Categories
Albums

Best albums of 2024: Albums #10 through #6

Hello again!

Just a few days ago, I shared my first post in months, a reintroduction of sorts, and I offered a hint at the medical struggles with which I closed out the year. But if I am being honest, 2024 wasn’t all bad. Indeed, there was lots to like about the year.

Before everything went steeply downhill at the end, I got away for a few weekends away, spent some quality time with my lovely wife, enjoyed some biking and some hiking, and got to see some great live music. Indeed, music was a constant for me last year, much as it is every year, even if I wasn’t writing about it as prolifically as I normally do.

Yes, great music was released, so much, in fact, that I spent a lot of the year in catch-up mode, listening to albums for the first time long after their initial release date. In this way, I discovered a lot of exceptional new artists and reacquainted myself with many old friends during the last six months of the year (and a little into the new year). Some of these were represented in the post I shared a few days ago of seven excellent albums that didn’t quite make the cut.

When I first set out to make this year’s top albums list, I was expecting it to be mostly comprised of the old reliables but while some of these are certainly there, I for one was surprised at which albums and which bands made the final ten spots. I will be starting to share these today, with this post marking the start of my top ten countdown in earnest, kicking it all off with albums #10 through #6. Then, I plan to share my favourite five in five posts over the next few weeks.

With all the excellent releases in 2024, I am sure I missed out on one or two. So as we go through my own ten favourite albums, I welcome your comments and thoughts and perhaps even your own top ten favourites in the comments spaces provided.

Let’s do this.


#10 Quivers “Oyster cuts”

We begin with an album that just snuck itself into my top ten favourites at the last moment. Quivers originally formed in 2015 in Hobart, Tasmania but I only discovered them six years later, in 2021, with the release of their sophomore album “Golden doubt”. By this time, the quartet had relocated to Melbourne, Australia and were attracting attention the world over for their take on jangle pop in the key of The Smiths and R.E.M. They signed with Merge Records in 2022* and this third album, “Oyster cuts”, is the first to be released there. It’s ten earworms that dig further into you with each listen, expanding their palette beyond the jangle to develop their own sound, all held together by an equal sharing of vocal duties and obvious passion for the music they all make together.


#9 The Jesus And Mary Chain “Glasgow eyes”

The Reid brothers, Jim and William, released this, their eighth studio album**, in the year following their 40th anniversary in a band together. Much like most of their previous albums, “Glasgow eyes” was written and mostly recorded by the brothers, who by their own admission share a form of ‘telepathy’ working in the studio together, with the sound augmented by session and guest musicians. And well, the album is awesome. It’s very much recognizable as a JAMC record and at the same time, it isn’t same old, same old. It has its noisy hallmarks and Jim Reid’s all-too-cool vocals but it also shows the brothers reinvigorated and charged electronically. If I’m being completely honest here, though, I didn’t expect to enjoy this album half as much as I do. It’s just so much fun.


#8 The Last Dinner Party “Prelude to ecstasy”

I first heard the growing buzz surrounding London, England-based, The Last Dinner Party, back in the summer of 2023. I finally got around to sampling their sounds when I was in Toronto visiting my friend Tim for the Slowdive show there in September of that same year. We were going back and forth sharing YouTube videos but for some reason*** on that night, neither of us were really impressed. However, after continuing to see their name and images splashed all over social media, I gave them another chance just before Christmas 2023 and found myself reformed. By the time “Prelude to ecstasy”, the all-female quintet’s eagerly awaited debut, was released at the beginning of February 2024, I was finding myself ordering a copy for my vinyl collection. The comparisons to Kate Bush and Florence Welch for all their baroque drama and melodrama are apt but I would also throw Annie Lennox or Siouxsie Sioux into the mix for fun. However, all is not sunshine and rainbows. Indeed, there’s lots of punk angst and attitude here as well. My only hope is that it is not tamed or toned down at all by big music as time goes on.


#7 Vampire Weekend “Only god was above us”

I first got into New York City’s Vampire Weekend with their self-titled debut album in 2008, loving their energy, their blend of various world music styles with an indie rock mindset, and their often humorous song subject matter and lyrics. From there, I continued to the follow the group and loved each of their first three records. Something changed for me, however, with their fourth album, 2019’s “Father of the bride”, something I could never put my finger on, but I was never able to properly connect with the double album****. Happily, “Only god was above us” feels like a return to form. It’s a solid record that exhibits everything that I enjoyed about the group previously and there’s not one skippable track in the bunch.


#6 Real Estate “Daniel”

Ok. I think I am finally ready to call it. I am officially a Real Estate fan. And I don’t even know why I’ve been fighting it for so long. I’ve been following the New Jersey-based indie rock band since they released their third album, “Atlas”, in 2014 and on that release then, and each since, I have found much to like in their easy-going jangle pop, seeing similarities between them and Glasgow’s Teenage Fanclub, another of my favourites. But it’s this year’s offering that’s really done it for me. It’s a moody and atmospheric piece of work that never fails to catch my attention whenever I turn it on and has me tapping my toes, my fingers, and nodding my head along through all its eleven tracks.


*A perfect home for them, if you asked me.

**And second since re-forming in 2007.

***Maybe it was too many IPAs.

****And I am fully aware that I may be one of the few who didn’t appreciate it as much as the others.

Stay tuned for album #5 on this list. In the meantime, you can check out my Best Albums page here if you’re interested in my other favourite albums lists.

Categories
Albums

Best albums of 2024: Greetings & honourable mentions

Well, hello and happy hump day!

It’s been a while. Three months since my last post, to be exact.

I didn’t intend to be away so long and definitely wasn’t expecting the piece on Beck to be my last post. However, life… well… it happened.

Without getting into all the gory details, let’s just say I had some unexpected health issues, some of them quite scary, involving an extended gig in the hospital. I have had to make a number of lifestyle changes, including slowing things down quite a bit. And though not all yet resolved, things have been improving and I am slowly on the mend, hopefully on track to a full recovery. I am grateful for the love of my life and partner in all things, close friends, and professional support, all of which have kept me going.

Of late, I’ve been slowly trying to get back to doing some of the things I used to enjoy and, of course, one of the first things that helped bring some solace was listening to music. Limited reading followed, and I’m just now returning to some writing, intending to slowly get back to this regular blogging fun.

While in the hospital, I had lots of time to think about the greats of 2024. So let’s begin with a sampling of great albums from last year worthy of honourable mention, followed by my next post, the first handful of those ten favourite albums for the year. Enjoy.


Camera Obscura “Look to the east, look to the west”:  The Scottish indie pop band’s sixth studio album and first since the death of keyboardist, Carey Lander in 2015, shows the group in fine form and chock full of that twee magic.
Check out: Big love

The Decemberists “As it ever was, so it will be again”:  The Portland-based quintet keeps on doing things in their own particular way – esoteric subject matter dressed up in indie folk, informed by a myriad of world musical styles – on their 9th studio album and we continue to love them for it.
Check out: Burial ground

Desperate Journalist “No hero”:  To my ears, these post punk revivalists from London, England have firmly grasped the torch let drop by Canada’s The Organ when that band split after only one great album back in the early 2000s.
Check out: Unsympathetic parts 1 & 2

Elephant Stone “Back into the dream”: The sixth album by the Montreal-based psych-rock quartet fronted by bass and sitar player Rishi Dhir, is more Beatlesque, jangle pop that is as equally relevant on a Saturday night, as it is on a Sunday morning.
Check out: Going underground

James “Yummy”: One of my favourite all-time bands celebrated their 40th anniversary year in 2023 with a compilation of orchestral reworkings of many of their much-loved classics and followed it up in 2024 with their 18th (!) studio album – future classics that feature the Manchester group’s signature “big”
sound and frontman Tim Booth’s inimitable lyric work and vocal style.
Check out: Is this love

Linn Koch-Emmery “Borderline iconic”: Unlike her 2021 debut, “Borderline iconic“, the Sweden born and bred singer-songwriter didn’t quite crack my top ten with her sophomore effort… but it was darned close – just over 30 more minutes of spiky and catchy, power pop attitude.
Check out: Ebay armour

The Vaccines “Pick-up full of pink carnations”: London, England’s The Vaccines are sadly one of those bands that I tend to forget about* – until of course, they release a new album, like this, their 6th LP offering, and I am immediately caught back up in the wave of their angular, fun, and anthemic indie-pop.
Check out: Heartbreak kid


*Not because they deserve to be forgotten- they just fall victim to my too much music, too little time” syndrome.

I’ll be back very soon with albums #10 through #6 for my Best albums of 2024 list. In the meantime, you can check out my Best Albums page here if you’re interested in my other favourite albums lists.

Categories
Albums

Best albums of 2023: #1 Slowdive “Everything is alive”

Well, folks, here we are at the precipice of a new year and I’m wrapping up the old one, crumpling it up like an off-scribbled on piece of foolscap, and jettisoning it in favour of new ideas… but not before celebrating my favourite piece of work that 2023 had to offer.

“Everything is alive”is Slowdive’s fifth studio album and second since re-forming back in 2014. Their original run spanned only six years from 1989 to 1995 but it was a prolific period resulting in 3 LPs, 5 EPs, and a handful of singles. The five players moved in different directions when they were dropped from Creation Records, a victim perhaps of the flagging shoegaze scene with which they were lumped, a flash fire that passed as quickly as it started. The lineup that performed on the group’s debut album – Neil Halstead, Rachel Goswell, Nick Chaplin, Chris Savill, and Simon Scott – announced a string of reunion shows nine years later and they’ve stuck together ever since then.

Slowdive has appeared a few times on these pages already, including placing number two with their triumphant return, the self-titled album, on this blog’s inaugural end of year, best albums list in 2017, and in pretty much every post I’ve referenced how I wasn’t super-enthused with them during their first go-round as a band. My attitude has, of course, changed and I now fully appreciate what they were doing back then and it goes with saying that I am completely enamoured with their new work.

“Everything is alive” got its start as many of Slowdive’s albums do, with principal songwriter Neil Halstead writing and demoing by himself. He had originally envisioned the album as more austere and electronic based. The recording sessions were then planned for the spring of 2020 but were in the end impacted and informed, as pretty much every album over the last three years has been, by the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting lockdowns. The recording of the album was pushed back and then spread out over various sessions and locations. But for the band, these were all joyous occasions when they finally happened, being the first time they had seen each in months and perhaps the first time they had seen people other than those with whom they were living for the same amount of time. This positivity likely informed the mood of the record and the original concepts for these songs were enlarged and expanded and became a representation of the band and their mood as a whole.

Indeed, “Everything is alive” is hopeful and joyful and full of life. It is eight songs that don’t want to be anywhere near darkness and solitude. It is five musicians and friends that have known each other a long time performing as one, familiar and familial, a large sound that can envelope and absorb and has room for everyone and everything. It is the album we needed, whether we knew it or not.

There is so much to love here that I wanted to pick all eight songs and run through each for you but in recognition that we’ve only got a few hours left to make 2023 brighter, I’ve managed to narrow down my picks for you to three.


“Alife“: Track three was the final single to be released in advance of the album and was the first one to be finished for it. It starts with a ringing and jangling guitar line and Rachel Goswell adds a set of vocals that are just as ethereal.”Two lives are hard lives with you.”And this is a theme that continues throughout, setting out a mysterious balance against Neil Halstead’s slightly more straightforward narrative. But really, it’s all just a whirlpool of sound and cyclical tones, a hint of relationship struggles, a blockage of communication, diverting wishes and dreams, he said, she said, a billion voices, all looking for love in this difficult life.

“The slab”: The climactic track on the album is very much that, dense and heavy and intense, its title perfectly describing the sound rather than hinting at a narrative. The intro is just over a minute and a half of pounding drums and guitars that fritter and sizzle in repetitive drones and underneath it all is something a bit ominous, washes of deep synths, like black curtains in a black room, ponderous and striking. When the vocals do come in, it’s like Halstead is allowing us in to a conversation already in progress but not quite completely opening the door. The words seem like they’re purposefully incomprehensible, just adding to the mystery and mood of the piece. And at the end of the five minutes, as the sound fades, you’re left bereft and just want to restart it but before you can stop yourself, you’re already flipping the disc back to side one.

“Kisses”: The first advance single from this amazing album is the closest thing to a pop single I’ve heard from the group in a very long time. Though it does feel upbeat and perhaps a little structured for Slowdive, it still is very much a chill vibe. The drums provide clarity in just one of the many layers of gauze and cobwebs, chiming guitars echo off into eternity and Halstead’s and Goswell’s harmonies flit and flirt on the surface of a million mirrors refracting in upon themselves.”I know you dream of snowfields, floating high above the trees, living for the new thing, sometimes the new won’t do.”It is a perfect sampling of the joy that the five-piece is looking to spread about here, drumming up memories previously lost, and forcing you to face them and appreciate the good and the bad and how they shaped everything that came after.


In case you missed the previous five posts, here is the rest of the list:

10. Bodywash “I held the shape while I could”
9. Boygenius “The record”
8. Depeche Mode “Memento mori”
7. The Clientele “I am not there anymore”
6. Eyelids “A colossal waste of light”
5. Pale Blue Eyes “This house”
4. The Reds, Pinks and Purples “The town that cursed your name”
3. The Veils “…And out of the void came love”
2. Blur “The ballad of Darren”

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

If you’ve gotten this far, allow me to wish you and everyone you care about a happy new year. See you all on the flip side of 2024.