Before we get into the single digits, catch yourself up on the rest of the list! I've arbitrarily shifted the next nine albums around so much that I honestly feel like any of them could have taken the title of my favorite album of the year at some point. I guess I sort of consider them all co-winners, which means each and every one of them is an absolute must-listen in my book.
In my mind, everything from here on out is required listening. I have played the hell out of every single one of the remaining twelve albums and, for the most part, still find them just as enjoyable as the first time. If you need to catch up with the rest of the list, check the tag before reading further.
Merry Christmas! Here’s an opportunity to give yourself the gift of some new music. Missed out on anything so far? Check out 30-26, 25-21, and 20-17. We’re getting closer and closer to the top ten, which means that, from this point on, pretty much all of these albums feel like my babies. I highly recommend everything, regardless of the number in front of it.
If you missed yesterday’s post, you’ll probably want to give it a look before diving into the next five entries on my list of favorite albums of the year. Reading back over these, I feel like my write-ups don’t sound incredibly enthusiastic, but, rest assured, I do love these albums. It’s just that three of them fall into the category of beloved artists with good but very slightly underwhelming follow-ups and the other two I’ve definitely overplayed at this point. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t give them a listen if you haven’t, though!
This year, I honestly thought I wasn’t going to be able to get this done. It was difficult for all the usual reasons - the impossibility of ranking art, the even greater impossibility of trying to be objective about it, the question of whether it’s even valuable to do at all, etc. - but also because I haven’t written anything about music beyond an informal sentence or two for almost an entire year. The thought of trying to say something meaningful about thirty different albums initially filled me with dread.
As promised, here are the remaining songs from this year (and one from last year, because I’m an idiot) that were particularly special or meaningful to me in their own way. Again, these are presented in alphabetical order. I also present to you, for the first time ever, a playlist of all 25 songs in both Apple Music and Spotify! No embeds because this post is already media-heavy enough, but click the name of your preferred streaming service to start listening. Tomorrow, I start counting down my 30 favorite albums of the year, so get excited! (And play these songs to amp yourself up!)
Here we are again. I’m not going to over-explain my latest disappearance. I just didn’t feel like writing for most of the year. But I feel like writing now, and I enjoyed a lot of music over the course of 2019. So I’m back to make up for lost time with an all-out blitz of year-end content. Starting now, I’m making it my mission to post every day for the rest of December as I work my way through my favorite releases of the year. There’s a lot of ground to cover, so forgive me if it all gets to be a little overwhelming.
I always spend the first few weeks of any new year in an intensely nostalgic musical headspace. This particular mix is proof of that. It started with a sudden desire to revisit my favorite Los Campesinos! songs. Then I had a conversation with a friend about some of the other bands that cropped up around the same time as them and seem to carry a lot of similar ethos and influences, the result being an earnest, enthusiastic cross between punk, twee pop, and indie rock that's heavy on alternating male/female vocals and sardonic, tongue-in-cheek lyrics. In their heyday, these bands were never particularly respected (or even acknowledged) by establishment indie outlets, but many of them are still around today, having built small but devoted fanbases off the backs of their remarkably consistent discographies.
That being said, I'm mainly interested in their origins here, those raw, exuberant early albums before they grew up and became jaded by the music industry machine, leading them to either their inevitable demise or down a more mature, meditative path. If I'd had time, I would've filled in the gaps with other bands from the same period who I never got into back then, but that might've turned into a bottomless rabbit hole, so, instead, I've added a few more recent bands that seem to carry a similar spirit. Overall, rediscovering this music has been a nice change of pace for my pop-saturated brain, and now I look forward to digging further into the release histories of these bands, many of whom I stopped regularly following after their first or second albums.
1. The Joy Formidable - The Magnifying Glass
The Joy Formidable's music is layered and atmospheric, an epic combination of shoegaze, dream pop, and post-punk. As effective as they are at stretching a song to galactic lengths, though, their more straightforward cracks at blistering two-minute rock songs are just as thrilling. There's no room for expansive guitar solos or slowly unfolding melodies. Instead, the song blazes from beginning to end, a fiery tangle of noise perfect for those moments when it's better to thrash around to loud, fast music than destroy everything around you. My recommendation: turn it up as loud as you can handle.
2. Land of Talk - Speak to Me Bones
Land of Talk deserve to be better-known, but, in a way, it's also nice to feel like there's a secret band in your pocket making incredible music just for you. I'll never forget the first time I heard Applause Cheer Boo Hiss; in a genre as oversaturated as indie rock, it was fresh and bold and exhilarating. To this day, nothing else pumps me up like this track, a grungy middle finger to all the shitty men in the world. The final build-up, Elizabeth Powell insisting brashly, "Not every girl is a nail/You're not a hammer," obliterates my mind every time - which explains why I only just remembered I put it on a mix last year, too. It's that good, folks.
3. Be Your Own Pet - The Kelly Affair
I remember Be Your Own Pet were lambasted when they came out for being a bunch of bratty, privileged, industry-connected teenagers trying to make punk music without the ethos to back it up. And, okay, sure, their music is shallow and derivative, but it's also a shitload of fun. Jemina Pearl wrangles her immaturity into a commanding vocal delivery that punches a hole through the rest of the band's charmingly ear-splitting and imprecise musical backdrops over and over again with hilariously vulgar one-liners. I've rarely had as much fun screaming along at the top of my lungs with anyone else.
4. Johnny Foreigner - Cranes and Cranes and Cranes and Cranes
You know what might actually be an unsung masterpiece? Johnny Foreigner's 2008 debut, Waited Up 'Til It Was Light. Honestly, I'm kicking myself for spending so long without revisiting it because the more I hear it, the more I'm convinced there's not a single mediocre track. To me, this album encapsulates more than any other a distinctly British, late '00s, DIY indie punk movement in a way that's simultaneously of its time and absolutely timeless. Not only do Alexei Berrow and Kelly Parker have voices perfectly suited to abrasive punk wailing, but they also share a vocal chemistry most duet partners only dream of.
5. Los Campesinos! - We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed
If I had to name one band that's been the most consistently and undeservedly underrated, Los Campesinos! would certainly be in contention. More than a decade after forming, they're still making damn good music, which is more than can be said for a lot of other indie rock veterans. In terms of their early work, We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed is often overshadowed by their debut, but it contains at least a couple of classics, including the title track, which is especially notable for its lyrics, such as the so-relatable-it-hurts millennial lament, "We kid ourselves there's future in the fucking, but there is no fucking future."
6. Martha - Christine
I really liked Martha's most recent album when I first heard it; unfortunately, most of it hasn't stuck with me, but I still feel the urge to put on this song, its opener, every now and again. For not even being two minutes long, it leaves a lasting impression that's difficult for every song after to live up to with its ramshackle, lo-fi clash of instrumentation and charmingly accented vocals shouting in full sincerity, "I never heard a more romantic story/Christine, everybody else just bores me." It's a formula the band masters so well here that anything after seems almost redundant in comparison.
7. Joanna Gruesome - Honestly Do Yr Worst
I could hardly get away with using "yr" in the title of this mix if I didn't include a song that illustrated that convention in action, now, could I? Joanna Gruesome already score major points for turning a pun on Joanna Newsom into one of the greatest band names ever. It only sweetens the deal that their two-minute nuggets of noise pop are also incredibly addictive. This band excels at alternating between extremes, juxtaposing sickly sweet twee harmonies against aggressive bursts of throat-scouring screams. The ultimate effect is as disorienting as it is enticing.
8. Pity Sex - Gigantic
This is a Pixies cover from an obscure split 7" release, which may seem like a random choice, but something about it just fit the vibe I'm going for here more perfectly than any of Pity Sex's other music. Britty Drake's voice seamlessly bridges the gap between impassioned and lackadaisical, never quite tumbling completely into one or the other. The instrumentation, too, seems to teeter on the edge of carelessness, giving the entire thing a charmingly impromptu atmosphere. It's pretty clear that a lot of effort went into it, considering how much it sounds like it took no effort at all.
9. Blood Red Shoes - You Bring Me Down
Why did I ever stop listening to Blood Red Shoes? I used to love them, and despite not hearing their 2008 debut, Box of Secrets, since probably the year it was released, I felt every word, melody, and riff deep in my bones upon revisiting it in 2019. They'd already mastered the art of establishing a consistent, immediately recognizable sound without just playing variations on the same song. Here, minimalist verses quickly make way for a pummeling, urgent, never-ending chorus, Laura-Mary Carter and Steven Ansell chanting in militaristic harmony, "Bury your head, bear your heart, but I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't."
10. The Long Blondes - Separated by Motorways
Although the Long Blondes lean in a more new wave direction, Kate Jackson's massive, gutsy wail lends their songs a thrilling punk edge, particularly on this track, which finds her at her most urgent and unhinged. In it, "two lonely girls go on the run," escaping from old men in pubs and solicitous boys on sidewalks into the arms of one another. Their friendship is depicted in almost romantic terms, Jackson crooning tenderly, "Wipe your eyes, darling, it's okay," atop an appropriately noisy wall of angular, '80s-indebted guitars.
11. The Grates - Rock Boys
Are the Grates a great (oops, unintentional pun) band? Probably not. Like Be Your Own Pet, though, they have an undeniable charm, like an adorable but badly behaved puppy panting and wagging its tail at you innocently, and you can't help but love them, even as you recognize their immaturity. "Rock Boys" is as close as they come to a ballad, and for all its blunt roughness, it's strangely moving. Chalk this up to Patience Hodgson's raw, impassioned delivery of the nearly wordless refrain, which rises and falls with the steady crescendo of guitar and drums. It's simple but very, very effective.
12. Pretty Girls Make Graves - This Is Our Emergency
I never got much into this band, but this song fully transplants the consciousness of my younger self into my current self's body for reasons I can't quite explain. Somehow, it just perfectly encapsulates a very specific feeling, one that's decidedly emo but in the best way possible. There's really nothing more cathartic than singing along to its effervescent chorus: "Stand up so I can see you/Shout out so I can hear you/Reach out so I can touch you/This is our emergency." The message may be vague, but it's clear whoever is being summoned is the most vital person in the world - it's up to you to decide who that person is for you.
As is my yearly tradition, here are my immaculately, obsessively tracked listening statistics for 2018. For the first time ever, I exceeded 25,000 plays (largely owing to me switching from CDs to my phone in the car, meaning I can track literally everything) and listened to music all 365 days of the year. I'm not sure if I should consider this impressive or concerning. I'll go with impressive. I don't have much else to say about this because none of it is very surprising if you've been even passively following this blog, which I guess means I've done my job here well.
I will reflect on what I said last year, which was that I wanted to spend more time getting to know new discoveries and returning to old favorites I'd neglected. I definitely achieved the former but sort of fell off in terms of the latter after a couple months. However, I'm starting 2019 off feeling very nostalgic, so maybe I'll do more of that this year. Otherwise, I don't really have any particular goals other than to keep on keeping on. Full charts are below the infographics, if you're somehow into that.
Last Scrobbled: Quay Dash - Queen of NY
Top 50 Artists:
1. Charli XCX (1,231 scrobbles)
2. SOPHIE (895 scrobbles)
3. Hop Along (599 scrobbles)
4. Kelela (547 scrobbles)
5. Blood Orange (442 scrobbles)
6. Portishead (400 scrobbles)
7. Kero Kero Bonito (393 scrobbles)
8. Half Waif (386 scrobbles)
9. Beach House (384 scrobbles)
10. Terror Jr (367 scrobbles)
11. Carly Rae Jepsen (358 scrobbles)
12. Ariana Grande (354 scrobbles)
13. Let's Eat Grandma (347 scrobbles)
14. LIZ (345 scrobbles)
15. Sevdaliza (336 scrobbles)
16. Ought (326 scrobbles)
17. Metric (316 scrobbles)
18. Neko Case (291 scrobbles)
19. Purity Ring (290 scrobbles)
20. Kate Tempest (285 scrobbles)
21. Mitski (282 scrobbles)
22. RosalÃa (267 scrobbles)
23. ionnalee (260 scrobbles)
24. Ezra Furman (245 scrobbles)
25. Wye Oak (238 scrobbles)
26. Rilo Kiley (236 scrobbles)
27. Natalie Prass (234 scrobbles)
28. Kim Petras (230 scrobbles)
29. Hannah Diamond (222 scrobbles)
30. Allie X (217 scrobbles)
31. Esperanza Spalding (213 scrobbles)
32. Janelle Monáe (213 scrobbles)
33. Young Fathers (205 scrobbles)
34. Noname (204 scrobbles)
35. A. G. Cook (203 scrobbles)
36. Danny L Harle (196 scrobbles)
37. Cashmere Cat (190 scrobbles)
38. Fielded (188 scrobbles)
39. Sky Ferreira (187 scrobbles)
40. Abra (182 scrobbles)
41. Sinjin Hawke & Zora Jones (177 scrobbles)
42. Kilo Kish (176 scrobbles)
43. First Aid Kit (172 scrobbles)
44. EASYFUN (171 scrobbles)
45. The Go! Team (171 scrobbles)
46. Whitney Ballen (166 scrobbles)
47. Lotic (163 scrobbles)
48. U.S. Girls (163 scrobbles)
49. Empress Of (152 scrobbles)
50. Princess Nokia (151 scrobbles)
Top 50 Albums:
1. Charli XCX — XCX Unreleased (379 scrobbles)
2. SOPHIE — Oil of Every Pearl's Un-Insides (325 scrobbles)
3. Half Waif — Lavender (318 scrobbles)
4. Hop Along — Bark Your Head Off, Dog (318 scrobbles)
5. Beach House — 7 (277 scrobbles)
6. RosalÃa — El Mal Querer (264 scrobbles)
7. Let's Eat Grandma — I'm All Ears (231 scrobbles)
8. ionnalee — Everyone Afraid to Be Forgotten (229 scrobbles)
9. Neko Case — Hell-On (221 scrobbles)
10. Charli XCX — Pop 2 (208 scrobbles)
11. Natalie Prass — The Future and the Past (203 scrobbles)
12. Ought — Room Inside the World (203 scrobbles)
13. Sevdaliza — ISON (200 scrobbles)
14. Purity Ring — Another Eternity (194 scrobbles)
15. Carly Rae Jepsen — Emotion (192 scrobbles)
16. Charli XCX — Number 1 Angel (192 scrobbles)
17. Ezra Furman — Transangelic Exodus (190 scrobbles)
18. SOPHIE — Product (190 scrobbles)
19. Kero Kero Bonito — Bonito Generation (184 scrobbles)
20. Noname — Room 25 (181 scrobbles)
21. Portishead — Dummy (178 scrobbles)
22. Sinjin Hawke & Zora Jones — Vicious Circles (177 scrobbles)
23. Mitski — Be the Cowboy (172 scrobbles)
24. Fielded — Drip Drip (171 scrobbles)
25. Janelle Monáe — Dirty Computer (168 scrobbles)
26. Kelela — Cut 4 Me (168 scrobbles)
27. Whitney Ballen — You're a Shooting Star, I'm a Sinking Ship (166 scrobbles)
28. Young Fathers — Cocoa Sugar (162 scrobbles)
29. Ariana Grande — Sweetener (161 scrobbles)
30. Wye Oak — The Louder I Call, the Faster It Runs (154 scrobbles)
31. Esperanza Spalding — 12 Little Spells (151 scrobbles)
32. Kate Tempest — Let Them Eat Chaos (150 scrobbles)
33. Blood Orange — Cupid Deluxe (148 scrobbles)
34. Cashmere Cat — 9 (148 scrobbles)
35. Lotic — Power (147 scrobbles)
36. The Go! Team — Semicircle (146 scrobbles)
37. Hop Along — Painted Shut (142 scrobbles)
38. Sky Ferreira — Night Time, My Time (138 scrobbles)
39. Now, Now — Saved (134 scrobbles)
40. Hop Along — Get Disowned (133 scrobbles)
41. Terror Jr — Bop City (128 scrobbles)
42. First Aid Kit — Ruins (127 scrobbles)
43. Terror Jr — Bop City 2: TerroRising (127 scrobbles)
44. Kate Tempest — Everybody Down (124 scrobbles)
45. Allie X — Super Sunset (123 scrobbles)
46. Blood Orange — Negro Swan (123 scrobbles)
47. Portishead — Portishead (122 scrobbles)
48. LIZ — Cross Your Heart (121 scrobbles)
49. U.S. Girls — In a Poem Unlimited (121 scrobbles)
50. Kelela — TAKE ME A_PART, The Remixes (119 scrobbles)
Top 50 Tracks:
1. SOPHIE — Immaterial (70 scrobbles)
2. Ought — Desire (67 scrobbles)
3. SOPHIE — Infatuation (66 scrobbles)
4. Let's Eat Grandma — Hot Pink (58 scrobbles)
5. SOPHIE — Faceshopping (58 scrobbles)
6. SOPHIE — Is It Cold in the Water? (55 scrobbles)
7. Hop Along — Not Abel (54 scrobbles)
8. Let's Eat Grandma — It's Not Just Me (53 scrobbles)
9. Sevdaliza — Human Nature (49 scrobbles)
10. Let's Eat Grandma — Falling Into Me (48 scrobbles)
11. Sinjin Hawke & Zora Jones — And You Were One (47 scrobbles)
12. SOPHIE — Whole New World/Pretend World (46 scrobbles)
13. Hop Along — Prior Things (44 scrobbles)
14. Let's Eat Grandma — Cool & Collected (41 scrobbles)
15. Beach House — Drunk in LA (40 scrobbles)
16. Charli XCX — Secret (Shh) (40 scrobbles)
17. Half Waif — In the Evening (40 scrobbles)
18. Half Waif — Leveler (39 scrobbles)
19. LIZ — Queen of Me (39 scrobbles)
20. Beach House — Black Car (38 scrobbles)
21. Hop Along — Somewhere a Judge (38 scrobbles)
22. Hop Along — What the Writer Meant (38 scrobbles)
23. Wye Oak — It Was Not Natural (38 scrobbles)
24. EASYFUN — Be Your USA (37 scrobbles)
25. Ought — Disgraced in America (37 scrobbles)
26. Charli XCX — Delicious (feat. Tommy Cash) (36 scrobbles)
27. Charli XCX — Roll with Me (36 scrobbles)
28. EASYFUN — Monopoly (36 scrobbles)
29. Natalie Prass — Lost (36 scrobbles)
30. RosalÃa — De aquà no sales (Cap.4: Disputa) (36 scrobbles)
31. SOPHIE — Hard (36 scrobbles)
32. Beach House — Woo (35 scrobbles)
33. Fresh Hex — I'm Gone (34 scrobbles)
34. RosalÃa — Bagdad (Cap.7: Liturgia) (34 scrobbles)
35. Charli XCX — Focus (33 scrobbles)
36. Hop Along — The Fox in Motion (33 scrobbles)
37. ionnalee — Joy (33 scrobbles)
38. Mitski — Nobody (33 scrobbles)
39. Ariana Grande — Be My Baby (feat. Cashmere Cat) (32 scrobbles)
40. Charli XCX — No Angel (32 scrobbles)
41. Charli XCX — Unlock It (feat. Kim Petras and Jay Park) (32 scrobbles)
42. Half Waif — Salt Candy (32 scrobbles)
43. Hannah Diamond — True (32 scrobbles)
44. Hop Along — One That Suits Me (32 scrobbles)
45 - RosalÃa — Di mi nombre (Cap.8: Éxtasis) (32 scrobbles)
46. Blood Orange — Always Let U Down (31 scrobbles)
47. Hop Along — How Simple (31 scrobbles)
48. Kim Petras — Heart to Break (31 scrobbles)
49. SOPHIE — Not Okay (31 scrobbles)
50. Carly Rae Jepsen — Your Type (30 scrobbles)
Top 50 Tracks, One Per Artist:
1. SOPHIE — Immaterial (70 scrobbles)
2. Ought — Desire (67 scrobbles)
3. Let's Eat Grandma — Hot Pink (58 scrobbles)
4. Hop Along — Not Abel (54 scrobbles)
5. Sevdaliza — Human Nature (49 scrobbles)
6. Sinjin Hawke & Zora Jones — And You Were One (47 scrobbles)
7. Beach House — Drunk in LA (40 scrobbles)
8. Charli XCX — Secret (Shh) (40 scrobbles)
9. Half Waif — In the Evening (40 scrobbles)
10. LIZ — Queen of Me (39 scrobbles)
11. Wye Oak — It Was Not Natural (38 scrobbles)
12. EASYFUN — Be Your USA (37 scrobbles)
13. Natalie Prass — Lost (36 scrobbles)
14. RosalÃa — De aquà no sales (Cap.4: Disputa) (36 scrobbles)
15. Fresh Hex — I'm Gone (34 scrobbles)
16. ionnalee — Joy (33 scrobbles)
17. Mitski — Nobody (33 scrobbles)
18. Ariana Grande — Be My Baby (feat. Cashmere Cat) (32 scrobbles)
19 - RosalÃa — Di mi nombre (Cap.8: Éxtasis) (32 scrobbles)
20. Blood Orange — Always Let U Down (31 scrobbles)
21. Kim Petras — Heart to Break (31 scrobbles)
22. Carly Rae Jepsen — Your Type (30 scrobbles)
23. Kero Kero Bonito — Only Acting (30 scrobbles)
24. Neko Case — Halls of Sarah (30 scrobbles)
25. Ezra Furman — No Place (29 scrobbles)
26. QT — Hey QT (29 scrobbles)
27. U.S. Girls — Pearly Gates (29 scrobbles)
28. Julia Holter — I Shall Love 2 (28 scrobbles)
29. Portishead — Glory Box (28 scrobbles)
30. Purity Ring — Stillness in Woe (28 scrobbles)
31. Cashmere Cat — Love Incredible (feat. Camila Cabello) (27 scrobbles)
32. Iceage — Pain Killer (27 scrobbles)
33. A. G. Cook — Beautiful (26 scrobbles)
34. Allie X — Girl of the Year (26 scrobbles)
35. Janelle Monáe — Screwed (feat. Zoë Kravitz) (25 scrobbles)
36. Kelela — All the Way Down (25 scrobbles)
37. Sega Bodega — Maryland (25 scrobbles)
38. Danny L Harle — 1UL (24 scrobbles)
39. Doss — Extended Mix (24 scrobbles)
40. Lotic — Hunted (24 scrobbles)
41. Wolf Alice — Don't Delete the Kisses (Charli XCX x Post Precious Remix) (24 scrobbles)
42. Esperanza Spalding — Thang (23 scrobbles)
43. Princess Nokia — Tomboy (23 scrobbles)
44. Quay Dash — Queen of This Shit (23 scrobbles)
45. Hatchie — Sure (22 scrobbles)
46. Kate Tempest — Grubby (22 scrobbles)
47. Metric — Dressed to Suppress (22 scrobbles)
48. Noname — Don't Forget About Me (22 scrobbles)
49. Paris Suit Yourself — Won't K (SOPHIE Remix) (22 scrobbles)
50. Terror Jr — Smoke (22 scrobbles)