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Saturday, December 30, 2017

Top Albums of 2017

In the midst of all the madness that was 2017, I found time to listen to 66 new albums. Whether that was healthy for me or a rational decision is anyone’s guess, but as always I want to share my opinions on my favorite music from this year. My tastes are all over (because I think everything is a banger) so bare with me.

20. Goths by The Mountain Goats (Indie Rock) 



 16 albums into their robust discography, The Mountain Goats wanted to try something new for their latest project: crafting a rock album without guitars. Though this might seem an innocuous decision, it leads to the album having a serene quality that sets the stage for John Darnielles immaculate songwriting. Not enough can be said about the lyrical content of this album. The writing alone is interesting enough to be read for entertainment purposes, but when surrounded by the music it becomes something spectacular. The album frames narratives of being an outcast and the monotony of living in small towns against the tune of smooth keyboard progressions and heavy basslines, with occasional embellishments like woodwinds chiming in to add some flavor. Each song plays out like its own fully fleshed out story told from the perspective of a character we learn about over the course of 3-5 minutes. In a word, it is the prettiest rock album I listened to all year, able to take the expectations of Indie Rock and flip the script, giving you a more intimate and thought provoking experience than you might expect.



19. The Iceberg by Oddisee (Hip-Hop) 


Rappers have had to evolve and change faster and faster in the past decade or so. With the genre becoming a worldwide phenomenon so suddenly, adaptation became the name of the game. So when groups like the Hellfire Club and Mello Music Group’s label arrived on the scene refusing to conform to modern popular rap standards, it came as a welcome surprise. Emerging from this scene, with production rooted in live instrumentation and soulful lyrics, Oddisee’s 2017 album struck a profound chord with me. The album explores broad topics such as isolation for POC in suburbs, gender disparities in the workplace, people growing into racism as opposed to out of it, and the importance of finding happiness in your art, all through the lens of an artist who just wants to make a difference. As the basslines bump and each song holds its own funky groove, Oddisee comes off as a selfless rapper who genuinely enjoys the opportunity he has been given through music. Which isn’t to say it came easy, though he certainly makes it seem effortless. His flow can fly by at supersonic speed with perfect clarity to break down into triplets whenever he sees fit, showing an adaption to a modern style without having to drop that which makes him unique as a rapper. He lays his life and concerns out before his listeners in such a candid and genuine way that even when he raps about loving a girl who could be cheating on him it feels we are just getting a window into how he perceives the world. Unlike a lot of artists’ work, this album doesn’t feel like a performance, but rather the unfiltered thought process of one of the rap game’s finest.



18. I Am A Man by Ron Miles (Contemporary Jazz) 



Writing about Jazz is a daunting task for me. Trying to identify things I like often leads me into the wall of “this revolves around a musical concept I don’t fully understand.” After which I fear my review will just get worse. However, you don’t have to be able to dissect something in order to know that you like it, and this album is a gorgeous compilation of what makes Jazz such an undying musical form. Named after a piece of literature written by an African-American during the Civil War era, this album feels like a declaration of character. Character in that each piece of of the quintet feels like it’s trying to accomplish its own goal. During the extensive solos you hear bandmates playing with ideas and twisting melodies all while the soloist continues to stand at the forefront at the song. It can often times feel chaotic, like each musician is tuning into and making music for a different album, but that is where Miles’ arrangements shine the most. The music is meant to layer and stack upon itself so that you can have moments of complex harmonies while one member of the band is playing a dissonant riff over the top. What should be in the background is changing to the foreground constantly and vice versa. The album is able to create beautiful and aggressive music while also making the listeners ears put in a significant amount of work, which to me is always when Jazz is at its most exciting and fresh.



17. Melodrama by Lorde (Pop)



 I remember getting into an argument with someone in 2013 after Pure Heroine came out because they claimed it was just another generic Pop album. In my fury, being the be-all-end-all guru of musical value that I am, I tried to convince them that the album felt much more a critique of pop music and that was what made it amazing. Luckily, four years and a new album later, Lorde delivers on what I can only call “Post-Pop,” because everything about the album plays to the strengths of Pop music without succumbing to the mindlessness the genre is saturated with. Everything about Lorde’s music throws a curveball at pop tropes: There are catchy melodies, but they often belie sadness or some kind of commentary; there is instrumentation that is downright grimy; and even Lorde’s voice is something I wouldn’t call amazing in comparison to her contemporaries. When all these elements come together, you get one of the strongest explorations of Pop of the year. The album opens with Lorde singing about having to try and enjoy a night out despite how she actually feels about certain people in her social group. The project as a whole never lets you forgot that Lorde holds a great deal of disdain for how we glorify and abuse wealth while also engaging in that same careless opulence. Of every album on this list, this feels the most modern in its depiction of how we deal with unappealing aspects of ourselves and society. That is to say, we ignore them. In response to heartbreak, drunken flings, self-doubt and emotional abuse, the most common response among my generation is just to push the pain down and ignore it. So hidden beneath the bouncing synths and vocal harmonies lies a reflection of just being lost and trying to find yourself in any distraction that presents itself to you.



16. Drunk, by Thundercat - (Jazz Fusion/R&B)



 Trying to explain Thundercat’s music is the equivalent of trying to speak backward, but in the simplest terms possible, Thundercat is a geek who loves cats. Everything else about him, his world-class Bass chops, his falsetto reminiscent of Maurice White of Earth Wind and Fire, and his short and often dense musical arrangements, plays second fiddle to his quiet geeky nature. For his third album, Thundercat created a collection of songs that sound like the ravings of a musical madman stuck in his house due to extreme introversion. Soul, Funk and Jazz collide to create the foundation of this wacky album. It opens with the narrative of a man hungover, trying to piece together the mess of what happened the night before, while still sticking to his daily routine. This narrative comes to reflect the album as a whole, as Thundercat’s music is always trying to stretch in a different direction while still keeping to some sort of focal point. Ideas disappear as soon as they appear and it gives the illusion that the album is always transforming. To complement this, Thundercat’s singing is as as gorgeous as ever, adding a light layer over the top of heavy arrangements and serving to ground the music as it changes. One moment basslicks are literally flying at you from every direction and the next you have a smooth 80’s throwback ballad that makes you want to sway back and forth on an empty floor. The lack of cohesion from song to song eventually becomes the cohesion of the album, at the center of it one of the best bass players in modern music who never takes himself seriously. The music is intoxicating and the 50 minute length can pass by in an instant, leaving you to immediately start over and indulge in the crazy world of Thundercat from the very top.




15. Big Fish Theory, by Vince Staples (Hip-Hop)



 Simply put, Vince Staples is one of the best rappers currently putting out music right now. His work paints dystopian pictures of a childhood growing up in poverty, and even as he becomes more recognized as a rapper, he never forgets his roots. On his sophomore project, he takes his production down a path laden with dirty electronic beats that take inspiration directly from the European House scene. This feels like stepping into a club and being held there through 40 minutes of bangers ripe with cutting lyrics and thoughtful asides. I am usually not one to mention features on albums unless they are exceptional or super relevant to the overall quality, but Kilo Kish’s presence on this album is vital. To complement Vince’s often monotone voice, she is often featured as a sort of narrative guide to whatever is happening in that moment, reminding me of the narrator from Midnight Marauders. As the rapper becomes a bigger and bigger star (i.e fish) he explores as the space around him starts to become more and more constricted. At times the album becomes more abstracted, revealing Vince’s thoughts as a person as opposed to a rapper, even diving into how he relates to one of his idols, Amy Winehouse, in an interlude. Even during what may be the height of his career, the Long Beach native cannot shake his wicked introspection and old habits.



14. MASSEDUCTION, by St.Vincent (Glam Rock/Pop)



 I will be the first to admit that I underestimated how much I would enjoy St.Vincent’s music. I had listened to an album or two a few years ago but was in a place where they just didn’t hit me. That, and most people I know who really enjoy her music have tastes that differ vastly from my own. So in my stupidity I assumed she wasn’t for me. With the release of her latest album this year, I listened to it front to back twice in a row and was floored. The music is liberating, often combining fast paced or atypical drum machine patterns with synths that create the structure for her impeccable vocals and songwriting. Listening to her music, it becomes clear that St.Vincent is as big a fan of making music as her fans are of listening to it, unafraid to drastically toy with tempos and warp her songs until they each feel like a complete project in and of themselves. In a way the more upbeat songs feel like conscious party anthems; they make you move and think at the same time, relishing in the layered riffs and melodies that even carry over multiple songs. Verses and choruses can feel like two opposite sides of a whole that lead to amazing transitions like “Los Ageless,” which has my favorite hook of the year, yet feels like an isolated thought that interrupts the rest of the song. On the slower songs, the wildness of the album disappears and you get these stripped down intimate conversations with St.Vincent along with solemn chord progressions. These never feel like detours from the main idea however; they are just as important and showcase her diverse musical craftsmanship.



13. Harmony of Difference, by Kamasi Wahsington (Contemporary Jazz) 



 Following up The Epic, Kamasi Washingtons 2015 three-hour album debut, seems like an almost impossible task. For many other musicians, that album would be the culmination of their life's work. So instead of trying to re-capture lightning in a bottle, Kamasi crafts a new musical project around a novel idea: make the entire project one song. While legends like Davis and Coltrane have created albums with extremely long songs that cover a multitude ideas in them, the songs are clearly distinct. On this album, each song is intentionally a fragment the final track, “Truth,” a structure that allows the listener to become familiar with the story of the album before diving into its climax. Bits and pieces are broken off and expanded in ways that feel new but become recontextualized once the last song ends. Being as attuned to the spiritual as he is, you get the idea that for Kamasi, concepts like desire and perspective all tie back into truth, which is what he is always striving for in his music. The album comes full circle in a way most albums don’t, asking questions it later answers, leaving the listener with a sense of wholeness. This could very well be a road map of the journey Kamasi himself took to find his own truth, and in sharing his process and laying bare the skeleton of the entire album, maybe he can help you find some answers as well.



12. Apricot Princess, by Rex Orange County (Rock/Pop) 



 I first heard Rex in his features on Tyler the Creator’s album from this year, and found his voice mesmerizing. Upon listening to his solo work I found he reminded me of a mix of Amy Winehouse and Brian Wilson at his finest. Drawing as much from modern Rap trends as he does classic Rock ballads, his style is a fusion of his own diverse tastes. His ability to write as candidly as he does allows him to weave together lyrics while making it seem as natural as speaking. Backed by instrumentation that includes some of the smoothest keyboard work you will hear all year to shredding guitars, Rex makes sure to use the the full range of his own personal taste to create the musical palate of the album. The album touches on themes of lost love and loneliness, with Rex himself being prone to feelings of isolation and nihilism. He often brings up his own sense of mortality and fear of death, seeming to fear dying while still feeling emotionally unfulfilled. He comes across as a reserved soul on some tracks before aggressively belting out hooks like “don’t tell me you’re sorry, you’re just sorry for yourself,” on others, letting his thoughts ring out uncensored. The album becomes an escape from socializing and a letter to his own problems with love and compatibility. Each song feels like him working through his relationship with some person or concept, talking to himself lyrics and melodies.



11. Lalia’s Wisdom, by Rapsody (Hip-Hop) 



 This album is based on life lessons that the North Carolina native rapper learned from her grandmother growing up. These lessons cover everything from how to treat your partner with respect to taking pride in your blackness. On this album, full of Neo-Soul inspired beats, Rapsody asserts her dominance and promises to always be her best self. Her fixation is not on material goods but rather on sharing the knowledge she has learned from those close to her growing up. Of course, none of this would be worth much if she couldn’t cut it much as an MC, and thankfully she can spit with the best of em. On each song she delivers dense bars that not only blow most of her contemporaries out of the water, but does so without having to appeal to the mainstream masses. Rapsody comes off as a battle rapper, where the art of crafting clever lyrical content around interesting narratives is the only way to rap. The stellar features on this project (Kendrick, Moonchild, Anderson .Paak,) serve to adapt their sounds and skills to Rapsodys smartly woven musical tapestry, so each time we hear a voice that isn’t hers, the transition is smooth and they never feel jarring. Taking much more from Outkast (which she references many times on the album) than any modern trends in Hip-Hop, Rapsody’s music feels diverse and unafraid to be funky one moment and soulfully smooth the next, all with her lyrics serving as a tether for her life stories. This is a powerful piece of work from a rapper who has staked her claim and earned her place among raps elite.



10. FKJ, by French Kiwi Juice (Chillwave/House) 



Earlier in the fall, a friend showed me an amazing video of FKJ and another musician, Masego, improvising a song called “Tadow” in Red Bull’s music studios. Over the course of the eight minute video, KJ picks up a bass,guitar, saxophone and keyboard, laying down different melodic loops seamlessly. I was so impressed with that performance that I listened to his album later that weekend. What it contained was some of the smoothest music I have heard all year, each song a study of a simple idea or melody that expands and contracts over its runtime before going on to the next idea. When you realize all of the production was done by one person, and yet still there is room for vocalists to come in and add character to the moving tracks, it becomes all the more impressive. It is soulful music that has been constructed in a digital workshop, resulting in a crispness that sounds almost too clean, until you think about how much refinement and revision must have gone through to get it to where it is. This album is the fully-formed vision of one artist, yet it still feels humble and eager to grow. FKJ’s personal vocals act more like his instruments, part of the loops that create the chill world that guest vocalists inhabit. It takes the female vocal trope that EDM music thrives on and filters it through music that is sound enough to function on its own. This is the kind of album that you just put on and close your eyes, letting the music paint the pictures for you.


9. After Laughter, by Paramore (Synth-Pop/Rock) 



From this point one the albums in the list will have had a significant personal lasting impact on me as opposed to me just being very fond of their musical contents. So don’t be fooled by this album only being number nine on the list, this is by far the 2017 album I listened to the most. While I was walking, working, playing games, etc. It is full of catchy Pop earworms and fun synth-driven bangers that I find myself humming at least once a week. It is also one of the saddest things I have listened to all year. With Paramore being known for Pop-Punk, and lead singer Hayley Williams known for her biting lyricism and exceptional voice, this album at first seems like a complete change in direction. However, depression and loneliness don’t always take the form of a black cloud looming over someone's head, and among these colorful and bright tracks lies Hayley confronting her own inability to be happy. She sings of the pain of having uplifting people in her life whom she can’t connect with due to her own personal issues. One would assume that pop stars always choose music that reflects their lyrical mood (Drake croons over sober beats when sad, Carly Rae Jepsen sings excitedly over happy Pop instrumentals, etc.) but Paramore has chosen to to make an album that reflects the kind of headspace they want to live in. So when Hayley talks about wanting to be left alone so she can quietly suffer, you get the sense that isn’t how she wants to spend the rest of her life. It can be extremely hard to motivate yourself to strive for happiness if you don’t really believe in it, but by making a beautiful and sonically positive album as Paramore has done, you slowly lay the foundation for your own emotional healing.



8. Fin, by Syd (R&B/Hip-Hop) 



 I have already talked at length about this album this year so it shouldn’t be a surprise that it ended up on this list. The Internet is currently one of my favorite bands, so when its members started releasing solo work I was excited to see what each one offered in a more intimate context. The strongest of these projects so far is Syd’s debut album, which has allowed her to flex the production, lyrical, and singing chops she has been developing for years. Rather than trying to create an entirely new sound, she slides into the seat of a modern R&B diva. Taking notes from the confidence of Aaliyah and the nonchalant attitude of Jhene Aiko, Syd is able to write like she has been at the top of the charts forever. Featuring songs revolving around her past mistakes and embracing said mistakes, encouraging self-love, and putting on for squad that has helped her get to where she is, the album reveals so many subtle details about Syd’s life and personality. While still keeping her signature quiet vocal style, she slays each track with a moxie and swagger that has been kept dormant until now. This project was conceived as a demo to showcase her songwriting talent, and instead cemented her as one of the best acts in R&B today.



7. Process, by Sampha (Alt R&B/ Electro-Soul) 



 Sampha always sounds like he is in pain when he is singing. While this could be interpreted as a lack of technique, I see it as the artist’s devotion to laying himself bare in every song he makes. Known formally for his stellar features and bedroom musician aesthetic, Sampha’s debut album is nothing less than poetry. His approach to songwriting is to write complex and often visually rich narratives to convey his feelings of loss. Everything he does, from his minimalist production to the somber piano that features in the slower songs, carries a tremendous sense of weight and can leave the listener feeling like they are experiencing something surreal. Each sound feels like an extension of the artist’s own turmoil. Sampha is able to perfectly capture his emotion in a musical context, so when he hurts, you can’t help but feel uncomfortable. Yet the whole time, you have to admire the drive and ambition of a man who has lost both of his parents to cancer and has been able to create a lush and heartbreaking album to cope with his own pain. Emotionally, it still seems like Sampha is in a bad place, even flirting with dreams of dying on some of the tracks. But counteracting this pain is the outlet he has found in his musical career. The process of recovering after losing someone close to you is never easy and it never ends. but hopefully the thought of strangers feeling connected to him via his music is enough to put Sampha’s mind at ease, if only for a moment.

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6. 4:44, by Jay-Z (Hip-Hop) 



While Jay-Z maybe be one of the most important figures in Hip-Hop’s history, his recent releases have been lacking most of the punchy substance that made his earlier work great. So when rumors started spreading that a Jay-Z and Beyonce project was in the works after the release of last year’s Lemonade, I was hype to see what that could entail. That rumored project may well have turned out to be 4:44, and luckily for us it is the best album that Jay-Z has put out in more than a decade. With a history of albums that revolve around a smooth talking and aggressive drug dealer turned millionaire, one would expect more of the same from the almost 50-year-old rapper. What we got, however, was a father and husband reflecting on the poor decisions he has made in regard to his family while trying to encourage his people to invest into their own culture. The album opens with him dismantling the persona that is Jay-Z, admitting some of his biggest fears over the years as they relate to love and happiness. He even addresses his feud with protege Kanye West, feeling more disappointed in their rough patch than angry at Kanye for potentially dissing him. As the album goes on we learn more about Jay-Z’s early life and insecurities than ever before, from his mother having to hide her own sexuality to his own inability to form long lasting loving connections without ruining them. In the titular track he formally apologizes to his wife and child for his past mistakes, wholeheartedly admitting to being a mess rather than making excuses. It is a shocking yet moving side of a rapper who has cut his teeth on a sort of ruthless swagger. All of this is of course enhanced by No I.D’s bombastic soul sampling production, making the album feel as grounded in the roots of black culture as you can get. This of course makes sense, because anytime Jay-Z isn’t reflecting on his past he is thinking about the financial and spiritual future of African-Americans, encouraging us to own business and pave our own way. While not the most sound financial advice, it showcases Jay-Z’s current lease on life, a man who wants nothing more than to do what he can to secure the future happiness of his family and people. 4:44 is a testament to the idea that even the most hardened and stubborn man can change his ways for the better.


5. DAMN, by Kendrick Lamar (Hip-Hop) 



Coming into 2017 I didn’t expect another Kendrick album to drop anytime soon. To be honest, if he never made another album he would still have one of the strongest discographies in rap music, with his work improving by leaps and bounds over time. So when news of DAMN first came to light I was skeptical at best. After all, with two Kendrick posters and my only tattoo revolving around one of his songs, you could say that I have a bit of a fixation on the Compton rapper. Thankfully, this album takes a much darker turn than I would expect from this point in his career. Rather than revel in his indisputable talent and influence, he turns the focus inward and uses his fame to re-examine his personal life. If To Pimp a Butterfly was a call to arms for black culture, then DAMN is Kendrick looking in the mirror and trying to slap some sense into himself. The songs are all one word titles in all caps to emphasize the importance of their concepts to Kendrick. He tackles the hypocrisy within himself, preaching to love thy neighbor in one song while knowing that he could very well have glorified violence in another. Still untouchable as ever in terms of flow and lyrics, DAMN poses the question of whether or not Kendrick will ever find solace in himself as an artist, with some of the most dense writing found in any album this year. In Kendrick, and in all African-Americans he posits, lies a curse of duality that pulls his people in two directions at once with extreme force. So while Kendrick understands that gang violence isn’t an okay thing, it is also a part of who he is and the people who raised him. With more lavishly textured production than anything found on a Kendrick album thus far, he dives into this same duality as it applies to love, power and humility. It never seems like he wants to be put on a pedestal, but his desire to be great is still ever-present in every song he makes.



4. 4eva Is a Mighty Long Time, by Big K.R.I.T (Hip-hop) 



 Ever since my experience with the 2014 album Cadillactica, I have been captivated by this Southern rapper’s complete dominance over his craft and ability to add a daunting layer of consciousness to his trap-influenced bangers. In fact his work is almost always split down the middle, with half of it being more akin to club music and the other half an appeal to Conscious Rap set over soulful instrumentals. Krit has seemingly never been able to find a proper balance on a singular project, his answer to that apparently being putting out a double album that encompasses both the eccentric grill-clad rap persona of Big K.R.I.T and the more reserved and spiritual Justin Scott. The first CD is an unabashedly arrogant collection of heavy hitting songs that allow Krit to showcase his mastery of the Southern trap aesthetic. Proclaiming that bias against Southern rappers has kept him in a box, he tirelessly asserts himself as a GOAT contender. In all of this though he evokes a sense of sadness. Here you have this tyrant of a force in rap who only wants to be recognized for the talent he has. In a lot of ways, the rap persona he puts forth has always been a shield for his insecurities, a way to cover his fear of being inadequate despite having an extremely strong discography. So by splitting the album into two separate projects, he allows that shield to live in isolation as a its own phenomenon, which is still better than what most artists making similar music put out. On the latter CD, Justin Scott shows off more of his lavish production chops, drawing from old soul and blues songs, with fresh live instruments added to the sample to make each song come to life. Hear he confronts his more grounded fears, his alcoholism, and his mortality. He exposes himself for a longer period of time than he has on any other record and you get this amazingly vivid picture of the man behind the music. By putting in an insane amount of work and releasing a double LP, he has finally given us the most tried and true representation of the artist that is Big K.R.I.T.


3. Ash, by Ibeyi (Experiential Neo-Soul, Art Pop) 



 The French-Cuban duo Ibeyi are in a lane all their own. Being multilingual singer-songwriters, they thrive off their inability to limit themselves. Drawing inspiration from anywhere and everything, their sophomore release is a fusion of countless different worlds. Mixing Afrobeat Hip-Hop and Neo-Soul with experimental sampling, and having a through line of the pair’s amazing vocals, this album is a sonic treat. In the torrent of music lies an underlying theme of women’s empowerment. Ibeyi combats the idea that a woman’s role should be one of complacency, and take out their frustration by drawing on the strength of the powerful women who have passed in their own lives. This isn’t to say that the sisters are immune to pain, far from it. Songs like “I wanna be like you,” represent the sisters admitting they have a long road to go in their own lives before they can be the powerhouses of change they want to be. According to Michelle Obama, “The measure of any society is how it treats its women and girls,” an idea that Ibeyi not only believes wholeheartedly, but sample directly for one of the most powerful songs on the album. In the latter half of the album the duo’s lyrical prowess really shines as they depict more and more visceral pictures of their own pain. It is slow burn, but poinent enough for the listeners to pay attention as it keeps them tense the whole way through. This album feels like the quiet spark of a revolution, like the feeling of discomfort that first moves one to march in the streets. Ash is a meticulously arranged album where even silence is used as an instrument on the slower songs, where lyrics fly by in multiple languages to show the sisters’ connection to their roots, and listeners are never allowed to forgot the message behind the music.


2. Flower Boy, by Tyler the Creator (Hip-Hop) 



This is the album that I have always wanted from Tyler, a project where he puts his production and musicianship before everything else and gets the sound he wants before writing any lyrics. This isn’t to say that I don’t think Tyler can carry himself as a rapper, but rather that his style and flow work best when his production carries most of the weight of each song. As an artist it feels like Tyler has always had a bit of an issue conveying all of his thoughts through music. He is known for his lyrical intensity and the colorful characters he creates in his songs, but his albums have never felt like a 1:1 representation of his feelings. Whereas on this project we get a near perfect blend of Tyler’s lyrical themes meshing with the musical garden he has created. Opening as a narrative sequel to a lot of the themes touched on in 2015’s Cherry Bomb, Tyler talks about the feeling of using material goods to cover up loneliness. While he would have you believe that he has left his more sad past behind him, Flower Boy is a return to form for the introspection that the wacky rapper has a knack for. As songs pass by, a bigger picture of Tyler’s life and feelings unfold, revealing everything from potentially repressed sexuality to a feeling of isolation from his friends that never goes away. Musically, the signature wonky synths and 808’s that have followed Tyler through his career make a triumphant return, paired with beautifully orchestrated horns and woodwinds, to make this the most confident of his albums to date. A bunch of the buzz from this album came from Tyler’s sudden admittance that he may be sexually attracted to men, but stopping there completely misses the point. The whole project is a confession, a musical form of Tyler coming to terms with a lot of his demons. He even postulates on a future in which he is no longer able to make a living off of his art and how devastating that would be. He is an artist that has always wanted to be heard and for his voice to be unique, and on this latest LP he gives us that and more in the most eloquent manner he could manage.



1. CTRL, by SZA- (R&B/Neo-Soul) 



Another album I talked about earlier in the year, CTRL is the best example I can think of where a debut lives up to all of its hype and potential. In a genre filled with sexy people talking about sexy things, SZA approaches her album from the perspective of the side chick. Her songs cover such a wide variety of specific situations and feelings that you have to imagine them as being drawn from her own personal experiences. One moment she is poking fun at the excitement around having an affair, while in the next we hear a soul crushing musical testament to her self-doubt. Love can easily be a messy thing to write about, but the kind of strength required to open up about being in unhealthy and fleeting relationships is immense. Feeling enamored with the idea of someone with no way of knowing how long your fling will last or what you really mean to the other person is terrifying. Of course, all of this would be tainted if the production and vocal performances were anything other than exceptional, and luckily for us that isn’t the case. Silky and loose is how I would describe the musical flavor of the album, with melodies sliding in and out of focus as SZA’s vocals sound better than ever. In comparison to the more vibe-heavy singers in today's R&B scene, SZA belts, sustains, and embodies different emotions with different vocal inflections. You can tell that a lot of the stories behind this album came from real life interactions, but it is also clear that the artist has made peace with a multitude of her mistakes. There are short interludes where the women she presumably looks up to give advice on maintaining your sanity. By the album’s end you get the sense that SZA is determined to not only to combat feelings of loneliness, but to love herself more, because she finally sees herself as worth it. This doesn’t mean that she will be magically okay forever, but knowing that you are still on your journey often comes with a peace of mind that SZA has more than earned. 

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Kehlani, Syd, & SZA: Personifying R&B











From the male perspective, there is no shortage of women in R&B. You see them in videos and hear about them as various male artists croon about love and sex, which to some may be ample enough “representation” for them to be satisfied.  The problem with this is that the representation of women in this way is shallow and de-humanizing, training young minds to believe that women are nothing more than bland objects designed for consumption. Even the best of this generation's artists like Frank Ocean can’t single handedly reverse years of misrepresentation, so what is the solution? Not surprisingly, many female R&B artists express an alternative view of women through their songs. A Select few in particular are choosing to do this by telling personal narratives that serve to paint women as people, rather than objects.

Kehlani, Syd, & SZA are all artists who exemplify this growing trend of women taking back the genre through their creative approach to songwriting and storytelling. The three women, all singers in their 20’s, dropped their debut solo albums this year, and while they each have a unique sound, they all provide much needed breath of fresh air and human perspective in the world of contemporary R&B.

A lack of agency, or ability for an individual to make their own choices and think freely, often surrounds women who are the focal point of R&B songs. Stories are one-sided and there is rarely a back and forth between male and female perspectives. While not every single song that does this is a bad song, having an entire genre’s mainstream appeal revolve around this one-sidedness just hurts the style’s potential. Enter Kehlani, an Oakland native who is just as comfortable singing about parties and sex as she is admitting mistakes made in her past relationships. With her debut album, SweetSexySavage, she doubles down on making music that highlights her strengths as a songwriter by shedding light on some of her less than stellar personality traits. Kehlani portrays herself as Kehlani, a young woman who has hurt people and who  has been hurt, who has made mistakes and also been made a fool, of someone who loves life but has also tried to take her own. There is a multi-faceted approach to her music because that is just who she is as a person. Take the song ‘Piece Of Mind,’ in which Kehlani recounts experiences with a past lover, a timeless subject for many many songs, and over the course of the song comes to terms with aspects of the relationship that were negative. While an implication of emotional abuse she sings about could be seen as just saddening, it is the acknowledgement of what both sides did right and wrong that she states helped her grow as a person and an artist. While we as listeners may never hear that other party sing their point of view, Kehlani does a good job at depicting them as a person who made choices and had an impact on them, not just as a stepping stone or talking point for a song.

Kehlani also takes a very Winehouse-esque approach on her songs about sex and often write songs in a way the emphasizes a distinction between sex as an intimate act and as a purely physical act. In songs like ‘Distraction’ and ‘Do U Dirty’  Kehlani admits that she wants a one night stand with whoever she is singing too, which is something massive frowned upon unless it is straight men talking about the subject. Her being so open about her sexuality and desires is important not just because it shows women have the same urges as men, but because it allows women to have the most active role in how they control their bodies. Instead of a perception of women and their sexuality being controlled by songs men make, Kehlani has asserted what she wants and how she wants in her own words on her own time. You can disagree with her lifestyle, but you have to accept that it is her portraying herself how she wants to be portrayed. As an artist you should have a certain power over how your image, a power that is often not granted to women in the same fashion.

On the topic of power, Syd’s debut solo album Fin is powerfully testament to the young singer's ability as a songwriter. Syd is most commonly know as a former producer for the rap collective Odd Future and as the frontman for the Internet, a neo-soul/R&B band that excels at writing songs about the complications of young love and the lust for the good life. Fin however is not a part of The Internet’s catalog, but rather her own separate work where she gets to flex her chops as a lyricist. Syd takes a lot of influence from the confident women of 90’s R&B and puts a modern twist on the aesthetic that artists like Aaliyah pioneered. The most interesting part of this process however is that Syd never comes off as intimidating or the baddest chick in the room (much like Aaliyah or Left Eye would), but rather as a earnest musician who wants her slice of the pie. She switches seamlessly between songs like ‘Shake em off’ where she admits that her anxiety sometimes gets the best of her and prevents her from sleeping to bangers like ‘No Complaints,’ a minute-long braggadocious anthem of believing in your own ability. It is through this album that we are given many different lenses with which to view Syd through, but they all contain same core message of a search for power and control. While the album doesn’t explicitly name names or throw shots at other artists, it is nothing less than a declaration of Syd’s potential. She stated she wrote the song in a variety of different lyrical styles just to show people that she could, and that the album serves as neon billboard of Syd’s prowess. This was simultaneously an attempt to convince other artists to see her skill and collaborate with her. In other words, Syd meticulously planned an album around her struggles with life and her dreams, then wrote it in such a way that if other artists want to even touch a similar vibe they have to do it off of the platform she is creating through her music.

In addition to empowering Syd as an artist, her eclectic style and unique narratives again  gives more depth to women. Syd has openly come out as gay (an even more underrepresented group in music), and doesn’t shy away from that in her lyrics. There is heartbreak, betrayal, laughs, and the the pursuit of finding something worth lasting, just as in any heterosexual relationships. I am not trying to argue that Syd specifically makes music for the LGBT community, but rather that just by being gay and making such genuine and expressive music we get more positive messages for future women in the industry (and outside of it) to relate and connect to. Power in music is all about influence, who you know, who you work with, who respects you, and who you have inspired, and it appears that Syd will keep creating until the whole world hears her music and respects her name.  

A final angle I want to consider is the importance of being vulnerable in your music. Vulnerability is something widely associated with R&B, mostly because that is a genre where men can “get away” with showing more feelings, but is often  not explored to the melancholy depths with which it can take its listeners. For it is through something like vulnerability that a good artist can actively connect with their audience. Surely Kehlani and Syd are both well versed in this, but I would like to draw attention to CTRL, The debut album of SZA. SZA is an interesting figure in the modern musical landscape, she is a part of TDE (a predominantly Hip-Hop label that houses such heavy hitters like ScHoolboy Q and Kendrick Lamar), and makes melodic personal music in stark contrast to the broader narratives often penned by her labelmates. There had been a back and forth about the release date of her album for about half a year done, but it finally dropped last month and was filled with heartbreaking narratives about being the “other girl.” It indeed appears that the album revolves around the feeling of not knowing whether or not you are valued by the person you have chosen to give your heart and sexual exclusivity. Songs like ‘The Weekend’ are a tragic tale of only having a partner for the weekend, knowing they share a bed with someone else and are just as happy if not happier with them, coming from an artist who looks like the kind of woman who would be put on a pedestal as a the spitting image of beauty. That seems to be the whole point of the album's story though. SZA is a woman, and by most standards she is very beautiful, and talented as all hell considering the album we are talking about, but that doesn’t save her from herself. The vulnerability that she expresses throughout the album is that of someone who has seemingly failed more than they have succeeded, which has caused her to question herself and her value as a person. When she talks about wanting to be with a man, it feels less like a cry for attention and more like for help, because she may have been in a point where she felt that she could only receive validation through another person. The impact of this is so powerful that even when you as a listener get to ‘Pretty Little Birds,’ a ballad that oozes confidence where SZA seems to finally be willing to try and love herself again, you cannot forget the haunting relatability of the album as a whole.

I think the concept and feelings of this album extend past a woman trying to find love and security in a partner. It becomes a sort of reflection on a time where an artist was potentially at their most human. A type of feeling that is best conveyed through music and given an infinite amount of weight once you factor in just how much SZA’s narrative clashes with the more general view of women in her same genre. Women who are faceless and never given agency could never experience pain the way she does, and could never share that pain with us as beautifully as she did. It is the flaws that she had that created the catalyst for such a piece of art to exist, and these flaws are not specific to her.

Women are flawed creatures who love to enjoy life and at the same time are susceptible to the realities of loneliness and longing, which contrary to popular belief is not that different from their male counterparts. The reason the artists I mentioned are so important for the modern image or R&B and the growth of the genre in the future is because, through their music, they are demanding to be heard and respected as people. They aren’t trying to separate their struggles from men or claim to be better than men, but rather they are aggressively and eloquently telling stories. Stories about what it means to be lost and found then lost again set over lush instrumentals featuring some of the best lyrical song-writing of the year. Stories about what it means to fight for equality when sometimes you don’t even understand yourself. Stories that will encourage future female artists to stand proud after they get knocked down even if it is the millionth time you have been knocked down. Stories that spit in the face of the unfairly objectifying images of women that give them no voice or agency.

These amazing artists are writing songs and telling stories about what it means to be a person.