Showing posts with label Andrea von Kampen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrea von Kampen. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Top 10 CDs of 2021

Wow, 2021, what a year. Never in my life would I imagine being given the gift of salvation and then shin kicking it, but here we are, still having to wear masks, vaxxed, boosted, and barely living a life of freedom because 40% of the country is like, You don’t control me! Cool bro. Cool. Stop paying your car insurance, stop wearing a seat belt, don’t get any vaccines for your kids, allow you dogs to become rabid...don’t just pick and choose because a Cheeto’s minions made this an us verse them issue. *sigh* At least we have music. Right?

 

So, let’s get into it…

 

#10 – Morgan Wade – Reckless

I have amazing friends that love great music. Craig tipped me off to Morgan Wade, and I am certainly glad he did. The production value of the CD is excellent. The guitar tones, layers, and placement of instruments is expertly done. I was excited to learn that it was Sadler Vaden, of the 400 Unit, behind the console. The album is polished and flows nicely between tracks which have a center, a string that ties them all together. Musically, everything makes sense. But, when you strip away the layers and just focus on the voice and lyrics, the true gift of Reckless emerges. Wade tells stories that are real, honest, and accessible. It is a great record and deserves all the praise it has received.

 



 

#9 – Julien Baker – Little Oblivions

I have mad respect for Baker. Three albums in, and she continues to push herself. She could just roll up into a studio with her guitar and a few pedals and record another Sprained Ankle and people would love it, but she wouldn’t be content. She needs to grow, and I am enjoying watching her growth. Despite the fuller, more electropop, driven sound, the intimacy of her lyrics is not lost. She still has a lot to say and can weave together excellent phrases. Baker is an earnest writer, and I love her for it.

 

 



 

#8 – Son Volt – Electro Melodier

I mean, it is Son Volt, the creators of one of my favorite genres of music, one of the reasons I formed Whiskey Daydream after EKe broke up. As you would expect, Farrar’s lyrics are honest, poetic, political, and timely. He has his pen on the pulse of our generation, and he isn’t afraid of losing fame or fans, he’s gonna call it like it is. The recording is great. The instrumentation is great. The players are great. It is just a great album. Period.

 






#7 – Andrea von Kampen – That Spell

Coming off the heels of Old Country, That Spell was a highly anticipated release for me. A few Eps and a full length into it, and von Kampen hasn’t abandoned what makes her special. Her songs can absolutely stand on their own with just the strength of her clear and breathy vocals, the six strings of her guitar, and the authenticity of the stories she is sharing. That being said, she made some excellent choices on this recording, bringing in strings, piano, and other organic instruments to help fill space and alter the mood track to track. The church organ on “The Wait” is everything I could hope for on a recording. The restraint that her supporting cast played with is incredible. I wish every musician could listen to That Spell, if only to understand that sometimes less is more.  



 


#6 – Quicksand – Distant Population

Y’all, you can take the boy out of the 90’s, but you can’t fully remove the 90’s from the boy. I spend the vast majority of my time listening to very thoughtful, chill, singer/songwriter, Americana, and Alt-Country music, but every now and again, I need to throw up the \m/ and just let loose. I became a huge fan of Quicksand with the release of Manic Compression in 1995, and I was elated when, out of nowhere, they seemed to re-emerge in 2017 to release Interiors. So, when they dropped Distant Population this year, I had to get it, and I am glad I did. I recently joined a gym to keep moving and get myself healthy, and this CD gets me going before every workout. What I love about Quicksand is each piece of the puzzle has equal value. Schreifels vocals are great. The lyrics are solid. Vega is one of my favorite bassists. Cage if a beast behind the kit. Capone has excellent chops and tone without being too thirsty. Individually they are great. Together they are better.




#4 – Billie Eilish – Happier Than Ever / Olivia Rodrigo – Sour

I have 1a’d and 1b’d before, but never given two albums the same position, but with these two, it is impossible for me to separate them. They are the same album. I know. I know. Two different artists. They don’t even sound the same. But all the elements are the same. 



·         Crisp production? Check

·         Solid, emotive vocals? Check

·         Excellent earworm melodies? Check

·         Good, angsty, scorned lover, songwriting? Check

Hell, both albums have tracks that sound like they are in ¾ and have the rise and fall of a proper waltz, and they both offer songs that feature incredible bass lines. Rodrigo’s “good 4 u” has the grimiest bass line on the first two verses. Every time I hear it, my hips begin to gyrate like I am Elvis or some shit. Eilish is more consistent, allowing the bass line to drive the entirety of “Lost Cause.” Same effect; I am just grinding for longer when that one comes on.

 

There are some definite differences. Happier Than Ever has a moodier and somber vibe. It is sultry and earnest. Sour, has a pop sensibility that feels younger. Some of this can be attributed to regional differences. Eilish is a LA born and bread. Everyone from LA is jaded. It is part of the package. Whereas Rodrigo comes from Temecula, about an hour East of San Diego, sunny, dry, gorgeous, but it’s got a very Stepfordy vibe.

 

Still, I am pretty sure both Rodrigo and Eilish will burn down your house if you fuck them over, they’ll just do it differently. Billie’s gonna pour the gas and leave trails of gunpowder, then sit back and watch as you start the fire when you flick out your cigarette butt, smirking as it goes up all Halloween orange and chimney red. Olivia, on the other hand, is throwing a molotov cocktail through your window and then flipping you off through your door camera before she walks away. Pick your poison. As long, as you stay on their good side, I highly recommend both albums.  

 

 

 #3 – Lucy Dacus – Home Video

 

It feels like I am always writing about Lucy Dacus and for good reason. She is brilliant, and her band is incredible. They make consistently excellent music while continuing to evolve. Dacus serves up pure and unflinching lyrics, inviting the listener into her world while sparing nothing. They are raw and real. She is giving you everything she has to offer. Don’t listen if you are trying to avoid feeling. When talking about Lucy Dacus I feel compelled to mention her band. Hayden Cotcher is one of my favorite drummers, extremely tasteful with quick wrists and excellent dynamics. Christine Moad is a fantastic pocket bassist. He has all the chops and knows when to use them, ensuring the integrity of the track is never jeopardized. Jacob Blizard is a damn genius. I am not sure who is responsible for what when they are in the studio, but his playing adds so much to each track. Having seen them live multiple times, they are all amazing to watch work, and this gift of a CD can be listened to from start to finish with no regret of time wasted on any track.

 

 

#2 – Watchhouse – Watchhouse

 

From the outside looking in, hell even from the inside looking in, this was the year of Watchhouse for me. I listened to this CD and all the back catalog of Mandolin Orange (their former name) more than anything this year. My first and only concert I have been to since the pandemic began was to see them (plus Son Volt and the Sleepy Rubies) at the Open Highway Music Festival. I absolutely adore when couples sing together. There is something magical when there is real love behind the melody lines and lyrics. I love Marlin’s mandolin and Frantz’s fiddle. Fuck, I love that their names and primary instruments make alliterations. I love everything about a band singing about being kind. The album is crisp. The instruments are perfectly distanced, allowing the recording to breathe like it would on stage. I can, and have, listen to it on repeat for days at a time. It is a worthy purchase.

  

 

 

#1 – Jack Ingram, Miranda Lambert, Jon Randal – The Mafia Tapes

You can thank Austin City Limits for this one. I hadn’t heard anything about this recording, but Ingram, Lambert, and Randal did a supporting session on ACL, and it made me go buy the CD. I love Miranda Lambert, have all of her recordings, including the Pistol Annie’s stuff, so when I saw her pop up on my DVR, I had to stop and watch. As a singer/songwriter, the Mafia Tapes is everything I love. Three friends, sharing their tunes, adding harmonies to each other’s tracks, and filling out the instrumentation with some complimentary guitar parts here and there. When I was in college I tried to make a similar recording, rolled up to the barn that was on the property of the house I was staying in with a couple PZM microphones and a four track recorder. I wanted to hear everything. I wanted the vocals to get lost in the rafters. I wanted the creak of the old wood floors, the sound of the wind rattling the battered tin roof. I wanted the environment to be part of the recording. That is absolutely what they captured here, three incredible singer/songwriters holed up in a house somewhere in West Texas and they recorded everything allowing the listener to feel like they were actually there. It is perfect in its simplicity, and the songwriting is fantastic to boot. I went weeks with it in constant rotation and never got tired.

 

Well, there you have it, my Top 10 for 2021. Per usual, I only ranked albums that I purchased, and there were many that didn’t make the list. One, in particular, was The Off Season by J Cole. For a portion of the year, I thought it was going to be my #1. The beats are excellent. The production is crisp, and Cole’s lyrics are intelligent and thought provoking. What eventually caused it to fall was they are also misogynistic AF. The more I rolled around bumping it with the kids in the car, the more I thought I hope my son never speaks this way about a woman, and I pray that no one ever treats my daughter like she is an object. Ultimately, I decided if I continued to play the album and others with similar themes, I was part of the problem. I was giving artists a pass that they don’t deserve, so I stopped playing it and removed it from it’s place on my list. So here is a reminder for all that we need to be the change we want to see.

 

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Top 10 CDs of 2019


Here we are again, me, my wife, my mom, and you, yes you. You took the time to click on a link to see what this old washed-up singer/songwriter was listening to in 2019. Looking back at my blog, if you can still call it that, this is my 10th year of posting a Top 10 list. There are some familiar faces here, but, like always, some new artists moved me this year.

Like previous years, I’ve got rules and shit. Number one rule: I had to actually purchase the CD. If I didn’t love it enough to own it, then it is not list worthy. Seems pretty logical to me. I know you streamers, who cannot wrap your head around buying an album, are #SYDHs, to which I say, GET OFF OF MY LAWN!!! This is my list, after all. The other rules, with no particular weight, include: how often I listened to the album; how good the artist can pull it off live (yes; I know that doesn’t seem to fit an album review, but, again, it’s my list, and I do what I want up in this piece); quality of recording; strength of lyrics; no EPs; no live albums – it has to be new music, if an artist did a live CD of all new songs, I would consider it; and, for artists that have multiple albums under their belts, how this album compares to their other work.



With the nitty gritty out of the way, I wanted to just mention Homecoming by Beyonce. It’s a live recording from Coachella, not new material; therefore, it cannot be in the running for my Top 10, but, come on, Beyonce at Coachella, with a drumline. The performance was masterful, and the recording is incredible. It deserves to be owned by all. 







Alright, let’s dive in…

I am pretty sure every recording Dallas Green has done since I started doing these Top 10s has made the list. I have a tattoo that pays homage to Sometimes for fuck’s sake. He is brilliant with the voice of an angel. No one. And I mean NO ONE can duplicate the purity of his falsetto, and his instrumentation is always inspiring. The recording is a thing of beauty, the placement of the instruments, the harmonies, the explosions of sound that create interesting sonic layers. It is exactly as it is billed, a pill for loneliness. When I wake-up, and I am just not feeling it, I get it spinning and, immediately, I feel comforted.


I am a SUCKER for harmonies, if you’ve ever read any of my Top 10s or followed my Facebook Music Page where I post what I am listening to daily, you know this. When the singers are related, the harmonies are always the best. I cannot explain it, but there is something about the shared experiences dancing with shared genetics that makes them glorious. Enter Joseph. Three sisters. Two of them twins. Yeah; glorious. Good Luck, Kid represents real growth for the band. I’m Alone, You’re Not, their 2016 effort always seemed overproduced to me. It didn’t seem authentic. It didn't sound as incredible as they do live, but this album really displays the strength of the unit without overwhelming it with slick production. Lyrically they have always been strong. They provide very personal stories that have universal appeal. Thirteen tracks and not one of them seems forced (Yeah you read that right; 13. In the age of the 7 song CD, they gave us 13). “Green Eyes” stands out to me. The build into the chorus gets me jazzed every time.


I mean, it’s Norah Jones. Can Norah put out of flop? I do not think so. She is a genius. She is an incredible musician, lyricist, and singer, and she knows no boundaries. Her creativity is limitless. My only knock on this recording is it is only seven songs. I want more! But the seven songs are so damn strong it could not be denied. I am listening to it as type. My mind is fully engaged, and my ass is busting a move in my chair, feet all tapping and shit. When well written words are married to music that causes your body to move involuntarily, you know you’ve done something right. “Wintertime” may be a perfect song. The instrumentation is tastefully offered with amazing spacing, allowing breath, and the words weave a blanket we can all use to keep us warm.



Y’all, Clark is a master musician. He plays with an honesty that most of us can only dream of achieving, and he will not allow himself to be boxed in by Blues norms. Yes, he is a Blues musician, but he is pushing those boundaries, and hopefully attracting new artists to the genre. This Land will go down as one of the best protests albums of the 45 era. I could say so much about Clark and this recording, but I want to save the space so you can read the lyrics for “This Land.”



Paranoid and pissed off
Now that I got the money
Fifty acres and a model A
Right in the middle of Trump country
I told you there goes a neighborhood
Now mister Williams ain't so funny
I see you looking out your window
Can't wait to call the police on me

When I know you think I'm up to something
I'm just eating out but still hungry
And this is my analogy
I ain't even near you can't 'til you put me
I remember when you used to tell me
Nigga run, nigga run
Go back where you come from
Nigga run, nigga run
Go back where you come from
We don't want, we don't want your kind
We think you's a dog born
Fuck you, I'm America's son
This is where I come from

This land is mine
This land is mine
This land is mine
This land is mine

Up 'til the sun comes up
No I can't stop grinding
And I can't let 'em break me
No I can't let 'em find me
You can meet my friend the governor
Only if you wanna try me
Or you can meet my other friend the judge
Just in case you think I'm lying

And I know you think I'm up to something
I'm just eating out but still hungry
And this is my analogy
I ain't leaving here you can't take it from me
I remember when you used to tell me

Nigga run, nigga run
Go back where you come from
Nigga run, nigga run
Go back where you come from
We don't want, we don't want your kind
We think you's a dog born
Fuck you, I'm America's son
This is where I come from

This land is mine
This land is mine
This land is mine
(This land is mine)

This land is mine (this land is)
This land is mine (this land is)
This land is mine (this land is)
This land is mine (this land is)


Brittany Howard cannot be contained; she is a force of nature that knows no master. Jaime is the height of artistic expression. The recording serves up so many courses for hungry ears. It perfectly balances modern production and vintage instrumentation, never allowing one to dominate the other. Her voice is as powerful as ever, and her story is more honest than ever. “Georgia” opened my eyes and allowed me to get a little closer to this songwriter that I have respected for so many years while “Goat Head” reminded me that there is still a lot of work to be done on this American experiment.

See, tomatoes are green
And cotton is white
My heroes are black
So why God got blue eyes?

My daddy, he stayed
My grandmama's a maid
My mama was brave
To take me outside
'Cause mama is white
And daddy is black
When I first got made
Guess I made these folks mad
See, I know my colors, see
But what I wanna know is...

Who slashed my dad's tires and put a goat head in the back?
I guess I wasn't s'posed to know that, too bad
I guess I'm not 'posed to mind 'cause I'm brown, I'm not black
But who said that?
See, I'm black, I'm not white
But I'm that, nah, nah, I'm this, right?
I'm one drop of three-fifths, right?


Son Volt, like City and Colour, is one of those bands that always makes the list when they drop a CD, largely based on the strength of Jay Farrar’s lyrics. In my opinion, Jason Isbell, Jay Farrar, and Benjamin Gibbard are the best lyricists of the generation. Union is the quintessential protest album, and Farrar is able to accomplish that without beating the listener over the head with obvious phrases. Sometimes you need a “Fuck you I’m America’s son” and sometimes you need a “They can fill up the jails but it won't make a dent, the sins don't wash away in the sea of discontent,” from “The 99.” Like all of Son Volt’s recordings, this latest album is clean. The production is timeless. The instruments are well placed in the mix with throaty and twangy guitars being featured throughout. The vocals sit upfront, and the harmonies help fill the space beneath. The groove on “Broadsides” is probably my favorite of the album. It’s one of those that just impels you to make a stank face while your body gyrates.


For most of the year, this album sat at #1. I absolutely love von Kampen’s voice. Her YouTube presence is incredible, dropping multiple live videos making it clear she is the real deal. If I wrote this list next week, she may move back up. The top four are always so fickle. Day to day. After Another Day, Desdemona, and an amazing Audiotree recording, Old Country finally gave us what we have been waiting for, for years, a full disc. Eight songs to sink our teeth into, and they did not disappoint. Not one throwaway in the bunch. What I love most about this recording is it is understated. In the age of electronics and big production, von Kampen stays true to her Americana roots, highlighting the beautiful tones of real instruments that help to showcase her lyrics and incredibly pure vocals.


I always feel somewhat strange about including artists that I actually know, like somehow it invalidates the strength of the recording, but I defy you to find a better recorded CD in 2019. The production on Evergreen is the shit I dream about. The layers are tasty. The vocals are perfectly placed. The harmonies are so beautifully positioned that you don’t even realize they are there unless you are really, really, listening for them. The guitar tones drop my jaw and weaken my knees. Maybe it’s because Evergreen sits in my musical wheelhouse, but damn it I love this CD, and I have been publicly gushing about it since it dropped. It’s a toe tapper. It’s sultry. It’s a showcase of great songwriting and musicianship. It’s everything a timeless CD should be.


Y’all this CD came out of no where for me. I hadn’t even heard of the Black Pumas. I was just using YouTube to listen to music while I was getting shit done at work, and ol’ YT decided I needed to hear “Colors,” and I did. They are a merger of everything I really love about music. So much diversity and soul, paying homage to the past, but pushing the music forward. Marvelous musicianship and songs that actually say something. You can dance to it, get butt-ass naked and make love to it, or just chill while sipping on a nice glass of Woodford Reserve, allowing the sounds to sooth your soul. Hell, if you are really skilled, you could probably push play on Black Pumas, get butt-ass naked and make love while sipping on some Woodford. It’s your world. You do you, just make sure you give this one a spin.


1.2, you may be saying. Well, I just realized Cuz I Love You was released in 2019. Some singles from the album were release much earlier, so it seems like it has been out forever. Despite bending my own damn rules, I am including it because it is too damn good. “Tempo” is my jam of the year. When I am really wanting to get down, I put that bad boy on and just love life. The thing that is so great about Lizzo is she has broad appeal. I cannot count how many times I have been carting members of my son’s 4th grade football team around and we are all breaking it down to this album. You want to have a good time. You want to dance your ass off. You want to appreciate an incredible musician that is totally authentic and inspiring, put in some Lizzo and try not to bounce. 


Those that are really connected to me saw this coming. Unlike Black Pumas, Bombara, City and Colour, Son Volt, and von Kampen who all make music similar to the music I make, I have no idea how Elena Tonra does it. It’s not just the instrumentation or the the downbeat, it’s her phrasing, her control. It's the sparseness. She is able to get so much out of every beat, every syllable. No CD got more play from me this year than Ex:Re. More than anything, I want music to make me feel, and I do not care what the emotion is, I just want real, true, emotions. I cannot listen to this album without getting all up in my feelings. While Lizzo gave me my party CD, Ex:Re gave me my I’d like a good cry CD. Lyrically it is pure poetry. I’ve listened to “The Dazzler” seven times in a row. I could put it on repeat and never tire. The images Tonra pens are vivid and heart breaking. They are everything I want.  

The night is young at the Dazzler
I spiked my own drink, took myself to bed
Alone I pondered the cheap thrills of hotels
The miniatures, the endless throwaway towels
One for my hair, one for my foot
Another for my other foot
My face, my neck, my spilt beverages

Drunk in my hotel room, I look perfect
I look like I'm 24 before I caught your coldness
God, I'm gorgeous
I keep begging for late checkouts
Let me stay here, let me live here
In room 232 till I expire, I can shower for hours
Leave the lights on, I'm not paying those bills

The neighbours are quiet, no one is back yet
I think about the falsity of hotel sex
Expensive bed sheets and the orange glowing filaments
The way you used to say you love me
In the heat of it, holiday feeling
When it wasn't over too quick
Yeah, I'll throw the TV out the window
And I'll paint the whole room gold
I'll make potions with the minibar here
Yeah, I feel unbalanced, put my feet on the walls
Trying to meet you all night, I'm not paying for calls

Oh, this is heaven
Alone
Yeah, this is living
Alone  

   
I don’t think I’ve ever done this before, but here are the other albums I purchased this year. Again, they were good enough to get beyond a simple stream, good enough that I had to own them, just not enough room in the Top 10. There may be something here you also want to check out.
  

Andrea von Kampen
Twlights & Evening Bell (EP)
Beyonce
Homecoming (Live)
Copeland
Blushing
Glen Hansard
This Wild Willing
Jesse Gannon
Jesse Gannon (EP)
Lowland Hum
Glyphonic
Maybe April
The Other Side
Patty Griffin
Patty Griffin
Sara Bareilles
Amidst the Chaos
Seth Walker
Are You Open?
Silversun Pickups
Widow's Weeds
Tank & the Bangas
Green Balloon
The Black Keys
Let's Rock
The Lumineers
III
Tool
Fear Inoculum


While I do think being a singer/songwriter affords me a certain amount of credibility, I am certainly not saying these are the only recordings worthy of listening to from 2019. I am sure many of you have different lists of great albums I should check out, so please post them in the comments. I am always open to being moved by new music. 

Until next year...