The Bacon Review

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

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#5 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Sault

January 27, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Untitled (Black Is) + Untitled (Rise) by Sault

Much like Run The Jewels at #6, Sault produces music that simultaneously answers to and defines the zeitgeist. But where RTJ is in your face and in your feeds to the point where they’re hard to avoid, Sault takes a much more subtle approach. Like RTJ, the music they produce is rooted in the plight and rise, the pain and joy of Black people worldwide, but it’s not outwardly angry. Instead, theirs songs are built on disco, soul, and R&B. They make you want to groove, in a 70s Marvin Gaye / Fela Kuti way, but they lyrically keep you firmly planted in the present.

The first of this year’s two albums, Untitled (Black Is), was released on Juneteenth, in the thick of global Black Lives Matter protests spurred on by the murders of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd. The second (and equally stellar) album, Untitled (Rise), came out three months later. They did the same thing in 2019, coming out of nowhere and releasing two earth shattering albums; 5 and 7 together appeared at #7 that year. That’s four amazing albums in 71 weeks. During a global pandemic and mass unrest at systemic racism and global warming. Just imagine what they could accomplish if we had had more quiet, complacent and complicit years. Personally, as difficult as it is to admit, I’d likely not have heard of Sault had the world not been boiling over due to the Trump kakistocracy. Or if I’d heard of them, I wouldn’t have latched onto them like I did in 2020. I once was blind, but now I see.

That said, you can’t really see Sault. The band is an enigma. Sure, they have Twitter and Facebook and Instagram feeds of their own, but they post to those only when a new album is released, in a very mechanical, unsocial way. And they certainly don’t respond to replies or comments. They don’t have a YouTube channel (the video above, and frankly all their videos, even the audio-only videos, appear to be created by fans). They’ve never toured. You won’t find them speaking out in front of cameras, or backing political candidates in overt ways. You won’t find them at all. What little information we do know about them has been dug up by über-music nerds at a handful of publications and has never been confirmed by the band.

Sault is likely made up of four main contributors: London-based producer Dean Josiah "Inflo" Cover (who also produced Michael Kiwanuka and Jungle albums that have appeared on the Top 31 in past years), keyboardist and co-writer Kadeem Clarke, London-based soul singer Cleopatra "Cleo Sol" Nikolic, and Chicago hip-hop artist Melisa “Kid Sister” Young. Michael Kiwanuka makes an appearance on (Black Is) in the song “Bow” shown in the video above as well.

We are all lucky to have been gifted such a wealth of amazing music from one source. Maybe someday we’ll get to thank them in person, but for now we must actively listen, enjoy, and then act. Despite the difficulty we all encountered in 2020, my “suffering” doesn’t begin to equal the generations of difficulty those that aren’t white have faced. Now that the scales are tipping back in the right direction, it will be too easy to sink back into our separate and unequal lives. Bands like Run The Jewels and Sault are here to remind us to stay vigilant. How did we get so lucky?

p.s. A big thank you goes out to my friend Ryan, who has created a Spotify version of the Top 31 playlist as a companion to my Apple Music playlist. On top of that, he’s gone so far as to create a “Singles” playlist, where he’s pulled one song from each album. In his words:

“The idea is that I want Royal Radio, I want the 2020 Top 31 countdown show you would air on KEXP if you had the opportunity.”

Thank you so much, Ryan. I’m elated that you’ve done this. Spotify users rejoice! And for the other readers out there who may not know, Ryan is 100% the reason I started the Top 31 back in 2009. Prior to my countdown, Ryan was doing his own annual musical advent calendar. When he pulled the plug after having created it for a few years, I decided to pick up the reins (with his blessing). We should all be thanking Ryan. Maybe this will be the start of a bigger collaboration in years to come.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 27, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, sault, michael kiwanuka, cleo sol, kid sister, inflo, marvin gaye, fela kuti
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#6 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Run The Jewels

January 26, 2021 by Royal Stuart

RTJ4 by Run The Jewels

In the summer and latter half of 2020 when I needed a non-destructive way to take out my pent-up anger and mad-at-the-world rage (times of which were plenty), I would turn to RTJ4. Throughout the year, the hard hitting, nail-on-the-head music on Run The Jewels’ fourth full-length was my perfect go-to album. On top of that, Killer Mike, whose real name is Michael Santiago Render, is one-half of Run The Jewels, an outspoken politically-savvy voice in Atlanta, an ardent supporter of Bernie Sanders, and consequently someone whom I followed quite intently leading up to the 2020 election. I even bought a “Killer Mike for President 2020” tee. Run the Jewels were welcome MCs to the world in 2020.

Killer Mike and his partner El-P (born Jaime Meline), who produced the album in full, met via the Cartoon Network’s Senior Vice President and Creative Director of On-Air at Adult Swim Jason DeMarco (of all things) in 2011. El-P then produced Mike’s fifth studio album, R.A.P. Music in 2012, which sealed their partnership for good. Together they’ve released three self-titled numerical albums and finally the acronymed, (and best of the bunch) RTJ4. Run the Jewels 2 appeared on the Top 31 at #28 in 2014, and I ashamedly overlooked Run the Jewels 3 in 2016 (but have since listened and love it, too). All this is to say, these two have built up quite a resume, and the music they produce shows it.

RTJ4 is far from “toddler friendly.” This is the most vocal minority: dark, vulgar, and (rightfully so) angry. As I didn’t leave the house all that much in 2020, I had to really work at finding opportunities to listen to the album. I would look forward to those times when I could take a short drive to run an errand, cranking the volume inside my car. Nothing feels more cutting and raw and confusing and perfect to my middle-aged, caucasian, suburban, male and oh-so-privileged body than blowing out my ear drums and singing loudly along to the chorus of a song like “JU$T,” which repeats “Look at all these slave masters posin’ on yo’ dollar.” I feel energized and called-out all at once, which is exactly what I wanted and needed to feel in 2020.

The album was released 2 days ahead of schedule, on June 3. The murder of George Floyd, whose neck was pinned under Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin’s knee for 8 minutes and 46 suffocating seconds on May 25, 2020, and the subsequent protests that were set off worldwide through focused outrage at his death, pushed the duo to get their music out as quickly as possible. Their statement (via a now-deleted El-P Instagram post) says it all:

Fuck it, why wait. The world is infested with bullshit so here's something raw to listen to while you deal with it all. We hope it brings you some joy. Stay safe and hopeful out there and thank you for giving 2 friends the chance to be heard and do what they love. With sincere love and gratitude, Jaime + Mike.

We didn’t need to look hard for reasons to get incensed about all the injustice and negativity and horror in the world in 2020. But now, in late January 2021, if you find that you need a blatant reminder to actively and purposefully struggle against the cozy blanket of privilege you find yourself buried under now that the excess weight of the Trump regime has been shed, look no further. RTJ4 will have you up out of your seat, angrily punching the air and looking for ways to shake things up in no time.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 26, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, run the jewels, el-p, killer mike
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#7 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Fleet Foxes

January 25, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Shore by Fleet Foxes

This 2020 Top 31 is officially the twelfth time I’ve written about my favorite albums of the year. The history I’ve documented in that span is one of my favorite things about the overall endeavor. Getting to reread what I thought about a record ten years later is personally exciting.

For instance, I just went back and reread the reviews of the two previous Fleet Foxes albums that have appeared on the Top 31 (Crack-Up at #12 in 2017 and Helplessness Blues at #9 in 2011). My memory of the band is that I’ve always held them in high regard and unquestionably loved everything they’ve put out. But upon rereading those older reviews, I’m reminded of my own Fleet Foxes burnout just before Helplessness Blues came out. To me, now, that sounds like somebody else entirely. How could I have ever disliked the Fleet Foxes. And yet there it is, in black and white.

One thing I can say for certain: if I’d been writing about my Top 31 in 2008, the self-titled Fleet Foxes debut from that year would have been #1. Since then the band has been through ups and downs, breakups and reunions, mostly at the whim of the band’s principal songwriter and lead singer Robin Pecknold. After a long sabbatical while he went to Columbia University, the band’s release of Crack-Up in 2017 felt a little less “triumphant” than I would have hoped for. I loved the somewhat disjointed and melancholy album, but it didn’t exceed expectations. So when the band released Shore at the exact moment of the Autumnal Equinox (September 22, 2020, at 13:31 UTC), I was excited and genuinely curious where Pecknold was taking the band.

And I was so happy to hear that where he was taking them was exactly where I hoped they’d be. Shore, the band’s fourth album in their 14 year history, is a beautiful, orchestral masterpiece. Pecknold recorded the foundation of the album in a number of studios starting in 2018, working with many new collaborators while fully expecting to bring in his bandmates to round out the songs into a complete Fleet Foxes album. But then the pandemic changed everything, making it impossible for the band to gather throughout 2020, leaving Pecknold essentially alone to write lyrics and finish the album.

All of these factors make the album’s creation and subsequent sound all the more astonishing. The multi-layered harmonies, the strings and horns, and Pecknold’s ethereal and personal lyrics that the Fleet Foxes are known for are all there. As such, Shore couldn’t be mistaken for anything but a Fleet Foxes album. But that’s also where the album shines – it doesn’t sound like a throwback to another era, as their previous albums have. This isn’t 60’s hippie music. Pecknold brings a new level of experience, growth, and maturity to the album, demonstrating the potential greatest I saw in him back in 2007 wasn’t just a fluke. He just needed time to get there.

Accompanying the release of the album is a film of the same name shot and directed by Kersti Jan Werdal. It features the entire album playing over a beautiful set of Pacific Northwest landscapes. On top of that, the video above for “Sunblind” is great, and the only opportunity you’ll have to catch a video with 2020-era Pecknold in it. A video for “Can I Believe You” was also released, with dancers squaring off to the music in mesmerizing ways.

Shore was a calming presence for me as 2020 wound down. If I needed to relax and disconnect from the madness in the real world, I’d throw this on and quickly escape to a cold and misty Washington-state beach. We were lucky to have the Fleet Foxes in our world in 2020, given the way the album came together. Maybe in 2021 we’ll get to see them live once again. Fingers crossed.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 25, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, fleet foxes, robin pecknold
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#8 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Matt Berninger

January 24, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Serpentine Prison by Matt Berninger

Matt Berninger may very well be my favorite performer, ever. If you’ve been following The Bacon Review for the last 11+ years, then there’s a good chance you’d know this already, given how much prominence the lead singer of The National has been allotted over the years. Including his main band’s appearances on the Top 31 (four times: #6 2019, #4 in 2017, #3 in 2013, and #1 in 2010), his side project, El Vy (#10 in 2015), and Berninger’s appearances in other performers’ albums (such as Chvrches and CYHSY), the man has been mentioned nearly every year that the countdown has existed.

I mention this history because it plays a big part in how I listen to and quantify the new stuff he puts out. It’s not just “how does this music compare to everything else this year?” but also “where within all the music of his that I love does this rate?” Never an easy question, and it inevitably changes over time. For instance, while The National’s High Violet ranked #1 in 2010, I don’t consider it the best amongst the four albums the band has on the countdown. (That honor currently goes to 2013’s Trouble Will Find Me. Ask me again tomorrow and I’ll give you a different answer.)

Serpentine Prison, Berninger’s first true “solo album,” is a great effort. No, it’s not a National album, but it’s damn close. And I’m sure it will stick with me a lot longer than the El Vy album has. Sonically, the album sounds similar to what a National album might be if they left the bombast that comes with a lot of their songs on the shelf. Prison is soft-spoken, and because of that it doesn’t immediately hook you. It’s more of a slow burn.

This is the kind of album that feels like good background music at first, but by the middle of the album you find yourself leaning in, listening intently, and picking out the hints of the album’s collaborators. The album has a good, down to earth feel that sounds full and polished, thanks to producer Booker T. Jones. (He of Booker T. & the MG’s and a ton of collaborations from the 60s on (including Otis Redding, Willie Nelson, Rita Coolidge, Bill Withers, and Neil Young, just to name a few.) Jones plays on a few songs as well, and helped bring together a slew of other big names to participate in the making of the record, including Andrew Bird, Gail Ann Dorsey (who featured prominently on The National’s 2019 album I Am Easy to Find), Brent Knopf (Berninger’s partner in crime in El Vy), and The National’s Scott Devendorf. The song above, “Distant Axis,” is probably my favorite of the album. The video is quite fun as well.

Berninger has been keeping himself busy since the last National album in 2019. In addition to creating this solo album, he’s released a couple of new songs worth listening to that don’t appear on the album. His fantastic duet with Phoebe Bridgers, called “Walking on a String,” is from Zach Galifianakis’s feature length “Between Two Ferns,” in which Berninger and Bridgers appear in the movie Phoebe Bridgers and The Spiders from Bars, along with two members of The Walkmen. He also released a cover of Mercury Rev’s “Holes” as part of a benefit series called “7-inches for Planned Parenthood.”

Perhaps after reading all this, you agree that Berninger is worthy of the praise I heap upon him. I can understand if his baritone and delivery aren’t your cup of tea, but I don’t think it’s possible to deny his greatness. Serpentine Prison is a worthy solo debut, and I highly recommend that you pick it up as soon as possible.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 24, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, matt berninger, the national, chvrches, clap your hands say yeah, phoebe bridgers, booker t jones, andrew bird, brent knopf, el vy, scott devendorf, bill withers, neil young, otis redding, willie nelson, rita coolidge, gail ann dorsey, the walkmen
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#9 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Sufjan Stevens

January 23, 2021 by Royal Stuart

The Ascension by Sufjan Stevens

Much like yesterday’s Car Seat Headrest album, Sufjan Stevens’ latest solo work, The Ascension, is the worst album he’s produced since I started the Top 31: his last album, Carrie & Lowell, was #4 in 2015, and The Age of Adz was #3 in 2010. And once again, in any other year The Ascension would have ranked much higher than #9. It suffers not from being less-than-great, but instead from having been released in a year of a great outpouring of other stellar music.

This new album is a stark departure from the quiet and contemplative Carrie & Lowell. Dense and fully electronic, The Ascension is better defined as an extension of Adz, which was a real surprise to me and everyone else when it was released back in 2010. If you’re a longtime fan of Stevens, you won’t be surprised in the slightest. But if you’re still clinging to Lowell, or even farther back to the likes of 2005’s Illinois, you might wonder what the hell is going on with this new album.

Turns out, the album sounds like it does out of necessity: Stevens was in the process of moving from his longtime home in Brooklyn to a more remote spot in the Catskills during the recording of the album, and his stringed instruments were packed away, out of reach. Whether that was a conscious effort, a made up constriction, or entirely true is besides the point. Stevens is the master of his musical domain, and that domain is not bound by the soft and intimate analog world.

All of Sufjan’s deeply personal refrains are here, such as “I wanna die happy” repeated twenty-some-odd times in the song “Die Happy,” or “…I was asking far too much of everyone around me,” from the absolutely gorgeous title song. You’ll find your self swimming in those same waters as on past albums, but this time with day-glow paint and UV lights shining on the pool. If you’ve not listened to Sufjan in the past, I’ll first ask “why not?!” and then happily point you to this album; it’s a perfectly fine point to dive into his warm embrace, something much needed throughout all of 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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 23, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, sufjan stevens, car seat headrest
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#10 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Car Seat Headrest

January 22, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Making a Door Less Open by Car Seat Headrest

You’ve made it! Welcome to The Bacon Review’s Top 10 of 2020. At #10, we have recent Bacon Top 31 stalwarts Car Seat Headrest, with their worst album of the last five years. No, that’s not a joke. Making a Door Less Open, the band’s twelfth studio album and fourth I’ve listened to, is not as good as their last two albums, Teens of Denial, which hit #7 back in 2016, and Twin Fantasy (Face to Face), which made the top 3 in 2018. It’s pretty awesome when a band’s lesser work is still good enough to crack the Top 10 in a given year.

Making a Door Less Open sounds quite a bit different, musically. The band’s lead singer and principal songwriter Will Toledo still has his signature lazy delivery, but the instrumentation he’s built behind his lyrics sounds quite different. Where the past albums sounded fully analog, the new stuff is clearly digital, with interesting cuts and splices thrown on top of computer-driven alteration of Toledo’s voice and guitars, and a repetitive drum beat backing it all up. A couple songs devolve quickly into noise-rock that is difficult to crack into, but when it works, it knocks your socks off.

The opening tracks, “Weightlifters” and “Can’t Cool Me Down,” (shown in the above lyric video), are fairly typical Toledo, complete with highly repetitive choruses. But then the album shifts into entirely new and confusing territory, evidence of a man who’s cracking under the pressure his fame has brought upon him. Whereas his past work has been about how difficult the lives of the people around him have been, Door is a more personal, present affair. “Hollywood,” for instance, is intense and cacophonic, where we hear Toledo screaming “Hollywood makes me wanna puke!” over and over again.

Further evidence of Toledo’s inner turmoil is revealed in the few non-Car Seat Headrest things that surfaced between this and the last album. For instance, Toledo along with drummer Andy Katz created a fully electronic side project called 1 Trait Danger, led by Toledo wearing a fully-covering gas mask with LED-activated eyes, and full albums and an entirely fictitious backstory created for the band’s Bandcamp page. It’s a chameleon-like shift reminiscent of Beck’s stranger departures over the past couple decades. Probably should have left that door closed.

Making a Door Less Open, however, is well worth your time. If you’ve not listened to Car Seat Headrest in the past, start with Twin Fantasy (Face to Face) before diving into this one. But if you’re a fan, Door is an interesting shift that I think you’ll love.

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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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 22, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, car seat headrest, beck, 1 trait danger
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#11 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Glass Animals

January 21, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Dreamland by Glass Animals

I’m writing this review on the night of President Biden and Vice President Harris’s inauguration, and hooooo boy it’s amazing the difference a day can make. It would be foolish to think that all our troubles are behind us now that the 46th president has been sworn in, but it sure has been nice to feel that way just for an instant. There’s a long road ahead, but it feels so good to have a president that has already shown he has a plan and is headed in the right direction.

It couldn’t be more fitting a night to write about Glass Animals, whose fantastic third full-length album Dreamland is just barely missing the top 10 of 2020. This album is fun, bouncy, and instantly lovable. These songs evoke a sound of treacly throwback, to bands like Passion Pit or Suckers, with electronic-driven beats underneath higher-register male vocals.

After you first listen, and then repeat, and repeat again because you just can’t stop yourself, you start to hear the words to the songs. It’s only then that you start to realize the topics being sung about are deeply personal, often dark life stories. Dave Bayley, the band’s principal song writer, said this about the album:

The idea of Dreamland is to go from my first memory up until now, through all the big realizations that happen in life. It's about the things that happened and the people that surrounded me in that time, good things, bad things, horrific things, funny things, confusing things, bits where I hated myself, bits where I hated other people, first loves, discovering sexuality, sadness, abandonment, mental health. It's just painting pictures of those moments and times that, looking back, make you who you are.

Bayley, from Oxford, England, not only wrote the songs, but he also sang and produced all the songs on Dreamland, with a touch of help from his Oxford childhood friends and bandmates Drew MacFarlane (guitar, keyboards, backing vocals), Ed Irwin-Singer (bass guitar, keyboards, backing vocals) and Joe Seaward (drums, percussion). The band (or maybe just Bayley himself?) even put together a full video set for the album. Not just lyric videos, like most bands these days, but a short form video has been created for each song on the album. On top of that, the band’s website (glassanimals.com) is creatively genius. I don’t want to give it away — just click that link and look for yourself.

Then go buy the record and listen. I won’t be surprised when it doesn’t leave your speakers for days.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 21, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, glass animals, passion pit, pet shop boys
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#12 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Fontaines D.C.

January 20, 2021 by Royal Stuart

A Hero’s Death by Fontaines D.C.

You may remember Fontaines, D.C. from their appearance on last year’s Top 31, where their debut album landed at #26. Proving there’s always an exception to the rule, the Dublin-based band’s 2nd album, A Hero’s Death is anything but a sophomore slump. They created a work of art with their first release, but it wasn’t without mistakes — a little too predictable, a little too derivative. In the short span between that debut and the release of Death in July, they’ve clearly learned how to be themselves, how to create something that sounds like Fontaines D.C. and not like some earlier band they’re mimicking.

The songs they craft are hard hitting – driving drums, strong guitar lines and Grian Chatten’s droning vocals repeating common refrains throughout. Despite the repetitiveness, or maybe because of the repetitiveness, this music hits in a much different way than bands that came before. Those repeated refrains become the titles to the songs. Take “Televised Mind,” for instance. It starts with the line “That’s a Televised Mind” repeated six times. That happens two more times in the song, becoming the defect chorus, despite being only 4 words long. Most of the songs on the album are like that. Reading it this way, it sounds horrible and boring. But there’s something to how they deliver it, the droning yell, the incessant beat. It’s invigorating.

A mix of Television and Juno thrown together in a blender that’s missing a blade or two. The lads in the band (Carlos O'Connell on guitar and backing vocals; Conor Curley on guitar, piano, backing vocals; Conor Deegan III on bass guitar, guitar and backing vocals; Tom Coll on drums, percussion, guitar; the aforementioned Grian Chatten on lead vocals) all met the British and Irish Modern Music Institute, a collection of eight colleges scattered throughout Great Britain. The education pays off, clearly. They chose their name based on the character Johnny Fontane from The Godfather, and had to add a superlative to their name when they found out a previous band called The Fontaines had already claimed the name. “D.C.” was added as the initials for Dublin City.

The video above, for the title song, is fantastically weird. Starring well-known Irish actor Aidan Gillen, who played Tommy Carcetti on The Wire and Littlefinger on Game of Thrones, the video starts out fairly normally before devolving into a sick and twisted fever dream of repetition, ending in Gillen going in to kiss a ventriloquist’s dummy of himself. It’s tough to watch, and the refrain “Life ain’t always empty” replaying over and over and over on top of the visuals is a cruel irony for the pain that Gillen’s character is continually going through. But, hey, at least we got a great song with a great album to surround it.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 20, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, fontaines dc, aidangillen, game of thrones, the wire, television, juno
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#13 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Gorillaz

January 19, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez by Gorillaz

Damon Albarn is a musical chameleon. He got his start with Blur in the early 90s (whose 8th album The Magic Whip was on the Top 31 at #21 in 2015). He’s also appeared on the Top 31 with The Good, The Bad and the Queen (#23 in 2018). And what started as a side project in 2005, Gorillaz has lately become Albarn’s main gig. The band’s seventh album, Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez appears here at #13 for 2020.

I’d lost interest in Gorillaz, despite my ongoing love for Albarn’s music. I haven’t loved anything he’s done with Gorillaz since their 2005 Danger Mouse-produced sophomore album Demon Days, and consequently the four albums prior to Song Machine that were released between 2010 and 2018 did not make the Top 31 cut. I’m glad that 2020 saw the release of another great Gorillaz album.

For those of you living under a rock, Gorillaz is a “virtual” band, with four fictional animated characters illustrated by Tank Girl-creator Jamie Hewlett. Musically, the band’s songs are principally created by Albarn, with a large collection of support characters and guest stars coming in to flesh things out. Since 2016, the band’s song creation duties have been shared with a third member of the band, Remi Kabaka Jr., who mans the lead percussion and produces the songs. Together they create a wide variety of digitally-created music with Albarn taking the lead on vocals, often singing with guest starts.

Song Machine started at the beginning of 2020 as a web-only music video series, a collection of singles released monthly with guest stars appearing on each song. There was no intention of releasing the songs as a full album. But, much like all the other plans launched in the first couple months of 2020, things changed. And we’re all the better for it.

The guest stars on Song Machine, Season One are what propelled this album into a prominent spot of my 2020 playlist. Robert Smith, Beck, St. Vincent, Elton John, and Peter Hook (among many many others) appear on the album. Not only do they lend their voices to these songs, but the songs they appear on shift tonally to the range that these voices are known for. So the album often sounds less like a Gorillaz album, and more like a movie soundtrack filled with great pop songs.

The album is very easy to love. Even if you’ve not been a fan in the past, I recommend checking it out. You just may surprise yourself.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 19, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, gorillaz, damon albarn, blur, the good the bad and the queen, robert smith, the cure, elton john, beck, st. vincent, peter hook, joy division, new order
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#14 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Khruangbin

January 18, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Mordechai + Texas Sun EP by Khruangbin

Things are heating up on the countdown as we get closer to the top 10, so allow me to introduce a nice cooler into the mix. Khruangbin, the mostly-instrumental band out of Houston, produces the best damn background music you’ll ever hear. Need something light to lift up your quiet afternoon, or the perfect mood-setter for an intimate dinner party (held outside and appropriately socially-distanced, of course)? Put on Khruangbin.

The band, whose name is Thai for “airplane” and is pronounced “KRUNG-bin”, features Laura Lee on bass, Mark Speer on guitar, and DJ Johnson Jr. on drums. Together, the trio create a soundscape of soul, surf, psychedelic, and funk that makes you feel like you’re sandwiched between a heavy down comforter and a fresh flannel sheet: cozy. They often combine their instrumentation with light, repetitive vocals from all three members that act more like a fourth instrument rather than anything that would take the lead.

That’s what you’ll hear throughout their excellent third full-length, Mordechai, and that alone could be enough to make the Top 31. But that wasn’t Khruangbin’s only release in 2020. They teamed up with Top 31 veteran Leon Bridges (whose debut, Coming Home, was all the way up at #2 in 2015) to produce a little EP called Texas Sun. Four songs of perfection, so great I wish they wouldn’t have stopped there. Maybe in 2021 they’ll form a new combined band called Khruangbridges. Until then I’ll have these two albums on repeat.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 18, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, khruangbin, leon bridges
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#15 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Nation of Language

January 17, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Introduction, Presence by Nation of Language

Throughout 2020, when I wanted to listen to something released in 2020, but be swept back to the simpler emo/goth days of the late 20th century, Brooklyn’s Nation of Language would be there for me. If I were to play their fantastic debut album, Introduction, Presence, for you, and I didn’t tell you who it was, I fully believe you’d wrinkle your brow and say, tentatively, “is this… Joy Division?” or “…Depeche Mode?” or “…The Cure?” depending on the song I put on. Yes, the band’s impersonation of our synth-pop heroes from the 80s and 90s is really that good.

No, I haven’t put any eyeliner on while listening to them, but lord I hope the kids are (please, somebody with a connection to teens or 20-somethings, gather intel and report back). The trio, Ian Richard Devaney on vocals, guitar, percussion; Aidan Noell on synth and background vocals; and Michael Sue-Poi on bass; started on their pilgrimage to another era back in 2016. Since then they’ve released amazing single after amazing single, slowly building up enough songs to compile it into this lovely debut album.

Introduction, Presence doesn’t really have a breakaway hit for me to point you to. Rather, the feeling the album evokes is an entire world I wish I could go back to. I know I’m being exceedingly glib about the late twentieth century (hello white privilege!) but it’s less of an era and more of a younger age sort of longing. The freedom, lack of responsibility, and excess amount of disposable income that comes with youth is what this music reminds me of. But that’s also a great reality check, as I put it on the page. Yes, life was different then. But I also didn’t have my son, who is twelve now. Or my daughter, who is three. Or my lovely wife, who is… not three. Listening to Nation of Language allows me to think of that previous life fondly, and to spread that joy around my currently life. Give it a listen, as I know you’ll find that joy, too.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 17, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, nation of language, depeche mode, joy division, the cure
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#16 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Sylvan Esso

January 16, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Free Love by Sylvan Esso

We’ve reached the apex of the curve, the middle point of the Top 31, and I couldn’t be happier to announce Sylvan Esso is strongly holding the #16 spot. On its surface, Free Love may sound quite similar to Grimes’ Miss Anthropocene, reviewed yesterday, but listen closer. Grimes’ has a knack for dark and gritty dance music, but where Sylvan Esso truly shines is crisp and clear vocals on top of crisp and clear melodies. There’s absolutely nothing gritty about Free Love.

I mean it when I describe them as “crisp and clear.” Put on some headphones and give the song “Free,” featured in the video above. It’s a very quiet tune, as if Meath is standing right next to you, barely singing directly into your ear. Listen for the movements of her tongue and lips in the recording — it’s all there, and it’s magical.

There are quite a few videos out for the album, which hasn’t been the case for most albums on the Top 31 this year (I assume because Covid made it quite difficult to pull a video crew together). I could have chosen any of these as the signature song to feature with this review:

  • “Frequency”
  • “Ferris Wheel”
  • “Train”
  • “Rooftop Dancing”

Sylvan Esso is two people, Amelia Meath on vocals and Nick Sanborn on the instrumentals, with both of them handling the production. Meath and Sanborn have been playing together since 2014, and they married in 2016. They’re adorable, and so is their music. They’ve been on the Top 31 once before, with their second album, What Now, having hit #19 in 2017. If they keep producing records like this, they’ll be on every Top 31 to come.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 16, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, sylvan esso, grimes
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#17 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Grimes

January 15, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Miss Anthropocene by Grimes

Grimes, the Vancouver-born digital dance music phenom, was seemingly able to do more than most in 2020. In addition to releasing her amazing fifth album Miss Anthropocene, she: voiced a singing character named Lizzy Wizzy in the highly-anticipated yet disastrously-released video game Cyberpunk 2077; released an hour-long DJ mix under the character’s name called This story is dedicated to all those cyberpunks who fight against injustice and corruption every day of their lives! (which will not make the Top 31); and had a baby boy in May with her boyfriend Elon Musk, which they named “X Æ A-12” but subsequently renamed “X AE A-XII” to be legally recognized under California state law (you may only use characters found in the modern English alphabet when naming children in California, apparently).

Grimes, whose given name is Claire Boucher, is called “c” by her friends because it is the universal symbol for the speed of light. The woman is clearly an AI-based robot trying to pose as a live human being and failing spectacularly. But hey, the music is great, so I say we keep her.

This is the second time Grimes has appeared on the countdown (unfortunately, as her three previous albums to that one escaped my radar until it was too late). Art Angels, her fourth album, appeared on the Top 31 back in 2015 at #12. Where that album was fairly straightforward, Miss Anthropocene has Grimes noticeably stretching her talents into new and different ways. It is very much a Grimes album, with her clear, soft high-pitched vocals spread across gritty driving beats. But there are also distinct guitar and bass-driven strings throughout, with “Delete Forever” (shown above) taking it to her full indie-pop potential.

If you’ve liked her music in the past, then you won’t be disappointed. If you’re new to the magic of Grimes, this is a great spot to dive in — let it be your main course, and the rest of her albums will be there for you when you’re ready for seconds.

P.S. currently, grimesmusic.com links directly a simple Google Doc titled “VOTING TOOLS” containing literal links to resources for registering to vote and learning about candidates and such. I love her.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 15, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, grimes, elon musk
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#18 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Childish Gambino

January 14, 2021 by Royal Stuart

3.15.20 by Childish Gambino

Time for another digression. “This is America,” a song that came out nearly two years ago (!), is a perfect song. It’s only gotten more perfect as Trump’s presidency has steamrolled over our democracy while our collective blinders to the massive presence of white supremacy have been slowly and then suddenly removed. In the song, Donald Glover, aka Childish Gambino, brilliantly raps, dances, and displays in the video the symbolism of a hypocritical world that squeezes every last drop of joy and attitude out of black culture for its own selfish amusement while simultaneously pressing its collective knee onto their metaphorical and literal necks.

When the horrific facts surrounding the devastating and extremely avoidable deaths of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd at the hands of the police surfaced, in what was already shaping up to be an insanely difficult year, the not-really-melting pot of America boiled over. Protests and vigils and marches began happening at regular intervals (monthly, weekly, and sometimes daily depending on where you lived in the country, and even outside of it) and still continue today, albeit on a much smaller scale. The heat of the summer combined with an inability to leave the house due to Covid-19 lockdowns (as well as smoke from months-long west coast wildfires) blended into a literal fever pitch of anger. All the while, “This is America” played in the background in my head.

Things continue to escalate, as our racist president has made it painfully clear that the bigots and nationalists and white supremacists have his full, undivided support. They have been empowered, and they’re coming out of hiding in droves. I’m ashamed at my own surprise at the truth, that this truly is America. This is who we are.

These painful acts that happen again and again with greater and greater frequency, and each day more horrifying than the last — I once was blind, but now I see. This is America. 57% of the white voting population did so for Trump in 2016. Despite four years of constant disgust and disgrace, and despite 20+ million more voters being added to the rosters, that same 57% of whites voted for Trump in 2020. The vast majority of white voters — 73% more than voted for Biden — voted for Trump. This is America. Centuries of oppression and segregation and suffering. This is America.

And Mr. Glover captures it all in the space of 4 minute song.

This truth weighs on my conscience, and I strive to raise my children in a way that opens their eyes to it. I don’t pretend to have the power or knowledge to fix any of it. But I do know I won’t be letting that fucking genie get back in the bottle.

/digression

“This is America” doesn’t appear on 3.15.20, but the song has never appeared on any album. Despite it being the song that has continually bounced around my head throughout 2020, I feature it here as 3.15.20 is Glover’s first album to come out since the release of “This is America.” Plus I needed another opportunity to watch the video.

3.15.20 is Glover’s fourth Childish Gambino album, and only the first to appear on the Bacon Top 31. I suppose I, too, in a way have been coming out from hiding these past four years. The album doesn’t hook you so much as seep into your skin upon multiple listenings. In his review for allmusic.com, Tim Sendra summed the album up well, saying it is:

“a challenging, hooky, mysterious, and odd record that feels like it was built out of pieces left over from a collision between OutKast, David Bowie, Sly & the Family Stone, and Prince. Add in bits borrowed from Flaming Lips, Tyler, The Creator, and Lee Perry, and it’s a mad scientist’s take on modern pop with Glover at the middle alternately crooning with honey-dipped sweetness, rapping menacingly, crying out in pain, and telling tales”

The call-backs to OutKast and Prince are glaring, but it’s the more subtle nudges toward Bowie and Sly that really get you. This is a soundscape more than a cohesive album. “42.26” (most of the songs on the album are titled by the time stamp they exist on the album), previously released on the 2018 Summer Pack EP titled “Feels Like Summer,” is the most radio-friendly song, and well worth the price of admission.

Glover is supremely talented. He has the potential to join the vaunted EGOT crowd. (To date, 16 people have won an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony award. Currently, Glover has only won grammys and emmys, but it wouldn’t be a stretch for him to earn the final two awards needed to complete the set.) He’s a performer, fully aware of his stardom and exploitation of the world around him for his own personal gain. But we’re all better off with him in the world, opening our eyes and reflecting back to us what I and so many other white people have ignored for far too long.

Rewatch the video above, often. Buy 3.15.20. And then use your power (and privilege) to make constant, significant, and lasting change.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 14, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, admin, childish gambino, donald glover, outkast, david bowie, sly and the family stone, prince
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#19 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — HAIM

January 13, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Women In Music Pt. III by HAIM

At this point in the countdown, at the high end of the top 20, almost the halfway point, I want to acknowledge how each day this past week has been progressively more and more difficult to write these posts. The past week has been very chaotic here in the United States, and the next week — until we’re safely past Biden’s inauguration — is looking to be even moreso. Music is most often an escape for me, but the noise of the world is starting to drown it out. For now, I feel the draw to keep up the pace, but there may come a time in the next week where either I can no longer concentrate on anything but the insanity, or — and more likely — I feel I should no longer distract from what is happening out there with my pithy reviews. If such a time comes up, rest assured it will just be a short break, and not a forever move. We all need closure, in so many ways.

/digression

Yesterday’s band made the point of not creating Top 40 radio-friendly pop music, and today’s band is the yin to its yang. The three sisters known solely by their surname HAIM have really outdone themselves on their third album, Women in Music Pt. III. The album is anything but a collection about women in music, presenting a biting collection of songs that paints the difficult picture of being a woman in the music business.

The sisters pull together all the right elements for a pop-rock masterpiece, including personal difficulty and tragedy, fantastic writing by the three sisters and Ariel Rechtshaid and Rostam Batmaglij, who also produced and engineered the album (the same Rostam who was not only a former member of Vampire Weekend, but who also appeared all the way up at #2 with his own solo debut album back in 2017 – a good reminder to put that album back into the rotation. Man, it’s so good.).

I’ve had trouble getting into HAIM in the past — their first two albums felt a bit vacuous. But Women is just a great time, all the way through. Another addition to the great team the band has collected for this album is their video producer, who is none other than Paul Thomas Anderson. He directed the above video, for the fantastic song “The Steps” as well as four other videos for the album: “Now I’m In It,” “Summer Girl,” and “Hallelujah.” He even took the photo used on the album cover.

This album is the complete package. You best get on it if you haven’t already.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 13, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, haim, pt anderson, rostam
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#20 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — The Third Mind

January 12, 2021 by Royal Stuart

The Third Mind by The Third Mind

The Third Mind is a supergroup you’ve never heard of. You may not recognize the members’ names: Dave Alvin on guitar and vocals, David Immerglück on guitar and keyboards, Victor Krummenacher on bass, Michael Jerome on drums, and Jesse Sykes on guitar and vocals; but the sheer number of hits they’ve been responsible for over the decades is immense, including from such well known bands as Camper van Beethoven, Cracker, Better Than Ezra, X, The Blasters, The Toadies, The Knitters, and Counting Crows. (Alvin even wrote the hit “Long White Cadillac,” from Dwight Yoakam’s album Just Lookin’ for a Hit, which has a special place in my Oklahoma-bred heart). Please don’t expect anything like that here — The Third Mind does not produce intentional Top 40 radio hits, from any genre.

(With so much history here, and the many connections they come from, research for this review sent me down myriad rabbit holes and tangential explorations that resulted in “A ha!” moments, and I’d like to apologize up front for all the parenthetical realizations to follow.)

This is 60s/70s acid-rock psychedelia at its finest. If you like guitar noodling and long jam-band solos, somewhere between the Dead and Pink Floyd, then you’ll want to pick up their self-titled debut immediately. The amount of talent on the album is clear. Aside from one original song, the lovely (but short) instrumental “Claudia Cardinale,” the album is full of fantastic covers of songs I was previously unfamiliar with:

  • “Journey in Satchidananda,” by Alice Coltrane, 1971.
  • “The Dolphins” by Fred Neil, 1966 (also performed by Tim Buckley in 1973)
  • "Morning Dew" by Bonnie Dobson, 1962 (made famous by The Grateful Dead and recently covered by The National on the massive 2016 Grateful Dead tribute album Day of the Dead), and lovingly sung on this album by Sykes
  • “East West” by Paul Butterfield and his Blues Band, 1966 (The Third Mind version is fantastic, and long, at 16:28. Apparently the vinyl version of the album has two additional takes, at 17:03 and 14:04 minutes long, respectively. That’s 47+ minutes of record dedicated to a single song, not that I’m keeping track)
  • “Reverberation” by The 13th Floor Elevators, 1966

I was first drawn to them due to Jesse Sykes’ involvement. I’ve had a musical crush on Sykes since around 2004, when she released her debut album with her band The Sweet Hereafter. She released three albums with them, the last came out in 2011 (go back and check them all out if you haven’t before). Aside from guest appearances on a few songs, I hadn’t heard much from her since then. Needless to say, I was excited to hear The Third Mind solely because I knew it meant more Jesse Sykes.

Listening to the album was particularly bittersweet throughout the year. I had tickets to see The Third Mind at the Crocodile on April 12, but of course that show got canceled, along with all of the shows from Spring 2020, on. I hope once the pandemic passes that The Third Mind is still able to pull things together to make up the tour, but a lot can change in a year’s + time. Meanwhile, I’ll keep listening to the album and hoping.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 12, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, the third mind, jesse sykes, Camper van Beethoven, Cracker, Better Than Ezra, X, The Blasters, The Toadies, The Knitters, Counting Crows, Dwight Yoakam
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#21 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Caroline Rose

January 11, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Superstar by Caroline Rose

From Loner to Superstar — I’m not sure either title is quite accurate, but it paints a good picture of the dual aspirations of Caroline Rose, whose fourth full-length earns the 21st spot on our countdown. She brings great indie rock with fantastic pop hooks worthy of superstardom, coupled with the strong ironic lonerism of a millennial that makes you want to stay just outside of arms reach, lest you get hurt. It’s a balance not many could pull off.

Her last album, Loner, thoroughly wowed me and consequently appeared at #12 two years ago. Superstar, her fourth, is a continuation of everything I loved about her previous album, and it’s a testament to the wealth of good music released this year that it appears only in the bottom half of the countdown.

“Feel the Way I Want To,” shown in the fun video above, is the biggest hook, featuring Rose’s signature keyboard work, constantly driving beat, and impossibly catchy chorus. The rest of the album doesn’t disappoint, carrying forward what I loved so much about Loner. If you didn’t pick up that 2018 album, I recommend starting there. By the end of it, you’ll find yourself compelled to keep the party going right into Superstar.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 11, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, caroline rose
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#22 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Deep Sea Diver

January 10, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Impossible Weight by Deep Sea Diver

How is it that Deep Sea Diver, Seattle’s little engine that could, is seemingly everywhere in my area, but barely talked about outside of the Pacific Northwest? Impossible Weight, the band’s third full-length album in their 16+ year history, is utterly fantastic, but if you’re not my neighbor, you’ve probably never even heard of them. The album was #1 on KEXP listener’s Top 90.3 albums of 2020, yet Pitchfork doesn’t have a single article about them. It’s as if we’re watching two parallel universes battle it out right in front of us.

Be that as it may, please now consider yourself part of the inner circle. Now you know. And if you’re a long-time follower, you might have already known, as the band’s debut album appeared on the Top 31 at #23 back in 2012. On top of that, Sharon van Etten (no stranger to the Bacon Top 31), makes an appearance on Impossible Weight’s title song, creating a duet with Deep Sea Diver’s Jessica Dobson that’s entirely overloaded with singing talent. Makes me wonder if Pitchfork, in their lack of recognition of Deep Sea Diver, has a beef to pick with someone related to the band and is being spiteful.

I guess Deep Sea Diver isn’t for everybody, but if you’re a fan of female-led indie rock, you’ll love them. Someday Dobson’s name will be as well known as van Etten, or Barnett, or Phair. Until then, all we can do is enjoy them with additional fervor and shout their name from the rooftops. The rest of the world will catch up eventually.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 10, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, deep sea diver, sharon van etten, courtney barnett, liz phair
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#23 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — The Avalanches

January 09, 2021 by Royal Stuart

We Will Always Love You by The Avalanches

“Well-known vocalists singing atop dreamy electronic music” has always been a favorite genre of mine, yet somehow The Avalanches have eluded me until now. Granted, they’ve only released three albums in their 23 years as a band, but all three are phenomenal, and I’m ashamed to have missed out on them until now. It’s ok, go ahead and laugh, I deserve it. But if you, too, haven’t heard of them before, have I got an album for you!

We Will Always Love You, at 71 minutes long, might actually be better bylined “The Avalanches and a mind-boggling number of collaborators.” A cake of fantastic original instrumentation blended with hundreds of samples, with the icing of roughly twenty “with…” names scattered across the 25 songs on the album. To whit (along with links to the videos):

  • “The Divine Chord” with MGMT and Johnny Marr, shown above
  • “Running Red Lights” with Rivers Cuomo and Pink Siifu
  • “Interstellar Love” with Leon Bridges
  • “Take Care In Your Dreaming” with Denzel Curry, Tricky & Sampa The Great
  • “Wherever You Go” with Jamie xx, Neneh Cherry and CLYPSO
  • “Reflecting Light” with Sananda Maitreya and Vashti Bunyan
  • “We Will Always Love You” with Blood Orange
  • And other song collaborations without videos featuring Orono, Perry Ferrell, Cola Boyy, Mick Jones, Kurt Vile, Karen O, Cornelius and Kelly Moran

Additionally, there’s another video medley of songs from the album, blended together as a film of experimental choreography created using 3D volumetric capture techniques in collaboration with TEM Studios and Rambert Dance London.

Whew! Impressive, to say the least. If you like Washed Out or Odesza, you’re going to absolutely love this record. Jump on it ASAP.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 09, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, the avalanches, mgmt, johnny marr, rivers cuomo, weezer, pink siifu, leon bridges, denzel curry, tricky, sampa the great, jamie xx, neneh cherry, calypso, sananda maitreya, vashti bunyan, blood orange, perry ferrell, cola boyy, mick jones, kurt vile, karen o, cornelius, kelly moran, orono
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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.

__________________________________________

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

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 08, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, idles
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