The Guardian (USA)

The 50 best albums of 2023 – 50 to 21

- Laura Snapes and Ben Beaumont-Thomas

50CMAT – Crazymad, for Me

Coming off halfway between Jenny Lewis and Self Esteem, Dublin’s CMAT sets life’s greatest embarrassm­ents to ritzy country showstoppe­rs – the musical equivalent of piling your beehive high to distract from your tear-reddened eyes. On her second album, she tots up the price she has paid for her bad boyfriends, self-subjugatio­n and knowing avoidance of less-thanromant­ic realities, always with mordant humour rather than self-pity: “I’m just some stewardess who feeds your pets / And does your dishes and pays your rent,” she sings on the delicate, harmony-heavy Such a Miranda. For all that she has lost in these songs – pride, love, literal cash – her perspectiv­e remains a firmly clasped jewel. Laura

Snapes

49Romy – Mid Air

Even if her lyrics remain pretty much the same as ever – I love you; you hurt me – and the trance-y backings (chiefly by Fred Again and Stuart Price) are well-crafted but rote, Mid Air is saved from feeling mid by the sheer character and authority of Romy Madley Croft’s singing voice. The xx vocalist lifts everything here, whether she’s being tenderly consoling on Strong, tempering the jaunty beat and saucy punning on She’s on My Mind with audible worry or giving terrified little quivers of vibrato on Twice as she realises the strength and certainly of her feelings. Ben Beaumont-Thomas

48Jaimie Branch – Fly or Die Fly or Die Fly or Die ((World War))

In August, Branch’s death, aged 39, left the US jazz scene without one of its most forthright trumpeters and composers, heralded for both her fiendish intricacy and bright, big-hearted themes. This posthumous album is a stunning final statement spanning country songs, hip-hop breakbeats, free improv sketches, Latin funk, organbacke­d balladry and beyond, united by Branch’s zesty pronouncem­ents and

gorgeous trumpet tone. BBT

47Gina Birch – I Play My Bass Loud

A highlight of walking around London this winter has been seeing Gina Birch’s face everywhere, screaming out of posters for the Tate’s Women in Revolt! exhibition. The still came from a Super 8 video Birch made in 1977, the year that the visual artist also formed punk radicals the Raincoats with Ana da Silva. Forty-six years later, Birch’s spindly, dub and funk-flecked debut album proves just as vital, just as attuned to scream-inducing injustice and, maybe most miraculous­ly, just as playful as those formative works. The song I Am Rage makes classic girl-group sweetness unbearable, with Birch adopting a deathly child’s voice. In the coolly anthemic title track, the force of her bass playing has “rumbled your secrets”. At the same time, it’s full of the kind of wisdom you only get from ageing: “One day I stopped caring / On and on it went,” she sings on And Then It Happened, casual as you like – though the impact of her thought lingers like a scream. LS

46Hannah Diamond – Perfect Picture

Dressed in pink outfits and with a girlish voice to match, Diamond seemingly dares you to belittle her or view her pure pop project as ironic. Instead she is inspiringl­y sincere as she sings about wanting to be noticed and loved, and she ponders the gulfs between fame and ordinary life, between digital artifice and flesh-bound reality, with keen feeling. Her vulnerabil­ity and genuine ordinarine­ss – so different from the performed relatabili­ty of big stars – is perhaps why she has not crossed over from the undergroun­d. But these songs (produced with Scritti Politti’s David Gamson) are true pop masterpiec­es worthy of any A-list singer. BBT

45Slowdive – Everything Is Alive

Made following the deaths of singer and guitarist Rachel Goswell’s mother and drummer Simon Scott’s father, the second album of Slowdive’s comeback bore a newfound clarity: their dense shoegaze haze had been lifted, as if with it youthful illusions about anything lasting forever. Everything Is Alive is barebones and contemplat­ive, newly sharpened by chilly electronic touches yet still monumental in scale. Poignantly, its awareness of life’s cycle of endings and rejuvenati­on also attracted a new audience on TikTok, suggesting a pan-generation­al appeal for their hard-won perspectiv­e. LS

44Mandy, Indiana – I’ve Seen a Way

If Gilla Band’s Most Normal deconstruc­ted rock Cronenberg-style last year, then Manchester’s Mandy, Indiana strip away the genre scaffoldin­g altogether to deal in realms of pure, eviscerati­ng texture. Their debut summons cold gusts whipping down wet warehouse walls throbbed by punishing techno; funereal fanfares evaporatin­g into the ether; disembodie­d squalls and swarms. It’s fantastica­lly nasty, a feeling enhanced by their unsparing approach to rhythm and Francophon­e singer Valentine Caulfield’s equally percussive, sibilant glee as she riffs on various abject horrors. While many artists created worlds on their own terms in these uncertain times, Mandy, Indiana, like Lankum, reverberat­ed in the abyss.

LS

43Yo La Tengo – This Stupid World

This Stupid World is a testament to the 40 years that Georgia Hubley and Ira Kaplan have been playing together (and 30 with bassist James McNew): the product of intentiona­lly aimless improv sessions in their own space, closed off to the rest of the world, yet unavoidabl­y guided by their distinct chemistry. Their humour lies in the unsettled dusky groove of Tonight’s Episode, which feels vigilant, playing its cards close to its chest; Until It Happens is just as quizzical and minimal. The distortion of the title track and Brain Capers is balanced out by Hubley’s sweet country song Aselestine, with its pedal steel lens flare, while the band’s innate sense of equilibriu­m combines in the dualities of Sinatra Drive Breakdown, as a cool motorik pulse calms sparking noise to brooding stillness. This Stupid World isn’t prescripti­ve about its outlook, but makes a good argument for tight community and understand­ing in the face of the idiocy outside your four walls. LS

42Jim Legxacy – Homeless N*gga Pop Music

Not only did the Lewisham producer-singer-rapper co-create the backing for the year’s biggest UK rap track, Dave and Central Cee’s Sprinter, he also put out this heartfelt solo album on which each brief song is instantly, inimitably his. Legxacy’s style is of earnest R&B singing about uncertain relationsh­ips, backed by cleanly plucked acoustic guitar lines, and with samples of drill, grime and other semivintag­e Black music playing in and out as if from a passing car window. The beats can be peppily high-tempo – the Jersey club of Old Place – but the mood always stays poignant, as if Legxacy is scrolling through memories of parties and loves gone by. BBT

41Fever Ray – Radical Romantics

Another trip through the back of the wardrobe into Fever Ray’s halffrozen, half-tropical sound-world. Karin Dreijer began developing it two decades ago with the Knife, their duo with their brother Olof, and by now it is populated with a thriving and very particular sonic ecology: bird calls, lupine howls and sudden lizard-wriggles of noise, with dancehall and techno their heartbeat. Dreijer is also one of the great enunciator­s in pop, luxuriatin­g in the mouth-feel of their poetry: “Will you meet me, hocus-pocus? / On the other side of hyper focus?” (Meanwhile Olof’s own brilliant 12in release this year, Rosa Rugosa, took in the same scenery but from the very height of summer.) BBT

40Eddie Chacon – Sundown

The spectral second solo album by the low-key R&B legend seemed to waft the veil between pleasure and pain, between having everything and losing it all, between life and the great beyond. Eddie Chacon and producer John Carroll Kirby stripped back the comparativ­ely heavy keys of 2020’s Pleasure, Joy and Happiness for an album of slurred synths and flute solos barely of this earth, percussion that evoked rain dappling the roof of a Frank Lloyd Wright bungalow and melted funk designed to soundtrack a smooth shuffle on the carpet inside, cocktail in hand. Cast in a twilit hue and preoccupie­d with loss, Sundown neverthele­ss found the revivified Chacon at the outset of a stunning creative frontier. LS

39The National - Laugh Track

As frontman Matt Berninger confronted a debilitati­ng breakdown towards the end of 2019, the National wondered if they would ever even make another album. Then they made two, of which Laugh Track was the surprise second release this year – and which proved that they hadn’t just regrouped but revitalise­d. For the first time in several years, they sounded like five guys hunkered down in the engine room, smelting lean, light-headed epics such as Deep End and Dreaming, and leaning on a quarter-century’s worth of trust to get out of their own way, letting classic ballads remain unfussed (Laugh Track) and manic dirges untrammell­ed (Smoke Detector – maybe their best ever song). And almost losing it all gave Berninger’s lyrics a newfound clarity about what’s worth holding on to, most strikingly expressed in Space Invader, which conveyed a kind of panicked gratitude for having recognised love and pursued it years ago when it could so easily have dissolved in a letter that went unwritten, a subway stop missed. LS

38Danny Brown – Quaranta

Danny Brown has long had two rap voices – a high-pitched wizened tone like a Disney crone dispensing profane wisdom, and a deeper, more serious cadence – but these poles have never been further apart as on Quaranta, his reflection on turning 40. There are still plenty of rude, zany punchlines and images; a rotary phone is used for one particular­ly vivid sex metaphor, unprintabl­e here. But the downbeat moments are slower and lower than ever. The title track is a midlife crisis in real time; Down Wit It is a brutal too-late understand­ing of love for an ex-girlfriend, Brown’s voice splinterin­g into static under the shame and sadness; and Bass Jam is intensely poignant as he reminisces about the music percolatin­g through his childhood family home, giving the residents an outlet they didn’t otherwise have for their emotions. BBT

37The Lemon Twigs – Everything Harmony

That explosion of earnest yet psychedeli­c adult pop in the postBeatle­s US, from Simon and Garfunkel to the Beach Boys, the Byrds and even the hipper end of the Monkees, gets reanimated here in all its sumptuous Technicolo­r beauty. It would be inaccurate to say the duo transcend pastiche – you can almost feel the corduroy static against your ankles – but the songwritin­g is so ridiculous­ly strong that were these songs released in the early 70s, the Lemon Twigs would still be on the cover of Mojo and Uncut at least once a year. BBT

36Loraine James – Gentle Confrontat­ion

With four albums and three EPs following her 2019 breakthrou­gh For You and I, it’s been astonishin­g how quickly and deeply London producer Loraine James has hollowed out her own particular grotto in music: connected to other undergroun­d sounds from electronic­a to modern compositio­n as well as the deeper corners of R&B, hip-hop and jazz, but decorated with the flotsam of her own life and lit with a wobbling flame. Guest singers such as Eden Samara and George Riley are on hand here for soaring vocals, but James’s own more earthbound, conversati­onal voice remains the most affecting of all, confiding family trauma with a stoic shrug.

BBT

35Water From Your Eyes – Everyone’s Crushed

As if emptying the contents of an overstimul­ated head on to a metal workbench, this triumph of art-pop is noisy, disorienta­ting and full of possibilit­y. The Brooklyn duo pick up punkfunk basslines, car-alarm riffs, plucked strings, spoken word, corporate chimes, pure noise and more, and hammer it all together with the haste of someone who needs to get to their next job. The end product is fascinatin­gly tactile and in the case of the ballad 14, utterly beautiful. BBT

34Jpegmafi­a and Danny Brown – Scaring the Hoes

The precursor to Danny Brown’s introspect­ive Quaranta was made at the crunch point of his addictions – he was in rehab by the time it was released – and his full-length collab with Jpegmafia is hyperstimu­lated, like a domino effect of short circuits being blasted by too-strong currents. “Blacked out, can’t think no more / So ain’t no way we ’bout to take this slow,” he warns on opener Lean Beef Patty, sounding, as ever, like he’s rapping through molars clamped around a chew toy. There are glitches and breakbeats, the blare of cursed jazz ensembles and broken arcades, skeleton-rattling percussion and slippery samples of Kelis swimming through the whacked signal-to-noise mix. Jpeg’s production chews these sounds up as if between the teeth of a bin lorry crusher, organic source traces glinting amid the detritus and creating the record’s apocalypti­c lure. LS

33Grian Chatten – Chaos for the Fly

Fontaines DC remain a going concern, but their frontman made this solo release feel anything but a between-albums diversion. There are forays into new sounds for him, such as the breezy Rat Pack backing of Bob’s Casino and cosmic trip-hop on East Coast Bed, but what remains the same is his strength as a lyricist: he tramps moodily towards misanthrop­y, but a deep love for humanity prevents him from ever quite getting there. Chatten writes the way a sketch artist draws, in deft, sure lines – whether describing New York’s freezing sidewalks getting salted (“the whole of the city was seasoned to taste”) or pinpointin­g toxic acquaintan­ces (“they will celebrate the things that make you who you’re not”). BBT

32The National – The First Two Pages of Frankenste­in

If Laugh Track sprawled, confidentl­y sharing the fruits of the National’s unexpected­ly prolific return, then their beautiful first album of 2023 held a more precarious pose as Matt Berninger tried to maintain his footing on faltering ground. First Two Pages of Frankenste­in spanned the terror and rage of how it feels when home doesn’t feel like home any more, when, as Berninger duetted with Phoebe Bridgers, “your mind is not your friend”. But for all that he battled with writers’ block, these are some of his most beautiful, prismatic evocations of loss, from the nihilistic anthem of Tropic Morning News to the vulnerable shudder of undersung standout Ice Machines. LS

31Kara Jackson – Why Does the Earth Give Us People to Love?

A one-time US national youth poet laureate, Jackson’s writerly pedigree leaps out of this droll, glum debut album. Backed by thrumming arrangemen­ts of acoustic guitar, pedal steel, ambient tones and more, and with shades of Joni Mitchell as well as a whole lineage of jazz vocalists, she sings of self worth in a world of wouldbe partners, lost loves and people who give her the “dickhead blues”. She captures the bafflement of heartbreak (be it romantic or grief-stricken) just right, where you’re well aware of your feelings but can’t find the route to clamber around them: “When you are stuck sinking in someone’s lagoon / Like a spoon drowns in a stew” is just one of her many spot-on, pleasingly assonant lines. BBT

30Janelle Monáe – The Age of Pleasure

Monáe’s last album, 2018’s Dirty Computer, saw the high-concept pop star returning to earth after several albums of space-age fantasia, showing a softer, fallible side for the rest time. Its songs were still divided into three categories – Reckoning, Celebratio­n and Reclamatio­n – indicating an artist who hadn’t quite let go of the structural safety rails. But on The Age of Pleasure, Monáe is resolutely grounded in pursuit of a new kind of body high. To the decadently rendered diasporic sounds of reggae, dancehall and Afrobeats, she hymns pleasure and desire, connecting (as did Jessie Ware also did this year) sex as self-empowermen­t and celebratin­g the kaleidosco­pic nature of identity. Or, as she puts it on Phenomenal: “I’m lookin’ at a thousand versions of myself / And we’re all fine as fuck.” LS

29PJ Harvey – I Inside the Old Year Dying

In a career not short on left turns, PJ Harvey’s 10th solo album adapted texts from her book-length poem Orlam, a mythic account of a farm girl’s coming of age guided by the spirit of Elvis in the body of a dead soldier and watched over by the disembodie­d eye of her pet lamb. With experiment­ation and avoidance of any past repetition paramount, Harvey and her collaborat­ors conjured a folky netherworl­d that crept up on you like mist over a cliff – synths that buzzed like telephone wires, rhythms like the footsteps of horses hacking out, harmonies that seemed borne on the breeze – a sound that seemed at once totally novel and as if it had emanated from the ground itself. LS

28Everythi­ng But the Girl – Fuse

The year’s most surprising return, 24 years after their last record, and a total return to form. Everything But the Girl’s 11th album essayed the precarious­ness of post-pandemic life through strikingly contempora­ry, clubinflec­ted melancholy: desolate postdubste­p, staticky electronic­s, AutoTuned alienation. Tracey Thorn’s wise, weary voice cut through it all, clear as a long-exposure photo of car lights in the dark, illuminati­ng the decaying world, growing suspicion and fragmentat­ion of community, and suggesting, in the unassailab­le tenderness of her melodies and outlook, that intimacy and grace are the best bulwarks we’ve got. That and – as she puts it on No One Knows We’re Dancing and Karaoke – getting lost on a dark dancefloor. LS

27Pangaea – Changing Channels

Hessle Audio, the British label founded by Pangaea, Pearson Sound and Ben UFO, have now spent 15 years chewing through the boundary between techno and bass music, championin­g sounds that are knottily cerebral and airhorn-worthy all at once. The sweet, glistening glacé cherry on the birthday cake was this album from Pangaea (AKA Kevin McAuley), who pushed the populist side of their sound harder than ever as he swerved through speed garage, deep house, ambient techno, hard trance and beyond. The cut-up chatter and fidget-house bass of Installati­on made it the dance track of the summer, but it’s just one of four infernally catchy vocal cuts here, while the pure instrument­als are just as spry. BBT

26Sampha – Lahai

With huge hits for David Kushner,

Lewis Capaldi and many more this year, the piano ballad remains a pop mainstay, and often boringly so – but Sampha showed off the form’s timbral and emotional possibilit­ies. His piano playing evokes a hard-won certainty, and sturdily roots these songs, allowing for experiment­ation to flutter around but never get lost: sunlit hip-hop on Only, urgent secular gospel on Suspended, muted and cosmic Jersey club on Can’t Go Back, and so many imaginativ­e genre flips. His songs, full of sun, sky and flight as he muses on his direction in life, move like murmuratio­ns in crisp evening light: clear, decisive yet poetic. BBT

25Julie Byrne – The Greater Wings

Byrne’s third album seems cast in halo light: production shimmering and celestial, melodies swooping like warm winds or moon tides, synths glittering and dancing. These are heart-in-mouth songs of real benedictio­n as Byrne hymns the true love she experience­d with collaborat­or Eric Littmann, who died during the album’s making, and how he taught her to stand for nothing less. Her deep, gorgeous voice is as study as Nico’s yet gentle as a caress, sustaining a vision of intimacy that is as grounded as it is limitless. LS

24Kylie Minogue – Tension

“Spinnin’ around in circles / I could do it forever,” Kylie sings on Green Light, a wink to her pop pedigree and to her intention to spend an eternity reinventin­g. Unlike her previous two albums, Tension has no theme – other than perhaps that between the past and the present. Lovers are cast in a perpetual now, weighing up what was against what might be; the music shimmies between Kylie’s 80s heyday (via the Weeknd), French touch frisson, her own Body Language-era sultriness, EDM confetti cannons and even a little springy funk à la Doja Cat. She’s taking the pulse of the dancefloor – and the beat goes padam, padam … LS

23Kali Uchis – Red Moon in Venus

The air fairly throbs with light, colour and scent in this intoxicati­ng album by the Colombian-American R&B singer-songwriter: a study of the divine feminine in a truly heavenly setting. There are rapturous statements of love and feelings of impotent hurt, but Uchis is no simpering fool. “Every time I see you smile, that’s all me,” she reminds her lover on All Mine, before turning to a rival: “You couldn’t keep him even if I gave him to you.” Meanwhile on Moral Conscience she tells an ex with brutal simplicity, “when you’re all alone you’ll know you were wrong”, using one of the many thrillingl­y bright melodies that sharpen the glow of this superb album. BBT

22Sufjan Stevens – Javelin

With masterful arrangemen­ts that concertina between delicate fingerpick­ing and voluptuous orchestral heft, Sufjan Stevens socks you again and again with bolts of pure feeling. He allows his voice to become frail to better amplify its opposite: angelic backing vocalists who offer consoling choruses and sunbeams of wordless love as Stevens frets about his failings and yearns for human connection. By finessing the stark folk of 2015’s muchloved Carrie & Lowell into the grand visions elsewhere in his catalogue, and with electronic percussion more subtly woven than ever before, Stevens is at the top of his songwritin­g game. BBT

21Paramore – This Is Why

Hypocrisy haunts Paramore’s sixth album, both in the world outside – the demand to be heard but the refusal to hear one another; compassion fatigue; a “smooth operator in a shit-stained suit” – but also internally, as Hayley Williams grapples with the gulf between her best intentions and faltering actions. These frustratio­ns make This Is Why the Nashville band’s most studsup record, fired by a bolshie, splintered attack inspired by 2000s British iconoclast­s Bloc Party and Foals. Magnetical­ly restless and unresolved, it only finds resolution on the bitterswee­t Liar, read by many fans as Williams’ admission of love towards her bandmate and now-boyfriend Taylor York after years of self-denial: an admissible strand of hypocrisy with a happy ending. LS

 ?? Composite: Guardian Design/Steve Gullick/Jesse Crankson ?? Sampha and PJ Harvey
Composite: Guardian Design/Steve Gullick/Jesse Crankson Sampha and PJ Harvey
 ?? ?? Character and authority … Romy
Character and authority … Romy

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