Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

The Top 10 Albums of 2017

- BY ALAN SCULLEY CORRESPOND­ENT Email Alan Sculley at alanlastwo­rd@gmail.com.

Many years produce an album or two that scream “Year’s Best Album” from the first listen. This was not that kind of year.

In fact, there wasn’t a lot to separate any of the albums I ranked in the top five. There was, however, a good deal of depth to the albums of 2017, and limiting the honorable- mention list to 10 was difficult. Here’s how I see the best albums of this year.

1The Rural Alberta Advantage: “The Wild” This Canadian band hits a new high-water mark on its fourth album, “The Wild.” On stellar songs such as “Bad Luck Again,” the group balances grittiness, a little twang and a healthy dose of pop melody, creating songs that immediatel­y demand attention. “Brother” and “White Lights” show a more acoustic, folksy, but no less fervent, side to the band. The Rural Alberta Advantage may not be hip enough to make many Top 10 lists, but I’ll take this album over Kendrick Lamar or Lorde any day.

2J. D. McPherson: “Undivided Heart & Soul” A couple of years ago, I ranked McPherson’s second album, “Let The Good Times Roll,” at the top of my year-end list. This follow-up effort is just as good. It’s a more original, harder- rocking effort, with cool-grooving “Desperate Love” and the fuzzed out “Lucky Penny” leading the way. U2: “Songs of Experience” Some may consider “Songs ••• of Experience” a sell- out album meant to recapture the mass audience U2 failed to reach with its previous three albums. Fair enough. But the new songs are well- crafted and have enough lyrical substance that there’s no faulting their accessibil­ity. Besides, wasn’t the ability U2 shows to blend depth, relatabili­ty and beauty on “Songs of Experience” among the same qualities that made “The Joshua Tree” a classic album 30 years ago?

4Khalid: “American Teen” Khalid confronts the rush of love, the crush of heartbreak, issues with parents and more. The kicker is Khalid knows how to write memorable vocal melodies and instrument­al hooks. That’s reason enough to anticipate how good Khalid, 19, might become as he grows into adulthood.

5Chris Stapleton: “Fro m a Room Vol. 1” and “From a Room Vol. 2” Many of the songs on this pair of albums date back a decade to Stapleton’s songwritin­g days. And it’s hard to see why gems like “Second One to Know” (a soultinged bit of Southern rock) and “Scarecrow in the Garden” (an easy- going country rocker) got passed over by other artists. But Stapleton makes these old songs sound new again.

6Queens of the Stone Age: “Villains” On the seventh album f rom t his band, Josh Homme and crew continue to make some of the most distinctiv­e and fresh hard rock music going, finding new variations in the band’s establishe­d sound. With its bouncy beat and a barrage of hooks, “The Way You Used To Do” is as catchy a heavy rock song as 7 you’ll hear. St. Vincent: “Masseducti­on” Plenty of artists attempt to i ncorporate the EDM/ synthetic sounds common in top 40 pop today, often with awkward results. Annie Clark (St. Vincent) employs electronic touches and beats that serve the songs and make “Masseducti­on” an album that combines sharp songwrit- ing with imaginativ­e production.

8Squeeze: “The Knowledge” Back in action after an extended breakup, songwriter­s Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford show they can still muster pop brilliance, with several songs (“Patchouli” and “Two Forks”) that will spur memories of such Squeeze gems as “Tempted” and “Some Fantastic Place.”

9SZA: “Ctrl” One of the most auspicious R& B albums of the year belonged to SZA. Songs like “The Weekend,” “Prom” and “Drew Barrymore” boast uncommonly striking silky melodies, while the hip-hop-ish rhythms of “Doves in the Wind,” and “Love Galore” give “Ctrl” a good deal of edge and groove. “Ctrl” is up for five Grammys.

10Lorde: “Melo

drama” Lorde’s second album captures the chaotic, emotional swings of life being lived in the wake of a difficult breakup, all set to a synth- laden sound that’s both grand and intimate.

Honorable mention: Vince Staples, “Big Fish Theory;” Kendrick Lamar, “DAMN;” Robert Plant, “Carry Fire;” Sam Smith, “The Thrill of it All;” Big Head Todd & The Monsters, “New World Arisin’.”

Ja s on I s bell & t he 400 Unit, “The Nashville Sound;” Beck, “Colors;” Margo Price, “All American Made;” The National, “Sleep Well Beast;” and Brand New, “Science Fiction.”

 ??  ?? “Songs of Experience” by U2
“Songs of Experience” by U2
 ??  ?? “The Wild” by The Rural Alberta Advantage
“The Wild” by The Rural Alberta Advantage
 ??  ?? “Undivided Heart & Soul” by J.D. McPherson
“Undivided Heart & Soul” by J.D. McPherson

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