The Bacon Review

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

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#29 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — Daisy the Great

January 03, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

All You Need Is Time by Daisy the Great

Many bands will be new to the Bacon Review when they show up in the 2022 Top 31, but the honor of being the first new band on this year’s list goes to Brooklyn-based Daisy the Great. The six-member band is led by dual lead singers Kelley Nicole Dugan and Mina Walker, and my brain categorizes them thusly: smart, hook-driven pop; First Aid Kit without the twang.

All You Need Is Time is the band’s 2nd album, and it’s a happy, upbeat pivot from a lot of the other “serious” music you hear (and love!) coming out of our pandemic malaise the past few years. Daisy the Great’s debut, I’m Not Getting Any Taller, came out in early 2019 but completely missed my radar. The band rose to internet fame in 2021 when their very first released song, 2017’s “The Record Player Song1” became the object of a viral “one breath challenge” on TikTok. Users created 20,000+ videos featuring the song’s chorus, which generated over 270 million aggregate views on the app.

I believe that makes Daisy the Great the first TikTok-famous band to hit this blog, but TikTok is not how I found them. My friend Ryan Spain2 introduced them to me, by way of a musical puzzle. He shared that he had been playing the opening track (shown in the video above) obsessively for a few weeks, and had surprisingly unlocked a massive easter egg in the song. As a fan of puzzles, and of the art of making music that has a literal deeper meaning that can be discovered upon multiple listens, I’m not going to ruin the surprise for you (but ask directly and I’ll happily reveal). I will not be surprised if you happen to fall in love with the song upon repeated listening, or because of the discovery itself, or both.

The band has been prolific when it comes to the visual side of music. In addition to the “Time Machine” video above, there are seven additional videos for six other album tracks:

  • “Record Player” with an additional animated version, performed with pop trio AJR
  • “Glitter”
  • “Cry in the Mirror”
  • “Easy”
  • “Aluminum”
  • “Liar”

Check them all out, as they’re clearly gifted in song craft as well as creating candy for the eyes. And then go listen to the rest of the album, it’s worth it.

1. Not to be confused with another non-album single called “Record Player,” the reimagined version of the TikTok hit that appears on the Deluxe Edition of All You Need Is Time and features the same choral hook as the original.↩
2. Ryan’s been mentioned numerous times on the Bacon Review over the years. He and I met across a friendly poker table nearly 20 years ago, and it was his advent-themed Top 24 music list that he compiled annually in the 00’s that was the catalyst for what become the Bacon Top 31. Ryan continues to help with the production of this Top 31 — the Spotify and (new this year!) YouTube Music playlists exist because of him. If you like that those playlists exist, or really even that the Bacon Top 31 exists, you can thank Ryan directly on Discord at username GoingOptimal#3697. ↩

__________________________________________

30. Cool It Down by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
31. CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

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

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

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

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

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

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 03, 2023 /Royal Stuart
2022, advented, daisy the great, first aid kit, ajr
Top 31
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#30 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — Yeah Yeah Yeahs

January 02, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Cool It Down by Yeah Yeah Yeahs

I thought the Yeah Yeah Yeahs were done. Their last record came out in 2013 (Mosquito, which didn’t register on the Bacon Review that year), and no one had heard from them in literal years. So when the Yeah Yeah Yeahs tweeted “Cannot wait to play you some tunes old and NEW! New music! New Era!” in May 2022, along with a set of upcoming shows in NY and LA in October, the music blogging industry started to froth at the mouth.

Cool It Down, the band’s fifth LP in their 20+ year history, came out on September 30. The release of the album was preceded by the lead single / loud declaration of reemergence “Spitting Off the Edge of the World,” which featured Perfume Genius (#15 in 2010) on guest vocals. It’s a slow, droning, powerful statement, indirectly related to the climate crisis. “I see the younger generations staring down this threat, and they’re standing on the edge of a precipice, confronting what’s coming with anger and defiance,” lead singer Karen O about the song. “It’s galvanizing, and there’s hope there.”

The rest of the album is just as good. It feels more grown up, less raw, than their earlier efforts. There are more instruments at play, including a plethora of keyboards. It’s still unmistakably Karen O, and therefore unmistakably Yeah Yeah Yeahs. Picking a favorite song from the wealth of goodness isn’t easy, but once I watched the video for “Wolf,” shown above, starring Britt Lower (who you’ll recognize from Apple TV+’s “Severance”), I suddenly had a favorite. The band has also released videos for the “The Big Sleep” and “Spitting Off the Edge of the World.”

The Yeah Yeah Yeahs aren’t for everyone, and I doubt there’s anyone reading this who hasn’t already decided which side of the YYYs line they fall. If you didn’t like them before, there’s nothing here that’s going to change your opinion. But if you’ve been a fan anywhere in the last two decades, this will do nothing to change that opinion, either. Give it a listen at the links below to confirm.

__________________________________________

31. CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

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

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

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

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

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

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 02, 2023 /Royal Stuart
2022, advented, yeah yeah yeahs, karen o, britt lower
Top 31
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#31 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — FKA twigs

January 01, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

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

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

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

CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

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

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

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

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

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

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

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

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

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

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 01, 2023 /Royal Stuart
2022, advented, fka twigs, the weeknd, bjork, grimes, the knife, fever ray, karin dreijer andersson
Top 31
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#0 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Rostam

December 30, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Changephobia by Rostam

The 2022 Bacon Top 31 will be kicking off in earnest on Sunday, per usual. I’m here a couple days early to correct a year-old mistake. Back in January, midway through the 2021 Top 31, my lovely wife, Anna, began speculating what my top 5 of 2021 would be. She had the benefit of knowing what picks #16–#31 were, because I’d been publishing those picks daily throughout the first half of January. And she had the added benefit of me having pushed all kinds of music on her throughout the year, so she already had a strong feel for what I’d been liking.

She started rattling off a few names that would land near the top the 2021 list. “War on Drugs for sure, and Big Red Machine. Nation of Language…” — the corners of my mouth start to curl up as she goes through her mental musical rolodex — “Fleet Foxes… Rostam? His new one came out this year, didn’t it?” — and my expression shifts immediately, from a smirk to mild panic.

My mind starts racing… Rostam! I haven’t listened to him in a couple months, but damn Changephobia is a great album… Did we start listening to it in 2021 — when did it come out? I quickly bring up Wikipedia: released June 4, 2021. SHIT. Now what do I do? The rest of the Top 31 is already locked in… there’s no way to fit it in without pulling something else out, and I’m certainly not cutting something from my remaining top 15 of the year to make room for a clear Top 10 album.

So I resolve to amending the list. I’ve had to do it once before, back in 2014, after all. Changephobia will just have to be a #0 for 2021, out of the official ranking for the year but every bit as important as the rest of the list. I knew what I needed to do, but then time got away from me, the rest of the year flew by, and here we are on the cusp of the 2022 Top 31, and I’m finally writing about one of the best from 2021.

You may not know who Rostam is, but if you’re reading this, chances are you’ve heard me talk about him before. His full name is Rostam Batmanglij (رستم باتمانقلیچ in his Iranian parent’s native Persian1), and he has been all over the Bacon Review since it began in 2009:

  • He was a founding member of Vampire Weekend whose albums hit #6 in 2010 and #3 in 2013. He left the band prior to their fourth album, but he still produced a couple songs on that album, which hit #3 in 2019.
  • He produced and co-wrote two songs on Hamilton Leithauser’s debut solo album, which hit #11 in 2014.
  • He wrote one and produced another song on Frank Ocean’s Blonde (#4 in 2016)
  • Wrote and produced three songs on Francis and the Lights’ debut album (#21 in 2016)
  • He and Hamilton Leithauser released a joint album that hit #19 in 2016).
  • and he produced Haim’s Women in Music Pt. III which hit (#19 in 2020

That is no fewer than eight separate Bacon Top 31 albums he’s been an integral part of, and I left his 2nd full-length album off the 2021 list. Ugh, I hate myself2. At least I’m making up for it here. Changephobia is a lovely album. I got to see him perform solo for the first time in August 2022, at Neumos. Despite him lacking a full-bodied stage presence (this was his first show post-covid, and he’s not used to owning the spotlight on his own – look at that laundry list of big names he’s propped up on his shoulders, above), it was a magical experience.

Changephobia is a great follow-up to his 2017 debut, Half-light, which was my #2 album of 2017. If you’ve not heard either album, I urge you to do so. Hit play on the video above to hear his voice first hand (and don’t miss the who’s who of guest stars in that video: HAIM, Charli XCX, Wallows, Kaia Gerber, Remi Wolf, Nick Robinson, Bryce Willard Smithe, Samantha Urbani, Demi Adejuyigbe, Seth Bogart, Huck Kwong, Ariel Rechtshaid, Matt DiMona, Ghazal Hashemi, Carter Howe, Julian McClanahan, and Chris Paloma all make an appearance in the back of that cab).

If listening to his original music doesn’t cut it, then listen to these two non-album covers he’s done: Dylan’s “Like a Rolling Stone” and the Pogues’ “Fairytale of New York,” which I had on repeat all Christmas season this year. The man is a genius, and I can’t wait to hear what he does next.

And that is how we finally wrap up the previous year here on the The Bacon Review. This is a one-person operation over here, desperately needing a systems manager / editor. Until I magically get a budget and an ability to hire, mistakes will continue to be made, but I’ll do everything I can to stop them from happening! In the veritable words of Matthew Wilder, “Ain’t nothing gonna break-a my stride, nobody gonna slow me down, oh no, I got to keep on moving.” See you on Sunday to start up the 2022 Top 31!

1. Isn’t that language just beautiful to look at? I love Arabic script, and may someday learn to write a language that uses it just so I can make calligraphy with it.↩
2. The technological reason that led to the omission is just plain dumb: I use a smart playlist in Apple Music to pull together all the albums I download for a given year. The 2021 version had two new rules applied to that playlist that I thought would help me greatly: I told it to exclude anything with “single” or “ep” in the name. Guess what two letters appear next to each other in the word “Changephobia.” Worry not, the 2022 smartlist does not have those rules repeated.↩

December 30, 2022 /Royal Stuart
rostam, vampire weekend, hamilton leithauser, haim, frank ocean, francis and the lights, bob dylan, the pogues, 2021, advented
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#1 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — The War on Drugs

January 31, 2022 by Royal Stuart

I Don’t Live Here Anymore by The War on Drugs

We’re now a month into 2022, I’m 48 years old, my kids are 13 and 4, and I’m finally willing to admit it: I love dad rock. My parents raised me on classic rock (shout out to KMOD 97.5 FM in Tulsa, Oklahoma). My tastes have been shaped by a heavy foundation of Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, and The Eagles (for better or worse). I’m aware that a lot of what I have loved in the past decade could be categorized as dad rock – previous Top 31 #1s like The National, Elbow, Phosphorescent, and Bon Iver all qualify. But none of those are so obviously Dad Rock with a capital D as the #1 of 2021: The War of Drugs. I’m fairly certain if you look up “dad rock” in the dictionary, you’ll find a glamour shot of lead singer / songwriter Adam Granduciel, with his flowing locks, vaseline smeared on the lens, with ghostlike images of his band flanked around him.

I Don’t Live Here Anymore, their fifth studio album, quickly jumped into the running for top album when it was released on October 29, 2021. At the time, I had already convinced myself that Big Red Machine was going to be my #1, given how much my family loved hearing How Long Do You Think It‘s Going to Last over the year. But the first time I heard that strong piano ring out on the opening song of Anymore (“Living Proof,” shown in the video above - hit play on that right now while you read on), my knees got shaky, my confidence wavered. There’s just something about Granduciel’s raspy voice, his beautiful songwriting, his strong melodies — this album grabbed ahold of my playlist and muscled its way to the front. My wife fell in love with it, too – we must have listened to the album at least three times a week from the day it came out. And the excitement when it comes on hasn’t yet worn off – will it ever?

The War on Drugs perfected the form: that classic rock sound of the 70s and 80s, in songs about lost love while driving down the highway over sweeping crescendos and slow guitar solos. This album took me back to my childhood so much that I actually sent the album to my dad for Christmas, and of course he loves it, too. Truly Dad Rock. I dare you to listen to the fourth song, “I Don’t Wanna Wait,” and not picture in your mind’s eye a musical montage showing Crockett and Tubbs flying across the waves of the Atlantic in a speedboat on their way to break up a cocaine deal gone bad.

Granduciel, whose real name is Adam Granofsky, leads the charge in the band, but there’s five other members who make up the current lineup: David Hartley on bass, Robbie Bennett on keyboards, Charlie Hall on drums, Jon Natchez on sax and Anthony LaMarca on rhythm guitar. Various members have dropped in an out since they formed in 2005 (including Kurt Vile, who was an original member before breaking off for his own solo work), but this lineup has been intact since their third album, Lost in the Dream took the world by storm (and appeared at #13 in the Top 31 that year).

This is now the third album put out by this particular War on Drugs lineup. In addition to Dream, their last album, A Deeper Understanding, also appeared on the Top 31, but it was near the bottom at #29 in 2017, mainly due to me not giving the proper chance. It won Best Rock Album at the Grammys that year. I have no excuse, but I do plan on returning to it, thanks to the strength of Anymore.

And Anymore is such a strong album. I recommend headphones when you put it on. Granduciel is legendary for the amount of time he spends on the production of his albums. Hints of Jimmy Iovine’s production of Tom Petty’s Damn the Torpedoes run throughout. It’s a pristine recording, something you can’t hear just anywhere. One of my favorite sounds in all of music is the quick, high-pitched yet intimate sound that the pads of fingers make when quickly moved up and down the neck of a guitar while searching for that next chord. Listen for it – once you hear it, you can’t stop hearing it.

Granduciel and band have found the top of the mountain. The tip top comes at the second song on the album, “Harmonia’s Dream.” At nearly six and a half minutes, it builds an amazing wall of sounds across two verses and choruses before taking a turn at 2:45 when the keyboards pierce through at the three minute mark into an extended bridge that will leave you in a fit of anticipation but the time the full band kicks in again at the 4:45 point. Then everything hits all at once and you’re moving and shaking uncontrollably when the guitar solo kicks in at 5:15. “You’re on your own” the band sings in harmony – and they’re right. The world has melted away, the bad is gone, and you’re left with pure joy.

The title song is also fantastic, with the gorgeous harmonies of Lucius filling in the chorus.

Granduciel appeared on Song Exploder to talk about the making of this song, how Lucius got involved, how the end of the first stanza is filled with nonsense words… it’s a good listen.

The War on Drugs hit peak form, and I’m very curious to hear where they head next. Similar to the Nation of Language album at #4, I have trouble imagining them continuing without breaking out of their tried-and-true format. But they’ve done it consistently now for three albums, so maybe the formula is so dialed in that it doesn’t need to change. It’s clear that what started in the 70s and 80s has retained enough uncharted territory to leave room for new music here in the 2020s. I’m so excited to hear what’s next, and hopefully it hits on all the right 40-year-old notes.


  1. How Long Do You Think It's Gonna Last? by Big Red Machine
  2. Jubilee by Japanese Breakfast
  3. A Way Forward by Nation of Language
  4. Things Take Time, Take Time by Courtney Barnett
  5. Little Oblivions by Julien Baker
  6. Valentine by Snail Mail
  7. sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs
  8. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
  9. Hey What by Low
  10. Local Valley by José González
  11. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
  12. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
  13. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
  14. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
  15. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
  16. Screen Violence by Chvrches
  17. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
  18. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
  19. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
  20. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
  21. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
  22. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
  23. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
  24. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
  25. NINE by Sault
  26. Observatory by Aeon Station
  27. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
  28. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
  29. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
  30. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

  • Apple Music Radio Station Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Station Playlist

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 31, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, the war on drugs, kurt vile, tom petty, jimmy iovine, the eagles, led zeppelin, pink floyd
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#2 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Big Red Machine

January 30, 2022 by Royal Stuart

How Long Do You Think It's Gonna Last? by Big Red Machine

Every year there’s the big obvious acts that continually appear on the Top 31. At the top of that list are both The National and Bon Iver, both of whom have had #1 albums (2010 and 2016) along with three additional, separate appearances on the Top 31 each. In fact, I haven’t done the math, but I’m confident in saying that Aaron Dessner (20% of The National) and Justin Vernon (99% of Bon Iver), combined, have been responsible for the largest percentage of all music I’ve listened to in the last 15 years.

The two of them have done many things together, arguably the most prominent being the work they’ve done together as Big Red Machine. Their first foray into a partnership was a collaborative song called “Big Red Machine” on the Dessner-produced Dark Was the Night compilation in 2009 (#10 that inaugural Top 31 year). According to wikipedia, Dessner reached out to Vernon via MySpace, and they collaborated on the song remotely, and didn’t meet in person until a follow-on performance for the collaboration was hosted later that year. They continued to work together while producing and creating with their respective bands. They formed a record label, 37d03d, which released the first full Big Red Machine album in 2018 (self-titled, #13 that year). In addition to Dessner and Vernon, that album also features Phoebe Bridgers, Dessner’s brother Bryce and Bryan Devendorf from The National, and multi-instrumentalist Richard Parry from Arcade Fire, among many others.

Then they turned their attention to Taylor Swift, or many she turned her attention to them. The two albums that came out of their collaboration had a big impact on my 2020 Top 31, coming in collectively at #4 last year. But Swift is not the only Dessner/Vernon produced artist I’ve enjoyed. From the very first Top 31 in 2009, with the aforementioned Dark Was the Night compilation and Bon Iver’s Blood Bank EP, there have been only two years (2014 and 2015) that one or both Vernon and Dessner did not appear on the Top 31 as performer or producer. Sharon van Etten, Local Natives, Frightened Rabbit, Taylor Swift, Kanye West — they’ve all benefited from the magic touch of Aaron Dessner and/or Justin Vernon in the last 15 years.

There were also a couple of Big Red Machine singles to come out in 2020 that haven’t appeared on any albums: “No Time For Love Like Now” with Michael Stipe, and a get-out-the-vote in Wisconsin cover of Aimee Mann’s “Wise Up” featuring 4 of out 5 members of The National and others.

And now we’re finally up to the present, with How Long Do You Think It's Gonna Last?, the supergroup’s 2nd full-length album under the Big Red Machine name. The album features a daunting list of guest appearances: Taylor Swift on two songs, James Krivchenia of Big Thief, Anaïs Mitchell on three songs, Ilsey (a prolific singer/songwriter who has written for and sung with a dizzying number of artists you’ve heard of), Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold, Naeem (otherwise known as rapper Spank Rock), a song called “Hutch,” dedicated to the lost-too-soon lead singer of Frightened Rabbit, Scott Hutchison, featuring Sharon van Etten, Lisa Hannigan, and Shara Nova (lead singer of My Brightest Diamond), La Force (aka Ariel Engle of Broken Social Scene), Ben Howard, and This is the Kit (Kate Stables).

Whew.

There are many highlights to this album (as there should be for a #2 album of the year). The Robin Pecknold / Anaïs Mitchell sung “Phoenix,” shown in the lyric video above, is my personal favorite (mostly because it’s the favorite of 4-year-old, who demanded I play that song over and over again throughout the summer of 2021). But even the most stripped down songs, such as the two where Aaron Dessner finally takes the spotlight all by himself, playing guitar and singing on “The Ghost of Cincinnati” and “Magnolia” in what can only be described as his best Elliott Smith impersonation. The Taylor Swift collaboration “Renegade” is a poppy, Swiftian jaunt you’ll love – it could have easily been created for Swift’s 2020 albums folklore or evermore.

It’s hard not to look at How Long as the capper of one hell of a musical decade for Dessner and Vernon. There’s no way that either of them is done making music. But if you look at the arc of U2, R.E.M., or The Stones, now is about the time in their respective careers that the drive to create something new and different clashes with the desire to slow down, spend more time with family, and rely heavily on the income from previous hits rather than create something new and earth shattering. Selfishly, I hope they choose a different path and continue to give us everything they’ve got. We’ll find out soon enough – 2022 is a new year, and maybe there’ll be another Bon Iver or National album, or some new Dessner- or Vernon-produced project that will simply blow us all away. I can’t wait.

__________________________________________

3. Jubilee by Japanese Breakfast
4. A Way Forward by Nation of Language
5. Things Take Time, Take Time by Courtney Barnett
6. Little Oblivions by Julien Baker
7. Valentine by Snail Mail
8. sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs
9. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

  • Apple Music Radio Station Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Station Playlist

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 30, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, big red machine, the national, bon iver, Justin vernon, aaron dessner, phoebe bridgers, arcade fire, taylor swift, sharon van etten, local natives, frightened rabbit, kanye west, Aimee mann, Michael stipe, big thief, anaïs mitchell, isley, fleet foxes, robin pecknold, naeem, lisa hannigan, Shara nova, my brightest diamond, broken social scene, la force, ben howard, this is the kit, elliott smith, rem
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#3 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Japanese Breakfast

January 29, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Jubilee by Japanese Breakfast

Despite striving myself on my punctuality, I’m often late to the party. Japanese Breakfast, a band of indefinite size and location fronted by Korean-born, Oregon-raised renaissance woman Michelle Zauner, is a prime example. Their album, Jubilee, that I have so valiantly placed at #3 on my Top 31 for the entirety of 2021, did not enter my audio purview until December 28, 2021. If I’d posted my Top 31 in December, as I used to do until a few years ago, this album would have not been included at all.

Instead, I learned about it thanks to the fantastic KEXP community, who voted this phenomenal third album from the band as their #1 album of the year. I didn’t even hear the live broadcast of that announcement. I read about it a few days later, decided to listen to the album that had struck everyone’s fancy, and was subsequently left trying to figure out how to pick up the pieces of my exploded brain that had scattered around the living room.

This is pop music in its purest, most exciting form. Zauner’s wit, song structure, and bubbly voice – equal parts Grimes and Jenny Lewis – weave a tapestry of pure joy for ten solid songs. The peak of the joy comes at song #2, “Be Sweet,” featured in the video shown above. That chorus – “Be sweet to me baby. I want to believe in you, I want to belieeeeeeve” – is so sickly sweet, I die.

The last song on the album, “Posing for Cars,” is the least pop-like song on the album, but the extended, Doug Martsch-esque guitar solo showcases Zauner’s skills on the instrument. And skilled she is. In addition to having penned three albums with Japanese Breakfast, Zauner is also the director for nearly all of their music videos. And these aren’t some cheap band-performance videos. They’re full-on stories, sometimes strung together into epics. The other two videos from Jubilee are “Posing in Bondage” and “Savage Good Boy,” featuring Micheal Imperioli (best known as Christopher Moltisanti from the Sopranos), and is meant to be a prequel to the story shown in “Bondage.” Zauner has also directed videos for Better Oblivion Community Center, Charly Bliss, and Jay Som.

As if that weren’t enough, she released her first book in 2021. Crying in H Mart: A Memoir debuted at #2 on the NYTimes Best Seller List in April. And it’s now being adapted into a film by Orion Pictures, of which the soundtrack will be supplied by Japanese Breakfast.

Jubilee has been nominated for Best Alternative Music Album, and the band for Best New Artist Grammys (not sure how that works, given that this album is their third as a band). Pitchfork, in their 7.8/10 review of Jubilee, declared 2021 as “Jbrekkie Season,” and I have to agree. This doesn’t feel like the top – this feels like we’re only at the beginning of something huge, like, the birth of a new Michelangelo. I absolutely cannot wait to see what comes next.

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4. A Way Forward by Nation of Language
5. Things Take Time, Take Time by Courtney Barnett
6. Little Oblivions by Julien Baker
7. Valentine by Snail Mail
8. sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs
9. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

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January 29, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, japanese breakfast, grimes, jenny lewis, michelangelo, built to spill, michael imperioli
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#4 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Nation of Language

January 28, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

A Way Forward by Nation of Language

This one, A Way Forward, the sophomore release from Brooklyn, NY, band Nation of Language, is going to take you back. Honestly, the album couldn’t be more poorly named, as everything about it drips nostalgia. You may remember Nation of Language from last year’s Top 31, when their stellar debut album, Introduction, Presence, came in at #15. As the band has settled into themselves, expanding their corner of the indie pop world, they’ve dug deeper into the 80s pop archives. “New wave indie pop” is the genre Wikipedia puts them in. My uneducated mind wants to call it merely “synth pop,” but you get the idea.

The trio, Ian Richard Devaney (lead vocals, guitar, synthesizer, percussion), Aidan Noell (synthesizer, backing vocals), and Michael Sue-Poi (bass guitar), have created an album full of treacle. Song after sugary song, this album makes you want get up and move. Devaney’s vocals always sound as if he’s standing back in the corner of a cavernous room, singing breathy, sometimes intelligible words. And that’s ok! Because these songs are not about the lyrical content – it’s all about the keyboards, the dance groove, and the 1980s ethos.

Whereas last year’s album felt a little disjointed, due to the album being a collection of singles that had been released over the years prior, A Way Forward shows what the band can do with purposeful creation of a whole. As you start the album, the first couple tracks ease you into what they’re all about. Then you hit track 3, “Wounds of Love,” and you’re fully invested, standing up at your desk and lightly shifting your hips from side to side. The song shown in the video above, “The Grey Commute,” comes in at song five, and you‘ve abandoned all hope of getting any more work done.

Watch the video for song six, “This Fractured Mind,” and I dare you not to dance infectiously along with Devaney. It‘s impossible. Nation of Language have a mountainous task ahead of them – how do they keep this momentum rolling, and make their sound less nostalgia, all their own? While I love what they’ve done on these last two albums, I’m dubious they can continue in this same direction without bringing something new to the sound. Only time will tell, and for now, I’m going to enjoy the hell out of it.

__________________________________________

5. Things Take Time, Take Time by Courtney Barnett
6. Little Oblivions by Julien Baker
7. Valentine by Snail Mail
8. sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs
9. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

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January 28, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, nation of language
Top 31
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#5 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Courtney Barnett

January 27, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Things Take Time, Take Time by Courtney Barnett

Welcome to the Top 5 of 2021! Courtney Barnett has been so consistently prominent in my active playlists, it feels as though she’s been around forever. I had thought of starting this review of her latest fantastic release, Things Take Time, Take Time, with something along the lines of “Courtney Barnett’s entire solo career has been charted on the Bacon Top 31.” While that statement is entirely true, it lacks the proper oomph when I look back and realize, dumbly, that Barnett has had only two previous albums: 2015’s Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit (#5 that year), and 2018’s Tell Me How You Really Feel (#8 that year).

Check out my earlier reviews for the history of the Melbourne, Australia-born singer/songwriter. Since her last album album, her guitar-playing has gotten even more electric, and thanks to the pandemic, it’s being given more prominence. Unlike past albums, Things Take Time has only two musicians on the entirety of the album, creating a sound that is more sparse and direct than previous efforts. Barnett still brings her unbelievably slow, nearly spoken-word vocals to the fore, while also filling in guitar, bass, piano. And Stella Mozgawa plays drums, percussion, and keyboards.

With her third album here in the Top 10, I think it’s safe to say I’ve got a thing for Barnett. She’s got a sense of humor, irony, and pun that comes through both in her lyrics as well as her videos. In addition to “Before You Gotta Go,” featured above, check out “Rae Street,” “If I Don’t Hear From You Tonight,” and “Write a List of Things to Look Forward To.”

Courtney Barnett continues to refine her delivery for the better. Even if you haven’t enjoyed what she’s put out so far, I recommend checking out Things Take Time. It only takes one full play to start to understand the nuances and beauty of her craft. Give it a play, you won’t regret it.

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6. Little Oblivions by Julien Baker
7. Valentine by Snail Mail
8. sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs
9. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

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January 27, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, courtney barnett
Top 31
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#6 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Julien Baker

January 26, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Little Oblivions by Julien Baker

I’ve done a great disservice to the artist here at #6. Little Oblivions is the third album by singer/songwriter Julien Baker, yet it’s the first of her’s to appear on the Top 31. I’ve enjoyed her previous album, 2017’s Turn Out the Lights, but it came out mere days before I put together my list for 2017, and so it consequently missed inclusion. And don’t even ask about her debut, 2015’s Sprained Ankle.

I’ve mentioned Baker a couple times in other reviews, as she’s quite chummy with Lucy Dacus (#23 this year) and Phoebe Bridgers (#3 last year). The three of them teamed up as boygenius on an ep back in 2018, and left us begging for more. If you’re a fan of any of those three, you’re a fan of all three. But each has their own voice and spin on where they take the role of “honest and fucked up.”

Of the three, Baker’s voice is strongest. Where Bridgers is delicate, and Dacus is smooth, Baker is wrought. Self-doubt, suicidal tendencies, and alcoholism are common refrains in Baker’s songs, all dripping with the raw emotion that proves she’s lived every bit of it. And there’s so much power behind it all, too. Baker can (and often does) take a song from a quiet, intimate moment to a literal screaming-at-the-top-of-your-lungs crescendo, you’ll find yourself losing your voice singing along on the way to the grocery store.

Little Oblivions is much more rock band-oriented than her two previous albums. There’s a sparseness to her earlier work that has been shed for a more traditional guitar/bass/keyboard/drums setup, all performed by Baker. Baker plays nearly all the instruments on her albums - just like Prince. Baker, 26, has established herself as a true musical force in her 10+ years as a recording artist. She hasn’t hit Billie Eilish levels of popularity, but there’s a sincerity to her music that Eilish lacks, along with a distinct, pleasing absence of pop hooks. In addition to the fantastic song “Faith Healer,” shown in the video above, check out the awesome stop-motion animated video for “Hardline” as well.

Do yourself a favor and get aboard the Julien Baker train. We’ve already left the station, but if you start now you can catch up to us by the next station. All aboard!

__________________________________________

7. Valentine by Snail Mail
8. sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs
9. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

Full Album
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January 26, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, julien baker, phoebe bridgers, lucy dacus, prince, billie eilish, boygenius
Top 31
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#7 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Snail Mail

January 25, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Valentine by Snail Mail

At 22 years old, Lindsey Jordan has accomplished more than most. She’s released a critically-acclaimed debut album under her solo project name Snail Mail (2018’s Lush). She’s moved out and moved back in with her parents (thanks, Covid-19). And she’s released an even more widely acclaimed sophomore Snail Mail album, the exquisite Valentine, dropping in here at #7.

There are many comparisons to draw from when trying to quantify Jordan’s music. THere’s the inevitable comparisons to Hole, or Juliana Hatfield. And anything she does wouldn’t have been possible without the existence of Liz Phair. Today, I talk about Snail Mail in the same breath as King Princess, Lucy Dacus, and Phoebe Bridgers. But none of these do her sound justice.

Her voice is more breathy, as if she’s on the verge of losing it. The songs go from slow ballads about relationships on their last legs, to groovy songs about recovery (according to Pitchfork she did a stint in rehab in November, 2020), to hard rock surprises like the title song shown in the video above.

I liked her debut album, but connected with it too late to include on the 2018 Top 31. Lush feels less polished, less experienced than Valentine. But if you like the song in the video above, then you’ll really connect with Lush, as that album is the more hard rock of the two she’s put together. Despite billing herself as a solo act, she has a full band performing behind her lead vocals and guitars. Bass, keyboards, drums, rhythm guitar, and backing vocals are all there. And even some guest stars: last year’s #1 on the Top 31, Katie Crutchfield (aka Waxahatchee) sings background vocals on “Ben Franklin” (the aforementioned song about recovery – watch the video).

As I mentioned, Jordan is only 22 years old. There’s a lot more ahead for her, and I’m anxious to see where she heads. The growth seen between albums one and two was huge. The next album has got to be even better.

__________________________________________

8. sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs
9. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

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View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 25, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, snail mail, hole, juliana hatfield, liz phair, king princess, Lucy dacus, phoebe bridgers
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#8 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — tUnE-yArDs

January 24, 2022 by Royal Stuart

sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs

The artist here at #8 is not new to the Top 31, but I did not expect them to be here. tUnE-yArDs, the Oakland, CA duo, have releasing music together since 2009, and I love their first three albums. BiRd-BrAiNs, their 2009 debut, did not make the inaugural Top 31 — but that was no fault of their own. I didn’t hear the album in time, and have grown to love it since. Their second and third albums both landed in the Top 10 (w h o k i l l #4 in 2011 and Nicky Nack #6 in 2014).

I was impressed with their originality. I wrote in my 2011 review “using loops of [Merrill Garbus’s] powerful voice along with other analog sounds to create electronic beats/rhythms/melodies…culminating in a cacophony of sounds that are vaguely African in origin.” They found a sound totally unique and unmistakable, infectious and groovy. But after three albums of greatness, the uniqueness had started to wear thin. By the time their fourth album, I Can Feel You Creep Into My Private Life, came out in 2018, I just couldn’t get into it, and I promptly put it down and never picked it up again.

When sketchy., their fifth album, came out in March, I felt a sense of duty to listen to the album, but the first time through it failed to hook me. I put it down. And likely would have not picked it up again were it not for a friend praising the album on social media. I engaged him in conversation, questioned his taste, and he implored me to give it another go. I’m so glad I did.

sketchy. (yes, it’s annoyingly styled that way, lowercase with a period. They style the band name as “tUnE-yArDs,” so I guess I’ll indulge them on the album name styling as well) is a return to form for Garbus and her musical partner Nate Brenner. Check out “hypnotized” in the video above, as well as the endlessly catchy “nowhere, man“. Much like the Low album at #10, this music can sound abrasive and difficult. But if it’s too much, perhaps “hold yourself.” is more your speed. It’s slower, more subdued, but still every bit Garbus and Brenner.

Do what you can to rise above the noise, and hear the whole of what’s being presented to you. I think you’ll find yourself pleasantly surprised.

__________________________________________

9. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

Full Album
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View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 24, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, tune-yards
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#9 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Fleet Foxes

January 23, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes

I’ll admit right up front that putting this album on the Top 31 feels a bit like cheating. My love of the Fleet Foxes runs deep, and is well known amongst my closest friends. A Very Lonely Solstice is not a Greatest Hits album — that would be a clear violation in a Top 31 — but it is a live album, in which Robin Pecknold, lead singer and principle songwriter of the band, performs a 45 minute set of songs from his catalog (plus a couple extras, including a beautiful cover of the Bee Gee’s “In The Morning,” originally made popular by Nina Simone). Normally that would not be enough to qualify – it wouldn’t be unique enough to warrant getting listed.

But give it a listen, and you’ll understand instantly why I had to make an exception. Or, better yet, watch it. The entire performance is available on YouTube. Get a fire going in your fireplace, put on your coziest pajamas, and curl up on the bearskin rug and watch, holding (or held in the arms of) your loved ones.

Fleet Foxes have appeared on the Top 31 three times previously, for their three most recent studio albums. Shore was #7 in 2020, Crack-Up was #12 in 2017, and Helplessness Blues was #9 way back in 2011. I loved them as they were coming up in late 2007 and early 2008, when I saw them five times in the span of eight months. (Including their first show in LA, where I was surprised to see them not draw a Seattle-sized crowd at the storied Troubadour. There was probably no more than 50 people in attendance at their performance, as they were opening for Band of Horses off-shoot Grand Archives and Blitzen Trapper and nobody had bothered to show up early. I remember sitting next to and inexplicably introducing myself to Pecknold’s dad at that show.) And I love them every bit as much now, if not more.

Pecknold’s voice is truly angelic. So it makes perfect sense that he created this album on the 2020 Winter solstice at Brooklyn's St. Ann & The Holy Trinity Church. Unbelievably, he recorded the opener, “Wading in Waist-High Water” alongside the Resistance Revival Chorus, all socially-distanced and masked, the sound cutting through the masks like sunlight through a pane of glass. After that overpopulated opener, it gets much more sparse – fulfilling the “Very Lonely” promise of the album’s title. It was Dec. 2020, the height of covid lockdown, so only the silent film crew (a family affair: Pecknold’s brother Sean was the director, and his sister Aja the producer) could attend.

If you’ve ever dabbled in Fleet Foxes, or even if you haven’t, this album will be equally received by all. It is a lovely performance, and a testament to Pecknold’s resilience and love for his audience that he is literally giving the performance away online. You truly cannot afford to not listen to this record.

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10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

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Radio Station
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View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 23, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, fleet foxes, advented, robin pecknold
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#10 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Low

January 22, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Hey What by Low

We’re entering the Top 10 with an explosion of sound. Hey What, the 13th album from Duluth, Minnesota band Low is the loudest, most distorted album on the 2021 Top 31. And it is glorious.

My love of Low has had its ups and downs. I like to think I’m attracted to most if not all kinds of music, but I have my limits. Low often falls outside of those limits – too noisy, too disparate, too unapproachable. The last Low album I loved was 2005’s The Great Destroyer, and it, too, is glorious. But that was 16 years and seven albums ago. Consequently, you’ll notice a distinct lack of Low on the Top 31. Enter Hey What.

It would be foolish of me to say that Hey What is approachable. It most certainly is not: excessive amounts of distortion, feedback, reverb, electronic noise and the band’s signature dissonant harmonies from dual leads Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker make for an album that is far from an easy listen. Consequently, to love this (and any previous) Low album is a somewhat singular affair, calling for expensive headphones, a dark room, and a healthy side of THC. Assemble those ingredients, lie down, and feel yourself almost literally melt into the carpet.

There are a number of videos out from the album. I particularly like the song “Days Like These,” so I featured it above, but I’d be hard-pressed to determine a favorite. Nonetheless, please enjoy these other visual delights:

  • “White Horses”
  • “I Can Wait”
  • “Disappearing”
  • “Hey”
  • “More”

For the first time in their career, Low is a true duo. The core of the band has always been married couple Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker, but there’s always been at least one other person performing instruments alongside them since their inception 28 years ago. With the departure of their longtime bassist Steve Garrington in 2020, Sparhawk and Parker moved forward with writing and creating Hey What on their own.

They are quite possibly the quintessential working couple. The two have recorded and performed together for the entire history of the band, through the birth of two children, and here they remain, 28 years later, at the pinnacle of their musical careers, with no sign of stopping. Their music is unmistakable thanks to their uniquely harmonized vocals. They’ve found a sound and stuck with it, unabashedly doing things their way, to great effect.


  1. Local Valley by José González
  2. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
  3. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
  4. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
  5. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
  6. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
  7. Screen Violence by Chvrches
  8. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
  9. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
  10. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
  11. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
  12. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
  13. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
  14. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
  15. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
  16. NINE by Sault
  17. Observatory by Aeon Station
  18. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
  19. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
  20. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
  21. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

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January 22, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, low
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#11 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — José González

January 21, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Local Valley by José González

José González’s music is the audio equivalent of a nap in a hammock on a deserted beach, with the waves gently lapping at the sand and the afternoon sun warming your closed eyelids. This is not music you work out or dance to – relaxation is the price of admission to a José González album. As an English-speaking Swede born to Argentinian parents, he sings in three different languages. Be it Swedish, Spanish, or English, his voice – soft as an Angora sweater – plays a duet with the acoustic guitar he plays with the pads of his fingers, so quiet you can only make out every third word. It’s magical.

Damon Albarn (The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows, #13) has created 25 albums in 30 years – an album every ~1.2 years. Jenn Wasner (Flock of Dimes, #12) has created 9 albums in 14 years – an album every ~1.6 years. Local Valley is the González’s fourth album in 18 years. That’s an album every ~4.5 years! The Gothenburg, Sweden singer/songwriter’s songs aren’t the only things that move at a slow pace.

If you are unfamiliar with González’s previous work, but you enjoyed the Kings of Convenience (Peace or Love, #20), then I encourage you to slip into something even more comfortable. Don’t let the fun song shown in the video above fool you – most of González’s songs aren’t like this one.

There are a lot of other great videos from this album that all sound more like traditional José González. “Visions” is vintage González. The “El Invento” video is great, too; I love the lyrical treatment of this song – you can hear him sing while you read the native Spanish, but you can also read the English translation right there on screen. And check out “Head On” for the most “rockin” you’ll see him get (which isn’t much, to be sure)

I was lucky to buy tickets to see González coming up in a couple months. It’ll be good to get out into society again, and especially good to ease into it with José González singing gently in my ear. Buy the album, then buy tickets to the show and join me! You won’t be sorry.

__________________________________________

12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

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January 21, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, josé gonzález, junip, kings of convenience
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#12 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Flock of Dimes

January 20, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes

In the immortal words of G.O.B. Bluth, I’ve made a huge mistake. Well, maybe not huge, but one I’m certainly not proud of. Head of Roses, the third release from Flock of Dimes, came out back in April, and I’ve been enjoying it immensely for the last eight months. That’s not the mistake – quite the contrary, in fact. However, also for the last eight months, I’ve been thinking, and even saying to multiple people who I recommended the album to, that Flock of Dimes was the solo project of the lead singer of Sylvan Esso.

Insert the game show buzzer sound here.

Turns out, Flock of Dimes is not Amelia Meath’s solo project. It is in fact Jenn Wasner’s solo project. Jenn is the lead singer of Wye Oak. To my credit, if you put the two bands side-by-side, they do sound very similar. Even more to my credit, Wasner recorded this Flock of Dimes album with Nick Sanborn, the non-Amelia Meath half of Sylvan Esso. So who can really forgive me for mistaking Wasner for Meath? Moving on…

I do love Head of Roses. And I love Wasner’s voice here every bit as much as I did on Wye Oak’s excellent album The Louder I Call, The Faster It Runs, (#9 in 2018). Learning that Roses was made by half of Wye Oak and half of Sylvan Esso makes perfect sense. Sanborn’s production isn’t as heavy handed as Andy Stack’s Wye Oak production, and Flock of Dimes is more guitar-y than your typical Sylvan Esso album. Roses sits squarely in between — a Sylvan Esso or Wye Oak album straight from the metaverse, perhaps never having meant to be, but here now thanks to Dr. Strange’s magic spell. Or, you know, maybe Wasner just wanted to work with Sanborn, or vice versa.

The song shown in the video above, “Hard Way,” is the most subdued song on the album. If you want more of that heavy Wye Oak guitar, check out the video for “Price of Blue”. There’s also a great video for “One More Hour,” a song that sits squarely in the middle between those two.

Don’t sit on Flock of Dimes (or Wye Oak, or Sylvan Esso). Head of Roses is Wasner’s third solo album, and ninth total album when combined with her Wye Oak output. And it’s her best yet. Hopefully 2022 will bring another Wye Oak album, and then we can start the cycle all over again.

__________________________________________

13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

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Radio Station
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View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 20, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, jenn wasner, wye oak, sylvan esso
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#13 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Damon Albarn

January 19, 2022 by Royal Stuart

The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn

Damon Albarn’s newest record, The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows, was created in isolation in his home outside of Reykjavik, Iceland during the pandemic. That point is important, because it gives this slower, introspective album the perfect sense of place.

After starting in on a commissioned project with some native Icelandic musicians, Albarn had to shift course due to the pandemic – they could no longer get together and jam. According to Pitchfork, What was going to be an “orchestral interpretation of the land outside his living room window” became the foundation for a new solo album that he eventually brought to life with two musicians he had a long history with: Simon Tong (guitarist for the Verve and for Albarn’s side project The Good, The Bad, & the Queen) and frequent Gorillaz collaborator Mike Smith.

A view of Esja in Reykjavík, Iceland. The landscape inspiring 'The Nearer The Fountain, More Pure The Stream Flows': https://t.co/2L231hVJiu pic.twitter.com/NljvMSA084

— Damon Albarn (@Damonalbarn) November 29, 2021

The collection of songs that emerged from that curvy road of creation is not a Blur or Gorillaz album. It’s not full-on pop, nor digital craziness. But Albarn’s voice is unique, with or without collaboration, and his music always invariably sounds like him. If you’ve ever thought “I want a Blur album without the heavy guitars” or “This Gorillaz stuff would sound great if it didn’t have all that digital distortion,” then Fountain is for you.

The video above, for the song “Royal Morning Blue” is the only video from the album that features Albarn. But there are a series of video clips set to the music that you can watch while listening. If you like consuming your music with visuals, as I do (full on MTV generation here), these vignettes are perfect for the music.

It feels as though Damon Albarn has been somewhere in my shortlist of “current rotation” albums for most of my life. I wrote about his prolific output in my review of the second album from his side project The Good, The Bad, & the Queen’s second album (2018’s Merrie Land, #23 that year). I’ve updated what I wrote then to include what has come out since:

Blur released their first album, Leisure, in 1991. Including that seminal album, Albarn has been a principle part of the production for eight Blur albums (2015’s The Magic Whip was #21 that year), [seven] Gorrilaz albums (2020’s Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez was #13 that year), six various collaboration albums, two albums with the collective known as The Good, the Bad & the Queen, and [now two] solo albums.

That’s a mind-blowing 25 albums in 30 years. A spry 53 years old, Albarn doesn’t show any sign of slowing down his output. Where he will head next is anybody’s guess, but take my hand and we’ll skip along with him, together.

__________________________________________

14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

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Radio Station
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View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 19, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, damon albarn, blur, the good the bad and the queen, gorillaz
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#14 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Arlo Parks

January 18, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks

There’s a good chance you’ve heard the artist here at #14, even if you can’t name her. Arlo Parks and her fantastic debut album, Collapsed in Sunbeams, are seemingly everywhere and on everyone’s lips. The album is littered with sweet, approachable, soulful R&B, primed and ready to be the pleasant background for many a musical movie montage.

Arlo Parks is 21 years old, a number so low it proves she has no legitimate right to be as talented as she is. And yet. The London-born singer/songwriter, whose full name is Anaïs Oluwatoyin Estelle Marinho, has accomplished a ton in her short career. She started releasing original music in 2018. In 2019 she released two EPs, and the right peoples’ ears started to perk up. She collaborated with Glass Animals and Phoebe Bridgers, both of whom appeared prominently on past Top 31s. Continuing unabated on her upward trajectory and outpouring of creativity, she wrote 12 more songs and unleashed Collapsed in Sunbeams on the world, and quickly won the 2021 Mercury Prize for Album of the Year. I won’t be surprised when she walks away as Best New Artist at the upcoming 2022 Grammys.

It was difficult picking the right video to feature above, as she’s created quite a few for the album:

  • “Too Good,” above
  • “Hope”
  • “Caroline”
  • “Green Eyes”
  • “Hurt”
  • “Black Dog”

The album feels almost too perfect. The production is immaculate. The beats sublime. And the lyrics never offend. It’s sometimes hard to tell one song from the next, and it carries an air of temporariness to it – something that will burn bright and then flame out quickly. That may be a good thing, forcing Marinho to explore further depths, uncover more layers. In the meantime I’ll enjoy Collapse, and anxiously await what comes next.

__________________________________________

15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

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January 18, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, arlo parks, glass animals, phoebe bridgers
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#15 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Jungle

January 17, 2022 by Royal Stuart

Loving In Stereo by Jungle

Jungle, the London-based electronic dance combination of childhood friends Tom McFarland and Josh Lloyd-Watson, cannot make a bad song. Loving In Stereo, the third full-length they’ve created in their short 8 years, is a dancer’s dream. Song after song of music to move by. Picking up exactly where they left off with For Ever, (#28 in 2018), Loving has the duo growing, stretching, and flexing their muscles in all the right ways. They’ve fully taken over the mantle once adorned by acts like Jamiroquai, creating poppy, beat-heavy grooves that are impossible to sit still to.

Loving In Stereo is on YouTube in full, and like Wolf Alice earlier in this countdown, the band has produced a unique music video for (nearly) every song:

  • “Keep Moving”
  • “All of the Time”
  • “Romeo, feat. Bas” (shown above)
  • “Lifting You” and “Bonnie Hill”
  • “Fire”
  • “Talk About It”
  • “Truth”
  • “What D’You Know About Me”
  • “Just Fly, Don’t Worry,” “Goodbye, My Love feat. Priya Ragu,” and “Can’t Stop the Stars”

The duo does not make an appearance in these videos. Lloyd-Watson is actually behind the camera, directing every single one of them with Charlie Di Placido, creative director of the video design house JFC Worldwide. Each video is a single shot, start to finish. The band works with an amazing dance troupe choreographed by Nathaniel Williams and Cece Nama. Together they create these compelling and complex dance scenes set in the interior and grounds of an abandoned building.

If you’ve not yet gotten on the Jungle train, now’s your chance. Loving in Stereo is sure to be loved by anyone who listens to it. So get on – it’s going to be a good ride.

__________________________________________

16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

Full Album
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Radio Station
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View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 17, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, jungle, jamiroquai
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#16 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Elbow

January 16, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Flying Dream 1 by Elbow

Here we are at the midway point. I find an odd sense of beauty that #16 on the Bacon Top 31 always appears on the 16th of the month. This tends to be an inflection point in the countdown — from here on, the quality of the music starts to blend together, each album likely the top of someone else’s list.

The new Elbow album is perfect for #16. Elbow is known for their bombast. Intimate, closely held lows are met with full, orchestral crescendos. But not Flying Dream 1. This is a quiet album, not unlike a meditation. It’s 45 minutes of “Lippy Kids” (“Lippy Kids” is the choral backbone of their phenomenal 2011 album Build a Rocket Boys! and the song never breaks a sweat). It’s gorgeous and lush in all the right ways, and never calls attention to yourself.

The album was produced remotely while everyone was in lockdown in 2020, with the band sharing files back and forth, building the structure for each one. When people could once again convene in small, in-person groups, the band took on a residency at Theatre Royal in Brighton to put the final touches on the album. Utilizing the natural resonance of the theater, the resulting sound is wonderfully warm. You can get a good sense of the place in the three videos the band has released for the album. First, in “Six Words” featured above, as well as the videos for the title track and for “The Seldom Seen Kid” (not the title track from their 2008 album, but about the same subject as that album: the late Manchester musician Bryan Glancy).

Elbow have been playing together for over 30 years, and have been producing great music for two-thirds of that time. I didn’t start listening to the band until I acquired their Mercury-prize winning 2008 album The Seldom Seen Kid. Every studio album they’ve produced since then has appeared on the Bacon Top 31, first with Build a Rocket Boys! (#5 in 2011), The Take Off and Landing of Everything (#2 in 2014), Little Fictions (#1 in 2017!), and Giants of All Sizes, came in at #8 in 2019. You could throw the songs from all those albums and Flying Dream 1 into a hopper, pull out any ten songs, and it would hold together as a complete album. Without knowing the albums intimately you wouldn’t be able to tell what year the songs are from.

It’s quite the achievement to have such consistency for so long. With the exception of swapping out drummers in 2016 (Richard Jump out, Alex Reeves in), the same four-piece lineup has remained for all thirty years: Guy Garvey (lead vocals, guitar), Craig Potter (keyboards), Mark Potter (guitar) and Pete Turner (bass). You’d be hard-pressed to find that level of consistency anywhere. Sure, bands survive that long. But to continue to put out record after record of great-sounding, uniquely-their-own music — its unheard of.

If you’re unfamiliar with Elbow, please crawl out from under that rock. Pick up any of Elbow’s last six studio albums, put on some headphones, and let Calgon take you away. Seriously – go do it right now.

__________________________________________

17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

Full Album
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Radio Station
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View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 16, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, elbow
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