The Bacon Review

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

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

#31 on the 2018 Bacon Top 31 — Moonface

January 01, 2019 by Royal Stuart

Happy new year, and welcome to the 2018 Bacon Top 31! I started counting down my top 31 albums of the year in 2009, so this year’s countdown marks my tenth such list. Ten years of listening to many many albums and culling from that experience the 31 best albums each year. By the end of the 2018 list, we’ll have collectively discussed 310 albums in that span — no doubt a larger number of albums than most readers even have in their personal collections.

The Top 31 began in 2009 as a form of promotional payment to the artists I was discovering and listening to (often illegally) for free. I don’t know how many actual album purchases resulted from my touting, but knowing that number was greater than zero helped me set aside the minor tinge of guilt I felt in not paying the artists directly for the music I was listening to. I was an avid show-goer back then, and I documented the shows I went to, writing about them for a handful of small-time Seattle blogs that got me into those shows for free.

Now, ten years on, profit-by-album-purchase for these artists is all but dead, as subscription-based streaming has taken over — note I now post a link to an auto-updating 2018 Bacon Top 31 playlist via Apple Music, if you happen to be a subscriber like me. Even listening to full albums, rather than individual songs, feels like it may be antiquated. (Be that as it may, I still prefer listening to an album from song 1 to the end.) Through streaming, the artists get a very small payment each time you listen to one of their songs, but it’s much less than they would have gotten through the purchase of a full, physical-copy album. Now, apparently, with the sale of recorded music no longer a viable way to make a living as a musician, the artists look to touring as their way to break even (at best); promoting these musicians and spreading the word about when they’ll be on tour is more important than ever.

I’ve grown in years and my family in number, so show-going doesn’t happen nearly as often as it used to for me. I like going to shows, but if I can’t have a comfortable seat near the front, I’d just as soon skip the live performance. So, the way I experience music now is almost exclusively as background to the everyday events of my life, and that has shaped my tastes: it’s now way more difficult to listen regularly to albums like These Four Walls, the phenomenal and phenomenally loud #5 album of 2009 by We Were Promised Jetpacks. Does my age cause me to prefer something more mellow to listen to, or does the nature of how I listen force my hand? Over the coming year I hope to look at this ten-year dataset to see if I can answer questions like these. I’m not sure what things I’ll uncover, but I’m excited at the prospect of the prospecting.

As for 2018, it was another shitty year, politically, but another amazing year, personally. The music I listen to every day continues to play a big part in my and my family’s lives. Unlike last year, when I struggled to claim any one album as “the absolute best,” this year poses a similar-but-different problem for me in the top spots of the list. I won’t go into any detail here lest I give too much away, and maybe things will be more clear towards the end of the month. All will be revealed eventually, but for now, here’s #31!

This One’s for the Dancer & This One’s for the Dancer’s Bouquet by Moonface

Spencer Krug, I can’t quit you. While his name isn’t a household name, you most certainly would recognize his unique, warbling vibrato. Krug is the extremely prolific singer/songwriter behind many albums I’ve listened to over the last 12+ years. He’s appeared four times in previous Top 31s, twice as Moonface (#27 in 2011, #23 in 2013) and twice as half of the unstoppable Wolf Parade (#17 in 2010 and #14 in 2017). If I’d been doing the countdown prior to 2009, his 2006 and 2007 Sunset Rubdown albums would have certainly been on the list, along with Wolf Parade’s 2005 and 2008 albums. I somehow missed his 2009 Sunset Rubdown and 2012 and 2016 Moonface albums, but I aim to go back and listen. I’ve also heard his two Swan Lake albums (2006 and 2009), but they’re the only albums in the bunch that haven’t stuck with me over the years.

That’s a lot of consistent output for one man. And unlike prolific songwriters like Mark E. Smith of the Fall or Robert Pollard of Guided by Voices, Krug seems to have found the secret sauce to keeping his bandmates happy and engaged through his prolifery: have multiple and different outlets for your creativity. Instead of alienating his bandmates and cycling from one session musician to the next, Krug puts out nearly an album a year and manages to stay in his bands’ good graces.

(Did you catch that? I just made up a word. Please reach out to my legal team for permission to reuse “prolifery” before you drop it into your own missives.)

This One’s for the Dancer & This One’s for the Dancer’s Bouquet, the fifth Moonface full-length, is typical Krug. Dreamy, meandering lyrics over a beautifully dissonant combination of digital and analog sounds. Keyboards, saxophones, vocoder and steel drums play large roles across the album. It’s magical, and well worth a listen on your favorite streaming musical subscription. As I write this, I’m starting to talk myself into thinking this album should be higher than #31 for the year. But this is where I placed it when I first cut the list (earlier today), so I’m going to stick to that — future regrets be damned.

__________________________________________

Subscribe to the 2018 Bacon Top 31 Apple Music playlist
2009-2017 Top 31s

January 01, 2019 /Royal Stuart
2018, advented, moonface, spencer krug, wolf parade, swan lake, sunset rubdown
2 Comments

#1 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 31, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Little Fictions by Elbow

Here we are at the #1 album for 2017, Elbow’s absolutely stellar Little Fictions. The Top 31 is my way of trying to capture my year in music — what I was listening to, what I was enjoying. As the soundtrack to my life, the Top 31 is always influenced by the events from the year, but that’s not to say the events we all felt in 2017 are what drove my musical tastes. Ask anyone I consider a friend, they would probably say that 2017 was a shitty year for Americans. Over the year I grew more and more terrified by what is happening in our country, politically. But in my personal life, my year was far from shitty. It was quite glorious, in fact: I moved in with my girlfriend at the beginning of the year, and then we got pregnant shortly thereafter. We followed that by getting married in August and then the birth of our lovely daughter in October (if I had a Top Songs of All Time countdown, “Under Pressure” by Queen and David Bowie would be #1 for 2017). That’s a lot of awesomeness to cram into one year.

Following me along throughout all of those experiences was this fantastic album by Elbow. For those of you that don’t know, Elbow is a band out of a small town outside of Manchester, England called Ramsbottom. While the band has been playing music together since 1990, they didn’t become “Elbow” until 1997 (which was still 21 years ago — and aside from drummer Richard Jupp leaving the band in 2016, replaced by session drummer Alex Reeves, they’ve performed with the same lineup for that entire time). Little Fictions is their seventh album in that span. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed every release they’ve put out, and their last two albums were featured prominently on the Top 31s in their respective years (The Take Off and Landing of Everything was #2 in 2014; Build a Rocket Boys! was #5 in 2011).

I can’t talk highly enough about this band. Guy Garvey’s voice is like butter (and to unaccustomed ears, he sounds a lot like Peter Gabriel). The rest of the band (brothers Craig (keyboards) and Mark Potter (guitar), along with Pete Turner (bass)) put together one solid rock n roll hit after another. Often quiet, with key moments of electric bombast, the band manages crescendo like no other. And each album is every bit as good as the last. It’s an amazing feat.

This album — THIS ALBUM — may be the best yet. But that may also be how this album is tied to my experiences over the year. The first song on the album, “Magnificent (She Says),” featured in the video above, is Garvey’s response to how terrible 2016 was. He says in this video regarding the song that he needed a way to process all the shit that had happened. So he chose to look at it from the perspective of a wide-eyed little girl, full of innocence and love.

And there she stands
Throwing both her arms around the world
The world that doesn’t even know
How much it needs this little girl

It’s all gonna be magnificent, she says
It’s all gonna be magnificent

Glorious. Did I mention I now have a daughter, born only in October? And then there’s the second song, “Gentle Storm”:

Counting down, now the clocks reset when I met you
Do we start a new life?
Yours and my spit-shone restless hearts, they were meant to
Beat one time, share one fate
From this day

Gentle storm
Rage away
And fall in love with me
Fall in love with me
Fall in love with me
Everyday

Gobstopping. Did I mention I got married in August? Be sure to check out the video for that song, which features Benedict Cumberbatch.

From there, the album just continues unabated on its ascendance to greatness. “All Disco” sums up music and life nicely, the title from a quote by Frank Black (“whatever music you love, it’s all disco”). There’s a nice docu-video featuring that song. The last song on the album, “Kindling,” is a slow and quiet outro for the album that primes you for the replay you have inevitably already set up. There’s a great little acoustic alt-version of that song featuring a duet between Garvey and John Grant.

The penultimate song on the album, the title song “Little Fictions,” is an 8+ minute orchestral dream. Put on headphones and play it loud. The song starts with dissonant chords on a piano interplaying with a programmatic drum beat. Enter Garvey, singing about what feels like jabs in a relationship that has passed its due date. The chorus comes in:

We protect our little fictions
Like it’s all we are
Little wilderness mementos
But there’s only you and me here
Fire breathing
Hold tight
Waiting for the original miracle

And with that the song keeps building to one hell of a climax, violins and violence raging and building to the lyrical reveal: “Love is the original miracle.” Whether or not the couple in the song reconciles their differences is unclear, but you’ll most certainly feel spent at the end of it.

I can’t get enough of this band and this album. I want everyone to love them as I do. Give it a few listens. Put it on in the background, or play it loud in the fore. It will fill you with warmth and envelope you with joy.

__________________________________________

2. Half-Light by Rostam
3. Everything Now by Arcade Fire
4. Sleep Well Beast by The National
5. Soul of a Woman by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
6. Relaxer by Alt-J
7. Hot Thoughts by Spoon
8. Colors by Beck
9. Mental Illness by Aimee Mann
10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 31, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, elbow, queen, david bowie, john grant, frank black, peter gabriel
1 Comment

#2 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 30, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Half-Light by Rostam

It’s been nearly five years since the last Vampire Weekend album, and boy do I miss them. Do you, too? What if I told you you could have what sounds like a Vampire Weekend album right now? What if I told you it might even be better than any Vampire Weekend album? Read on…

Rostam Batmanglij used to be in Vampire Weekend. At 24, he produced the band’s self-titled debut all on his personal Mac using Pro Tools, in addition to singing background vocals and playing many of the instruments (which, incidentally, came out ten years ago this month!). Some would argue that he made Vampire Weekend what it is — and perhaps that’s also why we haven’t been graced with a new Vampire Weekend album, since Rostam left the band two years ago.

The son of Iranian immigrants, Rostam has رستم, his Persian name, written in bold script across the front of the album. I knew I liked his music, but was surprised to learn just how much I’ve liked him over the years. He has produced many songs from previous Top 31 winners, including Hamilton Leithauser (#11 in 2014), Frank Ocean (#4 in 2016), and Francis and the Lights (#21 in 2016). And Rostam and Hamilton Leithauser’s joint album, I Had a Dream That You Were Mine, was #19 last year.

Half-Light, Rostam’s solo debut, was produced by both he and Ariel Rechtshaid, who both won grammies for their jointly-produced Vampire Weekend album Modern Vampires of the City (#3 in 2013). The debut sounds so much like Vampire Weekend, you’d be forgiven for mistaking the two. And just like Vampire Weekend, the album sounds a little too close to 80s Paul Simon at times (including sampling the drums from Simon’s “The Obvious Child” on “Don’t Let It Get To You”). This is a stellar album, front-to-back, and one I’ll be listening to just as often as I listen to Vampire Weekend’s albums (which is a lot). I predict you will be, too.

__________________________________________

3. Everything Now by Arcade Fire
4. Sleep Well Beast by The National
5. Soul of a Woman by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
6. Relaxer by Alt-J
7. Hot Thoughts by Spoon
8. Colors by Beck
9. Mental Illness by Aimee Mann
10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 30, 2018 /Royal Stuart
Comment

#3 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 29, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Everything Now by Arcade Fire

Forty years on, disco is still very much alive and kicking. Leave it to Bacon Review stalwarts Arcade Fire to put together a solid dance record that sounds straight from the 70s but manages to avoid irony. Everything Now, the Canadian ensemble’s fifth record in their 13 years of existence, is a tour de force, and a nice rebound from their two previous (and relatively lesser) albums Reflektor and The Suburbs (#15 in 2013 and #8 in 2010, respectively).

While I hadn’t written them off entirely, the last decade from Arcade Fire had left me feeling as if they were just a shadow of what was. Thankfully, this new album has finally brought them back to their former glory. I recently listened to their ten-year-old second album Neon Bible, and Everything Now is right up there with it. “Everything Now,” the song shown in the video above, is one fantastic pop song. Put it on and feel yourself transported to another era, dressed in gold lamé, speckled in disco-ball spots and blissed out on cocaine.

Don’t stop with that song — this album is jam packed with greatness. “Signs of Life” is another disco number, whose video puts a young couple in the middle of B-movie X-files strangeness. “Creature Comfort,” a song about coping with the crushing pressure of life, was produced by Geoff Barrow, formerly of Portishead (speaking of gold lamé, you can watch the video here). “Electric Blue” let’s Régine Chassagne take the lead vocals, singing about the longing for a relationship that’s been put on temporary hold, narcissistic body issues, and being on different wavelengths with those you love (video here).

As you work your way through the album, what at first sounded light and upbeat soon becomes a magnifying glass on living in our excessively materialistic culture. The album appears to put the band in a similar headspace as that of bands like Radiohead, whose continued output gets darker, subversive, introspective and difficult. While they are a big part of the machine that makes us all want want want, they struggle with their place in it. It’s hard for me to put myself in their unique position, but I’m glad they can channel that energy into some great music for me to enjoy. And so should you.

__________________________________________

4. Sleep Well Beast by The National
5. Soul of a Woman by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
6. Relaxer by Alt-J
7. Hot Thoughts by Spoon
8. Colors by Beck
9. Mental Illness by Aimee Mann
10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 29, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, arcade fire, portishead
Comment

#4 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 28, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Sleep Well Beast by The National

Duh. You expected this album to be ranked up this high on the Top 31, I’m sure. I’m fairly predictable when it comes to The National. Their last two albums, Trouble Will Find Me in 2013 and High Violet in 2010 were ranked #2 and #1 in their respective years. The fact that Sleep Well Beast, the band’s lovely seventh album, is ranked #4 is unusually low for them.

But wow, this album. It matters not that the album doesn’t stray into the rhythmically unique as much as the band did on Trouble or 2007’s Boxer. What stands out on this album are the way the band breaks character, ever so slightly. There’s a crack in the wall of their shine, a subtle but purposeful shift from “mechanically clean” to “slightly smudged” — as if they’re the muscle car whose owner has decided it’s time to pull the muffler off.

The usual sound from The National is there. Matt Berninger’s baritone hangs ever-so-beautifully over the orchestrated output from the sets of brothers, Dessner and Devendorf. It’s not unusual for The National to get loud and raucous on stage, but their albums tend to be studied affairs. But where there is similarity on Sleep Well Beast, there is also divergence. Look at “Turtleneck,” for instance. This song stands out for its sheer brazenness — Berninger is practically yelling across the entirety of the song, reminding me of Nick Cave’s “Babe, I’m On Fire” (if you’ve not heard that 14+ minute rager of a song, I command you to go listen to it right now).

I’m not sure if you hold The National with the same high regard that I do. To many, they are the quintessential “dad rock” band, and, well, I’m a dad twice over, so… But I am surprised at their lack of superstardom all the same. This is a band that has produced solid album after solid album, getting better with age. If you’ve not yet heard this album, run out and change that right now. I’m sure it’ll convince you to change your opinion of them, for better or worse; nothing will be the same after you’ve heard it.

__________________________________________

5. Soul of a Woman by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings
6. Relaxer by Alt-J
7. Hot Thoughts by Spoon
8. Colors by Beck
9. Mental Illness by Aimee Mann
10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 28, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, the national
Comment

#5 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 27, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Soul of a Woman by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings

Sharon Jones was an amazing woman who lived a hard life. As I wrote in my review of her and The Dap-Kings’ fantastic album Give the People What They Want (#12 in 2014):

Jones has a storied history herself, having been nothing more than a backup singer throughout the 70s, 80s and 90s. She spent her days as a corrections officer at Rikers Island and an armored car guard for Wells Fargo.

I’m sad to report that Ms. Jones passed away in November 2016, due to pancreatic cancer that she had been battling since 2013. But her music truly lives on, with this posthumously released eighth album, Soul of a Woman. Watch the video for Sail On! and you’ll see the shrouded in shadow Jones singing into a mic wearing a baseball cap over her chemo-therapy-induced bald head. But her voice never wavered. In the video for “Call on God” she is a little more prominent, so you can get a better feel for the woman behind the voice.

Bottom line, Sharon Jones was a powerhouse. Check out this performance by the band at the grand opening of KEXP’s new home, in April 2016 (just 7 months prior to her passing). What she and the Dap-Kings were able to create is the best, and that’s why I have their final album here in the Top 5.

I’m sure we’ll hear a lot more from the Dap-Kings — they’ve been the backup band for many different acts, including David Byrne and St. Vincent on their album Love This Giant, which was #15 in 2012. But there can be no more Sharon Jones to come, we’ve heard it all. She will be sorely missed, and I will thoroughly enjoy listening to her music for the rest of my life. May she rest in peace.

__________________________________________

6. Relaxer by Alt-J
7. Hot Thoughts by Spoon
8. Colors by Beck
9. Mental Illness by Aimee Mann
10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 27, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, sharon jones and the dap-kings, david byrne, st. vincent
Comment

#6 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 26, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Relaxer by Alt-J

Alt-J is a surprisingly resilient band. Every album they release, I’m surprised to see that they’re still around. Their first album felt like a flash in the pan, even though I loved it enough to put it at #2 in 2012. Their sophomore album, This is All Yours, came out in 2014 to my complete and utter amazement. I ranked it #17 that year.

And now their third album, Relaxer, came out earlier this year and it’s really good. I don’t think I’ve felt so conflicted about a band’s ongoing talent as I have for Alt-J. How do they sound so unique yet so accessible? How do they continue to produce music in such a narrow area of the musical spectrum, and how do they make it sound so damn good?

Relaxer is surprising beyond its mere existence. For one, “3WW,” shown in the video above, as well as the song “Deadcrush” (video here) features vocals from Ellie Rowsell, lead singer of Wolf Alice (whose album My Love is Cool was #3 in 2015). Also, this album features a loose cover of the traditional folk tune “House of the Rising Sun,” which the band took liberties with by adding an entirely different second verse. Not only that, but the band has 20 (yes, twenty) classical guitarists playing all at once on that album. Why? Because the band never does anything lightly.

Their music videos are no different. Beyond “3WW” above and Deadcrush linked earlier in this article, be sure to check out “In Cold Blood” and “Pleader” as well. The production value Alt-J puts into everything they do is fantastic. From writing/recording to video filming to live performances, the band spares no expense, and it’s a beauty to listen and watch. And that’s why they’re #6 in 2017.

The Top 5 is coming up! Brace yourselves.

__________________________________________

7. Hot Thoughts by Spoon
8. Colors by Beck
9. Mental Illness by Aimee Mann
10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 26, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, alt-j
Comment

#7 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 25, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Hot Thoughts by Spoon

Consistently good. This is not a musical level that is easily attained, but continues to be a theme here at The Bacon Review. Look at Spoon, for instance. Their album, They Want My Soul, was #3 in 2014, and while the previous album to that, Transference in 2010, didn’t make that year’s Top 31, I’m confident that all of their previous albums would have made the cut.

Hot Thoughts, the band’s ninth album, it no different. It’s a solid rock n’ roll album through and through. Britt Daniel and crew have such a knack for pop hooks and 4-minute brilliance, I’m pretty sure as long as the band keeps producing music it will be absolutely stellar.

It was a difficult decision on which video to feature above. I went with “Do I Have to Talk You Into It” because of it’s use of Photoshop as an animation medium. I use Photoshop every day in my worklife, so seeing it in a public setting like this is a kick. But do be sure to check out the video for “Can I Sit Next To You,” (I guess Spoon has a thing for song titles that should end in question marks but don’t) which I think is a better song.

Overall, Hot Thoughts is a great album start to finish. Much like most Spoon albums. If you’re not yet on the Spoon train, I recommend that you change that at any time. Doesn’t matter which car (album) you get on, they’re all equally good. Hot Thoughts is here, waiting for you to board.

__________________________________________

8. Colors by Beck
9. Mental Illness by Aimee Mann
10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 25, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, spoon
Comment

#8 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 24, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Colors by Beck

You all know Beck. He’s been a musical chameleon for nearly 25 years, starting with his massively successful single “Loser” in 1994. His last album, Morning Phase, has grown on me considerably since I ranked it #26 in 2014. And his 2009 project, Record Club, when he covered the entirety of Velvet Underground’s debut album, I ranked it #7 that year (Hmmm… I should go back and re-listen to that).

Beck can seemingly turn anything he does into gold. According to wikipedia, he “became known for creating musical collages of wide genre styles … he musically encompasses folk, funk, soul, hip hop, electronic, alternative rock, country, and psychedelia.” Like I said, a musical chameleon. I’ve been a fan of most of his work since he began, and it never ceases to amaze me when I’m playing something older of Beck’s and whoever is listening with me is surprised to learn that it’s him. Apparently, everybody has Beck pigeonholed into the mold of that one song they know by him (which could be any number of disparate songs). So when they’re presented with any of his other work, they’re thrown off.

Colors, his 13th album, gives us a dancey, disco-fueled version of Beck, led by the fantastically good song “Wow,” featured above. Go ahead and hit play, I’ll wait.

Did you hit replay when it was done? How many times? When this song first came out in June 2016 I was blown away, and then was disappointed to learn that no new album had been mentioned. 16 months later, Colors finally came out, and it delivered. If you haven’t yet heard it, I command you to do so.

__________________________________________

9. Mental Illness by Aimee Mann
10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 24, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, beck
Comment

#9 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 22, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Mental Illness by Aimee Mann

I’ve been enjoying Aimee Mann’s work for a long time (ever since she wrote some original songs for one of my favorite films ever, P. T. Anderson’s Magnolia, way back in 19991), but her albums of the last decade haven’t hooked me. That is, until her ninth album, Mental Illness, came out this past March.

Mann’s music is always easy to listen to in the background, but as soon as you move it to the foreground you start to notice the dark undertones of her lyrics. It’s this balance of folky darkness that draws you in, and that effect is especially evident on Mental Illness (as if the title wasn’t enough of a hint).

Another great thing about Aimee Mann is that she seemingly knows everybody. She’s married to Michael Penn. She’s in a side-project band with Ted Leo called The Both. And for this album she teamed up with Jonathan Coulton, who co-wrote “Patient Zero,” “Good For Me,” and “Rollercoasters” and John Roderick, who co-wrote “Poor Judge.” That list of names might as well be the start of my nonexistent Top 10 Male Songwriters of the 2000s list.

Mental Illness is a great album, and Aimee Mann is a great singer/songwriter. The orchestration throughout this album puts it over the top. I can’t recommend it enough — go get it now!

1. Magnolia climaxes with the all-star cast halting in their various storylines and lip syncing Mann’s song “Wise Up,” which is such an odd experience but a perfect release for the pressure that builds up over the length of the movie. Check out this amazing music video, for another song from the movie, called “Save Me.” The video was filmed by director P. T. Anderson on the movie sets at the end of each day of shooting, with the actors in the movie sitting motionless in their various scenes. Aimee Mann had Tom Cruise (et al) in her music video; I’m guessing that’s something that nobody else can claim.↩

__________________________________________

10. The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage
11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 22, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, aimee mann, michael penn, ted leo, jonathan coulton, john roderick
1 Comment

#10 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 22, 2018 by Royal Stuart

The Wild by The Rural Alberta Advantage

Welcome to the Top 10 of 2017! At #10, we have a mainstay of the Bacon Review. I’ve featured the Rural Alberta Advantage many times over the years. Their debut, Hometowns, was #6 in 2009; Departing, their 2nd album, was all the way up at #2 in 2011; and their third album, Mended With Gold was my absolute favorite album of 2014.

With nowhere to go but down, the Toronto band’s fourth album, The Wild, comes in at a relatively meager (for them) #10 on the year. By many accounts, this album is their best album to date. I’ve been more attracted to their previous efforts, but I will admit this one has grown on me significantly over the months that it’s been out. Their sound is generally the same, but the band has been through a fairly significant line-up change since their last album: keyboardist/background vocalist Amy Cole left the band in 2016, to be replaced by Robin Hatch. Robin’s contribution to the band could be seen as fairly equal to Amy’s, but when I saw the band live a few months ago, I was disappointed by Hatch’s lack of dynamism on the stage.

Nils Edenloff’s songwriting continues to shine, and his voice has taken on a Tom Waits-esque strain that I worry can’t be maintained long term, lest his voice wither away completely. Drummer Paul Banwatt’s excitement behind the kit is still very much evident, and continues to be the main draw for me.

This is a great album in a sea of greats from the trio. I’ve been thoroughly impressed with the band’s ability to stay around and current given their rather meager following, but I will continue to sing their praises. Someday, maybe they’ll catch on with a larger American public, but for now, I will love them as if they were my own.

__________________________________________

11. american dream by LCD Soundsystem
12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 22, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, rural alberta advantage
Comment

#11 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 21, 2018 by Royal Stuart

american dream by LCD Soundsystem

Just like the Fleet Foxes at #12, the band at #11 broke up at the beginning of the decade, only to reunite to great triumph years later. But where the Fleet Foxes went away in 2011 with a whimper, James Murphy and his band LCD Soundsystem went out in the biggest way possible, playing their “last show ever” at Madison Square Garden along with four warm-up shows at Terminal 5 in New York. The build up to those last shows was even followed by a documentary about the experience. It features many non-performance shots of Murphy in his daily life as well as him being interviewed by Chuck Klosterman, called Shut Up and Play the Hits (it’s great, if you haven’t seen it I recommend it highly). The band was 100% dead by the end of 2012.

Or so it seemed. Three years later, the rumors started flying around the internet that LCD Soundsystem was going to be reuniting in 2016. Thankfully, the rumors proved to be true. They reunited, and then proceeded to record this album, american dream, which is truly great. It sounds as if the band never went anywhere, picking up exactly where they left off in sound and stature. This isn’t the first time LCD Soundsystem has appeared on the Top 31. Their previous album, This is Happening, was #21 that year (looking back, I should have ranked it much higher, probably around #11 or #12, as I continue to listen to it fairly regularly).

Much like past LCD albums, there are one or two klunker songs, but overall it’s superb. The same influences are there (David Bowie being most prominent), with the same unmistakable sound and James Murphy’s near-spoken lyrics. If you’ve liked past LCD Soundsystem albums, you’ll like this one every bit as much.

__________________________________________

12. Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes
13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 21, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, lcd soundsystem, james murphy, david bowie
Comment

#12 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 20, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Crack-Up by Fleet Foxes

Here we are at #12 with the album voted “most definitely” to appear on this year’s Top 31: Crack-Up. The Fleet Foxes have been one of my most-loved bands since they first appeared on my radar back in 2007. I’ve written so much about the band, I’m sure I don’t need to cover where they came from or who they are.

But what I can cover are where they’ve been. After touring extensively to promote 2011’s Helplessness Blues, the band’s #9 ranking second album, they seemingly broke up so that lead singer/songwriter Robin Pecknold could get his undergraduate degree at Columbia University. Imagine my excitement when, in March 2017, a new song came out of nowhere — the first single from their forthcoming third album, Crack-Up.

I devoured the song, listening to it on multiple repeats over the next week. It was a sprawling, 9+ minute epic called “Third of May / Ōdaigahara,” and while it had hints of the Fleet Foxes of old, the song felt deeper, wiser, as if having been the result of a great journey. Two months later, still having not heard the full album, I got to see the band play in the small-ish (for them) Showbox Market. Hearing those wonderful harmonies, and the new songs blended with the old, it brought all the love right back to the fore.

Then the album came out in June, and I’ve listened to it at least once a week since then. This is a work of art. Unlike the band’s previous work, there’s no real “hook” to these songs, so it does take a little while to catch you. But once it does, it won’t let go, seeping into your thoughts even when you’re not listening to it. Such is the magic of Fleet Foxes.

If you’re interested in hearing more from the album, I recommend this live set from KEXP, performed around when the new album came out. You’ll recognize everything you remember about them, but they’ve clearly aged. And I’ll be damned if it doesn’t look and sound good on them.

__________________________________________

13. Famous Last Words by The True Loves
14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 20, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, fleet foxes
Comment

#13 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 19, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Famous Last Words by The True Loves

You may recognize the name of the band at #13, but have the distinct feeling that something’s different about them. That’s because The True Loves used to have vocals, produced by the fabulous Grace Love. Their eponymous debut album was featured at #14 in 2015. Since then, the band has been through a lot.

At the end of the summer 2106, Grace Love broke up with the band, citing a desire to sing something other than soul music. The now 8-piece band, an amazing mix of horns, drums, keys, guitars and bass decided to move on, voiceless but in no way diminished. Before you read on, hit play on the above video for a snippet from the recording of the title track on their fantastic album, Famous Last Words,

As you can tell, these guys are a tight-knit group. They read each others cues and create rhythms and sounds that keep you engaged and bouncing, even without any vocals to latch on to. I’m convinced this won’t be the last we hear from these guys. They’ll either get a new lead singer, or they won’t, but if they can keep up the songwriting, and then killing it on stage (as I hear they have been), their future is bright.

__________________________________________

14. Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade
15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 19, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, the true loves, grace love, grace love and the true loves
Comment

#14 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 18, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Cry Cry Cry by Wolf Parade

I don’t remember disliking Wolf Parade, but apparently I did. I just reread my post for the band’s third album, Expo 86, which was #17 in 2010. In it, I discuss how much I used to hate Wolf Parade and why.

That, apparently, was a long long time ago. Because now I really like Wolf Parade, and I especially like their fourth album, Cry Cry Cry. Their music is not surprising — each album sounds like an extension of the previous one. But the formula they’ve managed to create for themselves works very well. As I mentioned in my 2010 post:

The band has an interesting dynamic. Two lead singers, who each write separate songs for the band to perform, each with a different aesthetic. Dan Boeckner is the more poppy of the two, writing songs with upbeat hooks that appeal to a greater audience. Spencer Krug, (my favorite and lead singer for another fave band of mine, Sunset Rubdown), is decidedly more eccentric in his song construction.

The video linked above is a dual video for two songs from the album, “King of Piss and Paper” (written by Krug) and “Artificial Life” (written by Boeckner). So you can get a taste of both sides of the band.

Sadly, the website I linked to in the post above, for Spencer Krug’s band Sunset Rubdown, is no longer. But it looks like his other solo project, Moonface, has a website that is still going strong. His second Moonface album Julia With Blue Jeans On was #23 in 2013. He even released a 2-song thing earlier this year, apparently. Excuse me while I go listen to that.

OK, I’m back. That was NOT what I expected it to be1. Anywho, Wolf Parade is awesome, and this album continues to prove that face. Run out and buy it now.

Turns out there’s an electronic artist out there that is also going by the name Moonface, and Apple Music thinks those two Moonface bands are the same entity. Clearly they are not, but I’m not sure where to go to get it corrected. I reached out to Spencer Krug’s US PR guy (as listed on the Moonface website) in a lame attempt to do something.↩

__________________________________________

15. Pure Comedy by Father John Misty
16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 18, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, wolf parade, spencer krug, moonface, sunset rubdown
Comment

#15 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 17, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Pure Comedy by Father John Misty

I’ve written quite a bit about Josh Tillman’s alter ego Father John Misty a few times over the years (his debut album, Fear Fun, was #14 in 2012 and his second album I Love You, Honeybear was #6 in 2015). But it’s only on recent runs through his fantastic third album Pure Comedy that I’ve come to this opinion: Father John Misty is the millennial Elton John.

Bear with me here. Think about it: Tillman’s stage presence is wild and ironically humorous, much like Elton John but without the costumes. Tillman’s voice is quite similar to John’s, and they both use them to great effect. The music of Pure Comedy is very orchestral, similar to much of John’s work from the 80s and 90s. Are you seeing it yet?

Where Tillman differs from John is his use of thick sarcasm to paint a bleak picture of humanity. This album is mostly quiet and good for having on in the background until you start paying attention to the words. Then you realize Tillman’s world is depressing and lonely. I’m not put off by sad, depressing music — I did come of age in the 90s, after all — so this album is right up my alley.

Tillman has always had a good grasp of the visual, but he’s taken it to new heights with this album. His website takes Ed Steed’s fabulous illustrations from the album cover and animates them. The video shown above, “Total Entertainment Forever,” features Macaulay Culkin dressed up like Kurt Cobain in a demented “virtual” world. And there are a number of other videos from the album:

  • “Pure Comedy”
  • “Leaving LA”
  • “Things It Would Have Been Helpful To Know Before The Revolution”

There’s even a 25-minute short film called “Pure Comedy” directed by Tillman and Grant James that dismantles the Father John Misty songwriting process into a series of in-studio and LA-based imagery, a lot of which shows LA covered in raging fire — perhaps a little too prescient given the most recent spate of forest fires in the area. You can read a lot more about this album and Tillman’s process in the feature from the NY Times back when the album came out.

The song “Leaving LA” nearly killed the entire album for me. The song is over 13 minutes long, and the lilting way Tillman sings throughout the entirety of the song somehow expanded in my mind to fill the entire album, thinking he was stuck in a groove that had infected all 74 of its musical minutes. I thankfully got past it, and so can you. Give this album a listen if you haven’t already. And listen to its sad, broken stories. They paint a bleak picture that perfectly captures what 2017 felt like politically.

__________________________________________

16. Shake the Shudder by !!!
17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by La La Land
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 17, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, father john misty, josh tillman, elton john
Comment

#16 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 16, 2018 by Royal Stuart

Shake the Shudder by !!!

While the band at #26, Portugal. The Man, have some odd punctuation in their name, the band here at #16 has a totally unpronounceable punctuation-only name. !!! are an electronic dance band currently living in NYC. Before you proceed, I’ll make it slightly easier for you to read this post: the band calls themselves “Chk Chk Chk”. So you can call into your local DJ and request them without feeling dumb.

!!! have been around for the better part of two decades, but they haven’t been on my radar since their awesome album Myth Takes came out in 2007. This year’s Shake the Shudder is the band’s seventh album, and it slays. Even though there’s only men in the band, the vocals on more than one of these songs are provided by an unnamed woman. It makes for a more well-rounded experience than past !!! albums. Go ahead and hit play on the video above, for the opening track “The One 2” and you’ll see. The album carries on nicely from there, but I dare you to not get up and dance around after a few songs.

We’re cresting the mid-way point of the Top 31. Things are heating up, and I can’t wait to share the remaining 15 albums!

__________________________________________

17. La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Justin Hurwitz / Pasek and Paul
18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 16, 2018 /Royal Stuart
advented, 2017, !!!
Comment

#17 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 15, 2018 by Royal Stuart

La La Land (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Justin Hurwitz / Pasek and Paul

From angry and politically-charged at #18 we now cross-fade to the sappiest, treacle-filled music around: musical theater. I know there are many many lovers of the movie La La Land out there (it won five of the 12 Oscars it was nominated for, not including Best Picture), but the anecdotal evidence from my friends and acquaintances is that to enjoy this movie, with its predictably cheery disposition and supreme Hollywood narcissism, is to have a dissenting opinion.

Then dissent I shall. I loved this movie, I love these songs. It’s magical, I dare say. I don’t gravitate towards musicals or broadway as a rule, but this isn’t my first musical rodeo. The Broadway smash Hamilton soundtrack was #11 in 2015. And Singin’ in the Rain is one of my favorite movies (if you’ve not seen it, please correct that ASAP). Granted, it did take me a couple listens to get used to Gosling and Stone’s singing, but after a few times through I no longer get hung up on them. I just smile and dance (in my head) along to the songs.

The music for the soundtrack was composed by Justin Hurwitz, who went to Harvard with the writer/director of La La Land, Damien Chazelle. The lyrics were written by the writing duo Pasek and Paul. Together, the group has made a fantastic movie and soundtrack, and if you’ve not seen or heard either, I implore you to correct your mistake post haste.

P.S. — Feel free to skip the John Legend song (“Start a Fire”). That song is garbage.

__________________________________________

18. The Underside of Power by Algiers
19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 15, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, justin hurwitz, pasek and paul, ryan gosling, emma stone
Comment

#18 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 13, 2018 by Royal Stuart

The Underside of Power by Algiers

And now for something completely different. Algiers, from Atlanta, Georgia, blend a number of seemingly unrelated influences into inciteful, politically motivated, upbeat and most times angry rock and roll. They occupy the very tiny space in the center of the Venn diagram between TV on the Radio, The Dirtbombs, Gil Scott Heron and southern gospel.

The Underside of Power is the band’s second album. Their eponymous debut came out in 2015 and while it appears to have been critically acclaimed, I had not heard of the band until John in the Morning played them a few months back. Regardless of whether you like this music, it definitely calls attention to itself. The clash of sounds does its job beautifully, making you sit up and take action, even if that action is to change the station.

Give the album’s title song a listen above for an example of how they sound. Some of the songs on the album are slower, piano-led numbers with dark overtones, and some go the opposite way: hard, fast and loud guitar and drum-laden punk rock anthems. When reviewing the band’s debut album in 2015, Willamette Week called them “dystopian soul,” which sums their sound up perfectly, and puts them in a genre all their own.

“Dystopian” and “soul” are not words you can usually assign to one band or one sound, but Algiers manage to pull it off with aplomb. If you find yourself intrigued, I recommend reading this All Songs Considered article, where the band breaks down each song on the album, with references and background provided. There’s even an “influences” playlist at the end that is jam packed with interesting things.

__________________________________________

19. What Now by Sylvan Esso
20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 13, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, algiers, tv on the radio, the dirtbombs, gil scott heron
Comment

#19 on the 2017 Bacon Top 31

January 13, 2018 by Royal Stuart

What Now by Sylvan Esso

The album in at #19 would have fit right in on the 2015 Top 31, when Chvrches’ Every Open Eye was #1 and bands like The dø and Purity Ring were in the top 15. It was the year for indie girl-led pop. Sylvan Esso, a duo from Durham, North Carolina, are definitely in that mode. Their eponymous debut album came out in 2014, but failed to make my radar that year even though it was fairly popular (I can’t possibly hear every good album that comes out, right?).

What Now is their second album, and it is full of treacly indie pop goodness. The best song from the album, “Die Young,” is shown in the video above, but there are a number of other great songs (and videos: “The Glow,” “Radio,” and “Kick Jump Twist”) on this record. If you’ve liked any of the band names mentioned thus far, you’ll love Sylvan Esso. Beyond that, there’s not much more I can say.

__________________________________________

20. 50 Song Memoir by The Magnetic Fields
21. Plunge by Fever Ray
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 13, 2018 /Royal Stuart
2017, advented, sylvan esso, chvrches, the dø, purity ring
Comment
  • Newer
  • Older

Powered by Squarespace