Showing posts with label Andrew W.K.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew W.K.. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

D.M's Top 11 Albums of 2021

May we please start with talking about how happy I am about this list?  Legitimate difficult decisions had to be made in order to compose the list you’ll read below, and make no mistake, that’s a wonderful thing.  Not since 2014 have I been so privileged as to have to agonize who’s going to make the final, very finite, cut.  

To add on to the lengthy and probably overly analytical conversation that Chris and I had, I think part of what’s happening here is that maybe, hopefully, fingers crossed, the baseline of music is improving.  Does that necessarily mean a new wave, a burgeoning fad that will sweep the music-imbibing public and usher us into a blessed era of radio-conquering prosperity?  Nah, probably not.

But don’t lost hope!  Part of what really sets this list, and the choices it forced me to make, apart from some of its predecessors is that a number of bands, many listed here in the embellished Honorable Mention section, fell into two groups – they either wrote amazing singles, but couldn’t maintain that momentum over a full album, or wrote a great, memorable record, but not so different from their previous accomplishments.  Originality, or in a baser sense, novelty, can break ties here.  So, there’s good news all around; there were a lot of worthy records that are still worth the investment of your time even if they didn’t crack this list, and also that this list must contain, as the kids say, some real bangers.  Shoot, I'm even giving away the elusive EP of the Year award, which I don't get to do every year.

Brushing all that aside, here’s part of the litmus test for me with how highly I personally consider the list below – when my coworkers at the office, who are dimly aware that I might be a person of varied interests when separated from the confines of my career, asked me who my top artists where this year, I could rattle off all eleven of these records without a second thought.  I haven’t been able to do that in literal years.

Before we begin, a recap of the rules:
-All qualifying albums must be original studio material – no live albums, no compilations, no re-releases, no covers albums.
-There are eleven albums here, because, of course, it goes to 11.
-Honorable Mention would normally just be one album, but I’m so pleased with 2021 as a musical year (and only as a musical year,) that I’ve decided to reward a number of albums.

Without further ado, here we go:

Honorable Mention (in alphabetical order) -

The Browning – END OF EXISTENCE
Charred – PRAYERS OF MALEDICTION
Employed To Serve – CONQUERING
Fear of Domination – VI: REVELATION
John 5 & The Creatures – SINNER
K.A.A.N – KAIZEN
Phantom Elite – TITANIUM
Powerwolf – CALL OF THE WILD
Steel bearing Hand – SLAY IN HELL

EP Of The Year – The Hawkins - AFTERMATH


Not going to go into a ton of detail here for an EP, but man, why isn't there more of this?  I mean, I get it, leave them wanting more, but there's barely enough here to know I'm thirsty for this!  Infectious and groovy and melodic and perfectly paced.  A lot to like.


11 – Andrew W.K – GOD IS PARTYING


I have been doing a year-end best of list every year since I dared call myself a music journalist, which was all the way back in 2008.  To that point, Andrew W.K's iconic "I Get Wet" had been released six years prior, and his career was already considered long past toast.  Now, nearly twenty years after the revelation that you truly could write a record where every song was about partying, we get another worthy landmark in the pantheon of Andrew W.K...and it's about as far from a party album as you can imagine.  Moody, temperamental and introspective, Andrew W.K wanted to show us all that he could execute a serious record while performing all the instruments himself, and he did just that, with great aplomb.  It is true that this is a singles record - not every song here is a home run.  But the moments that are elevated to greatness are sublime in their orchestration.


10 – We Butter The Bread With Butter – DAS ALBUM


I liked this album a lot the first time I heard it.  To the point where I would be listening to it in idle moments at work, and coworkers were starting to notice (generally followed by either a request to know what that awful racket was, an ask to turn it off, or some combination of the two.  Philistines.)  Then, suddenly it was lost to me.  And now, in reviewing everything I listened to this year, it finds itself back in the fold, earning top honors.  I won’t lie, it’s not the easiest listen – there’s a density of sound here that rivals anybody on the market, to the point where the album can be physically exhausting to listen to if you’re not prepared for it.  The deep bass tones and cavernous percussion are relentless and insistent, but if you’re willing to distill the music a little, there’s a lot of rhythmic sensibility contained in here, and once you get a taste for that, the album unfolds.

 

9 – Beartooth – BELOW


Let’s not bury the lede – the opening riff of “Devastation” is the best pure adrenaline guitar riff written this year.  And that’s no idle boast or one-off, because “Below” is end-to-end positively turgid with great riffs.  Real down and dirty metal purists are going to balk at the dramatic, melodic, singalong choruses that borrow from less authoritarian heavy genres, but don’t be intimidated by their ignorant condescension.  Beartooth can hammer with the best of them, and excels in writing songs that can change gears but still stay coherent within the musical narrative.  I feel like if I say “Below” is a rich man’s Avenged Sevenfold album, that both obfuscates some of the album’s genius and belittles the idiomatic accomplishments of both bands (because “City of Evil” is awesome,) but for some reason I can’t get that phrase out of my head.

 

8 – 6:33 – FEARY TALES FOR STRANGE LULLABIES: THE DOME


France, as a country, has for centuries been considered the beating heart of European art and culture (with apologies to Italy and specifically the city of Florence,) so refined and so scrutinizing in its taste that what the French culture deems worthy of merit must truly be beyond reproach.  So it logically follows that only a French experimental band could get away with writing a devilishly catchy song called “Holy Golden Boner.”  6:33 returned for the first time in six years with an album that made up for lost time by putting more words in the title (bonus points for a cool album cover,) and also stands as a stark improvement over the charming but flawed “Deadly Scenes.”  Regardless, at its best moments, 6:33’s music always sounds like a collection of demented, impish showtunes, and “Feary Tales” provides a whirlwind trip of exactly that over its wayward one-hour runtime.  Close your eyes and you can almost see the choreography.

 

7 - Vaelmyst – SECRYPTS OF THE EGOCHASM


As Chris and I have discussed at some length on this site over the years, there are several splinter genres of metal that have been all but played out – there’s little to no more room for experiment, expansion or idiomatic adjustments.  We normally make this argument with specific regard to power metal, but if we’re being honest in our heart of hearts, death metal is also in many ways a dry well.  And yet, Vaelmyst found a way to take all the desiccated mores of an overplayed idiom and revive them in such as a way as to be interesting and novel and dare I say, catchy?  The concept of catchy death metal often seems like a contradiction in terms at best and anathema to a possessive fanbase at worst, but the fact that I caught myself humming some of Vaelmyst’s better riffs during quiet moments at work speaks to the power that this band has unlocked.  And that was after having listened to the record just once.  I found myself going back to this album over and over throughout the months subsequent to its release, whenever I needed that particular fix for death metal done right.

 

6 - Erdling – HELHEIM


Erdling and I have danced around for a few years ago, but we’ve never been able to connect in any meaningful way.  Their album from last year, “Yggdrasil,” is as close as we’ve come to me giving them real accolades….until now.  For this, their fifth full-length album, Erdling locked in on the magic formula and found just the right combination of melody and groove and synth-industrial might to make “Helheim” stand out not only from their own catalogue, but from the effort of a lot of worthy contemporaries this year.  By the way, singles be damned, “Vogelfrei” is the best offering on this record.  NDH has spread out from beyond it’s original borders by a wide margin, but Erdling is proving that the home country still brews some of the best.

 

5 - CueStack – DIAGNOSIS: HUMAN


This was a latecomer to the list, and I admit that there may be some projection here on my part – “Diagnosis: Human” reminds me in many ways of the pomp and circumstance and hook-y energy of Peter TÃĪgtgren’s excellent side project PAIN, and my fandom of that band is such that I might be pleased just to hear something that reminds me of that in the first place.  That’s not to say that CueStack can’t stand on their own, far from it – they exist at the burgeoning crossroads of electronic music and metal, and this debut full length shows the promise of a full synthesis of the two genres, ranging from the typically aggressive to the impressively muted.  In what typically can be a caustic mix of overwhelming sounds, CueStack found a way to weave some nuance into presentation, so the ceiling is high.

 

4 - Fear Factory – AGGRESSION CONTINUUM


I’m grinding my teeth a little that I have this album this high, but game has to recognize game (the implication here is that I also have game, when most contemporary evidence points to the contrary.)  As I said at the time of release, I didn’t want to like this album, since it was released on the heels of the most serious acrimony of a band who has spent much of their career soaking in acrimony.  Some of the members may be possessed of some…difficult….character traits.  Nevertheless, this is the best Fear Factory record since “Archetype,” and it’s not especially close.  Maybe even since “Obsolete.”  All of the proper violence of the band’s, well, archetype, is represented here in full, but couched within that cacophony is the proportionate mixture of riff and groove that has always made FF stand out from their contemporaries.  This is a really great effort, regardless of circumstances.

 

3 - Bokassa – MOLOTOV ROCKTAIL


In cooking, there is often equal reverence for the competing skills of ornate, detailed and time-intensive preparation, and the ability to do the simple with a level of practiced magnificence.  Bokassa’s album from 2021, “Molotov Rocktail,” fell squarely into that second camp.  Mixing some tenets of stoner rock, gutter punk and straightforward metal, the band assembled a roaring diesel engine of edgy rock, blending all the complementary elements into the blast furnace at its heart.  The album also possesses a chef’s kiss blend of sarcastic fun, gritty realism and implied menace to make for a listen that’s easy and accessible, but never boring.  The entire proceeding is punctuated with chant-worthy punk sing-along choruses that help bind the hooks and melodies into easily hummable touchstones.  In the modern era of music, it’s hard to impress solely by doing the simple things better than anyone else, but that’s what Bokassa has done here, and they should be celebrated for it.


2 - Dead Poet Society - -!-


What’s happening to me?  There was a time in my life when I would have bypassed this album without a second thought.  Maybe I’m becoming more open-minded, or, as I prefer to think, perhaps the world has finally come around to see music my way (unlikely.)  If I said to you ‘Breaking Benjamin on steroids,’ that’s an oversimplification of what’s really happening here, but it lends some idea of the contents of “-!-“. The attraction to Dead Poet Society’s album comes from the deep juxtaposition of earnest, clean vocals and impossibly throaty rhythm.  It’s an insistent, deep sound that hasn’t really been heard since the microcosm of Soundgarden’s “4th of July,” and Dead Poet Society artfully stretched that out into an entire record.  The record doesn’t utilize a lot of virtuosity, but as rare as it is to say, that kind of styling is unnecessary here and would have actually been a mistake.  “-!-“ is all about fury and emotion and the undulating earth beneath our unsteady feet.

 

1 - Cave of Swimmers – AURORA


It doesn’t seem possible that the best album of the year could be produced by a mere two musicians, but here we are.  While “Aurora” is impressive in its depth and intricacy and layers, the album also impresses upon the attention from the first strains.  Riding that line between instantly catchy and philosophically interesting is perhaps the most difficult of all feats in music, especially in metal, where one is almost invariably sacrificed for the good of the other.  And that’s before we reconcile with the idea that the lyrics and themes from this album range from the relatable, to the typically prog, to the utterly ridiculous.  Yet every moment is packed with some distinct hook, some well-orchestrated edge, some synthesis of percussion and guitar that rings true in the ear in the listener.  “Aurora” is as bold a statement of arrival as we’ve had in recent years, and Cave of Swimmers is not to be missed.

 

 

Friday, September 10, 2021

Album Review: Andrew W.K. - "God is Partying"


Holupwaitaminute.  Did Andrew W.K, who for roughly twenty years has been the self-styled God Partying…write a power metal album?

That sounds so wrong.  Every part of it sounds wrong, even as it’s typed.  And yet, after repeated listening, that’s the only tangible conclusion that can be drawn from listening to his new album “God Is Partying.”

And it doesn’t take much time to get there.  The lead single “Everybody Sins,” is a stark departure from the rapturous bombast that kicked off the man’s most famous work, “I Get Wet.”  No longer is it time to party, as “Everybody Sins” comes with a stunted, hammering riff, devious in the depth of its novel guitar tone, and sets a more serious tone for all the proceedings to follow.  

It’s worth repeating again, specifically as it relates to this single – all the modern hallmarks of power metal are present.  There’s a singalong, major-key chorus with backup singers to help up break up the bleak landscape of the main riff, there are keyboards and a pulsing beat…this is power metal in all but name.

The momentum continues into Babalon, another composition that falls outside all the preconceived notions we’ve ever had about Andrew W.K.  For all that, one of his most important hallmarks remains; his albums have always been larger than life, and “God Is Partying” does nothing to change that.  This record is B-I-G.  It’s a massive sound, and the first two cuts are overwhelming if you’re not prepared for them.  It’s like that old Maxwell advertisement with the guy being blown away by the speaker.

There was a lot of press going into this record about how Andrew (if I may call him Andrew,) wanted to show everyone out there a different side not only of his songwriting, but of his musical ability.  All of that comes through in this effort, as Andrew re-invents himself, diving into the metal roots that he’s always flirted with, and at the same time playing every sound that’s heard on the record. As bizarre as it is to say, there is not one party anthem on this record, not a single veneer of bacchanalian invincibility.  Instead we’re left with a collection of songs that describe markedly human emotions like pain, confusion and regret, all while blasting out mammoth chords and titanic choruses.

Nowhere is this more apparent than on the album’s third single “I’m In Heaven,” which thunders into the room with little warning and crushes glass under its hooves for three minutes.  There is no let up here, no sprightly interludes, just a tumult of synth reverb and a crash of drums and guitar.  Imagine if you can that Type O Negative’s “October Rust’ was melted into an alloy with “I Get Wet,” and you’re….well, kind of there.

Let us not get carried away – there are five other songs on “God Is Partying,” plus the under-a-minute filler of “Goddess Partying” and none of them stand out in a particular way.  “Stay True to Your Heart” comes the closest, in that it is an interesting and respectable attempt to venture into some ‘80s-style synth rock, with a manufactured beat and an electronic essence.  There’s nothing wrong with the song, and Andrew should be credited for trying to spread his wings in that direction, too.  But it does sound a little out of place amidst the rest of the record.

As for the other four songs, if you’ve heard one of them, you’ve essentially heard them all.  Again, not bad songs, just not what’s going to pay the bills for the record, and the last three “Remember Your Oath,” “My Tower,” and “And Then We Blew Apart,” are in many ways extensions of the same basic power ballad idea.

Don’t get distracted, though – we talk a lot on this site about artists who either don’t have the ability to re-invent themselves, or fail miserably in the attempt.  Andrew W.K, went for it, abandoning everything that made him famous to this point, and the result, “God Is Partying” is an admirable lesson in versatility.  The three singles – “Everybody Sins,” “Babalon” and “I’m In Heaven,” are more than reason enough to make this worthy effort part of your regular listening rotation.

So yes, Andrew W.K wrote a power metal album.  And it happens to be better than just about any other power metal album released this year.