
Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Mosquito


Holly Williams, The Highway
10. Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Mosquito
Karen O howls on "Sacrilege" as the sound revs with electric fury and the divine intervention of a gospel choir. "Buried Alive" features rap persona Dr. Octagon in what sounds like overhead music for an S&M dungeon. The title track is really about a mosquito. "He’ll suck your blood," sings Karen O, even buzzing like one of them bugs. The album’s raucous absurdity is a complete mess. And what a glorious mess it is.
9. Jessie Ware, Devotion
It was "Wildest Moments" that had everyone talking about the remarkable cords, classy style and Sade-like smoothness of Jessie Ware. She was the ’90s of the new millennium. A minty breath in a room full of stale stench. And her debut is full of "moments": The funk-soul "Running" struts, "If You’re Never Gonna Move" grooves and "Taking in Water," for her gay brother, inspires.
8. Holly Williams, The Highway
With her sinewy drawl and doleful suitcase of songs, Holly
Williams – from the Hank lineage – has become Nashville’s unsung hero. Rooted
in the American sound that marked her previous release, The Highway brims
with the undressed, reflective and often-heavyhearted songwriting of Williams’
career. The acoustic "Waiting on June," an achingly beautiful true tale of her
grandparents’ long life together (the wedding, the babies, their deaths), will
wreck you.
7. James Blake, Overgrown
An electro hypnosis, James Blake’s Overgrown is so quietly
staged it permeates the subconscious first, unfurling its layers over time.
With graceful simplicity and the allure of his otherworldly – and sometimes
even sexy (the sensational "Life Round Here" will tingle you) – baritone, this
work is a breathtaking spectacle where songs subtly loop, morph and swell into
sonic splendor.
6. Vampire Weekend, Modern Vampires of the City
The dainty gents of Vampire Weekend know a good hook. "Diane
Young" is delirious, drum-punched pop with wonky pitch-shifting, crunching and
fizzing; it makes for one of the most infectious moments in music this year.
They get into your head with the wistfulness of the horn-y, Celtic-kissed "Unbelievers,"
Paul Simon-ed "Everlasting Arms" and eerie "Hudson." Much credit to Ezra Koenig
for that voice. It’s heaven.
5. The National, Trouble Will Find Me
The Cincinnati quintet’s reliably strong catalog of
melancholic mellowness got another noble release with Trouble Will Find Me,
the understated sixth LP from a band as modest as their sound. The staggering
opening trifecta – "Don’t Swallow the Cap" stands out most – is graceful and
emphatic, with Matt Berninger’s achy Bono-like baritone taking center stage.
But the closers are just as stunning, especially the conjured dream state of
tenderhearted coda "Hard to Find."
4. Tegan and Sara, Heartthrob
Pop music doesn’t get much better than ... Tegan and Sara’s
latest? Stripping the grittiness of the sisters’ indie-rock-and-sometimes-folky
sound for something more ’90s-boom-box-made was a bold move – and a move that
notches the best album of their career. The songwriting still aches (see "How
Come You Don’t Want Me"), the harmonies still intoxicate ("Now I’m All Messed
Up" comes to a beautiful yin-yang close) ... and the new sound – produced by pop
go-to Greg Kurstin – throbs with heart.
3. Kacey Musgraves, Same Trailer Different Park
On "Merry Go ’Round," Kacey Musgraves admitted something
few in country music ever do: small-town life kind of sucks. Then came "Follow
Your Arrow," about staying true to yourself – even if you’re gay, and even if
you like getting high. The rest of her major-label debut is equally
unconventional, fresh-spirited and ballsy: The deceiving lullaby sparsity of
"It Is What It Is" almost masks the suggestion of casual sex, and "Blowin’
Smoke" is a witty portrayal of a dead-end waitressing job. "I’m out here going
broke," she laments. Not for long.
2. Daft Punk, Random Access Memories
Nothing about Daft Punk’s disco-dipped futuristic fantasia is
obvious, but then again, Daft Punk hasn’t just always gone outside the box
musically – they’ve evaded the box altogether. They’re on the outer edge again
with Random Access Memories, an already-ubiquitous game changer for the "One
More Time" duo. This is a dazzling bravura of ambitious head trips, from the
magic of "Contact" and "Instant Crush" to "Get Lucky" and its vintage feel-good
vibes.
1. Patty Griffin, American Kid
The profoundness of Patty Griffin goes back to her 1996
debut, but now – nearly 20 years later – this new pinnacle surely aligns her
with other singer-songwriter greats like Bruce Springsteen and Joni Mitchell.
That’s because her thematic LP American Kid, inspired by her father’s death,
is an American classic. It’s an elegy so viscerally and spiritually powerful –
marked by poignancy, razor-sharp storytelling and a voice as rich as they come
– that this enlightened work is Patty Griffin’s golden ticket to the pantheon
of music legends.