2023 :: Favorite Music

Welcome to the 2023 Holiday at the Sea year-end music list. There was a lot of great music in 2023, but I’ve narrowed it down to my favorite top 50, presented here in alphabetical order. I hope you see some of your favorites and find something new. I’d love to hear your thoughts. What has been your favorite music of 2023?

the 2023 Holiday at the Sea year-end music list:


  • Afro Futuristic Dreams by Idris Ackamoor & The Pyramids // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • A Trip To Bolgatanga by African Head Charge // BC // FB // Insta //Amzn //

  • Tony Allen JID018 by Tony Allen, Adrian Younge, & Ali Shaheed Muhammad (Jazz Is Dead) // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • New Blue Sun by André 3000 // site // Amzn //

  • My Back Was A Bridge For You To Cross by Anohni & The Johnsons // site // BC // Insta // Amzn //


  • Love In Exile by Arooj Aftab, Vijay Iyer, Shahzad Ismaily // site // Amzn //

  • Black Duck by Black Duck // BC // Amzn //

  • Sun Arcs by Blue Lake // BC // Amzn //

  • Sahel by Bombino // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Keeping Secrets Will Destroy You by Bonnie “Prince” Billy // BC // Amzn //


  • Dimanche à Bamako by Bounaly // BC // Amzn //

  • the Record by boygenius // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Fly or Die Fly or Die Fly or Die ((world war)) by jaimie branch // site // BC // Amzn //

  • Nocturnal Country by Sammy Brue // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Villagers by Califone // site // BC // FB // Amzn //


  • Chitinous Mandible by Chitinous Mandible // site // BC // Insta // Amzn //

  • Hostile Environment by Creation Rebel // BC // Amzn //

  • Shadow Kingdom by Bob Dylan // site // FB // Amzn //

  • & the Charm by Avalon Emerson // site // BC // Insta // Amzn //

  • Some Kinda Love Performing The Music Of the Velvet Underground by the Feelies // site // BC // Amzn //


  • A River Running To Your Heart by Fruit Bats // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Let the Moon Be a Planet by Steve Gunn & David Moore // BC // Amzn //

  • Philanthropy by Hauschka // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Days In The Desert by High Pulp // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Oh Me Oh My by Lonnie Holley // site // BC // FB // Amzn //


  • James and the Giants by James and the Giants // BC // Amzn //

  • Did You Know That There's A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd by Lana Del Rey // site // FB // Amzn //

  • New Future City Radio by Damon Locks & Rob Mazurek // BC // Amzn //

  • No Fixed Point In Space by Modern Nature // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • the Age of Pleasure by Janelle Monae // site // BC // FB // Amzn //


  • Since Time Is Gravity by Natural Information Society // site // BC // Amzn //

  • Travel by the Necks // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Jump On It by Bill Orcutt // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Switched-On by Pachyman // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • After the Magic by 파란노을 (Parannoul) // BC // Insta // Amzn //


  • The Times by Phoenix Afrobeat Orchestra // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Drag On Girard by Purling Hiss // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • the Window by Ratboys // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Garden Party by Rose City Band // site // BC // Insta // Amzn //

  • Live at Third Man Records by Rich Ruth // BC // Insta // Amzn //


  • Robed In Rareness by Shabazz Palaces // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Everything Is Alive by Slowdive // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Javelin by Sufjan Stevens // site // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Music Is Victory Over Time by Sunwatchers // BC // FB // Amzn //

  • Secret Stratosphere by William Tyler And The Impossible Truth // BC // FB // Amzn //



Wau Wau Collectif Return For Marriage

In 2018, my wife asked what I wanted for Father’s Day. Inspired by Joe Strummer’s London Calling radio series and Anthony Bourdain’s traveling curiosity, I said that I wanted to do a weekly 30-minute music podcast dedicated to fighting Xenophobia by exploring music from all around the world. So I created the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow. Each week, I posted a 30-minute show with songs from around the world, along with an interactive map. I discovered so much music from around the world that my ears have forever grown beyond the boundaries of my neighborhood.

Though I no longer regularly curate the podcast, I often find myself wanting to post special episodes when I come across music I wish everyone could hear. I had such an experience in 2021 upon hearing Wau Wau Collectif’s debut Yaral Sa Doom. In fact, that album was one of the main reasons I brought the project out of hiatus for a special 53rd episode. Yaral Sa Doom blurred borders and genres and held my attention for a very long time. In fact, I return to it quite a bit still (and just a side-note, you can always trust Sahel Sounds. If you see it on their label, buy it.)

Now the Collectif collective is back with their second album, “Marriage.” Wau Wau Collectif is a long distance collaboration from musicians in Senegal and Sweden’s Karl Jonas Winqvist. The must-read Pan-African-Music (PAM) interview describes the project:

“The outcome of an encounter between the Swedish musician-producer Karl Jonas Winqvist and musicians from the Toubab Dialaw village in Senegal, this collective recording, which evolved through jam sessions and WhatsApp exchanges, represents a strange vessel that traverses the Mediterranean soundscape.”

Both albums incorporate children vocalists and the effect is one that elicits child-like innocence and exploration; a world where we get to know others through music. Where Xenophobia is unthinkable because curiosity, respect and admiration win the day. Children are taught borders. Wau Wau Collectif wants to help us erase them. The music is not forceful; it draws you in. It is not in a hurry but it is persistent and it seems to constantly unite disparate elements. Deep, weary voices with a children’s refrain; floating flutes over insistent basslines; traditional and electronic instruments. This is music that brings it all together, because it all belongs together.

The group’s music is often light and airy. Pitchfork notes of the band’s 2021 debut: “It takes less than a minute for Yaral Sa Doom to begin levitating.” But this second album finds the collectif still levitating but grounded by thick bass (Baye Kate). The album draws from hip hop and electronics and once again, children.

Jesse Locke notes that some of the rhythms that laid the foundation for Marriage were actually recorded “during Winqvist's 2018 Senegal trip that ignited the project.” Winqvist told PAM: “We recorded so much material and me and Aruna sent overdubs, ideas and new songs to each other up till last week, so the songs on Yaral Sa Doom ended up on that album because they were ready first. But there were just as many other songs waiting and almost finished”

Marriage materializes with the floating instrumental “La Paix Du Senegal (Instrumental)” which ushers in the album with a sense of warmth and welcome, of mesmerizing rhythms and shuffles. The instrumentation builds and lets you know that this album may contain folk songs, it’s not a subdued “folk” album. As if there was any question, the deep bass and passionate rhymes of “Baye Kate” let us know that this is listening as exploration. This is music as joy, as protest, as life. The mix of electronic and traditional instrumentation continues throughout the album with the fierce flute of Mariage Forcé weaving in and around the vocals. The space jazz odyssey of Yay Balma skronky uses sax floating over grounded repetition while swirling psychedelic flutes hold on to our attention. The murky dub vibe of Yonou Natangue never gets so foggy that the light fails to shine through. Once again, floating flue melodies raise the ear to something higher . . . until the ethers coalesce . . . the space jazz odyssey of Yay Balma places skronky sax over grounded repetition and more floating flutes. There’s the driving Afrobeat rhythm of Nécessaire balanced by the etheral Pitchou Goudibi. This is music of movement, of emotion, and of life. There are ups and downs, reflective moments and moments to dance. For everything there is a time.

Swimming in deep grooves and folk flourishes, there is an urgency to this music. This is music connecting the spheres . . . bridging the here and now with the hope of what if . . . the urgency of why not now? And throughout both albums, the vocals cross the ages. Children are always near, whether in the playful nature of the music itself or their reappearing vocals; sometimes as accents, sometimes as the focus. This is music of community. Winqvist says: “Since our first album, ”Yaral sa doom” (means ”educate the young” in wolof) was a dedication and prayer to all the young ones growing up in this world now I felt the need to also bring them into our recordings.”

Marriage picks up where Yaral Sa Doom left off. And, though it is obvious that the genesis material often overlaps, the two albums stand as distinct explorations, each exploring similar territory but from different angles and with different questions and, quite often, finding different things. Wau Wau Collectif reminds us of the joy of music, and hopefully the joy of life that is worth fighting for. Here’s a good starting point for your soundtrack.


Listen to the lead single: “N​é​cessaire” courtesy of Sahel Sounds:



NOTE FROM THE PRESS RELEASE:

“Sadly, flute player Ousmane Bah passed away after the completion of the album. Wau Wau Collectif wishes to dedicate Mariage to his memory.”


  • Support Wau Wau Collectif at Bandcamp

  • Purchase Marriage at Bandcamp

  • Follow Wau Wau Collectif at Facebook

  • Visit the Sahel Sounds website

  • Support Sahel Sounds at Bandcamp

  • Listen to Episdode 53 of the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow featuring “Yaral Sa Doom” by Wau Wau Collectif

  • Read Aquarium Drunkard’s 2021 review of Yaral Sa Doom


Mdou Moctar: Tiny Desk (Home) Concert (2021)

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Tuareg wunderkind Mdou Moctar performs (at home) for the NPR Tiny Desk and this is my love language.


Setlist:

  1. Ya Habibti

  2. Tala Tannam

  3. Afrique Victime


Players:

  • Mahamadou "Mdou Moctar" Souleymane: lead guitar, vocals

  • Ahmoudou Madassane: rhythm guitar, vocals

  • Mikey Coltun: bass

  • Souleymane Ibrahim: calabash


Important People:

  • Video: Mamadou Halidou, WH Moustapha, Sabrina Nichols

  • Audio: Mikey Coltun, Seth Manchester

  • Special Thanks: Dynamique Image and Machines with Magnets


Tiny Desk People:

  • Producer: Bob Boilen

  • Video Producer: Kara Frame

  • Audio Mastering: Josh Rogosin

  • Associate Producer: Bobby Carter

  • Tiny Production Team: Maia Stern, Gabrielle Pierre

  • Executive Producer: Keith Jenkins

  • Senior VP, Programming: Anya Grundmann



Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp 03 by Jeich Ould Badou

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Over the past couple of months, I have been pleased to pass along the announcement that 10 years later, the Sahel Sounds was following up their fantastic Music From Saharan Cellphones compilation with the ground-breaking compilation, Music from Saharan WhatsApp.

“For the year of 2020, Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp." Every month, we'll be releasing an EP from a musical group in the Sahel. Every album will be recorded on a cellphone, and transmitted over WhatsApp, and uploaded to Bandcamp - where it will live for one month only. Available for pay as you want, 100% of the sales will go directly to the artist or group. After one month, the album will be replaced by another one, until the end of the year.”

The label says of this third installment:

“This month we go to Mauritania to one of the premiere players of the tidnit, Jeich Ould Badou. Coming from a hereditary family of musicians, Jeich's tidnit (the Mauritanian lute) is updated, with built in phasers and pre-amps. Jeich is well known in Nouakchott, where he regularly gigs in weddings and invitations. Here he presents a series of WZN recordings, instrumental classic Mauritania music, for dancing: three songs recorded at home with the drum machine, and one live invitation recording with percussion.”

credits

released March 16, 2020

Jeich Ould Badou - Tidnit
Boss DR-770 Drum Machine (Tracks 1, 2, 3)

Recorded by Jeich Ould Badou on iPhone 7, March 2020
Album Art by Christopher Kirkley

Tuareg Guitar: Welcome To Saharan Desert Rock

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I have made my love of Tuareg Guitar music known to you, dear friends. So the following mix should come as no surprise. As if any of you are waiting around to be surprised by the music mixes I post. But, hey, you go have your own weird daydreams, alright?!

The Sahel Sounds Records Tuareg Guitar page says:

“Tuareg guitar has become one of the most popular folk music in the contemporary Sahara. Originally political ballads, created in exile in Libya, today the sound has expanded to encompass everything from introspective love songs, blistering psychedelic rock, and synthesizer and drum machine. At its core, the music still relies on poetry to transmit a message, carried by the pentatonic solos of a guitar.”

Here is a mix of songs from some of my current favorite Tuareg albums.

Tracklisting:

  1. “Itous” (Live) by Tamikrest

  2. “Nar djenetbouba” by Tinariwen

  3. “Wiwasharnine” by Mdou Moctar

  4. “Idrach” by Timasniwen

  5. “Afous Dafous” by Tartit

  6. “Ici Bas” by Songhoy Blues

  7. “ASCO” by Ali Farka Touré

  8. “Chebiba” by Tallawit Timbouctou

  9. “Imigradan” by Les Filles de Illighadad

  10. “Alemin” by Group Inerane

  11. “Tenere” by Afous d'Afous

  12. “Tekana” by Etran Finatawa

  13. “Dounia” by Toumast

  14. "Amidinin Senta Aneflas” by Terakaft

  15. “Tamudre” by Imarhan

  16. “Ameji (douleur)” by Imaran

  17. Tumastin by Amanar

  • Browse other Holiday at the Sea playlists.

Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp 02 by Oumou Diabate et Kara Show Koumba Frifri"

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Last month I was pleased to pass along the announcement that 10 years later, the Sahel Sounds was following up their fantastic Music From Saharan Cellphones compilation with the ground-breaking compilation, Music from Saharan WhatsApp.

“For the year of 2020, Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp." Every month, we'll be releasing an EP from a musical group in the Sahel. Every album will be recorded on a cellphone, and transmitted over WhatsApp, and uploaded to Bandcamp - where it will live for one month only. Available for pay as you want, 100% of the sales will go directly to the artist or group. After one month, the album will be replaced by another one, until the end of the year.”

The label says of this second installment:

“This month we present mother and son duo, Oumou Diabate and Kara Show Koumba Frifri (Youssouf Drame), from Bamako, Mali. Playing traditional Mandingue music, these lowkey recordings are a snapshot from a griot family home. Oumou Diabate has been performing all her life, and is honored as one of the first griots to perform on television when it first arrived in Mali. Kara Show carries on his family tradition, a renowned performer of the Tamani drum. A founding member of the Balani Show outfit Group Mamelon, Kara Show is a regular guest performer in Bamako’s modern music scene."

Preview the second EP here (THIS WILL DISAPPEAR AT THE END OF THE MONTH):

Head over to the Bandcamp page to download the first installment and track future releases.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Facebook.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Twitter.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Youtube.

  • Support Sahel Sounds at Bandcamp.

  • Browse “Sahel Sounds” at Amazon.

Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp"

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The Sahel region of northwestern Africa, spans several countries including: Mauritania, Mali, and Niger, and includes dozens of languages and dialects. This region produces some of my favorite music in the world (browse my posts tagged “Tuareg”). And one of my favorite labels putting out some of my favorite music is Sahel Sounds.

Pitchfork says that at least part of the reason label owner Christopher Kirkley chose to work in the Sahel region was “in part because it was so hard to find English-language information about it.” The label’s website says:

“We work directly with artists that we represent and aim to have input and control over artistic endeavors. All profits are shared 50/50. We’re committed to using culture as a means of communication, helping our artists build careers, and listening to good music.”

Preview the trailer for 2016 German trailer about the label (which is available to watch at Amazon Prime):

In 2010, the label put out the terrific and fascinating Music From Saharan Cellphones compilation. The compilation’s Bandcamp page provides some context:

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“Music from Saharan cellphones is a compilation of music collected from memory cards of cellular phones in the Saharan desert.

In much of West Africa, cellphones are are used as all purpose multimedia devices. In lieu of personal computers and high speed internet, the knockoff cellphones house portable music collections, playback songs on tinny built in speakers, and swap files in a very literal peer to peer Bluetooth wireless transfer.”

The compilation not only helped highlight music from the region but was, for many, the first exposure to Tuareg guitar wizard Mdou Moctar, whose album Ilana (The Creator) was one of my favorites of 2019. Now, 10 years later, the label presents the follow-up to the ground-breaking compilation, Music from Saharan WhatsApp.

“For the year of 2020, Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp." Every month, we'll be releasing an EP from a musical group in the Sahel. Every album will be recorded on a cellphone, and transmitted over WhatsApp, and uploaded to Bandcamp - where it will live for one month only. Available for pay as you want, 100% of the sales will go directly to the artist or group. After one month, the album will be replaced by another one, until the end of the year.”

The label profiles the first installment at the Bandcamp page:

“This month's release comes from Agadez guitar band, Etran de L'Aïr. Translated to "Star's of Agadez," Etran is one of the longest running wedding bands in a city renowned for guitar. Constantly playing in the outdoor weddings, both in the city and the surrounding countryside, Etran play exhaustive concerts, late into the night. Even for a guitar band, they push the instrument to the extreme, with three guitars playing simultaneously, soloing over one another, creating a dreamy cacophony of sound. This session was recorded at night in their home in Abala, just outside the center of Agadez. "We invited friends over to the home, for encouragement," says Moussa "Abindi" Ibra. "But we asked them not to make too much noise, for the sake of the recording."

Preview the first EP here:

Head over to the Bandcamp page to download the first installment and track future releases.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Facebook.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Twitter.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Youtube.

  • Support Sahel Sounds at Bandcamp.

  • Browse “Sahel Sounds” at Amazon.

Les Filles de Illighadad at Chicago Music Exchange

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You already know that I dig Tuareg music (browse tagged posts here). I featured the song ““Jori” by Les Filles de Illighadad on Episode 46 of The Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow and have followed the group ever since. Les Filles de Illighadad join Tartit as the number of women Tuareg led groups continues to grow.

As noted in my original post: The group’s Bandcamp page says:

“Sublime recordings from rural Niger. Two very different sides of Tuareg music - dreamy ishumar acoustic guitar sessions, and the hypnotic polyphonic tende that inspires it. Guitarist Fatou Seidi Ghali and vocalist Alamnou Akrouni lead the troupe, named after the village.”

She Shreds recently partnered with Chicago Music Exchange to invite Les Filles de Illighadad to play at CME’s showroom, and to talk with Fatou Seidi Ghali. Watch the fantastic performance here and head over to She Shreds to read the interview.