If we were to
consider only legacy artists in compiling the year’s best, the list would be
competent, though nothing special. Add in bands with histories of 5 to 10
years’ running, and the list gains a lot of credence. But when rookies are
added to 2018, the year is impressive indeed. In fact, we may look back to see
the end of the decade represented a changing of the guard, to a new generation
of pop musicians eventually sporting long pedigrees. Of course, the reality is
that the guard is always changing, always in flux, but 2018 was a year when
newcomers stood out.
DISQUALIFICATIONS: You simply won’t find any
Kanye West here, for obvious reasons. Sun Kil Moon is left off the list because
Mark Kozelek is getting boring with his endless personal-diary releases. Drake
and The Carters (Beyonce and Jay-Z) are here, but pushed down in rank because
alleged sincerity seems formulaic. More difficult is the case of the
Frankenmuth family band Greta Van Fleet, who claim to be making original music,
but sound too much like a note-for-note ripoff of Led Zeppelin to be worth
their own ranking. Fans of GbV may notice no ranking for Cash Rivers – the joke
wore thin on me pretty quickly.
Among the departures from this sphere,
Aretha Franklin’s was the highest profile, but the most heartbreaking departure
of 2018 was Scott Hutchison of Frightened Rabbit, who gave us plenty of hints
that he saw suicide in his future. Too bad no one could steer him from his
goal. Dolores O’Riordan, Mac Miller, and Lil’ Peep also died way too young and
tragically. Other particularly sad grace notes were for Tony Joe White, who
died soon after releasing a remarkable studio album; Pete Shelley of The
Buzzcocks, who died suddenly of a heart attack in December at age 63; and Hardy
Fox of The Residents, who succumbed to cancer after his band released yet
another anonymous masterpiece.
And 2019 looks set to begin with fervor –
Maggie Rogers, The Dead C, Sharon Van Etten, Emily Strange, Deerhunter, The
Twilight Sad, The Cowsills, maybe even The Wrens?
Regular Studio Albums, 2018
1. TIE
– Julia Holter, Aviary
2. TIE
– Mary Halvorson, Code Girl -- The world was graced with three double-length
jazz/experimental compositions in 2018, and while Kamasi Washington’s is down
the list slightly for its traditionalism, two women shot straight to the top.
Chicago’s dream-vocalist Julia Holter takes linguistic poetry-play to new
levels, backed by a double-bass recalling Joni Mitchell in Hejira days. Jazz guitarist Mary Halvorson, meanwhile, debuts a new
ensemble led by the stunning vocalist Amirtha Kidambi. Both jazz-influenced
albums put voice on the center stage, not in a traditional jazz-chanteuse way,
but as studies in linguistics, information, emotion and nonsense. It is
unprecedented to have two such amazing works in a single year.
3. Mitski,
Be the Cowboy – She may be called the
Japanese-American chanteuse for the strange, but Mitski can aim an arrow at
your emotions as well as she foils any and all conventions of music.
4. Low,
Double Negative – Another
experimental leap comes from everyone’s Duluth favorites. Alan and Mimi elect
to follow a route similar to the one pursued lately by Bon Iver, in making noise
and sonic drone serve the interest of songwriting. The effort may unsettle some
Low fans, but this seems their best work to date.
5. Heather
Leigh, Throne – Face it, the best
works of the year eschewed normality. Heather Leigh (Murray) has given us plenty
of improvisational pedal-steel solo albums, as well as duos with saxophonist
Peter Brotzmann, but here she mixes vocals suggestive of Kate Bush with
dream-induced noise. It’s amazing to see her continue to set new goals and then
exceed them.
6. John
McCutcheon, Ghost Light – Wow, a
hammered dulcimer player best known for covers and kids’ albums releases the
best album of folk originals by anyone in many years. Loaded with unforgettable
songs that hint at Wendell Berry.
7. Belly, Dove
– A lot of 1990s indie bands were reuniting in the late 2010s, so why should
we have expected Tanya Donelly to score such a stunning surprise with the Belly
reunion? Tanya walks off with the reunion award. A strong collection of taut,
emotional songs.
8. Fucked
Up, Dose Your Dreams – Speaking of
double-disc megaworks, Fucked Up supposedly gave us the ultimate punk-opera
with David Comes to Life, but then
the band returns to the concept form with a stellar album featuring dozens of
guests, including the elusive Mary Margaret O’Hara.
9. Kamasi
Washington, Heaven and Earth – Occasionally,
lovers of the Coltrane/Coleman school insist that saxophonist Washington is a
little too traditionalist, but when epic orchestrated arrangements are mixed
with direct political calls, who can complain? (BTW, Coltrane’s lost album is
#1 in the Specials section.)
10.
Bodega, Endless
Scroll – Nice to see a Brooklyn band return to the art-rock styles of Pink
Section. More fun than you ever bargained for in 2018.
11.
Paul McCartney, Egypt
Station – It’s not just that a Beatle can make such a solid record at age 76,
it’s that this diverse and powerful recording bests most Wings output, and many
of the better solo albums McCartney released in the 1990s.
12.
Hop Along, Bark
Your Head Off, Dog – Frances Quinlan already was wowing the world with her
guitar arrangements, now her lyricism skyrockets forward. A serious toast to a
band reaching peak.
13.
Quell Chris and Jean Grae, Everything’s Fine – This isn’t so much a hip-hop observation of pop
culture, as a hip-hop version of Firesign Theatre for the 21st
century, which makes it an odd duck indeed. Probably deserves to be higher for
sheer audacity.
14.
Lucy Dacus, Historian
– The biggest problem with Dacus forming boygenius with Julien Baker and
Phoebe Bridgers is that this exceptional album from early in the year might get
overlooked. No.
15.
They Might Be Giants, I Like Fun – Since this morose yet peppy album comes close to the
standards of 1990’s Flood, one might
consider a Top 10 ranking to be necessary. Hey, competition was very tight this
year, what can I say?
16.
Earl Sweatshirt, Some
Rap Songs – One might think 15 songs clocking in at under 30 minutes were
exercises in nonsense, but Sweatshirt has followed his muse into deep corners
of jazz-influenced poetry.
17.
Laurie Anderson, Landfall
– An exceptional collaboration with Kronos Quartet on Hurricane Sandy. Its
only limitation was the predictable minor-key viola runs, making this work a
little less groundbreaking than Anderson’s most recent Heart of a Dog.
18.
Tracy Grammer, Low
Tide – This is Grammer’s first fully-realized album as a solo artist since
the death of Dave Carter. And she covers Kate Bush. And that’s really all you
need to know.
19.
Darlingside, Extralife
– If you haven’t gotten the vocal harmonic oddness that is Boston’s
Darlingside, you have some catching up to do.
20.
Guided by Voices, Space
Gun – Robert Pollard’s relevance never ever falters, which is a miracle in
its own right.
21.
Richard Thompson, 13
Rivers – Wow! One of Thompson’s best. Hard to name a weak cut here.
22.
Soccer Mommy, Clean
– The rumors are true. Just listen.
23.
David Byrne, American
Utopia – Not a dystopia, but an effort at hope in a time of Trump. Byrne
takes songwriting to the level of his collaboration with St. Vincent some years
back.
24.
Hayley Heyndrickx, I
Need to Start a Garden – Acoustic and deeply rhythmic at the same time, and
brilliant lyrics.
25.
John Prine, The
Tree of Forgiveness – Wow, not just a placeholder and cancer-survivor
return to the fold, but a sharp album featuring some of Prine’s most droll
poetry ever.
26.
Zaimph, Rhizomatic
Gaze – Marcia Bassett gives us a double-LP dose of her signature electronic
drone sounds, but structured as a multi-suite symphony, including babbling
voices.
27.
Elvis Costello and the Impostors, Look Now – A sprawling and well-crafted album, though not intended
to be a late-70s rocker style.
28.
Johnny Marr, Call
the Comet – Marr has released some impressive solo work between Smiths and
Modest Mouse stints, but this one is a ringing, chiming success.
29.
Arthur Buck, s/t –Wow, can Joe Arthur and Peter Buck crank
out great pop tunes as a team!
30.
The Dollhouse Thieves, s/t – Perhaps the most
interesting folk-rockish rookies to come out of the Denver area in a decade or
more.
31.
Lucero, Among the
Ghosts – Yes, connubial bliss can be a state for writing angst-driven blistering
rock.
32.
Kacey Musgraves, Golden
Hour – Skeptics might grumble she’s moving too swiftly (bad pun) into pure
pop, but with songs this good, who cares?
33.
Willie Nile, Children
of Paradise – At a time when populists are telling us to hate the refugee
and hate the homeless, punk-pub-rocker Willie Nile comes back to stand in
defense of the voiceless. A powerful statement.
34.
The Residents, Intruders
– Eric Drew Feldman is making The Residents less anonymous and more
melodic, but that doesn’t make them less weird. This album on the doppelgangers
among us is startling, and The Residents’ live shows in 2017-18 leave audiences
breathless.
35.
Vase Vide, Sleep[Talk]
– The vocal interplays and keyboard are every bit as interesting as last
year’s Colors of Entropy EP, but the addition of Kellie Palmblad
turns VV into a finely-honed shiny pop wonder.
36.
Superchunk, What
a Time to Be Alive – Mac gives us a strong antidote to the Trump era,
dancing every second.
37.
Cat Power, Wanderer
– Chan Marshall is back, more self-assured than ever, dragging Lana Del Rey
along for the ride.
38.
Marissa Nadler, For
My Crimes – One of the nation’s best freak-folk practitioners just got a
whole lot better, hinting at images of early 1960s murder ballads, updated for
2018 sensibilities.
39.
Tony Joe White, Bad
Mouthin’ – Fans had few ideas when this lo-fi blues masterpiece came out
that this would be White’s last will and testament, but how appropriate, if we
have to lose him.
40.
Bird Streets, s/t – Want to know the future of Southern
California riff-infused pop? You’re looking at it, listening to it.
41.
Neko Case, Hell-On
– Apologies to both Neko and Father John below at ending up in the 40s, but
this was a great year. In Neko’s case, this stands among her finest efforts,
solo or with New Pornographers.
42.
Father John Misty, God’s
Best Customer – The wry humor and self-deprecation here made this my
favorite FJM album, at least since I Love
You Honey Bear.
43.
The Aces, When My
Heart Felt Volcanic – We could call these four women derivative for trying
to recapture the fire of the first Haim album, but really, Aces can write great
pop tunes.
44.
Wye Oak, The
Louder I Call, The Faster It Runs – Jen has finally reconciled her two
styles in a compelling and beautiful fashion.
45.
The 1975, A Brief
Inquiry Into Online Relationships – It’s easy to dismiss lead singer
Matthew Healy’s angst and histrionics, but this was undoubtedly the most
interesting album the band has ever made. Sometimes the clashes between solo
piano and autotune seem gimmicky, but hey….
46.
Rosanne Cash, She
Remembers Everything –A strong riff-filled angry album for women, one that
could almost be a #MeToo anthemic moment.
47.
Palm, Rock Island
– Palm is melodic weirdness at its very best. Hard to call it “difficult
music” when it’s so danceable.
48.
Bardo Pond, Volume
8 – Previous volumes of jam sessions at the Lemur House came out in small
batches, but Fire Records decided to make this one a full commercial release.
Highly deserving for fans of Philly sludge psychedelia.
49.
Rock*A*Teens, Sixth
House – As impressive an indie reunion as one might find in a very busy
year. Virtually every track is a keeper.
50.
Snail Mail, Lush
– An impressive debut for a teenager, and we can say with certainty that
Lindsey Jordan has a lot more to show the world.
51.
The Beths, Future
Me Hates Me – A strong woman-led guitar-band debut from New Zealand. The
Beths make me dance and cry at the same time, which should tell you something.
52.
Graham Parker, Cloud
Symbols – Surprising horn-infused dance music from the old master of pub
boogie.
53.
Sons of Kemet, Your
Queen is a Reptile – Bonus points for trying something as audacious as
tuba, kettle drum, and sax. Much more than a novelty, though limiting at times.
54.
The Dodos, Certainty
Waves – The former folkie duo from San Francisco takes a noisy turn similar
to Low, and it works.
55.
I’m With Her, See
You Around – A country-rock supergroup trio succeeds not so much due to
Sara Watkins as to Sarah Jarosz, and Jarosz fans are not a bit surprised.
56.
Janelle Monae, Dirty
Computer – Cool to see Monae back away ever so slightly from sci-fi
storytelling to dive more deeply into straight-up immediate songs of desire.
57.
Rainbow Kitten Surprise, How To: Friend, Love, Freefall – Think of a laid-back version of
Darlingside, plenty of harmonies and plenty of in-joke smiles, and that gives
you a picture of the appealing RKS style.
58.
Shopping, The
Official Body – The UK’s answer to Pink Section continues its madness,
though it faces new competition from the likes of Bodega and Palm.
59.
Courtney Barnett, Tell
Me How You Really Feel – This kind of ranking suggests a sophomore slump
for the Australian wunderkind, but really, no slump here. Great confessional
songs, but the new kid on the block had to compete with scores of newer kids
this year.
60.
Heather Leigh/Peter Brotzmann, Sparrow Nights – More focused than the duo’s three live albums,
though a bit overshadowed by Heather Leigh’s solo work.
61.
Ought, Room
Inside the World – I’m a huge fan of
Canada’s premier art-rockers, though this one didn’t grab me as much as the
first two.
62.
Culture Club, Life
– Who would have guessed Boy George had such a burst of energy in him?
63.
Parquet Courts, Wide
Awake! – This slight move to mainstream garnered the band a slot on Ellen
DeGeneris, and it’s a fine album, but not as high up as previous works.
64.
Pusha-T, Daytona
– Consistent innovation in this album, though not as groundbreaking as some
fans claim.
65.
Dream Wife, s/t – Damn, how did this UK trio get below
50? There’s just too many damned great new bands out there, and this is one of them.
66.
Speedy Ortiz, Twerp
Verse – Hey, it’s another helping of Sadie Dupuis, it has to be good for
you.
67.
Rubble Bucket, Sun
Machine – What do you do when you’re a Broadway-oriented, Deaf School-style
band with horns and percussion, and you face a painful breakup, substance
abuse, and thoughts of suicide? If you’re Kalmia Traver, you dance to it! I
heartily endorse the Rubble Bucket strategy over the Frightened Rabbit
alternative.
68.
The Decemberists, I’ll
Be Your Girl – Say what you will about Colin Meloy, this is a strong, poppy
effort that turns down the pompousness and overthinking, with good results.
69.
IDLES, Joy As An
Act of Resistance – This isn’t as interesting to me in the punk-revival
category as, say, Fucked Up or Bodega or Shopping (always preferred the likes
of Mars and DNA over Jam or Clash), but kudos to the crew for reviving British
punk anyway.
70.
Swearin’, Fall
Into the Sun – In which Alison Crutchfield reunites with an old lover,
takes a bunch of risks, and offers up a collection as good as anything from her
sister Katie.
71.
Camp Cope, How to
Socialise and Make Friends – Australia’s heroines of indie rock sometimes
get demerit points from the over-emoting of guitarist-lyricist Georgia
McDonald, but when she talks about the death of her musician father, you have
to fall under Camp Cope’s spell.
72.
Mothers, Render
Another Ugly Method – Unlike some critics, I thought Kristine Leschper made
a bid for a wider audience in Mothers’ second album, but their music admittedly
is angular, odd, and an acquired taste.
73.
Caroline Rose, Loner
– In which the former folk-pop singer/songwriter Caroline Rose makes a bid
for audacious pop, and it works! These songs will drive you crazy, but in a
good way.
74.
Florence and The Machine, High as Hope – Nice to hear Florence Welch go for understatement
for a change, and her nod to Patti Smith is great.
75.
Mt. Eerie, Now
Only – In some senses, this is as good as last year’s groundbreaking album
on acceptance of the death of a loved one, but one can only go back to that
well so often. It’s nice to know Phil Elverum is finding connubial bliss with
Michelle Williams, or at least one would hope.
76.
August Greene, s/t – Common may be overexposed in some
circles, but his heart and political sensibilities are in the right place in
this hip-hop supergroup album.
77.
Chris Corsano and Bill Orcutt, Brace Up! – The drum and guitar maniacal noise pair offer up their
first studio work after a few live outings. Orcutt’s focus on electric guitar
calls to mind his old band Harry Pussy, with hints of Zappa and Hendrix on the
side. Fry your brain.
78.
US Girls, In a
Poem Unlimited – I don’t always get what Meg Remy is about, but sign me up
for caring about it. Fascinating.
79.
The Good, The Bad, and The Queen, Merrie Land – Notice that Damon Albarn’s GBQ project ranks slightly
higher than his Gorillaz album for this year. GBQ gets specific and political
at a time that the UK needs a good swift kick in the ass, and Gorillaz looks
unfocused by comparison.
80.
Hymn 4 Her, Pop’n’Downers
– America’s ultimate road couple makes a quirky and delightful album owing
as much to Broadway or Gilbert & Sullivan as to Americana roots.
81.
The Joy Formidable, EARRRTH
– Some might not like Ritzy’s new minor-key dive into mysticism, but I
think it’s fine.
82. The
Wooldridge Brothers, Starts at Dusk – The
finest and grittiest suite of pop tunes yet from Milwaukee’s finest songwriting
siblings.
83. J. Cole, KOD – Many critics really loved Cole’s honesty here about substance abuse, but it didn’t seem as direct as his last two albums.
83. J. Cole, KOD – Many critics really loved Cole’s honesty here about substance abuse, but it didn’t seem as direct as his last two albums.
84.
Alison Statton and Spike, Bimini Twist – It may not reach the level of Young Marble Giants,
but there’s a lot of cool shit going on here.
85.
Typhoon, Offerings
– Despite the band’s tendency to get a little over-majestic in a Muse
fashion, this concept album was brilliant in arrangement and delivery.
86.
Jeff Tweedy, WARM
– A subtle, quiet accompaniment to his new autobiography, featuring some of
his best solo work.
87.
Death Cab for Cutie, Thank You for Today – Ben Gibbard may have to reach a bit more for
relevance, but this is not a bad album for this stage in the band’s career.
88.
Sarah Davachi, Gave
In Rest
.
Sarah Davachi, Let
Night Come On Bells End the Day – Canada’s keyboard experimentalist graces
us with two impressive works in one year.
89.
Ariana Grande, Sweetener
– This album really impressed me on first listen, but the meltdown with
Pete sort of soured the sweetener.
90.
Gorillaz, The Now
Now – This seemed to me to be an afterthought to Albarn’s main Humanz statement in 2017, though many
people loved it. Still not as good as his Good/Bad/Queen album, though.
91.
Blood Orange, Negro
Swan – One of the most impressive and understated R&B albums of the
year, addressing depression in its many forms.
92.
Alannah McCready, Ricochet
Heart – One might think at an 90 level I’m meh about new-country, but note
that this one still is higher than Pistol Annies or Ashley Monroe. A talent
worth paying attention to.
93.
Roy Montgomery, Suffuse
– Some interesting vocal experiments alongside Roy’s always-intriguing
guitar, with guest appearances by the likes of Circuit des Yeux.
94.
Laura Grace and the Devouring Mothers, Bought to Rot – The transgender lead
singer of Against Me! tries some solo work that is not supposed to be punk, but
retains a lot of punk energy.
95.
Kyle Craft, Full
Circle Nightmare – In some ways, Craft really is a 21st-century
Dylan, but he carries a little too much of that angst Ian Hunter always favored
in certain Mott the Hoople albums.
96.
Lake Street Dive, Free
Yourself Up – Another heaping helping of retro-soul bebop from the Boston
masters, though the companion EP ranks higher in the EP section due to its
spoof nature.
97.
Lily Allen, No
Shame – The British press may rail at Allen as dissolute and a bad mommy,
but screw that. These are heartfelt and fine pop tunes.
98.
Sarah Borges and the Broken Singles, Love’s Middle Name – I’m hearing a warm
evolution on this one, taking Sarah more toward a Susan Cowsill style. Hooray!
99.
Interpol, Marauder
– It seems to be cool to dismiss Interpol these days, but I actually found
a lot to like in this new studio session.
100.
The Foolish, Pleasantly
Depressing – Bunk Nesbit reminds us that any time one of his alter egos
enters the studio, magic happens.
101.
Nap Eyes, I’m Bad
Now – This is the most intriguing work yet from this Nova Scotia band.
102.
Laura Gibson, Goners
– One of the more intriguing and subtle singer-songwriters out there. Heartwarming,
wistful, and incredibly sad, all at once. An interesting step forward from Empire Builder.
103.
Jeffrey Gaines, Alright
– Who would have thought that a return by 1990s favorite Gaines would have
hints of a 1978 Costello? Some great pop tunes here.
104.
Sophie, Oil of
Every Pearl’s Un-Insides – She’s the toast of every dance floor, but is
Sophie truly the next big thing?
105.
The Breeders, All
Nerve – Fans of the Deal sisters will be shocked I put Belly in my top ten
and Breeders down here, but I rank based on interest. A good album nonetheless.
106.
First Aid Kit, Ruins
– A bit more morose for our FAK friends, but they wear sorrow well.
107.
Body/Head, The
Switch – A lot of people have this album way up, and I give Kim Gordon
credit for sticking with unadulterated experimental noise, but I found that
limiting.
108.
Chvrches, Love Is
Dead – Lauren Mayberry had an honest intention here, of distilling the
band’s themes and making them a little more pop-accessible. Too much repetition
of lyrics and riff lines made the album a bit less interesting than previous
ones – but check out the Hansa Sessions EP, reviewed below.
109.
Cardi B, Invasion
of Privacy – Yes, she can rhyme it up, and yes, it’s fun, but sort of
limiting – still, a much better shelf life than Nicki Minaj.
110.
The Young Fables, Old
Songs – A country-music couple from a rural area outside Knoxville give us
hope for the future of country, with stunning tracks like “Sawmill Wages.”
111.
Cloud Nothings, Last
Building Burning – Dylan Baldi returns to punkier roots to mostly good
results, though at times I like the more pensive Cloud Nothings.
112.
Kaia Kater, Grenades
– Caribbean-influenced folk beats, and the only political analysis of
islander revolt I’ve ever heard.
113.
Animal Collective, Tangerine
Reef – Another chapter in the band’s newfound fascination with
environmental devastation, this one dealing with the death of the ocean. It may
not be as alluring as some of the band’s earlier work, but fascinating
nonetheless.
114.
Hot Snakes, Jericho
Waves – Nice to have Hot Snakes back in a strident album that sounds a lot
like Drive Like Jehu.
115.
Calexico, The
Thread That Keeps Us – A rich and emotional collection from our favorite
bilingual border band.
116.
Arctic Monkeys, Tranquility
Base Hotel + Casino – Hey, if nothing else, the band should be credited
with not making the same album over and over, instead opting for a strange tale
about a cheesy jazz club at a space station. Maybe the idea doesn’t always
work, but I’m impressed they tried it.
117.
The Struts, Young
and Dangerous – If it wasn’t for lead singer Luke Spiller’s hilarious
self-deprecation, this band’s mashup of NY Dolls, Queen, and early Aerosmith
could be annoying – instead, it’s just fun.
118.
Frankie Cosmos, Vessel
– Greta Kline writes some great lyrics and puts on a fascinating live show,
though I can’t say it always translates in the studio.
119.
Dirty Projectors, Lamp
Lit Prose – It’s good to see David Longstreth has gone back to being happy,
though these songs work better in a live venue, as the ranking of the Brooklyn
show in the Specials section indicates.
120.
Pistol Annies, Interstate
Gospel – Despite immense popularity, the trio of Lambert, Monroe, and
Presley don’t always click as often as say, I’m With Her, but they’re more
mainstream country. This one carries the tradition well.
121.
Hinds, I Don’t
Run – The crazy women from Spain try for a deliberate lo-fi Velvet
Underground approach, but it doesn’t click as often as with their first album.
122.
Joan of Arc, 1984
– An eclectic experiment to let vocalist and visual artist Melina
Ausikaitis release her inner hillbilly while Tim Kinsella weaves tales of rural
innocence. Odd but wonderful.
123.
tUnEyArDs, I Can
Feel You Creep Into My Private Life – I live for Merrill Garbus’s forays
into the studio, though this one was a little meandering.
124.
Ashley Paul, Lost
in Shadows – A stunning ambient noise work from the always-interesting
Paul.
125.
Bridget Hayden, Pure
Touch Only From Now On, They Said So – An oft-overlooked member of
Vibracathedral Orchestra reminds us why any Hayden release is a cause for
celebration.
126.
Kimbra, Primal
Heart – Even if Kimbra’s attempt to release her inner Maori is only
partially successful, she remains the Kiwi pop-dance queen of choice.
127.
Peter Holsapple, Game
Day – Continental Drifters and dB’s founder Holsapple gives us a fond look
back at his life in rock, though I’d like a few more forward glances. Holsapple
retains his deft touch, however.
128.
The Claudettes, Dance
Scandal at the Gymnasium – Chicago’s boisterous bar band offers up a
sort-of concept album on high school life. Tremendous fun.
129.
Jackie-O Motherfucker, Bloom – This might have belonged in special albums, since it’s a
compilation from several recording sessions, though the music is unreleased,
and more conventional in song structure than much of Jackie-O’s catalog.
130.
Lykke Li, So Sad
So Sexy – The title says it all – sensuous songs about dominating the dance
floor with tears in your eyes.
131.
Preoccupations, New
Material – Honestly, I don’t begrudge these guys for the name change from
Viet Cong, and their style is a situationist spin of Interpol, but all too
often the tracks fade from the mind.
132.
Eric Bachmann, No
Recover – Eric’s solo acoustic tours recently have been great, and he
promises a 2019 Archers of Loaf reunion tour. This studio outing with his wife
is more of a dream-pop effort, however, with few of the hard-hitting lyrics
he’s known for.
133.
Hunt Sales Memorial, Get Your Shit Together – Fun and howling deliveries from the former
session musician with Tin Machine and Iggy Pop.
134.
Jack White, Boarding
House Ranch – Every time someone starts ranting against Jack, I find
something good to say about his latest solo efforts, but this one made it hard
to do, as it fell flat for the most part.
135.
Galen Ayers, Monument
– The daughter of prog-rock legend Kevin Ayers describes the tough years of
being primary caregiver for her late dad, with a voice similar to Aimee Mann’s.
We’re bound to be hearing more from her soon.
136.
Stephen Malkmus, Sparkle
Hard – I know, the Pavement founder deserves better ranking, particularly
since this is better than most Jicks work. Not to be overlooked.
137.
Travis Scott, Astroworld
– It’s too bad this album is defined primarily for the collaboration with
Drake, because Scott’s voice and vision is far more interesting than Drake’s
own.
138.
Art Brut, Biff!
Bam! Pow! – Eddie Argos may be more reticent about taking over the world
than when Art Brut was founded, but the Dadaist-comedian vocalist remains as
wry and snarky as ever.
139.
Charalambides, Tom
and Christina Carter – So glad to see Charalambides back in the studio,
though this double album is some of their most minimal work. Still, Christina’s
blues harp is important to hear.
140.
Pig Destroyer, Head
Cage – Decently inventive grindcore.
141.
Loma, s/t – The side project of Jonathan Meiburg of
Shearwater is worth hearing.
142.
Mandy Barnett, Strange
Conversation – A really diverse collection of country and pop tunes from a
woman who knows Broadway as well as she knows Nashville.
143.
Gang Gang Dance, Kazuashita
– The weirdo Brooklyn dance ensemble returns after a hiatus to have a more
gauzy demeanor, though in live performances, Lizzy is as amazing as ever.
144.
Amanda Shires, To
the Sunset – To her credit, Shires has a great cozy singer-songwriter style
somewhat reminiscent of Victoria Williams, though nothing stands out too
tremendously.
145.
Stuart Staples, Arrhythmia
– A cool album but an acquired taste, as the lead singer of Tindersticks
experiments with long pieces combining orchestral backing with improvisation.
146.
Houndmouth, Golden
Age – When a Midwestern folkie-Americana group wants to hit the dance
floor, it could be a disaster, but in this case, it works!
147.
Kinky Friedman, Circus
of Life – Kinky returns to the road with songs of reminiscing and Willie
Nelson worship. OK, it can be maudlin at times, but it still beats Willie’s
latest.
148.
Iceage, Beyondless
– Some people think of Iceage as the saviors of indie-post-punk, but I only
see them as mildly interesting. But still worth a listen.
149.
Lucy Kaplansky, Everyday
Street – Another fine collection from Lucy, but her desire to make a
statement against streaming makes this album too unavailable, and needlessly
so.
150.
Franz Ferdinand, Always
Ascending – When FF recorded a collaboration album with Sparks in 2016, I
thought a revival was in order, but this new studio album mostly treads water.
151.
Laura Veirs, The
Lookout – I’m glad Veirs is getting a wider audience with what many think
is her best work yet, but I don’t think husband/producer Tucker Martine is
encouraging her to go far enough out of her comfort zone. Her work in the
case/lang/veirs trio shows what she can accomplish.
152.
Dwarfs of East Agouza, Rats Don’t Eat Synthesizers – Normally, I’m all about any Sun City
Girls spinoff project out there, but this was only mildly interesting.
153.
Bad Bunny, X
100pre – Bad Bunny may have originally ridden on Drake and Cardi B
coattails, but the bilingual Puerto Rican rapper has a depth to his songs that
indicate he will advance well beyond this debut album.
154.
Ensemble Economique, Radiate – Fun in a droney way, but I still miss Starving Weirdos.
155.
Kal Marks, Universal
Care – Some raucous Boston punk, though maybe not as groundbreaking as some
fans believe.
156.
Robyn, Honey – Yes,
she’s dominated the dance floor for 20 years, but my interest wanes quickly.
157.
Chris Smither, Call
Me Lucky – Cool session of new material from Smither, his first in nearly a
decade.
158.
Let’s Eat Grandma, I’m
All Ears – This British women’s duo explores the same type of gauzy
psychedelia as Trailer Trash Tracys – interesting for a while, but not
life-changing.
159.
Ashley Monroe, Sparrow
– This album is probably her best solo work to date (distancing from the
Jack White enterprise probably helped), but it’s overshadowed by her work with
Pistol Annies.
160.
Albert Hammond Jr., Francis
Trouble – Still like Albert as a singer-songwriter, but this album didn’t
stick in my memory long.
161.
Sarah Sample, Redwing
–- Now here’s a good example of how alt-country singer-songwriting should
be done.
162.
Yo La Tengo, There’s
a Riot Going On – There is? YLT passionate defenders will hate this, but
the band to me just gets sleepier all the time.
163.
Frank Turner, Be
More Kind – The UK’s best purveyor of blue-eyed soul has intentions in all
the right places, and is certainly a hell of a lot more interesting than Sam
Smith.
164.
Brandi Carlile, By
the Way, I Forgive You – People whose opinions I trust insist this is
Brandi’s best album. Not hearing it. Good tunes to be sure, but occasionally
lackluster.
165.
Janiva Magness, Love
is an Army – Some impressive blues-jazz chanteuse arrangements going on
here.
166.
Hudson (deJohnette, etc.), s/t – I think it’s cool to
put Jack DeJohnette and friends in the service of pop reinventions, but I still
like his hard-core jazz better.
167.
Okkervil River, In
the Rainbow Rain – Will Sheff’s turn to happy psychedelia makes for more
pleasant party music, though not as essential as his last two Okkervil River
albums.
168.
Walter Salas-Humara, Walterio – A very decent solo album form the lead singer of The
Silos.
169.
Emily Kinney, Oh
Jonathan – Sometimes actresses shouldn’t be vocalists and songwriters, but
Kinney makes a good case, and the Betty Boop voice works to her advantage.
170.
Matthew Sweet, Tomorrow’s
Daughter – Some of Sweet’s recent duo work with Susanna Hoffs has been
cool, though his solo efforts have been a bit forgettable. This is an
exception, tight and energetic throughout.
171.
Paul Kelly, Nature
– Cool adaptations of works by the likes of Sylvia Plath and Dylan Thomas
by this Australian folk singer.
172.
We Were Promised Jetpacks, The More I Sleep, The Less I Dream – As good as this band can be, I
wish they’d be a little less anthemic, as sounding like U2 does not suit them.
173.
Beach House, 7 – I
put Beach House in the Yo La Tengo category of dreamy-sleepy, and this one is
no exception.
174.
Willie Nelson, Last
Man Standing – For longevity and rebellion alone, I ought to give Willie a higher
ranking. He’s still sounding good for the mid-80s, but I didn’t have a lot of
clear takeaways from this album.
175.
Six String Drag, Top
of the World – Just an enjoyable and light-hearted jam session, and there’s
certainly nothing wrong with that.
176.
Christina Aguilera, Liberation
– The trills and angst still may be set to stun, but this feels like the
most legit and heartfelt work she’s ever done. Seems like Drake, Nicki Minaj,
and The Carters all could get lessons on street cred from Aguilera.
177.
Dave Holland and Evan Parker, Uncharted Territories – Nice to see Holland back in the fray,
though some of the jazz newcomers are doing more interesting things.
178.
Dawes, Passwords
– I’ve often defended Dawes when others say the band is too southern
California/Jackson Browne. Yet many people liked this album best of all, and it
somehow didn’t move me.
179.
Gwenno, Le Kov – I’ll
follow Gwenno everywhere, but an album sung entirely in Cornish (?) was a bit
much.
180.
Coheed and Cambria, Unheavenly
Creatures – The band may sound a bit Rush-pompous when they’re involved in
all this sci-fi storytelling, but I’m ready for this five-part Vax tale to
start.
181.
Elle King, Shake
the Spirit – King has much more in blues rock to offer the world than X’s
and O’s, but she allows her cheesier moments to define the tone of the album
here.
182.
Natalie Prass, Future
and Past – I am a strong believer in Prass, but her shift from Muscle
Shoals horns to electronica-pop robbed her lyrics and arrangements of some of
their soul.
183.
Bat Fangs, s/t – Many people swear by this newcomer
hard-rock women-led band, but the songs don’t translate all that well in the
studio. I’m keeping my mind and ears open.
184.
Glorious Sons, Young
Beauties and Fools – A British band that opts for some nostalgia blues-rock
of 1970s vintage, an easy listen with plenty of emotional delivery.
185.
Mumford & Sons, Delta
– They might be rich, but we can still feel a little bit of sympathy for
the Mumford gang, who insisted they poured out their soul in the new album,
only to be told by many fans (as well as most critics) that they sounded like
“Coldplay on Xanax.” It may be tedious at times, but at least Marcus Mumford
didn’t try to make the same album over and over.
186.
Ben Harper and Charlie Musselwhite, No Mercy In This Land – Ad hoc
collaborations can have the same problem as regular bands – they can suffer
from sophomore slump. There’s some great musicianship here, but it doesn’t
stand as well as their 2013 album.
187.
Tracey Thorn, Record
– Nice to see the lead singer of Everything But the Girl return to offer
synth-driven observations on middle age, though this does reinforce why I was
only mildly interested in EBTG.
188.
I See Hawks in L.A., Live and Never Learn – Some fine moments in Southern California
jam-band/folk-rock mashups, though that style was never totally my thing.
189.
Lord Huron, Vide
Noir – Still evolving, but also still vague in delivery at times.
190.
Muse, Simulation
Theory – Let’s give Muse credit for always being politically astute and
giving us political warnings when necessary. But the turn to electronica to
talk about the hazards of online culture had sort of predictable results.
191.
Jim White, Waffles,
Triangles and Jesus – White has always struck me as a more countrified
version of Stan Ridgway, and there’s nothing wrong with that.
192.
Bart Davenport & The Bedazzled, Blue Motel – Is this the modern
equivalent of yacht rock? There’s a certain amount of pop fun here, but I was
never a yacht-rock kinda guy.
193.
Great Lake Swimmers, The Waves, The Wake – This Canadian folk-rock band is becoming more
and more the personal project of Tony Dekker, which is not a bad thing in and
of itself, but the dream pop that results is less interesting than their
original work.
194.
JD Wilkes, Fire
Dream – The concept of this is fascinating enough, relying on elements of
Tom Waits and Crazy World of Arthur Brown, but the delivery is a little over
the top.
195.
Devotchka, The
Night Falls Forever – Fans of the Denver gypsy band may not like it when I
say Devotchka mostly makes the same album again and again, but that’s what I
hear.
196.
Gucci Mane, Evil
Genius – Much more finely crafted than many of his releases, but also a bit
formulaic.
197.
Lucius, Nudes – The
debut album didn’t convince me, and this is a bit of a sophomore slump, but I’m
still willing to grant Lucius a listen.
198.
Eleanor Friedberger, Rebound – Ever since she left as lead singer of Fiery Furnaces,
Friedberger’s been exploring some 1960s and 1970s landscapes, often with some
great results, but other times, like now, just meandering.
199.
Drake, Scorpion –
OK, this was supposed to prove Drake’s vulnerability and sad self, but a
lot of the arrangements seem calculated.
200.
Snow Patrol, Wildness
– I’ll give Gary Lightbody credit for trying to age gracefully, but the
band isn’t going to relive that late 1990s angst, but then again, I wouldn’t
want them to.
201.
Tami Nielsen, Sassafras!
– The former singer for Canada’s Nielsen Family gets swamp-funky, with good
results.
202.
XXL, Puff O’Gigio
– Usually the collaboration albums of Xiu Xiu and the EDM band Larsen are
fairly interesting just for something different, but only a few tracks rise
above the noise here.
203.
Mount Joy, s/t – Mildly intriguing folk rock good for
morning meditation.
204.
Justin Timberlake, Man
of the Woods – We can give Timberlake credit for at least trying a “back to
nature” vehicle as he approaches middle age, but it doesn’t gain him much.
205.
Matt & Kim, Almost
Every Day – Matt & Kim could have gone more for a certain TMBG-style
humor, or strict dance electronica. The fact that they are choosing the latter
path is a disappointment.
206.
Glen Hansard, Between
Two Shores – Dude, forget Marketa. Go back to The Frames. I’m not getting
much out of this morose path.
207.
Imagine Dragons, Origins
– The Utah/Vegas superstars actually can sound decent when they let rhythm
come first. But this album opts for pure pop formula.
208.
Titus Andronicus, A
Productive Cough – I’ve usually followed Titus Andronicus through all the
punky and operatic twists they’ve made, but this album just sort of falls flat.
209.
The Carters (Jay-Z and Beyonce), Everything is Love – I am going to keep this on the list because
our favorite mega-celebrity pair are trying for fidelity and legitimacy, but,
as Jay-Z has shown in recent solo efforts, when you’re this rich your efforts
to define street cred look sort of lame.
210.
Eels, Deconstruction
– Because there are a couple songs of merit, this album will close out the
list of “worth a listen.” But Mark E. keeps making the same morose statements
over and over. He has hit the limit here. Mark Kozelek already exceeded my limit,
which is why there are no Kozelek solo or Sun Kil Moon albums on the 2018 list.
Special
Albums (Live, Compilations, Splits, CD-Rs, MP3, etc.) (some outstanding reissues
from Posies, Soul Asylum, Malo, et al this year, but if it wasn’t dominated by
new material, it isn’t eligible)
1. John
Coltrane, Both Directions at Once: The
Lost Coltrane Album – For once, a legendary archival work fully lives up to
its reputation. This is one of Coltrane’s most coherent, solid works, right up
there with My Favorite Things and A Love Supreme.
2. St.
Vincent, MassEducation – A sparse
re-imagining of 2017’s Masseduction, featuring
Annie Clark’s voice and accompanying grand piano. A sad but beautiful work.
3. Lera
Lynn, Plays Well With Others – A fine
selection of duos (John Paul White, Shovels & Rope) from one of
country-rock’s most intriguing women.
4. The
Jayhawks, Back Roads and Abandoned Motels
– This is not any kind of rarities compilation, but an album of Jayhawks
recording songs that they originally wrote for other people.
5. The
Kills, Live at Electric Lady Studios – Alison
is on fire in this set of live material from recent albums.
6. Mt.
Eerie, (after) – Live renditions in a
Dutch church of songs from A Crow Looked
at Me and Now Only.
7. Bangles/Three
O’Clock/Dream Syndicate/Rain Parade, 3x4
– Probably the first good chronicle of the Paisley Underground, these
modern sessions from 2017-18 have the four bands going into the studio to
record each others’ 1980s hits.
8. Alt-J,
Reduxer – Normally, remix albums
don’t do a lot for me, but this mix of songs and artists make the album
exceptional, maybe even better than Relaxer.
9. Guided
by Voices, Ogre’s Trumpet – The first
good non-bootleg chronicle of the current GbV with Bobby Bare Jr. Wonderful
choice of tracks.
10.
Parlor Walls, Live
at St. Vitus NYC, October 2018 – A vibrant and exciting recording of a
relative newcomer.
11.
Linda Thompson, My
Mother Doesn’t Know I’m On the Stage – In which Linda pulls together
friends like Martha Wainwright to perform some Edwardian-era Vaudeville
numbers.
12.
Yoko Ono, Warzone
– Isn’t it lucky we have 85-year-old Yoko to reinterpret some of her older
protest songs for a Brexit and Trump era?
13.
Luther Russell, Selective
Memories – More than just a best-of compilation, this features rare and
unreleased work from Russell’s sessions over the last 30 years.
14.
Neil Young, Songs
for Judy – A double live album from 1976, at the height of Young’s acoustic
and Crazy Horse powers.
15.
Paul Simon, In
Blue Light – An odd but intriguing collection of lesser-known Simon songs
reinterpreted in very eclectic ways.
16.
A Star is Born OST
– This list usually avoids soundtracks, though projects like Once are exceptions. The original songs
here by Brad Cooper and Lady Gaga are too good not to mention.
17.
Ry Cooder, Prodigal
Son – Cooder digs up old blues favorites and makes them scary.
18.
Joan Baez, Whistle
Down the Wind – In what she says will be her last studio release, Baez
picks out some unique and wonderful songs that proves she still has an amazing
voice.
19.
Car Seat Headrest, Twin
Fantasy – While we wait for the next album of Will Toledo originals, here’s
a complete re-recording of one of his older Bandcamp classics.
20.
Dennis Quaid and The Sharks, Out of the Box – Sometimes movie stars shouldn’t attempt rockin’
covers. And sometimes it works pretty well. This is one of the latter
instances.
21.
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Live from the Ryman – Hey, it’s not as scripted as Springsteen on Broadway, and the energy
level is high, though it does seem too picture-perfect.
22.
Dirty Projectors,
Live at Elsewhere, Nov. 18, 2018 – Some exceptional songs, focusing on new
material from Lamp Lit Prose, delivered
in rousing fashion.
23.
The Residents, I
Am a Resident! – What a concept, The Residents remix recordings of fans
covering Residents songs. Snakes eat themselves, and so do eyeballs.
24.
Lords of the New Church (live disc) – On occasion of
the re-release of the Lords album, a live set is also offered for the first
time.
25.
Jeph Jerman, First
Second
26.
Jeph Jerman, Bray
Harp – Two ambient compositions from the leader in naturalist sounds and
improvisational noise.
27.
Peter Holsapple and Alex Chilton, The Death of Rock – The vocal “moderator” on this album can be
distracting, but the 1978 sessions bringing together a young Holsapple and
battle-tested Chilton are fascinating.
28.
John Wesley Harding, Greatest Other People’s Hits – One of the more unexpected and fun
releases from Record Store Day, this one has Harding dishing up odd covers.
29.
Terra Naomi, Secret
Songs – This is not the full studio album of new material promised, but a
suite of demos and unreleased goodies featuring material from the last couple
years.
30.
Coldplay, Live in
Buenos Aires – Make as much fun as you want, this one isn’t bad at all.
31.
Permanent Green Light, Hallucinations – Michael Quercio’s post-Three O’Clock project,
brought together in one CD and released for the first time.
32.
Big Star, Live at
Lafayette’s – A Big Star fanatic will say that this was an ideal set, and a
good example for why they were the band of the century. A lukewarm Big Star fan
will say that these guys were a very competent, yet very ordinary rock band.
33.
Maggie Roche, Where
Do I Come From? Selected Songs – This two-disc set is more than just a
best-of of Maggie’s work. There are unreleased solo songs, as well as rarities
from The Roches and Maggie and Suzzy Roche.
34.
Bruce Springsteen, Springsteen
On Broadway – Of course it’s essential, but it also feels as though Bruce
has relied too much on the epic romanticism passages from his memoir. Yes, this residency has been hard work, but there is little here about the formation of E
Street Band, and odd gaps in the stories chosen from his personal childhood.
Both the album and the Netflix film drag in places as a result.
35.
Bill Orcutt, My
Friends When I’m Not There – Orcutt released an LP re-release of a tape in
2018, as well as a compilation of singles, but this album is a completely new
live set. When you consider he also released an EP and a duo album with Chris
Corsano, it’s been quite a year for Bill.
36.
Nellie McKay, Sister
Orchid – I think it’s cool McKay wanted to record an album of jazz
standards after recording an album of strange psychedelic throwbacks, but when
will we get new songs from Nellie?
37.
Echo and the Bunnymen, Stars, Ocean, Moon – Kind of nice to hear orchestrated remixes of
the Bunnymen’s favorite songs, but there’s also a sense of midlife crisis here.
38.
Rage Against the Machine, Live in LA 2000 – A necessary and exciting document, but the Los
Angeles Democratic Convention of 2000 sure seems like a loooong time ago.
39.
Jorge Santana, Love
the Way – More than just a reissue or compilation, this is a suite of
unreleased and remixed material.
40.
VIbracathedral Orchestra, Club Oto, 2018 – Since the ensemble has stopped releasing new
material in the last couple years, the annual Club Oto outings are our one
chance each year to catch up with VCO.
Singles and EPs
1.
boygenius, s/t – Yes it’s overhyped, but the trio of
Julien Baker, Phoebe Bridgers, and Lucy Dacus have put out six songs that are
startlingly great.
2.
Edith Makes a Paper Chain, Hummingbird – Sarah Hope proves herself not just a great lyricist,
but a fine studio wizard in manipulating noises and found sound.
3.
Lake Street Dive, Freak
Yourself Out – The 10” companion to Free
Yourself Up, this little EP is a milestone in LSD fun.
4.
Lana Del Rey, Venice
Bitch/Mariners Apartment Complex – Two songs from the promised 2019 album Norman Fucking Rockwell show Lana
absolutely on top of her game.
5.
Grouper, Grid of
Points – No, it’s not an album, it’s a 20-minute minimalist piano study,
one of Liz Harris’s finer works.
6.
Esperanza Spalding, 12
Little Spells – Even though this work is longer than supposed “albums” from
Grouper and Jenny Hval, Spalding explicitly calls this work an EP. A dozen
short pieces on the body, and the mind’s reaction to the body, make this a far
cry from the grandeur of Spalding’s Emily’s
D+Evolution, and it also shows she’s always growing and changing.
7.
Azure Ray, Waves
– Maria and Orenda are back! My only gripe is that the flexi 7” release had
only two of the five songs available on the download. Physical first, streaming
last!
8.
Heather Maloney, Just
Enough Sun – This one has the feel of Lydia Loveless’s Boy Crazy: exceptional songs from Maloney’s 2017-18 tours that you
just might want to pick up in case they don’t find their way onto an album.
9.
Jenny Hval, The
Long Sleep – This extended single is one of the most normal, melodic things
Hval has ever done, and absolutely delightful.
10.
Nobody’s Girl, Waterline
– Three Kerrville folk-country veterans unite for a women’s power trio to
challenge the likes of I’m With Her, boygenius, and Pistol Annies.
11.
Public Practice, Distance
is a Mirror– A Brooklyn supergroup formed from members of Wall and Beverly.
Fun stuff.
12.
Chvrches, Hansa
Session EP – Five acoustic versions of tracks from Love Is Dead, very appealing in their delivery – and interesting to
hear an electronica-driven band go acoustic.
13.
Alien She, Feeler – Dublin’s women’s punk
collective makes its first assault on America. We surrender!
14.
Belly, Feel –
A fine companion to the reunion album Dove.
You can never have too much Tanya Donelly.
15.
Kevin Mitchell, Gray
Crown – It takes amazing guts to write a hip-hop EP about aging and
vulnerability, but then Mitchell has never been anything less than fearless.
16.
David Byrne, “The
Best Live Show of All Time” – A droll EP of the American Utopia tour, including
two Talking Heads tunes. Fun!
17.
Bill Orcutt, Neu
Bros and Rural Beatles – Almost an album in length, and indisputably weird.
18.
Courtney Barnett, City
Looks Pretty – Maybe the coolest 12” single of Record Store Day. A fine
teaser to the new album.
19.
Iron and Wine, Weed
Garden – A fine footnote to Sam Beam’s last album, actually some of the
best songs of that session.
20.
The Decemberists, Traveling
On -- Meloy and company often work
best in EP format, and this is a nice epilogue to this year’s album.
21.
Belle & Sebastian, How to Solve Our Human Problems, Parts 2 and 3 – It was a challenge
figuring out how to list these EPs, as the release of the trio split between
2017 and 2018. The concluding two discs were more Zen, bringing us to a deeper
understanding.
22.
Waxahatchee, Great
Thunder – A simple minimalist re-recording of some of Katie Crutchfield’s
oldest songs as Waxahatchee.
23.
Brian Eno and Kevin Shields, The Weight of History – Eno collaborates with My Bloody Valentine
members. Hope we get more releases from these sessions!
24.
Protomartyr, Consolation
– Sometimes the idea of a project sounds better than the project itself. An
alliance between Protomartyr and The Breeders should have clicked, but mostly
this EP was sorta OK, and the fault seemed to lie more with Joe than the Deal
sisters.
25.
First Aid Kit, You
Are the Problem Here – Not just an adjunct to the Ruins album, but a powerful single in its own right.
26.
The Mountain Goats, Hex
of Infinite Binding – An eclectic set of observations, but this is the only
new John Darnielle (not counting reissues) we got in 2018.
27.
Kacey Musgraves, High
Horse Remixes – This isn’t just cool for being a RSD Black Friday 10”
record, but because one of the weaker cuts on her new album was turned into a
dance floor anthem. It works.
28.
John C. Spengler, Workin’
On It – Wry and fascinating songs of Colorado life.
29.
Parlor Walls, EXO
– A band we all should pay more attention to.
30.
Guided by Voices, 100
Dougs
31.
Guided by Voices, Wine
Cork Stonehenge – The band has three solid 2019-2020 albums already in the
hopper, but these singles get demerited a bit for being $11-$13 retail for a
7-inch record. Pollard says, “If you don’t like it, don’t buy it,” but I think
more fans should just say no.
32.
Rich Jones, The
Shoulder You Lean On – Inventive Chicago R&B/hip-hop with elements of
pop.
33.
Ought, Four
Desires – Four cool remixes from the new Ought album, available only on
cassette!
34.
Flaming Lips, The
Story of Yum-Yum – Another crazy sci-fi fantasy from our Oklahoma crew,
timed to coincide with the release of a dedicated Dogfish Head Flaming Lips
brew.
35.
Glands of External Secretion, Backlit Colander – Seymour Glass and Barbara Manning are usually
inexplicable when they get together as Glands, and this is no exception. But
the fact of their existence is enough.
36.
Paul Sprawl, Signs
of Life – Strange guitar rumblings from deep in the Big Bend area of West
Texas.