mixtapes for weathers and moods / music for good days and bad days


For nonstop listening of players' tracks you must login to DEEZER music site! / A lejátszók számainak zavartalan hallgatásához be kell lépned a DEEZER zeneoldalra.

A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Rhiannon Giddens. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Rhiannon Giddens. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2020. január 7., kedd

PnM.MiX - 22 W I N D Y songs from FAVORITE FOLK & AMERICANA ALBUMS of AllMusic 2019

PnM.MiX - 22  W I N D Y  songs from FAVORITE FOLK & AMERICANA ALBUMS of AllMusic 2019

Our Native Daughters

"Folk and Americana artists used a broad range of approaches, from candid intimacy to commanding austerity to devastating intensity, to tell their stories this year.



2 0 1 9

A culturally charged folk and roots music supergroup featuring Rhiannon Giddens, Leyla McCalla, Allison Russell, and Amythyst Kiah.
Our Native Daughters - Slave Driver from Songs of Our Native Daughters
The Smithsonian Folkways-issued debut album from Carolina Chocolate Drops frontwoman Rhiannon Giddens, former Carolina Chocolate Drops cellist Leyla McCalla, multi-instrumentalist Allison Russell (Po' Girl, Birds of Chicago), and alt-country/blues singer/songwriter Amythyst Kiah, Songs of Our Native Daughters is a bold, brutal, and often beautiful dissertation on racism, hope, misogyny, agency, and slavery told from the perspective of four of modern roots music's most talented women, who also happen to be black...

An established guitarist and solo artist who has
worked with everyone from Lambchop to Charlie Louvin.
William Tyler - Our Lady of the Desert from Goes West
Although its title suggests a continuation of the pastoral Americana meditations from 2016's wondrous Modern Country, guitarist William Tyler's fourth solo outing is in fact a brighter, occasionally frolicsome set, rife with sublime melodies and executed with an understated confidence. Its title, Goes West, refers not to the dusty cross-country voyages that inspired its predecessor, but to Tyler's recent relocation from his native Nashville to sunny Los Angeles. As on Modern Country, the all-instrumental Goes West again employs a full band, though its leader sticks solely to acoustic guitar with Meg Duffy joining him on electric guitar, James Anthony Wallace on piano, Griffin Goldsmith on drums, and co-producer Bradley Cook covering bass, synths, and a smattering of other instruments...

Literate, golden-voiced singer/songwriter whose music blends progressive country and folk with touches of blues and pop.
Allison Moorer - The Ties That Bind from Blood
Allison Moorer is someone who has been through things that most artists could never contemplate. When Moorer was 14 years old, her father shot and killed her mother before taking his own life, and that sort of baggage is something no one fully escapes. Unsurprisingly, Moorer is no stranger to dark themes in her music, but she doesn't wallow in tragedy, and her songs search for a light rather than obsessing on the shadows. Her 2019 album Blood is a musical companion to her memoir, published the same year, that deals with the tragedy that left a mark on her childhood and how she and her older sister (fellow musician Shelby Lynne) struggled to make peace with it. One might expect Blood to be a grand musical statement, given its overriding themes, but that's not the case, and that works to the advantage of the music, which is intimate and immediate, allowing Moorer's vocals to take center stage...


Celebrated Nashville songwriters who have enjoyed successful careers separately and as a duo.
Buddy & Julie Miller - Underneath The Sky from Breakdown on 20th Ave. South
Buddy & Julie Miller are two unique talents who happen to work very well together, which is convenient, since they happen to be married. He's a fine songwriter and an inspired guitarist and producer with a gift for the evocative and atmospheric, while Julie's lyrics are compelling stories of love and human experience that gain greater emotional depth through her voice, which subtly melds vulnerability and strength. While Buddy Miller is one of the busier people in Nashville between his own recordings and his frequent work with others, little has been heard from Julie since she and Buddy released the duet album Written in Chalk in 2009. While health problems kept Julie on the sidelines for most of the 2010s, she was well enough late in the decade to cut a batch of fresh songs with Buddy, and 2019's Breakdown on 20th Ave. South is a welcome reminder of her special talents as a vocalist, songwriter, and collaborator...


Thoughtful, world-weary Americana from this Virginia-born singer/songwriter.
Caroline Spence - Wait On The Wine from Mint Condition
Over two full-lengths and one EP, Nashville's Caroline Spence has shown an uncanny knack for portraying the complexities of the human condition in poetically candid little vignettes of warm and weary Americana. Her second LP, 2017's Spades & Roses, earned enough respect and critical acclaim to net her a deal with Rounder Records, the veteran roots-driven label behind her third outing, Mint Condition. Produced by Dan Knobler (Lake Street Dive, Erin Rae), the 11-track set takes no great stylistic leaps, but offers a continued evolution of the journey Spence has been on since she debuted back in 2013...

Singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and leader of eclectic traditional folk group the Carolina Chocolate Drops.
Rhiannon Giddens - I'm On My Way (with Francesco Turrisi) from There Is No Other
Often, the phrase "there is no other" carries an air of romanticism, but Rhiannon Giddens turns its conventional meaning on its head on her collaboration with Francesco Turrisi. The pair focus directly on "othering," the process of identifying different cultures as alien from a person's own experience -- a phenomenon that the pair refute not only with the title of their 2019 album but the very music it contains. Giddens claims classical music and old-timey folk as her musical heritage; Turrisi is a jazz musician who studied early music -- backgrounds that provide a considerable amount of common ground, something that is evident throughout the restless, haunting There Is No Other. While it's possible to trace individual elements back to their origins -- much of the music churns to a Mediterranean drone, Giddens' dexterous claw-hammered banjo is at the forefront -- it takes close listening to parse these parts, as the duo are determined to emphasize common threads that tie cultures together...


Best known for co-founding BR5-49, Chuck Mead also served as music director of Broadway hit Million Dollar Quartet and leads the Grassy Knoll Boys.
Chuck Mead - Shake from Close to Home
It's hard not to read the title of Close to Home as an admission of the album's contents. Chuck Mead does indeed stick to his Tennessee roots here, which may not be a surprise considering that the former leader of BR5-49 spent much of the 2010s directing the music on the Million Dollar Quartet musical and supervising the soundtrack for the CMT show Sun Records, and Close to Home does indeed bear a big rockabilly heart. Recorded with producer Matt Ross-Spang, who's helmed records by John Prine, Jason Isbell, and Margo Price, at Sam Phillips Recording Studios, Close to Home boasts a style that evokes old sounds and styles without doggedly replicating the past. It's an appealing combination...

Americana singer/songwriter from Boise, Idaho whose music blends classic country and vintage blues.
Eilen JewellWorking Hard for Your Love from Gypsy
Returning to original material after the 2017 covers album Down Hearted Blues, Eilen Jewell is unusually engaged with the modern world on Gypsy. This doesn't mean the singer/songwriter is abandoning her Americana for country-pop. With its smoldering, swampy groove and sawing fiddles, the opening "Crawl" makes it clear that Jewell continues to mine and fuse all aspects of American roots music; she's as comfortable with country as she is soul. What gives Gypsy its contemporary kick is how Jewell stares directly at the political turmoil that's roiling America in the waning years of the 2010s...

Australian folk singer/songwriter from Melbourne with a powerful voice and a vintage, early-'60s-inspired tone.
Grace Cummings - Other Side from Refuge Cove
A young folk artist with a commanding, rough-hewn voice and forthright approach, Australian singer/songwriter Grace Cummings makes her auspicious debut with Refuge Cove. Bearing a classic tone that recalls the '60s folk revival infused with some of rock's raw power, Cummings began making the rounds in her native Melbourne in 2018, quickly building a buzz that was intensified after an online video of her covering Bob Dylan's "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" led to a contract with Flightless Records, the label spearheaded by local psych faves King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard. Rather than mess with a winning formula, the label wisely chose to capture their new signee in her natural format, recording live in a room with just an acoustic guitar and her throaty, dominating voice bouncing off the walls. What minor piano and guitar overdubs there are always serve the basic composition of the songs. Alternating between earthy poeticism and honest observations, Cummings tries to make sense of both her inner and outer worlds, drawing the audience in with an intimacy that doesn't suffer from the usual self-conscious pitfalls of confessionalism...

Raised in South Dakota by Mennonite missionaries, singer/songwriter Rachel Ries spent her formative years immersed in an unusual mix of Congolese spirituals, Mennonite hymns, and the popular Carpenters tunes of the day...
Her Crooked Heart - Enough from To Love To Leave To Live
Indie folk-rock outfit led by charismatic Minneapolis-based singer/songwriter and producer Rachel Ries.
The project of Minneapolis-based musician Rachel Ries, Her Crooked Heart delivers an elegantly rendered debut of intertwined narratives set amongst beautifully layered arrangements that incorporate lush chamber pop, jazz, and experimental folk. Culled from the personal tumult following her 2013 divorce, the material on To Love To Leave To Live leans heavily into Ries' emotional transformations both as a person and an artist. Leaving not only her marriage behind, but also a previous recording career under her own name, she inhabits this new endeavor with a crackling energy wrought from the sadness, excitement, anxiety, and other raw elements of her sea change...


Scottish singer-songwriter blends dark Leonard Cohen musings with Stuart Murdoch airs.
James Yorkston - My Mouth Ain't No Bible from The Route to the Harmonium
In the five intervening years between 2014's Cellardyke Recording and Wassailing Society and its follow-up, The Route to the Harmonium, James Yorkston recorded two albums as part of the earthy minimalist trio Yorkston/Thorne/Khan, founded an ambitious folk club in his native Fife, and published his debut novel, 3 Craws. Since debuting in 2002, the Scottish folk singer has consistently maintained a prolific and multifaceted output, and as his career has progressed, his albums have increasingly reflected this sort of all-in-one art form, often bypassing typical folk song structures and coming across as a sort of freewheeling panoply of ideas and layers. Like its predecessor, The Route to the Harmonium, his ninth solo outing, combines a sort of meandering personal journal approach with arrangements that veer from solitary fingerpicking to robust stacks of brass, drums, and an unusual amount of zither...


Warm, vintage-inspired country-rock and folk from this singer/songwriter, who is best known for his work with wife Margo Price.
Jeremy Ivey - Diamonds Back To Coal from The Dream and the Dreamer
Although he's been a fixture of Nashville's indie music scene since the mid-2000s, Jeremy Ivey has largely assumed the role of collaborator, playing in bands like Secret Handshake and Buffalo Clover, and serving as guitarist and sideman to his wife, country singer/songwriter Margo Price. In terms of asserting himself as a frontman, the 41-year-old is a bit of a late bloomer, but his strong solo debut for the Anti- label is a testament to waiting until you're ready. On The Dream and the Dreamer, the Georgia native offers up nine thoughtful, tastefully written cuts that traverse '60s-inspired country-rock, folk sensibility, and indie pop melodicism, peppered with a few hazy plumes of light psychedelia. Recorded at Nashville's all-analog Reel Recording and mixed at the historic Sam Phillips Recording in Memphis, the album manages to tip its hat to the methods of an earlier era without all the self-congratulatory throwback baggage that so many similarly inclined Americana artists feel compelled to flaunt...


Based out of Louisville, Kentucky, singer/songwriter Joan Shelley has a warm and mellifluous voice that evokes both the Deep South and the West Coast, drawing from both old-time country and '60s folk.
Joan Shelley - Cycle from Like the River Loves the Sea
Joan Shelley hails from Kentucky, and her best music reflects the placid, Sunday evening sound of life in the rural American South. So why did she travel to Reykjavik, Iceland to record her fifth solo album, 2019's Like The River Loves The Sea? That's anyone's guess, but the results show it was an experiment that worked, and worked well for her. The sweet, smokey sadness of Shelley's voice has rarely been better served than it is on these sessions, blending a folkie clarity and quaver with a natural soulfulness that gives her performances a strength that betrays the subtlety of the presentation. There's a natural intimacy to Shelley's lyrics -- she doesn't deal in grand conceits, being more comfortable pondering the more compact themes of human relationships -- and as a vocalist she respects their scale, but she finds in them a universality that lends them a power plenty of more bombastic writers could never match. Shelley, co-producer and multi-instrumentalist James Elkington, and a small crew of Icelandic musicians have made Like The River Loves The Sea a model of artful restraint...


A mercurial English-Canadian singer/songwriter who brings together influences as wide-ranging as Lou Reed, Burt Bacharach, and Bertolt Brecht.
John Southworth - Obscurantism from Miracle in the Night
In what feels like a briefer, inland-dwelling sequel to 2014's tour de force, Niagara, Miracle in the Night distills into its 11 tracks the kind of enigmatic moonlit fantasia that could only come from the singular mind of John Southworth. Twelve albums into his career, the English-Canadian songwriter's reputation as a smart-pop mysterioso only deepens as he continues his transformation into the hushed blend of acoustic jazz, folk, and chamber pop that has more or less marked his later output. Assembled with great craft by his longtime band the South Seas, Miracle in the Night is a wonder of earthen poeticism, peculiar observations, and beautifully captured instrumentation. Amidst the gentle piano voicings, pump organ, and brushed drum parts, Southworth's distinctive voice whispers and croons, occasionally flexing its power like a sudden night wind...


The queen of traditional rockabilly music, Kim Lenz is a dynamic performer whose rootsy, swaggering sound evokes the twangy heritage of classic performers of the 1950s like Wanda Jackson and Janis Martin.
Kim Lenz - Hourglass from Slowly Speeding
On her fifth album, Kim Lenz delivers her most stylistically broad production to date with twangy songs dusted with themes of pain, desire, and the supernatural. Lenz, who first emerged in the '90s with her trademark backing group the Jaguars, is largely known as a queen of traditional rockabilly, a torchbearer of the swaggering, wickedly sexy style of '50s female rock icons like Barbara Pittman, Wanda Jackson, and Janis Martin. With Slowly Speeding, she expands upon this approach, exploring ever more nuanced aspects of the Americana tradition. At the core of the album is the title track, a woozy, slow country waltz with a backwards guitar intro and haunting pedal steel lines...


An Americana singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist and a member of the sibling country/bluegrass family act Jypsi before working with Jack White and going solo.
Lillie Mae - Some Gamble from Other Girls
Collaborating with producer Dave Cobb helps Lillie Mae simultaneously sharpen and expand her focus -- a nifty, subtle trick that fuels Other Girls, her second album for Third Man Records. Lillie Mae operates in an undefined territory where ancient and modern music meet, a place where bluegrass can seem spacy but not quite lonesome. This is a distinct, delicate balance, one she hinted at on Forever and Then Some, but Other Girls benefits from Cobb adding a sense of spectral melancholy to the proceedings. It's a quality that's thankfully not overplayed; it's there just enough to add dimension and mystery, emotions that still linger when the record turns and eases into something a little simpler. Lillie Mae's high, keening voice is suited for such stylized plaints but the reason Other Girls works as well as it does is that it's not solely sad...


Lula Wiles are a progressive string band -- progressive in their musicality and progressive in their social outlook. While the trio of Isa Burke, Eleanor Buckland, and Mali Obomsawin hardly eschew tradition -- they're proudly rooted in any number of Americana sounds...
Lula Wiles - Love Gone Wrong from What Will We Do
If there's a latent hesitancy in the title of What Will We Do, Lula Wiles' debut for Smithsonian Folkways, there's nothing tentative about the trio on this 2019 album. Isa Burke, Eleanor Buckland, and Mali Obomsawin project a confidence throughout What Will We Do, an attitude reflected in the casual swagger of their string band as well as their flinty tales of living in the murk of modern America...


Greatly talented yet hugely underrated British folk singer and songwriter since the late '60s.
Michael Chapman - It's Too Late from True North
...True North couldn't be more of a contrast. This is almost a full-circle return to his earliest years as a recording artist; musically it charts directly from 1969's Rainmaker and 1970's Fully Qualified Survivor. True North couldn't be more organic. Gunn returns as producer, plays lead guitar, and alternates with Chapman on bass and drums (the latter used sparingly at best). Chapman's glorious, innovative, mantra-like fingerstyle playing guides every song...


Both a departure from and a continuation of his work with Talk Talk and .O.rang, Paul Webb's Rustin Man project shares not only members with those bands, but a sophisticated approach and heartfelt spirit.
Rustin Man - Judgement Train from Drift Code
Seventeen years separate Rustin Man's 2002 debut album Out of Season and its follow-up, but in the best possible way, Drift Code sounds like it took a lifetime to make. In some respects, it did. After Out of Season's release, Rustin Man's Paul Webb spent time raising his family and turning an old barn into his home and the studio where he painstakingly created the songs that became Drift Code. Working with drummer Lee Harris -- a lifelong friend and member of his other bands, Talk Talk and .O.rang -- Webb recorded each instrument with a number of microphone placements that allowed him to take his pick of imaginary "rooms" when he put the songs together. This intricate process deepens the cloistered, strangely timeless feel that Out of Season introduced, but as gorgeous as that album's blend of Beth Gibbons' vocals and Webb's arrangements was, Drift Code feels like the true introduction to Rustin Man. This is the first set of songs Webb wrote for his own voice, and what a voice it is: Weathered, tremulous yet surprisingly versatile, it's as if the years it took for Drift Code to come to fruition shaped his vocals into the perfect instrument for its contemplative songs...


Former ranch worker and rodeo rider from New Mexico whose songwriting connects with alt-country and Americana.
Ryan Bingham - Got Damn Blues from American Love Song
It's hard to imagine a comeback as rowdy and realized as American Love Song. The double album isn't merely Ryan Bingham's first in four years, it's his most confident since his brief flirtation with the mainstream at the dawn of the 2010s. Bingham's retreat from the spotlight was fueled in part by personal issues -- both of his parents died in the early 2010s, a loss chronicled on 2012's Tomorrowland -- but he also seemed at ease releasing modest albums on his own Axster Records imprint. American Love Song also appears on Axster, but it's the furthest thing from modest. Chalk some of this up to co-producer Charlie Sexton, who gives the album's 15 songs a rough-and-tumble feel suited for backwoods Texas juke joints. Sexton, who plays plenty of greasy guitar on the album as well, pushes Bingham to play with grit and heart, a move that makes the record a pleasure on a pure musical level; it's the sound of a great group of players laying into earthy grooves, no matter if they're rave-ups or sunset strums...


Singer/songwriter from Maine, renowned for her poignant and melodic folk-tinged tunes, including songs that have been covered by many pop artists.
Patty Griffin - The Wheel from Patty Griffin
Patty Griffin is a gifted artist who has no fear of expressing her heart and soul and doesn't hide behind empty artifice in her music. It's a bit surprising that she had never made an LP called Patty Griffin before releasing her self-titled tenth studio album in 2019, just because Patty Griffin is such a simple, straightforward, and honest description of the music inside. That description holds true for most of Griffin's best music, yet it seems particularly apt for this album; on Patty Griffin, the songs and the performances sound remarkably open and unguarded, with the spare, primarily acoustic arrangements adding focus and emphasis to the intimacy of her voice, an instrument of sure and measured fervor. Patty Griffin was written and recorded during a difficult period in her life, while she was being treated for cancer and briefly lost her voice, and themes of mortality and loss are certainly present in this music...


Brooding and vulnerable country-soul from the pen of Richmond Fontaine frontman Willy Vlautin and his muse Amy Boone.
The Delines - The Imperial from The Imperial
It took the Delines five years to deliver The Imperial, the sequel to their 2014 debut, Colfax. Much of the delay can be explained by a car accident singer Amy Boone suffered in March 2016, but the delay wound up working in the band's favor, as it gave time for songwriter/guitarist Willy Vlautin to craft an extraordinary set of ten songs. Whenever he's not slinging a guitar, Vlautin is a novelist, a talent evident in how the songs on The Imperial are built upon evocative, telling details that create their own little world; the ten tracks play like interconnected short stories, not songs...








2019. december 7., szombat

PnM.MiX - 33 1st/2nd tracks from bestof 2019 by AllMusic

PnM_MiX - 33 1st/2nd tracks from bestof 2019 by AllMusic


"It's time to celebrate the best music of 2019. We begin with our overall top 100 albums of the year..."



First known as the frontwoman for the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Karen O branched out from the band's incendiary rock soon after their debut album, Fever to Tell, was released in 2003.
One of the early 21st century's most influential musicians and producers, Danger Mouse parlayed his skill at blending and juxtaposing elements of rock, hip-hop, dance, and pop into an unmistakable approach that he likened to being an auteur.
Danger Mouse / Karen O - Lux Prima from Lux Prima
...Together, the pair sets a dramatic, mysterious, and strangely luxurious mood that fits Lux Prima's musings on birth and rebirth. They begin the album with its most ambitious track: A nine-minute, four-part suite, "Lux Prima" swirls eerie synth passages, symphonic grandeur, and slinky R&B together with an unhurried mystique. It's an impressive, somewhat daunting prologue that hints at just how much ground Karen O and Danger Mouse cover on the album, and how well they complement each other...


Electronic indie folk outlet of West Midlands producer and multi-instrumentalist Stephen Wilkinson.
Bibio - The Art of Living from Ribbons
On 2017's excellent Phantom Brickworks, Bibio's Stephen Wilkinson took a deep dive into his music's ambient side that was unexpected, yet made perfect sense within his body of work. This time, Wilkinson spotlights the acoustic elements that have added warmth to his sound since the beginning, and the freshness of Ribbons suggest that his break from song-based music reinvigorated him. In interviews, Wilkinson has mentioned he prefers the simplicity of writing on acoustic guitar, and that purity shines through on the album's numerous instrumentals...

Singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and leader of eclectic traditional folk group the Carolina Chocolate Drops.
Rhiannon Giddens - Gonna Write Me a Letter from There Is No Other
Often, the phrase "there is no other" carries an air of romanticism, but Rhiannon Giddens turns its conventional meaning on its head on her collaboration with Francesco Turrisi. The pair focus directly on "othering," the process of identifying different cultures as alien from a person's own experience -- a phenomenon that the pair refute not only with the title of their 2019 album but the very music it contains. Giddens claims classical music and old-timey folk as her musical heritage; Turrisi is a jazz musician who studied early music -- backgrounds that provide a considerable amount of common ground, something that is evident throughout the restless, haunting There Is No Other.

An established guitarist and solo artist who has worked with everyone from Lambchop to Charlie Louvin... Having established his reputation as a versatile and supremely inventive guitar ace, he then launched a solo career that focused on instrumental, often experimental compositions that pulled from a variety of styles, from sparse American Primitive to pastoral country-driven rock and folk.
William Tyler - Alpine Star from Goes West
Although its title suggests a continuation of the pastoral Americana meditations from 2016's wondrous Modern Country, guitarist William Tyler's fourth solo outing is in fact a brighter, occasionally frolicsome set, rife with sublime melodies and executed with an understated confidence. Its title, Goes West, refers not to the dusty cross-country voyages that inspired its predecessor, but to Tyler's recent relocation from his native Nashville to sunny Los Angeles. As on Modern Country, the all-instrumental Goes West again employs a full band, though its leader sticks solely to acoustic guitar with Meg Duffy joining him on electric guitar, James Anthony Wallace on piano, Griffin Goldsmith on drums, and co-producer Bradley Cook covering bass, synths, and a smattering of other instruments...


Singer/songwriter from New Zealand who deals in minimalist and slightly gothic contemporary folk.
Aldous Harding - Fixture Picture from Designer
The New Zealand singer/songwriter's third studio effort, and her second time working with producer and frequent PJ Harvey collaborator John Parish, Designer eschews the post-last call darkness of 2017's Party for something a bit sunnier, though no less peculiar. Aldous Harding remains an enigma; she's an elusive but captivating presence who can invoke both a nervous giggle and a slack-jawed tear via her careful pairing of abstract lyrics and subtle hooks...

This virtuoso guitarist, composer, and producer lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
Steve Gunn - New Moon from The Unseen In Between
Annabel Mehran's black-and-white cover photo for Steve Gunn's The Unseen In Between is a portrait of the guitarist and songwriter seemingly on the move. It evokes those found on early- to mid-'60s recordings by Bob Dylan, Koerner, Ray & Glover, Jackson C. Frank, Bert Jansch, and others. Gunn has shifted his focus considerably. Rather than simply showcase his dazzling guitar playing, he delivers carefully crafted, uncharacteristically tight and well-written songs with guitars, keyboards, strings, reeds -- and percussion -- translating them without artifice or instrumental disguise.... Opener "New Moon" commences with an acoustic guitar and bassline delivering a syncopated psych-folk vamp before a heavily reverbed electric guitar paints over them both...

Violinist, singer, songwriter, and composer known for his eclectic pop-folk style and multi-layered sound.
Andrew Bird - Sisyphus from My Finest Work Yet
Given that he's as well known for his whistling as for his singing, not everyone picks up an Andrew Bird album expecting a cogent lyrical statement. The impressionistic verse that's dominated his work bears this out, but given the cultural tumult of life in America in 2019, it's not surprising that even Bird has something to say about the world at large. My Finest Work Yet (never let it be said Bird is afraid of making a bold statement) isn't the work of an artist mounting a soapbox, but most of the songs do follow a consistent theme that in a time of chaos and upheaval, apathy and cynicism are our worst enemies, and that when we have enemies rather than adversaries, we've given the opposition power rather than blunted it...


Welsh indie singer/songwriter who produced for Deerhunter and other peers in addition to crafting her own intricate solo albums.
Cate Le Bon - Miami from Reward
Welsh artist Cate Le Bon's fifth album, Reward, was created in a vacuum of solitude. While Le Bon was in an intensive furniture-making course by day, she spent her nights alone at the piano writing the skeletons that would be fleshed out as songs here. Nonstop activity is part of Le Bon's brand, and while her collaborative band Drinks and production duties for Deerhunter's Why Hasn't Everything Already Disappeared? took up space on her resumé not long before Reward, three years passed between its release and her last fully solo album, 2016's Crab Day...

Over a long span, the London band have made energetic, heartbreaking indie pop that relies on punk, mod, country rock and incisive lyrics for support.
Comet Gain - We're All Fucking Morons from Fireraisers Forever!
When a band has been around as long Comet Gain have -- over 25 years -- and keep making great records, it's easy to take them for granted. They have a foolproof plan for always getting the full attention of their listeners though: make the angry songs feel like the attack of a swarm of insane bees, make the pop songs pop like giant bubblegum bubbles, make the sad songs cry-a-bucket-of-tears sad. While their previous record Paperback Ghosts had an autumnal, almost pastoral, tinge on many of the tracks, the sound of Fireraisers Forever! is almost the opposite...


The part Dutch, part Turkish combo are dedicated to updating the psychedelic sounds of Turkey in the early '70s, adding deep funk beats and synthesizers to the mix.
Altin GünYolcu from Gece
Altin Gün were formed by former members of Jacco Gardner's band to pay tribute to the Turkish psychedelia of the early '70s that they discovered and fell in love with while on tour in Turkey. Bassist Jasper Verhulst fell under the spell of artists like Baris Manço, Selda Bağcan, and Erkin Koray, who blended traditional Turkish folk sounds with the wild sounds of their day, so Verhulst decided he wanted to do something similar in the 2010s, using modern production techniques and synthesizers along with psych guitars and Turkish instruments...


Texas guitarist who combines blues roots with contemporary soul and hip-hop.
Gary Clark, Jr. - This Land from This Land
"F*ck you, I'm America's son/This is where I come from." Gary Clark, Jr. spits out that line with all the venom he can muster on the opening track of 2019's This Land, and while he's specifically challenging a racist neighbor who doesn't believe he can afford the Texas ranch he calls home, it also sounds like he's shouting down anyone who has dared to question his creative ambitions or tried to pigeonhole him as just another bluesman. Since making his major-label debut with 2012's Blak and Blu, Clark has steadily been widening his boundaries as a musician, and This Land is his toughest and most ambitious work to date, a bold and often ferocious set of songs that serves as a polyglot of African-American musical idioms and sharply articulate thoughts about American life in the midst of the Trump era...


Mississippi-born blues guitarist boasts a full-bodied sound and worked with Buddy Guy and Eric Gales before he could buy beer.
Christone "Kingfish" Ingram - Outside Of  This Town from Kingfish
At the ripe old age of 20, Clarksdale, Mississippi guitar slinger Christone "Kingfish" Ingram has been anointed "the next explosion of the blues," by no less than Buddy Guy. The proclamation is accurate. Ingram is young, but he's spent most of life pursuing the blues across the Delta and Chicago traditions, with nods at '70s hard rock and soul along the way...


Acclaimed Mississippi bluesman and member of the Bentonia blues school who also operates America's oldest surviving juke joint.
Jimmy "Duck" Holmes - Cypress Grove from Cypress Grove
Jimmy "Duck" Holmes is one of the last practitioners of old-fashioned Mississippi blues, playing a variation that belongs to the Yazoo county town of Bentonia. Holmes kept that sound alive at his own juke joint and on a series of records in the 2000s, but the 2019 album Cypress Grove is designed as a vehicle to introduce the bluesman to a wider audience. Dan Auerbach, the lead singer of the Black Keys and head of the Easy Eye Sound studio and label, shepherded the project, bringing Holmes up to Nashville to record with a bunch of his cohorts, including guitarist Marcus King...


Los Angeles-based roots music diva who records old-school, purist rockabilly.
Kim Lenz - Bogeyman from Slowly Speeding
On her fifth album, Kim Lenz delivers her most stylistically broad production to date with twangy songs dusted with themes of pain, desire, and the supernatural. Lenz, who first emerged in the '90s with her trademark backing group the Jaguars, is largely known as a queen of traditional rockabilly, a torchbearer of the swaggering, wickedly sexy style of '50s female rock icons like Barbara Pittman, Wanda Jackson, and Janis Martin. With Slowly Speeding, she expands upon this approach, exploring ever more nuanced aspects of the Americana tradition...

A Midwestern-based blues band that keeps the sound of Chess and Sun Records alive.
The Cash Box Kings - Ain't No Fun (When the Rabbit Got the Gun) from Hail to the Kings!
It's hard not to see the title of Hail to the Kings! as the Cash Box Kings celebrating themselves, but this 2019 album -- the group's second for Alligator -- makes it plain that the quintet can occasionally plant their tongues firmly in cheek... It's funny and it's smart, revealing that all of the Cash Box Kings are not only in on the joke, but that their hearts belong to Chicago. Certainly, Hail to the Kings! is an enthusiastic celebration of Chicago blues in all of its electric forms...



Kentucky-based singer/songwriter mixing both '60s folk and old-time country.
Joan Shelley - Coming Down For You from Like the River Loves the Sea
Joan Shelley hails from Kentucky, and her best music reflects the placid, Sunday evening sound of life in the rural American South. So why did she travel to Reykjavik, Iceland to record her fifth solo album, 2019's Like The River Loves The Sea? That's anyone's guess, but the results show it was an experiment that worked, and worked well for her. The sweet, smokey sadness of Shelley's voice has rarely been better served than it is on these sessions, blending a folkie clarity and quaver with a natural soulfulness that gives her performances a strength that betrays the subtlety of the presentation...

Vocalist who makes atmospheric orchestral pop showcasing her torchy image and sensuously husky singing style.
Lana Del Rey - Mariners Apartment Complex from Norman Fucking Rockwell!
With the creation of her Lana Del Rey persona, singer/songwriter Lizzy Grant stitched together the iconography of a fading American dream with soaring but melancholic pop songwriting, becoming an icon unto herself in the process. Her distinctive approach blurred sadness and longing just as it did past and present, drawing on the influence of classic American pop while integrating modernized touches like trap beats and millennial cultural references. With sixth album Norman Fucking Rockwell!, Lana Del Rey expands her vision with the most daring and vulnerable work of her catalog...

Indie folk artist and singer/songwriter with releases on Drag City and Jagjaguwar.
Sharon Van Etten - No One's Easy to Love from Remind Me Tomorrow
...Van Etten maintains that sense of drama on Remind Me Tomorrow, her fifth full-length album, but she's radically shifted her presentation. Working with producer John Congleton, she's expanded her sonic palette, incorporating vintage synthesizers and drum loops while occasionally cranking up her amplifiers. Some of the sounds are conscious throwbacks, but they don't play like retro nostalgia, not in the context of Remind Me Tomorrow, which juxtaposes fearless aural adventure with keenly observed observations of easing into a satisfied life...


Brash, bold power pop-inspired trio fronted by Wild Flag and Helium's Mary Timony and featuring members of the Aquarium and the Fire Tapes.
Ex Hex - Tough Enough from It's Real
On Rips, Ex Hex reimagined the instant gratification of rock & roll with thrilling results. On their second album, Mary Timony, Betsy Wright, and Laura Harris take a deeper dive into rock's transporting powers. At once tighter and more complex than Rips, It's Real reflects the two years Ex Hex spent touring in support of their debut, as well as the year it took to craft the album in the studio (one key piece of gear was the Rockman, an amp that Boston's Tom Scholz developed in 1982). In much the same way that some power pop and new wave bands expanded their music to arena-sized proportions as the '80s unfolded, It's Real is bigger and more deliberate than its predecessor...


Brooklyn indie rock quartet steered by the vulnerable songwriting of singer/guitarist Adrianne Lenker.
Big Thief - Contact from U.F.O.F.
By the arrival of Big Thief's third album, U.F.O.F. ("UFO friend" per lyrics in the title track), songwriter Adrianne Lenker had established herself as a singular force in indie music, both through two acclaimed albums with her band and with more delicate solo material including 2018's Abysskiss. In the meantime, Big Thief had toured almost constantly between preparing their 2016 debut, Masterpiece, and recording U.F.O.F., all the while becoming more and more tight-knit as a group...



L.A. quartet whose spiky yet vulnerable mix of punk, chamber pop, and singer/songwriter confessions influenced decades of artists that followed.
that dog. - Just The Way from Old LP
"I haven't felt like this since 1995," Anna Waronker snarls at one point on Old LP, the first album from that dog. in 22 years. During that time -- nearly half of Waronker, Rachel Haden, and Tony Maxwell's lives -- the band's spiky yet vulnerable mix of punk, chamber pop, and singer/songwriter confessions shaped later generations of indie rock and pop artists. It's all the sweeter, then, that Old LP is a near-flawless blend of experience and exuberance... The band's fiery side also sounds better than ever on "Just the Way You Like It" and "Down Without a Fight," both of which hone their deadpan punk-pop to an even sharper point...


West Coast indie group helmed by Dusty Reske featuring elements of space age pop, shoegaze haze, and dream pop sweetness in their layered sound.
Rocketship - Under Streetlights Shadows from Thanks to You
Cue the record scratch sound effect because 2019's Thanks to You is exactly that. Working mainly with vocalist Ellen Osborn, Reske concocted a record that nearly measures up to their debut in every way, and it's clear that while time has passed and there are new elements added to Rocketship's sound, Reske's gifts as a writer and producer haven't faded at all. Whether dipping back into the space-age shoegaze sound (complete with vintage organ chords) on the opening "Under Streetlights Shadows"...


Former Golden Grrrls members who went on to form Sacred Paws, producing sunny, polyrhythmic pop.
Sacred Paws - The Conversation from Run Around the Sun
Sacred Paws' second album doesn't deviate from the winning formula the duo perfected on 2017's Strike a Match: twanging Afro-pop guitars, pulsing drums, giddy vocal interplay, and songs catchy enough to latch on like a deer tick and never let go. Rachel Aggs (vocals, guitar, bass) and Eilidh Rodgers (vocals, drums) apply the same high standards to Run Around the Sun, working with much the same team to create a joyous indie pop listening experience...





Los Angeles-based singer/songwriter who blends ethereal indie electro-pop with dark thematic tones.
Billie Eilish - bad guy from WHEN WE ALL FALL ASLEEP, WHERE DO WE GO?
On her big-league debut, Billie Eilish makes a bold entrance into the mainstream, leaving the fringes behind to embrace her role as an anti-pop star for the disaffected Gen Z masses. With a youthful, hybrid blend that incorporates elements of indie electronic, pop, and hip-hop (assisted by brother Finneas O'Connell), When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? captures the late-2010s zeitgeist by throwing conventional boundaries to the wind and fully committing to its genre-blurring self...


A tough-rhyming rapper whose approach is equally effective over jagged and smooth productions, Little Simz (originally Lil Simz) is also known as an actor for her recurring roles on the BBC's Spirit Warriors and E4's Youngers.
Little Simz - Offence from Grey Area
...On her third full-length album, Grey Area, Simz has reached a new peak, with an honest record that isn't afraid to take shots at the world at large. It's also incredibly concise -- an aspect that many of her peers often miss the mark on -- with no filler despite the broad variation the record boasts.
Simz comes out swinging on opening track "Offence," which acts as a declaration of intent for everything that follows, as she bellows "I said it with my chest and I don't care who I offend." It acts in part as a battle cry but also as a primer for truths, both personal and social, that she is capable of exploring...


Australian singer/songwriter whose seamless meld of dreamy indie pop and confessional alt-country evokes names like Angel Olsen and Sharon Van Etten.
Julia Jacklin -  Body from Crushing
... Jacklin's lyrics and vulnerable yet jaded vocal delivery are the primary focus, however, on a set of breakup songs that is, importantly, as much about reclaiming one's sense of self as it is about loss.
Crushing is riveting right from the spare, noir-tinged opening track, "Body," which remembers the moment Jacklin decided to leave the relationship after her partner got them thrown off a flight. The humiliating scene is punctuated by her wondering if he might use a nude photograph he once took of her against her; she describes the aftermath as "heading to the city to get my body back."...


Evoking trip-hop as well as the xx's spare electronic pop, FKA twigs' songs are haunting and vulnerable.
FKA twigs - thousand eyes from Magdalene
On her early EPs and LP1, FKA twigs' Tahliah Barnett expressed the intersections of love, pain, fragility and strength with remarkable eloquence. While making Magdalene, she embodied them. Not only did she endure the end of a long-term relationship, she had surgery to remove six large uterine fibroids (colorfully described by her as a "fruit bowl of pain"). These events became the heart of her second album, which uses the duality of Mary Magdalene as a lens for its wounded yet resilient feminine energy...

Singer, songwriter, and producer who debuted with pop-oriented R&B and grew into one of the more adventurous, expectation-defying artists of her era.
Solange - Down With the Clique from When I Get Home
Unfazed by having to follow a landmark album that crowned the Billboard 200, went gold, and yielded a hit that took a Grammy, Solange leisurely detours with When I Get Home. Made in spots as remote as Los Angeles and Jamaica, the follow-up to A Seat at the Table was also recorded in New Orleans and Solange's native Houston. Most pertinent is the last location, referenced repeatedly in expressions of nostalgia, pride, and tranquility, as well as in titular geographic markers..


Witty, confident singer/rapper who blends hip-hop and soul as she tackles issues of race, sexuality, and body positivity.
Lizzo - Cuz I Love You from Cuz I Love You
Since her indie days, Lizzo has been a distinctive and multi-talented artist capable of blending rap, soul, pop, and her classical training with positive messages and a sharp sense of humor. On her major-label debut Cuz I Love You, she takes all of these strengths to the next level, and the results are her most consistent, and consistently joyous, set of songs yet. Working with a creative team that includes producer Ricky Reed -- with whom Lizzo connected shortly after releasing her second album, Big Grrrl Small World -- she continues to embrace her gospel roots and the full power of her voice...



Singer and songwriter, as well as a poet and activist, who naturally applies the latter two outlets to her modern, soul-rooted R&B.
Jamila Woods - ZORA from LEGACY! LEGACY!
Jamila Woods conceptualized her second solo album after an exercise she presented to her poetry class at Young Chicago Authors. The students were assigned to choose a poem and "cover" it, as Woods terms it, by putting their individual spin on it...


Grammy-nominated American rapper traversing soul, R&B, and hip-hop.
Rapsody - Nina from Eve
When L. Lamar Wilson interviewed Rapsody for Oxford American in 2018, the writer and filmmaker asked the rapper -- coming off two Grammy nominations, her profile still on the rise -- if she felt part of the same cultural lineage as Nina Simone and Roberta Flack. The exchange fired Rap's imagination to conceptualize the follow-up to the celebrated Laila's Wisdom.. For the album's title, Rapsody refers to the Book of Genesis, thereby uniting and honoring black womanhood, herself included...

London-based IDM producer signed to Kode9's Hyperdub label.
Loraine James - Glitch Bitch from For You and I
Loraine James' first Hyperdub release is an homage to her London upbringing, as well as an exploration of her own identity, specifically as a queer black woman residing in the city. The cover art shows her standing in front of her childhood flat while holding up an old Polaroid photo of the same building. Reflecting the multiculturalism of the city, her music is influenced by numerous genres and styles, but it rarely feels like she's dipping into any of them for train spotters' sake. Her music is the sound of spontaneous expression beyond any perceived limitations. Opener "Glitch Bitch" is a motivational club track frayed with skips and stutters, nearly crashing into itself by the end...


Eclectic and powerful post-punk band that's steadily evolved under the leadership of one of rock's most celebrated songwriters.
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Spinning Song from  Ghosteen
Plenty of artists have built careers out of writing about death, but only a tiny handful have shown the capacity to honestly and eloquently write about grief. Nick Cave knows more than a bit about grief, and he's been willing to stare into that particular abyss, doing so with a particularly keen focus on 2013's Push the Sky Away and 2016's Skeleton Tree, the latter partially informed by the death of his teenage son in 2015. Grief is hardly the only emotion that Cave and his ensemble the Bad Seeds explores on 2019's Ghosteen, but a sense of loss and a heavy heart permeates these songs like a thick fog, as well as the bonds of family and how they can bring us together and keep us apart...