Music That Takes Me Places

TOP 10 ALBUMS OF 2014


Another year has passed. I honestly thought that this would be the year where I would get back to writing more...anything really..about all of the great new music that I explore all year, especially the music that can't escape me, even when I am not listening. That obviously didn't happen. But it is year's end, so here is my list of top albums for 2014. 


10. Distance, Light & Sky, Casting Nets

Chris Eckman, Singer/songwriter and founding member of the 
Seattle band The Walkabouts, along with British-Dutch singer/songwriter Chantal Acda, and composer Eric Theileman of the EARR Ensemble, released this gem of an album last month. I'm sure that it is not yet on the radar of most folks, but it should be. Casing Nets is a warm and beautifully realized album. Amazing to me is that these three artists walked into a studio in Prague earlier this year with producer Phil Brown (Talk Talk, Spirit of Eden), having only played together once before, and having only shared these songs via email, and recorded this album in six days. Recorded live with almost no overdubbing, these songs provide a listening experience that exemplifies true artistry at work.





9. Melanie De Biasio, No Deal

Harriet Gibsone, who writes for The Guardian, wrote "Among the buzzing cyber hive and unrelenting pace of modern life, there is a special place for albums that suspend time." She was speaking No Deal, the slow burning, atmospheric, and utterly captivating new album by Belgian jazz singer and flautist Melanie De Biasio. De Biasio has said that she likes the space in blackness because you can imagine so many things. In an interview with Mojo, De Biasio added "What was important to me...was to create a space with no time, and to let the listener put his own emotions in.....I hope that this record give a space for the listener to dream, rest or have a good time." Does it ever.

  



8. Mac Demarco, Salad Days

Funny, offensive, slacker, and talented. These are all words that have been used when writing about Montreal native Mac Demarco. I would say that all are on point. Not giving a shit is also how I would describe him and his music. Demarco marches to his own beat, with his own sound and style. It works and it works, really well. Don't let the slacker grooves or slightly off-kilter sound fool you. Demarco is a serious musician with a knack for writing incredibly catchy songs. Recognition for his latest collection of songs comes with Salad Days' nomination for Canada's 2014 Polaris Music Prize for best album of the year.



7. Luluc, Passerby


Passerby is a beautiful album and one of the best releases in 2014. It's the kind of album built for a cozy, quite morning when you want to slow life down. NPR's Stephen Thomson described Zoe Randell and Steven Hassett's album best when he wrote that they 'traffic in gentle, disarming simplicity, rarely allowing their music to speed up past a gentle lope...Luluc uses calm as a medium unto itself.' This calmness, at the center of Passerby, is what really resonated with me. It elevates the beauty of these songs, the songwriting, and instrumentation. Passerby is simply a gorgeous album and one not to be missed.





6. Woods, With Light and with Love

I have been a fan of Woods for a few years now, having first been introduced to them through their 2012 release Bend Beyond. Since then, I have gone back and spent time with their earlier albums. They are all very good, with each one building on the strengths of the previous. As Ian Cohen wrote for Pitchfork, 'this isn't a jamband who occasionally stumbles onto golden tunes: Jeremy Earl's high, distinct voice is predisposed to melodies that quickly corkscrew their way into your memory'. With With Light and with Love, Woods arrives with a new collection of catchy, foot-tapping songs that combined to make this their best album yet.  



5. Spoon, They Want My Soul


Some wines age beautifully over time, some spoil. The same can be said of bands. After 21 year together, I can say that Spoon is aging beautifully and their new album, They Want My Soul, maybe their best yet. This statement maybe a hard sell to the many Spoon faithfuls, including myself. Spoon has always owned their own space in the music world. No one sounds quite like them and I think that they have taken conscious strides to ensure that this is the case. On They Want My Soul, like with a nicely aged bottle of wine, there are subtleties, depth, and undertones. And like a finely aged Cabernet, this album is bigger and bolder than those released in their youth. So drink this one up.



4. Warpaint, Warpaint

Warpaint’s self-titled second album trades urgency for atmosphere, moving with an unhurried, dreamlike pulse. In an interview with The Fader, the band reflected on their debut The Fool as having so much to say that it felt a bit chaotic. Not so here. The 2014 version of Warpaint is more subtle and more seductive, shaped by their desire for a spacious, sexier record where “things aren’t being spoon-fed to you.” Guitars weave in and out of shadowy rhythms, basslines roll low and steady, and the vocals drift just above the mix, more texture than focal point. They’ve achieved the sound and space they set out to create, and it has me hooked.



3. Beck, Morning Phase 

When Beck released Sea Change back in 2002, it was a revelation. The songs and album completely turned everything that Beck had done before on its side. I completely fell for that album and wondered if Beck would ever return to that musical space. Twelve years later, Beck has done just that. With Morning Phase, Beck revisits everything that made Sea Change such a special album. Yet it is a different album. There was an intimacy with Sea Change that frankly can never be duplicated. But it does not need to be. Beck is not trying to duplicate the past. He is acknowledging it and using the framework for what made that album so special to explore something new. 




2. Elbow, The Take Off And Landing Of Everything

In my humble opinion, Elbow is one of the great bands of their generation. With each album they further establish themselves as a class unto themselves. With The Take Off and Landing of Everything, they deliver another collection of stellar songs. While the lengthier tracks might be mistaken for a shift toward greater ambition, Elbow has always been about crafting specific soundscapes. On this album they simply give these songs the room to fully inhabit the spaces where they live.





1. Damien Rice, My Favorite Faded Fantasy

It has been eight long years since Damien Rice release his last album. So where was he? In an interview he did for The Telegraph he described his self-exile as a time of "transition," One in which he shedded old attitudes to life and exploring new ones. "I am really curious about life, about why we are all here. I notice my skin is aging, things are changing, I've seen people dying, so that's the train we are all on. And I would like to figure some shit out before I reach the destination." Back now, Rice takes us into the mind of a man who is searching and yearning for many answers, but is getting more comfortable with just living the journey.   




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