The Top 100 Albums of 2017

For 2017’s year end list, I did something a little different. Most obviously, I scrapped the EP’s list and made one giant albums list instead of breaking it into 5 parts. I also created a playlist of songs from this list to check out, available at the bottom of the page, and you can find links to listen to each album after their respective descriptions.

However, you may also notice something unusual with the writing. Faced with the daunting task of writing 100 albums blurbs with precious little time, I decided I needed to give myself some structure to trick myself into making this task seem doable. I gave myself a limit of 3 sentences per album, challenging myself to fit everything I needed to say into that restriction. I hedged a bit by using more run-ons than I normally would, but by treating this like a writing exercise, I was able to break my writer’s block and learn more about my own writing. So feel free to laugh along as we get towards the end, as I do everything in power to fit what my passion into an all too tiny limit.

Regardless, thank you for reading, and I hope you’ve enjoyed 2017 in music as much as I have.

100. Japanese Breakfast — Soft Sounds From Another Planet
japanese breakfast

Soft Sounds From Another Planet represents a nice step up Japanese Breakfast’s debut. Psychopomp felt a little too by the numbers for me, but its follow up sees Michelle Zauner more willing to deviate from dream pop’s tried and true formula. This is a nicely atmospheric record with draws just enough from indie rock, shoegaze, and modern pop to keep things interesting. Spotify


99. Impure Wilhelmina — Radiation
impure wilhelmina
Impure Wilhelmina is what would happen if a post-hardcore band listened to a lot of sludge metal and The Smiths. Turns out the result has something in common with Katatonia and similarly depressing hard rock groups, but the emphasis on post-punk really makes Radiation stand out. It’s one of those mostly non-metal albums that’s main audience is metal fans, but it’s also a damn good one that should be checked out by post-punk fans with a tolerance for heavier material. Spotify


98. Hannah Peel — Mary Casio: Journey to Cassiopeia
hannah peel

Mary Casio
is a pleasant record at its worst and downright gorgeous one at its best. It’s essentially a mix between synth-heavy progressive electronics and brass band, which turns out to be a very intriguing combination. Parts of it can feel a little empty, but there are moments of sheer beauty and imagination that more than make up for the less interesting ones. Spotify


97. Nagrobki — Granit
nagrobki

Polish punk bands seem to love their brass instruments, and Nagrobki is no exception. Granit could easily have been a pretty standard garage rock album, but brass instruments, electronics, and heavy feedback are used well to break up the monotony. It’s sometimes crazy and fun, but often dark and deliberate in a way that feels unusual for other Polish punk derivatives I’ve heard. Bandcamp Spotify


96. Japan Blues — Sells His Record Collection
japan blues

Japan Blues is the project of Howard Williams, host of NST’s “Japan Blues” radio show, and much of Sells His Record Collection has the feel of a truncated radio show. Yes, there are samples (as well as field recordings) being mixed to create a new composition, but this record often just moves from one intriguing Japanese music sample to the next. That actually works pretty well, creating what comes across as an expertly curated trip across Japanese film and folk music. Bandcamp


95. Unleash the Archers — Apex
unleash the archers

Apex feels like a breakthrough for Unleash the Archers, a band that I honestly had written off prior to hearing this. There’s nothing I would classify as “high art” here, but just pure heavy metal cheese at its finest. It’s a fun, epic sounding combination of power metal, melodeath, and traditional heavy metal, and it’s hard not to recommend to anyone without an appreciation for that sort of thing. Spotify


94. Tzusing — 東方不敗
tzusing

Tzusing’s EPs have put him at the top of my list of industrial techno producers, and he proves on his full length debut that his style can work across a whole album. 東方不敗 is a fusion of industrial techno and Chinese folk music, and it alternatives between incredibly fun bangers and eerie headphone music. Not every song here reaches the heights of his A Name of Out Place EPs, but there are number of great tracks that cement Tzusing as a producer to watch. Bandcamp Spotify


93. The Bug vs. Earth — Concrete Desert
the bug vs earth

I had no idea what a collaboration between a drone legend and a grime producer would sound like, but apparently it’s some even slower moving drone than usual Earth. It’s interesting to hear the split between tracks that are more focused on Dylan Carlson’s guitar and the ones that have The Bug providing more of a beat than just a noise backdrop, with creating a trance like quality. I honestly could have done with a decent portion of its massive 90 minute run time shortened. but this is a solid release and still different enough from a typical Earth record to stand on its own. Bandcamp Spotify


92. Bent Knee — Land Animal
Web

Even though their sound is a lot prettier and more atmospheric, Bent Knee might be the most dynamic rock band I’ve heard since System of a Down. Land Animal is filled with style shifts that appear out of completely nowhere, yet somehow keep the momentum of the tracks going. Courtney Swain’s vocals are a clear highlight, as she gives an excellent performance that is just strange enough to work over such constantly changing instrumentals. Spotify


91. Vince Staples — Big Fish Theory
vince staples

In a surprise twist, Vince Staples’ second album sees him rapping entirely over EDM and house beats. And while I don’t love every song on Big Fish Theory, the songs here that work are spectacular and some of the biggest bangers I’ve heard all year. Vince’s rapping style is still darker less energetic than you would expect from an electronic-heavy hip-hop album, so even when it falters Big Fish Theory is at least an interesting experience. Spotify


90. Enslaved — E
enslaved

Enslaved have remained relevant in the metal scene for nearly the entirety of their 25 year career by constantly evolving their sound. What started as a viking metal pioneer soon morphed into black metal and more recently into a full on progressive metal leader. E sees the band lessening some of their heaviest aspects (although certainly not completely removing) in favor of a more atmospheric and melodic approach that keeps their sound feeling fresh. Spotify


89. Alfa Mist — Antiphon
alfa mist

Antiphon comes across as a proper jazz album for fans of Nujabes and lo-fi hip-hop, and that’s not a bad thing at all. Alfa Mist is primarily a pianist, but plays a number of instruments (including rapping at one point) throughout the album. It all feels like a very personal project, and there’s a certain somber yet hopeful tone here that is striking in many Nujabes songs, but I don’t often find in jazz itself. Bandcamp Spotify


88. Clap! Clap! — A Thousand Skies
clap clap

I have mixed feelings on Clap! Clap! as an artist, as I do with most white producers who base their careers off of sampling African music. However,  from a musical standpoint, A Thousand Skies greatly expands upon the ideas from his first album and creates a compelling mix of Western electronic and African folk music. It works because it’s never just one plus the other, but instead an evolving composition of different styles, and it comes together to create an atmospheric and often very beautiful sounding record that I couldn’t ignore. Bandcamp Spotify


87. Rapsody — Laila’s Wisdom
rapsody

Rapsody came into this album with some much deserved hype after her verse on Kendrick Lamar’s “Complexion,” and she shows why on Laila’s Wisdom. She’s always had the flow and lyrical ability to contend with the best in hip-hop today, but this is the first project where Rapsody’s songwriting ability really shows through. Many of the songs here feel immediate and important, especially in its first half, and it’s aided by a number of strong features. Spotify


86. Dynfari — The Four Doors of the Mind
dynfari

Creating an atmospheric black metal album centered around the “four doors of the mind” (apparently sleep, forgetfulness, madness, and death) isn’t an idea I would necessarily call “good,” but Dynfari go far enough to make it work here. The Four Doors of the Mind blends black metal with post-rock and some really gorgeous accoustic music, but the compositions make sense around the themes each “door” is attempting to convey. This actually works quite well and makes for a pretty dynamic take on a genre that was sorely lacking in originality in 2017. Bandcamp Spotify


85. Exquirla — Para quienes aún viven
exquirla

Exquirla is a new project featuring three members of post-rock band Tounda and flamenco vocalist Niño de Elche, and their debut shows there is still very much some life left in the post-rock genre. It doesn’t avoid all of the pitfalls of the genre, but it’s structured differently enough to accommodate a vocalist and adds in some light Spanish folk influences as well. If you’re absolutely sick of groups like Explosions in the Sky and Mono, I’m not sure Exquirla will do enough to convince you, but this is a heavier, more original attempt that is certainly more interesting than what anyone else in that style is putting out right now. Spotify


84. Benighted — Necrobreed
benighted

Necrobreed is a really dumb album by a band that clearly doesn’t take themselves seriously. It’s also as brutal and crazy as death metal gets, and the fact that this band does it with a juvenile sense of humor makes it all the more fun. Necrobreed isn’t necessarily new territory for Benighted, as its still very much the same death metal and grindcore combination that has been found on past albums, with weird samples thrown in for good measure, but it’s still consistently enjoyable and no one else is doing death metal quite like these guys. Bandcamp Spotify


83. Ondatrópica — Baile Bucanero
ondatropica

Ondatrópica’s sophemore album is a fun and interesting fusion of different “world” music styles. Hailing from Colombia,  Ondatrópica certainty has plenty of Colombian folk music in its sound, but Latin jazz, reggae, dub, Calypso, and more pop up throughout Baile Bucanero as well. It’s maybe a little long as a full listen and not quite as strong as the group’s debut, but there’s a lot of fun to had here and no two tracks sound alike. Bandcamp Spotify


82. Rainforest Spiritual Enslavement — Ambient Black Magic
rainforest spiritual enslavement

Dominick Fernow may be best known for his Prurient moniker, but his work as “Rainforst Spiritual Enslavement” impressed me this year. Ambient Black Magic is essentially an ambient album that creates the feeling of being trapped in a jungle. It’s full of tension and nails that feeling of something lurking behind you, while also making great use of the sound of rain. Spotify


81. Cormorant — Diaspora
cormorant

Few bands can survive their frontman leaving after their breakthrough album, but Cormorant have done exactly that with Diaspora. It may not reach the same heights as their masterful Dwellings, the last album they released with original vocalist and songwriter Arthur von Nagel, but it’s still a very good album that feels like the natural evolution of where bands like Opeth and Disillution left more extreme progressive metal last decade. I wish it had more of the quieter sections that made Dwellings so fantastic, but in its place Cormorant have done a remarkable job of making prog-infused black metal varied and engaging over the course of 10-20 minute songs. Bandcamp Spotify


80. The Necks — Unfold
the necks

Minimalist free jazz group The Necks break their streak of one song albums with a whopping four tracks on Unfold. Gone is much of the drone from 2015’s Vertigo, and in its place is a larger emphasis on piano and drums. The compositions are still intentionally repetitive to an almost hypnotic level, despite their shorter (around 20 minutes each) length, but a good number of surprising instruments and noises are thrown into the loops to keep each track engaging throughout. Spotify


79. The Horrors — V
the horrors

The fifth album from The Horrors is very much rooted in 80s alternative music, but it still manages to sound fresh and different. There’s a hard, almost industrial, edge at times to the psychedelic post-punk of V, and it exists in that always strange area of being both dark and danceable at the same time. Considering the heavy doses of Depeche Mode and Joy Division on here, I’d say that’s exactly where they want to be. Spotify


78. Ingurgitating Oblivion — Vision Wallows in Symphonies of Light
ingurgitating oblivion

Ingurgitating Oblivion have an unusual take on technical death metal, and for the most part, it works well on Vision Walls in Symphonies of Light. This is a raw and often dark album, with complex songs that that range from 7 to 23 minutes long, occasionally featuring long sections that sound straight out of an experimental dark ambient project. The production is certainly lo-fi, but it fits the the raw and brooding atmosphere of the music and provides a nice contrast to the technicality it surrounds. Bandcamp Spotify


77. Guerilla Toss — GT Ultra
guerilla toss

GT Ultra is the shortest album on this list at under 30 minutes, but it makes the most of its short run time. This is fun, catchy psychedelic pop record that is full of energy and is constantly changing its sound into something new and interesting. It’s the kind of album that packs so much unconventional stuff into such an accessible package that it’s somewhat deceptive as to how weird it actually is. Bandcamp Spotify


76. Grizzly Bear — Painted Ruins
grizzly bear

While Painted Ruins doesn’t reach the heights of Yellow House or Veckatimest, it’s great to have Grizzly Bear back. Even on an album takes less chances than their past work, the band’s fusion of contemporary indie rock with psychedelia, folk, and pop music is consistently creative and far more complex than what it initially appears to be. The songs build well off each other, and while it doesn’t have some of the instantly memorable gems like their past records, it works exceptionally well as a whole album. Spotify


75. Aris Kindt — Swann and Odette
aris kindt

This is a beautiful ambient album from Aris Kindt that routinely creates striking textures. It sounds very simple on the surface, but there’s quite a bit of subtlety hidden within the synths and bits of noise. Much of Swann and Odette can lull you in with atmosphere and repetition, only to build to brass instruments and more experimental sounds layered under the main drone. Bandcamp Spotify


74. Billy Woods — Known Unknowns
billy woods

No one raps like Billy Woods, whose penchant for stringing witty non sequiturs together in often profound ways is unmatched in hip-hop. He’s 100% on point on Known Unknowns, which has some of his strongest rapping to date, and legendary underground producer Blockhead takes a more experimental approach with his production here. Repetitive and often unnecessary choruses bring it down somewhat, but this is still another strong album from someone who has quietly become one of underground hip-hop’s most consistent artists. Bandcamp Spotify


73. Ayreon — The Source
ayreon

Arjen Luccasen is the master of cheesy progressive metal, and while I’ve come to accept that he’s never going to make another The Human Equation, he’s made another very good album here. The Source, like other Ayreon albums, is a sci-fi concept album that features guest vocalists from a who’s who of power and prog metal singers. The vocalists all give great performances, but it’s still the little touches, such as Wagner-esque motifs for the different characters, connections to past Ayreon albums, and general musical diversity, that make Ayreon the standard in progressive metal operas. Spotify


72. Myrkur — Mareridt
myrkur

Danish one woman black metal/dream pop/folk project Myrkur goes in a softer direction on Mareridt with, an abysmal closing track aside, mostly great results. Mareridt is primarily a dark folk album with black metal influences here and there and a ton of atmosphere. This format removes a lot of the jank from past Myrkur projects, and while I admittedly kind of liked how raw and unprofessional sounding parts of her past releases were, this is a much better format for Amalie Bruun to show off her skills as both a vocalist and songwriter. Bandcamp Spotify


71. Idles — Brutalism
idles

Albums I would classify as pure “punk” are few and far between these days, but Idles have delivered a debut that is just that. Brutalistm takes elements from different years and decades of punk music, including classic punk, hardcore, and noise rock, with urgent lyrics that routinely take a sarcastic tone. This is a a promising debut and a great, bombastic bit of punk rock in its own right. Spotify


70. Saagara — 2
saagara

Saagara is a project led by Polish clarinetist Wacław Zimpel, and its fusion of free jazz with Indian folk music is a pretty radical departure from Zimpel’s solo material. Usually known as a minimalist player, Zimpel opts for a more aggressive pace on this record, as it moves more like a folk album with a heavy dose of jazz instruments and rhythms. However, there are clearly still minimalist qualities to be found here, and it ends up as both the most compelling album I’ve heard from Zimpel and another strong release from the excellent Instant Classic records. Bandcamp Youtube


69. Caligula’s Horse — In Contact
caligula's horse

Caligula’s Horse has been releasing consistently solid material since their debut in 2011, but In Contact feels like a breakthrough for the Australian progressive metal band. This is an epic sounding album that often hides how heavy it actually is through beautiful textures and incredibly melodic vocals. In that way it feels like a more technical evolution of the work groups like Haken and Leprous were doing a few years ago, and with the state of modern prog too often reverting to King Crimson worship, building upon a more recent progressive style is certainly welcome. Spotify


68. Omar Souleyman — To Syria, With Love
omar souleyman

I wasn’t sure what to make of Omar Souleyman signing to Diplo’s Mad Decent label, other than it just being weird that a dabke (Syrian wedding music) singer is on the same label as Riff Raff, but To Syria, With Love quickly put any worry to rest. For better or worse, this is the same Omar Souleyman as ever, just with cleaner, more electronic style production. This ends up being exactly the right approach, as Souleyman’s sound has always been music to dance to, and it’s never been more fun and danceable than it is here. Spotify


67. Colin Stetson — All This I Do For Glory
colin stetson

All This I Do For Glory doesn’t exactly reinvent the wheel for Colin Stetson, but it’s another collection of gorgeous minimalist tracks from one of modern music’s most extraordinary performers. Stetson still uses circular breathing, among other advanced techniques to play multiple parts of his saxophone at once, with this album once again recorded in a single take without edits. However, what’s more impressive about Stetson is that this way of producing music ends up as interesting, emotive, and often beautiful material, and All This I Do For Glory is no exception. Bandcamp Spotify


66. Bicep — s/t
bicep

Bicep’s latest is simply a really solid collection of chill house music. It’s the type of record that is engaging enough to warrant careful listening, while also working purely as chill relaxing beats to throw on the background. It’s not the most original or amazing album on this list by any means, but there are some tracks on here I ended up coming back to over and over again because it struck exactly the kind of vibe I wanted in my life. Bandcamp Spotify


65. Dälek — Endangered Philosophies
dalek

Industrial hip-hop has changed a lot since Dälek’s early day,s so while it was disappointing, it didn’t surprise me that their comeback record last year felt too much like a relic of the 2000s. A year later, they return with Endangered Philosophies, an album with more energy, a clearer sense of purpose, and poignant politically charged lyrics. Dälek have more of an atmospheric vibe and far less dynamism than more recent industrial rap groups like Death Grips and clipping., but that style only adds more focus to MC Dälek’s words, and there’s a tension and sense of uneasiness here is that still unique to the genre. Bandcamp Spotify


64. LCD Soundsystem — American Dream
lcd soundsystem

James Murphy and friends return from their short lived hiatus with a record that feels more lyrically dense and less purely danceable than any in their discography. American Dream recalls 80s alternative rock with some of the modern electronic elements you would expect from LCD Soundsystem, and it works to mostly great results. Nothing on here is as powerful as a track like “All My Friends,” but taken as an entire album, American Dream is both the most personal and political work of Murphy’s career. Spotify


63. SAICOBAB — SAB SE PURANI BAB
saicobab

SAICOBAB is what would happen if Yoshimi P-We (Boredoms, OOIOO) took her avant-garde brand of punk and applied to it Indian folk music. The result is an appropriately strange mixture of the psychedelic and noise influences typically present in Yoshimi’s music, but used more sparingly over traditional Indian folk rhythms and instruments. These sounds make for an interesting playground to Yoshimi’s one-of-a kind vocals that go from singing to shrieking to the simply indescribable at the drop of a dime. Spotify


62. Pyrrhon — What Passes for Survival
pyrrhon

Oddballs of the technical death metal world, Pyrrhon certainly isn’t for every metal fan, but what they try to do on What Passes for Survival honestly shouldn’t work as well as it does. Adding noise rock, a style than is inherently based around texture and is rarely precise, into a technical death metal sound that is very obviously based on technicality, seems like a recipe for disaster. Instead, Pyrrhon have a crafted one of the heaviest, most dynamic and dissonant albums you can find in the death metal genre, and it’s an absolute blast if you can stomach it. Bandcamp Spotify


61. Fleet Foxes — Crack-Up
fleet foxes

After an amazing debut and a follow up that changed very little, Fleet Foxes opt for longer and more dynamic songs on Crack-Up. This results in less catchy, instantly memorable tracks like on their self-titled released, but instead has some pretty fantastic shifts in tone, volume, and tension. The most dynamic tracks are breathtaking, and the sheer amount of instruments and tonal shifts here gives Robin Pecknold far more to work with from a songwriting perspective than the Fleet Foxes sound had previously allowed. Spotify


60. William Basinski — A Shadow in Time
LP_Jacket_RE11183

The first track of two tracks on A Shadow of Time is a tribute to the late David Bowie, and not only does it bring something new to William Basinki’s tape loop formula, but it’s one of the strongest compositions of his career. It features a saxophone loop paired with the usual tapes, and it recalls Bowie’s album Low in a stunning way that could only come from Basinksi. The second track is relatively fine, but does very little to separate itself from anything else in Basinki’s discography. Bandcamp Spotify


59. Pallbearer — Heartless
pallbearer
While I often associate doom metal with adjectives like “dark,” “depressing,” and “somber,” Pallbearer is a reminder that sometimes it can just sound downright epic. Heartless is an example of slow and heavy music done right, with a shocking amount of catchy moments as well. It’s something different and far more accessible than the typical doom metal sound, and it’s the kind of record that is easy to recommend to both genre purists and fans of groups like Mastodon and Baroness alike. Bandcamp Spotify


58. King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard — Flying Microtonal Banana
king gizzard and the lizard wizard

King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard released a whopping four full length albums in 2017, all with some sort of interesting twist attached to them, and all of surprising decent to high quality. Flying Microtonal Banana was the first and probably the best of the group, as it experiments with using microtuned instruments to play King Gizzard’s brand of psychedelic/garage rock. This somehow works while still managing to keep the band’s sounding far more accessible than similarly experimental groups, and that plus a dose of krautrock makes this feel like an uncovered psychedelic rock relic from 1975. Bandcamp Spotify


57. Sote — Sacred Horror in Design
sote

Sacred Horror in Design is a very different record from Sote, as despite some industrial moments here there, it’s a much less aggressive album than what we’re used to from the Iranian producer. Instead, this is an interesting electoacoustic record with Iranian folk influences, and Sote’s love of noise seems contained to the background. This gives Sacred in Design a kind of a unsettling feel at times, especially in its quietest moments, and makes it both the strongest and by far the most ambitious record he has released to date. Bandcamp Spotify


56. Kelela — Take Me Apart
kelela

Kelela has been releasing impressive music through mixtapes and features for a few years now, but she truly deserves to find more mainstream success with her full length debut. Take Me Apart is a catchy, well written, and musically diverse R&B record that has some of the most infectious pop songs I’ve heard in a long time. It’s also just a quality electronic album, purely from a production standpoint, with different styles of EDM and wonky providing the backdrop for Kelala’s vocals, and the music and vocals mesh together perfectly. Spotify


55. Nathan Fake — Providence
nathan fake

Nathan Fake has always been a pretty varied producer, but his first full length album in five years sees the British going in the harshest, most dissonant direction of his career.  Noise legend Prurient even shows in one especially heavy track, which has the two alternating between a more sunny synth-based techno and an industrial beat. Even on the rest of the album, Fake is able to maintain an interesting dynamic between angry and jovial, despite a clear digital sound to nearly every part of the record. Bandcamp Spotify


54. Power Trip — Nightmare Logic
power trip

Power Trip’s Nigthtmare Logic is a fun and heavy slice of crossover thrash metal that doesn’t overstay its welcome and avoids a lot of the nostalgia traps plaguing other modern thrash bands. That’s not to say that what Power Trips is doing here is especially new, as their sound is clearly rooted in 80s hardcore and metal, but the songwriting here is far less predictable and by-the-numbers than just about any crossover trash album I’ve heard this decade. This makes Nightmare Logic a more engaging and interesting listen for metalheads, but it also makes it accessible enough to appeal to those who may not have nostalgia for D.R.I. Bandcamp Spotify


53. Alan Vega — It
alan vega

Former Suicide frontman Alan Vega passed away last year, leaving behind a posthumous album that takes an existential look at his impending death and the state of the world. Vega’s vocal style is close to spoken word, as he growls over noisy and repetitive industrial beats and spiraling guitars. There’s a rawness to this where, even in its simplicity, it sounds like Vega is giving every breath he had left to make this record. Spotify


52. The National — Sleep Well Beast
the national

The National are one of the very few bands you can count on to make consistently great indie rock these days, and Sleep Well Beast takes their sound in interesting new directions. It’s softer and more somber on per song basis than their past work, and unlike practically every other indie rock band out there, The National’s addition of electronic elements doesn’t start the party but makes their sound bleaker. Matt Berringer still sounds the same as ever, but his voice lends itself perfectly to the darker, more atmospheric tone of this record, and Sleep Well Beast maintains the strong lyrics and songwriting ability that has made the group so great for the last 15 years. Spotify


51. Ibibio Sound Machine — Uyai
ibibio sound machine

Uyai is simultaneously one of the most original takes on afrobeat I’ve heard in awhile and also one of the most purely fun albums I’ve heard this year. Ibibio Sound Machine have crafted an album of non-stop dance rhythms, with influences stemming from various types of electronic and African music, funk, and alternative rock, among others. There are plenty of surprises along the way, as well a seemingly infinite amount of instruments at their disposal, and Ibibio Sound Machine have more than enough energy and variety to keep the party going through the course of the album. Bandcamp Spotify


50. death’s dynamic shroud — Heavy Black Heart
death_s dynamic shroud

death’s dynamic shroud may have dropped the “.wmv” from their name, but Heavy Black Heart is still as strange an album as any this vaporwave trio has made. It’s also the first one where their love of K-pop, glitch, and starting and stopping samples at seemingly random times really comes together in a coherent package for longer than a song or two at a time. Something is always happening on this album, and even in the moments where catchy pop or R&B drops at the perfect time, you just know that something weird is about to follow seconds later. Bandcamp Spotify


49. Archspire — Relentless Mutation
archspire

Metal may be rooted in classical music, but albums rarely show that as literally as Archspire’s Relentless Mutation does. This is an absolutely brutal technical death metal release that effortlessly adds neoclassical riffs and an ethereal atmosphere into its sonic assault. This album represents a step forward in tech death songwriting, as it’s not only one of the more purely technical albums I’ve heard this year, but it manages to keep its sound varied and surprising throughout. Bandcamp Spotify


48. Machine Girl — …Because Im Young Arrogant and Hate Everything You Stand For
machine girl

Not only had it been awhile since I had heard a good new digital hardcore album, it had been awhile since I had heard a new digital hardcore album period. Machine Girl’s oddly titled …Because Im Young Arrogant and Hate Everything You Stand For is a bit of a throwback to the late 90s days of Atari Teenage Riot and The Mad Capsule Markets, but with more crisp, modern sounding production and a rawness that is more reminiscent of today’s vaporwave or “internet” electronic albums. It’s often dumb lyrically, but also so aggressive and so good at rapidly mixing different types of heavy samples that it ends up as the best album of it’s kind of I’ve heard that’s been released in the last 15 years. Bandcamp Spotify


47. Protomartyr — Relatives in Descent
protomartyr

Protomartyr’s past work has always felt like a nice reworking of post-punk in a modern context, but in Relatives in Descent is the first of their albums to strike me as something more. This is still very much a post-punk album, albeit a noisier one than past Protomartyr releases, but the lyrics clearly focus on the state of the unease modern world and the music around it certainly matches it. There is an inescapable  sense of dread in the atmosphere of this record, and it sounds like the darkest, most political album Nick Cave never made. Bandcamp Spotify


46. Blanck Mass — World Eater
blanck mass
Blanck Mass, the solo moniker of Fuck Button’s John Benjamin Porter, has made a number of tracks I really like, but World Eater is the first time he’s put it all together on a full album. Much of this is odd little IDM and wonky beats that move that are fun and interesting on their own, but always seem to dissolve into some sort of industrial chaos. At no point does this work better than “Rhesus Negative,” which is essentially what Blanck Mass does best trimmed down into an incredible 9 minutes, but the rest of the album has more than enough surprises to keep things interesting through the final track. Bandcamp Spotify


45. tricot — 3
tricot

While tricot may not be as noisey as other Japanese female-fronted experimental rock bands like Bleach, Melt-Banana, or Mass of the Fermenting Dregs, there’s a similar oddity to their music that is infectious. For all intents and purposes, 3 is best described as a “math rock” album, but it embraces a similar love of pop vocals as other Japanese experimental rock albums that makes it far more catchy and charming than pretty much anything else I’ve heard with that “math rock” label. Underneath that pop exterior, the instrumentation is varied and technical as you would want from the genre, and as such should easily appeal to both fans of math rock and those who have no interest in overly technical rock whatsoever. Bandcamp Spotify


44. Joey Bada$$ — ALL-AMERIKKKAN BADA$$
joey badass

Joey Bada$$ moves away from the old school style found on his debut, and despite really liking that album, it ends up being the right move. Joey has something to say on ALL-AMERIKKKAN BADA$$, and the split between a mellow first half and aggressive second provide the perfect canvas for his lyrics on social justice and racially inequality. It may alienate a few people who came to Joey purely for the boom bap throwback, but this is an intelligently written record from a monumentally talented artist, and hip-hop fans should take notice. Spotify


43. The Body & Full of Hell — Ascending a Mountain of Heavy Light
the body and full of hell

In case the first collaboration between sludge metallers The Body and hardcore/powerviolence band Full of Hell wasn’t chaotic enough for you, they made another one. With Ascending a Mountain of Heavy Light, the two groups mesh even stronger with more adventurous songwriting that allows for even odder and heavier sections. There’s a swirling mix here of overwhelming guitar and drums, power electronics, guttural screams, and a section that sounds like something out one of Merzbow’s recent jazz collaborations, but more than anything, there is just more of what made the first album between these two so interesting and so unbelievably heavy. Bandcamp Spotify


42. Björk — Utopia
bjork

Utopia is almost the inverse to Björk’s last album, Vulnicura, as its a glitchy mostly Arca-produced record that replaces the latter’s dark strings with sweet, happier ones. The lyrics are, as you might expect from the title, significantly more hopeful than the breakup detailed in Vulnicura, but there are a few less positive tracks where I question if Björk and I have the same definition of “utopia.” Still, even when the concept doesn’t always hit and the album goes on for maybe a bit too long, Utopia works because of Björk’s splendid vocals and wonderfully creative production that is still unlike what any other artist is making in modern music. Spotify


41. Bargou 08 — Targ
bargou 08

Bargou 08’s Targ is the first officially released project of Tunisian musicians Nidhal Yahyaoui and  Sofyann Ben Youssef, who use drums, a variety of wind instruments, and a Moog synthesizer to recreate traditional folk songs of their region. It’s a fascinating record, both as an interesting musical experiment to hear North African folk songs performed with this set of instruments and purely as a document to hear the music of Bargou. Between the synth rhythms and the surprisingly heavy percussion in spots, there’s a lot of groove and fun to be had, but also a clear passion and love of one’s culture that makes this an essential listen for anyone with even a passing interest in “world” music. Bandcamp Spotify


40. Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith — The Kid
kaitlyn aurelia smith

Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith returns with more her synth-heavy electronic I loved on last year’s Ears. By comparison, The Kid has more of a futuristic sound to it and more heavily utilized Smith’s vocals, but the album’s biggest strength remains the same as its predecessor. Despite being primarily a synth album, Smith does an incredible job of simulating nature, creating the feeling of exploring forests, bodies of water, and space and making an incredibly digital album feel as organic as possible. Bandcamp Spotify


39. Ryuichi Sakamoto — async
ryuicihi sakamoto

Ryuichi Sakamoto’s first non-soundtrack solo album in nearly a decade is very much concerned with texture, both in terms of the crispness of its samples and the motifs those samples represent. async is often a dark album, with plenty of gloomy piano, organ, and synth melodies, but also a very beautiful one that has themes of hope and peace buried beneath its bleakest moments. It’s not the most musically interesting or obviously experimental album Sakamoto has made, but it’s clearly among his most personal and carries an emotional weight that is unrivaled in the legendary producer’s discography. Spotify


38. Zola Jesus — Okovi
zola jesus

After a disappointing detour to electropop with 2014’s Taiga, Zola Jesus returns to her darker roots with an album that blends her brand of darkwave with a little bit of the pop she’s picked up in the mean time. Okovi is a gloomy, atmospheric album of chamber instruments and harsh pecrussion, but it routinely builds to powerful hooks, and Zola Jesus’ passionate and powerful voice is on full display. The slower tracks don’t always reach the same atmosphere as on some of her earlier lo-fi material, but the highlights on this project are among the best of Zola Jesus’ career, and Okovi is as close as she has come to making a front to back great album. Bandcamp Spotify


37. Amenra — Mass VI
amenra

To borrow a phrase from MMA fighter Cub Swanson, Amenra’s Mass VI is like “beautiful destruction.” This is a devastating sludge metal record that can at one moment greet you with massive, heavy riffs and pained vocals that sound like the coming of the apocalypse, only to surprise you the next with lush melodies and beautiful spoken word interludes. In many ways, this sounds like the atmospheric sludge version of an emotional screamo record, with how much emotional weight this carries, and its an absolute triumph of modern sludge music. Bandcamp Spotify


36. Maniucha Bikont & Ksawery Wójciński — Oj borom, borom
maniucha bikont and ksawery wojcinski

I admit that I don’t have a vast knowledge of Ukranian folk music, but if there’s more out there like OJ borom, borom I will gladly learn more. The instrumentation, primarily coming from Wójciński’s double bass, is constantly moving and sounds free form, while simultaneously being absolutely beautiful to listen to. The lack of different instruments and Wójciński’s deliberate pace gives Maniucha Bikont’s powerful vocals space to shine, and there are even some extended acapella moments that break the album up nicely. Spotify


35. Laster — Ons vrije fatum
laster

Laster injects some much needed new ideas into atmospheric black metal on Ons vrije fatum. It’s at times very heavy and at times very lo-fi (by today’s standards), but mixes in more melodic and ethereal post-punk in ways that create a different type of atmosphere than anything else I’ve heard in the genre. It’s equal parts Fleurety and Joy Division (OK, maybe more like 70/30), and the result is something weird, tragically beautiful, and wholly original for black metal in 2017. Bandcamp Spotify


34. Iglooghost — Neō Wax Bloom
iglooghost

I’ve been big on Iglooghost’s EPs, so I’m happy to say that his cheery blend of wonky, footwork, hip-hop, and whatever other electronic styles he can fit onto a track absolutely works on a full length album. The tracks on Neō Wax Bloom never seem to stay still for more than a few bars, as the Irish producer is always either adding in something new or completely changing things around. Thankfully what he adds almost always works and never loses sight of the extremely upbeat vibe that the whole project carries with it. Spotify


33. Jun Konagaya — Memento Mori
jun konagaya

This bizarre bit of avant-folk and industrial from Japanese composer Jun Konagaya is simple on the surface, but amazing to listen to. The vocals, while technically in Japanese, often sound more like animal noises than anything that could be described as human, and that works with the repetitive, nature-esque feel of Konagaya’s instrumentation. The organ is featured prominently, giving this appropriately titled album a funeral-like atmosphere, as it’s one of the best and strangest meditations on life and death I’ve heard all year. Bandcamp (partial)


32. Perfume Genius — No Shape
perfume genius
No Shape is a pop album at its core, but a deceptively strange one that is hardly ever stays the same for long. Mixed in with the often beautiful ballads of love and relationships are abrasive sounds, quick style changes, an eerie atmosphere, and even one track that reminded me of something off of Colin Stetston and Sarah Neufeld’s Never Were the Way She Was. Even in its most lush moments, there’s an inescapable tension to No Shape, and both the crispness of the instrumentals and the range of Perfume Genius’ vocals only work to  strengthen that dichotomy. Spotify


31. Jlin — Black Origami
jlin

Jlin’s Black Origimi isn’t a radical departure from her fantastic debut a few years back, but the Indiana producer’s crisp samples, footwork rhythms, and often repetitive vocal snippets still work wonders the second time around. And much like on Dark Energy, it’s fascinating to hear footwork taken this far outside of the dance realm and used in such a thematic way. Each of the tracks have a clear theme that is brought to life by the short, repetitive vocals and precise sampling, and listening to Black Origami feels like listening to a producer tell a story through the medium of electronic music. Bandcamp Spotify


30. Ifriqiyya Electrique — Rûwâhîne
ifriqiyya electrique

Ifriqiyya Electrique is a collaborative project between French experimental guitarist François R. Cambuzat and a host of Tunisian musicians. Rûwâhîne, the group’s first album, plays with industrial sounds in the context of traditional banga music from the Tunsia region, and it results in an album that sounds darker and more ritualistic than almost anything else that gets classified under the umbrella label of “world” music. The vocals come across almost like chants over the swirling of noisy guitars and heavy percussion that comes from both African instruments and electronics, and it works as part of a larger experimentation on how the truly organic and the truly digital can intersect. Bandcamp Spotify


29. Sampha — Process
sampha

One of my favorite things about Sampha’s Process is how his silky smooth voice can feel like its filling the room while still sounding organic and effortless. This is true on the album’s piano ballads, electronic bangers, and the tracks that work as some combination of the two. That quality within its variety helps cement Process as an incredibly impressive debut, as its filled with intriguing compositions that incorporate elements of R&B, soul, and various forms of electronic music, as well beautiful writing and a vocal performance that demands attention. Spotify


28. Circle — Terminal
circle

Finland Circle has been around for 25 years in some form or another, and while I can’t say I’ve kept up on every single album they’ve put out over that time, Terminal  feels like a pretty radical shift from where the band was at their onset. This is a much heavier, more dynamic sounding album than what I remember from the group, with vocals that range from operatic singing to full on screaming for long stretches of time, and instrumentation that passes everything from krautrock to Hawkwind-esque space rock to sludge metal. It’s a far wilder ride than I could have ever anticipated, and it’s some of the most fun and interesting psychedelic-inspired rock of recent years. Bandcamp Spotify


27. Ex Eye — s/t
ex eye

Just the fact that Colin Stetson actually made a black metal album is in an of itself of one my favorite things to happen in music in 2017, but as it turns out, Stetosn’s style of circular breathing saxophone prowess makes for an interesting experiment with a full metal band behind him. Stetson can sometimes get drowned out behind the guitar and drums, even with the saxophone turned up higher in the mix than I’ve ever heard in a metal album, but that can also make for some pretty crazy compositions. The moments where all the instruments come together to simultaneously play over each other are particularly wild, and Stetson has a few quieter solos that are much appreciated as well. Bandcamp Spotify


26. Kendrick Lamar — DAMN
kendrick lamar

Hip-hop concept albums are difficult to pull off, and DAMN‘s effectiveness in telling a story that can work in different ways depending on whether you listen to it with the original track listing or with reverse track order is legitimately amazing. While I don’t love every song on here, especially some of the disposable pop songs that feel like a stark contrast to the more intricately detailed tracks, this is almost certainly the most ambitious and original album Kendrick Lamar has attempted. Of course, it goes without saying that Kendrick’s rapping is fantastic, and while the beats aren’t as memorable to me as on his last two albums, the 808s, record scratching, and drops from former Big L DJ Kid Capri all fit within DAMN‘s concept. Spotify


25. Lör — In Forgotten Sleep
lor

Progressive metal returned in a big way in 2017, and no where was that more true than with Lör’s outstanding debut record. The Philadelphia band takes elements of progressive metal, power metal, and folk metal on In Forgotten Sleep  and combine them in wholly original ways that constantly surprise the listener. Nearly all of the tracks here feel epic and move in ways you might not expect, with style, speed, and melody all building to moments that stand out in ways I haven’t heard from a prog metal album in years. Bandcamp Spotify


24. Chelsea Wolfe — Hiss Spun
chelsea wolfe

Chelsea Wolfe has teased a transition into doom metal on recent albums, but Hiss Spun puts her damn near actually turning into a metal act. The core of the album is more focused around guitar and drums than anything Chelsea has done before, but she still uses electronics as an ancillary piece to create layers of dark and ethereal music, while her voice can alternate between adding yet another brooding layer or acting as a melodic release from the doom. While Hiss Spun isn’t as dynamic as 2015’s Abyss, attempting an album this close to metal and noise territory is commendable, and it works exceptionally well throughout the entirety of the record. Bandcamp Spotify


23. Ninos du Brasil — Vida eterna
ninos du brasil

Ninos du Brasil have been making interesting music for a few years now, but Vida eterna is the fist album where their sound really comes together across a full length project. This is a tense, atmospheric, and ultimately very fun fusion of industrial techno and Brazilian batucada music, and there’s a surprising amount of variety to be found here. This is an album that simultaneously begs to be danced to, while also acting as a truly original slice of experimental music. Bandcamp Spotify


22. Elder — Reflections of a Floating World
elder

Elder continue to do their thing on the vast majority of Reflection of a Floating World, which is yet another collection of exceptionally written stoner rock/metal epics. Whether it’s heavy sludge riffs, melodic guitar solos, moments of 70s psychedelia, or the full on krautrock of “Sonntag,” this album never does the same thing for too long, and every aspect of its compositions are exceptionally well performed. While Elder is a more of a name in the metal community, and Reflections of a Floating World is certain to be on many end of year metal lists, this is honestly one of the best psychedelic rock albums to come out in a long time as well, and you don’t need to be a fan of modern metal to get something out of it. Bandcamp Spotify


21. Angles 9 — Disappeared Behind the Sun
angles 9

Angles, the experimental big band brainchild of Swedish saxophonist Martin Küchen, shuffles some members around and winds up a total of 9 this time around on their worthy follow up to 2014’s fantastic InjuriesDisappeared Behind the Sun, like its predecessor, is a challenging free jazz album rooted in social justice with its titles and themes, and presents motifs of war, freedom, love, and loss in its sound. These are complex compositions with a lot going on in each track, but there are powerful stories to be found in the way they progress, as well as a ton of compelling instrumentation throughout. Spotify


20. Damien Dubrovnik — Great Many Arrows
damien dubrovnik

Damien Dubrovnik have always excelled at merging the atmospheric with the apocalyptic, and Great Many Arrows contains some of the group’s harshest and most violent moments juxtaposed with some of their most strikingly beautiful. Just on the first track or “arrow,” piercing screams and an increasingly overpowering drone is played over gorgeous orchestral music, and that dichotomy continues in various forms throughout the course of the album. Despite its softer moments, Great Many Arrows is one of the most intense listening experiences I’ve had this year. and the more I return to its demented world the more fascinated I am by it. Spotify


19. Big K.R.I.T. — 4eva is a Mighty Long Time
big krit

Hip-Hop double albums are rarely consistent, but Big K.R.I.T. solves this issue by essentially packaging together two very different albums that are both are excellent in their own right. The first disc of 4eva is a Mighty Long Time is done in K.R.I.T.’s classic Southern style, complete with the kind of features you would expect from an album of its type. The second is more of a slowed-down conscious album, with jazz and gospel beats and R&B features, and both show equally compelling sides of one of modern hip-hop most talented and underrated emcees. Spotify


18. Forest Swords — Compassion
forest swords

Forest Swords continues to play with his unique blend of ambient and psychedelia on Compassion, his second full length release, and he ends up crafting a worthy follow up to his debut. Song for song, Compassion moves a bit a slower than Engravings, but there’s more of a tribal sound to this record, with harder drums that work in unusual ways with the dub rhythms and psychedelia. However, my favorite aspect of Forest Swords’ production is still his use of small vocal samples to break up certain tracks, especially on the absolutely haunting single “Panic.” Bandcamp Spotify


17. Converge — The Dusk in Us
converge
Now in their 40s, Converge have returned with a musically diverse album that isn’t trying to remake Jane Doe or even Axe to Fall, but one that has replaced songs about unadulterated rage with tracks about the birth of a child and becoming a father. Musically, it accomplishes that by incorporating more sludge sections, different vocal styles, complex time signatures, and a generally slower pace than any other Converge album. The Dusk in Us is still well within the metal/hardcore style that made the band beloved to begin with, but it feels perfectly tuned to the themes of this record. Bandcamp Spotify


16. Slowdive — s/t
slowdive

It’s been 22 years since influential dream pop/shoegaze band Slowdive have released a full length album, but their self-titled return makes it seem like they never left. The atmosphere of this record is just something else, as it drifts at a slow, airy pace and surrounds the listener with a type of ethereal bliss I haven’t felt in a dream pop or shoegaze album in a long time. There’s little here that is necessary new territory, but it occupies a space that feels long lost from modern alternative music, and it feels absolutely sublime to return. Spotify


15. Endon — Through the Mirror
endon

Endon’s Through the Mirror is not only the single heaviest album I heard in 2017, but it’s easily among the heaviest albums I have heard in my lifetime. This album’s brutal roller coaster ride into a combination of harsh noise, hardcore, heavy metal, and sludge is just incredibly fun to be along for, and coming out unscathed is one of the most satisfying experiences I’ve had with music this year. Every individual part, despite sounding utterly chaotic on its own, somehow end up forming quality pieces of music together, and that makes Through the Mirror‘s few moments of melody and tranquility all the more powerful. Bandcamp Spotify


14. Yves Tumor — Experiencing the Deposit of Faith
yves tumor
Yves Tumor’s Experiencing the Deposit of Faith could best be described as an ambient record, but it routinely delves into experimental sounds, changes up rhythms, and alters its tone in ways far more than what I typically expect from the genre. Each new song brings a different slowed down take on some on combination of samples from psychedelic, industrial, folk, and soul music, among others, and no two songs here sound alike. The disconnect between tracks can make it seem more like a compilation at times (and to be fair, Warp Records has occasionally billed it as such), but it’s hard to complain when the quality is consistently this high, and taken as a whole there simply isn’t another producer right now who is making music quite like this. Download


13. Mount Eerie — A Crow Looked at Me
mount eerie
Before any instrumentation even begins, Phil Elverum starts A Crow Looked at Me by reminding us that “death is real,” and what follows are heartbreaking meditations about the death of his late wife. As you might expect, this isn’t as musically innovative as other Mount Eerie records, but it rightfully puts the focus squarely on Phil’s guitar and vocals, with no choruses or common musical structures. “I don’t want to learn anything,” says Phil, as he focuses most on what he finds in the symbols left behind and delivers a profoundly human look at what it means to lose a loved one. Spotify


12. The Ruins of Beverast — Exuvia
the ruins of beverast

Exuvia is a dark, tribal, and atmospheric doom metal album from multi-instrumentalist Alexander von Meilenwald, and its heavy riffs and hypnotic rhythms are absolutely stunning. Despite moments of melody and even beauty, there is a ritualistic nature to Exuvia that constantly makes it sound like something evil is approaching. It certainly draws influence from the recent wave of atmospheric black metal, but isn’t as musically overbearing as anything from that genre, and that actually works to make it sound even more threatening and certainly more original. Bandcamp


11. Nmesh — Pharma
nmesh

Not only is Nmesh helping to keep vaprowave a genre worth taking seriously (sometimes), the Kentucky producer’s rapid-fire sampling to create experimental sounds feels like the natural evolution of plunderphonics. Pharma uses this to create a drug-fueled fever dream that alternates between the completely chill and the all out nightmare, with surreal vocal samples present on just about every track. Musically, Nmesh has crafted a record that exists somewhere between the type of sound vaporwave is typically known for and the modern ambiance of groups like 2814, and it makes for both an essential listen for fans of the genre and a great introduction point for those unaware. Bandcamp Spotify


10. Open Mike Eagle — Brick Body Kids Still Daydream
open mike eagle
On Brick Body Kids Still Daydream, Open Mike Eagle tells the story of the Robert Taylor homes, as he brilliantly intertwines tales of “ghetto superheros” with the realities of project housing and its demolition and removal. Throughout the album, Mike raps as a child seeing himself as Juggernaut from X-Men to cope with his living conditions, a man who has to “no sell” like a professional wrestler to avoid showing the world his pain, and as the building itself fighting off demolition and institutional racism. This is not only only one of the best and most important albums of the year, but also an achievement in hip-hop storytelling that cements Open Mike Eagle has one of the most crucial voices in hip-hop today. Bandcamp Spotify


9. Algiers — The Underside of Power
algiers

Algiers blew me away on the self-titled debut, but their combination of post-punk, gospel, and electronic/industrial feels fully formed on their fantastic follow-up. As the title might suggest, The Underside of Power is political record, and it uses Algiers’ energetic, diverse, and powerful instrumentation to lay the groundwork for its booming gospel vocals that deal very closely with important topics of power in the world today. When you hear a track like “Cleveland,” for example, where the names of deceased victims of police brutality are immortalized in a gospel voice over the band’s aggressive punk guitars and industrial synths, the power of Algiers’ message becomes hard to ignore. Spotify


8. Rosalía — Los Ángeles
rosalia
Los Ángeles, the debut record from Spanish singer/songwriter Rosalía, is simultaneously an experimental modern flamenco album and a dark, painstakingly beautiful meditation on death (the title means “The Angles,” not the American city). The mostly acoustic guitar-focused instrumentation, entirely by Raül Refree as far as I can tell, routinely plays with volume and tension, and is full of intense, gloomy, and often simply gorgeous melodies that bring out the album’s themes. However, Rosalía’s voice is by far the strongest instrument here, as her massive range, passionate delivery, and her own ability to manipulate tension is what makes this album so beautiful to listen to, and her performance is without a doubt the best vocals I’ve heard on an album in 2017. Spotify


7. Merkabah — Million Miles
merkabah

Merkabah, a sludge and jazz metal hybird from Poland, is a band I’ve enjoyed since finding their first album in the depths of Bandcamp, but they came into their own on 2014’s Moloch, and have created something special with Million Miles. This no longer feels like a cool experiment, but an actual composition where moments of atmospheric dark jazz will build to heavy sludge, bits of noise, and free jazz. Some parts still sound chaotic, but the way Million Miles moves, even between its heaviest moments, is simply sublime and can make the entire album feel like one long, amazing track. Bandcamp Spotify


6. Richard Dawson — Peasant
richard dawson

Richard Dawson has crafted a wonderfully strange album with Peasant, a record of wild, dissonant compositions that are reminiscent of pre-medeival era folk music, with touches of modern day freak folk. The songs here are among the most constantly changing pieces of folk music imaginable, never allowing the listener to get comfortable with one sound or tone, and always building to some type of odd tension. This blends with lyrics that tell engaging, multi-dimensional stories in unconventional ways, and helps make Peasant the type of album I  could found something new in and even more enjoyable in every time I returned to it. Spotify


5. Brockhampton — Saturation Trilogy
saturation trilogy

The self-proclaimed “best boy band since One Direction” released their first three albums in 2017, and while the first Saturation was an overall solid mix of gems and untapped potential, the final two are individually among the most fun and unique hip-hop albums to come out this year. At their core, Brockhampton are a pop rap group disguised  as an experimental hip-hop collective (or vice-versa) that have a production style that sounds like the evolution of Odd Future, only with more of a focus on posse cuts and at times more serious topics (Kevin Abstract’s verse about homophobia and coming out as gay on “Junky,” for example). The hooks are huge, the production is consistently on point for the course of three albums, and each of the six emcess bring their own style of flow and lyrics that mesh well enough together to keep their sound fresh for all of the 3 hours of music they released in 2017. Spotify (Trilogy) Spotify (1) Spotify (2) Spotify (3)


4. Oxbow — Thin Black Duke
oxbow

It took Oxbow a decade to release Thin Black Duke, but this epic sounding noise rock album with orchestral and jazz instruments was absolutely worth the wait. This is a musically dense record that, despise radical shifts in style and tone, feel perfectly placed together, and is helped by a theatrical vocal performance from Eugene S. Robinson. Not only does Robinson more than keep than keep up with the album’s dynamism, but his delivery sells the album’s story as much the lyrics themselves, and it all helps to create an album that, in terms of recent similar experimental rock, is only rivaled by the best Swans albums of the last decade. Bandcamp Spotify


3. Bell Witch — Mirror Reaper
bell witch

Mirror Reaper is Bell Witch’s tragic tribute to Adrian Guerra, their former drummer who passed away last year. It’s an epic, nearly 90 minute single track that beautifully uses the weight and atmosphere that comes with doom metal, as it slowly builds to passionately heavy guitars and screams that feel like the world around you is about to collapse. This is a challenging listen, both because of the length and because what it means is so clearly found within every note and word, but through all of its darkness and despair is a type of real beauty that I can only describe as “human.” Bandcamp Spotify


2. Tyler, the Creator — Flower Boy
tyler the creator

Odd Future’s former leader finally matures on Flower Boy, an album of shockingly honest lyrics about loneliness, depression, and queerness over largely lush and upbeat production. There’s real depth to be found here, with the dichotomy between loneliness and happiness found in both the words and beats, and Tyler, the Creator’s surprisingly reserved delivery and just slightly off singing (especially compared to smooth features from Frank Ocean and Rex Orange County) bring those emotions to life. This is the album that we’ve waiting for from Tyler, an artist who has always been talented, but has rarely been honest in his music. Spotify


1. Laurel Halo — Dust
laurel halo

I’ve been a fan of both Laurel Halo’s synth pop vocal work and her more elaborate non-vocal records, but Dust feels like the perfect merger and subsequent evolution of everything she has done to this point. This album is full of amazing and unusual textures, routinely merged with infectious rhythms and Halo’s monotone vocals that beautifully fit the album’s mix of the synthetic and the lush. However, the brilliance of Dust is how all of its pieces come together, as its a deceptively dense album with what seems like electronic magic happening in the background at every moment, and yet it’s so easy to just drift away and enjoy the wonder that Laurel Halo has created. Spotify

Honorable Mentions:
Akercocke — Renaissance In Extremis
Bing & Ruth — No Home of the Mind
Boris — Dear
Brother Ali — All the Beauty in This Whole Life
Carbon Based Lifeforms — Derelicts
Clark — Death Peak
Computer Graphics — Lo-Fi
CunninLynguists — Rose Azura Nijano
Dodecahedron — Kwintessens
Dying Fetus — Wrong One to Fuck With
Emel — Ensen
Helge Lien Trio — Guzuguzu
Lorde — Melodrama
METZ — Strange Peace
MIKE — MAY GOD BLESS YOUR HUSTLE
Ne Obliviscaris — Urn
NOÊTA — Beyond Life and Death
Pain of Salvation — In the Passing Light of Day
Path of Might — s/t
Pharmakon — Contact
Priests — Nothing Feels Natural
Renart — Fragments Séquencés
Schnellertollermeier — Rights
The Moon and the Nightspirit — Metonia
Tinariwen — Elwan
Ulver — The Assassination of Julius Caesar
Unsane — Sterilize
Yasmine Hamdan — Al Jamilat

The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 5 (20-1)

Top 25 EPs
Top 100 Albums — Part 1 (100-81)
Top 100 Albums — Part 2 (80-61)
Top 100 Albums — Part 3 (60-41)
Top 100 Albums — Part 4 (40-41)

20. Zeal and Ardor- Devil is Fine
zeal-and-ardor

Black metal and gospel music probably shouldn’t work together, but somehow Zeal and Ardor have managed to pull it off. Devil is Fine is a weird, experimental record for sure, but Zeal and Ardor don’t go overboard trying to force its styles to clash. Some songs use blackened screams and metal instrumentation more than others, while songs like the title track are catchy, evil-sounding blues with a backing tremolo. It switches between some of the most unusual metal music I’ve heard all year and music catchy enough that I could see it finding an audience far beyond the metal and experimental scenes. There’s also a general sense of evil in this album, with its devil-worshiping lyrics that are magnified by its delivery in a gospel and blues sound. Unfortunately, it partly still feels like a proof of concept at only 25 minutes, and takes up a decent chuck of that with interludes. It’s also been pulled from streaming sites in anticipation of a re-release in February, so you may have to wait to hear it again if you want to keep things 100% legal.
*not currently streaming*

19. Niechęć- s/t
niechec

Niechęć is proof that Poland’s unusual jazz scene goes beyond just the avant-garde. The band’s second self-titled album is a cross-genre celebration, incorporating sounds from all over the rock and jazz spectrum. However, Niechęć do more than just throw jazz rhythms into rock music. Their music is often bombastic, but can quickly settle into ghostly moments of calmness. The piano is the prominent instrument, but horns, electronics, and drums are featured as well. All have quite the range on this album, and much like other recent Polish jazz gems, it’s remarkable how cohesive this manages to be. It’s an album that seems impenetrable on paper, with its vast array of influences performed in an improvisational setting, but it never sounds lost or completely overbearing. This is a phenomenal dark jazz record crossed with a phenomenal post-rock record, and mixed with a bit of noise, electronic, psychedelic rock, spiritual jazz, and hard rock. It’s loud at times, beautiful at others, and completely unpredictable.
Bandcamp

18. Frank Ocean- Blonde
frank-ocean

Few albums seemed to be as highly anticipated as Frank Ocean’s latest, but at least for me, Blonde lived up the hype. Frank puts so much of himself out there, including the flaws, that we hear the humanity in his voice. This applies to the beat work as well, which is generally more stripped down than on Channel Orange, but still full of small details. It’s far more of a minimalist approach than you would expect from an R&B album, and it puts an emphasis on those small details and changes in rhythm. You get the sense that one person carefully worked through how each and every part should sound, and the production feels like an extension of the personal lyrics. Even the guests rarely feature full choruses or verses (with the exception of Andre 3000), but tend to fill small roles.It all adds up to one of the year’s most most deeply personal albums and a step forward for modern R&B.
Spotify

17. Roly Porter- Third Law
roly-porter

Third Law
sounds like the soundtrack to a horror film I very much want to see. It’s an exercise in tension and spacing, with Roly Porter using moments of calmness, and even silence, to build to sequences of harsh noise, violent clashes, and abrasive cuts. It reminds me of a how a master horror director can lull their audience into a false sense of security before a big scare. Porter has timing nailed down, and listening to this it’s no surprise that he’s scored films with how well he understands tension and the physical aspect of music. And to be clear, this album is more than just noise drops. Even in its long sections of ambiance, there is always something creepy and uneasy going on, with strings, synths, and light vocal melodies. Roly Porter does everything he can to make the listener feel uncomfortable, and it works.
Spotify | Bandcamp

16. Danny Brown- Atrocity Exhibition
danny-brown
I admit that I’ve never been as much of a Danny Brown fan as the rest of the internet seems to be. He’s talented, and it certainly shows on this album, but I’m always surprised that his voice doesn’t divide more people. With that being said, Atrocity Exhibition is the first album of his that really clicked with me. His voice is still as distinct as ever, but the production on this record is something special. There are raw trap beats, industrial hip-hop tracks, jazz samples, and a ton of experimentation. Most importantly, it all fits perfectly with Danny’s crazy voice and subject matter. On paper, his lyrics aren’t all that different from the typical hip-hop clichés, but Brown’s over-the-top stories about drugs and women are a little more clever than your typical rapper, and he seems to understand how ridiculous his persona is. All of that comes together to create an exciting, dynamic record that represents the gold standard for hip-hop production in 2016.
Spotify

15. Touché Amoré- Stage Four
touche-amore

As a genre that once stood for “emotional hardcore,” emo music is one that puts a tremendous amount of emphasis on the humanity of its creators. That emotion is at the core of Touché Amoré’s Stage Four, and talking about the album without that at the forefront would undermine its biggest strength. To put it simply, Stage Four is a concept album about the passing of frontman Jeremy Bolm’s mother, who died of cancer in 2014. There are songs where Bolm acts as a narrator, singing/screaming to the listener directly as he tells his story, while others have him sounding on the brink of tears as he speaks directly to his mother. Parts of Stage Four sound so personal that it’s hard not to wonder if you as the listener are really meant to be hearing it. It’s tragic material and Bolm’s performance captures the weight of it. Musically, however, Stage Four is very simple and on the lighter side of hardcore. The instrumentals acts mostly as a basis for the narrative, and often crescendo from light to heavy sections. It’s fine, but again, that’s not the point. It’s the emotion that makes this one special.
Spotify | Bandcamp

14. 2814- Rain Temple
2814
One year removed from transporting us into through vaporwave version of Neo Tokyo, the duo of HKE and  t e l e p a t h テレパシー能力者 return with something completely different. A lot of the typical vaporwave motifs are gone and replaced for more instrumentation, more techno, and more downtempo influences. It expands on many of the ideas found in last year’s 新しい日の誕生 , but not the ones that you may expect. For example, Rain Temple uses spacing and atmosphere incredibly well, but manages to be far more active than what we’ve come to expect from these artists. It doesn’t set up a specific time and place the way that their last album did, but instead manages gives us a consistent atmosphere (cyperpunk) and plays around with the instrumentation a lot more this time around. It’s a very different record from anything that HKE or t e l e p a t h テレパシー能力者 have made, but it’s also a more than worthy follow-up to last year’s breakthrough and a fantastic ambient release in its own right.
Spotify | Bandcamp

13. Marissa Nadler- Strangers
marissa-nadler

The best adjective I can use to describe Marissa Nadler’s Strangers is simply “haunting.” This is dark, dreamy record full of atmosphere in its music, and the lyrics and vocals only add to that. Nadler intentionally depersonalizes the lyrics, often telling stories of characters presented to us with the right amount of vagueness. Strangers is an album that always contains a mood and often a story, but never a full context to the people you are hearing about. They feel appropriately like strangers, and the folk/dream pop music that Nadler presents her stories over are appropriately lush. It’s dark, but not overwhelmingly so, and it rarely falls into the same traps that often plague folk records. This is in part due to the vocals, which are delivered with an incredible amount of control and subtlety. They’re powerful at times, but often subdued to the point of a whisper. Strangers just gorgeous to listen to, and it comes together as a both a fantastic folk record and one of the best “dark” dream pop albums to come out in some time.
Spotify | Bandcamp

12. Aesop Rock- The Impossible Kid
aesop-rock
The Impossible Kid feels like the natural next step for Aesop Rock. It’s a self-produced album that makes its themes a little more obvious for people who are turned off by the vagueness of Aesop’s lyrics, but still has the depth and abstract wordplay that fans love. The production is full of synths and guitars and feels distinct from anything else in the genre at the moment. There’s also an energy to it that extends to Aesop’s delivery, as he flows with a speed and passion that immediately engages the listener. As an emcee, Aesop Rock has always stood above his underground peers, but he’s also evolved so much as an artist. He subtly carries themes from one track to the next and has enough depth to his writing to reward close listening. The Impossible Kid, with both the words and production coming from the man himself, feels like the most purely Aesop Rock of Aesop Rock albums, and certainly his best since Labor Days at the very least. He’s evolved as a producer and a writer, and the result is a truly fantastic record from the man with the largest vocabulary in hip-hop.
Spotify | Bandcamp | Youtube

11. Radiohead- A Moon Shaped Pool
radiohead

It’s always hard for me to properly rate a Radiohead album. After all, the highs that this band has achieved are so monumental, and an album like A Moon Shaped Pool simply isn’t on the level of their best work. With that being said, there is some truly fantastic material here that would be the high point of even many great bands’ careers. Much of this album consists of tracks Radiohead have kept unreleased for years, and have re-recorded/altered to fit within this album. With that in mind, it’s remarkable A Moon Shaped Pool ends up sounding cohesive. Each song feels like a part of the same theme, as there’s a lush and melancholic feel to the project a as a whole. The electronic elements that have become such a staple of Radiohead are also more subtle in this album, as it’s much more a chamber/art pop record with an orchestral aesthetic. This is Radiohead at their most reserved, but it also has some of their catchiest and most instantly gratifying pop material the band has produced in years.
Spotify

10. Metá Metá- MM3
meta-meta
There’s been an interesting jazz-rock scene brewing in São Paulo in recent years, with Metá Metá (as well as solo work and collaborations from its members) at the forefront. MM3 introduced the collective to a new audience in 2016, and it’s their most focused record to date. Their influences are still vast, with elements of punk and hard rock, samba, noise, and various assortments of jazz music, but the tracks here are a little bit tighter and more accessible. There’s also a great passion and immediacy to them that makes me wish I could understand more of the lyrics. Each of the musicians is an exceptional talent, with vocalist Juçara Marçal delivering a powerful performance over some incredibly varied and often loud guitars, drums, and saxophones. MM3 is a chaotic album to be sure, but it’s also one that has catchy moments and builds to its chaos noticeably well. It’s simply one of the finest jazz-rock albums of recent years, and it’s about time the greater music world discovered what the Brazilian underground has been hiding.
Spotify

9. Anenon- Petrol
anenon
The saxophone is not exactly a new instrument to minimalist music, with Colin Stetson especially proving its worth in recent years. However, Brian All (Anenon) shows that there is plenty more than can be done in that realm. Petrol, his third full length release and easily his most expansive, is a simply a stunning piece of work. It uses a heavy dose of saxophone and moderate (but often dominant) touches of strings and percussion, while it stylistically takes elements of jazz, electronic, classical, and ambient music. Those styles are found in its structure as well, as Petrol was recorded as a series of improvisational sessions that have been edited for the record with digital sounds added. That allows All to be very and meticulous about the album’s pacing, while the instrumentation sounds beautifully organic. Petol is an interesting experiment between the physical and digital sides of music, and that in and of itself makes it worth listening to. However, it’s also a uniquely mesmerizing jazz album that deserved far more attention than it received in 2016.
Spotify | Bandcamp

8. Vektor- Terminal Redux
vektor

Vektor takes thrash metal to space with their first album in five years, and the results are breathtaking. Terminal Redux is a great example of looking to the past and creating something new. The production is modern, but that and a few subtleties taken from the recent influx of technical metal, are the only things that keep Terminal Redux from sounding like something that could have come out in the early 90s. Their influences are mostly taken from late 80s thrash bands, such as Kreator and Anihilator, with vocals reminiscent of early 90s death metal. On top of that, the lengthy songs have a ton of atmosphere and progressive tendencies that resemble something out of a Hawkwind or space rock album. It’s a combination that makes Terminal Redux an incredible achievement as a technical album, while it also shows off a range and ambition from a songwriting prospective that is unheard of in thrash metal. You’ve heard these components before, but rarely done this well, and never put together quite like this.
Spotify | Bandcamp

7. Street Sects- End Position
street-sects

Right off the bat, End Position is a punishing album. It presents a chaotic mix of industrial, noise, punk, and power electronics. And yet, through it’s dirty aesthetic and bombastic pacing, there’s unexpected bit of light that always seems to shine through at the perfect time. End Position has just enough melody to elevate it beyond just an album of industrial brutality and into some real creative territory. It would be strange to call this an “accessible” album in any way, but it’s also among the more approachable albums I’ve ever heard to use power electronics, and it doesn’t sacrifice intensity to do so. It’s just that Street Sects have found their own blend of abrasiveness. That blend of fast punk rock, pounding drums, industrial beats, and noise drops make for an oh-so-satisfying level of brutality. End Position is the debut record that impressed me most in 2016, and few albums are capable of pounding my skull in better.
Spotify | Bandcamp

6. A Tribe Called Quest- We Got It from Here… Thank You 4 Your Service
a-tribe-called-quest
A Tribe Called Quest could not have picked a more perfect time to drop their final album and their first in 18 years. Released just after the November election and towards the end of a year where death dominated the themes of music and the news regarding its creators, We Got It from Here… Thank You 4 Your Service is an inspiring politically-charged record that simultaneously reflects on marginalized groups in modern America and pays tribute to the late Phife Dawg, who passed away during the making of the album. These themes may not always sound easy to connect, but Phife and Q-Tip present their lyrics with a great deal of passion that ends up keeping the album focused. The beats are on point as well, with Tribe’s quintessential jazz samples found throughout the record. In 2016, they sound more timeless than old school, and that can be said for the album as a whole. This may be a classic group returning after nearly two decades, but so much of this album feels appropriate and almost necessary for hip-hop in 2016. This isn’t so much a return to the past as it is a powerful sets of voices speaking to us again when we need them most.
Spotify

5. Tanya Tagaq- Retribution
tanya-tagaq
If this were a list of the best vocal albums of 2016, Tara Tagaq’s Retribution would be firmly planted at #1. Tagaq’s Inuit throat singing blows me away every time I listen to it, and that vocal work is the centerpiece of the songwriting here. There’s so many layers to Tagaq’s voice and so much variety and emotion to her performance that I can’t help but be reminded of her mentor, Björk. However, Retribution is more than just a vocal showpiece. Tagaq continues to impress as a songwriter as well, as she creates unsettling and at times terrifying compositions throughout the album. Most the songs exist somewhere between experimental, minimalist, and rock music, but there’s an unexpected hip-hop track featuring Shad that works quite nicely. It’s eclectic to say the least, but it needs to be in order to satisfying the range of the vocals. Retribution culminates with a chilling cover of Nirvana’s “Rape Me,” a track that exemplifies Tagaq’s ability to work within Western songwriting and turn it into something completely outside of mainstream conventions. It’s a brilliant end to a brilliant album from one of modern music’s most interesting and talented artists.
Spotify

4. Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds- Skeleton Tree
nick-cave-and-the-bad-seeds
While much of Skeleton Tree was recorded before the tragic death of Nick Cave’s son in 2015, themes of grief surround the album. This is a dark and heartbreaking listen, but also a powerful one. From a musical standpoint, it’s one of the most minimalist albums Cave has released, and makes heavy use of drone and light electronic touches to build tension. This is especially true on its masterful opening track, which feels like a punch to the gut right from the start. Other songs are more piano-driven, but still stripped down. The compositions are actually some of the most interesting in the Bad Seeds discography, as they’re so far removed from the rock roots the band is known for. The vocals sound tragic and demand attention, but fit within the minimalist tone of the music. Nick Cave has always done grief well, but this feels like something else. It’s just more personal and tender, and it’s hard to turn away from it, even as a broken sounding man roughly sketches disturbing images with his voice. Skeleton Tree isn’t always an easy album to listen to, but it’s certainly an affecting one.
Spotify

3. Death Grips- Bottomless Pit
death-grips
Bottomless Pit is Death Grips doing their thing. That is to say, it’s an album that takes the core sound of the industrial hip-hop duo and sends it into strange places with amazing results. This might just be the craziest, rowdiest, and most aggressive Death Grips album to date, but it also has some of their most reserved tracks as well. It’s just that there are so few artists who willing to go this crazy in terms of constant experimentation with their sound, all while still sounding so distinct. MC Ride shouts his way through most of the record, even forgoing actual words at times. Most of the album is a shot of raw energy that rarely ever lets up, and is even successful when it does. No other album in 2016 had this kind of “break everything now” feel to, and it does so with consistently surprising production that varies throughout the record. From a musical standpoint Bottomless Pit sounds more directly influenced from punk rock than any prior Death Grips album, and it’s heavy on glitch and electronic as well. I have no idea where they go from here, but Death Grips continue to make raw, entertaining music that sounds like no one else.
Spotify

2 . Nicolas Jaar- Sirens
nicolas-jaar
I don’t really know where to start with Sirens, other than to say it really blew me away. It’s an album of constant unease and frequent stylistic shifts, and it makes for both an intricate experimental electronic record and an entertaining pop album. Jaar takes influences from all over (and well outside of) the electronic realm, and consistently merges them together in interesting and often surprising ways.  There’s certainly a political message at the core of Sirens, but it’s usually presented abstractly. Individual lines stuck with me throughout the year, and the variety in which Jaar produces allows him to get the most out of their delivery. That variety is really what impressed me most about Sirens, as for something that goes in this many different directions, what Jaar has produced here sounds incredibly focused. No two tracks sound even remotely similar, yet it all feels like its part of the same concept. As a whole, Sirens is challenging as both a musical journey and as a political statement. It also manages to be catchy and accessible enough to recommend to just about anyone with even a sliver of tolerance of experimental music.
Spotify

1. David Bowie- Blackstar
david-bowie
First and foremost, it’s impossible to separate David Bowie’s sudden death two days after the Blackstar‘s release from the album itself. After all, Bowie’s impending death is what this album is about. Blackstar was the rare opportunity for the world to hear a legendary artist confront their own death through their art, and that’s intrinsic to what makes this album special. It’s also the most experimental album Bowie ever put out, with its heavy emphasis on art rock, jazz, and electronic. It comes together into an absolute masterpiece of dark and atmospheric music. That atmosphere sets the tone for its lyrics, which are beautiful in both how abstract and honest they manage to be. Bowie continuously paints pictures of death, the afterlife, and memories of career, with motifs in the instrumentation that do the same. The vocals complete the tragic beauty of the record, as Bowie performs with a stunning passion that has a fair amount of uncertainty in its tone. “I’m dying too,” he rumbles towards the album’s end, as we hear his voice start to break. Blackstar is many things. It’s a tragic, epic, fascinating, and ultimately an essential listen. It’s also one of the great swan songs in modern music history, and the best album of 2016.
Spotify

Honorable Mentions:
Alfio Antico- Antico
Anna Högberg Attack- s/t
Ansome- Stowaway
Arashi- Semikujira
Be’lakor- Vessels
Black Mountain- IV
Céu- Tropix
Chthe’ilist- Le dernier crépuscule
Deakin- Sleep Cycle
Deathspell Omega- The Synarchy of Molten Bones
Fallujah- Dreamless
The Gerogerigegege- Moenai Hai
Horseback- Dead Ringers
In the Woods…- Pure
Inter Arma- Paradise Gallows
Kate Tempest- Let Them Eat Cake
Kayo Dot- Plastic House on Base of Sky
Kuedo- Slow Knife
Leon Vynehall- Rojus
Maria Usbeck- Amparo
Mizmor- Yodh
Mono- Requiem for Hell
Open Mike Eagle & Paul White- Hella Personal Film Festival
Pleasure Model- Kendo Dynamics
Sainkho Namtchylak- Like a Bird or Spirit, Not a Face
Schammasch- Triangle
Trap Them- Crown Feral
Valerio Tricoli- Clonic Earth

Thanks for reading!

The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 4 (40-21)

Top 25 EPs
Top 100 Albums — Part 1 (100-81)
Top 100 Albums — Part 2 (80-61)
Top 100 Albums — Part 3 (60-41)

40. Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith- Ears
kaitlyn-aurelia-smith
Ears
is an album of light contrasts. Much of it is very digital sounding, with Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith handling a wide of range of synths and digital production. However, there are also light woodwind and brass instruments that are frequently layered on top of those synths. This contrasts appears in the vocals as well, with Smith’s airy voice digitally filtered and often mixed lower than the instrumentation. This style works to give Ears a tender and oddly upbeat feel. It’s an album for night time listening that’s coated in cheery indie pop paint. My only complaint is that many songs end by fading out. It’s an obvious stylistic choice, but I would love to hear some of the tracks expand, especially when the 11 minute closer, “Existence in Unfurling,” is so fantastic.
Spotify | Bandcamp

39. Brian Eno- The Ship
brian-eno
The Ship
is the first Brian Eno album in over a decade to feature vocals. I wouldn’t say that’s necessarily the album’s strongest individual aspect, but it fits within its larger contest. Even with the vocals and a more pop-oriented closer, this is still largely an ambient album, and one that creates the ambiance of sinking ship. There are parts where everything is drifting slowly and lost in the open space of the ocean, while at other times its more dramatic and even cinematic sounding. That sound is interlaced with samples from old news broadcasts of sinking ships, adding even more claustrophobia to what is already a tense listen. The 20+ minute opener is the real crux of The Ship, but its closing cover of The Velvet Underground’s “I’m Set Free” is another highlight. That track is a gorgeous cover on its own, but it’s stunning in how dramatically it shifts from the rest of the record. It’s hard to explain, but it’s the perfect way to end an album that essentially amounts to being about death.
Spotify

38. Moonsorrow- Jumalten aika
moonsorrow

Moonsorrow have always existed on the bleaker, more spiritual side of folk metal. They make longer, more atmosphere songs that are less “fun” and more rooted in the Pagan mythology of the folk music they drawn from. Jumalten aika (Age of the Gods) is their darkest album yet, with more black metal influences, contrasted with gorgeous moments of minimalist folk music. Often times, the folk rhythms will merge within the heavier sections, and Moonsorrow have always done an outstanding job of building their lengthy tracks. Much of Jumalten aika sounds cold and nature-like, even in its heaviest sections, and to be clear, this is the heaviest Moonsorrow have ever sounded. It’s also one of the year’s most epic metal albums, but it reaches that sound in a way that is also beautiful and atmospheric.
Spotify

37. eMMplekz- Rook to TN34
emmplekz
Rook to TN34
is like what would have happen if King Missile made an industrial album. It’s a weird spoken word project with seemingly nonsensical social commentary played over industrial, techno, and electropop beats. It’s strange and charming, but all fits together in the end. There’s a sound collage feel to Rook to TN34, as Baron Mordant’s mundane delivery and one-liners sound like he might as well be pulling from random sources. The production adds to this feels, with Ekoplekz moving from brutal to upbeat in a way that fits with the oddity, and at times poignancy, of Mordant’s rambling. The lyrics are funny, clever, and often dark, but more than anything, they end up telling a fairly coherent story despite initially sounding like nonsense.
Spotify | Bandcamp

36. Masami Akita & Eiko Ishibashi- Kouen Kyoudai
masami-akita-and-eiko-ishibashi

Wading through Merzbow’s massive discography is a daunting task. He’ll release a double digit number of albums in any given year, and to make finding his material even more confusing, he’s released this collaboration with Eiko Ishibashi under his given name. Ishibashi is no stranger to noise music as well, although she will sometimes venture out into more accessible styles. That makes for an interesting contrast on Kouen Kyoudai, which builds slowly to Merzbow’s ear-piercing noise. Before that, Ishibashi plays a very sombre piano, and mixes in drums underneaths the harsh noise. The motifs here relate to playgrounds and childhood in general, and it sounds like childhood memories turning to nightmares. Out of all the albums on this list, I’m confident Kouen Kyoudai is the least accessible. However, for those who appreciate harsh noise, there’s some interesting layering here and a sentimentality unusual for the genre.
Spotify | Bandcamp

35. Katatonia- The Fall of Hearts
katatonia

The Fall of Hearts
is somewhat of a turning point for Katatonia. Their last record, Dead End Kings, felt like a default album. It wasn’t bad, but it was the first Katatonia album that really made me think the band was running out of ideas. Thankfully, this isn’t actually the case. The Fall of Hearts has them smartly taking their recent progressive influences and dialing back on some of their heavier parts, but in a way that still sounds distinctly Katatonia. There’s still a hint of gothic rock and a ton of atmosphere, but there’s also a more reserved style that allows Jonas Renske’s airy vocals to shine. This style also allows for more guitar solos and instrumental variation, as it’s simultaneously one of the more gloomy and technical albums Katatonia has released in some time. Yes, it’s their farthest away from doom metal yet, but Brave Murder Day Part 2 is never coming. This is the album that makes sense for Katatonia in 2016, and it builds on what the band has been doing well for the last decade, while leaving behind the parts that were becoming stagnant.
Spotify

34. Beyoncé- Lemonade
beyonce
No album made more of a cultural impact in 2016 than Lemonade. Chances are that you already you know what this, and statistically you have better chance of having heard this than any other album on this list. However, if you haven’t, I recommend it to even non-pop fans. It’s really an excellent album worthy of the praise it received this year. Beyoncé does an excellent job of storytelling on Lemonade, fusing the concepts of a woman dealing with the unfaithfulness of her partner and the struggles of being of a black woman in America. Those two concepts come together well, and it makes Lemonade a black woman power anthem that became a topic of controversy in 2016. Its lyrics don’t mince words, both in terms of how personal Beyoncé gets in her stories of cheating (people spent much of the year trying to figure out who “Becky with the good hair” was) and in its afrocentric imagery. Booming production and a strong vocal performance round things out to make this an album that won’t be soon forgotten, even in a current pop culture state that has the memory of a goldfish.
Tidal (subscription based)

33. Shabaka and the Ancestors- Wisdom of Elders
shabaka-and-the-ancestors
Nothing about the components of Wisdom of Elders is especially unusual. It’s a throwback to the days of spiritual jazz, but takes strong influences from African music as well. That combination isn’t new, and even last year there was an excellent spiritual jazz that found an audience in Kamasai Waashington’s The Epic. However, while Washington’s record was more ambitious, Shabaka Hutchings’ record feels tighter. Even at well over an hour, Wisdom of Elders flows beautifully and is easy to get lost in. It’s just as easy to forget how large the band is (eight musicians, seven from Johannesburg where the album was recorded) with how well the instruments play off of each other. The African roots of the album also merge well, and sound like a natural extension of its Pharaoh Sanders-inspired rhythms. Again, Wisdom of Elders isn’t going to revolutionize modern jazz, but it’s certainly among the most purely enjoyable experiences I had with the genre this year.
Spotify | Bandcamp

32. Ka- Honor Killed the Samurai
ka

After following up his chess-themed album cover with a title like Honor Killed the Samurai, I wouldn’t blame you if you expected Ka to sound like a long lost Wu-Tang Clan member. However, while the motifs are similar, Ka has a laid back flow and style all his own. You hear the sound of golden age New York hip-hop in his music, but it’s surrounded by a dark atmosphere and a lack of aggression that gives Honor Killed the Samurai a mysterious zen-like vibe. Ka’s quiet voice fits the samurai theme, as he comes off as calm and introspective, like you’re having a quiet conversation with him. The production helps this as well, with samples from martial arts films and overlooked jazz classics. It fits perfectly with Ka’s vocals, allowing the listener to vibe to his atmosphere and focus on his introspective, clever, and often dark lyrics.
Spotify

31. Skáphe- Skáphe²
skaphe
In a year with many fantastic black metal releases, I’m not sure I heard another one as disgusting as Skáphe². It absolutely nails the raw sound that I love from black metal, while finding new ways to innovate the genre. Psychedelic sounds are common throughout the record, as are moments of noise and layered atmosphere that gives Skáphe both a weight and a darkness. Everything here just feels so dirty, even for black metal. It moves at a methodical pace, as if Skáphe are slowly drowning the listener in mud and filth. Honestly, the imagery of drowning fits the album well. There’s a dark, depressing mood that runs through Skáphe², and it only adds to the heaviness. Obviously, this isn’t going to be for everyone, but those who like their metal as far outside of mainstream aesthetics as possible will find a special kind of stench here.
Bandcamp

30. Swans- The Glowing Man
swans

The Glowing Man is the first Swans album in awhile that didn’t completely blow me away. That says more about the quality of their recent work than it does about this record, however, as The Glowing Man is still an impressive epic. Like the two albums before it, this is a long album, sprawling two discs and nearly two hours. It feels a little too long, but that’s more because it takes awhile to get going. The second disc is the real highlight, with an immense amount of tension that only Swans could provide. Michael Gira has always been a master of repetition, and that’s never been more true on 25 minute epics like “Frankie M” and the title track. As a whole, the record is on the more subdued side for Swans, yet there’s an even greater obsession with rough textures and dissonance. It’s dense, sometimes disturbing, and even beautiful in certain moments.
Spotify

29. The Dillinger Escape Plan- Dissociation
the-dillinger-escape-plan

The supposedly final album from The Dillinger Escape Plan doesn’t necessarily reinvent the wheel, but it’s in many ways what the legendary mathcore band has building to for some time now. Dissociation is full of sudden rhythmic changes, moments of pure chaos, sounds that combine the different types of heaviness that come from punk and metal music, and sudden shifts to melody that bring it all together into a coherent package. They continue to tighten their style on each album, so their core sound continues to feel fresh, and there are plenty of moments of true experimentation as well. Few “math” bands can successfully venture into jazz or electronic music with as much success as DEP can, and the variety is truly something to behold, considering how absurdly chaotic their core sound can be. It probably won’t convert anyone who wasn’t already into The Dillinger Escape Plan, but it’s hard to imagine any fan not enjoying this album. It’s an outstanding mixture of everything they’ve done in their 20 year career, and a reminder of why this band has been so important to modern heavy music.
Spotify

28. clipping.- Splendor & Misery
clipping
clipping. let their aggressive side go wild on their Wriggle EP earlier in 2016, but their third full length album is a huge departure for them. Splendor & Misery is a dense and focused afrofuturist concept album a slave (only named Cargo #2331), a prison breakout, an AI computer. It’s an album that touches on a number of interesting themes and is richly detailed between the music and lyrics, but I don’t want to spoil where the story goes. I will just say that this is one of the tightest hip-hop concept albums I’ve ever heard, and it uses clipping.’s trademark static and wall-of-noise “beats” to set a claustrophobic space atmosphere and convey its message. There’s also direct influence from gospel musicand plenty of references to hip-hop history and afrofuturist novels. It’s a dense listen and understanding its many intricacies requires a time commitment far beyond its relatively short run time. However, Splendor & Misery is a step forward artistically for industrial hip-hop and will reward listeners patient enough to give it a chance.
Spotify | Bandcamp | Youtube

27. Blood Incantation- Starspawn
blood-incantation
Maybe some of my love for the brand of grimy lo-fi death metal found on Blood Incantation’s debut is due to the sheer number of overproduced tech death albums that came out in 2016. Starspawn is just stands out so much in the death metal scene, as they achieve a real rawness that is rare for modern bands in the genre. In some ways it feels a throwback to early 90s death metal, but it doesn’t sound dated either. There’s plenty of modern influences here, especially from doom metal, the current wave of atmospheric metal, and even the tech death that it does so well to differentiate itself from. At its core though, this is brutal and dynamic album, and that’s what matters. It’s honestly very impressive from a technical standpoint, but it’s even more so in terms of how well the songs progress and the mood it creates. Starspawn is an amazing debut and I can’t wait to hear more from Blood Incantation.
Spotify | Bandcamp

26. Innercity Ensemble- III
innercity-ensemble
Innercity Ensemble is a collective of experimental Polish jazz musicians, and they do things a little differently than most free improvisational groups. I’ve always been impressed with how cohesive their projects sound, even with seven musicians from different sides of the experimental world coming together. Their third record takes this even farther, with beautiful passages that take inspiration from different eras and scenes of jazz music, interlaced with folk, noise, and drone. It’s incredibly diverse, and it never feels like the musicians are simply noodling around. This is true even when surprising instruments enter the sound, as the credits include granite blocks, congas, flugelhorns, and two different darabukka players, among plenty of others. It sounds like the musicians had fun recording this, but also focused on getting the sound exactly the way they wanted to. That is to say, it has the positives of improvised music without sounding directionless or overwhelming.
Bandcamp | Youtube

25. Show Me the Body- Body War
show-me-the-body

Real authentic punk rock can be a hard thing to experiment with. That’s why it’s surprising to hear how much variety and experimentation is crammed into Body War, the debut album from New York post-hardcore band Show Me the Body. The riffs alternate between slow and heavy sludge, harsh industrial, and a funk rhythm that sound like what would happen if Red Hot Chili Peppers got really, really rebellious.  There’s also a strong hip-hop influence on this album, including a surprising strong industrial rap song to close thing out. Body War is constantly changing and feels intense because of it. It’s an abrasive album that somehow feels natural, and it does something different for punk music without losing any of the immediacy and passion necessarily for the genre.
Spotify | Soundcloud | Youtube

24. Solange- A Seat at the Table
solange
There is a song on A Seat at the Table called “F.U.B.U” (For Us By Us), preceded by an interlude in which Master P states “If you don’t understand my record, then you don’t understand me, so this is not for you.” In some ways, there are parts of Solange’s unapologetically afrocentric album that I can’t understand and there parts that do make me feel like an outsider listening to it. That’s fine. I still love it. A Seat at the Table is a record that obviously means something, especially to its performers, and that comes across regardless of how much or how little you understand the significance of a black woman’s hair, for example. Individually, these are fantastic and meaningful pop songs, and they work both in and out of the context of the album. Most of the songs are simply yet beautifully arranged, and use old-school jazz, soul, and R&B as its foundation. The compositions are aided by Solange’s vocal performance, which shows great range in both its technique and emotional depth. That and the obvious passion here makes A Seat at the Table an album can be easily recommend, even to people it’s not necessarily “for.”
Spotify

23. Alcest- Kodama
alcest
After a mildly disappointing album in 2012 and a very disappointing album in 2014, Alcest have finally got their intensity and their originality back. As Kodama proves, those two are not necessarily one and the same. Alcest were one of the first bands to mix shoegaze and black metal and are pioneers of the current “blackgaze” scene, but they’ve never been as heavy or “black” as many of their followers or even contemporaries. Kodama is a return to the beautiful, lush side of Alcest that is aided, not dominated, by its heavier moments. The band plays with style and intensity, often moving from spiraling guitars and raw screams to airy dream pop. However, this record also marks a return to Alcest’s flow. No blackgaze band and has been able to flow through a track like Alcest, keeping the dreaminess and beauty intact through its heaviness. Their transitions are the farthest thing from jarring, which is not easy to do with a sound as dominating as black metal. Welcome back, Alecest. We missed you.
Spotify | Bandcamp

22. Car Seat Headrest- Teens of Denial
car-seat-headrest
It’s been a few years since I’ve really gotten into an “indie rock” record (and even longer since I’ve felt like I’ve had an accurate definition of what that term means), but Car Seat Headrest changed that this year. Teens of Denial sounds the early 90s indie rock album I never knew I wanted in 2016. That’s not to say that this is a pure Pavement copycat and could have been released 20 years ago. Far from it. Instead, Teens of Denial is an album that is influenced more directly by the indie rock stars of yesteryear and builds on that in a way that is distinctive to the modern times. Will Toledo’s lyrics deal with his own life as millennial and include some richly detailed stories, some meant to be interpreted more literally than others. The songwriting is a strong point, and Toledo pairs his personal lyrics with musical influences that have obviously left an impact on him. Teens of Denial makes no attempt to hide where it comes from, and it’s more enjoyable because of it. It’s a little too long, but it’s also a damn good lo-fi record that makes a classic style sound relevant in 2016.
Spotify

21. Cult of Luna & Julie Christmas- Mariner
cult-of-luna-and-julie-christmas
Well, here’s a collaboration I didn’t see coming. Prolific Swedish sludge band Cult of Luna teams up with Julie Christmas, the former frontwoman of criminally underrated New York post-hardcore band Made Out of Babies. Christmas’ raw scream and sharp sung vocals are distinct to say to the least, but the two parties merge well here. The range of Christmas’ voice forces Cult of Luna out of their slow and heavy comfort zone and often into more dynamic territory. That’s not to say this isn’t slow or heavy, as it’s still primarily a sludge album, but it has to take risks to match how dynamic the vocals are. Those risks includes adding more complexity beyond the scope of the usual sludge record, softer segments, and a concept about space that works its way into the instrumentals as well. This results in one of the most interesting and varied albums Cult of Luna have ever made, and one of the most uniquely intense sludge albums in years.
Spotify | Bandcamp

Next: The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 5 (20-1)

The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 3 (60-41)

Top 25 EPs
Top 100 Albums — Part 1 (100-81)
Top 100 Albums — Part 2 (80-61)

60. Preoccupations- s/t
preoccupations

A new name may not bring an entirely new sound for the Canadian post-punk band formerly known as Viet Cong, but their first release as Preoccupations is a nice step forward. There’s an obvious throwback here to an 80s style, but Preoccupations still maintains their own original sound. Their influences include the traditional post-punk acts, but there are obvious nods to art punk, indie rock, and even darkwave. Preoccupations occupies a space somewhere between new wave and no wave, and does so with a super spacey, slightly noisy sound and some consistently strong songwriting. It isn’t a complete 180 from their Viet Cong days, but it’s a bit tighter, and it’s hard to complain about a band playing post-punk this well in 2016.
Spotify | Bandcamp

59. öOoOoOoOoOo- Samen
ooooooooooo
Pin-Up Went Down’s Asphodel is back with a new project that takes the basic sound of her old band and makes it even crazier. The best way I can describe Samen is if Pin-Up Went Down added more electronic and jazz elements to their Mr. Bungle-meets-Unexpect blend of avant-garde metal. It’s remarkable how off-the-wall this album can get, while always returning to moments of pure pop fun. It never takes itself too seriously (as you might expect from an album with consecutive tracks called “Fucking Freaky Futile Freddy” and “Meow Meow Frrru”), and it’s full of surprises. Give it a listen and have a blast hearing where it goes.
Spotify | Bandcamp

58. Tomutonttu- Trarat
tomutonttu
Tomutonttu is the solo project of Jan Anderzén, the main man behind Finland’s Kemialliset Ystävät. Trarat is his debut under that moniker, and it’s somehow even stranger than your average Kemialliset Ystävät album. It still takes many of the same influences, with psychedelic folk and electronic among the core parts of the sound, and it still has Anderzén’s odd sample choices and liberal interpretations for what can be used as an instrument. However, Trarat is more of an electroacoustic album, and it’s unlike anything else I’ve heard in that style. It’s almost glitch-like in the way that it moves, with odd sounds suddenly starting and stopping at even odder times. Yet underneath that maximalist exterior is a more minimalist folk and drone sound. That combination, strange is at may sound, results in a charming and certainly weird record, and it successfully differentiates itself from Anderzén’s other charming and weird records.
Spotify | Bandcamp

57. Raime- Tooth
raime

Raime’s Tooth is far from the most varied album I heard this year. Most of its songs use a synth line for the entirely of the piece and layer other sounds over and around it. Tooth is either going to drive you insane with its repetition or pull you in with its ambiance. The tracks here are very simple, but they are also are vast and ripe with subtlety. They’re ripe with mystery as well, as there’s a cold, hypnotizing vibe to this record that is goes beyond description. In terms of influences, ambient, industrial, and dub are the most obvious, but Raime also take influence from punk music. That gives Tooth a bit of intensity and even humanity that is often lacking from electronic that is this stripped down.
Spotify | Bandcamp

55. Leonard Cohen- You Want It Darker
leonard-cohen
The last album from legendary singer/songwriter Leonard Cohen is not only the best he’s put out in nearly two decades, but it’s also one of the most interesting of his career. Like the title suggests, You Want It Darker is a much darker album than the usual Cohen affair. Death, loss, and uncertainty surround this record, but that’s not the say it’s all doom and gloom either. There’s a fight against that darkness that lingers here, and Cohen’s rough delivery brings credence to its lyrics. The strength of the album, like most from Cohen, is its songwriting, but I ended up liking more the arrangements than I usually do from him. The sameness of his vocal performance works here because of how connected the themes are between songs and how willing he is to bring lyrics and instrumental passages back in later tracks. It’s a very different Leonard Cohen album, but an excellent swan song to a legendary career.
Spotify

55. Jachna / Mazurkiewicz / Buhl- Dźwięki ukryte
jachna-mazurkiewicz-buhl
The Instant Classic label continues to put out gem after gem from the Polish jazz scene, and this collaborative effort from Wojciech Jachna (trumpet), Jacek Mazurkiewicz (double bass), and Jacek Buhl (drums) is one such release. The three instruments merge well together, and both Jachna and Mazurkiewicz contribute electronics to the sound as well. Some of these are softer and play with the melody, while others are add walls of noise to the mix. The chemistry of the trio is simply fantastic, to the point where I would love to know how much of Dźwięki ukryte is improvised. That organization makes it an experimental record that can be approached by those who turned off the by the more dissonant side of free jazz, while also offering something unique to those who aren’t.
Spotify | Bandcamp | Youtube

54. Oathbreaker- Rheia
oathbreaker

As one of the more interesting hardcore bands of recent years, Oathbreaker took a huge risk with Rheia. This album represents a major stylistic shift for them, with their crust punk sound changing to a more trendy black metal/shoegaze or “blackgaze” one. Thankfully, Oathbreaker do far more than simply copy Deafheaven or Alcest, and end up with one of the strongest and most original albums to come out of the recent blackgaze wave. The biggest reason for this is Caro Tanghe’s vocals, which translate exceptionally well to the new sound. She maintains her passionate scream from her hardcore days, but can switch to a more blackened growl when necessary and also mix in some vibrato-heavy clean vocals from time to time. Rheia starts to lose steam in his second half, but its highlights and exceptional first half make it must for any fan of the blackgaze sound.
Spotify | Bandcamp

53. NV- Binasu
nv

The debut solo album from Russia’s Kate Shilonosova (NV) is a wonderfully upbeat collection of pop tunes that take elements from all over the 80s pop and electronic spectrum. The result is a catchy and accessible album that also manages to be oddly experimental. The familiar 80s sounds are there, but they way they are put together always sounds just a little strange. Everything always ends up fun, catchy, and pleasant, but with such a waterfall of synth washing over it that it ends up coming across as vaporwave-like with how strange and pleasant it can sound at the same time. This gives Binasu a certain charm that really works with its sound, and the often beautiful yet heavily accented vocals only add to that. It’s certainly simple, but this is also a thoroughly entertaining debut that makes for one of the most fun pop listens of the year.
Spotify | Bandcamp

52. Nails- You Will Never Be One of Us
nails

At just over 20 minutes long, You Will Never Be One of Us is the shortest album on this list. Hell, it wouldn’t even be long for the EP list. But that’s the way hardcore operates. It prioritizes short bursts of intensity, and Nails have certainly made an intense album. This is a non-stop brutal assault of hardcore and extreme metal music, with riffs that sound sludge-y and fast at the same time. While the riffs merge the heaviness of punk and metal, the songwriting takes cues from both as well. Most tracks are brief, with fast riffs and drums that sound like rhythmic assault with a blunt instrument. However, there are also a few solos and bits of melody that pierce through very briefly, giving us just a bit of a break from the pure unadulterated brutality that Nails has to offer.
Spotify

51. Kornél Kovács- The Bells
kornel-kovacs

2016 ended up being a pretty good year for house music, despite its major players being either absent or past their relevancy. However, no house album in 2016 got to the dance roots of the genre more than Kornél Kovács’ The Bells. This is a fun record that slightly tones down the humor Kovács has been known for as a live DJ on his EPs, but still keeps the creativity and playfulness. This are easily the most atmospheric collection of songs Kornél Kovács has released thus far, and it shows Kovács expanding as an artist without losing what makes him great in the first place. That is to say, you can dance to this, and you should. In fact, no album I heard in 2016 was more purely danceable than The Bells, and while it does have a few duds, songs like “BB” and the title track are among the most fun I had with electronic music this year.
Spotify

50. Lustmord- Dark Matter
lustmord
As a pioneer of dark ambient, Lustmord is no stranger to otherworldly atmospheres. However, Dark Matter takes that more literally. Lustmord’s latest is made up of deep space samples collected from NASA and other public libraries of astronomical sounds. It’s manipulated to fit a rhythm, but that there’s even a thought of musical time is deceptive. The whole album has great weight to it with how deep the samples are to being with, and how distorted Lustmord makes them. Listening to Dark Matter feels like pushing through a dense atmosphere in order to get to an open center. It’s hard to focus on its details at first because of the amount of feedback and rumbling surrounding it. Essentially, it’s the musical equivalent of exploring deep space.
Spotify

49. The Body & Full of Hell- One Day You Will Ache Like I Ache
the-body-and-full-of-hell

One of the heaviest slow bands in music today (The Body) teams up with one of the heaviest fast bands in music today (Full of Hell). The result is an album that alternates between tense moments of drone and full on noise/industrial/powerviolence assault. The two artists work well off of each other, but The Body takes the lead in the slower sections, and Full of Hell’s added instrumentation and vocals work to build the tension and tease its more chaotic moments. Once those chaotic Full of Hell moments hit, The Body’s noise/drone works as a nice backdrop in the same way that Merzbow’s power electronics did on his Full of Hell collaboration a few years back. I wouldn’t say it’s the absolute best album in either band’s discography, but One Day You Will Ache Like I Ache is still a very good record that represents a slightly different brand of noise for both artists.
Spotify | Bandcamp

48. Jameszoo- Fool
jameszoo

The debut album from Dutch producer Jameszoo is full of surprises and is oozing with potential. His style mixes free jazz with wonky and different blends of electronic music into a sound he calls “naive computer jazz.” Fool is full of experimentation and strange sounds playing off one another, but the tracks come across as the right amount of challenging. There’s a lot wide ranging ideas here that come together in interesting and surprisingly approachable ways. Throughout the record, Jameszoo throws in dashes of bossa nova, g-funk, and even some sounds that I associate more with noise and musical concrete than anything in the electronic or jazz realm. At its core, this is an experimental record and an intriguing at that. It throws a lot at the wall and occasionally falls short, but the vast of majority of Fool makes for a fascinating listen.
Spotify

47. Denzel Curry- Imperial
denzel-curry
There aren’t many trap albums I would praise for its flow and lyrics, but Denzel Curry’s Imperial is far from your normal trap album. Curry’s rapid fire flow is impressive to say the least, and he delivers his lines with intensity that both demands the listener’s attention and meshes perfectly with the 808s blaring behind him. The production is also a highlight, as the beats strike a nice mixture of raw and atmospheric. It provides a surprisingly nice canvas for Curry’s equally raw lyricism, while also helping to creature some catchy choruses. Imperial is the rare album that works both as a collection of trap bangers and as a collection of lyrical hardcore tracks. It simultaneously sounds like what trap could be in the hands of a great emcee and the natural evolution of hardcore hip-hop.
Spotify | Soundcloud | Hot New Hip-Hop (Download)

46. Motion Graphics- s/t
motion-graphics

There’s something to be said for an album when my biggest criticism of it is that it’s far too short. Clocking in at just at 29 minutes, this inventive little glitch pop record left me wanting more like few other albums in 2016. It makes the most of its time, however, as there’s a ton on going in every track. Few songs have the same rhythm as the last, and while one section might sound like the synths of Oneohtrix Point Never mixed with Animal Collective, the next can bring in some glitchy RnB ala Clarence Clarity or even some classic Kraftwerk or Yellow Magic Orchestra influences. Despite its constant activity, nothing about Motion Graphics feels rushed. It gives off a chill vibe throughout and it uses its glitchier moments well to transition. All of this makes for a fantastic debut that positions Motion Graphics as a producer to watch moving forward.
Spotify

45. Sturgill Simpson- A Sailor’s Guide To Earth
sturgill-simpson
While Sturgill Simpson’s major label debut sees him straying a little bit from his outlaw country roots, it’s hard to argue with the results. A Sailor’s Guide to Earth is Simpson’s most varied and accessible album to date, as its still rooted in the sound of Waylon Jennings and other outlaw artists, but takes more influence from soul, psychedelic rock, and pop music. It’s a wonderfully creative musical adventure full of brass instruments, keyboards, and synths with Sturgill’s southern voice booming over them. A Sailor’s Guide to Earth also acts a concept album with Simpson speaking directly to his young son about navigating his life through the metaphor of a ship sailing. It’s a tender lyrical album with beautiful and bold music around it, and it makes A Sailor’s Guide to Earth a landmark album for modern country.
Spotify

44. Fire! Orchestra- Ritual
fire-orchestra
Mats Gustafsson is now three albums deep into his experimental big band project, Fire! Orchestra, and Ritual sees him making meaningful changes its sound. The massive number of musicians has dropped from 29 to 21, and the songs are about the half the length of the 20+ minute epics found in the first two records. Still, this is a Mats Gustafsson record through and through, with deceptively catchy riffs juxtaposed with noise and moments of experimental clutter. For a musician known for making music as experimental as Gustafsson, Fire! Orchestra is quickly becoming one of his most organized projects. Maybe that’s out of necessity with the number of musicians involved, as it would be a mess otherwise, but Ritual is a very tight and focused jazz album.
Spotify

43. Furia- Księżyc milczy luty
furia
Poland’s Furia has long been an underrated gem in the underground metal scene. With Księżyc milczy luty (translates to “Moon Silent Severe”), they’ve released one of the densest and most varied black metal albums of 2016. It takes awhile for the vocals to come in, and even when they do, they rarely have the roughness you might expect from black metal. Furia are most interested in atmosphere and there’s a bluesy power to both the vocals and the guitar work rarely found in the genre. In terms of mood, there’s a definite darkness to it, as well as a cold and haunting feeling. It moves slowly, almost at a drone or doom metal pace at times, and builds tension to its more chaotic parts. As a black metal album, it’s something far outside of the genre’s usual boundaries and much more minimalist. However, it’s heavy and focused enough to still please anyone but the most traditionalist of fans.
Bandcamp | Youtube

42. Crying- Beyond the Fleeting Gales
crying
Power pop and chiptune are not exactly genres I frequent. That’s why Crying’s full length debut is one of 2016’s biggest surprises for me. There’s something just so infectious about Beyond the Fleeting Gales. From its gleefully upbeat pop melodies to its video game motifs that bring a smile to my face, everything about this album exudes happiness. It’s also an original take on the pop genre, and there’s a good amount of variety throughout its relatively brief run time. The chiptune influences aren’t overbearing, as the retro sound never dominate the production. It all comes together into a cohesive record, and one that is far more than the sum of its parts. This is one of my favorite debut albums of 2016, and it’s legitimately one of the fun things I listened to this year.
Spotify | Bandcamp

41. The Drones- Feelin Kinda Free
the-drones

Feelin Kinda Free is a tense, experimental album from one of modern rock’s most interesting bands. Musically, it’s chaotic and feels all over the place, yet remains consistently interesting and works purely as an experimental post-punk album. However, the album’s tumultuous instrumentation meshes beautifully with the tense, misanthropic tone of the lyrics that deal with political turmoil, terrorism, and violence. That’s the success of Feelin’ Kinda Free. It’s works as both a political album and as an experimental rock album, and it’s a perfect example of using noise and harsh sounds to convey a deeper message. And the fact that (spoiler alert) Feelin Kinda Free is not the highest drone-influenced art rock album from an Australian band on my list this year is more a weird anomaly than any real indication of its quality.
Spotify

Next: The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 4 (40-21)

The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 2 (80-61)

Top 25 EPs
Top 100 Albums — Part 1 (100-81)

80. Neurosis- Fires Within Fires
neurosis
For many years, Neuroris has been one of the most innovative bands in all of metal music. However, the atmospheric and slightly straightforward Fires Within Fires has the band spinning their wheels a bit. The final two tracks elevate things and the latter half is really the part of the album that shines. That’s where Neurosis proves once again that they can create subtle and sombre sludge that goes beyond the expectations of the genre. This is a band with an obviously slow and heavy sound, but they’ve always done a remarkable job of building tension and keeping the listener engaged. It’s a shame it takes so long to get to great parts of Fires Within Fires, but the latter half makes this album essential for sludge metal, and even Neurosis at their worst is better than the vast majority of the genre.
Spotify | Bandcamp

79.- Tomorrow the Rain Will Fall Upwards- Wreck His Days
tomorrow-the-rain-will-fall-upwards
Wreck His Days
is much darker album than its water colored cover album art would suggest. At its core, this is an ambient dub and dark jazz record that glides along in a shroud of mystery. That mystery is aided by the anonymous nature of Tomorrow the Rain Will Fall Upwards, who has yet to reveal their identity. There’s a few known features (from HTRK’s Jonnine Standish and These Immortal Souls’ Genevieve McGuckin), but the only other sounds that can be traced to identifiable humans are vocal samples that show a working class rising up over gloomy synth loops. Wreck His Days is clearly a political album, with its samples taken mostly from feminist and socialist sources. However, the haunting synths and the space in between those samples give off the feeling that there’s more here than there first appears.
Spotify | Bandcamp

78. Mamiffer- The World Unseen
mamiffer
The husband and wife duo of Aaron Turner (Isis, Old Man Gloom) and Faith Coloccia have made a very pretty album in The World Unseen. It combines post-rock, drone, and dream pop into a lush and atmospheric package, and it’s honestly the first Mamiffer release that has grabbed me in awhile. This is partly because The World Unseen feels so focused towards its dreamy aesthetic, and partly because the emphasis on the drone and dream pop sides of Mamiffer are more prevalent here. There’s less guitar on this album in general, with piano taking over as the lead instrument. When the guitar does appear, it’s usually heavy and comes with a heavy dose of feedback and noise. That may not sound like the recipe for a “pretty” album, but The World Unseen never loses its dreamy ambiance, even in its darkest moments, and Coloccia’s vocal melodies feel like they’re softly floating through this dream.
Bandcamp

77. Winterhorde- Maestro
winterhorde
Winterhorde takes black metal to a place that feels almost at odds with the genre’s origins. As opposed to the often bleak, lo-fi nature of black metal, Maestro has melodic vocals with choirs, orchestral instruments, and rock opera writing. It’s a risky choice, but a good one. The vocals are powerful, the instrumentation is varied and technical, and it manages to keep its blackened roots among its symphonic chaos. Symphonic black metal is nothing new, but few other bands in that genre take influences from the modern wave of power and symphonic metal. Maestro sounds as much like Nightwish or Epica as it does Emperor, only much heavier than anything pure symphonic metal can offer. Somehow, someway, Winterhode have made a black metal opera. That’s pretty awesome.
Spotify | Bandcamp

76. case / lang / veirs- s/t
case-lang-veirs
The first collaborative album between k.d. Lang, Neko Case, Laura Veirs is a successful one. All three artists bring their distinctive sounds to the table in a way that sounds more cohesive than I could have expected. The backgrounds of all three are varied, with indie pop, folk, and alt-country found throughout their discographies, and the album ends up as a beautiful mixture of those sounds. All three artists share vocal duties and they get the best results on the tracks where they trade off in more or less equal parts. However, even the tracks dominated by one singer/songwriter are well written and pleasant to listen. Most would be quality solo tracks by their respective artist, and those tracks are still made better by the presence of other two musicians.
Spotify

75. Ian William Craig- Centres
ian-william-craig

Ian William Craig packs a lot into Centres. I mean that both in terms of its length and the incredible amount of variety it contains for an album of its kind. Centres could most easily be described as an ambient or drone album, but that would be simplifying it. There are moments of extended tape loops that build to heavy drone and lush soundscapes, while there also sections that are more akin to ambient pop. Centres starts and ends with very different versions of the same track, with the opener sounding like an ultra-digitized and slowed down pop song and the later sounding almost like an acoustic demo from a singer/songwriter. The vocals, which are used sparingly, can take some getting used to, but they aren’t the focus. Like the tape music it’s influenced by, Centres is about the journey and how things change over time. It’s certainly active, and that works as both a strength and a weakness at times, but the payoff is ultimately worth it.
Spotify | Bandcamp

74. Injury Reserve- Floss
injury-reserve
Arizona hip-hop trio Injury Reserve bring a ton of energy to their sophomore album, Floss. Rappers Steppa J. Groggs and Ritchie With a T frequently sound like they were shot out of a cannon as they flow over some fantastic production from Parker Corey. Many of the songs have laid back jazz beats, with a few heavier cuts as well. However, there’s energy throughout the whole record, as even the more relaxed beats are full of small intricacies. Some of the lyrics can be corny, but they’re more than made up for by incredibly witty ones. Lines like “Man, I’m dressed like Carlton / I’m the black Ben Carson” stand out more than the duds. Injury Reserve make it known that the want the industry to take notice, and if Floss is any indication, they’re on their way up.
Spotify | Soundcloud | Youtube | Download

73. Devin Townsend Project- Transcendence
devin-townsend-project
Transcendence 
is the seventh Devin Townsend Project album since 2009, and at this point, fans of Devin Townsend know what to expect. Few artists in progressive music have successfully merged pop and progressive metal like Devin has, and the latest Project record feels like a natural step forward for the band. The core sound is intact, but there’s a lot more atmosphere this time around. Transcendence is a far dreamier and more abstract record than any other in Townsend’s discography, and his ridiculously varied vocal performance works perfectly with this newfound atmosphere. There’s some great instrumental work as well, with long, spacey solos that contrast nicely with some of the album’s heavier moments, and it never loses the sense of fun that Devin Townsend has always been known for.
Spotify

72. Oranssi Pazuzu- Värähtelijä
oranssi-pazuzu
Värähtelijä is an album of special moments. It’s certainly flawed, as it’s a bit too long and doesn’t always play by its strengths, but there are times on here where Oranssi Pazuzu seems like they’ve really figured the whole psychedelic black metal thing out. The biggest difference between this and past Oranssi Pazuzu albums is that Värähtelijä follows less of a black metal structure and pulls more directly from psychedelic rock. The tracks here feel like long, hazy jam sessions with screams and metal aesthetics, but with the feel of psychedelic music at its core. They don’t try to be dynamic, as much as they snap the listener into a trance. Otherworldly space rock sounds help that as well. Again, not every moment of Värähtelijä nails that sound (otherwise it would likely be in my top 20), but even as a whole, this feels like a huge step in the right direction for psychedelic black metal.
Spotify | Bandcamp

71. Bat for Lashes- The Bride
bat-for-lashes
The Bride
presents a bit of a dichotomy for Natasha Khan. From a conceptual standpoint, The Bride is her most ambitious album yet. From a musical standpoint, it’s among her simplest. The story of the album involves a bride whose husband dies in a car crash on the way to the altar. That story is presented theatrically and with a great deal of subtlety in Khan’s performance. It’s clearly the focus of the record, and that combined with its dark and gloomy atmosphere is enough to carry it. Musically, The Bride moves slowly and exists somewhere between synthpop and Kate Bush-style art pop. It has quite a few ethereal passages as well, which helps create a sombre mood for the album’s story. Again, it’s not the most musically varied or complex thing in the world, but few 2016 albums told a better story than this one, and there’s some real beauty here as well.
Spotify

70. Marillion- Fuck Everyone and Run
marillion
In a year where progressive rock music was largely stuck in the past, I give Marillion a lot of credit for returning with a relevant album. F E A R is a very political record, broken up into three long sections, with a shorter track between each one. That format allows Marillion to tell a series of fairly detailed stories relating to the rise of hypernationalism, among other topics. There’s a part of me that felt a little weird hearing protest music in this style, but the lyrics on F E A R come across as genuine. It also manages to be far more than just a partisan album, as it’s more a plea for humanism than anything else, and lacks the smug attitude that made certain political tracks unbearable in 2016. F E A R is also very solid from a musical standpoint, with enough variety and technicality to please any fan of progressive music. It’s a return to the prog epics of yesteryear, not because it blatantly copies them, but because it actually has something to say and a story worth telling.
Spotify

69. SubRosa- For This We Fought the Battle of Ages
subrosa

In the last few years, Utah’s SubRosa has quietly become of the one most distinct voices in sludge and doom metal. Their heavy use of violins and strong songwriting chops give their songs a great deal of power and emotion. This is on full display on For This We Fought the Battle of Ages, especially in its latter half. Few metal bands can create music that is simultaneously this heavier and this somber, and tracks like the closer “Troubled Cells” reach a level of emotional complexity than few doom metal bands can achieve. If you want your doom metal a little more orchestral, a little more gothic, and a lot more beautiful, SubRosa is a band you need to be listening to.
Spotify | Bandcamp

68. Paul Jebanasam- Continuum
paul-jebanasam
Paul Jabanasam is quickly becoming a name to watch in drone music. His second solo album is three long glitchy drone tracks that largely sound like static coming from a reactor, yet still sound rooted in classic music. The static starts to get a bit heavier and more cinematic as it goes on, and that makes Continuum the type of album that gets more engaging as it progresses. As much as I like drone, I’ve heard far too many albums in the genre that lose steam and fail to make meaningful changes across the course of a full length project. That’s not to say Continuum is the most varied thing I’ve ever heard, but it has its sound and builds to a worthwhile conclusion without becoming tedious.
Spotify | Bandcamp | Soundcloud

67. Ulcerate- Shrines of Paralysis
ulcerate
Technical death metal seemed to be the metal trend of 2016. Ulcerate are certainly one of the reasons for its rise in popularity, and Shrines of Paralysis sits well above the vast majority of the tech death field. It’s not even that Ulcerate is more technical than their peers, although they are among the elites in that category, but more than the band are just better at writing songs. Their tracks are far more brutal, far more dynamic, and far more atmospheric than the norm for the genre. Their sound is chaotic, and Ulcerate waste no time building to their brutality. There are a few moments of pure atmosphere that break things up, but for the part this is a brutal assault throughout. It’s among the heaviest, most intense, and most technical metal albums of the year, and avoids the usual pitfalls of the tech death genre.
Spotify | Bandcamp

66. Yoshimi- Tokyo Restricted Area
yoshimi

First and foremost, Yoshimi’s Tokyo Restricted Area is a Dream Catalogue release that has nothing to do with vaporwave. Getting that out of the way, this is an atmospheric, almost ghostly ambient album that takes influence from equal parts industrial and trap music. There are traditional Japanese sounds in there as well, painting a picture of a futuristic Tokyo that is starting to become popular on the Dream Catalogue label. Still, this is a different take on that sound, with Yoshimi focusing more on the bleaker sides of the cyperpunk aesthetics. And in terms of the sound itself, I can’t say I’ve ever heard trap drums used quite like this. Tokyo Restricted Area an interesting album at the very least and one of the more original dark ambient records of 2016.
Spotify | Bandcamp

65. Wardruna- Runaljod – Ragnarok
wardruna
For a band that started as a folk side project of infamous black metal band Gorgoroth, Wardruna has really comes into its own. Now down to just Gorgoroth’s Kvitrafn and vocalist Lindy Fay Hella, the duo has completed the third piece of Wardruna’s Runaljod trilogy with a new set of focus. There’s a unique epicness to Ragnarok that makes it sound like a Nordic folk album that learned from black metal. There’s frequent chanting and a heavy use of drone, but traditional Nordic instruments, children’s choirs, and nature sounds are used to great effect as well. This isn’t just a black metal album wit the heavy parts stripped away, nor does it sound like a non-folk artist trying to make an album outside their genre. Instead, Wardruna have come into their own and made one of the most epic sounding folk albums of recent years.
Spotify

64. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard- Nonagon Infinity
king-glizzard-and-the-lizard-wizard

Nonagon Infinity
sure makes one hell of a first impression. This album starts out heavy and fuzzy right from the start, with no need for pointless intros or shenanigans. The hook of this record is that it can be listened to in a continuous gapless loop, and the songs are constructed with that in mind. Because of that, it’s not always the most varied record out there, but variety isn’t necessarily why you’re listening to a garage rock album anyway. King Glizzard focuses on a raw, destructive, and powerful aesthetic, and it makes Nonagon Infinity fun to listen to. This is the type of hard rocking garage record that has its sound, nails it, and never lets up. Literally.
Spotify | Bandcamp

63. Lord of the Isles- In Waves
lord-of-the-isles
There’s a lot to like about the full length debut from Lord of the Isles. In fact, there’s also a lot here in general, and at a nearly 80 minute run time, some of the fat could have been trimmed. Still, In Waves is a dreamy house record that is as much a dance soundtrack for under the stars as it is intricate headphone music. The dreamy atmosphere that Lord of the Isles produces makes this sound like neither human nor mechanical. That feeling extends throughout the record, despite a stylistic shift from deep to ambient from track to track. However, what impressed me most about In Waves is the way that it flows. This is a very active album that is all but flawless about its repetition. Sounds enter and exit at just the right time, and it’s not so much tension, but a sense of wonder about what’s next that keeps the listener engaged.
Spotify

62. Insomnium- Winter’s Gate
insomnium
Since Winter’s Gate is a long single track melodic death metal album, it’s hard not to draw comparisons to Edge of Sanity’s classic Crimson. While Insomnium’s latest hasn’t exactly dethroned Dan Swano and company, they have created an ambitious album that takes influence from Crimson, while adding their own sound to their mix. Melodeath hasn’t been the most innovative genre in recent years, so it’s nice to see a band like Insomnium step out of their comfort zone. Part of that includes a return to acoustic sections that were prevalent in the early Gothenburg scene, while also using melodic solos and clean vocals that neatly break up the heavier parts. Winter’s Gate is also rich with detail and subtlety, something that has been sorely lacking from the genre in recent years. It’s not a complete overhaul for melodeath, but a nice return to its roots that has enough new ideas to move it forward.
Spotify | Youtube

61. Sarah Neufeld- The Ridge
sarah-neufeld

Coming off a masterful collaborative effort with Colin Stetson, Sarah Neufeld takes a leap forward in her solo material with The Ridge. The most obvious difference is the addition of vocals. Neufeld isn’t the greatest vocalist I’ve heard, but she’s far better than I would expected from someone who is really only known as a violinist. At the very least, it adds a new dimension to the music that separates her from other modern classical composers. Drums are also a new addition, and while they can sound a little out of place at times, it adds some much needed intensity to parts of the record. Thankfully, the focus is still the violin, and that’s where Sarah Neufeld shines. She’s an impressive violinist, but also a strong composer. There’s obvious influence from her partner, Colin Stetson, but The Ridge sees Neufeld really coming her into own as a solo artist. It’s more accessible and more original than her debut, and there’s simply a lot of beauty to be found on this album.
Spotify | Soundcloud

Next: The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 3 (60-41)

The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 1 (100-81)

Now here’s the big one…

First, a disclaimer. This list is ordered based on how I felt about these albums during my time working this project. I probably spent too much time moving albums around as I wrote, and could easily have spent more. These are all albums I enjoyed and my goal is more to celebrate a great year in music and provide recommendations than argue about how one album is better than another.

This was also a tough list to narrow down. For all of the problems 2016 had, a lack of great music wasn’t one of them. We certainly had our fair share of death in the music world, a sentiment reflected in many albums this year, but purely from an artistic standpoint, 2016 was a great year for music.

Thank you for reading, and please let me know what you think in the comments or on Twitter @BryceJMurphy.

Also, you can check at my Top 25 EPs list right HERE

100. Atmosphere- Fishing Blues
atmosphere
Fishing Blues
is a bit of a return to form for Atmosphere. Slug’s vocals still sound like a relic from early 2000’s underground hip-hop, but in terms of lyrics and production, this is the most inspired the influential duo has sounded in nearly a decade.
Spotify | Bandcamp

99. Blank Banshee- MEGA
blank-banshee
Blank Banshee takes maximalism to its extreme, with just about every measure of MEGA changing from one strange hybird of trap, glitch, vaporwave, ambient, or electronic to another. It’s not always the easiest thing to listen to, and I sometimes wish ideas were given a little more time to breathe, but the sheer amount of unique and interesting sounds on this thing make it hard to put down.
Spotify | Bandcamp (Name-Your-Price)

98. Wovenhand- Star Treatment
wovenhand
David Eugene Edwards has slowly abandoned the gothic country that his band 16 Horsepower pioneered, as each release with his Wovenhand solo project goes farther into psychedelic rock and folk territory. Star Treatment continues that trend, with Edwards rough yet powerful voice working in tandem over the dark and fuzzy instrumentation.
Spotify | Bandcamp

97. Youandewan- There is No Right Time
youandewan
Youandewan has amassed a large amount of EPs and singles over the years, but There is No Right Time is proof that he can handle a full length release as well. This is a nice collection of a deep house cuts, many of which teeter on the line between being fun dance numbers and cerebral headphone music. A few tracks venture far outside of house music, with mixed results, but there’s some real gems here that make it a great listen.
Spotify | Bandcamp

96. OvO- Creatura
ovo
“Avant-garde metal” is often attributed to any sort of metal that goes against the genre’s grain, but few bands earn that label like Italy’s OvO. At its core, Creatura is a noisy industrial metal record with experimental influences aplenty. There are screams on here that sound like someone is in real, physical pain, while the instrumentation goes crazy between electronic, noise, industrial, and metal. It’s strictly for fans of heavy experimental music, but I doubt anyone making this record was going for accessibility.
Spotify | Bandcamp

95. Evy Jane- Breaking
evy-jane
Evy Jane’s Breaking is the dreamy Blade Runner-esque pop album I always kind of knew I wanted. The vocals soar over the ghostly downtempo beats that borrow from the recent trend of darker R&B. It’s lush and beautiful, but without being overwhelming. That is to say, there’s a great deal of mystery and subtlety to Breaking and it creates one hell of an atmosphere.
Spotify

94. Moor Mother- Fetish Bones
moor-mother
The debut album from Moor Mother is without a doubt the most unsettling hip-hop album I listened to in 2016. Lyrically, Fetish Bones is an aggressive politically charged album that deals with difficult topics right off the bat. Musically, it unsettles as well, with an industrial sound that rarely ever falls into a steady beat. It’s an intense listen, but there’s real passion and relevance underneath the noisy exterior, and the production is among the harshest and most interesting I’ve hard in industrial hip-hop.
Spotify | Bandcamp

93. Ihsahn- Arktis
ihsahn
Emperor’s prolific frontman moves farther into the progressive metal genre with Arktis, his most streamlined yet polished solo album to date. The songs are varied and aided by a healthy roster of guest spots, and there’s quite a few catchy moments for an album made by a black metal legend. This is Ihsahn at his most approachable, but not at the expensive of the songwriting that has made him great for so long.
Spotify

92. São Paulo Underground- Cantos invisíveis
sao-paulo-underground
Rob Mazurek’s São Paulo Underground has never been a particularly accessible group, but they’ve really upped the chaos on Cantos invisíveis. The album mixes the group’s usual avant-garde jazz, electronic, and world music, but instruments often feel like they are fighting against each other more so than on past São Paulo Underground records. It can be overwhelming at times, but the highlights (namely the fantastic 13+ minute opener and closer) make it worth the rough patches for fans of experimental music.
Bandcamp

91. Bombino- Azel
bombino
Nigerien guitarist Bombino brings his blend of tishoumaren (Tuareg blues rock) music to the West with Azel, his second album to be produced in North America. Fans of Tinariwen will instantly recognize the style, but Bombino stands out with his exceptional technical playing and some fantastic production that makes the Tuareg sound pop in ways we’ve rarely heard.
Spotify | Bandcamp

90. Julianna Barwick- Will
julianna-barwick
Will
is another gorgeous ambient pop album from Julianna Barwick. Much of the music comes from simple synths, keys, strings, and Barwick’s vocals. Her voice is beautiful on its own, but it’s often soaked in reverb here to the point where it’s hard to differentiate it from the synths around it. This one is all about the atmosphere and it’s hard not to drift away listening to it.
Spotify

89. Saor- Guardians
saor
Saor’s Guardians isn’t a massive step forward for the Scottish metal band, but their combination of atmospheric black metal and Celtic folk music is still captivating. The band’s songwriting can get a little predictable, with each song following a similar pattern over 10-11 minutes, but that’s more than made up for with some truly breathtaking moments. Few metal bands can even hope to have the kind of atmosphere Saor attains so effortlessly.
Spotify | Bandcamp

88. The Avalanches- Wildflower
the-avalanches
It took 16 years for The Avalanches to release their sophomore album, and needless to say, Wildflower is not as revolutionary as Since I Left You. Still, this is a fun sample-heavy record that evokes the early 2000s of dance music without sounding completely dated. Even 16 years later, The Avalanches have a sound that make it easy to dance to, a production style that keeps things unpredictable, and a sense of humor that keeps things fun. Adding to that humor, Danny Brown appears a few times to tell us which drugs he’s been doing lately (spoiler: it’s all of them).
Spotify

87. BADBADNOTGOOD- IV
badbadnotgood
For a band that got their start (brilliantly) making jazz covers of hip-hop songs, BADBADNOTGOOD have adapted well to writing original material. Their fourth album is rich with features, as Colin Stetson, Mick Jenkins, Kaytranada and others lend their talents to their record. Those wide range of guests take BADBADNOTGOOD’s sound into some interesting directions, as we now get to hear R&B and rap over their hip-hop and electronic-inspired jazz fusion. The results are mostly solid, and the band’s original and ultra accessible core sound is still as strong as ever.
Spotify | Bandcamp

86. Anderson .Paak- Malibu
anderson-paak
Anderson .Paak broke through in a big way in 2016 and it’s easy to see why. Malibu is a fun and playful album that blends R&B, hip-hop, and soul and shows off Paak’s exceptional talent as a singer, rapper, and producer. Anderson’s distinct and passionate voice comes through most comfortably as a singer, but he holds his own as a rapper alongside strong guest verses from Talib Kweli and Schoolboy Q, among others. It’s an impressive debut that shows a lot of promise for the future, and more than anything, it shows a talented new artist who sounds like he’s having the time of his life recording. That makes his music all the more infectious.
Spotify

85. King Goat- Conduit
king-goat
Neither doom metal nor progressive metal were ripe with original material in 2016, but King Goat found a way to simultaneously breathe new life into both genres. Their debut album, Conduit, takes many of its riffs from the relics of doom, but infuses it with progressive vocals, melodies, and solos. The combination works shockingly well, as both influences are obvious in King Goat’s sound, and much of Conduit really feels like a smart blend of those two styles. There’s even some throat singing here and there to go along with a few experimental touches, and it all adds up to one of the most promising metal debuts of the year.
Spotify | Bandcamp

84. Jeff Rosenstock- Worry
jeff-rosenstock
I fully admit that I’m not the biggest fan of power pop or pop punk, so a lot of the nostalgia this album is going for is lost on me. If you are bigger Weezer fan, for example, you will probably love this. Still, even I enjoyed Jeff Rosenstock’s clever lyrics and appropriately snobbish delivery about life as a 30-something in modern middle class society. The power pop instrumentals build nicely, turning into heavier punk when the emotions of the songs reach their most passionate. Most of all, Worry is a funny and well written album, presented in an unlikely style that somehow still works in 2016.
Spotify | Bandcamp

83. Aluk Todolo- Voix
aluk-todolo
France’s Aluk Todolo continue their streak of solid krautrock/black metal hybrids with Voix, an album that turns down some of the black metal and heightens the kraut, psychedelic, and drone parts of their music. Voix feels like a throwback to the days of Neu! and other instrumental krautrock acts, but with modern influences that do just enough to make it fresh. The album sounds like one long track and is deceptive in how dynamic it actually is. The instrumentation is constantly changing and all over the place, but Aluk Todolo do an excellent job of making their compositions sounds almost trance-like. It certainly won’t be for everyone, but in terms of psychedelic rock in 2016, few albums did it better or more distinctly than Voix.
Spotify | Bandcamp

82. Okkyung Lee & Christian Marclay- Amalgam
okkyung-lee-and-christian-marclay
Amalgam is an improvised live performance from cellist Okkyung Lee and producer Christian Marclay. Both performers are accomplished experimental musicians, and both have experience working with roughly textured, noisy music. Lee’s cello is about the least comforting I’ve ever heard from a string instrument, as it’s often played with harshness in mind. Marclay’s samples are much of the same, with noise drops and abrasive clashes. The two musicians sound like they are fighting each other for dominance for about half of the record and then suddenly click together to creature a true cacophonous mess of strings, scratches, samples, and noise.
Spotify | Bandcamp

81. Thee Oh Sees- A Weird Exits
thee-oh-sees
Adding a second drummer turned out to be a great decision for Thee Oh Sees. A Weird Exits is the best album they’ve put out in a long time (maybe ever), and so much of it has to do with their percussion. Long instrumental segments are rare in garage rock, but they’re used frequently here, allowing the band to explore crazy drum patterns and swirling psychedelic rhythms. It’s the type of psychedelic album that doesn’t overwhelm or present a great deal of noise, but lures you in with playful rhythms and moments of catchiness. A Weird Exits is not necessarily as weird as its album title would suggest, but it is an entertaining album that works as a throwback to both 90s garage rock and 70’s psychedelic and krautrock.
*not currently streaming*

Next: The Top 100 Albums of 2016, Part 2 (80-61)

The Top 25 EPs of 2016

It’s that time of the year again. 2015 was the first year in a while I was without a radio show to fill my musical countdown void. So this year, sometimes against my better judgement, I decided to embark on another large writing project to celebrate some of the music that stuck with me most in 2016.

Throughout the next week I will be counting down my 100 favorite albums of the year, 20 albums at a time, but we start today with a list of my 25 favorite EPs.

Thank you for reading, and please let me know what you think in the comments or on Twitter @BryceJMurphy.

25. Chino Amobi- Airport Music for Black Folk
chino-amobi
Airport Music for Black Folk
is apparently a tribute to six cities Chino Amobi has traveled to in Europe. How exactly the tracks relate to the cities isn’t immediately apparent, but the harsh industrial beats, heavily manipulated vocals, and general craziness of the music makes this one interesting.
Spotify | Bandcamp (Name-Your-Price) | Soundcloud

24. Steven Wilson- 4 ½
steven-wilson
4 ½ is a nice a collection of holdover tracks from former Porcupine Tree frontman Steven Wilson. At 37 minutes, it’s almost a full length, but feels more like a compilation than anything else. Each song feels self contained, but the tracks themselves are fleshed out and feel like more than just album extras.
*not currently streaming*

23. Dead Congregation- Sombre Doom
dead-congregation
Greek death metal band Dead Congregation have always had strong doom influences in their music, but they up it significantly in this EP. Because of this, Sombre Doom moves at a slower pace, but it’s still as dark and heavy as the usual Dead Congregation release. Anyone into death doom metal should give both this band and this EP a listen.
Bandcamp | Youtube

22. Zamilska- UNDONE
zamilska
Zamilska’s UNDONE is not your typical industrial techno release. It’s not as fast, as brutal, or as instantly danceable as a lot of other records in its genre, as Zamilska instead places an emphasis on more subtle, darker textures. She also tends to layer her tracks with vocal samples, often in a way that leads to intentional clutter. That approach helps UNDONE stand out in a crowded industrial techno field.
Spotify | Bandcamp

21. Benoît Pioulard- Thine
benoit-pioulard
Seattle’s Benoît Pioulard has removed a lot of the dream pop from his sound that first drew me to him, but Thine is proof that he can still create beautiful textures as purely an ambient/drone producer. All three songs are minimalist in their composition, but it’s interesting to hear field recordings and nature sounds mix with Pioulard’s voice.
Bandcamp

20. Hidden Orchestra- Wingbeats
hidden-orchestra
The main attraction of Hidden Orchestra’s Wingbeats is the gorgeous 12 minute title track, which takes a sample of birds chirping and puts the sound of a slow building jazz symphony around it. The rest of the EP consists more of experiments, with the same bird sample being played over a variety of different instruments in shorter doses. Those tracks are interesting, but it’s the first one that I kept coming back to.
Spotify

19. Grischa Lichtenberger- Spielraum
grischa-lichtenberger
I’m not sure I heard a more digital sounding record in 2016 than Spierlraum. Grischa Lichenberger uses a heavy dose of glitch and Autechre-influenced IDM to create what sounds like the inner workings of a computer. It sounds so distinctly inhuman that it could easily be interpreted as a bunch of random sounds organized by something digital, yet it somehow forms into compelling and atmospheric electronic.
Spotify

18. Moses Sumney- Lamentations
moses-sumney

Moses Sumney is a talented singer with a one-of-a-kind voice. His rough yet passionate falsetto would sound appropriate on both folk and soul tracks, so it’s even more appropriate the music on Lamentations strikes a balance between the two. The Thundercat-featured “Lonely World” is the highlight of the EP, showing off Sumney’s chilling vocals off the record’s most intricate and atmospheric instrumentation.
Spotify

17. The Sad Bastard Book Club- And the Sirens Sang of a Time When There Were No Foghorns
the-sad-bastard-book-club

The Sad Bastard Book Club are not an easy band to describe, but their sound makes perfect sense with their influences. This EP takes influences from gothic country, americana, post-rock, and doom metal. That may sound like a weird combination, but The Sad Bastard Book Club merge it in a way that makes it approachable. This is an EP that feels authentic with its country roots, but branches out into an eclectic sound. It’s dark, but not overly so, and it does something different in the gothic county genre.
Bandcamp (Name-Your-Price)

16. Rome- Coriolan
rome
Rome’s Coriolan feels like a full length album condensed into 25 minutes, with a lengthy intro and outro and a middle that tells the story of Roman general Gaius Marcius Coriolanus. It’s a lot for an EP, and honestly feels too brief for what it’s trying to accomplish. However, Rome has never been your typical folk artist, and his original mix of neofolk, post-punk and martial industrial, combined with his deep vocals, make this one great. There’s a lot variety here in a short amount of time, and songs like the title track are among the heaviest and catchiest in Rome’s discography.
Spotify

15. Amnesia Scanner- AS
amnesia-scanner
Here’s a crazy one. Amnesia Scanner take danceable beats from a variety of different electronic styles, make them super glitchy with heavy industrial drops, and distort/repeat vocal samples in a way that all but removes it from the dance roots of the rhythms. Because of that, AS can be challenging to listen to at times, but also a ton of fun if you’re into experimental music. It’s completely unpredictable, but still feels like a dance album deep down. Very deep down.
Spotify

14. Floating Points- Kuiper
floating-points
There’s something about the rhythm of krautrock that just makes me feel great. It’s an almost trance-inducing rhythm, and it’s fantastic to hear producers embrace it in modern electronic music. With the 18 minute title track of Kuiper, Floating Points uses krautrock beautifully, as he mixes it with elements of jazz and ambient music. The second track, “For Marmish Pt.2” is more ambient and takes a bit of time to get going, but has some gorgeous moments once it does This is a long EP, but a nice one-two punch of a very different tracks from a talented producer.
Spotify (Part 1) | Spotify (Part 2) | Soundcloud (Part 1) | Soundcloud (Part 2)

13. G.L.O.S.S.- Trans Day of Revenge
gloss
I loved G.L.O.S.S.’s debut demo last year, and Trans Day of Revenge does not disappoint as a follow-up. Much of what I wrote about that demo last year still applies this time around. The vocals are still raw and passionate and the instrumentation is still fast and heavy. The production is a little better on this one, but musically, it’s more of the same. Thankfully, that’s exactly what I wanted from G.L.O.S.S.
Bandcamp

12. Imperial Triumphant- Inceste
imperial-triumphant
Imperial Triumphant are one of black metal’s craziest bands, and Inceste is more of what made Abyssal Gods one of my top 3 albums of 2015.Much like that record, Inceste is all about dissonance, heavy and complex riffs that sound like they could go off the rails at any point, and a dark, lo-fi production that evokes the traditions of black metal. Essentially, this is an an avant-garde black metal release that nails both the “avant-garde” and the “black metal.”
Spotify | Bandcamp

11. serpentwithfeet- blisters
serpentwithfeet
Having produced for everyone from sludge metal band The Body to experimental pop star Björk, The Haxan Cloak has become a go-to name for anyone who wants to add some darkness to whatever genre they make. It’s no surprise that his magic applies to R&B as well. serpentwithfeet’s dark style of R&B/art pop is accompanied by production that is minimalist and almost-drone like at times, while heavier and symphonic in spots as well. This results in a dark atmosphere that lets serpentwithfeet’s equally dark lyrics take center stage, and a record that is among R&B’s most original in 2016.
Spotify

10. Willow- Workshop 23
willow
It’s a good thing that Willow is more creative at producing than she is at naming songs (or albums, as Workshop 23 is the 23rd release from Workshop Records). Its name might make it easy to miss, but Workshop 23  deserves an audience. It’s  a wonderfully atmospheric collection of deep house tunes that isn’t afraid to go outside of house’s usual confines. The tracks build slowly, as parts of the records are composed with a minimalist aesthetic, but the result is a chill vibe that Willow hits consistently. There are some great vocal loops here as well, as Willow’s voice blends perfectly into her atmospheric beat work. It’s fantastic stuff and cements Willow as a producer to watch for the future.
Spotify | Soundcloud

9. Zammuto- Veryone
zammuto
Veryone
is a strange EP, but one that puts a smile on my face whenever I listen to it. Digitized spoken word samples are used and repeated throughout the album, reminiscent of something Negativland or People Like Us would do. However, Veryone is also whimsical and upbeat, both in its vocal samples and the instrumentation behind them. Much of this wouldn’t be out of place on an indie electronic record, but the vocals take it somewhere completely outside the box. I wish it were a little longer than 10 minutes, but for while it lasts, Veryone makes for a fun and often funny use of plunderphonics.
Spotify | Bandcamp

8. Lakker- Struggle & Emerge
lakker
I’m not sure there’s an artist who gets more tension out of industrial techno than Lakker. Unlike many records in the genre, Struggle & Emerge doesn’t try to pound your face in with noise, but instead slowly make you uncomfortable. Its slow drone is often at odds with the fast rhythm of its beat, which helps create that tension and unease. And for certain moments, this record will break out into heavy noise. It’s just more methodical about doing so, and it can also show an incredible amount of ambiance. Its samples come entirely from field recordings (mostly from bodies of water) and news reports, which only add to the uneasiness.
Spotify | Bandcamp

7. Vince Staples- Prima Donna
vince-staples
After a strong full length debut in 2015, Vince Staples returns with an EP that once again show off his one-of-a-kind flow and deceptively dark lyricism. No I.D. and DJ Dahi return from Summertime ’06 to handle production duties, with James Blake adding a few tracks as well. This results with an electric mix of beats that all have some energy behind them. They act as the perfect backdrop for Staples’ flow, which strikes a remarkable balance between smooth and aggressive. Both that flow and production make Prima Donna easy to enjoy, and the depth of Vince’s lyrics make it worth coming back for.
Spotify | Soundcloud

6. Massive Attack- Ritual Spirit
massive-attack
While Massive Attack have released a number of great tracks in the last decade or so, it’s no secret that the group’s best work is well behind them. However, Ritual Spirit trims a lot of the filler that has been present on recent albums and gives us a good, solid taste of what creative trip-hop can be in 2016. All four songs feature guest vocals, ranging from frequent collaborator Tricky to the more recent Young Fathers. All four of those features work and sound distinct from one and another. It’s a testament to how varied Massive Attack have always been, as they start the record by moving from a fun UK hip-hop track to a gorgeous downtempo pop song. This is a great EP and among the most consistent projects Massive Attack have put out in a very long time.
Spotify

5. clipping.- Wriggle
clipping-ep
After winning a Tony award for his work on the Hamilton musical, Daveed Diggs returns to his experimental roots. Wriggle is clipping. at its noisiest and most aggressiveness, with lyrics that frequently reference kinky sex acts over noise drops and industrial hip-hop beats. Few hip-hop groups can make music with as much raw aggression as clipping. can, and Daveed Diggs’ rapid fire flow just keeps more and more ridiculous. The title track is especially crazy, turning Whitehouse’s “Wriggle Like a Fucking Eel” into a song about stripping. That track has some of the fastest rapping I’ve heard all year, over a harsh and aggressive beat that fits its subject matter. clipping. also released a great full length album this year called Splendor & Misery. That album shows the more intelligent, reserved side of clipping., while Wriggle is them at them at their most raw and nasty.
Spotify | Bandcamp | Youtube

4. Gorguts- Pleiades’ Dust
gorguts
Pleiades’ Dust had to be a challenging record for Gorguts to make. Death metal is not typically a genre associated with 30+ minute tracks, and simply extending a death metal song for that long would get boring fast. Thankfully, Pleiades’ Dust is a constantly changing track that expands on Gorguts’ sound from 2013’s Colored Sands and adds in some new ideas. There are more moments of overwhelming dissonance, contrasted by ambient sections that break the death sections up nicely. However, those ambient sections do more than just act as glorified track changers. Gorguts will return to previous ideas and build upon previous death metal sections in interesting ways that take advantage of its single track format. Essentially, Gorguts have made long-from technical death metal, and against all odds, it works.
Spotify | Bandcamp | Youtube

3. Jefre Cantu-Ledesma- In Summer
jefre-cantu-ledesma
Rarely have I heard noise music as beautiful as this or ambient music as dynamic as what’s found on In Summer. Jefre Cantu-Ledesma packs a ton of a variance into 24 minutes, creating dreamy ambient music that ventures into noise, drone, and shoegaze. The two highlights, “Love’s Refrain” and “Blue Nudes (I-IV)” evoke the feeling of listening to a summer tape, with skips, sudden stops, and interrupting noises, but an overall melody that is simply stunning and only grows more intense as the songs continues to build. The rest of the EP is filled with more challenging experimental tracks that go into more intense and often less rhythmic noise. Those are interesting as well, and their cacophony breaks up the dreaminess of the longer tracks. That dichotomy is the crux of the In Summer, as it’s simultaneously one of the most beautiful records I heard in 2016, while also being one of its most chaotic.
Spotify | Bandcamp

2. Mélanie de Biasio- Blackened Cities
melanie-de-biasio
Belgium’s Mélanie de Biasio is a bit of a throwback. She has a voice that wouldn’t sound out of place with in the peak of vocal jazz, 50 years ago, and critics have compared her to Billie Holiday because of that. While Holiday reaches a special level that goes beyond comparison for me, de Biasio’s smokey voice has a subtle power to it that does remind of what I love about that era of jazz. Instrumentally, Blackened Cities, is much more modern, however. The entire EP is a single 25 minute track that has long instrumental segments, and takes influences from post-rock, dark jazz, and ambient music. It’s a gorgeous combination and a very unique for long-form jazz. It’s also a format that allows the instrumentals to shine and de Biasio’s vocals to make a huge impact when they appear. Her delivery has an intimate feel to it, and the record as a whole has a feeling of wandering into a small jazz club past midnight.
Spotify | Bandcamp

1. Moro- San Benito
moro
There is a beautiful album at the surface of San Benito that celebrates the culture and roots of Argentina. However, layered over the top is the harshness of its political history. Samples include rabid dogs barking, swords slashing, human screams, missiles, and reoccurring sounds of water. Many of those water samples are violent, bringing with them the themes of destruction and power, but they’re contrasted by the moments of peace that the ocean can bring as well. This is interlaced (or often forced) over beats that Moro self-describes as “ramba,” a mixture of rhythms from Argentinian, Uruguayan, and Cuban music. It’s a powerful combination, both the sense of how harsh its sounds are and in what those sounds mean. San Benito is an intriguing musical experiment that successfully blends genres, but it’s also more much than that. It’s the EP that stuck with me most in 2016, and I recommend it highly to anyone with a passing interest in experimental, industrial, or world music.
Spotify | Bandcamp | Soundcloud

Honorable Mentions:
Better Person- It’s Only You
Kyoka- SH
Lorenzo Senni- Persona
Mondkopf- The Last Tales
Oil Thief- In the Heat
Signor Benedick the Moor- Maiden Voyage Suite
Tombs- All Empires Fall

Next: The Top 100 Albums of 2016 (Part 1, 100-81)

Top 100 Albums of 2015, Part 5 (20-1)

Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
EPs

A LINK TO STREAM EACH ALBUM IS AVAILABLE BY CLICKING THE COVER ART.

20.  2814- 新しい日の誕生
2814
I put a vaporwave album on the 20 of my list. Kill me now. In all seriousness though, this is beautiful. The Dream Catalogue label released a ton of vaporwave in 2015, and many of those albums were legitimately good. 新しい日の誕生, or Birth of a New Day, stands out to me as the best. Through some incredible atmosphere it paints a picture of drifting through a cyberpunk version of Tokyo at night, with distorted commercial sounds drifting in and out of the dreamy ambiance. It’s not the most varied album in the world, but it doesn’t need to be. The strengths of 新しい日の誕生 lie less in its technical aspects, and more in the feelings and images it creates. Maybe more than any other album on this list, this is one you’ll either “get” or you won’t, as so much of what it does well is rooted in its atmosphere. All I can really say is that if you’re listening to this with the lights on, you’re doing it wrong.

19. Cattle Decapitation- The Anthropocene Extinction
cattle decapitation
For whatever reason, grindcore isn’t among my favorite metal genres. Bands like Pig Destroyer, Brutal Truth, and Carcass (when they were a grindcore band, anyway) are among the biggest exceptions, and Cattle Decapitation has added themselves to that list with their last few albums. The Anthropocene Extinction is probably the closet to death metal that they’ve gotten, but it’s also easily my favorite in their discography. This is a brutal album, but also an exceptionally dynamic one. Few measures ever repeat for more than a few seconds, and there’s just a ton going on throughout the record. The vocals are also sensational and varied, ranging from deep death metal growls, pig squeals, and even distorted clean vocals that give the album some needed melody without losing any of its heaviness.

18. Damien Dubrovnik- Vegas Fountain
damien dubrovnik
Croatian duo Damien Dubrovnik have made an appropriately vile album in Vegas Fountain that is difficult to listen to. Partially for that reason and partially despite that reason, it’s one of my favorite albums of 2015. Vegas Fountain could most easily be described as death industrial music, but that really only tells part of the story. This is a dark album that has elements of noise, ambient, and industrial, and combines them in a way that is often intended to make the listener uncomfortable. It succeeds in that through a myriad of disturbingly high-frequency pitches, well-timed noise drops, unintelligible vocal samples, and repetitive drone and synth that makes this one of the year’s most tense albums. It all culminates in a sensational closing track that slowly releases that tension into a beautifully heavy outro. It’s far from a pleasant album, but there’s real artistry and craft here, and it’s certainly one of the most unforgettable musical experiences I had in 2015.

17. Jlin- Dark Energy
jlin
Jlin’s debut album, Dark Energy, is a refreshingly original take on footwork music. From the brilliant use of vocal samples to clean and unusual instrumentation, the components used here are a little different than what is typical for the genre. However, the way these sounds are put together is really what makes this album. The often repeated vocal samples are used to create a theme and narrative to the chaos of the music around it. The track “Guantanamo” is a perfect example of this, with horror movie samples and constantly changing dance rhythms creating a strangely powerful atmosphere to deal with a serious subject. That’s really the crux of Dark Energy, as it has something to say, and does so with power and creativity.

16. Ghost- Meliora
ghost
2015 was the year Sweden’s Ghost finally came into their own. Meliora was not only a breakthrough mainstream success, but also their most finely crafted album yet. It’s honestly amazing how catchy this is for something so heavily rooted in doom metal. In some ways this album feels like a throwback to the early days of Black Sabbath, but with more symphonic elements, more melodic vocals, and some Alice Cooper and KISS thrown in for good measure. As someone who doesn’t even like Alice Cooper or KISS and prefers the Dio years of Sabbath, that isn’t even an appealing combination to me. Yet by virtue of being so ridiculously catchy, creatively written, and deceptively heavy in spots, Meliora stuck with me. It’s the album Ghost has been building to in the last decade, and one of the most fun metal albums to come along in years.

15. Algiers- s/t
algiers
I had no idea that post-punk and gospel could sound as amazing together as they do on on Algiers’ self-titled full length debut. The vocals are a big reason for that, as Franklin James Fisher hits a perfect balance between the rawness of a punk voice and the soaring sound of a church chorus. The music as a whole routinely sounds like church music gone punk, but it’s more complicated than that. Algiers’ music is full of subtle touches and experimentation that often makes this album sound like its one measure away from coming off the rails and turning into full fledged noise rock. Sometimes it does. The lyrics are also worth touching on, as the power and urgency of the music is reflected in its words. Underneath its noise are stories of racism and injustice, often presented with religious imagery that once again mirrors the music that delivers it.

14. Merzbow, Gustafsson, Pandi, Moore- Cuts of Guilt, Cuts Deeper
merzbow gustafsson pandi moore
Two years ago, legendary noise producer Merzbow teamed up with avant-garde drummer Balazs Pandi and brilliant saxophonist and Fire! Orchestra mastermind Mats Gustafsson. The result was “Cuts,” a solid and fairly unique album of avant-garde jazz and noise. With Cuts of Guilt, Cuts Deeper, the trio has become a foursome with the addition of Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore, and the album they’ve created is much more cohesive and epic than their first. This album is split into four long tracks, and is at its best in the opener and closer where its more intense moments are spaced out and given more room to breathe. Those intense moments are incredible to say the least, with each instrument sounding like its in a battle with the others to be the loudest, without the music as a whole sounding random or cacophonous. That’s a testament to the talent of all four musicians involved, and the unsung hero of the group might be Balazs Pandi for somehow keeping rhythm in this chaos.

13. Panopticon- Autumn Eternal
panopticon
Other than a quick intro at the start of the album, the bluegrass elements unique to Panopticion’s music are mostly gone from Autumn Eternal. That’s honestly a disappointment, as Panopticon made black metal and bluegrass work together in ways I never thought possible, but that doesn’t take away from the quality of what’s on here. Autumn Eternal is a fantastic atmospheric black metal album with excellent songwriting that keeps each of its long tracks engaging and varied throughout. There’s a lot of subtly to the music here, especially in how the heavier sections work with the softer and more atmospheric elements. It’s not the heaviest black metal album out there, nor is it the darkest or most atmospheric in its style, but it’s an album that consistently gets the tropes of the genre right and builds on them in new and interesting ways.

12. Death Grips- The Powers That B
death grips
Death Grips released the first half of The Powers That B in 2014, but followed it up with its second half and full release in 2015. I’m including both halves for the purpose of this list, but the 2015 portion is the more noteworthy half anyway. Both discs show very different sides of Death Grips’ unique industrial hop-hop, with its first half more sample-heavy and electronic/glitch oriented (with the great Björk contributing vocals), while the latter part brings in more of a noise rock sound. Both are excellent, and in their own weird way. Death Grips has succeeded in making the rare hip-hop double album that is actually good, simply by having so much variety. The instrumentals on The Powers That B are crazy and often intense, and while I doubt anyone will seriously be putting MC Ride and his half-rapping half-shouting delivery on their “best rappers alive” lists, he flows in a way that remains perfect to the madness happening around him. Taken as a whole, The Powers That B is the best Death Grips album since their masterful The Money Store, and it farther cements them as one of the most original and innovative artists in music today.

11. Lupe Fiasco- Tetsuo & Youth
lupe fiasco
Lupe Fiasco started off his career strong with an incredible debut in Food & Liquor and an equally incredible follow up in The Cool in the mid 2000s. That was before a power struggle over creative control spawned a series of sub-par releases that often sounded like they weren’t even coming from the man himself. Testsuo & Youth is the first Lupe Fiasco album in 9 years to actually sound like a Lupe Fiasco album, and boy, welcome back Lu. This is a lyrically dense album, maybe even more so than Lupe’s first two records, but it’s well worth the deep dive. The production is often melodic and pop-influenced, but it thankfully strays from the boring radio bait of the last few Lupe Fiasco releases. The beats play off the lyrics in surprising ways, and there’s a distinct evolution to both the words and music. What starts out as a more cheery album about Lupe’s own life quickly turns into gloomier meditations on our prison system, violence in Chicago, and a hell of a lot more. It’s a long and dense album that demands multiple listens, but it’s also one that deserves them.

10. Grimes- Art Angels
grimes
I have a confession to make. I love pop music. It’s never something I try to hide or something I’m in any way ashamed of, but it’s not something I get to say very often. That’s because pop music rarely gives me something new and creative to get excited about. As a fun, dynamic, and wonderfully creative pop album, Grimes’ Art Angels is the kind of record I wish came out more often. It takes a couple of tracks to find its groove, but the vast majority of this record nails what pop music should be, as it both embraces the genre and experiments with its conventions. Much of Art Angels is crazy, fun, and infectiously catchy, but that almost disguises just how much is going on in the music. Grimes is constantly willing to play with rhythms, sounds, and aesthetics, often taking them from far outside pop’s usually safe parameters. Take a song like “Kill V. Maim,” for example, a track that draws heavily from bubblgum pop, but throws tons of heavier and more experimental sounds over it in such a dynamic way that it ends up with a demonic cheerleader-vibe. It’s the kind of brilliantly fun song that can only exist in the realm of pop, and only if the artist is willing to go outside of both the genre and the culture. Grimes does just that throughout Art Angels, and while it may be more upbeat and obviously pop-driven than her past work, I actually think this Grimes’ most experimental album to date.

9. Bell Witch- Four Phantoms
bell witch
With their third album, Seattle’s Bell Witch has crafted what may be my favorite funeral doom metal ever. This dark and gloomy record takes heavy influence from another slow and heavy Seattle band, Earth, and uses that style of sludgy drone guitars to amazing effect. It’s an album that can lull you in with its slow repetition and melancholic atmosphere, only to build to crushing riffs and passionately harsh vocals. In doing this, the sadness in Four Phantoms isn’t forced, but earned. There is a real, genuine feeling of doom on this record that is maintained throughout, and it makes its depression sounds appropriately heavy, dark, and beautiful. That last adjective is what a lot of funeral doom misses. It’s a difficult thing to explain, but as someone who has suffered years of major depression, funeral doom and other “depressive” forms of music can often sound corny to me because it comes across as all ugliness, all the time. Four Phantoms is dark, but it finds beauty in its darkness, and could in equal parts be called one of the gloomiest, heaviest, and prettiest records of 2015. As Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky once said, “Life is beautiful in spite of everything.”

8. Oneohtrix Point Never- Garden of Delete
oneohtrix point never
Few producers are as diverse as Oneohtrix Point Never, especially within a style that is unique to them. Garden of Delete is once again a mixture of various electronic subgenres, including IDM, glitch, ambient, industrial, drone, and even vaporwave, with a ton of surprises thrown in. It also has a much greater emphasis on heavier industrial sounds and darker atmosphere than his past records, and there’s far more here that comes outside the realm of electronic music. There are brief moments, for example, that sound like something out of a industrial grindcore album, yet they fit beautifully into a larger construct that is part sound collage and part electronic masterpiece. The music often moves quickly from sound to sound, but it strikes the perfect balance between unpredictability and fluidity. Honestly, it took a couple of listens for me to realize just how much I liked Garden of Delete. There’s just so many different sounds here, and the constantly changing flow of this record takes some getting used to. However, there is no other producer that can make an album like Garden of Delete, with its components sounding so random and digital and its atmosphere sounding so human. It sounds like the electronic equivalent of a monkey on a typewriting creating Shakespeare, yet in reality it’s just a brilliant record from a brilliant artist.

7. Clarence Clarity- No Now
clarence clarity
Clarence Clarity’s No Now is not only one of the most original debut albums I’ve come across in years, it’s also one of the 2015’s most unique records. Taking elements from pop, electronic, R&B, glitch, jazz and noise music, Clarence Clarity has created a bizarre sound that often manages to be infectiously catchy and unmistakably weird at the same time. It’s equal parts pop and experimental, but it never quite clings to one sound for very long. That could have easily been a drawback, but the sounds on No Now are so consistently interesting that it actually ends up working to the album’s benefit. There’s so much unpredictability here, and yet Clarence Clarity still finds a way to turn such a diverse group of constantly changing sounds into actual songs. It’s an incredible achievement, especially for a debut. Furthermore, while Clarity’s influences are often clear, the way this album is put together and the sounds it creates are wholly unique. There really isn’t anything else out there that sounds like No Now, and it’s absolute treat for anyone who likes their pop music a little out of the ordinary or their experimental music a little more catchy.

6. Prurient- Frozen Niagara Falls
prurient
Prurient’s Frozen Niagara Falls is an album of contrasts. It’s full of noise, growling, and heavy industrial sounds often juxtaposed with gorgeous instrumentation and electroacoustic undertones. It has harsh, unintelligible vocals, yet also has something to say. It’s also in large part a noise album, and yet it’s something I would describe as both “introspective” and “epic,” two words I don’t normally associate with noise music. There’s an incredible amount of passion to the vocals and instrumentals, and the long sections of noise only add to it. This is an example of style and substance coming together, as the duality of the music mirrors the love/hate dynamic of the lyrics, and the vocals present them in an appropriately desperate way. Just the fact that lyrics and narrative are worth talking about on an industrial/noise album is remarkable in and of itself, but the fact is that Frozen Niagara doesn’t even need those lyrics to be understood. The way the album is constructed and the way Prurient places such polar opposites of sound together creates its own narrative. There’s first and foremost the blend of styles that come from different eras of Prurient’s discography, which is reflected in both its sound and lyrics, but there’s also themes of lust, love, despair, and violence that are found in both as well. Suffice to say, Frozen Niagara Falls is a complex and brilliant album, and it should be listened to by anyone with even a passing interest in heavy music.

5. Chelsea Wolfe- Abyss
chelsea wolfe
Chelsea Wolfe has been releasing great albums for years, including many of the best gothic rock and darkwave records of the past decade. Abyss, however, is her masterpiece. It draws upon a multitude of musical influences, most of them of the darker variety. There’s of course darkwave and gothic music, but there’s also varying amounts of doom metal, industrial, folk, electronic, drone, and noise rock here. The album starts with a one-two punch of one of the best and most unique industrial tracks of the year, followed by one of the best and most unique doom metal tracks of the year. Chelsea Wolfe has always had diversity in her sound, but Abyss is by far the varied album she’s ever put out, and none of the tracks sound of place. Everything here fits beautifully into the dark and gloomy atmosphere of the record, and they all share some truly gorgeous vocals. Even with many influences coming from well outside of darkwave, Chelsea Wolfe has nearly perfected what I love about the genre. Darkwave at its core finds a balance between darkness and beauty, and there few records I’ve heard that walk that line better than Abyss. It’s an album that is both utter sorrow and breathtaking beauty, by way of music that is both accessible and experimental.

4. Julia Holter- Have You In My Wilderness
julia holter
Julia Holter’s Have You In My Wilderness continues her string of mastery with another beautiful record that sounds somewhere between ambient, modern classical, 60’s baroque pop, and contemporary indie music. Holter’s fourth album is her most intimate sounding to date, with her powerful yet subtle vocals often bouncing around from side to side. This might be the best mixed record of 2015, as every sound is clean, and subtle volume and spacing changes really bring the tracks to life. Much of the instrumentation comes from string instruments and piano, with usually soft percussion and a few incredible sections of brass instruments. Julia’s voice works wonders on top of it, with an incredible vocal range and a diverse delivery that blends with the instrumentation in often unconventional ways, despite its pop foundation. Holter has made records with plenty of drone and noise in the past, and those influences are still used here, albeit it fairly subtlety. For all intends and purposes, Have You In My Wilderness is an experimental record, but it rarely sounds like one. Everything blends together so well that it creates a type of simple beauty that is not as easy to achieve as it may sound, and makes for a truly wonderful listen.

3. Imperial Triumphant- Abyssal Gods
imperial triumphant
Black metal made up a fairly high percentage of the metal music I liked in 2015, and this sophomore album from Imperial Triumphant is easily my favorite of the bunch. This is black metal at its most insane, with heavy atmosphere that is shrouds the rest of the music in an almost uncomfortable way. Even the softer moments of Abyssal Gods are full of tension, as you never know what is lurking around the corner. The album immediately shows its brutality, starting with blistering drums and a wailing saxophone, followed by growling vocals that are mixed at the same level as the instruments around it. Almost immediately it achieves the rare task of sounding one note away from being too heavy and claustrophobic, playing close to that hypothetical line but never crossing it. Instead, Abyssal Gods pushes the limits of dark, menacing, atmospheric, and dissonant black metal, and mentioning that it works as a technical showcase as well seems almost beside the point For my money, this is easily the best metal album of 2015, and one of the best and most original black metal records to come along in years. It’s brutal and off-the-rails crazy, but I wouldn’t have it any other way.

2. Colin Stetson & Sarah Neufeld- Never Were the Way She Was
colin stetson and sarah neufield
Colin Stetson and Sarah Neufeld are two virtuosic musicians who have released fantastic solo records, but as it turns out, they might be even better as a duo. Never Were the Way She Was is their first collaborative album, and I don’t think anyone could have predicted just how well the duo gels together. After all, both are unique players who no problem creating multi-layered tracks on their own, and haven’t needed any help to fill out their sound. Stetson is especially remarkable at this, as he uses circular breathing to play multiple parts of his bass saxophone at the same time. On this record, his sound is less intense, and he’s able to take more of a minimalist approach and take turns as the lead. Sarah Neufeld’s violin works wonders as both a compliment to Stetson’s playing, and often as the lead instrument.

The sound these two create is as pure as music gets in 2015, as it’s not only breathtaking, but also has the clear feeling of an intimate performance. All of the music on this album is performed live, and there are no loops or overdubs. There’s something special about albums like that, and it makes the music here sound all the more human, despite its technical mastery. Most the tracks here are slow and meditative, and aren’t quite as intense as either’s solo projects. This album simultaneously expands on what both musicians have done in the past, while also creating a sound that is distinct from anything in their respective discographies. It’s also distinct from any other musical project released in 2015, and it’s one of the best avant-garde records of recent memory.

1. Kendrick Lamar- To Pimp a Butterfly
kendrick lamar
What can I even say about To Pimp a Butterfly that hasn’t already been said? The third album from Compton rapper Kendrick Lamar was one of the most critically acclaimed and talked about albums of 2015, and I’m here to tell you it deserves every accolade it gets. This is a masterpiece, plain and simple, with everything from its production to its lyrics to its flow at an all-time level. The beats on To Pimp a Butterfly mark a departure from Kendrick’s last release, the brilliant good kid, m.A.A.d City, with lush samples and instrumentation that combines different eras of hip-hop with heavy funk, soul, and jazz influences. This provides a perfect canvas for the album’s story, which sees Kendrick meditating on race, the struggles of fame, politics, mental health, among other things.

The “concept” part of this concept album is less about characters, and more about a steady progression of one man reflecting on the world around him, tied together with small pieces of a poem that Kendrick slowly builds on. The storytelling on To Pimp a Butterfly is among the strongest I’ve heard in any genre of music, let alone hip-hop. Kendrick clearly takes influences from “street poets” like Nas and 2Pac, who ends up being a major part of this album’s story, but To Pimp a Butterfly does it on a much grander scale. This is an important record that isn’t afraid to tackle difficult topics, and does so with a great deal of intelligence, nuance, and humanity. Kendrick changes his flow in order to tell these stories, with deliveries that range from subdued (“These Walls”) to angry and intense (“The Blacker the Berry”) to manic (“u”). There’s an incredible amount of attention to detail in the way words and sounds are placed together, and there’s so much depth that it all but requires multiple listens.

There’s a lot more I want to say about this record, but I’ll leave it at this: To Pimp a Butterfly is the best album of 2015.

————————————-

Thanks for reading, and sorry for the delays! Let me know what your favorite albums of the year were in the comments, on Facebook, or on Twitter @BryceJMurphy. If you haven’t already, you can check out albums 100-21 here:

Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4

You can also check my list of the top 25 EPs of 2015 right here.

And finally here, here are some honorable mentions that just missed the top 100.

Honorable Mentions:
Annabel (lee)- By the Sea… and Other Solitary Places
Arcturus- Arcturian
Chessmaster- 非実体
The Chills- Silver Bullets
Deafheaven- New Bermuda
death’s dynamic shroud- I’ll Try Living Like This
Dystopia Nå!- Dweller on the Threshold
Enshine- Singularity
Gnaw Their Tongues- Abyss of Longing Throats
Irfan- The Eternal Return
Jaga Jazzist- Starfire
James Welburn- Hold
Kerridge- Always Offended Never Ashamed
Loma Prieta- Self Portrait
Lucifer- Lucifer I
Midnight Odyssey- Shards of Silver Fade
Mike Shiflet & High Aura’d- Awake
Moon & Pollution- The Box Borealis
Passo Torto & Ná Ozzetti – Thiago França
Perfume Advert- +200 Gamma
Pinkshinyultrablast- Everything Else Matters
Ptaki- Przelot
Quis ut Deus? & Weston Adam- Last Man on Earth
Red Apollo- Alturist
Riacardo Donoso- Saravá Exu
Sulphur Aeon- Gateway to the Antisphere
Ulvesang- s/t
Zomes- Near Unison

Top 100 Albums of 2015, Part 4 (40-21)

Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 5
EPs

A LINK TO STREAM EACH ALBUM IS AVAILABLE BY CLICKING THE COVER ART.

40. Cult Leader- Lightless Walk
cult leader
Cult Leader is essentially Gaza with former bassist Anthony Lucero taking over on vocals, and Lightless Walk picks up right where Gaza left off. This blistering combination of screamo, sludge, and metal music has loud and crazy moments of heaviness that are broken up by huge sludge riffs. It’s simultaneously one of the year’s heaviest hardcore records and one of the year’s most dynamic hardcore records. Needles to say, it’s an essential listen for fans of the genre.

39.  złota jesień- Girl Nothing
zlota jesien
Girl Nothing is not only my favorite noise rock album of 2015, a year that had a ton of fantastic noise rock releases (including a few from Poland), but it’s also one of my favorite full length debuts of the year. złota jesień doesn’t try to overwhelm with the brutality of its noise, but instead creates a sound that mixes a more relaxed shoegaze style with faster punk influences. The muffled lo-fi production adds to the distortion of the music, and it results in a one-of-a-kind type that fuzz.

38. Holly Herndon- Platform
holly herndon
Holly Herndon’s Platform is a constant experiment in sound dynamics done through a pop lens. Herndon’s vocals sound as if they were originally recorded for an art pop album, but are constantly being manipulated in unusual and interesting ways. Similarly, the structure of the music is all over the place, with sounds coming and going often and from many different places. It creates a feeling of uneasiness that is contrasted interestingly with the atmospheric vocals. Those vocals never quite stay in one place as long you think they will, even when the album gives you no reason to expect comfort. More than anything, I love that Platform is almost deceptive in its weirdness. The opener “Interference” is actually fairly accessible, and it took nearly half the album for me to realize just how experimental the music I had been listening to was.

37. Gloryhammer- Space 1992: Rise of the Chaos Wizards
gloryhammer
If we’re being completely honest here, power metal is pretty dumb. That’s not to say the music is bad, or that bands like Blind Guaridan and Helloween aren’t amazing, but there are way too many power metal bands that write only about generic fantasy or sci-fi tropes and don’t realize just how ridiculous they sound. Gloryhammer succeeds in finding a way to make power metal even dumber by mixing fantasy and sci-fi together in incredibly stupid and exaggerated ways, but they do it with self-awareness and border on parody. It’s over-the-top silly and laugh out loud hilarious at times, and the actual power metal itself is better than many of the bands its spoofing. Gloryhammer nails the epic sound of the genre, with super catchy hooks and great technical instrumentation. Plus it has a character named “Angus McFife,” and that’s really all you need.

36. The Necks- Vertigo
the necks
The Necks only released one song in 2015, but they made it count. Vertigo is a single 44 minute track that starts with a beautiful drone and evolves into an experimental jazz record that never quite relinquishes its beauty, even at its most intense moments. There’s an enormous amount of tension throughout, as light instruments tease something big and give way to bigger noise when it’s least expected. It’s certainly an album that requires patience, but it’s well worth the time for anyone with a taste for free jazz or ambient music.

35. Baroness- Purple
baroness
With a mid-December release, Baroness’ fourth full length album just snuck into to the “album of the year” conversation for 2015, so it’s one of the more difficult albums on this list for me to rank. Regardless, this has a much more straightforward sound than Baroness’ last few releases, and that works out for the best. It’s still as varied as it needs to be, but all of the songs mostly amount to catchy and somewhat lo-fi sludge/stoner metal. That may not sound like much, but this style of music is rarely as catchy and memorable as it is on Purple. Somehow the big melodic choruses sound appropriate around big sludgy riffs, and just the idea that a sludge album this heavy can be this fun amazes me.

34. Swahili- Amovrevx
swahili
2015 had somewhat of a resurgence of funk-influenced music, with Swahili’s Amovrevx being one of its best examples. This album is part funk, part disco, part krautrock, and all psychedelic. It’s easy to call it a 70’s throwback, but there’s some modern electronic touches that give it a distinct feel, and I can’t say I’ve heard another album that sounds exactly like this. Most importantly, it’s super fun and danceble, with a great deal of creativity throughout the record. Even with two 10+ minute tracks, Amovrevx is very accessible on top of just being a fantastic album in general. This deserves to be listened to by more people.

33. Ash Koosha- GUUD
ash koosha
Ash Koosha’s GUUD reminds me a lot of Flying Lotus’ 2010 masterpiece Cosmogramma. It doesn’t necessarily sound like FlyLo, as Ash Koosha’s music is substantially more digital sounding, but it presents wonky and glitchy electronic/hip-hop in short bursts that quickly move from one idea to the next. There’s a surprising amount of classical music influence on here as well, and it provides a perfect contrast to technological overload of many of GUUD‘s crazier moments. It’s an album that often sounds like a computer malfunctioning in an oddly rhythmic way, but it never leaves any doubt that a human being is behind it.

32. Vince Staples- Summertime ’06
vince staples
After years of quality mixtapes and great guest spots, my expectations for Vince Staples’ full length debut were sky high and Summertime ’06 did not disappoint. It’s an ambitious album to be sure, as both double albums and concept albums tend to fail in hip-hop more often than not. Thankfully Vince’s storytelling is strong throughout Summertime ’06, and the production, mostly from No I.D. and Clams Casino, do an excellent job of letting Staples’ distinct voice and flow take center stage. Most of the beats have a simple catchiness to them, as well as some dark undertones that match the subtle darkness of the lyricism. The second disc isn’t as memorable as the first, but as a whole it ranks among the very best hip-hop albums of 2015.

31.  Stara Rzeka- Zamknęły się oczy ziemi
stara rzeka
Kuba Ziołek has contributed to some great avant-garde albums in the last few years with Inncercity Ensemble, Alameda 5, and Ti’en Lai, but his 2013 album as Stara Rzeka is what first drew my attention to him in the first place. Zamknęły się oczy ziemi is the follow up to his brilliant debut, and it’s more focused on the drone and psychedelic folk elements this time around. There’s still a lot of experimentation along the way, but this record more grounded than the first, and makes for a better listening experience as whole. The folk itself is tense and dark, but it’s not without moments of pure beauty. Much of it is a shockingly cohesive mix of neofolk, freak folk, and avant-folk that successfully ventures into moments of heavy drone and avant-garde weirdness without going overboard. It’s a weird and beautiful experience, and never overstays its massive run time.

30. Lil Ugly Mane- Third Side of the Tape
lil ugly mane
I’m still undecided as to whether Lil Ugly Mane’s Third of the Tape is presented brilliantly or horribly. There’s over 2 hours of music on this album, all in different styles, and all mashed together one right after the other in 18-25 minute chunks. It’s not intuitive by any means, but it makes for an interesting foray into the mind of an exceptionally talented and creative producer, and essentially forces the listener to digest it as a longer experience. Some of the album’s strengths lie in that experience, but that wouldn’t mean much if the music wasn’t good to begin with. Thankfully, the music on Third Side of the Tape is well worth listening to. It’s nearly impossible to describe due to how varied it is, but I enjoyed nearly every “track” on this behemoth of an album.

29. Joey Bada$$- B4.DA.$$
joey bada$$
I loved Joey Bada$$’ debut mixtape a few years back, but I hadn’t kept up with him since. His full length debut, B4.DA.$$ reminded me of why he caught my attention in the first place. Joey’s flow is the biggest and most obvious strength of the record, as he sounds effortlessly smooth with complicated rhyme schemes. The lyrics match the flow, with clever wordplay abound and a good amount of both braggadocios and introspective rhymes. All of that takes place over fantastic boom bap and jazz beats that take from the best of golden hip-hop while adding some modern touches. Not a bad debut for a guy who hasn’t even turned 21.

28. Alabama Shakes- Sound & Color
alabama shakes
One of the year’s most popular rock albums also happens to be one of its best. Much of Alabama Shakes’ sound has roots in the old, with southern rock, blues and soul at its forefront, but there’s a great deal of modern indie rock in there as well. Instrumentally, it’s an interesting combination that is performed tightly, but the vocals are really what sets it apart. I’m not sure there is a more powerful vocalist in popular music today than Brittany Howard, and her performance here is nothing short of incredible. The heavier songs are the highlights for me, with Howard going absolutely nuts with her range over a distinctly southern sound that is rarely used this well in music today.

27. Horrendous- Anareta
horrendous
I struggle to find a term to describe Horrendous’ Anareta as anything other than “badass.” The overly brutal cover lets you know this is a death metal album, but it’s not as generic or over-the-top brutal as it may lead you to believe. This is a heavy album to be sure, but it’s also one with some melody and a ton of influence from all over the metal sphere. Thrash riffs, melodeath solos, and prog undertones all appears frequently with vocals that sound straight out of an old-school death metal record. Those influences come together in cohesive and unique ways that make Horrendous stand out from the rest of the death metal pack.

26. Young Fathers- White Men Are Black Men Too
young fathers
Young Fathers have always blurred the line between hip-hop, electronic, and R&B, but never has that line been blurrier than on White Men Are Black Men Too. They’ve always had a vibe that sounded to me like if TV on the Radio were British and rapped, and that has never been more apparent than on this album. Some of it is their similar synth use to the Brooklyn rock band, but it’s also the way electronic and indie influences come together to sound more powerful than quirky. The rapping is used more sparingly than on here than in any past Young Fathers record, and that’s a good thing. That’s not to say it’s ever been bad, but the band’s sung portions have always been their most powerful, and they are no longer trying to force raps where it isn’t needed. Young Fathers have made great songs for years now, but 2015 is the first year where I can say honestly say they’ve made a great album.

25. Myrkur- M
myrkur
Since releasing her debut EP in 2014, signing to Relapse Records, and revealing her identity to be Danish pop singer Amalie Bruun, one-woman sorta-black metal band Myrkur has been among the most divisive acts in metal music. Regardless of what genre you want to classify this as, Myrkur is doing something unique and doing it very well. She takes a ton of influence from atmospheric black metal, and there are moments of real heaviness on this record. Those moments are contrasted and often interlaced with gorgeous dream pop and medieval and Nordic folk music. The way it comes together is far from perfect, but M is the rare album that successfully uses black metal without letting it dominate the sound. The real crux here is the gorgeous atmosphere and vocals, and the heavier sections set that up and give this album darkness for Myrkur’s voice to shine over.

24. Alva Noto- Xerrox Vol. 3
alva noto
Alva Noto took his sweet time releasing the final volume in his Xerrox trilogy, but it was well worth the wait. Xerrox Vol. 3 is a collection of gorgeous ambient and glitch tracks that keeps some of the classical influences from Alva Noto’s frequent collaborations with Ryuichi Sakamoto. The biggest strength of this record is in how much Alva Noto gets out of simple, minimalist sounds that are prevalent throughout the album. You can more or less tell what Xerrox Vol. 3 sounds like by listening to any individual song, but each track builds differently and ultimately elicits different reactions. Just about every track goes into interesting directions and remains consistently engaging and thought provoking throughout.

23. Kamasi Washington- The Epic
kamasi washington
Kamasi Washington’s The Epic certainly lives up to its title. This three disc jazz record has a massive amount of music on it, and thankfully each individual disc is a great listen on its own. The sound of the record varies throughout, but much of it hearkens back to the spiritual jazz likes of Pharoah Sanders and John Coltrane, two of my all-time my favorite jazz musicians. More than anything, The Epic feels like a great tribute to some amazing artists, and it’s wonderful to hear classic jazz styles return with modern touches in 2015. Despite its length, the music on here walks the line between avant-garde and accessible, and it’s easily the jazz album with the most crossover appeal of the year. It’s an incredibly ambitious debut, even with so much of it rooted in the past, but Kamasi Washington pulls it off.

22. Gorod- A Maze of Recycled Creeds
gorod
As a genre defined most by its technical ability, technical death metal can often wind up with incredibly boring and derivative songs written talented musicians. Often times, it’s a genre for great musicians, but not great artists. France’s Gorod is a breath of fresh air as the rare tech death band that has the songwriting to match their technical prowess. A Maze of Recycled Creeds is first and foremost an incredible technical achievement from superbly complex musicians, but it’s also unpredictable and full of rhythmic changes that exist as more than just a showcase of musicianship. Its often jazzy rhythms remind me of tech death legends Atheist, which is among the highest praise I could give to band in this genre.

21. Elza Soraes- A mulher do fim do mundo
elza soraes
Elza Soraes is a legendary samba vocalist who greatly influenced the recent influx of more experimental Brazilian samba/rock/jazz hybrids. At 78 years old, she released what is by far the most experimental album of her career in A mulher do fim do mundo. Her voice doesn’t have a ton of range, but it perfectly compliments the dynamic music behind her that will quickly switch from pop-ier samba music to free jazz, hard rock, and even hip-hop. It’s an incredibly varied album that flows superbly, with Soraes’ rough low vocals providing the glue that keeps it together.

Continue to albums 20-1

Top 100 Albums of 2015, Part 3 (60-41)

Part 1
Part 2
Part 4
Part 5
EPs

A LINK TO STREAM EACH ALBUM IS AVAILABLE BY CLICKING THE COVER ART.

60. William Basinski- Cascade
2062_cascade_sleeve3
William Basinski’s Cascade was easily the toughest album for me to rank on this list. There’s not much to it, other than a simple piano loop that is slightly altered over the course of 40 minutes. Some listens drove me mad and caused me turn it off a minute or two in, while others have blown me away by just how much Basinski gets out of next to nothing. There’s a hypnotic quality to it that can be mesmerizing, and the riff itself is thankfully very beautiful. It’s a tough listen, but for better or for worse there were few albums that were as memorable for me in 2015.

59. Godspeed You! Black Emperor- Asunder, Sweet and Other Distress
godspeed you black emperor
It’s easy to think of Asunder, Sweet and Other Distress as a disappointment and move on. Many Godspeed You! Black Emperor fans have done just that, and this album is rarely talked about nine months after its release. Still, Godspeed’s track record leaves them with such sky high expectations that a merely great album is disappointment. Asunder, Sweet and Other Distress is a disappointment, but it’s also (and this one of my hotter takes of the year), still a great album. It’s not as consistent as what we’ve come to expect, but the moments it builds up to, where gorgeous guitars swirl around each other with violins and soft drums over a heavy drone, are reminders of how far ahead Godspeed You! Black Emperor are from the rest of the post-rock pack.

58. Theodor Bastard- Vetvi
theodor bastard
I hate using the term “world music,” but that label applies perfectly to Theodor Bastard. This large Russian ensemble takes folk music from all over the world and adds in some trip-hop and darkwave for good measure. Vetvi has a whole is a wonderfully ethereal record, and certainly an ambitious one with the sheer number of different instruments used. Not all of the compositions come together in the most exciting ways, but it’s something special when Theodor Bastard gets it right. Thankfully they make it work more often that not.

57. Akhlys- Dreaming I
akhlys
Naas Alcameth, the man behind Akhlys, has a history of making dark and disturbing ambient music. Even his debut album as Akhlys was more in the ritual ambient vein and contained no traces of metal. It makes sense then that its follow up, Dreaming I nails the dark atmosphere and long sections of ambient and drone that play during and between its black metal. 2015 had many atmospheric black metal albums, but this is one of the absolute best. The mostly long tracks have a haunting atmosphere and the vocals are menacing in the best way. Maybe the best thing about Dreaming I, however, is that it’s listenable. It lets the atmosphere create its nightmarish effect far more than lo-fi mixing ever could, and because of that it has far more crossover appeal than most other albums in the genre.

56. Schnellertollermeier- X
schnellertollermeier
Switzerland’s Schnellertollermeier has a sound that is difficult to describe. It’s kind of like the noisy jazz artists like Zu and Black Engine play, but there’s a lot of various experimentation that goes above and beyond those bands without quite reaching the sheer heaviness of the former or the overwhelming craziness of the later. It’s the drums that make this record more than anything, with the music often stopping for heavy fills that break things up nicely. The 20 minute self-titled opener is really the crux of this record, and it’s a pretty amazing journey through different phases of jazz, noise, and post-rock. Honestly, all I can really say is that if you like avant-garde music, you should experience it for yourself.

55. Blue Daisy- Darker Than Blue
blue daisy
Trip-hop is not a genre that is generally associated with darkness, but nothing about Blue Daisy’s music is typical. Darker Than Blue is fairly diverse from a musical perspective, but Blue Daisy maintains a low howl that blurs the line between singing and speaking, with his voice only getting more and more distorted as the album goes on. The lyrics range from dark and depressing to pure nihilism, but it all fits together perfectly. This feels like a deeply personal project, and a very immersive one for those willing to to follow down its dark path.

54. The Rodeo Idiot Engine- Malaise
the rodeo idiot engine
The Rodeo Idiot Enginge is for people who don’t think The Dillinger Escape Plan or Converge aren’t quite crazy enough. With constantly changing rhythms the band’s sound stays completely unpredictable and off-the-wall heavy throughout most of Malaise. There are a few sludgy breaks that provide some much needed time to let the madness stir and the listener recover, but as a whole this is one of the year’s heaviest, craziest, and overall best hardcore albums.

53. The World Is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die- Harmlessness
the world is a beautiful place and i am no longer afraid to die
I really liked the combination of emo and post-rock this long-titled Connecticut band had on their first record, but I’m glad they’ve changed things a bit on their follow up. Harmlessness is a much more mature and varied record than its predecessor, and while the band still takes elements from both post-rock and emo, the way they apply it here is more subtle and less predictable. The songs rarely follow a generic post-rock structure this time around, despite some of the guitar sounds still being very reminiscent of other bands from that genre. More than anything, however, this is a quality emo and pop punk album that greatly deviates from the simple rhythms and predictable chord progressions expected from those genres.

52. Ausculation- L’étreinte Imaginaire
ausculation
Ausculation, the newest moniker of Golden Donna’s Joel Shanahan, is a more ethereal approach to electronic music than Shananhan has tried before. L’étreinte Imaginaire is still as synth heavy as anyone who has listened to Golden Donna would expect, but there’s a undeniable atmosphere here that contrasts beautifully with its house rhythms. It’s a slow moving album, but that’s a good thing in this case. Shanahan takes his time and lets the music build, and the result ranks among the most gorgeous house music you’ll ever hear.

51. Zs- Xe
zs
This glitchy and experimental album from Zs is simultaneously one of the weirdest and one of the most accessible noise rock albums from this past year. Instead of using noise to make their sound heavy, Zs use it to constantly keep the listener guessing. There are no walls of noise or punk vocals to be found here, and at times this sounds like pure glitch music, but with guitars, drums and a saxophone. Think of it as something between a the world’s most mellow Lightning Bolt album and the world’s glitchiest Battles album.

50. The Pop Group- Citizen Zombie
the pop group
Citizen Zombie, the first album from The Pop Group in 35 (!) years sounds like it probably could have been in 1980. It’s also a welcome return to The Pop Group’s entirely unique blend of styles, and it’s amazing to hear it done so well so many years later. Citizen Zombie is largely an experimental post-punk album, but with elements of funk, dub, and noise rock mixed in. The vocals have a murky and distorted sound to them, and much of the album sounds fairly lo-fi, but there’s still something oddly catchy about many its songs.

49. Ahnnu- Perception
ahnnu
Not all ambient music is made equal. Ahnnu’s Perception is a perfect example of an ambient album subverting exceptions, as the lush sounds aren’t put together in a way that is meant to be beautiful or relaxing. This is instead a ridiculously active album with samples constantly coming and going, and Ahnnu keeps the progression unpredictable throughout the record. It’s far from the most soothing ambient album of the year, but it’s one of the weirdest and most interesting.

48. Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah- Stretch Music
christian scott atunde adjuah
There’s something special about a jazz album when it finds its groove. It’s like being taken through a ride of unpredictable rhythms and sounds, while also being relaxed and fully at ease. Stretch Music is a great example of that, and few jazz records of this quality are as varied as this one. In some ways, this is a mashup of many different jazz styles throughout the years, but it never loses its rhythm. It all feels very cohesive, and that might be the album’s biggest achievement.

47. KEN mode- Success
ken mode
Success is the album that finally got me on board with KEN mode. The opener “Blessed” is about as perfect as a fusion of noise rock, hardcore punk, and sludge can be, with passionate Henry Rollins-esque vocals over a slow and heavy riff and a noisy exterior that goes in and out of the foreground. It’s simply fantastic, and it sets the tone for the rest of the record that goes farther into a punk direction than past KEN mode releases. The rest of Success doesn’t quite live up to its opener, but it’s still a very solid and consistent album that routinely plays with loud/soft dynamics in interesting ways.

46. Ava Luna- Infinite House
ava luna
Ava Luna is the only band I’m aware of that can transition from pop soul to noise rock in a way that makes sense. Both parts work exceptionally well, and it takes a bit of time for Infinite House to show its true colors. The first part of the record strolls along a nice pace with a catchy and diverse range of indie rock, soul, and pop music. Even at their softest, Ava Luna has a pleasant and dynamic sound that’s easy to listen. Then the noise kicks in, and this album gets crazy. The slow buildup to the fuzzy wall-of-noise-esque guitars on “Black Dog” part way though the album ranks as one of the best and biggest surprises of the year. Even after that turning point, Ava Luna continues to provide soulful vocals and pop catchiness, but with a ton of fuzziness and experimentation. It’s pretty crazy stuff.

45. Czarface- Every Hero Needs a Villain
czarface
I enjoyed the first time 7L, Esoteric, and Wu-Tang Clan’s Inspectah Deck came together to record a Czarface record, but I never could have expected this. Between Inspectah Deck coming through with vintage verses on just about every song and quality guest verses from GZA and Method Man, this is the Wu-Tang album I never knew I wanted in 2015. The production is fantastic as well, and it walks the perfect line between boom bap and MF DOOM (who also provides an excellent guest verse)-style superhero samples.

44. Steven Wilson- Hand. Cannot. Erase
steven wilson
The latest project for Porcupine Tree mastermind Steven Wilson is one that stays true to the progressive rock roots of his last two solo albums, but thankfully provides more than just a love letter to years of music past. Hand. Cannot. Erase tells the story of a woman who disappears one day without notice, inspired by the real life events of Joyce Vincet. I have a few minor gripes with some of Wilson’s storytelling, but as a whole there’s passion and care in the way the album is put together and how the story is presented. The instrumentation blends with the lyrics and provides a fitting and ever-changing backdrop for the narrative. There’s also more of the variety and modern touches that made Porcupine Tree one of the most important progressive rock bands of the last few decades As far as I can tell, this album is not available for streaming at this time.

43. Alameda 5- Duch tornada
alameda 5
With brilliant artists like Merkabah, Niechęć, kIRk, and Inncerity Ensemble, Poland has become one of my favorite places for contemporary jazz music. Alameda 5, somewhat of a supergroup of avant-garde Polish musicians, continues Polish jazz’s recent success of embracing modern technology and experimental electronic music, while also taking from the past. Duch tornada is simultaneously a space rock album, a free jazz album, and an avant-garde electronic album, and yet it  is never overwhelming. Each member of this quintet contributes a laundry list of instruments to the project, and that combined with the wide array of musical influences keeps this record fresh throughout.

42. Mount Eerie- Sauna
mount eerie
Anacrotes, WA’s Phil Elverum plays a fairly minimalist style of folk and drone on Sauna. Elverum’s voice is consistently soft, although long sections of the album are instrumental, with his guitar mostly laying low as well. Its best moments are the softer, more subtle sections, where the vocals and guitar sound beautiful lightly touching the drone that plays throughout the course of the album. Everything feels very intimate, even when the drone starts to overpower or even eliminate the other instruments. It’s pretty, but it’s a kind of pretty that demands its listener’s full attention.

41. Jerusalem in My Heart- If He Dies, If If If If If
jerusalem in my heart
Jerusalem in My Heart released a solid collaboration with Suuns earlier in the year, but their later 2015 album, If He Dies, If If If If If, is the one that best represents their brand of electrocacoustic music. Everything from the vocals to the instruments used come from an Arabik folk background, and that in and of itself sets it apart from other electronic/folk projects. However, the debut Jerusalem in My Heart album was fairly scattershot and sounded more like an experiment than something actually enjoyable. This is one much tighter without straying from its experimental nature, and it’s far more enjoyable to listen to this time around.

Continue to albums 40-21