Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Albums in My Life: 2013

In 2013, I was in grad school, and during the summer, I worked as a kitchen employee at Penn State. I drove my girlfriend into town for her job in the morning, but my job didn't start until lunch time, so I had a lot of free time to walk around town or listen to music. During school, I also lived alone; my girlfriend was finishing up her degree at my undergraduate college about a half hour away. I visited every weekend, but the days of solitude really got me used to myself, and I filled time with a lot of music and hobbies, along with studying of course.



Image result for childish gambino because the internetChildish Gambino- Because the Internet
It's interesting to see how radically the critical consensus has changed on Childish Gambino. This and his earlier work were panned pretty much across the board, but as soon as Awaken, My Love! came out, people were clamoring to reevaluate his previous records and make it seem like they loved his records all along. I was there, no you didn't. However, I actually enjoyed this record, and I felt like it was a pretty smart critique of internet culture as well as containing good songs and is definitely Donald Glover's most ambitious musical project. The lyrics were a little corny, but what critics failed to see was that was kind of the point. Donald Glover is far too self aware to think that those punch lines were genuinely good bars. C'mon guys.



Image result for mbv albumMy Bloody Valentine- mbv
My Bloody Valentine went 22 years without dropping an album and didn't miss a beat. This record almost reaches the sublime highs of Loveless while not repeating it outright. It maintains that woozy, fuzzy and dreamy atmosphere, but is definitely still its own thing. I'm really looking forward to see what Kevin Shields and company do next. There's supposed to be an EP coming out sometime soon, but with My Bloody Valentine, I think release dates are more general guidelines. However, to go 22 years without an album and somehow have a project live up to that amount of hype is astonishing.


Image result for lousy with sylvianbriarof Montreal- lousy with sylvianbriar
This album is one of my three favorite of Montreal records, the other two being Cherry Peel and Hissing Fauna, are You the Destroyer? I find it hard to pick a favorite since the records are so radically different, and shows how versatile an artist Kevin Barnes is. This record sounds almost nothing like anything they've ever done before or since, being influenced by a lot of old folk and psych rock records, and it puts Kevin Barnes' incredibly personal and cryptic lyrics into an almost Dylanesque perspective. I also think it's one of the bands most consistent albums, with no low points or skippable tracks to be had. Even my other two favorites have at least one track that overstays its welcome.



Image result for earl dorisEarl Sweatshirt- Doris
Earl's debut album is quite a bridge between the two different halves of his career. This links the hyper violent early work with the more depressive later work in a way that maintains his trademark lyricism and dense rhyming abilities. I played the hell out of this album when it first came out, and I still listen to tracks like 'Hive' a decent amount. This also gave him an opportunity to really show who he was as an artist, whereas on his Earl mixtape or on an Odd Future project he always kind of seemed like Tyler's boy genius secret weapon. While I do long to see them collaborate in the future, especially since their sounds have diverged so far, it was good to see him step out from his mentor's shadow and embrace his own sound.


Wolf Cover2.jpgTyler, the Creator- Wolf
Like Doris, this really was a transitional record that bridged the gap in Tyler, the Creator's radically different early and more recent albums. Wolf is a lot more tonal, jazzy and melodic than his previous work, relying on a lot more influences of neo soul and 90s R&B, while still retaining some of the story elements that appeared on those albums, minus the horrorcore framing (for the most part). There are still hype beast tracks and songs looking to offend like tracks off Goblin, but you can see how Tyler was trying to stray away from that sound and slowly transition to the more accessible and critically successful fare that appeared on Flower Boy and IGOR.



So, that was 2013 for me, as well as the conclusion to the Albums in My Life series. As I previously stated, if you were curious as to my favorite albums from subsequent years, check out my year end top 10 lists.

I also hinted at a new feature on this blog in previous posts and here it is: I'm calling it Golden Nuggets. In the feature, I will give a little bit of background and share my opinion on the #1 song on the Billboard chart from fifty years ago (hence golden) that week (or period of weeks). It'll be interesting to see what songs were popular fifty years ago, as well as chart the changing music tastes and discover some songs I hadn't even possibly heard of since they've been lost to time. I hope you enjoy it.


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Albums in My Life: 2012

2012 was a pretty big transitional year for me. I graduated from college, started grad school, worked my final year of summer camp, met my girlfriend's family, finally got around to getting my driver's license; the list goes on.

Image result for fiona apple idler wheelFiona Apple- The Idler Wheel.....
The Idler Wheel... was the first Fiona Apple album I bought when it dropped. I had heard Extraordinary Machine a few months previously, and by some random coincidence, her new album was just about to drop. It's been about 7 years now, so it's almost time for the next album. I bought the composition notebook edition of the CD and played the album constantly that summer. I still return to 'Every Single Night' and the crazy counterpoint on 'Hot Knife'.
What I like about a Fiona Apple album is that even though they come out very sporadically, they have enough density to stand on their own until the next album comes out.


Image result for frank ocean channel orangeFrank Ocean- Channel Orange
As popular as Channel Orange was, you've got to admit it's a weird album. It's kind a pastiche of ideas loosely assembled into a somehow cohesive product. It's held together by Frank's singing and a general theme of rich kids with nothing to do but get high and make mistakes. Some of the little soundbytes in between tracks remind me of channels changing (maybe by the title, that's the point). It took me a while to come around to Blonde, and I outright rejected Endless, based on the previous greatness Frank already reached on this record.



Image result for of tape vol 2Odd Future- The OF Tape Volume 2
This was probably Odd Future at the peak of their popularity, and the album also ushered in the return of Earl Sweatshirt from his Somalian exile on the posse cut, 'Oldie'. I think this album was a pretty good introduction to all the sub groups and artists within the Odd Future collective, though some get a little more shine than others. It's been very interesting to see where everyone's career has gone since the release of this record.





Image result for panopticon kentuckyPanopticon- Kentucky
This probably the best example I would go to when describing an album with polar opposite influences. With this album, Austin Lunn expertly mixed atmospheric black metal with American bluegrass and folk music for an intriguing sound and concept revolving around a Kentucky coal miners' union strike. It's kind of baffling how well this works, but I guess if other folk metals exist, why not Americana metal? I don't think Austin got the ratio quite right again until his latest monstrous opus, The Scars of Man Upon the Once Nameless Wilderness, which was my number one album of 2018.



Image result for swans the seerSwans- The Seer
This was the first album I ever heard by Swans, and I definitely came in at a interesting place in their discography. I had recently starting Pitchfork regularly, and made a habit of giving 'difficult' records a shot. A noisey, dark, arty post rock double album sounded right down my alley, and it was. I had never really anything like the bands incremental progressions and explosive peaks. The closest I had ever come was Godspeed You! Black Emperor, but Swans was so much more explosive, dark and hypnotic. This album not only opened up the door to Swans for me, but to more bands in this vein.




So, that was my musical 2012. In the next and final edition of Albums in My Life, I'll take a look at the records that really influenced me in 2013. After 2013, I figured you could just check out my year end top 10s if you were interested in my favorite albums from those years, since this blog started in 2014. See you next time.



"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."