Saturday, January 5, 2013

Best of 2012: 20-16

20. Elle Varner: Perfectly Imperfect [RCA]














Finally. Something to shove in the face of all those who complain that top 40 contemporary r&b is boring, swanky, and robotic, something, that is, aside from Frank Ocean. If Varner's excellent debut sounds like a throwback, it's because this daughter of music bizzers has done her homework: older soul and even jazz seem to be the main pools she draws from. Her raspy voice, undeniably impressive without being ostentatious, is well-matched to the lyrics (also hers), which move seamlessly from sensual to shy to self-doubting, but are always refreshingly human, as is her voice. Her body-image issues, like her unsatisfactory sex-life, never seems artificial. These are realistic if fictionalized quandaries of a young twenty-something (a month older than yours truly): think Taylor Swift, unless you don't like Taylor Swift, in which case don't. "Sound Proof Room," about desire and loud sex, is my favorite, but its sense of unquenchable eros is accentuated the next track, which mourns her inability to speak to the man she wants. And when the lyrics seem maudlin and the production (again, hers) too pristine, an expert hook pulls you back in and you let style take the wheel. Before you know it, the substance returns.

19. Serengeti: C.A.R. [Anticon]



Goofy Chicagoan David Cohn is the best kind of weirdo rapper-- smart, funny, sincere, organic. If you aren't familiar with 2008's "Dennehy," the loving and hilarious tribute to his best fictional creation, blue-collar Southsider Kenny Davis, go and Youtube it immediately. Eclectic samples, great jokes, and vivid and carefully-rhymed details worthy of Ghostface render C.A.R. one of those heartfelt albums that you don't have to abandon your beloved irony or your sense of humor to enjoy. Just check out the aptly-titled Chitown lament "Cold," which yearns for "a simple life, where we milk cows and cobras." Anecdotes and one-liners pervade these sympathetic snapshopts of social realism so witty and so funny you know they had to be the work of someone clinically depressed.



18. Disappears: Pre-Language [Kranky]


Channeling such touchstones as Joy Division and The Fall is now a practice in indie rock as entrenched as irony, fuzzy guitars, and PBR. It's also one which I have been known to bitch about. Most of the time, 80's hero-worship is simply not done well: it doesn't move, or it incorporates bad verse, or it fails to register emotionally, or it lacks bite. With the help of newly enlisted Steve Shelley, these Chicago shoegazers have crafted an album that both grooves like The Fall (and yes, Sonic Youth) and reinvents Mark E. Smith's disdainful snarl. What's more, they've crafted an album that manages to stand out amongst so many of its nearly indistinguishable compeers. Maybe not at first, but play it a few times and realize that "Hibernation Sicknes" has one of the best guitar solos you've heard in months, that certain phrases of terse bitterness refuse to leave you, and that nearly every song has a hook that scratches an itch you forgot you had and a beat you can't help but move your body to.



17. Action Bronson: Blue Chips [Fool's Gold]














NYC's most famous Albanian rapper-by-day and chef-by-night hasn't altered his style too much since his debut, 2011's very solid Dr. Lecter, except for exchanging a pretty established producer for some punk who goes by "Party Supplies" and hails from, I kid you not, Williamsburg. It turns out Party Supplies not only has a damn good ear, but an eclecticism that leads him to sample everyone from Dean Martin and Aaron Neville to Iron Butterfly and Frank Zappa. Challenging samples, like the ballsy strings-only in opener "Pouches of Tuna" or the ballsier theft from Ghostface Killah (to whom Action is always compared, though I think Nas is just as accurate) in closer "Tapas," establish beyond all doubt that, at least on a strictly technical level, Action Bronson belongs to a very elite group of rappers. The culinary metaphors are witty, but, as this Feinschmecker should know, a great flow needs some meat as much as a great voice does (*cough* Christina Aguilera), or great guitar chops (*cough* Jeff Beck). And to be fair, there is quite a bit of substance here. His subject matter, though, is for the most part limited to drugs, hoes, and food-- or so a cursory listen would have you believe. Dig deeper-- as his verbal dexterity and apt beats will encourage you to do-- and you'll find poignant reflections on everything from his mixed feelings about his dad to his anger at an ex to his anxiety over his small penis.




16. The Cloud Nothings: Attack on Memory [Carpark]














They can gripe all they want about how Steve Albini's production involved chilling out and playing Scrabble on Facebook-- reasonably so as Albini has become synonymous with hands-off production, giving equal volume (as in this album) to all parts and replicating the 'live' sound of a band-- but there was no good reason to pay attention to this band before this album. But really, who cares? This is a surprisingly exciting album, and such a step forward from their previous emo slag. This is emo gold, not beyond borrowing from post-hardcore and Sonic Youth or from 00's bastardization and Pete Wentz, whom I sincerely believe to be an underrated lyricist even if he is a shitty songwriter. The monstrous "Wasted Days" is the winner here, although "No Future/No Past" also represents a major step forward for the band. Does this album represent anything about 2012 or the future of music? I doubt it, but it warms your heart to know that a guitar-based band can still create exciting music. Really, if you don't like riveting rock and/or roll, well, there's always Bon Iver. A midwesterner myself, I can assure you Dylan Baldi speaks for far more of us.

Best of 2012: 25-21



I've done some calculating, and I've listened to around 150 albums this year. Here's the top 20%, and three EPs I couldn't leave out.

25. Plug: Back in Time [Ninja Tune]















The most apt description (which is yet far from apt) is a trancey drum & bass, but like any electronic musician worth his salt, Luke Vibert resists definition, even as electronica fans continue to define a ludicrous argosy of subgenres, apparently driven by the need to neatly classify every new species they encounter. A hidebound opponent of architectonic endeavors myself, I'm content simply to lose myself in this densely packed whirlwind of frenetic beats, tempo shifts, eccentric samples, ridiculous cacology, and the bleeps, buzze
s, and birrs of far too many instruments to count.



24. Patti Smith: Banga [Columbia]
















Beginning with a sympathetic reinterpretation of a letter of Amerigo Vespucci and concluding with a lovely rendition of Neil Young's environmentalist classic, Banga bleeds with the excessive mystical language and fanciful imagery which so few songwriters can borrow from without sounding silly or pretentious. Highbrow allusions abound, with the song titles alone paying homage to Andrei Tarkovsky, Maria Schneider, Mikhail Bulgakov, Seneca, and Constantine via Pierro Della Francesca. While this is normally the type of album I can't stand, Patti Smith delivers her musings with heartfelt sincerity and embraces the déclassé punk rock simplicity that has always proved the perfect vehicle for her poetry.



23. Killer Mike: R.A.P Music [Williams Street]


This breakthrough album by a lingering presence in the booming ATL rap scene is desultory, Killer Mike apparently unable to decide whether he likes his R.A.P. served gansta/braggadocio or conscious/political style. Not that these two elements can’t smoothly be brought together, but Mike's capriciousness results in a album inconsistent both in style (which is welcome) and quality (which isn’t). As R.A.P. Music begins with a few decent songs severely deficient in both hooks and depth, the first great beat comes late: the old school funk backing up the goofy old school narrative of “Jojo’s Chillin.” This segues into a darker view of the 80’s with Killer Mike attacking the the drug war, and the prison industrial complex, and celebrating Regan's death. From here on, the beats just get more memorable, the hooks catchier, the lyrics sharper, up until the killer troika at the end. First, a love-hate relationship with the ATL. Next, a coming-of-age story and tribute to his grandad that also confesses his debt to Tupac and William Golding. Lastly, the title track itself, which lays claim to the entire legacy of Rebellious African People music.



22. s/s/s: Beak & Claw EP [Anticon]


As I have no great fondness for the symphonic treacle of Sufjan Stevens or the post-rock
hip-hop of Son Lux, it's native Chicagoan and oddball rapper Serengeti that both drew me to this bizarre little collab and rendered it one of the year's most surprising pleasures. Beautiful and strangely compelling, Beak & Claw nevertheless benefits from an often auto-tuned Sufjan and the barely discernible hooks of Son Lux. Serengeti's rapping is predictably great, drawing on the life of the self-consciously artsy bourgeois which along with a willingness to experiment may yet be the only thing these artists have in common.


21. Saigon: The Greatest Story Never Told Chapter Two: Bread and Circuses [Suburban Noize]


While it lacks both the expert beats and grandeur of its excellent predecessor, Saigon's sophomore album (although if we're counting mixtapes he has already graduated a long time ago) adds a new layer of sophistication and expands its ambit beyond the conscience outrage of his debut. Taking the role of executive producer, Just Blaze only directly produces the first track, the triumphant "Plant the Seed (What U Paid For)." Distinguishing between Rap and Real, paying tribute to the black martyrs who were "Blown Away," and sensitively tackling the scabrous issue of a "Relafriendship," Saigon rarely dishes out duff rhymes or slips into the sermonic.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Best of 2012: 30-26


I've done some calculating, and I've listened to around 150 albums this year. Here's the top 20%, and three EPs I couldn't leave out.



30. Miguel: Kaleidoscope Dream [RCA]











What a curious album by this big-sunglassiod crooner-- at times so retro as to be classic, at times clearly indebted to the usually laudable trends pervading the new wave of r&b right now. Find yourself some decent technology to consume this heap of ear candy, clearly the work of a studio maven with an eclectic love of hodgepodge. "Adorn" is a sure-fire single, and "Use Me" contains subtlety and intelligence worthy of Frank Ocean himself.
8/10



29.The Coup: Sorry to Bother You [ANTI-]












Not only is Boots Riley an unapologetic Communist, he's funny-- check out "500 Million Ways to Kill a C.E.O." from 2006's brilliant Party Music, a song which has gained great popularity as it became an anthem for the Occupy movement. A veteran purveyor of conscious-rap that's both danceable and actually fun, Boots is a rare leftist musician who continues to put in his hours as an activist. Full of funk beats and clever rhymes, Sorry to Bother You rarely gets preachy. From a caustic drubbing of trust-fund hipsters to a call for educational reform in which Algebra is not the unique occasion "in which a school can say that there should be a balanced equation," Sorry to Bother You is the kind of revolution you can dance with.
8/10




28. Skrillex: Bangarang EP [Atlantic]











I can't tell you how many times I've been told, "but every ACTUAL fan of dubstep, every REAL member of the electronica community can't stand Skrillex." To which I reply, "exactly." While critics and dedicated dubsteppers detest this well-crafted album, normal people love it for the shameless and undeniable fun that it is. Unique? Hell no, Skrillex steals every trick in the dance-pop book, which he clearly knows far better than his revilers assume. Michael Tatum wins the best comment award, which claims that no one who digs Sleigh Bells has any reason to dislike this album.
8/10


27. Ab-Soul: Control System [Top Dawg Entertainment]













Like action films, hip-hop albums have needlessly grown longer and longer and longer. Like most of these albums, Control System would benefit from some prudent retrenchment, but what really struck me about this 75-minute behemoth is how often I did listen to it throughout. Sophisticated rhymes backed by skillful Top Dawg beats, Control System is somewhat scattershot and all the more engaging because of it. 8/10



26. Taylor Swift: Red [Big Machine]











I was surprised by how many of my friends dismissed this album, not only indie snobs but people who otherwise have no reservation expressing their love for Lady Gaga, or P!nk, or Kesha. Now, T. Swift is far from Gaga and likely always will be. A talented songwriter and smart lyricist in her own right, T. Swift knows how to make a love album which, unlike those of so many indie and r&b chanteuses, doesn't reiterate the same themes and emotions in each song. A year older than Taylor myself, I'd be lying if I claimed I couldn't relate to some of this album. Having recently split up with my girlfriend, I'd be lying if I said my most played jam for several weeks was not "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together." Which is not to say it wouldn't be my most played jam regardless. 
8/10