Thursday, December 31, 2020

Spaghetti Blogonese's Top 25 albums of 2020

 



As the year 2020 was a showshit of a year, it was apt that the musical output was top-notch. Never before had I needed an LP to drop like it did on 11th December by The Avalanches - crafting a sumptuous concept album about love and light, against all the odds. Fleet Foxes continued to mesmerise with their fourth epic seasonal majesty, coninciding with the start of autumn. Crack Cloud, a bunch of recovered addicts from Vancouver knocked up a sublime debut of eccentric post-punk. Faten Kanaan hypnotised me with her meditative frozen landscapes - perfect for winter. Freddie Gibbs delivered on all his potential, by finding his stride over The Alchemist's hazy production - Freddie proving to be the ultimate street rapper.

Erland Cooper came in time for a spring, with a pastoral concept LP of folk and orchestral lore located off the north of Scotland. Nadia Reid, down there in New Zealand offered up a heart-achingly gorgeous folk record. Regarding explosive jazz, Shabaka & The Ancestors really came through with a rootsy, primordial investigation into where the origin of humanity lays. Dan Bejar brought the old Shadow Power (my student radio alias) vibes back with one of his career bests of surreal and vivifying songwriting and Oneohtrix Point Never followed up his stellar work on the Uncut Gems soundtrack by dropping his ninth album of spangly, dimension-bending white elephants.

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1. THE AVALANCHES – WE WILL ALWAYS LOVE YOU

2.FLEET FOXES – SHORE

3. CRACK CLOUD – PAIN OLYMPICS

4.FATEN KANAAN – A MYTHOLOGY OF CIRCLES

5. FREDDIE GIBBS - ALFREDO

6. ERLAND COOPER – HETHER BLETHER

7. NADIA REID – OUT OF MY PROVINCE

8. SHABAKA & THE ANCESTORS – WE ARE SENT HERE BY HISTORY

9. DESTROYER – HAVE WE MET

10. ONEOHTRIX POINT NEVER – MAGIC ONEOHTRIX POINT NEVER

***************************************************************

11. CARIBOU - SUDDENLY

12. BONNIE LIGHT HORSEMAN – BONNIE LIGHT HORSEMAN

13. BC CAMPLIGHT – SHORTLY AFTER TAKEOFF

14. U.S. GIRLS – HEAVY LIGHT

15. THURSTON MOORE – BY THE FIRE

16. BILL CALLAHAN – GOLD RECORD

17. JARV. IS – BEYOND THE PALE

18. I BREAK HORSES – WARNINGS

19. THE STROKES – THE NEW ABNORMAL

20. WILMA ARCHER – A WESTERN CIRCULAR

21. MIKE POLIZZE – LONG LOST SOLACE FIND

22. THE SOFT PINK TRUTH – SHALL WE GO ON SINNING…

23. FIONA APPLE – FETCH THE BOLT CUTTERS

24. CRAVEN FAULTS – ERRATICS & UNCONFORMITIES

25. EINSTURZENDE NEUBATEN – ALLES IN ALLEM

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

The 20 Best Albums of the 2010's by Spaghetti Blogonese

 


Was hoping to count down the top 40 soups of all time, as I just had a delicious Borsch (hot Ukranian beetroot broth) and it felt like less of a chore than finally having to make these picks. After TOO MANY months of thinking and umming and ahing, I am putting down the final write-up, which began as a countdown, but end up as a denouement.

1. THE WAR ON DRUGS – LOST IN THE DREAM (2014)

This decade has indeed seen fragments and bits and pieces all hover, sputter and go every which way but loose. Genre-bending was a common denominator 10 years ago, as we witnessed Radiohead and Primal Scream produce career-highs with electronica-whazzbeat and post-office-punk; two of the big harvests from very potent farmers. Also, heavyweight albums felt as heavy as music magazines would push Daft Punk's Discovery and The Strokes' Is This It as modern classics that everyone would at least know about, if not love. I downloaded that latter LP from Napster, and burnt it to Sony Minidisc if anyone actually remembers or used that.

Things are different now. Fragments and splices and pastiches are aboard; I just Googled “What artistic period are we in?” and it came back with “neo-dadaism” - “a defiantly anti-art” movement, and to reflect that an artist like Grimes would make sense to represent the huge shake-up in consumerism as we all go solo and might not even know who our best friends favorite band are – or even care about what they listen to. Not speaking for myself here, just a glance from afar.

Lost In The Dream might sound linear, but actuallyis a pastiche of the highest order. A magnificent nod towards Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan and Big Star, it is all of this and more, primed, synced up and pumped through 80's drive-time. Nothing says that better than “Red Eyes” a five-minute blast of giddy fresh air, with the best riff I’ve ever heard, and believe me, I am not a riff person. “Suffering” that follows has the gentle piano and layered liquification after the head over heels free-fall that was delivered priorwards.

The glory of this album boils down to two things: the playing and the sequencing. The instrumentation is staggering – not a foot is put wrong across the hour. “An Ocean In Between The Waves” and “Burning” recall Dire Straits in particular as the wagon rolls along – but it's swimming and it's building and so they crescendo. They're not just jams, but they sure kick them up. Adam Granduciel gets his bass coating painted on and then applies the electric gloss in a sea of haze. Just to reiterate, this is the best record of the decade for one truly vital categorization – track order. The spacey, off-centered “Disappearing” provides the perfect glue that binds the core of the LP. “The Haunting Idle” also gives divine breathing space, before we pick up one last piece of gusto in the ravishing “Burning.”

The last two songs are akimbo aplomb. I had a can of Taiwan beer in my hand in Jingan, Taipei in the winter of 2014, ready to spend another Christmas living abroad in Asia. The title track (9 from 10) came on Spotify and I felt both reassured and hypnotized at once. It is a song of imagery and the album could end there and be sealed off, all the good for it. But instead Granduciel pulls off the deal-seal with “In Reverse,” a song that ties together nicely with Tame Impala's “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards” which is a major theme of my decade, despite making daily progress. It's the little moments that have made this decade for me through music, and that can of beer – that cool burst of air, as Granduciel sings about “the grand parade,” wanting that person, head held high to the sky, pollution, wind, philosophy, everything goes, let it go; – you're well-earned.

2TAME IMPALA – LONERISM (2012)

Another one of those little moments that happened was renting a U-bike in Taipei after finishing my morning shift at the kindergarten, and cycling this huge main road bombing it to my other job, playing Lonerism in it's entirety, with no better album title to sum up the age we now live in.

Music To Walk Home By” the fifth track, was in full effect “I just don't know how to feel right / A beautiful girl is wasting my life” sings Kevin Parker, and nothing could be better in this cyclable muddle that I found myself in; a hamster on a fucking wheel.

That bike ride used to begin with the opener “Be Above It” with the hyperventilating panic attack of “Gotta Be Above It” rattled over and over to build up the huge momentum that would be needed to sustain two jobs, before the eventual red self-destruct button would be jammed and the trapdoor would open, but at least a game of pool would be waiting after the end of a long day. Sometimes this would happen 4 nights a week. This album defines that time for me.

The glorious “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards” is the song the Beatles never wrote and it found it's way onto rock history playlists in pubs all around the world – it's hall of fame material and this psychedelic fuzz of an album provides feedback of flamboyance and absolute showmanship. It's a paradox though as it's all borne out of insecurity.

As I type this now, I realize how much I need to write in order to feel better. I also feel that getting this shit on the screen helps me to get away from the past and move on. As “Music To Walk Home By” continues “I'm playing a part of somebody else / while trying so hard to be myself” before the electric guitar comes down like a guillotine, over the crystalline synths, it provides one of the most defining moments of a lifetime for me, in one of the most beguiling albums.

3.  BON IVER – 22, A MILLION (2016)

Moving to and leaving Asia were the two biggest things to happen to me over the last 10 years, and as I left for a few last days in Chiang Mai in Thailand, this album dropped – and the theme of uncertainty had never resonated as well as this in the most avant-garde outing of the artist's career so far. The opener has zeitgeist vocals that use autotune miles better than Frank Ocean does - and Madlib style asides which were rife in 2016, all over James Blake as genres melded instead of being bent like time ago. On “715 – CRƩƩKS” he sounds like Bane from Batman as the vocals carried the most digital weight since Daft Punk, 15 years priorwards.

I used to jog with our dog Tess by the canal with this album sound-tracking us. I had three of the most meaningful months I have ever had, cleaning out my head, dealing with lucidity, with the most jumbled up and bastardized fusion of an LP, defining the time. 22, A Million employs jazz, post-rock and Americana to get it's meaning across. And who knows what the shit that is? I think not the artist himself can answer that one on a clear morning now.

As weird as this album is, it is drunk and dizzy. The tumble and sinister Deathbreast second track is sinister and bassy as it gets. Even the way the tracks are spelt “10 d E A T h b R E a s T” and ““33 GOD”” for example prove a bitch to type, I should have done a touch-typing test like Tom Mundy. The LP flows like bubbles from a saxophone, toes the line before crossing it, gets drunk, sobers up and just rides with it. I should really appreciate the work that went into it a bit better, as to distill all this bizarreness into 34 minutes isn't just the result of one whackadoo session. Witchcraft, Bain, Pleasure Island, I want to be a real-boy. Spirited Away. Botch-job. Uplifted. A lucidating clan. Listen to understand.

4. DAVID HOLMES – LATE NIGHT TALES (MIXTAPE) (2016)

If you play this on Spotify, go for the God's Waiting Room Continuous Mix which is at the bottom of the track-listing, as it has a couple of extra-special cuts on there. This record deals with demons, memories and the afterlife. It spans the globe, taking in Japanese, Hebrew, and 1950' s America. It has an Irish backdrop as poet and DJ B P Fallon recalls the memory of Henry Mccullough, a guitarist who played with Paul McCartney and Wings.

I would put this as my favourite mixtape of all-time now, as Holmes has outdone my previous best Come Get It I Got It, a wild and psychedelic effort from 2002. Late Night Tales, instead has an element of transcendence and humanity.

But seeing Aenas come wading through the grass

Towards him, he reached his two hands out

In eager joy, his eyes filled up with tears

And he gave a cry “At last! Are you here at last?”

The pearly gates above or the hounds below is something I dropped thinking about when I was about fifteen, but the reflective nature of this shimmer of a wonder asks all the existential questions about oneself, but also unites families and loved ones. Nothing highlights this better than Lullaby Movements

“Ru-ru(Sleep Little Baby)” which is an exploration into sleepy songs from around the world, the lyrics here being from Eritrea.

So, all in all a radiant effort from the best DJ that ever lived, a carefully well-constructed, emotional, white-lighted mix-tape that represents a maturity and evolution that is indeed as Jeff Bridges sings on here: “It's in every one of us.”

5SUFJAN STEVENS – CARRIE & LOWELL (2015)

Hushed, toned down effort from one of the meltiest singer songwriters since Jeff Buckley. Just checked on my 2009 write-up and he made it in at #7 on the best albums of the noughties. Well, what a feat to get so high on this one! The christmassiest singer-songwriter got a whole lot more personal, singing about his mother abandoning his him in a video store, then seeing her face on his brothers baby daughter decades later – melancholic, haunting and poignant.

Especially since the grandiose 50 states project an album for each state - that Sufjan had in the early 2000’s that obviously got disbanded, discarded as an artistic whim – this pared-down effort ushered in a new side of intimacy that I heard snippets of in the unlikely place of my school, thanks to my colleague Harley Kean. Also heard “Should Have Known Better” in the pool hall, which was mental, considering the hushed, toned-down effort in a gangster establishment.

6. BURIAL – RIVAL DEALER (2013)

December 11th 2020 was the date that the mesmerizing We Will Always Love You by The Avalanches came out and it’s recently just added technicolor to a doubtful time, the album dropping at such a crucial concurrence of circumstance. The same thing happened a few years ago with this record, three tracks that saw this dub boy go wayward in order of 1. Rave-----2. Pop-----3. Sitar Tapestry.

I remember my fourth Christmas away from home in Taiwan and the vibe of this ringing, ringing out to be played. 1. Beats / snare. ……..2. 80’s…….....3. Hippie strings and transgender rights. Nah, I’m just kiddin’ around over here. Burial has been more of an EP artist, save for 2007’s stellar Untrue and therefore and such necessitated a change in direction.

The cold air in Taipei me felt on me limbs. Me felt on me forehead. Me even felt from the fridge me yoinked open to grab another can of Asahi from the convenience store. Like the winner on this list, this album helped being 9688 km from home. Brought you so close when you were so far.

7. BEACH HOUSE – BLOOM (2012)

An absolute wonder of shoegaze and not the only entry of that genre in the top 10 here. The Baltimore duo originally kicked off the decade in 2010 with the velvety Teen Dream, then things progressed, a.k.a puberty was done – just kidding lol- and the band finally ahem bloomed :)

Enough of text talk – the effect that this album was all about magnetism, which was a theme of the decade – it is quite strange that I noticed how as I was living closer to the earth’s core and equator when I was in Taiwan I became super sensitive to earthquakes and premonitions. I also got super perceptive of people it was uncanny. A girl I went on a date with in 2012 was so beautiful but a little shy – and I was singing the lyrics of “The Hours” over and over again in my head.

That whole washed-up on the rocks feeling was thoroughly warranted in decade of being astray, isolated – washed up but not washed out.

8. SLOWDIVE – SLOWDIVE (2017)

To get a double dose of shoegaze in the top 10 is really something special at this juncture – compared to the last end of decade list, which had 10 gargantuanly different records in its wake – take this 10 as more of a special blend.

Slowdive’s fourth LP, and their first since 1995’s Pygmalion clocked in eight songs at a cool 46 minutes and has a brilliant sequencing. Lustrous opener “Slomo” for example was incredibly dreamy and scented of heaven – before “Star Roving” comes shooting out of the blocks at bullet pace, pile-driving a tectonic riff.

And this is how it goes with this record, a crystalline, well-defined and elegant piece of work that deserves to be held down as a stone cold classic – time spells <3

9. FLEET FOXES – CRACK-UP (2017)

This was like complex architecture – if the Seattle band had previously had a song-based output – then this was the less sandblasted, more holistic third. As the hardcore Fleet fans mainly go for the first two LP’s over this one, this gets my nod as the most overrated album of the 2010’s.

In the same way that The National cemented their place as my favorite band over this decade – Fleet Foxes have sneaked up alongside them – it’s kind of pointless having a #1 band anyway – why not just like a few? I’d have to put Radiohead, Spiritualized and Vampire Weekend.

Be it the rustic, be it the grainy, be it the candlewick, be it the rainy, be it the rocky, be it the slip, be it the slip-road, be it the grit.

Be it the end-all, be it begin, be in it to lose, be in it to win, be the one for the bounce leading up to the catch, be the right thumb that was injured leading up to the dance.

10. KILLER MIKE – R.A.P. MUSIC (2012)

This record is just good lord.

11. CLOUD NOTHINGS – HERE AND NOWHERE ELSE (2014)

What sounds like snarly punk doesn’t have in fact to be snarly – it’s insecure, misguided, full of self-revulsion maybe but not angry at anyone else per se, This album proved to be their fourth outing and solidified the Cleveland outfit as one of the strongest hook generating bands out there.

12. HOW TO DRESS WELL – LOVE REMAINS (2010)

Taken from my review 10 years ago: “though he's hyped to shit in the real world by all the blogs and hot girls wearing pedal-pushers - he's too busy focusing on his icy-warm harmonies. People say "lo-fi," or mention the 90's R&B influence on his electronica, but I'm not gonna throw a genre description into the mix. I think it's best to get lost in his hazy, ghostly mix. If you like the idea of holidaying in Alaska and Hawaii in one visit, then check this, partner!

13. GIL SCOTT-HERON – I’M NEW HERE (2010)

An autobiographical half hour in spoken word, funk and electronica, in effect. We can call Gil-Scott the Daddy of rap music, the spoken poet architecture boy wonder godfather extraordinaire. The fact that he departed a year after this record was released gave it that parting-shot like quality – and later got a couple of redux efforts by Jamie XX and Makaya McCraven – it’s colossal and immortalized -just as he’d like it. :)

14. A.A.L – 2012-2017 (2018)

Doing all the shiz that Daft Punk did in a Chilean-American form, Nicolas Jaar absolutely took up the mantle of disco torch bearer in this wildly old-school offering, funking up, souping up, caking this record in make-up. The samples, beats and everything that this offering puts forward are chosen with the taste of the cognoscenti.

15. SHABAZZ PALACES – LESE MAJESTY (2014)

A producers record – a neat tressled, cosmic voyage into the cosmos with the rapping buried quite deep into the mix. This sophomore LP from the Seattle duo kicked all the right boxes in wordplay, cosmetology and forbearing. Funk filled, fuel-filled, full of imagination, black and white on color – all in a chestnut box.

16. PERFUME GENIUS – PUT YOUR BACK N 2 IT (2012)

There’s been a bit of a theme in this top 20 that I’ve gone with some of the less-consensus albums by a particular artist and here comes another. For the perfume fans, many would point to his debut, or even 2020’s Set My Heart on Fire Immediately as his best album. It’s certainly his tenderest and wooziest – there’s even a Phil Collins throwback in “Floating Spit” – the most lo-fi of the lo’fi’s. Fragility at iit’s finest.

17. KURT VILE - B'LIEVE I'M GOIN DOWN (2015)

A late thirty-something on an existential trip – sound familiar? Best thing about this artst is that his surname is his real name, but there is absolutely nothing vile about him, as his range on this thing, from banjo to acoustic to electric to drawl to scraggle to nook to cranny. This LP cemented the place of the artist as one of the best voices in modern folk music.

18. FLYING LOTUS – UNTIL THE QUIET COMES (2012)

In which Steven Ellison decided to focus in on the slumbered down elements of his scuttering jazztropic beats, featuring a range of guests from Erykah Badu to Thom Yorke to Thundercat. The fact that it was 18 songs condensed into 46 minutes, made the transitions reminiscent of sleep itself – think of the puns you could have with that one. “Rapid Ear Movement?” - ah, I’ll get me coat.

19. BLOOD ORANGE – FREETOWN SOUND (2016)

This one got described as all kinds of things – a mixtape, a futuristic classic, a smorgasbord – or maybe these were just my artistic flinches into absurdity, it’s hard to remember. In 2016, as I was mentally preparing to leave Taiwan after 6 years there and this funk, soul, rap, r & b or whatever it dememed itself to be got in all up non at under over beneath my conscience, oh selecta!

20. LCD SOUNDSYSTEM – AMERICAN DREAM (2017)

Picture the scene: Stuttgart, 2017, living in an air-bed-and-breakfast, 5 minutes walk to work, a bucket of hardship, a crushed soul of affliction - a job that was a hive of negative energy for a multinational corporation that I still respect and ironically miss, despite my scathing sentiment to the package.

Bang comes this album - racing out of the blocks, to run come save me - as the lyrics went on about his baby having a bad dream in his arms and his friend warning him about the cocaine and then dove straight in.




Sunday, December 13, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 20. LCD Soundsystem - American Dream (2017)

 20. LCD SOUNDSYSTEM - AMERICAN DREAM (2017)

Picture the scene: Stuttgart, 2017, living in an air-bed-and-breakfast, 5 minutes walk to work, a bucket of hardship, a crushed soul of affliction - a job that was a hive of negative energy for a multinational corpration that I still respect and ironically miss, despite my scathing sentiment to the package.

Bang comes this album - racing out of the blocks, to run come save me - as the lyrics went on about his baby having a bad dream in his arms and his friend warning him about the cocaine and then dove straight in.

American Dream was simply one of the best comeback albums of the decade, especially when the band were meant to have disbanded and such. And such and such and such and such and such and such and such and such and such such such such such such such such such such  such such such such such such such such such such.




Friday, December 11, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 21. The National - Trouble Will Find Me (2013)

 21. THE NATIONAL TROUBLE WILL FIND ME (2013) 

When I was studying to be a teacher in Budapest, the prequel to this album -  High Violet  - came out and I was mesmerised; at 26 years old I felt the songs directly mirrored my ascent into my prime.

When Trouble Will Find Me came out at 29 I felt I was continuing my ascent, but maybe was on the cusp of falling apart, living in Taiwan, before my new ascent a bit later; like the title of the album confirms - this band kind of bookmark my time alert -  and there's nothing more to say,

There are so many fucking avenues to go down with this chestnut. You can roast them - one avenue. You can reverse-griddle them; another. You can put on your combat boots and fry me a night out - one option. Or act all circumspect and leave me stranded in the hypermarket, holding my boxes alone - another.




Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 22. Leon Vynehall - Nothing Is Still (2018)

 22. LEON VYNEHALL - NOTHING IS STILL (2018)

Came with an accompanying novel about the artist's parents migrating to America. The concept was automobiles, boats and starting a new life over dub, electronica and soaking it up soak tub. Check out the description below taken from metacritic - as I think it's better than I can do justice. :)

  1. Jun 11, 2018
    80
    Importantly for a concept album like this, the pacing is effective throughout with a good balance of light and shade, and because of this the narrative is consistently immersive and engaging.
  2. Jun 21, 2018
    80
    Vynehall has woven a rich tapestry of complimentary sounds that serves a purpose far bigger than the music itself. It's an artistic piece in the truest sense that works best as a singular whole, inviting the listener to take the time to clock off for its duration and immerse themselves fully.
  3. IT WAS MEGA, I LOVED THIS LP
    IT REMINDED ME OF A LOT OF GOOD
    GOOD THINGS LIKE YOU
    LET'S GET TOGETHER SOMETIME
    I WOULD LIKE THAT TOO

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 23. Eluvium - Nightmare Ending (2013)

 23. ELUVIUM - NIGHTMARE ENDING (2013)

This one's like the ultimate ambient album, sweeping textures, luscious strings, twinkling pianos and a bucket of comfort - almost wrote "compost."

Predictive texting used to cost me dearly on the old Nokia, on the old iPhone 3 and such. Now I needn't worry so much, but I have come to realize that I am such a lazy typer that my texts are littered with spelling mistakes.

Like, if I'd just typed slower, the time it took to go back and edit a text like this one, could've been savoured kicking back into a fulcrum of chill and had lavendar bathsalths with some Eluvium playing.





 



Albums of the Decade - 24. Bon Iver - Bon Iver (2011)

 24. BON IVER - BON IVER (2011) 

When you're craving content, have no fear when Spaghetti Blogonese is near. This 2011 album was the breakout record for the American folk collective - building on the prettiness of the debut For Emma, Forever Ago from 2008 - something that I fell in love with, over a girl called Emma too. Capture that.

Vocal harmonies and a sense of the rustic was the schtick on this matchstick joy -  camp fires and the like would have been immense in the winter snow on this blanket of a showing, on this blanket of a spanker, on this blanket of a winner. 

I used to be a sinner, but feel less and less this way now, I used to be a winner - but the gold is not up for play now. As the sun's rays come down and permeate my lens now, you'd be better off with Bart Simpson somewhere around here to proclaim something fresh and innovative like "Don't have a cow man!"



Sunday, December 6, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 25. Grizzly Bear - Shields (2012)

 25 GRIZZLY BEAR - SHIELDS (2012) 

Just found a secret xmas market in Vilnius with real fires and hot wine, and in the time of a pandemic, you feel like a rebellious C.W. a bit, but that smoky vibe was perfect to come home to a bit of revisiting last decade and popping on a bit of Grizzly Bear, who are one of the top Math indie bands of the last 20 years or so.

Quite a sooty band, quite an advancing band, quite an escalating arpeggiated band, quite worth your time of a band, quite a band of all the seasons, quite a vocal melody-oriented band, quite a band situated with not the actual animal thats a Grizzly Bear. 

This is their third (out of four) and best album so far, it builds as a progression up to the ultimate crescendo, and I look forward to these mammals building more musically and feeding me more musical milk out of their tits before they bite me up and ravage me. 




Albums of the Decade - 26. Justin Hopper & Sharron Kraus with The Belbury Poly - Chanctonbury Rings (2019)

 26. JUSTIN HOPPER & SHARRON KRAS, WITH THE BELBURY POLY - CHANCTONBURY RINGS (2019)

A spoken word and poetry record about the changing of the seasons, that sits really well on top of The Belbury Poly's 8-bit style electronica. This LP carries a bewitching, pagan kind of spook, that narrates an American character's nostalgia for his lost grandmother and experiences a sighting of her among the chalk rings - that may have been left there by mystical beings.

The fact that in this digital age I was digging the samples of even Morris dancing - a British pecularity in of itself, was remarkable, given the range of scope of albums on this list - proving that nothing is left spare, surplus to requirements, even something like Elton Johns "Candle In The Wind," though that's a moot point. 






Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 27. Vampire Weekend - Father of the Bride (2019)

 27. VAMPIRE WEEKEEND - FATHER OF THE BRIDE (2019) 

I did a vlog a few years ago about why Vampire Weekend are the best band of a generation and that opinion still holds forth. Their fourth opus - a double disc extravaganza! - a concept album about the pecularities of marriage - definitely gets a drivetime, Fleetwood-Mac do-over and nothing is conceded, only added to, despite this reckoning.

I went jogging yesterday, December 1st, and it felt great playing this full-bodied record on the first day of advent, as the snow glistened off the Eastern European rooftops. "...off..." is enough in that last sentence, not sure why Americans say "off of..." - luckily Vampire Weekend don't make such clunky songs.

The band have had three albums appear on this albums of the decade list now, and that's surely a reason for them to celebrate among themselves, doesn't matter if it's distancing or a glass of hot wine in a small group; I'm all good.






Thursday, November 26, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 28. Nick Cave - Push The Sky Away (2013)

 28. NICK CAVE - PUSH THE SKY AWAY (2013) 

I've been on a huge Nick Cave trip lately, since his amazing live album that was released last week, at the time of publishing. Idiot Prayer is just him alone at a piano at Alexandra Palace in London and it's the most affecting live piece that I've ever heard.

Push The Sky Away however, is a mellower reckoning, an ode to Brighton on the South coast of England, best encapsulated by the glistening tracks "Wide Lovely Eyes" and " Water's Edge" - and glancing through Wikipedia just now, it seems that various reviewers mention the fogginess, tenderness, funeral-pace, hollowness and rumbling bass-lines to name but a few characteristics.

When the majority of talk is often about the full-bodiedness of The Bad Seeds' swampy characteristics and nooks and crannies, fucking cracks and crevices - I am fully on board - but it's a bit like when PJ Harvey's White Chalk came in at #54 in the decade prior on this blog - I have a moonward boon towards musicians that distill their infuences into chill pills, and for all the blues and heavy bass - I'll rest at this pace. Come again.



Albums of the Decade - 29. Four Tet - New Energy (2017)

 29. FOUR TET - NEW ENERGY (2017)

I have a special disposition towards this artist as I started listening back in 2002 with "Rounds" Kieran Heddens third and prettiest LP - which came in at #60 in my best albums of the 2000's - and definitely opened up the: 

sluice

A brilliant collection of words, specialy given the freshness of this ninth album "New Energy" - which had an extremely fluid and fluent texture - low on the beats and light melodies to drift into excellence...

#Four Tet and Marcus drifting into excellence #





Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 30. Lana Del Rey - Norman Fucking Rockwell (2019)

 30. LANA DEL REY - NORMAN FUCKING ROCKWELL (2019) 

When this came out last year, a girl that I was in love with met me and motioned with her hand like a conductor to the "I'm waaaaasted" in "The Greatest"  - it was heart-achingly nostalgic - which I feel is what this LP is all about. What it boils down to. Hey Kevin, turn the water off ya ratbag.

That whole remembering of the times once had, when you bought a truck in the middle of the night, or threw off your nightgown, just like Sylvia Plath, or wanted to go to a party in California just hit me up. Kevin, make me a cuppa, would ya kid?

The hype surrounding this last year was just staggering, and I was initally skeptical of the Pitchfork hype and such, but wy be so, when you can just let the sheer quality wash over you? Kevin. Milk no sugar.

When c-wolves are giving flak to artists like Taylor Swift and Ariana Grande because of their gender - the best way is to shove them a Lana Del Rey or Fiona Apple record and ask them to gobble it up.  My brew's ready. Thanks Kev.




Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 31. Thom Yorke - Anima (2019)

 31. THOM YORKE - ANIMA (2019) 

The spaghettiblogonese  #1 album of 2019 - this baby had an electronic peacocking quality about it - I used to and often still do go jogging to the beats of  "Twist" - which is one of the greatest dubstep songs of all time - this is the least Radiohead-like album that their frontman has ever produced.

The hymnal "Dawn Chorus" is another highlight to this underground heavyweight of an album - it is so grainy, so dusty, so dubby, so shady - it's cobbled together sequentially - and these imperfections make the darkness rather spellbinding actually; it sputters but never freakouts. 

If you drink yourself up a scotch, you'll note that this album goes quite well with that single malt vibe - that perfect November freezing outside vibe - when the unbelievable "runwayaway" brings down the final curtain  to dub - yes dub - what the actual? Artists frequently possess the ability to spring surprises, and this cat has done it again. Cat out the hat. Rabbit from the bag.




Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 32. Spiritualized - And Then Nothing Hurt (2018)

 32. SPIRITUALIZED - AND THEN NOTHING HURT (2018) 

I'd like to sit around and dream you up a perfect miracle
I'd part the clouds and have the sun proudly shining on you
I'd take the stars as well and line them up to spell "Darling, I love you"
And little by little watch it all come true

"And little by little let it all come down" is how my reedit goes to the the opener "A Perfect Miracle" - which Jason Pierce does what Pitchfork claimed:

...simply distills and gathers the essence of what has often made Spiritualized so powerful—hypnotic hymns of self-doubt, charging rock ...

It is that distillation that makes this album a hark-back to his wondersome catalogue of Ladies and Gentlemen, We Are Floating In Space, Let It Come Down and Lazer Guided Melodies to name but three. Even when the lyrics go drivetime - he literally has a song about driving a car down a hill - all the components of a true rock & roller still remain, and that was all our gain.




Sunday, November 15, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 33. James Blake - Overgrown (2013)

 33. JAMES BLAKE - OVERGROWN (2013) 

This was a coming-of-age album for the artist, who collaborated with RZA of Wu Tang, on one of the tracks of the decade -  "Take A Fall For Me" - about unrequited love, that packs the biggest punch, as does "Digital Lion" - another laser shredding track that is out of this macrocosm, an outlier of suspense.

This sophomore album from James Blake - I saw it on tour when he came to Taipei - was a mix of angular trajectories, piercing shreds and harsh realities. To absorb it up at Legacy in Huashan Arts Park feels like a yesterday ago and now I got the new me.

Still, though I got the new me, the old me was still grooving and getting pumped full of electrolytes when I saw this live. Holy ghost. Fucking pup.




Albums of the Decade - 34. My Bloody Valentine - MBV (2013)

 34. MY BLOODY VALENTINE - MBV (2013) 

Ear shredding

Base of a shoegaze

Of a cavity

What goes up

Grinder can

Pump me full of smoke

Ending up on your back laying sideways

Ending on your own - lieing - cryways

You popped it of your own accord

To fathom or try and cobble some kind of target together

But that ain't your reckoning

At least not for another year





Saturday, November 14, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 35. Kind Midas Sound - Solitude (2019)

 35. KING MIDAS SOUND - SOLITUDE (2019)

This would've been perfect for the pandemia of 2020, but nevertheless, contrarily on the other hand -  and anyone who's been through a break-up will feel the bare-bones poetry spoken over spare, instrumental soundscapes and dub.

This album was an ogre; a brutal sense of discordance and disassociaton - the feeling when you're flummoxed when they're gone, when you can't eat, but you force-feed yourself and you bring it up anyway; the details are raw and the truth of falling out of love is as valid as the on-boarding process - a utensil in it's own right.

Listening to Solitude is best done in exactly this context; I wouldn't bang this on at a dinner party - unless you are a fan of an atmosphere of grizzle come swiftly and I know you're not a big fan of that as you're speading posh lard on your rye bread, doing vodkas and eyeing up caviar.



Wednesday, November 11, 2020

Albums of the Decade - 36. Amen Dunes - Love (2014)

 36. AMEN DUNES - LOVE (2014) 

Burned some candles last night after work, turned off the main lights and just slumped out to "Lonely Richard" - one of this band's best tracks - Damon McMahon is one of the most unique (warbling but resolute) voices in contemporary folk music.

Popped open a pack of blueberries just after finishing a short 4km jog and quickly getting in at home to wash the dishes. Amen Dunes' 2018 follow-up to this Freedom - was soundtracking my workout and that LP also gives an artistic stride to the beginning of the day.

Just pressed a coffee and the lyrics of "Splits are Parted:" 

"Moved to free house with violent people

Roam the streets at night
Born to love your jagged sound
Sing a decent dime
Oh, I could love you
Oh, I could make it easy"

So, all in all - stunning with candles, berries and coffee - any tme of day. Roger that.