24 Great Albums of 2020.....
Emotional to look back upon whilst listening to some of the great albums released during this year of all years! So hard to narrow it down to just 24....
Julianna Barwick - Healing Is a Miracle
Layered harmonious vocalisations, realised intrinsically and improvised out of the either. With its dreamlike fragments and haunting woven electronica, an album of wonder and power to consistently surprise from start to finish. A voyage of discovery which fans of Sigur Rósshould soak up like the healing power of honey.
Idles - Ultra Mono
Does exactly what it shouldn't on the tin and then some! Following spritely in the footsteps of Brutalism and Joy as an act of Resistance. Idles deliver again carving out their own space in what is set to be a very interesting 2021. Roll on the mosh pit. Socially distanced of course!
Laura Marling - Song For Our Daughter
A mercurial modern day classic that is as timeless as it is ageless. An album that pulls you in time after time and each time, after resting a while, keeps on giving.
Doves - The Universal Want
10 years on or thereabouts since the magnificent Kingdom of Rust album. A welcome return from Doves. Not as immediate perhaps as it's predecessor but not a bad thing for that. Repeated listens reveal it's depth and wider horizons, pure Doves, class as always.
Various: Blue Note Re:imagined
Truly inspirational dovetailed joints of classic Blue Note past and present. Giving full respect to the many leaves out of Blue Notes legendary book of Jazz greats, fragmented grooves out of the cool blue into horizons new. Long may it continue.
Bob Dylan - Rough and Rowdy Ways
Bob is back!
Hugh Masakela and Tony Allen - Rejoice
As sublime as the meeting of great minds in Allen and Masakela.
Brigid Dawson & the Mothers Network - Ballet of Apes
With a tip of the hat to layered 60's sounds of yore, with a songwriter of immense power and resonance.Swathed and awash with psychedelic overtones and a melodic insistance but always close to the edge.
Khruangbin - Mordechai
Khruangbin continue to create insatiable grooves that consistently have the power to heal. take a chill pill and kick off those redundant shoes, Khruangbin know the score when it comes to keeping cool amidst the chaos.
Andy Bell - The View From Halfway Down
A tripped out lesson in longevity. Keep it real for yourself and Andy Bell proves it just so. An album layed down as a refreshing foundation on which many more will hopefully follow. Impressive Byrdsian/Roses opener Love Comes In Waves to the last strains of electronica on Heat Haze on Weyland Road. Just sit back and let the album wash over you. A perfect antidote to these difficult times.
Gil Scott-Heron - We're New Here Again - A Reimagining By Makaya McCraven
Another re-working and celebration of Scott-Heron's unfinished last album I'm New Here, this time by the intuitive Chicago drummer and producer McCraven. An album that continues working on so many different levels reminding us faithfully how huge Scott-Herons talent and influence continues to be. This is how an album should be re-appreciated and reimagined.
Trees Speak - Shadow Forms
Doesn't seem that long ago since we've caught our breath with their previously majestic OHMS, one of the discoveries of 2019. This years Shadow Forms continues to raise us higher into the branches and keep us nodding our heads in approval to classic twisted krautrock beats, electronic off kilter soundscapes and more depth than you could shake a stick at. Trees Speak are continuing to deliver a haunting beacon of light in a darkening forest.
Go Go Penguin - Go Go Penguin
A testament to their confidence in their own self belief and outstanding ability to carve out record after record with such a high standard of innovation combined with fluid imagination. Continuing not to be pigeon holed into jazz, classical, trip hop, dance, electronica but absorbing the best of it to create their own beautiful works beyond.
Bill Fay - Countless Branches
Coming just before the Global Pandemic kicked in, a release from Bill Fay proved how such fragile beauty can retain itself even in the strongest of ill winds. The ageing legend giving emotional presence to the passing of time majestically.
Cornershop - England is a Garden
Everyone should have a Cornershop in their lives. Nice to welcome back Cornershop after what seemed like too long a time. Like a pure breath of fresh air after the storm subsides.An album that just keeps on giving in multitudes to heighten the vibration in troubled times.
Lightning Orchestra - Source And Deliver
As full of jazz blues and funk as anything this year. Lose yourself in a distant galaxy of the groove. Pure Joy. Sourced from some of the best influences out there and rightly so, more than delivered.
Nick Cave - Idiot Prayer
Alone, a master craftsman, who instinctively knows what to leave out. A telling of tales so telling in a year of keeping distant but so very much up close and personal.
Nadine Shah - Kitchen Sink
Intensly woven sounds knitted together like a long metaphysical dressing gown to dance wildly to when you just don't want to open the curtains. Fans of Jesca Hoop and The Creatures will enjoy it's wide eyed introspective rhythm.
bdrrm - Bedroom
A debut album that's as surprising in 2020 as it is timeless. Seemed to grow out of nowhere and continues to spread its Ride, Galaxie 500 and Pale Saints guitar mulititudes into it's often sombre, dark and elongated isolation. The album climbs it's comparison mountains with aplomb and looks out on a wider, broader horizon. A band to watch in 2021 and onwards!
Shirley Collins - Heart's Ease
A refreshing beacon, a classic album already amidst so much history. A pure voice that is as young as it is old.
Completely grounded in the folk tradition with so many layers of wisdom leaving space to fly into realms of often meditative, simple psychedelic wonderment. Escape into it.
Jehnny Beth - To Live Is To Love
A powerful statement of intent from Jehnny Beth. Twists and turns by the bucketful, raw power mixed with such tender beauty with all of it's fault lines baring witness to eruption after eruption.
Brigid Mae Power - Head above the Water
Brigid Mae Power continues to grow from strength to strength since her outstanding 2016 debut album. Once again to immerse yourself in Power's ethereal voice is to feel the beauty of healing, once you let go and allow it to carry you to secret waterfalls and majestic contemplation, the world seems better. Head above the Water, just like wild swimming and the continuing after glow, nature does as it does.
Fontaines D.C. - A Hero's Death
The Fontaines D.C. deliver barely a year after the success of their debut Dogrel. No matter how far they travel, Dublin's rain washed cobbles once again continue to cleanse the poetic pallet, with tales of anger and woe, observations of a collective anxiety and living in the 21st century.
Bill Callahan - Gold Record
A sparser more spontaneous although elegant in it's deconstruction, a worldly wise Bill Callahan album that would sit nicely in his Smog catalogue and it's none the worse for that. Continuations and observations of growing into comfortable shoes with tales of the simple complexity of day to day family life with wonder and sharp wit. A nod and a wink to the Gold Records of yore, oh how we wait for more.









