The soundtrack to last year.
1 State Of Grace – Taylor Swift
1 State Of Grace – Taylor Swift
Red (Big Machine; 2012)
2 Forever
Is A Long Time – Krystle Warren
Love Songs – A Time You May Embrace (Parlour Door; 2012)
3 I Think
I Broke Something – Dan Romer and Benh Zeitlin
Beasts of the Southern Wild OST (Thirty3 And A 3rd; 2012)
4 Forever
Green – The Felice Brothers
Mix Tape (New York Pro; 2010) – although somewhat ironically
actually from a mix cd
5 Sweet
Talk – Jessie Ware
Devotion (Island; 2012)
6 Manchester
– Kishi Bashi
151a (Joyful Noise; 2012)
7 I
Couldn’t Be Your Friend – Tegan and Sara
Heartthrob (Warner; 2013)
8 Useless
Desires – Patty Griffin
Impossible Dream (ATO; 2004)
9 With God
On Our Side – Buddy Miller
Universal United House of Prayer (New West; 2004)
10 Ohio –
Patty Griffin
American Kid (New West; 2013)
11 100
Million Little Bombs – Buddy Miller
Poison Love (HighTone; 1997)
12 Starry
Skies – Laura Cantrell
No Way There From Here (Shoeshine; 2013)
13 The Wire –
Haim
Days Are Gone (Polydor; 2013)
14 The Mother
We Share – Chvrches
The Bones Of What You Believe (Glassnote; 2013)
1
Seems like I listened to a lot of big glossy pop records
through 2013, and Red, which carried me from last year well into this, was the
biggest and glossiest of them all, and maybe the best. I like Taylor Swift
heaps – knowingly, but not at all ironically – and “State Of Grace” knocks it
out of the park, shearing along in vivid, rapturous lines…it’s a rush.
2
It was not once but twice that Krystle Warren’s astonishing
voice caught me – a while back at a Nick Drake tribute concert, and then again
over the in-store speakers in Basement Discs. That second time, it was Love
Songs that was playing, a swooningly romantic set that partakes of folk, blues,
jazz and classic pop, and swirls it all into a confection that feels timeless.
Sometimes it’s in the tiniest details that a song gets to you; “Forever Is A
Long Time” is at once the lp’s most representative and its finest moment.
3
Something about Beasts Of The Southern Wild really caught at
me and lingered – I guess that’s what art does. Like a splinter under the skin,
I worried at it and it went ever deeper; I suppose I’ll never fully dislodge
it, or uncover just what it is that causes such a visceral response in me. But
there’s this, at least: the music’s an integral part.
4
I find myself singing along to this one a lot; so dusty, so
evocative.
5
There can’t be too many songs that so embody their titles as
this one, all elegant swagger, and going down so smoothly.
6
“Manchester” sounds like a rainbow, swirling upwards all the
way through to that final flurry of strings.
7
So Tegan and Sara emerging with such a monster of a pop
album, riding on waves of synths ripped straight from the 80s, melodies to kill
for and an eye for the stadium – that was maybe something of a surprise. But
what’s not a surprise at all is that it’s so plainly, desperately
heart-on-sleeve – which is what makes “I Couldn’t Be Your Friend”, and indeed
the whole of Heartthrob, so darn great.
8-11
Well, this year, I basically fell completely in love with
Patty Griffin. There’s something transcendent about her music, some quality
that calls to mind that old line about music being feeling then, not sound;
it’s a quality present on luminous, unadorned songs like “Useless Desires” as
well as in the more ornate mysteries of a track like the riverine “Ohio”. And
then there was Buddy Miller, a fellow traveller along these roads of
contemporary Americana; for several months through the middle of the year, I pretty
much only listened to the two of them. Like Griffin, Miller has impressive
range as both a songwriter and an interpreter; his 9 minute-long reading of
Dylan’s “With God On Our Side” is revelatory, its simplicity perfectly, finely
wrought, and then there are cuts like the chiming “100 Million Little Bombs”,
its yearning feel completed by Julie Miller’s distinctive, lovely harmonies.
12
Another unutterably sweet slice of modern country from the
ever delightful Laura Cantrell, from another wonderful album – it feels so
effortless, and yet there’s so much craft and heart to it that you couldn’t
possibly take it for granted.
13
Yes! Clearly Haim are all kinds of awesome, and Days Are
Gone didn’t disappoint; “The Wire” is the best of the new songs on it, sheer
pop-rock pleasure. (I was very tempted to choose their excellent cover of
“Strong Enough”, which isn’t on the album, instead.)
14
I only discovered this one recently, sugary-sharp, and I
keep expecting it to wear off, and it keeps on showing no signs at all of doing
so – like all the best pop, it’s a moment, fleeting, that feels like it might
last forever, even though you know it never will.
December 2013
* * *
Previously
2012
2010 & 2011
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
December 2013
* * *
Previously
2012
2010 & 2011
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005