create videos heavy with choreographed groups of dancers performing feats no normal human should be capable of. For Volcano, J & T teamed up with choreographer Shay Latukolan to create a video for each song from the albumL: Volcano – A Motion Picture. The videos string together to show the 50-minute broadcast of a local television station (which has J & T in the broadcast booth, naturally) showing different formations of dance and rhythm and loose storytelling. The songs are each single, long takes, with 18 dancers playing off each other and moving with the camera. Nothing is ever resting or standing still, and it’s all so closely orchestrated. It’s mesmerizing. Dancers Will West and Mette Linturi most often take the leads in the short stories shown in each video, but the other 16 dancers are every bit as good as they are. The amount of work that must have gone into planning, rehearsing, (dancers and stage production) and then filming these one-long-take videos is mind-blowing.

I’ve said it before, and I guess I’ll keep saying it well into the future: Jungle makes you move. Watch the video above, for the great song “Back on 74,” or better yet, just watch the full movie, and dance along.

__________________________________________

  1. Javelin by Sufjan Stevens
  2. The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We by Mitski
  3. Radical Romantics by Fever Ray
  4. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  5. Blondshell by Blondshell
  6. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  7. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  8. Sundial by Noname
  9. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  10. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  11. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  12. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  13. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  14. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  15. The Window by Ratboys
  16. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  17. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  18. Pollen by Tennis
  19. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  20. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  21. everything is alive by Slowdive
  22. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  23. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  24. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 25, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, jungle
Top 31
Comment

#8 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Sufjan Stevens

January 24, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Javelin by Sufjan Stevens

Sufjan Stevens has led many musical lifetimes in his 48 years on this earth. He released his debut album when he was just under 25 years old, in 2000. His third album, 2003’s Michigan, was the first of his that I heard, and it established Stevens as a talented singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist (he played no less than 18 different instruments on the album). It was his sixth album, Illinois, that saw his fame rise to the highest of highs. The album was recognized as “best of the decade” by a number of publications (and I generally concur). Those six albums constitute his first “lifetime,” creating lush, Spector-like arrangements on top of his hushed falsetto singing songs about inanimate objects, geographic locations, and even serial killers — rarely turning the lens inward on himself.

The next ten years produced only one album, The Age of Adz, which came in at #3 in 2010. This album is his second “lifetime,” creating what I believe is his best record, but one that is confrontational, noise-laden, and rich to extravagance. It also marked a distinct shift in subject matter in his lyrics, where he chose to focus inward, blatantly focusing on his emotions and health concerns (he’d been suffering through a mysterious debilitating viral infection that affected his nervous system and caused chronic pain).

Carrie & Lowell, his seventh album, came out in 2015 (#4). It started yet another chapter in his musical progression, staying focused inward on deeply personal subjects such as the death of his mother Carrie and his relationship with her husband, Stevens’ stepfather Lowell Brams. Stevens attributes a lot of his love of music and musicianship to Brams, who came into his life when he was young. Carrie & Lowell, laden with quiet, whispered vocals throughout, is a complete departure from Adz. Rather than pushing you away from the speaker with loud noise-driven over-layered music, Lowell forces you to lean in closely.

The next five albums, a series of extended collaborations, contemplative orchestration, and less evocative lyrics, form the fourth chapter: Planetarium (with Nico Muhly, the National’s Bryce Dessner and James McAlister) (#30 in 2017), Aporia (with Lowell Brams) in 2020, The Ascension (#9) in 2020, Convocations in 2021, and A Beginner’s Mind (with Angelo de Augustine) (#29) in 2021.

And now, two years after that, we find Sufjans writing a new masterpiece, learning from the many chapters of his musical history, and forming way may become known as his best yet, with Javelin. Lyrically and musically, the album picks the best parts of The Age of Adz and Carrie & Lowell and creates something wholly new. Stevens dedicated the album to “the light of my life, my beloved partner and best friend Evans Richardson, who passed away in April.”

A month prior to album release, Stevens announced on Instagram that he had been hospitalized for a debilitating illness called Guillain–Barré syndrome, a fast-moving autoimmune disorder in which the body’s immune system mistakenly attacks the peripheral nerves. Stevens “woke up one morning and couldn’t walk. My hands, arms and legs were numb and tingling and I had no strength, no feeling, no mobility.” Stevens was sent home to continue his recovery on the day Javelin was released.

While not directly about these events, Javelin feels like Stevens’ most intimate album. Aside from backing vocals provided by others on most tracks, and longtime friend and collaborator Bryce Dessner’s guitar on track 9, lovingly called “Shit Talk,” Stevens performed every instrument, and recorded and mixed every song in his home studio. At times quiet like Lowell, and others bombastic like Adz, I’m not being hyperbolic when I say this may be the best manifestation of Stevens’ talent. It’s a testament to the number of great albums from 2023 that pushes this phenomenal work down to #8.

No matter what level of fan or non-fan of Sufjan Stevens’ work you’ve been in the past, Javelin is for you. It’s the best place to start a new obsession, or to put the cherry on the top of one you’ve already been building (like me).

__________________________________________

  1. The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We by Mitski
  2. Radical Romantics by Fever Ray
  3. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  4. Blondshell by Blondshell
  5. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  6. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  7. Sundial by Noname
  8. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  9. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  10. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  11. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  12. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  13. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  14. The Window by Ratboys
  15. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  16. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  17. Pollen by Tennis
  18. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  19. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  20. everything is alive by Slowdive
  21. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  22. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  23. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 24, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, sufjan stevens, lowell brams, nico muhly, the national, bryce dessner, james mcalister, angelo de augustine
Top 31
Comment

#9 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Mitski

January 23, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We by Mitski

Mitsuki Miyawaki, aka Mitski, had an eventful 18 months after the release of her sixth album, Lauren Hell. She had her first chart topper, when her song “The Only Heartbreaker” from that seminal 2022 album hit No. 1 on Billboard’s Adult Alternative Songs chart in March 2022. She continued to struggle internally with everything that comes from being famous. She co-wrote a song with David Byrne (#15 in 2012) and Son Lux (#17 in 2013) for the soundtrack to the best movie of 2022, Everything Everywhere All at Once. She got nominated for an Academy Award for said song. She chose not to perform the song during the ceremony, likely related to the previously mentioned inner turmoil related to being potentially even more famous1. She and Byrne and Son Lux did not win an Oscar for said song, despite the movie taking home nine other academy awards. And she found the time to record her best album yet, her seventh, called The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We.

Miyawaki’s voice and tone remain unchanged on the new album, but everything around it has been beefed up. Subdued are the electronic-pop intonations of Hell, replaced by the warm embrace of a Mitski-led 17-person choir, along with a full orchestra conducted by none other than Drew Erickson, who arranged the big band feel of Father John Misty’s Chloë and the Next 20th Century (#9 last year) and the fantastic strings in Weyes Blood’s And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow, (also last year, at #25). This album has a majesty unlike anything Mitski’s done before. Check out the choir, as featured in the video above, for the song “Bug Like an Angel.” The only other song she’s released a video for from this album is “My Love Mine All Mine,” a shorter, non-choral song reminiscent of a number of Father John Misty’s recent songs.

On my past two reviews of Mitski’s albums, Lauren Hell at (#18 last year), and her fourth album, Puberty 2 at #24 in 2016,2 I’ve written a lot about how it’s taken me a long time to understand Mitski. “Understand” is probably not the right word – I can feel like I know where she’s coming from with her songs and what she puts out in the world, but I can’t really say I know her, let along “understand” her. But my brain has finally caught up to her music. She was so far out ahead of me, I couldn’t see her past the horizon. I’m still behind her now, but I’m no longer losing ground. Here’s to hoping she comes through town when I’m available to see her in all her gory. In the mean time, I’ll keep Inhospitable on repeat.

1. Stephanie Hsu, the young actress who performed in the movie and was nominated for an academy award as well, performed in Mitski’s stead.↩
2. I’ll never be able to forgive myself for being so disconnected as to not even put her genre-defining fifth album, Be The Cowboy, in the Top 31 of 2018.↩

__________________________________________

  1. Radical Romantics by Fever Ray
  2. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  3. Blondshell by Blondshell
  4. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  5. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  6. Sundial by Noname
  7. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  8. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  9. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  10. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  11. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  12. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  13. The Window by Ratboys
  14. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  15. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  16. Pollen by Tennis
  17. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  18. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  19. everything is alive by Slowdive
  20. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  21. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  22. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 23, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, mitski, david byrne, son lux, father john misty, weyes blood, drew erickson
Top 31
Comment

#10 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Fever Ray

January 22, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Radical Romantics by Fever Ray

Welcome to the Top 10 albums of 2023. This is where things really get fun for me, thinking about the albums from the year that I had the most trouble putting down, and what they mean to me and place they occupy in my life.

Fever Ray is the moniker under which Karin Dreijer – half of the groundbreaking electronic duo The Knife – performs, and seeing them appear here in 2023 should not be any surprise. The Knife’s Shaking the Habitual was #29 back in 2013, and both of Dreijer’s earlier Fever Ray releases have appeared on the Top 31 (#18 in 2009 and #21 in 2017). I am always picking up what they’re laying down.

Dreijer, and their nom de plume, Fever Ray, are unlike anything else I currently listen to. In my younger, gothier days I’d cycle through The Cure, Bauhaus, Siouxsie, and the like, and while all of those bands had a particular look to them – liked to wear dark makeup and do funny things with their hair – I would never have said any of them were “in costume.” My days-away from 50-year-old wants to call Fever Ray “goth,” but there’s something more to it. Dreijer and their Fever Ray bandmates are 100% “in costume,” all the time. On the cover to their phenomenal third album, Radical Romantics, Dreijer has a bald cap on, a ringed mane of long thin white hair, and elaborate makeup that would make them a shoe-in for the Ghost of Christmas Past in a revival of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol.

Radical Romantics is Dreijer’s best album since The Knife’s Silent Shout, which came out back in 2006 (better than the two previous Fever Ray albums, and way better than The Knife’s final album, Shaking the Habitual, from 2013). The additional help Dreijer brought onto Romantics likely has something to do with it. In addition to roping in their brother Olof (aka the other half of The Knife) for four songs, Fever Ray also collaborated with Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, the Oscar-winning and Grammy-winning duo behind the soundtracks to 2010’s The Social Network and 2013’s The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (that’s not to mention Reznor’s other gig) on two songs. You can watch videos for both of those Reznor / Ross songs. The first is featured above, called “Even it Out,” and even shows Reznor and Ross performing within. There are some definite Reznor-like sounds flowing through the song. The other is “North,” a more subdued affair, with similar production to the duo’s soundtrack work. Obviously, Dreijer’s work without the help is great, too (the albums wouldn’t appear here on the Top 31 if I didn’t think so). But when 60% of the songs on the album are essentially The Knife songs or tangential Nine Inch Nails songs, there really is no comparison.

You can watch a couple other videos the band has released from the album: “Kandy” and my favorite track from the album, the opener, “What They Call Us.”

I had the immense pleasure of seeing Fever Ray perform live in November, and it was everything I want out of a live show. Theatrics, costumes, dance routines and throbbing bass make for one hell of an experience. Just last week Fever Ray released a live performance video created for ARTE.tv (“the European Culture Channel”) concert series “Passengers,” called Les Hauts Fourneaux d'Uckange (in English, The Blast Furnaces of Uckange) — an hour-long, extremely well-produced film showing the band perform in an abandoned factory in northern France. I encourage you to watch the performance, as it is nearly 1:1 of what I saw back in November, right down to Dreijer’s deathly makeup, their David-Byrne inspired big suit, and the light-up cloud headpiece worn by the keyboardist. Watching them perform, you’ll start to understand what is so magical about Dreijer and the band.

Radical Romantics is eerie, intense, brooding, and it seeps into every one of your orifices like a thick fog. I cannot recommend it highly enough.

__________________________________________

  1. Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers
  2. Blondshell by Blondshell
  3. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  4. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  5. Sundial by Noname
  6. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  7. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  8. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  9. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  10. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  11. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  12. The Window by Ratboys
  13. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  14. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  15. Pollen by Tennis
  16. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  17. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  18. everything is alive by Slowdive
  19. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  20. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  21. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 22, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, fever ray, the knife, the cure, siouxsie and the banshees, bauhaus, trent reznor, atticus ross, nine inch nails
Top 31
Comment

#11 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Young Fathers

January 21, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Heavy Heavy by Young Fathers

Here we are on the bubble of the Top 10 of 2023 with Young Fathers, who were in this exact same position with their phenomenal Cocoa Sugar a short five years ago. Heavy Heavy is the band’s fourth full-length, and it’s every bit as good as Cocoa Sugar.

Not much has changed with the band in the space between these two albums. They still hail from Edinburgh, Scotland, and they are still a trio of men who have now been making music together for 15 years: Alloysious Massaquoi (born in Liberia, moved to Edinburgh when he was 4), Kayus Bankole (born in Edinburgh to Nigerian parents) and Graham 'G' Hastings (born in Edinburgh to Scottish parents). Having been writing and performing together since they were teenagers, the three men dance and spar and finish each other’s musical thoughts like brothers. Watch their KEXP Live Performance from earlier this year to see how they play off each other – the first three songs of the short set see each of them take the lead at various points.

Heavy Heavy is only a short 33 minutes long, with 10 get-in-get-out 3-minute tracks. It’s heavenly. Whereas Cocoa Sugar saw the band adopting more pop-song qualities that allowed them to secure a wider audience, Heavy Heavy has them maturing those same ideas into the best they can be. The song “I Saw,” shown above, achieves a sound somewhere between TV on the Radio and Prodigy. The other video they’ve released, for the song “Tell Somebody,” is an odd choice for a video. It’s gorgeous, don’t get me wrong, but the song feels more like a transition, and bridge between the highlights of the album, “Drum” (song #3) and “Geronimo” (song #5).

When I first heard Young Fathers, I wasn’t sure where they should be stored in my musical file cabinet. Over these last two albums, they’ve shifting up to the front of the drawer that features political rock, hip hop, and hard hitting dance artists. (No such drawer exists – maybe that’s the metaphor I should be painting here: they’ve been moved to a musical drawer all their own). Even if you only kinda liked Cocoa Sugar, I urge you to listen to Heavy Heavy. It contains a half-hour of danceable, singable, catchy as all get-out music that you’ll want to repeat again and again.

__________________________________________

  1. Blondshell by Blondshell
  2. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  3. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  4. Sundial by Noname
  5. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  6. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  7. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  8. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  9. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  10. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  11. The Window by Ratboys
  12. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  13. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  14. Pollen by Tennis
  15. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  16. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  17. everything is alive by Slowdive
  18. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  19. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  20. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 21, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, young fathers, tv on the radio, prodigy
Top 31
Comment

#12 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Blondshell

January 20, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Blondshell by Blondshell

I love getting in on a new band on the ground floor and watching them rise to the top. 26-year-old Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter Sabrina Mae Teitelbaum, otherwise known as Blondshell, is a great example of this experience. I saw her and her band open for Porridge Radio (#12 last year) at the tiny 200-person venue Barboza in September 2022. At the time, she had released exactly three songs (“Olympus,” “Kiss City,” and “Sepsis” – the latter of which is featured in the video above). Three months later, she was signing a record contract with Partisan Records, home of recent Bacon Top 31 faves Fontaines D.C. (#20 in 2022, #12 in 2020, and #26 in 2019) and IDLES (#24 in 2020 and #16 in 2018) among many others. And now, a year later, she’s released a superb, Obama-approved self-titled debut.

Prior to 2020, Teitelbaum performed under the name BAUM, and had a distinctly different musical personality. BAUM’s music was more centrally Pop with a capital P, and she had a minor viral hit with a song called “Fuckboy.” Listening to that song now, while a little catchy, it unsurprisingly sounds immature and hollow. As COVID started to settle in in early 2020 she made the switch to Blondshell (a name she and her sister came up with over dinner one night). After a couple years of rumination and deep thinking, the first Blondshell song to be released, “Olympus,” came out in June 2022. Over the next year, the magic appears to have taken over as she assembled what became the debut album.

Blondshell has clear linear ties to similar sources as Indigo de Souza did, but Teitelbaum feels more singularly Courtney Barnett, a Bacon Top 31 fave (#5 in 2021, #8 in 2018, and #5 in 2015), and further back into 90s rock, like Hole or the Cranberries. When I saw her perform back in 2022 she played a cover to Built to Spill’s “Carry the Zero,” which came out in 1999. Being a huge BTS stan, of course this had some positive influence on me, personally. You can watch her “KEXP Live Performance” to see her and the band in action, or watch the handful of additional videos she’s released from the album:

  • “Salad”
  • “Joiner
  • “Veronica Mars”
  • “Street Rat”

We’re getting into the portion of the Top 31 where every artist becomes a must-listen. There’s no “give this a try,” it’s all very much “stop what you’re doing right now and listen.” And that’s where I‘ll end this review. Do it. Now.

__________________________________________

  1. All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza
  2. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  3. Sundial by Noname
  4. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  5. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  6. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  7. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  8. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  9. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  10. The Window by Ratboys
  11. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  12. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  13. Pollen by Tennis
  14. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  15. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  16. everything is alive by Slowdive
  17. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  18. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  19. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 20, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, blondshell, baum, fontaines dc, idles, obama, built to spill, hole, pj harvey
Top 31
Comment

#13 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Indigo De Souza

January 19, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

All of This Will End by Indigo De Souza

There are many ways an artist can pay homage to an earlier time or work, and there’ve been a number of artists on this year’s Top 31 who are clearly referring to something previous. Teenage Sequence is kinda LCD Soundsystem. Greg Mendez is kinda Elliott Smith. Tennis, Kate Bush. Ratboys, Pale Jay, and Anohni equal Big Thief, Lee Fields and Nina Simone, respectively. As they say, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.

Indigo De Souza, the Asheville, North Carolina-based, American-Brazilian singer-songwriter, whose fantastic third album All of This Will End is coming in at #13, is also phoning in directly from the referential dept. Take some Courtney Barnett rock n’ roll fuzz, some Liz Phair directness, and even some of Alanis’ production, and you’ll end up smack dab in the middle of this De Souza record. While it’s not breaking new musical ground (what is anymore, really?), it’s hitting all the right indie rock spots.

De Souza is blunt. The title of the new album is, as you might expect, related to the finality of everything. She told WhyNow.co.uk, “I know that I am fleeting and I’m dying.”

“I named the album All of This Will End because it took me a while to accept that. Once I was able to accept that, feel less afraid of it but more open to it and curious about it, my life started to become more meaningful because accepting you are a temporary thing is what gives way to meaning and intention and connection. “It doesn’t give way if you think you’re special and you’re never gonna die, or if you’re so afraid of death you can’t even think about it. I know the people I love are going to die and so am I, so I love them even more, and I put so much time and effort into showing up. “I basically do as much as I can to shine a light on any corner I can reach. Any corner beyond what I know is beyond my control. I try to pour as much intention into everything I do, as much as I can, because I want people to feel included and safe. I know how lonely it is to be alive, so it feels important to create community if it’s possible at all.”

That loneliness and finality shines through in the lyrics scattered throughout All of This. But the album is not sad and lonely – it is triumphant, loud, and in your face in the best way. Give the song above, “Smog,” a listen and you’ll see. Or watch one of the other videos from the album: “Younger & Dumber” (the quietest song on the album) and “You Can Be Mean” (not so quiet). Then put the album on when you’re angry at the world and want to take out your frustrations. You’ll be glad you did.

__________________________________________

  1. My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons
  2. Sundial by Noname
  3. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  4. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  5. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  6. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  7. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  8. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  9. The Window by Ratboys
  10. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  11. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  12. Pollen by Tennis
  13. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  14. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  15. everything is alive by Slowdive
  16. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  17. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  18. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 19, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, indigo de souza, courtney barnett, liz phair, alanis morrisette
Top 31
Comment

#14 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Anohni and the Johnsons

January 18, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni and the Johnsons

It’s a travesty that Anohni with and without her band, the Johnsons, has never appeared on the Bacon Review Top 31. They’ve been making stellar music since their 2000 self-titled debut. There have been two “and the Johnsons” albums that could have been featured: their fourth, 2009’s The Crying Light, and their fifth, 2010’s Swanlights. And not including Anohni’s 2016 amazing solo debut, Hopelessness, on the Top 31 that year was such an egregious transgression I even wrote about it a bit after the fact.. I only wish including their stellar 2023 album My Back Was a Bridge for You to Cross made up for all those misses. It won’t, but I’m going to give it a try nonetheless.

Anohni Hegarty, formerly Antony, is a singer, songwriter, artist and anything but simple. She is British-born, New York City-based, and Oscar-nominated, for her collaboration with J. Ralph on the climate-change driven song “Manta Ray” from the 2016 documentary Racing Extinction, becoming the first openly transgender performer nominated for an Academy Award. Her solo album, Hopelessness, which featured production by Oneohtrix Point Never, won me over with Anohni’s deep, vibrato-laden voice played over the top of driving electronic beats. Bridge, here in 2023, is a departure and/or return to form, depending on how you look at it. It’s been 13 years since she last released an album with the Johnsons. Combine her rekindled relationship with that producer Jimmy Hogarth, who has work with Amy Winehouse, Sia, and Tina Turner, and you end up with 41 minutes of distinct Anohni-driven soul.

In an interview in The Guardian, Anohni and Hogarth aimed to channel Nina Simone and jazz singer Jimmy Scott. From my somewhat untrained-ear position, I can feel the connection to Simone pretty strongly. This album was recorded in a more immediate fashion than Anohni’s previous, tedious-attention-focused-on-every-note productions. All told, the album took roughly only two weeks to complete, with the band creating a remarkable 3-4 songs a day in that time.

There have been four videos created for the album:

  • the above, “Scapegoat”
  • “Why Am I Alive Now?”
  • “Sliver of Ice”
  • “It Must Change”

The cover of the album features a black and white portrait of noted outspoken American gay liberation activist Marsha P. Johnson, one of Anohni’s heroes. According to that same article in The Guardian, Anohni met Johnson just six days before Johnson was murdered in 1992 (still an open case). Anohni had been and remains so moved by what Johnson did and stood for, Anohni named her backing band after Johnson in tribute.

This is a slow-burner of an album that carries a heaviness unlike any other. It feels like a weighted blanket draped over your body, cozy and warm. Put on the record, light a fire, and just let it unfold.

__________________________________________

  1. Sundial by Noname
  2. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  3. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  4. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  5. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  6. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  7. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  8. The Window by Ratboys
  9. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  10. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  11. Pollen by Tennis
  12. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  13. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  14. everything is alive by Slowdive
  15. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  16. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  17. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 18, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, anohni, anohni and the johnsons, nina simone, oneohtrix point never, j ralph, jimmy scott
Top 31
Comment

#15 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Noname

January 17, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Sundial by Noname

Five years can feel very long, or very short. For a kindergartner, five years is a literal lifetime, having gone from an immobile blob to a living, breathing, interacting and fast-moving person. But for the parents of that five-year-old, those first five years can feel like they flew by. Every parent who sends their child off to their first day of kindergarten thinks “Where did my baby go and how did this happen so fast?”

For Fatimah Nyeema Warner, aka Noname, the five years since she released her debut album, Room 25, must have felt extremely long. A lot has happened in that time: She announced a second album, to be named Factory Baby, a year after Room 25 came out, only to formally cancel it a year later;1 She threatened to retire from music and the spotlight, and started a black- and queer-focused book club; She formed a rap supergroup with Smino and Saba (the latter of whom she collaborated with early on in her career); And she ultimately rededicated herself to her solo career, assembling a fantastic, confrontational, and welcoming second full-length, Sundial.

Noname got her start by falling in love with writing poetry and attending open mics and poetry slams. From there she made the natural movement into freestyle rapping with friends, including Chance the Rapper. Her first recorded appearance was on his second mixtape, Acid Rap, in 2013, and she contributed a verse to a song on his third, the timeless Coloring Book (which I sadly overlooked in 2016). Her first collected solo work was the mixtape Telefone, which came out immediately following that Chance collaboration.

Warner has a command of rhythm and verse unlike no other. While she doesn’t have any music videos I can point you to, you should hit play on her Tiny Desk Concert above. You can also hear a bit of her skill in the short film created about her Sundial Block Party from earlier this year. And then go and put on the full album. I wouldn’t be surprised if you find yourself having listened to it on repeat for the rest of the day.

1. She’d grown weary of her fame and frustrated with the (mostly white) demographic that followed her, saying on Twitter, “I refuse to keep making music and putting it online for free for people who won’t support me. If y'all don't wanna leave the crib I feel it. I don't want to dance on a stage for white people.”↩

__________________________________________

  1. 10,000 gecs by 100 gecs
  2. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  3. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  4. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  5. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  6. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  7. The Window by Ratboys
  8. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  9. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  10. Pollen by Tennis
  11. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  12. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  13. everything is alive by Slowdive
  14. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  15. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  16. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 17, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, noname, chance the rapper, saba, smino
Top 31
Comment

#16 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — 100 gecs

January 16, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

10000 gecs by 100 gecs

When I first heard the 100 gecs 2019 album, 1000 gecs, it was from out of nowhere. I’d found it via an unlikely source (NYTimes’ “Best albums of 2019”), got instantly infatuated with it despite not really knowing how to listen to it, and promptly added it to my Top 31 (but near the bottom, down at #29). As the subsequent four years’ repeated listening has proven, I placed that album way too far down on the list. It was mind blowing, and unique enough that it felt like they could never match the genius and immediacy of the sound of that album. Enter 9,000 additional gecs, stage left.

10000 gecs the St. Louis duo’s fantastic and fantastically weird sophomore record, is another triumph. It’s silly and noisy and loud and catchy as hell. “It’s 10 times as good as the last one,” Laura Les told Pitchfork. Les along with her partner in crime, Dylan Brady, had a lot of pressure put on themselves after the success of their breakout, genre breaking debut. While I can’t confidently say this new album is 10x better than the debut, it does prove that 100 gecs are capable of extending themselves well beyond what I or anyone expected.

A close cousin of what the band Sleigh Bells showed us a decade earlier (#12 in 2010 and #31 in 2012), the much less polished and less consistently loud sound from 100 gecs makes them a bit less approachable. Hit play on the video above, for their song “Hollywood Baby” and you’ll see what I mean. Then view any of the other videos they’ve created from the album and you’ll understand the catchiness of it as well:

  • “The Most Wanted Person in the United States”
  • “Billy knows jamie”
  • “Dumbest girl alive”
  • “Doritos & Fritos”
  • “mememe”

I am once again sitting here drawing a blank as to where 100 gecs can go from this peak. But I thought this same thing back in 2019, so I’m finding it a little easier to throw my expectations out the door and simply hope for the best. Until then, I’m going to thoroughly enjoy 10000 and 1000 gecs in anticipation.

__________________________________________

  1. For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers
  2. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  3. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  4. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  5. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  6. The Window by Ratboys
  7. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  8. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  9. Pollen by Tennis
  10. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  11. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  12. everything is alive by Slowdive
  13. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  14. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  15. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 16, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, 100 gecs, sleigh bells
Top 31
Comment

#17 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — The Chemical Brothers

January 15, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

For That Beautiful Feeling by The Chemical Brothers

The Bacon Review has been a fan of Ed Simons and Tom Rowlands’ big-beat electronica outfit The Chemical Brothers for a very very long long time. Their stellar debut album, Exit Planet Dust, came out in 1995, and I loved it and their subsequent releases (1997’s Dig Your Own Hole and 1999’s Surrender). You might think music that resonated with someone in the heart of their 20s youth may no longer relate to the nearly-50-year-old father of two he has become in the subsequent decades, but you’d be very wrong. Granted, the six albums that came out between 1999 and 2019 didn’t land as squarely in my day-to-day listening. But there’s something about the band’s stellar tenth album, For That Beautiful Feeling, that hits different.

This is the Chemical Brothers back in their 1990s glory. Intense bass beats, sampled and repeated vocals about love and life, big sweeping crescendos that take over your body no matter where you are when you hear them — what you remember most about the band is all mostly there. The only real difference is the Beth Orton and Noel Gallagher cameos have been replaced by the French singer/songwriter Halo Maud and everywhere-man Beck.

The band has released a handful of videos from the album:

  • The above “Live Again” features a dancer stuck in a loop, continually stepping out of her trailer into an ever-changing landscape, brought on by some barely-scene tentacle-laden alien.
  • No Reason is a great song shown to the green-screen escapades of a dancing marching band
  • Goodbye features a colorful couple in love
  • Skipping Like a Stone ft. Beck is the most ambitious video, but takes the idea of a skipped stone with a hero complex to its illogical extreme.

If you liked The Chemical Brothers back in the day, and if your ears can still hear and your body can still move, then you should definitely check out Feeling. And if the band is new to you, give it a listen to hear what people were dancing to 30 years ago. I’m genuinely curious to hear a current 20-something’s take on the style of dance music that was created 10 years before they were born. Beyoncé, with her most recent house-driven masterpiece, RENNAISANCE (#2 just last year), and others have been giving everyone a taste of what 90s dance music was like. The Chemical Brothers were one of the originators. It’s time for us all to get re-educated.

__________________________________________

  1. ÁTTA by Sigur Rós
  2. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  3. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  4. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  5. The Window by Ratboys
  6. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  7. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  8. Pollen by Tennis
  9. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  10. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  11. everything is alive by Slowdive
  12. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  13. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  14. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 15, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, the chemical brothers, beth orton, noel gallagher, halo maud, beck
Top 31
Comment

#18 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Sigur Rós

January 14, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

ÁTTA by Sigur Rós

Sigur Rós released their 7th studio album, Kveikur, in 2013. In the ensuing years, the band members had a few odds and ends, such as producing a version of The Simpsons theme song, appearing in Game of Thrones, re-releasing their internationally acclaimed sophomore album Ágætis byrjun with additional previously-unreleased material, a couple of songs for Black Mirror, their drummer leaving the band due to sexual assault allegations, tax evasion charges being given and then dismissed, and even lead singer Jónsi’s first museum exhibition in the US, at the National Nordic Museum in Seattle.

After that roller coaster of a decade, the band reconvened, and if the music they subsequently recorded is any indication, were ready to settle down a bit. ÁTTA, which is “eight” in Icelandic, is the Icelandic band’s eighth album in their nearly 30-year history. Like their previous albums, it is ethereal, lush, and deeply moving. Without a drummer, and consequently no real percussion in the album, ÁTTA may lack the bombast of past albums. But lacking in bombast by no means means “sparse.” The album was recorded at Abbey Road Studios in London, along with the London Contemporary Orchestra.

To match the rich orchestration of the recorded work, the band went on a global tour with a 41-piece orchestra called the “Wordless Music Orchestra”. A 30-city tour around the globe with 3 band members, 41 orchestra members, and countless roadies makes for a mind-bogglingly large effort. My wife and I got to see the fruits of their labor when they came to Seattle, and it was every bit as magical as you might imagine.

Along with the music for ÁTTA, the band engaged 10 filmmakers to create a short film for each song. They did a similar exercise for Valtari (#7 in 2012) If the emotional weight of the songs isn’t hitting you where it hurts, watching the visuals while listening certainly will. The short films that make up the ÁTTA Film Experiment are all vastly different and interesting – these were my favorites:

  • “Blóðberg” is arresting in its simplicity – a drone flight over a barren landscape that goes from endless sand and dead trees to bodies laid across the landscape for as far as the eye can see
  • “Klettur,” my favorite track on the album, is equally terrifying, with seemingly disparate sections featuring roller derby, kids in the woods being stalked by a shadowy figure, and blood coming out of the eyes of dolls
  • “Gold,” is unique in the way it shows what appears to be a man pining for and dreaming about a relationship lost
  • “Andrá,” shown above, is the best video in the Experiment – featuring real Sigur Rós fans with deeply moving stories being brought into the studio to hear the song for the first time and sharing their feelings

There’s not much else I can say about a band you’ve either heard of and love, or never heard of and will likely not enjoy. Sigur Rós, while creating ostensibly background music do an amazing job of forcing you to sit up and listen with your entire being. ÁTTA is no different.

__________________________________________

  1. Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas
  2. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  3. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  4. The Window by Ratboys
  5. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  6. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  7. Pollen by Tennis
  8. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  9. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  10. everything is alive by Slowdive
  11. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  12. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  13. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 14, 2024 /Royal Stuart
sigur ros, 2023, advented, jonsi
Top 31
Comment

#19 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Black Pumas

January 13, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Chronicles of a Diamond by Black Pumas

It’s a rare phenomenon when a sophomore album is better than a debut. Debut albums often have years of creativity built into them – the band members often having brought the songs along with them through the high school / college years, having noodled on them for ages before finally putting them to tape. Then the band is asked to produce a 2nd record in a fraction of that time, hence “the sophomore slump.”

Not so with Black Pumas’ 2nd album, Chronicles of a Diamond. The Pumas are a duo out of Austin, Texas. Their self-titled debut album from 2019 did hit my radar at the time, but was a bit too over-produced for my liking. It did not make the Top 31 that year. I think I was the only one to not connect with the album, as they received numerous nominations from the Grammys: Best New Artist, Record of the Year, and Album of the Year.

Fast-forward four years, and singer/songwriter Eric Burton and guitarist/producer Adrian Quesada have produced an even better follow-up. A lot of bands would have crumbled at the pressure of producing something that could match, let alone exceed their critically-acclaimed debut. But Chronicles does just that.

Black Pumas are put into the psychedelic soul genre, pioneered by the likes to Jimi Hendrix and Sly and the Family Stone. Hard-hitting drums and keyboards back up the fuzzed out sounds of Quesada’s guitar and Burton’s vocals. Burton’s voice is placed forward of the band, his lyrics easily heard over the music. Their sound reminds me of the Dirtbombs, or Algiers (#18 in 2017), and even a little of Benjamin Clementine, but with more fuzz (you know Clementine – his song “Nemesis” is the theme song for AppleTV+’s The Morning Show). A neither Clementine nor Burton would be anywhere without Seal having led the way with his gorgeous voice 30 years ago.

Watch the video above, for their great lead single “More Than a Love Song.” You can also see videos for “Mrs. Postman,” “Angel,” and “Ice Cream (Pay Phone).” Even better, just check out Chronicles of a Diamond – it’s one hell of an album.

__________________________________________

  1. The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose
  2. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  3. The Window by Ratboys
  4. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  5. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  6. Pollen by Tennis
  7. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  8. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  9. everything is alive by Slowdive
  10. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  11. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  12. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 13, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, black pumas, jimi hendrix, sly and the family stone, the dirtbombs, algiers, benjamin clementine
Top 31
Comment

#20 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Caroline Rose

January 12, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

The Art of Forgetting by Caroline Rose

I’m a big fan of Caroline Rose, the person. But they’re proving hard to pin down, musically. Their first album, Loner, was my #12 album of 2018, and it was tongue-in-cheek pop rock of the best kind. Then their sophomore album, Superstar – #21 in 2020 – was polished up like a gemstone, more pop, less rock. And now they’ve released a great third album, but again reinvented themselves into something else again.

The “rock” side of them has reared its head again, this time with a little garage and grit thrown in for good measure. The Art of Forgetting is a great album, on par with the other two. But because of these shifts they’ve made on each album, I think they’re having trouble finding their audience overall. Or maybe that’s just how it looks from the aging peanut gallery over here.

The two videos that have been released from the album, the above for the song “Miami”, and also “Tell Me What You Want,” are something of a marvel as well. The “Miami” video (“CHAPTER ONE” as it says at the beginning of the video), shown entirely in reverse, depicts Caroline and a companion in a night of fun and debauchery. Halfway through the video, the marquee overhead reads “THANKFUL FOR YOU.” The “Tell Me What You Want” video is the literal exact opposite, in video form. It starts where the “Miami” video ended, but this time moving forward through time (starting with “CHAPTER TWO”). It depicts the same events as shown in the “Miami” video, but this time Caroline is alone, drunkenly going through all the same motions they went through with the companion (in reverse). Drinking until belligerent, staggering around and falling into a pool, most of the letters on the marquee halfway through have been removed, leaving only “F O O L,” ending the story in the hotel room where Caroline then masturbates to, presumably, the memory or dream of the companion shown in “Miami”. The video ends where the “Miami” video began, with a hotel-room CRT TV tuned into television snow. Directed by Sam Bennett, the pair of videos make for a great story, posing more questions than providing answers, in a provocative way.

I suppose Forgetting is similar – Caroline tells a deeply (seemingly) personal story throughout the album, interspersed with answering-machine messages from their grandmother and other found-artifact noises, such as the starting and stopping “KA-CHUNK” of a tape deck. It makes for a wild ride, and one hell of an album.

__________________________________________

  1. Bewilderment by Pale Jay
  2. The Window by Ratboys
  3. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  4. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  5. Pollen by Tennis
  6. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  7. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  8. everything is alive by Slowdive
  9. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  10. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  11. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 12, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, caroline rose, sam bennett
Top 31
Comment

#21 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Pale Jay

January 11, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Bewilderment by Pale Jay

Soul music has had its ups and downs here on the Top 31. From Seattle’s own Pickwick hitting #1 back in 2011, to Leon Bridges and St. Paul & the Broken Bones, to the goddess herself, Sharon Jones in 2017 (RIP), the genre remains alive and well. Enter Pale Jay, a newcomer to the field, with his debut album, Bewilderment. With a voice like Lee Fields or Curtis Mayfield, and easy-living music evocative of Khruangbin, Pale Jay will have you leaning back in your chair and blissfully dreaming about easy breezy summer days.

There’s not much information out there about Pale Jay. He has no wikipedia page, he plays anonymously, and his web presence is boiled down to a single Bandcamp page. He does maintain an active Instagram account, a la SAULT or Banksy. The music on his page only goes back to his first EP, back in October 2021. And aside from a couple singles, this short-but-sweet debut album (with eight songs and coming in at just 24 minutes) is all we get of him. I did find a site reviewing this album who claims Pale Jay was trained as a jazz vocalist and pianist and calls southern California home.

There have been a few artists over the years here on the Top 31 who have chosen to keep their identity a mystery. Some choose to wear obfuscating makeup, such as The Knife or Fever Ray (2009 and 2017). Others choose to stay out of videos and remain unnamed, like Sault (2019, 2020, 2021, and who could forget their SEVEN albums that were #1 collectively just last year). Or there’s artists like Orville Peck, who have worn a mask in public for their entire musical career, and have never dropped character when the public is watching or listening.

Pale Jay fits into the Peck line of anonymity. But whereas Orville Peck has been around long enough that people have been able to put together who his true identity is (thanks to matching up the tattoos he wears all over his body), Pale Jay remains entirely anonymous for the time being. He wears a red balaclava in public (reminiscent of Pussy Riot, who choose to remain relatively anonymous for fear of retribution from the Russian Government), along with a white bucket hat with a red plastic brim. Those combined generally with an all-white turtleneck and white pants, he is effectively covered from head to toe aside from his (yes, pale-skinned) hands, ankles, lips, eyes, and sometimes forearms. (It’s only a matter of time before someone identifies him by the bird tattoo on his left inner elbow.)

You can watch videos Pale Jay has created for each song on the album, each featuring the artist in his signature costume, mostly walking / biking / boating in one long take to each of these songs.

  • “Preface”
  • “In Your Corner”
  • “Dreaming in Slow Motion”
  • “Bewilderment”
  • “Vladimir”
  • “Don't Forget That I Love You”

There’s also this video for a beautiful acoustic rendition of “By The Lake” that will set aside any worries that Pale Jay is unable to master that gorgeous falsetto in a live setting. I chose the featured video above only because it has him driving while lip syncing, with others blissfully trusting their lives to the masked man behind the wheel.

Put Bewilderment on, right now. It’s a short, 24 minute commitment, and you won’t be disappointed. I guarantee it.

__________________________________________

  1. The Window by Ratboys
  2. Action Adventure by DJ Shadow
  3. Let’s Start Here. by Lil Yachty
  4. Pollen by Tennis
  5. Greg Mendez by Greg Mendez
  6. Teenage Sequence by Teenage Sequence
  7. everything is alive by Slowdive
  8. My Soft Machine by Arlo Parks
  9. I/O by Peter Gabriel
  10. Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
The best song pulled from each album

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 11, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, pale jay, curtis mayfield, khruangbin, leon bridges, pickwick, st. paul and the broken bones, sharon jones, lee fields, the knife, fever ray, sault, orville peck, pussy riot
Top 31
Comment
  • Newer
  • Older

Powered by Squarespace