The Guardian (USA)

From Britney to Germán Bringas: the best old music our writers discovered in 2023

- Tim Jonze

Aneesa Ahmed, Ben Beaumont-Thomas, Katie Hawthorne, Elle Hunt, Tim Jonze, Ammar Kalia, Sasha Mistlin, Alexis Petridis, Dave Simpson, Laura Snapes and Joe Stone Slapp Happy – Sort of

Slapp Happy’s 1972 debut album is a curious thing. It was recorded at Faust’s Wümme studios, with the krautrock legends acting as backing band, but it sounds absolutely nothing like krautrock. It was intended as a joke – a sarcastic response to experiment­al musician Anthony Moore’s record label demanding something more commercial – but carries no audible trace of the smug condescens­ion that implies. Instead, it exists in an unplaceabl­e space of its own creation. Its melodies stick with you – the fabulous Blue Flower was covered on Mazzy Star’s 1990 debut album She Hangs Brightly – its air of oddness feels unaffected, Dagmar Krause’s voice is a plaintive delight: pop music made by minds untethered to accepted notions of pop.

Alexis Petridis WAT – World According To

Just when you think there couldn’t possibly be another early 80s band at the intersecti­on of post-punk and new wave with tinny drum machines, aloof female vocals and guitars seemingly recorded in a public toilet, it turns out there’s another – and the trio WAT, operationa­l in Dutch city Eindhoven from 1983-1985, are a really good one. There’s something of Young Marble Giants’ Alison Statton to Ankie Keultjes’ wistful yet steely vocals, but the arrangemen­ts are way more maximalist, clearly also drawing from the jangling British indie of the time – Thin Blue Notes is like a great lost Smiths song. Their best tunes were gathered up this year on a compilatio­n by Belgian label Stroom (who just had an undergroun­d hit with the brilliant Voice Actor).

Ben Beaumont-Thomas Germán Bringas – Tunel Hacia Tí

One of the best things about interviewi­ng musicians from far-flung music scenes is asking them for local recommenda­tions. After I spoke to Guatemalan cellist Mabe Fratti this autumn, I received a WhatsApp volley of enthusiast­ic tips from her adopted community in Mexico City – and discovered a new obsession in jazz multiinstr­umentalist Germán Bringas (who also runs the club and improv cornerston­e Jazzorca). Tunel Hacia Tí (tunnel towards you) is a compilatio­n of his work from 1991 to 2000, and it spans parched spiritual vistas, lunar lounge music, squalling trumpet tantrums as dry as the desert earth, doomed kalimba hoedowns. It could live on ECM; it also variously summons visions of the intricacie­s of Beatrice Dillon’s music put through Oneohtrix Point Never’s warped filter. Wigged-out abstractio­ns are followed by moments of sublime melody – I had to check that Caminatas, with its devastatin­g, lilting, intensifyi­ng keys-and-trumpet refrain, wasn’t a cover, it sounds that classic. Everyone I’ve introduced him to has become equally obsessed: welcome to the Germán hive. Laura Snapes

Britney Spears

I wasn’t a Britney fan when she launched in 1999. Three years earlier, I’d been radicalise­d by the Spice Girls, and the lyrics to Born to Make You Happy offended my newly minted feminist sensibilit­y. Recently, my return to the gym after a brief pause (2017-2023) has caused me to revisit her back catalogue. My favourite track is Stronger, which announces itself with a foghorn and only gets more demented from there, her hiccuping vocals declaring independen­ce over a crunchy industrial beat. Where previous singles … Baby One More Timewere passive, Stronger sees her fully empowered, and I credit its energising power with at least 70% of my lifting capabiliti­es. She’s stronger than yesterday; we both are. Joe Stone

Pulp – Death Comes to Town

In his recent memoir, So It Started There, drummer Nick Banks calls Death Comes to Town “the greatest lost Pulp track ever”. Written in their pre-fame 80s using a keyboard’s “disco” setting, the song was mysterious­ly abandoned during the sessions for troubled third album Separation­s. A remix called Death Goes to the Disco appeared on the B-side of 1991’s Countdown and the superior original eventually limped out on the album’s 2012 reissue, but it deserves a wider hearing. The hook is instantly infectious, Jarvis Cocker’s lyrics are a gateway to adventure (“Tonight’s the night, open your door and I will come inside …”) and the chorus and “la la las” are just made for giddily punching the air. Perhaps if they’d written it later, it would have been another Common People. Dave Simpson

Billy Idol – Rebel Yell

Has anyone ever displayed as much aryan beauty as Billy Idol, shirtless on the cover of Rebel Yell? Maybe Bowie. Maybe. I ask because the image has been glued to my phone all year as I’ve played and hummed along to the eerie synth and pulsating bassline of Eyes Without a Face, the album’s hit single. I first discovered it at my barber’s, where tattooed Italians inexplicab­ly subsist on a diet of early 80s new wave and golden era hip-hop – perfect. Gloriously, I’ve also been able to share my love of Idol with friends, as the track reemerged on TikTok this year, allowing a new generation to enjoy this chunk of new wave perfection with ethereal French backing vocals and a rap-rock middle section to boot. It’s as if Idol attempted to both condense – and preempt – the decade’s defining trends into one heartbreak­ing tale of a deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip. Sasha Mistlin

Organic Grooves with William Parker and Hamid Drake – Black Cherry

Earlier this year, I was watching

Moroccan gnawa master Majid Bekkas play. As he laid down an earthy groove on the three-string gimbri, it was his drummer Hamid Drake that caught my attention. Hitting fluid, minimal rhythms that held time often with just a single rimshot, Drake’s rooted approach to the kit was unique. He has worked with jazz luminaries including Don Cherry and Pharoah Sanders, but it was Black Cherry – a remix album of a 1997 duet with free jazz bassist William Parker by production collective Organic Grooves – that soon moved on to regular rotation in my household. Through layering dub effects, sub-frequencie­s and electronic beats, Black Cherry amplifies Drake’s meandering rhythms, giving them added weight for the dancefloor. Best played loud for full immersion. Ammar Kalia

Maanam

As the cliche goes; you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone. In July, after stumbling on a tribute marking the fifth anniversar­y of the death of Olga Jackowska – AKA Maanam’s Kora – I delved into the Polish band’s discograph­y. They were mostly known for their gritty, energised, guitar-centric post-punk sound, embodied by their 1989 single Sie Ściemnia. But before that, they had softer, acoustic beginnings: from 1980, the seven-and-a-halfminute Szał Niebieskic­h Ciał offers crooning vocals, experiment­al synthesise­r, edgy guitar riffs, and deeply emotional lyrics. Based on the blues scale but with a new wave flavour, it’s sad yet somehow not depressing: Kora’s warbling voice laments about the planets for the first five minutes, before a textured guitar solo takes you into a state of spaced-out wonderment.

Aneesa Ahmed Gillian Welch – Everything Is Free

I came across Everything Is Free via Father John Misty’s cover in the Spotify Studio sessions. It’s an ironic introducti­on for a song written and recorded by Gillian Welch in 2001, as a damning indictment of Napster and the then-emerging era of music piracy. Its lyrics leapt out at me for their ambivalenc­e, and even anger: “Everything I’ve ever done, got to give it away … We’re going to do it anyway, even if it doesn’t pay.” Twenty years later, streaming may be legal, but artists are still not fairly compensate­d, and Welch’s song has emerged as a contempora­ry folk standard, covered by Courtney Barnett, Phoebe Bridgers and more. I love the turn in the song’s final verse, where Welch threatens her withdrawal from an exploitati­ve system: “I don’t need to run around / I’ll just stay home … If there’s something that you want to hear, you can sing it yourself.” Elle Hunt

Metallica – Ride the Lightning

Ahead of Metallica’s “no repeats” double headliner duties at Download, a friend (and James Hetfield superfan) made me a playlist of songs beyond the band’s obvious classics. One of them, Creeping Death, got me stuck on their ferocious second album. Nuclear war, biblical plagues, capital punishment, suicidal depression: Ride the Lightning harnesses full-body fears to generate breathtaki­ng power. Charged by the nightmares of literary greats (including King and Hemingway), the 80s thrash metal classic is half bravado, half total terror, and still dangerousl­y potent. Back in June, when Metallica hammered through the album’s brutally claustroph­obic title track, Ride the Lightning felt brand new. Katie Hawthorne

The Mountain Goats – Dance Music

Where to start with the Mountain Goats and their 971 albums: a concept album about goths, you say? An LP with alternativ­e Swedish titles? I didn’t know, so I wrote them off as too tough a nut to crack. More fool me. It was this tale of fear and loathing in San Luis Obispo that finally did it. John Darnielle rap-sings his way, Subterrane­an Homesick Blues style, through a real-life tale of domestic abuse, childhood anxiety and the struggles with hard drugs that followed. Within it he includes a perfect encapsulat­ion of music’s potential for escapism. As his stepfather hurls a glass at his mum and a screaming row ensues, Darnielle scurries upstairs to the safety of his record player and realises: “So this is what the volume knob’s for.”

 ?? ?? Fully empowered … Britney Spears, Germán Bringas and John Darnielle of The Mountain Goats. Composite: Getty Images/ Bennett Piscitelli
Fully empowered … Britney Spears, Germán Bringas and John Darnielle of The Mountain Goats. Composite: Getty Images/ Bennett Piscitelli
 ?? ?? Wistful yet steely … WAT
Wistful yet steely … WAT

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