Best Albums of 2025 (Greg only)

It’s been a bit since Elijah & I have put together our annual Best Albums of the year list. We had a good run, starting back in 2008 and continually pretty faithfully up until a couple of years ago, when both of us must have been overwhelmed with work, life, and everything. I did find a note on my phone where I’d begun compiling a list of my Best Albums of 2023 (the usual suspects: Mitski, Tim Baker, Sufjan Stevens, Angelo de Augustine, The New Pornographers, along with some newer groups like boygenius, Caroline Rose, Nation of Language), but it never made it beyond my Notes app.

I suppose part of our reason for doing these lists was to share the joy of the listening experiences we had discovered with any readers out in the “interwebiverse” (just coined that term), as well as to somehow acknowledge and celebrate the great work that these artists had released in the year gone by. So hopefully, there are still a few folks out there who will stumble upon this & benefit from the the work put into sorting through some of the various musical endeavors that were released in 2025.

So this year I’m going solo in sharing my Best Albums, as Elijah is probably too busy providing for his dear family to pay much attention to new music (I tend to listen as I’m driving, doing dishes, and going to sleep). In the past, I typically put a lot of thought into the ranking process of 1-10, but this year, I just don’t have it in me to sort it out that carefully. Except for the NUMBER ONE album, which I will list first, then everything else will just be in alphabetical order.

Here is a link to a Spotify playlist of tracks from my 2025 Best Albums list, along with a few tracks from other works that didn’t quite make the cut (LINK)-you can use this playlist and click on the three dots to “Go to album” so that I don’t have to add links for each one on the list below. Hope that you may take up & listen, my friends! (from Greg)


  1. ROMANCE (DELUXE EDITION) – FONTAINES D.C.

Now, to the pedant, I will readily admit that the original release of this album from the Irish band Fontaines D.C. came out in 2024. But I did not hear of it that year. I just heard a song from this album a few months ago algorithmically playing on Spotify after the record I was listening to had finished, then when I looked up the album, it said it had come out in 2025.

Well, it turns out that what I was listening to was a “Deluxe Edition” that had been released, but I am counting it as a 2025 album because I want to sing the praises of this masterpiece.

The first track on Romance sounded like it could have been a track from Depeche Mode’s 1986 album Black Celebration. Lovely, but derivative. But when the next song (and every other song after that) began playing, I was entranced by all that I was hearing: the seething energy of youth, carving out their place in this modern world, along with the masterful songcraft, easily weaving through various genres and vocal styles. I was intrigued by the alternately thick and spare instrumentation, as well as singer Grian Chatten’s refusal to soften his distinctive Dublin accent into something more internationally palatable (such as when the word “hard” was delightfully pronounced as “haired”), and on and on I could sing its praises.

Song after song is a sonic and lyrical feast, engaging repeated listens with deeper appreciation and reward. I’ve since checked out this band’s back catalogue and found it to have the seeds of the genius that this album exemplifies, while the fullness of melodic and compositional dexterity displayed here had not yet been realised (though many of the track’s on Chatten’s 2023 solo album Chaos for the Fly do demonstrate a similar level of accomplishment). Truly, the only thing I do not like about this masterpiece is the cover art, which feels a bit AI-slop-ish. I anticipate great things from these lads in the days to come…I think people will still be listening to this record 100 years from now!

ALTOGTHER STRANGER – LAEL NEALE

I think it was at the beginning of 2025 that I discovered this gifted lo-fi, indie-folk singer-songwriter (an accurate but perhaps less alluring genre label for her music is “minimalist drone pop”) and I was immediately fascinated by the kind of homemade quality of her songs (many times created with the help of an “Omnichord,” which may seem a bit twee to some, but which I found particularly endearing). I was struck by her timeless lyrical prowess and the melodic purity of her vocals, particularly on her first album on the SubPop label, Acquainted with Night which I actually purchased on vinyl, an affectation I reserve for albums that I DEEPLY ADORE. Her work sounded like an amalgam of Emily Dickinson, Bob Dylan, and the band Low, and her lyrics became deeply embedded in my psyche.

Sadly, this new album did not reach the same heights as that 2021 opus, but it still rises above so much of the pap and pablum that exists in the sonicsphere these days. She is not only conveying her own experience of the world, but her lyrics seem to embody an earnestly contrarian worldview about contemporary existence, particular in an urban environment–she lived in LA for a while, so I can relate to her revulsion to the kind of life that we live in this “negatropolis”– for more of her trenchant observations on turning away from the wired-in, distraction-saturated, and additive-filled world, I’ve loved reading her Substack as well.

ANIMARU – MEI SEMONES

I feel very Gen Z with the addition of this Indie-pop/jazz album, as I discovered the artist via an Instagram reel and she looks like she is barely out of her teens, but her debut album is astonishingly great! If I had continued ranking albums on this list, Animaru would have been near the top…

To begin with, Semones is an incredible guitarist, of both a jazzy Bossa Nova sort as well as a 90’s alternative grungy ilk, and she writes her songs in complex symphonic arrangements & time signatures, sometimes reminiscent of a light South American style I associate with Brazil in the 1960’s, but she’s singing in both English and Japanese, with vocals that swing from high and sweet airy falsettos to deep and powerful alto resonances. She is obviously a prodigy of confounding levels of genius and disciplined musicianship, and yet, she also feels disarmingly tender and pensive. I can only anticipate amazing things for this artist in the future.

BLIGHT – THE ANTLERS

I’ve followed The Antlers since the release of their 2009 concept album Hopsice, which followed a doomed romance in a cancer ward (it sounds depressing, but it is actually so powerfully evocative and intimately alluring). My appreciation for their subsequent works has varied, but this new album is a return to the heights of their talent. It’s incredibly fragile at times and explosively agitated at others, as the songs seem to focus on ecological and societal ills of the modern world. Honestly, these are not themes that typically draw my attention, but this is so masterfully created, I felt the agony of what our industry and technology have done to earth and its inhabitants to a heartbreaking extent. If you’re like me and would rather ignore the effects of our mismanagement of God’s creation, I suggest you open yourselves to at least one listen of this record, to help you “consider the source” of much of our woes…

I HEARD THAT NOISE – quickly quickly

The first song I heard from this one-man band from Portland, OR was “Enything,” which immediately hooked me with it’s propulsive poppy charm and smooth double-tracked vocals, but when I purchased the full record, it was quite different from what I’d expected. A bit more on the “noise pop” end of the indie-rock genre, but I grew to enjoy the blasts of fuzz or dissonance that would disrupt the melodic guitar finger-picking or piano strokes. For those of you who know the music taste-maker Josh McBride, he gave this group his hearty approval after I put a song on his 40th birthday playlist, and that’s something.

IN LIMERANCE – JACOB ALON

This is another astonishing debut album from a younger artist (though on a major record label), this time from a “non-binary” Scottish indie-folk singer-songwriter. The sadness of this singer’s experience of confusion and violence on the basis of their identity and sexuality is made exquisitely lovely through such a delicately yearning voice (sometimes almost yelping and yodeling) and controlled instrumentation. Even if you can’t relate to the queer experience, this is a stunning work of art that deserves to be heard and appreciated. I can’t wait to hear more from them…

LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL – THE DEARS

I’ve been following The Dears, a Canadian indie-rock mainstay since the mid-2000’s (when I heard lead man Murray Lightburn had been called the “black Morrissey” I knew I had to check them out!) and while they’ve fallen off of the mainstream radar of late, I’ve always followed any of their new releases with great interest and appreciation. I’m happy to say that this new album is among their best! The band sounds just like they did at the height of their sonic powers (which I take to be their 2006 masterwork Gang of Losers, which is among my favorite albums EVER!).

Song after song is filled with such engaging tunefulness and Lightburn’s earnest lyricism, it is a joy to follow him opening his heart up and sharing all of its triumphs and sorrows with the world. His song “Dead Contacts” hit me particularly hard, thinking of folks who’ve passed away this past year and how I’ve come across their name in my phone address book recently (particularly my wife’s Aunt Eileen, who was so dearly loved by all of our family!).

patching – runo plum

Yet ANOTHER debut album from a Gen-Z indie-folk singer-songwriter! I’ve been following this artist for the last couple of years as she’s released EPs or singles, and I was particularly impressed with her collaboration with Philip Brooks on “mountain songs,” a collection which contains some tracks that I’ve listened to so many times and have put on various playlists.

Well, her debut album didn’t quite reach the level of perfection I was hoping for or anticipating, but it is still awfully good. Her voice reminds me at times of Harriet Wheeler from The Sundays (another of my all-time favorite groups), so I probably projected my desire for a more jangly acoustic sound from her (which she often hits quite nicely), but I’m just happy that she’s continuing to release her gifts into the world that needs her kind of beautiful melancholy.

The Scholars – Car Seat Headrest

I got really into these indie-rockers back in the mid-2010’s with the back-to-back releases of Teens of Style and Teens of Denial, the later of which I played on repeat for some time. I didn’t get as into some of their subsequent albums, but this new release feels (similarly to The Dears) like a return to form, though there is another sense that I’m getting which I hadn’t quite seen in them before.

That is, this feels like they’re creating a kind of “neo-Classic Rock” with the album being called a “rock opera” as if the band is picking up cues from The Who or Pink Floyd, with a number of songs exceeding the 10 minute mark, containing some of the dynamics and flourishes of a genre lost to past ages. To be honest, I didn’t quite follow the storyline of The Scholars, but I don’t think it really matters, as the songs stand quite well on their own, at least to my ears! I did pick up the CD at the new Fingerprints location in Bixby Knolls when I was there with two of my brothers, as it promised a “38-page booklet” (I think), but then when I opened the booklet up, the font size was like 2-3 point and could only be read through zooming in on my phone camera. Maybe I’m just getting old…but what the heck, CSH!

VALERIAN TEA – Magic Fig

This album is kind of the wild card on this list, but I felt like it was consistently more interesting to me than any of the albums below. Again, another debut album–no idea how old the members are, but it sounds like it was made in 1967 by some prog/psychedelic synthesis with an ethereal female lead singer singing about goblins and “Riders at Dawn.” This is not my typical fare, but something in this record just clicked with me: maybe it was the feeling of authentic musicality and creativity in an age of overproduced pop and AI. I would understand if this is not for everyone, but except for the title track, song after song, I totally dug it! Turn on, tune in, and drop out, man!


Before I transition to the albums that DIDN’T make the 10 BEST list, I did want to give a shout out to a 2002 self-titled album from Long Beach indie-rock heroes, The SeaMonsters, which was just put up on Spotify this year. I love this album so much & it takes me back to when I was playing drums (barely competently) with the genius lead singer, guitarist, & songwriter Matt Clatterbuck and demigod-level bassist Victor Orlando Nieto (who was one of my groomsmen) in the band Pal in the mid-1990’s. Some of the songs on this record began back when we were in Pal, but The SeaMonsters took them to the next level with the heap of talent that is Erick Nieto on drums (he was the one who actually taught me to play!) and they added new songs that I also cherish so dearly. I know I will listen to their music often with great joy for the rest of my life. So immeasurably talented, these guys!

OTHER 2025 ALBUMS OF MENTION

  • As Long As I Am in the Tent of This Body I Will Make a Joyful Noise – John VanDeusen: This is another worship-esque album from the incomparably talented JVD, whose 2018 album (I Am) Origami Pt. 2 – Every Power Wide Awake is among my favorites of all time (thanks to JVD fan Peter Peringer, we even sang some of those songs in our church services!). So of course I was hoping that this would live up to the stature of that work, but, sadly, I think this record fell so far short of that goal. I was actually somewhat depressed after my first listen. Some may disagree & I’d be happy to be wrong, but to my ears, this is not his finest hour. I know I will still check out anything he releases–he is indeed a wonderful person, whom I got to have a meal with when he was playing a concert at our church. But that can’t change my opinion of this album.
  • Balloon Balloon Balloon – Sharp Pins: I figured I could only have one album where the title was repeated thrice (see The Dears), but srsly, this was an amazing record. It sounded like some early Byrds or other comparable 1960’s rock bands demo tracks (along with a healthy Guided By Voices vibe), pretty much created by one guy, but when I received my order of the CD (late for Christmas!), the lyrics seemed so inane that I couldn’t bring myself to include it in the top 10. Still worthwhile to listen though–just don’t try to hard to make out the words!
  • Belong – Jay Som: In the past, I thought of this one-woman act as having a much more indie rock/alternative sound, but this new album is a bit over-produced mainstream pop for my taste. But there are still some really exceptional songs on here–I think anyone could enjoy the songcraftsmanship of this record!
  • Dance Called Memory – Nation of Language: I also picked this CD up at the new Fingerprints store, but when I played it on the way home, it fell far short of the retro 80’s New Order-esque sound that I’d loved so much on their 2023 album Strange Disciple. But still some solid cuts herein.
  • Deadbeat – Tame Impala: If you’ve read past Best Albums lists on this blog, you know that each Tame Impala album has made our top 10 each year they came out, but when I heard the first singles from this record (“Loser” and “Dracula”) I wasn’t feeling it. But I actually went back and listened to the whole record a few times and it grew on me, just not to the point where it would kick off one of the albums above. Definitely always a Kevin Parker fan though! Wunderkind, this guy!!
  • Sinister Grift – Panda Bear: I wanted to like this so much, being a huge fan of Animal Collective (singer-songwriter Noah Lennox’s main band) and his previous solo work, but this was more of a miss than a hit for me. Sorry Noah!
  • Straight Line Was a Lie – The Beths: This band has put out THREE solid indie-pop albums since 2018, but this one did not connect with me. So bummed. Their lyrics are among the cleverest and the tunes are so melodic, but it just didn’t land this time around. Check out their past albums though, especially Future Me Hates Me.

I’d love to hear where you disagree or what I might have missed below! Thanks for reading, friends!

Another Decade of Bests (2010-2019)

This post is the second of two parts. With hindsight and in living with particular albums for longer, we have compiled lists of our ten favourite albums for each year from 2000-2019. Perhaps these lists will be of some interest for those who wish to walk down Memory Lane, or indeed, for those who might wonder if any of these [subjective] gems passed them by (as we have discovered from comparing our respective lists). Whatever you—dear reader—might glean from our produce, we are grateful for the opportunity to indulge in our list-making and music-listening passions here.

Elijah & Greg


— E —

  1. The Age of Adz / All Delighted People EP
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. The Winter of Mixed Drinks
    Frightened Rabbit
  3. Halcyon Digest
    Deerhunter
  4. The Suburbs
    Arcade Fire
  5. Teen Dream
    Beach House
  6. InnerSpeaker
    Tame Impala
  7. High Violet
    The National
  8. This is Happening
    LCD Soundsystem
  9. Clinging to a Scheme
    The Radio Dept.
  10. The Monitor
    Titus Andronicus

— G —

  1. The Age of Adz / All Delighted People EP
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. The Suburbs
    Arcade Fire
  3. The Winter of Mixed Drinks
    Frightened Rabbit
  4. InnerSpeaker
    Tame Impala
  5. Forget
    Twin Shadow
  6. The Reluctant Graveyard
    Jeremy Messersmith
  7. High Violet
    The National
  8. Contra
    Vampire Weekend
  9. Together
    The New Pornographers
  10. So Runs the World Away
    Josh Ritter

— E —

  1. The SMiLE Sessions
    The Beach Boys
  2. Belong
    The Pains of Being Pure at Heart
  3. Dye It Blonde
    Smith Westerns
  4. Strange Mercy
    St Vincent
  5. Bon Iver
    Bon Iver
  6. Let England Shake
    PJ Harvey
  7. Humor Risk
    Cass McCombs
  8. Helplessness Blues
    Fleet Foxes
  9. The Year of Hibernation
    Youth Lagoon
  10. Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming
    M83

— G —

  1. The Last of the Country Gentlemen
    Josh T. Pearson
  2. Helplessness Blues
    Fleet Foxes
  3. 100 Acres of Sycamore
    Fionn Regan
  4. Rapproacher
    Class Actress
  5. Build a Rocket Boys!
    Elbow
  6. Strange Negotiations
    David Bazan
  7. Making Mirrors
    Gotye
  8. Endless Now
    Male Bonding
  9. The Family Tree: The Roots
    Radical Face
  10. 12 Desperate StrAight Lines
    Telekinesis

— E —

  1. Shields 
    Grizzly Bear
  2. Bloom 
    Beach House
  3. Dept. of Disappearance 
    Jason Lytle
  4. Lonerism 
    Tame Impala
  5. Silver & Gold
    Sufjan Stevens
  6. America 
    Dan Deacon
  7. ‘Allelujah! Don’t Bend! Ascend!
    Godspeed You! Black Emperor
  8. All We Love We Leave Behind 
    Converge
  9. Shrines 
    Purity Ring
  10. Sweet Heart Sweet Light 
    Spiritualized

— G —

  1. Fear Fun
    Father John Misty
  2. Silver & Gold
    Sufjan Stevens
  3. Break It Yourself
    Andrew Bird
  4. Tramp 
    Sharon Van Etten
  5. Port of Morrow 
    The Shins
  6. Adventures in Your Own Backyard 
    Patrick Watson
  7. The Idler Wheel is Wiser Than the Drive of the Screw… 
    Fiona Apple
  8. Lonerism 
    Tame Impala
  9. Through the Deep, Dark Valley 
    The Oh Hellos
  10. Who’s Feeling Young Now?
    Punch Brothers

— E —

  1. Pedestrian Verse
    Frightened Rabbit
  2. Reflektor 
    Arcade Fire
  3. Partygoing 
    Future Bible Heroes
  4. m b v
    My Bloody Valentine
  5. Big Wheel and Others 
    Cass McCombs
  6. Trouble Will Find Me 
    The National
  7. Wondrous Bughouse 
    Youth Lagoon
  8. Love’s Crushing Diamond 
    Mutual Benefit
  9. Monomania 
    Deerhunter
  10. Muchacho
    Phosphorescent

— G —

  1. Pedestrian Verse
    Frightened Rabbit
  2. Modern Vampires of the City
    Vampire Weekend
  3. Torres
    Torres
  4. The Worse Things Get, the Harder I Fight, the Harder I Fight, the More I Love You
    Neko Case
  5. Promises
    The Boxer Rebellion
  6. Trouble Will Find Me
    The National
  7. The Lives Inside the Lines in Your Hand / Threeep
    Matt Pond PA
  8. Alone Aboard the Ark
    The Leisure Society
  9. Us Alone
    Hayden
  10. Lily & Madeline / The Weight of the Globe EP
    Lily & Madeline

— E —

  1. pom pom
    Ariel Pink
  2. Burn Your Fire for No Witness
    Angel Olsen
  3. Nobody Wants to Be Here & Nobody Wants to Leave
    The Twilight Sad
  4. Lost in the Dream
    The War on Drugs
  5. St Vincent
    St Vincent
  6. Brothers and Sisters of the Eternal Son
    Damien Jurado
  7. Some Blue Morning
    Adrian Crowley
  8. Too Bright
    Perfume Genius
  9. Owl John
    Owl John
  10. Are We There
    Sharon Van Etten

— G —

  1. Heart Murmurs
    Jeremy Messersmith
  2. 1000 Forms of Fear
    Sia
  3. Second Sight
    Hey Rosetta!
  4. Brill Bruisers
    The New Pornographers
  5. Stay Gold
    First Aid Kit
  6. Upside Down Mountain
    Conor Oberst
  7. My Favourite Faded Fantasy
    Damien Rice
  8. Are We There
    Sharon Van Etten
  9. The Take Off and Landing of Everything
    Elbow
  10. In Conflict
    Owen Pallett

— E —

  1. Carrie & Lowell 
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. Currents 
    Tame Impala
  3. viet cong
    Viet Cong (Preoccupations)
  4. Depression Cherry 
    Beach House
  5. I Love You, Honeybear 
    Father John Misty
  6. Vulnicura 
    Björk
  7. Weirdo Shrine 
    La Luz
  8. Fading Frontier 
    Deerhunter
  9. White Men Are Black Men Too
    Young Fathers
  10. Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit
    Courtney Barnett

— G —

  1. Carrie & Lowell
    Sufjan Stevens
  2. Currents
    Tame Impala
  3. Teens of Style
    Car Seat Headrest
  4. Vulnicura
    Björk
  5. Bashed Out
    This is the Kit
  6. Dear Wormwood
    The Oh Hellos
  7. Depression Cherry
    Beach House
  8. Brother
    The Brilliance
  9. Sprinter
    Torres
  10. Times Infinity Vol. One
    The Dears

— E —

  1. Masterpiece 
    Big Thief
  2. My Woman 
    Angel Olsen
  3. Teens of Denial 
    Car Seat Headrest
  4. Painting of a Panic Attack 
    Frightened Rabbit
  5. Puberty 2 
    Mitski
  6. A Moon Shaped Pool 
    Radiohead
  7. Skeleton Tree 
    Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
  8. You Want it Darker 
    Leonard Cohen
  9. Emotions and Math
    Margaret Glaspy
  10. Next Thing 
    Frankie Cosmos

— G —

  1. Teens of Denial
    Car Seat Headrest
  2. Are You Serious
    Andrew Bird
  3. Painting of a Panic Attack
    Frightened Rabbit
  4. Puberty 2
    Mitski
  5. The Birds Outside Sang
    Florist
  6. A Moon Shaped Pool
    Radiohead
  7. Arranging Time
    Pete Yorn
  8. Remember Us to Life
    Regina Spektor
  9. Front Row Seat to Earth
    Weyes Blood
  10. 22, A Million
    Bon Iver

— E —

  1. A Crow Looked at Me
    Mount Eerie
  2. DAMN
    Kendrick Lamar
  3. Capacity
    Big Thief
  4. Planetarium
    Sufjan Stevens, Nico Muhly, Bryce Dessner & James McAlister
  5. No Shape
    Perfume Genius
  6. Slowdive
    Slowdive
  7. Last Place
    Grandaddy
  8. Sleep Well Beast
    The National
  9. Powerplant
    Girlpool
  10. Antisocialites
    Alvvays

— G —

  1. (I Am) Origami Pt. 2 – Every Power Wide Awake
    John Van Deusen
  2. Stranger in the Alps
    Phoebe Bridgers
  3. Pure Comedy
    Father John Misty
  4. Planetarium
    Sufjan Stevens, Nico Muhly, Bryce Dessner & James McAlister
  5. Crack-Up
    Fleet Foxes
  6. Swin Inside the Moon
    Angelo De Augustine
  7. Sleep Well Beast
    The National
  8. Ruins
    First Aid Kit
  9. Mentall Illness
    Aimee Mann
  10. Painted Ruins
    Grizzly Bear

— E —

  1. 7
    Beach House
  2. Be the Cowboy
    Mitski
  3. And Nothing Hurt
    Spiritualized
  4. Only Love
    The Armed
  5. God’s Favorite Customer
    Father John Misty
  6. You Won’t Get What You Want
    Daughters
  7. Lush
    Snail Mail
  8. In a Poem Unlimited
    US Girls
  9. Singularity
    Jon Hopkins
  10. The Future Me Hates Me
    The Beths

— G —

  1. Be the Cowboy
    Mitski
  2. God’s Favorite Customer
    Father John Misty
  3. Something in the Rain (OST)
    이남연 & Rachel Yamagata
  4. Lush
    Snail Mail
  5. Boygenius
    Boygenius
  6. 7
    Beach House
  7. Big Red Machine
    Big Red Machine
  8. Love is Dead
    Chvrches
  9. You, Forever
    Sam Evian
  10. Hell-On
    Neko Case

— E —

  1. It Won/t Be Like This All the Time
    The Twilight Sad
  2. All Mirrors
    Angel Olsen
  3. U.F.O.F.
    Big Thief
  4. Remind Me Tomorrow
    Sharon Van Etten
  5. Reward
    Cate Le Bon
  6. Titanic Rising
    Weyes Blood
  7. Ghosteen
    Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
  8. Anima
    Thom Yorke
  9. 2020
    Richard Dawson
  10. Two Hands
    Big Thief

— G —

  1. Forever Overhead
    Tim Baker
  2. Cala
    Fionn Regan
  3. Better Oblivion Community Center
    Better Oblivion Community Center
  4. My Finest Work Yet
    Andrew Bird
  5. Titanic Rising
    Weyes Blood
  6. Tomb
    Angelo De Augustine
  7. Father of the Bride
    Vampire Weekend
  8. Remind Me Tomorrow
    Sharon Van Etten
  9. Anima
    Thom Yorke
  10. Immunity
    Clairo

See our lists from 2000-2009 here.






Best Albums of 2016

best-albums-of-2016

Remember us? Neither do we. On with the show.

Love,
Greg & Elijah

Elijah’s Top 10 Albums of 2016

nattesferd

10. Nattesferd  Kvelertak — Listening to Nattesferd, Kvelertak’s third full length album, is something like travelling back in time. The album is a marked departure from aural onslaught of their previous record (2013’s Meir, produced by one of my all-time favies, Converge’s Kurt Ballou). Don’t get me wrong, Nattesferd is an onslaught, but of a much different nature. Fears that Kvelertak might be headed toward a more mainstream rock sound are allayed continually throughout this 47-minute masterclass in capturing the familiar energy, precision and fun of the American heavy metal sound of the early eighties and the aggression and fullness of the Norwegian black metal sound of the 21st century without losing any of their respective charms.

puberty-2

9. Puberty 2  Mitski — There are two distinctive threads running through Puberty 2. Firstly, there is innovation and a refusal to adopt a singular form of songwriting. Mitski demonstrates that she can write high quality and accessible pop tunes (see ‘Your Best American Girl’) whilst verging on proto-grungey post-punk (see ‘My Body’s Made of Crushed Little Stars’) and occupying more familiar, yet refreshing indie territory in between. The second thread demonstrates that Puberty 2‘s variety is not the result of simply compiling tracks from across a repertoire — this is Mitski’s fourth album. Looking past the fact that she’s only 25 (what have we done with our lives?), Mitski is demonstrating that she is a seasoned and consummate artist.

next-thing

8. Next Thing  Frankie Cosmos — Next Thing is the epitome of ‘big things in small packages’. This album lasts under a half an hour, with the longest of its fifteen tracks lasting only 164 seconds (that’s 2:44). But the listener will not feel cheated. Somehow, Frankie Cosmos (22-year-old Greta Kline) is able to capture complete, common, yet complicated thoughts with each track. In fact, the album is summed up quite well by the cover. As you can see, the perspective of the image is from that of a passenger in a car, doodling in a notebook. At the same time, the passenger is revealed to be using a mobile to take a photograph – captured as the cover image itself. The car is veering left, perhaps making a turn to the ‘Next Thing’. We also observe typical things – a fallen tree branch, a littered plastic bag, paw prints, a car driving off in the distance. It’s a brilliantly simple yet interesting composition, much like the record.

skeleton-tree

7. Skeleton Tree  Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds — This album, as so many albums on my list this year, caught me by surprise. I first heard ‘Jesus Alone’ on 6 Music on 2 September and I knew Skeleton Tree was going to be special. The production was sparse and moving. Cave had moved from his typical narrative formula (in the accompanying documentary, One More Time with Feeling, Cave claims that he has lost his faith in narrative-based songs). The rest of the album reflects these shifts. With both the stirring words and ambient musical tone, Cave is reflecting on a profound sense of loss (having lost his young son Arthur in the summer of 2015) and engaging in some serious existential inquiries. So really, Skeleton Tree is not so atypical of Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds after all.

teens-of-denial

6. Teens of Denial  Car Seat Headrest — There’s been a slight tendency toward slacker rock in my listening this past year. It’s probably a hangover from 2014’s GARAGE ROCK BONANZA. When Car Seat Headrest’s Teens of Denial first appeared on my radar, I despised the names of both the band and the album. But as with a lot of things in life, those become invisible or at least inconsequential to an individual once a relationship is solidified. I could write a lot about this record, but Greg expresses it so well that I’ll cede the floor to him for this one (see Greg’s comment on Teens of Denial below).

painting-of-a-panic-attack

6. Painting of a Panic Attack  Frightened Rabbit — A familiar face. I’m going to be honest here: when I first heard this record I was convinced that I would consider it nearly, if not the weakest Frightened Rabbit album to date. Something about it fell flat for me. So I put it away for a few months. Maybe six months. Then I picked it up again – I knew there had to be something I was missing. Even upon the first re-listen I asked myself, ‘Was I even paying attention?’ It was as if I had never heard these songs. And they were actually quite good! Maybe you share my initial impression. If you have not got back to Painting of a Panic Attack, I implore you to give it another shot. I admit that there are times when it feels less adventurous/emotionally porous than FR’s other material, but there is a quality to the songwriting (thanks to the ever insightful pen of Scott Hutchison) and production (thanks in part to the National’s Aaron Dessner) that keeps me listening.

emotions-and-math

4. Emotions and Math Margaret Glaspy — Margaret Glaspy’s debut album makes one wonder, what comes next? Emotions and Math is as competent and complete as a veteran release. That’s not say that Glaspy has gone stale – far from it! She touches on Aimee Mann and Elliott Smith in equal measure and brings her own sophisticated musical sensibilities to the table in well packaged yet positively aggressive and unpolished pop rock tunes. Emotions and Math improves upon subsequent listens and leaves us thirsty for what Glaspy will do next.

a-moon-shaped-pool

3. A Moon Shaped Pool  Radiohead — I’ve done the maths and have discovered that the period between The King of Limbs and A Moon Shaped Pool is the longest gap between Radiohead albums since their first release, way back in 1993. That’s five years, two months and 20 days between KoL and AMSP! I know it might not seem like much, but perhaps you will remember that long gap between Hail to the Thief and In Rainbows – a mere four years, four months and one day. Okay, maybe it’s not so much about the quantity of time between records as it is the quality of material on each record that leaves us thirsting for more. The King of Limbs has its charms, including the special edition packaging, featuring the world’s first (and probably last) ‘newspaper edition’. But it fails to reach the bar set by previous releases, especially since In Rainbows seems to have become so loved amongst the Radiohead intelligentsia. But A Moon Shaped Pool proves to be not so much a simple return to form as it is a uniquely profound yet thoroughly ‘Radiohead’ collection of haunting and atmospheric orchestrations. It is unassuming, gritty, yet polished. It is all the things for which we admire Radiohead and with an added expanse of lyrical coherence.

my-woman

2. My Woman  Angel Olsen — Angel Olsen is another familiar face among my end-of-the-year picks. Her previous record, Burn Your Fire for No Witness, was my third favourite album of 2014. When an artist produces something as good as Olsen’s previous outing, it’s difficult to know how to approach subsequent releases. Should one set high standards only to be disappointed or should one go in expecting the worst? I was still weighing out this question when I first heard My Woman. According to Olsen, the album’s themes revolve around ‘the complicated mess of being a woman’. As one who does not self-identify as a woman, I believe this album also has plenty of energy to contribute to ‘the complicated mess of being a human’. Olsen’s lyrical, vocal and musical presence is stronger than ever and the record seems to hold together more fully than her earlier releases. In complete self-awarness, she addresses themes of despair, broken expectations and ultimately, hope, all borne with her trademark wit and defiant boldness.

masterpiece

1. Masterpiece  Big Thief — It’s been a while since I’ve been so completely surprised by an album. There are great albums from great artists that I can see coming from miles away (such as Sufjan Stevens’ masterful Carrie & Lowell from 2015) and there are the general surprises that make me a new fan (such as Emotions and Math and Teens of Denial above). But then there’s something like Big Thief’s Masterpiece. I had already heard the album before I realised it was released on Omaha-based Saddle Creek Records, which might have coloured my first listen with Midwestern angst. But the Midwestern angst found me over the course of that first listen. I grant that this is all becoming a wee bit self-indulgent for an Angeleño-Glaswegian commenting on an album from a Brooklyn-based band that reminds him of the American Midwest. (To give me some tenuous credit, singer/guitarist Adrianne Lenker is from Minneapolis.) But there are serious, though probably unintentional musical and vocal hints of the Anniversary (1997-2004) among others, which is enough to send me spiraling into an adolescence-fueled hunt for a [misplaced] sense of ‘authenticity’. Because of these fleeting emotions, I feel some sort of shame that I can’t help but make this album my top pick of 2016. Beyond these fleeting emotions, Masterpiece is an album with superior breadth and depth, musically and thematically, driven by Lenker and Buck Meek’s vocals and guitars, completely deserving of any scanty honour that I may offer. It will haunt me well into 2017, which, unlike UK and American politics, is no bad thing.

Honourable Mentions

  • Love  Muscle and Marrow
  • You Want it Darker  Leonard Cohen (1934-2016)
  • Slow Forever  Cobalt
  • Blackstar  David Bowie (1947-2016)
  • Air  Astronoid

Greg’s Top 10 Albums of 2016

everything-at-once

10. Everything At Once  Travis — Elijah may be holding his nose with this choice, but I felt like these Scottish lads (who’ve been together for 26 years!) finally found their way back to the simple, lovely tunefulness of their turn of the century apex (The Man Who, The Invisible Band) with this strong release. I’m a sucker for the gentle melancholic hopefulness of Fran Healy’s voice (check out 2:03 on this video) and shimmering indie instrumentation of the band.

winter-lives

9. Winter Lives  Matt Pond PA — I have a weak spot for this chamber-pop troubadour. He once again demonstrates a songwriting brilliance that has made me love his poppy, life-affirming tunesmithery over the years. His voice has such a perfect sincerity and tone, the lyrical nostalgia of songs like ‘The Glow’ and ‘Whoa (Thirteen and Sledding with Kerry in Northern New Hampshire)’ warmed my sentimental heart, and the arrangements are solid and masterful.

light-upon-the-lake

8. Light Upon the Lake  Whitney — You listen to this album and you wonder, what time-machine did these guys fall out of with their perfect falsetto over tight bass/drum combo and 60’s & 70’s guitar sounds. They may be aching for those ‘golden days’ but for my money, they’ve captured them quite perfectly here.

arranging-time

7. Arranging Time  Pete Yorn — Ah Pete Yorn, yet another brilliant songwriting flame from the early 2k’s that had somewhat flickered out over the years (a la Travis). But he found that former fuel somewhere and picked up right where musicforthemorningafter left off with this new release. Check out tracks 1-3, ‘Shopping Mall’ and ‘Walking Up” for shambling, big-hearted, melodic indie goodness.

daughter-not-to-disappear

6. Not To Disappear  Daughter — Oh her voice just slays me from the first word to the last: like smoke hitting a rain-covered window. Her elegant lyrical delivery taps into the deepest sadness you could imagine, but then soars into the sun over a cascade of guitars and throttling drums (check this video out, as well as this one and fail to be impressed).

a-moon-shaped-pool

5. A Moon Shaped Pool  Radiohead — This collection of songs (arranged alphabetically it seems) took a bit to grow on me. Initially, I thought it was just some stray songs they’d never really finalized that they’d figured they would finally put on a record, but as I listened more carefully, it opened itself up to me—a staggering heartbreak woven through with gorgeous orchestration and unexpected turns of phrase and melody. They are back at the heights of their powers after the floundering The King of Limbs.

the-birds-outside-sang

4. The Birds Outside Sang  Florist — This is just a gentle, artless, and moving reckoning of dealing with the aftermath of a serious accident. The singer’s voice is fragile, child-like, but full of wonder and hard won wisdom…remembering the light coming into the room where she lay recovering, re-imagining the moment of the accident, but also whimsically meditating on the beauty and capriciousness of life. The instrumentation is lo-fi guitar strumming, Casio keyboard humming, and some droning organs, with the occasional full-band kicking in to make a point.  It’s just so sweet and tender—the mending of a confused soul.  (You can sample the record here. I particularly love the title track.)

painting-of-a-panic-attack

3. Painting of a Panic Attack  Frightened Rabbit — Ok, earlier I had told Elijah this wouldn’t probably be on the upper half of my top 10, but as I’ve gone through and listened again to the 12 tracks, it really is strong (I was basing my early sense of the album on the deluxe edition with 3 extra b-side worthy tunes). I think I was initially turned off by some of the ‘radio-friendly’ tendencies I was picking up (‘Get Out’, ‘An Otherwise Disappointing Life’) and though it loses it’s way a bit on the second half, man, when you listen to ‘Death Dream’ and ‘I Wish I was Sober’ and ‘Still Want To Be Here’ and ‘400 Bones’, it’s clearly the same undeniable genius we’ve celebrated on their last 3 albums.

are-you-serious

2. Are You Serious  Andrew Bird — I’ve always been a fan of the Birdman, but sometimes his meandering obscurity (addressed here on the title track: ‘Used to be so willfully obtuse / or is the word abstruse? / Semantics like a noose / get out your dictionaries’) and multi-layered loop tracks could sometimes become a bit tiresome. Here, he is the TIGHTEST he’s ever been with a strong backing band, streamlined songwriting, and his most straightforward reflections (‘this is all non-fiction’) delivered sincerely alongside delicious whistled melodies. It’s an almost perfect album (save the two-chord gruelling groove ‘Truth Lies Low’).

teens-of-denial

1. Teens of Denial  Car Seat Headrest — I resisted listening to this album for a long time, despite (or because of?) the accolades coming in from various quarters of musicdom. I can’t remember what made me give in, but I’m so glad I did not hold out one moment longer. This is a concept album about a troubled teen exploring some deep universal themes (mortality, depression, anxiety) and others more teen angst-y (experimenting with drugs, drunk driving, relationship drama). The vocalist sounds (and reads) like two parts Ray Davies (Kinks), one part Beck, one part Stephen Malkmus (Pavement) with a dash of Black Francis (Pixies) to taste. The sound of the record is a blend of 90’s alternative rock (open chords through chunky overdrive pedal; double-tracked vocals) mixed with kind of a classic rock aesthetic (hello cowbell!), but as with all of the artists on this list, the song is king (the only number I’m not crazy about is the nearly 8 minute jam ‘Vincent’). This kid is only in his early 20’s but, to my ears, he has already been writing songs for years that hold their own with the greatest ever written.

Honourable Mentions

  • 22, A Million  Bon Iver — I actually like this experimental collection from the falsetto king, but it just didn’t seem substantial enough to qualify as a full-length LP—it’s only like 22 minutes and 22 seconds long (hey wait a second, that was on purpose!!).
  • Young Mood  Colt — It really is a great collection of songs—I just couldn’t get over the singer’s grating, narcoleptic baritone voice.
  • I also didn’t find the time to listen more carefully to a few records from artists I admire (Remember Us to Life Regina Spektor and Ruminations Conor Oberst, so they perhaps would have ended up on this list had I given their albums some attention).  I also want to keep my ears tuned to the Spanish alt/indie band Mourn, who had a so-so album come out, but have potential to be a great band in the days ahead.

Dishonourable Mentions

  • Painting With  Animal Collective — Not as bad as 2012’s Centipede Hz, this album still failed to make much of a dent in the AC canon, which is so disappointing as I love this band so much.
  • Mangy Love  Cass McCombs — I swing back and forth on this guy from album to album, but I almost felt like he was pranking his audience with this collection of his usual esoteric lyricism put to “easy listening” accompaniment.  It won many fans in a wide range of music critics, but I’m calling the Emperor’s New Clothes on this one.
  • Here  Teenage Fanclub — Oh how I love these Scottish indie gods, but this album, their 10th LP, bored me to tears.