Joey’s Top Ten Albums of 2019

Here we go. I’ll have more to say about many of these in my best albums of the decade list next week.

10. 100 gecs: 1000 gecs

What if SOPHIE, M.I.A., and Skrillex had two horrible children?

Listen: “Money Machine”

9. Control Top: Covert Contracts

Covert Contracts is the best straight-up punk rock album in…

…wow, so long that I’m not sure how to finish the sentence. Maybe since riot grrrl.

Listen: “Office Rage”

8. oso oso: basking in the glow

The production can make this album seem slight or small. But Jade Lillitri’s talent for pop punk melodies and capturing sentiments is colossal.

Listen: “basking in the glow”

7. The Regrettes: How Do You Love?

There’s one certainty in 2019, and it’s that Lydia Night, who released this sophomore album at just eighteen years old, is an innate talent. Some young artists sound gleeful to be making music and living their dream. She performs this power pop with the poise and seriousness of someone who has been making music for a lifetime.

Listen: “California Friends”

6. Purple Mountains: Purple Mountains

David Berman gave us a comeback album about how fucking unhappy he was. A month later, he had died by suicide. The album’s less of a bummer than that sounds, but that all-consuming fact remains.

But do what you can to listen for his lyricism. He was really one of the best.

Listen: “Just The Way That I Feel”

5. Charly Bliss: Young Enough

Young Enough is an impressive evolution for an already impressive band. Their sophomore album is, dare I say, slick, and the shine suits their rock a little more neatly. More vitally, they’re more aggressively tugging heartstrings, looking back at heartbreak and trauma and coming out on the other side stronger for it.

Listen: “Young Enough”

4. billy woods & Kenny Segal: Hiding Places

billy woods raps carefully and considerately about the despair of living in a system in which more and more people are falling into poverty, and about how being black both makes poverty both more likely and considerably more horrible and inescapable. Kenny Segal’s bleak but inventive and engaging production completes it and makes this among the best musical documents of the American empire’s love affair with leaving its own people behind.

Listen: “Checkpoints”

3. Billie Eilish: WHEN WE ALL FALL ASLEEP, WHERE DO WE GO?

Her zoomer energy can seem like a gimmick, but the charm of nearly every song is so wildly different. Her brother’s production is so unique, but it’s still Billie’s magnetism as a performer who’s unafraid to act her age that makes this the most memorable album of 2019 by a fair bit.

Listen: “bury a friend”

2. Jamila Woods: LEGACY! LEGACY!

Jamila Woods is the most talented person on this list, and her celebration and investigation of her heroes can feel like she’s just showing off. It might feel less from her soul than debut HEAVN, but LEGACY! LEGACY! is such a monument, a real thinker of a listen which you’ll never stop finding new angles to approach.

Listen: “BALDWIN”

1. Lana Del Rey: Norman Fucking Rowell!

The next best American record.

Listen: “Norman fucking Rockwell”

Honorable Mentions: Crush on Me by Sir Babygirl, Miss Universe by Nilüfer Yanya, Immunity by Clairo, Dedication by Carly Rae Jepsen, Patience by Mannequin Pussy, Two Hands by Big Thief, U.F.O.F. by Big Thief

Honorable Mentions to the Honorable Mentions List: uknowatimsayin¿ by Danny Brown, Eve by Rapsody, KIRK by DaBaby, Jaime by Brittany Howard, Beware of the dogs by Stella Donnelly, Remind Me Tomorrow by Sharon Van Etten, Bandana by Freddie Gibbs & Madlib, Dogrel by Fontaines D.C., Keepsake by Hatchie, Better Oblivion Community Center by Better Oblivion Community Center, the first glass beach album by glass beach, Buck Up by Carsie Blanton, Wildcard by Miranda Lambert, Cuz I Love You by Lizzo, The Best of Luck Club by Alex Lahey, Father of the Bride by Vampire Weekend, Fever by Megan Thee Stallion

Joey’s Top Ten Songs of 2019

Welcome, everyone. I always like waiting until the year is actually over to get these lists out. Just doesn’t feel right to do it earlier.

I have a lot of posts coming out in the next couple of weeks, so let’s just get right into it.

10. Sharon Van Etten: “Seventeen”

“Seventeen” is the biggest moment of Sharon Van Etten’s career. This song about witnessing a changing New York City is elevated by a great vocal performance and a grand presentation.

9. FKA twigs: “cellophane”

Much has been written about the naked emotion in “cellophane,” but what makes it work for me is the slow, broken piano track.

8. Clairo: “Bags”

A song about the unspoken calculations in moments of intimacy, something about the simple swagger of the guitars here really brings “Bags” together. The best part is her lingering on “know you’d make fun of me.”

7. Stella Donnelly: “Tricks”

Beware of the Dogs is a frequently dead-serious album about Stella Donnelly’s exhaustion with men. “Tricks” is also about that (it calls out the men who heckle her with song suggestions), but it’s her most fun song by far and it includes all of her best hooks. Lose yourself in the “LEAVE IT ALONE, LEAVE IT ALONE” bit.

6. Vampire Weekend: “This Life”

“I’ve been cheating through this life/And all it’s suffering/Oh, Christ!/Am I good for nothing?” is the best refrain Vampire Weekend’s ever made, and Jake Longstreth’s lead guitar lines are the best among many on a great guitar album. “Harmony Hall” is more viscerally thrilling, but “This Life” has incredibly strong fundamentals which make its virtue longer-lasting.

5. Lizzo: “Juice”

Lizzo has finally made a song as fun as she so obviously is. Not sure why the public had to reach back to 2018 and 2017 to get her atop the charts.

4. Lil Nas X (ft. Billy Ray Cyrus): “Old Town Road (Remix)”

Remember: Billboard removed the original “Old Town Road,” a modestly charting trap song with a banjo sound here and there, from its country listings. This sparked a frenzy of streaming “Old Town Road” in protest, and the song was already headed to number one. But the rest of the story is in Lil Nas X’s best tweet: “see he left and came back with help lol”

The original’s two minutes didn’t have an unwasted second, so some will still prefer that. But Billy Ray Cyrus’s verses turn the song into a world-conquering triumph. “Old Town Road (Remix)” had the longest stay at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 in the chart’s history. Can’t nobody tell them nothing.

3. Alex Lahey: “Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself”

On I Love You Like A Brother, Alex Lahey found a foolproof formula. “Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself” returns to that formula and is the most euphoric thing she’s ever written. And she finally brings out a mainstay of her earlier career that had yet to appear in her solo work: her saxophone.

Her songs about daily millennial strife need this companion. Even if things are hard, you can make them just a little bit easier by being kind to yourself.

2. Lana Del Rey: “The greatest”

Lana Del Rey finally tops “Video Games” with this this weirdly triumphant song about the end of the world, inspired by the 2018 Hawaii false missile alert. What if the last words we ever heard were “Kanye West is blond and gone/’Life on Mars’ ain’t just a song/I hope the live stream’s almost on?”

1. Mannequin Pussy: “Drunk II”

God, what a fantastic band, and Marisa Dabice’s voice is a monster. What’s the greatest moment here? “I still love you, you stupid fuck?” “I have the answer now?” My vote’s for “you feel guilty, it’s pathetic.”

Dabice wrote the song while actually inebriated, drunk trying to escape the torment of her breakup.

“Drunk II” is a band taking everything it does well and doing it all at once. Holy crap.

Honorable Mentions: “Gone” by Charli XCX & Christine and the Queens, “Cruel Summer” by Taylor Swift

Joey’s Past Top Tens, 2010-2018

This is a new website mostly made to chronicle my best-of music lists, but starting history with the best of 2019 doesn’t make sense.

So here were my top ten songs and albums from 2010 to 2018 as submitted to the Village Voice Pazz & Jop Critics Poll. Many of these have changed since (and you’ll see a lot of that in my upcoming feature), but this feels worth chronicling.

Then you’ll see my best songs and albums of 2019 list in the first few days of the new year.

2010

ALBUMS

1. Janelle Monáe: The ArchAndroid (Suites II And III)
2. The National: High Violet
3. Kanye West: My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
4. Titus Andronicus: The Monitor
5. Robyn: Body Talk
6. No Age: Everything In Between
7. Dessa: A Badly Broken Code
8. Cloud Cult: Light Chasers
9. Broken Social Scene: Forgiveness Rock Record
10. Big Boi: Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty

SONGS

1. Broken Social Scene: “World Sick”
2. Spoon: “Out Go The Lights”
3. Big Boi (ft. Gucci Mane): “Shine Blockas”
4. The National: “Terrible Love (Alternate Version)”
5. LCD Soundsystem: “I Can Change”
6. Janelle Monáe (ft. Big Boi): “Tightrope”
7. Cee Lo Green: “Fuck You!”
8. Robyn: “Dancing On My Own”
9. Metric: “Black Sheep”
10. Caribou: “Odessa”

2011

ALBUMS

1. Frank Ocean: nostalgia,ULTRA.
2. tUnE-yArDs: w h o k i l l
3. Wussy: Strawberry
4. Girls: Father, Son, Holy Ghost
5. Adele: 21
6. Drake: Take Care
7. The Weeknd: House of Balloons
8. Jay-Z & Kanye West: Watch The Throne
9. Fucked Up: David Comes To Life
10. Paul Simon: So Beautiful Or So What

SONGS

1. Beyoncé: “Countdown”
2. Drake (ft. Rihanna): “Take Care”
3. Girls: “Vomit”
4. The Rapture: “How Deep Is Your Love?”
5. Britney Spears: “Till The World Ends”
6. EMA: “California”
7. Lana Del Rey: “Video Games”
8. Tyler, The Creator: “Yonkers”
9. Jay-Z & Kanye West: “Otis”
10. Das Racist: “Michael Jackson”

2012

ALBUMS

1. Frank Ocean: channel ORANGE
2. Kendrick Lamar: good kid, m.A.A.d city
3. Fiona Apple: The Idler Wheel…
4. Loudon Wainwright III: Older Than My Old Man Now
5. The Mountain Goats: Transcendental Youth
6. Japandroids: Celebration Rock
7. Jens Lekman: I Know What Love Isn’t
8. Taylor Swift: Red
9. Leonard Cohen: Old Ideas
10. Dirty Projectors: Swing Lo Magellan

SONGS

1. Pussy Riot: “Putin Lights Up The Fires”
2. Psy: “Gangnam Style”
3. Taylor Swift: “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together”
4. Japandroids: “The House That Heaven Built”
5. Frank Ocean: “Thinkin Bout You”
6. Usher: “Climax”
7. Kacey Musgraves: “Merry Go ‘Round”
8. The Shins: “Simple Song”
9. Carly Rae Jepsen: “Call Me Maybe”
10. Miguel: “Adorn”

2013

ALBUMS

1. Arcade Fire: Reflektor
2. Tegan & Sara: Heartthrob
3. Kacey Musgraves: Same Trailer, Different Park
4. Vampire Weekend: Modern Vampires of the City
5. Kanye West: Yeezus
6. Janelle Monáe: The Electric Lady
7. Paramore: Paramore
8. My Bloody Valentine: m b v
9. Waxahatchee: Cerulean Salt
10. Disclosure: Settle

SONGS

1. Superchunk: “Me & You & Jackie Mittoo”
2. HAIM: “The Wire”
3. Icona Pop (ft. Charli XCX): “I Love It”
4. Mariah Carey (ft. Miguel): “#Beautiful”
5. Lorde: “Royals”
6. Vampire Weekend: “Ya Hey”
7. Arcade Fire: “Afterlife”
8. The Knife: “Full of Fire”
9. Justin Timberlake (ft. Timbaland): “Dress On”
10. Drake (ft. Majid Jordan): “Hold On, We’re Going Home”

2014

ALBUMS

1. D’Angelo: Black Messiah
2. Against Me!: Transgender Dysphoria Blues
3. Run the Jewels: Run the Jewels 2
4. Miranda Lambert: Platinum
5. Azealia Banks: Broke With Expensive Taste
6. Old 97’s: Most Messed Up
7. Parquet Courts: “Sunbathing Animal”
8. tUnE-yArDs: Nikki Nack
9. Jenny Lewis: The Voyager
10. Aphex Twin: SYRO

SONGS

1. Kendrick Lamar: “Untitled”
2. Beyoncé (ft. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie): “***Flawless”
3. DJ Snake (ft. Lil Jon): “Turn Down For What”
4. J. Cole: “Be Free”
5. Kira Isabella: “Quarterback”
6. Future Islands: “Seasons (Waiting On You)”
7. Taylor Swift: “Blank Space”
8. Flying Lotus (ft. Kendrick Lamar): “Never Catch Me”
9. Sia: “Chandelier”
10. Lil B: “No Black Person Is Ugly”

2015

ALBUMS

1. Kendrick Lamar: To Pimp A Butterfly
2. Grimes: Art Angels
3. Heems: Eat, Pray, Thug
4. Carly Rae Jepsen: E•MO•TION
5. Donnie Trumpet & The Social Experiment: Surf
6. Waxahatchee: Ivy Tripp
7. Miguel: Wildheart
8. Courtney Barnett: Sometimes I Sit And Think, And Sometimes I Just Sit
9. Jamie xx: In Colour
10. Sleater-Kinney: No Cities To Love

SONGS

1. Estelle: “Stronger Than You”
2. Fetty Wap: “Trap Queen”
3. Donnie Trumpet & The Social Experiment: “Sunday Candy”
4. Kendrick Lamar: “Alright”
5. Justin Bieber: “What Do You Mean?”
6. Mark Ronson (ft. Bruno Mars): “Uptown Funk”
7. Grimes: “Flesh Without Blood”
8. Rihanna & Kanye West & Paul McCartney: “FourFiveSeconds”
9. Miguel: “Coffee”
10. Missy Elliott (ft. Pharrell Williams): “WTF (Where They From)”

2016

ALBUMS

1. A Tribe Called Quest: We Got It From Here…Thank You 4 Your Service
2. Chance The Rapper: Coloring Book
3. Jamila Woods: HEAVN
4. Beyoncé: Lemonade
5. Car Seat Headrest: Teens of Denial
6. Blood Orange: Freetown Sound
7. G.L.O.S.S.: Trans Day of Revenge
8. Frank Ocean: blond
9. Solange: A Seat at the Table
10. Kaytranada: 99.9%

SONGS

1. Kanye West: “Ultralight Beam”
2. Car Seat Headrest: “Drunk Drivers/Killer Whales”
3. Beyoncé: “Formation”
4. Chance The Rapper (ft. 2 Chainz & Lil Wayne): “No Problem”
5. Rae Sremmurd (ft. Gucci Mane): “Black Beatles”
6. Solange: “Cranes in the Sky”
7. Jamila Woods (ft. Noname): “VRY BLK”
8. Rihanna (ft. Drake): “Work”
9. Desiigner: “Panda”
10. G.L.O.S.S.: “Give Violence A Chance”

2017

ALBUMS

1. Jens Lekman: Life Will See You Now
2. Jay-Z: 4:44
3. Alex Lahey: I Love You Like A Brother
4. Kendrick Lamar: DAMN.
5. Emperor X: Oversleepers International
6. Lorde: Melodrama
7. St. Vincent: MASSEDUCTION
8. SZA: Ctrl
9. Brockhampton: SATURATION II
10. Kelela: Take Me Apart

SONGS

1. Kesha: “Praying”
2. Jay-Z: “The Story of O.J.”
3. Mount Eerie: “Real Death”
4. Kendrick Lamar: “DNA.”
5. Paramore: “Hard Times”
6. Carly Rae Jepsen: “Cut to the Feeling”
7. Cardi B: “Bodak Yellow”
8. Lil Uzi Vert: “XO Tour Llif3”
9. Japandroids: “North East South West”
10. Khalid: “Young Dumb & Broke”

2018

ALBUMS

1. Janelle Monáe: Dirty Computer
2. Parquet Courts: Wide Awaaaaake!
3. Mitski: Be The Cowboy
4. Noname: Room 25
5. SOPHIE: OIL OF EVERY PEARL’S UN-INSIDES
6. Kacey Musgraves: Golden Hour
7. The Beths: Future Me Hates Me
8. Snail Mail: Lush
9. Cardi B: Invasion of Privacy
10. boygenius: boygenius

SONGS

1. Snail Mail: “Pristine”
2. Drake: “Nice For What”
3. Mitski: “Nobody”
4. Pusha T: “The Story of Adidon”
5. Ariana Grande: “thank u, next”
6. Lana Del Rey: “Venice Bitch”
7. Hop Along: “How Simple”
8. Playboi Carti (ft. Lil Uzi Vert): “Shoota”
9. Janelle Monáe (ft. Zoë Kravitz): “Screwed”
10. Rae Sremmurd (ft. Juicy J): “Powerglide”

Joey’s Top 100 Albums of the Decade: Introduction

INTRODUCTION | 100-76 | 75-51 | 50-26 | 25-11 | 10-1 | FULL LIST

I’ve undertaken a few large writing projects before, but this is, by far, the largest.

Next Monday to Friday, I’ll be rolling out my top 100 albums of the 2010s along with writeups for each album. I’ve kept a mental list of the decade’s best music for the entirety of the past ten years, and I’ve been thinking about this list and listening to music with this article in mind basically every day since August 2018. I’ve been writing it over the past half year.

So to begin, here’s an introduction in the form of an FAQ. And I have an honorable mention at the end of this post. Enjoy.

Q: Who are you? Why should I, a hypothetical internet wanderer who does not know you, care about your take on the music of the 2010s?

A: Hi! I’m Joey Daniewicz. I’m a 28-year-old Minnesotan who has been writing about music for just over ten years. I began writing a music column for the University of Minnesota Morris’s student newspaper The University Register in September of 2009. I went on to serve as that newspaper’s Arts & Entertainment Editor and then its Editor-in-Chief. I wrote about music there until November 2012.

I’ve done some writing at The Young Folks and City Pages, and I’ve gotten a few words published at Village Voice, where I voted in their famous Pazz & Jop Critics Poll for nine years (and I’ve now voted in its spiritual successor, the Uproxx Critics Poll, for two years). I was featuring on Robert Christgau’s blog roll for a bit back when he wrote for MSN. That was kinda neat.

I’m not a super decorated or active music writer, but I’ve existed in those circles for a while and have a decent resumé for it.

But that doesn’t really get at the question of why you should care. Well, it’s a hard question!

Not long after I was paying attention to new music and not long after I was writing about new music, the 2010s started. The 2010s have been special to me because it’s the first time I’ve really witnessed a decade of new music.

And while this list won’t be as important as Rolling Stone‘s or Pitchfork‘s lists, I think it’s pretty cool that unlike those, this feature is unified by a single voice and a single perspective. And unlike most lists made by one person, I’ve written about one hundred albums for it. It’s taken a lot of work, but I think this feature is pretty unique, even if, honestly, my selections are mostly pretty typical.

Q: Have you done this sort of thing before?

A: Yeah! Just a few months into my columnist role I wrote about my ten favorite albums of the ’00s. I named The Hold Steady’s Boys And Girls In America the album of the decade. My opinion on the matter has since changed (as you can see in this updated list I drafted a few months ago), although not a lot.

Q: What defined music in the 2010s?

A: There’s a lot to go over, but two things stand out.

The first is the collapse of the indie strangeness that defined 2009. Animal Collective, Grizzly Bear, and Dirty Projectors didn’t make big waves in the 2010s (although you should check out Swing Lo Magellan by Dirty Projectors, which almost made this list). Indie in general feels like it matters less than it did in the ’90s and ’00s.

The other trend is the dominance of black solo artists who have inspired auteuristic discussion of their work. They have cultivated media experiences and dominated discourses. Some are Tyler, The Creator, FKA twigs, Jay-Z, Solange, and Janelle Monáe. But four artists stand above all this decade. They are Kanye West, Frank Ocean, Kendrick Lamar, and Beyoncé. You will read plenty about those four on my list.

Q: Who is this list for?

A: Firstly, it’s for myself.

After that, I’d love for my friends to read it and maybe use it to discover music. That’d be such an honor.

Finally, the dream is absolutely for someone just getting into popular music to use this as a primer. I tore through these lists eleven or twelve years ago and through them built an understanding of the canon of recorded popular music. Obviously most people will go with an editorial list from a notable publication if they’re looking for that. But I think this does a pretty good job. If you’re reading this and looking for a jumping off point, I believe this list does right by you.

Q: What’s your criteria?

A: Uhhhh…..

I got this question a few times, and it’s a weird one.

I’m not in love with that question, but I get the demand for it. I think that if you read the list you can figure out what I do and don’t value, but a few things to keep in mind are an album’s consistency, its overall aesthetic, how memorable its songs are, the value of what it sets out to accomplish, and its success at actually accomplishing that.

Q: Is this a list of the best albums, or is this a list of your favorite albums?

A: The distinction has always seemed pretty pedantic to me. The purpose of these lists isn’t to assert some sort of musical infallibility but to contribute to a larger discourse about which music is especially noteworthy. Do I believe that my taste is unimpeachable and that these must be the best 100 albums of the decade? No. Obviously not. But it’s also true that these are more than just my favorites. They’re the albums that I really truly believe to be the best. At this moment in time, anyway. To me, “favorite” and “best” are the same question. And I think that people who treat them as separate questions should believe in their own judgment more.

Q: You left off my favorite album! What gives?

A: 100 albums is not very many albums!

I won’t name the albums that got closest right now, but there were some artists that had marvelous decades that didn’t quite find their way onto this list. Some of the most notable absences are Danny Brown, Nicki Minaj, Ariana Grande, Hop Along, Jason Isbell, and St. Vincent.

Q: Lastly, was there anything this decade that’s worthy of the list but doesn’t quite fit in?

A: What a suspiciously specific question. Why, yes there is!

It’s an anthology, so it doesn’t quite fit my rubric (my list only includes albums of new music). But it’s released in the 2010s and made exclusively from music originally released in the 2010s. A few of the releases that make up this anthology just missed my cut, so I was thrilled to see this release and feel compelled to give it special mention.

Honorable Mention. Burial: Tunes 2011-2019 (2019)

Since 2007’s landmark Untrue, Burial hasn’t given us the follow-up we’ve wanted, but his output of singles and EPs has been consistently impressive. But it isn’t until all his solo work for Hyperdub over the past ten years is laid out in this two-and-a-half hour display that one can appreciate the enormity of his decade. A few of these ten-give-or-take-three minute journeys are intense, but many wander, drowning you in ambience. Tunes taken altogether feels like an assertion that he’s still the best electronic artist out there. Maybe we don’t even need another album.

Listen: “Rival Dealer”

Meet me back here on Monday.

INTRODUCTION | 100-76 | 75-51 | 50-26 | 25-11 | 10-1 | FULL LIST