Best Albums Of 2016
Like last year, starting up with:
Ted Gioia - The 100 Best Albums of 2016
As the previous years, this is my kind of list. With Black Star as #1 and Radiohead as #28.
I'll have a closer look later . . .
Ted Gioia - The 100 Best Albums of 2016
As the previous years, this is my kind of list. With Black Star as #1 and Radiohead as #28.
I'll have a closer look later . . .
Comments
Sounds like Rolling Stone's list is out. I haven't seen it, but allegedly Beyonce is #1.
Craig
Rolling Stone. (Just the Bowie here.)
NME. (Ditto. Beyonce didn't win this one)
So far my one pop culture opinion is that Jaar should be on more of these.
19 on RS.
18 on NME.
These lists are great in how predicable they are. Rolling Stone? The Stones, Green Day, Sting, etc. really over ranked? Yep.
NME? Average young British rock band taking the top spot? Yep.
The inclusion of Drake's godawful Views on the last two lists should invalidate them completely.
Craig
2: Bowie
6: Radiohead
From my must have list
20: Nick Cave
- I feel sooo hip with 2 in the top 10 !
NME. - Same as RS
Consequence of Sound list.
29: Nicolas Jaar (a @rostasi rec, as I remember it)
21: Jenny Whal
17: Tim Hecker (Yes !!!)
13: Radiohead
03: Bowie
- 2 times Beyonce over Bowie, Hmmmm ? - I almost feel like listening to Beyonce.
The Gioia List:
1: David Bowie - Blackstar
12: Roomful of Teeth - The Colorado (wonderful album)
28: Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool
59: David Lang - The National Anthems
64: International Contemporary Ensemble - On The Nature of Thingness
87: Daniel Wohl - Holographic
- Under my radar:
Nico Muhly & Teitur, Markus Stockhausen / Florian Weber, Michael Mizrahi, Glenn Kotche & Sō Percussion, Paul Moravec, Third Coast Percussion/Steve Reich
- And no Brian Eno on neither of them
Not asked in a snarky I'm-gonna-pounce-on-your-answer way. Genuinely curious. And surprised. I thought it was good, but in the grand context of his entire discography, a bit underwhelming. I found myself wanting to like it way more than I did because of how it corresponded to his passing. I wanted to find more meaning and emotional impact in Blackstar because of that. But eventually I had to admit that Bowie's final statement wasn't "Rock n' Roll Suicide" or "Time" or "Five Years" or any type of song that would, to my mind, be an appropriate coda to this music giant (and personal favorite of mine (even more than Frisell and Monk... I think). Eventually I had to admit that were it not for it corresponding to his passing, this is an album that would inevitably gather dust on my shelf except for my annual visitation when I hoped it would resonate with me.
I mean, I think it's a nice album. Enjoyable. Only one track that makes me want to skip through it. But really no track that is particularly memorable either... which, in my experience, is not a common trait of a Bowie album. Well, I suppose that isn't true of his new millennium music.
I mean, I'm not giving much weight to those polls listed above. Rolling Stone is a joke, NME has its flaws, even Gioia... he's got an admirably diverse listening habit, but where he goes wide, he rarely goes deep... most of his choices are on the tepid side of their respective genres. I think the #2 spot on his list in an honorary ECM position, and most of his jazz selections tend to be on ECM/Bluenote... with the exception typically being a solo piano and/or vocal jazz selection on one of the NYC-based medium size labels. Good stuff for sure, but not very daring music in the grand scheme of things. But even with all that, I'm surprised to see Bowie at number one on his list.
Curious what other people think.
On the other hand, pretty thrilled for McCaslin and crew. They're some talented musicians and it's nice to see them getting some rock n' roll treatment.
/furniture
The Gioia list I enjoy because it's more diverse than most lists, and I always find myself discovering music I would not be exposed to normally.
Craig
22 for me, including 9 of the top ten.
Craig
We should start a competition to guess which of the top 10 Craig does not have. (I'll go with Danny Brown on the scientific grounds that I have never heard of him).
eta, I've got just two on the jazz-centric Gioia list - But I'll probably have more soon!
George Coleman and Allen Toussaint are the two, both delightful. I hope Allen's album gets some love on the year-end jazz lists.
I want to claim partial credit for seeing young piano whirlwind Daniil Trifonov in performance this year.
Doofy - Maaaaaybe.
Craig
Sorry, logic fail - You have at least one! Could have both...
Unlike last year (Kamasi), there's no big monster #1 in 2016. Gregory Porter will be on a lot of lists.
Oh, I also have the Sarathy Korwar.
100-81
80-61
Lots of obscure and intriguing things.
This one is an old favorite of mine: