The Bacon Review

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

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#5 on the 2025 Bacon Top 31 — Dean Johnson

January 27, 2026 by Royal Stuart in 2025, Top 31

I Hope We Can Still Be Friends by Dean Johnson

For his 50th birthday in May, 2023, the angel-voiced alt.country singer/songwriter Dean Johnson released his debut album, the utterly fantastic (and sadly overlooked by the Bacon Review that year) Nothing for Me, Please. He felt it was finally time — he’d been working on (and working up the courage to let loose into the world) the album for the better part of two decades. Half a century into his time on this earth, and he was now ready.

Born on Camano Island in the San Juan Islands here in the PNW, the Seattle-via-Bellingham performer, who has the look of a starved Pacific Northwestern longshoreman in a mustachioed Sam Elliot costume, has been a known, much-loved entity around Seattle for a long while. He’s a regular at Al’s Tavern in Wallingford (an institutional dive bar that opened in 1940, and has therefore been around longer than other Wallingford institutions Dick’s Drive-in (1954) and Archie McPhee’s (1983)), where he spent much of the 2010s working in addition to hanging out and getting lost in the background while playing in other going-almost-nowhere country-esque bands.

It was while working at the bar that he mastered his own song craft, but remained hidden due to crippling self-doubt of his own abilities. He’d play a show of his own music here and there, but only because the people who knew him and what he was capable of would drag him out of hiding to do so. He put his debut album to tape in the late 10s, but committed it only to a private SoundCloud link that he’d share around to those he knew. There’s a YouTube video from 2016 of Johnson performing “Faraway Skies” for a submission to NPR’s Tiny Desk competition that didn’t result in anything.

The pandemic of the early 20s only solidified his hidden-in-plain-sight stance. Finally, in 2023, many years after he’d recorded it, he released that debut album. Nothing for Me, Please is a masterpiece in song-driven storytelling. I first heard Johnson sometime that year, possibly when his song “Faraway Skies” was featured on FX’s Reservation Dogs at the start of Season 3 (one of my favorite shows – highly recommend!). Or, even more likely, I heard Johnson for the first time on KEXP radio’s Sunday morning show “The Roadhouse” with DJ Greg Vandy, which is typically on in my house every weekend.

I still hadn’t heard that debut album in full before I saw him perform at Bumbershoot during Labor Day weekend of 2024, over a year after the debut had come out. What I do remember about that performance was learning that his delicate tenor voice was not built for the festival stage, unable to overpower the din of the crowd. I moved on to another stage. Shortly thereafter, I came across Johnson’s video recordings of some of his debut-album songs on a live performance video channel called Western AF1, and that was the tipping point — I was finally hooked.

I eventually fell in love with the full album album, growing enamored with the singer’s quietly sarcastic delivery and darkly funny lyrics. Listen and watch the video for “Acting School,” a song about learning how to act in order to pretend that everything is a-ok after a harsh breakup. Or the title song, “Nothing for Me, Please,” which is about the potential of spending an eternity in Heaven sounding actually quite awful. Music to my ears, literally.

And now we’re finally caught up to his every-bit-as-good-as-the-debut sophomore album, I Hope We Can Still Be Friends. Everything about Johnson and his music is endearing. On “So Much Better,” he brings a new dimension to getting over a past love, the humor catches you off guard. “Well, I’m feelin’ so much better now / Since I had my mind erased / If I passed you on the street / I would not recognize your face.” There’s a beauty in how he drags out the “sooooo” with his gorgeously high vibrato.

“Before You Hit the Ground” (featured in the video above) is another song about a big heartbreak Johnson experienced, this time with a woman from Oklahoma in the late 00’s. Buddy Holly gets a prominent mention in the song, as a way for Johnson to eventually imagine his own demise in a way similar to Holly, via plane crash. The song ends with Johnson interpolating Holly’s “That’ll Be the Day” with the final lyric “That’ll be the day, darling / that’ll be the day that I die.”

Johnson’s stage presence is best described as “unassuming.” He’s quiet, and his headlining shows (I’ve seen him twice more since that 2024 Bumbershoot performance, once at the Tractor and again that Showbox) are pin-drop quiet between songs, as that’s the only way to hear the inevitable sideways joke he throws out that will make you belly laugh. Watch his KEXP Performance from August this past year and you’ll get a good sense of his command of the stage (or lack thereof).

I Hope We Can Still Be Friends was produced by Seattle’s own Sera Cahoone, who has released many a solo album, and has played drums for Carissa’s Weird and Band of Horses (she does not appear on BoH’s Why Are You OK? that appeared at #16 in 2016). She plays drums, expertly and reserved, on Still Be Friends as well.

In a fantastic article / interview from Paste Magazine from June this past year, Johnson talks about the future. “I have so many compositions — from fresh ones to old ones — that are really dear to me and I really need to finalize words for them and commit to lyrics. I think my next three albums will be, by far, the most exciting things for me that I’ve ever done. I really want to get into a recording life as soon as I can. I’m fucking 52 and I am changing.” I’m right there with you, Dean (I turn 52 tomorrow). And I’m glad you’ll be right here with me for these next few years and maybe longer. The music world is a much better place with you in it.

1. I highly recommend you check out Western AF’s playlist of Johnson’s songs.↩

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  1. Snocaps by Snocaps
  2. Through This Fire Across from Peter Balkan by The Mountain Goats
  3. The Scholars by Car Seat Headrest
  4. Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory by Sharon Van Etten
  5. Phonetics On and On by Horsegirl
  6. Dance Called Memory by Nation of Language
  7. Straight Line Was a Lie by The Beths
  8. Middle Spoon by Cheekface
  9. Virgin by Lorde
  10. Alex by Daughter of Swords
  11. Everybody Scream by Florence + the Machine
  12. Let God Sort Em Out by Clipse
  13. Forever Howlong by Black Country, New Road
  14. Phantom Island by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
  15. DOGA by Juana Molina
  16. The Rubber Teeth Talk by Daisy the Great
  17. Billboard Heart by Deep Sea Diver
  18. Thee Black Boltz by Tunde Adebimpe
  19. Sinister Grift by Panda Bear
  20. DON'T TAP THE GLASS by Tyler, The Creator
  21. I’m Only F**king Myself by Lola Young
  22. Who Is The Sky? by David Byrne
  23. THE BPM by Sudan Archives
  24. The Life of a Showgirl by Taylor Swift
  25. moisturizer by Wet Leg
  26. TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Nine Inch Nails

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View all previous years’ Top 31s

January 27, 2026 /Royal Stuart
dean johnson, sera cahoone, buddy holly, carissa’s weird, band of horses
2025, Top 31
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#5 on the 2016 Bacon Top 31

January 08, 2017 by Royal Stuart

Are You Serious by Andrew Bird

There seems to be a bit of a recurring theme happening in the Bacon Top 31: persevere, and greatness will come back to you. DJ Shadow, Band of Horses, Yeasayer — these bands have all been around for quite a long while, but it wasn’t until their umpteenth album came out that they found the greatness they once enjoyed much earlier in their careers. The same can be found here at #5, with Andrew Bird and his 13th studio album Are You Serious.

This is Bird’s best album yet. He’s clearly matured as a songwriter, and his songs — written with the creative flourish of an accomplished poet — are damn near perfect. There are a number of high points in this album, but none so fantastic as “Left Handed Kisses,” a dueling duet sung with the captivating Fiona Apple (who is no stranger to the Top 31, her most recent album having reached #1 back in 2012). (I posted the video for “Left Handed Kisses” back in March)

If Serious is Bird’s best album, “Kisses” is his best song ever. From the sparse guitar, the powerful interplay between Bird and Apple, down to the beautifully strong lyrics such as:

For it begs the question
How did I ever find you?
Now you got me writing love songs
With a common refrain like this one here, baaa-aaa-aa-by

The “baby” at the end of that song is drawn out across many notes, the common refrain heard in many a love song across all of folkdom. The coda at the end of the song is what slays me, sung in alternating lines from Bird to Apple and back again:

Now it’s time for a handsome little bookend
Now it’s time to tie up all the loose ends
Am I still a skeptic or did you make me a believer?
If you hesitate, you'll hear the click of the receiver

No, they’re not talking on the phone. The “click of the receiver” is the metaphorical hang-up at the end of a bad relationship. And it’s those little hoops that Bird’s lyrics make you jump through that I absolutely love. This album is full of them. If you’re a fan of great lyrics, beautiful violin, and semi-quiet background songs (“don’t be thrown by “Capsized,” shown in the video above. This is one of the more rocking songs on the otherwise subdued album), this one is definitely for you.

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6. Lemonade by Beyoncé
7. Teens of Denial by Car Seat Headrest
8. Goodness by The Hotelier
9. The Mountain Will Fall by DJ Shadow
10. Junun by Shye Ben Tzur, Jonny Greenwood & The Rajasthan Express
11. The Hope Six Demolition Project by PJ Harvey
12. Amen & Goodbye by Yeasayer
13. Sea of Noise by St. Paul & The Broken Bones
14. You Want It Darker by Leonard Cohen
15. Painting Of A Panic Attack by Frightened Rabbit
16. Why Are You OK by Band Of Horses
17. Not To Disappear by Daughter
18. Sunlit Youth by Local Natives
19. I Had a Dream That You Were Mine by Hamilton Leithauser + Rostam
20. ★ by David Bowie
21. Farewell, Starlite! by Francis and the Lights
22. This Unruly Mess I’ve Made by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis
23. LNZNDRF by LNZNDRF
24. Puberty 2 by Mitski
25. Light Upon the Lake by Whitney
26. A Corpse Wired for Sound by Merchandise
27. Away by Okkervil River
28. case/lang/veirs by case/lang/veirs
29. Love Letter for Fire by Sam Beam & Jesca Hoop
30. Barbara Barbara, We Face a Shining Future by Underworld
31. Preoccupations by Preoccupations

January 08, 2017 /Royal Stuart
2016, advented, andrew bird, fiona apple, dj shadow, band of horses, yeasayer
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#16 on the 2016 Bacon Top 31

December 16, 2016 by Royal Stuart

Why Are You OK by Band Of Horses

Sometimes a band you’d long given up on surprises you. Such is the case with the album at #16, Band of Horses’s fifth album Why Are You OK. Every since “Is The a Ghost” got stuck in my head sometime in late 2007, I’ve had trouble liking this band. Their debut album, Everything All the Time, is a great album. They really nailed it with that one. Each album since then has been a shadow of that original greatness.

And I’m not saying this new one is better than their 2006 debut. This is — finally — the follow-up album I’ve been waiting for them to make all along. It was produced by Jason Lyle of Grandaddy, and maybe that has something to do with the subtle-but-important differences that show up. “Casual Party,” the first single from the album, featured above, is a classic Band of Horses song. It sounds like them, they’re having fun, and it’s catchy and rocking.

The rest of the album builds off that song, to leave you with a warm glow inside. I had the pleasure of seeing these guys perform at the Paramount earlier this year, and the live versions of these songs are every bit as good as they sound recorded. And lead singer Ben Bridwell is having a blast. He’s the type of guy that seems like he’d be friends with everybody, he’d be the one to buy you a round just for being you. And that’s the sense you get out of this album, too.

__________________________________________

17. Not To Disappear by Daughter
18. Sunlit Youth by Local Natives
19. I Had a Dream That You Were Mine by Hamilton Leithauser + Rostam
20. ★ by David Bowie
21. Farewell, Starlite! by Francis and the Lights
22. This Unruly Mess I’ve Made by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis
23. LNZNDRF by LNZNDRF
24. Puberty 2 by Mitski
25. Light Upon the Lake by Whitney
26. A Corpse Wired for Sound by Merchandise
27. Away by Okkervil River
28. case/lang/veirs by case/lang/veirs
29. Love Letter for Fire by Sam Beam & Jesca Hoop
30. Barbara Barbara, We Face a Shining Future by Underworld
31. Preoccupations by Preoccupations

December 16, 2016 /Royal Stuart
2016, advented, band of horses
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