The Bacon Review

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

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#31 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — FKA twigs

January 01, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Welcome to the fourteenth annual Bacon Top 31. 14! At the completion of this list, I’ll have written a blog post for 436 albums since I began back in 2009. And I still look forward to writing and sharing my top albums, every year. It’s likely because I don’t write throughout the rest of the year. Rather, I listen. My music consumption remains as active as ever: I constantly seek out new albums, and I’m almost always listening to the album I most recently found. The act of collating, ordering, writing about and weighing each against the others as well as the events of the year that led them to be loved by me hits many different pleasure points in my brain.

14 years as an amount of time feels relatively short, until you really start to examine what has transpired in the interim. In 2009, for instance, Barack Obama was inaugurated as the 44th US president and Michael Jackson died; Captain Philips’ cargo ship was boarded by pirates and Captain Sully Sullenberger landed his plane safely in the Hudson River (both stories were recreated as movies with Tom Hanks in the lead, in 2013 and 2016, respectively). In 2009, the iPhone 3GS was released, Facebook had not quite reached 500 million users (they’re now at nearly 3 billion users monthly), and Instagram had not even been invented yet!

That’s enough about the past, let’s get back to the present. For the next 31 days I’ll be counting down my favorite albums from 2022. I hope you read and listen alongside me, confirm or deny your own preferences against mine, and find some new music you hadn’t yet heard. Let’s get to it.

CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

By the time Tahliah Debrett Barnett, otherwise known as FKA twigs, released her first official recording, 2012’s EP1, at 24, she’d been making a name for herself as a backup dancer in music videos, for the likes of Kylie Minogue, Jessie J, and Ed Sheeran. EP1 had four songs, and a year later, EP2 came out with an additional four songs. Twigs learned early on how to channel the raw energy that comes from dancing in sex-and-image-first videos into her own music: she produced a video for each of those eight songs on the first two EPs, understanding the influence those visuals could have on her listening world.

In 2014 she released her first full length, LP1, which was the #10 album that year. That album had twigs singing in her signature falsetto, softly and intimately as if she’s lying next to you on the same pillow, with her lips next to your ear. CAPRISONGS is much more forward, more bold.

The album is technically a mixtape, but don’t look to me to define the difference between that and an album — I tried to figure it out, but failed. Twigs brings the term to the fore by peppering the album with the sounds of a cassette tape being loaded and a tangible, tactile PLAY button being pushed. Perhaps calling this a mixtape rather than an album is the easiest way twigs could break her own mold. Her falsetto is still there, but so, too, is her naturally-unaffected voice, sometimes pushed through machine modification, sometimes angrily barked. Many guest singers and rappers appear alongside twigs throughout the record: Pa Salieu, Dystopia, Rema, Daniel Caesar, Jorja Smith, and Unknown T all make an appearance. The Shygirl fueled “papi bones” is a personal favorite, with its driving, dance-heavy beat that demands the listener move their body. The Weeknd makes the biggest splash on the album, with the duet “tears in the club” featured in the video above.

fka Twigs is an enigma, a blend of beat-heavy indie pop, avant garde artistry, and primal urge. She flourishes at the intersection of Björk (artistic musical expression), Grimes (indie dance yumminess), and The Knife/Fever Ray’s Karin Dreijer (thrill and horror imagery), and if you like any one of those artists then you’ll feel right at home with CAPRISONGS. Seek it out at the links below, and then check back in tomorrow for something entirely different.

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All albums in their entirety.

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A single song selection pulled from each album.

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January 01, 2023 /Royal Stuart
2022, advented, fka twigs, the weeknd, bjork, grimes, the knife, fever ray, karin dreijer andersson
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#10 on the 2018 Bacon Top 31 — First Aid Kit

January 22, 2019 by Royal Stuart

Ruins by First Aid Kit

Breaking into the top 10 of 2018, here’s Swedish duo First Aid Kit appearing again with their fourth album, Ruins. (They first appeared on the Bacon Top 31 with their sophomore album Lion’s Roar at #4 in 2012 and then Stay Gold at #17 in 2014.) Sisters Klara and Johanna Söderberg, like The Decemberists back at #14, have found a formula that works well for their unique talents. But the difference here is that their music is timeless. Rooted in country, theirs is not a new sound, but it’s not an old sound, either.

Voices like butter, harmonies like satin sheets, these two have been making hit after hit since they first started recording music back in 2007 when they were both still in their mid-teens. By sheer coincidence, the sisters’ younger brother was in kindergarten with the daughter of Fever Ray / The Knife’s Karin Dreijer Andersson, and mother Söderberg encouraged Dreijer to listen to her daughter’s songs on Myspace. Achieving popularity in Sweden came shortly after they signed and recorded with Dreijer’s music label, Rabid Records. But it wasn’t until Robin Pecknold, lead singer of Fleet Foxes, came across the sisters’ cover of his song “Tiger Mountain Peasant Song” and subsequently discussed it on his own band’s webpage did the duo start to get international fame.

Listen to the song in the video above, for “It’s a Shame,” and you can see why these big name artists wanted to be attached to First Aid Kit. Put on the album and the difficulties of the day just slough off. There’s a couple more fun videos from this new album, for Rebel Heart and Fireworks. This band, and this record, will be one I listen to often probably for the rest of my life.

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11. Cocoa Sugar by Young Fathers
12. Loner by Caroline Rose
13. Big Red Machine by Big Red Machine
14. I’ll Be Your Girl by The Decemberists
15. The More I Sleep the Less I Dream by We Were Promised Jetpacks
16. Joy as an Act of Resistance by IDLES
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
2009-2017 Top 31s

January 22, 2019 /Royal Stuart
2018, advented, first aid kit, fever ray, the knife, karin dreijer andersson, robin pecknold, fleet foxes
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#21 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 11, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Plunge by Fever Ray

And now for the strangest (and probably more divisive than Kendrick Lamar, musically) entry on the 2017 Top 31: Fever Ray. If you like Fever Ray, the band, then you’ve probably already latched onto this album and are loving it. If you don’t know who Fever Ray is, then prepare to be equally angered, frightened, and dumbfounded by what you’re about to hear. Maybe you’ll like it, maybe you won’t.

Fever Ray is the stage name of Karin Dreijer Andersson, who is half of the famed Swedish electronic brother-sister duo The Knife. The Knife had some amazing albums when they were together, and now Fever Ray carries the Swedish dark electronic torch. And boy does it get dark.

Her eponymous debut album made #18 on the 2009 Top 31, and here we are eight years later with Plunge. Andersson has a unique sound and voice that is unmistakably hers, and Plunge is no different. But within the album, she seems to be pushing things further, into more difficult territory, similarly to what Björk has been doing on her last few albums. But while Björk has managed to find a zone that is completely unlistenable to me, Fever Ray manages to pull it off a little bit better.

I only cringe a little when I’m listening to Plunge. But I do make a point to make sure no children are within earshot, as the music can get quite vulgar in addition to the darkness, with lines like that from the song “This Country,” which has the lovely line “This house makes it hard to fuck” and “This country makes it hard to fuck” repeated over and over and over again.

Fever Ray’s visual output is every bit as dark and interesting as the audio. The video above, for the song “To the Moon and Back,” you’ll notice, is labeled “Part III.” That’s because there were two disturbing, minute-long shorts that were released prior to the video (Part I: Switch Seeks Same and Part II: A New Friend).

I believe I’ll continue to listen and be intrigued by Fever Ray for the entirety of her musical career. And I doubt I’ll ever feel at ease about it. And somehow that’s a good thing.

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22. DAMN. by Kendrick Lamar
23. Capacity by Big Thief
24. The Tourist by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
25. CCFX EP by CCFX
26. Woodstock by Portugal. The Man
27. MASSEDUCTION by St. Vincent
28. On the Spot by Hot 8 Brass Band
29. A Deeper Understanding by The War on Drugs
30. Planetarium by Sufjan Stevens, Nico Muhly, Bryce Dessner, & James McAlister
31. A Moment Apart by Odesza

Subscribe to the 2017 Top 31 Apple Music playlist
2009-2016 Top 31s

January 11, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, fever ray, bjork, karin dreijer andersson, the knife
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