The Guardian (USA)

The 10 best contempora­ry albums of 2021

- John Lewis

10. Caroline Shaw – Narrow Sea

So much new compositio­n seems to make connection­s between contempora­ry minimalism and early music. Narrow Sea sees Pulitzer prize-winning composer Shaw create a very American variety of antique minimalism, featuring opera soprano Dawn Upshaw. The ancient folk song Wayfaring Stranger and other Sacred Harp hymns are placed in a disorienta­ting sonic environmen­t, with Gilbert Kalish providing discordant piano and the New York ensemble Sō Percussion switching between Steve Reich-ish marimbas and atmospheri­c effects on ceramic pots, water bowls and dulcimers.

9. Robert Ames – Change Ringing Robert Ames, founder of the London Contempora­ry Orchestra, is a crucial connector in modern music, the arranger and conductor linking Jonny Greenwood, Frank Ocean, Little Simz, Jónsi and Actress with contempora­ry minimalist­s. His solo debut Change Ringing features six meditative, dronebased pieces, but the highlights are Tympanum and Rounds, where Ames’s slow-motion, multilayer­ed approach gets more microtonal and harmonical­ly complex.

8. Spindle Ensemble – Inkling

Bristol’s intriguing Spindle Ensemble feature composer and pianist Daniel Inzani backed by vibes, violin and cello. Their second LP showcases some compelling Philip Glassstyle minimalism but also pushes into Morricone-esque exotica, Japanese-inflected country and western and Satieish romanticis­m.

7. KMRU – Logue

The Bandcamp page of KMRU – a sound artist based between Berlin and Nairobi, AKA Joseph Kamaru – is always worth checking out for ambient textures. Logue, the third of five mini-albums he released this year, is an addictive mix of meditative electronic­a, slow-motion synth-pop and bucolic field recordings from east Africa.

6. Gazelle Twin & NYX – Deep England

Gazelle Twin’s 2018 album Pastoral was a febrile journey into the heart of middle England, mixing menacing folk chants, thuggish techno and satirical lyrics, with vocalist, composer and producer Elizabeth Bernholz serving as a retro-futurist court jester. Deep England sees her collaborat­ing with the six-piece drone choir NYX to turn the album’s themes into drumless, paganistic a cappella soundscape­s, filled with eerie pitch-shifted vocals, mouth percussion, microtonal harmonies and endless layers of reverb. Read the full review.

5. Ichiko Aoba – Windswept Adan

This Japanese singer, songwriter and guitarist is best known for her wonderfull­y wayward take on bossa nova, but her first collaborat­ion with pianist and composer Taro Umebayashi is a marked change in direction. Beautifull­y played and sung, it is a soundtrack to an imaginary film; a dreamlike conceptual voyage through the East China Sea; and a piece of orchestral music that slyly references Erik Satie, Philip Glass, Astrud Gilberto and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan while maintainin­g a unique artistic vision.

4. Blank Gloss – Melt

The latest by this Sacramento duo is a fascinatin­g addition to the burgeoning genre of ambient Americana. It reassemble­s the defining sonic tropes of American roots music (woozy pedal steel, slurring fiddles, brushed drums and reverb-drenched electric guitar) as disembodie­d sounds put through an ambient filter. Where so much electronic­a conjures up concrete brutalism, this suggests huge skies and dust-dry roads; it’s the sound of Harold Budd, Dick Dale and Pat Metheny melting in the Mojave sun. Read the full review.

3. Space Afrika – Honest Labour

The third proper album by the Manchester duo is a truly immersive voyage – 19 tracks of manipulate­d field recordings, synth drones, haunted bass lines and barely there breakbeats. The spoken-word tracks have a certain Mancunian swagger but most of the record comprises icy, futuristic instrument­als which seem to distil the most ominous sonic implicatio­ns of dubstep and drill without using any beats at all.

2. Stick in the Wheel – Tonebeds for Poetry

Best known for their punky, London-accented folk music, this LP sees the Walthamsto­w duo draw from their background in experiment­al electronic­a to provide a psychogeog­raphic voyage through the capital. AngloSaxon poems are recast as sludge metal; ancient cockney nursery rhymes become sinister pieces of digital minimalism; urban field recordings are turned into terrifying pieces of musique concrète. This is music that draws from 1,000 years of history, fed through a portal into a dystopian future.

1. Floating Points/Pharoah Sanders/London Symphony Orchestra – Promises

Promises is a remarkable three-way collaborat­ion that is simultaneo­usly an orchestral suite, a piece of free improvisat­ion and a groundbrea­king electronic masterpiec­e. Yet none of those definition­s really do it justice: this is a haunting piece of sound art that slowly seduces you over its 47-minute duration, using drones, frictionle­ss modal jazz improvisat­ions and a constantly mutating baroque harpsichor­d riff, all the time slowing down your perception­s of time and space. Read the full review.

 ?? ?? Compelling … Spindle Ensemble. Photograph: Paul Blakemore
Compelling … Spindle Ensemble. Photograph: Paul Blakemore
 ?? ?? Sound art and thuggish techno … KMRU, Gazelle Twin and Floating Points
Sound art and thuggish techno … KMRU, Gazelle Twin and Floating Points

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