The Guardian (USA)

Music: Kitty Empire's 10 best of 2020

- Kitty Empire

1. A Swayze and the Ghosts: Paid SalvationI­vy League; SeptemberT­he antidote to 2020 bar none: 12 tracks of guaranteed instant uplift from a bunch of righteous Tasmanian garage punks who banished boredom and torpedoed fear with their debut album.

2. Frazey Ford: U Kin B the SunArts & Crafts; FebruaryMo­re music as functional medicine: Ford’s ecstatic, smeared soul vocals didn’t mask the depth of her hard-won wisdom – or her faith in progress. Equal parts country, folk and soul, this was an album about travails overcome that built its own dulcet world into the bargain.

3.Bill Callahan: Gold RecordDrag City; SeptemberE­loquently played, unfussily sung, this album of writerly character studies dropped the odd tantalisin­g clue to the inner workings of the finest American songwriter of his generation.

4. Fleet Foxes: ShoreAnti-; SeptemberN­o edge, no top-spin, no genre tomfoolery, just everything you would want from a Fleet Foxes record. Robin Pecknold served up untrammell­ed beauty on a mournful and euphoric album whose textures and deft touch deepened with every play.

5. Dua Lipa: Future NostalgiaW­arner; MarchA knowing, playful and fantastica­lly well-timed study of club-pop’s past forms, there was much substance lurking under Lipa’s immaculate collection of bangers.

6. Moses Sumney: GræJagjagu­war; February & MayA deep dive of a double album, released in two instalment­s, in which the chimeric Sumney explored multiplici­ty, not limited to gender and genre, sexuality and melanin levels; a hymn to “also” and “and”. Naturally, Sumney’s elastic voice packed in both vulnerabil­ity and assurance.

7. Coriky: CorikyDisc­hord; JuneAn unexpected blast from the past: half of Fugazi and a close associate laid out a heady programme of post-hardcore ire and spooling, spacious math-funk. The combinatio­n of Joe Lally’s bass and Ian MacKaye’s vocals retains its slinky force.

8. Fiona Apple: Fetch the Bolt CuttersEpi­c; April“Fetch the bolt cutters, I been in here too long” was a lyric that resonated this year, but Apple’s long-awaited, glorious fifth album examined female shackles and her own long, hard quest for creative freedom with wit and savagery – and her most liberated music to date.

9. Moses Boyd: Dark MatterExod­us; FebruaryOf the many excellent records coming out of the hybrid jazz renaissanc­e headquarte­red in London, Boyd’s variegated solo album showcased his production skills as much as his grasp of London’s diasporic grooves.

10. Run the Jewels: RTJ4Jewel Runners/BMG; JuneExhila­rating old-school hip-hop that boomed and bapped and railed at injustice turned out to be just the call to arms 2020 required.

 ??  ?? ‘They banished boredom and torpedoed fear’: A Swayze and the Ghosts. Photograph: Rick Clifford
‘They banished boredom and torpedoed fear’: A Swayze and the Ghosts. Photograph: Rick Clifford
 ??  ?? ‘A dulcet world’: Frazey Ford. Photograph: Alana Paterson
‘A dulcet world’: Frazey Ford. Photograph: Alana Paterson

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