For a playlist of my favorite tracks off my favorite 2016
albums, click here for a Spotify playlist. This list contains all my "Choice Tracks" from each album in the Top 20 plus much more.
Well, 2016, as far as years go, you were a scumbag, stealing from us some sacred music cows. Last year’s Top 20 write up got posted mighty late, arriving in February (like this one) to acknowledge the 2015 deaths of Scott Weiland and Lemmy and then, in early 2016, David Bowie. It was an avalanche of crumbling stars after that, with the departures of Prince, Leonard Cohen, Sharon Jones, Glen Frey, Merle Haggard, Keith Emerson and Greg Lake (Palmer beware!), and George Michael. Add in other artistic and iconic losses, such as Alan Rickman, Gene Wilder, Gary Shandling, Carrie Fisher, Muhammed Ali, Gordie Howie, Steve Dillon, and John Glenn. TWO members of Barney Miller’s staff, Abe Vigoda and Ron Glass. Alan Thicke! And Fidel Castro and Nancy Reagan are in purgatory somewhere mud-wrestling, and I’m fine with that.
I also should confess that I haven’t heard Bowie’s final album Black Star. I just couldn’t do it. I saw the video premiere for “Lazarus” after he died and I was completely horrified and saddened. Stomach churning. Bowie has always been a provocative artist, but it was dispiriting to think that THIS was how he wanted to world to see him as he left this mortal coil – blind, in rags, desperate, insane. I vowed never to watch it again and then could never bring myself to pick up the album. Too soon.
Honestly, none of these losses were more personal and heartbreaking than Gord Downie’s announcement that he is suffering from terminal brain cancer. He is still with us, inspiring the nation, but the future is dire and upsetting. The last Hip shows across Canada were epic, shattering goodbyes, and fans have been additionally graced with a new solo record from Gord, an exhortation to Canada to address historical crimes against Indigenous peoples. Gord Downie’s fragile figure loomed large in 2016.
As always – PILES of great new music. An embarrassment of riches once again. Big hitters (for me) Besnard Lakes, Frightened Rabbit, Teenage Fanclub, and School of Seven Bells did not disappoint. A few brand new artists (for me) pushed into list as well. A lot of great ambient/psychedelic/instrumental records floated about in 2016 it seemed. Some extended plays I picked up included new music from previously defunct acts. Wolf Parade reunited around Sub Pop’s deluxe reissue treatment of Apologies for the Queen Mary and an unexpected 4 song EP (called EP4) of new music. Excellent return to form. Even more exciting was the reunion of Lush, seemingly following a trend in the ranks of original British shoegaze (see Ride, Swervedriver, Pale Saints, My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive, etc.). Their new EP, Blind Spot, is just perfect.
Before I get to the albums, here are my Top 25 favorite songs of 2016:
1. Getting Gone – Mutual Benefit
Well, 2016, as far as years go, you were a scumbag, stealing from us some sacred music cows. Last year’s Top 20 write up got posted mighty late, arriving in February (like this one) to acknowledge the 2015 deaths of Scott Weiland and Lemmy and then, in early 2016, David Bowie. It was an avalanche of crumbling stars after that, with the departures of Prince, Leonard Cohen, Sharon Jones, Glen Frey, Merle Haggard, Keith Emerson and Greg Lake (Palmer beware!), and George Michael. Add in other artistic and iconic losses, such as Alan Rickman, Gene Wilder, Gary Shandling, Carrie Fisher, Muhammed Ali, Gordie Howie, Steve Dillon, and John Glenn. TWO members of Barney Miller’s staff, Abe Vigoda and Ron Glass. Alan Thicke! And Fidel Castro and Nancy Reagan are in purgatory somewhere mud-wrestling, and I’m fine with that.
I also should confess that I haven’t heard Bowie’s final album Black Star. I just couldn’t do it. I saw the video premiere for “Lazarus” after he died and I was completely horrified and saddened. Stomach churning. Bowie has always been a provocative artist, but it was dispiriting to think that THIS was how he wanted to world to see him as he left this mortal coil – blind, in rags, desperate, insane. I vowed never to watch it again and then could never bring myself to pick up the album. Too soon.
Honestly, none of these losses were more personal and heartbreaking than Gord Downie’s announcement that he is suffering from terminal brain cancer. He is still with us, inspiring the nation, but the future is dire and upsetting. The last Hip shows across Canada were epic, shattering goodbyes, and fans have been additionally graced with a new solo record from Gord, an exhortation to Canada to address historical crimes against Indigenous peoples. Gord Downie’s fragile figure loomed large in 2016.
As always – PILES of great new music. An embarrassment of riches once again. Big hitters (for me) Besnard Lakes, Frightened Rabbit, Teenage Fanclub, and School of Seven Bells did not disappoint. A few brand new artists (for me) pushed into list as well. A lot of great ambient/psychedelic/instrumental records floated about in 2016 it seemed. Some extended plays I picked up included new music from previously defunct acts. Wolf Parade reunited around Sub Pop’s deluxe reissue treatment of Apologies for the Queen Mary and an unexpected 4 song EP (called EP4) of new music. Excellent return to form. Even more exciting was the reunion of Lush, seemingly following a trend in the ranks of original British shoegaze (see Ride, Swervedriver, Pale Saints, My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive, etc.). Their new EP, Blind Spot, is just perfect.
Before I get to the albums, here are my Top 25 favorite songs of 2016:
1. Getting Gone – Mutual Benefit
2. Necronomicon – The Besnard Lakes
3. Break – Frightened Rabbit
4. Ride It Out – Redspencer
3. Break – Frightened Rabbit
4. Ride It Out – Redspencer
5. You – Day Wave
6. Ablaze – School of Seven Bells
7. Celebration – Yves Jarvis (formerly Un Blonde)
8. Take It Slow – Rogue Wave
9. Lady of the Ark – Kyle Craft
10. Hey You - The Thermals
11. Crucified Again – Arcade Fire
12. 22 (OVER S∞∞N) – Bon Iver
13. Line Them All Up – Black Mountain
14. Lost Dreamers – Mutual Benefit
15. Still Want To Be Here – Frightened Rabbit
16. Mixed Messages – Tuns
17. Yr Face – Yuck
18. Human Performance – Parquet Courts
19. No Worries Gonna Find Us – Plants and Animals
20. Golden Lion - The Besnard Lakes
21. Golden Vanity – The Hanging Stars
22. Bad Texan – Lucid Dream
23. Memory – Preoccupations
24. Racing Country – EZTV
25. I Have Nothing More To Say – Teenage Fanclub
And now…
The Top 20 Albums of 2016
20. Rogue Wave – Delusions of Grand Fur
The Top 20 Albums of 2016
20. Rogue Wave – Delusions of Grand Fur
Setting aside the frankly silly malapropism of the title,
Rogue Wave convinces me once again that they may be the most criminally
underrated indie-rock band of the 2000s.
I ranted about this in reference to 2013’s Nightingale Floors, suggesting it is pure happenstance that bands
like The Shins or Vampire Weekend become 1st
tier indie rock stars while Rogue Wave goes relatively unnoticed. It bugs the hell out of me. Grand
Fur is tightly packed with wonderfully catchy, guitar-driven indie pop,
perfect harmonies, and lyrical beauty, richly deserving to be heard and
loved. Choice track: “Take It
Slow”.
19. Radiohead – A Moon-Shaped Pool
I remember being mystified by the endless accolades handed
to Kid A back in 2000. I felt there were obviously some very strong
singles (“Everything In Its Right Place”, “Optimistic”, “Morning Bell”), but I
also felt the document was indulgent and was not nearly as accomplished as The Bends and Ok Computer, two nearly flawless albums. This trend continued with each Radiohead
release… a vague disappointment tempered by some seriously transcendent
moments. Yet…yet…there is always
something inescapably superior about a Radiohead album when compared to their
peers, and this holds true once again with A
Moon Shaped Pool. It’s a beautiful,
introspective, but often bleak record.
It’s challenging stuff, gloomily cyclical, at times moribund, yet deeply
immersive if you give it the attention it truly deserves. Why they continue to
sell a gazillion records to average music consumers is beyond me, though. Choice track: “Daydreaming”.
18. Pinkshinyultrablast – Grandfeathered
Taking their name from an Astrobrite album, Pinkshinyultrablast are a Russian quartet that
assault the ears with supercharged, wall-of-sound shoegaze. The touchstones are obvious – Lush, Cocteau Twins, My Bloody
Valentine – but the delivery is considerably louder and decidedly more
raucous. There is an immense density of
trebly guitar, backed by airy synths, drawing comparisons to Luminous Orange, Fleeting Joys, Serena
Maneesh, and early Asobi Seksu. The hooks are undeniable, while the
pixie-dust vocals of Lyubov Soloveva keep the cacophony rooted in the pop roots
of C86 twee bands of the 80s. And they
sound like they are having a blast. Is
there a contemporary shoegaze scene in Russia?
If we can get more of this rock candy, I sure hope so. Choice track: “I Catch You Napping”.
17. TUNS – TUNS
Great bands maintain greatness because of an internal
familiarity, a reciprocal instinctiveness that keeps them gelling. That is perhaps why the “supergroup” concept
so often falls short of expectations, with the whole being less than the sum of
its parts. High pedigree collectives
like Snowpony, Electronic, The Postal
Service, Zwan, Broken Bells, etc. were never awful,
and often good, but paled in comparison to their original outfits. And so it was with trepidatious delight that
TUNS arrived, a Haligonian power trio comprising Mike O’Neill (The Inbreds), Chris Murphy (Sloan), and Matt Murphy (The Super Friendz). These three enter this fray as masterful and
venerated indie-rockers who can weave a guitar and vocal hook like nobody’s
business. I am happy to say that the
gestalt is super impressive. TUNS
literally sound like all three bands perfectly mashed together – upbeat,
super-catchy guitar pop, with delectable harmonies that feel like home. And more so if you were weaned on the early
albums of these humble giants. Choice
track: “Mixed Messages”
16. Cavern of Anti-Matter – Void Beats / Invocation Trex
Stereolab is an
all-time favorite of mine, and in some ways the most unique of my most
cherished bands whose catalogues I devour.
The band tend to describe their music in their song and album titles
and, while comically oblique, are also metaphorically bang on somehow: Space
Age Batchelor Pad Music, Transient
Random-Noise Bursts With Announcements, Aluminum
Tunes. Even Refried Ectoplasm attaches to the Stereolab sound in some absurdist
manner. With the band on a "Hiatus/Sabbatical/Pause/Intermission/Breather"
we have been graced with a pretty great ‘lab-ish album from Laetitia Sadier (Silencio, in 2012) and now, in 2016, Tim Gane gives us Void Beats / Invocation Trex under the
moniker Cavern of Anti-Matter. Again,
the titling seems an analog to the album itself…somehow. While there are certainly lots of Stereolab
touchstones, this record is a little more motorik and cyclical, with less of
the grinding organ and guitar in favor of copious bleeps and bloops. As well, Void
Beats is primarily instrumental (Bradford Cox of Deerhunter/Atlas Sound
guests on vocals on one of the two vocal tracks), sounding much like Holy Fuck and other analog-techno
outfits. But the short of it is that
Gane’s new record is amazing – engaging, fun, meditative, innovative, and
grounded in the core history of the Stereolab legend. Choice track: “Echolalia”.
15. Sianspheric - Writing the Future in Letters of Fire
The past few years have seen the return of foundational
British shoegaze bands – Swervedriver,
Slowdive, Ride, Lush, and My Bloody Valentine – and these
Canadian genre masters have followed suit.
I’ve been a fan since the first floaty delayed chords of their 1995
debut, Somnium, surprised my
ears. This was surely not a sound one
associates with Hamilton, Ontario.
It’s been 15 years since their last proper album and they have come back
at the top of their game. Gentle,
slow-tempo, glacial passages carry faraway reverbed vocals lines, with
occasional grandiose bursts of distortion and fuzz. These are songs to lose yourself in, fully
and completely. Headphones and isolation
recommended. Choice track: “It’s Not
Over”.
14. Wire – Nocturnal Koreans
From 1977 to 1979, Wire put out three bombshell albums that
were post-punk before first-wave punk was over.
They were unusually innovative and artful in their approach to stripped
down, angsty, guitar-based rock, cementing them as revered grandfathers for
years to come. Despite two lengthy
hiatuses (1979-1987 and 1991-2003) and some mediocre forays into techno, Wire
has consistently lived up to their hallowed beginnings across a stack of great
records. 2016’s Nocturnal Koreans is no
exception, with their time-tested recipe of taut minimalist guitar lines,
brainy nihilistic lyrics, and cold-filtered vocals. I truthfully can’t think of a band coming out
of the late 70’s art punk scene that evolved to remain as relevant, exacting,
and exciting as Wire. Choice track: “Still”.
13. Black Mountain - IV
In an obvious nod to Led
Zeppelin, Black Mountain’s roman numeraled fourth record is a mammoth
psychedelic rock-fest. Their eight
minute opening single, “Mothers of The Sun”, is a stoned, sci-fi elegy to
proto-metal at its best, laid at the far-out altars of Hawkwind, Black Sabbath,
and Deep Purple. Thereafter is a quick shift to that odd place
where 80’s new wave meets 80’s metal, as if Jefferson Starship was kicking out the jams with Blondie (“Florian Saucer Attack”). “Line Them All Up” is a glorious prog-folk
number in which singer Amber Weber showcases her soulful pipes. “Cemetry Breeding” almost has a goth feel,
were it not for other main vocalist Stephen McBean’s rockist vocal delivery.
Top to bottom, this is a big, brash retro-rock record, complete with a cover
clearly and wonderfully indebted to Pink
Floyd. Like their previous album Wilderness Heart, IV gifts us with intricate musical homages so perfectly realized
that there is no concern of rip-off or derivation, just wide-eyed
celebration. Choice track: “Line Them
All Up”.
12. Teenage Fanclub – Here
Us southwestern Ontarions are a lucky bunch, because for some
extremely odd reason, Teenage Fanclub’s Norman Blake decided to relocate to
Kitchener (and, I believe, Joe Pernice
to Toronto, making their band The New
Mendicants a going concern). I think
I can safely assume that there is no other British rock luminary who has made
this career move; the possibility of running into Mr. Blake on King St. is
positively surreal. In any case, the
Fanclub played Toronto’s Lee Palace recently, and it was seriously nostalgia inducing. The band has mellowed over the years, for
certain, but their M.O. remains fully intact – impossibly catchy and fetching
vocal harmonies over jangly, fulsome chords emitted by three intertwined
guitars, usually punctuated by a lava-hot solo on a Fender Jaguar. It’s the kind of set up that seems
pedestrian, tired even, on paper. But
the songcraft of Blake, Gerard Love, and their mates is so perfectly developed,
a timelessness is assured. Here, once again, does this all very
well and stands up solidly to previous classics like Songs From Northern Britain, Man-Made,
and Thirteen. Choice track: “I Have Nothing More To
Say”.
11. Explosions In The Sky – The Wilderness
Explosions in the Sky have long been a band that
descriptively aligns with a key corner of my musical tastes – wide-screen,
cinematic, often fiery instrumental rock.
Key adherents include Godspeed
You! Black Emperor (and splinter groups A Silver Mt. Zion, Set Fire
To Flames, Fly Pan Am), Mogwai, Kinski, Pelican, Mono
and others (and see RLYR, #10
below). Explosions in the Sky have
helped pioneer this framework since the early 2000s, and while I have enjoyed
their records, they always seemed to fall short of the majesty so often evoked
by their compatriots. But The Wilderness takes a rather giant leap
forward, primarily because the band has moved outside their typical sonic
template (namely, waves of guitar moving from spare, minimalist lines to
maximalist crescendos). I am largely
unfamiliar with their soundtrack work for three movies in 2013-2015, but
perhaps the narrative demands of film have pushed them to try new things. The Wilderness sounds like a new Eluvium album, which is a welcome
development (Eluvium has released 7 ambient-experimental albums since 2003 that
are uniformly tremendous). Drastically
reduced is the reliance on electric guitar as the foundation – it’s still
there, of course, but there is a neo-classical richness provided by beautiful
synth lines and swells, digital beats alongside their regular kit, reverbed piano,
and a singular attention to melody. The
result is uplifting and grandiose, a Chariots
of Fire type elevation. This greater
instrumental balance gives the guitar work room to breathe and evolve into
entirely new personalities that were not previously possible. Epic!
Choice track: “The Ecstatics”.
10. RLYR – Delayer
I can only assume this new outfit is pronounced
“Re-LAY-er”. Let’s go with that. I have no memory of how this came across my
virtual desk, but I recall being interested as it was a side project of Pelican’s guitarist, Trevor Shelley de
Brauw. Their bandcamp offering did not
disappoint. Take my description of
“incendiary instrumental rock” as described in #11 above, and it applies quite
nicely to RLYR. That said, there is a harder edge at play here, much as there is with many Pelican
songs, which tugs RLYR into the loosely defined “post-hardcore” genre. The fuzz/distortion is indispensable, upping
the angst quotient considerably, such that RLYR shares the sonic territory of Horseback, Torche, Jesu, Psychic Paramount,
and Wayne Rogers’ body of work
(notably Magic Hour and Major Stars). There are only four songs on Delayer, with one song clocking in at 23 minutes and
two exceeding 6 minutes, but
this is hardly atypical in this genre. Although there
are long extended passages of gritty, buzz-saw guitars, the hooks are there,
and they refuse to let you go. It is
worth noting that RLYR plays pretty fast, much faster than the sludgy (but
amazing) work of Jesu, for example. It’s
all amped up, up-beat, and determined to anthemically fry your face. Choice track:
“Slipstream Summer”.
9. The New Lines – Love and Cannibalism.
This is 60’s throwback psychedelic pop, clearly influenced
by The Byrds, Moby Grape, Fairport
Convention, and early folk numbers by Syd
Barret/Pink Floyd. I also hear a lot
of the paisley underground, referencing The
Rain Parade and The Dream Syndicate. The vocals are an acquired taste, delivered
with an oddly deadpanned affectation, as if the singer is a not-all-there acid
casualty, a 60’s zen caricature. While the maudlin vocals may marginalize some
listeners, Love and Cannibalism is
otherwise beautiful and lysergic. Lovely 12-string guitar arpeggios, vintage
organ, and infernally catchy choruses.
If you like kaleidoscopic baroque pop and long to return to
Haight-Ashbury, this is highly recommended. Choice track: “Weatherman’s
Apology”.
8. Preoccupations – Preoccupations
Calgary’s excellent noise rockers Women dissolved and reformed with much critical fanfare as Viet Cong. Viet Cong’s debut, Cassette, was a reverb-drenched noise pop document referencing Pavement, Wire, and No Age. I was hopeful for the future, but 2015’s
self-titled follow up was only good, and not great – something was
missing. The band hit the indie papers with
faux-scandal when their name became a subject of much protest, wagging fingers,
allegations of racism, and calls for censure.
I thought this was total bullshit and entirely misplaced ire. The band did not help their cause by
shrugging their shoulders with the excuse that they thought the Viet Cong were
bad-asses, clearly drawing on superficial celluloid references. Political quicksand. Weary of the controversy, they have emerged
as Preoccupations. And while Wolf Parade put out a surprise 4 song
EP this year, Preoccupations is my new Wolf Parade (or Handsome Furs, or Sunset
Rubdown). They sound a lot like those
bands now, along with a consistent undercurrent of Joy Division, early Psychedelic
Furs, and Echo and the Bunnymen. Amazing!
Choice track: “Memory”.
7. Flyying Colours - Mindfulness
Thank you intrepid rock critic godfather, Jack Rabid,
founder and editor-in-chief of the incomparable music zine The Big Takeover. Every
quarterly issue is jam-packed with incisive reviews from the world of
underground rock and associated genres.
Jack’s Top 40 each issue is a treasure trove of records that would have
otherwise passed me by. Enter Flyying
Colours, a group of Aussies that, to my ears, are a bit too pigeon-holed as
shoegazing descendants of My Bloody
Valentine, Ride, and Chapterhouse. I get it, but I also hear more straight up
psych rock structures and sounds aligning with Brian Jonestown Massacre, The
Dandy Warhols, Tame Impala, and The Lilys. But we’re splitting musical hairs here – this
is fulsome, stunning fuzz rock – loud, heavily reverbed, melodic, and
explosive. This album is fucking
dynamite. Thanks again, Jack! Choice track:
“It’s Tomorrow Now”.
6. School of Seven Bells – SVIIB
I’ve been a committed fan of this pop-goth-dance trio ever
since I saw them open for TV On The Radio back in 2007 or so. Three amazing albums followed, reigniting my
love of bands like Cocteau Twins, Lush, Siouxsie and the Banshees, and Kate
Bush. SVIIB has always had a danceable
quality as well, alongside bands like M83, Caribou, and Air. In some cases, they are 2 or 3 production
mistakes away from bad dance pop. Unlike
M83’s latest album Junk (which is
horrendous) they maintain their cool.
Tragedy struck the band in 2013 when drummer Benjamin Curtis (formerly
of Secret Machines) succumbed to lymphoma.
Through the sadness and devastation, front-women and twin sisters
Alejandra and Claudia Deheza assembled, built up and mixed a range of already
laid down tracks, demos, and song ideas to release one final posthumous album,
in honor of their fallen friend and bandmate. It is much the same, which is to say, super
fabulous – angelic two-part harmonies, irresistible melodies, soaring synths,
and dance-floor ready beats. Choice
track: “Ablaze”
5. The Lucid Dream – Compulsion Songs
Whoa! For some reason
I do not recall how I came across these groovy Brit mofos, but extremely happy
I did. This is an epic psychedelic rock
album, but in no way constrained by whatever stereotypes that such a description
might conjure. They burst out of the
gate like a Gatling gun, with “Bad Texan”, a four-on-the-floor acid-dance punch
up that sounds like the Happy Mondays
guitar dueling with Holy Fuck. Second track “Stormy Waters” reverts to an
acoustic folk romp, punctuated by fuzzy auto-wah, suddenly sounding like Gomez or Akron/Family. And then…an 8
minute psychedelicized reggae dub jam ("I'm A Star In My Own Right),
complete with a melodica that would do Augustus
Pablo proud. This reggae detour feels sympatico with the rest of the album, like the Clash's Armagideon Time? “21st
Century” is off-the-rails garage punk, a full on rendering of MC5, Stooges, Ty Segal, and The White Stripes’ more uncontrolled
urges. The whole album feels eclectic
but unified by distorted and otherwise multi-effected wall of guitar
attacks. It’s like the aural equivalent
of staring into a oil drum full of burning magnesium. On acid.
Choice track: “Bad Texan”.
4. Mutual Benefit – Skip A Sinking Stone
Unknown to me at the time, this unassuming folk group landed
in the 7th spot of 2013’s
best of collection with Love’s Sinking
Diamond. “Let’s Play / Statue of
Man”, in retrospect, was my favorite song from that year (although I believe I initially
put it behind “High School Lover” by Cayucas and “Takes Time” by Jim
Guthrie). So I have been waiting for the
follow up and felt for some reason that a sophomore slump was inevitable. Not so!
Another tremendous record. Skip A Sinking Stone is absolutely stunning, elegant, warm, and
pretty. My love of fuzzy mayhem may be
unmitigated, but I am also a sucker for that warm sweet spot where folksy talent meets technical
prowess, attentive production, narrative vision. Every note, swelling string, vocal harmony,
finger pick, piano trill, and tremolo decay seems to be in its perfect place. This may all be meaningless without the all
important foundation of melody, and that’s where Mutual Benefit elevates their
craft. The melodies are effortless,
winsome, and irresistible. Every track
evokes sunshine, cool breezes, sacred ground.
Love, regret, family and friends.
Traveling, shifting landscapes, and drifting dreams. Gosh, did I lay that on a bit thick? You know what, I don’t think so. In fact, I’m struggling with it sitting at #4
– it may deserve more than that. Choice
tracks: “Lost Dreamers” and “Getting
Gone” (both of these in contention for song of the year).
3. Un Blonde – Good Will Come To You
Where do dudes like this come from? Jean-Sebastian Audet, a
Calgarian who’s relocated to Montreal, is a wondrous genius. I had the distinct pleasure of watching him
play live at the Hillside Festival in 2016 and, although it was just him and
his guitar, I was captivated (I think maybe another player was there, but
whomever it was seemed superfluous). He
has this rare alacrity and fluidity in his guitar playing that feels unique, like a totally fresh approach to the instrument (although at times I am
reminded of Sandro Perri). As good as his live set was, it is a shadow
of his beautiful 2016 record Good Will
Come To You. Most songs have his
acoustic guitar as the foundation, and his strumming patterns are strange and
inscrutable, sounding simultaneously lazy and highly disciplined. Ditto to his jazzy electric guitar overlays,
which sound random and jammy – yet entirely purposeful to the structure. The acoustic passages remind me of Animal Collective’s Sung Tongs, but instead of the
paroxysmal hollers and tribal chants, Audet provides us with some of the most
soulful, gospel-tinged vocals I’ve had the pleasure of hearing. I suspect the four part harmonies are all
him, from deep bass to ringing falsettos, all sung with a gorgeous
vibrato. The homey production is
profoundly intimate – he’s right on the mic, right in your ear, next to you on
your porch. Added to the tracks are a
range of found sounds and field recordings, putting you right in the midst of
some welcoming downtown neighbourhood, observed through technicolor
sunglasses. It's an intensely “present”
record that seems to compel calm and
mindfulness. And listening to it,
I wonder if Audet has any choice but to write, play, and live music. I can’t imagine
he could do anything else. Choice
track: “Celebration”.
2. The Besnard Lakes – A Coliseum Complex Museum
Ah, the mighty Besnard Lakes – every album they put out is glorious and epic. This oddly named
album may be their best yet. Walls of
deeply effected guitars and keyboards with the impossibly high vocals of Jace
Lasek soaring above them. Every song feels anthemic – the Lakes have that lovely ability to sound impossibly huge
but then somehow kick it into an even higher gear. If you wish to get a sense of quintessential
sense of this band, check out the compelling and beautiful (and wonderfully
ambiguous) video for the single “Necronomicon” (apparently
its first screening to co-lead Olga Goreas moved her to tears, and it’s easy to see/hear why). It’s strange – when I think about Canadian
music and bands, I often forget about the Besnard Lakes as I list-make in my
head. But we’re now 5 LPs and 2 EPs
into their growing discography and I
am starting to register that they are somewhere in my top 5 Canadian bands of all-time. Who, in fact, would place after Neil Young,
Arcade Fire, and Constantines? I
think it might be the might Besnard Lakes.
Looking forward to 2017 release, apparently coming soon! Choice tracks: “The Golden Lion”,
“Necronomicon”.
1. Frightened Rabbit – Painting of a Panic Attack
2013’s Pedestrian
Verse was good, but could not hold a candle to the triumphs of The Midnight Organ Flight and A Winter of Mixed Drinks, two albums
that were ever present in my ears during the late 2000s, and somehow emblematic
of a pre-child, financially secure, fancy-free concert going period with many
fine friends. I thought the Rabbits were
on a mild downward slide, but 2016’s Painting
of a Panic Attack has kicked me in the gut.
Back to back heartfelt and powerful indie-rock songs that send me back 8
years or so. I have to say, it’s hard to
make heart-on-sleeve rock songs like these without slipping, at least a little
bit, into self-importance, repetition, and even self-parody. Many a band have I grown weary of because
they couldn’t break out of their original mold, becoming tired and
pointless. This is the risk – if you
sound like you are always on a soapbox, or always crying to the love that has
rejected you, or always playing the angry isolationist card – well, it’s hard
to maintain a sense of authenticity (independent, completely, of “real”
authenticity, whatever that means).
Frightened Rabbit have not really changed, yet have avoided this trap
fully and completely. Acknowledging some
sonic experimentation here and there, the rhythm/feel/structure feels no
different from 8 years ago. What does
this sound like? Take your old favorite
FB songs, and all the best songs of bands like Wintersleep, Snow Patrol, Elbow,
The Long Winters, and The Shins, and you have a good picture of Painting a Panic Attack. Every song gives you a reason to tap your
toes, sing along, or fall into sudden repose to get a handle on the greatness
you are hearing. Irresistibly yours.
Choice track: “Still Want To Be Here”, “Break”.
Some Great Records Falling Outside The 2016 Top 20 List
Narrowing to the Top 20 was tricky once again, so much so that I have secondary list of a few records that could have easily made the cut. Perhaps a top 25 was in order, but to lighten the writing load, I stuck to 20 and put these highly worthy records outside the main list.
By Divine Right – Speak and Spell: BDR’s full cover album of Depeche Mode’s 1983 classic is brilliant and perhaps should be in my top 20; but I arbitrarily do not allow the inclusion of cover records or compilations. I don’t know why, I just don’t. Their translation of DM’s synthetic lines into crunchy guitar pop is tremendous and the live show knocked my socks off.
Eluvium – False Readings On. More gorgeous meditative ambient passages from Matthew Cooper. His dronescapes, dreamworlds, and MIDI operettas truly position Eluvium as the heir apparent to Brian Eno.
Foreign Fields – Take Cover. If you enjoy lush orchestral arrangements, spacious reverb, emotionally wrought (and highly gifted) vocals, and…well…pervasive melancholy, this may be the album for you. This is a similar feel to James Blake, but more song-oriented, similar to Antlers, Antony and the Johnsons, Fanfarlo, Sleeping States, and Radical Face – but kind of better than all of them, by several smidges.
The Hanging Stars – Over The Silvery Lake: The whole artist/title combination feels eponymous to the music itself. This is a great space cowboy/Laurel Canyon gem and reminds me of Beachwood Sparks.
Holy Fuck – Congrats: What we have come to expect from Toronto’s own Neu-Technocrats – heady, dark, electro dance anthems. A trancey groovefest.
The Junipers – Red Bouquet Fair. With Pet Sounds production, syrupy harmonies, and lush orchestration, The Junipers effortlessly channel The Zombies, Beatles, and early Bee Gees. It is a gorgeous record that sounds fresh and vibrant, with multiple toes dipped in the 60s, and reminds me of the best albums of late 90s Elephant 6 bands (Olivia Tremor Control, Essex Green, Ladybug Transistor, The Minders) and other more recent gems, like the Ruby Suns, Marching Band, The High Dials, and Secret Cities. Hard to not push this into my Top 20 list.
Parquet Courts – Human Performance: This band indignantly dismisses that they are influenced by Pavement (they claim their greatest influence is the more obscure, clearly Pavement-sounding Tyvek – also a great band). This is irrelevant to listeners like myself who hear it so clearly, an amazing call back to Slanted and Enchanted and Wowee Zowee.
Plants and Animals – Waltzed In From The Rumbling: I’m a little annoyed leaving this out of the top 20. On the cusp, this is yet another accomplished album of soulful indie rock from these amazing Montrealers.
And here still are more excellent 2016 records that deserve mention, all garnering at least a 7.5/10 by my personal reckoning:
Alcest – Kodama: Former alt-metalists go the route of Jesu, Torche, and Mew, finding beauty in layers of heavy riffage and 80s synth backdrops.
Angel Olsen – My Woman: Not quite as dramatic and sublime as Burn Your Fire (#10 in 2014) but chock full of great indie rock songs with a splash of glam and some vocal pomp.
Bob Mould – Patch The Sky: Elder punk statesman Bob Mould has always played a bracing, hard & fuzzy punk-pop but this is the closest he’s come in his solo works to his post-Hüsker Dü outfit, Sugar. A welcome return to scorchers from the early 90s.
Daniel Land – In Love With A Ghost. Daniel Land (& The Modern Painters) landed in my aural lap back in 2009 with Love Songs for the Chemical Generation, a woozy bedroom pop-ambient affair similar to Hammock, Dan Deacon, and Youth Lagoon. I was smitten. Land’s latest offering has a more synth-poppiness to it, reminding of Depeche Mode, Bronski Beat, Air, M83, and Young Galaxy.
Day Wave – Headcase / Hard to Read: Simple, catchy indie-pop recalling The Cure, Echo and the Bunnymen, Pains of Being Pure At Heart, and C86 bands in general. This is a reissue of their first two EPs, but has “debut album” status as the first real physical release. The live show was a sweet birthday treat.
Gord Downie – The Secret Path is the soundtrack companion to the graphic novel and animated short-film, telling the tragic story of a 12-year-old boy, Chanie Wenjack, who escaped one of Canada’s residential schools to journey home, a trek that would cost him his life. It’s a symbolic call to action for Downie, who is spending his last days advocating for reconciliation and truth. It’s a beautiful and sad record.
Haley Bonar – An Impossible Dream. Bonar, a Canadian growing up South Dakota, graces us with fuzzy guitar pop, recommended if you enjoy Juliana Hatfield, Vivian Girls, Courtney Barnett, Frankie Rose, and the like.
High Violets – Heroes and Haloes. Lushy, gazey, guazy guitar pop. Lovely airy vocals and hitting the same sonic notes as Pains of Being Pure At Heart, Pinkshinyultrablast, Fleeting Joys, Soft Science, and Tamaryn.
Hope Sandoval and the Warm Inventions – Until The Hunter: Not really new territory being covered here, but the dark, sultry underground folk of Sandoval is always welcome.
Juliana Barwick – Will: Operatic ambient gorgeousness from spritely Barwick. The album may pass you by relatively unnoticed if you’re not careful. But with your attention, it’s completely immersive. Recommended if you like This Mortal Coil, Tim Hecker, Enya, Hammock, Julia Holter, and Grouper.
Kestrels – Kestrels: Buzzsaw wall of guitar pop from Montreal, sounding a lot like old tour mates Ringo Deathstarr and Yuck.
Little Scream – Cult Following: After 2011’s St. Vincent-inspired The Golden Record, Laurel Sprengelmeyer starts with an ultra groovy, ear-catching disco number and apparent shift in mandate. Sounding more like Prince or Abba, the dance kitsch starts to wear thin, but the album is ultimately saved by a return to her earlier avant-pop.
Nick Cave – The Skeleton Tree. Mr. Cave lost his teenage son in a climbing accident and although much of the album was already in process before this tragedy, you cannot help but hear his mourning throughout. Dark, sad, and harrowing.
Nopes – Never Heard Of It: Face-melting, noise punk delivered at terminal speed with anguished lo-fi vocals. While tough to listen to excessively, Nopes grab your attention and hammers you before you can squirm away. And it is also clear that the lead guitarist has some serious chops, a rare commodity in this anti-genre.
Nothing – Tired of Tomorrow: Classic shoegaze/dreampop that sits hand in hand with Pains of Being Pure At Heart, Lush, High Violets, Cheetahs, Slowdive, and Pale Saints.
Noveller & thisquietarmy – Reveries: I have a penchant for minimalist psychedelia and ambient drones, going back to the early work of Spaceman 3/Spiritualized/Spectrum (and a big list of others). Noveller is the solo outfit of Sarah Lipstate, who contributed guitar to Receiver-era Parts and Labor. Thisquitearmy is an experimental drone project of Montrealer Eric Quach. Together? Long ebullient swaths of sustained, elliptical guitar and strings. Truly meditative.
PJ Harvey – The Hope Six Demolition Project. Recorded behind one-way glass to allow voyeurs a peek into the creative process, PJ Harvey’s follow up to Let England Shake (my #1 album of 2011) is less accomplished, but it is still great and maintains the same political portentousness.
Radical Face – The Family Tree: The Leaves: Floridian Ben Cooper’s third in his “Family” trilogy of heartfelt acoustic and orchestral indie pop. Beautifully done and reminiscient of Sufjan Stevens and Lord Huron. Also check out The Roots and The Branches from 2011 and 2013.
Sam Beam and Jesca Hoop – Love Letter For Fire. Admittedly I prefer Sarah Beam’s angelic vocals complementing Sam’s (in Iron and Wine) over Jesca Hoop. Yet Hoop provides more confident co-leadership in these folky numbers and it’s nice to hear Sam trading off lines. If you like Iron and Wine, you will like this.
Savages – Adore Life. Savages are punk as fuck and witnessing the video for “The Answer” feels almost exactly like my first viewing of “Smells Like Teen Spirit”. Communal rebellion, love, nihilism, release. I don’t think Savages represent the watershed moment that was Nirvana’s Nevermind, but perhaps they should.
Several Futures – Before Your Forget. Long post-punk tirades from Toronto. Fans of Metz, Ought, Sunny Day Real Estate, and Wire should approve.
Snowblink – Returning Current. Groovy, loungey ambient-pop taking copious cues from St. Vincent, Feist, and Little Scream.
Tamaryn – Cranekiss: These shoegazers dropped a portion of the fuzz and replaced it with cycling electronica, sounding a lot like School of Seven Bells, Cocteau Twins, Curve, M83, and The Cure.
Thermals – We Disappear: Pure Thermals. High energy, irreverent pop-punk. No one does it quite like them.
The Tragically Hip – Man Machine Poem: The Hip’s catalog has been up and down in the later 2000s, but Man Machine Poem hits the same lofty notes as 2009’s We Are The Same. Given the tragic news of Gord Downie’s failing health, the record has an extra weightiness to it and a sombre undercurrent as a Canadian institution suddenly says goodbye.
Wilco – Schmilco: Another great offering by the grand-gentlemen of indie rock, Schmilco is a little more country, bluesy even, than 2015’s Star Wars.
Wintersleep – The Great Detachment. Another powerful offering, Wintersleep is at the top of its game in delivering grand and often spine-tingling rock hymnals. RIYL Snow Patrol, Elbow, The Dears, etc.
The Disappointments, Miscues, and Disparagements of 2016
And, like every year, we have our disappointments. These aren’t bad albums necessarily, it’s just that they fall quite short of hopes and expectations. Which makes me dislike them even more. They betrayed me.
First, fuck autotune. Nothing is improved by autotune, even if pitch is technically truer. It’s an awful sound. So why would a brilliant singer like Justin Vernon, aka Bon Iver, use it? His 2016 record, 22, A Million is getting endless congratulations whereas I find it terribly annoying 75% of the time. At times it sounds interesting and whimsical and progressive, coming across like Múm, Half-Handed Cloud, or a toned down Animal Collective. But then it regresses to abrasive low-fi beats, unnecessary static and interrupted volume (like a bad mp3 file), and autotuned/vocoded vocals. And the bizarre symbology of the song titles bugs me. It has its moments though, especially “22 (OVER S∞∞N)”, which is a great track – but overall, man, a frustrating listen.
I have waited patiently, 3 or 4 years I guess, for one Kyle Craft to emerge from the ashes of never-to-be indie stars Gashcat. Gashcat had no physical releases – just a digital LP and an EP via Bandcamp and an enormous buzz from playing SxSW around 2011-2012. They were the reincarnation of Neutral Milk Hotel and ready to be my new favorite band. Then a break up was announced and all online presence disappeared with rumours of lead ‘Cat, Kyle Craft, having moved to Portland from Louisana to hunker down and make some new music. Happily, he re-emerged as a Sub Pop signee with a brand new album, Dolls of the Highland. It’s good (and the slightly reworked “Lady of the Ark”, a Gashcat song, retains it’s greatness). But just good. Which is far below what I expected, as I expected it to be my new favorite album. He lost the DIY ramshackle, all hands-on-deck energy of his previous work, moving instead into glam-rock, blues shuffles, and deep south Americana. Sigh. I should stress, probably, that it’s quite a good album. If you like Dylan, David Bowie, and The Band, which I of course do.
M83’s new album, Junk, is horrendous. Anthony Gonzalez obviously loves his synthy 80s trappings, but the dancey fluff on here is irredeemable. It’s like Howard Jones humping the Thompson Twins while Wham watches. How he can get here from 2003’s Dead Cities, Red Cities and Lost Ghosts is beyond me.
Another big disappointment in a purely relative sense was PersonA by Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros. It’s not bad, but pales in comparison to my top album of 2012, Here. And I express confused disappointment after being blown away/torn to shreds by the Suuns set at Hillside 2016, only to find the supporting album, Hold/Still a grating, ponderous mess.
Have at it! Signing off!
J.