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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
Playlists

Playlist: New tunes from 2021, part four

Well, we made through another year. It’s New Years’s Eve, a mere handful of hours left of 2021. I would normally be all optimistic for the new year, but I can’t help but question if things will really get better with the turn of the calendar. I saw someone post a meme recently on social media somewheres that gloomily said: “That moment that you realize that 2022 is pronounced twenty twenty too.” I laughed out loud because it rang so true.

Still, traditions must be adhered to. The countdown will go on, resolutions will be made and broken, young lovers will kiss at midnight, sparkling wines will be uncorked and guzzled, and of course, I will post the final instalment of my annual four-part playlist sharing some of the new tunes released during the year. You are welcome to go back and revisit parts one, two, and three, which include songs from the first three quarters of the year. And this final playlist, twenty five songs, much like the previous three, collects the bangers from the last three months. However, since new releases are typically scant at this time of year (the calendar usually being more full of reissues and box sets for Christmas), I bolstered whatever spots remain with the b-sides, or tracks that just missed being included in the previous three parts.

As rough as the year has been personally and for all of us collectively, we’ve at least had some great music being created and released to keep us going. In some areas of the world, things began opening up in the fall and live shows were being held, a sort of tease and taste of how things can be if they ever return to normal, and then, Omricon swept in to remind us that this pandemic isn’t quite beaten yet.

But let’s focus, just for a few minutes, on the joy of music, shall we? Right then.

Highlights of this playlist’s last twenty-five songs include:

    • “Still the same” is infectious synth pop from the latest album by Princess Century, the solo project of Maya Postepski (ex of Austra and TR/ST)
    • Always whimsical and dreamy and mellow rocking, Luna frontman Dean Wareham delivers fun on “The past is our plaything” from his newest solo album
    • On “Dying in LA”, Canadian indie electronic rock band, Gold and Youth, channels OMD and Simple Minds for the soundtrack of the film that John Hughes never made
    • And speaking of 80s revival, Nation of Language do their best impression of New Order on “Across that fine line”
    • It’s almost sickening how Elbow keep continuing to make untouchable and beautiful music each and every album but songs like “Six words” draw me in every time
    • Departure Lounge came out of nowhere earlier this year to release their first album in two decades and songs like the jangly “Australia” show why more people should have missed them
    • And finally, “(We like to) Do it with the lights on” is just one of many reasons I’m glad that Nicholas Thoburn didn’t stop making music as Islands, as he had threatened back in 2016

For those who don’t use Spotify or if the embedded playlist below doesn’t work for you, here is the entire playlist as I’ve created it, complete with links to YouTube videos:

1. “Pool hopping” Illuminati Hotties (from the album Let me do one more)

2. “Human touch” Pond (from the album 9)

3. “Still the same” Princess Century (from the album s u r r e n d e r)

4. “Mid-century modern” Billy Bragg (from the album The million things that never happened)

5. “The past is our plaything” Dean Wareham (from the album I have nothing to say to the mayor of L.A.)

6. “Aquamarine” Hand Habits (from the album Fun house)

7. “Bessie, did you make it?” Marissa Nadler (from the album The path of the clouds)

8. “Wasted” The War On Drugs (from the album I don’t live here anymore)

9. “Proud home” Lily Konigsberg (from the album Lily we need to talk)

10. “Miss Moon” Penelope Isles (from the album Which way to happy)

11. “Dying in LA” Gold & Youth (from the album Dream baby)

12. “Across that fine line” Nation Of Language (from the album A way forward)

13. “Turning green” Courtney Barnett (from the album Things take time, take time)

14. “It should have been fun” Pip Blom (from the album Welcome break)

15. “Royal morning blue” Damon Albarn (from the album The nearer the fountain, more pure the stream flows)

16. “Six words” Elbow (from the album Flying dream 1)

17. “Tell me tell me tell me” Rinse (from the EP Wherever I am)

18. “Australia” Departure Lounge (from the album Transmeridian)

19. “Too loud” Autogramm (from the album No rules)

20. “(We like to) Do it with the lights on” Islands (from the album Islomania)

21. “When I come around” Nap Eyes (from the EP Nap Eyes)

22. “When it breaks” Quivers (from the album Golden doubt)

23. “The right thing is hard to do” Lightning Bug (from the album A color of the sky)

24. “In the stone” The Goon Sax (from the album Mirror II)

25. “Jaywalker” Andy Shauf (from the album Wilds)

As always, wherever you are in the world, I hope you are safe, continue to be well, and well, enjoy the tunes.

If you’re interested in checking out any of the other playlists I’ve created and shared on these pages, you can peruse them here.