If you released an album this year and gang rape sex videothought you could slide by without bringing your A-Game, well, as Chance the Rapper would put it, "Uhahua!"
2016 was stacked with great music. Many of the world's biggest artist's put out the best work of their careers, legends blessing us with swan-songs that make saying goodbye even rougher and fresh acts achieving household name status in record speed.
Here are 10 albums that got us through the rough times, stopped the world and reminded us that joy still exists.
On their latest gem, The 1975 splashes jazz and gospel into their tried and true format of expert pop nostalgia. Matty Healy is settling into his role as an increasingly self-aware heartthrob, calling himself out for being that dudewho sometimes quotes Jack Kerouac in the absence of actual insight.
It takes a reformed cynic to properly deliver earnest lines like “I’m just with my friends online / and there’s things we’d like to change,” that his generation needs. And, like many things he has no business pulling off, Healy does it while oozing charisma.
"Drone bomb me / blow me from the mountains and into the sea," challenges Anohni in her first recorded breaths, because there's no room for subtlety here. Hopelessnessis relentlessly dreary to the point that it somehow flips over and becomes inspirational.
Take a second to consider the people walking the Earth who aren't captivated by Chance's spell. Even the Grammy's, not a particularly progressive institution, loosened up the rules to let Coloring Book, a streaming-only album, have a chance, and it changed the game for the better.
This year, we finally found out what happens when we actually let Rihanna take her time and deliver an album that reflects the complex woman she is. The result was the best work of her career. Let her do things her own way, darling.
Dammit, Bowie. Dammit.
There is only one way to prepare for Frank Ocean music, and that's yearning. He delivered that in spades. But it’s a damn shame that fuss over Frank Ocean died down a little bit after he released not one, but two phenomenal pieces of work. On Blonde, he reinvents Pavement’s slacker rock with the compulsion of a born overachiever who is desperate to figure out a way he can just chill.
Hval weaves Norwegian metal, lush orchestral pop and the otherworldly vocals promised by the album's Cocteau Twins-inspired title, bookended by panting and giggles. Her pristine art-pop takes us so high up into the clouds that we get dizzy and laugh about it all. The female body continues to be a battleground, Hval reminds us there's nothing more hardcore then menstrual blood.
Lemonadewas more than just a victory as an album as Beyoncé established herself as more of a force than a pop star. Fact vs. fiction, country vs. hip hop, love vs. jealousy, film vs. record — to a lesser artist, these are dichotomies. But Bey dismantles it all and builds something more powerful from the rubble. And the queen will be eating at Red Lobster whenever she damn pleases.
In Mitski Miyawaki's hands, the tools of indie rock, dulled over the years, are sharper than ever. Clocking in at just over half an hour, Puberty 2is an exercise in controlled chaos. Heartbreak isn't something that's cured, it's molten lava concealed under a clean, white shirt. We're all just trying to keep it together, aren't we?
In the four years since Solange's musical rebirth, the excellent TrueEP, she's been keeping her cards close to her chest. She even relocated to New Orleans to reconnect with her family's history. You know, the real sh*t that went down for decades and centuries before we made a fuss about that ill-fated elevator ride. When she finally let us in, you could hear the twist of a knife in her voice. But there's a brightness, too, because she doesn't have to go at it alone.
Topics Music
Bolaño in Girona: A Friendship by Javier CercasThe River Rukarara by Scholastique MukasongaFeral Goblin: Hospital Diary by Kate RileyAnnouncing Our Summer Issue by Emily StokesMaking of a Poem: Mark Leidner on “Sissy Spacek” by Mark LeidnerThe Black Madonna by Aaron RobertsonA Rose Diary by Walt John PearceStory Time by Cynthia ZarinInterrupted, Again by Joanna Kavenna“What a Goddamn Writer She Was”: Remembering Alice Munro (1931–2024) by The Paris ReviewOn Elias Canetti’s Book Against Death by Joshua CohenOn Asturias’s Men of Maize by Héctor TobarBolaño in Girona: A Friendship by Javier CercasLe Bloc: An Account of a Squat in Paris by Jacqueline FeldmanIn Warsaw by Elisa GonzalezChasing It Down the Elevator Shaft to the Subconscious: Or, Getting Hypnotized by Jeremy ButmanAnacondas in the Park by Pedro LemebelEncyclopedia Brown: A Story for My Brother, Philip Seymour Hoffman by Emily BarrAlice Notley’s Prophecies by David Schurman WallaceA Rose Diary by Walt John Pearce Royole puts its flexible display tech into an Alexa 'BBC dad' announces CNN interview with the perfect dad joke Google Assistant added a bunch of cool features for 2020 Samsung's new Galaxy Chromebook comes in a color that won't bore you to death U.S. to collect and store DNA from teenagers detained at the border Amazon Fire TV will be in new BMWs, so you can stream just like in a Tesla Stator's big Jodie Comer and Andrew Scott play Facebook revamps 'privacy checkup' to help manage data settings 'Once Upon a Time' and '1917' win Best Picture at Golden Globes UK bans laptops and big smartphones on airlines from 6 countries I tried this $13,000 gamer chair to see if it'd make me a Real Gamer Japan moves closer to acceptance, with another city recognising same Pray for the Cadbury social media manager who's frantically fending off trolls Juno is a countertop appliance that chills your bottle of wine in minutes, literally LG's AI 99 very good names to give your house plants Arnold Schwarzenegger slams Donald Trump in 40 second Twitter rant Tesla rival Fisker to sell Ocean SUV for $37,499, and it has karaoke What we really want to see at CES 2020
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