New Aesop Rock. Technically he is the best lyricist for his vast vocabulary. His tracks are a bit to digest and take a few listens.. and I love them.
New Aesop Rock. Technically he is the best lyricist for his vast vocabulary. His tracks are a bit to digest and take a few listens.. and I love them.
Christ, she’s better at this than any other artist on Earth. She makes pop music that FEELS like something. Find this incredibly moving. She da best.
Oh sometimes the classic sounding stuff is the best. Hello, Mr Krivit.
Love love love Wye Oak, but the more they left the guitars behind, the more I felt like I missed a part of what made them so great.
The good news is that Jenn Wasner’s picked up her guitar again. How flipping good is this?
He’s back. And this is even better than the A side! I love the way it starts like a dreamy 80s ballad and then goes into a gorgeous wonky electro chorus. He’s a ruddy genius.
This is me all over today. Headphones on and listening to this.
14. Perlas & Conchas – @FeminaMusica Beguiling Argentinian trio that's a hard-to-describe mix of folk, R&B and electronica. https://t.co/9S24jlBHSh
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
13. Assume Form – @jamesblake Never quite got him before this album, but I do now. An expansive and ambitious record, full of great guest vocals and robust songwriting. https://t.co/70smVz3bYj
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
12. Your Wilderness Revisited – @_williamdoyle The artist FKA East India Youth returns after a long absence with surely the best album ever made about the joys of suburban architecture? https://t.co/ORlVxW5bF3
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
11. Why Hasn't Everything Disappeared Already? – @DeerhunterMusic
Brandon Cox's best album since the divine Halcyon Digest, full of his some of most accessible and lovely songs, despite the rather apocalyptic lyrical tone. https://t.co/Cyj3zUnbjo— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
10. Cashmere Tears – @KojeyRadical Blisteringly confident, kick-ass rap album that feels like a manifesto, but that slips down very easily. Tunes galore on this baby. https://t.co/m9i5dui4wW
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
9. What a Boost – @ROZIPLAIN Spent so much listening to this folkish delight in 2019. She sound so unassuming and gentle, it takes a while to realise how robust and brilliant the songs are. If you like @thisisthekit, this is a no-brainer. https://t.co/EI1QDu3UgQ
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
8. Ventura – @AndersonPaak A massive return to form after the Oxnard hiccup, Paak gets back to doing what he does best – being the most versatile pop soul singer on the planet and the closest thing we have to a Prince successor. https://t.co/cx4Smm2vI2
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
7. Metronomy Forever – @metronomy. An ambitious, sprawling and funky record that works better than it should, partly because it's got a bunch of the best songs Joe Mount & co have ever written. Also the best gig I went to this year. https://t.co/OGkCH0QkaM
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
6. Andromeda – @WeyesBlood
Natalie Mering, AKA Weyes Blood, has secretly travelled through time from 1971, bringing to us the best lost album of the 70s you've never heard. The songwriting on this is RIDICULOUS. A joy from beginning to end. https://t.co/PY0UMCevPv— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
5. Holding On To A Dream – @sir_Was_SE The world slept on this album and that is a crime. WAKE UP AND SMELL THE SIR WAS, peeps! Packed full of Scandi electro pop heaven, and one of the rare records in 2019 that just sounded full of optimism. Lovely. https://t.co/LRekrvw3e0
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
4. U.F.O.F. – @bigthiefmusic One of the TWO amazing albums they released this year, either of which could have been here. Something about the way they construct a song and the way Adrienne Lenker delivers it that really connects. What a year they've had. https://t.co/lvFqNbc7fd
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
3. Kiwanuka – @michaelkiwanuka. His magnum opus, full of the expansive sounds of the politically-conscious soul of the early 70s, but pinned down to the contemporary world by Danger Mouse's exquisite production. An album to lose yourself in. https://t.co/ofeOtdsiW0
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
2. Designer – @AldousHarding As beautiful as it is weird, and as weird as it is beautiful. A giant leap forward for an already brilliant artist. Even better, it has a pop heart and the songs are to die for. https://t.co/8hAz1GLlEG
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
1. Grey Area – @LittleSimz Nothing else came close. A towering achievement, to call it a rap album doesn't even cover everything that it is. Also saw her last week and she is a MEGASTAR live. Album AND gig of the year. https://t.co/qnNcjQF8dK
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
So yeah, @LittleSimz sounds like that, but she also sounds like this: https://t.co/7v2AruGr40
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
And this: https://t.co/z040Q7mpQs
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019
So there you go, that's my 2019. Hope you liked some or any of them. Do tell your friends there's a really exceptional list of albums on Twitter and they really need to check it out immediately.
— David Allison (@DavidHAllison) December 17, 2019

I genuinely don’t really know where to start with this one. First, I guess I should start with an apology. I know what it feels like to have an AOTM chosen that you know will be an effort for you. David, I am sorry. However, I have not chosen this because I am a huge Nick Cave fan. I have a passing knowledge of his music acquired some from of my previous (intense but failed) relationships. I have only ever bought one other Nick Cave album, Dig, Lazarus Dig from 2008. Bought on the strength of reviews, loved at the time but rarely played since.
What I do love about Nick Cave is his undeniably prolific creative output. I think this is his 17th studio album with Bad Seeds, add to that Grinderman and other side projects, soundtracks, screen plays, acting roles, exhibitions etc. This can be seen as self indulgent or it can be viewed more favourably as an endless stream of creativity. A stream that stopped a couple of years ago.
I don’t read too much music press if I am honest. I didn’t know about the loss of his teenage Son Arthur until the release of Ghosteen. I approached the album with some trepidation. I didn’t know what to expect and listened mostly without reading reviews in any detail. When you listen you are going to have to make a decision to give this a go or not. I hope you go with it. What you will find is a double album (double sorry David). The 2nd album contains two 12 minute songs (triple sorry David). As AOTM ‘asks’ go, this is a big one.
What first struck me is the ‘soundscape’. I never know if ‘soundscape’ is the right word. If it were a film it would be the ‘mise en scene’ so what ever the music equivalent of that is, that’s what I mean. Rich textured, chesty, vibrating analogue synths, strings, choral, gospel tinged backing vocals, piano’s and that voice. No matter what you think of Nick Cave, his voice is fucking incredible. It feels like his career to date, he’s been practicing to sing these lyrics and these songs. The first CD/side of the album is formed of 3-6 minute, beautiful and relatively conventional tracks. The 2nd and 3rd tracks, ‘Bright Horses’ and ‘Waiting for You’ are undeniably beautiful ballads. I think they will act as ‘anchor’ tracks that you will find yourself falling for on repeated listens. They are the most conventional and identifiable tracks and feature some achingly beautiful lyrics.
‘He’s the little white shape dancing at the end of the hall / the wish that time couldn’t dissolve’
And for me, this line, is a beautiful example of what I love about this album. ‘Arthur’ is never named. The word ‘death’ never appears. Neither does ‘grief’. Nor ‘loss’. There is close to no use of the past tense. The album revolves around the positivity and hope of the present and future tenses.
This album is not about loss. It is about permanence.
It is about the power of love and of memory. It makes me feel that there can be beauty found in the deepest tragedy which somehow makes me feel more connected with the things that I love the most.
Before Sammy was born we called him ‘Wolfgang’ it stuck so much we considered it for real. It feels like ‘Ghosteen’ is used in a similar manner by the Cave family on the other side of the life continuum. ‘There is nothing wrong with loving something that you can’t hold in your hand’
Back to the ‘ask’ – David, CD 2 will be a challenge for you. I’ll just call that now. I do urge you to give it a go though. I have these tracks play continuously CD1 and CD2 without interruption and feel this is the best experience. Nick Cave talks about the CD2’s tracks being the ‘parent’ tracks, they were written first and spawned the ‘children’, the tracks found on CD1. This only really makes sense when you become deeply familiar with the music. I hope this is somewhere that you get with this beautiful music.
‘I am beside you, look for me’
As the landscape in Rap has changed over the last 5 years I’ve stuck to what I know. The exception has been the ever consistent ‘Mello Music Group’ and their pillar producer Apollo Brown. Over recent years he has partnered with the likes of Ghostface Killah, Planet Asia, Ras Kass, Rapper Bog Pooh and Joell Ortiz among others. His boom bap soul filled Detroit sound has not only re-invigorated many MC’s careers but has also has owned much of my listening time.
Apollo Brown’s latest effort perhaps is his most challenging and best executed to date. Encompassing 59 Detroit MC’s his ‘Sincerely Detroit’ is a love letter to a city of sorts and showcases the depth of MC pedigree that the city has to offer. Through 21 tracks you feel the love and pain that the currently ran down and trying City of Detroit brings on a daily basis with Apollo perfectly pasting together an onslaught of head nodding beats.
Brown’s MC’s combination on first glance is un-expected but work well. Tying up Nolan The Ninja and Dopehead on ‘Skimmin’ shouldn’t work but it does. Whilst teaming up Guilty Simpson and Fat Ray on ‘The Backbone’ seems like a life long partnership.
Detroit heavy hitters Royce 5’9, Guilty Simpson and Slum Village all deliver lyrically but don’t over shadow the rest. At one moment you’re blown away by Paradime on ‘Never’ or the smooth bars from Boog Brown. I admit that 21 tracks can seems allot in the days of EP’s and short albums but the further I get into this album I struggle to find a track that I would drop.
Why do I love this album? It’s pure hop hop, it’s boom bap, and conveys the honesty that I struggle to find in hip hop these days. It reminds me of the hip hop I fell in love with in the late 90’s when I bought decks and hunted for raw underground hip hop.
Being mindful that this may move you away from your hip hop comfort zone I encourage you to spend some time with this album, it’s worth the investment.
This one is for Joey…..