Half-Year Half-List? 20 Fantastic Albums of 2020

2020.png

20 isn’t half of 2020, but here are 20 fantastic albums of 2020:

In Alphabetical Order:

  • Rejoice by Tony Allen + Hugh Masekela 

  • Fetch The Bolt Cutters by Fiona Apple 

  • Rough and Rowdy Ways by Bob Dylan

  • Joshua Massad & Dylan Aycock by Joshua Massad & Dylan Aycock

  • Circles by Mac Miller

  • Annual by Modern Nature

  • Snapshot Of A Beginner by Nap Eyes

  • Three by The Necks 

  • Jams From The Sun by Oregon Space Trail of Jazz 

  • Suite For Max Brown by Jeff Parker

  • Summerlong by Rose City Band

  • RTJ4 by Run The Jewels 

  • Acoustic by Oumou Sangaré

  • We Are Sent Here By History by Shabaka & The Ancestors 

  • Ocean Bridges by Archie Shepp, Raw Poetic & Damu the Fudgemunk

  • Companion Rises by Six Organs Of Admittance 

  • Oh Yeah? by Sunwatchers

  • Tamotait by Tamikrest

  • The Great Mountain by Waterless Hills

  • Strange To Explain by Woods

What am I missing?

What’s been some of your favorite music of the year?

Holiday at the Sea's Favorite Music of 2019

Screen Shot 2019-12-07 at 6.55.45 PM.png

2019 has been a great year for music. From 30-minute mind-melting jams to Tuareg guitar and all kinds in between. I LOVE year-end lists. I love seeing what other people loved, especially if I can find something I hadn’t heard before. And to a lesser extent, who doesn’t like having their tastes confirmed by people much cooler?

But I don’t necessarily like ranking everything. After all, every list is subjective. And is there really any music that is “best”? Maybe you preferred one album to others, but does that really mean it’s “better”? Excuse me while I step off of my soapbox.

And I don’t like not hearing what people recommend. So, as you already know, I made a four-volume mix of some of my favorite music of the year, which I hope you’ve already checked out. If not, feel free to do so here and here and here and here. Also, just one more time of review, I chose 50 songs this year but only 49 albums since ‘Sideways’ by Seryn was released as a single.

Now that you’ve had a chance to to hear the songs, here is the complete list in alphabetical order.

  • I Was Real by 75 Dollar Bill

  • Mandatory Reality by Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society

  • Ancestral Recall by Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah

  • U.F.O.F. by Big Thief

  • Sahari by Aziza Brahim

  • RE_CORDIS by Bruno Bavota

  • i,i by Bon Iver

  • V by The Budos Band

  • African Giant by Burna Boy

  • Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest by Bill Callahan

  • Ghosteen by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds

  • All My Relations by Cochemea

  • A Good Time by Davido

  • Grow Towards The Light by Dire Wolves

  • Sun Cycle / Elk Jam by Elkhorn

  • Pianoworks by Eluvium

  • Blue Values by Eamon Fogarty

  • All Time Present by Chris Forsyth

  • Gold Past Life by Fruit Bats

  • One Of The Best Yet by Gang Starr

  • One Step Behind by Garcia Peoples

  • The Unseen In Between by Steve Gunn

  • Back At The House by Hemlock Ernst and Kenny Segal

  • The Gospel According to Water Joe Henry

  • Terms of Surrender by Hiss Golden Messenger

  • More Arriving by Sarathy Korwar

  • Miri by Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba

  • Sauropoda by L'Eclair

  • Ilana (The Creator) by Mdou Moctar

  • Stars Are The Light by Moon Duo

  • Three Chords and the Truth by Van Morrison

  • All Mirrors by Angel Olsen

  • Desire Path by One Eleven Heavy

  • Phoenix by Pedro the Lion

  • Rainford by Lee “Scratch” Perry

  • Purple Mountains by Purple Mountains

  • Rose City Band by Rose City Band

  • ‘Sideways’ by Seryn

  • Out of Darkness by Some Dark Hollow

  • Illegal Moves by Sunwatchers

  • Amankor / The Exile by Tartit

  • Amadjar by Tinariwen

  • Preserves by Matt Valentine

  • Father of the Bride by Vampire Weekend

  • Remind Me Tomorrow by Sharon Van Etten

  • Come On Up To The House: Women Sing Waits by Various Artists

  • Water Weird by Wet Tuna

  • Ode To Joy by Wilco

  • The Sisypheans by Xylouris White

  • Walk Through The Fire by Yola

///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

  • Listen to Volume 01 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

  • Listen to Volume 02 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

  • Listen to Volume 03 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

  • Listen to Volume 04 of my 2019 Year-End Playlist

    ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

Holiday at the Sea’s Favorite Music Label of 2019

L-493271-1462371599-8187.jpeg.jpg

My Favorite music label of the year would have to be, without a doubt, Brooklyn’s Beyond Beyond is Beyond. Self-describes as: "“Music for Heads, by Heads,” which just about sums it up. More a vibe than a genre. A way of thinking than a particular style.

With five out of my favorite 49 albums of the year; (Dire Wolves, Garcia Peoples, L'Eclair, One Eleven Heavy, and Matt Valentine (plus, if I had expanded my list or included an “Honorable Mentions” section, this list would have expanded even more. That De Lorians is really good to mention only one more), no other single label presented as much music that I wanted to hear this year.

I can’t wait to hear what’s next.

  • Visit the Beyond Beyond is Beyond website

  • Visit Beyond Beyond is Beyond’s Bandcamp page for all the goodies

  • Follow the label on Facebook

  • Follow them on Twitter

Sunwatchers: February 22, 2019 The Glove by NYC Taper

Sunwatchers: February 22, 2019 The Glove by NYC Taper

download.jpeg

Sunwatchers’ Facebook page describes the band as “Punk Jazz Drone” and really wants you to know what they’re all about in all caps:

SUNWATCHERS STANDS IN SOLIDARITY WITH THE DISPOSSESSED, IMPOVERISHED AND EMBATTLED PEOPLE OF THE WORLD.

That’s a sentiment we will stand with. Especially when the music is as vibrant as this. Who knew instrumental music could be political? We all did, son. NYC Taper, to whom we are all indebted for this show says:

Sunwatchers make no secret of their politics — heck, they’re written right on the cover of their previous album, II. They’re far from the only “rock” band (if you can even call them that) to use a saxophone, of course, but in Jeff Tobias’ hands, the instrument itself becomes political, recalling elements of spiritual and free jazz. Peter Kerlin, Jason Robira and Jim McHugh make a hell of an avant-rock trio, but it’s the defiant tone of that sax, the holy cry, that seals the band’s sound.

The band’s most recent album Illegal Moves is one of my favorite albums of 2019. I’ve been jammin this 2019 February set at The Glove and I think you will too.

  • Visit the Sunwatchers Facebook page.

  • Follow Sunwatchers at Twitter.

  • Visit the show’s page at the NYC Taper site.

  • Download the show from its page on the Live Music Archive.

  • Purchase the group’s music at Bandcamp.

  • Purchase the group’s music at Amazon.

Sunwatchers2019-02-22The GloveBrooklyn, NY USARecorded and produced by acidjackSchoeps MK4V (FOB, ROC, PAS)>KCY>Z-PFA>Sound Devices MixPre 6>24/48 WAV>Adobe Audition CC>Izotope Ozone 5>Audacity 2.2.2>FLAC ( level 8 )