Saturday, December 31, 2022

Melse 2022: Back in the Saddle

Well, there's no other way to put it: This was the best year musically for me since 2019.  Probably 5 albums here would've been my album of the year if they had come out in 2021.  Two years of real letdowns paid me back and then some.... here's the stuff:


First the honorable mentions:



Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever - Endless Rooms



The Black Keys  - Dropout Boogie



The Sheepdogs - Outta Sight



Flasher - Love Is Yours



Color Green - Color Green



Brendan Benson - Low Key



Peach Pit - From 2 to 3


The top 15:


15. Oso Oso - Sore Thumb


My first foray into true Emo, these guys sucked me in with their 2019 debut Basking in the Glow.  The amazing guitar work and the catchiness of the vocals are still here, however, due to the death of the founding lead guitar player, this album was left about 20% unfinished.  The songs on this release are still strong, yet I can tell they needed a final polishing that unfortunately never happened.  I will most definitely keep my eyes peeled for whatever frontman Jade Lilitri comes up with next.



14. Drugdealer - Hiding in Plain Sight


70’s R&B with a little yacht rock mixed in? Sign me up. 2019s Raw Honey was enjoyable but apparently not good enough for even an honorable mention on my 2019 list. This one is an easy listener all the way through and a significant improvement. So many catchy hooks and cool little instrumental parts. Multiple singer cameos keep it fresh. 




13. Death Cab For Cutie - Asphalt Meadows


Death Cab is a band that’s always been in my orbit, so to speak.  I can make a killer 15-track playlist of their best stuff that rivals any band IMO, but they’ve never really made one front-to-back unbelievable album.  2011’s Codes and Keys, and 2015 follow-up Kintsugi were as close as they got for me, but still not quite.  Thank You For Today came out in 2018 and was really lackluster - I thought they had lost it - but this offering is super good!  They seemed to regain their gusto and get back to what they’re best at, which is creating mid to uptempo pop rock with crazy infectious choruses.  This a very enjoyable album all the way and I’m glad they’re still going at it. 



12.  Toro Y Moi - Mahal


Genre bender supreme Chaz Bear is back with album #7. This is the first Toro album I’ve actually checked out front to back and I’m certainly glad I did. After cycling through his discography, it’s clear 2015’s What For? is the one that truly hits hard for me but Mahal is very, very good as well. Sort of an equal blend of psych, funk, pop, and rock with a little R&B mixed in.




11. Cold Jackets - Health Queen Squeeze


This is the sophomore effort from this Austin, TX duo. With James Petralli (of White Denim fame) on production, they’ve unlocked a new level. It’s mostly garage rock but it’s punky at times and they also aren’t afraid of a synth. Super catchy hooks and some nice little riffs throughout.




10. Band of Horses - Things are Great


This is one of those bands that has sort of been in my orbit for the better part of 10 years yet I never really dug into them.  I believe one of the fellas mentioned that this offering was very good and boy were they right.  It's beautifully written melodic indie rock in its purest form.  I never did go back and listen to anything from their back catalog, but from everything I’ve seen this is sort of a springboard back to an earlier (more successful) sound, similar to what I previously mentioned about Death Cab.




9.  Mamalarky - Pocket Fantasy


These folks are back for their sophomore offering after releasing their self-titled debut two years ago.  The formula still applies: some guitar-driven pop goodness, some trippy synthy stuff, and some beautiful female vocals laid over all of it.  I can’t get enough of it and I think it’s better than the debut - a feat not often accomplished.



8. Small Paul - Strangeland EP


A side project from our boys The Moondoggies, this is obviously in the same vein.  I think this little collection of tracks is better as a whole than the most recent Moondoggies stuff.  The lead singer’s voice is so fitting and excellent.  I have a long-established track record of including an EP in my year-end list and here I am again.  If this was a full-length album it would be an album of the year contender. 




7.  The Smile - A Light for Attracting Attention


If you asked me if Radiohead was an all-time level band for me I would quickly say no. However, they have 2 releases that are relatively high on my best 100 since ‘90 list and I recently read (and loved) a book about the making of Kid A, so perhaps I’m kidding myself.  The Smile is a 3 piece consisting of Thom Yorke and his main man Jonny Greenwood and a sort of jazz-funk blender of a drummer in Tom Skinner.  I’m not a musician so I’ll level with you:  this shit sounds like Radiohead to me.  I’m certain the reason Thom and Jonny spun off and did this has something to do with Skinner, but I don’t know what or why because my musical palate isn’t there.  No matter; these songs are killer and I love the energy and everything about it.  It’s the best Radiohead adjacent release in 15 years. 



6. RHCP - Return of the Dream Canteen


Surprise!  The boys released a companion album to Unlimited Love in a similar fashion to Radiohead with Kid A/Amnesiac.  This is most definitely not a collection of B-Sides, but another complete album that was intentionally created alongside UL.  I do believe that perhaps this album is better song-for-song, but I just cannot rank it as high as UL because UL came first.  I truly enjoyed every song on this album.  There is not a single skip track here; I can’t say that for UL. I just don’t have the same relationship with this batch of songs as I do with UL.




5.  Arctic Monkeys - The Car


When Tranquility came out I was at first in awe at the fact that it sounded like literally nothing I’d ever heard before.  Initially, I slept on it a little, landing it at #7 on my year-end list, but after repeated listens and a general understanding it’s since skyrocketed to my #45 favorite album since 1990.  It slowly grew on me and it became my favorite album to play late at night at work when the lights went down and folks finished their drinks.  The Car is a doubling down of sorts.  Alex Turner is going to do exactly what he wants to do and everybody else can fuck off, and I respect that at this stage of his career.  Although not a concept album like Tranquility, The Car is musically similar.  More crooning, more string arrangements, less guitar (if that was even possible).  I liked this album the first time I heard it.  I loved it after listen #10.  A true slow burner. 



4.  RHCP - Unlimited Love


The Chili Peppers were the very first band that I went absolutely ballistic over, sometime around 2002.  They were the coolest, most badass group of musicians I could’ve ever imagined, and their output matched their persona.  I watched the Funky Monks documentary and the live Off The Map concert film roughly a million times, and perhaps most importantly, enjoyed all of these things with a small group of friends that felt the exact same way.  At that time they had already released a significant portion of what is now considered their best stuff: Blood Sugar Sex Magik, Californication, and By The Way.  The 3 main John albums (at that point) were all very unique in nature and all represented the RHCP sound in different ways.  2006 brought what I’ve always felt was a coming together of sorts, Stadium Arcadium, which was a humongous 28-track double album that really crossed off every little thing that the Chili Peppers had ever been.  And it was just as good as the rest of the prime stuff.  Then John quit.


The Chili Peppers have never been universally lauded by the higher-brow music critics (the Grammys sure as shit don’t count) and that’s always bothered me.  The easy answer as to why is Anthony Kiedis, who delivers head-scratching lyrics by the fistful and can’t really sing to begin with.  Professional reviewers, in my opinion, routinely value lyrics over the melody to such an insane degree that it makes it hard to be taken seriously when your content is so filled with non-sequiturs and questionable, sometimes potentially offensive content.  If you listen to the Chili Peppers and just can’t get past Anthony, I don’t blame you in the least.  It takes a general acceptance of his bullshit to be all-in.  But he excels almost as well as anybody at putting the melody at the forefront.  His lyrics just fill holes in the song that goes along well with whatever else is happening.  Once you get to understand his goal, it all becomes clearer.  


Fast forward to Unlimited Love, the first album to feature Frusciante in 16 years.  Leading up to this moment I was so unbelievably worried that the magic was gone.  After all, 3/4 of the band is 60 years old.  The two Klinghoffer-era albums were fine but nowhere near peak.  Was that because of Josh or was that just because the window had closed? No band has ever put out anything truly elite at this stage, and the RHCP base sound is maybe the worst type to age well.  The 3 singles leading up had me totally and completely bummed.  And then the album dropped and it was everything I could’ve hoped for.  After a few listens I was ready to say it was almost as good as their best stuff.  I’ve since cooled off that opinion.  The severe Kiedis missteps are becoming more common, but the musicianship is exactly what it always was, John rips off so many vintage solos, Flea is Flea, Chad is Chad, the chemistry is there, the songs are there, and Anthony is very, very often not only tolerable but a real asset to the big picture.  This isn’t in the same rarified air as the “big 4” John albums, but it sits perfectly fine with me and I’m as excited as ever to see what comes next; it’s completely satisfying if you take into account how old they are and all that they’ve been through.    



3.  Andrew Bird - Inside Problems


Man, this one got its hooks into me really good.  Andrew is a violinist by trade, often playing it in an unorthodox manner like a guitar.  It’s weird in the best way.  He’s released roughly 10,324 albums but this is my first and only exposure to him.  His songwriting and singing here are unbelievable.  Despite the violin etc., this is at its core pop music.  He’s able to assemble his lyrics in such a smooth way syllabically that the choruses and verses just sort of flow right out (sort of in an Alex Turner circa AM way).  This album is in my opinion equal parts Father John Misty, Lou Reed, and Kevin Morby.  A real contender for album of the year all the way to the end.




2.  Spoon - Lucifer on the Sofa


I FINALLY was able to fully digest and appreciate Spoon this year. It started with the release of Lucifer and then trickled down to almost their whole discography. This one isn’t as good as Hot Thoughts or the masterpiece Transference, but it’s extremely good. 20 years into their career, it’s shocking to see that they can still put out albums with the following formula: 80% classic Spoon sound, 20% something new. This one is a straight-ahead rocker, something they haven’t really done before. The only thing keeping this out of my number-one spot is about 3 songs that I’m not 100% all in on. I’m quibbling; it’s an excellent album.



1.  Dawes - The Misadventures of Doomscroller


After only recently becoming a Dawes connoisseur, I was a bit worried about a new album considering the two most recent, 2018’s Passwords, and 2020’s Good Luck With Whatever did not blow my skirt up. There was a chance the best was behind them - a tale as old as time. Upon hearing the first single and then seeing that this bad boy is 6 songs and 46 minutes, my reaction was something along the lines of “yo yo yo wtf!”. I wouldn’t call this a blatant attempt at a jam album but that’s certainly what it sort of ends up being, with many little extended instrumental bridges and solos inserted snugly inside what otherwise are songs you’d expect to hear from these guys. I was concerned this was an attempt at a diversion from the fact that they had lost their magic and the songwriting was gone, but even with the “jammy” nature of them aside, these are unbelievably well-crafted vintage-era Taylor songs. Only “There’s a Joke In There Somewhere” doesn’t quite hit me 100%. But that’s just quibbling. The first 4 songs are so insanely good in every possible way I'm still in awe.  This is my album of the year. 

Saturday, September 10, 2022

Jake 2021 - Music Matters - Deadlines Don't

     It’s that time yet again - even though I’m insanely late. Music is such a wonderful thing. It’s incredible to find and share great music. It’s even better to love an album as much as a close music friend. Music brings people together who wouldn’t normally fit. It’s this gravitating force that draws us all in. When you find someone who has the same taste in music it’s something very special. It’s like finding your wife or husband. It’s extremely rare. When you find new music, you want to share everything with that person - every album and song you enjoy. You learn what the other person likes. What they don’t like. How to find that sweet spot of genre and connect it all together. A lot of my albums this year are from those people and it makes this list very special:



14. Wednesday - Twin Plagues

If you’re surprised this album made my list, so am I. Super heavy, dark, and emo album with a female lead singer. Yeaaah, not something I’ll go seek out very often. Imagine if the lead singer from Snail Mail joined Taking Back Sunday - hahaha okay maybe not that intense but…kind of. Sometimes we stumble into weird times in our lives where albums just hit you at the right moment. Maybe it’s the passion you can feel from the songs or the intensity of the music or the distorted guitar - probably that. Either way, I liked this album but it’s not for everyone.


Top Songs:

Gary’s

Birthday Song

Cliff



13. Francis Lung - Miracle

Another ultra-talented solo artist. Francis played every instrument on the album and even produced the record. That’s super impressive. A combination of unique, distorted guitar solos, slow, sad songs, and heavy drums with upbeat keys and depressing lyrics. This might be a me problem, but I always seem to gravitate towards depressing lyrics/artists - oh well. This was an album I really liked a lot at first but I really need to be in the right mood. It would have been significantly higher on my list earlier in the year. Good album overall but not an album I can listen to all of the time.


Top Songs:

Uncommon

Don’t Call Me Baby

Miracle



12. Houndmouth - Good For You

My wife really loves this album. I love it because she loves it but it really is fantastic - especially after their last dud of an album. I love the passion behind an album. Just truly opening yourself up and letting go of how you feel - Tonight’s the Night is the best example of that. I find myself attempting to sing almost every song. Thankfully, they went back to their southern rock days with great vocals and some really solid guitar solos. I’m hoping this album shows what’s come from this band. 


Top Songs:

McKenzie

Make It To Midnight

Ride or Die

Ohio



11. Bull - Discover Effortless Living

Penny and I rocked out to this album every day I picked her up from daycare in the boiling Arizona summer. Killer guitar solos and consistent drums are all I need - I don’t care about vocals as much as I used to. This album would be higher on my list had I not seen a live performance by the band. Does that make me vain? Probably, but this is my album list. Great studio band. Poor live band. Would rank higher had they sounded semi-similar when seeing them live. Night and day between their performances but I still really liked the album.


Top Songs:

Shiny Bowl

Perfect Teeth

Serious Baby



10. The Berries - Throne of Ivory

Ahh, man. This album did the opposite approach I think artists should take (which is advice no artist should take) - release your worst songs as singles and save the best songs for the album release. I loved every single The Berries released. When the album came out, the remaining songs were the opposite of every single. What the fuck?! They were super slow, had no guitar solo, and sounded the same. Once I calmed down and really listened to the album again and again and several more times and accounted for the fact that almost half (5 of 12) of their singles were on the album, I started to enjoy the change of pace songs. I like the album a lot but still think it left a bit to be desired. I’m hopeful they’ll get back to their ripping guitar solo days.


Top Songs:

Mantra of Strength

Sci-Fi Racer

A Hymn That Only I Know



9. Israel Nash - Topaz

I’ll never forget the first time I heard this album. I was driving around in a silver Chevy van through Yosemite National Park looking up at the enormous granite walls and just being taken back by the views and the incredible music. Sometimes music transports us back in time to a place we really enjoy. That’s how I feel with this album. As soon as I play "Dividing Lines" I’m back in California - it makes me feel like a kid. Like almost every other album on this list, it’s layered with instruments - and has a heavy focus on guitar solos :). The harmonica is stellar, with a shit ton of horns, and a dreamy feel to every song. This is one of my favorite albums of the year.


Top songs:

Down in the Country

Dividing Lines

Indiana



8. Liam Kazar - Due North

Nothing quite like finding an album in the last few months of the year that’s just right for your music taste. I love the funkiness of this record. It’s super upbeat with a distorted guitar, endless keys, and harmonies galore - not surprising based on the fact that the album was produced by Sam Evian. Now it all makes sense. If you enjoy an album that will make you get up and dance, this album is for you. I listened to this album during the brutal winter months in NY imagining myself sitting on my porch in the summer. Great albums can do that to you. It’s amazing how much a setting impacts the effect an album has on you. The more I listen to this album, the more I like it.


Top Songs:

On a Spanish Dune

So Long Tomorrow

Give My World

Shoes Too tight



7. Hiss Golden Messenger - Quietly Blowing It

This album took me 10+ tries before I really started to love it and now, I can’t stop listening. When JT highly recommends an album I will force myself to endlessly listen to it until I like it - mostly because I know he’s right. I’ll like the album eventually. The only thing I don’t know is how long will it take - sometimes it takes months, and sometimes, it takes years. Thankfully this album only took a few months :). It’s a really happy, upbeat album - much different from a lot of the albums on my list. Am I okay? Who knows. Anyway, I’ve enjoyed this album so much, I’ve shared it with several people outside my music circle and they’ve liked it - including my wife. It’s country, it’s funky, has a bit of a Lenny Kravitz vibe - "Mighty Dollar" has great guitar - slide, electric, and acoustic. It’s an album I really enjoy and will continue to enjoy.


Top Songs:

Way back in the Way Back

Hardlytown

Quietly Blowing it



6. The War On Drugs - I Don’t Live Here Anymore

The War on Drugs are becoming the LeBron James of alternative rock - they put out such great albums consistently that they don’t make a huge impact because that’s just normal. This is the case yet again. I almost overlooked this album. It’s like every album they put out - it’s fucking fantastic. I have no complaints about the album - besides maybe the Paula Cole cover/song (I Don’t Wanna Wait)? Not sure what that’s about but I enjoyed it. The album has guitar solos. It has harmonies. It has the keys. The real question is, what’s next? Does this incredible pace of great album after album continue endlessly or do they go on a different route and try something new? All I know is that I love everything they’re doing.


Top Songs:

Harmonia’s Dream

Change

Living Proof



5. Sam Evian - Never Know

I’m a sucker for Sam Evian. He could put out an album where the drums are replaced with a constant fart and I would love it. This album is similar to his previous records but the vocals are more distorted and engineered. He has that same incredible guitar tone - similar to J Masics - where I can recognize it's him very quickly. Loads of piano and keys, horns, harmonies, strings, guitars, and it makes me really happy. No real standout songs because the whole album feels like one long song. That helps create a great flowing album.


Top Songs:

Dream Free

Time to Melt

Freeze Pops



4. Rosali - Bones

This album is what I wish Julia Jacklin would do more - more guitar please and thank you. Love the pace of this album with the dreamy, low-key vocals. Put in the heavy, upbeat drums and add in Neil-esque guitar solos and you have one hell of an album. Wish there more songs like "Pour over Ice" but maybe that’s like saying, “I wish every song was perfect.” This was another solid album in a year of very solid albums.

Top Songs:

Pour over Ice

Bones

Whisper



3. Strand of Oaks - In Heaven

Another artist who I feel like just puts out incredible music consistently - and I just love consistency. You definitely need to push yourself as an artist to become better, but Strand of Oaks should just keep it right here. Absolutely loved Easerland and I think In Heaven is a better album - mostly because it’s slightly more positive and upbeat. Booming guitar solos and vocals. Awesome harmonies. A solid album where I liked every song but nothing really outstanding - which is fine for me. Something I could listen to no matter my mood or place.


Top Songs:

Hurry

Jimi & Stan

Galacticana



2. Dinosaur Jr. - Sweep Into Space

If you told me 3 years ago that Dinosaur Jr. would be close to the top of this list I would have laughed in your face. I don’t know how to describe the feelings I had towards J Masics and Dino Jr. early on. It was mostly confusion at first as to how someone could enjoy this in any way or if people were just saying they loved Dino Jr. because it made them sound edgy. Then it became an understanding of why people enjoyed Dino Jr. - they’re clearly all very talented musicians - but It was still not for me in any way. I mean, not even remotely close to enjoyable. Then, I was recommended Elastic Days by JT - who hadn’t given up hope after several years. Not sure what happened but it all clicked. I finally understood it. If you can just take the vocals for what they are, you’ll really experience one of the greatest musicians of our time. Now I actually enjoy his vocals! Still, after all, I hadn’t listened to any Dino Jr. until this album. I think it took me so long to listen to Dino Jr. because I was worried it would take me a decade based on how long it took me to like J Mascis. I’m happy to say, this album did it. Not sure if Kurt Vile toned this album down but fuck, but I love it. The combination of heavy drumming and pace, J Mascis's unbelievable guitar solos and tone, and his underrated vocals made this one of the best albums of 2021. Not to mention, my Daughter - Penny - loves this album which makes it that much better, “Do you want to listen to J Mascis??” - “Uh huh!”. 


Top Songs:

Walking To You

To Be Waiting

I Expect Always

Take it Back



1. Cory Hanson - Pale Horse Rider

Combination of Thom Yorke and Neil Young? Yeah, I’m fucking interested. Okay, it’s obviously not at their level but it’s a cool combination of Thom Yorke’s vocals - and sometimes Neil - with some Neil guitar solos. I absolutely love this album. Even the weird, instrumental interludes. I first listened to this album while driving around Death Valley National Park and hiking through the Star Wars filmed mountains there. It’s a beautiful album. A ton of slide guitar - on almost every song. A ton of Thom Yorke-sounding vocals - listen to "Bird of Paradise" and tell me that’s not Thom Yorke. Amazing guitar tones and solos. It has everything I need in an album. It’s a little bit slower than most of my albums on this list but just listen to "Another Story from the Center of the Earth" and you’ll understand why it sits at number 1 on my list.


Top Songs:

Another Story From the Center of the Earth

Limited Hangout

Paper Fog

Bird of Paradise