Sunday, December 31, 2017

Best Albums of 2017: Albums of the Year

The following artists released works that were truly above and beyond in the field of music. These are the people and albums that may define a generation, a time, perhaps a whole decade. No one had better music than our top three artists this year, and after you listen to them, I'm certain you'll agree.

Without further adieu, here are 2017's Albums of the Year:

3. Kelly Lee Owens
Kelly Lee Owens
Electronic/Ambient : Listen

When you first see the album art for Kelly Lee Owens' debut self-titled release, you expect a very specific thing, that is to say, if you have no knowledge of the Welsh singer-songwriter going into your first listen, like me. What you think--I know because it's what I thought--is incredulity at having to slog through another god-awful, indie, guitar-and-vocal performance like the nigh insurmountable numbers of weird-folk troubadours that have sprung up in the wake of Pavement. But what you hear when you first listen to Kelly Lee Owens' debut self-titled album, especially if you have no knowledge of the Welsh singer-songwriter, like me, will blow your goddamned mind.

To say that my first listen was puzzling is the most terrible of understatements: I was left literally dumbfounded. I didn't see any of this coming, an intense, atmospheric blend of electronics and vocals delivered so softly you'd think she was whispering in your ear. There are not enough adjectives synonymous with awe to adequately describe how I felt after listening to this album, suffice to say that this may be, by a wide margin, the most surprised I have ever been while reviewing music.

The first listen, however, was literally through the speakers of my iPhone, which, despite what I'm sure were someone's best intentions, suck. So, for my second listen, I donned my studio headphones for the first time in months, finally having found an album that gave me occasion to do so. And was it ever as glorious as I remembered. Listening to Kelly Lee Owens, you are immediately wrapped in sound, the scintillation of every note passing ever so faintly over you. By the time you reach the second song, you're wondering what aural pleasures rest within the remaining confines of such mysterious yet inviting soundscapes.

But not all is warmth and tantalization in the land of Owens. Songs like "Anxi." and "Evolution" follow more straightforward lines, but with a dark twist. There's always some...thing underneath the surface; transfixed by both amazement and horror, all you want it is to discover what "it" is, but terrified that reaching into the murky depths could result in pain, or worse.

Then there are gorgeous, ambient songs like "Arthur" and especially "8," the album's nine-minute closing track that is every Grimes song and every Aphex Twin song played over top of each other, the layers washing over you wave after wave, until eventually all that's left is a simple Kraftwerk beat ticking down the seconds until your journey through time and space comes to an end.

I can't say how many times I have listened to this album, trying to discover every secret, every hidden place. I can't say how many more times I will listen to it again--a vein this rich begs to be mined. I have actively listened to it, I have passively listened to it: driving, cooking, doing laundry. I have used it to fall asleep. I have had to listen to it first thing upon waking. I'm listening to it while writing this very article. There is nothing more addictive than the puzzle only you can solve. This album is that puzzle
...for everyone.

2. Richard Dawson
Peasant
Avant-Folk : Listen

Have you ever wondered if music could break your mind, or unlock the mysteries of the universe, or answer every question about existence you've ever had, if only you could just...understand it? I know, it's strange to say that a folk album (with some serious metal and industrial influences hidden in there ever so expertly) with lyrics inspired by dark ages English diaries could be the key to something so important this far in the future.

I can't explain how I feel about this album properly. The more I listen to it, the more I wish all folk sounded like this, but then this wouldn't be SO unique. I am still utterly confused as to its production, conception, and even its very existence.

I know I'm rambling, but this album does that, it's like the King in Yellow or discovering R'lyeh, its non-euclidean geometry twisting your every conventional thought into a four-dimensional mobius. If artists are directors, Richard Dawson is David Lynch. If albums are paintings, Peasant is Saturn Devouring His Son.

The album opens with a gorgeous brass chord progression, more a soundscape than a song, but it soon devolves into various...well, to be honest, farty noises that had me laughing harder than anything Weird Al's done in years. But jokes aside, the non-conventional structure and lack of respect for anything resembling music theory is a great introduction for how the rest of this album will go.

"Ogre," perhaps the song getting the most press, and rightly so, is where the true body of the album begins. Slowly, we enter the world of Bryneich, with a beautiful string arrangement that could have you easily slip into a medieval court. Shortly voices enter, a boisterous choir, not unlike those of a charivari that begins (or ends) many a joyous gathering, but something is off. Dawson's own voice is clear but distinctly unsettling and his guitar is plucked so hard it might break in half. The suite eventually transitions into a chorus so catchy and powerful that Sufjan Stevens would bow in admiration.

The other standouts on this album--and considering its place in this list, there are many--also conjure the same sense of unease, giving you glimpses of the structures and sounds you are so familiar with from folk, or just music in general. But the glimpses are fleeting, and their presence is only there as a fix, a morsel to make you beg for more. "Weaver" also ends with an epic group-vocal that booms through whatever listening device you prefer, its slow build proving worthy of such a din. Never before has folk-music been appropriate for a mosh pit.

I could keep going...and going, and going. "Prostitute" sounds more like it's coming out of today's Silence Breakers headlines than from the ninth century, proving that even the incredibly old can be incredibly prescient; "Shapeshifter" is both creepy and fun, the Nightmare Before Christmas of folk songs; "Scientist" could go toe-to-toe with any classic metal song and win, its Jethro Tull-inspired licks as heavy as a brown dwarf; and "Beggar," my god, a sadder, more beautiful ode to man's best friend has never been heard, and will never be heard again.

It is clear that Dawson put the time, the work, the blood and sweat in to become intimately familiar with a period of such brutality and squalor. But his ear for sumptuous strings, clever songwriting, and resonant lyrics makes the era not only intriguing, but intrinsically beautiful. Peasant is more--so much more--than a distraction. It is a ode, a tome, an epic poem. It is the present full of past; a timely work from another time.

1. Kendrick Lamar
DAMN.
Hip Hop : Listen

Once upon a time, hip hop was sorely lacking in concept albums. Not even that long ago, the genre was derided for creating albums that were just filler to bump out the couple dancefloor singles a rapper would put out over the course of a year. That was before, before Kendrick Lamar. With his last three albums: Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City, To Pimp a Butterfly, and now DAMN.; he has created three true works of art, full of brilliance in both their writing as well as their delivery. Lamar is the messiah hip hop has been waiting for.

To be honest, there's not a lot I can say here that hasn't been said countless times about DAMN.; it's on so many year-end lists for a reason: mainly, it's astounding. There aren't many artists that can be continually surprising with their seemingly never-ending well of creativity, heart, intelligence, singularity, individuality, idiosyncrasy, specificity, and ingenuity like Kendrick.

This entry could be entirely about "DNA.," a song so fantastic it puts the rest of the hip hop world to shame, but that would be a disservice to the peerless, furious, precious, funny, vivid, precise, intimate, merciless, distinct, inimitable, stirring, effortless, original, electric, curious, enthralling, sincere, philosophical, fun, tender, sheepish, bouncy, fast, lucid, schizophrenic, fluent, scathing, smooth, homegrown, seamless masterpiece that is every single moment on DAMN.

This entry could be entirely about the loop samples from "ELEMENT.," a combination of gorgeous hums, strings, and piano that is so ethereal in an album so grounded in earthly problems that it could be the starship we cling to to escape this cold, dead place. But that would be a disservice to the incredible work put into every detail of every sound on DAMN.

This entry could be entirely about "HUMBLE.," a banger if Kendrick ever wrote one, and a damn catchy tune with a chorus we've all felt like yelling at a coworker/celebrity/worst-president-ever or two ("Bitch, sit down / Be humble"). Its accompanying music video (which I know technically goes outside the purview of an album review) is wildly arty, bold, and often insane, but so encompasses both the sound of the album in a single visual and the musical mission statement of Lamar himself. But that would be a disservice to every jaw-dropping, hard-hitting rhyme on DAMN.

Kendrick Lamar is a wordsmith of unknowable proportions, buoyed ever higher by insanely talented guests from Rihanna to, inexplicably, U2, and Lamar squeezes every sound for all it's worth by filling the space with lots of words. But not a single syllable is wasted--each specifically chosen to tell his story exactly how he wants, with every recitation so flawless you wonder when, or even if, he breathes. And while DAMN. is a beyond-extraordinary rap album, it is also a phenomenal dissertation on fate, and how, no matter where you come from, you can chase it, rather than run from it.

For it's originality, its depth, and its wondrous vision, DAMN. is the best album of 2017.



And that's it everyone! The Baltimore Music Festival has come to a close, as has a god-awful year, but here's to a better 2018, and the great music of 2017!

If our Albums of the Year aren't enough to hold you over, check out our Honorable Mentions and Runners Up.


--S^E

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

The Best Albums of 2017: Runners Up

The following artists and their works were excellent and more than worthy of a listen, or several listens. They proved to be exemplary beyond the other totally great artists in our Honorable Mentions section, but were just that shy of being truly the best of the year.

Without further adieu, here are 2017's Runners Up, in alphabetical order:

LCD Soundsystem
American Dream
Dance-Punk : Listen

In 2010, LCD Soundsystem disbanded forever. Now, less than 10 years later, "forever" is over and LCD is back and bigger than ever. The fourth title from the long-standing dance-punk outfit, led by singer-songwriter and hyper-talented producer James Murphy, picks up exactly where This Is Happening left off without missing a note. What many have spurned as a cash-grab reunion is anything but; American Dream is a revelation that intrigues, confuses, and saddens. Album closer "Black Screen" alone is worthy of a spot on this list, with Murphy's pleading grief--stemming from the death of mentor/father figure/coolest man ever, David Bowie--slowly devolving into an ambient wash of synths that fade in the same way we all do with time. Other standouts like "Other Voices," "I Used To," and "How Do You Sleep?" kick up the album's intensity with that tried-and-true must-be-LCD combo of shouted bad poetry, ultra-complex percussion, and hypnotizing bass lines. God, it's good to have them back.

The National
Sleep Well Beast
Indie Rock : Listen

Anyone who has spoken to me about the state of sound-saturating indie knows how much I find the National incredibly boring. It is, therefore, with much chagrin, but also with a pleasant surprise that I find myself including Sleep Well Beast this high on my year-end list, or on the list at all. Each song is a piece of a larger whole, yet starkly isolated, beginning low and rising and building to a dreadful crescendo that is unparalleled in the indie rock scene. Even the National's contemporaries like Grizzly Bear and Sufjan Stevens have a hard time equaling the raw power dripping from each note that is Sleep Well Beast, its every moment overflowing with untamed emotion and fully-realized aura. And that's totally leaving out Matt Berninger's heavy, eloquent lyricism and nostalgic Echo-and-the-Bunnymen-esque delivery. Every part interplays and intertwines perfectly, creating one of the most satisfying records of the year.

Sampha
Process
Alternative R&B : Listen

The past couple years have been very kind to British R&B. We've had beautiful releases from Michael Kiwanuka, Rina Sawayama, and Jessie Ware, just to name a few. And now Sampha joins the mix, with his alternative, nearly minimalist style on Process. Almost clashing with the extensively electronic sounds, Sampha lays his soul bare, putting all his regrets, pains, and dreams on display in vignettes that approach perfection. Every song embraces the tumult that is life on our pale blue dot, an epiphany that catalogs all the longing and memories in a bastion of pure grandeur. "Blood on Me" could easily be a song that defines a career, delivered with complexity and gut-wrenching power, over a smooth electro-beat that could just as easily be hosting a hip hop hook rather than its much more moribund croon. "Reverse Faults" is a revelation within the genre, with a glitchy loop reminiscent of Anohni's debut last year, experimental and sublimely confusing. This and many others fit like tattered, overused puzzle pieces in a rich tapestry of catharsis, nay, apotheosis.

Slowdive
Slowdive
Shoegaze : Listen

If you know me, then you know I'm a sucker for shoegaze: I count down the days until A Place to Bury Strangers release an album, I fall asleep to My Bloody Valentine's Loveless, I seek out any band who will try their damnedest to blow my ear drums with a squall of pure noise. Slowdive is a sleeping giant of a band, one who waved the flag of this once revolutionary sound. But the hallmark of a revolution is that it comes back around, and the giant stirs from his slumber. Perhaps inspired by MBV's 2013 return, itself marking the end of a 22-year hiatus, the group have come back to us after the same expanse of silence. And much like MBV, as well as the above listed LCD Soundsystem, Slowdive respect their own legacy, releasing their first self-titled album that is both an extension of their discography as well as an essential addition to it. The sound is familiar, but innovative in its atmosphere; filling in gaps from the past, yet unflinching from its forward leaps toward an unknown and terrifying horizon. At some times abstract, at others casual, this album is truly worthy of carrying the ingenious band's name as its own.

St. Vincent
Masseduction
Pop/New Wave : Listen

Praise the Lord, St. Vincent released an album. It doesn't matter which one, it's one of hers. One of the few insanely talented guitarists not interested in grinding themselves into a genre-rut, AND able to create beautiful songs while exploring new sonic territory, Annie Clark is the musician/singer/ass-kicker of a generation. Her collected works could inspire an entire memoir, or at the very least, and 18th century-style pamphlet. And Masseduction truly is an about-face of style for St. Vincent's fifth release. Taking cues from electronic, pure pop, techno, and glam rock, Clark once again creates a voice and musical universe uniquely hers. The lyrics are darker, yet somehow more inviting and enlightening. The songwriting is varied, complicated, and still so easy to consume, like putting gold leaf in a smoothie of Forbidden Fruit. The undertaking of creating and finishing the album put Clark back almost a full year, but the extra effort has clearly paid off, making Masseduction not only an incredible St. Vincent album, but perhaps the best St. Vincent album.

P.S. Seriously, who is Johnny and why are all his songs so sad?

Vince Staples
Big Fish Theory
Hip Hop : Listen

Summertime '06 was one of the best hip hop albums of the decade when it was released just two years ago. It was, therefore, with great anticipation that I waited for Vince Staples' Big Fish Theory, and he did not disappoint. Staples is a master of taking west-coast rap conventions and turning them on their ear. What would normally be chest-pounding boasts become caricatures of the overcompensating. Club banger beats are purposefully overproduced to create tinny loops that force the listener to focus inward rather than lose themselves. Don't worry though, Staples isn't so out of touch, as you still get insane dance floor favorites as "Yeah Right" and "Big Fish," but they're all imbued with a cautious withdrawal that is patently him. Nothing show-boats but every detail is excessively important--rococo rap. Big Fish Theory is the best continuation of a personal style that I still can't wait to hear more of: Vince Staples' off-kilter delivery and avant-garde beats are the best thing in an industry full of one-note trap slogs.

The War on Drugs
A Deeper Understanding
Rock/Americana : Listen

My bad, everybody. I'm super late to the train for this one. The War on Drugs has been releasing quality heartland rock songs for years, apparently, creating an almost insufferably talented niche for himself as the modern Springsteen, Petty, or even Dylan. I never heard Slave Ambient, and I didn't even consider 2014's Lost in the Dream until I was going through other publications' lists and saw it in so many #1 spots. As such, I had to catch myself up, and goddamn was it worth it. Every song is a sumptuous palette of sound and story-like vocals, delivered with a voice that, while unique, still seems comfortably familiar. Despite the extensive use of synthesizers and other electronic studio tricks, Adam Granduciel's songs sound incredibly warm, and worn; listening to them is the musical equivalent of your favorite sweater. The stories in each song are both intense and polished, and well worth the time to explore in depth.



Stay tuned, readers. Later this week, we'll be releasing our Albums of the Year listicle!

If our Runners Up aren't enough to hold you over, check out our Honorable Mentions.


--S^E

Thursday, December 21, 2017

The Best Albums of 2017: Honorable Mentions

Was 2017 not the worst year in American history? Well, let's take a look at the chart...
  1. 1860-1865 (tie)
  2. 2001
  3. 1968
  4. 1929
  5. 1941
  6. 2017
So no, but it is sixth, which is pretty bad when it's out of two hundred forty-one. But enough "politics" (i.e., a topic no one cares about but me), on to the best albums of the year.

Some artists kept 2017 in mind when recording their albums, others danced the pain away, but in either case, we got some seriously great music out of a bad situation.



Hey avid listeners, harsh critics, background-noise-while-I'm-doing-schoolworkers, and people with ears who hear music everywhere (and I suppose also eyes, since you're reading this)! This article marks the first ever BALTIMORE MUSIC FESTIVAL! A thing I literally just came up with that's like the Cannes Film Festival, but for music!

Does that make it less pretentious? Of course not! Just please wait until you see the list before assuming snores will ensue.

Anyway, there were far too many albums to have just a top ten, and I kept discovering music as the deadline for this article was approaching so it's over thirty artists now.

Without further adieu, here are 2017's Honorable Mentions, in alphabetical order:

Arca
Arca
Electronica/Experimental : Listen
Joey Bada$$
All-Amerikkkan Bada$$
Conscious Hip Hop : Listen
Big K.R.I.T.
4eva Is a Mighty Long Time
Southern Hip Hop : Listen
Big Thief
Capacity
Indie Rock : Listen
Bjork
Utopia
Art Pop/Avant-Garde : Listen
Converge
The Dusk in Us
Hardcore Punk : Listen
Death From Above (apparently sans "1979")
Outrage! Is Now
Hard Rock : Listen
EMA
Exile in the Outer Ring
Folk-Noise : Listen
Father John Misty
Pure Comedy
Indie Folk : Listen
Feist
Pleasure
Indie Pop : Listen
The Horrors
V
Post-Punk : Listen
Ibibio Sound Machine
Uyai
Afrobeat : Listen
Idles
Brutalism
Punk : Listen
Jay-Z
4:44
Hip Hop : Listen
Jlin
Black Origami
Electronic : Listen
Kelela
Take Me Apart
Electro-R&B : Listen
King Krule
The OOZ
Indie Rock/Trip Hop : Listen
Lorde
Melodrama
Pop : Listen
Mount Eerie
A Crow Looked at Me
Indie Folk/Minimalism : Listen
Nine Inch Nails
Add Violence EP
Industrial Rock : Listen
Perfume Genius
No Shape
Art Pop : Listen
Protomartyr
Relatives in Descent
Post-Punk : Listen
Queens of the Stone Age
Villains
Stoner Rock : Listen
Rosalía
Los Ángeles
Folk/World : Listen
SZA
CTRL
R&B : Listen
Thundercat
Drunk
Jazz Fusion : Listen
Tyler, The Creator
Flower Boy
Alternative Hip Hop : Listen
Wolf Alice
Visions of a Life
Noise Rock : Listen
Chelsea Wolfe
Hiss Spun
Sludge Metal : Listen
Xiu Xiu
Forget
Art Rock/Experimental : Listen









Stay tuned, readers. The rest of this week, we'll be releasing our Runners Up and Albums of the Year listicles!


--S^E

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Best New Music (8.25.2017)

It has been a long time since this site has posted a review of an individual album, but once in a great while, there is a work so powerful we can't help but hold it up in examination.


EMA
Exile in the Outer Ring

In the three years since the release of the oppressively dark, yet hauntingly beautiful, The Future's Void, Erika M. Anderson's third album as EMA, a great deal of horrible things have happened: the rise of proto-fascists in Turkey and the Philippines, Brexit, the election of a racist muppet to the Presidency of the United States, and too many cars/vans/trucks running into crowds of people to count. There have been protests against police violence met with police violence, refugees from war-torn countries forced to starve or drown mere feet from salvation, and literal Nazis marching in the streets.

It is against this backdrop that we have Exile in the Outer Ring, an epic tome of our present-day dystopia, brought forward in a glorious wash of digital noise. Anderson uses her nihilistic vision of the world to perfectly match a ghostly, stark emptiness in the music that is as abrasive as a blizzard wind, but as clean as the fresh snow it leaves behind--crystalline purity covering a wind-scoured wasteland.

The "Outer Ring" is defined by Anderson herself as the dying former suburbs surrounding cities now filled with rich gentrifiers; slums with picket fences and pristine lawns. Here, in the outer ring, Anderson meets the characters that inhabit her fourth album, many of them just different sides of herself. On the record's single warm moment, "Down and Out," she sings "They say 'you need a sense of purpose' when you're on the floor / They think that maybe you deserve it if you're poor," which is about as lighthearted as it gets in a world where America is a Russian satellite.

The industrial moments that The Future's Void touched on are made blindingly explicit on the songs "Fire Water Air LSD" and "33 Nihilistic and Female," which use repetitive samples reminiscent of Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross' The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo score, or early Coil singles. The sound of machines and blaring, bass-driven klaxons fill the air with the same dread as Skynet coming online. Surviving a journey through the Outer Ring is perilous and horrifying, but most of all, it's rare.

With Exile in the Outer Ring, Anderson holds a mirror to the world, and it reflects a portrait that we wish we could banish to the uncanny valley. But we can't, this world is real, it never ends. The reflection shares our face, and only by correcting ourselves can we correct the image we see.


Stream EMA's Exile in the Outer Ring via NPR here.

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

The Best Albums of 2017...So Far

The year is half-over, but it's been six months of great music. Plus, it's never too soon to start making lists...delicious, delicious lists.

Honorable Mentions
Arca Arca, Joey Bada$$ All-Amerikkkan Bada$$, Father John Misty Pure Comedy, King Gizard & the Lizard Wizard Flying Microtonal Banana, Migos Culture, The Mountain Goats Goths, Nine Inch Nails Not the Actual Events, Priests Nothing Feels Natural, Sampha Process, Sun Kil Moon Common as Light and Love Are Red Valleys of Blood, Thundercat Drunk, The xx I See You


10. Feist
Pleasure
The long-awaited fifth studio album by Leslie Feist is also her most daring, varied, personal, and open. Feist holds nothing back, experimenting with electronic sounds on the opening title track, spoken word on the fabulous "Century," and minimalism on "I Wish I Didn't Miss You" and "Baby Be Simple." Her patented quirky take on indie-folk-rock is still present on the fantastic "Get Not High, Get Not Low," with a chorus of overlapping vocals joining her on every chorus. She's also not afraid to go heavy, opening an entirely new pathway for her sound that's adventurous, contemplative, and overwhelmingly listenable.


9. Ibibio Sound Machine
Uyai
The London-based world-dance group's sophomore effort is anything but sophomoric. Fun all the way through, Uyai combines electronic, West-African funk, post-punk, and new wave in equal measure for a truly unique musical experience. What should be a chaotic mess, Ibibio Sound Machine mix all the influences effortlessly to make their 70s-Nigerian-meets-LCD-Soundsystem album about liberation, beauty, and the power of women the most enjoyable album this year.


8. Wiley
Godfather
A thoroughly entertaining record, Godfather manages to feel forward-thinking and deeply satisfying, while still sounding elemental and vital. Wiley may have tried to shake off the "grime" label, but here he purposefully owns it, taking a victory lap around his peers and pushing them to succeed at the same time. It may be Wiley's last album (that remains to be seen), but if it really is, its single-minded focus, charisma, and unapologetic club-pop beat make for a hell of a swan song.

7. Idles
Brutalism
Imagine Joe Strummer and David Yow had a permanently-angry love child. That child fronts Idles, a band whose debut is so harsh and gloriously punk that Margaret Thatcher rolled over in her grave. They're heavy, dark, and abrasive, and  Joe Talbot's lyrics are witty, sardonic, and biting. It can honestly be said that nothing--nothing--sounds this loud, pissed-off, or crushingly awesome. It is called Brutalism after all, and it is brutal.
 
6. Xiu Xiu
Forget
Xiu Xiu has always been polarizing: are they art-rock or just a mess; is that cacophonous drone a beautiful wash or just accidental feedback; are they electronic or rock; are their themes intentionally disturbing or just ugly? The beauty of constantly leaving listeners on the fence about these questions is that it frees Xiu Xiu to do whatever they want musically, including compiling an album of wondrously varied arrangements that walk the fine line between dance, folk, punk, and noise. Forget is a stunning testament to experimentation, minimalism, and arresting performance.


5. Fleet Foxes
Crack-Up
It has been six years since blues-folk troubadours Fleet Foxes gave us Helplessness Blues, perhaps the best album of its release year, but you should have no doubts as to how much work they were doing in the meantime. Crack-Up is as good as they've ever been, if not even better, their music growing in complexity and density. And while Fleet Foxes try their best to make their third album as pop-inaccessible as possible, its compositions are almost excessively beautiful, drenched in orchestration and narrative arc. Crack-Up is overwhelming, exhilarating, and ultimately a rewarding experience very much worth the long wait.


4. Perfume Genius
No Shape
Mike Hadreas' fourth album as Perfume Genius is his most decadent and realized yet. While his 2014 single "Queen" declared "no family is safe when I sashay," the songs on No Shape are no longer concerned with bigots, relegating them to the past where they belong, and instead focusing on love as transcendence, addiction recovery as heaven, and stability as sacrament. No Shape also removes a lot of the electronic frills of Too Bright, but keeps the lessons learned from them, inflating the album with brazen confidence and outlandish extroversion. No longer afraid of identity and derision, Hadreas exclaims his mantra of survival: "I'm here, how weird."


3. Run the Jewels
Run the Jewels 3
I know, I know, RTJ released this as a "Christmas f**king miracle" in 2016, but it came out too late for last years' lists. Killer Mike and El-P's third attempt is too good to not include on a best-of list, so now it's here. 3 is a manifesto of outrage, defiance, and nonconformity that's so epic it's deadly. The trio of "Talk to Me," "Legend Has It," and "Call Ticketron" may be the the best triplet of songs this decade, and guest verses from Danny Brown ("Hey Kids"), Trina ("Panther Like a Panther") and even Tunde Adebimpe ("Thieves!") just elevate Run the Jewels sound from exceptional to god-like. Their craft is so finely tuned and their message so sharp it will most certainly be the soundtrack of the many riots to come.


2. Mount Eerie
A Crow Looked at Me
Death, as a thematic element, was once called "literary ambulance-chasing" by a New York Times critic. It's a way to force readers/viewers/listeners to feel without having to work for it. But while the death that occurs in young adult novels and Lifetime movies is meant to shock and then disappear again, Phil Elverum's eulogy to his late wife is no surprise: it is a long, painful culmination of an insidious disease; and it does not disappear: real grief lasts forever. But instead of being overly morose for hours, A Crow Looked at Me simply remembers. Yes, memories can be painful, but they can also heal. For grief to lead to catharsis is the most sought-after human experience; it's intimately personal, yet bigger than the whole world. Elverum helps us, and hopefully himself, journey from desolation to appreciation. Life is not guaranteed.


1. Kendrick Lamar
Damn.
This entry could be entirely about "DNA.," a song so fantastic it puts the rest of the hip-hop world to shame, but that would be a disservice to the peerless, furious, precious, funny, vivid, precise, intimate, merciless, distinct, inimitable, stirring, effortless, original, electric, curious, enthralling, sincere, philosophical, fun, tender, sheepish, bouncy, fast, lucid, schizophrenic, fluent, scathing, smooth, homegrown, seamless masterpiece that is every single moment on DAMN. Kendrick Lamar is a wordsmith of unknowable proportions, buoyed ever higher by insanely talented guests from Rihanna to, inexplicably, U2, and Lamar squeezes every sound for all it's worth by filling the space with lots of words. But not a single word is wasted--each is specifically chosen to tell his story exactly how he wants, with every recitation so flawless you wonder when, or even if, he breathes. And while DAMN. is a beyond-extraordinary rap album, it is also a phenomenal dissertation on fate, and how, no matter where you come from, you can chase it, rather than run from it.