The Bacon Review

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

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#8 on the 2024 Bacon Top 31 — Cheekface

January 24, 2025 by Royal Stuart in Top 31, 2024

It’s Sorted by Cheekface

I like humor in music. In the Top 31 so far this year we’ve got Father John Misty (over the top crooner), King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard (good ol’ boys), Vulfmon (downright silly), and even yesterday’s artist, MJ Lenderman, is humorous in his own ironic, lyrical way. The band here at #8, LA’s Cheekface, excels at dry, matter-of-fact humor – the exact kind of humor living in today’s uber-politicized world requires.1 To whit:

I just want to be popular to watch
In the movie you put on from the camera on your porch
Your across-the-street neighbor walks his dog on TV
The future is now, unfortunately
And if I’m never, ever gonna be alone
Here in my community neighborhood home
Then I wanna be popular to watch
In the movie you put on from the camera on your porch

That, dear friends, is the chorus for “Popular 2,” my favorite song from Cheekface’s 4th rockin’ album, It’s Sorted. I can’t describe what a sense of accomplishment I felt when I was able to finally sing that verse word-for-word by memory. It’s so good! Is this musically challenging, ground breaking music? No! Does it make me smile, repeatedly, on every listen? Yes! Do I regularly put exclamation points in my reviews? No! Does Cheekface make me want to use exclamation points? Yes!

I don’t know about you, but I can’t handle a lot of what’s going on in the world right now. Music has the magical power to take you in all kinds of directions: sadness, elation, anger, happiness, emotional, gleeful. Which direction is not necessarily the point, as long as that direction is away from the right now. Cheekface’s magic is that they keep you mostly grounded in the right now, with blunt reality tinged by dry, direct delivery, while still managing to pull you away to some new reality where the absurdity of life is humorous.

The song “Don’t Stop Believing,” very similar to “Indian Summer” by Beat Happening, features the lines “Everyone cool will die. Everyone weird will also die. What lives on is the destruction caused my market economics. Being unique does not fit neatly into the grid of corporate needs. Still, I work like a dog doing a dog day’s work, and who could blame me? I live in a society.” There is nothing funny about those lives. They’re bleak and sad. But lead singer Greg Katz’s baritone delivery is comical. He stumbles over himself trying to cram in the line about working like a dog. It doesn’t fit the beat, but he successfully pulls it off.

The chorus for “Plastic” goes like this: “Everything is gray now, do you like it? You know I only want it if you want it. Whatever you need now, we can make it out of plastic.” These are not song lyrics, this is a letter from a pen pal who’s on the verge of a mental breakdown. The bridge of the same song is a call-and-response with “Is there recycling?” followed by “It’s sorted.” It doesn’t have to make sense, it just has to make me smile.

I first covered Cheekface for their great third album, Too Much to Ask at #22 in 2022. Here we are two years later and that album still sees regular airplay in my home, along with It’s Sorted. “Life in a Bag” (featured in the video above) is one of many highlights across the album. Each song I listen to as I write this review compels me to put the lyrics here in writing – they’re all just so nonsensical but somehow make all the sense in the world. But I’ll stop – just go listen to the damn thing yourself and watch the lyrics as you do.

You can meet the entire band (Greg Katz on lead vocals and guitar, Mandy Tannen on backing vocals and bass, and Mark “Echo” Edwards on drums) by watching the It’s Sorted Album Commentary the band put out in support of the record. One of the more amazing and endearing things about the band is they self-release and self-promote everything they do. The band is very active on social media, their albums come out on Katz’s own New Professor Music record label, and they have toured extensively for the short few years that I’ve known of them.

I saw Cheekface in 2022, missed them last year, but am excited to get to see them again, at Neumos on May 23. Based on the number of “5th album” talk happening in their social posts and on the band’s hosted Discord, I’m confident their next album will be out by then. At the show, there will be lots of singing along, shouting at key moments, likely Katz leading us in some guided dancing, like we are the puppets and he holds the strings. Cheekface shows are very interactive. And the best part? I am very confident that my cheeks will hurt from smiling by the end of the show. Maybe that’s why they call themselves Cheekface.

1. Wikipedia take all the fun out of describing the fun that is Cheekface: “The group's songs, characterized by [lead singer Greg] Katz’s talk-singing, are typically short and lyrics-driven with a dry sense of humor and tend to share a thematic interest in anxiety and sociopolitical unease.” ↩

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  1. Manning Fireworks by MJ Lenderman
  2. Hit Me Hard and Soft by Billie Eilish
  3. Clouds In The Sky They Will Always Be There For Me by Porridge Radio
  4. CHROMAKOPIA by Tyler, The Creator
  5. Dot by Vulfmon
  6. Always Happy to Explode by Sunset Rubdown
  7. Songs Of A Lost World by The Cure
  8. TANGK by IDLES
  9. My Method Actor by Nilüfer Yanya
  10. Alligator Bites Never Heal by Doechii
  11. No Name by Jack White
  12. Flight b741 by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  13. As It Ever Was, So It Will Be Again by The Decemberists
  14. Cutouts and Wall of Eyes by The Smile
  15. Below a Massive Dark Land by Naima Bock
  16. Mahashmashana by Father John Misty
  17. Strawberry Hotel by Underworld
  18. Faith Crisis Pt 1 by Middle Kids
  19. Romance by Fontaines D.C.
  20. Here in the Pitch by Jessica Pratt
  21. Brand On The Run / Our Brand Could Be Yr Life by BODEGA
  22. People Who Aren’t There Anymore by Future Islands
  23. 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
  • 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, 2025 /Royal Stuart
cheekface, father john misty, king gizzard and the lizard wizard, vulfmon, mj lenderman, beat happening
Top 31, 2024
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#13 on the 2024 Bacon Top 31 — Vulfmon

January 19, 2025 by Royal Stuart in Top 31, 2024

Dot by Vulfmon

It feels good to write a blog. It feels good to write a blog. It feels good to write a, write a blog. Yeah!

This is going to be one hell of a rambling, wandering review, because I’ve unexpectedly fallen into a sprawling world that was previously unknown to me called Vulfmon. Hopefully by the end you (and I) will have been able to make some sense of it all.

Vulfmon’s out-of-left-field 2024 album Dot came to me as a recommendation from my friend Ryan just over a month ago, on December 10. Everything in my life up to that date shall now be known as BV (before Vulfmon) and we are currently living in the AV (after Vulfmon) timeline. Let’s talk about the album without any other context, as I first heard it on that fateful day. This album will catch you off guard. These songs are really, really good. But they also sound of another era, as if this is a movie soundtrack or compilation from the 60s/70s that I am only now hearing, made up of all sorts of acts I recognize but can’t quite place. “The Beatles” are on this album (“Little Thunder”). As are “The Jackson 5.” There’s funk, there’s disco, there’s more than one sax solo (see “Hit the Target (Vulfmix feat. Eddie Barbash)”). And there’s actually a legit Beach Boys cover of “Surfer Girl” that lends to the legitimacy of the other soundalike-but-not-the-real-deal songs.

So there’s the angle that these are songs made to sound like other songs, other eras of songs. And then there’s the humor. The collection of people working with Vulfmon on this album were clearly having a blast. Songs like “It Feels Good to Write a Song” and “Too Hot in L.A. (Vulfmix)” are so over the top silly but yet infinitely catchy, you’ll be humming them to yourself long after you’ve put the album down for the day. This isn’t “Weird” Al parody, it’s more along the lines of Reggie Watts’ “Fuck Shit Stack.” Notice I didn’t even mention “Disco Snails,” (featuring vocals from Zachary Barker) which is the video featured above, and not to be missed. “The simple answer is they’re dancers.”

This is a great album. Vulfmon has figured out the formula that hits the right spot in my brain. But what the hell is going on, how did it get made, why does it exist, and who is this Vulfmon? Vulfmon is the mononym of Jack Stratton, from Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and he’s been making music since he picked up two drum sticks when he was a kid. He is one of four founding members of the band Vulfpeck, who formed in Ann Arbor, Michigan when Stratton (keyboards, drums and guitar) started an “imagined German version of the U.S. session musicians of the 1960s” band with his U-M friends Theo Katzman (guitar, drums and vocals), Woody Goss (keyboards), and Joe Dart (bass). Vulfpeck has been making music together since 2011, and have released six studio albums since then.

You may have heard of Vulfpeck’s work, but would have potentially dismissed it as “legend” or “folklore.” Back in 2014, the band came up with a scheme to take advantage of Spotify’s royalty structure to then turn any royalties they received into an admission-free tour. They created an “album” called Sleepify that had ten tracks of literal silence and no actual music on it, and encouraged their listeners to stream the album on repeat while they slept. The album flew under the radar on Spotify, gaining thousands of plays while listeners streamed the album on replay overnight, until Spotify caught on and pulled it down two months later. The ploy exposed a loophole in Spotify’s royalty calculation, and it cost the company a total of $20,755, with which Vulfpeck made good on their free-of-charge tour in September 2014. I know I’ve heard some flavor of this story over the years, and I’m glad to now have a real world reason to get back to it.

Dot is Stratton’s third solo release in three years. “Solo” is a bit of a misnomer, because most if not all of these songs were created with like-minded individuals. The most prevalent collaborator is Jacob Jeffries, who appears on four songs and is now a touring member of Vulfpeck. Jeffries’ sings backing vocals on those songs, except for the Jackson 5-esque song, “Nice To You (Little Yacov Version),” where he takes the lead. But for that song, his voice has been run through an AI filter to sound like young Michael Jackson, to great effect.

Another frequent collaborator on the album is Evangeline Barrosse who appears on three songs: “Got To Be Mine,” “Letting Things Go,” and “Tokyo Night feat. Evangeline.“ They are all fantastic, and her voice fits the vibe perfectly.

In addition to everything above about Vulfmon, Vulfpeck, and the many facets of their music, there’s even more that contributes to the amazingness of this man and this band. Vulfpeck.com is a well-designed, very bare-bones website, currently offering links to buy tickets to the band’s two upcoming shows at Red Rocks and Madison Square Garden (these guys have a major following). The website also has a link to the Vulf Compressor – Stratton’s own digital compression tool for making instruments sound old or sampled, used widely on songs you’ve definitely heard before (such as on HAIM’s 2020 album _Women In Music Pt. III, #19 in 2020). Additionally, there’s a link to the Vulf Conservatory, where Stratton offers a Masterclass in Mixing for $250. And there’s a link to their two fonts, Vulf Mono and Vulf Sans. Yes, I said fonts. Mind-blowing.

I’m sure I could keep digging and producing weirder and more endearing shit, but I think I’ll stop there. I’m hooked. Vulfmon and Vulfpeck, you have my attention (and I’m aware I’m late to the party by a lot of people’s standards, as I watch their 2023 performance on the Bonnaroo main stage). I know there are a lot of links in the post above – if you’ve not been able to click on any of them, I recommend you skip them all and just watch all the videos in one go with the 30-minute “Full Visual Album” of Vulfmon’s Dot. I predict you’ll be as blown away as I have been. I’ll be sure to ping you when the next batch of craziness gets released.

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  1. Always Happy to Explode by Sunset Rubdown
  2. Songs Of A Lost World by The Cure
  3. TANGK by IDLES
  4. My Method Actor by Nilüfer Yanya
  5. Alligator Bites Never Heal by Doechii
  6. No Name by Jack White
  7. Flight b741 by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  8. As It Ever Was, So It Will Be Again by The Decemberists
  9. Cutouts and Wall of Eyes by The Smile
  10. Below a Massive Dark Land by Naima Bock
  11. Mahashmashana by Father John Misty
  12. Strawberry Hotel by Underworld
  13. Faith Crisis Pt 1 by Middle Kids
  14. Romance by Fontaines D.C.
  15. Here in the Pitch by Jessica Pratt
  16. Brand On The Run / Our Brand Could Be Yr Life by BODEGA
  17. People Who Aren’t There Anymore by Future Islands
  18. 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
  • 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, 2025 /Royal Stuart
vulfmon, jack stratton, vulfpeck, the beatles, beach boys, the jackson 5, reggie watts
Top 31, 2024
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