Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Liner Notes: Top Twenty Albums of 2014, Part II

Back to Part I

20. Dum Dum Girls – Too True
Too True hits and runs. Over its relatively short 30-minute run time, these ten songs grab your attention and worm into your brain, before melting into the next track.

19. Taylor Swift – 1989
Max Martin produced (for the most part), but still undoubtedly Taylor Swift, 1989 was the guilty pleasure of serious music critics this year. Not that you should feel guilty about liking pop music.

18. Chromeo – White Women
Listening to White Women from start to finish is like eating candy for dinner. With tongue planted firmly in cheek, Chromeo released the best nostalgia-for-the-‘70s-and-‘80s album since Random Access Memories, and they had as much fun as possible doing it. Bonus points for containing my toddler’s favorite song of his three years on this planet.

17. Spoon – They Want My Soul
Spoon just puts out album after album of catchy indie rock. The week that They Want My Soul came out, I listened to it so much that I’d wake up in the middle of the night humming “do-do-do they want my soul.” Witty, sharp lyrics complete the full package here.

16. Lykke Li – I Never Learn
The power ballad hasn’t sounded so good in decades. Taking a real-life break-up as inspiration, the Swedish singer goes for it with this collection of heart-on-her-sleeve anthems.

15. Real Estate – Atlas
Something about Real Estate’s music seems so easy, as though we’ve all been here before. Guitars chug along at a medium pace, strumming out melodies in swirls of sound. The happy-go-lucky pop music and the submerged vocals sometimes hide the seriousness of this record. Perhaps not as immediate as their previous releases, Atlas nonetheless had staying power, staying in steady rotation throughout the year.

14. Phish – Fuego
Phish has fashioned a 30-plus-year career on the strength of its incredible live shows, not it’s studio work. But Fuego is an album that encapsulates all that is Phish. “The Line” and “Sing Monica” show off the band’s pop sensibilities. “Wombat” begins as a barely listenable exercise in absurd Phishy-ness, only to develop an infectious funk groove that ends just as it’s hitting full stride. The title track, an extended prog number that churns through numerous sections, has already turned into a highlight of the band’s live shows.

OK, Fuego isn’t breaking new ground, but few bands can please devoted fans and convert new obsessives quite like Phish can.  Fuego is the sound of a band that’s still engaged with its sound, still finding new pockets in which to groove, even after three decades.

13. Woods – With Light and With Love
In truth, With Light and With Love could’ve been released in any year from about 1968 to the present. Earthy rock n’ roll, jangly guitar, and loose jamming dominate the album. Much of this is well-trodden ground, but Woods has a knack for a pop melody.  “Shining,” “Moving to the Left,” and “Leaves Like Glass,” are so catchy you could be forgiven for singing along with the singer and the guitar line.

On the title track, Woods really goes for it. What starts as another groovy pop song evolves into a full-stretched guitar workout with echoes of early Pink Floyd. Instead of just mimicry, Woods has injected new life into these familiar, jam-rock sounds.

12. Lydia Loveless – Somewhere Else
Somewhere Else is mostly a country album. I say mostly because there’s a good deal of gutsy rock n’ roll, and a smattering of punk attitude. Whether that makes her a country-punk singer, or an alt-country artist, or what, I’m not sure I could say. What I can tell you is, this is an outstanding album.

Loveless marries her smart, engaging storytelling with a powerful delivery. Listen to standout track “Chris Isaak,” where her voice rises, falls, and breaks over the sliding guitar sounds.  Or “Head,” which is about exactly what you think it’s about, where her voice wavers between pleading and demanding. It’s a trick that would see lesser singers fall flat on their faces, but Loveless pulls it off fearlessly.

11. Grouper – Ruins
Grouper's Ruins
Ruins comes alive in the moments of echo. The reverberations of the piano strings hover in space, waiting for the next line of notes to break though. As Liz Harris sings, her voice hides among the sparse sounds, blending in with the fading echoes.

Nothing about this music is urgent. Everything is given time to breathe, to contemplate, to meditate. It feels lightweight, unbearably so at times. The songs threaten to break away from whatever is holding on time them and get swept off in the slightest of breezes. Occasionally, an ambient sound—falling rain, a croaking frog, a bleeping microwave—intrudes, only to fade again into the background. Ruins is sparse, minimalist, and intoxicating.

10. Mac Demarco – Salad Days
Words like “slacker” and “stoner” come to mind with Mac Demarco’s Salad Days. The music is relaxed, and Demarco’s vocal delivery is laconic and unhurried, as though he tossed these songs off on a summer afternoon when he was playing hooky from his real job. On album highlight “Brother,” Demarco repeatedly implores us to “take it slow now, brother.” “Let Her Go” is an ode to the passive realization that a relationship is over.

But that’s just the spell that Salad Days weaves. Demarco may be playing the slacker role, but the album is stuffed full of carefully crafted guitar pop. Nothing is out of place. Every vocal hook and chord progression and drum fill is just right. Yes, it’s great music to take along when you’ve skipped work and are heading out to the beach, but it’s also great music.

9. Todd Terje – It’s Album Time
What to make of the debut album from Norwegian producer Todd Terje? At the time of its release, almost half of this album had already been available via singles and EPs. Was this just a way to re-release music we’d already heard, along with some connective tissue?

Thankfully, Terje had more in mind with It’s Album Time. It’s that rare thing in 2014: an album that’s better than the sum of its parts. The album ebbs and flows effortlessly, touching on one style of dance music before morphing into the next. And within that context, the standout tracks become ever better. “Strandbar,” “Delorean Dynamite,” and, especially, “Inspector Norse,” showcase Terje’s talent for steadily building tension into a euphoric release.

8. Sharon Van Etten – Are We There
Sharon Van Etten’s Are We There is a disarmingly honest album from the singer-songwriter. It’s a break-up album (or perhaps it’s a “I’m in a bad relationship” album). Songs like the devastating “Your Love is Killing Me” are urgent and unflinching in their view of love.

The music is often as raw as the lyrics; you can almost hear the fingertips pounding on the keys on a ballad like “I Love You But I’m Lost.” Although there are plenty of orchestral strings and drum-machine sounds, Are We There still manages of the trick of maintaining the intensity and intimacy of a live performance.

7. Flying Lotus – You’re Dead!
You're Dead!
You’re Dead! is the latest exercise in experimentation from producer Steven Ellison’s Flying Lotus project. Combining jazz, electronic music, and hip-hop into something totally unique, You’re Dead! demands close attention and repeated listens. This hyperkinetic album spits out ideas faster than they can be digested, before moving quickly on to the next thing.

“Never Catch Me” is the album highlight. Featuring an irresistible appearance from rapper Kendrick Lamar, it distills the Flying Lotus formula into something approaching a pop song, before it devolves into a transcendent groove. All that’s left is to wonder where Flying Lotus may go next.

6. Run the Jewels – Run the Jewels 2
Run the Jewels 2 is the sound of a smack in the face, in the best possible way. Killer Mike and El-P bring us aggressive and in-your-face hip-hop. Everything coheres on this album, from the production to the beats to the flow. The energy threatens to explode over the edges at any moment. It’s a high-wire act that twists and turns and dares to topple over, but somehow keeps its balance at all times.

Each track bleeds into the next, making the entire album one long highlight. Although, I would be remiss if I didn’t call out the gloriously titled, “Close Your Eyes (And Count to Fuck),” featuring Rage’s Zack De La Rocha, whose sliced-and-diced vocals form the hook of one of this year’s best songs.

5. The War on Drugs – Lost in the Dream
Lost in the Dream is a classic headphones album. The latest from The War on Drugs pulls you under its waves of sound, dragging you down to get lost in its own particular world. Turn up the volume, close your eyes and submit to every splash of noise.

The War on Drugs takes standard rock n’ roll ideas and pushes them to the edge of ambience. Listen to the way album opener “Under the Pressure” morphs from a propulsive rock number to a spaced-out wash of feedback. And then there’s catchy, energetic “Red Eyes,” one of the great songs from any band this year. Is there a better moment than the build to that emphatic “Woo!” that keeps coming back around?

4. St. Vincent - St. Vincent
The influence of St. Vincent’s 2012 collaboration with David Byrne, called Love This Giant, is all over her follow-up, this year’s self-titled release. While Lady Gaga spent much of last year going on about art and pop (and then kinda fell on her face when it came to both), St. Vincent has put out a fantastic album of artistic pop music. She takes intelligence of her earlier work and feeds it into a channel of electricity that would recall the Talking Heads even if it weren’t for the obvious connection.
St. Vincent

On fiery cuts like “Rattelsnake” and “Birth in Reverse” St. Vincent appears to open up and give us a look inside her head, while at the same time remaining more distant and unknowable than ever. “Huey Newton” and “Digital Witness” are sly nods the oversaturation of technology. “I Prefer Your Love” and “Severed Crossed Fingers” are ballads that are just a bit off, cast with a shade of edginess.

What really ties it all together, though, is the searing guitar that Annie Clark plays. Deceptively fierce guitar lines cut through the album, never allowing us to let down our guards for even a moment, forcing us to again and again ask, “How did she get her guitar to sound like that?”

3. Beck – Morning Phase
From the standpoint of pure sonic quality, no album this year sounds better than Beck’s Morning Phase. Seriously, find your friend with the absolute best soundsystem and play this album at an uncomfortably loud volume. Every note rings clear as crystal, every tone is sharp as a blade edge. Sure, anyone can make music on a laptop in their parents’ basement, but could it ever sound like this?

Morning Phase isn’t just about the sound quality, of course. Thankfully, the music is deserving of such treatment. The songs are masterful, almost symphonic, pop songs. Backed by orchestral arrangements (contributed by Beck’s father), Morning Phase is contemplative, reflective music.

This far into his career, a new Beck album is a new opportunity to reassess his entire output. Much of the chatter around Morning Phase has been that the album is a sister to his 2002 classic, Sea Change. While that’s a good touchpoint, Morning Phase is more than just a successor. It’s a mature, intricate work that stands as one of the best of Beck’s long career.

2. Aphex Twin – Syro
While Richard James has continued to release music under different names, Syro is his first album under the Aphex Twin moniker since 2001. For such a profoundly influential artist (and we’ll see this again with the #1 album on this list), a return from such a lengthy layoff brings a mix of expectation and trepidation. Will the music be as good as those classic albums I’ve listened to so many times over the years? Will the sound be the same, or will it have changed in all the wrong ways? Electronic music, in particular, has evolved quickly in the last dozen or so years. Had Aphex Twin been left behind?

When Syro finally reached our ears, all that concern was tossed out the window in one assured motion. This album is undoubtedly Aphex Twin. Neither a reinvention nor a simple rehash, Syro pushed new ideas within a familiar form.

Syro is a surprisingly easy listen. Yes, there are lots of different sounds on the album, and plenty of moments of dissonance and challenge. But it’s also a relentlessly melodic album that spins out hooks at a dizzying pace. It’s been said before that Aphex Twin is dance music that you don’t dance to, and that holds true here. Tracks like “produk 29[101`]” and “180db_[130]” bring up right up to the edge of the floor, but ultimately, this is music for headphones.

And then, after eleven tracks after beats, we are brought back to Earth with the stunningly beautiful, “aisatsana[102],” a gorgeous ambient piano number that provides the perfect bookend to one of the great albums of the year.

1. D’Angelo and the Vanguard – Black Messiah
First, there was Brown Sugar in 1995. Then, the landmark Voodoo in 2000. What followed was fourteen years without new music (aside from some leaked and live material). Then, with almost no forewarning, D’Angelo released Black Messiah on December 15th.

Much like Aphex Twin’s Syro, Black Messiah is the sound of a much loved artist returning from a long hiatus with a bang. In the late ‘90s, D’Angelo was supposed to be the Great Hope of Soul Music. Would he lose his fastball after 14 years on the sidelines? Not only does D’Angelo still have it, but Black Messiah may be his best release. D’Angleo has expanded his sound by adding a heavy dose of rock guitar verve to his blend of RnB, blues, soul and funk.

On opener “Ain’t That Easy,” he sings, “You can’t leave me, it ain’t that easy, walk away, when you want me to stay.” Is that about a lover, or is he addressing himself and his years in the wilderness? His signature groove is noticeably fuzzed over with electric guitar. “1000 Deaths” is the edgiest song in his catalogue, with a thumping bass anchoring waves of angry distortion. There’s plenty of sex-funk, too. “Sugah Daddy” and “Back to the Future (Part I)” throb with dense funk grooves.

Clearly, this album has been labored over in the studio, but it somehow manages to not feel worked to death.  D’Angelo has credited this album to “D’Angelo and the Vanguard,” and the message is clear: this is the work of a band. Despite its polish, Black Messiah also maintains a late night jam session feel.

The temptation is to leave this lower on the list, as it’s only been in our hands for a few weeks. But the music here demands attention, and all the hype aside, it’s without a doubt the best thing I’ve heard all year.

All the albums listed can be found on the Liner Notes: Best of 2014 Spotify playlist (excepting the one artist who isn't available on that service).

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