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TA best Of 2020
Well, it seems like this place is inching ever closer towards death but I've been making these yearly threads for almost 10 years now, so in the name of tradition and also to order my own thoughts, here are my favorites of the year:
Beatrice Dillon - Workaround. This seems to be the one record that's placed high on all the lists I've looked it. Hectic, complex, non-4/4 drum programming has really come back into fashion recently in a big way, although it often ends up feeling try-hard, unsatisfying and overproduced. This record offers a more thoughtful and deliberate, almost structuralist take it on that, picking up where artists like SND left off. Definitely one of the smartest records this year.
Sleeparchive - Trust. Given how uninspired, watered down or downright pop-ified most techno has become in the past two years, something like this almost feels like a statement record now. It seems like Sleeparchive heard all of the garbage techno, said "fuck that" and went all-out - Techno doesn't get more pure, powerful and monolithic than this. When you are as invested into techno as I am, it is quite reassuring to hear that it can still be done properly, which is probably why this is my record of the year.
Andrea - Ritorno. This didn't make it on any end-of-year-lists, even though it is a very impressive album, perhaps because by now the "Ilian Tape sound" has become familar and it came out early in the year. It's probably the best non-ambient/experimental home listening electronic record of the year though; great drum programming and lush, emotional, memorable synths. Also very impressive engineering throughout.
Echium - Disruption Of Form. Sferic has been one of my favorite labels for a while and they had a good year again. I think the award for "best sound design" goes to this one - great mix of lush, hazy pads and chords, acoustic sounds, field recordings and glitchy digital sounds.
Ulla - Tumbling Towards A Wall. There's been quite a few good albums from the West Mineral camp (spread out among a whole slew of labels like C-Minus, Motion Ward, Lillerne Tapes, Experience ltd etc.) this year, although by their nature they tend to all blend together a bit. This one is probably the most memorable, great textures and an inventive, playful sense of melody and harmony that transcends the usual ambient fodder.
In a sort of more general reflection, I didn't think it was that good of a year for dance music overall, although part of that impression might just be the subjective experience of the whole Corona situation - to say that this year has been one big blur is probably going to be an understatement for most people. Pretty much everyone I've talked to about their yearly favorite has said that they've had trouble at all keeping up with new music and found it difficult to even remember what came out this year. Even for those who traditionally kept up with new music, with the entire situation this year and the ever-increasing onslaught of new releases coming out every week, it's been an increasingly seductive proposition to just stop paying attention to new music alltogether. Despite trying to at least somewhat pay attention to new music, my favorite musical discoveries this year were all older music, from shoegaze (Whirr) to experimental jazz (The Necks) to contemporary electro-acoustic composers (Iancu Dumitrescu and Jakob Ullmann) and postwar academic electronic music (Jaap Vink and Roland Kayn). And it's not that there haven't been any decent new records, there's been loads, they just didn't seem all that memorable or exciting compared to what still lurks in the archives of the past - especially in dance music. Early in the year, people were predicting a slew of great "lockdown" records but I don't think this really has come to fruition (which I find surprising, given how much more studio time most professionals have had this year), which either proves how dependant dance music is on the studio-dancefloor feedback loop and/or further proves that the genius of the struggling artist is largely a myth and that people in precarious situations (e.g. most non-millionare DJs this year) aren't necessarily in a great position to just bash out some timeless music.
In trance related matters, it seems that, apart from all the 90s hard trance / euro trance influenced techno cheese, early 90s prog influences have become a big thing in many more underground records; generally in the form of some nebulous anachronistic assemblage of rave-y 90s style. It's all fairly pleasant but personally, I don't find it particularily interesting (which might also be because early 90s prog and proto trance has never been a sound I really have a soft spot for) and it just seems to further prove that in lieu of any new musical movements, people are still frantically mining for any possible resurrection or synthesis of 90s style that hasn't been done yet.
On the plus side, while (apart from writing my own music, which I've done relatively consistently) I haven't engaged with music as much as I would've liked, I started reading fiction again this year, something I've done very little of as an adult. I read a ton but my favorites were Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow, Tom McCarthy's Remainder and Richard Powers' Orfeo.
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June 2018 mix
Last edited by Woony on Dec-25-2020 at 12:46
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