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

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#16 on the 2024 Bacon Top 31 — IDLES

January 16, 2025 by Royal Stuart in Top 31, 2024

TANGK by IDLES

My love and acceptance of IDLES as a force to be reckoned with has been a long time coming. I got swept up in the KEXP-driven mania around the band back in 2018, and ranked their sophomore album that year, Joy as an Act of Resistance, at #16. I hold by that ranking, that’s a great album and the accolades are well-deserved. In 2020, the band’s third album, Ultra Mono, slipped a little, down to #24. Their fourth album, Crawler, from 2021, failed to stay on my radar; I was aware of its existence, but I had no place for it in my listening habits of those middle Covid years. Enter TANGK, the band’s fifth album, here at #16, and the band has come roaring back with a vengeance.

A few factors have led to this shift of opinion, with IDLES being able to ascend to somewhere near the top of my proverbial “favorites” list: TANGK is their best album yet, and it was produced by Nigel Godrich; the band has released some phenomenal videos in support of the album; and I got to see the band live at the Paramount this past May.

TANGK is still a loud, in your face album that will put off a lot of people. But when compared to IDLES’ œuvre, TANGK is downright tame, much more approachable than past works. I have to believe that Nigel Godrich, who coproduced the album with Kenny Beats and Mark Bowen (IDLES’ lead guitarist), had something to do with this album appealing to my ears more than any of their past albums. Godrich is responsible for the production of all the Radiohead albums that I love , as well as the Beck albums Mutations and Sea Change, all of which would have qualified as “best album of the year” had I been documenting my Top 31 in the late 90s / early 00’s1.

The band is visually minded in addition to producing great, anger-inducing music. Check out the video above, for the song “Grace,” and watch closely. Rather than spoil it for you, I’ll pause here so you can watch the first 30 seconds of the video or so, then leave it playing while you come back here to finish reading. No, your eyes aren’t deceiving you: that is Chris Martin from 25 years ago, as seen in the original video footage for Coldplay’s 2000 song “Yellow.” But this time, he’s singing the words to IDLES’ “Grace,” through the magic of Deepfake AI. The video is a result of a dream Talbot had, who then took the concept to Martin who was more than happy to lend the video to the band, so much so that he even helped them train the AI model that built the new mouth movements.

Other videos from the album include “Gift Horse,” which is a great song with a disjointed, nonsensical video. “POP POP POP,” a song that amazingly rhymes “strong like bull” with “vulnerable,” has a video that concentrates on Talbot’s magnetic, mustachioed face. The band recently released an alternate version of this song with an electric new verse by Danny Brown to open the song. And finally, “Dancer,” which was the lead single for the album and has a video that sees the band… dancing? One of the many things I love about this band is their ability to not take themselves too seriously.

IDLES’ live performances are not to be missed. Their show back in May was intense and emotional. It was also the only time I’ve shed a tear at a live show in recent memory. I was sitting in the front row of the balcony, looking down on the band on the stage and the very active mosh pit in the middle of the floor. At one point the band’s two guitarists, Mark Bowen and Lee Kiernan, came down off the stage and slowly worked their way through the crowd while the roadies did their best from the stage to keep their guitar cables from becoming disconnected. When the guitarists got to the middle of the pit, they began playing back to back while encouraging the crowd to rotate around them, like a human tornado. The sea of people circling around the two musicians was a site to behold. During this time in the show, I noticed an older man (ie: my age) carrying a smaller child in his arms and hanging around the outside of the maelstrom but not completely outside of it. This clearly aging rocker was introducing his son to the wonders of the pit in as safe a way as one can – “that’s one lucky kid,” I thought.

After the guitarists returned to the stage, and the tornado calmed down to a more normal turmoil, I couldn’t stop watching this dad with his child from above. They were having a great time, the dad never putting the child down, staying near the edges of the moshing. Between songs at one point, Joe Talbot, the charismatic, deep-throated lead singer, noticed the pair, too. “I’ve got bad eye sight, so my eyes may have been deceiving me, but I swear I saw a child out there in the pit. Is there a child out there?” The crowd pointed them out, and Joe proceeded to have a conversation with the dad and child from the stage, while 3,000+ people listened on. Through this conversation, I learned that it was a boy, that he was 8 years old, and this was his first mosh pit experience. “Well, this is a good most pit to be in. IDLES fans take care of each other.” Joe asked him a couple more questions, with the child and the dad yelling their answers back as loudly as they could to be heard on the stage. At the end of their conversation, Talbot got serious for a minute. “If there’s one thing I want to make sure you take away with you from this show, one thing that will live on with you long after you leave here, it’s this: if you ever feel down, or withdrawn, or sad – tell someone. It’s important for you to share those feelings, because that’s how you will find out you are not alone. Seriously, that is so important: YOU ARE NOT ALONE.” And that’s how I got choked up, my eyes welling up at a fucking IDLES show of all things. It chokes me up writing about it now. What a positive message to impart on this impressionable kid.

“You are not alone” is the tag line from my favorite radio station, KEXP, and a constant message delivered from the morning DJ and the station’s loudest cheerleader, John Richards. He and Talbot have been very close since Joy made an impression in 2018, and they are kindred spirits. “You are not alone” is such an important statement, very much needed in these current times of unrest. As our 47th president is sworn into office next week, “you are not alone” is a sentiment I carry with me daily, and will lean on a lot in the coming years. That, and also the fact that IDLES is a band of great people who make great music, and KEXP is a great radio stations that plays that great music for us all to hear. It makes me feel not alone just thinking about it, and I hope you feel it, too. You are not alone.

YOU ARE NOT ALONE.

1. If my listening habits in the ensuing years are any indication, it is not hyperbolic to say that Radiohead’s 1995 (The Bends), 1997 (OK Computer), 2000 (Kid A), 2001 (Amnesiac), 2003 (Hail to the Thief), and 2007 (In Rainbows), albums, and Beck’s 1998 (Mutations) and 2002 (Sea Change) albums – all produced by Nigel Godrich – would have been #1 in their respective years if I had written up a Top 31 in those years. Only the production credits of George Martin, aka “the fifth Beatle,” has had more influence on my musical tastes than Nigel Godrich.↩

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  1. My Method Actor by Nilüfer Yanya
  2. Alligator Bites Never Heal by Doechii
  3. No Name by Jack White
  4. Flight b741 by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  5. As It Ever Was, So It Will Be Again by The Decemberists
  6. Cutouts and Wall of Eyes by The Smile
  7. Below a Massive Dark Land by Naima Bock
  8. Mahashmashana by Father John Misty
  9. Strawberry Hotel by Underworld
  10. Faith Crisis Pt 1 by Middle Kids
  11. Romance by Fontaines D.C.
  12. Here in the Pitch by Jessica Pratt
  13. Brand On The Run / Our Brand Could Be Yr Life by BODEGA
  14. People Who Aren’t There Anymore by Future Islands
  15. White Roses, My God by Alan Sparhawk

Subscribe to the Top 31 playlists!

Full Albums
All albums in their entirety

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
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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, 2025 /Royal Stuart
idles, radiohead, beck, coldplay, chris martin, danny brown, joe talbot
Top 31, 2024
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#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.

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  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
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#31 on the 2023 Bacon Top 31 — Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

January 01, 2024 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Fifteen years! That’s how long I’ve been tracking my Top 31 albums by year. 15 years honestly doesn’t feel that long. When I started examining, categorizing, and logging what had formed my listening habits across the previous 12 months, I was 35 years years young. By the time I’m done reviewing the albums that shaped my 2023, I’ll be 50.

The little imposter syndrome voice in the back of my head says opinions on current music from a 50-year-old are less relevant now than they would have been 15 years ago. But I also know that the Bacon Review audience is special (you’re special!). Most of you have been following the Top 31 for years, your musical tastes growing older alongside my own. I do strive to push my own listening boundaries ever outward, and I am able to bring my fifty years of listening experience to more easily see the differences and similarities I hear in new music. Having an ever-expanding library of reference points is key to the enjoyment of new music here at The Bacon Review.

The music of 2023 continued its march into new and uncharted territory. But as you’ll see as the Top 31 unfolds, new music by past Top 31 bands proved to be the mainstay in my speakers. A quick count on the expected 2023 Top 31 has only 11 or 12 new-to-the-Bacon Review artists. That’s just under half of the new albums that will be featured over the next month. It feels like an imbalance to me, but I haven’t done a comparison to past Top 31s – maybe they’ve all been like that, or maybe there’s been a natural slow decline in new artists featured as the Top 31 gets older and the list of featured artists grows longer. There’s probably some mathematic principle that refers to the decline of new elements introduced to an annually-recurring list phenomenon. If you know what that phenomenon is called, please let me know.

Let’s get on with it, shall we?

Los Angeles by Jacknife Lee, Budgie & Lol Tolhurst

We’ll be starting the 2023 Top 31 off with an album from a handful of names you likely don’t recognize, but whose instrumentation you most definitely have heard before. Garret “Jacknife” Lee is an electronic artist who has been producing albums for U2, Bloc Party, Crystal Castles, The Editors, and even R.E.M.’s final studio album, Collapse Into Now (#30 in 2010). Peter Clarke, aka “Budgie,” is best known as the drummer for Siouxsie & the Banshees. And finally, Laurence "Lol" Tolhurst was the founding drummer for The Cure (he was asked to leave after Disintegration due to increasing complications from his alcoholism). Kevin Haskins, the drummer for Bauhaus, was originally in the project but had to bail early for a Bauhaus reunion tour, forever robbing the resulting album of ever achieving its full gothic glory.

Tolhurst and Budgie met while touring with Siouxsie and The Cure way back in 1979, and Los Angeles marks the first official songs they’ve created together as well as being their each of their solo debuts. Lee got involved in production on the album when Haskins left the project and the remaining drummers were feeling their work was too steeped in their gothic past. Starting anew in 2019, the trio wrote a suite of distinctly non-gothic instrumental tracks as the foundation for their budding album. The “band” was still trying to sort out what the songs would be when the pandemic hit in March 2020.

A couple of the tracks ended up in the hands of James Murphy (of LCD Soundsystem), who agreed to write lyrics and sing on the album. From there, the trio brought in a number of big names: the Edge (U2 guitarist), Bobby Gillespie (Primal Scream’s singer), and Isaac Brock (Modest Mouse’s singer). Joe Talbot from Idles was even going to appear on the album, but had to back out due to conflicting schedules. The resulting Los Angeles album feels a bit scattered in places, given the distinct vocal stylings of the singers who ended up performing on the record. But if you love Murphy, Gillespie, or Brock, I highly recommend checking out the album.

__________________________________________

There are many ways to listen to the 2023 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as they are revealed on the countdown!

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 01, 2024 /Royal Stuart
2023, advented, the cure, siouxsie and the banshees, rem, jacknife lee, budgie, lol tolhurst, U2, bloc party, crystal castles, the editors, bauhaus, james murphy, lcd soundsystem, the edge, bobby gillespie, primal scream, isaac brock, modest mouse, joe talbot, idles
Top 31
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#6 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — Sharon Van Etten

January 26, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

We've Been Going About This All Wrong by Sharon Van Etten

It’s been three years since we last heard from Sharon Van Etten on the Top 31. Her fifth album, a tour de force called Remind Me Tomorrow, was #5 in 2019. Five years prior to that, the fantastic Are We There was #4 in 2014. Go back two more years and you’ll find her third album, the Aaron Dessner-produced Tramp, at #13 in 2012. And now with her sixth album, We’ve Been Going About This All Wrong, is here at #6.

With four albums in the Top 31 over the last 12 years, she is the most decorated woman on the Top 31, a fantastic achievement by any measure, but a somewhat dubious and shameful honor for me personally. Van Etten’s first two albums, Because I Was in Love, and epic, both came out in 2009 and 2010, just as the Bacon Review was getting started, and my head was in a different space then. In my review of Tomorrow I wrote “In the beginning, the Top 31 was a lot more subconsciously, and therefore outwardly, male-centric.” What an understatement. Out of the 31 artists featured in the Top 31 in 2009, only five bands with female singers made the list. 2010 had three, if I stretch a little and qualify Belle & Sebastian. 2011: two. One year like that, it’s an anomaly. Two, it’s an interesting bit of problematic trivia. But three (and I stopped counting there; it’s likely even more years than that) and it’s a pandemic of aural blindness.

Last year, the number had gotten up 13. More respectable, but still not quite half. By the time this year’s Top 31 is done, I’ll have charted 19 albums that feature lead singers that are women. I didn’t enact some level of overt corrective measure, or create some artificial level or number that had to be filled by woman-led bands. I just charted what I truly loved this year. There has a been a definitive, quantifiable shift in my taste in music over the last 14 years. I don’t deserve notoriety for this achievement, but that won’t stop me from feeling a little bit better about my own personal balance.

At this point, the quality of Van Etten’s output is so great, it’ll be a surprise if she ever produces something that doesn’t fall into the Top 10. In the three-year void between Tomorrow and All Wrong, her 2nd album, 2010’s Epic, hit its 10th anniversary. To mark the occasion, Van Etten released a new deluxe version of the album (naturally called epic Ten) that included a track-for-track remake by various artists, including Bacon Review stalwarts Big Red Machine (#13 in 2018 and #2 in 2021), Idles (#16 in 2018 and #24 in 2020), Courtney Barnett (#5 in 2015, #8 in 2018, and #5 in 2021) and Fiona Apple (#1 in 2012 and #2 in 2020). When your career affords you the ability to gather Bon Iver, Courtney Barnett, and Fiona Apple to cover your own songs and release it as a bonus to your own reissued album, you know you’ve made an impact on people. My love of her music is well documented, but clearly there is no question as to her greatness.

In addition to my personal favorite from the album, “Mistakes,” shown in the video above, Van Etten has released a number of videos of songs from the album:

  • “Headspace”
  • “Used To It”
  • “Porta” (which also has a “making of”)

Get your hands on We've Been Going About This All Wrong. It is stellar, start to finish. Even if you’ve not connected with her music to date, give this one a full chance to sink in. You will not be disappointed.

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7. SOS by SZA
8. Wet Leg by Wet Leg
9. Chloë and the Next 20th Century by Father John Misty
10. Big Time by Angel Olsen
11. Ants From Up There by Black Country, New Road
12. Waterslide, Diving Board, Ladder To the Sky by Porridge Radio
13. I Walked with You a Ways by Plains
14. The Last Goodbye by Odesza
15. A Light for Attracting Attention by The Smile
16. Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers by Kendrick Lamar
17. Inside Problems by Andrew Bird
18. Laurel Hell by Mitski
19. Full Moon Project by Phosphorescent
20. Skinty Fia by Fontaines D.C.
21. I Love You Jennifer B by Jockstrap
22. Too Much to Ask by Cheekface
23. Dripfield by Goose
24. Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe In You by Big Thief
25. And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow by Weyes Blood
26. NOT TiGHT by DOMi & JD BECK
27. Preacher’s Daughter by Ethel Cain
28. Live at KEXP, vol. 10 by Various Artists
29. All You Need Is Time by Daisy the Great
30. Cool It Down by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
31. CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

There are many ways to listen to the 2022 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as they are revealed on the countdown!

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

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

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

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

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 26, 2023 /Royal Stuart
sharon van etten, aaron dessner, big red machine, bon iver, idles, courtney barnett, fiona apple
Top 31
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#8 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — Wet Leg

January 24, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Wet Leg by Wet Leg

Some years have its “indie darling,” a new-to-the-scene band who far exceeds its station. The kind of band that gets booked for the smaller stage at the summer festival and when the festival rolls around a few months later the band has acquired an audience overloads area the band is playing in. Idles in 2018 is a prime example. Or the Fleet Foxes in 2008, even. For 2022, that band is Wet Leg, with their self-titled debut album. And oh, what an album it is.

Wet Leg are an indie-rock duo from the Isle of Wight, Great Britain. Rhian Teasdale and Hester Chambers, who met while attending the island’s Platform One College of Music, have been performing together as Wet Leg since 2019. Their album bounces seamlessly between different sub-genres of indie pop, from slacker rock (“Angelica”) to surf rock (“Wet Dream” and “Ur Mum”) to glam rock (“Oh No”) and punk pop (“Too Late Now”), with their post-punk anthem “Chaise Longue” the best of the bunch (featured in the video above).

I got to see Wet Leg at THING, the annual PNW music festival held at Fort Warden in Port Townsend, in the middle of the first day with an amped up, crammed in crowd. They duo have a full backing band providing the rhythm section to the antics of the two charismatic leads. It must be fun to be in your first year of existence and already have the audience shout-singing your lyrics back at you. It sure is fun for the audience.

Wet Leg have started something big. Well crafted pop rock is a fine place for any band to make their start — it’ll be interesting to see how they continue to pique our collective interest. For now, I’ll continue to enjoy Wet Leg, the album. And I know you will, too.

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9. Chloë and the Next 20th Century by Father John Misty
10. Big Time by Angel Olsen
11. Ants From Up There by Black Country, New Road
12. Waterslide, Diving Board, Ladder To the Sky by Porridge Radio
13. I Walked with You a Ways by Plains
14. The Last Goodbye by Odesza
15. A Light for Attracting Attention by The Smile
16. Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers by Kendrick Lamar
17. Inside Problems by Andrew Bird
18. Laurel Hell by Mitski
19. Full Moon Project by Phosphorescent
20. Skinty Fia by Fontaines D.C.
21. I Love You Jennifer B by Jockstrap
22. Too Much to Ask by Cheekface
23. Dripfield by Goose
24. Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe In You by Big Thief
25. And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow by Weyes Blood
26. NOT TiGHT by DOMi & JD BECK
27. Preacher’s Daughter by Ethel Cain
28. Live at KEXP, vol. 10 by Various Artists
29. All You Need Is Time by Daisy the Great
30. Cool It Down by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
31. CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

There are many ways to listen to the 2022 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as they are revealed on the countdown!

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

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

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

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

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 24, 2023 /Royal Stuart
2022, advented, wet leg, idles, fleet foxes
Top 31
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#20 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — Fontaines D.C.

January 12, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Skinty Fia by Fontaines D.C.

The band just barely making the Top 20 of 2022 should be known to avid readers of the Bacon Review. Fontaines D.C., five Irishmen now living in London, have been on the Top 31 for their entire history — their debut, Dogrel, was #26 in 2019, and their stellar second album, A Hero’s Death, was #12 in 2020. Now they’re back, at (what we hope is) the tail end of the Covid pandemic, with a brutal album that is so perfect for right now.

Whereas in 2019 I was quick to compare the band to English post-punk outfit (and KEXP darlings) Idles (who were #16 in 2018 and #24 in 2020), Fontaines has pushed further and further from the sound that they burst onto the scene with back in 2019. The band still has the same core members (Carlos O'Connell and Conor Curley on guitar, Tom Coll on drums, Conor Deegan III on bass, and Grian Chatten, principle lyric writer and singer). But they’ve found a new version of themselves that will no doubt put a lot of previous listeners off. Chatten, who barely sings as it is, seems to magically take his voice an octave lower – more haunting, more droning. I love it.

The album name, Skinty Fia, is an arcane Irish slur that translates to “damnation of the deer.” In the interim between their 2020 2nd album and this one, the band left their native Ireland for London, in from what I read was more like an act of rebellion against the status quo. And yet the amount of Irish and Dublin-related elements of the album belie the fact that the band clearly miss home.

Listen to the song in the video above, “I Love You.” It starts off well enough, a paean to the home they left. But then it goes on, a near-shouted list of shame about Dublin that settles into a groove not unlike the best Underworld lyrics (substitute “lager, lager, lager” for “echo, echo, echo”). But London can be hard for the Irish, as demonstrated in the opening song, “In ár gCroíthe go deo” which is an Irish phrase that translates to “in our hearts forever”. Back in 2020, a recently departed Irish woman’s family had wanted to put that phrase on her gravestone but were forbidden to do so by the Church of England unless the family also put the English translation on there as well. That’s a level of cultural control bestowed by the state that is hard for me to even fathom, and well worthy of a song to commemorate it.

If you enjoyed “I Love You,” there are four other videos the band has produced from the album:

  • “Roman Holiday”
  • “Skinty Fia”
  • “Jackie Down the Line”
  • “The Couple Across the Way”

I know I can’t make you like everything I like. What a boring world that would be. But I hope you give this one a chance, even if it’s not resonating with you at first. After a few listens it sinks into your pores. With the torrential downpours the western side of the US has been getting these past few days, I can’t imagine something better to be listening to.

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21. I Love You Jennifer B by Jockstrap
22. Too Much to Ask by Cheekface
23. Dripfield by Goose
24. Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe In You by Big Thief
25. And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow by Weyes Blood
26. NOT TiGHT by DOMi & JD BECK
27. Preacher’s Daughter by Ethel Cain
28. Live at KEXP, vol. 10 by Various Artists
29. All You Need Is Time by Daisy the Great
30. Cool It Down by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
31. CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

There are many ways to listen to the 2022 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as they are revealed on the countdown!

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

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

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

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

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 12, 2023 /Royal Stuart
2022, advented, fontaines dc, idles, underworld
Top 31
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#28 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — Various Artists via KEXP

January 04, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Live at KEXP, vol. 10 by Various Artists

In 2022, KEXP — the radio station that broadcasts at 90.3 on the FM dial in the Seattle area and worldwide at kexp.org — turned 50. The station has recorded countless “Live at KEXP” sessions that they then post on their YouTube channel. From those sessions, they’ve produced ten “Live at KEXP” collections over the years. These are wildly varying mixes that lovingly reflect the eclectic nature of the station and all its DJs loves and influences. And that finally brings us to why we’re here: Live at KEXP, vol. 10, my #28 album of the year.

First, a bit about the history of this much-loved radio station: it started as “KCMU” when four UW students in 1972 wanted an outlet and learning environment for journalism and on-air music to students beyond what had been previously available via KUOW, the original UW station (which had been severely reduced due to university budget cuts in the early 70s). It has been through a variety of changes over the last five decades: shifting from KCMU to KEXP thanks to an agreement with Paul Allen’s Experience Music Project in the early 2000s; a formalization of format from a mix of news and DJ-led music to only music in the 90s; and a successful transformation from solvency being provided by university or investor backing to being fully listener supported.

The mission of the station has never wavered: “to enrich [listeners’ lives] by championing music and discovery. [The station’s] vision is a connected and compassionate world embracing curiosity and a shared love of music.” They mean it when they say “KEXP: Where the music matters.” While I can’t pinpoint the connection exactly, it’s safe to say that I wouldn’t have the love of music that I do without KEXP in my life. And KEXP has truly been “in my life”:

  • While my wife and I were in the hospital for the birth of our daughter, we made a request to the station during a quiet moment in the delivery room that was played on air by John in the Morning, along with a sharing of our story, and heard live on our personal speaker in the room
  • It is KEXP I think of when I think back to my personal experience around 9/11 – with my alarm going off early in the morning to the sounds of KCMU in 2001, John’s telling of the first plane hitting the Towers is as clear in my head now as it was that morning
  • At the start of the pandemic, the station adapted quickly to the new rules of society, figuring out how to broadcast from DJ’s homes, and the station’s secondary motto “You are not alone” became a powerful mantra to listeners worldwide, including me and my family. The support the station provided then continues today as the station digs deeper into the support that the station brings to our lives through the music and stories they share.

Having been a Gold Club member multiple times over the years, and privy to the secret stage shows the station held in the tiny Children’s Theater at the Seattle Center during Bumbershoot, I’ve been witness to many intimate and monumental musical performances thanks to the station. It’s those types of performances that fill out the Live at KEXP releases, and Volume 10 is no exception. There’s “En La Front” from a 2022 performance by Argentinian singer/songwriter Barbi Recanati next to “Lump” from a 1995 performance by The Presidents of the United States of America, a 1997 Modest Mouse performance of “Dramamine” (that will simply bring you to tears due to the recent untimely passing of MM drummer Jeremiah Green due to cancer) next to “Legend Has It” from the 2017 Run the Jewels set linked in the video above. My personal favorite from the album is “Süpürgest Yoncadan” from the 2019 performance by (new to me and the Bacon Review) Turkish psych-rock band Altin Gün shown at the top of this post.

I am (we are) so lucky to have an outlet as consistently strong as KEXP to introduce me (and you) to new music from around the world that I (we) would never hear otherwise. I mentioned earlier that the station is listener supported, and consequently the album is not available to hear on the streaming services. You’ll need to go to your local (Seattle) record store to pick up the vinyl, or you can pay (minimum $10) to download the album from Bandcamp. Or of course you can just peruse the full library of performances on KEXP’s Youtube channel. All proceeds from the vinyl and from the album go directly back to the artists featured. And then when you’re done buying the album, why don’t you head over to kexp.org and throw the station a few bucks as well — without them we would not be talking here, today.

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29. All You Need Is Time by Daisy the Great
30. Cool It Down by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
31. CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

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January 04, 2023 /Royal Stuart
2022, advented, kexp, angel olsen, sudan archives, modest mouse, black belt eagle scout, brittany howard, fontaines dc, altin gün, barbi recanati, kikagaku moyo, idles, café tacvba, the presidents of the united states of america, deep sea diver, run the jewels, khruangbin, y la bamba, delvon lamarr organ trio, black pumas, neko case
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#24 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — IDLES

January 08, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Ultra Mono by IDLES

If ever there was a year for loud, positive-change-oriented punk rock, 2020 was it. IDLES, the five-piece band of rockers from Bristol, are very much in the right place and the right time. The first time IDLES appeared on the Top 31 was for their 2018 album Fear as an Act of Resistance (#16 that year), and I was a reluctant convert. It took me a bit to warm up to the band that year.

Sure, there was plenty to be angry about in 2018, but nothing like the insanity of 2020. Ultra Mono, the band’s third album, instantly grabbed me. When the heavy bass and drums kick in on the opening song “War,” you’re jolted out of your seat and immediately flooded with adrenaline. 43 minutes later you emerge exhausted and drenched in sweat, having experienced every emotion in the most cathartic therapy session ever.

Lead singer Joe Talbot’s lyrics circle around easy breezy topics such as the modern sociopolitical climate, class struggle, mental health and toxic masculinity. He barks at you in the angry, violent tone typically reserved for army sergeants at boot camp. And the two guitars, bass and drums carry his voice along a war-torn, muddy path running along no-man’s zone. It’s not quiet, at all, ever.

But it’s perfect for 2020.

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1. Saint Cloud by Waxahatchee
2. Fetch The Bolt Cutters by Fiona Apple
3. Punisher by Phoebe Bridgers
4. folklore + evermore by Taylor Swift
5. Untitled (Black Is) + Untitled (Rise) by Sault
6. RTJ4 by Run The Jewels
7. Shore by Fleet Foxes
8. Serpentine Prison by Matt Berninger
9. The Ascension by Sufjan Stevens
10. Making a Door Less Open by Car Seat Headrest
11. Dreamland by Glass Animals
12. A Hero’s Death by Fontaines D.C.
13. Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez by Gorillaz
14. Mordechai + Texas Sun EP by Khruangbin
15. Introduction, Presence by Nation of Language
16. Free Love by Sylvan Esso
17. Miss Anthropocene by Grimes
18. 3.15.20 by Childish Gambino
19. Women In Music Pt. III by HAIM
20. The Third Mind by The Third Mind
21. Superstar by Caroline Rose
22. Impossible Weight by Deep Sea Diver
23. We Will Always Love You by The Avalanches
24. Ultra Mono by IDLES
25. Visions of Bodies Being Burned by clipping.
26. Thin Mind by Wolf Parade
27. The Loves of Your Life by Hamilton Leithauser
28. Palo Alto (Live) by Thelonious Monk
29. color theory by Soccer Mommy
30. Fall to Pieces by Tricky
31. Quarantine Casanova by Chromeo

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January 08, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, idles
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#26 on the 2019 Bacon Top 31 — Fontaines DC

January 06, 2020 by Royal Stuart

Dogrel by Fontaines DC

From one literal throwback to 70s music, now to one that’s a throwback in style if not in the time it was recorded. Fontaines D.C., a five-man post-punk group out of Dublin, fall right in line with a separate scene from Marvin Gaye’s world of the 70s. Fontaines are hard-hitting, loud and obnoxious, evoking feelings of Joy Division, The Clash and even maybe a little bit of that early-U2 fervor.

I first fell in love with Fontaines by listening to KEXP 90.3 FM, my favorite Seattle-based (but more prominently available online) radio station. They received equal airplay to the station’s #2 album of 2018, Idles (#16 in my Top 31 of 2018), and were often played back to back with that band despite not releasing their album until April 2019.

If you’re a fan of guitars, barking vocals, and music with a message, then Fontaines DC are right up your alley. If you liked Idles’ Joy as an Act of Resistance from 2018, then you’ll especially love it. Give it a listen now.

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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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January 06, 2020 /Royal Stuart
2019, advented, fontaines dc, idles, kexp, the clash, joy division, u2
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#16 on the 2018 Bacon Top 31 — IDLES

January 16, 2019 by Royal Stuart

Joy as an Act of Resistance by IDLES

This one is going to need some explanation. Upon first listen of any IDLES song, you may find yourself saying “what the fuck, Royal, this is just loud angsty testosterone-filled noise.” On the surface you wouldn’t be wrong. But if you dig a little deeper, listen to the lyrics, read a bit about the band, learn where they’re coming from, you start to see the magic in the madness. Give it a minute, and that lightbulb may turn on for you as it has for me and many others whose musical opinions I value.

IDLES are a band of five tattooed, crooked-grinned lads out of Bristol. Lead singer/songwriter Joe Talbot sings in a heavy, almost barking voice that only a punk rocker could love. The band somehow fills the void between Nick Cave, Rammstein and The Clash, but with songs structured around unexpected subject matters like toxic masculinity, hatred of tabloid journalism and the stillborn birth of Talbot’s daughter Agatha. Below the cacophonous veneer is a vulnerable, endearing group of men trying to find their way in the late 2010s.

Once you hear that pain, suffering and fear shared within these songs, the tone changes. They still function as a form of release, but instead of empathy not of testosterone. Joy as an Act of Resistance is the band’s second album, and I’ve read that 2017’s Brutalism, created before the death of Talbot’s daughter, but after the death of his mom, is equally enthralling.

Joy is full of songs I can get behind, and the band takes visual representation of their songs to a new level as well, with videos out for quite a few of the album’s songs:

  • Colossus (shown above)
  • Great
  • Samaritans
  • Danny Nedelko

I asked at the start of this year’s Top 31 “Does my age cause me to prefer something more mellow to listen to, or does the nature of how I listen force my hand?” and this album is a perfect example. I can’t listen to this album at home without getting some angry looks from my family. And I didn’t really want to listen to it at home with my family. This album is a solo-listening affair, and I just have very few opportunities for that any more. It took a lot of work to get over the hump with it, but I’m glad I did — listening in my car, in headphones at work, etc. And I implore the same of you: give it a long chance at hooking you, and you’ll be surprised.

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17. Hell-On by Neko Case
18. Superorganism by Superorganism
19. Living in Extraordinary Times by James
20. Thank You for Today by Death Cab for Cutie
21. Black Panther: The Album by Kendrick Lamar
22. Suspiria (Music for the Luca Guadagnino Film) by Thom Yorke
23. Merrie Land by The Good, the Bad & the Queen
24. Room 25 by Noname
25. WARM by Jeff Tweedy
26. God's Favorite Customer by Father John Misty
27. Vessel by Frankie Cosmos
28. For Ever by Jungle
29. Twerp Verse by Speedy Ortiz
30. Remain in Light by Angélique Kidjo
31. This One’s for the Dancer & This One’s for the Dancer’s Bouquet by Moonface

Subscribe to the 2018 Bacon Top 31 Apple Music playlist
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January 16, 2019 /Royal Stuart
2018, advented, idles, nick cave, the clash, rammstein
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