King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard - Gumboot Soup
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Jeff Rosenstock - POST.
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They Might Be Giants - I Like Fun
2017 was the year I really got into American oddballs They Might Be Giants, and as such I was somewhat excited for 'I Like Fun', as despite having a career that has been going on for over 30 years they are remarkably consistent, and although their recent material lacks the reckless fun from their first five or so releases, it's still pretty great. 'I Like Fun' carries this on, and although it feels only several frustrating steps away from greatness, it's definitely one of their most concise, cohesive and dark albums. TMBG have always dealt with death as a subject matter in their songs, and that is the same here, with opener 'Let's Get This Over With' and closer 'Last Wave' maybe being the best examples of this, but the real standouts are the bizarre title track - which I hated on first listen but has grown on me since, it sounds like pretty much nothing I've ever heard, like a sci-fi soundtrack with brass and extended drum rolls - and especially 'When The Lights Come On', which ranks as maybe the most sincerely sad TMBG song ever created. 7.0/10
Camila Cabello - Camila
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CupcakKe - Ephorize
I first heard CupcakKe ultra-explicit brand of hip-hop on Charli XCX's 'Lip Gloss', and 'Ephorize' is pretty much everything a fan of that could want, with clever innuendos and hilarious wordplay that relates mainly to sex, genitalia or 'stylin on the haters'. Luckily there's enough variety in the production and moods of these tracks that this album never gets boring or overly obnoxious, and other than several annoyances - the contemporary EDM instrumental of 'Post Pic' is a drag near the end of the album - but standouts 'Cartoons' and 'Cinnamon Toast Crunch' make up for it. 7.8/10
Fall Out Boy - MANIA
Oh God. This album is so bad it makes me regret how negatively I reviewed 'One More Light' by Linkin Park last year, because this is worse. Even if we pretend that the failed attempts to copy mainstream EDM and pop trends on 'YOUNG AND MENACE' and 'HOLD ME TIGHT OR DON'T' are the greatest songs ever written, the tinny, overcompressed production is some of the worst I have ever heard, every song seems to have been finished and then turned up so high before being released that every song has become a solid block of hissing, bombastic noise. I have never like Fall Out Boy much beyond some early singles, but this is such a step down that it honestly makes 'Raditude' look like 'Pet Sounds'. 2.0/10
Tune-Yards - i can feel you creeping into my private life
All I can say is that I don't particularly enjoy this album, the vocal-heavy style is so saccharine yet lacking in much actual catchiness or excitement, resulting in an album that feels longer than it's runtime, and becomes quite irritating. Some of the lyrical themes about cultural appropriation also rubbed me up the wrong way, and the self-flagellating 'Colonizer' seems like it was created purely out of guilt, and comes across poorly because it is a song that apologises for using african music influences while also exhibiting them. That said, this album is at least quite unique and some of the singles are well crafted. 5.5/10
Jpegmafia - Veteran
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Migos - Culture II
This album is not only physically difficult to get through with it's frankly shocking 1 hour 45 minute, 24 song runtime, but it feels even longer due to about half the songs being so indistinguishable and boring that I can't even remember what they sound like by looking at the track name. My first listen to this was spent mainly browsing the internet because I was so bored out my mind by about 3 in every 4 tracks. My album of the month is another long, many-tracked album, but at least it has the decency to make the songs sound different, and feels like an artistic statement rather than a cynical way to get more streams, which 'Culture II' undoubtedly is. That said, the good material here is impressive, with 'Narcos', 'Stir-Fry' and the surprisingly depressing 'Gang Gang' standing out. 4.7/10
RAT BOY - CIVIL DISORDER
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Craig David - The Time is Now
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Ty Segall - Freedom's Goblin - ALBUM OF THE MONTH
Observe Migos, this is how to do a double album! I'm not particularly familiar with Ty Segall's work mainly because it's not on Spotify and I'm too lazy to seek it out, but after stumbling across a stream of the album on Stereogum a week before it's official release I was TOTALLY PSYCHED DUDE!! Opener 'Fanny' is a lesson in garage rock, while 'Rain' sounds like a lost Beatles track (Perhaps ironic due to the popular Beatles B-side of the same name.). There are several extended instrumental jams on both sides of the album which fall into the sweet spot of loose enough to be exciting but controlled enough not to become too alienating, demonstrated perfectly on the extended closing track 'And, Goodnight'. I'm generally not a fan of 'throwback rock' (The Black Keys for example), but this is such a fully-realised and timeless celebration of rock in it's many forms that I can't help but love it. It's not perfect - like all double albums it could probably be cut down to a single incredible disc, but the cuts made would be more painful here than on most albums of the same length. 8.8/10
Observe Migos, this is how to do a double album! I'm not particularly familiar with Ty Segall's work mainly because it's not on Spotify and I'm too lazy to seek it out, but after stumbling across a stream of the album on Stereogum a week before it's official release I was TOTALLY PSYCHED DUDE!! Opener 'Fanny' is a lesson in garage rock, while 'Rain' sounds like a lost Beatles track (Perhaps ironic due to the popular Beatles B-side of the same name.). There are several extended instrumental jams on both sides of the album which fall into the sweet spot of loose enough to be exciting but controlled enough not to become too alienating, demonstrated perfectly on the extended closing track 'And, Goodnight'. I'm generally not a fan of 'throwback rock' (The Black Keys for example), but this is such a fully-realised and timeless celebration of rock in it's many forms that I can't help but love it. It's not perfect - like all double albums it could probably be cut down to a single incredible disc, but the cuts made would be more painful here than on most albums of the same length. 8.8/10
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