The big annual round-up of new music for 2020 took so long that I am considering doing a regular blog post summarising the new music for each month of the year. This is at least in part to remind myself to return to things occasionally!
I am not promising I will be able to sustain this, but here is a first attempt - more than 60 albums released in January that are at least worthy of a listen. It's too soon to pick out potential highlights of the year, but I've been particularly enjoying Patricia Brennan, Yasmin Williams, Fergus McCreadie and Diego Pinera.
Thanks, as ever, to everyone on Twitter contributing to the Friday new music threads - what a revelation they continue to be!
Abul Mogard - In Immovable Air (Ecstatic)
Beautiful, textured ambience evoking the natural world.
Aki Takase/Christian Weber/Michael Griener - Auge (Intakt)
Democratic, collaborative and empathetic piano trio, balancing haunting beauty with moments of wildness.
Albertine Sarges - The Sticky Fingers (Moshi Moshi)
The Sticky Fingers provides the name of both this album and the band Sarges has assembled to create it. Arty, fun and radical pop music with joyously infectious melodies.
Alexander Hawkins - Togetherness Music (For Sixteen Musicians) (Intakt)
One of the UK's great pioneers of improvised music, here celebrating his 40th birthday, continues to produce work of seriousness, combining intensity with the joy of collaborative music making. It is of course notable that this also features the great Evan Parker.
Alostmen - Kologo (Strut)
Celebratory, joyful and vital music centred around the Frafra traditions of the kologo (stringed lute).
Ani DiFranco - Revolutionary Love (Righteous Babe)
DiFranco's extraordinary consistency as a songwriter and performer continues on this gloriously soulful album.
Anna B Savage - A Common Turn (City Slang)
Excellent debut album of myserious, translucent songs. Produced by William Doyle (East India Youth).
Apifera - Overstand (Stones Throw)
Hazy, dreamy, synthy jazz textures.
Arlo Parks - Collapsed In Sunbeams (Transgressive)
The sort of release I might often be (unfairly) resistant towards because of the months of prior hype - but this is genuinely delightful, soulful, lingeringly memorable music.
Azmari - Sama'i (Sdban/N.E.W.S.)
Brussels based band fusing musical influences from various parts of the world.
Beautify Junkyards - Cosmorama (Ghost Box)
Fourth album from Lisbon based group specialising in haunted grooves.
Bicep - Isles (Ninja Tune)
Detailed dance music with lush textures and insistent impact. Dreams of the dance floor.
Binker and Moses - Escape The Flames (Gearbox)
Appropriately incandescent live set from the always impressive duo.
Characteristically absorbing live recording. Intriguingly, the band had had all their equipment stolen immediately ahead of this 2018 performance - it's fascinating to hear how comfortably they adapt.
Caroline Shaw - Narrow Sea (Nonesuch)
So Percussion, Dawn Upshaw and Gilbert Kalish deliver Shaw's very new settings of often familiar texts from the Sacred Harp - this is an intricate, richly imagined musical world.
Celeste - Not Your Muse (Universal)
The much feted singer delivers a direct, classy debut album.
Diego Pinera - Odd Wisdom (ACT)
A superb ensemble with saxophonist Donny McCaslin, guitarist Ben Monder and bassist Scott Colley deliver Pinera's knotty but memorable compositions with a thrilling, adventurous small group vibe.
Divide and Dissolve - Gas Lit (Invada)
A 'call to transformation and freedom' encompassing some brutal noise and dense, confrontational sheets of sound.
Elori Saxl - The Blue Of Distance (Western Vinyl)
The music here feels aquatic and elemental - and then you discover that it is partially based on digitally processed recordings of wind and water. When combined with instrumental contributions, the result is a compelling and effective contemporary sound world.
Emeka Ogboh - Beyond The Yellow Haze (A-TON)
Superb, multi-layered debut album from the Nigerian sound and installation artist.
Ethan Iverson - Bud Powell In The 21st Century (Sunnyside Communications)
The former Bad Plus pianist explores the lasting legacy and influence of the great piano player and composer Bud Powell in rich, kaleidoscopic arrangements. Features an impressive roster of musicians including Ingrid Jensen, Ben Street and the Umbria Jazz Orchestra.
Fergus McCreadie - Cairn (Edition)
Thoughtful, deeply melodic, frequently thrilling trio album from the young Scottish pianist and composer with a strong sense of landscape and nature. Great dynamic and textural range throughout.
Francisco Mela - M.P.T. Trio Volume 1 (577 Recordings)
Jazz meets Cuban traditions on this breathtaking set.
Goat Girl - On All Fours (Rough Trade)
More nuanced, introspective and exposed second album.
Grandbrothers - All The Unknown (City Slang)
Third album exploring the integration of electronics and live instrumentation to create percussive patterns and layered atmospherics.
Hilang Child - Every Mover (Bella Union)
Earnest, honest electro-acoustic songwriting.
Ivo Perelman Trio - Garden of Jewels (Tao Forms)
Bold and uncompromising improvised music.
James Yorkston - The Wide, Wide River (Domino)
The kind of artist it is now too easy to take for granted due to their extensive catalogue. This one is a loose and spontaneous collaboration with The Secondhand Orchestra, with intuitive arrangements that really bring the songs to life.
Jason Moran - The Sound Will Tell You (Bandcamp)
A good example of how lockdown has unlocked a different kind of creativity in some artists.
Jim Ghedi - In The Furrows Of Common Place (Basin Rock)
Powerful and intense exploration of modern folksong.
Joe Lovano/Marilyn Crispell/Carmen Castaldi - Garden Of Expression (ECM)
Both expressive and meditative - featuring some deft and controlled playing with great lightness of touch.
John Pope Quintet - Mixed With Glass (NEWJAiM)
An open-minded approach to contemporary jazz and improvisation, both drawing from jazz tradition and engagement with other forms of music. The triple horned front line and lack of chordal rhythm section instrument makes for a compelling and refreshing line up too.
Kitchen Cynics - Beads Upon An Abacus (The Trilogy Tapes)
Technically a compilation, so probably belongs there, but it's well worth highlighting Alan Davidson's refracted folksong.
Lande Hekt - Going To Hell (Get Better)
Songwriting that succeeds in being both raw and sophisticated, often drawing from new wave.
Lia Ices - Family Album (Natural Music)
Enriching, melodic and emotive songs delivered with an affecting, tremulous grace.
Loren Connors and Oren Ambarchi - Leone (Family Vineyard)
A dream collaboration, structured with two solo performances sandwiching a duo piece.
Madlib - Sound Ancestors (Madlib Invasion)
Visionary hip hop producer joins forces with Kieren Hebden (perhaps playing a Teo Macero-style editing role) for a compelling sound collage.
Mala Herba - Demonologia (Olindo)
The study of demons, ghosts etc - music both haunting and ritualistic.
Mario Rom's Interzone - Eternal Fiction (Traumton)
A band celebrating its ten year anniversary but very much new to me - an incandescent take on European jazz with very agile drumming!
Mason Lindahl - Kissing Rosy In The Rain (Tompkins Square)
Enveloping, hypnotic solo guitar music with a beautiful reverb-drenched sound.
Mica Levi - Blue Alibi (Bandcamp)
Surprise second instalment of raw sounding but intelligent avant noise pop from an artist determined not to be pigeonholed.
Midnight Sister - Painting The Roses (Jagjaguwar)
Brilliantly constructed synthesis of 70s pop stylings.
Mu Tate - Let Me Put Myself Together (Experiences Ltd)
Brilliantly immersive and provocative lockdown recordings, distilling a range of club and electronic influences into a heady synaesthesia for the moment.
Terry Gross - Soft Opening (Thrill Jockey)
Motorik intensity from trio with Trans Am's Phil Manley.
The Besnard Lakes - The Besnard Lakes Are The Last Great Thunderstorm Warnings (Full Time Hobby)
Further progtastic explorations, although not without attention to detail in mood and melody too. One of the stronger Besnard Lakes records.
The Body - I've Seen All I Need To See (Thrill Jockey)
Typically brooding, visceral and intense meditations.
The Notwist - Vertigo Days (Morr Music)
File alongside Califone in a list of dependably consistent and underrated bands, continuing to explore new directions.
Theo Bleckmann and The Westerlies - This Land (The Westerlies Music)
Fascinating exploration of the combination of voice and brass.
Th1rt3en - A Magnificent Day For An Exorcism (Fat Beats)
The impact of some of this may depend on your tolerance for rap-rock, but Pharaohe Monch's near-breathless, nimble flow is compelling in any context.
Universally Challenged - Oh Temple! (Hive Mind)
Minimalist but gradually broadening psychedelic expanses.
Various Artists - Indaba Is (Brownswood)
Another of the specially curated projects the Brownswood label excels at, this time focusing on contemporary South African jazz. Recorded over five days, the music here has an urgency and immediacy.
Various Artists (John Dwyer) - Witch Egg (Castle Face)
The ever prolific John Dwyer (O Sees) assembles a range of musicians to explore skronky avant rock improvising. Hints of Can.
Will Glaser - Climbing In Circles (Ubuntu)
The supremely musical and expressive drummer has released an album of maturity and depth, exploring a range of approaches to improvisation in a trio with saxophonist Matthew Herd and pianist Liam Noble.
John Twells returns to recording under the Xela moniker for the first time in more than ten years.
Yasmin Williams - Urban Driftwood (Spinster)
Stunning, shimmering solo guitar music.
Yung - Ongoing Dispute (PNKSLM)
Edgy, angular, verbose indie rock.
Yu Su - Yellow River Blue (Yi Shi Yi Se)
Subtle and absorbing electronic tapestries.
Yvette Janine Jackson - Freedom (Fridman Gallery)
Remarkable compositions dealing in textured sound.
SOME REISSUES AND COMPILATIONS
PJ Harvey - Is This Desire? + Demos
Julius Hemphill - The Boye Multi-National Crusade For Harmony (Box Set) https://www.newworldrecords.org/products/julius-hemphill-1938-1995-the-boye-multi-national-crusade-for-harmony-box-set
Marc Almond - The Stars We Are Deluxe Edition
Various Artists - Somewhere Between: Mutant Pop, Electronic Minimalism & Shadow Sounds Of Japan 1980-88 (Light In The Attic)
Various Artists - Cafe Exil - New Adventures in European Music 1972-1980 (Ace)
Shintaro Quintet - Evolution (BBE Music)
Various Artists - For The Good Times - The Songs of Kris Kristofferson (Light In The Attic)
SINGLES/LOOKING AHEAD
The Weather Station - Atlantic
Pino Palladino and Blake Mills - Just Wrong
Hiss Golden Messenger - Sanctuary
Teenage Fanclub - I'm More Inclined
Matthew E. White and Lonnie Holley - This Here Jungle of Modernness/Composition 14
For those without the time or inclination to wade through over 500 albums from across the year (and who can blame you?), of if you are in any way curious as to which have stayed with me the most, here is a shorter selection of 50 from the year. I won't necessarily claim they are the best, some are very personal (and predictable, if you know me) choices. They are loosely ordered with favourites at the top, but I care less and less for ranking or standouts these days!
First of all, I'm going to cheat and introduce an award for Artist of the Year - which will go to Moor Mother, for having the sheer audacity to play a major role in (at least) six great albums this year. If I had to pick a favourite of them, it would probably be the Irreversible Entanglements record.
Andrew Tuttle - Alexandra
Maria Schneider - Data Lords
Bob Dylan - Rough & Rowdy Ways
Mourning [A] BLKstar - The Cycle
Daniel Blumberg - On&On&On&On&On...
Bonny Light Horseman - Bonny Light Horseman
Speaker Music - Black Nationalist Sonic Weaponry
Frazey Ford - U Kin B The Sun
Rob Luft - Life Is The Dancer
Pulled By Magnets - Rose Golden Doorways
Bruce Springsteen - Letter To You
Armand Hammer - Shrines
The Necks - Three
Tyshawn Sorey - Unfiltered
Jeff Parker - Suite For Max Brown
Nathan Salzburg - Landwerk Vol 1/Landwerk Vol 2
Junk Magic - Compass Confusion
Rob Mazurek Exploding Star Orchestra - Dimensional Stardust
Shabason, Krgovich & Harris - Philadelphia
Nate Wooley - Seven Storey Mountain VI
Starebaby - Natural Selection
Hiss Golden Messenger - Forward, Children/School Daze
Jeremy Cunningham - The Weather Up There
MoonMot - Going Down The Well
Horse Lords - The Common Task
Tatsuhisa Yamamoto - Ashioto
Okkyung Lee - Yeo-Neun
Greg Fox - Contact
North Americans - Roped In
Krononaut - Krononaut
Irreversible Entanglements - Who Sent You?
Aesop Rock - Spirit World Field Guide
Mary Halvorson - Artlessly Falling
Martin Pyne - Spirit Of Absent Dancers
Gregoire Maret, Romain Collin, Bill Frisell - Americana
H.C. McEntire - Eno Axis
Pretty Sneaky - Pretty Sneaky
William Tyler - New Vanitas
Michael Wollny - Mondenkind
Caleb Dolister - Daily Thumbprint Collection 3: The Wandering
Seafarers - Seafarers
Shabaka & The Ancestors - We Were Sent Here By History
Eli Winter - Unbecoming
Pink Siifu - Negro
Matthew 'Doc' Dunn - Rain, Rain, Rain
Coriky - Coriky
David Torn - Fur/Torn
Jasper Høiby - Planet B
Fiona Apple - Fetch The Bolt Cutters
Gillian Welch & David Rawlings - All The Good Times
A songwriting presence behind some massive pop hits (including Ariana Grande's 7 Rings), Victoria Monet's Jaguar is futuristic R&B, sexually forthright R&B.
Vladislav Delay - Rakka (Cosmo Rhythmatic)
Five years on from his last album, during which time Sasu Ripatti initially gave up on music before returning via some soundtrack compositions. Rakka is a heavier, more confrontational beast, combining electronica with more extreme noise elements.
Vula Viel - What's Not Enough About That? (Vula Viel)
Third album from Bex Burch's group is vibrant, poised and alive. Although released before lockdown, the questions it posits ('Are you alive? Are you loved? What's not enough about that?') seem pertinent in a year when excess and entertainment were necessarily stifled.
V.V. Lightbody - Make A Shrine Or Burn It (Acrophase)
Lush but unconventional theatrical pop.
Waclaw Zimpel - Massive Oscillations (Ongehoord)
Polish clarinettist and multi-instrumentalist making immersive sound design.
Waxahatchee - Saint Cloud (Merge)
Katie Crutchfield has always had an instinctive skill with melody but on Saint Cloud, she finally finds a sound and arrangements that adequately support and enhance her songs.
Wax Machine - Earth Song Of Silence (Beyond Beyond Is Beyond)
Refined psychedelia from Brighton.
Webber/Morris Big Band - Both Are True (Greenleaf)
Superb, inventive and playful big band writing.
Wendy Eisenberg - Auto (Ba Da Bing)
Gently freeform, liberated, challenging songs.
Wesley Wolffe - Wesley Wolffe (Total Works)
Arty post-punk jousting.
Westerman - Your Hero Is Not Dead (PIAS)
Gently manipulative and experimental pop songwriting.
White Denim - World As A Waiting Room (Radio Milk)
30 day album project - typically blistering.
William Basinski - Lamentations (Temporary Residence)
The source material for the tape loops on Lamentations apparently dates back across Basinski's life and career, going back 40 years in some cases. This might explain why the music here sounds so timeless and enduring. These meditations on grief are haunting and captivating.
William Tyler - Music From First Cow (Merge)
William Tyler - New Vanitas (Merge)
Soundtrack for Kelly Reichardt's film (sadly delayed by the pandemic in the UK) and low key solo album take William Tyler a step away from the ensemble vistas he has been focusing on for the past few years and back into more intimate, introspective mode.
Witch Prophet - DNA Activation (Heart Lake)
Imaginative and effective fusion of Ethiopian jazz, R&B and hip hop.
Wolfgang Muthspiel - Angular Blues (ECM)
A nuanced and adroit trio with Scott Colley and Brian Blade handling both originals and standards.
Woods - Strange To Explain (Woodsist)
Dreamlike, textured album recorded in California.
Yaeji - What We Drew (XL)
Detailed and carefully constructed first full length mixtape.
Yello - Point (Universal)
A very welcome return from Boris Blank and Dieter Meier, very much playing to their strengths (perhaps too much so in the case of Waba Duba, which could have sat very comfortably on Flag).
yMusic - Ecstatic Science (New Amsterdam)
Contemporary chamber music.
Yo La Tengo - We Have Amnesia Sometimes (Matador)
Yo La Tengo - Sleepless Night (Matador)
No official new album from YLT this year, but instead some diverting and satisfying additional projects. Sleepless Night is a warm and charming set of covers, placed alongside a drifting, beautiful new song called Bleeding. We Have Amnesia Sometimes finds the band recording and releasing some of their 'formless' studio improvisations.
Yves Jarvis - Sundry Rock Song Stock (Anti)
Brilliant use of multitracked vocals as part of the music's overall texture.
Yves Tumor - Heaven To A Tortured Mind (Warp)
Space age rock music.
Zachary Cale - False Spring (All Hands Electric)
Bittersweet, poetic songs.
Zara McFarlane - Songs Of An Unknown Tongue (Brownswood)
McFarlane continues to develop her own voice, and is becoming more assured and a clearer communicator with every album. Here, her various genre preoccupations are subsumed more thoughtfully within a clear and coherent overall sound.
Potent psychedelic project from multi-instrumentalist Grant Beyshcau.
Tamikrest - Tamotait (Glitterbeat)
Billed as a louder, rockier album from the Malian group - but this is a little misleading. Beyond a couple of heavier tracks, this might be their most texturally and dynamically diverse record to date.
Tangents - Timeslips (Temporary Residence)
Excellent, vivid fourth album from the Australian group, crafting curious, percussive and involving sound worlds.
Yamamoto's first full international release - two superbly realised, patiently developing long pieces combining percussion, field recordings, electronics and guest musicians.
Taylor Swift - Folklore
Taylor Swift - Evermore
Perhaps due to the involvement of Aaron Dessner and Justin Vernon, these surprise releases were very much the hipster's choice of pop albums in 2020. I wasn't fully sold on Folklore's glossy backwoods vibes, but the wordy, savvy Evermore demonstrates Swift's skills as a songwriter.
Tenci - My Heart Is An Open Field (Keeled Scales)
Minimal, striking song craft from the Chicago singer-songwriter.
Terje Rypdal - Conspiracy (ECM)
Typically sweeping, atmospheric sounds from the great guitarist.
Terry Allen and the Panhandle Mystery Band - Just Like Moby Dick (Paradise Of Bachelors)
First set of new, original songs from Allen since 2013 is rich in allusive narratives and well drawn arrangements.
The Avalanches - We Will Always Love You (Modular Recordings)
Pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed this, having been somewhat unmoved by Wildflower - the collaborations with guests work really well, everything subsumed into a wider, coherent whole, despite being a bounty of sounds and ideas.
The Budos Band - Long In The Tooth (Daptone)
Killer grooves, killer horns, great sound.
The Dead Tongues - Transmigration Blues (Psychic Hotline)
Possibly the strongest of Ryan Gustafson's albums as The Dead Tongues and, as we can't listen to Ryan Adams anymore, this will do very nicely.
The Homesick - The Big Exercise (Sub Pop)
Great blend of wiry indie rock and pastoral elements.
The Howling Hex - Knuckleball Express (Fat Possum)
Typically ragged and frayed genius from Neil Hagerty.
The Magnetic Fields - Quickies (Nonesuch)
Never ones to miss an opportunity to build an album around a gimmicky concept, here Stephin Merritt's outfit deliver an album of many pithy, very short songs. The format works well for Merritt's brand of sardonic wit.
The Microphones - Microphones in 2020 (PW Elverum & Sun)
One very long, very moving song-story.
The Necks - Three (ReR)
Another triumphant set of improvisations from the band expert in conjuring sheets of sound.
The Orb - Abolition Of The Royal Familia (Cooking Vinyl)
Vintage electronica pioneers sound fresh and revitalised.
The Soft Pink Truth - Shall We Go On Sinning So That Grace May Increase? (Thrill Jockey)
Dense atmospherics and revitalising sounds from Drew Daniel, on an album that apparently began life as a response to the rise of facism around the world.
The Third Mind - The Third Mind (Yep Rock)
Something of a mighty supergroup, with Richard Thompson drummer Michael Jerome, Dave Alvin, Victor Krummenacher, David Immergluck, and special guest Jessie Sykes. They brilliantly interpret music by Alice Coltrane, Tim Buckley, Paul Butterfield and others.
The Transcendence Orchestra - Feeling The Spirit (Editions Mego)
Ambient, healing music from Anthony Child.
Theo Parrish - Wudaaji (Sound Signature)
Typically soulful and deep club music from one of the great innovators.
Thiago Nassif - Mente (Gearbox)
Nassif organises a vast supporting cast on this album of unconventional, unclassifiable groove pop.
This Is The Kit - Off Off On (Rough Trade)
Absorbing, turbulent and intricate songs from Kate Stables.
Threadbare - Silver Dollar (No Business)
Radical, deconstructed, often heavy jazz from clarinettist Jason Stein, who readers may know from Natural Information Society.
Three Queens In Mourning/Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - Hello Sorrow/Hello Joy (Textile)
Alasdair Roberts, Jill O'Sullivan and Alex Neilsen take on the Will Oldham repertoire with predictably tremendous results.
Throwing Muses - Sun Racket (Fire)
Intense and incandescent, but sometimes hushed and tightly coiled.
Thumbscrew - The Anthony Braxton Project (Cuneiform)
Compelling approach to as yet unperformed Braxton compositions. There's clearly an affinity for Braxton's music and his concerns here, but also an individual freedom too.
Thundercat - It Is What It Is (Brainfeeder)
The virtuoso bassist continues to create thrillingly complex and inspirationally vivid contemporary fusion.
Tim Berne's Snakeoil - The Fantastic Mrs. 10 (Intakt)
This feels a bit rawer and more insistent than the previous few Snakeoil albums - the project continues to develop in new and interesting ways.
Tim Garland - ReFocus (Edition)
An imaginative, audacious but empathetic reworking of Stan Getz's Focus album - Garland really excels at these broad canvas arrangements.
Tim Heidecker - Fear Of Death (Spacebomb)
Warm, loose and free wheeling album of 70s inspired country and soft rock pastiches. This jars with the album's thematic preoccupations with death and mid-life anxieties, itself a curiously effective device.
TJO - Songs For Peacock (Orindal)
A covers album of sorts - but a uniquely moving, unexpected and personal one, serving as it does as a mixtape dedication to Tara Jane O'Neil's late brother.
Tomas Tello - Cimora (Discrepant)
Unique sounding, contemplative instrumental music drawing on Peruvian traditions.
Toots & The Maytals - Got To Be Tough (Trojan Jamaica/BMG)
Toots Hibbert is a massive loss. I reviewed this for musicOMH here.
Trees Speak - Shadow Forms (Soul Jazz)
Tucson, Arizona based experimental act explore motorik/Krautrock vibes.
Tricky - Fall To Pieces (False Idols)
Characteristically terse and claustrophobic music from Tricky - working well with new vocalist Marta.
Tristan Perich - Drift Multiply (New Amsterdam/Nonesuch)
Contemporary composition for 50 violins and 50 loudspeakers.
Tunes Of Negation - Like The Stars Forever and Ever (Cosmo Rhythmic)
Second mysterious and hypnotic album from Sam Shackleton's trip with Takumi Motokawa and Raphael Meinhart.
Tyshawn Sorey - Unfiltered (Bandcamp)
More robust and brave contemporary music from the immense and uncompromising Tyshawn Sorey - pulling in all manner of different directions and offering constant surprise. A Bandcamp exclusive - but not set up to enable embedding, perhaps because, as the title suggests, these pieces are long, unedited and difficult to digest.
Crazy video game jazztronica. Deconstructed standards on Satin Doll, modern standards (Old Town Road!) and original compositions on DRM.
Sam Lee - Old Wow (Cooking Vinyl)
Another excellent album of repurposed folk material that sounds fresh, engaging and spirited.
Santrofi - Alewa (OutHere)
Tremendous Ghanaian Highlife.
Sarah Davachi - Cantus, Descant (Late Music)
Sarah Davachi - Figures In Open Air (Late Music)
More mesmeric, immersive soundscapes. Figures In Open Air captures some assured live performances and is intended as a supplementary work. Cantus, Descant is a brilliantly coherent, strangely moving work for various organs and keyboards.
Sarah Louise - Earth and Its Contents (Bandcamp)
Originally created as a soundtrack for Nick Crockett's film Fire Underground, this elemental music now stands alone as it is made more resonant by climate change and by the pandemic.
SAULT - Untitled (Black Is) (Forever Living Originals)
SAULT - Untitled (Rise) (Forever Living Originals)
Supposedly mysterious artists shy of the limelight but actually no doubt an exceedingly effective PR project, Sault's two albums this year captured the BLM Zeitgeist with righteous protest and jubilant celebration. Most likely the work of producer Inflo and singer Cleo Sol (whose own somewhat overshadowed album was masterful).
Schnellertollermeier - 5 (Cuneiform)
Polyrhythmic delirium.
Seafarers - Orlando (Bandcamp)
Jazz musicians tackling modern original folk songs - vocals from the tremendous and very versatile Lauren Kinsella.
Secret Machines - Awake In The Brain Chamber (TSM)
Welcome return of heavy progressive shoegaze outfit.
Shabaka and The Ancestors - We Are Sent Here By History (Impulse!)
For me, the best and most important of Shabaka Hutchings' various projects.
Shabason, Krgovitch & Harris - Philadelphia (Idee Fixe)
Intimate, hushed songs capturing the detail of the mundane and the routined. Not sure I get the same satisfaction from making the bed, but the consolations of the home life meant something more in lockdown.
Shabazz Palaces - The Don of Diamond Dreams (Sub Pop)
Inventive and compelling avant-hip hop.
Shackleton/Zimpel - Primal Forms (Cosmo Rhythmic)
Three long, slow building pieces in this successful collaboration between Sam Shackleton and Polish clarinettist Waclaw Zimpel.
Shamir - Shamir (Bandcamp)
Shamir - Cataclysm (Bandcamp)
Artful pop music with wide-ranging vocal presence. These albums are refreshingly different from Shamir's prior work - much less disco and much more angular rock band.
Shirley Collins - Heart's Ease (Domino)
Collins' assured comeback continues apace with this graceful collection, providing beautiful framings for Collins' conversational and direct delivery. This includes four new non-traditional tracks.
Sibusile Xaba - Ngiwu Shwabada (Komos)
Part of the maskandi and malombo traditions but also clearly with a distinctive and individual approach, this album of South African guitar and vocal music, apparently recorded in one continuous take, is revelatory.
Sidi Toure - Afrik Toun Me (Thrill Jockey)
More softly rhythmic. beautiful and joyful music from Mali with Toure joined by guitarist Mamadou Kelly and Boubou Diallo on calabash.
Silver Scrolls - Music For Walks (Three Lobed)
The title would suggest that this music is very much for me - and indeed, its combination of meditative, reflective space and exploration of rock music terrain is robust and effective.
Sink Ya Teeth - Two (Hey Buffalo)
Great art pop for the dance floor.
Sir Richard Bishop - Oneiric Formulary (Drag City)
Some fascinating divergences and tangents on this one, from electric guitar pieces to use of keyboards.
Siti Muharam - Siti of Unguja (Romance Revolution On Zanzibar) (On The Corner)
The granddaughter of legendary taraab singer Siti Binti Saad places her own interpretation on romantic musical traditions.
Six Organs Of Admittance - Companion Rises (Drag City)
Ben Chasny wrote, recorded and played everything here, sometimes adroitly blending acoustic guitar performances with treated vocals and electronics. This is not a lockdown record (it was released back in February), but one that maybe inadvertently set the scene for that type of independent, reflective release.
Skeletons - If The Cat Comes Back (Shinkoyo)
Nebulous, floating, curious song structures from Matt Mehlan.
Skyway Man - The World Only Ends When You Die (Mama Bird Recording Co.)
Brilliantly uncategorisable, disorientating, sonic verbiage.
Sonar with David Torn - Tranceportation Vol. 2 (RareNoise)
Second volume of lattice like groove structures with the innovative guitarist guesting.
Songhoy Blues - Optimisme (Transgressive)
Desert blues now with urgent, punkish energy.
Space Afrika - hybtwibt? (Bandcamp)
Mixtape of sounds, samples and recordings reconstructed with a strong narrative. Revenue donated to a range of BLM related charities.
Sparkle Division - To Feel Embraced (Musex International/Temporary Residence)
Bizarre collaboration between William Basinski (sometimes playing saxophone) and Preston Wendel.
Sparks - A Steady Drip, Drip, Drip (BMG)
One of the most consistently imaginative and underrated of bands.
SPAZA - Uprise! (Mushroom Hour Half Hour)
Subtly stirring improvised score documenting the battle against Apartheid.
Speaker Music - Black Nationalist Sonic Weaponry (Planet Mu)
Released without prior publicity in response to the death of George Floyd and the issues again highlighted as a result, DeForrest Brown Jr.'s second full album for Planet Mu is intellectual and theoretical but also visceral, hard hitting and uncompromising. A compelling amalgam of words and rhythm.
Spencer Zahn - Sunday Painter (Cascine)
Beautiful, lush, atmospheric instrumentals - delivered with a sense of painterly detail.
Spike Orchestra - Splintered Stories (Tzadik)
Sam Eastmond's radical modern big band music with remarkable dynamic range and intensity.
https://www.tzadik.com
Squarepusher - Be Up A Hello (Warp)
Tom Jenkinson still has the ability to surprise and delight - and this favours his mischievous side.
Starebaby - Natural Selection (Pi)
Dan Weiss' David Lynch-inspired noisy electric ensemble continues to produce music of impressive intensity and impact.
Steve Spacek - Houses (Black Focus)
Minimal and efficient soulful dance music.
Stillefelt - Stillefelt (Stoney Lane)
Chris Mapp's excellent ambient jazz trio offers space for contemplation and reflection.
Still House Plants - Long Play (Bison)
Still House Plants - Fast Edit (Bison)
Bursts of combative defiance - free improvisation with a DIY/punk energy, interaction built on anxious and querulous interjections.
Sufjan Stevens - The Ascencion (Asthmatic Kitty)
Sufjan Stevens and Lowell Brams - Aporia (Asthmatic Kitty)
I'm still somewhat unconvinced by Sufjan Stevens' detours into electronic music - the clutter seems to too often detract from his emotional intentions. Still, The Ascension still has sublime moments and belongs here for its vaunting ambition alone. The instrumentals on Aporia, made in collaboration with his step father, radiate a genuine warmth.
Sun Araw - Rock Sutra (Sun Ark)
Manic and gleeful electro weirdness.
Sun Ra Arkestra - Swirling (Strut)
First studio album from the Arkestra, corralled by the great Marshall Allen, in over 20 years. Still very much in touch with the core astral concerns.
Surprise Chef - Daylight Savings (Mr Bongo)
Lithe and breezy groove pieces, recorded over the course of a single weekend.
Susan Alcorn - Pedernal (Relative Pitch)
Expanding the vocabulary and possibilities of the pedal steel guitar. Also, dream ensemble with Mary Halvorson, Mark Feldman, Michael Formanek and Ryan Sawyer.
SUSS - Promise (Northern Spy)
Dreamscapes of the American west.
Swamp Dogg - Sorry You Couldn't Make It (Joyful Noise Recordings)
A great new set of country soul songs to relish. The sadly missed John Prine guests on two tracks.