Showing posts with label Prog Rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prog Rock. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

BJØRN RIIS, FIMBULVINTER

BJØRN RIIS
In Norse mythology, Fimbulvinter is the merciless winter that precedes Ragnarök, a time of chaos and collapse that ultimately makes way for renewal. It’s a season marked by darkness, struggle, and survival. As the title of Bjørn Riis’ latest solo album, Fimbulvinter becomes more than a mythological reference, it’s a thematic anchor.


You may not have heard of Riis, which is a shame. He’s the co-founder and guitarist of Norway’s Airbag, one of progressive rock’s most compelling guitar-driven bands. For over 20 years, he’s helped shape a sound defined by atmosphere, precision, and emotional weight. Since 2016, he’s also built a solo catalog that pushes those qualities even further inward, offering deeply personal explorations through richly textured arrangements. 


With Fimbulvinter, Riis draws on his own experience with anxiety to explore feelings of isolation, fear, and emotional collapse with striking clarity and conviction. The reference to Fimbulvinter isn’t just symbolic, it mirrors the album’s sonic and emotional arc. What begins in heaviness and unease gradually gives way to reflection and, ultimately, a faint but meaningful sense of hope. 


Musically, Fimbulvinter balances brooding, ambient passages with bursts of jarring energy. Across 45 minutes and six songs, Riis blends introspective melodies and layered soundscapes with hard rock edges, crafting a sound that’s as introspective as it is expansive. It not only evokes the myth of endings and rebirth, it delivers one of Riis’ more powerful solo statements.







Friday, March 21, 2025

STEVEN WILSON, THE OVERVIEW

To Steven Wilson, 2001: A Space Odyssey is the defining film about space—not as a conquered frontier or a backdrop for adventure, as many movies depict, but as a vast, indifferent expanse of terrifying scale and emptiness where humanity is insignificant. It’s this understanding of space’s true nature that served as the genesis of his new album, The Overview, in which he seeks to capture that of overwhelming perspective.

Inspired by the "overview effect"—the cognitive shift astronauts experience when seeing Earth from space—The Overview mirrors that moment of existential realization. The album consists of two extended compositions: Objects Outlive Us (23 minutes) and The Overview (18 minutes), designed as immersive sonic journeys that take listeners beyond our world. Its structure follows a trajectory from our solar system into deep space, passing celestial landmarks before plunging into the Eridanus Supervoid—a cosmic void spanning 1.8 billion light-years.


Though the album wrestles with existential themes, Wilson does not intend for it to be bleak. Instead, he embraces the idea that humanity’s fleeting existence is something beautiful—a rare and random occurrence in an unfathomably large universe.


Wilson has long been closely associated with progressive rock and often hailed as its torchbearer for decades. Yet he has consistently resisted strict genre classifications. On The Overview, however, he fully embraces progressive rock, citing its grand scale and conceptual ambition as a natural fit for the album’s themes. Still, he avoids predictable prog tropes, favoring dynamic arrangements, melodic motifs, and unexpected production choices.


Lyrically, the album juxtaposes the mundane details of everyday human life with the incomprehensible forces of the cosmos—a contrast he developed with Andy Partridge (XTC), whose observational storytelling helps bridge the two perspectives.


I've always been an enthusiast of long-form musical structures, and this approach naturally fits the album’s themes, reinforcing its cinematic scope. While echoes of Pink Floyd may surface in The Overview, Wilson acknowledges that certain elements might also remind listeners of Blade Runner, a film and soundtrack deeply embedded in his creative DNA. However, he considers his primary influence to be his own evolving body of work, constantly pushing himself to explore new creative terrain without repeating the past.


It’s Wilson’s relentless pursuit of new creative spaces that I admire most about him as an artist. With each new album, he carves out a unique musical world, asking listeners to suspend disbelief—along with their expectations—and embark on a journey with him. With The Overview, that journey becomes a 42-minute celestial odyssey that is immersive, arresting, and a visionary achievement.






Friday, February 28, 2025

MOTORPSYCHO, MOTORPSYCHO

Motorpsycho
Thirty-five years and over thirty albums in, Motorpsycho’s Hans Magnus "Snah" Ryan and Bent Saether enter a new era as a duo, embracing full creative freedom on their epic, self-titled album. As a band enthusiast, it’s thrilling to hear Ryan and Saether deliver the full spectrum of the Motorpsycho sound—from tight pop-rock tracks to sprawling prog epics, acoustic meditations, and psychedelic explorations.Their first double album since the Gullvåg Trilogy, Motorpsycho is both a return to form and a step forward, proving that even in a leaner form, their ambition remains limitless.

More than just another entry in their vast catalog, Motorpsycho feels like a statement of intent—a reinvention that embraces the past while carving out some new ground. Across 81 minutes, Ryan and Saether sound as vital and adventurous as ever, pushing their sonic boundaries with the same restless creativity that has defined them for decades. This is Motorpsycho distilled to its purest essence—uncompromising, immersive, and utterly their own.






Friday, December 22, 2023

TOP 10 ALBUMS OF 2023



2023 was not my favorite year for new music. There was not much that was fresh sounding, exciting, or new. There were a lot of so-so albums that seemed to be recirculating things that I have heard before and not things of the good kind. But, there were those special, standout albums that reminded me of why I go seeking out new music year after year...to make the heart race, the mind ponder, and to satisfy the need and desire to be carried off to someplace else. My top ten albums of 2023 did just that and more. In this regard, it was a GREAT year for new music. 


10. Coyle Girelli, Museum Day

Coyle Girelli
English singer-songwriter Coyle Girelli has done a little bit of everything. He's fronted two bands, co-written songs for two French musicals, written hit songs for a diverse group of artists from Macklemore to BTS, he's collaborated with other hit-making songwriters such as Linda Perry, and he's released two solo albums. He's done...just a bit.

Girelli now calls New York City home and on his latest album, Museum Day, he draws inspiration from living and loving in the Big Apple. He also tips his hat to some of the bands that have inspired him over the years...The Smiths, The National, The War On Drugs, and even New Order. Yet these songs are all Girelli. 

Girelli has a gift for songwriting and each of the ten songs on Museum Day are wonderful. With melodies and lyrics that capture moments in time beautifully whether they are ones filled with love, joy, sadness...or all of them at once, Girelli has crafted a great album.





9. Ġenn, Unum

Genn
In 2017, Childhood friends, vocalist Leona (vox) Farrugia, bassist Leanne Zammit, and guitarist Janelle Borg left their home island of Malta and moved to the UK. Brighton to be exact. There they met drummer Sofia Rose Cooper and Ġenn was born.

Ġenn takes it's name from the Maltese word for frenzy. Unum is the Latin word for oneness, unity, and a sense of being whole. Together, these two words greatly define the tone and tenor of Ġenn's music. Drawing from their diverse backgrounds and influences, the band has somehow woven post punk, noise-rock, Maltese folk, some Jamaican rhythms (Cooper has Jamaican and Portuguese roots) and a little bit of psych-rock into a tapestry of sound that is surprising and exciting to hear. Most importantly, the band's eclecticism works. 

Loud, caustic, quiet, moody, hypnotic, Unum will have your heart racing and your head wanting more. It's a fierce album and was my favorite debut of the year.





8. Dylan LeBlanc, Coyote
 
Dylan Leblanc
Dylan LeBlanc was in Austin, Texas, climbing the face of a 100-foot cliff, gambling with 'Mother Nature’s good graces' as he pulled himself up by tree branches. Once he reached the top, all that laid ahead of him was a lush treeline. There was a breath of stillness, then the sound of a thunderous rustling that drew closer and closer to him. In a blink, LeBlanc watched as a frenzied raccoon came speeding out of the treeline, trailed by an animal that stopped and stared at him with striking intensity: a coyote. 

As LeBlanc describes the moment, “We’re looking at each other dead in the eyes…and I’m saying -- out loud -- ‘If it’s you or me, I am going to kick you off the side of this cliff. I’m not going down.’ LeBlanc recalls that it was an intense, human-animal moment. A moment that he's never forgotten. 

Living on the edge of danger with its many consequences is the theme woven throughout the songs on Coyote, LeBlanc's fifth album. LeBlanc has said that that it's an autobiographical and concept album built around a character named Coyote, a man who is on the run. Set against a moody and atmospheric folk rock musical backdrop with a tinge of psychedelia, LeBlanc's songs have a cinematic feel to them, like the closing scene of a movie where the protagonist is last seen walking down an empty Texas highway on a cool clear night reflecting on his many trials and tribulation while his camp fire is left smoldering, crackling, and popping in the distance. It's a highway where I want to be. I just love this album and I think that you will as well.






7. Bruno Major, Columbo
   
Bruno Major
There once was an old ivory white 1981 Mercedes Benz 280sl named Columbo. Columbo was named after the 70's TV character. The car and character's trench coat were the same color. Singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Bruno Major loved Columbo...the car. 

After being locked down at his parents house in Northampton, England during COVID, where he felt starved of life and experience, Major hopped a plane to LA. There he would drive around in Columbo. The car became a symbol of his renewed autonomy, being able to go wherever he wanted to go and do what he wanted to do once more. In an interview, Major said that this was the most prolific period of writing in his life with songs exploded out of him. Those songs became his third album, Columbo.

Columbo the character was eventually retired. Columbo the car met a different ending in a car crash. While Major may have have lost Columbo, he found a new place of creativity from those drives in his 'nuts and bolts' traveling partner. And it has produced his best album to date. Columbo is an enchanting album about love, heartbreak, time, and hope. So it's fitting that Bruno would sing fondly of Columbo on its title track and of a time when they can ride together again. 

"Columbo, Columbo, I'll see you on the other side. We'll go for a sunset ride. You wait, someday, we’ll drive the world away. On the Pacific Coast Highway"





6. Greta Van Fleet, Starcatcher

Greta Van Fleet
When Greta Van Fleet arrived on the scene in 2017 with their debut album From the Fires, they were hailed and celebrated as a hard-rocking, Led Zeppelin-esk sounding band that was here to save rock music. I thought that the album and the band were fine. But to me, lead singer Josh Kiszka had not yet figured out what to do with his voice. And twin brother Jake (guitar), younger brother Sam (bass), and Danny Wagner (drums), as good as they were as musicians, had not landed on a signature sound. They sounded too much like a Zeppelin knock-off and lacked originality.

2021's The Battle At Garden's Gate, their follow up album, found the band stretching in new directions while toning down the Zeppelin influences. The results were mixed. There were moments of brilliance, exemplified best on the album's closing, The Weight Of Dreams, a monster of a song with one of the greatest guitar solos of the past decade. But there were others that fell short.

All of this brings us to Starcatcher, the Band's third album. In a press release, brother Sam, said that with this album they wanted something 'raw around the edges'. Something that represents them going 'back to their roots' while also moving them forward at the same time. I think that the band realized that they will never outrun their Led Zeppelin influences and that 'going back' was a decision to embrace it. It was the right move. Taking this and a decade's worth of playing together and growing as a band, as songwriters, and as musicians, Greta Van Fleet has finally landed on something that successfully fuses it all together. For me, Starcatcher is their most successful and best album to date. 




5. The Milk Carton Kids, I Only See The Moon

The Milk Carton Kids
Kenneth Pattengale and Joey Ryan know how to fill quiet spaces better than most musical artists that I have listed to over the past twelve years. This is the length of time that they have been releasing albums as The Milk Carton Kids. With two interplaying acoustic guitars and voices that come together with gorgeous harmonies, Pattengale and Ryan create spaces that seem to stop time and make you take in the moment. 

Since their 2015 album, Monterey, the duo have introduced new instrumental elements to their music. The journey for them has been to figure out how to best use these elements to create spaces where colors are more expansive, but the intimacy of their music is preserved. On their latest album, I Only See The Moon, the duo use orchestral strings, clawhammer banjo, and organ beautifully to do exactly that. This is best experienced on the title track. The strings draw you in and then fade away for the moment to bring your full attention to a single guitar and Pattengale as he sings "Far away from prying eyes I cry, how I cry for you. A broken croon in solitude, I only see the moon." It's simply beautiful. 

"The world won’t end the way you think or when you think it will. Time’s a thief, why are we standing still? We’ve got all of the time in the world to kill. We’ve got all of the time in the world to kill."

An album that the duo describe as a love letter to loss and reconciliation, I Only See The Moon is gorgeous, spellbinding, and so special.





4. Declan Welsh and The Decadent West, 2

Declan Welsh
2019 was a very good year for the Glaswegian band Declan Welsh and The Decadent West. Their debut album, Cheaply bought, Expensively Sold, was a hit in Scotland and earned the band a Scottish album of the year nomination. New EP's followed as well as  touring. Then COVID happened.

Tucked away in his room for months on end, lead singer and songwriter Declan Welsh wrote and demoed a new set of songs. The songs drew on the band's influences is new ways and the lyrics reflected feelings and ruminations concerning isolation and anxiety that Welsh was experiencing. But the songs also then gave way to moments of humor, hope and love which as Welsh explained in an interview, 'break through to lift the songs and provide light to the shade'. The band then took his demos into the studio and came away with their sophomore album, 2

It's been a minute since I could say that every song on an album was a standout, but that is the case with 2. From the opening song, Mercy, to closing song, The Comedian, Welsh and the band deliver a set of songs that combine to form one of my favorite albums of the year and satisfy my need for great Scottish Alt rock.





3. Steven Wilson, The Harmony Codex

Steven Wilson
What can one say or write about Steven Wilson that has not been said or written about already? Guitarist, keyboardist, vocalist, composer, audio engineer, producer, Wilson is and has been one of the most prolific and influential musicians of his generation. With a scope and body of work spanning thirty years, his journey and career is really unparalleled. 

For many, Wilson's band Porcupine Tree has been the entry point to all things Wilson. From there, it was on to his other bands, collaborations, and solo projects. Each one occupying a unique musical space with its own sound and point of view. There is just so much to list and share here that I'm not even going to start. What I am going to do is jump to Wilson's new solo album,The Harmony Codex.

In Wilson's recently published autobiography, he includes a short story called...The Harmony Codex. It's a self-described piece of dystopian sci fi. Dystopian in the sense that it’s a science fiction story, but it takes place in a world that Wilson says is just about recognizable as our own yet it's very surreal. Like a lot of dystopian sci fi, Wilson says, its metaphor for the world we live in today. And in this case, the central metaphor is the never-ending staircase.

Wilson points to a direct relationship between his short story and his new album that shares the same name. While there are some songs that Wilson has drawn on from the story's characters and situations, there are others that are more 'obliquely related to the subject matter' in the sense that they relate to this idea of “it’s about the journey, it’s not about the destination.” But where does one start such a journey musically speaking?

In an interview Wilson said that when he started writing this record he had nothing. No agenda. He just sat down and started making music for the sake and for the pleasure of experimenting with sound, and experimenting with songs in the context of experimental sound. That experimentation has augmented Wilson's musical DNA. While certainly still familiar to past albums and works, there is something different going on here. Spatially and sonically this is a newly formed space and soundscape and its next level. I could go on, but I will stop here as this is not a never-ending blog post. 

The Harmony Codex truly is about the journey and it's a journey that we should all be taking in its entirety...all at once. So my suggest is that you put on your headphones, sit back, and let yourself experience this remarkable album. You will be rewarded for it. 






2. Gorillaz, Cracker Island

Gorillaz
When Blur's Damon Albarn and comic book creator Jamie Hewlett came together back in 1998 to form the virtual band Gorillaz, I don't know that they thought they would still be at it twenty-five years later. I know that I did't think that this would be the case. While I liked their debut album, Gorillaz, and LOVED their follow up, Demon Days, I figured that as the novelty of a virtual band faded away, their music would become less fresh and exciting, and the band would quietly exit stage left. Yet here they are in 2023 with their eight album Cracker Island. And what an album. 

Not since Damon Days has Albarn and the band's music sounded this fresh and exciting. Collaborations with Stevie Nicks, Thundercat, Tame Impala, Bad Bunny, Beck, and others only add to the strength of their songs and music. Perhaps this is where they do exit stage left. Perhaps not. But if it is the case, it would be a fitting way to go out.





1. Lankum, False Lankum

Lankum
With one half of them rooted in traditional Irish folk music and the other in experimentation, introducing elements from different musical genres and creating dissonance and some consonance within their songs, Lankum have been an interesting band to explore. Though I will say that I have not always enjoyed their music. It can be dark and feel menacing with tension being created for which there is no relief or release. It can become too much for me to handle. This is not the case with False Lankum, the band's latest album. Not at all. 

'If modern folk music needs its own OK Computer, its own The Dark Side Of The Moon, or indeed its own F#A#∞, this may well be it.' Mojo

With False Lankum, the band's ambitions have never been greater. And yet, they have finally found the perfect balance between tradition and the something else that they have been playing with for so many years. Listening to the album, I truly felt like I was hearing something new, something different, something for the first time. In this regarding, Mojo's putting this album in the company of such singular albums such as OK Computer, while lofty, is just about right. What Lankum have achieved with their album False Lankum is truly breathtaking. 



Friday, September 29, 2023

STEVEN WILSON, THE HARMONY CODEX

What can one say or write about Steven Wilson that has not been said or written about already? Guitarist, keyboardist, vocalist, composer, audio engineer, producer, Wilson is and has been one of the most prolific and influential musicians of his generation. With a scope and body of work spanning thirty years, his journey and career is really unparalleled. 

For many, Wilson's band Porcupine Tree has been the entry point to all things Wilson. From there, it was on to his other bands, collaborations, and solo projects. Each one occupying a unique musical space with its own sound and point of view. There is just so much to list and share here that I'm not even going to start. What I am going to do is jump to Wilson's new solo album,The Harmony Codex.

In Wilson's recently published autobiography, he includes a short story called...The Harmony Codex. It's a self-described piece of dystopian sci fi. Dystopian in the sense that it’s a science fiction story, but it takes place in a world that Wilson says is just about recognizable as our own yet it's very surreal. Like a lot of dystopian sci fi, Wilson says, its metaphor for the world we live in today. And in this case, the central metaphor is the never-ending staircase.

Wilson points to a direct relationship between his short story and his new album that shares the same name. While there are some songs that Wilson has drawn on from the story's characters and situations, there are others that are more 'obliquely related to the subject matter' in the sense that they relate to this idea of “it’s about the journey, it’s not about the destination.” But where does one start such a journey muscially speaking?

In an interview Wilson said that when he started writing this record he had nothing. No agenda. He just sat down and started making music for the sake and for the pleasure of experimenting with sound, and experimenting with songs in the context of experimental sound. That experimentation has augmented Wilson's musical DNA. While certainly still familiar to past albums and works, there is something different going on here. Spatially and sonically this is a newly formed space and soundscape and its next level. I could go on, but I will stop here as this is not a never-ending blog post. 

The Harmony Codex truly is about the journey and it's a journey that we should all be taking in its entirety...all at once. So my suggest is that you put on your headphones, sit back, and let yourself experience this remarkable album. You will be rewarded for it. 


Friday, August 25, 2023

THE MOMMYHEADS, CONEY ISLAND KID

Every few years I 'discover' a band that seems to have been around for decades and I'm left scratching my head wondering how I'd never heard of them or heard their music. Such is the case with The Mommyheads. Reading reviews of the band's many albums, the common theme is that this is a band that has been getting better and better with time and age. I can't yet speak to that since I haven't listened to their back catalog of 14 albums that span 34 years going back to 1989. What I can say is that their 15th album, Coney Island Kid, is absolutely fantastic. 

Fusing pop, prog, indie and psychedelic rock, into a swirling kaleidoscope of curious and slightly idiosyncratic music, The Mommheads have similar underpinnings to XTC and Motorpycho (especially 2020's The All Is One). I was drawn into Coney Island Kid right from the ambient synth opening of title track which uses Coney Island as a backdrop to convey 'themes of desperation and soul-searching'. Honestly, it's been a minute since I was this intrigued with a band or album. 






Friday, March 17, 2023

RPWL, Crime Scene

RPWL
I first heard RPWL when I stumbled upon their 2019 album Tales From Outer Space. I was quickly drawn to the German progressive rock band and their extensive twenty year catalog of albums and Tales quickly rose to be one of my favorites of that year.  

As I wrote back in 2019, the band started as a Pink Floyd cover band, and while it is probably not fair to still be talking about their origins 20+ years later, you can still hear Floyd influences, especially the band's later work (think The Division Bell). With this said, RPWL are truly an original band, especially on their concept oriented albums, such as their latest Crime Scene. On it, the band writes that it 'directs its attention to the morbid, the perverse, the evil in good, the abysses of the human behavior spectrum in all its unpredictable diversity, which sometimes comes across as bizarrely disturbing and conclusive, if one tries to fathom it.' Certainly not topics for the faint of heart, but in the hands of RPWL, they are explored in a way that will keep you coming back for another listen. So glad that RPWL are back.




Friday, December 11, 2020

TOP ALBUMS OF 2020


This past year was not the one that any of us expected or wanted. And I think that it's safe to say that everyone experienced such a wide range of thought, feels, and emotions as we all moved through it. This was certainly the case for me. Fortunately with each passing month, there were new albums that provided me with outlets to escape...with any hope to my happy place. 

At different times, I reach for each one of these albums again and again. Here are my top albums of 2020!



10. Airbag, A Day At The Beach

Airbag, A Day At The Beach
I got excited when I first learned that Airbag was back in the studio recording a new album. Since 2009, the band, hailing from Oslo, Norway, had only released four albums. Each one has become favorites of mine. I was ready for more. Almost a year later, A Day At The Beach arrived back in June and I got my Airbag fix.   

One would never say that Airbag has a totally original sound. Influences of bands like Pink Floyd and Porcupine Tree have always been present. On A Day At The Beach, the band does move in a bit of a new directly with the addition of electronic elements which they say were inspired by the resurgence of ‘80’s electronica and new wave. In this regard, they have tapped into a bit of The Cure circa Disintegration.

With six songs clocking in at almost fifty minutes, there is plenty of music to consume here. I cannot recommend A Day At The Beach enough. This is a fantastic album. 





9. Creeper, Sex, Death & The Infinite Void

Creeper, Sex, Death & Infinite Void
WOW. WOA?! WOW! That was my reaction listing to Creeper's amazingly original, inventive, and over-the-top sophomore  album. Since then, I have been trying to figure out just how to describe this one. Then I read Kerrang!'s perfect review; 'If the coquettish camp of The Rocky Horror Picture Show is your idea of a good time, or you’ve enjoyed the morbid-idiosyncrasies of a John Waters movie, the lovingly-crafted universe evoked by Sex, Death & The Infinite Void might just feel like home. Imbued with endless passion, colour and a carnival of glorious sound, it’s a musical marvel.' A marvel indeed.




8. Glass Animals, Dreamland

Four years after the release of their Mercury Nominated album, How To Be A Human Being, Glass Animals are back and better than ever. A much more personal album, ‘Dreamland is the awakening moment from a turbulent time’ for the band and the ‘nostalgic personal journey of front man and producer Dave Bayley.’ (OMH) 

In the hands of other bands, exploring difficult childhood memories, relationships, and the topic of recovery might weight down an album, but not with Glass Animals. Dreamland’s heavy topics are disguised with psych-pop upbeat tones and by ‘referencing people and/or characters as food.’ Using these tactics, the band creates a dream-like state that allows the reality of Bayley’s past to ‘seem a little less intense’ (MFN). 




7. The Haar, The Haar

The Haar

The story goes that Irish folk and traditional percussionist Cormac Byrne and fiddler Adam Summerhayes were on holiday in Inis Oírr when they walked into a pub and were silenced along with everyone else as Molly Donnery began to sing unaccompanied. Fast forward some time and the three meet up in a studio along with accordionist Murray Grainer to record some Irish traditional songs. The four made no plans in advance of entering the studio. As they explained, they just let the music create itself. 

What resulted was the creation of a truly stunning collection of songs captured on their first and only takes. As Folk Radio wrote about The Haar, it's 'a very evocative record, bringing senses of the pain and futility of war and the salt of the ocean, as well as the beauty of the land and the strength of human relationships through its works and music. We need more music like this; spontaneous, alive and affecting, The Haar will take you on a journey and have you appreciating the purest of life's pleasures. Wonderful stuff.' I so agree.




6. Eric Hutchinson, Class of 98

Eric Hutchinson, Class of 98
In the press release for Class of 98Eric Hutchinson explains that sometime last year, he came to a strange realization: he kept daydreaming about high school. It had been over 20 years since the singer-songwriter had graduated, yet the adolescent dreams, hopes, fears, anxieties and emotions he faced as a kid began flooding back. Suddenly, he felt transported back into his teenage self and those years filled with the kind of alienation and private angst that is recognizable to most anyone who’s ever been 16. 

Now, years later, he has chronicled those adolescence years. Wrapping them in ’90s inspired alt-rock-pop music from bands like Fountains Of Wayne and Weezer, Hutchinson has crafted a memorable set of songs and album.




5. Dua Lipa, Future Nostalgia

Dua Lipa, Future Nostalgia
Having no idea who Dua Lipa was when I first listened to Future Nostalgia, I got all excited that I had made some great musical discovery that I would share with my kids. The album fits squarely in their musical lane. Turns out that I'm about the only one who doesn't know about Britain's biggest female musical artist. 

I will just say that I love Future Nostalgia. As Variety wrote, "It's an impeccably crafted, gleefully executed half-hour plus of pop perfection that does meet the moment, maybe, in just reminding you how good it feels to be human, And to be in love. And to be in Studio 54." This is modern pop at its best. 
 



4. Siv Jakobsen, A Temporary Smooth 

Siv Jakobsen, A Temporary Smooth
Gentle and calming, Oslo-based singer-songwriter Siv Jakobsen’s ambient, folky tunes belong in an independent coming of age film, or at very least, a heartbreaking scene in Normal People. Poised with an unhinged rawness, Jakobsen’s sophomore album ‘A Temporary Soothing’ does just as the title says, acting a security blanket to offer shelter during those blue Sunday evenings or summer thunderstorms. Clash Magazine 

I was immediately drawn to this album and have come back to it many times. It's captivating and hard to escape.



3. Lime Cordiale, 14 Steps To A Better You 

Lime Cordiale, 14 Steps To A Better You
What a FUN album! Australian brothers, Oliver and Louis Leimbach, along with their bandmates are back with another gem of an album. With their sound that blends 'summery vibes and harmonies and bouncing melodies' (Billboard), Lime Cordiale's catchy sing-along-songs are second to none. 

Listening to this album will put a smile on your face and bounce in all 14 of your steps...to a better you. This is one of those albums that we all could use a bit more of this year. 



2. Katie Melua, Album No. 8

Katie Melua, Album No. 8
Katie Melua is one of the UK's best selling artists of all time. Yet, here in the states she is not widely known. It's really ashamed. Melua is that rare artist who's music radiates and captivates while remaining quiet and gentle. These are two qualities that we don't see too much of anymore. Being loud, shocking, and controversial seems to sell more albums these days. 

Now in her mid-thirties and recently divorced, Melua's lyrics go deeper and get more personal than on past albums. Wrapped in a beautiful cinematic melancholy soundscape, Melua reflects on  thoughts and feelings of loss, of heartbreak, and of appreciation for what has been and what is to be. While Album No 8 is Melua's story, passages throughout are recognizable and relatable. It all makes Album No. 8, Melua's most special album to date.   




1. Motorpsycho, The All Is One

The All Is One
I was not familiar with Motorpsycho when I first sat down to listen to The All Is One. I also had no idea of it's running time. Turns out that the album, the last in a trilogy by the Norwegian trio, clocks in at one hour and twenty four minutes. It’s a good thing that I did not know or I probably would have never started listening. But honestly, when I go to the end….I was truly disappointed that it was over. I just wanted more. And I wanted to learn everything that I could about this band that has produced 24 albums over the past 30 years.
 
As Everything Is Noise wrote about The All Is One, ‘Truly, this is an album you give yourself up to. It can be a demanding task to surrender your whole attention and time to just listening to music, no matter how good it is – albums like The All Is One not only make it simple, but incentivize you for doing so. The reward is the experience itself: a swaddling of progressive, psychedelic (called ‘psychodelic‘ by the band) rock that’s equal parts calming and transcendent. It’s a portal to another world or dimension, one with technicolor skies, drinkable air, and tingling currents that prick your corporeal form to remind you that you’re the most alive you’ve ever been, all while floating on a magic carpet.'

Listening to The All Is One, I could not help but reflect on the truly epic albums that I listened to as a kid and absolutely devoured as they transported me someplace that I had never been. It is exactly what I needed this year...or any year.