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RECONFIGURING SOME NAMES: ALBUMS OF 2024

I have lately been thinking about Steve Voce. He died thirteen months ago, exactly one month short of his ninetieth birthday, and it is an indication of the high esteem in which he was held that I only found out, by accident, about his death last month.


Who was Steve Voce? He was a successful Merseyside businessman - possibly a used car salesman - who in his spare time listened to and wrote and broadcast about jazz. For almost half his life he wrote columns and record reviews for Jazz Journal - the only British jazz magazine readily available to the teenage me of the seventies and early eighties - and for nearly as long as that he hosted a show on Radio Merseyside entitled Jazz Panorama. In more recent years he also served as a jazz obituarist for The Independent.


Voce was a writer of scabrous but articulate humour, and many Jazz Journal readers turned to his column first as a matter of routine. When writing about the jazz that he knew and loved, his knowledge was so detailed and deep as to be regarded authoritative, and so - in an oddly logical parallel to James Hamilton writing about dance music in Record Mirror - his views ended up carrying a lot of weight.

 

STEVE VOCE RIP


He was not shy to express his views and to do so bluntly. He knew what he liked - and, more problematically, what he did not. In stark parallel to the hopefully benign umbrella under which all music critics have today settled, in an increasingly desperate attempt to keep the music industry and monied advertisers on board, Voce called things as he saw them. His love was for jazz as most jazz adherents continue to perceive it - the classic stuff; Ellington, Hawkins, Parker, Gillespie, Miles, Woody Herman, Swing in general, the West Coast of the fifties. Of these players and their nearly innumerable satellites, Voce wrote with obvious passion and in encyclopaedic detail.


Towards other branches of jazz he was markedly less charitable. He disliked Dixieland and most twenties jazz - and positively, and vocally, loathed free jazz, which he was destined always to view as a pretentious con trick. "If this is 'where it's at'," he commented in 1965, aged thirty-two, of Ayler's Bells, "I'm better off without it." He also took an exceptionally dim view of pop music, as most sixties British jazz followers did, and was not remotely fond of jazz-rock and fusion.


Paradoxically, Voce was not a complete jazz reactionary. In the sixties and seventies in particular he was a very early and keen champion of new developments in British jazz. He raved about Mike Westbrook's band when most of its members were still schoolboys or college students. He approved heartily of the likes of Neil Ardley and Michael Gibbs, the latter of whom he eventually ranked on the same level as their mutual hero, Gil Evans (whose adventurous work Voce continued to champion well into the eighties). He spoke and wrote warmly about Ian Carr and in particular Nucleus. He adored - most likely fancied - Carla Bley, and in the Jazz Journal 1972 critics' poll he ranked Escalator Over The Hill as his top album. He seemed to view free improvisation as a valid ingredient, as opposed to the whole recipe. As far as the great fork in the late fifties jazz road was concerned, he opted to follow the Miles Davis modal path rather than the Ornette Coleman one (his 1995 Independent obituary of Don Cherry was accordingly somewhat curmudgeonly, whereas his 2004 obituary of Steve Lacy was far more generous; see also Derek Bailey [2005] versus Mike Osborne [2007]).


Yet a bluff curmudgeon is how Voce seemingly preferred to be known - and, in his later writings, an increasingly right-wing and homophobic one (he was, unsurprisingly, on first-name terms with Philip Larkin). Jazz Journal, his principal channel of expression, was an unashamedly reactionary enterprise, staffed almost wholly by genially bitter and ageing (and nearly exclusively male) cricket fans who felt that it had all gone dreadfully wrong after Parker (and therefore rendered The Wire necessary in the early eighties). The magazine preferred to focus on veteran Swing players who still survived and performed; Panama Francis, Bud Freeman, Eddie Miller, Peanuts Hucko. The names Voce successively gave to his Jazz Journal columns tell their own and incrementally barren story; What'd I Say, It Don't Mean A Thing, Scratching The Surface and, in his final years, the ominously-titled Clinging To The Wreckage, in which latter he wrote with comprehensive relish and palpable love about old music made mainly by long-deceased musicians, for a residue of an audience which might have only barely existed.


The reason why Voce's passing was scarcely noted may well have been down to the fact that music writing was not his sole career. He was outside the hive. He had a day job which he obviously did well enough to provide a base of support for what too many people still view as an idle hobby. It is probably the same reason why I will be unlikely to be remembered as a music writer. Yet I note that for more than half a century Voce was close friends with Humphrey Lyttelton - the essential difference between the two being that Voce would have been extremely unlikely to find any time in his life for Radiohead, if indeed he had ever been aware of them.


But in his prime Voce wrote for a readership which was indeed clinging to the wreckage, or what they viewed as wreckage caused by a Modern World they could not, and therefore refused to, understand. They clung onto their vision of jazz as the sole beacon of truth in their own recognised world as they manned the barricades to fortify themselves against tomorrow's intruders. They were afraid of losing their selves and the parameters of identity by which such selves could be constructed.


And this is, said the author magically about to link to the present subject, exactly the same mindset which is occurring with music writers today. There is, admittedly, infinitely more at stake and at risk in 2024 than there was in, say, 1980, the year Americans opted to dismiss a perfectly competent President and replace him with a televisual strongman demagogue.


While it is melodramatic to speak in the sepulchral tones of the recently-deceased James Earl Jones - the last surviving major cast member of Dr Strangelove - about the final pages of human history being written, it would not necessarily be farfetched to consider doing so. We know in our bones that, nearly eight decades after his passing, Hitler has won and that humanity has not only failed to evolve but seems completely happy to regress. When I was growing up in the seventies, I was shown bright pictures, both actual and metaphysical, of the sparkling future that awaited all of us in the following century. We were not promised an unforgiving, technology-enabled reverse to medieval feudalism with its attendant barbarism, although perhaps the writers whose tales I eagerly read in the Damon Knight-edited anthology A Science Fiction Argosy were right about robots replacing humanity, sans those writers' saving, if finally naïve, optimism.


In such dreaded circumstances, it is the natural instinct of human beings to seek protection and shelter, and it is this tendency that I have identified in the many, many end-of-year 2024 album polls that I have so far seen. Of course we know that all end-of-year polls are nonsensical, semi-random contrivances to aid brand recognition (and thus potential demographics for the benefits of pined-for advertisers) and viewing/readership figures, and that moreover such polls may do far more unintentional harm than intended good to the music which they claim to document and celebrate (in that order) - after all, once 2025 has dawned, who still wishes to be stuck with any records of 2024? The remorseless urge to push on and "develop," the eternal nowness which actually robs the music of its year from being in the present tense - no, it cannot provide pleasure here and now, it must be annotated and carved into the rock of records and made to relate to its damnable, crippling history and is therefore instantly turned into stone (happy birthday for yesterday, Jeff Lynne) - serves, if anything, to prevent music from going forward. Why should it when 2025 "promises" a new record by such-and-such, the same system, the identical leisurely stroll around the virtual Blenheim Palace Gardens of dogma-engineered heritage?


I look at these 2024 polls and their content does not resemble the 2024 through which I have lived. Theirs is a user/consumer/industry-friendly distortion of what actually happened. They are trying to sell back to me their version of a year which has, at the time of publication (unless you happen to be in the Southern Hemisphere), not yet ended.


And I am not buying it. In their frantic craving for protection against what Trump or Musk or whoever is likely to thrust upon their world - maybe the only "world" they have ever known - they look to, and promote, music which reflects their own, rapidly-diminishing world. Going back to Jazz Journal for a moment, I remember that their choice of album of the year in 1980 was a four-LP box set on World Records (the ambition of that name!) entitled The Louis Armstrong Legend, a careful compilation of what were then all of the available Hot Five and Hot Sevens recordings from what at the time was over half a century ago - yes, the Super Deluxe repackaging of Rock's Indebted Tapestry is not a recent notion.


There was a moderate degree of outrage about recordings from the 1920s collectively being the best thing released in 1980. Adherents, however, argued fervently that without those Armstrong records - which continue to constitute some of the finest and most avant-garde music of the twentieth century - jazz as it was known in 1980 would simply not exist. Who was sixteen-year-old me to argue - I plodded uphill to the James Kerr & Co. Ltd. shop at 98 Woodlands Road and bought a copy - and moreover I chuckled at the thought that this might be a gleeful overturning of some statues, confirmation of end-of-year polls' elemental absurdity. Who gives a spuddock whether it's the Hot Five or the Art Ensemble Of Chicago (no Louis, no Lester) on top? In the same year the NME writers' lists purposely excluded anything by the Pretenders and included a single by Nick Kent's Subterraneans which was pointedly about Chrissie. I learned not to take polls seriously at a very early age.


But here I be, not having compiled an end-of-year album poll in something like fifteen years (don't bother looking it up and "correcting" me; I know what I did and didn't do) so why now? Why this late and possibly final stage?


I felt that I needed to say something, to correct the general distortion in the rest of these polls or at least gently point out a different and possibly more fruitful road. In addition, I felt that I needed to clarify some key matters when it comes to the art - and it is an art - of listening. When contemplating the following list of one hundred albums, succeeded by a second list of over 450 other albums, you may consider that I have gone mad or become a musical wino, drunkenly swigging music, rather than a connoisseur. Or that I'm bullshitting.


None of these things is the case. I am profoundly aware of the evils associated with unregulated streaming enterprises. And yet the three-and-a-half years plus that I have thus far spent streaming music have, if anything, liberated me, may even have saved me from the care home. I suddenly find that I am able to locate and listen to nearly anything, and that is what I have been doing. Not even Sir Elton John could afford to buy or download every album that comes out. None of us can, due to the fact that we have to spend a fair proportion of our money on such decadent fripperies as food, heating and shelter.


However, I can attest to you that I have listened to and absorbed every single one of these albums. In many cases - and this to a degree (though not Degree Absolute) influenced what went in my top hundred - I have liked what I heard sufficiently to purchase the album in question. However, a lot of what I did get is via downloading; I turned sixty this year, and increasing limitations of storage space and personal physical capabilities mean that it is infinitely easier to usher new music into the house via our laptop and to listen to any music in that manner (as opposed to spending half an hour painfully sorting through acres of compact discs - I adamantly do not "do v*nyl," speaking of pretentious con tricks - to find the music in question).


Furthermore, I listen to music pretty well most of the time, including when I'm working (when I'm able to do so), hence everything of worth eventually gets to me. In addition, tired of the wearily false yay-saying of mainstream music media, including our wretched radio system, I have picked up recommendations for music via social media and also prolonged listening to Radio France/FIP, a genuinely eclectic network of Government-funded stations which makes our hoary old channels seem prehistoric in their "300 algorithmic oldies only" moat of musical suet. Many of the records you might not recognise in these lists I came across, and was introduced to, on FIP.


HOW I COMPILED THESE LISTS, AND WHAT IS CONSPICUOUSLY MISSING FROM THEM


There was no great science involved in compiling the lists. I went through all the albums from this year that I bought, prioritised them for my Top 100 (though not all of them; several, including Beabadoobee and Coldplay, regrettably didn't make the cut, although it must be emphasised that this does not devalue their considerable merits), then did a thorough search of everything else that was, pace the late Robert Palmer, in my system and gave them a list of their own.


As far as the Top 100 itself was concerned, I found that I had to identify and rank a discrete top twenty. I initially tried to do this with the whole of the list but found ranking the remaining eighty albums impossible. Many of those eighty have an absolute right to be in the top ten and it is only for reasons of numerical space that they are not. I have therefore come up with an alphabetised list of what would have constituted numbers 21-100.


This left the thorny issue of the other 450 or so albums which were on my longlist. For the sake of sanity I have simply listed them all, again (with two exceptions which really belong together) in alphabetical order. Once again, any of these albums would in other circumstances be fully entitled to a Top 100, and in some cases a top ten, placing. Just because I couldn't get them in - and I reluctantly had to take some out - doesn't make them lesser records.


Please remember that it was not my intention to make a "complete" or "definitive" list of the year's best music. What you will read here is unlikely to be cited in any encyclopaedia or Wikipedia entry and is, like anything else, subject to my own personal whims and biases, for better or worse (I think mostly the former, but then I would say that, wouldn't I?). Make your own list or better still don't bother making one at all.


WHAT ISN'T IN THESE LISTS, AND WHY


Observant readers will note the marked absence of many albums which have met with otherwise seemingly universal critical approval and there are several reasons for that, not the least of which has to do with what I was talking about earlier, apropos "frantic craving for protection."


It is my reluctant duty to suggest to you that, when participating in end-of-year music polls, the overwhelming majority of music critics tend to pick...the kind of albums that aren't really getting made any more (there's a similar tendency with Academy Award nominators), albums which essentially do not have anything to do with, or say to, the world we are now forced to inhabit, if not the world we have been inhabiting for some time.


And, although I am reluctant to nominate a scapegoat for that tendency, nevertheless I feel compelled to do so for the greater good. It strikes me that the undue reception given to Manning Fireworks by MJ Lenderman represents the essence of everything that is wrong with music criticism, and what we are expected to derive from what is, whichever way you choose to look at it, pop music.

 

Now Lenderman's day job, as guitarist of the band Wednesday, helped to furnish us with Rat Saw God, one of 2023's very finest "rock" albums. But I suspect critics have overreacted to Manning Fireworks as a consequence, and moreover this reception has perhaps underlined why that profession is steadily approaching extinction. Yes, here we have wry character studies and beautifully-hewn observations of a systematically-shrinking community, all very polite, perfectly designed to appeal to the white college-educated middle classes who not so secretly frown down on working class scruffs who go out and dance, fuck and make a noise with their do-you-even-call-that-music racket - and also to English Literature graduates who take up music writing as a pretext to indulged in extended lyrical analysis, as if history hadn't proved time and time again that people don't listen to the words; then again, as quite a high proportion of would-be music critics are musically illiterate, it would be too much to expect analysis of the actual music, or how delivery, tone, placing and approach can affect or alter it.


My feeling is, as it has been for some time, that these critics harbour actual contempt for genuine pop music - as I will be demonstrating below - and its consumers, and some might argue that if this were extended to a sociopolitical level, it could in part explain why Kamala Harris lost and Trump won; because, yes, Biden stayed too long and didn't give Harris nearly enough time or space to differentiate herself satisfactorily from her predecessor - or, more likely, the kind of Democratic Party that its rich donors want isn't the kind of Democratic Party that anybody else really now wants - and because too many people prioritised superstition over first-hand experience (or more importantly considered themselves too precious, pure and important to go out and sully their hands with voting) - but also, and you'll hear it everywhere, the people who were hurting (regardless of who was actually responsible for the pain) did not feel that they were being listened to, or addressed. They felt Harris was using initiation code words to preach to the converted, even if the converted were nowhere to be seen.


This is not to condemn Harris - far from it; anyone who stands up for Mingus' Let My Children Hear Music is speaking my language - but what was being offered seemed out-of-date and deprived of function. It really does seem to me that records like Manning Fireworks belong to a mythical yesterday, when everyone was refined and knew their place. I suspect most of the inhabitants of Mr Lenderman's town would probably have voted for Trump and kept each other awake at night howling Morgan Wallen songs while trying to find their way back home. Another symptom of this regrettable tendency, though to a slightly lesser extent, was Adrianne Lenker, who may well indeed have a Bright Future if or when she decides to learn how to sing.


Cowboy Carter - the entire, twenty-nine track download edition, please - is not included because, not just because its physical launch was seriously botched, but because it is an album which one can admire or be momentarily bedazzled by, but which is impossible to love, which was not the case with Resurrection. Moreover, the record does not seem to advance on the innovations Ray Charles made with Modern Sounds In Country And Western Music - a genuine case of the oppressed taking over the music of their oppresors - sixty-two years ago, whereas Mickey Guyton's authentically and justifiably angry House On Fire does appear in my 100 because she means it with her music, rather than treating it as another expensive fashion accessory; see also the numerous country albums which appear in both lists, from Willie Nelson to Zack Bryan and Johnny Blue Skies (a.k.a. Sturgill Simpson) via the exceptional (even by Kasey Musgraves' own high standard) Deeper Well, but alas not Woodland; Gillian Welch and David Rawlings were responsible for Time (The Revelator), one of the very greatest albums made by anybody, twenty-three years ago, but have never bettered it, and all I now hear are empty, bland gestures encased in musically conservative wrappings.


More of the latter can be found on the Clairo album, another overhyped example of how entitled people would prefer pop music to sound like - i.e. like it was still 1971 - as performed by the demure, down-to-earth daughter of the Chief Marketing Officer of Golftop, who helped his buddy to start up a record label on which she could release her music. Actually I got taken aback on several occasions listening to some perfectly pleasant and imaginative songs only to be told that it was Clairo (writing and) singing them. Nevertheless my preference is for 2024 pop music to sound like 2024. Albums by Jennifer Lopez, Katy Perry, Meghan Trainor and others got jeered at and/or ignored, but all sounded just fine to me, while the Camila Cabello and Ariana Grande albums were more than just fine (for the British equivalent of Clairo, see The hyped-up-to-their-teeth Last Dinner Party, whose album isn't here but sounds pretty good if you can manage to ignore who they are). Sabrina Carpenter, on whose case we were several years back when you could only find her albums with difficulty on import, is, of course, sui generis (and to people who don't find "Espresso" perfect, insolent pop - well, as Mr Murphy has suggested on many occasions, you picked the wrong place to stay); suffice it to say that Sabrina is everything Clairo could, and will, never be.


(and the new Dua Lipa album, much more focused and sure of itself than its critically-overloaded, can-carrying predecessor from the recent Dark Ages, is remarkably good sunshine listening too! Confidence Man, however, beyond question delivered 2024's best "dance pop" album; hit after hit after blessed, but better than Madonna, hit.)


I certainly didn't have the urge or the stomach to tolerate The Cure's long-awaited (by too many) Disintegration 2 sequel, nor Nice Cave's portentous and self-righteous Wild God (if only - it will make you fall asleep again), nor the sentimental accolades given to ageing wasters who were big, or at least heard of, when 6 Music listeners were kids. As someone steadily nearing pensionable age (if my body will allow me to do so), this is no exhibition of ageism; a look through my lists will reveal work by Richard and Linda Thompson, Nick Lowe and his spiritual heir Richard Hawley - just because he isn't trendy any more doesn't mean he stopped making great records - and, well, everybody from Wadada Leo Smith to Ian flipping Hunter, the latter sounding hungrier than he's done in decades. Meanwhile, octogenarian John Cale just got on with it and made a naughty album fully worthy of brat guru status - and, although I largely avoided placing archive material from departed musicians (apologies to Arthur Russell's Pictures Of Bunny Rabbit and McCoy Tyner and Joe Henderson's Forces Of Nature: Live At Slugs', both of which are somewhere beyond fantastic) in either list, Ryuichi Sakamoto's noble swansong could not be overlooked, nor could Shellac's To All Trains, nor could (although nearly everyone did) Lou Reed's belated final statement, a work of extended quiet ambience, the long-awaited bookend to Metal Machine Music - and, heck, if Laurie Anderson and John Cale are both in there, so should Lou.


What jazz there is in this year's lists is comparatively minimal, and most of the best stuff (esp. Messthetics/James Brandon Lewis and Jeff Parker), despite or because of being American, totally dispensed with, and better still disregarded, the fatal tendency of too many British jazz players to relapse into ambient noodling (looking at you, Nubya Garcia and the quite overpraised New Age muzak of Nala Sinephro) in order to ensure a better chance of airplay on a moribund BBC radio network which now clearly only views music as an anaesthetic (all those interchangeable chillout/mindfulness/calming sequences, bereft of presenters or stimulation of any kind - remain unconscious and obedient). Still, Shabaka Hutchings and Cassie Kinoshi got in, owing to better organisation and more active imagination, although in truth I am waiting for the ghost of Peter Brötzmann to rise and splutter over the top of all of this. In the meantime, veteran Norma Winstone and relative newbie Kit Downes just know about quietude.


I should further make it clear that I have no time for the smoke and mirrors of the delusion-laded writer attempting to woo gullible readers with superficially impressive-looking but analytically hollow purple prose to sell a bill of goods and endeavour to dazzle with hazy record collector chimeras. For instance, grown professionals can claim about Still House Plants that their album If I don’t make It, I love U sonically "often resembles This Heat’s Deceit via Hyperdub compilations and Tilt-era Scott Walker." Ooer, missus, look at my massive collection (on second thoughts, don't). Actually the record sounds like Jeff Buckley's band tuning up, or, if you prefer, "an accidental scratch in the groove from Jeff Buckley’s Grace." Maybe just listen to the latter in a format which doesn't scratch. "You can feel a subconscious assimilation of early 00s R&B mixed with slowcore and Midwest emo. It’s comparable to a no-wave D’Angelo or Lauryn Hill" - no, pal, you can. Only you. Completing the gibberish bingo card, "Still House Plants embrace, rather than shun, sounds absorbed from childhoods spent in working-class environments." Continued page 94.

 

2024: A TALE OF TWO GIRLS - WAIT, I SEE MORE!

 

In the end, and up until eight days ago, the story of music in 2024 was ultimately and only going to be about Taylor Swift and Charli xcx. This has not been reflected in the year's album polls. One of these women is omnipresent at or around the top, whereas the other has scarcely been mentioned at all, which I consider deliberate.


Before I get any deeper into that dichotomy, however - hey, by the way, remember David Kushner who had that ethereal hit "Daylight"? He came back with a cracking album this year, entitled The Dichotomy - I should look at, and explain, my choices for the top ten (oh, and by the way, the Chappell Roan album technically came out in September 2023. You're welcome).


Pages (Shaznay Lewis album) - Wikipedia


At number ten is Shaznay Lewis, sometime of All Saints, whose last two group albums were spectacularly and vividly good; her second solo album is explosively innovative pop which, had it been written and recorded by somebody half her age, would now be roundly applauded. There isn't a bad track on it. The record puts most of its more allegedly hallowed contemporaries (e.g. Songs From My Lost Laundry List) in the shade.


Diamond Jubilee (album) - Wikipedia


Diamond Jubilee has been slightly and unfairly downgraded in my list, but I reeled with wonder when first I heard it on YouTube on a Sunday afternoon some sunnier months ago; that rarity of rarities, a fully self-contained album not owing much of anything to anyone and which succeeds in creating its own impermeable world. And it's only the second-best album this year to do that! Out on proper physical on 21 February; start saving up now. Oh, and it's CANADIAN (well, of course)!


Chromakopia - WikipediaGNX (album) - Wikipedia


There's no due date (yet?) for physical release of CHROMAKOPIA but what a startlingly inventive album from start to finish which, unlike a lot of this year's other albums, told me things I didn't already know, or did but in a far more interesting way. Meanwhile, GNX appeared by magic the morning after my operation and I only knew about it because Lena came to see me and told me the news. We listened to it two mornings later, by which time I was back at home, and were spellbound by its absolute and in some cases hilarious ("MUSTAAAAAAARD!") certainty. That comes out on physical on 1 March, by the way.


A. G. Cook: Britpop Album Review | Pitchfork


If you're going to have brat, you need to have Britpop (and not just because Charli pops up on it, here and there), an astounding triple album (unlikely to come out on CD) full of wit, adventure, ambition and above all mourning for SOPHIE, whose own and very fine posthumous album must also be taken into account and absorbed.


Only God Was Above Us - Wikipedia


Everybody has taken Vampire Weekend for granted and downgraded them. This is most unfair, since Only God Was Above Us might be their best, and is certainly their most moving, album; "Hope" is a "Hey Jude" for these benighted, traduced times.


Peter Cat Recording Co.: BETA Album Review | Pitchfork


But I have FIP to thank for introducing me to Delhi's Peter Cat Recording Co. BETA is their second studio album; there was a compilation in 2018 entitled Portrait Of A Time: 2010-2016, while their official debut Bismillah appeared the following year. Although I came to the latter belatedly - it's on download and LP but not on CD and has never been publicised anywhere - I reckon it might be my favourite album of the decade, up there with Janelle Monáe's Dirty Computer. What PCRC do is to take the elements of what some people would call classic (i.e. seventies) pop, integrate them into a more contemporary indie setting and scientifically elongate them into episodes of extended self-interrogation. Something like "Memory Box," which may now be one of my favourite songs ever, could theoretically go on forever - and yes, there is for me a "hospital nightmare" aspect to this, but not really in a negative manner; the overall impression is one of a more lavish Cornershop. BETA continues this development in many engaging ways, "People Never Change" being its very own "Memory Box": "People never change, but I will/‘Cause I never give a fuck, that I'll never be enough."

 

Taylor Swift - The Tortured Poets Department: The AnthologyBrat and It's Completely Different but Also Still Brat - Wikipedia

 

The main "problem" music critics have to face, and come to terms with, in 2024 is Taylor Swift. I placed the word "problem" in quotation marks because what music critics, by and large - Rob Sheffield being an honourable exception - cannot come to terms with is the (to them) uncomfortable fact that Taylor is the most important pop star there has ever been. Bigger and longer-lasting than the Beatles (as McCartney, happily mucking in with Taylor's audience and clapping along, would doubtless attest), more widespread and generous than Presley, Swift has altered the atoms of pop, what its history and present tense, if adroitly but honestly mixed, could mean, not just for music in the future, but for society. Her mother-and-daughter audiences care not one toss for critics or canons. She herself is more thoroughly versed in every pop and rock "canon" than anyone - and people can't come to terms with that "she."


Taylor's story is so thoroughly integrated and expertly threaded throughout her entire career; it is as if she has succeeded in creating an intricately-detailed world for herself, and therefore by extension for everybody else. So The Tortured Poets Department - which has to be listened to in its entire Anthology form - continues and concentrates its focus on that story, which has mainly to do with a brief but wild affair with the lead singer of a band, the drummer for which band is presently due to marry...Charli xcx.

 

You see where we're going here. One of these women is critically lionised while the other is, at best, politely tolerated. The only conclusion to be drawn is that critics are taking sides, and it's to do with assumed "credibility." They assume "Sympathy Is A Knife" is a song about Taylor, which it is not. They are far too stuck-up to admit bedazzlement in respect of perfectly-damaged pop songs like "von dutch" and "360," let alone the two clearly heartfelt SOPHIE tributes. They affect to ignore "Girl, It's Confusing," particularly the remix involving Lorde which is one of the most radical singles pop has ever seen. Following some seven decades of bloody man-versus-man beef punch-ups in pop, which surely also achieved its apex this year with Kendrick's "Not Like Us," which manages not just to diss Drake successfully but do it hilariously and adventurously and make the beef stand for a whole lot more, maybe even a whole society, Lorde admits she was mistaken, the two women muse on how The Industry thrives on setting women against each other, and both make up and agree that The Industry is the real enemy. Men in rock have fights. Women in pop level up, make up with each other and get on with it.


But, if you need the whole Anthology, you also require the full, two-CD edition of brat and its remixes, literally seeing the songs through a looking glass. Taylor consolidates, Charli pushes ahead with an absolute justification of the dozen years of PC Music - as also reflected in Flaw Flower, the brilliant album by Zoee, one of the key voices on "Hey QT," which features one of the year's best and most desolate pop singles, "Microwave." Seven copies of the album on cassette remain on Bandcamp at the time of writing - with some of the most sheerly creative and avant garde things ever to be heard on a pop album. It has to be a top draw - and, until eight days ago, it was the top draw.


The Birth and Death of the Universe Through Mount Fuji by 3776 (Album, Art  Pop): Reviews, Ratings, Credits, Song list - Rate Your Music


This is why you have to wait until the very end of the year. I saw the album being recommended by somebody on Bluesky. Amusing cover, I thought; must check it out. The album apparently only came out on 11 December, a fortnight before Christmas. It was only very briefly available on streaming but never mind, the whole album is on YouTube.


I sat there on Sunday afternoon listening to the album on YouTube and was thunderstruck. That evening both Lena and I listened to it. We agreed it was more than just an event.


I know little about 3776 except they are what in Japan are called an "idol group," i.e. a girl group whose members are artists in different fields but not primarily, or at all, musicians. Nevertheless there is an incredible and inexorable complexity about the songs on this album, which latter represents a full-blown concept concerning nothing less than the birth and death of the universe, incorporating Mount Fuji, as its title implies.


The songs are bizarrely brilliant, like High Llamas (nice but not great album this year) threaded through Cornelius and possibly even the Carla Bley of Escalator, and are linked by a deadpan, high-speed Japanese narration telling, presumably, the album's story. Songs and interludes crash into each other like drunken dodgems and at most points there are approximately a million different things happening at one time - the whole world at once, or is it just Tokyo at rush hour? The album ends with the exact same drone with which it began - again, much like Escalator. Like Diamond Jubilee, it doesn't need a universe because it created one itself. Imagine Girls Aloud or Little Mix coming up with "Revolution 9" but all set to a beat and memorable tunes. This is pop music that defies configuration with a Name. In his later years, Steve Voce was apt to buttonhole colleagues and confide to them in a melancholy fashion, with regard to his beloved notion of jazz: "We've lived through the best of it, haven't we?" Nothing else to look forward to, nothing new to discover, no reason to live any further. The fact is that we are living through the best of things right now, and should revel in them, in defiance of the impending worst.


PUNCTUM'S 2024 TOP TWENTY

1.  3776: The Birth And Death Of The Universe Through Mount Fuji

2=.  Charli xcx: brat and it's completely different but also still brat

2=. Taylor Swift: The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology

4.  Peter Cat Recording Co.: BETA

5. Vampire Weekend: Only God Was Above Us

6.  A.G. Cook: Britpop 

7. Kendrick Lamar: GNX

8.  Tyler, the Creator: CHROMAKOPIA

9.  Cindy Lee: Diamond Jubilee

10.  Shaznay Lewis: Pages

11.  Meshell Ndegeocello: No More Water: The Gospel Of James Baldwin 

12. Jessica Pratt: Here In The Pitch 

13. Brittany Howard: What Now

14. Leyla McCalla: Sun Without The Heat

15. Confidence Man: 3AM (La La La)

16. 1999 WRITE THE FUTURE: hella (˃̣̣̥╭╮˂̣̣̥) ✧ ♡ ‧º·˚ 

17. Yard Act: Where's My Utopia?

18. Billie Eilish: HIT ME HARD AND SOFT

19. Charlotte Day Wilson: Cyan Blue

20. John Cale: POPtical Illusion


NUMBERS 21-100

Arooj Aftab: Night Reign

Laurie Anderson: Amelia

Public Service Broadcasting: The Last Flight 

(both albums about Amelia Earhart, subjectively and objectively respectively)

BADBADNOTGOOD: Mid Spiral

Cat Burns: early twenties

Camila Cabello: C,XOXO (Magic City Edition)

Sabrina Carpenter: Short N' Sweet

Fat Dog: WOOF.

Fievel is Glaque: Rong Weicknes

Fontaines D.C.: Romance

Fraud Couture: Amazing Investment Opportunity 

(heard Ben Watson playing some incredible stuff off this on Soho Radio! On Bandcamp only)

Nelly Furtado: *7*

Childish Gambino: Atavista

Ganavya: Daughter Of A Temple

Beth Gibbons: Lives Outgrown

David Gilmour: Luck And Strange 

Ginger Root: SHINBANGUMI

Kim Gordon: The Collective

Peggy Gou: I Hear You

John Grant: The Art Of The Lie

Geordie Greep: The New Sound

Mickey Guyton: House On Fire

Armand Hammer/billy woods/ELUCID: We Buy Diabetic Test Strips

Idles: TANGK

Cassandra Jenkins: My Light, My Destroyer

Johnny Blue Skies: Passage Du Desir

Justice: Hyperdrama 

Philippe Katerine: Zouzou

KAYTRANADA: TIMELESS

Kit Sebastian: New Internationale

Michael Kiwanuka: Small Changes

KNEECAP: Fine Act

L'Impératrice: Pulsar

Kelly Lee Owens: Dreamstate

Lemon Twigs: A Dream Is All We Know

Liniker: CAJU

Dua Lipa: Radical Optimism

Mach-Hommy: #RICHAXXHAITIAN

Magdalena Bay: Imaginal Disk

Sananda Maitreya: The Pegasus Project: Pegasus & The Swan

(the comeback nobody noticed)

The Messthetics & James Brandon Lewis: The Messthetics And James Brandon Lewis

Elaine Mitchener: Solo Throat

Mount Eerie: Night Palace

Kacey Musgraves: Deeper Well

Mustafa: Dunya

Kate Nash: 9 Sad Symphonies

Nemhasis: Verbahtim

Molly Nilsson: Un-American Activities

O.: WeirdOs

(best saxophone/drums duo since John Surman and Stu Martin)

Pearl & The Oysters: Planet Pearl

Orville Peck: Stampede

Pet Shop Boys: nonetheless (expanded edition)

Lou Reed: Hudson River Wind Meditations

Dawn Richard & Spencer Zahn: Quiet In A World Full Of Noise

Ride: Interplay

Rosé: Rosie

Ryuichi Sakamoto: Opus

St Vincent: All Born Screaming

ScHoolboy Q: Blue Lips 

serpentwithfeet: GRIP

Nadine Shah: Filthy Underneath

Shellac: To All Trains

Wadada Leo Smith & Amina Claudine Myers: Central Park's Mosaics of Reservoir, Lake, Paths and Gardens

SOPHIE: SOPHIE

Tems: Born In The Wild

tripleS: <ASSEMBLE24>

Rosie Tucker: UTOPIA NOW!

Kali Uchis: ORQUÍDEAS PARTE 2 (Deluxe)

Kamasi Washington: Fearless Movement

Jane Weaver: Love In Constant Spectacle

Tierra Whack: WORLD WIDE WHACK

WILLOW: ceremonial contrafact (empathogen deluxe)

Lainey Wilson: Whirlwind

Remi Wolf: Big Ideas

Jamie xx: In Waves

Nilüfer Yanya: My Method Actor

Zoee: Flaw Flower


THE REST

070 Shake: Petrichor 

A Certain Ratio: It All Comes Down To This 

Ab-Soul: Soul Burger

Gracie Abrams: The Secret Of Us (Deluxe)

Abstract Crimewave: The Longest Night

James Acaster: Hecklers Welcome

Actress: Statik

Adeem The Artist: Anniversary

(ahmed): Giant Beauty 

Poppy Ajudha: Poppy

Melissa Aldana: Echoes Of The Inner Prophet

Allie X: Girl With No Face 

Marina Allen: Eight Pointed Star

ALVILDA: C'est Déjà L'heure

(from France; year's best girl power-pop record) 

Les Amazones d'Afrique: Musow Danse (Bonus Edition)

Oren Ambarchi, Johan Berthling & Andreas Werlin: Ghosted II

Marcia Ambrosius: CASABLANCO

Erika Angell: The Obsession With Her Voice 

Anycia: PRINCESS POP THAT

Omar Apollo: God Said No

Arab Strap: I'm totally fine with it 👍don't give a fuck anymore

ARXX: Good Boy

Joan Armatrading: How Did This Happen And What Does It Now Mean

Arrested Development: Bullets In The Chamber

Artemas: pretty

AURORA: What Happened To The Heart?

J Balvin: Rayo

Bonnie Banane: Nini

Bashy: Being Poor Is Expensive

William Basinski: September 23rd

Bastille: &

Bat For Lashes: The Dream Of Delphi

Bbymutha: sleep paralysis

Beabadoobee: This Is How Tomorrow Moves

Joe Bel: Family Tree

BERWYN: WHO AM I

Yaya Bey: Ten Fold

Bibi Club: Feu De Garde

BIG SPECIAL: Postindustrial Hometown Blues 

BIG|BRAVE: A Chaos Of Flowers

BigXthaPlug: TAKE CARE

Bilal: Adjust Brightness

James Blackshaw: Unravelling In Your Hands

James Blake & Lil Yachty: Bad Cameo

Bleachers: A Stranger Desired

The Blessed Madonna: Godspeed

Mary J Blige: Gratitude

Blood Incantation: Absolute Elsewhere 

(OTT but if you're going to do this, do it this way. Sorry Mannequin Pussy but you didn't convince me)

Blu: Love (the) Ominous World

BODEGA: Our Brand Could Be Yr Life

Kate Bollinger: Songs From A Thousand Frames Of Mind

Betty Boo: Rip Up The Rulebook

James Brandon Lewis Quartet: Transfiguration 

Patricia Brennan Septet: Breaking Stretch 

Brigitte Calls Me Baby: The Future Is Our Way Out

Luisa Brina: Prece

Bring Me The Horizon: POST HUMAN: NeX GEn

British Murder Boys: Active Agents & House Boys

Zack Bryan: The Great American Bar Scene

Bubble Love: Bubble Love

The Bug: Machines I-V

The Bug Club: On The Intricate Workings Of The System

Anna Butterss: Mighty Vertebrate

Cadence Weapons: ROLLERCOASTER

Bill Callahan: Resuscitate!

Caribou: Honey

Eliza Carthy: No Wasted Joy 

Cassyette: This World Fucking Sucks

Jennifer Castle: Camelot

Cavalier: Different Type Time

Chanel Beads: Your Day Will Come

Manu Chao: Viva

Chastity Belt: Live Laugh Love

Chat Pile: Cool World 

Eric Chenaux Trio: Delights Of My Life

Kenny Chesney: Born

Chief Keef: Almighty So 2

Rachel Chinouriri: What A Devastating Turn Of Events 

Chlöe: Trouble In Paradise

Chrystabell & David Lynch: Cellophane Memories

Dorinda Clark-Cole: Determined

Cloud Nothings: Final Summer

Cash Cobain: Play Cash Cobain

Cola: The Gloss

Coldplay: Moon Music

J. Cole: Might Delete Later

Common & Pete Rock: The Auditorium, Vol. 1

Clarissa Connelly: World Of Work 

Tony Conrad & Jennifer Walshe: In The Merry Month Of May

Nikka Costa: Dirty Disco

Charley Crockett: $10 Cowboy 

Sheryl Crow: Evolution

Crowded House: Gravity Stairs

Crumb: AMAMA

cumgirl8: the 8th cumming 

Burton Cummings: Above The Ground

Grace Cummings: Ramona

Denzel Curry: King Of The Mischievous South, Vol. 2

Emily d'Angelo: Freezing

Karl d'Silva: Love Is A Flame In The Dark

Dagny: ELLE

The Dare: What's Wrong With New York?

Andra Day: CASSANDRA (cherith)

Erika de Casier: Still 

De Schuurman: Bubbling Forever

Kim Deal: Nobody Loves You More 

Deco: Destination: I Don't Know

Isaac Delusion: Lost And Found

Janet Devlin: Emotional Rodeo

Alvaro Diaz: SAYONARA

Madi Diaz: Weird Faith (Deluxe)

The Dining Rooms: Songs To Make Love To

DJ Anderson do Paraíso: Queridão

DJ Suzy: Haunted Disc

DMX Krew: Spiral Dance

Doechii: Alligator Bites Never Heal 

(really, what the hell is this doing all the way down here?)

Dolores Forever: It's Nothing

Du Blonde: Sniff More Gritty

Ducks Ltd.: Harm's Way

eat-girls: Area Silenzio

John Early: Now More Than Ever

Einstürzende Neubauten: Rampen (apm: alien pop music)

Wendy Eisenberg: Viewfinder 

Ekko Astral: pink balloons

Elephant9 & Terje Rypdal: Catching Fire 

Eliza & The Delusionals: Make It Feel Like The Garden

ELUCID: REVELATOR

ELUCID: INTERFERENCE PATTERN

Empress Of: For Your Consideration

English Teacher: This Could Be Texas

Noga Erez: THE VANDALIST 

Anna Erhard: Botanical Garden

Everyone You Know: Ain't Smiled In Ages

Everything Everything: Mountainhead 

Ex-Easter Island Head: Norther

Experential Orchestra: American Counterpoints

Ezra Collective: Dance, No One's Watching

Ezra Feinberg: Soft Power

Fennesz: Mosaic

Sierra Ferrell: Trail Of Flowers

Anna Ferrer: Parenòstic

Field Music: Limits Of Language

FINNEAS: For Cryin' Out Loud!

Kelly Finnigan: A Lover Was Born

FLO: Access All Areas

Luis Fonsi: El Viaje

Foster The People: Paradise State Of Mind

Four Tet: Three

Frances Forever: Lockjaw

Mabe Fratti: Sentir Que No Sabes

Fucked Up: Another Day

Future & Metro Boomin: We Don't Trust You

Future Islands: People Who Aren't There Anymore

Galantis: Rx

Angelica Garcia: Gemelo

Orla Gartland: Everybody Needs A Hero

Dana Gavanski: LATE SLAP

Katie Gavin: What A Relief

Myriam Gendron: Mayday

Ghetts: On Purpose, With Purpose

Ghost Dubs: Damaged

Freddie Gibbs: You Only Die 1nce

Girl In Red: I'M DOING IT AGAIN BABY!

GloRilla: Glorious

Jess Glynne: JESS

Goat Girl: Below The Waist

Joe Goddard: Harmonics

Godfather Don: Thesis

Godspeed You! Black Emperor - NO TITLE AS OF 13 FEBRUARY 2024 28,340 DEAD 

Ruth Goller: Skyllumina

Chilly Gonzales: Gonzo

Gorgon City: Reverie

Harry Górski-Brown: Durt Dronemaker After Dreamboats

Gossip: Real Power

Ariana Grande: Eternal Sunshine

Green Day: 'Saviors'

Griff: Vertigo

Daphne Guinness: Sleep

Gunna: One Of Wun

Sahra Halgan: Hiddo Dhawr

Halsey: The Great Impersonator

Mary Halvorson: Cloudward

annie hamilton: stop and smell the lightning

The Hard Quartet: The Hard Quartet 

Roy Hargrove's Crisol: Grande-Terre 

Lalah Hathaway: VANTABLACK

Richard Hawley: In This City They Call You Love

Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band: Loophole

Paul Heaton: The Mighty Several 
 
Hermanos Gutiérrez: Sonido Cósmico
 
Hiatus Kaiyote: Love Heart Cheat Code
 
Hifi Sean & David McAlmont: DAYLIGHT
 
High Vis: Guided Tour 

Becky Hill: Believe Me Now?
 
Hinds: VIVA HINDS

Paris Hilton: Infinite Icon

Julia Holter: Something In The Room She Moves

Jon Hopkins: RITUAL

Hovvdy: Hovvdy

Hozier: Unreal Unearth: Unending

Kate Hudson: Glorious

HUMANIST: On The Edge Of A Lost And Lonely World

Ian Hunter: Defiance Part 2: Fiction

Nailah Hunter: Lovegaze 

Hurray For The Riff Raff: The Past Is Still Alive

HYUKOH & Sunset Rollercoaster: AAA

Ice Spice: Y2K!

Illuminati Hotties: Power

The Innocence Mission: Midsummer Swimmers

Vijay Iyer/Linda May Han Oh/Tyshawn Sorey: Compassion

James: Yummy

Boldy James & Conductor Williams: Across The Tracks

Wendy James: The Shape Of History

Dora Jar: No Way To Relax When You Are On Fire

Bryony Jarman-Pinto: Below Dawn

Jawnino: 40

Jlin: Akoya

Joan As Police Woman: Lemons, Limes And Orchids

Norah Jones: Visions

I. JORDAN: I AM JORDAN 

JPEGMAFIA: I Lay Down My Life For You

Judas Priest: Invincible Shield

Juniore: Trois, Deux, Un

Ka: The Thief Next To Jesus

Rae Khalil: CRYBABY

Kehlani: Crash

Khurangbin: A LA SALA

Killer Mike: Michael & The Mighty Midnight Revival, Songs For Sinners And Saints

Cassie Kinoshi's seed. with NikNak & London Contemporary Orchestra: Gratitude

Knocked Loose: You Won't Go Before You're Supposed To

Allegra Krieger: Art Of The Unseen Infinity Machine

David Kushner: The Dichotomy 

Lava La Rue: STARFACE

La Femme: Rock Machine

La Luz: News Of The Universe

Miranda Lambert: Postcards From Texas

LATIN MAFIA: TODOS LOS DIAS TODO EL DIA

Latto: Sugar Honey Iced Tea

LAUREL: PALPITATIONS 

John Legend: My Favorite Dream

Ravyn Lenae: Bird's Eye

Lescop: Rêve Parti

The Linda Lindas: No Obligation

Linkin Park: From Zero

LL COOL J: THE FORCE

Charles Lloyd: The Sky Will Still Be There Tomorrow 

London Grammar: The Greatest Love

Jennifer Lopez: This Is Me...Now (Deluxe)

Lord Spikeheart: The Adept

Los Bitchos: Talkie Talkie

Los Campensions!: All Hell

Nick Lowe: Indoor Safari

Rosie Lowe: Lover, Other

John Luther Adams: An Atlas Of Deep Time

Mira Lu Kovacs: Please, Save Yourself

Shelby Lynne: Consequences Of The Crown

Lizzy McAlpine: Older (And Wiser)

Declan McKenna: What Happened To The Beach?

Kali Malone: All Life Long

Tamela Mann: Live Breathe Fight

Roc Marciano: Marciology 

Margaux: Inside The Marble

The Marias: Submarine 

Masoc: challenge accepted

MAVI: Shadowbox

Lauren Mayberry: Vicious Creature

Mdou Moctar: Funeral For Justice 

Shawn Mendes: Shawn

Pat Metheny: Moondial

MICHELLE: Songs About You Specifically

MIKE & Tony Seltzer: Pinball

Mildlife: Chorus

Milkweed: Folklore 1979

Elijah Minnelli: Perpetual Musket

Amaia Miranda: Mientras vivas brilla

Father John Misty: Mahashmashana

Mk.gee: Two Star & The Dream Police

Momus: Ballyhoo

Moor Mother: The Great Bailout

Christy Moore: A Terrible Beauty

Megan Moroney: Am I Okay? (I'll Be Fine) 

Megan Thee Stallion: MEGAN: ACT II

Fred Moten/Brandon López/Gerald Cleaver: The Blacksmiths, The Flowers

Mount Kimble: The Sunset Violent

Musical Jazz: eightEEn

N'Zeng: The Trip

Naemi: Dust Devil

Milton Nascimento & esperanza spalding: Milton + esperanza

The Necks: Bleed

Helado Negro: Phasor

Willie Nelson: The Border

Neue Grafik: Dalston Tape Vol. 1 

Nia Archives: Silence Is Loud 

Nicolette & the Nobodies: The Long Way 

Nidia & Valentina: Estradas

Nines: Quit While You're Ahead

Normani: Dopamine

NxWorries: Why Lawd?

Ombiigizi: Shame

(Kevin Drew's new project; closest you'll get to a Broken Social Scene record this year)

Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp: Ventre Unique

Gabriela Ortiz: Revolución Diamantina

Christopher Owens: I Wanna Run Barefoot Through Your Hair

Shabazz Palaces: Exotic Birds Of Prey

Fabiana Palladino: Fabiana Palladino 

Jeff Parker & EVA IVtet: The Way Out Of Easy

Carly Pearce: Hummingbird

Pearl Jam: Dark Matter

Katy Perry: 1432

Peter & The Roses: Peter And The Roses

Phosphorescent: Revelator

Peso Pluma: Éxodo

PNAU: Hyperbolic

Poppy: Negative Spaces

Port Sulphur: Meta Guru

Cesar Precio: La Suite Logique Des Choses

Project Gemini: Colours & Light

Purple Disco Machine: Paradise

Kevin Puts: The Hours (Live)

Pye Corner Audio: The Endless Echo

RaiNao: CAPICÚ 

Rakim: G.O.DS NETWORK - REB7RTH

Rapsody: Please Don't Cry

Real Estate: Daniel

Rahim Redcar: HOPECORE

Redd Kross: Redd Kross

The Red, Pinks And Purples: Unwishing Well

Rema: HEIS 

The Rheingans Sisters: Start Close In

Tommy Richman: COYOTE

Daisy Rickman: Howl

RM: Right Place, Wrong Person 

Joanne Robertson & Dean Blunt: Backstage Raver

Porter Robinson: SMILE!: D

Maggie Rogers: Don't Forget Me

Natascha Rogers: Onaida

Daniel Romano: Too Hot To Sleep

Rosali: Bite Down

Lucy Rose: This Ain't The Way You Go Out

Maggie Rose: No One Gets Out Alive

claire rousay: sentiment

Bill Ryder-Jones: Iechyd Da

Gruff Rhys: Sadness Sets Me Free

Laetitia Sadier: Rooting For Love

Saagara: 3

Saint Etienne: "The Night"

Saint Levant: DEIRA

Jack Savoretti: Miss Italia

Scene Queen: Hot Singles In Your Area

Scooter: Open Your Mind And Your Trousers

Section 25: Move On

Shabaka: Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace

Shakira: Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran

William Shatner: Where Will The Animals Sleep? Songs For Kids And Other Living Things

Caroline Shaw with Sō Percussion: Rectangles And Circumstance

Shovel Dance Collective: The Shovel Dance

SilkRoad Ensemble: American Railroad

Skee Mask: ILP19 - Resort

Sleater-Kinney: Little Rope

The Smile: Wall Of Eyes

The Smile: Cutouts

Joe Snow: Elephants

Snuts: Millennials

SOFT PLAY: HEAVY JELLY

Laetitia Sonami/Éliane Radigue: A Song For Two Mothers/OCCAM IX

Astrid Sonne: Great Doubt

SPRINTS: Letter To Self 

Vince Staples: Dark Times

Ayra Starr: The Year I Turned 21

The Staves: All Now

Juanita Stein: The Weightless Hour

Colin Stetson: The Love It Took To Leave You

Stick In The Wheel: A Thousand Pokes

Sunset Rubdown: Always Happy To Explode

Mohammes Syfkhan: I Am Kurdish

Taimashoe: Put The Trash Out

Tapir!: The Pilgrim, Their God And The King Of My Decrepit Mountain 

Tasha: All This And So Much More

Aaron Lee Tasjan: Stellar Evolution

Alfie Templeman: Radiosoul

Thee Sacred Souls: Got A Story To Tell

Theodora: BAD BOY LOVESTORY

This Is Lorelei: Box For Buddy, Box For Star

Linda Thompson: Proxy Music

Richard Thompson: Ship To Shore 

THUS LOVE: All Pleasure

Tiflis Transit: A Thought Is Not A Feeling

Justin Timberlake: Everything I Thought It Was

Mary Timony: Untame The Tiger

Tinashe: Quantum Baby

Tindersticks: Soft Tissue

Tones And I: Beautifully Ordinary

Rafael Toral: Spectral Evolution

Meghan Trainor: Timeless (Deluxe)

twenty one pilots: Clancy

Tyla: TYLA

Underworld: Strawberry Hotel

Unessential Oils: Unessential Oils

The Unthanks: In Winter

The Veronicas: Gothic Summer

Bob Vylan: Humble As The Sun

Milan W.: Leave Another Day 

Tashi Wada: What Is Not Strange?

The WAEVE: City Lights

Walt Disco: The Warping

Warrington Runcorn New Town Development Plan: Your Community Hub

Andrew Wasylyk & Tommy Perman: Ash Grey And The Gull Glides On

Water Damage: In E

Waxahatchee: Tigers Blood

Faye Webster: Underdressed At The Symphony

Koe Wetzel: 9 Lives

Jack White: No Name 

Wild Pink: Dulling The Horns

Immanuel Wilkins: Blues Blood

Yasmin Williams: Acadia

Norma Winstone & Kit Downes: Outpost Of Dreams 

Wishy: Triple Seven

Chelsea Wolfe: She Reaches Out To She Reaches Out To She

Wu-Lu: Learning To Swim On Empty 

Wussy: Cincinatti Ohio

Xavi: NEXT

Xiu Xiu: 13" Frank Beltrame Italian Stiletto With Bison Horn Grips 

Xylitol: Anemones

Yatta: Palm Wine

Dwight Yoakam: Brighter Days

Lola Young: This Wasn't Meant For You Anyway

Young Miko: .att

Lechuga Zafiro: Desde Los Oídos De Un Sapo

Alice Zawadski/Fred Thomas/Misha Mullov-Abbado: Za Górami

ZAYN: ROOM UNDER THE STAIRS

John Zorn: New Masada Quartet, Vol. 3 (Live)

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