You’ve heard from the best, now hear from… well, me! I’m no Fantano or Pitchfork, but I do have Airpods in at most hours–along with a well-used car stereo–so I heard plenty of music in 2023 for which praise is due. To complement my Top Games of 2023 list from the other day, then (a brief movie one is on my Letterboxd – expanded video adaptations of both pending!), here’s some quick ‘n dirty takes on my favorite albums and singles which hit my ears this year:
TOP ALBUMS OF 2023
#10) Noah’s Ghost, Lost Nights
Low on the list out of principle ’cause I didn’t get around to listening until I was driving home from a NYE party, but still: Solid vocal and instrumental synthwave of the eerie Stranger Things-adjacent variety, all wrapped in an endearing package honoring the same retro aesthetic.
#9) Hackney Diamonds, The Rolling Stones
Half a century and change after their biggest hits, there’s admittedly more hack than diamonds in this LP, but having the boys back in town with new material felt like a cause to rock all the same. And we got a Lady Gaga feature, no less!
#8) Badlands, Magic Sword
In a genre full of nostalgia-mongering and fantastical imagery, Magic Sword has cornered the market on a specific yet indelible mood: Music to quest to. With eerie synth tones and song titles like “Nowhere Else to Run,” “A Dark Task,” and “There is Still Good in You,” how can you not want to don a cloak of your own and journey towards what lies on the horizon?
#7) Halloween Mixtape II, Magnolia Park
Back in my day, if you wanted Halloween-themed emo music, you had Blink-182’s “I Miss You” and maybe a Panic! at the Disco track or two. Leave it to young guns Magnolia Park, though, to dole it out on the regular! Amid tracks which explicitly name-check the holiday and other suitably spooky subjects, raucous yet wistful opener “The End: An Emo Night Rhapsody” more than earns its subcultural pretension, 408 collab “Manic” is an infectious ode to a dysfunctional relationship, and “Life in the USA” makes for a darkly funny, unapologetically political dig at late-stage capitalism.
#6) The Jaws of Life, Pierce the Veil
If Vic and the gang put out a new record, you know it’s gonna be on this list somewhere. Shouty lead single “Pass the Nirvana” had me wary when it dropped in 2022, but I came around to its sound on the release proper, and numerous other tracks keep PTV’s quality-over-quantity discography going strong: The thunderous yet dreamy promises of “Even When I’m Not with You,” the cacophonous pleading of “Emergency Contact,” and the aching reflections on Chloe Moriondo duet “12 Fractures” were particular highlights.
#5) The Maine, The Maine
I’m always a little wary when a band well into their career releases a self-titled album. Are we in for a bold, image-defining musical experience, or just a going-through-the-motions contractual obligation? With The Maine, however, it’s neither, as their 2023 eponymous LP may well be my favorite yet. From the indignant yet bouncy chorus on “Blame” to the downright danceable “Leave in Five,” The Maine remain an indelibly entertaining missing link between radio-friendly pop rock and heart-on-the-sleeve, Hopeless Records catharsis. Generous of them, too, to write the theme song for every college party I ever peaced out on with “How to Exit a Room.”
#4) Desert Hearts, W O L F C L U B
It’s a crowded scene out there for 80s-throwback acts, especially in my library, but WOLFCLUB stands apart from the pack (no pun intended) by having… well, just really darn good hooks. As ever, young love, sleek cars, and dark nights are the imagery du jour, but with tracks like soaring, insistent opener “Crystalise” and breathless call-and-response “Shoreline” (complete with a sax solo!), they simply outrun the competition.
#3) Intellectual Property, Waterparks
I don’t consider myself a sonic tastemaker at the best of times, but I was still surprised to see Waterparks’ latest LP pop up on multiple critics’ worst-of lists for 2023, because… this thing slaps? I get it–rambunctious production, goofball lyrics, and random stylistic transitions aren’t for everyone, but the loopy, corny, often horny energy of tracks like “Funeral Grey,” “Brainwashed,” and “Self-Sabotage” is just too infectious for me to pooh-pooh.
#2) The Heavy Box, Derek Sanders
We didn’t get a new Mayday Parade record in 2023, but we did get the next best thing: Another acoustic outing from frontman Derek Sanders! Despite its five-track run, this box is heavy indeed — “Home” is a melancholy reflection on the road to peace, “Howell Canyon” evokes The Postal Service with its thrumming percussion and laments that “we exist to only fall apart,” and the sparse instrumentation of “True Story of a Boy Whose Exploits Panicked a Nation” encloses a heartbreaking look back at a life literally or figuratively reaching its end… while also continuing Sanders’ cute tradition of naming songs after Calvin & Hobbes quotes. Cap it off with a reunion with classic Mayday compatriot Jason Lancaster on “For Dear Life,” and you’ve got an EP which all transported me back to 2013–not a place I ought to linger, in truth, but a comfort in certain troubled moments all the same.
#1) Emotaku, Sunrise Skater Kids
Four words: emo songs as anime themes. As prolific as the overlap is between weebs and scene kids, it’s amazing no one capitalized upon this peanut butter-and-chocolate combo before, but bless SSK for giving it a go, turning pop-punk hits by Yellowcard, My Chemical Romance, and more into even peppier J-pop bangers, complete with translated lyrics. Enjoy the back half, too, where each track is convincingly condensed into what could well be the opener to your new favorite slice-of-life series! Now for someone to actually produce the shows that’d go with these…
TOP SINGLES OF 2023
#10) “Burning Rubber,” Arcade High
Nothing too complicated here–just another rad, funky throwback perfect for neon-lit night drives, from the dudes who arguably do it best.
#9) “Mess it Up” (Purple Disco Machine Remix), The Rolling Stones
As alluded to above, I won’t pretend Hackney Diamonds is a newsworthy return to form for the rock titans, but to just have (1) a disco remix (2) of a Rolling Stones song in the year 2023 felt like a rift in time had opened in the best way.
#8) “Nobody Tells You When You’re Young,” Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness
To have weathered my twenties to the sound of Everything in Transit by Jack’s Mannequin, only to reflect along with frontman McMahon on the things only growing older can teach you… it’s nice. Not uplifting, but nice.
#7) “Tell Me I’m Alive,” All Time Low
For all their overproduced earlier work and off-stage scandals, I stand by my conviction that All Time Low can always be counted on to fire off a rowdy earworm about being an unambitious screw-up. Their 2023 record may have been too familiar to make my Top 10 in aggregate, but this all-too-relatable lead single of the same name stands tall (or, maybe, slumps against wall) just the same.
#6) “After Destruction,” Descartes a Kant
I don’t know exactly what’s going on here, but it’s loud, it’s vaguely sci-fi, and I have a thing for orange hair, so color me pleased.
#5) “More Like a Crash,” Mayday Parade
We did get some new Mayday Parade singles this year, at least! And the first was the best, or at least the most promisingly unique: “More Like a Crash,” in which classic Mayday heartbreak (“guess it’s been a while since I had nothing to do”) crests before the trademark guitar breakdown with a holler of the title line, feeling right out of their rawer Black Lines period. Eager to see where the overall sonic direction of their next project goes!
#4) “Childhood Eyes,” Yellowcard
Among the many bands experiencing a renaissance thanks to emo-era nostalgia, none were perhaps more surprising–or welcome–than Yellowcard reneging on their 2016 final bow with a new EP. Of particular note was this track, in which the band openly carries forward their original youthful energy without sounding desperate or pandering. Another pop punk group that tried to make aâcomeback in 2023 shouldâblink their own eyes and take note…
#3) “LosT,” Bring Me the Horizon
Some songs capture a specific emotion so well that it’s almost like a part of you has been carved out and pressed on vinyl. Not always a pleasant emotion, mind you, but all the same, “LosT”–with its incessant guitars, glitched-out electronic segments, and furious lyrics–is the sound of that one adjective, that one feeling, running like a bull in a china shop through one’s head in moments of self-doubt. I (thankfully) can’t relate to controversial lead singer Oli Sykes watching anime while doing ketamine, but to wanting to scream “what the hell is fucking wrong with me?” after a bad day? Consider me found.
#2) “Take Me with You,” Neck Deep
Hey, remember that week or two in 2023 when some random government guy claimed he saw UFOs, and everyone decided that was irrefutable proof aliens exist? Neck Deep does, or at least they struck while the iron (or some other metallic substance not of this planet) was hot and dropped this silly little homage to The X-Files, E.T., and the increasingly sensible anxiety of wanting to leave Earth while there’s still time. I didn’t know these dudes had a nerdy novelty song in them, but it just makes their library of A-tier pop punk even better!
#1) âEat the Acid,â Kesha
In the late Aughts, Ke$ha was widely derided as the nadir of music: trashy, airheaded, unconscionably perverse. With time, however, came change for the artist, both for good–a reappraisal of silly, sexy pop stars–and for ill: namely, a #MeToo-adjacent sexual abuse case and subsequent industry fallout. I don’t have the space, much less the education, to dissect how all of this influenced Kesha (long since bereft of the dollar sign) during the production of her 2023 record Gag Order; I just know that, for all of the bombastic tracks I showered with accolades earlier, “Eat the Acid” is the most interesting song I heard this year: a calm, haunting, hypnotic mantra about faith, isolation, and the dilemma of seeking self-actualization from without as opposed to within.
Time may be an illusion, but when it comes to the end of December, listicles are a cold, hard fact. In keeping with my annual diet of movies, music, videogames, and– a tad shamefully–not that many books or TV shows, here’s my Top Stuff in each medium that (typically) released within the last 365 days. I always say “Top Stuff” because I’m sure there’s even better ones I haven’t seen/played/whatever, and I’d never dare presume that my personal interests represent some objective, or even subjective, metric by which you should judge your own preferences. This is just some art I thought was cool as I kept on truckin’ in 2021–and if you did too, then that’s cool too!
FILMS
5. Nobody
When pop culture historians look back on the late 2010s, John Wick will stand as a lodestar for cinema. Vengeful popcorn flicks had existed before, of course, but the tip of the still-flourishing Keanussance brought a vibrancyâa commitment to coherent and well-choreographed, not just violent, actionâthat the genre largely lacked post-Matrix. The stage set, Wickâs director David Leitch then teamed up with the brains behind the hyperactive first-person shooter movie Hardcore Henry for a film with a similar story, yet founded on a critically different question: what if the guy kinda looked like a weenie? Thatâs no disrespect on Bob Odenkirkâs name, though, for while the actor is old enough to be my father, he plays both sides of the coin with aplomb: a meek pencil-pusher one moment, and a long-dormant hitter putting the heads of Russian thugs through walls the next. Owing, I suspect, to it being a common cramped location, thereâs a lot of scuffles on public transportation in action moviesâeven 2021 gave us another in Shang-Chiâbut the bus brawl here ranks among the best, most deliciously brutal fight scenes in recent history. And the R-rated Home Alone climax, complete with Doc Brown packing heat? An all-timer. Fingers crossed that Odenkirkâs health scare earlier this year doesnât keep him from safely stepping back in for a sequelâI pity the next crook who absconds with that kitty-cat bracelet!
Fast & Furious is a superhero franchise. Once I became aware of that, consciously or not, I stopped seeing the movies as meathead-meets-gearhead Michael Bay runoff and started⊠well, seeing them, period. Part soap opera, part Mission: Impossible, and part Talladega Nights, the Fast series has morphed over my lifetime into a ridiculous yet unironically entertaining staple of the megaplex, and nowhere more so than this, its ninth mainline installment. The absurdities pile higher than ever: Vin Diesel and John Cena play blood brothers, a character we saw die in a fiery crash inexplicably teleports to a building across the street, and falling upwards of three stories is apparently fine so long as you land on something with a steering wheel. But in turn, we get cars swinging on ropes, cars getting flipped by supermagnets, cars going to mfâing outer spaceâjust utter nonsense I wouldâve come up with while racing Hot Wheels around my bedroom floor as a child, but starring Helen Mirren and costing more than the GDP of some nations to produce. What it all comes down to, though, is really straightforward: family. And you know what? Iâll be there with my own for Fast 10 on opening night.
2. Malignant
When questioned on my seemingly inconsistent taste in media, whether by myself or others, Iâve come to answer with a blunt philosophy: I like stupid shit, so long as itâs also awesome. Few men in Hollywood have their finger on that pulse like James Wan, whoâafter more or less inventing an entire subgenre with Saw and proving his action chops in Furious 7 and Aquamanâreturned home in 2021 for the worldâs first neo-giallo body horror martial arts slasher. That description, in itself, is arguably a spoiler, but believe me when I say that nothing can still prepare you for what goes down in the final minutes of this thing. Suffice it to say that, after an hour or two of getting immersed in the moody lighting, cheesy dialogue, visceral kills, and a wicked Pixies cover, I went from clutching my armrest to internally hooting and hollering like a WrestleMania spectator. When everyone loves or loathes a movie, it’s unifying but stultifyingâbecause whatâs even left to discuss? But when, as with Malignant, reviews were split between âthat was the dumbest thing Iâve ever seenâ and âGOAT,â I know nowâas I did the moment I left my screeningâ that itâs a picture Iâll be talking and thinking about for years to come⊠always there, in the back of my mind.
The Green Knight
What makes a myth, a story that can endure for generations? For my money, on the silver screen, itâs spectacle: the clang of swords, the spark of a flame, the sight of someone or something massive looming in the distance, and a hero in the foreground whoâs willing and able to brave it all to accomplish their quest. Modern blockbusters deliver such thrills in spades, but lest we forget: in a sense, Arthurian legends walked so that everyone from Tarzan to Iron Man could run, swing, and fly. Drawing from an epic poem older than my own country by centuries, The Green Knight may take some liberties to entertain a contemporary audience, yet at its core is a haunting, slow-boil tragedy far from any of the family-friendly Disney adventures that clog theaters. Our protagonistâs fate is sealed in the first act, and for all intents and purposes, his is a pilgrimage to doom. En route, the cavalcade of characters he encounters keep the proceedings varied, as does director David Loweryâs arresting eye for color and creeping dread, from the yellow of Sir Gawainâs cloak to the orange fog which suffuses the air as a vulpine companion suddenly reveals it can speak. Thereâs magic, bloodshed, sex, ghosts, and giants. Itâs sad, frightening, monumental, and it has not one but two Alicia Vikanders. Dev Patel has a beard. What more can you ask for in an epic tale?
VIDEOGAMES
5. Marvelâs Guardians of the Galaxy
Would they learn their lesson?This was the question looming over Marvel videogamesâat least, those published by Square-Enixâafter the glitchy, glorified gacha machine that was Marvelâs Avengers proved the second-biggest gaming letdown of 2020 (Cyberpunk 2077 takes the heavy crown, of course). I was pleased to learn, however, that they had, and the once-omnipresent curse of The Superhero Videogame returned to its slumber once more. I havenât beaten it yet, so itâs low on the list as a matter of principle, but Marvelâs Guardians of the Galaxy earns top marks across the board: the graphics look great and the design of its alien worlds is wildly creative; the combat is satisfyingly chaotic yet intuitive (though my PS4, in its autumn years, sometimes struggles to keep up); and the soundtrack is chock full of 80s bangersâGod only knows what these licensing rights cost, but it was worth every flarkinâ penny. The titular ensemble is wonderfully written and acted, tooâthe MCU casting leaves big shoes to fill, but the amount of funny, context-specific dialogue is remarkable. Thereâs some jank, sure (I’ve had to reload a save more than once after one of the score of audiovisual cues overlapping at any given moment got stuck on-screen), the Telltale-ish dialogue choice system feels half-baked, and Rocket is way more of an asshole than even Bradley Cooper played him for no good reason. Also, does the rest of the squad really have to get on my case every time I gently veer off a sub-Uncharted linear level route for a moderate cache of upgrade points? Still, itâs a minor miracle for a AAA single-player game with minimal microtransactions to release in the â20sâhereâs hoping future cape games take note!
4. Unpacking
I like a good loud, violent shooter, but Iâm not above a humble point ânâ click narrative jaunt when the mood strikes me. Case in point: This yearâs Unpacking, a âzen puzzle gameâ which simulates a common yet comforting ritual: taking stuff out of boxes and putting it on shelves when you move into a new place. In so doing, across a handful of locations spanning a decade, you slowly piece together⊠not a story, per se, but rather a young life. Photos of a friend once held high on the wall go into a drawer; an iPod weathers with age before being relegated to the ubiquitous box âo cables; videogames advance with the generations, from a chunky little Game Boy to an Xbox 360. Along the way, the cozy, colorful isometric graphics and pleasant soundtrack make even the humblest bathroom look like somewhere youâd just want to curl up and relax. That art style in particular does so much with so littleâwho knew I could recognize, say, a DVD of Ghost World or Up from a chunk of pixels smaller than my thumbnail? Itâs not long, itâs not particularly challenging, and it implicitly casts you in the role of a character way outside my usual range (a Jewish lesbian illustrator, I think?). Now more than ever, though, the serenity of new beginnings is something we could all enjoyâjust cut the tape with your Stanley knife (so thatâs what those are called) and get to Unpacking.
3. WarioWare: Get it Together!
After years of glorified tech demos and greatest-hits collections, WarioWare returned in earnest! This time, instead of capitalizing on a control gimmick (see, e.g., Touched, Twisted, Smooth Moves), the greedy garlic-chomperâs latest meta-game outing went back to the drawing board for a radical tweak: playing not as âyourself,â but rather as Warioâs many beleaguered friends and employees, sucked into their own work product by some malicious malware. This seemingly basic change opens up all kinds of possibilities, for the split-second solution which each microgame inherently demands becomes that much more daunting when youâre switching between not only settings but also entire control schemes! The lack of the bonus âtoysâ which have been a tradition in the series is a shame, but in their place, we get a bevvy of diverse multiplayer outings, as well as a challenge system and shamefully addictive postgame âPrezziesâ to level up characters and unlock bonus content. Among the quick, on-the-go games which flourish on Nintendo Switch, Get it Together! is well worth your time.
2. Psychonauts 2
If, like me, you do yourself a favor and donât read Tim Schaferâs Twitter, youâve probably been looking forward to Psychonauts 2 since the first one debuted sixteen years ago. But unlike many gaming sequels long-damned to development hell, Double Fine didnât miss a beat: the graphics are cleaner, and the combat takes a cue from modern action-RPGs, but the delightful Burton-adjacent art style and creepy, clever levels stuffed with collectibles are all back just as you remember them. Too often, latter-day platformers dine on âmember berries instead of advancing the subgenre (looking at you, Yooka-Laylee), but Psychonauts 2 adds a plethora of diverse new characters and psychic abilities, as well as a surprisingly robust open world full of side missions. After this long between entries (plus or minus the canonical but slight VR trip In the Rhombus of Ruin), it may be too much to ask for a threequel already, but thereâs precious few franchises willing to get this zany and unapologetically fun!
Resident Evil: Village
In 2017, licking its wounds after the bloated mess that was Resident Evil 6, Capcom had a lot to prove to survival horror fans. Inspired by The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Hideo Kojimaâs ill-fated P.T. in equal measure, Resident Evil 7: Biohazard met those expectations and then some, literally bringing a new perspective to the series and remembering to actually include some fear alongside all the gross monsters and explosions. A follow-up was inevitable, and while I felt vindicated to learn that leaks about the eighth entry being called âVillageâ were accurate, nothing couldâve prepared me for how frightening, crazy, and exciting this game would be. Werewolves, living dolls, a giant fish-man, cyborg zombies which may or may not violate intellectual property rights⊠and, yes, a certifiably scarousing vampiress with a least a foot on most of the NBA all torment you at one point or another. But unlike most other modern horror, where your only options are to run, hide, and/or read a journal about how this is all a metaphor for repressed trauma, youâve got shotguns, grenade launchers, sniper rifles, and a morbidly obese nobleman whoâll sell you ammo for all of them. Throughout it all, the RE Engine coats this grotesque Gothic world in a photorealistic patina that makes the prior generation of consoles sing (or shriek, as the case may be). If âbadass campâ is the tone Resident Evil wants to strike going forward, consider me a happy camper indeed, and ready for whatever the shocking conclusion here promises for RE9!
Honorable Mention: The Pathless
So The Pathless actually came out in 2020, but I first played it this year and, to my knowledge, it was marketed predominantly as a PS5 gameâand really, who even has one of those? I can see how the game would take advantage of the next genâs daunting processing power: the entire world is one big, loading screen-free map, gated only by passages which are out of reach ’til you beat a given boss. However, it runs just fine on PS4 as well, and what a joy that it does, because The Pathless provides a setting that I relish wherever it arises: a vast, quiet, mysterious world to just run through and make sense of. From crumbling temples adorned with carvings of giant beasts to scattered puzzles which reward a little block-pushing or clever jumping with a power-up, the game is unapologetically inspired by Breath of the Wild and, in turn, Shadow of the Colossus. Yet moment-to-moment play actually evokesâof all thingsâMarvelâs Spider-Man: Your protagonist, a veiled warrior with an eagle by her side, gains bursts of speed from firing arrows at omnipresent, floating glyphs, and so most traversal is accomplished by taking auto-aim at the nearest doodad to sprint across fields and valleys in search of your next friend or foe. Itâs beautiful, strange, and invigorating all in oneâjust what I seek out all art for.
ALBUMS
5. Sinner Get Ready, Lingua Ignota
When women want to make a name for themselves in music, it can feel like the industry presents them with two doors: innocent naif or objectified doll. Lingua Ignota, aka Kristin Hayter, elected for Door Number Three: apocalyptic medieval priestess. Or at least, thatâs the vibe one gets from a scroll through her discography, replete with track titles like âIf the Poison Wonât Take You My Dogs Willâ or âGod Gave Me No Name (No Thing Can Hide from My Flame).â On this, her second LP, Hayter screams, mourns, and calls for bloodshed over an ominous organ, dire strings, and guitars which crash with the force of an angry demon, along with a whole orchestra of other unnerving instrumentation. More than any heavy metal, this is music to perform human sacrifice toâand yet itâs undeniably technically impressive and, in its own noisy, cataclysmic way, self-affirming! If you want girl-power rock thatâs less tsundere and more sundering, Mistress Ignota demands your supplication.
After 15-odd years in the saddle, one couldnât be blamed for questioning whether the Florida quintet can still wax emo with the best of âem. To be sure, Mayday Parade largely leans away from their more complex, bombastic inclinations on this latest full-length, but their wistful lyrics and singalong hooks are as strong as ever. âKids of Summerâ kicks things off with a rousing ode to reckless youth, while âOne for the Rocks and One for the Scaryâ is prime MP, starting off plaintive and sparse before erupting into an all-cylinders ode to fragile love (âwe can do everything, weâll start right here in this room⊠just donât take off too soonâ). Things admittedly peter out in the latter half: âBad at Loveâ is so boilerplate that I thought it was a OneRepublic cover at first, and filler track âHeavenâ feels named after the exact opposite afterlife, running a tired pun into the ground over a triphop beat for two-and-a-half minutes. On balance, though, the boys continue to age more gracefully than many of their peers, and still have me catching feelings as much as when I first heard âJamie All Overâ post-high school. The real oversight, though? No song named after a Calvin & Hobbes quote!
2. Kingdom II, Arcade High
The 80âs homage is a crowded subgenre these days; itâs all too easy to paste some rudimentary electronic riffs over kick drums, slap a neon palm tree on the cover, and call it a day. But Arcade High continues to outrun the competition with a mix of vocal and instrumental tunes targeted like a light gun at Millennial-era videogame vibes. The duo hearken back to fuzzy chiptunes (âGlowâ), deliver a nod to Dark Souls (âDGYK,â feat. Jei-Laya), and even remix the title opener of 2016âs original Kingdom for some nostalgia of their own (âWelcome Backâ). Not every trackâs a hitââSlayâ is a perfect example of a song thatâs catchy but not memorable, a repetitive and off-brand slab of dance-rock that had me wishing itâd perform as advertised by the first minute. But on the whole, making a trilogy of this âseriesâ would be fine by me!
1. The Rearview Mirror EP, The Midnight & The Magik*Magik Orchestra
I turned 30 this year. I didnât accomplish everything I once said that I would, by nowâsome of thatâs on me, some isnât. But when I inevitably reflected on my past with greater frequency in 2021, this was how the tranquil ânow,â the wistful âthen,â and the aching âmaybe somebodyâ sounded in my soul. Veering away from 80âs throwbacks, L.A. duo The Midnight reimagine five of their top tunes with a wholly unprecedented vibe: out with the saxophones and synthwave, in with violins and piano. The transplant, however, breathes beautiful new life into their songwriting: As cool as tracks like âEndless Summerâ and âMemoriesâ felt before, they nearly bring a tear to the eye nowâand when I saw the group live in downtown Tacoma in November, to celebrate my birthday, the latterâs lines never felt truer: âSummer days are growing colder⊠weâll know better when weâre older.â
Honorable Mention: Heartwork (Deluxe), The Used
Heartwork made my last Top Stuff list, so I wonât dive into its primary tracklist much here, except to reiterate that itâs marvelous to see a group Iâd written off as screamo has-beens turn around and drop one of my favorite albums of 2020. As is the style of late, however, they re-released it a year later with another entire recordâs worth of cuts! But these are no mere B-sidesâeach tune couldâve readily been on Heartwork 1.0, continuing its themes of both literary references (âThe Brothers Karamazov,â âBlood Meridianâ) and love gone very, very bad, all while killing it with their chorus game (belting out ânobody hates me like you do / youâve got that perfect miseryâ has no right to feel as good as âMi Medicina, Mi HeroĂnaâ makes it). Wherever the band goes next, Iâm now confident that time Used wonât be wasted!
SINGLES
5. âFruit Roll Ups,â Waterparks
Waterparks is (are?) a lot of things: artists, self-aware industry critics, a boy band that also makes songs with names like âI Miss Having Sex But at Least I Donât Wanna Die Anymore.â In that spirit, this yearâs coyly titled Greatest Hits wasâlike 2019âs FANDOMâa bit too scattershot and longwinded to crack my top five. However, this track in particular really did a number on me; letâs just say that a ballad by a shut-in who likes junk food and horror movies, and âbought some really sick lights, if you want to come over,â hit close to home. The modern wave of electronica and hip-hop-tinged emo wasnât around when I was a teen, but had it been, you can bet Iâd have been sharing memes of lines like âIf you want to see me acting so desperately, all you gotta do is stop texting meâ left and right on my socials!
4. âI MISS 2003,â As It Is
TheLegend of Zelda: The Wind Waker. The Iraq War. Kill Bill, Vol. I. The Challenger explosion. 2003 was like any year, full of ups in downs. But as of January 1, 2022, thereâll be no children who were alive for it, and one thing those 365 days irrefutably had in abundance was a certain, special kind of youthful music: capital-P Pop Punk. Nearly twenty years hence, As It Is has struggled to find its place in what remains of that community, settling of late on an MCR-lite doom ânâ gloom aesthetic that I must confess doesnât do it for me. However, on âI Miss 2003,â the quartet funnel this dreariness into a longing for the early Aughts thatâs achingly potent to me and my fellow Millennials. Like a Hot Topic T.S. Eliot, the band stuffs the lyrics here with references to a dozen different emo mainstays, from Paramore to Good Charlotte, turning mashed-up lines like âtell me that youâre alright, cuz Iâm not okayâ into a veritable sonic time machine. As It Is are British, so call them phonies if you want for reminiscing about Americana, but I myself have always felt like an outsider to the sceneâheck, I didnât even really start listening to anything beyond my parentsâ CD collection until about 2009. Since then, though, thereâs always been a place in my heart for the rebellious, lovesick energy of this subgenre. âNow life is boring, let’s write a story where we never grow upâŠâ
3. âMeant for Misery,â Settle Your Scores
While As It Is wallowed, for better or worse, in the salad days of pop punk, Ohio outfit Settle Your Scores charged forth like it hasnât aged a day. To be sure, the bandâs not opposed to hindsightâthey themselves have a song called â1999ââbut they blew the doors open on this yearâs Retrofit with this snotty earworm about a universal sentiment: feeling like the world sucks and you just canât catch a break. Really, hasnât 2021 all made us feel like weâre âin the eye of the shitstormâ?
2. âRise, Nianasha (Cut the Cord),” Coheed & Cambria
Coheed & Cambria has continued to surprise me, going from a group I respected more than enjoyed (canât knock that sci-fi prog-rock hustle) to one whose every single enters heavy rotation on release day. 2021 brought two of them, the first being âShoulders,â which nearly made this list with its rip-roaring riffs and classic tale of a damaged relationship (âmaybe we werenât made for each other, and Iâm just the one you can keep aroundâ). However, this second one edged it out, not just because itâs catchier by a hair but because it explores a dynamic thatâs novel to me in pop, at least outside Cat Stevens or “Cat’s in the Cradle”: father-to-son love. âCall me, and I’ll be there when you need your great destroyer,â the speaker assures his boyâa Dad of the Year line if Iâve ever heard one! Given the maddening ambiguity of this space rock-opera to date, I’m fully prepared for Vaxis II (the presumptive next LP) to never satisfyingly piece this paternal saga together, but Iâll be singing along either way.
âThe Last Picture Show (Lost Outrider Remix),â Arcade High
Itâs a 2021 remix of a 2019 song, that was in the style of a 1980s song, named after a 1970s movie set in the 1950s. If thereâs a more potent Matryoshka doll of nostalgia on the market right now, I havenât seen it. Maybe itâs just having changed both my job and my city earlier this year, but something about the reflective lyricsâof Anytown melancholy and the promise of a better tomorrowâcut deep to my core, no matter how many times I hit ârepeat.â Whether itâs escaping a bad day or rushing towards the promise of a good one, that same hope is still there when I hit the road, whether by foot or by car, and miles to go before I sleep: âThey canât catch me⊠Iâm already gone.â
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Now go have a Happy New Year! Masks aside, I don’t know about you, but I’m feeling ’22. If nothing else, Elden Ring isn’t going to play itself!