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Top 50 Albums of 2016

2016, despite being 2016, was a pretty good year for music.

In reverse order, my fave 50 albums:

50 Savages - Adore Life
49 Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Skeleton Tree
48 Weaves - Weaves
47 Wye Oak - Tween
46 Invisible Boy - Invisible Boy
45 AlunaGeorge - I Remember
44 The Joy Formidable - Hitch
43 All Saints - Red Flag
42 Blood Orange - Freetown Sound
41 Boys Noize - Mayday
40 Eliot Sumner - Information
39 Thee Oh Sees - A Weird Exits
38 Honeyblood - Babes Never Die
37 Katy B - Honey
36 Nice As Fuck - Nice as Fuck
35 Solange - A Seat at the Table
34 Sleigh Bells - Jessica Rabbit
33 Still Corners - Dead Blue
32 Warpaint - Heads Up
31 David Bowie - Blackstar
30 Banks - The Altar
29 Emma Pollock - In Search of Harperfield
28 Emma Ruth Rundle - Marked for Death
27 Frank Ocean - Blonde
26 Leonard Cohen - You Want It Darker
25 Dinosaur Jr. - Give a Glimpse of What Yer Not
24 Jimmy Eat World - Integrity Blues
23 Bat For Lashes - The Bride
22 Tegan and Sara - Love You To Death
21 Bruce Hornsby & The Noisemakers - The Way It Is 2016
20 Carly Rae Jepsen - Emotion Side B
19 The Frank And Walters - Songs For The Walking Wounded
18 Haley Bonar - Impossible Dream
17 Kate Tempest - Let Them Eat Chaos
16 The Anchoress - Confessions Of A Romance Novelist
15 Bob Mould - Patch The Sky
14 Bon Iver - 22, A Million
13 Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool
12 Bruce Hornsby & The Noisemakers - Rehab Reunion
11 Minor Victories - Minor Victories

10 Mitski - Puberty 2

Your Best American Girl is already an indie classic but there’s much more than that here.

9 Beyoncé - Lemonade

Another remarkable achievement.

8 Angel Olsen - My Woman

Her most absorbing album yet.

7 Daughter - Not To Disappear

Initial disappointment that this didn’t move on much from the (albeit excellent) sound of their debut now more than compensated by repeat listening. A grower.

6 Låpsley - Long Way Home

Everything about this album made sense when I saw Låpsley live this year. What a talent.

5 School of Seven Bells - SVIIB

The perfect, bittersweet farewell.

4 Shura - Nothing’s Real

Every single track’s a banger.

3 Poliça - United Crushers

Three albums in from my favourite band and I’m yet to hear a song I don’t love to bits. I saw them 4 times this year and wished it had been more.

2 Rihanna - ANTI

Intriguing on first listen and still revealing gems nearly a year on. In years to come ANTI is going to be revered as a masterpiece. People hating on Work could not be more wrong either.

1 The Wedding Present - Going, Going…

I’d fallen a bit out of love with The Wedding Present over the last decade. 2008’s El Rey and 2012’s Valentina had their moments but were disappointing. The subsequent “Cinerama” reworking of Valentina into an atrocious lounge jazz / easy listening / big band thing was so awful it was the first album I’ve thrown away and deleted from my library for years.

My expectations for Going Going… were therefore pretty low. The idea of 20 tracks at 1 hour and 20 minutes starting with 4 (FOUR!) lyric free moody instrumentals was going to be horrendous. A conceptual piece, based on a US road trip with videos for each song just made it sound worse.

Yet. Here we are.

Despite including the most diabolical song The Wedding Present have ever recorded (Secretary) it’s my album of the year.

It’s gorgeous. The production sounds like the Wedding Present again.

There are so many moments in an album that showcases Gedge’s talent for storytelling, melody and emotion but I’ll just comment on the last two songs, which are my favourites.

Gedge’s love of the pop song and knack for classic songwriting was honed in the (proper) Cinerama years, and reached a peak for me in the gorgeous Perfect Blue from 2004’s return of the Wedding Present. I didn’t think he could match those moments again. He has. Rachel is melodic, sentimental, and just utterly joyous.

You might not top Rachel as an the album’s indie pop banger but you can follow it with the perfect album closer.

Santa Monica is magnificent. It is the most affecting song David Gedge has ever recorded.

The sense of finality is unavoidable:

It’s the last track of an album titled “Going, Going…”. It feels so much like he’s revisiting the last song (Octopussy) from his best album (1991’s Seamonsters). In the lyrics he also references a song from George Best, the first album.

Then there’s the last line. Oh boy, that last line.

I hope this doesn’t mark the end of The Wedding Present but if it is what a way to go out.

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Top 50 Debut Albums (40-31)

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Top 50 Debut Albums (40-31)

Numeros 40 to 31 then:

40) Blondie - Blondie (1976)

This, and the three albums that would follow are sublime and as good as any other band from their era.

Their fifth one was bobbins, mind.

39) Gayngs - Relayted (2010)

A supergroup of Minneapolis based musicians led by Ryan Olson. "A collection of drugged-up keyboards and slick production almost exclusively inspired by 10cc's I'm Not in Love".

38) Howling Bells - Howling Bells (2006)

Their finest hour.

37) Beyoncé - Dangerously In Love (2003)

Crazy In Love dominated 2003 and it dominates this album from the beginning. Righly so, it is one of the best songs you'll ever hear. There's more here though. A mighty solo debut from an artist who has gone on to even better moments.

36) The Pretenders - Pretenders (1980)

Seeing Chrissie Hynde live this summer made me realise what a great collection of songs The Pretenders have. A shed load are on this debut.

35) Morrissey - Viva Hate (1988)

Suedehead was far better than anyone dared hoped. Then came Everyday Is Like Sunday. What a track.

Morrissey stuff > Smiths stuff remains by controversial opinion.

34) Cinerama - Va Va Voom (1998)

Although the Cinerama name would continue until 2004, this debut is the only David Gedge album that doesn't sound like The Wedding Present. Recorded with his then partner, Sally Murrell, it's a great departure with wind and string instruments.

33) Ash - 1977 (1996)

One of indie's great singles bands, and their debut is packed full of some of their best.

32) CHVRCHES - The Bones Of What You Believe (2013)

Influenced by the very best 80s synthpop. Already influencing others. 

31) Gene - Olympian (1995)

There's some beautiful songwriting here and it would continue until their final and often overlooked masterpiece - 2001's 'Libertine'.

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