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Best Of Playlist record reviews

Best of 2025: Spaces

I started splitting playlists a few years ago, both to keep them from getting too unwieldy and to keep longer 15-20 minute tracks from discouraging people who were in it for more bite-sized material, without going full this-is-one-genre-and-this-is-another, which wasn’t much fun for me.

So much great material this year. The Spaces designation starts as mostly jazz, classical, and electronic, but I think of it as anything more sculptural, environmental, or exploratory. Obviously, there’s a lot of overlap – Antibalas, Damon Locks, William Tyler/Kieran Hebden’s Lyle Lovett cover, Moor Mother’s orchestral reworking of an earlier song, for example – would have definitely worked in the other list, but this was a by-feel process. These songs all felt right with the other songs on this playlist.

As usual, just used Tidal; my preferred transferring mechanism is Soundiiz, but there are several varieties. I hope there’s something you love here, and I hope you tell me what I missed:

https://tidal.com/playlist/0fcdcd21-2a4d-4bc0-b572-941e33f14238

  • Antibalas, “Oasis” – Kicking off with some of my favorite grooves of the year. Antibalas’s lean, bubbling instrumental offering Hourglass immediately jumped to some of my favorite of their work, as much as I’d loved the lead vocals previously.
  • James Brandon Lewis, “D.C. Got Pocket” – For his second record with Anti, James Brandon Lewis leaned into a muscular, sinewy trio with Chad Taylor on drums (who shows up on this list a few other times) and Josh Werner on bass (along with guest spots from Guilherme Monteiro on guitar and Stephane San Juan on percussion). This taut, funky track references the go-go sounds of Lewis’s hometown without being too obvious, and puts one of my favorite hooks of the year in the bell of his horn.
  • Peter Gordon and Love of Life Orchestra, “Macho Music Danceteria” – Another raging fanfare and unstoppable groove, from a different scene. This archival recordLOLO80, is a potent reminder of the revelatory nature of Gordon’s work. Rhys Chatham called Gordon the first artist to pair rock-and-roll gestures with classical technique, and it still bangs. This tune specifically mentioned the gay underground of early ’80s New York and the intersection of glamor and grime at its famous Danceteria.
  • Damon Locks, “Click” – Damon Locks’ first record under his own name in a minute is the kind of thoughtful, grimy collage music I don’t hear enough of anymore, done as well as I’ve ever heard it. This moody track is a highlight in a record full of highlights. “I stay tuned in, but the radio only plays a voice in the distance.”
  • Makaya McCraven featuring Theon Cross and Ben LaMar Gay, “Strikes Again” – Continuing the Chicago flavor as we visit drummer-composer-producer McCraven’s return to International Anthem and his beat-tape-inspired roots on a series of stellar EPs. This tune, from Techno Logic, features waves of brass from Gay’s cornet and Cross’s tuba in an infectious late-night groove.
  • William Basinski and Richard Chartier, “Aurora Terminalis (excerpt 1)” – I felt a commonality in the way sounds decay, vaporize into shifting atmospheres, in this gorgeous second collaboration between Basinski and Chartier with the McCraven above, along with a common affection for community, even in mourning.
  • Rob Mazurek, “Papaya Fruit” – Mazurek’s solo synth excursions on Nestor’s Nest intrigued and beguiled me throughout the year.
  • Sir Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra, “Four Walt Whitman Songs, No. 1: ‘Beat! Beat! Drums!'” – Of the many ways I am a simple man: about all you have to do is put Kurt Weill’s name on your record, and I’m giving it a concerted listen. But the collision of talent here, conductor Rattle with the LSO and baritone Ross Ramgobin taking lead vocals, made these definitive versions for me.
  • John Zorn and the Mary Halvorson Quartet, “Bagatelle #82” – There’s something that reminds me of Weill in Zorn’s classical/chamber writing I find intoxicating, and this set of his Bagatelles performed by the Mary Halvorson Quartet was a match made in heaven.
  • Julia Hülsmann Quartet, “Nevergreen” – German pianist Hülsmann leads a spellbinding quartet, with music that shares a similar spirituality and tightly woven quality, reminding me of Zorn and exemplifying the current era of ECM artists.
  • Marshall Allen, “Are You Ready” – Marshall Allen – while still shepherding the Sun Ra Arkestra – celebrated his 101st birthday with a gorgeous solo record, still killing it on alto with a marvelous band including baritone player Knoel Scott, trumpeter Michael Ray, and a killing string section.
  • Nels Cline, “House of Steam” – Cline’s Consentrik Quartet with tenor player Ingrid Laubrock sharing the frontline and the flexible rhythm section of Chris Lightcap and Tom Rainey, was the set I was sorriest to miss at Big Ears this year and if I’d had enough time to live with the debut record by this astonishing band beforehand, I might have made sure I was in line earlier. Magical.
  • Preservation Brass, “Climax Rag” – A gorgeous, swinging tribute to longtime percussionist Kerry “Fat Man” Hunter. For Fat Man is a perfect example of what makes Preservation Hall Jazz Band and its offshoots so crucial in the American music landscape, and this version of James Scott’s 1914 groundbreaking rag feels as alive as the first warm spring day.
  • Ethan Iverson, “Dance of the Infidels” – Speaking of crucial reminders that the canon can still feel live and immediate, Smalls both as a club and a label reiterate that again and again, not least on this remarkable document of Ethan Iverson leading a righteous trio with Albert “Tootie” Heath on drums and Ben Street on bass. This romp through a Bud Powell classic is a personal favorite but every track is a highlight.
  • Rodney Whitaker, “Sunday Special”Mosaic, the fourth record of bassist Rodney Whitaker exploring the compositions of Gregg Hill, delighted me front-to-back. The gorgeous horn line on this one, played by Terell Stafford and Tim Warfield, drew me in initially, and the pristine melody kept me coming back.
  • Renee Rosnes, “Estorias de Florista” – Rosnes digs deep into Brazilian music on Crossing Paths, as on this gorgeous version of Milton Nascimento’s classic, with her driving Fender surrounded by a crushing and delicate band including Chris Potter, Chico Pinheiro, and John Patitucci.
  • Billy Mohler featuring Jeff Parker, Damion Reid, and Devin Daniels, “No Age” – Bassist Billy Mohler was unknown to me, but the presence of Jeff Parker and Damion Reid got me to check out his terrific The Eternal. This excellent tune, rich with mood and tension, is a great vehicle for this quartet.
  • Vijay Iyer and Wadada Leo Smith, “Floating River Requiem (for Patrice Lumumba)” – The second meeting of these towering artists, Defiant Life, is another astonishing look at the intersection of their compositional and improvisational styles and a series of gorgeous landscapes. This mournful piece, dedicated to the first prime minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is one of a series of masterpieces they weave together throughout the record.
  • Nicole McCabe, “Inner Critic” – A newer voice to me, the California-based saxophonist and composer McCabe blew me away with her compositions and bandleading throughout A Song to Sing.
  • Adam O’Farrill, “Nocturno, 1932” – O’Farrill’s writing and playing just get stronger and clearer in a way that reminds me of Samuel Delaney, in his essential book about writing, making a plea “For clarity, not simplicity.” He shows up throughout this list, often with some of the players he assembled on his masterful For These Streets, like Mary Halvorson, Patricia Brennan, and Tomas Fujiwara, and I’m still finding gems on this gorgeous record, like this soulful noir stroll.
  • Sumac and Moor Mother, “Scene 5: Breathing Fire” – Expansive doom-metal band find a perfect partner/rallying cry with rapper/poet Moor Mother on The Film, full of righteous, slow-groove tracks like this one.
  • The Sure Fire Soul Ensemble, “The Grifter” – Giving a little break on the expansive visions of death and dread we’d dug into on the previous several tracks, but also carrying some of the thematic material, with a smoky cloud of instrumental soul from The Sure Fire Soul Ensemble.
  • DJ Python featuring Jawnino and Organ Tapes, “Dai Buki” – Queens-based DJ Python works in a similar mood-piece vein on this track, but also maintains a taut momentum throughout. Built for the chillout room or a transition between a couple of bangers.
  • JKriv and Pahua, “Paula’s Dance (Extended Mix)” – My biggest musical obsession this year as a whole was digging deeper into the Razor-N-Tape label (including funk and soul mentor Andrew Patton and I making a pilgrimage to the store in Brooklyn on my birthday trip) and this collaboration between co-founder JKriv and Argentinian producer Pahua is a prime example of what kept me coming back, a track I never get tired of.
  • Ringdown featuring New Body Electric, “Emotional Absentee” – Ringdown, the collaboration between Caroline Shaw and Danni Lee, could have fit on either list, working as a luminous pop song, but I still hear the classical rigor, the intricate clockwork throb of Shaw’s better-known work, and I always heard this remarkable song in this context.
  • David Murray Quartet, “Bird’s The Word” – Tenor legend David Murray’s (here also on bass clarinet) newer Quartet continues to astound and delight me. They live in and move through this composition; the subtle melodic comping of Luke Stewart’s bass, Marta Sanchez’s piano, and Russell Carter’s rock-solid but surprising drumming gives a gravity and lightness to the proceedings.
  • Raymond Pilon, “Long Story Short” – Parisian guitarist Pilon and a crack quintet gave us a gorgeous record, Open Roads, and this song, with its intertwining guitar and vibes (Alexis Valet) lines, hit my heart immediately.
  • Eric Alexander, “Angel Eyes” – Saxophonist Eric Alexander and his Quartet on Chicago to New York find every curve and shadow in this, one of my favorite standards.
  • Gerald Clayton, “Cinnamon Sugar” – Pianist Clayton assembled an all-star group for Ones & Twos – vibraphonist Joel Ross, flutist Elena Pinderhughes, trumpeter Marquis Hill, and drummer Kendrick Scott, with post-production work by Kassa Overall – and they all shine on some of his best, most distinctive compositions.
  • Ingrid Laubrock withFay Victor and Mariel Roberts, “Koan 58” – A favorite tenor player, Laubrock, assembled a series of trios for adaptations of Erica Hunt’s poetry, Purposing the Air, and the connections between Victor’s voice, Roberts’ cello, and Laubrock’s reeds struck me perfectly.
  • Angel Bat Dawid and Naima Nefertari, “Procession of the Equinox” – Any time there’s new work from polymath Angel Bat Dawid, it’s cause for celebration in my corner. Here she works with London-based musician and curator Nefertari on a spiritual, searching set of work.
  • Exceptet, “Tree Lines: IX. Baobab” – This excerpt from Katherine Balch’s ode to old-growth trees, exquisitely executed by NYC-based chamber ensemble Exceptet felt like it shared some DNA with the previous two tracks, exulting and finding spirituality in nature but without the sentimentality that often carries with it.
  • Esthesis Quartet featuring Bill Frisell, “Capricorn” – Esthesis came together with Bill Frisell to pay tribute to cornetist Ron Miles – the quartet’s mentor and Frisell’s longtime collaborator – with mostly new, original compositions. An act full of love, rigor, and powerful, joyful defiance.
  • William Tyler, “A Dream, A Flood” – Nashville guitarist Tyler made his strongest and most fully realized record yet. I’m still panning the rivers of this record and finding gold, like this haunting tear between the fabric of worlds.
  • Kara-lis Coverdale, “Equal Exchange” – Coverdale’s warm, beguiling solo piano and synth pieces vibrate the same parts of my soul as the Tyler and even the dancier track that follows this.
  • Nomi Ruiz and Eli Escobar, “Full Fantasy” – Two people who epitomize NYC dancefloor royalty come together and live up to every expectation in this perfect club track.
  • Mark Ernestus’ Ndagga Rhythm Force, “Khadim” – Hard Wax founder Ernestus digs into mbalax with this simultaneously stripped-down and lush record, as good for hitting the floor with your people as going inside yourself.
  • Brad Mehldau, “Better Be Quiet Now” – I found my appreciation for Brad Mehldau – huge for me as a teenager, drifted away for a couple of decades – renewed in recent years, starting with his stunning memoir and stoked by reunions with Joshua Redman and a stunning duo set with Christian McBride, both last year. So I was primed for Ride Into the Sun, a richly orchestrated journey through (mostly) the Elliott Smith catalogue that captures the romance with an unpitying eye.
  • Chris Cheek/Bill Frisell/Tony Scherr/Rudy Royston, “O Sacrum Convivium!” – This brilliant quartet led by saxophonist Cheek, Keepers of the Eastern Door, covers an astonishing range of rep with a deep, lived-in empathy, like this Messiaen piece.
  • Camila Meza featuring Gretchen Parlato and Becca Stevens, “Uncovered Ground” – Chilean guitarist/composer/singer Meza teamed up with two of my favorite jazz vocalists for this breathtaking original and standout from her record Portal.
  • The Budos Band, “Escape from Ptenoda City” – Turning the temperature back up with this kicking, groove-saturated avalanche of overlapping riffs from Budos’s terrific VII.
  • Quantic and Sly5thAve, “Twang” – Quantic made my favorite entry in the DJ-Kicks series in many years and, naturally, many of my highlight tracks are his own work. This collaboration sent me deep into the catalog of Austin saxophonist/composer/producer Sly5thAve.
  • Soul Clap, “Unifying Force” – This Boston duo released another astonishing record that reminds me of what I love about house, including its sense of possibility, especially this pulse-pounding earworm.
  • Teri Lyne Carrington and Christie Dashiell, “Triptych: Resolve/Resist/Reimagine” – A different flavor of possibility and groove comes in this highlight of drummer-composer Carrington and singer-composer Dashiell’s revivification of Max Roach and Abbey Lincoln’s landmark We Insist!
  • Brandee Younger, “Breaking Point” – Brandee Younger’s compositions and playing get stronger and stronger, as evidenced by this sparkling, racing, cascading highlight of Gadabout Season with a tight trio of Rahsaan Carter on bass and Allen Mednard on drums.
  • Ganavya, “Land” – I learned about Ganavya through her astonishing guest spot with Shabaka’s band at Big Ears last year, and so was primed for her magnificent Nilam, and it didn’t disappoint. A magical cry into the wonder.
  • Nathan Salsburg, “Part I” – The two beautiful pieces of Salsburg’s Ipsa Corpora are a new apotheosis of his long-form solo acoustic guitar playing and a powerful portrait, a reminder of the necessity of bearing witness.
  • Nicole Glover, “Resilience” – Saxophonist Nicole Glover’s creamy-and-spiked tone gets a brilliant showcase on Memories, Dreams, Reflections with the supple rhythm section of Tyrone Allen and Kayvon Gordon.
  • Amina Claudine Myers, “Hymn for John Lee Hooker” – This miniature from Myers’ home recorded solo piano and organ record Solace of the Mind is a potent reminder of art and people’s ability to ripple through time, building resonance.
  • Brian Charette, “Ceora” – One of the finest current organ players in the NYC jazz scene returned with a beautiful showcase for saxophone legend George Coleman including this sumptuous read on a Lee Morgan classic.
  • DJ Airwalk, “Flower Metal” – The floating chords this atmospheric dancefloor crusher starts with felt like they shared a language with the previous tracks and the two that follow.
  • Cerrone and Christine and the Queens, “Supernature MMXXV (Purple Disco Machine Remix)” – Cerrone’s revival in the last few years has given me endless joy and this collab with Christine and the Queens (who I discovered when they worked with Dam-Funk) and Purple Disco Machine on remixing duties is a classic given a subtle, sweet refurbish that honors it in every way.
  • DJ Haram, “Loneliness Epidemic” – DJ Haram’s Beside Myself is a furious, love-rich encomium to finding ways to live in the world and not succumb to despair. This and several other songs on her new one have given me so much solace in this year.
  • Nate Mercereau, Josh Johnson, and Carlos Niño, “Hawk Dreams” – The rhythm section of  Mercereau and Niño (who first blew me away with Surya Botofasina but went to the stratosphere with Andre 3000) pairing with one of modern music’s most fearless genre-crossing saxophonists Johnson seemed like a match made in heaven, and what’s hopefully the first of many records by this trio did not disappoint.
  • Alexa Tarantino, “Inside Looking Out” – A saxophonist who has not only a grasp but an incessant curiosity for the entire history of the horn that comes out in her playing a way that reminds me of James Carter more than anyone else, Tarantino’s writing and bandleading – like the thrilling way her solo blends seamlessly into Steven Feifke’s piano on this lead-off track to her excellent The Roar and the Whisper – catch up to her dynamic technique and point the way to even greater things.
  • Natural Information Society and Bitchin’ Bajas, “Nothing Does Not Show” – Two exploratory groups at the vanguard of the current Chicago scene, Josh Abrams’ Natural Information Society and CAVE offshoot Bitchin Bajas, came together for an astonishing record of warm, spiritual minimalism on Totality.
  • Behn Gillece, “Beyond the Veil” – Vibraphonist Behn Gillece assembled a remarkable ensemble, including Rudy Royston on drums and Willie Morris on reeds, for a set of his excellent compositions, like this slow-flowing piece that feels like watching clouds of fiberglass.
  • Saul Williams and Carlos Niño, “We are calling out in this moment” – Saul Williams has loomed large in my consciousness, my understanding of poetry and music, since a year-ish period when I found Slamdance, Slam (which I saw at the Drexel in the whole week it was in theaters), and his track on Crucialpoetics Vol. 1. This collaboration with Carlos Niño and other guests (on this track including Maia the Artiste and Kamasi Washington) is the closest thing I’ve heard to Williams’ exhilarating set at Big Ears a couple of years ago yet committed to wax, and I can’t wait to see this group live at this year’s festival.
  • Maya Beiser, “Salt Air, Salt Earth” – Cellist Maya Beiser made a breathtaking record themed around salt. Every piece is excellent, but this Clarice Jensen composition lit up every cell in my body.
  • Linda May Han Oh, Ambrose Akinmusire, Tyshawn Sorey, “Folk Song” – Linda May Han Oh’s arco bass that kicks off this singing, sweeping standout from her Strange Heavens felt like it had some commonality with the Beiser, and the restrained, deep-drilling tonal palette Akinmusire’s trumpet and Sorey’s drums find every nuance reminds what an astonishing unit this is.
  • Chicago Underground Duo, “Hyperglyph” – This collaboration between cornetist Rob Mazurek and drummer Chad Taylor was one of my gateway drugs into exploratory instrumental music – I saw them at a Firexit downtown on the same bill with German techno duo Mouse on Mars – and they’re still astonishing me.
  • Oren Ambarchi, Johan Berthling, and Andreas Werliin, “Chahar” – There’s a very cool angular free-funk quality I wasn’t expecting from this trio led by avant-doom-noise guitarist Oren Ambarchi with bassist Johan Berthling and drummer Andreas Werliin (who I knew from Mats Gustafsson’s Fire! Orchestra).
  • Dave Douglas, “Future Community Furniture” – Another of my very early gateways into the avant-garde (I feel like I bought Douglas’s tribute to Mary Lou Williams and Charms of the Night Sky in the same year I first heard Zorn’s Masada) still searching and still putting out everything at the highest quality as on this intriguing band with the brass section filled out by Alexandra Ridout and David Adewumi (making stunning use of those harmonies and dissonances) and a rhythm section of Kate Pass, Rudy Royston, and Patricia Brennan.
  • Fieldwork, “Fantome” – A reunion of Tyshawn Sorey, Steve Lehman, and Vijay Iyer, that shows they haven’t missed a step, that shared language still has ineffable qualities that come out more strongly in this configuration than when the three of them work with one another in other contexts.
  • Matthew Shipp, “Cosmic Junk Jazz DNA” – Every Shipp record is an event, even as he’s one of the most prolifically recorded pianists in any genre. While I’ve been a big fan since the David S. Ware quartet he was in, he’s developed a solo-piano language like few people of his generation. This vocabulary begs to be pored over like Cecil Taylor’s as it evolves subtly and explosively. The Cosmic Piano is his most potent statement in the genre yet.
  • Kris Davis Trio, “Lost in Geneva” – Still reeling from last year’s remarkable debut album, this ferocious rhythm section of Robert Hurst and Johnathan Blake pairs beautifully with probably my single favorite pianist of my age cohort, Davis, and this between-albums single keeps me extremely excited for more music from these three.
  • Dayna Stephens, “Brake’s Sake” – Saxophonist Stephens moved to bass for a surprising and delightful run through Monk tunes, featuring his long-running collaborators Ethan Iverson, Stephen Riley, and Eric McPherson.
  • The Necks, “Warm Running Sunlight” – The Australian trio who redefined the piano trio continue to dig deep into their shared language, as on this flowing pastoral (and the rest of their beautiful record Disquiet).
  • Otherlands Trio, “Imago” – This trio, led by bassist Stephan Crump, aligns him with two other musicians who never abandon their shared melodic groove sensibilities, even at their most avant-garde: tenor player Darius Jones and drummer Eric McPherson, and the results are a rain of gorgeous multi-colored sparks.
  • Tomas Fujiwara, “Recollection of a Dance” – Fujiwara, long one of my favorite drummers, assembled a percussion quartet – including Patricia Brennan, who’s very probably this year’s playlist MVP, alongside Tim Keiper and Kaoru Watanabe – for a gorgeous, searching set of songs on Dream Up, including this one.
  • Chris Thile, “Partita No. 2 in D Minor, BWV 1004: IV. Giga” – I like Thile’s first record of Bach but not quite as much as his excursions into the classical canon on other people’s records – like Edgar Meyer or Bela Fleck – or on his Live From Here radio show, where it felt like the pressure wasn’t as strong. This return to that repertoire burned away all those reservations; it feels like he’s relaxing into the material and singing it through the mandolin, without sacrificing any rigor or concentration.
  • Sam Amidon, “Tavern”Salt River is the most fun I’ve had with a Sam Amidon record in years, and this bouncing duet with saxophonist/producer Sam Gendel epitomizes why.
  • Estratos and Michael Mayo, “VESPER” – Brooklyn jazz/R&B band Estratos beguiled me with their eponymous album, especially this song, with Mayo’s deadpan vocal riding a hypnotic, bouncing groove.
  • Pat Thomas, “For McCoy Tyner” – London’s [Ahmed] astonished me this year at Big Ears – though it’s still a set I’m torn about, ask me in person – and that sent me down the rabbit hole of its component players, especially pianist Pat Thomas (not the Highlife singer, a mistake it turns out I’d been making for years). The subtlety and closeness of this Tyner tribute hints at the blast furnace intensity of [Ahmed] and feels a million miles away at the same time.
  • Patricia Brennan, “Aquarius” – Vibraphonist Brennan amazes me more with every single record and Of the Near and Far is a masterwork. The slow build on this, the melodic cells from her band including Miles Okazaki, Sylvie Courvoisier, and John Hollenbeck, and the surging power it rises to… just stunning.
  • Kieran Hebden and William Tyler, “If I Had a Boat” – Tyler’s solo record also made my list. Still, this collaboration with Kieran Hebden (Four Tet) who was massively influential to me in my 20s felt very much its own thing. This extended, pastoral take on one of my favorite Lyle Lovett songs was the rare “This feels like it was made for me” piece of art that exceeded those expectations.
  • Lonnie Holley, “The Burden (I Turned Nothing Into Something)” – Another artist whose wide ranging taste in collaboration finds a way to honor what’s unique about each of the artists he works with while still feeling entirely his, Holly teamed with percussionist/synth player Jacknife Lee and multi-instrumentalist Angel Bat Dawid (mentioned earlier on this list) on this gorgeous track from his remarkable Tonky. I’m still not sure if the “prayers” part of the playlist starts with this or the track before, but we’re definitely in it by now.
  • Moor Mother with Wooden Elephant and the Beethoven Orchestra Bonn, “LA92” – Moor Mother’s orchestral reworking of her Analog Fludis of Sonic Black Holes record was a brilliant chance to revisit one of the first records of hers I fell for, and a remarkable statement in its own right.
  • Gabriel Kahane, “Heirloom: I. Guitars in the Attic” – Kahane’s astonishing piano concerto, played by his father Jeffrey Kahane (also signed to Nonesuch in the ’80s) and The Knights, is my favorite of his classical works on record yet, leaning into the form and conjuring a lot of inchoate thoughts I’d been working through about memory and inheritance.
  • Mary Halvorson, “About Ghosts” – Mary Halvorson’s Amyrillis band – I’m on record as calling it her most powerful and flexible unit, perfect for translating her writing – made their best record yet, About Ghosts, including adding to certain songs (like this one) two additional tenor saxophones, Immanuel Wilkins and Brian Settles, upping the harmonies and fire in the front.
  • Charles Lloyd, “Ancient Rain” – At 87 years old, Charles Lloyd continues to play with a clarity and fire refined over an entire life in music and as a person. His bluesy Figure in Blue would be the envy of anyone, with astonishing interplay between Lloyd, Jason Moran, and guitarist Marvin Sewell. As good as the rest of the record is, I couldn’t get this unaccompanied tarogato coda out of my head and that’s where we leave this year’s wrap up – an 87 year old legend, playing one of the most beautiful melodies of the year, on an instrument that’s not even his main axe, bare in a single beam of light.
Categories
Best Of visual art

Best of 2025: Visual Art

Incredibly strong slate of Visual Art exhibits this year, 70 shows across six cities. Less New York presence because I only made one trip this year and because it was celebrating my birthday less time to traipse through galleries, but what we saw there was choice. Getting to show my Mom an hour of Christian Marclay’s The Clock – not on this list because it was on it when I first saw the piece, but maybe my favorite single artwork of the last 20 years – was worth so much.

Everything on this list is in Columbus, unless otherwise stated. All photographs are by me; all art is owned by the respective artists. The list is in chronological order.

20 Favorite Visual Art Shows of 2025

  • Harminder Judge, Bootstrap Paradox (MOCA, Cleveland) – Fascinating spiritual abstraction dealing with death through changing colors. I was unaware of the London-based artist before walking into MOCA and walked away breathless.
  • Various Artists, Pangrok Sulap (Red Gallery, Knoxville) – Big Ears Festival has stepped its visual art game up significantly over the last few years and this year I was especially struck by the work of this indigenous collective out of Malaysian Borneo (Dusun and Murut clans) where Pangrok means “punk rock.” Large scale, protest art that vibrated with the music bounding through the streets.
  • Taryn Simon, Taryn Simon (Gagosian, NYC) – Another fascinating collection of protest/commentary art including a riff on the kleroterion, an Athens election mechanism, and unsettling, beautiful photographs commenting on the current political moment without smashing us over the head.
Amy Sherald, Whitney Museum (my Mom in the foreground)
  • Amy Sherald, American Sublime (Whitney Museum, NYC) – I knew Sherald’s portraits, but the Whitney’s exquisite, sharp presentation reiterated the cumulative power of seeing the massive scale of these pieces, often putting marginalized communities at a mythic/American mural scale, bringing them into a perspective that was a necessary corrective, and the number of canvases talking with one another. Also a show that benefitted greatly from the free hours – even though I have a membership to the Whitney, I loved seeing these with a wider range of people.
  • Jack Whitten, The Messenger (MoMA, NYC) – I’ve been a rabid fan of Jack Whitten since the Wexner Center show a few years ago and this fuller retrospective deepened his hold on me and my appreciation for his work, as well as letting me turn my Mom and my friends Daria and Marie onto his work.
Jack Whitten at MoMA
  • Elsa Muñoz, Botánica Apokaliptica (Pecha Projects) – The side room of the new Brandt Gallery – which has been killing it in general this year – provides a space for more angular, challenging work. This, my first exposure to Muñoz, was a rich, poetic, haunting collection of pieces that really spoke with one another.
  • Carol Tyler, Write it Down, Draw it Out: The Comics Art of Carol Tyler (Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum) – Not just one of the best exhibits I’ve seen in the Billy Ireland (which consistently impresses me), one of the best curated (by her daughter Julia Green with additional exhibition labels by John Kelly) exhibits and one of the most successful examples I’ve seen of using the gallery space itself and integrating ephemera to tell a story ever, in any medium. Still thinking about this astonishing exhibit.
Carol Tyler at Billy Ireland
  • Richard Lillash, Interior Spaces Beyond the Surface (Brandt Gallery) – I knew Richard Lillash mostly as a musician from his role in Don Howland’s blown-out-blues duo The Bassholes, though I knew I he was a visual artist. This witty exhibit that played with thoughts of Chagall and de Chirico and direct references to other art was revelatory.
  • Maren Hassinger and Senga Nengudi, Las Vegas Ikebana (Columbus Museum of Art at the Pizzuti) – An astonishing tribute to long-term collaboration and community, seeing the way these two artists developed independently and came together, even on different coasts. Also, a beautiful reminder that the Pizzuti is back.
  • Tiffani Smith, GreaseNTheRoot (Streetlight Guild) – Streetlight Guild killed it this year; every time I walked through the door, I was richly rewarded. In particular, the gallery exhibits bore the fruit of tending community, curation as an act of love, and a reminder that love means holding people and work to higher standards. Tiffani Smith’s collages and sculptures pulled together threads of Black history, personal ancestry, and a keen eye to the ways those forces shape the present and future in a way I’d never seen before.
Tiffani Smith at Streetlight Guild
  • Tiffany Lawson, What If I Told You It Was Freedom (Streetlight Guild) – I was already a fan of Tiffany Lawson’s work, but this astonishing exhibit expanded, sharpened, deepened everything I love about the way she brings specific narratives to vibrant, surprising life. Hearing Mark Lomax (in the solo recital that made my live music year’s best) give introductory remarks about the difficulty of “making dope shit… Genius, we all know geniuses, but this…[gestures around] this is dope.” Not only do I agree with that sentiment wholeheartedly, but months later, that memory is a reminder of what a special situation Scott Woods has created with Streetlight Guild – where one of our town’s preeminent artists of decades can say it about one of our rising stars, and it just happens on the regular. Years and years of diligent community building and care were required to make this “just happen” and that should get called out a little more often.
  • Susan Watkins, Susan Watkins and Women of the Progressive Era (Dixon Gallery and Gardens, Memphis) – Beautifully curated exhibit of an artist who’s less well known than she should be with her archive tied to a single museum. This acted as a corrective and also helped put her work in context.
Tiffany Lawson at Streetlight Guild
  • Katie Davis and Jennifer Nicole Murray, Saturated Solace (Sarah Gormley Gallery) – This year Sarah Gormley struck me with the thoughtful way exhibits are put together, the careful, incisive ways the artists dialogue. My favorite example – and there were several exhibits that were in heavy contention – paired Katie Davis, whose layered, mood-thick abstractions I’ve loved for a long time, with someone new to me, Jennifer Nicole Murray whose collages and unsettling realistic paintings merged a sharp point of view on the world at large (snatches of memes and TikTok catchphrases colliding) with inner lives in various stages of turmoil.
  • Harry Underwood, Mostly True Stories (Lindsay Gallery) – Lindsay Gallery also settled into its downtown location and never let up, everything I saw there was a winner. This combination of bucolic, idealized “golden age” scenes and text undercutting any sort of gauzy nostalgia burned into my brain and is still teasing me as I write this.
Jennifer Nicole Murray at Sarah Gormley
  • LaShae Boyd, A Letter to the Liberated Child (Brandt Gallery) – This show hit as hard as a sledgehammer but wielded by a dancer. The amount of intricate painterly craft and technique combined with the deep trauma inherent in the stories being told was an astonishing combination.
  • Veronica Ryan, Unruly Objects (Wexner Center for the Arts) – The play between containers and space in this largest exhibit I’d yet seen by this British sculptor beguiled me, unsettling and poetic and meditative. I came back to this show at least hair a dozen times and it kept revealing secrets.
LaShae Boyd at Brandt Gallery
  • Nanette Carter, Afro Sentinels (Wexner Center for the Arts) – The new sculptures here in its eponymous series were astonishing but what I loved most were the juxtapositions, the interplay and the way pieces spoke to one another.
  • Florian Meisenberg, Florian Meisenberg (No Place Gallery) – No Place killed it in general this year but this impossible to categorize show of recent work by this Berlin-based painter took the cake for me.
Nanette Carter at Wexner Center
  • Laura Sanders, Survivor Skills (Beeler Gallery at CCAD) – This exhibit of Sanders’s hyper-realistic paintings evoked powerful narratives of resilience and strategies.
  • Sarah Fairchild, The Gilded Wild (Beeler Gallery at CCAD) – Fairchild’s play with textures and materials had their best yet showcase in the large room of this Beeler show.
Sarah Fairchild at Beeler Gallery

Categories
Best Of dance theatre

Best of 2025: Theater/Opera/Dance

This was a closer-to-home year for me in terms of “performance art.” My only New York trip was for my birthday, so more about friends, and I didn’t get to any theater (have no fear, I’ve already got APAP booked and three or four theater/Opera/dance pieces around Winter Jazz Fest and Globalfest).

That local focus really shone a light on how strong the artistic quality of the theatrical scene is right now: the batting average of the 50 shows I saw this year was extraordinary. Beyond the version of Nine that exceeded all my expectations, Short North Stage delivered several other productions that served as a reminder that they’re the best they are at what they do. Abbey Theatre of Dublin swung for the fences and – even when the final product didn’t quite make my final 15, gave me an experience I’d never seen before in a theater (The Witch of November) or delivered all the beauty of some of my favorite musicals with an intimacy and community spirit (Fun Home with Evolution, Hadestown with their Young Adults program). The Contemporary did a version of my favorite play of the last five years that lived up to my memories of seeing it at the Public in every way.

Smaller companies took chances that paid off big, with Tipping Point ripping my heart out of my chest, Endeavor introducing me to one of the freshest playwriting voices in years, Imagine giving us Rent with Mark and Roger played by femme-presenting actors and a fresh, DIY take on material I know in my sleep (along with a Cry-Baby that punched way above its weight class and came within a hair of making this), pointing to a bright future with Brandon Boring taking the reins as Artistic Director. Opera Columbus shows up here twice, and the two that didn’t make the list easily could have. Tyrell Reggins’ Trinity Theatre Company launched an ambitious project to do every August Wilson play of the cycle and set the bar high.

And the biggest story is the return to full artistic power of the Wexner Center. Leveraging relationships with the Department of Dance, Denison University, and national and international artists, they presented the strongest slate since before the pandemic. All praise to Elena Perantoni. All praise to Kathleen Felder. I can’t wait to see what this team does, augmented by Nathalie Bonjour, who joined during the year.

Everything below is in Columbus unless otherwise stated, all photos are provided by respective companies as stated. If I reviewed it, I quote and link to the original review. If a review isn’t linked, it had a limited run or I was out of town and I wrote a preview or I saw it on my own dime. Listed in chronological order.

Nine, photo by Fyrebird Media, provided by Short North Stage
  • Nine by Maury Yeston and Jeff Marx, after Federico Fellini, directed by Edward Carignan (Short North Stage) – In my review for Columbus Underground, I wrote, “Carignan does a masterful job of balancing what’s kinetic – keeping the entire cast moving, swirling around both Guido and each other to underscore the sense of chaos and fragmentation in the character’s mind, reinforcing that we’re always in his mind – and pausing to both let the audience breathe as well as stop on these arresting images that pay homage to one of the 20th century’s great image-makers. Another touch that reinforced that push-and-pull, which I appreciated very much, was Vera Cremeans’ take on Guido’s mother, his biggest influence, bringing a stillness that we don’t see much of throughout the rest of the show, the deliberateness she brings to the role and the gravitas, as the only person who does – probably who could – tell Guido to “Shape up,” helps emphasize the loneliness as he’s turned away from that center of gravity, as well as leading the company in a searing, blew-my-hair-back rendition of the title song.”
  • Archiving Black Performance: Roots and Futures by Holly Bass, Marjani Forté-Saunders, Jennifer Harge, Ursula Payne, Crystal Michelle Perkins, and Vershawn Sanders-Ward (Dance Notation Bureau/Archiving Black Performance, Wexner Center for the Arts) – This mixture of archives, keeping performance alive, and expanding on languages, is right up my alley and my jaw was in my lap for the entire hour of this.
  • Fat Ham by James Ijames, directed by David Glover (Contemporary Theatre of Ohio, Riffe Center) – I didn’t think anything could live up to how The Public Theatre struck me, but my god, this destroyed me. In my Columbus Underground review, I wrote: “Patricia Wallace-Winbush reminds us all that she’s at the very top tier of comic actors; her physicality and timing astonished me over and over. Glover’s production set up an interesting doubling of the outsider-insider observer-and-participant relationship across generations with Reese Anthony’s firecracker of a performance as Tio, resonating in ways I hadn’t noticed when I saw Fat Ham Off-Broadway. Anita Davis’s Tedra also spoke to me in ways the other performance didn’t, giving me a sense of understanding of the character without letting her off the hook for any of the horrible decisions or their repercussions while also still hilarious; I’ve never seen the first half of that equation pulled off as well in any Gertrude from any production of Hamlet, adding the razor-sharp comedic sensibility shoved me back in my chair.”
Fat Ham. Photo by Alexa Baker, provided by Contemporary Theatre of Ohio
  • Gem of the Ocean by August Wilson, directed by Tyrell Reggins (Trinity Theatre Company, Columbus Performing Arts Center) – The first August Wilson I ever got to see in a theater (the Goodman in Chicago) had a high personal bar set for me and Tyrell Reggins – who I was already a fan of as an actor but didn’t know his directing – sailed so far above that bar I left with my jaw hanging down, unable to talk to anyone as I walked back across downtown. Led by Wilma Hatton as one of my definitive Aunt Esters (again, a high bar, I saw Fences on Broadway), everyone in this left me stunned.
  • Dentro. Una storia vera, se volete by Giuliana Musso (translated by Juliet Guzzetta) (Wexner Center for the Arts) – Often documentary theater or journalistic theater I find vital but a little dramatically unsatisfying. Musso’s work here, dealing with child abuse, was exactly the opposite. A riveting, gut-wrenching, searing evening that still has me thinking about it.
  • Bothered and Bewildered by Gail Young, directed by Nancy Shelton Williams (Tipping Point, Columbus Performing Ars Center) – A director whose work I knew on a playwright I didn’t and one of my “Good lord, have you seen this?” shouting at everyone I could find moments of the year. As I said in my Columbus Underground review: “The magic of Bothered and Bewildered lies in its fascinating, yet impossible-to-look-away-from quality; it captures the frustrations and banality of the extremely realistic anger and frustration that no one can fight against. The grinding pain of knowing what the characters are going through will not improve for any of them. Williams and her cast make the immaculate craft going into this invisible; it feels as much like staring into fragments of someone’s life as anything I’ve ever seen on a stage, while simultaneously dragging me to the edge of my seat and slapping me across the face.”
Bothered and Bewildered. Provided by Tipping Point.
  • Rock Egg Spoon by Noah Diaz, directed by David Glover (Available Light, Riffe Center) – A wild burlesquing of history and the present, how good intentions go wrong and bad intentions go worse. The least describable anything I saw all year and maybe my single favorite piece on this list. In my Columbus Underground review, I said “The first act…gets at the heart of the human desire to be remembered, to have one’s story told, as a river flowing from the source of desperation not to be lonely. The hunger for connection and the desire to not show how much you want it, because rugged self-reliance is at the heart of the same myth, reverberates through both acts, as language (including “revolutionary,” “uncharted territory,” and the oft-attributed-to-Jefferson “Something better a few steps ahead”) shows up in different character’s mouths across various situations, showing how these concepts change and don’t change.”
  • Amadeus by Peter Shaffer, directed by Matt Hermiz (Gallery Players) – A huge-cast, music-heavy play I’ve known since I was a preteen and Hermiz and cast made me see it with fresh eyes and stand waiting for the bus home grinning, giddy to write notes and capture as much of what I just saw as I possibly could. In my Columbus Underground review, I said “Lusher’s Salieri is a masterpiece of nuance, a finely calibrated performance that makes every shade of the gray the character wallows in rich and vibrant and the character’s slide deeper and deeper into unhappiness feel inexorable, not despite his self-awareness but fueled by it, so enraged by the lack of causality between living up to some standards and talent and reward, so embittered by the lack of direct communication from the almighty that he reshapes his concept of God into his own misery. That unhappiness, that bitterness at life not catering to him is what he worships by the end of the play – something I’d never gotten before from a production of Amadeus: Hermiz and Lusher revealed this to me as not a play about loss of faith but putting that expectation at the center of your belief system.”
  • Being Black Outside by Vinecia Coleman, directed by Sermontee Brown and Sha-Lemar Davis (Endeavor, Club Diversity) – Endeavor put themselves on my personal map with this, my favorite new playwrighting voice in years (maybe since Available Light introducing me to Noah Diaz two years ago, maybe since an Under the Radar four years ago), brilliantly directed by Brown and Davis and beautifully acted by Robinson and Smith. I wrote in Columbus Underground, “I was laughing out loud, huge laughs that got me on the side of these two characters within five minutes of Being Black Outside starting. The voice is so startling and rich, establishing these vibrant characters without wasting words. Coleman’s writing and Brown and Davis’ direction align beautifully in a tone that has no quarter for despair, yet simultaneously doesn’t sugarcoat the terrible nature of many of these events. It’s as effective a piece of art at putting me in a world that’s hostile to the Black people inhabiting it.”
Being Black Outside, provided by Endeavor Theatre
  • Gutenberg! by Scott Brown and Anthony King, directed by Niko Carter (Abbey Theatre of Dublin) – The best insider-baseball theatre comedy I’ve seen in a long while, with the genuine affection and respect between the two cast members Jonathan Collura and Joe Bishara shining. For Columbus Underground, I wrote: “The other conceit that’s very hard to pull off and this Gutenberg! does extremely well is actors who know more than their characters. The deep commitment behind every malapropism, every half-understood-at-best trope of theater or movement at history, rings a bell. The bell might ring harder for those of us versed in the subjects but I think Bishara and Collura communicate a strong enough sense of “the confident idiot” that even if an audience member doesn’t know the exact reference, they’ve worked with someone of that stripe to know it’s wrong.”
  • Rappaccini’s Daughter by Daniel Catán after Nathaniel Hawthorne, directed by Brandon Shaw McKnight (Opera Columbus, Southern Theatre) – This Mexican composer’s take on a Hawthorne story I’ve loved since High School made my entire body vibrate. I said in Columbus Underground: “The fascinating arrangement choices, music directed by Salazar and played by Feza Zweifel (timpani), Carmeron Leach and Chris Lizak (all other percussion), Sara McGill (harp), and Diana Frazer and Que Jones (pianos) create a tense, throbbing landscape where subtle shifts sometimes feel like jump scares and sometimes lull us into a state of hypnotic attention until we come to, realizing we’re in a completely other place. The loveliness of the harp – and sometimes a piano or marimba – is less of a reprieve from the delicious creepiness and more a reminder of the Leonard Cohen line “Even damnation is poisoned with rainbows”…McKnight’s staging also fits into that tapestry of dread like a tight puzzle piece, not drawing attention to itself but putting the characters all just this side of uncomfortably close to one another, or when they’re not directly interacting, far away from anyone else, accenting their loneliness or their monomania or the feeling of drowning like Brueghel’s Icarus”
Rappaccini’s Daughter. Photo by Terry Gilliam, provided by Opera Columbus
  • Clowntime is Over by Joseph R. Green, directed by Michelle Batt (MadLab) – This revival of my personal favorite piece I’ve ever seen at MadLab, retaining Andy Batt’s astonishing existential clown in purgatory but switching the rest of the production up bringing in MadLab vet Michelle Batt as a director and a young supporting cast reminded me how much I loved it and revealed new textures I missed before. A rare utterly vital, necessary revival.
  • The Old Man and the Sea by Paola Prestini, Royce Vavrek, and Karmina Šilec, after Ernest Hemingway, directed by Karmina Šilec and Mila Henry (Beth Morrison Productions/Opera Columbus/Wexner Center for the Arts) – On my periodic trips to New York, no producer has a better batting average for my taste than Beth Morrison Productions and the combination of them, the Wex, Opera Columbus, and Paola Prestini set a lot of high expectations… and met every single one of them. I’m about as far as you can get from being a Hemingway fan but I was utterly enraptured and blown away by every minute of this. For Columbus Underground, I wrote: “The music here adroitly evokes, elevates, and amplifies the senses of frustration and transcendence. Jeffrey Zeigler’s cello and Ian Rosenbaum’s percussion establish landscapes but also joust with the vocal writing: bursts of marimba and sweeping arco lines buoy and skip across throbbing choral passages and set up Conteras’ growling hope and Brueggergosman-Lee’s ecstatic blue flame on “What a Fish;” scrabbling, tight percussive cello phrases and the soaring chorus entwine with Girón’s silken cry on “Come;” the marimba bounces across cello that conjures shadows at sunset as the chorus sings lines as clear as ice being dropped in a glass setting up a wry battle/seduction between on Brueggergosman-Lee and Contreras on “Daiquiri,” Those touches enliven the piece, enriching the emotion without distracting…The physical action also packs the field of vision with these allusions and witty references. During the previously mentioned Daiquiri, Contreras takes his blazer off and puts it back over his shoulders repeatedly, winking at the repetition and sameness of a drinking problem, but also shaking the jacket in the direction of La Mar and the glass, nodding to the drink as adversary and honored collaborator through Hemingway’s longtime preoccupation with bullfighting. The use of treadmills also underscores that repetition and monotony (alongside some rich drones from the cello and chorus) and the effort needed to maintain. Women throw plastic into the pools that represent the ocean. A chest freezer – any fisherman knows – stands in for a bar and also a coffin. The boats and rafts are brought down to earth as cheap pool flotation devices. All of these touches led to a grin that didn’t leave my face until I slept.”
The Old Man and the Sea. Photo by Terry Gilliam, provided by Opera Columbus
  • Mareas/Tides by Marion Ramirez and Ojeya Cruz Banks (Wexner Center for the Arts) – The best fusion of various dance styles and live jazz I’ve ever seen in my life, bar none. Unafraid of the prettiness of traditional ballet or the appeal of digging into a groove but also willing to go to the most abstract, mythic spaces.
  • Rent by Jonathan Larson, directed by Alan Tyson (Imagine Productions, Columbus Performing Arts Center) – Alan Tyson – beyond this he also directed a chroeopoem that was my favorite part of this year’s Columbus Black Theatre Festival – provided a stripped down Rent with two femme-presenting actors as Mark and Roger that pinned me to my seat and reminded me what I loved about that play originally, and all the people in my friend group who loved it I’ve lost since. For Columbus Underground, I wrote “That feeling – enhanced by terrific, low-key choices in choreography by Nicholas Wilson and intimacy choreography by Krista Lively Stauffer – gives the proceedings a vital, DIY edge, stripping away just enough slickness to lay bare the beating heart of these songs and relationships. In addition, Tyson’s production hits all of the beats a longtime fan would expect (without sacrificing a handshake to any newcomers), but also throws some fascinating curves and angles that sent me out into the night thinking about this production of a play I’ve probably seen a dozen times over the years.”
Rent. Photo by Payton Andisman, provided by Imagine Productions
Categories
Best Of Playlist record reviews Uncategorized

Best of 2025 – Songs

There was an enormous amount of music I loved this year. As usual, I divided this into songs – usually have lyrics, generally concise – and spaces – usually instrumental or minimal lyrics, usually expansive – and I think both lists are bulging with some of my favorite songs of all time. I hope you find something to love here, and I hope you let me know what I missed.

https://tidal.com/playlist/0f306b98-4b51-4098-a7f1-6a0d6b8ad492

  • Little Simz featuring Obongjayar, and Moonchild Sanelly, “Flood” – I liked the earlier Little Simz records but her fifth album Lotus plunged its hooks in me from the moment I heard this first single and never really relented. “They want you to stop, then they leave you to rot, but that’s just not my frequency, man.”
  • Halley Whitters, “Corn Queen” – The single best modern example of the heavy internal rhyme and alteration country song in the style of Roger Miller, Lefty Frizzell, and Tom T. Hall, a highlight of a record brimming with highlights, and my single favorite song of the year. “No kids of his own, just a two-year-old who thinks he’s everything. Gonna change her name, gonna help her raise a future former Corn Queen.”
  • Southern Avenue, “Rum Boogie” – Southern Avenue made a record as good as their breathtaking live show, that stands alongside their vintage rock and soul idols, and came through tragedy to do it. This song evokes a Saturday night in the Memphis I’ve come to know in the last decade-plus better than any I can think of, including a shout out to my (and Anne’s) beloved Buccaneer (RIP). “Down at the Bucc’ played a Midtown ruck, it was a magical little scene: hipsters tripping, eclectic women, and everybody in between.”
  • Esther Rose, “Rescue You” – Esther Rose continued to be the finest songwriter at ripping my heart out of my chest in the subtlest, lowest-key way with her devastating Want. This song in particular, with its repetition of “I know you’re scared” and “I would be too” (I think dropping an “I love you too” substitution on the latter a couple of times), is an ice sledgehammer to the solar plexus.
  • S. G Goodman, “Solitaire” – Another gorgeous tracking shot through the desolation of the soul and what keeps us going in the face of seemingly assured failure. “I know you cry about your brother for the times that he goes mad. But you look at me the same way, I’d throw my money down on that.”
  • James McMurtry, “Pinocchio in Vegas” – A brilliant, perfect blending of wry observation (placing the children’s book character in the adult mire of artifical lights, probate, and the grind) and bone-deep understanding of loss (the wrenching choruses with their point of view shift) that no one does as well as McMurtry. “Pinocchio’s in Vegas with his eyes on the prize. He’s a real boy now, his dick grows when he lies, but his face stays frozen like it’s still made of wood; it betrays no expression as he cleans them out good at that back room table, most every Friday night. He don’t even need the money, he’s just in it out of spite.”
  • Lilly Hiatt, “Kwik-E-Mart” – The swinging, laid back groove of this standout track from Forever, Lilly Hiatt’s most assured, rocking record since Trinity Lane, is the velvet glove delivering a sly, winking seduction/self-assessment: “Sweet, sweet perfume; everybody else disappears when you’re in the room.”
  • Sunny War featuring Valerie June, “Cry Baby” – Sunny War’s Armageddon in a Summer Dress is a slower burn than her astonishing Anarchist Gospel but the variety of textures and the foregrounding of some of her finest vocals make songs like this one (a duet with one of the greatest singers working, Valerie June) sumptuous slow-motion explosions. “You saw hell today. Ain’t life funny that way? Some grass isn’t green; some pain goes unseen.”
  • Willow Avalon, “Something We Regret”Southern Belle Raisin’ Hell is one of the most assured debuts I’ve heard in years and this brushed-drums rollicking shuffle knocked me over immediately. “I love you like sugar; you love me like sex. Put us both together, we’ll do something we regret.”
  • Golomb, “Play Music” – Golomb impress me more and more with each outing, and I’m heartened to see more of the world catching on as evidenced by a recent run with Mdou Moctar and a string of packed European dates. This ars poetica beautifully synthesizes their influences and points at the individual voice they’ve forged from them. “I want to play music that jumps my head to the side. I want to play music in an irresponsible manner. I want to play music with an undeniable question…with no answer.”
  • Cymande, “Chasing an Empty Dream” – The first Cymande record in a decade (and 40 years after their run of unassailable funk masterpieces) found them still rocking at the height of their powers. One of the great grooves of this or any year. “Is it real, what they feel? What’s the deal when they’re chasing an empty dream?”
  • clipping., “Run It” – I liked the way this frayed, future-rotted, glitchy groove sat between the two more conventional dancefloor monsters on either side and Daveed Diggs’ furious vocal drags the listener through that pulsing landscape by the throat. “Didn’t mean to wake up in the same clothes you’ve been rocking for a motherfucking week.”
  • Seun Kuti and Egypt 80 featuring Sampha the Great, “Emi Aluta (Zamrock Remix)” – Sampha the Great’s throbbing remix starts in media res with a vintage Egypt 80 horn burst and adds some simmering contemporary flavor to Seun Kuti’s excellent work carrying on Fela’s message. The sparseness of the vocal call and response before we return to those horns always stuns me.
  • Songhoy Blues featuring Rokia Koné, “Norou” – We take the energy down to a more healing, internal place with this gorgeous flowing track from Malian band Songhoy Blues with a remarkable feature from Rokia Koné.
  • Patterson Hood, “The Pool House” – I caught some similarity in the sound worlds between Songhoy’s guitar and vocal harmonies and the haunting orchestrations and sumptuous vocal from this personal favorite from Patterson Hood’s best-yet solo effort. “The story that broke him had a gleam in its eyes. Sometimes there’s no coming back from your fears realized.”
  • Bonnie “Prince” Billy, “Is My Living in Vain?” – I kept going back to both Hood’s Exploding Trees and Airplane Screams and Oldham’s The Purple Bird because they’re both excellent records with great songs but also for the way they both grapple with sounds that feel heavily 1970s to me: lush arrangements that drift like heat-fog in the borderland between country and soul and very masculine, very vulnerable vocal performances. This full-throated psalm takes the questions that underpin many of our lives and brings them to the forefront. “Is my praying in vain? Is my fasting in vain?”
  • Caylee Hammack, “Bed of Roses” – A world-beater of a contemporary country song and eponymous track of Hammack’s terrific sophomore record with a pedal steel line that felt like it waltzed hand in hand with the Oldham it follows but blooms into a bounce. “Bitter grapes make the sweetest wine. The holes I’m digging are just seeds and dreams I’m sowing for my bed of roses, where I’m sleeping just fine.”
  • Sharon Van Etten, “I Can’t Imagine (Why You Feel That Way)” – I was talking to someone just a few weeks ago, about seeing Sharon Van Etten play solo upstairs at Pianos during CMJ with the Smith Westerns. I’ve been a fan since that first record and watching her music grow in heft and power has been sheer delight and this new record might be my favorite, easily standing alongside the first two but never trying to relive their moments. The bass line on this song is probably my favorite of the year. “Took the medicine; now feeling strange. I can’t imagine why you feel this way.”
  • SASAMI, “Slugger” – Former Cherry Glazerr member SASAMI’s astonishing synthpop noir Blood on the Silver Screen is full of razorblade mosaics like this perfect three minutes knife twist. “I’m always running, so I probably should’ve seen it coming.”
  • Hurray for the Riff Raff, “Pyramid Scheme” – After their best record yet, this intermezzo of a single kept my appetite whetted for the next full Hurray for the Riff Raff statement. “I don’t know who you want me to be. I don’t know and it terrifies me. Don’t know what you want, don’t know what I want, don’t know what you want from me.”
  • The Delines, “Sitting on the Curb” – The torchy collaboration of Willy Vlautin and Amy Boone continues to paint gorgeous overexposed visions of people falling through the cracks and the no-bad-track Mr. Luck and Ms. Doom sustained that remarkable streak. “Don’t you know flames destroy everything in their wake? There’ll be nothing left at home when you come back realizing your mistake.”
  • Jenny Hval, “All night long” – I’ve been a fan of Hval through her more experimental and traditional singer-songwriter strains and I especially love work like this that braids those strains together. “What do I know? I’m lost in absentia. Dancing on my grave. What would happen if I fell, if I fell through?”
  • Housewife, “Life of the Party” – This Toronto band had escaped my notice until this year’s Girl of the Hour which I found full of sharply carved gems like this one. That rhythm and the voice are at the heart of what keeps me coming back. “Play a game of 20 Questions but I couldn’t answer one, like ‘Where are you going, how does it feel to look back on everything you’ve done?'”
  • Lisa Curtis, “Nothing More to Miss” – I try to keep myself open to new art (music especially) from a lot of channels but a perpetual source is recommendations from friends. This Columbus artist Lisa Curtis hit my radar courtesy of pal Vera Cremeans – also a hell of a singer, she features prominently in the theater best of – and I was stunned by the quality of the song and voice. I can’t wait to hear more from Curtis. “I let myself think that life is better when I am your bitch. But one day I’ll get better and there will be nothing left to miss.”
  • Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ featuring Ruby Amanfu, “Room on the Porch” – The Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ collaboration continues to highlight their strengths and this song adding the great Ruby Amanfu is a beautiful, warm exemplar. “All of our friends are now your friends, that’s how we do it here.”
  • Valerie June, “Trust the Path” – Valerie June continues to reshape soul music in her image while paying all tribute to the shadows she grew in on her astonishing Owls, Oracles, and Omens with evocative, sympathetic production from M. Ward and a band including Stephen Hodges (Tom Waits) and Josh Johnson (Jeff Parker, SML) always centering her voice and songs. “Promise me you’ll venture toward unknown, every step a new discovery shown.”
  • Alabaster Deplume, “Invincibility” – Poet and saxophonist Alabaster Deplume gives us a chambery mood record and this song – with a vocal arrangement from Donna Thompson – keeps haunting me. “You can make asunder me all the same, sing all you like, it won’t be my name.”
  • Maya Delilah, “Actress” – The first full-length from this British Blue Note artist reminds me of everything I loved about the ’90s/’00s soulful trip-hop/acid jazz era where this kind of smoky mid-tempo tune was in every lounge or chillout room. This version is better than I’ve heard anyone pick up those threads in many years. “I’m falling off the stage to play me in real life. Come get a single take without the lights ’cause I’m running out of places to hide.”
  • Vandoliers, “Life Behind Bars” – The Vandoliers’ astonishing Life Behind Bars was a reinvention and a restatement of purpose in addition to being their strongest set of songs. This title track is the kind of buoyant but unsparing stagger down memory lane that got me into alt.country/Americana in the first place. Perfection. “I’ve spent my life behind bars and moving cars. I’ve stayed out all night shooting stars and earning scars. Yeah, I’m guilty as charged.”
  • I’m With Her, “Year After Year” – The first I’m With Her record I liked quite a bit but not as much as the solo careers of Aoife O’Donovan, Sara Watkins, and Sara Jarosz, all of whom I’m a huge fan of, but the group’s return Wild and Clear and Blue laid waste to those reservations. “Passing ’round the guitar; fire crackles and roars. And the faces through the flames are all ones I adore.”
  • Tunde Adebimpe, “Magnetic” – Adebimpe’s Three Black Boltz isn’t a wild departure from his work with TV On the Radio but it’s at just enough of an angle to scratch a different itch. In a more just world, hooky dancefloor filler would have been coming out of every idling car all summer. “I was thinkin’ about the human race in the age of tenderness and rage. Had me seekin’ for an extra page.”
  • Lily Bloom, “Kerosene” – Columbus harpist/keyboardist/singer-songwriter Lily Bloom put out of the best debuts in a while, Spirits, and this smoke-cured-velvet single is a shining example of the pleasures within. “Cast a look like obsidian; see what you’re trying to hide. Your speech is like a penumbra, trying to see what’s on the other side.”
  • Kassi Valazza, “Your Heart’s a Tin Box” – This Portland singer-songwriter expanded her arrangements and tonal palette on From Newman Street, and this loping, dreamlike take on the struggling artist travelogue held onto me from the moment I heard it. “Disassociation. They want you to think you think too much.”
  • Ashley Ryan, “My Crazy” – A stellar example of contemporary country, the “First time I’ve felt this way” tropes with a crystal clear voice and a fast-shuffle beat propelled intertwining banjo and fiddle lines. “Like my crazy’s got some making up to do.”
  • Rhiannon Giddens and Justin Robinson, “Going to Raleigh” – This reunion of 2/3 of the original Carolina Chocolate Drops in tribute to legendary North Carolina musician Joe Thompson was a combination of scholarship and pleasure that was nearly unequaled this year. And a rare instrumental on this list that felt like it really only made sense in the “Songs” bucket.
  • Olive Klug, “Train of Thought” – Another shuffle but threaded with samples and a fascinating effect on Klug’s vocal. “I’m just peeking through the darkness waiting for the end to start; there’s this strange librarian smashing all the windows of her car.”
  • Born Ruffians, “Mean Time” – This Toronto band had somehow slipped under my radar until this year – doubly surprising because someone who’s been signed to both Warp Records and Yep Roc feels like I’m squarely in the center of that Venn Diagram. The soundworld they created on Beauty’s Pride, of which this is a strong example, I found really evocative. “A drop of rain on the window; a sudden burst of chemical bliss. Fresh plastic and Coca-Cola mist.”
  • Model/Actriz, “Vespers” – This Brooklyn post-punk quartet’s second album, Pirouette, hit every button I want from that genre, and I felt like this picked up on the electronic textures of the previous track and flowed into the silkier use of electronics and slightly downshifted driving rhythm of the next. “Now give thanks to theatre who I beseech religiously. Are you her? ‘Cause God gave me poise enough for the sharing.”
  • Maren Morris, “Bed No Breakfast” – This, the first single I heard from Maren Morris’s terrific divorce record Dreamsicle, hits a perfect blend of gauzy, post-Quiet Storm textures and a grinning, unsparing lyric I’m always a sucker for. “Sun is coming through the curtains, think I heard a bird chirping. Won’t you sleep better at your place?”
  • Kali Uchis, “Silk Lingerie” – The sustained keyboard chords and slow-creep drums of this highlight from Uchis’s Sincerely, P.S., set up her torchy vocal perfectly. Made for a pour of good bourbon, a medium strength cigar, and a loosened tie. “These pretty tears got my heart super soaked. I start to drown from the inside out.”
  • PinkPantheress, “Girl Like Me” – Raising the pulse a little with this shiny dance-pop miniature. “Think of me: you can’t pay for therapy. Nothing left to bleed; you spent all your clarity.”
  • Mekons, “Private Defense Contractor” – A similarly slinky groove from post-punk originators Mekons tied to grim sociopolitical commentary. “In my fantasy world, the owl has flown. Cryptic signs say: crawl under the throne; May the Happy Church hold you; police, priest, your body forevermore.”
  • Sweet Megg, “Bridge and Tunnel (Dance With Me)” – One of my favorite newer Nashville singer-songwriters; great band, great arrangements, voice that recalls Stevie Nicks and Linda Ronstadt but doesn’t sound like anyone else. “Take me out in the morning, take me home at night. Take me without warning, working hands feel alright.”
  • Erika de Casier, “Lifetime” – I liked the way the horn section of the previous song dissolved into the mist and an insidious drum pattern that kicks off this intoxicating tune from the Danish singer. “It lingers in my body when I realize that love is all we have.”
  • Sarah Borges and Eric Ambel, “Mercy of the Moon” – Jeremy Tepper’s death in 2024 was a huge loss to the Americana world (as an organizer of the Outlaw Country Cruise and of Sirius XM’s Outlaw Country Radio) and the New York roots music world lost one of its greatest advocates and connectors. This tribute single from Sarah Borges and Eric Ambel reminds us we also lost a hell of a songwriter and they knock this one out of the park. “I try to fight it but now I know: it’s out of my control. And I can’t even get my guitar to stay in tune; I guess I feel I’m at the mercy of the moon.”
  • Dierks Bentley, “Well Well Whiskey” – Once in a while, Nashville superstar Dierks Bentley lines up with my tastes beautifully and this example – whose title probably flagged me in the eyes of many of you reading this – is his voice in its lowest, snarliest register riding a beautiful tension-and-release arrangement. “Damn if I don’t miss you, damn if you ain’t here sitting at the bar, making it hard for this boy to drink a beer. Well, well whiskey, looks like we meet again. Well, well whiskey, what trouble we getting in?”
  • Joshua Ray Walker, “Dance With Who You Came With” – It’s a measure of Walker – already one of my favorite honky-tonk voices to come out in the last decade – that he took on my most reviled country subgenre (post-Buffet Tropics Nostalgia) and used that frame to paint one of my favorite songs of the year in this updating/revisioning of “Save the Last Dance For Me” that lands somewhere between lower Texas and “the islands.” His supple voice and good humor actually make me want a blender drink and a hammock. “You can dance with who you came with, or you can dance with me. Let me spin you ’round the dancefloor or you can dance with me.”
  • WITCH, “Nadi” – Turning the groove up a little bit with this heater from Zamrock all-stars WITCH.
  • CIVIC, “The Hogg” – Another Gonerfest veteran, Australian rock powerhouse CIVIC returned with their raging, pummelling Chrome Dipped. “Sunshine on the ocean floor; catch glimpses on our favorite walk. Hand in hand, feel the breeze and the wind on the shore of the wars we once fought.”
  • MSPAINT, “Surveillance” – MSPAINT continue their explorations into samples, rapping, and synthetic textures on their ferocious No Separation and while I had some reservations on the nu-metal vocal harmonies the songs always won me back over. “There’s no prescription for scorched earth.”
  • Kae Tempest, “Breathe” – I knew Tempest as a poet before I knew they even made music and this self-titled album reminded me what a crucial voice they bring to society. “How many hells must a person inhabit before they can see their life hangs in the balance?”
  • Buscabulla, “Incredula” – Always delighted to hear this Puerto Rican Duo return with new music and Se Amaba Asi was every bit as good as those first couple of EPs that made me fall in love with them.
  • Natalie Bergman, “Gunslinger” – Formerly of Wild Belle, I liked all of Bergman’s My Home is Not in this World album, but this song – co-written with Daptone rhythm section Homer Stenweiss and Nick Movshon, who played on most of the record – crushed me immediately and still does. “I picked him up and dusted him off when another might have left him for dead. He had whiskey on his tongue, he was parched by the sun; I never should have given him a chance.”
  • US Girls, “Firefly on the 4th of July” – The over-sustain on the organ throws the groove off on this in an extremely appealing way, unbalancing the listener and making us lean in; and that leaning in is more than rewarded. “The world’s a dream we’ve all unseen.”
  • Sunny Sweeney, “Diamonds and Divorce Decrees” – A favorite country singer of mine returned with a record Rhinestone Requiem easily among her best work. “I’m stuck between ‘I Do’ and ‘I’ll Never Do That Again.'”
  • Marc Ribot, “Map of a Blue City” – A lot was made of “Marc Ribot sings!” in the lead-up to Map of a Blue City when he’s been singing for a long time – I first heard his voice on a record buying Shrek’s Yo! I Killed Your God! in college – but there’s definitely more of a singer-songwriter element to the tunes on this beautiful record that feels very of a piece with the rest of the New West Records catalogue. “It’s not a blue map, it only looks that way. It’s a map of a blue city.”
  • Joshua Redman, “Borrowed Eyes” – Another rare instrumental on this list but Redman’s singing sax tone and the clarity and conciseness of the writing made it feel right, especially as a slightly warmer counterpoint right after the Ribot.
  • DANA, “7 Years Bad Coke” – Bringing the intensity back up with this high water mark noise-disco rager from the best, most nuanced record by my favorite Columbus band. “Man, I thought this shit was supposed to be fun.”
  • Dave East and Young Chris featuring Ransom, “Kiss the Sky” – I liked the way this beat felt following the more corroded Dana track and I loved the interplay of voices. “Look in his eyes, hit him, let him kiss the sky.”
  • Jessie Murph, “A Little Too Drunk” – A perfect pop song, no notes. “I’m’a call all my old bitches and tell them it’s love.”
  • Amanda Shires, “Lose It For a While” – Shires came back after a string where every record was better than the last and outdid all my expectations with one of the all-time-great breakup records, up there with For The Roses and Hot Buttered Soul. “Maybe they were meant to go until they’re gone. Maybe they were nothing at all, not even tears, until they got here.”
  • Margot Price, “Don’t Let The Bastards Get You Down” – Bringing the emotional content into a more sunshiny place, Price takes Kristofferson’s aphorism – the man shows up in a sample that feels like a blessing – and flips it into a bop that’s just as defiant and powerful. “They wanna wear your rhinestones, man, they ain’t got the backbone. Those tone-deaf sons of bitches, they don’t know your rags from riches.”
  • Robbie Fulks, “That was Juarez, This is Alpine” – Robbie Fulks returned to some instrumental colors and rhythms he’d eschewed on the last few records to great effect on Now Then. “Now the heat of the skies hits the back of our eyes til we run from the punishing air to reflect in the cool of the car: ‘There but for fortune…’ Such a hollow prayer.”
  • Patty Griffin, “Back at the Start” – If there’s such a thing as a weak Patty Griffin song, I’ve never heard one, and Crown of Roses is stuffed with winners, like this warm, propulsive gem. “Baby, it’s just you and all the umpires, hoping no one will notice that you don’t know what you’re doing.”
  • Charli XCX featuring John Cale, “House” – A collaboration I didn’t expect and one I really loved, Charli XCX leaning into her dark mythopoetic ballads, some of my favorite corners of her catalog, with a fountain-of-gravel assist from Cale. “Another world I created for what? If it’s beauty, do you see beauty? If there’s beauty, say it’s enough.”
  • Kronos Quartet featuring Allison Russell, Asha Bhosle, and Willie Nelson, “Hard Rain” – A stunningly gorgeous version of one of my favorite Bob Dylan songs tying together these distinctive voices and a chorus including Iggy Pop and Tanya Tagaq woven through a magical arrangement by Kronos Quartet. “I’ll walk to the depths of the deepest dark forest, where the people are many and their hands are all empty.”
  • The Sleeveens, “Drowning” – Irish-Nashville powerpop band covering my favorite Greg Cartwright song. It’s like this was made specifically for me. “Oh, I can’t tell you no lies – saw the spark of love in her eyes, then it died. Made me cry.”
  • Blueprint, “Black Plates” – Blueprint returned this year with a stone classic in Vessel and this paean to digging in the crates was on the playlist at every party we threw since the release date. “To you, just records; to me, a goldmine.”
  • Vybz Kartel featuring Beenie Man and Monster Twin, “Furnace Riddim (Brawta Mix)” – Vintage Vybz Kartel and Beenie Man with Monster Twin who I didn’t know as well.
  • JID, “What We On” – Growling seduction from JID’s consistently impressive God Does Like Ugly. “Knee deep down in that paint, call a holiday to the saints.”
  • Lorde, “Broken Glass” – stellar miniature from Lorde digging deep into her signature mix of heartbreak and groove. “I want to punch the mirror to make her see that this won’t last. It might be years of bad luck but what if it’s just broken glass?”
  • Demi Lovato, “Here All Night” – A marvelous, ridiculous club anthem with a metaphor more than strong enough for all the contortions Lovato has in mind. “I don’t want all natural, I want to go electronic, because if the music ever stops I might go psychotic.”
  • Cristina Vane, “You Ain’t Special” – Wry, subtle highlight from Vane’s excellent singer-songwriter record Hear My Call. “Honey, you ain’t special like your Mama said you was. And if you ain’t special, I ain’t got no more time for the two of us.”
  • Molly Tuttle, “That’s Gonna Leave a Mark” – Tuttle continues to grow into her voice as a songwriter, equaling her justly acclaimed reputation as one of the great bluegrass guitarists of her generation. The push-pull on this song is intoxicating. “If I was smarter, I’d up and leave, but I like to play with fire.”
  • Sabrina Carpenter, “Go Go Juice” – A sugar-rimmed tribute to the pull of bad decisions and a highlight off another gleaming, perfect pop record from Carpenter. “Some good old fashioned fun sure numbs the pain.”
  • Snõõper, “Worldwide” – Another burst of joy from Nashville’s rising pop-garage champs. The drum machine textures add a level of falling apart mystery to this record I really loved. “Do you really need me?”
  • Kid Cudi, “Mr. Miracle” – Cudi’s great memoir for me to check in on his material since the era when I was a superfan and he’s still putting out consistent, emotional earworms. “I was out and I was spinning, circles, I was dodging demons. Tell me, how did you defeat them?”
  • Jamie xx, “Dream Night” – Another instant dance-pop classic from Jamie xx. “I saw a dream last night, bright like a falling star.”
  • Moviola, “Kid Familiar” – A beautiful tune from Moviola’s breathtaking Earthbound, with a patchwork quilt of a subtle groove and glowing with mystery. “The flip side’s a charmer, the disc jockey said.”
  • Hayes Carll, “Good People (Thank Me)” – A lighthearted, grinning stomp from Carll’s excellent We’re Only Human. “I know a guy, he’s always worried. He’s in no hurry to try and see how he might have a couple issues. Well. I’ll be honest, that guy’s me.”
  • Marissa Nadler, “Light Years” – Another stunning record from Nadler, leaning into her more expansive palette of the last few but bringing back some stabbing specificity. “You knew the ways you numbered the days, cruising the night trying to find her. Then you tried to erase all the x-rays you took. No reminders.”
  • Lido Pimienta, “El Dembow del Tiempo” – The chamber music flavors of Pimienta’s La Bellezza were a surprise after the panoply of grooves that originally hooked me on her songs but I quickly came to love this luminous body of work.
  • Jehnny Beth, “High Resolution Sadness” – I loved Savages and Jehnny Beth’s solo work continues to expand and explode in all directions. “The world is a sad machine.”
  • Lady Wray, “Be a Witness” – One of my favorite throwback soul records and another winner from Lady Wray, with an undeniable disco throb. “Hold on tight and don’t let go.”
  • Annie and the Caldwells, “Wrong” – Another gorgeous updating of vintage disco sounds by soul-gospel family band based in Mississippi produced by Columbus expat Sinkane. “I thought I was doing right, then I realized I was wrong.”
  • Curtis Harding, “Time” – One of my favorite soul-rock singers returned with a stellar slab, exemplified by this horn-drenched call to prayer and defiance. “I never thought I would get so low. You picked me up off that killing floor, let’s go.”
  • Sudan Archives, “Ms. Pac Man” – A slinky, funny track with delightful arrangement surprises. “Put it in my mouth, and my bank account! Fuck you on the couch in my favorite blouse.”
  • Hand Habits, “Lioness” – I also loved Hand Habits’ new record of originals, but this Songs:Ohia cover (in a remarkably strong tribute record) fucking haunted me. Brought out new colors in a song I’ve loved for decades and hit me harder with what I already loved about it. “If you can’t get here fast enough, I will swim to you.”
  • Garlic Jr., “FTH” – Hakim Callwood’s expansion of his art into music consistently delights me but this sing-along scorched-earth treatment of a Cleveland-based restaurant chain some of my dear friends have been directly mistreated by was my fist-pumping song of the summer. “I don’t care if the sky falls as long as TownHall falls too, that’s just true, I hate to break it to you.”
  • Lily Allen, “Pussy Palace” – Allen made a record I loved just as much as her astonishing debut, bringing the same wit and fire, and fusing it to everything she knows now. “Hundreds of Trojans, you’re so fucking broken.”
  • Des Demonas, “Des Demonas Against Fascism” – Des Demonas expanded their palette without sacrificing anything in their best record yet. The groove and deadpan vocal on this are unassailable. “Living in a world with no pain, no fear.”
  • Mon Rovia, “Field Song” – Mon Rovia’s blending of roots in Liberia and his relocated home of Appalachian along with indie-pop really came into its full power this year. “Baby, I’ve been working some things off, trying to get right for myself, not anybody.”
  • Cardi B featuring Kehlani, “Safe” – A muscular duet from Cardi B’s excellent second album. “When I spaz and crash, you ain’t gon’ dip, right?”
  • Bee Humana, “Oceanic Blues” – Beautiful example from Columbus noir tropicalia band Bee Humana growing leaps and bounds since settling in with a steady lineup of singer-songwriter Bee Shuman with Dave Holm and Sam Brown. “The devil took my hand and led me, led me to the bottom of the sea.”
  • ROSALÍA featuring Estrella Morente & Sílvia Pérez Cruz, “La Rumba Del Perdón” – I’ve got nothing to add to the LUX conversation, but I love it as much as the rest of the world does.
  • Kojey Radical, “Rotation” – This British R&B artist hit my radar this year with his leather-smooth Don’t Look Down. “Lady Luck just made me clap and I gave her a standing ovation.”
  • Erykah Badu and the Alchemist, “Next to You” – The Alchemist producing whole records really bore fruit and the synchronicity he found with one my all time favorite songwriters and vocalists, Badu, exceeded all expectations. “Follow me and we gon’ break the rules.”
  • Fred again… featuring Amyl and the Sniffers, “You’re a Star” – Fred Again’s moody collaged dance tracks found a perfect foil in Australian garage-punk superstars Amyl and the Sniffers and built a gloriously rough take on grime. “Hey, you’re a lit one, always been a big star, never been a dull one. You wanna get out of here.”
  • Robert Finley, “Praise Him” – Beautiful soul-gospel from one of the best still doing it. “I’m going out of my mind so I better testify while I can.”
  • Florence + the Machine, “One of the Greats” – Florence Welch keeps getting better and better, more specific and more outward-looking. The band and arrangement foreground the drama but also let the jokes in this, one of her funniest songs, land without overplaying it. Extra points for my old pal Chris Vatalaro on piano. “I wrote down all my fumbling visions, transmitted by a television, got everything I thought I wanted and cried hungover in a hotel closet.”
  • Neko Case, “Wreck” – I’m still unpacking Case’s Neon Grey Midnight Green but this song, with the sweeping strings, stabbed me in the heart the second I heard it. “And I know I can’t burn this bright forever so just stay til the end of the fireworks show.”
  • Colter Wall, “Memories and Empties” – Colter Wall with a perfect ’60s soul-honky tonk mixture and the kind of wry wordplay his voice fits around like a glove. “This path only leads to a barstool where your memory can be left behind. Replacing memories with empties again.”
  • Armand Hammer and The Alchemist featuring Kapwani, “Dogeared” – Another of those fantastic Alchemist records I mentioned earlier this one supporting the duo of Billy Woods and Elucid featuring Kapwani. A dusty, light-dappled memory play. “She finished her drink and looked at me inquisitively, asking, ‘What’s the role of a poet in times like these?’ I never answered, but it stuck with me all week.”
  • Rissi Palmer, “Old Black Southern Woman” – A beautiful grappling with lineage and self-determination from one of our finest country singers. “I want to be an old black Southern woman, the kind my mother never got to be.”
  • Kenny Barron featuring Cecile McLorin Salvant, “Thoughts and Dreams” – A perfectly carved jewel from pianist Kenny Barron’s Songbook record ord, with Cecile McLorin Salvant as vocal partner. “How sweet the memories that choose to linger: the scent of that one perfume in a moonlit room; the long night of longing ending.”
  • Jason Isbell, “True Believer” – For me Isbell’s Foxes in the Snow was his first record since Southeastern where I skipped more songs than played through multiple times, but this (along with “Eileen” and “Ride to Robert’s”) I think is a stone classic as good as anything he’s written, with a gut-wrenching vocal that really benefits from the album’s barebones ambience. “If I got a little loose, I just forgot to be afraid, but I started out a true believer, babe.”
  • Brandi Carlile, “A War With Time” – This standout from Carlile’s beautiful, contemplative Returning to Myself feels like it helps set a tone for this phase of her work. “I don’t remember the faces, just the anger and the haunted places. So alive I could taste it on the rain. Even the roaches come from somewhere”
  • Jerry David DeCicca featuring BJ Cole, “Good Ghosts” – DeCicca’s the best songwriter I can think of working today at incorporating his heroes (like pedal steel icon BJ Cole here) without being intimidated by them, creating a situation where their genius perfectly fits his song (not unlike one of his heroes Warren Zevon and man, what I wouldn’t have given for a late-period Zevon record JDD produced). His Cardiac Country deals with everything in the world, especially mortality (given additional urgency with the artist’s open heart surgery) with the same warmth and good humor he brings to everything. “Maybe I’ll see you in a dream of deep blue. In a town where no one’s lonely, populated by only good ghosts.”
  • Todd Snider, “The Human Condition” – Someone gone far too soon even though he left us a voluminous body of work, Snider’s valedictory High, Lonesome, and Then Some, was another weathered masterpiece. “I was born in the human condition, dancing like I don’t know how.”
  • Leslie Odom Jr., “American Tune” – A beautiful read on this Paul Simon song from one of our finest interpreters, captured on a gorgeous live record. “I don’t know a soul who’s not been battered. I don’t have a friend who feels at ease. I don’t know a dream that’s not been shattered or driven to its knees.”
  • Willie Nelson featuring Rodney Crowell, “Oh What a Beautiful World” – Some of my favorite entries in the Willie Nelson catalog are deep dives into a single songwriter like the gorgeous Rodney Crowell songbook investigation-as-act-of-love album this duet gives its title. “It’s the rise and the fall of your clocks on the wall. It’s the first and the last of your days flying past. Oh, what a beautiful world.”
  • Mavis Staples, “Anthem” – A new high-water mark in matching singer with song. One of the great voices of faith over the last century making Leonard Cohen’s paean to believing because nothing is perfect, not in spite of it or out of some hope perfection is down the road, entirely hers. “Ring the bells, that still can ring. Forget your perfect offering. There is a crack, a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in.”

Categories
Best Of live music

Best of 2025: Live Music

In a world that felt even more on fire than usual – by which I mostly mean the fire was closer to me personally – I found a lot to be grateful for: my friends, my partner, my family, my jobs. My most often source for solace was, as it has been since I was a teenager, live music.

Across nine cities, I saw about 150 shows (expect that to be fewer next year; I’m trying to be more intentional and include more deliberate days of rest each week). Unsurprisingly, Dick’s Den was at the top of my list, hitting an average of once every two weeks, with Natalie’s Grandview and Cafe Bourbon Street tied for second place at 12, and Ace and Rumba also tied at 7. Interestingly, the Columbus Museum of Art and the Wex tied at 4 each, and all of which were terrific. Because there was so much good stuff, I interpreted “Festival” a little more liberally, as anything with multiple stages or days.

No way of knowing what’s next, but there are already some shows I’m very excited for in the upcoming year, and choosing to set my eyes with hope rather than leap to despondency.

All photos are by me, everything is in Columbus unless stated otherwise, and the listings are in chronological order

Joy Oladokun at Newport Music Hall

Top 25(ish) Shows

  • Joy Oladokun (Newport Music Hall, 01/21/2025) – Not quite the first show of the year I saw, or even exactly the first touring show (John Calvin Abney, who had a banner this year supporting SG Goodman as well as putting out a stellar EP, did a joint show with Lydia Loveless at Secret Studio a little earlier), but in many ways finally getting to see Joy Oladokun after being a massive fan of her last two records in the room that held so many of my favorite shows of all time (Wilco, Morphine, The Cramps, Sonic Youth, Medeski Martin and Wood/Chocolate Genius, X/The Detroit Cobras) set the tone perfectly and gave me a shot of burning resolve right after the inauguration. I thought the mix of solo acoustic and full-band numbers highlighted both sides of her work in a way I’ve seen a lot of singer-songwriters try but very rarely pull off anywhere nearly as well, and made some of the textures – revealing a surprising (to me) contextual thread between her Observations From a Crowded Room and Don Henley’s Building a Perfect Beast – appear in greater detail and relief.
  • Chuck Prophet and his Cumbia Shoes (Natalie’s Grandview, 02/05/2025) – I’ve never seen a bad Chuck Prophet show – the rare universally acclaimed songwriter who’s every bit as powerful a bandleader – but this flourishing of his merging a couple of members of his longstanding unit Mission Express with Cali cumbia band ¿Qiensave? into Cumbia Shoes hit another level of powerful catharsis, nuance, and unbridled fun.
Chuck Prophet and his Cumbia Shoes at Natalie’s Grandview
  • Joel Ross’s Good Vibes (Wexner Center for the Arts)/Joel Harrison’s Anthems of Unity (Natalie’s Grandview), both 03/06/2025 – Talking to a good friend and stalwart of the NYC and, now, LA, jazz scene about how the touring climate was in town, I brought up this particular evening when I got to see the first set of vibes maestro Joel Ross’s crushing current Sextet (that interplay of Maria Grand on alto and Josh Johnson on tenor in the frontline seared my eyebrows off), an unbroken suite of music blending Ross’s originals and standards that turned my head around then drive 10 minutes and see the astonishing guitarist Joel Harrison do his Anthems of Unity book with two of our local heroes, organist Tony Monaco and drummerr Louis Tsamous. These two approaches to jazz/improvised music/the history of American music, and the way both of these artists approached the canon and the way music can be about the rest of the world instead of being hermetic or closed reverberated hard against each other in my chest.
  • Deli Girls with Deionyx (Cafe Bourbon Street, 04/04/2025) – Over the last couple of years, Bobo has reclaimed the throne as my favorite place to see noisy, edgier rock and roll and one of my favorite places to see more underground-leaning DJs. This show scratched both of those itches hard and deep – NYC’s Deli Girls’ mix of grinding, throbbing rave beats, acid-singed noise, and in-your-face punk and Deionyx’s bleeding edge soulful-at-an-angle set of surprising and powerful records both made my heart incredibly full, as did the room packed full of people 15-25 years younger than I am.
Deli Girls at Cafe Bourbon Street
  • Greater Columbus Community Orchestra with Brian Harnetty, The Visitor (Hilliard Presbyterian Church, 04/06/2025) – Banner year for composer Brian Harnetty, who released a remarkable memoir, Noisy Memory, and put out a gorgeous recording of string quartet and samples The House, and a visual installation This Was Once a Forest, This Was Once a Sea, as well as premiering this rich, sparkling brass ensemble piece with the Greater Columbus Community Orchestra that I’m still feeling vibrate through me.
  • Nikhil P. Yerwadekar and Living Language (Barbes, NYC, 04/11/2025) – Because the sole New York trip this year was to celebrate my 45th birthday with a gang of my favorite people in the world, there were fewer distinct cultural items on the calendar. But this was an extreme highlight: Yerwadekar, whom I last saw backing Hailu Mergia at a Big Ears, leading a ferocious band through Afrobeat classics and originals in a wall-to-wall-packed Barbes back room where no one stopped moving. Made even sweeter as my great friend Andrew Patton’s inaugural visit to one of my temples of music.
Nikhil P. Yerwadekar and Living Language at Barbes
  • The Lilybandits with Two Cow Garage (Natalie’s Grandview, 06/05/2025) – I think anyone who’s read ten lines I’ve written or spent ten minutes in my presence knows I think Todd May’s the greatest songwriter Columbus has ever produced. They culminated an important reissue project of his first mature band, The Lilybandits with At Thirty Three and a Third this year, and lost its drummer and their lifelong friend Keith Smith last year. This extremely rare reunion of the original core members (May, Trent Arnold, Jose Gonzalez, Bob Hite) with longtime friend Keith Hanlon filing in on drums, Bob Ray Starker providing the horn lines he gifted them with on those records, and Smith’s son joining on a few vocals, was probably the biggest reminder of how much I love my town all year, wrapped up in a rock show that made hard to believe they’d only gotten together to run through the songs once. Two Cow Garage, long influenced by the Lilybandits (the first time I ever saw Two Cow, they did a Todd May song and dedicated it to “The genius of Bernie’s”) set the tone with a set of jubilant catharsis.
  • Charles “Wigg” Walker (ACME Feed and Seed, Nashville, 06/14/2025) – My eyebrows shot up when I saw Charles Walker – who I knew from his days with the Dynamites (who the Funkdefy collective, at the time including the above-mentioned Andrew Patton, booked in Columbus more than once, and my great friends in St Louis, at the time including fellow Columbus legend Matt Benz booked at Twangfest – was doing a regular brunch gig when Anne and I already planned to be in Nashville. We juggled our schedule to make sure we were in town in time for this and stayed for two sets: Walker still in perfect voice, backed by a sizzling organ trio led by his longtime Dynamites foil Charles Treadway, going through stone soul classics and gorgeous new originals.
Lilybandits at Natalie’s Grandview
  • Dan Baird and Homemade Sin (Eastside Bowl, Nashville, 06/14/2025) – If the only thing this show gave us was the five minutes of Dan Baird and his killer band opening with the Open All Night highlight “Sheila,” with Baird’s grin and electric presence, it would have justified the six-hours drive each way, the hotel cost, all of it. But it gave us so much more. 45 minutes of blistering rock and roll, led by someone who, at 71, is outplaying and dancing rockers a third of his age. Also, this was a beautiful look in the way other scenes take care of their own, organized by Warner Hodges (Baird’s guitar foil in Homemade Sin, longtime lead player in Jason and the Scorchers), here leading his own band and sitting in with every other set in a benefit for his former Scorchers bandmate Jeff Johnson.
  • Sam Johnson and Noah Demland, Contrary Motion (Wild Goose Creative, 06/20/2025) – The second or third year in what I hope continues as a series exploring the history of Queer chamber music/new music featured new originals from organizers Sam Johnson and Noah Demland, classics of the canon from Pauline Oliveros and John Cage, and contemporary pieces from Caroline Shaw and Leilahua Lanzilotti by a tight ensemble of some of our best players. A brilliant glimpse of where this music is, how it got here, and how relevant it still is.
  • Say She She (Woodlands Tavern, 06/20/2025) – Finally got to see my favorite of the current neo-disco bands, NYC’s Say She She, and they tore the roof off Woodlands in a crowd full of people I mostly didn’t know (besides Anne and my Providence-based friend Daria, maybe we knew two other people in a nearly sold out room) all dancing in a sweaty, delirious mess. The reason I went from the show above to this show, but they got separate listings, is that they felt like very distinct events to me; they didn’t resonate against one another like the couple of shared line items.
Say She She at Woodlands
  • Budos Band with Benny Trokan (Woodward Theatre, Cincinnati, 07/15/2025) – One of the great live bands I’ve seen in 30 years of seeing live music, Budos Band, retained their crown on a gorgeous summer night in a venue I hadn’t made it to in Cincinnati previously. Icing on the cake was Benny Trokan – who Anne introduced me to in his days with Robbers on High Street – with a tight, swinging four-piece going through the lovely smooth soul of his recent solo record.
  • Mike Dillon’s Punkadelick (Dick’s Den, 07/18/2025) – Columbus is lucky to get percussionist Mike Dillon coming through our fair city a decent amount, but what made this show special was the presence of New Orleans drummer Nikki Glaspie, who’s shared the stage with Beyonce, Ivan Neville, Snarky Puppy, and Nth Power. That powerhouse sense of the multiplicity of groove and the emotional content of the song took both sets I stayed for into outer space.
Budos Band at Woodward Theatre, Cincinnati
  • Vandoliers (Rumba Cafe, 08/12/2025) – I’d been a fan of the Vandoliers since their 2019 breakthrough Forever and this year’s Life Behind Bars was a revelation: simultaneously a reminder of what drove me so crazy about the alt.country/Americana scene in my teens and 20s and a broadening in the same sense as their Dallas forebears’ Old 97s’ Fight Songs and Satellite Rides. Similarly, this show was a gleeful, textured statement of purpose, with lead singer Jenni Rose’s songs detailing her coming out the other side of addiction and gender dysmorphia into a brighter place without sugarcoating any of the challenges, and the band – with one exception – having been with her the entire ride and still shouting together. As Anne said, “This is what all protest music should sound like: a party that also makes you want to smash shit.”
  • Mark Lomax II (Streetlight Guild, 08/28/2025) – I was lucky to see a few examples of one of our finest composers and drummers, Mark Lomax, in action this year, including a reunion with Scott Woods and his trio, and also missed a big premiere at the Wexner Center because I lost track of my schedule and didn’t buy before it sold out. But this rare solo drum recital, directly inspired by Tiffany Lawson’s What If I Told You It Was Freedom (look for more on that in my Art Exhibits Best Of) in Streetlight Guild’s smaller upstairs gallery space was a direct injection into my veins of his compositional strategies, his fingerprint-distinct approach to the drums, and about creativity in general as he discussed the pieces and personal history with Lawson and Woods.
Mark Lomax II at Streetlight Guild
  • Etienne Charles and Creole Soul (Wexner Center for the Arts) and Quintron and Ms. Pussycat with DANA (Cafe Bourbon Street), both 09/18/2025 – Two approaches to blending cultures and styles through a distinct lens of a life in art, both made exciting shows on this September night. Trumpeter/composer Etienne Charles led his phenomenal band through a selection of compositions drawing from jazz and funk traditions and his Trinidadian heritage to a rapturous crowd at the Wexner Center Performance space. A five minute drive away – we sadly missed Mutha Funk though I heard great things – Quintron and Ms. Pussycat celebrated their 30th anniversary as a rock-and-roll puppet show with homemade drum machines, greasy organ, and garage-rock hooks that’s had me in its hooks for decades and is still a show like nothing else and one I’ll never miss if I can help it.
  • Kid Congo Powers with Cheater Slicks (Grog Shop, Cleveland, 09/20/2025) – I did a lot of thinking about memory this year – I often do, but at 45 it felt pronounced – and seeing the great Kid Congo, a throughline of so much music I loved play a set bursting with memories of friends and colleagues he’d lost, including “The Boy Had It All,” “Sean DeLear,” “La araña,” “He Walked In,” and songs he’d played with bands many of whose members have slo passed on like The Cramps and The Gun Club, vibrated with those feelings and reminded me that you can carry those people with you in a jubilant way without diminishing how much it hurts. In addition, Cheater Slicks (longtime friends and mutual admirers of Powers) who have been on a streak the last two years, played one of the best sets I’ve seen them do in 30 years of seeing them semi-regularly.
  • Lorette Velvette with Deerfrance (Bar DKDC, Memphis, 09/26/2025) – The best musical side quest we’ve had in over a decade of going to Memphis with Gonerfest as the main course: Panther Burns legend Lorette Velvette on a double-bill with linchpin of John Cale’s Sabotage era Deerfrance in the intimate confines of Bar DKDC. Killing new songs from both artists, excellent bands including members of the Reigning Sound, Panther Burns, and the Memphis Symphony, and a gorgeous clinic of song.
Lorette Velvette at Bar DKDC, Memphis
  • Talisha Holmes and the Stardust (Dick’s Den, 10/03/2025) – I’ve been a fan of Talisha Holmes’ voice since High School and her singing and repertoire for almost 20 years, but the first show with the band she dubbed Stardust felt like a new chapter opening with ecstatic/spiritual jazz and folk textures into the thorny, dense R&B she does better than anyone else in town. It was an eye opening evening that got me extremely excited to see what’s coming next.
  • DANA with Messrs and DJ Adam Scoppa (Ace of Cups, 10/17/2025) – As seen in my records of the year, I thought DANA’s Clean Living was a triumph, and their constant touring schedule honed their most nuanced and powerful set of songs into a ferocious live set. Here, along with a rare reunion set from Columbus’ deconstructed hardcore heroes Messrs (including drummer Mat Bisaro playing like a monster while also going through a grueling round of chemo) and the sweet sounds of Adam Scopp’s Heatwave dance night made one of the most satisfying reminders of what I love about Columbus.
DANA at Ace of Cups
  • Robbie Fulks (Natalie’s Grandview, 10/18/2025) – Robbie Fulks is another artist who is no stranger to anyone who’s read this or talked to me, but what made this appearance at Natalie’s special to me was a return to the four-piece rock band format that made me fall hard in the first place, with drummer Gerald Dowd, bassist KC McDonough, and guitarist Robbie Gjersoe doing a setlist that returned to the first three records – and the excellent new one, Now Then – with one highlight after another.
  • Micah Schnabel and Vanessa Jean Speckman (Rumba Cafe, 10/23/2025) – A valedictory show for two artists who have done so much for Columbus in their performance home, Rumba, and a set that made my heart almost burst out of my chest.
Micah Schnabel and Vanessa Jean Speckman at Rumba Cafe
  • Worthington Chamber Orchestra, Frontiers of Sound (Worthington United Methodist Church, 11/07/2025) – The Worthington Chamber Orchestra has a great series, and they continued to cement their place in the creative firmament of Columbus with commissioning the first violin concerto from Columbus native (now based in New York) Aaron Quinn, played by Devin Copfer (WCO concertmaster, Chamber Brews co-founder, Devi and Liz, Urban Art Ensemble) and the orchestra. The piece planted its flag in a truly American continuum, textures that felt like Ives and Copland, cascading harmonies that recalled some of the sticky synth layers of vintage Detroit techno, and a soulful bluesiness in the central violin line that still had all rigor you’d want to see from classical music.
  • Durand Jones and the Indications with Psycodelics (Newport Music Hall, 11/09/2025) – The smooth soul of Durand Jones had a packed crowd at the Newport eating out of their palms with a sweaty, vibrant show that summed up what so many of us love about the genre while also serving as the entry point for so many younger people. Psycodelics did a muscular, fiery take on vintage sounds like EWF, Sly, and P-Funk that reminded me that music has a long future ahead of it.
  • Minibeast (Cafe Bourbon Street, 11/14/2025) – Peter Prescott’s Minibeast knocked me completely over, with sparking noise and 10,000-league-deep grooves. Also a reminder of how good Bobo sounds these days. Every nuance of that powerful, multifaceted sound washed over everyone in the room.
Vandoliers at Rumba Cafe

Top 20 Festival Sets

Ugly Stick at Natalie’s Grandview
  • Beachland’s 25th Anniversary (Beachland Ballroom and Tavern, Cleveland)
    • Mourning [A] BLKStar
    • Pull Chains
Mourning [A] BLKStar at Beachland Ballroom
  • Lost Weekend Records’ 22nd Anniversary (Natalie’s Grandview)
    • Ugly Stick
    • Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments Featuring Mickey Mocnik
TJSA with Mickey Mocnik at Natalie’s Grandview
  • Big Ears Festival (Various Venues, Knoxville)
    • Kate Soper and Wet Ink Ensemble, Ipsa Dixit (Bijou Theatre)
    • Joy Guidry (The Point)
    • Tyshawn Sorey and DACAMERA, Monochromatic Light (Afterlife) (St. John’s)
Kate Soper and Wet Ink Ensemble, Big Ears
  • Lee Bains III and Lonnie Holley (Barley’s)
  • King Britt/Tyshawn Sorey/Meshell Ndegeocello/Melz (Jackson Terminal)
  • SML (The Standard)
King Britt/Tyshawn Sorey/Meshell Ndegeocello/MELZ at Big Ears
  • Future Salad Days Opening (Blockfort Parking Lot)
    • Juanita and Juan
    • Clickbait
    • Cheater Slicks
Juanita and Juan at Future Salad Days
  • Jazz and Ribs Fest
    • Ron Holmes’ Eclecticism
Ron Holmes Eclecticism, Jazz and Ribs Fest
  • Gonerfest (Wiseacre Brewing, Memphis)
    • Pylon Reenactment Society
    • Lightning Bolt
    • Lothario
    • Cheap Fix
    • Des Demonas
    • TINA!!!
Des Demonas, Gonerfest
Categories
Best Of Playlist record reviews

Best of 2024 – Spaces

As I’ve done for the last few years, I create a couple of lists that are loosely grouped by impact – if it feels like something I’d play on a jukebox or has lyrics, if it creates a sharp impression that might reverberate later – if I feel like it’s a “song” I put it in songs. It goes here if it feels spacious or dreamy, like architecture or a painting or landscape. Obviously, in a lot of cases, these distinctions are porous.

Similarly to my songs list, there was so much good shit this year and I’m looking forward to getting this posted so I can really dig into everyone else’s lists.

  • Wadada Leo Smith and Amina Claudine Myers, “Central Park at Sunset”– Two veterans of Chicago’s AACM movement – equally prominent as composers and virtuoso instrumentalists – teamed up for a duo record Central Park’s Mosaics of Reservoir, Lake, Paths and Gardens that’s as rich, sprawling, and vibrant as the urban park that inspired it. This particular piece reaffirms the poetry in both artists’ playing – I’m not sure anybody plays a sunset on any instrument as well as Smith, and those delicate and powerful chords from Myers are like the shifting moods of a summer breeze.
  • Mary Halvorson, “Desiderata” – I liked both of the last two Halvorson records on Nonesuch, but Cloudward synthesized those pleasures and reaffirms her Amaryllis octet as one of the great working ensembles, able to conjure any mood, any atmosphere her writing requires and bring in their own personalities without overwhelming the overall tone. A band of leaders that are always in service of the music. The way the jaunty swing in the beginning shatters into abstraction to flow back together in a new form is a Halvorson trademark, executed perfectly here.
  • David Murray Quartet, “Free Mingus” – Elder statesman and master at blending the melodic and the free, David Murray, assembles a brilliant quartet with pianist Marta Sanchez, bassist Luke Stewart, and Russell Carter, for his breathtaking record Francesca. On this track the band digs into an undulating saloon song tempo with the intensity and beauty it demands – that flow from Murray’s solo into Sanchez’s brings me to the edge of my seat every time, and every bit of the record is this good.
  • Vijay Iyer/Linda May Han Oh/Tyshawn Sorey, “Ghostrumental” – The second record with Iyer’s world-beating trio with Linda May Han Oh and Tyshawn Sorey exceeded even the high expectations I had. Thick grooves that shifts almost imperceptibly into deep abstractions and switch up again without feeling like an exercise, and melodic cells that swirl around and lock into place. There are a lot of piano trios on the playlist this time because all of them kicked enormous amounts of ass. Maybe my favorite moment on this track is Oh’s rich bass solo and the surprising, no-bullshit but also unshowy comping from Iyer and Sorey behind her.
  • Soundwalk Collective featuring Patti Smith, “Pasolini” – As someone who’s as much a film nerd at heart – at least they took up equal headspace in my adolescence – and who’s off and on written poetry since I was a teenager, both Patti Smith and the subject of the piece, Pasolini, loom very large in my psyche. I also love Soundwalk Collective’s playing with time, geography, specifics. So Correspondences Vol. 1 hit me right where I live. This is a gorgeous, mysterious piece.
  • Nduduzo Makhathini, “Water Spirits: Izinkonjana” – South African pianist/composer Nduduzo Makhathini’s second Blue Note album uNomkhubulwane is a gorgeous, meditative work immaculately played by his trio of Zwelakhe-Duma Bell le Pere and Francisco Mela. The little shifts in this piece, the way a bluesy run gives way to bright crispness and then they conjure clouds in the water, keep me coming back.
  • Six Organs of Admittance and Shackleton, “Spring Will Return/Oliver’s Letter” – I didn’t have this collaboration between freak-folk/noise-rock chameleon Ben Chesney (as Six Organs of Admittance) and dubstep pioneer Shackleton (I think I bought everything on Skull Disco for at least a few years) but this droning, atmospheric track captures both artists’ mature powers and finds new textures where they intersect. Meditative like the last piece but not at all like the last piece.
  • Cassie Kinoshi’s seed., “iii sun through my window” – Saxophonist/composer from the incredible London scene and her seed collective’s record Gratitude. This track conjures a pastoral lushness with an underlying tension that I find gripping and intoxicating.
  • J. Pavone String Ensemble, “Embers Slumber” – I first saw Jessica Pavone at the exact same time I first saw Mary Halvorson, when Gerard Cox brought their long-running duo to town, and have been a fan ever since. The shadowy, rapturous Reverse Bloom features a trio of Abby Swidler on viola and violin, Aimée Niemann on violin, and Pavone on viola and compositions. This closing track alternates between heartbeat pizzicato and long, arco lines curling like smoke. The exquisite pace lets every element burst and then fade, letting the decay play off one another like the shadows in a Twombly mobile.
  • SML, “Three Over Steel” – SML set the bar high – in a year full of contenders – for smart, surprising groove music. This quintet of Anna Butterss on bass – on this track sometimes so heavy and thick it feels like a tuba in the best way – Jeremiah Chiu on synths, Josh Johnson on sax (those overlapping curlicues resist being easily grasped but also rebel against not being an earworm), the always subtle and response Booker Stardrum on drums and percussion, and Greg Uhlman on guitar. This track is a party starter in the world I want to live in.
  • Dave Guy, “Footwork” – As with many things, I have Andrew Patton to thank for hipping me to Ruby, a record led by longtime Daptone – more recently of The Roots – trumpeter Dave Guy. This Latin-flavored piece feels like the first rays of sunshine on a cobblestone street, with Guy’s sing-along trumpet leading a dance over lush beds of percussion.
  • Adam O’Farrill, “Dodging Roses” – Another favorite trumpet player, Adam O’Farrill, continues to top himself with the addictive HUESO, featuring a tight quartet of frequent collaborators including his brother Zack, bassist Walter Stinson – I’ve been blown away by that rhythm section hookup live and on record before, but they’ve never sounded better – and saxophonist Xavier Del Castillo. Crystalline writing given added life by the personalities of these players and a tribute to the kind of telepathy you hear at the absolute highest levels of this kind of small-group jazz.
  • Happy Apple, “Turquoise Jewelry” – Another stunner from this band led by drummer Dave King (The Bad Plus, Fellwalker) with bassist Erik Fratzke and saxophonist/keyboardist Michael Lewis. I love the stop-start and the subtlety of this one.
  • Caroline Davis and Wendy Eisenberg, “Accept When” – Saxophonist/synth player Caroline Davis put out multiple records that killed me this year, but this duo with guitarist Wendy Eisenberg vibrated strings in my heart I didn’t know existed, or had maybe forgotten about. That stretch toward the midpoint when their unison voices sing “Synchronicity” over and over, and then the instruments take over with this subtle, picked melody from Eisenberg and long tones from Davis, tentative at first and then stretching further and further out… good lord. One of my musical moments of the year.
  • Erik Friedlander, “Shrimping (Mod 9)” – Erik Friedlander is one of my favorite cellists in any contexts, but there’s something special about his writing when he applies it to a specific thematic context. His instrumental dissection of MMA, Dirty Boxing, with a sympathetic quartet of Uri Caine on piano, Mark Helias on bass, and Ches Smith on drums, is my favorite record in years. This bouncy but restrained track is a prime example of what I loved about the record.
  • Dirty Three, “Love Changes Everything II” – A new Dirty Three record is always a cause for celebration in my world, and the magnificent Love Changes Everything is my favorite since She Has No Strings, Apollo, maybe my favorite since Whatever You Love, You Are. I have countless records in my collection all three of these Australian players are on – none of them bad – but that unmistakable language when they get together is to be savored.
  • Marquis Hill featuring Samora Pinderhughes, “Balladesque (Nothing to Lose)” – Chicago-native trumpeter Marquis Hill assembled a dream team including Makaya McCraven, Jeff Parker, Caroline Davis, Josh Johnson, and Juan Pastor, to tackle six of his compositions and tunes by fellow Chicagoans on his Composers Collective: Beyond the JukeBox record. The vocals by Samora Pinderhughes on this one are the icing on the cake.
  • Patricia Brennan, “Los Otros Yo” – Vibes and marimba wizard Patricia Brennan wrote many of my favorite tunes this year and assembled an astonishing band to tackle them – including her bandmate in Halvorson’s Amaryllis, Adam O’Farrill, alongside Jon Irabagon and Mark Shim on reeds, and Marcus Gilmore on drums. This track grabbed me from that horn fanfare on the intro and never let me go.
  • Alabaster DePlume, “Honeycomb” – London-based poet and saxophonist Alabaster DePlume floored me with a beautiful EP this year, Cremisan: Prologue To a Blade that leads off with this gorgeous, melancholy duet for reeds and piano.
  • Max Richter, “The Poetry of Earth (Geophony)” – In a Landscape distilled the particular pleasures I get from Max Richter’s compositions, a series of pastoral watercolors that have enough tension to stay consistently interesting. One of my records of the year for both self-soothing and trying to go deeper.
  • Pat Thomas, “The Oud of Ziryab” – I loved London pianist Pat Thomas’s work with free jazz titans like Derek Bailey, but this was my first exposure to his solo piano conception and every track on The Solar Model of Ibn Al-Shatir knocked me for a loop.
  • Matt Wilson, “Good Trouble”- One of the shows I was sorriest to miss this year was the Jazz Arts Group bringing drummer/composer/bandleaders Matt Wilson back to the Lincoln with his killer band promoting the record this is the title track (composed with sax player Jeff Lederer) of a tribute to the late Senator John Lewis and, more broadly, a hard-swinging tribute to community in all its stripes.
  • Asher Gamedze and the Black Lungs, “Elaboration” – Another drummer/composer on the rise, South Africa’s Asher Gamedze assembled an octet and worked with one of my heroes, poet Fred Moten, on a spoken word meets fire music masterpiece I’m still unpacking, Constitution. This mostly words and drums duet of a track is maybe the purest distillation but it’s an unskippable record.
  • Immanuel Wilkins, “MOSHPIT” – Saxophonist/composer Immanuel Wilkins released a magnum opus Blues Blood this year and it’s another landmark flag-planting from an artist who’s better every time I see him – last time was Winter Jazzfest 2022, be damn sure I’m going to see this live at Big Ears in the spring.
  • Kronos Quartet featuring Jlin, “Maji” – The long-running lineup of the Kronos Quartet took a well-deserved victory lap this year before two seats switched members, including their spectacular Sun Ra tribute Outer Spaceways Incorporated. This track finds them collaborating with Chicago electronic artist Jlin – the only artist I’ve seen get a standing ovation in the middle of their set at Big Ears this year – on an infectious tune that samples Sun Ra’s “Hidden Spheres.”
  • Love Higher, “Crush” – Another recent favorite electronic artist of mine, Love Higher splits her time between Columbus and New York and is moving the dance floor culture in both scenes, with her own work, curating series like Errant Forms, and even acting in the Cameron Granger film that formed the spine of one of my favorite art shows this year. The EP this is the title track from is one of my favorite dance records in a while.
  • J. Rawls, “Fresco” – Sticking with the Columbus theme for a moment, legend J. Rawls released a stellar record Bump the Floor. The light, staccato house-echoing flavor of this was infectious.
  • Nubya Garcia, “The Seer” – My favorite of the current London saxophonists bringing contemporary flavors to a rock-solid grasp of the jazz tradition, Nubya Garcia’s Odyssey is the best synthesis yet of her varied interests, all filtered through her molten-gold, unmistakable sax tone.
  • Matt Mitchell, “Angled Langour” – Another crushing piano trio record – Zealous Angles – captures Mitchell’s working trio with Chris Tordini on bass and Dan Weiss on drums, and it has all the heaviness you’d expect from those three names but also, as on this track, reminds us how much intensity and delicateness they can balance, how many Kandor-style worlds they can build in these bubbles of restraint. Beautiful.
  • Marta Sanchez, “3:30 AM” – This Marta Sanchez record – also featuring Tordini in the bass chair alongside Savannah Harris on drums – felt like it had a similar powerful and restrained quality, an intense rhythm engine pushing right into the red, that I loved on its own but while playing with the list really felt nice between these other two pieces. A standout on a record – Perpetual Void – with no shortage of standouts.
  • Oneida, “Gunboats” – Opening with a heavy-motorik drum beat and squealing feedback, “Gunboats” instantly landed in the classic rager category for me of a band that has more of those deep rocking expansive jams that hold my interest all the way through than anybody still working I can name. This closed the snarling, searching Expansive Air on a fist-pumping note.
  • Kris Davis Trio, “Knotweed” – I was lucky to see this trio the week the record came out, and it made my shows of the year list. Maybe my single favorite pianist of my generation with the best rhythm section she’s had – Robert Hurst and Johnathan Blake – tearing into her excellent compositions. Probably the hardest time I had picking a single track to represent on this playlist.
  • Tyshawn Sorey, “Your Good Lies” – I’ve been lucky enough to see Sorey’s current trio of Columbus native Aaron Diehl on piano and Harish Raghavan on bass twice in the last year, and they only grow into their power and rapport with one another. The Susceptible Now, the new record of standards, is the finest document yet of this working unit and this tightly arranged expansion of the Vividry song might be its crowning achievement.
  • Brian Charette, “6:30 in the Morning” – Brian Charette, with a pulse-pounding quartet of Cory Weeds on tenor, Dave Sikula on guitar, and John Lee on drums paid tribute to B3 legend Jack McDuff in high style on You Don’t Know Jack! and they conjure the lighter Latin flavor of this McDuff composition beautifully.
  • James Carter, “Prince Lasha” – I don’t know why it took this long for a solo baritone saxophone record from James Carter, but it felt like answering (a very specific subset of) my prayers when it happened. An essential document from probably the finest practitioner of the instrument working today.
  • Nicole Connelly, “Sky Piece” – The presence of drummer Kate Gentile got me to check out Stamp in Time, and the writing and playing of trombonist Nicole Connelly (with Zachary Swanson rounding out the trio, along with Andrew Hadro guesting on bari on this track) kept me enthralled. The floating, plaintive quality here is always held together and held aloft by a tensile strength, with one of my favorite tones on trombone I’ve heard in a while.
  • Ibrahim Maalouf, “Timeless” – Lebanese trumpeter Ibrahim Maalouf was one of my favorite discoveries at an early (for me) Winter Jazz Fest, and I’ve been enraptured by his sound and writing ever since. Trumpets of Michel-Ange is a stunning cross-cultural achievement highlighting the quarter-tone trumpet Maalouf’s father created and on this track including guests like the kora master Toumani Diabaté.
  • Sarah Davachi, “Night Horns” – Sarah Davachi’s The Head As Form’d In The Crier’s Choir is another gob-smacking triumph, conjuring a diversity of moods from different instruments and combinations and a real mastery of all of them. This closing track, for pipe organ (also played by Davachi), is one of my favorite pieces to get lost in, always finding new threads.
  • Painkiller, “Samsara III” – John Zorn reformed Painkiller with the original trio of Bill Laswell and Mick Harris, Harris of course doing samples and electronics instead of acoustic drums these days, and I was overjoyed to find the acid-fried intensity and chemistry are both not only intact but deepened.
  • Kali Malone, “No Sun To Burn (for brass)” – I liked Kali Malone on records. Still, I became a massive fan seeing her live at the end of the night in one of the churches at Big Ears two years ago. All Life Long captures that power and the evolution of her compositional language better than any record before. This version of “No Sun to Burn” for a brass quintet – it also appears on the record in an organ arrangement – feels like the fog burning off a lake in the still morning.
  • Walter Smith III, “24” – For his second Blue Note record, saxophonist Walter Smith III assembled a hard-to-top quartet of Jason Moran, Eric Harland, and Reuben Rogers (the aptly titled Three Of Us Are From Houston and Reuben Is Not) and they make a meal of Smith’s originals including this one, that feels tailor made for the sense of deeply serious play all of these musicians bring to the table, as well as a great Sam Rivers tune.
  • JD Allen, “Know Rose” – Another tenor sax player at the top of his game, JD Allen, leans into denser, moodier territory on The Dark, The Light, The Grey, and The Colorful, and this sinewy, smoky ballad is right in his sweet spot. That tone needs to be luxuriated in.
  • Tallā Rouge, “Shapes in Collective Space” – Tallā Rouge’s first record of compositions for viola duo, Shapes in Collective Space, finds whole universes in that range and a wildly expressive palate with these two players, Aria Cheregosha and Lauren Spaulding. It’s here because those tones at the beginning felt there was a shared feeling with the Allen piece right before and the Beethoven-ish sunrise elements of the Richard/Zahn piece after.
  • Dawn Richard and Spencer Zahn, “Traditions” – The single piece I knew had to be somewhere on a year end playlist but I struggled the most with figuring out if it was here or songs. This second collaboration between R&B powerhouse singer-songwriter Dawn Richard and avant-jam bassist/composer Spencer Zahn expanded on their language and opened up even more of their world to me. This tone poem – with minimal, sharply carved lyrics that imply whole lives intersecting – is one of the most moving things I heard all year. “On game day, my brother wears his Saints shoes. Must be a Frank thing, ’cause when I wear ’em, shit, they lose.”
  • Carolyn Enger, “Orizzonte” – Pianist Carolyn Enger built Resonating Earth specifically to be a meditative, transportive work, and she chose the right composers for the job, especially Missy Mazzoli who put together this shadows-over-the-world miniature.
  • MTB, “Angola” – This reteaming of the frontline of Brad Mehldau, Mark Turner, and Peter Bernstein (the MTB of the name) with the rhythm section of Larry Grenadier and Bill Stewart is a delight start to finish, with beautiful interplay that comes from walking the same roads as all five of these players have. This lighthearted but deep romp through Wayne Shorter’s “Angola” was a highlight for me.
  • Dalia Stasevska and the BBC Symphony Orchestra, “Symphony No. II: The Faithful Friend: The Lover Friend’s Love for the Beloved” – Conductor Dalia Stasevska’s Dalia’s Mixtape bursts with ideas, colors, and gave me the most hope for the health of symphonic music of anything I’ve heard in years, including great new pieces from the likes of Anna Meredith, but I had to give it to this movement from a previously lost (I think) Julius Eastman symphony that moved me to tears on first hearing it.
  • Brian Harnetty, “The Workbench” – One of Columbus’s finest composers, Brian Harnetty put out this stand-alone piece written in honor of his father and it’s both a moving tribute and an example of Harnetty working at the top of his game.
  • Lara Downes, “America” – Pianist Lara Downes’ This Land is a stunning grappling with what this country we share means, full of both beauty and truth. My highlight was this Noah Luna arrangement of Simon and Garfunkle’s “America,” that opens the song up while keeping everything that’s good about it, played exquisitely.
  • Shabaka, “As The Planets And The Stars Collapse” – One of my highlights of this year’s Big Ears – and an appearance as part of A Night at the East in WJF – was Shabaka’s new flute conception; I worried I was so deep into his tenor player bag that I’d have a hard time getting on board, but the first few notes put those fears to rest and the richly developed record keeps unfolding and revealing both its truths and more mysteries to me.

Categories
Best Of Playlist record reviews

Best of 2024 – Songs

As I have the last few years, these podcasts are expansions of my favorite albums of the year; songs that wouldn’t let me go or representations of albums that I loved but didn’t quite make my top 20. These are – mostly – songs with words and creating a concentrating emotion or image; as opposed to the companion playlist, Spaces, which are – usually instrumental and create a landscape or a vibration for me.

In a broad sense – you’re used to this if you’ve been reading me for a little while – this starts with some anthems and ends with some prayers, through my crooked eye, of course. Your mileage may – and probably should – vary.

  • Miko Marks, “I’ll Cry For Yours (Will You Cry For Mine)” – The last few years have given us a bounty of tribute records that expand and subvert the sometimes perfunctory nature of these collections and My Black Country: The Songs of Alice Randall is one of the best I’ve ever heard. Assembled to go along with Randall’s terrific memoir of the same name, this pioneering black country artist’s work gets fresh, loving treatments. There isn’t a dud in its entire length, but probably my favorite is this searing, explosive read on a Randall tune I didn’t previously know, originally recorded by ’90s country singer Tamra Rosanes. Up until literally the night before I started writing this, I was sure I was kicking the playlist off with the next song, off my favorite record of the year, but walking under a fragile snow through the empty streets of my neighborhood, this song (which had been steadily moving toward the pole position of the playlist) said, “No, dumbass, this is the tone of the year and the tone of the music that spoke to you it’s all in there, between Miko Marks’ voice and those horns.” “Our wounds will heal through tears and time. When they draw up sides, can you cross that line?”
  • Hurray for the Riff Raff, “Snake Plant (The Past Is Still Alive)” – From the moment I heard it, Hurray for the Riff Raff’s The Past Is Still Alive felt like their masterpiece (so far), one of the best singer-songwriter records I’ve ever heard, and my record of the year. I had to play the whole thing back as soon as it ended. Every song on this record is perfect – arrangements pop, their voice has never sounded better – but this was the single song I reached for most often when I was down, and it’s a spectacular example of Segarra’s ability to stitch together perfectly captured moments with direct address and craft a mammoth dagger planted squarely in the heart. “Tattoo with a needle and thread, most of our old friends are dead. So test your drugs, remember Narcan; there’s a war on the people, what don’t you understand?”
  • Chuck Prophet, “Wake The Dead” – Long one of my favorite songwriters, Chuck Prophet refreshed his sound with an album-length collaboration with Salinas cumbia band Qiansave. That album – of which this is the title track – is the loosest, most powerful album Prophet’s made in a while; the sharply observed lyrics and his supple voice slide beautifully through these rhythms, both illuminating the shadowy spaces of the other. “If they ask you any questions, go ahead and tell the truth; if we have to, we can plead insanity. If it’s good enough for you, it works for me.”
  • Tim Easton, “Everything You’re Afraid Of” – My first favorite Columbus songwriter – based in Nashville for many years – put out his best record in years with the loose, ragged-and-right Find Your Way and this was the centerpiece in my mind, another song that gave me so much solace over the year I can barely sum it up (though I certainly tried when he did it at Dick’s Den this year and I was a bawling mess). “Ask yourself how you can help someone else who’s in pain today. Take all those worries, put ’em in a big ol’ book; leave the book on a stranger’s shelf. Now, congratulate yourself. Send a meaningful prayer of sympathy to all your enemies.”
  • Sinkane featuring Tru Osborne, “Everything is Everything” – Another of my favorite Columbus exports to the world, Sinkane made another spectacular record with We Belong, ornate but loose, dancefloor grooves sprinkled with interesting arrangement choices and beguiling melodies. With a vocal assist from Tru Osborne, this song is another in his long line of quintessential summertime jams alongside “Runnin'” and “Here We Be.” “That’s the problem with tomorrow; always one day away. I want to be free in this moment; well, this is what I pray.”
  • Ledisi, “Stay Here Tonight” – I loved Ledisi’s detour into the work of Nina Simone, but her new record of originals, Good Life, was exactly what I needed – like sinking into a bubble bath with a perfectly cold martini at the side; like the first time you hear Coltrane’s Crescent. The gleaming crystal keyboard line over crunchy drums, around her swooping voice blend beautifully. “Let’s be clear – you gotta say it right now: is it true?”
  • Adeem the Artist, “Wounded Astronaut” – Knoxville breakout Americana star Adeem the Artist followed their astonishing White Trash Revelry with the knottier, denser Anniversary that took a little longer to reveal its pleasures but hit me even deeper. This biting, deceptively easy-going look at the way we men treat women knocked me sideways – ripping a scab off rarely comes with as catchy a sing-along chorus as this. “Oh, the women I have loved and left injured in the shadows of my childhood dysfunctions playing out in real time… Were that I was younger, I could have put to use my wonder to imagine better ways a healthy partner is defined.”
  • The Paranoid Style, “Print the Legend” – Literary rock band The Paranoid Style, led by married couple Elizabeth Nelson and Timothy Bracy, put out their best record yet this year The Interrogator, making excellent use of Peter Holsapple (The dBs, Continental Drifters) and this catchy barbed wire-tumbleweed was one of my favorite songs of the year; an alternate universe urban “The Road Goes On Forever” that questions if there was ever a party in the first place. “Jill Collins grabbed the bag and then she grabbed the wheel. Sidney was shot, and near-passed-out, when he made his last appeal: ‘Keep me safe and keep me alive, and I’ll settle the score.’ They held hands and they laid eyes, before she pushed him out the door.”
  • Brittany Howard, “What Now” – With Howard’s sophomore solo outing she made a hard-hitting record every bit the equal of the Alabama Shakes work I initially fell in love with. The swinging drive of the groove here underpins the barely restrained rage of the lyric and vocal in an intoxicating way. “If you want someone to hate, then bring it on me.”
  • Joshua Ray Walker, “Thank You For Listening” – One of the finest new honky tonk singers, Joshua Ray Walker, in the midst of a fight with colon cancer, put out a gorgeous record of stripped down, acoustic takes on many of his finest songs and this lone new tune is one of his best, a four a.m. whisper of gratitude and reminder why any of us make things. “Thanks for listening to all my sad songs. Thanks for loving me when I sing the words wrong. Makes the bad times not seem so long.”
  • Hilary Gardner, “Jingle Jangle Jingle (I Got Spurs)” – I got to see one of my favorite jazz singers Hilary Gardner’s new project with the Lonesome Pines at Mezzrow around last year’s Winter Jazz Fest, and I liked it – I’d love hearing Gardner sing the phone book – but I was a little disappointed it was more movie-cowboy songs than the Western Swing I’d hoped for. Getting to live with the record, On The Trail With the Lonesome Pines, I love it. This Lilley and Loesser tune – which I first knew from Popeye as a kid, but was a focal point of a Tex Ritter Best Of I wore out in my 20s – sums up everything I love about her witty, winsome approach to these songs and the interplay with this crack band, especially the vocal nudges from guitarist Justin Poindexter. “Oh, Bessie Lou, though we’ve done a heap of dreaming, this is why it won’t come true: I’ve got spurs that jingle jangle jingle as I go riding merrily along. And they sing, ‘Oh, ain’t you glad you’re single?’ and that song ain’t so very far from wrong.”
  • Brittney Spencer, “Desperate” – One of my favorite new country singers exploded with a phenomenal front-to-back debut record My Stupid Life, and as much as I loved the first single “Night In,” this song got its hooks in me – with sharply detailed production that shows every nuance of Spencer’s voice and a bolt-from-the-blue pedal steel line around immediately relatable but never stupid lyrics, and a fist-pumping chorus about ambiguity and anxiety; a combination I’m always a sucker for. “I’m so used to hiding from the whole truth; caught between the holding back and worrying how you’ll react.”
  • Aoife O’Donovan and The Knights, “All My Friends” – Aoife O’Donovan continues to stun me, and this title track on her album-length collaboration with chamber orchestra The Knights, is an addition to her canon of some of the best songs written by anyone of my generation. The use of the orchestra – and horns from brass quartet The Westerlies – gives me chills every time I play it, while her voice and the lyrics give me hope through tears. “I always knew, and so did you, that we were going to war. Now years have passed; I’m trying to remember who it is for. If we reach 36 or if the door gets slammed, at least I know we’ve tried for all my friends.”
  • Waxahatchee, “The Wolves” – Waxahatchee keeps trumping herself and Tigers Blood is another triumph with warm, sharply observed songs; maps for living in the world in dusky, luminous production and sparse arrangements. “You’ve been proving yourself wrong with or without me here. You don’t look around, you don’t check the score; you cause all that trouble, then you beg for more on every warm horizon of what I let disappear.”
  • Adrienne Lenker, “Sadness As A Gift” – I like but don’t love the band Big Thief, so it took multiple conversations around the Big Ears Festival about their lead singer Lenker’s set being the favorite set of one person after another to get me to check out her gorgeous solo record Bright Futures. The violin-drenched arrangement here sets a perfect tone for the steely resignation of the song and her voice way up front and bright with I think two male voices hovering around it like moths. A perfect song in a damn fine album. “Just leaning on the windowsill. You could write me someday, and I hope you will. You could see the sadness as a gift, and still, the seasons go so fast.”
  • Sierra Ferrell, “Dollar Bill Bar” – This was Sierra Ferrell’s year, breaking out to bigger venues and capturing the ears of a wider range of people than my crowd of roots rock weirdos, and it’s incredibly well-deserved. She blends and braids the various strains of American music into personal, relatable songs as well as anyone working today; the arrangement on this with a moaning, sarcastic harmonica and a jaunty shuffle on the drums, is a perfect example. “If I had a dollar for every single hopeful heart, well, honey, I could break a hundred down at the dollar bill bar.”
  • Sarah Shook and the Disarmers, “Backsliders” – River Shook and their band continued expanding on the variety of textures and rhythms that made Nightroamer such a delightful jumping off point with Revelations but make some space for the vintage honky tonk shitkicking numbers that they write better than anybody else, like this mournful morning-after statement of purpose. “Now I got one foot out the door and you’re still getting dressed. Hate that I can’t say no as easily as you say yes. I’m a real piece of shit and you’re a vixen in a dress. I thought we was movin’ on but I was wrong I guess.”
  • Kyshona, “Where My Mind Goes” – Kyshona made my favorite of her records so far with Legacy, like the last couple of songs taking on the history of American music with open arms but also her family history and the legacy of black music. This gripping, dark gospel stomp sums up much of what I love about this record. “Where my mind goes when you tell me that I just can’t carry on. It’s where my mind goes – you can’t stop me. I’ll keep moving on.”
  • N’shai Iman, “Can’t Take It” – I discovered rising Columbus singer-songwriter N’shai Iman this year and this song enraptured me, some of the finest alternative R&B or is that just the mainstream of R&B these days, I’ve heard in a long time with a subdued under-my-skin groove and a stunning vocal. “I can’t feel your touch from so far away; I need hands-on assistance.”
  • Meshell Ndegeocello, “Another Country” – Meshell Ndegeocello’s No More Water: The Gospel of James Baldwin pulls off the brilliant magic act of simultaneously exulting Baldwin and taking him off the pedestal and out of the box that tries to make one of the great literary minds simple and digestible. This soaring song bursts from distorted spoken word into a chiaroscuro sunrise. Beautiful. “Gold brown red brown, more greed grows inside. Make more love, never grief.”
  • Arooj Aftab, “Whiskey” – I loved Arooj Aftab’s earlier records, especially Vulture Prince and the collaborative Love in Exile, but even as a fan I was unprepared for the stunning Night Reign. This contemporary torch song blends the guitarist of Gyan Riley and Kaki King with Maeve Gilchrist’s harp, Jamey Haddad’s percussion, and Linda May Han Oh’s bass into a rich landscape for Aftab’s vocal to flow through. “We’ll fade into the night on waves of your perfume. I’m drunk, and you’re insane; tell me how we will get home.”
  • John Moreland, “Visitor” – John Moreland, one of my favorite songwriters in the Guy Clark or Elizabeth Bishop tradition of turning a situation around and seeing how the light hits it from all sides, made another perfect record this year. This title track is a hymn to finding ways to live with one another, with a circling organ over subtly grimy drums. “I’ve been stoned and scared of my reflection. I can see your shifty smirk from the depths of my depression, but I will not be your puppet or your payment, your easy entertainment, for I’ve made amends for me.”
  • Rapsody featuring Erykah Badu, “3:AM” – Rapsody’s Please Don’t Cry knocked me over, front-to-back, but this sleepy slow jam produced by Lonestarmusik, S1, and Jemarcus Bridges, thick with lazy horns and an instant-classic Badu hook was an early favorite track of mine and still beguiles me. “I loved to laugh with you – you were never my mistake; a blessing.”
  • Lucky Daye, “Top” – Maybe my favorite straight-down-the-line R&B record of the year, Lucky Daye’s honeyed vocals flow beautifully around the big crunch of the drums and bass on this track, produced by D’Mile. “I can feel your water comin” over me, diving underwater till I’m lost at sea.”
  • Ice Spice, “Gimme a Light” – Ice Spice’s diamond-hard percussive flow gets a fantastic showcase on this Sean Paul-sampling sparse track produced by RIOTUSA. “She gettin’ loud but nobody moved; watch the TV, I’m makin’ the news.”
  • PinkPantheress, “Turn It Up” – This single from English singer-songwriter PinkPantheress brought her work into sharp relief for me and it was one of my favorite discoveries of the year (another case where I’m late to the party). This song about a tenuous relationship (if not obsession) uses moody production that has flavors of 2-step garage around its edges to evoke that feeling when the mood in a club shifts better than almost any song I can remember. “Tell me why you’re always here at night? Turn it up! It seems to me it’s the only time I see you. And when I thought I found my purpose in life, you’re not there.”
  • Shannon and the Clams, “The Moon is in the Wrong Place” – Shannon and the Clams’ gorgeous and heartbreaking new record – this is the title track – was born out of struggling with the untimely death of Shannon Shaw’s fiance, Joe Haener; I wouldn’t wish that on anyone. This record is a balm and a reminder that we can even dance about the terrible times; sometimes we need to. “Colors changed when you left this world – now everything’s a whiter shade of mauve. I’m seeing bright spots, shiny objects that you use for those you love: I spy seafoam, I spy olive, I spy golden candlelight. I spy something that you told me in the last week of our lives.”
  • Dave Alvin and Jimmie Dale Gilmore, “We’re Still Here” – This duet statement of purpose is a highlight of Dave Alvin and Jimmie Dale Gilmore’s second collaborative record Trying To Be Free, with a killing Alvin guitar solo and gorgeous intertwined B-3 and piano, connecting the two kinds of honky tonks that were fertile soil for the evolution of American music. “Well, a music business man with a music business smile said the songs that I write were old and out of style. But I’ve been boppin’ these blues for for over forty years. Hell, I don’t know where he is but we’re still here.”
  • Sabrina Carpenter, “Please Please Please” – Obviously one of the biggest breakout successes this year and I loved Short n’ Sweet as much as everyone, with this grinning put-your-man-in-his-place song and its vibe pop/roller disco groove. The rippling synth lines and those twangy smears on the vocals got their hooks in me immediately. “Heartbreak is one thing, my ego’s another; I beg you don’t embarrass me, motherfucker.”
  • Kaitlin Butts, “Other Girls (Ain’t Havin’ Any Fun)” – Kaitlin Butts’ Roadrunner! is my favorite contemporary reimagining of Western Swing in many years and this kiss off torch ballad is a highlight in a record full of highlights, featuring pedal steel like smoke rising off her in a film noir spotlight. “They say, ‘Other girls don’t act like this,’ that it’s poison on the tongue. They say, ‘Other girls don’t act like this,’ oh, but other girls ain’t having any fun.”
  • Emily Nenni, “I Don’t Have to Like You” – This standout from Emily Nenni’s great Drive & Cry has a swaggering, easy going beat dripping with organ shoving her voice into the foreground. “Well, it took time but I learned how not to feed the flame of folks like you. I can’t linger or I’ll burn a hole, that’s just what my eyes do.”
  • Luci Kaye Booth, “Damn Good In a Dive Bar” – This favorite track for me from Booth’s great The Loneliest Girl in the World has a simple arrangement that uses space around those guitar stabs and dusky drums very effectively but for me, this one is all about the tumble of words with the razor-cut alliteration and internal rhymes belied by the perfectly nonchalant vocal delivery. “All eyes on the high-rise Levi’s in the low light; boys say, ‘Hey there, ain’t you a sight.’ You can write my name in Sharpie on the wall, but you can’t take me home when they’re calling last call. Two-dollar buzz, breaking neon hearts: I look pretty damn good in a dive bar.”
  • Maren Morris, “Push Me Over” – I’ve long been a subscriber to the theory (I first heard from the Supersuckers’ Eddie Spaghetti) that every band’s disco record is my favorite record of this, and now I’ve added Maren Morris to that list. This overheated seduction was one of my favorite jams of the summer and works just as well in the cold of December. “Even if it’s just tonight, you still got me to the other side, but did you push me over, or did I? Either way, I gotta say, no hesitations.”
  • Carsie Blanton, “My Good Friends” – This highlight from Carsie Blanton’s terrific After The Revolution uses a campfire-folk arrangement to get this simple, profound message about how much we need other people in times of celebration and need. “When the darkness descends, I call up my good friends. They come down to the riverbed and crack me up until the light gets in.”
  • Amy Rigby, “Bad in a Good Way” – One of my favorite singer-songwriters, Amy Rigby, returned with her best record in years – maybe since MiddlescenceHang In There With Me. One of my favorite modes of Rigby is her character writing, and this affectionate eyebrow-raised capture of a life through his funeral was an instant favorite of mine; a stunning example of her laid-back, beckoning delivery and an interesting arrangement, shot through with drones. “He was the same as desert weather, he held it all together. Dry and gritty with a chill, but he wished nobody ill. He was pure Play It As It Lays, he was as sure as ‘Glory Days,’ the ones they thought would never end. Beneath it all, he was a friend who found a way not to be sad at all the love he could’ve had. He wasn’t good the way they say; he was bad.”
  • Queen Naija, “Good Girls Finish Last” – One of my favorite discoveries this year and one of my favorite R&B singles – the circling, “No you don’t know what you want,” gets stuck in my head for days every time I play it.
  • Shemeika Copeland, “Only Miss You All The Time”Blame It On Eve was a high-watermark for one of the most storied blues-folk singers of my lifetime, pairing Shemeika Copeland’s voice in astonishing form paired with Will Kimbrough’s production and stabbing guitar on this song (which Kimbrough also co-wrote), a sparse punch in the chest and a flickering flame in the darkness on a record that struck me over and over. “I miss you, lover, I miss you, friend. If I never see you again: it wasn’t you, it wasn’t me; just a love not meant to be.”
  • MJ Lenderman, “She’s Leaving You” – I resisted the Lenderman record Manning Fireworks at first – praise was a little too effusive, a little too universal, but as soon as I finally heard it I was in love. This song in particular, with its keening chorus, “It falls apart; we’ve all got work to do” and that chiming, ragged guitar gave me the best early-Wilco-conjuring feelings I’ve gotten from any record in many years.
  • George Strait, “Rent” – This highlight off George Strait’s remarkably consistent 31st album Cowboys and Dreamers opens with a directly addressed shoutout to its two (now gone from us) songwriters, Texas master of empathy and hooks Guy Clark and Keith Gattis (whose “El Cerrito Place” is one of my favorite ballads of the last 20 years and made my “Parting Gifts” playlist last year), and makes excellent use of Strait’s elder statesman voice and a subtle, devastating arrangement. “He said, ‘The war took my brother. The good Lord took my mother. And the years, well, I don’t know where they all went. Until that roll is called up yonder, all I can do is wonder if I even did enough to make a dent. But I made a few good friends, and I always paid my rent.”
  • Linda Thompson featuring Kami Thompson, “The Solitary Traveller” – This opening track from Linda Thompson’s return Proxy Music, named because these originals are performed by other artists, set the tone for an astonishing return, with a magical vocal from Thompson’s daughter Kami. “Lonely life, where is thy sting? Lonely life? There’s no such thing.”
  • Nick Lowe and Los Straitjackets, “Crying Inside” – At long last, the collaboration of one of the great power-pop (and other modes) songwriters and surf champions gave us a full-length and it exceeded even my high expectations. This song in particular is as good as anything Lowe has ever written and recorded. “I’m standing in a jolly crowd – joking, laughing a little too loud. Looking like the model of a man who’s got it made. But my repartee is just to disguise all the hurt I’m trying to hide.”
  • The Harlem Gospel Travelers, “We Don’t Love Enough” – For their follow up Rhapsody, back with producer and mentor Eli “Paperboy” Reed is a luminous cover of The Triumphs’ “We Don’t Love Enough” that I first heard on the seminal Numero comp Good God! They don’t just do it justice, they take it into space. The way they sing “It’s a shame…” was as heavy as whole lyrics on other songs and a much needed message in this fucked-up year.
  • Etran de L’air, “Igrawahi” – I’ve liked all the bands I’ve heard out of the Tuareg blues-rock scene exporting to the Europe and the States over the last ten years, but Etran de L’air – who I was lucky enough to see twice this year, at festivals that sometimes feel on opposite ends of the spectrum, Big Ears and Gonerfest – bring a different flavor with a rhythm section that recalls the loose euphoria of garage rock.
  • Charli XCX, “Club classics” – I didn’t love Charli XCX’s Brat quite as much as her last record but that was an extremely high bar for me and it was full of sticky candy and swirling summer jams. This grappling with nostalgia/tipping of the hat, set to a powerful groove was a favorite. “Play the track fast, not slow; pull it back twice, let go.”
  • Love Fiend, “Just For Eddie” – Another undeniable groove and grappling with nostalgia and the sometimes-disconnection baked into how we live our lives, and a beautiful eulogy (I think) from an angle more inspired by vintage ’70s pub rock and a cornerstone of one of my favorite rock records of the year. “Save a nickel, save a dime, so you can play a song one at a time: ‘Trouble in Mind’ or ‘Heartbreak Hotel,’ the 45’s got you under its spell.”
  • Freak Genes, “Clear in the Night” – This cracked garage/industrial blend from Cincinnati’s Feel It records feels tailor-made for fans of Gorgio Murderer and Optic Sink, and is their most beguiling worldbuilding on record yet. “Excess on demand.”
  • X, “Big Black X” – If Smoke & Fiction really is their last statement, pioneering West Coast post-punk band X – still with the original members John Doe, Exene Cervenka, Billy Zoom, and DJ Bonebrake – it’s a hell of a way to go out on. Ending this little section of the playlist with another deep groove and a gimlet eyed looking back, cut with diamonds and sung like a heart being sprayed by a flamethrower with the two voices coming together on maybe my favorite chorus all year. “Stay awake and don’t get taken. We knew the gutter, also the future.”
  • Gouge Away, “Maybe Blue” – Transitioning out of that handful of songs with a favorite young rock band that grew out of X and their scene, and the hardcore boiling around them, and crafted a completely fresh, head-knocking mix of elements I thought I’d grown tired of before hearing Deep Sage. “Can we go back to when the ceiling was breathing? Can we go back to when the wood grain was dripping?”
  • Ancient Peach, “Lovers Run” – A favorite new local band featuring Ginny Riot – a musician I’d follow into any new project – on guitar and vocals (shared with bassist Lauren Lever), and their EP was the best heavy, swinging shoegaze I’ve heard in a long while. “No offense, but they never told; and the silence grows.”
  • Angélica Garcia, “Juanita”– Garcia’s third album, Gemelo, knocked me sideways and the insistent beat and restrained vocal on the verses that both explode into a sculpture of fireworks on the chorus was a prime example of why.
  • Bette Smith, “Happiness” – Brooklyn-via-Memphis soul-rock singer Bette Smith made her best record yet, Goodthing, expanding on the multitude of pleasures from The Good, The Bad, and the Bette but giving it a brighter, more nuanced three-dimensionality. “Take a shot of freedom. Now how ya feeling?”
  • Amanda Anne Platt and the Honeycutters, “Mirage” – I was primed for The Ones That Stay after seeing a stunning Amanda Anne Platt and the Honeycutters show at Natalie’s this year and this song that struck me live stabbed daggers in my heart on the record. That shattering piano line the steel guitar orbits around, giving her band space to breathe, grabs me by the collar every time. “I take a toothpick and I walk outside – the sky is lavender and rose gold. Another sweet and salty summer night; an empty road that smells like charcoal. I strain to hear the angels sing, but they don’t owe me anything.
  • Memphis Royal Brothers, featuring Wendy Moten and Jim Lauderdale, “Brand New Heart”—This Memphis supergroup/Royal Studios house band features a backbone of legends like Lester Snell, Charles Hodges, and Michael Toles. On this debut record, they pair that tasteful firepower with killer new songs. This duet between legendary country songwriter Jim Lauderdale and Wendy Moten is a love duet for the ages. “Love’s an invitation to start your life again; a perfect celebration that doesn’t have to end.”
  • Ella Langley, “I Blame the Bar” – Like I suspect a lot of listeners, I found Ella Langley through that ubiquitous TikTok song, but the more I dug into her record hungover it kept revealing things, and this song has the best bad-idea-seduction chorus in years, up there with classics like Dolly Parton’s “Why’d You Come In Here Looking Like That” and Ani Difranco’s “Shy.” “No, I don’t blame you that it didn’t work out. Even if I used to, baby, I don’t now. It was the two-for-ones, being young and dumb, that everyone’s gotta go through.”
  • Dehd, “Hard to Love” – Another example that friends are the most reliable indicator of new bands as two different pals suggested Dehd’s record Poetry and I fell quickly in love, and this dust-spattered reckless backroads drive is a prime example of what keeps me coming back to it. “Gotta love the good man, but that ain’t what I want. Give me someone rough and tumble, someone hard to love.”
  • Raul Malo, “I Got Stripes” – One of the great American voices paired with one of the quintessential American songs, Johnny Cash’s Leadbelly adaptation, exceeded even those high expectations and gave us probably the definitive version; damn sure the only one that made me forget the original for as long as it’s running. “Them chains, them chains, they’re about to drag me down.”
  • Thee Sacred Souls, “Price I’ll Pay” – Cali sweet soul torchbearers Thee Sacred Souls knocked it out of the park with the sun-dappled harmonies and silky rhythms of Got a Story To Tell. In a record of gems, this one stuck in my throat every time I played it. “With every new season, I want to explore you.”
  • Muni Long, “Type Questions” – This finger snap-driven torch ballad was an immediate standout for me from Muni Long’s consistently great Revenge and a song I’ve revisited often over 2024. “I’m good at making something out of nothing – how come you never asked me if I have a husband?”
  • Moor Mother and Sistazz of the Nitty Gritty, “SOUTH SEA” – Moor Mother continued her streak of one of the great no-filler exploratory catalogs in music today with The Great Bailout. This expansive 9-minute track finds Moor Mother in her spoken word mode with fascinating backgrounds shifting between wordless gospel croons, vocalese, and a questing, mournful clarinet rising out of a horn section. Gorgeous and haunting. “Sometimes the killing is silent / So silent you can almost hear the chaos of people gathering / spells and curses in their head”
  • The Bellrays, “All The Rage” – After a six-year gap, Lisa Kekaula’s soul-injected rock band returns with a record of wall-to-wall firey power. This one captures the riffs, surging vocals, and swinging stomp of a rhythm section that’s always made The Bellrays so intoxicating. “Is it the morning after or the night before? This room is getting darker than it’s ever been before.”
  • Jake Blount and Mali Obomsawin, “What’s You Gonna Do When The Word’s On Fire”Symbiont, a masterpiece in folky, collaged, deconstructionist indigenous futurism brings together Jake Blount and Mali Obomsawin and finds all of their interests and earlier work coalescing in a way that dazzles me every time. “You are a fragment of a whole carrying with you a small, small role that multiplies with you. Remember you instructions: at the end you too will return to soil.”
  • Seun Kuti and Egypt 80, “Well Well Well” – Another extension and continuation of vintage Afrobeat that doesn’t shut out the present in any sense. A dance floor monster that orbits around Kuti’s sweet tenor and sticky horn lines I can’t help singing along to. “Many are falling and they don’t know because the world dey upside down.”
  • Common and Pete Rock featuring Bilal, “So Many People” – In a similar warm, throwback mode the match-made-in-heaven pairing of Common and Pete Rock returns to the hip-hop-as-woman metaphor of so much of Common’s work with a beat full of interesting flourishes moving with a light touch, and remarkable feature vocals from Bilal. “She showed up for me in the darkest times; conversations with her re-spark my mind.”
  • Mourning [A] BLKstar, “Just Can’t Be” – Cleveland’s avant-funk collective put out another crushing record with the lush and searching Ancient//Future, the interplay of the horns and vocals on this over the creeping flow of the beat sends this one over the top for me. “I am to blame, but you are the root.”
  • Jenny Scheinman, “Ornette Goes Home” – Maybe this is a more likely candidate for the Spaces list, but violinist/composer Jenny Scheinman’s new one All Species Parade roared out of the gate with this eulogy/tribute that’s rich with the same kind of melodic earworms Ornette was known for and that beat and searching quality just sort of fused itself in my head alongside the Mourning [A]BLKstar – Scheinman’s violin glides over and through Bill Frisell’s guitar and Carmen Staaf’s piano, with Frisell’s frequent rhythm section of Tony Scherr and Kenny Wollensen slyly winking at the Haden/Higgins hookup without slavishly recreating it.
  • Rema and Shallpopi, “BENIN BOYS” – I’m not as well-versed as I should be on the current Nigerian pop/afrobeats scene but I loved the silky, beckoning quality of this gold-plated pop collaboration as soon as I heard it. Those synth horn stabs both reminded me of the last couple of tracks and I thought set up the shift into the next few pieces. “If you play with the boys, you go collect.”
  • Ibibio Sound Machine, “Let My Yes Be Yes” – One of my favorite contemporary funk bands, London’s Ibibio Sound Machine, continued their unique fusion of elements with a sensibility that balances the groove and the song with uncommon delicateness for as powerfully thumping as these tunes are, with their remarkable Pull the Rope. “A better way for me to find me, just need to get you, get you behind me.
  • Nubiyan Twist featuring Nile Rodgers and The Reflex, “Lights Out (The Reflex Revision)” – The same feeling as the above with a late ’70s flavor – even featuring one of the architects of that sound – from the same UK scene as Ibibio Sound Machine and remixed by long running DJ The Reflex, this is like eating too much candy or having three too many drinks. “Down with the silence. Free your mind, let’s shake with the vibrance.”
  • Latto, “Big Mama” – Columbus native who came into her own in the Atlanta scene, Latto’s Sugar Honey Iced Tea is her best record yet and this seductive braggadocious track produced by COUPE, OZ, and Kid Masterpiece is an addictive string of earworms and hurts-so-good one liners. “Drinking out the bottle til this shit is done. On some Andre 3K shit, man, where the fuck my panties at?”
  • Luno Moon and Garlic Jr., “DRUNK ON A WEDNESDAY” – There’s a fascinating scene of exploratory, avant-leaning R&B in Columbus right now and Hakim Callwood – in his Garlic Jr. guise – and Luno Moon are at the center of it. This twisty song – those stuttered synths under the insistent drums kill me – sums up that sense of stasis between unhinged exuberance and regret and is as addictive as the behavior in the title. “Here time isn’t linear, how much of it do we have? My nose and my arms are wide open – come closer to me, let’s relapse on our love.”
  • Tinashe, “Getting No Sleep” – I love even the uneven Tinashe records, and I think Quantum Baby is one of her best – this clattering beat with the subdued synths sets up a smoky vocal that plays to all her strengths and a hook I hum for days every time I play it. “We ain’t getting no sleep, no, no, we’re just living instead. We can sleep when we’re dead.”
  • Shovels and Rope, “Piranhanana” – Shovels and Rope put out their rawest, meanest, most rocking record with Something is Working Above My Head and it was a breakthrough for a band I already loved. This swinging steamroller of an early single conjures vintage T Rex and AC/DC with the close harmonies melting into gang vocals. “Forlorn, used to lose it – skips the beat and gets straight to the bruisin’.”
  • MC Lyte, “All Day All Night” – With a laid-back boom-bap infused organ trio- recalling backing track produced by Easy Mo Bee, a revitalized MC Lyte made something that always makes me grin like an idiot, a standout on a brilliant restatement record 1 on 1. “Older now, with him here in front of me, it was clear he had no idea what he’d done for me: made me feel love, gave me hope like ‘Yes,’ in a world full of nopes, it was me that he caressed.”
  • Masha Marjieh, “Come Inside” – I’d been waiting for a proper Masha Marjieh – a crucial component of the classic run of one of my five favorite Detroit rock bands of my lifetime (I said what I said) The Deadstring Brothers – solo record and the psych-drenched Past Present Future more than delivered. This deliberately paced distillation of desire is a highlight for me on a record without any weak links, with one of my favorite bass lines and a organ part I want to sink into. “Whisper to me softly, please, how you’ll take me when you need.”
  • Samora Pinderhughes, “Drown” – I’ve liked Samora Pinderhughes but his performance at LPR during Winter Jazz Fest this year meant I was hungry for this new record and I was more than rewarded by Venus Smiles Not in the House of Tears, a damn masterpiece that’s still revealing truths to me. And this blown-glass piano ballad fucking levels me. “No sound, no sound around. I’m not too proud of what I’ve found. It won’t change until I face it, take a deep breath, and drown. Don’t take your eyes off the sea.”
  • Zach Bryan, “Bass Boat” – Speaking of songs that leveled me this year – I liked most of The Great American Bar Scene the way I like most of Bryan’s work; I’m a sucker for Springsteen-ish words sprayed like a firehouse. But this is one of the maybe 10 songs of his that hit me like a sledgehammer, piano-driven, and that backing vocal like a shadow or a conscience wrapped around the words. Just perfect. “I ain’t never been one for cheap excuses, and apologies have always been a little late or useless, but if you give me four minutes and a little bit of time, I’ll make them old days an old friend of mine.”
  • Maia Jarrett featuring The InBetweens, “Hold Me” – This striking single from Maia Jarrett, carrying on the lineage of her father bass player Noah Jarrett and featuring Jarrett’s collaborative trio The InBetweens with Conor Elmes on drums and percussion and Mike Gamble on guitar and electronics on sympathetic backing, is one of the most assured debuts I’ve heard in a very long time. Jarrett’s words and piano create an entire universe here, a forest of dancing razor blades and smoke that is specific in its intent but leaves enough mystery to keep me intrigued. “Being the girl that I used to hate: stable enough to open my eyes to fate.”
  • Cassandra Jenkins, “Clams Casino” – I loved Jenkins’ last record and My Light, My Destroyer, might be even better. It’s a slower burn but keeps sharing things with me, and this song – with its sidewalk-dancing rumble and guitar bursts – got me immediately. “I might never land on solid grounds. Part of me will always be in the clouds in an old suit in my hotel room, but I don’t wanna laugh alone anymore.”
  • Melissa Carper, “Borned in Ya” – Carper crosses western wing and honky tonk with a modern sensibility as well as anyone working and this ferocious, infectiously fun drawing of sides, with stinging electric guitar and a rich baritone sax telling the story as much as her intriguing voice, should be a standard if there’s any justice in the world. “Mama she sang to us, she borned it in us, and Daddy played those old records, and I remember sometimes he’d cry to hear those soulful sounds. Now I know what Daddy found.”
  • Dwight Yoakam, “I’ll Pay The Price” – The modern master at mixing the ancient and the immediate, Dwight Yoakam returned with his best record in almost 20 years – Brighter Days – and this song is pure, vintage Dwight in the best possible way. “Take any deal thrown by your hand and pay the price to hold it again.”
  • Maya de Vitry, “Compass” – Maya de Vitry’s song “How Bad I Want to Live” from 2022’s Violet Light was an immediate anthem and guiding light for me, on a record whose beauty I’m still digging into. Her new one The Only Moment was another stunner with a tight band that made me sorry I couldn’t make her tour stop at Natalie’s work with scheduling. This is my favorite song from it, insistent, burrowing right into my chest. “Sorry to hear that I let you down. Sorrier to know you were thinking I was here just holding up high some idea you had about me. I get it, I get mad too.”
  • Katie Mae and the Lubrication, “Hard Enough” – One of the most exciting new Americana bands to come down the pike in a minute, from the fertile Phoenix scene, Katie Mae and the Lubrication’s The Sighs & Strength hit every pleasure center I have focused around that genre with sharply defined songs and crisp playing. This was an instant favorite of mine from that first line. “Well, I picked up all my habits from my stupid-ass friends; I always feel lucky just to see them again. Life’s too short too let good loved ones go, too long without you telling them so. And everything else is hard enough.”
  • Watershed, “Sensational Things” – Columbus powerpop lifers Watershed returned in 2024 with one of their best records yet, Blow It Up Before It Breaks, up there with Star Vehicle and The More It Hurts, The More It Works. Re-teaming with Tim Patalan, it’s a collection of finely polished, vibrant gems, speckled with enough of the dust of living life to keep them interesting. This song about clinging to and finding that beauty in life is easily in my top ten for a band I dismissed early and really came to in the last 15 years. “I was killing time at the 8 Ball; ran into the drummer from my old band. As luck would have it, he was still going at it. Over drinks, we hatched a plan. Wondering who would show up as the band’s tuning up, I spotted you by the stage, all alone. As I stepped to the mic, you swayed and closed your eyes. I knew I was finally home.”
  • PyPy, “Poodle Wig” – The single set I was sorriest to miss at this year’s admirably-rain-fighting Gonerfest was Montreal’s PyPy, and their record Sacred Times ground glass in that wound. This hooky, buoyand song is a prime example of the joys splashed all over the record.
  • Davóne Tines and the Truth, “This Little Light” – At the forefront of modern and avant-garde opera, Tines took my breath away at Big Ears, and his tribute to the great Paul Robeson, ROBESOИ, more than delivered on what made me weep in the Tennesee Theatre at one in the afternoon. Robeson was one of my Grandmother’s – the font of all my taste, pretty much – favorites and I hate to speak for the dead but I think she would have loved this ecstatic, wrenching cry of a version of this at least as much as I do. Maybe more. “Let it shine.”
  • Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, “Hashtag” – The partnership who’ve given the world the catalog with the most classics in all of roots music for the last 30 years returned with the breathtaking Woodland Studios. Every song on it kills me, but this tribute to Guy Clark both a mentor for them and an inspiration for the kind of deep empathy and understanding, gives me chills every time. “You laughed and said the news would be bad if I ever saw your name with a hashtag. Singers like you and I are only news when we die. So here I’m sitting ’round another night, looking at your boots, Jesus Christ.”
  • Aaron Lee Tasjan, “Shining Down” – A highlight from the remarkable Jesse Malin tribute/fundraiser Silver Patron Saints, Columbus expat based in Nashville Aaron Lee Tasjan – who also put out a great record of his own this year, Stellar Evolution – who kicked around Malin’s New York milieu for some formative years, turned this wistful miniature from Sunset Kids into a hushed cri de coeur. The atmospherics – the massed vocals, the glistening finger-picked guitar – fit the gorgeous vocal perfectly. “I found another path through the broken glass. Everything was trash, but it all worked out. Keep on shining down on my life.”
  • Steve Dawson, “Time To Let Some Light In” – Chicago singer-songwriter Steve Dawson who I’ve been a fan of since Dolly Varden put out one of the best records in a career that doesn’t have any bad ones, Ghosts, this year, digging deeper into the intersection between laurel canyon singer-songwriter and Hi Records buttery soul, with – as usual – some of the greatest players working in one of the best music scenes in America, including the supple rhythm section of John Abbey and Gerald Dowd alongside the simmering organ of Alton Smith. “Freedom is another word for scared to death. I’m old and I’m tired and I’m running out of breath. It’s time to let some light in; I’ve done enough crying.”
  • Joy Oladokun, “QUESTIONS, CHAOS, & FAITH” – Joy Oladokun’s Observations From A Crowded Room was the only other record that immediately made me think “Fuck, record of the year,” alongside the Hurray for the Riff Raff I mentioned at the beginning of this list, and it’s still up there. I still play it almost daily – the opening up of Oladokun’s soundworld with electronic rhythms, choral backing, new textures on her astonishing voice, stepped up the work of an artist I already loved. Thanks for reading whatever part of this you did – I leave you with this hope-at-a-slant slice of beauty. “Nothing is certain, everything changes. We’re spirit and bone, marching to the grave. There are no answers, there are only questions, chaos and faith.”

Categories
Best Of live music

Best of 2024 – Shows

Stunning year of shows this time – in the usual suspect cities as well as a more than welcome return to Chicago. As you can probably expect, Dick’s Den featured most prominently in my show-going this year, with 26 as I write this (had to cut it off to give myself a break at year’s end, but I’ll probably be there twice more before the 31st) and Natalie’s coming in second at 20, followed by Cafe Bourbon Street at 14, and Rumba Cafe at 11.

As usual, everything listed is in chronological order, all photos are by me, and everything is in Columbus unless listed otherwise. Openers are listed if they added to my impression as I thought about this list.

The Barbarians Reunion, Radegast, January 2024
  • Tony Barba and Friends, Radegast Hall, NYC – A surfeit of credit card points allowing me to do it on the cheap made for a last-minute trip to Winter Jazz Fest in January 2024. I saw great shit there, as well as theater and exhibits, which I’m going to talk about in the Festivals portion of this wrap up… but the single thing that made me decide, “Fuck it, I’m going,” was a Facebook announcement of a reunion in the Brooklyn beer hall Radegast on Sunday night of one of my all-timers, a band of some of my dearest friends that helped define Brooklyn to me when I was first going there often in the early 2000s: the Tony Barba-led, hook-drenched The Barbarians. I rolled into this dark, cavernous room for two sets, wrapping the vintage Barbarians lineup’s mini-set of five stone-cold classics with older and newer material of Barba’s playing with other friends like Noah Jarrett, Conor Elmes, and Dave Treut that made me get off my stool and dance, that knocked me against the bar, that made me regret having a flight that left five hours after I stumbled out into the street, and that put a flag in the ground that said “This is going to be a good fucking year.”
  • Worthington Chamber Orchestra with Ucelli, Worthington United Methodist Church – I’m on record as thinking Mark Lomax is one of Columbus’s very finest composers and the more of his chamber music I hear the stronger that impression gets. I didn’t even know the Worthington Chamber Orchestra existed until I heard about this Sunday afternoon program themed around the underground railroad’s presence in Worthington (a good reminder in the wake of more recent white supremacist news around this suburb), and I was blown straight back in my seat. Lomax’s concerto used the cello quartet Ucelli at its spine to create a different form of cello concerto than I’d heard and, with the WCO under the baton of Antonie Clark, a wild, shifting, stormy narrative that opened up into these gorgeous sunlight textures. Anne and I talked about this for half an hour over dinner after.
  • Benefit for Dre Peace, Natalie’s Grandview – This show was a reminder of one of the things the Columbus music scene has always done very well: show up for each other. And a sterling reminder of the good work Natalie’s does providing stages to support this showing up. While the discussion from someone else with a kidney transplant at this benefit to get singer Dre Peace a new kidney was the single most moving moment of the evening, I was also gobsmacked by beautiful songs from Talisha Holmes, Ebri Yahloe, Starlit Ways and the Liquid Crystal Project. A Night that made my heart feel a little more full.
  • Nickel Creek and The Staves, Mershon Auditorium – Only got to the venue in time for a few songs from The Staves but their harmonies and barbed songwriting blew me away. Nickel Creek I was later to the party than other roots fans of my generation – I had to back into it through my love of Chris Thile and Sara Watkins’ later work – so this was the first time I’d seen them as a unit. Cataracts burned off my eyes – this was one of the best, most energetic live bands of any genre I’d ever seen: the beautiful tension and floating quality of encore-closer “Holding Pattern,” where Thile’s high-and-sweet tenor took on a flood of shadows as he sang, “Hold me, darling, while the world burns down,” is still stuck in my throat nine months later.
  • The Sleeveens with Goblin Smut and the Whiteouts, Cafe Bourbon Street – Irish-born Stef Murphy’s Tennessee-based supergroup (featuring members of Sweet Knives and Cheap Time) The Sleeveens blew my mind with catchy, crunchy riffs and grooves that recalled my favorite parts of the Stiff records catalog without feeling like just a throwback. And reminded me of the joyous, snotty power of longtime friends/faves The Whiteouts while turning me onto jubilant Goblin Smut. One of my most satisfying nights of rock and roll all year.
  • Hurray for the Riff Raff with NNAMDI, Skully’s Music Diner – I’ve been a fan of Hurray for the Riff Raff for a while – my fandom solidified with a stunning Twangfest set in 2016 followed by their masterpiece The Navigator (my favorite record of theirs until this year’s record of the year for me, The Past Is Still Alive). This set – with a killer opener from avant-R&B chameleon NNAMDI who also held down the bass chair in Hurray for the Riff Raff – did a couple of things I thought were almost impossible at the same time: doing a set of the entire new record that had come out in the last week or so, with one older tune included, for an artist with such an extensive and deep catalog, and having the crowd eat it up; and a set I didn’t move once during. Not to get another beer, not to talk to someone, not to use the restroom. The rare set that didn’t provoke any restlessness. The moment on “Snakeplant,” hearing a full room cheer as Alynda Segarra sang, “There’s a war on the people, what don’t you understand,” was as powerful a reminder I got of the connection between performer and audience as I had all year. Maybe as powerful as I’ve ever had.
Hurray for the Riff Raff, Skullys, March, 2024
  • Jeff Parker and the New Breed, Wexner Center for the Arts – An hour-plus of music whose seamless transitions and taste for ambience and texture – with an astonishing band including Josh Johnson on sax and keys, Paul Bryan on bass and synth bass, and Jeremy Cunningham on drums and sampler, Parker reaffirmed why he’s one of the great guitarists, composers, and bandleaders of my lifetimes, doing favorites of mine like “Executive Life,” the Steve Reich funk of “Max Brown,” and even dipping into forbears for that kind of elastic, electric group dialogue with a sterling read on Weather Report’s “River People.”
  • Seventh Son Anniversary, Seventh Son Brewery – Another reminder of the beauty of my community. Seventh Son – co-owner Jen has been a friend since I was 20 – open their doors and hearts to a lot of community organizations, artists, projects. Their anniversary this year coincided with Record Store Day and assembled some of my favorite people and acts in this town – including probably my favorite DJ duo The Coming Home, Natural Sway, my first time seeing Big Fat Head, and rare, welcome performances from the full trio version of Scrawl and Envelope that had a crowd of at least 1/3 people I wholeheartedly love singing along with me.
  • Scott Miller and Robbie Fulks, Thunderbird Cafe, Pittsburgh – I’ve been lucky to see these two of my favorite songwriters – and two of my gateway drugs to alt.country (whatever that is) – semi-often in the last few years, but this shared bill was tempting enough to schedule a trip to Pittsburgh around an art exhibit Anne wanted to see to overlap their date. And it didn’t disappoint – both singers, solo acoustic, have what feels like an infinite grasp on the history of American music and a wide, deep catalog to draw from. My heart vibrated like it was going to pound out of my chest from the first notes of Miller’s teenage looking-back-rallying-cry “Freedom is a Stranger” to the last downbeat of their shared Roger Miller encore.
  • Chicano Batman with Lido Pimienta, The Bluestone – I was blown away when I first saw LA R&B/rock powerhouse Chicano Batman at A&R bar back in 2017 and they’ve only grown in power – intense grooves and sweet harmonies, a kaleidoscopic sense of melody and an encyclopedic understanding of rhythm made a set I couldn’t stop dancing during. Lido Pimienta accompanied by an astonishing percussionist blew me away with poison-tipped songs and a voice that made my spine straighen.
  • Shannon and the Clams with Tropo Magica, Ace of Cups – Long one of the best live bands in the world, Shannon and the Clams brought their doo-wop tinged soul-rock back to Ace to promote their best, most painfully textured record yet, The Moon is in the Wrong Place, for a night of pure but never monochromatic beauty and catharsis. And they brought Tropo Magica who – back when they were still called Thee Commons as a four piece – Anne and I rolled the dice on at Ace almost a decade ago not knowing anything and walked away with a new favorite band, destroyed. An opening set I couldn’t imagine anyone else following, but, of course, Shannon Shaw, Hunx, and the rest of her band did with grace; making transmuting personal tragedy and quieter moments into anthems that feed the audience’s souls seem easy.
  • Contrary Motion, Urban Arts Space – More of this, please. A stellar chamber music program in honor of Pride Month spanning the spectrum from legends like Pauline Oliveros and Julius Eastman to the first great local contemporary composer I ever heard, Rocco DiPietro (who also worked with and wrote a great book on Eastman), to a striking new piece from co-director (with Sam Johnson) Noah Demland.
Chicano Batman, The Bluestone, May 2024
  • Megan Palmer and the Mezzanines, Rambling House – One of Columbus’s finest exports, Megan Palmer, has been setting the world on fire in Nashville for a while but we always benefit when she comes back through town. This collaboration with Dave Vaubel (The Randys) and Max Button’s delightful Western Swing/countrypolitan covers band The Mezzanines, augmented by the firepower of guitarist Brett Burleson gave fascinating rhythmic textures I wasn’t used to on Palmer songs I’ve been singing along to for years – a samba here, a rolling rockabilly riff there – and she’s always had good bands. Her adding rich violin textures to half of the Mezzanines repertoire was icing on the cake.
  • The Mavericks with Nicole Atkins, Rock the Ruins, Indianapolis – This double bill – finally getting to see the Nicole Atkins lineup with great Memphis guitarist/songwriter John Paul Keith on leads – in Indianapolis, a city Anne and I already love, was a no brainier. A beautiful summer night, The Mavericks changing up the set list in interesting ways – including frontman Raul Malo smiling more than I’d ever seen and finding the perfect balance between the dance party and the after party – and Nicole Atkins and band making those sometimes very intimate songs into anthems as big as the sky.
Nicole Atkins and Raul Malo, Indianapolis, August 2024
  • Meshell Ndegeocello, Wexner Center for the Arts – Meshell Ndegeocello has been on an artistic hot streak lately – following a masterpiece in a career strewn with masterpieces, Omnichord Real Book with an expansive, as-overflowing-with-ideas-as-its-subject tribute to James Baldwin No More Water – bringing the latter live to the Mershon stage under Wex auspices was breathtaking. Going to church in the best ways. The two shows from the Wex on here were – finally, after a while – just scratching the surface; the Art Ensemble of Chicago, Nathalie Joachim, and Tyshawn Sorey were all best-of-year contenders. It was just a stacked year.
  • Steve Dawson and Diane Christiansen, Hogan House – This was a reminder how good Fall is – Anne and I had to leave one of our favorite events, Art of the Cocktail, at the CMA early to make this; we’d also given up tickets for one of my favorite current jazz singers, Cecile McLorin Salvant, at the Wex because we’d bought those when Dawson and Christiansen were announced; all the same night. It’s also a tribute to Hogan House – a venue run by PJ and Abbie Hogan that brings these celebrations of the power of song to our town on a regular basis and constantly blows me away with its welcoming vibe, its remarkably good sound, and the friendliness and charm of its owners I’m lucky enough to call friends. Even with all that going on, within the first few notes of a set that reached back to Dolly Varden classics and leaned heavily on Dawson’s last two stellar records, Time to Let Some Light In and Ghosts, Anne and I both knew there was nowhere we’d rather be, and posted up at a bar halfway home to talk mostly about this set for an hour.
Meshelle Ndegeocello, Wexner Center, September 2024
  • Kris Davis Trio, Columbus Museum of Arts – A piano player who’s given me many of my favorite records and shows over the years making the trio record that stood above for me in a year of astonishing trio records, with one of the finest rhythm sections working, Robert Hurst and Johnathan Blake, hitting the highest heights in that CMA auditorium.
  • Davila 666 with The Ferals, Ladrones, and Las Nubes, Rumba Cafe – The same night as the Kris Davis Trio (what’d I tell you about fall?) brought back one of my all-time live rock backs, Puerto Rico’s Davila 666 for the first time in five years and they tore the roof off Rumba, partying like 2 am while the sun was still out and leading a stacked bill that introduced me to one of my favorite newish bands, Ladrones.
Ladrones, Rumba Cafe, October 2024
  • Dave Alvin and Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Natalie’s Grandview- I’ve been seeing Dave Alvin shows presented by Alec Wightman’s essential Zeppelin Productions since 2000; Wightman also promoted the first time I ever got to see another of my songwriter heroes, Jimmie Dale Gilmore. This appearance by those two fronting Alvin’s crack Guilty Ones band (Chris Miller, Lisa Pankratz, Brad Fordham) was a clinic in the power of songs – songs they grew up with in a lifetime of music fandom, songs that helped make their names like Alvin’s “Marie Marie” and Gilmore’s “Dallas,” songs by their friends (a jaw-dropping reggae take on a Butch Hancock song), and an example of how to balance an unflinching eye with belief things can get better and people can be better.
  • Jason Moran and the Bandwagon, Village Vanguard, NYC – One of my dream gigs for a long time has been to see Jason Moran and the Bandwagon in their standing Village Vanguard residency – a group that turned my head around when they first came to the Wexner Center under the auspices of Chuck Helm and who are still blowing me away in a variety of contexts – and luckily the last New York trip of the year allowed for just that. The final set of the week was dedicated to Duke Ellington with a side trip to songs he’d written for multi-media collaborations with Joan Jonas (the great artist was in attendance) and the bone-deep love of that music, the keen, active listening and responding between Moran, Tarus Mateen, and Nasheet Waits, and the ability to make it all alive was on full display.
  • Jesse Malin and Friends, Beacon Theatre, NYC – The reason we made that final New York trip and the icon of a saying Anne brings out regularly, “You can’t give yourself away.” Malin has thrown benefits, donated, opened the doors of the many bars he co-owns, for every benefit, every friend of his who was in need – and he’s friends with everyone in the music scene – and so it was only appropriate they all returned the favor. Even those of us who have but a couple specific memories flooded the Beacon Theatre with the kind of love I’ve talked about in this list – hell, in almost all of these lists – written large and in neon. I saw a few things after this – some great – but Malin and his band roaring through “Meet Me at the End of the World” and “Turn Up the Mains,” The Hold Steady exploding “Deathstar,” and Lucinda Williams doing their co-write “New York Comeback” are still echoing in my head.

Favorite Festival Sets:

Mendoza Hoff Revels in the bar mirror at Union Pool, NYC, January 2024
  • Winter Jazz Fest, NYC
    • Kaila Vandever, Zürcher Gallery
    • Marc Ribot and Mary Halvorson, Bowery Ballroom
    • Burnt Sugar with Vernon Reid, Brooklyn Bowl
    • Mendoza Hoff Revels, Union Pool
    • A Night at the East, Crown Hill Theatre
Shabaka, Bijou Theatre, Knoxville, March 2024
  • Big Ears Festival, Knoxville
    • Mary Halvorson’s Amaryllis, Tennesee Theatre
    • Jlin, The Point
    • Jason Moran and the Harlem Hellfighters, Knoxville Civic Auditorium
    • Chocolate Genius Inc, Bijou Theatre
    • Christian McBride and Brad Mehldau, Tennessee Theatre
    • Sexmob, The Standard
    • Charlie Dark MBE, Jackson Terminal
    • Shabaka, Bijou Theatre
    • Davone Tines and the Truth, Tennessee Theatre
    • Henry Threadgill/Vijay Iyer/Dafnis Prieto, Tennesee Theatre
Talisha Holmes, Columbus Arts Fest, June 2024
  • Columbus Arts Fest
    • Talisha Holmes
    • Soulutions Band
    • Trek Manifest and the Aye-1 Band
Faheem Najieb Quintet, Jazz and Ribs, July 2024
  • Columbus Jazz and Ribs Festival
    • Faheem Najieb Quintet
    • Milton Ruffin Quintet
    • Clave Sonic
Etran de L’air, Railgarten, Memphis, September 2024
  • GonerFest, Railgarten, Memphis
    • Pull Chains
    • RMFC
    • So What with Derv Gordon
    • Etran de L’air
    • Water Damage
Vernon Reid Conducting Burnt Sugar, Brooklyn Bowl, NYC, January 2024
Categories
Best Of visual art

Best of 2024: Visual Art

What an astonishing year for visual art this was – 64 exhibits in 6 cities, and very little of it let me down. I got my head turned around repeatedly and – for what’s in my town – I often came back again and again to drink from that fountain.

I want to take a few seconds for an elegy with the hope of rebirth for Skylab. I had dear friends who ran it over the years – I just saw one last weekend – and from the first time I went at 19 (ish), I knew my city was better for it. For that kind of a DIY space to hold on in a rapidly changing downtown for 27-ish (I feel like Berry Van Boekel and a couple of other people started hosting art shows in 1997 but I could be off by a few years) years is a marvelous achievement in itself.

Just as worth celebrating is the way it shifted with the interests of the residence but kept the quality so fucking high. The one exhibit on here I knew would be on this list within seconds of walking through the door, and it was of a lineage with the art I drank lukewarm cans of cheap beer and took in during my early 20s but for today. The music shows weren’t rage soaking out of my pores to Sword Heaven and Skeletons anymore, but the dance floor for Melanie Pagani one night I slipped into dance away the memory of a terrible play I saw was packed and the music was spectacular. If you have a few dollars, give to their relocation GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-skylab-gallery-find-a-new-home

As with the other lists, everything here is in chronological order (the three Ming Smith exhibits are grouped based on the first one of those I saw), in Columbus unless otherwise stated, and any photographs are by me unless otherwise stated.

From An-My Lê’s Two Rivers at Moma, January 2024
  • An-My Lê, Two Rivers; MoMA, NYC – My first exhibit of the year, while in town on an impromptu trip around APAP, also coincided with a Members guided tour with a curator of this fascinating mix of installations, sculptures, and photographs drawing lines between war games and her family’s exodus from Vietnam, smashing decades and locations together in ways that included art history and a point-of-view. Staggering.
  • Various Artists, 24/7; Seventh Son Brewing x 934 Gallery – This ticked every one of the senses of community I’m often hungry for – Seventh Son’s welcoming spirit, 934’s interest in mixing up artists of various backgrounds and styles, and a use of the space that still sticks with me.
  • Various Artists, Y’all Don’t Hear Me: The Black Appalachia; University of Tennessee Downtown Gallery, Knoxville – It’s odd writing this blurb right after hearing the great poet Nikki Giovanni died since Big Ears Festival was the last place I saw her read (her hometown, to a packed 1,000+ room at the Mill and Mine), and this group show in tribute to Giovanni they put together the next year was already echoing in my mind. A beautiful cross-section of the black community in Appalachia that doesn’t get spoken of as often as it should and dazzling work.
From Y’all Don’t Hear Me, UT Downtown Gallery, Knoxville, March 2024
  • Kara Walker, Back of Hand; Poetry Foundation, Chicago – Any time I get to see new Kara Walker, I’m overjoyed and the Poetry Foundation was the ideal space for these gargantuan, moving works on paper.
  • Nicole Eisenman, What Happened; MCA, Chicago – I knew a little of Nicole Eisenman’s work but this retrospective did an astonishing job of putting the scope of her interest, her tweaking of art and social history and the way that history and community are vitally important. A show that reminded me to love the world over and over again, without shirking any of its ugliness.
  • Laura Sanders, Her Habitat; Contemporary Art Matters – Finally made it to Rebecca Ibel’s new downtown gallery this year, which was as strong as her previous space. The enormous canvases in Sanders’ show hit me with the way every scene feels suffused with light from the inside out. These paintings feel hyper-realistic at first but – like the plays of Annie Baker or Branden Jacobs-Jenkins – the realism almost bends into surrealism as it gets to a deeper psychological truth.
Nicole Eisenman, MCA, Chicago, April 2024
  • Pallavi Sen, Dream Time; No Place Gallery – No Place Gallery has been the most consistently striking – for my tastes – gallery in Columbus for years and Pallavi Sen’s watercolors surging with overlapping patterns and an intriguing sense of repetition, was a highlight of everything I saw this year; I went back three times and never got it but loved sinking into these shapes.
  • Joan Jonas, Good Night, Good Morning; MoMA, NYC – This was the finest example I’ve ever seen of translating performance art – especially the way documentation changed over the decades – into a formal museum space. Gargantuan, overwhelming rooms that conjured the power and intensity of Jonas’s work but also made room for intimate, punch-you-in-the-face direct interaction with these pieces.
  • Various Artists, The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlatic Modernism; Metropolitan Museum, NYC – I’ve been enamored by The Harlem Renaissance since a middle school English teacher turned me into Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston, but this exhibit took the visual arts component of that movement – artists I knew pretty well like Archibald Motley and James Van Der Zee, and so many who were outside of my radar – and connected it to the larger world in a way I spent hours in and could have spent twice as long.
  • Melissa Zexter, Momento; Secret Studio – Secret Studio has turned me onto more of my favorite artists over the last few years than any other Columbus gallery. Melissa Zexter’s embroidered photography struck a nerve with me immediately while opening up an entire universe to me.
  • Various Artists, Clouds Are So Beautiful That I Can Bite My Toes; Skylab – This group show curated by Amari-Grey was an exposure to younger artists I didn’t know before walking through that door with work that knocked me sideways individually but built power and beauty through the conversation among them. Ducking out of the – also great – street fair atmosphere below, celebrating the massive hanging art Current and with my favorite DJs The Coming Home spinning into something knottier, more ambiguous, but still a celebration of life, was a reminder of how crucial Skylab has been as a place, a reminder, as Sun Ra said, “There are other worlds they have not told you of; I wish to talk to you.”
  • Ming Smith, August Moon and Transcendence at the Columbus Museum of Art; Wind Chime at the Wexner Center for the Arts; and Jazz Requiem – Notations in Blue at the Gund Gallery at Kenyon University – Having all three of these venues present Ming Smith (not born in Columbus but grew up here, not far from where I spent my childhood in the Hilltop) and showing different sides of her art was my single favorite visual art experience this year. The early trip to Africa juxtaposed against the stellar new installation at the Wex, the personally chest-cracking-open look at the Hilltop and the Ohio State Fair in 1989 in Transcendence, and the deep dive into Pittsburgh through the lens of August Wilson in August Moon at CMA, and the perfect conjuring of traveling and jazz icons, many of whom she knew personally, in these Bresson-y moments at the height of their power juxtaposed with the pause right before or right after being on stage at the Gund. This was probably one of the top ten experiences of my life, going through galleries and thinking about art. The kind of work that holds up just as much nerding out with people deep into their critical bag and taking my Mom and watching her be dazzled.
Ming Smith, Jazz Requiem – Notations in Blue at the Gund Gallery, November 2024
  • Rotimi Fani-Kayode, Tranquility of Communion; Wexner Center for the Arts – Another photographer whose work I knew slightly but this broad yet hyper-focused look at his work, curated by Mark Sealy, the director of Autograph, the London space/collective Fani-Kayode co-founded, was an explosion of myth (in a larger sense and also self-mythologizing), desire, fury and beauty.
  • Hannah Fitzgerald, There Are No Lies That Change the Version of You I Had; Urban Arts Space – Among my favorite parts of what Urban Arts Space has been bringing to town are artists I may have seen one piece of in a group show, and giving them a wider space to spread out. My favorite example of that this year – and there were several contenders – was Hannah Fitzgerald’s bodily, disorienting sculptures that recalled Louise Bourgeois, Paul Thek and Alina Szapocznikow, but with a completely unique feel and powerful point of view as they unpacked her relationship with her Mother.
  • Andrea Morales, Roll Down Like Water; Brooks Museum, Memphis – The Brooks in Memphis always has something that makes me overjoyed I made a couple of hours for it whenever I’m in that city I love, and they outdid themselves with this magnificent show of photographer Morales, one of the best explanations of Movement Journalism I’ve ever walked through and one of the most beautiful examples of clear-eyed empathy. Every turn I made here hammered me in the sternum.
Andrea Morales, Roll Down Like Water at the Brooks Museum, Memphis, September 2024
  • Lester Julian Merriweather, Ana*Log; Crosstown Arts, Memphis – Another favorite spot in Memphis over the last several years is the Crosstown complex, the rare renovation of an older building (once an enormous Sears distribution center) that feels like it’s doing things right, including its art gallery, classrooms, public radio studio, and clinic. This first exposure to Merriweather’s canvases winked at Jack Whitten, one of my favorites who I’m surprised I don’t see more influence from throughout the art world, but in a contemporary and personal way. These collaged and gridded abstractions struck a deep chord in me.
  • Cameron Granger, 9999; Queens Museum, NYC – I’ve been a fan of Cameron Granger for a few years – his show at No Place Gallery made my Best Of in 2022 and I still think about it and a film screening he set up at 934 Gallery last year, so I had to make it to the Queens Museum for his first solo museum show. This so far exceeded my expectations it left me floating through the park back to the train and – in a weekend I saw so much work that rocked me – may have been the finest thing I saw in those three New York days. The film at the center of the exhibit reminded me of the potential I saw in science fiction as as kid, to make metaphors real and force us to confront them, to explode our histories and our anxieties, and that only rarely delivers on.
  • Elizabeth Catlett, A Black Revolutionary Artist and All That It Implies; Brooklyn Museum, NYC – An artist I’ve loved for a long time, this expanded my understanding of Catlett into other genres and media and (as was a theme for so much of the work that stuck with me over the course of this year) and a beautiful example of empathy that’s not mushy or soft-focused.
Edges of Ailey, Whitney Musem, December 2024
  • Alvin Ailey and Various, Edges of Ailey; Whitney Museum, NYC – Alvin Ailey cast a long shadow over pop culture, not just dance, in a way only a few choreographers have, and this Whitney exhibit did an astonishing job putting him in context and dialogue with influences, peers, the social world of New York, and the AIDS crisis, in a joyous and painful explosion that highlighted the craft and struggle of the work and the power and ecstasy of being in this big gallery with one another.
  • Various Artists, Luna Luna: Forgotten Fantasy; The Shed, NYC – Props to Anne for finding this, I only knew this recreation of Andre Heller’s Modern Art Carnival was displayed in New York. The best use of enormous art space The Shed I’ve ever seen, and a remarkable act of love in restoring these delightful pieces.
Luna Luna: Forgotten Fantasy at The Shed, December 2024
Categories
Best Of theatre

Best of 2024 – Theater/Opera/Dance

An astonishing year for performance art in its broadest sense – every Columbus troupe was hitting, supplemented by killer work I was lucky enough to see in Chicago and New York. Also celebrating the 10th anniversary of Columbus Underground publishing my more formal thoughts, so all thanks to Anne and Walker Evans and everyone else I work with and I’m happy to call friends.

As usual, in chronological order and in Columbus unless otherwise specified.

  • Fairview by Jackie Sibblies Drury, directed by Aviva Neff; Available Light – A decade ago, before I had an outlet, I was so struck by my introduction to Jackie Sibblies Drury’s plays I felt compelled to blog about it on my old Blogspot spot as part of the season that cemented my affinity for Available Light. In January, Available Light set the bar high for my 2024 with her powerful, uncomfortably hilarious satire Fairview. In Columbus Underground, I said, “Fairview is a Philip K. Dick-inflected MAD Magazine special with a full Three Stooges episode nested inside about race in America, how the act of looking twists both the observer and the observed, the impossibility of truly knowing other people, and the Sisyphean quest for ‘Fairness,’ to accomplish it and even define it.” In December, I’m still citing and thinking about this amazing feat of creation.
Available Light’s Fairview, photo by Kyle Long
  • Second Servings by Nancy Shelton Williams, directed by Sue Wismar; eMBer Women’s Theatre – Sue Wismar’s long been one of my favorite actors in town; on that short list where I can have no interest in subject matter or a writer, but when I hear she’s involved? Now I’m interested. This first exposure to her directing delivered on those expectations and then some, finding breathing room and also a coiled tightness that felt right for these characters in this world. As I said for Columbus Underground, “I’ve seen all three of these actors be very good in many things over my years of seeing theater in town; I’ve never seen them better. The tenuous chemistry of the three, the layers of shifting alliances, feel like they go back decades and are as fresh as an open wound.”
  • You Will Get Sick by Noah Diaz, directed by Eleni Papaleonardos; Available Light – The fact that all three of the Available Light productions I saw this year ended up on this list isn’t an act of intentional favoritism; it’s because all three of them sent me out into the night not just rethinking my perceptions of theater but of the world. Nowhere was that more evident than in this piece, which I called in my CU review, “A play I haven’t seen before, a rare blend of commentary, voice, characters, and love—leavened with appropriate disgust—for the world.”
  • Night, Mother by Marsha Norman, directed by Michelle Batt; eMBer Women’s Theatre – Ember Women’s Theatre had an excellent year – I still regret not being able to make their third production because of family and job travel responsibilities and this bracing, note-perfect production of a great play no one’s done in Columbus for a very long time was a shining example. I said of Melissa Bair’s scorching Thelma, for CU, “Everything feels natural and also like an accumulating snowball in a way that’s as dark and dazzling as a Goya painting.”
eMBer Women’s Theatre’s ‘Night, Mother, photo by Michelle Batt
  • Purpose by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, directed by Phylicia Rashad; Steppenwolf, Chicago – It was a good year for Branden Jacobs-Jenkins as he further cemented himself as one of our two or three finest voices for the stage and a hell of a year for me as a theater-goer as I got to see two brand new works. Purpose took the black family drama as microcosm, with a civil rights leader patriarch (Cedric Young the week I was there) trying to keep his reputation spotless, with children who took varied paths. The wire-tight pacing given life by Rashad’s direction, the whiplash blending of distance and immediacy, and the best performances I’ve ever seen by actors I’ve been watching for a very long time – including Alana Arenas, Glenn Davis, and Jon Michael Hill – meant this is still reverberating around in my bones.
  • An Enemy of the People by Henrik Ibsen, directed by Amy Herzog; Circle in the Square, New York – My favorite Ibsen, adapted and tightened without losing any of its ferocious ambiguity as the intensity ramped up, by Amy Herzog whose 4000 Miles killed me at Lincoln Center in 2012, and directed by Sam Gold deploying all of the fascinating experiments that haven’t always coalesced in his recent work firing on all cylinders this time, centered around volcanic performances from Michael Imperioli and Jeremy Strong.
  • Legally Blonde by Heather Hach, Laurence O’Keefe, and Nell Benjamin, directed by Dionysia Williams Velazco; Short North Stage – This was a stellar year for Short North Stage – their The Color Purple, Ain’t Misbehavin’, and Jersey Boys were all also evidence of a company working at the height of its powers and perfect versions of the material – but Legally Blonde stuck with me both because of my surprise (I knew it was a musical and I saw the movie years ago, but didn’t know a single song) and because it was one of the purest distillations of delight I had all year, one of the key tenets of the stage, centered around jaw-dropping performances from Laura Overby, about whom I said, “Doesn’t just rise to that challenge; she sails into space, making it look easy,” and Vera Cremeans, whose “Virtuosic performance [let] the character’s hard-won wisdom, wit, and charm shine brilliantly,” (both from Columbus Underground) and a consistently killer ensemble.
  • An Iliad by Lisa Peterson and Denis O’Hare, directed by Cat McAlpine; Actors’ Theatre of Columbus – Actors Theatre was a mixed bag for my taste this year – their Twelfth Night was also beautiful, other two didn’t work for me – but this was the apotheosis of the risks they’re taking and the more adult subject matter they’re working with over the last few years and left me a blubbering mess. I’ve been a fan of Cat McAlpine’s work both as an actor and a director for years, but this sailed over those high expectations. For Columbus Underground, I called it “A riveting night of theater that’s a reminder of the challenges inherent in telling stories, in showing up for and with people, and how easily everything can fall apart.”
Actors’ Theatre’s An Iliad, photo by Nina Martin
  • Black on Earth by Orlando and Riccardo Hunter-Valentine, Brother(hood) Dance; Wexner Center for the Arts – Brother(hood) Dance’s first collaboration between OSU’s dance department and the resources of the Wex made my Best Of list last year and the wider lens they took to grapple with Black farming and integrated society took my breath away. This year had more of the “I can’t picture this anywhere else in Columbus” feeling the Wexner Center’s performing arts program used to give me constantly than I’ve had in years – all props to Elena Perantoni and Kathleen Felder – and this was a prime example.
  • Lunch Bunch by Adrian Einspanier, directed by Eleni Papaleonardos; Available Light – This was another of the most exciting playwrighting voices I’ve ever seen brought to vibrant, touching, and hilariously vicious life by Eleni Papaleonardos with a perfect cast – I was especially struck by Wilma Hatton, Michelle Schroeder-Lowrey, and Whitney Thomas Eads. I said in Columbus Underground, “[It’s] a reminder that we’re all trying to get through and be better, and some of us have to try much harder than others. A reminder of how easy it is to turn into a bully with just a little bit of power. And an uproarious workplace comedy. And it’s more than all those things.”
  • Max Roach 100 by Ayodele Casel, Rennie Harris, Ronald K. Brown, directed by Ayodele Casel, Rennie Harris, Ronald K. Brown, Torya Beard, and Kit Fitzgerald; Wexner Center for the Arts – This was another example of what the Wex does better than anyone else when it clicks – co-commissioning with New York’s Joyce Theater; finding the perfect curator for this, Richard Colton who I interviewed for a preview in one of my favorite interviews this year; and bringing together film, three of the finest choreographers, and astonishing dancers in tribute to one of the great composers of the last century.
Ayodele Casel at Mershon Auditorium, October 2024
  • Good People by David Lindsay-Abaire, directed by Pamela Hill; Tipping Point – First time in 10 or 11 years anyone had done this gut-punch, sadly-even-more relevant gritty poetic look at Boston’s working class from David Lindsay-Abaire, and Pamela Hill and a terrific cast led by a warm, powerful performance from Sonda Staley, broke me with this terrific production that (as I said in Columbus Underground), “Refreshed and deepened my understanding of this play I love while making me dig deeper into my assumptions and reflexive responses to luck, choice, and how I treat other people.”
  • Wife of a Salesman by Eleanor Burgess, directed by Leda Hoffmann; The Contemporary Theatre of Ohio – This was a stunning home run, born of the Contemporary’s keen eye for new plays and recontextualizing some of the American theater history CATCO made its bones on, with two knockout performances from Megan Lear and Teri Clark Linden at its heart, that I said in my CU review, “Give the density of ideas – the value of duty, the ephemerality of choice, the conflicting approaches of different waves of feminism, the commonality between people if we let our guards down enough – a visceral punch that kept me on the edge of my seat.”
The Contemporary Theatre of Ohio’s Wife of a Salesman, photo by Kyle Long
  • Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812 by Dave Malloy after Leo Tolstoy, directed by Melissa Lusher; Otterbein University – I tried to review a lot of college theater in my first couple of years writing for CU. I think it’s important and the two great programs here – OSU and Otterbein – are a lot of people’s introduction to live theater; including me, the first play I remember seeing that wasn’t a Broadway Across America was at OSU (I think; that same High School year also had my first Actors’ Theatre performance). A professor made the great comment on one of my reviews that sometimes a “watchable play” isn’t the best yardstick, sometimes it’s necessary to remember kids are trying their hardest even if I couldn’t recommend something to anyone else, so I backed way off and try to choose what I cover from these programs more carefully. But Otterbein’s musical theater pedigree and the fact this was the first time anyone in central Ohio did this Dave Malloy masterpiece gave me confidence in signing up to review it and I was blown the hell away. Some work fits perfectly with college students and I definitely had that sense the overheated emotion, complicated melodies and harmonies, and large cast all aligned in this phenomenal production. In my CU Review, I said “It drove home the way scale and scope excavate different feelings than smaller-scale work and how beautiful that scope is when everything comes together.”
  • Give Me Carmelita Tropicana! by Alina Troyano and Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, directed by Eric Ting; Soho Rep, New York – Of any non-Columbus venue, I’ve seen the most change-my-head-around work at SoHo Rep’s tiny Off-Broadway space on Walker Street. Beyond what I’ve personally seen and been blown away by there, it’s also been a huge source of the work that made Available Light the theater company that reinvigorated my love of theater in Columbus. So when a New York trip coincided with not only the final production before they search for a new home but also a collaboration between Branden Jacobs-Jenkins and downtown performance art legend – and Jacobs-Jenkins’ former professor – who I’d never gotten to see live, Alina Troyano – made this a no-brainer. With rapid-fire wit, Troyano (as herself and longtime alter ego Camerlita Tropicana) and Jacobs-Jenkins (played brilliantly by Ugo Chukwu) pay loving tribute to experimental theater, a shifting and sometimes hard-to-find “downtown” sensibility, the various characters in Troyano’s Tropicana-verse, and the sense of possibility that hits differently being in a room full of strangers and loved ones seeing it live. There was an almost karmic sense of a circle closing in this being the final play I saw of the year being a perfect summation of what I’m hoping for any time the house lights go down. May this set the tone for another year of wonder and possibility.
Curtain Call for Give Me Carmelita Tropicana! at SoHo Rep, November 2024