10. Jessie Ware – Devotion I don’t think anyone really expected this album to actually be as good as it is, and to have the crossover appeal that it has. Jessie Ware showed flashes of brilliance and something-more-than-pop over the last couple of years with a few singles, and appearances with SBTRKT and Joker, but on “Devotion” she straight up comes out the gate a more urban Sade, a more radio friendly and pleasurable Annie Lennox, a more sophisticated “insert r&b diva here”. With help by up and coming super producers like Julio Bashmore and David Okumu, there is this sense of contemporary Britain, with a constant eye to the past. It can be club music, but it’s really drinking wine at night music. Not every song is a perfect 10 or even an example of absolutely brilliant pop music, but there is enough strength here and enough cohesion as an album, that it works better that way, something that few pop albums can say. And man, this summer when NBC played “Wildest Moments” during a women’s gymnastics montage, like, everything was just right in the world. It may be my most perfect synchronous musical moment of the year, all triumph and grandeur. You have to have a foot in liking some of Britains 1980s sophisti-pop or modern r&b to really dig this, but you should give it a chance anyway. It signals a new direction in the already booming and constantly evolving alternative r&b scene. She deserves the accolades, we deserve this album. And apparently some collaboration with Beyonce is in the works. Yeah, that’s going to be really good.
9. Bahamas – Barchords This was love at first listen. And it makes sense, really. “Barchords”, Bahamas sophomore album reminds me of a simpler time in my life. Discovering singer/songwriter after singer/songwriter. Writing songs with catchy hooks and clever lyrics that I could sing along to. Music to put on when nothing else sounded good. Yeah, it’s a little Jack Johnson-y at times, but in a way – that’s why I like it so much. I think the first two songs “Lost in the Light” and “Caught me Thinkin” are two of the very best songs of the year, bring to mind the great summer I had, the rebirth as a “new person” and pursuing some things I’ve wanted to do for years. Jangly guitars, whispered, almost lazy vocals, the occasional huge chorus, the album is just a huge, good time and is done in a way that isn’t so simple that it’s as if we’re listening to Donavan Frankenreiter, but it isn’t far off. A lot of the record works because of the general feel, and it’s a good, good feeling. I know a lot of people who thought this record was just schlep, simplistic stuff – but I can’t help to enjoy it. One of my single most listened to records of the year, and the one that maybe brought more smiles to my face and those around me, than any other.
8. Japandroids – Celebration Rock Play it loud as hell, grab a beer – not some fancy microbrew. Clear out all expensive furniture or things currently close to you and just proceed to pump your fist and scream. Yeah, I like anthemic rock and “Celebration Rock” by Japandroids is one hell of a celebration. Stadium rock for the bearded, hoodie-wearing, Springsteen obsessed youth. It’s almost as good as Titus Andronicus’ “The Monitor” (probably my favorite rock album of the last many years), without all the super-literate lyrics. It’s bar music, party with your friends music, and it just fuckin rocks. I didn’t really care about the first Japandroids album, and though this is all pretty similar to their first one, I think they go bigger here, the choruses are bigger, the guitar is louder, the drums hit more fiercely, and something about the songs just works. They hit all the notes I want them to hit, even have choruses that just consist of “oh yeah, all right!” I can’t make out all the words and it doesn’t matter, because I’m too busy thrashing my head around and stomping my feet or playing drums to even notice. I can make sounds that approximate the lyrics, and it doesn’t matter because in my mind, I’m drunk and instead of drowning in my sorrows like usual, I’m living the dream.
7. Barna Howard – Barna Howard A dude and his guitar. That’s all this record is. It sounds like a 1970′s British Folk record, without all the British-isms, and with the warmth of modern recording – meaning it sounds like it was recorded in some small building or bedroom. You can hear the echoes, almost feel Barna’s feet slowly keeping time, his fingers brushing the frets, it’s an intimate album to be sure, a simple record, and one of the most compelling straight up singer/songwriter/folk records I’ve heard in years. I don’t know much about this guy, where he came from or how I came upon this record back in like March, but it’s stuck with me maybe more than any other record of 2012, always in constant play – perfect for rainy days, perfect for night time, it somehow even works in the car, if you have people to distract you from falling asleep. “I’ll Let You Pick A Window”, “Promise, I Won’t Laugh” and “Turns Around The Bottle” are three of my very favorite songs of the year, with “Promise..” being the single song this year that made me want to reinvest in an acoustic guitar and finally start learning to play after many failed half-assed attempts. Sometimes simplicity wins out, and Barna masters that here on his first record. Really beautiful stuff.
6. Turnpike Troubadours – Goodbye Normal Street Of all the albums in the top 20, “Goodbye Normal Street” is the one I’ve spent the least amount of time with, but is quickly becoming the one in which I’ve listened to the most. I first heard this album Thanksgiving weekend, thought it was pretty good, played it again and said “well, my list is suddenly going to have a lot more country music on it this year.” Saw them live the first week of December with Corb Lund, blew my mind, and have made this almost a daily listen since. I have no doubt that if I would have had this record a little bit earlier in the year, it would be in the top 3 albums of the year, but for now – it sits perfect where it is, as my likely favorite “country” record of the year. I’d heard the Troubadours once before, the song “Diamonds & Gasoline” but hadn’t really explored further, but when I started seeing this album pop up on some lists about the best things this year, I checked it out. Yeah, I’m hooked. It has the perfect blend of Texas country and Oklahoma grit, with a band that is equally able to write really rocking, angry songs as they are at writing more depressing, weepy ballads. You can get banjo strings AND electric guitar and it all works well. It’s “alternative country” to be sure, but it jumps around genres and sounds enough that it can appeal to traditionalists and those that hate tradition. One of the most addicting records I’ve heard this year, and one that will definitely stick with me long into the future.
5. Punch Brothers – Who’s Feeling Young Now? I remember back in 2008 when Nonesuch Records announced that they were releasing an album from Chris Thile’s new project; The Punch Brothers. It sounded like what was going to be the best thing ever. I was coming off my Avett Brothers obsession, ready for some reinvigorating, intelligent, whacked-out musicianship from Thile, but I was left feeling cold. It was interesting and so was their follow-up, but it took until “Who’s Feeling Young Now?” to really get the reaction I’d been waiting for, because this in an incredible album. I’d seen the band live a handful of times over the years, and they always impress and are truly some of the best, most musically interesting and capable acoustic musicians that I’m aware of, blending country and folk and bluegrass with classical and jazz and all that, a lot like Bela Fleck and the 1970s scene, but there’s a certain coolness that Thile & Co. have that other modern “new-acoustic” acts don’t really possess. And it’s not just because there is always some indie rock cover floating around (hell, he covered Pavement back with Nickel Creek), but there is just something cool going on here. It really has this jazzy feeling, but I think more than their previous two records, this one focuses a little more on the songs themselves than what they can show off with their instruments. There are songs you want to sing along to here, that will get stuck in your head, and they’re still complex arrangements. It’s a really impressive record and probably the strongest of Thile’s career, which says a lot. Beautiful, engaging, fun and boundary-pushing.
4. Old Crow Medicine Show – Carry Me Back I was ready to write Old Crow off. 2008′s “Tennessee Pusher” was not the record I wanted from them. Slower, more country than string-band. It was like almost an attempt at capitalizing on the Drive-By Truckers ascension, but I’d seen them live a couple times and they still had that energy that made them the heroes of the string band scene. But when “Carry Me Back” came out, I kind of batted my eyes at it, put it off, didn’t care a lot. Then I played it and the opening title track. Yeah, that’s what Old Crow is all about. Fast as hell, super fun to sing along with, string band music on crank. And it continues. It’s probably their most raucous record yet, which goes in their favor, and it might have some of their strongest songwriting. Great songs that sound like traditional folk tunes (“We Don’t Grow Tobacco”) and also songs trying to rewrite the anthemic campfire favorite “Wagon Wheel” (with “Ain’t It Enough?”). It’s easily the most fun record of the year for me, was a blast to have playing constantly in the house this fall with my Virginian roommate, and is just something I can’t seem to get sick of. It’s everything I love about string band music, the whole thing just sounds like a party. I mean, try to listen to “Mississippi Saturday Night” and not wish you were there, watching this happen. Working outdoors, chopping wood, taking kids and adults on mountain hikes, doing all this stuff I’ve been doing this year, this record couldn’t have come out at a more perfect time for me.
3. Ana Tijoux – La Bala For the majority of the year, I thought that this record was going to be my number 1 album of the year. Nothing encapsulates my obsession and love for modern Latin music more than Ana Tijoux’s “La Bala”. Nothing that I’ve heard is as perfect a blend of American musical trends with everything that makes the various styles of Latin music and politics unique. For Ana, we’re talking specifically Chilean, but the album itself acts at this huge diaspora of different Latin and Spanish-speaking cultures. But how can a HIP HOP album performed entirely in Spanish rank so highly with me? First of all – the sonics. The production on this record really cuts to what I love, it’s in your face and fits her delivery perfectly. Second – her delivery. I remember hearing Control Machete years ago and Calle 13 a few years ago and other Spanish-speaking rap acts, but no one showed me how perfectly suited the language is for rap like she has. It makes English pale in comparison. Third – what the album stands for, what it speaks to (politically), how authentic she is as a human, and what I’ve been able to translate. It is a political album, a lot of it (“Shock” specifically) about the political unrest and student movements in Chile, but there’s more – and I urge you, if you have any desire to listen to this album and want to get a fuller picture, look up recent interviews or album dissections or go see her live. She’ll talk, and you’ll fall under her spell. She’s a queen in the hip hop world, no matter the language, and this is a masterpiece of an album, whether or not I understand all or ANY of the words. Her voice is another instrument, played perfectly.
2. Kendrick Lamar – Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City How do you talk about the most talked about rap album of the decade? Kendrick Lamar delivered on every glimpse of promise and expectation we put on him and put out the first genuine, undisputed hip hop classic in a long time. Honestly, a classic. I’m talking like golden age classic, I’m talking universally loved. This album did that. And it sounds unlike anything that ever came before it. It’s deeply personal, to the point where it’s basically Kendrick walking us through his life at age 19, rolling through Compton, picking up a girl, peer pressure, everything. It flows like the best movie biopic you’ve seen, and it’s just insanely good. If you haven’t heard this record by now, I can’t help you. And I honestly don’t feel like I can write anything about it that hasn’t already been said many more times, with much better writing. Use google, there’s lots and lots about this. You need it. Oh and I fully endorse the Complex Magazine album walk through, it really helps illuminate where Kendrick is coming from with every track.
1. Miguel – Kaleidoscope Dream I was already obsessing over Miguel’s three “Art Dealer Chic” EPs when he released the “Kaleidoscope Dream: Water Preview”, a 3-track sampler that featured a more filled out “Adorn” (song of the year), and two tracks that were vastly different than his past work and I was unsure about. But when “Don’t Look Back” – which essentially sounds like a modern rock song with a r&b tinge, suddenly morphs into a funky, minimal, almost cold-sounding rendition of “Time of the Season” by the Zombies, yeah – I knew Miguel was in the process of making something that was really going to resound with me. And when I saw on the internet one day this fall that it leaked, I ran up a nearby mountain that night – the only place within a few miles I can get cell phone service and downloaded, downloaded, downloaded (and bought the LP). The next day, I finally got to listen to it, outside with friends, earphones in and it made me extremely anti-social. I was engrossed, it was the best album I’d heard in a long time and after that first listen, it was going to be hard for anything to top this list. Let’s be frank though, prior to 2012, I had no experience with Miguel. I didn’t really care about “All I Want Is You” and think that “Lotus Flower Bomb” is one of the more forgettable tracks on Wale’s album. I was late to the “Art Dealer Chic” party, but from the first time I heard “Adorn”…well…it’s the number one played song of all time on my itunes and has received well over double the plays on my Ipod before it died, on my phone currently, and had been my wake up alarm since July, until last week when I changed it to the title track. It’s an album mostly about sex, about the insecurities of it, about drugs, the fun of them. Misogynistic in places, unbearably sweet in others. I think it ranks up there with the very best of all r&b albums, if not at the very top. And what’s more, since the release of the album and subsequent touring, Miguel has proved to people all around as a true “artist”, not just a dude who sounds good in the studio. He’s done acoustic renditions for NPR, completely different versions of these songs live, dresses snappy as hell, and blows away everyone who has seen him live. It’s my favorite album of the year, with nothing even close.
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