The 10 Best Records & Wrok’s Best of 2017 Side B

Side-B

When I joked (badly) in January that this Chinese year of the Rooster is really just the Year of The Cock, I had no idea. There were so many great songs for the last part of the year, and not even from all the big bands or artists that you’d expect. In-between all the political, economic and climatic mayhem there was some sensible music being made.

Trends for the year include hearing amazing female vocals everywhere I listened and a return to “solos” in pop songs (guitar solos for sure, but other instruments too). Trumpety-trump proved to be a strong influence, adding a whole new chapter to the history protest songs. Everyone from Arcade Fire & Mavis Staples to Billy Bragg took a stab from across the pond, not to mention all the angry music (see Best Of Albums list). On the Side B playlist, the orange man gets a cameo on “House Cat,” and is summarily dismissed by a nonchalant Mark Kozelek (as a cat). But that’s just one of the 2.5 hours of my favourite tracks from July-December 2017. Let’s all hit shuffle and go on holiday.

national

1. The National – Sleep Well Beast

The National really are at the top of their game, and this album seems so effortless and smooth, I’d like to inhale it. They struggle though, and the intensity with which they wrestle their creative beasts are so pleasing and intoxicating. There’s absolute harmony and discordancy at work here, as well as really intimate lyrics. The record features the band’s first real guitar solos (there are two and they’re glorious).

LCD_Soundsystem

2. LCD Soundsystem – American Dream

The most brilliant record released this year to be met with equal and opposite amounts of scepticism. It’s one of their best to date and is overshadowed by their previous work. I only discovered LCD Soundsystem late anyway, but to me, this record sounds like prime LCD Soundsystem: the same themes but darker and the same sharp wit but with more bite. I don’t know why everyone calls it a comeback album when it’s clear that James Murphy never left the room.

Courtney_Barnett_Kurt_Vile

3. Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile – Lotta Sea Lice

This record is my go-to album for 2017. It always matches the mood. With lots of happy, sad, rocking and laid back bits of quirky wisdom it makes sense that an honest, down to earth record would be the outcome from these slacker-rock indie darlings.

war on drugs

4. The War On Drugs – A Deeper Understanding

This album builds on the high standards set by Lost In A Dream, with the same wash of sound that transports you somewhere else. The mood is higher and the sound bolder, as if to resolve the two records in a celebration of victorious, dirty guitars.

Richard Dawson

5. Richard Dawson – Peasant

An exciting and strange British freak-folk album from this dude who came out of nowhere. Dawson shows incredible bravery on this medieval Celtic off-key album. It’s dirty with beautiful melodies scattered haphazardly, and the record sticks and stays with you. The weirdest and most groundbreaking album that has chosen me for a while.

weather station

6. The Weather Station – The Weather Station

Oh, my kingdom for beautiful Canadian singer-songwriters! This record is classic Folk Gold in the vein of Joni Mitchell, but at the same time is Tamara Lindeman’s confident own voice. With mint production, engaging lyrics and a rolling musical urgency, this is definitely both a vinyl/headphone and crowd-pleaser record.

protomartyr

7. Protomartyr – Relatives in Descent

Finally, a band has risen to take the flame from Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds. Protomartyr are pissed-off and mysterious like a good Goth-inspired Post-Punk band should be. They have great rhythm and pace, with a surprising lulling quality for minor chords and dramatic badassery. Definitely music to watch Trump speeches or have existential crises to.

GSYBE

8. Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Luciferian Towers

A very simplified GY!BE record that hits home and feels very true to now. The album fits in well with their body of work, although it’s by no means an extensive movement of beautiful music. Rather it presents a well-organized progression of rage as grandiose tracks bombard your ears for just under an hour. A cathartic listen.

rostam

9. Rostam – Half-Light

An eclectic debut from one half of vampire weekend. The album turns pop song structure around while echoing traditional pop melodies. An inspiring sweet, detailed album from Batmanglij that doesn’t really go anywhere, but that’s entirely ok.

 

bongeziwe mabandla

10. Bongeziwe Mabandla – Mangaliso

A record that masterfully balances the traditional and new. South African Xhosa music has never sounded this modern or hypnotic, and this album turns sweet world music turned on its head.

That’s it. Special mentions to Bjork, Sza, Josh Ritter and Sylvan Esso. As Vicky would say, “soz lol.”

Advertisement

Best Music Of 2014 (a little more, a little less)

 There are so many firsts for this year. This is the first year that I’ve felt really overwhelmed with the number of albums I didn’t get a chance to listen to. This is the first year with a with a toddler in the house. This is the first year I’m posting a Best Songs playlist (see the end of the post), and in some respects, I feel like I had more time for songs than for albums.

So with that introduction, the 2014 albums that went from a blossoming romance to lifelong partners are:

1. The War On Drugs – Lost In The Dream

war-on-drugs

2. Angel Olsen – Burn Your Fire For No Witness

angel-olsen

3. Ryan Adams – Ryan Adams

ryan-adams-new-album

These albums got under my skin. Ryan Adams was
the incredible soundtrack to my first trip to the US (where I also saw him live). Angel Olsen’s beautiful voice held my hand while I made some difficult decisions this year. The War On Drugs was my constant companion through my most challenging professional, and most rewarding personal year. I bought all these albums on vinyl.

All the runner-up lovers, in no particular order

  • Beck – Morning Phase
  • Hozier – Hozier
  • Sylvan Esso – Sylvan Esso
  • Elbow – The Take Off And Landing Of Everything
  • Sturgill Simpson – Metamodern Sounds In Country Music
  • Weezer – Everything Will Be All Right in the End
  • Sharon Van Etten – Are We There

The nice albums that just didn’t stick

  • Jenny Lewis – The Voyager
  • First Aid Kit – Stay Gold
  • Rosanne Cash – River & the Thread
  • Jack White – Lazaretto
  • Conor Oberst – Upside Down Mountain

Albums that went over my head

  • St. Vincent – St. Vincent
  • FKA Twigs – LP1
  • Lana Del Rey – Ultraviolence
  • Thom Yorke – Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes
  • The Black Keys – Turn Blue

Albums I still need to listen to. Some of these may have made THE list, but…toddler

  • Lucinda Williams – Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone
  • Swans – To Be Kind
  • Sun Kil Moon – Benji
  • Luluc – Passerby
  • Rodrigo Amarante – Cavalo
  • The Antlers – Familiars
  • Tweedy – Sukierae
  • Hurray for the Riff Raff – Small Town Heroes
  • Flying Lotus – You’re Dead
  • Alvvays – Alvvays
  • Thurston Moore – The Best Day
  • Ty Segall – Manipulator
  • Leonard Cohen – Popular Problems
  • Against Me! – Transgender Dysphoria Blues
  • Bruce Springsteen – High Hopes
  • Mogwai – Rave Tapes
  • Eagulls – Eagulls
  • Robert Plant – Lullaby and… The Ceaseless Roar
  • The New Pornographers – Brill Bruisers
  • Damien Jurado – Brothers And Sisters Of The Eternal Son
  • Foxygen – …And Star Power
  • The Flaming Lips – With A Little Help From My Fwends

For the rest, here’s my Best Songs of 2014 playlist

I leave you with a 2-hour playlist of my Top 30 Tracks. Technically a Top 29, because GRMLN’s “Of Nothing” isn’t available on YouTube (yes, this is still happening). You can, however, listen to it on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/carparkrecords/07-of-nothing

 

 

A last final note…

The Decemberists snuck in two tracks this year from their forthcoming album (January 2015). I thought it was a little unfair to include it into the top tracks because they’ve just come along, but yeah, this is my new crush…