Best Tracks – 7.8.22
Katy J Pearson – “Willow’s Song”
Return was one of 2020’s
most overlooked debuts. A canny and homespun record that spanned the soft,
Laurel Canyon tendencies Pearson’s voice seemed destined for, and the bouncy
pop numbers that were such a surprise. For how much bigger the arrangements are
on Howl though, the songs themselves are slightly more insular, harder
to grab on to at first lesson. That is of course, not a detriment, and Pearson
to her credit, finds a way to combine everything – all the excess, all the
melody and all the drama – into something big and purposeful; into a closing
track that shakes the foundation her debut was built on.
Delicate Steve – “I Can Fly Away”
Steve’s breezy and virtuosic playing has only gotten better,
and his ability to captivate with these guitar-driven instrumental jams should
have the same hold on the public as Khruangbin, or at least the same hold on
college kids cramming for finals. The difference might be that Delicate Steve
succeeds more than most instrumental acts at treating the guitar as the lead
melody, and simply letting everything else fall into place. “I Can Fly Away”
isn’t built on vibey, background music, it’s as emotionally driven and
conceptual as it would be with vocals, and often, like most of After Hours,
even more so.
Burna Boy – “Glory”
As Burna Boy’s afrobeat roots
align themselves closer with modern pop, and his features grow to include the
likes of Ed Sheeran and Khalid, it would be easy for him to lose touch of his
purpose. Yes, those tracks are easily the weakest on his newest outing, but
elsewhere Burna Boy is pushing his sound in surprising and effective new ways. Ladysmith
Black Mambazo may not sound as left field of a collaboration on paper as it
really is, but Burna Boy doubles down, bookending Love, Damini with
their appearances. “Glory” is excessive in the best way possible. As the tracks
runs the gamut through a “Happy Birthday” interpolation and swells with orchestration
and choral refrains, it sets the stage for its album well as an opener can and successfully
harkens back to classics like “Gone till November”.
Spiral Stairs – “Slipped Away”
Scott Kannberg’s solo work outside
of Pavement heavily pales in comparison to Stephen Malkmus’, but avoiding those
predilections, you can make the case that Medley Attack!! is very
enjoyable. This is not a profound, or especially important release, but it never
aims to be, and Spiral Stairs is straightforward and effective in the sincerity
of its sound, a sound I find very enjoyable. Kannberg does come close to
transcending to greatness on a few tracks here though, most notably on “Slipped
Away”. For all its clunky and expository dialogue, Kannberg keeps the track
upbeat and carefree, evoking a wistful dichotomy that his old band used to do
so well.
Laura Veirs – “Winter Windows”
For an artist as consistently
arresting as Laura Veirs, a divorce album is the kind of songwriting fodder
fans dream of. Couple that with the fact that the man she was divorcing, Tucker
Martine, was her longtime producer as well, and you get Found Light, one
of Veirs’ best albums – a real compliment considering her high watermark and
her recent cutbacks. Veirs exudes confidence and melancholy and is unrestrained
throughout, determined to create palettes and production quirks that would
sound alien on her previous work. As the final moment from Found Light,
“Winter Windows” is pure catharsis, a track, both punky and biting in a way
that Veirs has seldom appeared before. What’s more is that she pulls it off.
Wu-Lu – “Times”
The complexity of Wu-Lu is clear
from the outset, Miles Romans-Hopcraft’s blend of Warp-friendly textures weaves
through hardcore, hip hop, breakbeats and industrial in ways that are clear
just from the initial tone of the production. Layering so many contrasting
elements is a lofty goal in itself, but a gem like “Times” tells another story.
Like a lot of the album, it focuses on youth and coming of age, but it also
finds the right tone to conveys anger and bitterness along with
nostalgia and acceptance. Romans-Hopcraft helped right the impetus for this track
with Morgan Simpson of black midi and you can tell, but its success lies in
just how much it sounds like a Wu-Lu cut.
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