Top 50 Albums of 2013, Part Five: 10-1

Thanks for your patience! I hope the final run is worth it. Thanks so much for putting up with me through list season. Same time next year, huh?

50 – 41
40 – 31
30 – 21
20 – 11

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10. Worriers – Cruel Optimist
Spotify || Rdio || Bandcamp

The name Lauren Denitzio may not mean anything to you – but if you give her just 20 or so minutes of your time, she could change your life. After years of slugging it out with the perenially underrated punks The Measure [SA], Denitzio formed Worriers in 2011 – a revolving door collective of friends and musos that were up for something short, fast, loud and purposeful. On her debut LP under the Worriers moniker, she presents a set of songs that provoke and ponder as much as they exhilarate and astound. It’s not an easy task to allow the two factors to cooperate without one spilling into the other’s territory, but here it is made to look completely effortless. Cruel Optimist is the year’s shining example of quality over quantity.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Never Were, Cruel Optimist, Best Case Scenario.

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9. Justin Timberlake – The 20/20 Experience
Spotify || Rdio

In the movie Chicken Run, Mel Gibson’s character of Rocky returns just in time to (spoiler alert) save the day. Julia Sawalha’s Ginger slaps him in the face angrily when he arrives. “That’s for leaving!” she shouts. She then goes in for the kiss, adding “…and this is for coming back.” Pop fans were essentially Ginger when The 20/20 Experience dropped back in 2013’s first quarter. As angry as we got for the seven-year wait between FutureSex/LoveSounds and this, the frustration subsided as soon as the orchestra swelled and introduced “Pusher Love Girl.” The slick, sharp and surprisingly progressive album that followed certified that there is room for only one Justin at the top of the pop stratosphere – not even a disappointing sequel later in the year could knock this record down a notch. Dressed to the nines, scoring a perfect ten and turning it up to eleven – that’s The 20/20 Experience.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Mirrors, Blue Ocean Floor, Tunnel Vision.

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8. Drake – Nothing Was the Same
Spotify || Rdio

He may have started at the bottom, but it’s lonely at the top. That was the message received on 2011’s game-changing Take Care LP – loud and clear, too. The song remains somewhat the same for its follow-up, although when you are following an album as important as Take Care, it’s somewhat forgivable to side-step in a way to take a moment and enjoy the view. Drake is just as despondent and disconnected from his supposed friends and increasingly-distant family, and he still talks us through each detail atop of cloudy, reverberating beats. He still keeps his ego in check, even when he knows it has the ability to get the very best of him. This may sound like Drake is stalled or running out of ideas. Au contraire – Nothing Was the Same is his moment of reflection, a balcony monologue recited while no-one else is around. It’s everything it can be… for now, at least.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Too Much, Hold On, We’re Going Home, Furthest Thing.

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7. Dave Hause – Devour
Spotify || Rdio || YouTube

Dave Hause swears to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. He did it back in the day with his heartland-punk vehicle The Loved Ones (not to be confused with the legendary Australian band), and it continues here into his second solo LP. The stories are still vividly told, the characters constantly desperate yet laced with hope… and you’d better believe that’s Hause’s heart, pounding away on his sleeve. Musically, he begs and borrows (not quite stealing) from your Springsteens, your Pettys and both your Segers and your Seegers. Devour isn’t defined by these influences, though – they merely guide Hause on his path to creating something plainspoken yet powerful. This is as close as he as ever come to achieving true musical greatness. For those that feel honesty truly is the best policy.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Autism Vaccine Blues, The Shine, The Great Depression.

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6. Wil Wagner – Laika
Spotify || Rdio || Bandcamp

Who is Wil Wagner when we’re not looking? On-stage, he’s the boisterous and charging frontman of the Smith Street Band; delivering some of the most consistently excellent rock music this country has to offer. If you’re interested in perhaps scratching below the surface, however, then Laika is the album for you. Matching bedroom intimacy with the production finesse of Lincoln Le Fevre, Wagner delves into confessionals ranging from his shitty neighbours to his life on the road. The album takes its title from a tender recount of the namesake dog from its perspective; but perhaps a more fitting title track could have been found in “I’m Not Gonna Lie to You.” It reflects what a genuine product Wagner is – his warmth, his familiarity and his ability to tell both strikingly personal and worldly relatable stories. An exercise in the importance of being earnest.

THREE TOP TRACKS: How They Made Us, More Like Signals Midbest, Laika.

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5. Surfer Blood – Pythons
Spotify || Rdio || YouTube

Even with the ultimate dismissal of charges, the arrest of Surfer Blood’s John Paul Pitts in March 2012 threatened to destroy the band entirely. Their reputation in tatters, Pythons was released with next to no fanfare and minimal promotion. It slipped under the radar for most and garnered only a brief glimpse of attention – notably via a Stereogum piece, a revealing Pitchfork interview and a furious comment section over at (where else?) Brooklyn Vegan. And so it was: Surfer Blood – of all bands – released the single most underrated album of 2013. Those that actually stopped to listen to Pythons were rewarded with a smart and sprightly album that carried darker undertones and an air of unease – and it was this yin-and-yang that kept it so interesting. With Gil Norton behind the decks, the band dipped into both his production discography (Pixies, Ed Harcourt, K’s Choice) and key elements from their 2010 debut, Astro Coast, to create something that could not be pinned down definitively to either. An essential extraction from the “maybe” pile of 2013.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Gravity, Demon Dance, Weird Shapes.

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4. Safe Hands – Montenegro
Spotify || Rdio || Bandcamp

Safe Hands released an album. For people that have followed the band from its mid-2000s beginnings, the previous sentence felt as though it would never be uttered – at times, at least. Still, here we are: Montenegro is the end result after roughly a dozen line-up changes and eight years under their collective belt. It was more than worth the wait – it may be the finest example of what is achievable within Australian music’s heavier field released this decade. It brushes off the normal nerves and jitters that come with the weight of a debut LP and storms through a set of blistering, rampageous metalcore that takes no prisoners and suffers no fools. It attacks with brute force, yet revels in enough subtlety to not be overcome by it. It is an intelligent, unrepentent and decisively bold album. Most bands wish their debut sounded as half as good as this. Montenegro is a case study in never giving up. This is the light at the end of the tunnel. At last, Safe Hands have arrived.

THREE TOP TRACKS: My Very Own Vesuvius, Alma Martyr, Montenegro.

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3. Jimblah – Phoenix
Spotify || Rdio

The best album to come out of Australia in 2013 was also its most damning portrayer. On his second album, James Alberts is merciless and unapologetic in his representation of alcoholism, drug dependency, broken families and media manipulation. He is disgusted with the way indigenous communities are torn apart and neglected. Phoenix is not a pleasant, reassuring listen. It’s tough to get through at times. This is what makes it so worthwhile – others within Australian hip-hop may speak more broadly and to a wider audience, but Jimblah is down to brass tacks the second he steps up to the mic. It’s certainly not always what one wants to hear, but Alberts sees a way out. He seeks clarity and closure, both a resolution and a revolution. The march starts here. The most important new voice in Australian music is speaking. It’s high time you paid attention.

THREE TOP TRACKS: TV, Fireproof, March.

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2. Buke and Gase – General Dome
Spotify || Rdio || Bandcamp

Four hands, four feet, twenty fingers, twenty toes and two voices. That is what’s solely responsible for General Dome. Let that sink in once you’ve heard the layered, mathematical and intrinsic arrangements that are prevalent throughout the entire LP. Something doesn’t quite add up – and it’s perhaps this very sentiment that make Buke & Gase such an intriguing project. Performing on custom-made hybrid instruments and churning out a mechanical blend of avant-garde experimentalism and twists on rock tropes, the duo make music that doesn’t so much think outside of the square as much as it throws entirely new shapes at it, leaving dents all over the outside. The tiniest of earworms will pull you in and there is a very strong chance you won’t be able to get back out again. General Dome is an engrossing album, one with everything in its right place and yet one that projects that everything could fall apart at any given second. The best album of 2036 to be released in 2013.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Cyclopean, Hiccup, Houdini Crush.

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1. Childish Gambino – because the internet
Spotify || Rdio || Website

In 2013, Donald Glover turned thirty years old. He also killed off Troy Barnes in Community, posted a series of Instagram photos detailing his inner anguish and defiantly released an album at Christmastime even though he was fully aware that his album was about as empty of the holiday spirit as something could possibly be. It was a particularly interesting year for a man adored for his character acting and writing, respected enough for his stand-up and incredibly divisive when it came to his hip-hop alter-ego, Childish Gambino. That he has given up the first two to focus on the latter is an incredibly bold move, and one that is firmly cemented on because the internet.

With the album’s release, he also attached a screenplay and a series of silent short films to accompany listening. A peculiar prospect, to say the least. So, has he made the right choice in putting all of his eggs in one basket? All signs are pointing to yes: On his most ambitious project to date, Glover pushes himself in every musical direction he can muster. The album features his most sweetly melodic and sentimental moments, as well as his most brash and blunt. It flash-cuts from one idea to the next, not pausing to let others catch up. Incredibly, in spite of nearly filling its disc space, it barely feels as long as it actually is.

In what was a mammoth year for hip-hop releases – Drake, Kanye, Jay-Z et al – nothing was as shocking as Gambino’s last minute victory over their (and everyone else’s) albums. because the internet is the sound of the clown crying. As the make-up chips away and falls off, the man behind it is finally revealed. Hold me close, my darling.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Telegraph Ave, 3005, Sweatpants.

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Top 50 Albums of 2013, Part Four: 20 – 11

Sorry for the delays, I’ll try and have this one done as soon as possible.

Parts one, two and three? Here, here and here.

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20. Jen Cloher – In Blood Memory
Spotify || Rdio || Bandcamp

After two albums with her loyal backing band the Endless Sea, Jen Cloher reached dry land and hit the ground running. A truly independent project, In Blood Memory wiped the slate clean and saw the former folk-rocker kicking her boots into some wandering Crazy Horse jams, some Velvet Underground stomps and some classic Cloher tenderness. All across the course of just seven songs. It’s an impressive feat, and it serves as both a welcome return for longtime fans and a fitting introduction to those that weren’t paying attention the first time around.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Hold My Hand, Toothless Tiger, Name in Lights.

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19. Lemuria – The Distance is So Big
Spotify || Bandcamp

On their third album, Buffalo’s sweethearts take listeners through a world of looking in from the outside – whether it’s getting lost in a different state, hiding true feelings in intimate moments or simply losing perspective of who you once were. It may be occasionally obtuse from a lyrical standpoint, but in a way that’s what gives The Distance is So Big such a large portion of its charm – once you’ve unlocked the song’s greater meaning, it grows in quality. It is an album that takes time to process, but is ultimately an album that confirms a Lemuria hat trick.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Oahu, Hawaii, Brilliant Dancer, Bluffing Statistics.

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18. The Drones – I See Seaweed
Spotify || Rdio

Five years in the wilderness saw the Drones return with a new member – keyboardist Stevie Hesketh – and a solo album under the belt for both frontman Gareth Liddiard and drummer Mike Noga. Still, the more things change, the more they stay the same: Seaweed, the band’s sixth LP, is a strict continuation of the sprawling, agonized ventures through indie rock, alt-country and shattering noise that has come to define what the Drones are all about. Rather than being a re-hash, it feels as fresh as it ever did; and we are richer for having heard it.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Laika, I See Seaweed, Nine Eyes.

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17. Deafheaven – Sunbather
Spotify || Rdio || Bandcamp

Exactly how the year’s most talked-about metal album came from such a specific point in left-field remains a true conundrum. Perhaps it was the fact that it was such a unique approach to the genre, tessellating the incessant fervour and melodrama of proto-black metal with the atmosphere and volatility of shoegaze. Furthermore, it pushed into spectrums that are normally untoward within the confines of either genre; resulting in an album that is endlessly fascinating. This is an album to obssess over the details of – and the best part is that you get out exactly what you put in.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Vertigo, Dream House, The Pecan Tree.

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16. Ra Ra Riot – Beta Love
Spotify || Rdio

“Now we’re getting closer,” sings Wes Miles with jubilation on the title track to his band’s third studio album. Ra Ra Riot are heading in the right direction on this album, embracing their poppier side with a flourish of keyboards and heavens-high falsetto. Although critical reception was sadly tepid, there was a confidence in Beta Love that could not be shaken – it’s the sound of a band refusing to take the loss of a key member (in this instance, cellist Alexandra Lawn) hinder their growth. The show must go on. With Beta Love, you’ll be grateful that it did.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Is it Too Much, Binary Mind, Dance with Me.

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15. Polar Bear Club – Death Chorus
Spotify || Rdio || YouTube

The gruff vocals of Polar Bear Club’s Jimmy Stadt occasionally provoked joking suggestions that he should clear his throat. Death Chorus is strange, then, in that it shows what they sound like with the aforementioned throat cleared. Vocal issues resulted in Stadt dramatically shifting his range and style, and pairing this with the introduction of three new members gave the band an entirely new lease on life. The album is an emotional strike-force that offered up boisterous energy and new-found conviction across a batch of ten punchy, forthright songs. What could have ended disastrously has instead given us the band’s best LP to date.

THREE TOP TRACKS: For Show, Blood Balloon, Upstate Mosquito.

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14. Lorde – Pure Heroine
Spotify || Rdio

2013: The year of our Lorde. The introverted pop starlet may not have been the obvious choice to start some kind of musical revolution this year, but what gratitude that it fell to her. A quietly defiant and brassy voice of a disaffected, often apathetic youth, Lorde certainly knows how to make boredom sound utterly thrilling as she coos, cries and whispers over whirring synth and clattering drum patterns. Artists twice her age are still yet to attain the kind of left-of-centre pop precision that is found on Pure Heroine. That alone may be the scariest thing about this album – it’s merely the beginning.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Buzzcut Season, Tennis Court, A World Alone.

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13. Kanye West – Yeezus
Spotify || Rdio

“And Jesus entered the temple and drove out all those who were buying and selling in the temple, and overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who were selling doves. And He said to them, ‘It is written My House shall be called a House of prayer but you make it a den of robbers.’” – Matthew 21:12-16

In 2013, Kanye West overturned the tables. Not since his earliest, hungriest days has he sounded this furious at the world around him. On his sixth album, he takes down organised religion, institutionalised racism and struggles with alcoholism. It’s not a pretty sight, but you’ve already got Graduation for that. Also of note: One of the final things Lou Reed did before his passing was give this album his seal of approval. Take from that what you will.

THREE TOP TRACKS: I am a God, Black Skinhead, New Slaves.

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12. Balance and Composure – The Things We Think We’re Missing
Spotify || Rdio || Bandcamp || YouTube

Too post-hardcore for the alt-rock crowd and too alt-rock for the post-hardcore crowd, Doylestown’s Balance and Composure have often been left in somewhat of a grey area from a musical perspective. What they display on their second studio album, The Things We Think We’re Missing, is that it is space worth exploring: like some bastard child of War All the Time and The Devil and God are Raging Inside Me, the album takes the loud-quiet-loud dynamic and applies it liberally to pedal-stomping angst and lovelorn brooding. A fresh, striking and shining example of what modern rock is capable of.

THREE TOP TRACKS: Back of Your Head, Tiny Raindrop, Parachutes.

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11. The Dear Hunter – Migrant
Spotify || Rdio

How’s this for a puzzling prospect: A side-project-cum-full-band, based entirely around a single conceptual storyline, manages to make their absolute best record to date with a collection of non-canon songs. Ironic? Maybe. Whatever the case, Migrant was an album that was nothing short of majestic; matching the ambition of previous albums and veering it into breathtaking new territory. Each song is full to the brim with remarkable melodies, flourishing arrangements and a spirited warmth. With Migrant, the door has been kicked wide open for Casey Crescenzo and co. Who knows where it may take them next?

THREE TOP TRACKS: The Kiss of Life, Whisper, An Escape.

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