Categories
Albums

Best albums of 2025: Honourable mentions

I know most people are not a fan of Mondays, given that it’s the start of a new work week and all that that entails, but I like the idea of new starts and all of the potential they bring. And what better day than a Monday to start a new series… and one that celebrates another year of great music at that.

Yes, indeed, it is that time again.

And though I’m not one to want to wish the days away, I gotta say I won’t be sad to kiss 2025 goodbye. It’s been, for the most part, an uneventful year, but also one that I won’t ever forget. I’ve spent the lion’s share of it in recovery mode. Health concerns that I don’t really want to get too deep into here but ones that, at many times this year, have had me worried that I’d never fully recover from. I am only now just returning to work after a long period away and that in itself is its own challenge.

All this to say, there were but a few bright spots to point out from 2025. I can include all the precious time I was able to spend with my lovely wife as one, of course, and all the quality time whiled away listening to great music as another. Yes, I devoted as much time as I could spinning records and exploring new music and old favourites on the streaming sites on the old Internet. The pure joy of music was almost as much a part of my recovery as the balance of rest and calm and fresh air.

So, yeah, by my quick glance at the calendar, I see we’ve got just over five weeks left of 2025 and my plan is to share, interspersed with my regular blog programming, some of my favourite albums that the year has offered. I’m starting today with some honourable mentions, albums that didn’t quite crack my top ten but that are definitely worth your time, and I’ll be back soon with a start to the countdown of my ten faves. Enjoy.


bdrmm “Microtonic”:  Hull, England based outfit imbues electronic dreams into their shoegaze arsenal for their third outing with brilliant results.
Check out: John on the ceiling

Ezra Furman “Goodbye small head”:  Always raw and immediate, the American singer/songwriter’s 10th album is filled with personal tales that at the same time feel quite universal.
Check out: Grand mal

Just Mustard “We were just here”:  The Irish quintet’s third album smacks equal parts of the haunting goth of Cranes and the noisy experimentation of Sonic Youth.
Check out: We were just here

Amy Millan “I went to find you”:  The Stars’ co-frontwoman’s* third solo album moves away from the folk/country of her first two releases and into an indie pop sound that feels like a warm comforter on a cold Canadian winter morning.
Check out: The overpass

Pale Blue Eyes “New place”: More beautiful and danceable dream pop ecstasy from the trio originally from Sheffield, songs that feel blissfully eternal.
Check out: Scrolling

Sloan “Based on the best seller”: The Canadian alt-rock icons doing what they do best on their fourteenth studio LP – just keeping on keeping on bringing the rock.
Check out: Dream destroyer

The Veils “Asphodels”: The latest by Finn Andrews’ musical vehicle is typically dramatic and epic, and worthy of another David Lynch soundtrack.
Check out: The ladder


*Whose last name I learned this year that I’ve been mispronouncing for two decades.

I’ll be back very soon with albums #10 through #6 for my Best albums of 2025 list. In the meantime, you can check out my Best Albums page here if you’re interested in my other favourite albums lists.

Categories
Live music galleries

Live music galleries: Amy Millan [2025]

Amy Millan at Club Saw, Ottawa – October 17 2025

Artist: Amy Millan
When: October 17th, 2025
Where: Club Saw, Ottawa
Context: I’ve seen Stars live five times and Broken Social Scene twice* but it had been quite a while since I’d seen either one. However, this wasn’t the reason why I really wanted to see Amy Millan, even though I do often lean towards the songs she sings with Stars. I had never seen her play live solo, just never got the chance, even though I had enjoyed her two previously released solo albums. Before buying the ticket, I had only given her newest album, “I went to find you”, a cursory listen, only becoming much more familiar with it in the week leading up to the show. Having said all this, I still found myself surprised at how much I enjoyed Amy Millan’s performance. Her extremely talented backing band included Christine Bougie** (guitar and lap steel), Stefan Schneider*** (drums), as well as fellow Stars members Chris McCarron (guitar) and her partner Evan Cranley (trombone and percussion), and she brought her friend Jenny Whiteley up onstage mid-set to duet on “Baby I”****. But it was Millan herself who lit up the stage, not only with the lovely, lilting, and soft touch on vocals that we’ve come to know and love, but with her in-between song banter, proving herself to be humble and hilarious and human. It was such that she could have played anything and we would have been with her the whole way. But she pleased Stars fans with a couple of their tunes, including a lovely solo performance of “Ageless beauty”, a personal fave, and with the exception of a Weeping Tile/Sarah Harmer cover, the rest of her set was solo material, mostly from that new album, performed so beautifully that it has infinitely risen in my esteem.
Point of reference song: The overpass

Amy Millan close up and personal
Chris McCarron and his headband on guitar
Stefan Schneider on drums
Evan Cranley with his trombone
Christine Bougie rocking the guitar
Amy dueting with Jenny Whiteley
Evan on the percussion 
Chris McCarron and his game face
Amy and Stefan
Rocking out

*Both times with Amy Millan

**Has performed with Shania Twain and Bahamas.

***Has performed with Owen Pallett, Belle Orchestre, among others.

****A song Whiteley had written and Millan had covered on her first solo album, “Honey from the tombs”.

Categories
Albums

Best albums of 2010: #5 Stars “The five ghosts”

Stars are a five-piece Canadian indie rock band that originally formed as the duo of Torquil Campbell and Christopher Seligman back in 2000. After their debut album, “Nightsongs”, was released in 2001, they began adding members. By the time “Heart” was released two years later, the band was up to their current roster size, after adding Evan Cranley, Amy Millan, and Patrick McGee, and the lineup has remained pretty much unchanged ever since. What I find interesting is that most, if not all of the band’s members grew up in Toronto, but the band has never been based there, finding its roots in New York City originally and then, later, relocating to Montreal.

I got into Stars around the same time as pretty much everyone else: shortly after “Set yourself on fire” was let loose on the public in 2004. This was fortuitously right in the middle of the Canadian indie rock renaissance, when all of a sudden, the world realized that music was being made in that gigantic country north of the United States. “Set yourself on fire” is widely considered Stars’ best album and admittedly, it is still my favourite out of all their albums. This is mostly because I know it so well, having listened to it incessantly when I first got a copy of it. Nevertheless, I love all of the albums Stars have since released (including this one, obviously), and if not loved, was able to appreciate the music on their first two when I went back to discover them. And I fully expect that any new album that they come out with next will be great as well, which is why I’ve rarely hesitated in pre-ordering each new album for my vinyl collection without so much as test driving one song. I can do something so rash with an ease of mind because they’ve established a consistency with each album, a sound that is recognizably their own and for us fans, is as comfortable as sitting in our jammies at the kitchen table with a warm cup of coffee and often, makes us want to interrupt our convalescence to get up and dance.

I remember succumbing to the elegance and beauty of Stars’ fifth album, “The five ghosts”, right away, much like I did for “Set yourself on fire”, but unlike its predecessor “In our bedroom after the war”, which started a bit tart but aged like a fine wine. They were on the vanguard of the resurgent trend of duelling male/female lead vocals, a quality that led me to make comparisons to The Beautiful South in the early days of my relationship with the band. On “The five ghosts”, Torquil Campbell and Amy Millan share the duties almost fifty-fifty and on those songs that they spar, the battle of the sexes is played out like the work of art that it is. Campbell doesn’t hide away his love for Morrissey and The Smiths and also channels Paul Heaton and well, Millan’s soft but smart delivery often makes you feel like she could break you in half without you even knowing she’s doing it.

The song titles and lyrics on “The five ghosts” are dark, evoking the macabre with words like death, bones, and haunting, but the album is very much alive. It’s a game Stars play well, much like The Beautiful South (okay, maybe I’m belabouring the comparison now), this juxtaposing of somber themes with seemingly fluffy and cuddly pop music. Not that you should surmise their music is simple, throwaway schlock. Stars are a complete unit, a stylistic package. The music is as intricately designed as one could wish, each layer a delight to pull away and examine in your hands, like the wisps of a cobweb dripping with dew. So yes, let the sun break through fog and delight in it.

If you’re not already listening to Stars, put them on now, preferably “The five ghosts”. If it’s not in your musical arsenal, have a crack at my three picks for you, just a few of the great pieces off the album:


“Changes”: Track seven is peppy and retro, it harkens back to the golden days of the movie musical. I’m thinking ‘Singing in the rain’ here. A synthesizer programmed drum machine sets the tone, abracadabra, confetti, and a sweet bass line starts the microwave to melt your soul like butter and Amy Millan’s lilting turn on vocals, invoking that of Kirsty MacColl, does the rest just fine. “Changes, I’ve never been good with change. I hate it when it all stays the same.” And before you all start crying nudity foul at the NSFW video, it’s an artsy-fartsy thing, playing on some sort of metamorphosis theme, good versus evil, light versus dark, ballet in the buff, and it was shot in the beautiful Winter Garden theatre in Toronto, which makes it all okay.

“Dead hearts”: The opening track on the album features the trademark Campbell and Millan call and response vocal work. It might almost be considered a tad precious with the chiming arpeggios, the graceful strings, and pitch perfect harmonizing if it weren’t for the fact that you knew by the title that they were singing about not just broken but, dead hearts. It was number seven on my Best tunes of 2010 list and in that particular post I also talked about the “gentle jingling guitars, the lonely tinkling piano, the string explosion, and [the] push/pull harmonies [that] all call to mind a fantastical world of a creative child’s imagination.” Haunting and wonderful and joyful in its misery and in its hope. “It’s hard to know they’re out there. It’s hard to know that you still care.”

“Fixed”: “You, you hold my heart. You, you won’t let up. After when I’m caught, touch turns into fisticuffs.” Much like the previous song, this one appeared on my Best tunes of 2010 list, this time at number twenty. It’s one of a good handful of dance floor fillers on the album. Millan takes the lead for this one, sounding almost hopeful and glorious, set against 80s synths and Madchester drums. As I’ve said before, “The drumming is peppy and the synths keep pace, urging any and all listeners to get up and dance, no matter where they are, the bus, a crowded sidewalk, or with a broom in the kitchen, and forget everything but the beat.” This is what makes Stars so great. They can challenge you to think at the same time is they are encouraging a great time. But let’s not lose the plot here. Finish that drink and let’s get out the on the floor.


Stay tuned for album #4. In the meantime, here are the previous albums in this list:

10. Diamond Rings “Special affections”
9. Bedouin Soundclash “Light the horizon”
8. LCD Soundsystem “This is happening”
7. The Drums “The Drums”
6. The New Pornographers “Together”

You can also check out my Best Albums page here if you’re interested in my other favourite albums lists.