Showing posts with label st. vincent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label st. vincent. Show all posts

Friday, December 31, 2021

jeffery berg's top 10 albums of 2021


Here are my Top 10 Albums of 2021!





10. 

THE WIND

Balmorhea



Windchimes and air and and plaintive guitars and fingertips upon creaky piano keys, this atmospheric record from Texan duo Rob Lowe and Michael A. Muller is a pleasing and transportive listen. Sometimes the chords grow more ominous and dissonant, a reflection upon the chaos and uncertainty of the natural and modern world. Track "La Vagabonde" and its lilting brass takes inspiration from Greta Thunberg's journey to the United States, the title, the namesake of the vessel.





9. 

AN OVERVIEW ON PHENOMENAL NATURE

Cassandra Jenkins




I was immediately taken by Jenkins when I first heard her music in early '21. Reminiscent of Aimee Man, Jenkins' record has wryness and "comedy-tragedy" that's both adventurous and cohesive. "Hard Drive" fuses spoken word, sprawling jazz and folk. The delicate "Crosshairs" is one of the prettier melodies and songs of the year.






8. 

KING'S DISEASE II / MAGIC

Nas




It's been nearly 30 years since his debut and Nas is still on a remarkable roll ("I'm on top / And I keep rising") with these two excellent albums. The production by Hit-Boy is crisp as all get-out (each track is laid fresh and distinctive from one another), and Nas' rhymes and delivery remain blunt and surprising. On "Ugly," from Magic, a litany of societal problems swirls over a muggy spool of sound. The guest spots from Eminem, EPMD, and Lauryn Hill on the Kings Disease II record are pretty mind-blowing.





7. 

DADDY'S HOME

St. Vincent



While music shouldn't all be about image, Annie Clark's blonde-wigged dip into mid-70s drag was certainly eye-catching and synonymous with this slick rock record. Her voice curdles on the dagger-sharp "Pay Your Way in Pain." Then there are beautiful, aching tunes like "Somebody Like Me" and the painterly, Bowie-esque "The Melting of the Sun." "My Baby Wants A Baby" brilliantly interpolates Sheena Easton's "Morning Train (9 to 5)" with the fears of an artist ever entering motherhood.





6. 

PINK NOISE

Laura Mvula



On this spunky and colorful electro album ("More than ever that you can imagine"), British artist Laura Mvula conquers plushy pink 80s-sounding synth soundscapes with heated, brassy and raw vocals. With thrumming, kicky dirges that suddenly break out of time signature and rhythm into splayed, widescreen choruses ("Conditional" and the masterful "Magical," for example), every track makes a splash. 





5. 

DEACON

serpentwithfeet



Josiah Wise's shivery vocals, concrete, dry-humored lyrics, and beguiling melodies make up this bluesy-bruised tapestry. The slow but jaunty "Same Size Shoe," the gospel-esque "Malik" ("Blessed is the man who wears socks with his sandals”), and intimate "Derrick's Beard" are haunting queer love songs. The celebratory "Fellowship" closes out the record with sonorous drums. 





4. 

JUBILEE

Japanese Breakfast



One of the best openings of an album this year is surely the back-to-back brilliance of the stately and soaring "Paprika" and the yearning "Be Sweet" on Japanese Breakfast's third record Jubilee. Confident and vulnerable at the same time, the tunes have an air of familiarity and boldness (like on the airy electrowaves and vox synth ride of "Posing in Bondage"; and the strummy, Mac DeMarco-esque "Savage Good Boy"). Michelle Zauner's vocals and deft songwriting shine throughout.



3. 

CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST

Tyler, The Creator





There are continual sparkly surprises over grumbly, tumbly beats on this masterwork from Tyler, the Creator. There's the laid-back neo-soul of "WUSYANAME," the droll stomper "LUMBERJACK," and the whole lot of "MANIFESTO." But overall, to neatly categorize the songs in writing (from their thorny lyrics and choppy, jagged sounds and transitions) feels inadequate. Definitely one of the more adventurous albums in some time.




2. 

CYCLORAMA

Polo & Pan 



"Take me back," Channel Tres demands on slick thumper "Tunnel." On the fittingly titled, Cyclorama, Polo & Pan cycle samples and melodies with soft, crisp beats, which sound modern and retro. From its gossamer prelude ("Come") & upbeat intro ditty ("Ani Kuni") to lush, pulsating French electropop ("Attrape-reve" & "Melody"--replete with some Van McCoy "The Hustle" rhythms) to the orchestral elements on "Bilboquet (Sirba)" (jaunty flutes on fleek!) and "Requiem"--the beat and synth flipping to freeze-frame waterfalls (like dissipating fireworks). The brisk and beachy "Feel Good" is kind of the opposite of these times (tumbling pianos and optimistic vocals and lyrics) has been a staple on my mixes this year.




1. 

SOMETIMES I MIGHT BE INTROVERT

Little Simz



As a fan of Little Simz' last album GREY Area, I was looking forward to more. Throughout this year, singles were being released from the British-Nigerian rapper, and it seemed to be mounting towards a significant work. Sometimes I Might Be Introvert is a grand piece of artistry and embraces the art of the album through and through. There are lavish, symphonic, broad moments such as the album opener, "The Rapper That Came to Tea," and "Standing Ovation" to the more organic, and stripped-down: swingy banger "Point and Kill" and smooth "Two Worlds Apart."  All including passionately intimate and personal lyrics and idiosyncratic delivery.


My Spotify playlist of my favorite tracks of 2021.





-Jeffery Berg

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

jeffery berg's top 10 singles of 2021



Here are my Top 10 Singles of 2021!




10. "STAND FOR MYSELF"

Yola


Yola hits a mighty climax with her emphatic "I'm alive!" refrains in this glimmery and rootsy anthem.


 



9. "NEW MIRRORS"

Minimal Schlager


Sunny wave of synthpop from sibling duo Minimal Schlager.





8. "KNUCKLE TATTOO"

girlhouse


An immediate earworm--girlhouse's pulsating rock single with distinctive lyrics ("Don't trust a man that can dance with a knuckle tattoo ... / he's got a band with a van and a bad attitude") felt both familiar, like a worn 90s grunge track, and yet, like a breath of fresh air.





7. "KEEP MOVIN'"

Jungle


In another difficult year, Jungle kept things going with this forward-looking, string-drenched dance nosh





6. "BACK TO OZ"

Sufjan Stevens & Angelo De Augustine


Somehow Sufjan Stevens manages to churn out so many well-crafted, yearning pop songs. This bittersweet tune reaches back into childhood and the fever dream that is Return to Oz.






5. "THE MELTING OF THE SUN"

St. Vincent


Extremely grand rock song cleverly references some golden music influences of yesteryear and also includes a killer vibrating guitar solo. The SNL performance from this year was a memorable showstopper.







4. "ACROSS THAT FINE LINE"

Nation of Language


Pleasing, driving epic post-punk tune that feels celebratory and bittersweet. Like the girlhouse song, this one is a cozy alt-rock throwback while simultaneously sounding fresh. 






3. "LUMBERJACK"

Tyler, the Creator


Fabulous song from Tyler, the Creator. Unapologetic (and funny) lyrics. Its sounds swirling like a record, this brief track was on repeat for me throughout the year.





2. "MAGIC"

Polo & Pan


I've been a fan of Polo & Pan's trip-pop music and remixes for a few years now, and also Pino Donaggio's Body Double score is a favorite of mine. So I was particularly chuffed to hear a mashup of Donaggio with Pilot's "Magic": a skilled, incredible sonic experience.





1. "BE SWEET"

Japanese Breakfast


Beautiful, quietly powerful pop-rock. The chorus, perhaps unintentionally, reflects the hope a lot of us are feeling in the midst of chaos right now ("Be sweet to me, baby / I wanna believe in you"). Impressively, lead singer Michelle Zauner also released her haunting memoir Crying in H-Mart this year as well.




My Spotify playlist of all my favorite tracks of 2021.




My Top 10 singles of 2020, if you want to look back.


-Jeffery Berg

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

am i my résumé?


I made this 4-CD set, Am I My Résumé?, for my friend Ben Sher.

The title comes from a strand of lyric from A Chorus Line which repeats itself a few times throughout. It suddenly became an overarching thematic line in many of the songs with the idea of work, jobs and identity. From a 50s magazine, I found an image of a kid's drawing of a gas station attendant with the child pointing at him. It is a crystalline, sort of biting encapsulation of human = job.



Knowing Ben's eclectic taste, I felt the freedom to be bold with some of the choices and include things like Sheena Easton's "9 to 5 (Morning Train)" which ended up pairing so elegantly with St. Vincent's "My Baby Wants a Baby" as a poignant coda on the final disc (it just so happens I found another symbolic ad from the 50s magazine of a woman staring into a white wicker buggy).


I loved re-discovering the song "Worthless" from Brave Little Toaster--which has to be one of the saddest tunes ever from an animated movie--where junkyard cars quickly rattle off their life stories before being demolished. Its first line "I can't take this kind of pressure" went well with an extended, charged Jimmy Michaels' remix of the Billy Joel song.




I also wrote and performed some simple piano themes for Ben which I think I'll continue doing for future mixes. One interlude is a track of beats, "Mall at Dusk," which morphed into Carter Burwell's haunting electro track "Duke in Bar (Warm as a Cry for Help" from Psycho III.





Given all the music cues I set up on the first and second discs, it became apparent I was creating something sprawling & had to keep going. I tried to hone things in for landing on the fourth disc, which ended up becoming more country-infused than I expected. It opens with a song I think I've taken for granted over the years, finding it corny, but now it feels like such a winsome, perfect pop song in these turbulent times--Climax's "Precious & Few."





All 4 back covers:



-Jeffery Berg