2/19/24

Best of 2023: Albums



This is my list of favorite albums for 2023.

2023 was a solid and respectable twelve months for music. It was a pleasant mix of new stuff and familiar faces. The year wasn't a grand extreme of the best or the worst, 2023 showed up, did its work, and everything was fine. This is in contrast to how I felt that 2022 was mostly underwhelming.

For shows, I finally made it back to Buffalo to see Wolf Eyes at the Mohawk Place. They were great and it was good to get out again. There hasn't really been much that interests me for concerts so I haven't bothered going to anything.

I dabbled with picking up a few reissues over the year. It was nice to add older material from Ash Ra Tempel, Bardo Pond, Bee Mask, Bowery Electric, Everyone Asked About You, Lush, and Wolf Eyes to the collection.

Caterina Barbieri composed an efficient classical synthesizer album. Lea Bertucci had a fascinating recording of two longform discordant drone pieces created with electronics and orchestral instruments. Marcia Bassett and Ursula Scherrer burned up a batch of CDs for the soundtrack to a live video performance in Paris that featured ethereal synths, field recordings, and manipulated voices.

BIG | BRAVE recorded another slab of their cold Montreal in winter metal. I should've gone to see them play Buffalo back in June. Blues Ambush delivered three completely zorched out instrumental guitar jams. Dana Ma's Cloning smooshed together a collection of unsettling cut-up noise. I correctly figured out what the cover is.

Collate rattled off some quick and catchy Minutemen style punk. This type of music works better when it isn't all dudes. Mutwawa successfully returned with a full length of their spooky and haunting noise. Guitarist Emily Robb released her second solo album and had a limited edition tour tape with Bill Nace pressed up into record form. Robb is one of the best six string players out there at the moment.

Terms churned out more of their wonderful abstract avant-garde noise rock. It's awesome to see the aesthetic of weirdness pioneered by Skin Graft Records is going strong in the 2020s. Wolf Eyes expounded upon the brooding minimal atmospheres of their last couple albums with Dreams In Splattered Lines, which had refined synthesizer/drum programing, Nate Young's cryptic lyrics, and John Olson's mutant reeds.

As always any album had to be released in the calendar year and I had to listen to it a lot. And if you are one of those types who needs a definitive album of the year, then that honor goes to On The Creekbeds On The Thrones by XV on Ginkgo. The trio of Claire Cirocco, Emily Roll, and Shelley Salant crafted an album that recalls the Galaxie 500 and probably that one band that had a banana on the cover of their first record. XV tags themselves as uncomfortable free punk from Michigan. On The Creekbeds On The Thrones has an almost lackadaisical mood to it. It's not so much lackadaisical as in laziness, but more of a relaxed step back or time out from the stress of the modern world.

The list goes band/album/label for those with questions of that nature.

01. Caterina Barbieri - Myuthafoo - Light Years
02. Lea Bertucci - Of Shadow and Substance - Cibachrome Editions
03. Marcia Bassett & Ursula Scherrer - A La Maison Live - Yew Recordings
04. BIG | BRAVE - Nature Morte - Thrill Jockey
05. Blues Ambush - s/t - Radical Documents
06. Cloning - Squirters - Blorpus Editions
07. Collate - Generative Systems - Domestic Departure
08. Mutwawa - Radiation Radio - Decoherence
09. Emily Robb - If I Am Misery Then Give Me Affection - Petty Bunco
10. Terms - All Becomes Indistinct - Skin Graft
11. Wolf Eyes - Dreams In Splattered Lines - Disciples
12. XV - On The Creekbeds On The Thrones - Ginkgo

1/23/24

Best of 2023: Cassettes



Here's the annual wrap up of my top tapes for the last twelve months. Nothing much really changes from year to year with these things. I like tapes that fall under the broad categories of experimental music, noise, and synth jams. There's probably some guitar and other instruments in the mix, too. It didn't necessarily make the list, but I was buying a lot more harsh noise for 2023. Sometimes you need to hear the gnarly stuff.

I capped any label at two tapes and tried to get as much variety on the list as possible, although I didn't buy a ton of tapes in 2023. Unifactor was surprisingly quiet with only three tapes and a Bee Mask record reissue. Constellation Tatsu had a mere six tapes on the year, which were all top notch.

2FAC's I Lobe The Secular World was one of my favorites and their sounds had heavy Metalux vibes going on. Lauren Pakradooni returned with a new Tether cassette that combined her usual tape work with occasional vocals that resembled Metalux as well. The bosses at Hausu Mountain each dropped a solo tape showcasing the unique sounds that have made their label a highlight of the experimental music world. Strategy put together a batch of cosmic dub that might be Paul Dickow's finest creation yet. Demon Life is the power trio of noise veterans Rodger Stella, Kyle Flanagan, and Tim Gick. As expected, they churned out a batch of demonic harshness. Acid Twilight wrangled together another fine collection of mysterious hypnagogic sprawl to add to their interesting discography.

As always any tape had to be released in the calendar year and I had to listen to it a lot. And if you are one of those types who needs a definitive cassette of the year, then that honor goes to Canicula by Ludmila Nunes on No Rent. Nunes also had a very good tape of deconstructed rock band nosies on Flat Plastic, but I felt the blasted out nether zone sounds of Canicula were a much more fully realized artistic statement.

The list goes band/album/label for those with questions of that nature.

01. 2FAC - I Lobe The Secular World - Unifactor
02. Acid Twlight - Shadow Wrangler - Not Not Fun
03. Akasha System - Ancient Path Complete - 100% Silk
04. Marcia Bassett & Sergej Vutuc - Covering The Surface - Yew
05. Demon Life - s/t - Flat Plastic Home Media
06. Eternities - Realness - Harmonic Ooze
07. Andra Ljos - Megalithic Statues of Vishapakar - Not Not Fun
08. Alina Kalancea - Alchemy - Important
09. Monokle - Ultraflowers - Constellation Tatsu
10. MrDougDoug - SOS Forks AI REM II - Hausu Mountain
11. Mukqs - Stonewasher - Hausu Mountain
12. Ludmila Nunes - Canicula - No Rent
13. LeeAnn Peppers & Motion Sickness of Time Travel - split - Humanhood Recordings
14. Strategy - Graffiti In Space - Constellation Tatsu
15. Tether - Jostle Bask - Refulgent Sepulchre
16. tinnitustimulus - Icterine - No Rent