The Bacon Review

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

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#23 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — DJ Shadow

January 09, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Action Adventure by DJ Shadow

Today will forever be known as the day I learned that DJ Shadow’s 1996 top-100 all-time masterpiece Endtroducing… is the Guinness World Records’ holder for “the first album to be recorded using only sampled sounds.” This feels somehow dubious / impossible, but I suppose someone had to be first, and it only adds to the greatness that is DJ Shadow’s debut. But that album is not what I’m here to talk about.

Action Adventure is DJ Shadow’s fantastic 7th studio album (his 6th album, Our Pathetic Age was #21 in 2019, and his 5th, The Mountain Will Fall, #9 in 2016). Where those two previous albums featured big-name guest vocals from the likes of Run the Jewels, Raekwon, and De La Soul, Action is almost entirely instrumental. Aside from the random vocal sample, (such as the lovely sample “All my records are tapes” repeated throughout “All My”), only “You Played Me” feels like a standalone pop song (see the video above). That vocal track, sampled from Jan Jerome’s 1990 R&B B-side “Baby, Got Me Goin,” gives the song an 80s throw-back vibe that will have you bouncing in your seat.

Lacking vocals, the rest of the album feels like it could be the soundtrack to one amazing late 20th Century movie, or perhaps the collected instrumental versions of an album that was originally released with rapping and singing on top. That’s not to say the album is not good — it is great, at being the background to your day as you go about cleaning the house, or hosting a party, or perhaps even on a run. Instead of being the soundtrack to an older movie, it can be the soundtrack to your life today. Watch the video for and listen to “Ozone Scraper,” and you’ll see exactly what I mean.

With a career nearly 30 years in length, DJ Shadow — aka Josh Davis — still has an amazing ability to tap into samples and sounds from the past and make them sound entirely new. Action Adventure fits right in with the work he did on the first U.N.K.L.E. album, 1998’s Psyence Fiction, and his 2006 album The Outsider. He remains a magician at creating beats and blending sounds, and is showing no signs of slowing down.

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

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View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 09, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, dj shadow, run the jewels, raekwon, de la soul, u.n.k.l.e., jan jerome
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#21 on the 2019 Bacon Top 31 — DJ Shadow

January 11, 2020 by Royal Stuart

Our Pathetic Age by DJ Shadow

It’s hard to believe that, despite having released his first album in 1996, Our Pathetic Age, DJ Shadow’s double-album epic from this year, is only his sixth studio album. Each of those six albums have been fantastic, starting with the groundbreaking Endtroducing....., the album that woke everyone to the potential of sampling and songbuilding. Since that seminal release, Shadow, whose real name is Josh Davis, has been building soundscapes and championing underground, has-been, and up-and-coming hip hop artists with great aplomb.

Our Pathetic Age is not a perfect album, but as it’s a double-length LP, it’s easy to set aside the imperfect to let the stellar shine. The album is split into two distinct halves, the first of which is fully instrumental, and the second the more predictable Shadow-type album. The Mountain Will Fall, Shadow’s 2016 album (#9 that year), saw him doubling down on his ability to take his great ear for beats and cadence and pairing that with well-known hip hop artists like Run the Jewels. RTJ reappears on the second half of Our Pathetic Age, along with a litany of other big hip hop names, such as Nas, Ghostface Killah, Raekwon, Gift of Gab and Leteef the Truthspeaker.

The video above, for “Rocket Fuel,” has Shadow teaming up with De La Soul. It’s a great song, and an even better video (directed by Sam Pilling, who also directed the great video I featured in my 2016 The Mountain Will Fall review). The song’s lyrics are top of the line, as written by the De La Soul crew. “People wanna know where Mase, Pos, and Dave went” goes the song. “Still here, still in your ear.” Later on in the song, the second verse has a mind-blowing rhyme that I can’t get out of my head:

Aced all quizzes, A-plussed the final
Vocals we align, we move it all simul-
-taneously over joints we rock
We earned thirty years, so you can say that we got
Three turns, live off the board, unlike you and your chessmen
We install doubt in you and your yes-men

That rhyming of “final” with the first two syllables of “simultaneously” and managing to keep the rhyme going is so so great. Check out this new album by DJ Shadow. You can set the first half aside, I won’t think anything less of you. But pay attention to the second half. It’s as great as anything Shadow has released to date, and you won’t be disappointed.

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22. Juice B Crypts by Battles
23. Pony by Orville Peck
24. Hyperspace by Beck
25. Eraserland by Strand of Oaks
26. Dogrel by Fontaines DC
27. You’re the Man by Marvin Gaye
28. Big Wows by Stealing Sheep
29. 1000 gecs by 100 gecs
30. In the Morse Code of Brake Lights by The New Pornographers
31. Radiant Dawn by Operators

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2009-2018 Top 31s

January 11, 2020 /Royal Stuart
2019, advented, dj shadow, run the jewels, nas, gift of gab, lateef the truthspeaker, ghostface killah, wu tang clan, de la soul
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#5 on the 2016 Bacon Top 31

January 08, 2017 by Royal Stuart

Are You Serious by Andrew Bird

There seems to be a bit of a recurring theme happening in the Bacon Top 31: persevere, and greatness will come back to you. DJ Shadow, Band of Horses, Yeasayer — these bands have all been around for quite a long while, but it wasn’t until their umpteenth album came out that they found the greatness they once enjoyed much earlier in their careers. The same can be found here at #5, with Andrew Bird and his 13th studio album Are You Serious.

This is Bird’s best album yet. He’s clearly matured as a songwriter, and his songs — written with the creative flourish of an accomplished poet — are damn near perfect. There are a number of high points in this album, but none so fantastic as “Left Handed Kisses,” a dueling duet sung with the captivating Fiona Apple (who is no stranger to the Top 31, her most recent album having reached #1 back in 2012). (I posted the video for “Left Handed Kisses” back in March)

If Serious is Bird’s best album, “Kisses” is his best song ever. From the sparse guitar, the powerful interplay between Bird and Apple, down to the beautifully strong lyrics such as:

For it begs the question
How did I ever find you?
Now you got me writing love songs
With a common refrain like this one here, baaa-aaa-aa-by

The “baby” at the end of that song is drawn out across many notes, the common refrain heard in many a love song across all of folkdom. The coda at the end of the song is what slays me, sung in alternating lines from Bird to Apple and back again:

Now it’s time for a handsome little bookend
Now it’s time to tie up all the loose ends
Am I still a skeptic or did you make me a believer?
If you hesitate, you'll hear the click of the receiver

No, they’re not talking on the phone. The “click of the receiver” is the metaphorical hang-up at the end of a bad relationship. And it’s those little hoops that Bird’s lyrics make you jump through that I absolutely love. This album is full of them. If you’re a fan of great lyrics, beautiful violin, and semi-quiet background songs (“don’t be thrown by “Capsized,” shown in the video above. This is one of the more rocking songs on the otherwise subdued album), this one is definitely for you.

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6. Lemonade by Beyoncé
7. Teens of Denial by Car Seat Headrest
8. Goodness by The Hotelier
9. The Mountain Will Fall by DJ Shadow
10. Junun by Shye Ben Tzur, Jonny Greenwood & The Rajasthan Express
11. The Hope Six Demolition Project by PJ Harvey
12. Amen & Goodbye by Yeasayer
13. Sea of Noise by St. Paul & The Broken Bones
14. You Want It Darker by Leonard Cohen
15. Painting Of A Panic Attack by Frightened Rabbit
16. Why Are You OK by Band Of Horses
17. Not To Disappear by Daughter
18. Sunlit Youth by Local Natives
19. I Had a Dream That You Were Mine by Hamilton Leithauser + Rostam
20. ★ by David Bowie
21. Farewell, Starlite! by Francis and the Lights
22. This Unruly Mess I’ve Made by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis
23. LNZNDRF by LNZNDRF
24. Puberty 2 by Mitski
25. Light Upon the Lake by Whitney
26. A Corpse Wired for Sound by Merchandise
27. Away by Okkervil River
28. case/lang/veirs by case/lang/veirs
29. Love Letter for Fire by Sam Beam & Jesca Hoop
30. Barbara Barbara, We Face a Shining Future by Underworld
31. Preoccupations by Preoccupations

January 08, 2017 /Royal Stuart
2016, advented, andrew bird, fiona apple, dj shadow, band of horses, yeasayer
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#9 on the 2016 Bacon Top 31

December 23, 2016 by Royal Stuart

The Mountain Will Fall by DJ Shadow

I’ve been a fan of DJ Shadow from the beginning. Endtroducing…… his 1996 debut, sits somewhere in my Top 10 of the 90s, and each of his albums since have had something fantastical about them. (Side note: I can’t for the life of me figure out why I didn’t include The Less You Know, the Better, his last album before this new one, in the 2011 Bacon Top 31. It probably has to do with the fact that the album came out in October. I must have missed it until 2012 had begun. Either way, huge misstep there.)

This new album, The Mountain Will Fall, is the closest he’s gotten to the magic of his debut. Throw in the fantastic Run the Jewels (who made the Top 31 themselves back in 2014), who appear on the album featured in the perfect song “Nobody Speak” shown in the video above. Take a moment to watch and listen to that video. This is music and music-video making at its greatest.

If you’re not familiar with DJ Shadow, it’s time for you to crawl out of that hole you’ve been in for the last 20 years. If you know him, then you like him, and you’ll like this album. Highly recommended.

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10. Junun by Shye Ben Tzur, Jonny Greenwood & The Rajasthan Express
11. The Hope Six Demolition Project by PJ Harvey
12. Amen & Goodbye by Yeasayer
13. Sea of Noise by St. Paul & The Broken Bones
14. You Want It Darker by Leonard Cohen
15. Painting Of A Panic Attack by Frightened Rabbit
16. Why Are You OK by Band Of Horses
17. Not To Disappear by Daughter
18. Sunlit Youth by Local Natives
19. I Had a Dream That You Were Mine by Hamilton Leithauser + Rostam
20. ★ by David Bowie
21. Farewell, Starlite! by Francis and the Lights
22. This Unruly Mess I’ve Made by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis
23. LNZNDRF by LNZNDRF
24. Puberty 2 by Mitski
25. Light Upon the Lake by Whitney
26. A Corpse Wired for Sound by Merchandise
27. Away by Okkervil River
28. case/lang/veirs by case/lang/veirs
29. Love Letter for Fire by Sam Beam & Jesca Hoop
30. Barbara Barbara, We Face a Shining Future by Underworld
31. Preoccupations by Preoccupations

December 23, 2016 /Royal Stuart
2016, dj shadow, run the jewels, advented
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#7 on the 2014 Bacon Top 31

December 25, 2014 by Royal Stuart

Not Art by Big Scary

Merry Christmas, everybody! Coming in at #7 is Australian band Big Scary, whose album Not Art, their second, actually came out last year but didn’t make it stateside until earlier this year. This album is hard for me to define; each song sounds derivative of another band.

The above video, for the song “Luck Now,” reminds me of Jeff Buckley, the way Iansek uses his falsetto to great effect. The song “Twin Rivers” (as seen here) has a dissonant-chord chorus and pervasive piano that reminds me of Grizzly Bear. And “Invest,” which can be seen here, has a drum break that makes me think of U.N.K.L.E. (back when DJ Shadow was with the band).

In addition to the above, you can hear Radiohead, Velvet Underground, and many many other references throughout the album, which, on the surface might appear to be a damning quality for the album to evoke. But it’s not, at all. This album is an absolute joy to listen to. It’s solid, through and through.

The band is a duo, Tom Iansek and Joanna Syme, and they started performing as Big Scary back in 2006. In addition to their two albums, they’ve released a number of EPs. Not Art is the first album of theirs to hit my radar, and I’m so glad it did. I found myself continually drawn back to it over the length of the year. You should give it a listen, too. It will stick with you.

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8. The Cautionary Tales of Mark Oliver Everett by Eels
9. Owl John by Owl John
10. LP1 by FKA Twigs
11. Black Hours by Hamilton Leithauser
12. Give the People What They Want by Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings
13. Lost in the Dream by The War On Drugs
14. Warpaint by Warpaint
15. Heal by Strand of Oaks
16. Stay Gold by First Aid Kit
17. This is All Yours by ∆
18. Brill Bruisers by The New Pornographers
19. Only Run by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
20. Augustines by Augustines
21. El Pintor by Interpol
22. I Never Learn by Lykke Li
23. Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes by Thom Yorke
24. The Voyager by Jenny Lewis
25. Voices by Phantogram
26. Morning Phase by Beck
27. Hungry Ghosts by OK Go
28. Run the Jewels 2 by Run the Jewels
29. Cosmos by Yellow Ostrich
30. Teeth Dreams by The Hold Steady
31. With Light & With Love by Woods

2009-2013 Top 31s

December 25, 2014 /Royal Stuart
2014, advented, big scary, radiohead, velvet underground, jeff buckley, grizzly bear, u.n.k.l.e., dj shadow
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