Tuesday, January 9, 2024

2023: Top 5 New Albums

Here we are with my annual tradition of top-5 albums.

A reminder about methodology: Top 5 albums were released in 2022 or 2023 (I sometimes don't buy music fast enough, OK?) . Then I rank 5 best new-to-me albums I encountered in the past year, and 5 miscellaneous songs that don't fit in the first two top-5 lists.

5. Built to Spill - When the Wind Forgets Your Name

Sub Pop, 09/2022

This was heavily promoted when it came out. I saw targeted facebook ads, silly youtube spots, etc. It's Built to Spill's 12th-ish album. Took me a bit to pick it up (I'd say the cover art is a bit off-putting). It's ... okay. It's the okayest Built to Spill album. They haven't made a bad album (although I don't really dig their Daniel Johnston collab too much). It's just that lately, every album seems a bit... less. 

In the mid-2000s, Built to Spill had settled into a stable 5-piece lineup: Martsch/Roth/Nelson/Netson/Plouf. Their live shows sounded fantastic. Live versions of old songs seemed perfect. Doug Martsch teased that the 5 of them had written songs as a group and they were great, but they were working through Doug Martsch solo compositions, and the next album would be a group effort. Then, the next one wasn't (more old songs), but the next one... and these songs never materialized. (I also remember similar rumors in the early 2000s about a 4th Halo Benders album. 

Then, lineup changes, pandemic, politics... and only Doug remains. I have a friend who insists the new 3-piece lineup of Built to Spill is the tightest, best yet. I skipped the show, so I couldn't say.

I will say that an OK Built to Spill album beats out some other bands at their peak. That's the amount of love I have for Built to Spill. (And I always think Idahoans, not Koreans, when someone mentions BTS.)

 

 

4. Brainiac - The Predator Nominate EP

 

Touch and Go Records, 05/2022

Tim Taylor died in 1997, leaving behind a band that was so far ahead of its time, we could dig up a cassette demo 25 years later and it would sound fresh. This is not peak Brainiac, it's about 8 not-fleshed-out song ideas, but it's great. For a while there, the Brainiac documentary was free to watch on Youtube. Sadly, no longer, although you may have luck on Tubi or Pluto for free.




3. Eyelids - A Colossal Waste of Light

 

Jealous Butcher Records, 03/2023


Portland's own Eyelids are on a hot streak. All their music is fantastic. Their live shows rip. They collaborate with everyone across the indie world (This album has Peter Buck from R.E.M. recording and playing on it). I can't say enough great things about Eyelids. They've shown up in this list before.

Why is this album not #1? Maybe because they set such a high bar with their previous albums? Maybe because two of the best songs on this album were released on a 7" a year before, so I'm less excited about them? I don't know. Prediction for 2023, though: their 2-LP singles collection "No Jigsaw" is due out in March, and I bet it's tops.




2. Casey Neill and the Norway Rats - Sending Up Flares

Fluff and Gravy Records, 09/2023

Casey Neill apparently started his career playing irish folk music. Any stray into indie pop was purely coincidental. Now, Casey Neill is a veteran, has an established combo filled with talented Portlanders (including a Decemberist), and makes world weary, Springsteenian (is that a word?) catchy musical stories about interesting characters. This is a solid album and good listen start to finish. My only complaint is that it doesn't have "Siphoners" on it, which has been stuck in my head since 2018.



1. The Van Pelt - Artisans and Merchants

 

La Castanya Records, 03/2023

WARNING: not as good as The Van Pelt's two classic 1990s albums. Somehow, those two albums have remained timeless. "Talk Rock" still sounds as vital in the 2020s as it did back then.

BUT... this is still pretty cool stuff from those same kids, now very much adults. There's some fun 90s reminiscence underpinning "Punk House" and "Grid", and there's something so catchy about shouting "Incredible Kegstands!" along with the music. But there's also some growth. Several songs ("We Gotta Leave", "Love Is Brutal") shed the talk-rock entirely for mellow, lightly-sung, less high-strung narrative. And it's great. take a listen.

Monday, January 8, 2024

2023: Top 5 New Discoveries

(5 favorite albums from 2021 or prior that I discovered this year)

5. Sugar - Copper Blue

Rykodisc, 09/1992

2023: The year Alex re-discovers the 90s! No, I remember reading about Copper Blue when it came out in some magazine or other (Probably Spin. Let's call it Spin.), but in the 90s, you couldn't just hear the music you wanted to, particularly if US radio refused to play it. This was 1992 album of the year for the N.M.E. in England. Anyway, I saw this CD's bluish case in the record store a time or two, but never shelled out the $$ to hear it. I wish I had. This is top-notch 90s pop. Maybe not as anthemic as Husker Du's "New Day Rising", but smoother and more radio friendly. Which again, makes me wonder why they didn't play this on the radio.

 

4. Smashing Pumpkins - Adore

   

Virgin Records, 06/1998

OK don't kill me. For some unusual personal circumstances, I had never heard this album until 2023. Pre-Adore, I was a Smashing Pumpkins fan. I didn't pony up the insane amount for "The Aeroplane Flies High", but if you have a friend who does, skip Pistachio Medley and the A-sides, it makes an insanely good 100-minute cassette.

I have even heard Ava Adore on the radio, but for reasons, I didn't get Adore when it was released. Soon, the general opinion was that it was OK, not great, and the world moved on from Smashing Pumpkins. Billy Corgan slowly morphed into Uncle Fester, and eventually broke up the band.

...And a few years later, I heard "Zeitgeist" when it came out, and that was bad; so I just never felt the need to revisit Adore.

Turns out, it's a pretty good album. I also heard Machina for the first time this year. It's a good-but-not-quite-great album. Maybe 2024 will bring Machina II and Judas Ø to my ears. who knows?



3. The Breeders - All Nerve

   

4AD Records, 03/2018

Good morning!

More 90s. Yay for the Breeders. Everything the Breeders do sounds good, but one of the problems with their later-period albums was that most of the songs sounded like half-a-song-idea that wasn't really fleshed out. This album fixes that. These are good songs that deserve to be spun alongside Last Splash and Safari and Pod.



2. The Cranberries - Something Else

 

BMG, 03/2017

An irish band, rereleasing mellower versions of their old catalog. Sound familiar? It could be argued that this record, which came out in 2017, was the Cranberries running out of ideas. It's 10 chamber-pop rerecordings of songs from their first 4 albums plus 3 new chamber-pop songs that fit right in. In hindsight, given the problems that Dolores O'Riordan was having, it's a miracle we get to hear these anyway. I find myself a bit saddened with the realization that I will never get to see the Cranberries live. 

So why is this album so good, and U2's Songs of Surrender so bad? (trust me, it's not good) For one, personal taste. Also, Dolores and the Cranberries seem genuinely into these versions. The songs are road-worn and comfortable. The new songs fit in pretty well, and the string section floats effortlessly through the whole thing. There was love and care and effort in the recording. The U2 project was mostly the Edge during the pandemic, going stir-crazy and recording mellow keyboard versions of songs that didn't need reinventing, with little input from the rest of the band.

Anyway, if you're a Cranberries fan, check this album out. It's growing on me each time I listen to it.



  1. Shellac - The End of Radio

 

Touch and Go Records, 06/2019

Radio One! Play the drums!

 A 12-track, 2-LP collection of two Peel Sessions Shellac did in 1994 and 2004. These have been floating around for some time (particularly the 1994 session), but in this format, they sound FANTASTIC. Shellac has always been about good sound, and in some ways, their music sounds like what the platonic ideal of what rock and roll guitar, bass, drums, and vocals should sound like. A bit dirty, a bit angry, but perfect.

This record encompasses all there is to love about Shellac. This is now Shellac's best album. These songs sound fantastic. Live, they stretch out and breathe. Sure, you could argue with the tracklisting. We don't need Canada twice. It really could use Copper and Wingwalker (and Didn't We Deserve, if you like punishment). But this record is perfect sound. Hear it on LP. It's stunning.

(buy on LP from Touch and Go Records here)

2023: Top 5 Miscellaneous Songs

 (The best five songs not on the other two lists. Either new in 2023, or new to me.)

5. Royal Blood - Boilermaker


from "Typhoons"

Warner, 04/2021

I was dragged to a Royal Blood show and had a great time. I didn't really know this band beforehand, but I'll be paying closer attention now. Recommended if you like your stripes white, your keys black, and your duo-jets flat.

 

4. Jason Isbell - Death Wish

 

From "Weathervanes"
Southeastern Records, 06/2023

Less capital-C Country, and more ... uhh.. Springsteenian (there's that word again!) storytelling from mister Isbell. I'm assuming that by 2023 almost everybody knows who Jason Isbell is. He seems like a champion of the downtrodden and underrepresented in real life, too... which makes him cooler than 30-50 feral hogs in my book.



3. They Might Be Giants - Alphabet of Nations [Extended Version]

 

From the deluxe edition (only) of "No!"
Idlewild Recordings 6/2012

I didn't think this song had a chance against the other good songs in this list... until I played it loud. These guys are REALLY selling it. They're into it. just listen. Technically, this is a re-recording, as the song also appears (in a shorter, more muted version) on 2004's "Here Come the ABCs", but John and John are so EXUBERANT! Really singing the hell out of this one. They sound excited about Oman and Pakistan, and, heck. Maybe they're right. We should all be so excited. I think my next vacation will be to West Xylophone.



2. Jimmy Eat World - Firestarter

From the "Last Christmas" 7"
Better Looking Records, 12/2001

Recorded in the Bleed American sessions, yes, it's THAT Firestarter. In hindsight, this doesn't seem long enough after The Prodigy came out for a cover. I don't have enough of the original song in my head-- It's just that creepy-eyed english bloke with the bad haircut shouting "Twisted Firestarter" and some keyboard sound effects, and the dude brushing the bugs out of his hair:

Yeah, that's it. 


Anyway, this is a cool cover, because it sounds like peak Jimmy Eat World. And I love whatever noise/drone is going on in the background. Adds to the tension of the song.



  1. Landing - Awake

From the Awake / Gravitational X Digital Single

Vast Arc Hues, 10/2023

A one-off single from Landing late in the year, and one of the catchiest songs they've ever written. This one just hits all the right notes for me. I don't know if it works for anybody else, but this I dig. It conjures sunshine, driving with the windows down, and this drifting out of the car windows.