Monthly Wrap-Up: April
5/22/2018 05:40:00 PMI know this is hopelessly late, seeing as it's already almost the end of May. To be honest, I had a very hard time forcing myself to finish this post and considered skipping it entirely, but my incessant need to maintain consistency talked me down from that. My reluctance to do the hard work of writing about them implies nothing about the quality of these tracks, which, in my opinion, remains excellent. I've also decided to re-brand these posts within their own proper category, as the original intent behind Top Ten Tuesday was more to get me thinking about tangible, interesting connections between songs, which the fact that I fell in love with them all in the same month is decidedly not. (it remains to be seen whether it will return to that purpose or be abandoned entirely).
10. Charli XCX - You're the One (Blood Orange Remix)
Listen, I've been fairly restrained about showing it here, but I haven't been able to stop listening to Charli XCX for a good six months now. After spinning the hell out of Pop 2, Number 1 Angel, and Vroom Vroom, I decided to lay off a bit before I wore them out entirely and dig into her earlier work. Unfortunately, I'm not too big on True Romance as a whole, but this song is probably my favorite from it, and I especially love this remix by Dev Hynes. It seems almost tailor-made for my current tastes in the way it straddles the line between Cupid Deluxe-era Blood Orange (the marimba/xylophone/whatever rhythms are reminiscent of one of that album's major highlights, "Chamakay") and some almost proto-Pop 2 flourishes (particularly the unabashedly heavy use of wavy auto-tune voice effects).
9. Kelsey Lu - Shades of Blue
A couple years ago, cellist and vocalist Kelsey Lu released a very promising EP entitled Church, and if "Shades of Blue," which I truly hope is the precursor to a larger project, is any indication, she's ready to deliver on that promise and then some. It's a jaw-droppingly gorgeous track that unfolds and expands with such patient, easy subtlety that it feels far more expansive than its sub-four minute run time would indicate. Over rich, lullaby-esque acoustic guitar strums, light brushes of percussion, and a late-arriving burst of cello, Lu lets her dusky, deeply emotive voice do the song's heavy lifting, adding infinitely complex layers of feeling to the simple declaration expressed in the chorus - "I'm not over you/Not over you/But I'm over feeling shades of blue" - every time it is repeated.
8. Empress Of - In Dreams
Since releasing Me in 2015, Empress Of (aka Lorely Rodriguez) has shared only a handful of standalone tracks, but they prove that she is quickly growing as an artist. "In Dreams," the b-side of her latest two-song single, is less high-energy and more melodically subtle than almost anything she's done in the past, but it's worth the pay-off of multiple listens to unpack its intricacies. Its lyrics alternating seamlessly between Spanish and English, the song has a hypnotic, mesmerizing effect, its pulsing electronic backdrop perfectly synchronized to Rodriguez's commanding yet delicate vocals. Rodriguez has yet to announce if this song and its companion, "Trust Me Baby," are the first taste of a bigger release, but I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
7. Blood Orange - The Complete Knock
Speaking of Blood Orange, I decided to continue my backwards exploration of his discography with Coastal Grooves. It's neither as immediate as Cupid Deluxe nor as lingeringly impactful as Freetown Sound, but it's still got its fair share of earworms and is actually quite charming in how comparatively lo-fi and tentative it sounds. "The Complete Knock" is an undeniable highlight, a preview of the complexity and versatility displayed on later releases. It expertly builds up from a minimal but propulsive bass line to a groovy, highly danceable whirlwind of electric guitar, synth and dreamily overlapping vocals, with a surprise robot twist near the end. As accusatory as it is, Dev Hynes' wounded complaint, "I just don't know what the hell is wrong with you," sounds almost sensual in his soulful wail.
6. Sky Ferreira - I Blame Myself
When Sky Ferreira released her debut (and, so far, only) album Night Time, My Time in 2013, I listened to a few songs, but I wasn't as open-minded about pop music back then and quickly dismissed it as not my thing. But I've lately come across it again on my quest to revisit some of the recent pop touchstones my past snobbery caused me to miss out on. And you know what? It's an incredibly addictive album that quite ingeniously melds contemporary pop perfection with eighties rock pastiche. "I Blame Myself" was the track that most immediately got me scrambling for the repeat button. The instrumental backing is delightfully retro, Ferreira's voice oozes charisma, and it's got the kind of instantaneous, undeniable hook I can't imagine anyone being able to stop themselves from wailing along to after even a single listen.
5. Solange - Lovers in the Parking Lot
Apparently I spent much of the last month fixated on a very specific sound because Solange's True was co-produced and co-written with Dev Hynes, which means it essentially sounds like Solange fronting Blood Orange, a combination I am absolutely here for. Almost every song on the EP is a jam of the highest order, but there's something special about "Lovers in the Parking Lot." It strikes that perfect balance of sounding simultaneously classic and forward-thinking, blending a more traditional piano melody with futuristic synths for an insidious combination. Of course, Solange's voice is the star of the show, and it goes down as smoothly as ever, gliding through the verses with effortlessly laid-back cool and achieving maximum impact in the fluttery, soulful chorus.
4. Ariana Grande - No Tears Left to Cry
Of all the current mainstream pop sweethearts, I have the biggest soft spot for Ariana Grande. While she may not have the most charismatic presence, her powerful voice is nearly enough to make up for it. Coupled with an ear (whether on her or her team's part) for insanely catchy melodies that sit just slightly outside the norm, it's almost certainly enough. I'll admit, I wasn't sure about "No Tears Left to Cry" the first time I heard it; the vast, rich, and soaring classic pop chorus seemed at odds with the more urban-leaning refrain that follows it. But it didn't take me long to decide that the unexpectedness of this juxtaposition is what makes the song just refreshing enough to stand out. It also doesn't hurt that I had said chorus playing on a loop in my brain within 24 hours and still haven't shaken it.
3. LIZ - Super Duper Nova
LIZ is a musical chameleon, in that she sounds like a different type of pop star in almost every single one of her songs. While an identity crisis isn't typically something to be praised, she largely makes it work on the basis of her music being so damn catchy and immaculately produced. Her latest single, "Super Duper Nova," casts her in the role of a bubbly and flirtatious extraterrestrial ingenue, and the result is as bizarre as it is infectious. Book-ended by a blaring approximation of a spaceship lifting off, the song features vocals auto-tuned and pitch-shifted into cutesy alien chirps, sparkly intergalactic washes of synth, about three different potential hooks, and way too many space-related euphemisms to count. It's just really, really fucking cute and really, really fucking weird, and I can't get enough of it.
2. Let's Eat Grandma - It's Not Just Me
Judging by its first three singles, Let's Eat Grandma's upcoming sophomore album, I'm All Ears, is aiming to shoot straight to the top of my AOTY list, an outcome I definitely could not have predicted at the beginning of the year. "It's Not Just Me" gives "Hot Pink" a run for its money in terms of sheer quality, but sound-wise they're almost entirely opposite. Where the latter is dark, metallic, and cold, the former is an effervescent and frothy summer synth-pop bop. This contrast is especially interesting considering the production is handled on both tracks by Faris Badwan and SOPHIE. (Bet you thought I'd managed to keep her name out of my mouth this time around, didn't you?) This seamless sonic versatility, as well as the youthful vocal charm that elevates both tracks, leaves the direction of the rest of the album excitingly wide open.
1. Hop Along - Not Abel
On paper, Hop Along is a band I should very much be into, but they've never managed to click for me beyond a couple songs. That all changed by the end of my first listen to their recently-released third album, Bark Your Head Off, Dog. I'll save my more sweeping praise of the album, other than to say that it's near flawless, for later and instead zero in on the track I haven't been able to shake from my head for weeks. On "Not Abel," Frances Quinlan seems to channel her inner Joanna Newsom both vocally and melodically. Her throat-straining warble conveys a cryptic but chillingly ominous narrative, drenched in biblical allegory ("Shirt blood-stained and yet it was not Abel/But Cain who got to hear/The voice that for so long had been a stranger") and reaching its climax in a bruised and bloodied submission to fate ("This has happened/This will happen/This is happening").
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