My Best of 2013 List (15-11)

best of 2013 -- jamie.jpg

15. Purple Snow: Forecasting the Minneapolis Sound by Various Artists

Purple Snow proves that Minneapolis knew how to make a record long before The Replacements and Husker Du.  It is a sprawling two-disc, two-hour funk/soul collection that shows what the Twin Cities was up to between the departure of Bob Dylan and the debut of Prince.  Well, that's not necessarily true, because Prince does appear on record here.  Purple Snow begins with a Prince Nelson contribution.  It was 1975 and he wasn't even old enough to buy a pack of smokes.  But there he was, age 17, and sitting in a session in his cousin Pepe's band 94 East as a rhythm guitarist on "If You See Me".  And damn was he great! It's a fantastic track and Purple Snow packs many that are just as good.  

There are terrific rare tracks by R&B legends like Alexander O'Neal, but like many "various artist" compilations that have come before it, this collection showcases great tracks from mostly unknown artists.  The results are extraordinary.   In particular, the contributions from The Lewis Connection and Ronnie Robbins are very strong.  But, the real treats come from Mind & Matter which showcases a young James "Jimmy Jam" Harris—who would later form a legendary hit-making songwriting team with Terry Lewis, whose compositions can also be heard in a couple places throughout this album. There are easily 20 stand-out cuts in this 30 song compilation.  For those that like their funk and soul both tasty and historic, Purple Snow is highly recommended. 

14. Once I Was An Eagle by Laura Marling

Once I Was An Eagle is an intimate combination of Laura Marling's droning, sensitive—and slightly percussive—acoustic guitars, hauntingly beautiful vocals straight-out-of-a-diary lyrics and an absolutely focused vision.  And, these days, an album like this is quite refreshing—and thank God it has found an audience that appreciates it.  The four song suite that seamlessly opens the album indicates that this 63-minute LP is a body of work, which Marling effortlessly rehearsed, calculated and probably wrote in a few inspired, all-nighter songwriting sessions.  It's not quite spellbinding, but it is very listenable.  If you're a "lyric guy or gal" there is a lot—and I mean a lot—to love over repeated listenings. 

At 23 years old, the singer/songstress has received plenty of comparisons to Joni Mitchell.  Why?  Because she's a girl who sings well and feels at home playing her acoustic guitar in alternate tunings?  Is it because, like Joni, she's blue? The comparison is understandable—especially because Marling's voice has a Joni Mitchell-like cadence—but it's not really accurate.  In truth, L.M.'s idiosyncratic songwriting is much closer to that of N.D.—Nick Drake.  There's nothing on Once I Was An Eagle  that is so melodically complex and immediately compelling like the songs on Court And Spark or Blue.  But there are a bunch of moving, mini Pink Moon-like masterpieces.  There's also a gorgeous, dissonant "Interlude"—a very smart inclusion by the way—that has Jack Nietsche written all over it.  It's a cool, early 70s incorporation.

If the brilliant Laura Marling has any issue with her songwriting, it is that she seems to compose melodies sort of like Bob Dylan writes words.  Her music is very intriguing and the odd melodic directions she takes do work, but the effect only lasts as long as you listen to it.  Even if one listens to Once I Was An Eagle 10 times in a row, attempting to sing back the melodies to any of Marling's songs is like trying to write down all of the lyrics to the first five songs off of Dylan's Highway 61 Revisited.  Her work is great, but not that memorable or distinct.  So, here's a precaution: Anyone expecting Laura Marling's musical compositions to be as astonishing as her voice and artistry will be disappointed.  The indistinguishability of her songwriting will be the one and only reason her music may move 200,000 people instead of 2,000,000.  She has everything else within her mind, soul and voice box to become a real star.  

13. Love In Flying Colors by The Foreign Exchange

The Foreign Exchange makes a very sophisticated version of R&B/Hip-Hop that just feels so good.  It's dreamy, slick, polished music that is both life and love affirming.  I knew I loved it within a minute.  It's somewhere between an adult contemporary version of Frank Ocean and Esperanza Spalding, with maybe a little Robert Glasper Experiment thrown in.  The Foreign Exchange has received a ton of critical acclaim over the last five years and they deserve all of it.  Love In Flying Colors not only passes with flying colors, it should be on many more critic's end-of-the-year best-of lists.  

12. Random Access Memories by Daft Punk

There really isn't much to say.  I haven't met too many people who don't love this album.  I certainly love it—and I'm not someone who idolizes the ground Daft Punk walks on.  I came into Random Access Memories as a casual fan that maybe listened to a Daft Punk album once or twice every two years.  But, I played this one all the time.  It is refreshing to know that there are still really talented artists out there who have a fully realized vision of what they want to accomplish and seem to produce true classics effortlessly.  Though R.A.M sits at number 12 on my list, I would never argue if it was number one on someone else's.  

11. Aljawal by Alsarah / Débruit

"World music" has the tendency to scare some people.  Indeed, it often takes a bit of a push to deliberately listen to something sung in a language that one isn't familiar with.  For me to love it, the music itself has to be fantastic.  When it comes to Aljawal, a collaboration between the French producer Débruit and the Sudanese singer Alsarah, the music is incredibly alluring and easily transcends the language barrier.  Perhaps you automatically associate "world music" as background ambience used for relaxation during meditation or yoga.  In that case, Aljawal is only world music in its origin and would more correctly be categorized as Indie/Electronica.  It's not terribly accessible, but not quite esoteric either.  It's sort of like a combination of Beats Antique, DJ Thundercat and a not-so-top 40 Lana Del Ray.  If you have an open mind, I definitely recommend it.  This is very rich stuff and any close listening on your part will be handsomely rewarded.  

I should also note that Aljawal was selected by NPR as one of the 10 Favorite World Music Albums Of 2013

My Best of 2013 List (20-16)

best of 2013 -- jamie.jpg

In your fantasies, you may be an astronaut or a left-fielder for the New York Yankees.  In my fantasies, I'm a dude who has a list of the 50 best albums of 2013.  

But fantasies seldom become reality.

Most likely, you don't have what Tom Wolfe called "the right stuff" to really be an astronaut and, chances are, you can't hit a major league fastball.  As for me, I admit that I just don't have 50 albums to give you.  I don't even have 25.

I wish I could give you a massive list of 50.  If nothing else it would give this little blog you're reading—my blog—a badge of credibility.  It'd make me feel like I was a poor man's Rolling Stone or Consequence of Sound.

But, I just don't have a list of that size prepared for you.  And I doubt I ever will.  To make a definitive statement that a certain set of 50 albums were the best this year assumes one has listened to 400 to 500 new albums.   I haven't.  I suspect that if I had to jot it down, I could probably name 100 to 120 albums from 2013.  Of those, I think I probably listened to 70 or 80.  That means I listened to one or two albums per week.  And I don't think that's all that bad.  I could name 50 really good albums from this list, but I don't think it's fair to select and reward such a high number from such a small kiddie pool.  

For me, 2013 was split fairly equally between filling in the holes in my ever-growing "biological music encyclopedia," new albums from this year, albums I never got a chance to listen to in 2011 or 2012, old favorites, and recommendations I received along the way.

With that in mind, I think 20 albums is a pretty friendly number.  So let's do it:

20. Wondrous Bughouse by Youth Lagoon

On Wondrous Bughouse, Youth Lagoon creates music that seems to exist in a futuristic jungle where poisonous frogs hop around lakes of lava and spiders spin glow-in-the-dark spider webs.  Though clearly inspired by the Flaming Lips, Youth Lagoon's chief sound-creator Trevor Powers isn't hand-cuffed to his inspirations and manages to create music that is totally him.  The results are both complex and enchanting and on "Attic Doctor," "The Bath" "Pelican Man" and "Sleep Paralysis," Powers and company will probably give more than a few listeners goose-bumps. Wondrous Bughouse is very cryptic and the lyrics don't offer much beyond the surface, but with music so multi-dimensionally layered and so strangely beautiful, you aren't going to get any complaints from me.  

19. FIDLAR

When it comes to punk, you can't ask for much better than FIDLAR, who on their debut album manage to create an impressively consistent album.  It wouldn't be very punk rock of me to dwell on every little thing that makes FIDLAR a great album.  Furthermore, there aren't really any intricacies here or all that much worth discussing at length.  What you hear is what you get.  This is straight-ahead punk rock and it's pretty damn good.  Having received a ton of acclaim in the music press, let me be another critic to say that this band is worth the buzz—even though they will probably never achieve the same level of popularity as some of their contemporaries, like Wavves. 

18. Moon Tides by Pure Bathing Culture

Moon Tides is simply breathtaking and surrealistic indie rock that recalls everyone from The Cocteau Twins to Jonsi to The Sugarcubes.  It's also a debut album and a great one at that.  In an economical 37 minutes, this duo from Portland, Oregon, sometimes sounds like they're writing a variation of the same song over and over again, but the sonics are nonetheless both addictive and compelling.  Much credit belongs to producer Richard Swift who sketches these nine songs into an instantly appealing collage.  Simply put, Moon Tides sounds like an audio version of an incandescent island paradise.  And since Pure Bathing Culture chose that scenery for their album cover, one might assume that's the feeling they were going after.  If that is true, it's hard to listen to this album and not agree that they achieved that goal extremely well.

17. Welcome Oblivion by How To Destroy Angels

Trent Reznor and Mariqueen Maandig make one helluva husband/wife album.  Why?  It's not just because they are talented.  It's because this creation is so daring and the couple complements each other's art so well.  Welcome Oblivion is often extremely uncompromising.  Beats, synthesizer guitars, vocals and all sorts of esoteric instrumentation seem to loop around like a conveyer belt traveling through hell.  But, it's not hell.  For throughout the crazy chaos, the couple is so tuned-in to each other's emotions and individual sonics—and seem so absolutely in love—that Welcome Oblivion winds up sounding like a couples therapy session for two people who absolutely don't need it.  They're okay with exploring everything.  The album does have several moments that are quite accessible.  The best example is the hauntingly-beautiful "Ice Age."  Maandig's "every-girl" voice is surrounded by Reznor's effective and equally gorgeous de-tuned chord progression.  It was one of my favorite songs of the year.  In the end, I believe this is the finest couple-collaboration in recent times.  It's second to only Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan.  For those that are up to the challenge, I highly recommend it.  

16. Piano Sutras by Matthew Shipp

Piano Sutras is both an odd album for Matthew Shipp and for his record label Thirsty Ear Records.  Both Shipp and Thirsty Ear have a reputation for releasing avante-garde jazz albums, often with electronica instrumentation doing cool stuff in the background.  Piano Sutras, however, is a solo piano album.  That doesn't make it any less avante-garde though.  Shipp's chord progressions make up 11 original compositions—and two jazz classics—that are both complex and beautiful harmonically.  I can't recommend it to everyone, because even I'll admit it has the tendency to sound stale, but that doesn't change that Shipp is one of my favorite modern day piano players and that Thirsty Ear is the one of the most audacious record labels. There is something here for even casual jazz listeners. Take Shipp's take on "Giant Steps," which he adapts into a very original adaptation—even if it only lasts one minute.  Wayne Shorter's "Nefertiti," on the other hand, is almost unrecognizable.  This is an album that encourages a lot of close listening.  And when you do listen closely, it's hard not to admire Shipp's absolute connection to his instrument.  

TWO FANTASTIC ALBUMS BY QUICKSILVER MESSENGER SERVICE

Quicksilver Messenger Service was one of the great psychedelic bands to come out of San Francisco in the late 60s.  They're perfect for fans of Jefferson Airplane, Santana, Love and The Grateful Dead. 

Quicksilver Messenger Service 

Quicksilver Messenger Service - Happy Trails