2018 LPS
Everywhere At The End Of Time: Stage 5 -
The Caretaker
Pastoral -
Gazzelle Twin
Make Me Know You Sweet -
Pendant
Mandy OST -
Johann Johannsson
A Laughing Death In Meatspace -
Tropical Fuck Storm
Everywhere At The End Of Time: Stage 4 -
The Caretaker
Psychedelic Spirit Show -
Moon Wiring Club
Mother -
Xylouris White
On Drugs -
Primitive Calculators
Unfold
- Gabor Lázár
Double Negative -
Low*
Sydney Rococo -
Steve Kilbey
Addendum -
John Maus
Culture II
- Migos
Insula -
Proc Fiskal
Cocoon Crush -
Objekt
Sleepmassk -
Sleepmassk
Ways Of Seeing
-
The Advisory Circle
This list is not as authoritative or comprehensive as it usually is (go to
FACT,
Complex,
OPIUM-HUM or
The Wire for that) because I didn't check out hundreds of albums this year like I normally do. Severe debilitating migraines caused my life to be lived at about a 3rd of its capacity. So I was rarely in a jovial mood to even entertain the thought of listening to the latest pop tune or experimental opus. The above records are just the handful I managed to enjoy in 2018.
I didn't mind
Sleep's
The Sciences,
Late Electrics by
Rangers,
Young Thug's
Slime Language/On The Rvn,
Future's
Beast Mode 2,
Kazuashita by
Gang Gang Dance,
Laurel Halo's
Raw Silk Uncut Wood,
The Invisible World Of... by
Beautify Junkyards,
Neville Watson's
The Midnight Orchard,
Duppy Gun's
Miro Tape etc. They might have ended up in my main best of 2018 list but I just haven't listened to them enough to rate them properly. I can't even recall if I liked
Let's Eat Grandma's
I'm All Ears or
Sophie's
Oil Of Every Pearl's Un Insides...er probably not.
There were new records from
Gas,
Oneohtrix Point Never, Alvin Lucier, Eli Keszler, Chris Carter, Bruce, The Weekend, Metro Boomin, Pusha T, Cardi B, Travis Scott, Rico Nasty, Teyana Taylor, Playboi Carti, Vince Staples, 21 Savage, Chief Keef, Gnod, Dead Can Dance, Julia Holter, Autechre,
Supersilent,
Jon Hassell, Hailu Mergia and a bunch of others that I just didn't get around to listening to let alone buying. Then there's all the new people I don't know. FACT even have a
list of the best 13 ambient LPs of 2018. None of which I've heard either and that's probably where my head should have been at more than anywhere else this year. I'm sure some of this unheard music is good stuff but that's the way my 2018 cookie crumbled.
On the soundtrack front I enjoyed
Rob's
Revenge OST and
Colin Stetson's
Hereditary OST but I didn't even get around to that
Scott Walker/Sia soundtrack or the new
Halloween from
John Carpenter & Co.
I nearly fell into the nostalgia traps of new releases from
Space Afrika, Beta Librae, Barker... all perfectly adequate facsimiles of past high water marks in innovative electronic music.
...apparently rave is the new old thing...hasn't it been the new old thing for at least seven years now?
...apparently speed garage is also the new old thing...
...liquid Drum'n'Bass, seriously people?!
Was
The Sons Of Kemet album really all that?
I wonder what
Mark Fisher would have made of
Guttersnipe's
My Mother The Vent? Being
Mars wannabes in 2018 is kinda trad, innit? Talk about not killing yr idols. Mars formed in 1974! Another case of a band picking up on the sonic aesthetics of a band but not understanding the revolutionary ideas behind them.
I don't even know who
Twenty One Pilots are or what they do...er... same goes for
Amnesia Scanner and
Tirzah. Do I need to know? Am I missing out?
I enjoyed track-y tunes like
Ramos from
Ploy and
Agua Y Puerta by
Lechuga because they sound like I could have made them myself on GarageBand if I could have been bothered.
What would
Mark Fisher have thought Part 2:
Vessel's
Queen Of Golden Dogs? I mean I get what they are doing but why would you want to do that? It feels like a thesis for a music degree doncha reckon?
Oh...and who gives two fucks about
Kendrick Lamar when you've got
YG serving up Californian gold ala
Big Bank!
YG is West Coast's main man.
*LOW - DOUBLE NEGATIVE
This record is a bit like Sun Kil Moon's
Benji album from a few years back, it was hard to ignore due to the groundswell of popularity on the internet and even from the archaic printed paper people. I first heard Low on the legendary
Witch In The Colours radio show hosted by Jason Reynolds on Melbourne's 3RRR when
I Could Live In Hope was released in 1994. At the time they were described as an American answer to Slowdive, which was a little misleading. I still remember hearing
Lazy for the first time and its Slint meets Twin Peaks reverbed vibe had me mesmerised. To me, Low reached perfection in 1995 on their 2nd album
Long Division. That LP was a three piece doin electrifying minimal rock with their signature threatening, gloomy and slow burning jamz that sounded like they were recorded in a cold and lonesome echo chamber. Sure they had excellent records after
Long Division particularly the following
The Curtain Hits The Cast (1996) and a couple recorded with Steve Albini. I lost touch with them after that though. So it was weird listening to them this year but also a joy.
Double Negative is like
a Low chopped & screwed tape. I don't know how they ended up in this sonic terrain (although they have always had an experimental bent) but it's great that they did. Low are still Low of old ie. lovely yet intense melodious close boy/girl harmonies. Its just that the sonic textures have been beautifully fucked with. Stuff drops in and out, gets slowed down, gets chopped, gets sent into the red, goes glitch-y and disintegrates then swells back to life in a swathe of distortion. The outstanding track
Always Tying To Work It Out sounds like DJ Screw could have been at the controls. This all might sound like a strange juxtaposition but it works to an impressive degree. Enthralling.
ARCHIVAL/COMPILATIONS/REISSUES
A Dream Sails Out To Sea: Get At The Wave -
Takashi kokuboTadaima -
Akiko YanoParaiso -
Harry Hosono & The Yellow Magic Band
Cochin Moon -
Haruomi Hosono & Tadanori Yokoo
Philharmony -
Haruomi Hosono
Orient -
Hiroshi Sato
Black Mass -
Lucifer
The Unexplained: Electronic Musical Impressions Of The Occult -
Ataraxia
Memoire Magnetique Vol.1 1966-1990 -
Bernard Parmegiani
The Girl From Chickasaw County -
Bobbie Gentry
Goodbyes And Beginnings -
Suzanne Menzel
The Music From Bagpuss -
Sandra Kerr & John Faulkner
Impressionz -
Ekoplekz
Chronolyse -
Richard Pinhas
East West -
Richard Pinhas
Rhizosphere -
Richard Pinhas
Jazz, Jazz Jazz -
Seif Abu Bakr and The ScorpionsAsnakech -
Asnakech Worku feat. Hailu Mergia & Temare Haregu
African Scream Contest Volume 2: Benin 1963-80
- Various
Two Niles To Sing A Melody: The Violins & Synths Of Sudan -
Various
Gumba Fire: Bubblegum Soul & Synth-Boogie In 1980s South Africa -
Various
Onda De Amor: Synthesized Brazilian Hits That Never Were 1984-94 -
Various
These records are obviously in no particular order. Apart from those three LPs mentioned, by
Lucifer, Ataraxia (both
Mort Garson pseudonyms) and
Bernard Parmegiani, I'm pretty out of the loop now when it comes to ye olde pioneering electronics reissues. God I even missed an Aussie
Creel Pone release this year! How many live recordings of
Throbbing Gristle do I need? Well all of them so I guess one more wouldn't hurt. Then there was a whole deluge of Japanese electronic, ambient, city-pop, image albums and Ghibli soundtracks from the 70s & 80s, a lot of which are getting issued in the west for the first time. Have all the good electronic and horror soundtracks now been reissued? I don't even know if great labels from the 00s like
Trunk, Omni Recording Corporation, Strut, Harmless or
Finders Keepers are still reissuing interesting esoterica in 2018. On the African tip there were choice compilations on
Habibi Funk Records,
Soundway,
Ostinato Records, Awesome Tapes From Africa and
Analog Africa, that stuff seems to be petering out now that they've reached the 80s Post-Boogie/R&B/Pop phase. What comes after that? Probably not much. Then again maybe in Africa they did noise-rock, indie, grunge, riot grrl, acid house, 'ardcore rave, techno, ambient, jungle, speed garage... who knows? Uh-huh! I just saw on the interwebs, a compilation
Pantsula! The Rise Of Electronic Dance Music In South Africa 1988-1990 was released last year on on
Rush Hour Music.
TELLY
INSIDE NO. 9
The anthology show that is sometimes horror, sometimes black comedy, sometimes drama and sometimes all of the above. Most film-makers get 2 hours plus to tell their story and it's usually not a masterpiece.
Reece Shearsmith and
Steve Pemberton give themselves 29 minutes and make a twisted ripper every time. Only comparable to
The Crown in consistency and quality. Their genius is breathtaking!
ATLANTA
Even better than the first season.
THE DEUCE
Pretty good but hey, I guess you can't top
The Wire can you?
THE STAIRCASE
Fascinating true crime documentary series. Did the justice system get it wrong? Surely
Michael Peterson is guilty but yeah I get it, there's not enough solid evidence against him though.
EVIL GENIUS
Disturbing four part true crime documentary about a bunch of fucking nutters and their strange hair-brained heist scheme that culminated in the murder of the pizza bomber. I don't know who or what to believe.
You do not want people like this in your life.
GLOW
Alison Brie is so charismatic as is
Kate Nash and surprisingly
Marc Maron is very good. Best telly soundtrack of the year ie. bunch of terrific old 80s radio songs I haven't heard since the 80s.
CLAWS
Bananas OTT crime drama/soap opera/comedy with the best wardrobe in TV since the 70s. Very 2018. This was entertainment.
AUDIO DOCUMENTARY
Evil Has A Name: The Untold Story Of The Golden State Killer Investigation.
This is an Audible exclusive. Six hours featuring audio from key detectives, profilers, criminologists, forensic experts, victims etc. in the saga of
The Visalia Ransacker/East Area Rapist/The Original Night-Stalker. Fascinating insight into the revolutionary ways of catching old evil cunts ie.
Joseph DeAngelo the man who raped over 50 women & girls and killed over 13 people in California from 1974 to 1986.
Paul Holes is the rock star of detectives! and the escalating technology surrounding
DNA is the catalyst that is the icing on this case's cake. Amazing story.
Happy New Year!