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Thread: Favorite albums of 2022

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    Favorite albums of 2022

    Here we are again. With 96 2022 albums and counting in my collection and who knows how many others sampled, this is probably one of the hardest (but most rewarding) year end lists I've put together. I heard a heck of a lot of stuff. My usual mid-year drift away from new releases just didn't happen. I kept with it, and now I'm left scrambling to make chops on what is going to be the longest album list I've posted since 2008.

    But first, an essential primer:



    Pocket Gnome - Oh, to Find a Home for a Gnome

    comfy synth

    Sample track: It's 7 minutes just listen to it

    This is a 7 minute EP about a happy gnome who finds a perfect home, and if you don't like it you suck.

    -------------------------------------------------------------

    ...Ok let's go it's a 35 album year end list huzzah!!



    35. Soul Glo - Diaspora Problems

    hip hop, hardcore punk

    Sample track: GODBLESSYALLREALGOOD

    This is the most fresh punk album I've heard in a while. The description is pretty straight forward. Pierce Jordan and co wrote a hardcore album and filled it out with all sorts of hip hop elements and rapped sequences. If that notion intrigues you, you'll probably like it. I can say the album didn't stick around on my playlist long after the novelty wore off, but hardcore never does really. The discovery process was delightful, and if its not my favorite 2022 release, it's absolutely something I encourage everyone to experience at least once.



    34. Lunar Spells - Demise of Heaven

    black metal

    Sample track: Damnation of the Heavenly Sun

    I was introduced to this band earlier in the year via their 2021 release Where Silence Whispers and then started noticing Demise of Heaven on recommendation lists. They really excel at keeping it simple, with a crisp tight lofi sound driven by short and basic repetitive melodies. It's old school in a way that I want way more than I actually hear, direct and uncompromising but focused on feel over force, harsh but also kind of pretty in its way.



    33. Veilburner - VLBRNR

    psychedelic death metal

    Sample track: Lo! Heirs to the Serpent

    Veilburner have evolved into a bit of a pet obsession of mine over the years--one of those bands I'm just going to instantly pre-order without sampling and preemptively know I will enjoy. They landed on a sound I adore and, as eclectic as their individual songs may be, they seldom deviate from the core formula. That formula happens to be endlessly brooding and bending incongruous avantgarde chaos. A December release handicapped my ability to absorb it all. It doesn't feel quite as compelling as their last album, but they're always a slow grow and there's nowhere to go but up from here.



    32. Auriferous Flame - The Great Mist Within

    atmospheric black metal

    Sample track: The Great Mist Within

    Recorded in his traditional abyssally hollow style, this Ayloss project was difficult to engage even by his standards. But the payout is still there in the form I've come to expect it: massive walls of bombast shrouding airy medieval melodic brilliance. It's just bleaker here, even more marginalized, the faintest glimpses of beauty in a mire of cold plodding fury. It's a bit of a challenge and not quite as captivating for me as his works as Spectral Lore and Mystras--no strangers to my year end top 3--but I got more than my Bandcamp dollars' worth exploring it.



    31. Artificial Brain - Artificial Brain

    tech death metal

    Sample track: Artificial Brain

    If the gurgling vocals on this were replaced with more conventional growls, I think half of it could decently pass as a Krallice album. I'm glad they aren't; that choking on my vomit sound hits me right in the sweet spot. Artificial Brain is very much in that later Krallician frantically performed lowkey monomoodal spectrum, tending to wash out in my head if I'm not actively engaging with it. I find this sort of stuff really rewarding; it can just play as a background piece, and any time I want to zone in I'm guaranteed something waiting for me to latch on to. They have an underutilized knack for writing incredibly desperate-feeling tremolo melodies that I hope is given more of a spotlight on future albums. My favorite tracks tend to be where they embrace that, most notably on the opener sampled above.



    30. Mizmor & Thou - Myopia

    doom metal

    Sample track: Myopia

    The ten minute funeral dirge of a title track is reason enough to pick this up, and there's 74 minutes of other material to toy around with after that. Thou and Mizmor are a pretty sick combo and sound, well, pretty much exactly how I would have expected them to. Don't count on much to rev you up here, opening track aside. The album's a sequence of crushingly thick slow rolls peppered with Mizmor's black metal inclinations and Thou's respect for 90s thematics.

    Would I remember this album as much without the title track? Well, no, I absolutely wouldn't. Myopia the song is a doom metal anthem for the ages and single-handedly carries this album into the sphere of something I'll remember for years to come. But the rest is pretty rad too.



    29. Fogweaver - Labyrinthine

    dungeon synth

    Sample track: Fogweaver - The Ring of Erreth-Akbe

    Dungeon synth is my new jam. As I slowly but surely transition towards becoming a feeble, decrepit, 40 year old boomer, my old bones just aren't going to be able to take blast beats and pig snorts much longer. Thankfully, people with access to MIDI keyboards have taken compassion and established a genre that us olds can still enjoy.

    I love dungeon synth. The itch was always there--Summoning stands as my third most listened to band all time--but I've scratched my way thoroughly down the rabbit hole at this point and buy nearly as much of this stuff as I do metal. It's not the easiest genre to rank. I'm barely even listening to it when I put it on. It's my ultimate dream background music genre. But it's been woefully underrepresented on my year end lists, and I can't continue to leave it off if I want to be honest about what I'm actually listening to. I binged Fogweaver a lot this year as a full discography playthrough. If I had to pick a favorite album, I'm not sure it would be this one. But I think this was my favorite dungeon synth discovery this year with a 2022 release, and I'm feeling pretty damn satisfied right now listening to it as I write this.



    28. Antecantamentum - Saturnine December

    post-black metal

    Sample track: Wraith

    I was about wrapped up with my 2022 year end list, making a final browse through new Bandcamp releases, when what to my wandering ears should appear but a killer December 9th experimental black metal release. It's a really meandering album that can be repetitious in phases but rarely follows a single theme to any logical conclusion, transitioning between thematic riffs and harsh assaults and peaceful post-black drifts and acoustic breaks without a predictable progression. Hints of Enslaved and Panopticon perhaps, if I had to guess at some bigger name influences, but Melpomenë has certainly crafted her own irreverent song-writing process that keeps me on my toes. I love that I'm never quite sure where a given track will take me, and the getting there is pretty fun too.



    27. Cervidae - Majestic Fables & Tales

    comfy synth

    Sample track: The Floating Castle Calls

    I've been pretty heavily diving into dungeon synth and its awkwardly pleasant offshoot comfy synth all year, and while it's rare for any one album in these genres to grip me on a level that justifies year-end placement, I absolutely adore queuing up full discographies of these artists and letting them roll all day.

    One of these dives lead me to purchasing the full Eisenfell label catalogue--a surreal collection of vaporwave hiphop comfy synth hybrid monstrosities that tickle me almost as pink as this album cover. I highly recommend hopping around through them on Bandcamp for an evening. Cervidae's second demo, Majestic Fables & Tales, ultimately stood out as my favorite in the mix. Maybe I'm letting the collective novelty skew my placement here a bit, but I don't care.



    26. Grima - Frostbitten

    atmospheric black metal

    Sample track: Giant's Eternal Sleep

    I tend to seek out innovations and projects that push norms to new limits, but sometimes a band can just come around and drop a solid atmospheric black metal album and I'm all in. Frostbitten doesn't do anything out of the ordinary outside of the occasional accordion accompaniment, which is itself pretty ordinary in Russian black metal these days, but it doesn't need to. It's just a really satisfying wintry nature soundscape that's excellently performed and ships a lot of good melodic progressions without overreaching.

    The only review I found of it makes a point of criticizing the production, and that gave me pause to listen to it a bit differently. I quickly noticed... I don't want to say flaws, but a definite blending together of sounds that enhances the atmospheric vibe at the expense of its distinct parts. But I connected with Frostbitten as a background-oriented mood piece despite its melodic tendencies. I like the overall aesthetic, and that doesn't always require instrumental clarity. Maybe with better production this album could have amounted to more, but I'm loving it for what it is.



    25. Krallice - Crystalline Exhaustion

    atmospheric black metal

    Sample track: Dismal Entity

    Modern Krallice is not the band I fell in love with 14 years ago. They're unrecognizable juxtaposed. Their constantly evolving sound has been more interesting than endearing to me. They slowly drifted off of my year end charts, but they were never forgotten. Demonic Wealth intrigued me quite a bit last year with its transition into synth-driven atmospheric sounds vaguely reminiscent of Botanist. Crystalline Exhaustion is the logical next step in that direction, and its cover art could not describe it more perfectly. This album sounds, intentionally as far as I can tell, like it was recorded in a crystal cavern a mile under the earth. It is a soundtrack for exploring such realms. It accomplishes this so vividly that I can't help but feel a deeper connection to the band again, perhaps the most I have since Loüm and Go Be Forgotten.



    24. Drudkh - All Belong to the Night

    atmospheric black metal

    Sample track: Windmills

    Ok, look, I know that if Drudkh took a dump on a paper plate and called it music I wouldn't gobble it up because I didn't place Handful of Stars on my 2010 list. (I haven't listened to that album in over a decade, so apologies if it was actually good and I was too hurr metal hurr at the time to appreciate it.) Wait, did I just apologize for not eating the $%#! sandwich? uh... Drudkh are pretty incapable of writing music I don't absolutely adore, and that's a testament to their enduring capacity to maintain a fundamentally unaltered core sound while pumping out endless quality material for twenty years as much as it's a testament to my enduring love for that core sound they flooded the Ukrainian bm scene with so many years ago. This album is just beautiful from start to finish. I'm thankful they're still able to do it after all the $%#!ing bull$%#! their country has had to endure this year.



    23. Everything Everything - Raw Data Feel

    pop

    Sample track: Teletype

    The opening track of this alone is enough to sell me if the rest doesn't fall to pieces. It might be the most infectious banger I've heard all year. Jonathan Higgs' vocal style is absolutely enchanting throughout and single-handedly carries half the tracks I'm otherwise neutral on to grand heights.

    Make no mistake, pop is not my forte or something I naturally gravitate to. I hadn't even heard Everything Everything before this album. A lot of these songs had me going "wow this is great in spite of". It definitely feels like a bookended album, with the opener and closer distinctly exceeding the in between for me. But the enjoyment is authentic, if that makes any sense. It doesn't leave me wanting more so much as occasionally consciously going wow I'm surprised I still like this.

    When it came time to sort a year end list, I decided I like it quite a bit!



    22. White Ward - False Light

    progressive black metal

    Sample track: Phoenix

    I didn't latch onto this album quite as much as a lot of people (I've been seeing it tossed around as album of the year outright), but my goodness does it have some stellar moments. A progressive black metal album packed with slow brooding saxophone and not averse to spoken sound clip samples, I honestly like it best at its most conventional. When these songs take off, they gooooo with precision and intensity and intricacy that makes the wait worth it every time. I sometimes wish I was a little more viscerally engaged with the in betweens, but they're never dull or redundant.



    21. Dinbethes - Balans

    pagan metal

    Sample track: Geboren

    Sucker for amazing album covers that I am, I gave this an instant sample when it showed up as a new release on Bandcamp, and it wound up in my cart shortly after. Its mid-tempo blackened viking metal grooves hook me start to finish, and at 34 minutes, it's a relatively easy listen that feeds my endless craving for the style and occasionally really pops off with something brilliant. The middle track Geboren in particular has a really cool sort of Middle Eastern vibe going on. Solo musician J. manages to make often neglected black metal bass relevant and uses some creative bending to forge epic moments. Geboren never gets too fancy for its own good and delivers its creativity in a controlled package. An admirable debut.



    20. Entgeist - Res Gestae

    progressive blackened death metal

    Sample track: Verfall

    Really nice all-arounder. Blackened death metal with progressive flares seems to be my bread and butter these days, and Entgeist stood out a lot for both their capacity to ship memorable riffs and their willingness to experiment around a fundamentally traditional core. I think the production's a bit washed on the guitars and doesn't always do justice to the full assault potential of the song-writing, but I love what they're doing here and hope this album's relative obscurity half a year after release doesn't dissuade them from keeping it up.



    19. Boris - Heavy Rocks 2022

    heavy rock

    Sample track: She Is Burning

    Leave it to Boris to pop off a killer metal-leaning song with brass in the year when every band on the planet seems to be doing it. Heavy Rocks 2022 kicks off about as fabulous as any Boris album ever could, with She Is Burning firing full speed ahead in their most quintessential psychedelic punk sound while still managing to find yet another new flavor novelty. The album ranges pretty far from there in ways that only Boris would consider. It's a smattering of most major leanings they've had over the years, written in the spirit of No with a flare for high energy consistent across the Heavy Rocks titles. It has no flow to speak of and seems like a randomly sorted Boris buffet, jumping from punk to jazz experimentation over an eclectic Nirvana-esque bass groove to drone to electronic-infused hardcore to a dire slow rolled piano and vocal outro with no regard for the listener's sensibilities, and as far as I'm concerned that's just part of their charm. The album literally ends mid note without explanation, a not-so-subtle hint that if you want the real deal you should go see them live.

    And I did, for the fifth time, and it was just as good as always.



    18. Esoctrilihum - Consecration of the Spiritüs Flesh

    brutal black metal

    Sample track: Thertrh

    Sometimes I just want to smash things. Aurally debase everything around me and revel in ruin. Portal's Avow filled that niche for me last year. This year, Esoctrilihum has been getting the job done. The album is so effectively destructive that I usually miss all the interesting things they do along the way. Once in a while my head snaps into place and goes wait there is a song here. I like it that way.



    17. Moonlight Sorcery - Piercing Through the Frozen Eternity

    melodic black metal

    Sample track: Wolven Hour

    Bombastic anthemic black metal in a constant state of hype that's uniquely, for the genre at least, distinguished by some very creative drumming. It's an excellent debut EP from a band with fairly little pedigree. I had a lot of fun listening to this and had to share. They followed it up with a second EP that I haven't had a moment to check out yet, but hopes are high. I could see a master class full length coming from them a year or two down the road.



    16. Liminal Dream - Mind

    experimental metal, ambient

    Sample track: Liminal Sight

    I don't think my love of Damián Antón Ojeda music is any secret these days. Liminal Dream is one of his lesser known projects, but this album is a wild ride. Throughout Mind, he uses a lot of electronic effects in fairly basic ways that don't really need to be technically cutting edge to get the job done, because it's all about creating a very unique atmosphere. As always, his music sounds like it was recorded under a rock at the bottom of a volcano inside a trench in the Pacific Ocean, and that melds uniquely with the programmed drumming, keyboard, and massively clipped samples he brings to the table here. In ways it stays true to his post-rock orientation as Sadness, but there's less structural build-up to climax tradition. The songs tend to collapse into these mires of ambient and harsh noise that feel fresh and incredible to me.



    15. Spire of Lazarus - Soaked in the Sands

    progressive deathcore

    Sample tracks: Soldier of Sand, Mask of the Wraith

    Or more accurately, progressive djent chipslam deathcore uh something something this many notes should not be able to exist on an album. It's pretty cheesy but compensates by going hard as hell at all times with almost no room to breathe.

    I feel like I place a Mechina album most years for hitting the same nerdcore appeal on a significantly tamer level. Mechina's 2022 release didn't do much for me, but this album stuffed the void until it ruptured rainbow mucus all over my eardrums.



    14. Sadness - Our Time is Here

    emogaze

    Sample track: Late Spring True Love

    Late Spring True Love is heartbreakingly gorgeous, and Sunset Girl is an admirable supplement to qualify this as an EP instead of a single. Its only flaw is being 11 minutes when I want a full album. Long known for his post-black metal projects that dabbled in pretty and fragile things, on Our Time is Here, Sadness drops the metal veneer entirely and embraces a purely shoegazed-out emo punk sound. It's fabulous. I want to place it even higher; it's just so short that it's hard for me to see it as a complete package from an album standpoint. Late Spring True Love is my favorite song of 2022.



    13. Blut Aus Nord - Disharmonium: Undreamable Abysses

    atmospheric black metal

    Sample track: The Apotheosis of the Unnamable

    This album might be best summarized by its cover.

    I was first turned on to Blut Aus Nord in 2011 with 777 Sect(s), and the sequence of albums from there through Memoria Vetusta III consistently enthralled me. They started to drift in a direction I struggled to connect with after that. I have very little memory of Deus Salutis Meæ or Hallucinogen, and I felt the latter underperformed their side project Yerûšelem that same year.

    Damn what a return to... quality. I can't say form for such an amorphous being. Blut Aus Nord's core sound is unmistakable throughout their discography, but the directions they've applied it in vary significantly. This album is an astral swamp. A hellspace of swirling bile that resists the temptation to manifest into anything solid and just keeps on brooding for 46 intensely satisfying minutes. It's been one of the most dominant background albums for me all year, recapturing that essence of profound untamed mystery I fell in love with them for a decade ago from a novel angle.

    The progression of this album is so amazing too. I wouldn't say it has any sort of linear flow, but each track just sounds better to me than the one before it. Whether that's an objective quality or just a steady immersion, it ends when I am most prepared to let it play on forever. The replay value is endless.



    12. Falls of Rauros - Key to a Vanishing Future

    folk black metal

    Sample track: Clarity

    Falls of Rauros are up to six full length albums now, and I have somehow managed to accumulate all of them without actually listening to anything since Hail Wind and Hewn Oak back in 2008. I don't know if the timing didn't align with my mood or what, but I ended up going into this album with an essentially blank slate, and I was really taken aback by how pretty it is. I don't even mean in the sense that they write scenic melodies. I mean, if you took out the harsh guttural screaming, this could be one of those easy listening albums. Adult contemporary. Or something like that. ...

    Really, this album is so chill. Falls of Rauros have a reputation for writing beautiful music, but a quick skim leads me to think they went further here, forcibly reducing the harshness of their tones to better match their picturesque melodies. I don't know how they manage to make a black metal-rooted sound so damn agreeable. Country grim frostbitten wintermoons, take me home.



    11. black midi - Hellfire

    experimental progressive math rock

    Sample track: Welcome to Hell

    Ok, I confess, for a few years there I thought that the meme synth billion note experimentation scene was just really popular. This is the first year I dove into black midi the band, so my perspective is lacking previous albums that I've been told are just as good if not better.

    Oh well.

    Whatever the hell is going on through this 40 minute cluster$%#! of sound, Geordie Greep's unique vocal performance and theatrical lyrics give it the air of an exhibition, like each track is the next display in some freak show. It's that consistency that makes it not just a great collection of songs but a great album for me, and it carries the least enticing moments (I could live without Still) through as part of a bigger picture. I enjoy it best as a full ride from start to finish.

    I had 11 top 10 albums this year. Sometimes that's just the way it goes. Something had to get the chop, and ultimately I want metal more.



    10. Boris - fade

    drone

    Sample track: 終章 a bao a qu -無限回廊-

    Holy crap what a treat. When Heavy Rocks 2022 was announced in July I predicted there would be a third full length this year. W screamed Wata to me. Heavy Rocks was the Atsuo project. Takeshi would get his turn leading the pack. I have no idea if that's how it actually works in the studio for them, but here we are. It's early to be judging this, I know. A December 2nd release doesn't allow for much processing time. But I'll venture to say this is the best drone project they've dropped since Altar with Sunn O))) in 2006.

    This sounds so good aaaaaaaa the first track has these very faintly mixed shrieking siren guitars in the background that remind me of what Wata did far more prominently on Intro from Akuma No Uta. Every track has something fuzzing and echoing and wailing behind the crushing wall of doom guitar just out of reach, always beckoning. The whole album is beautiful and I'm so happy Boris went this route. I want to say this is my favorite thing they've released since at least Dear (I think Dear was great and its poor reception was mostly due to the newest fanbase expecting something different, but I digress), and it's only going to get better over time.



    9. Kostnatění - Oheň hoří tam, kde padl

    avant-garde folk black metal

    Sample track: Çay benim çeşme benim

    A massive wall of frantic chaos to primitive melodies that don't conjure any sense of a modern folk connection. This EP's assault is more like a mass slaughter ritual in an antiquity that achieved dystopia before they even invented musical notation. I'm never quite sure what is happening instrumentally here, but I'm pretty sure a blood moon just collapsed into the Pyramid of Giza and the wrath of Anubis is about to rupture forth from my rib cage.

    Holy crap I just realized pulling a youtube sample link for this that the entire EP is a. Turkish folk. cover album. My mind is completely blown.



    8. Immolation - Acts of God

    death metal

    Sample track: An Act of God

    I consistently slept on Immolation for years before this album dropped, but something in that album cover spoke to me enough to check it out, and damn. This is so punchy from start to finish. It captures an older school death metal ethos of never holding back on the pummel, but it gets it done with modern expectations of (actual) production quality that I can enjoy without a lingering craving for more. It's managed to stay on rotation for 10 months now without feeling stale, and the title track is absolutely one of my favorite songs of the year.



    7. Fortress of the Pearl - The Grove

    piano and black metal bliss

    Sample track: At the Center Of It All, I Fear Of What's Outside

    Ayloss did that thing he seems to do at least once every other year where he puts out the new best Ayloss project I have ever heard holy crap this is euphoric. Start with his sound on Mystras and layer it with gorgeous piano and dulcimer and ride this into oblivion. I'm speechless listening to it. I wish I had found it sooner--had had more time to listen it next to III and Castles Conquered and Reclaimed and Ετερόφωτος and get a real feel for where it ranks for me in the canon of one of my all-time favorite artists. I discovered it when I started making this list, and this is not a year in which I can rocket something up to seventh place lightly. But here it is, already, and it is sure to dominate my January playlist.



    6. Hath - All That Was Promised

    blackened death metal

    Sample track: Decollation

    The first thing I look for in new music is a feel. The what they're doing to accomplish it, that comes later if they've acquired my interest. Maybe that's why the further back in time I go, the more I tend to shrug off death metal projects and lean ever more on black metal. Death metal bands of late have been growing tremendously proficient at shipping an atmosphere I can instantly connect with, and there's just so many more interesting things going on to engage my brain along the way. Hath's new album clicks for me like Ulcerate. I want to drown in its overarching encompassing void. The songs get to assault me with their depth and character from that sweet spot, not on the outside looking in.



    5. Scarcity - Aveilut

    post-black metal

    Sample track: II

    A nearly 8 minute intro track can seem like a tall order, but it sunk in pretty quick that Aveilut is not meant to be experienced as a collection of songs. It plods forward in perpetual moody motion, painting a sequence of grim, hostile landscapes like stages in a video game or circles of hell. The pacing is perfect. I builds up huge anticipation and then II instantly delivers with a pulse driven by some merciless freight train tone I can't identify but fell madly in love with on first encounter.

    The album refuses to break from the forward motion established in I, introducing more and more sinister elements to the journey that express themselves as layers over the rhythm rather than significant changes in the structure. The percussion evaporates in IV, but by then the album has already conditioned me to feel motion, and the airy post-rock guitar tones maintain a sense of vast open space. The landscape is just bleak and desolate now, a droned out hellscape occupied by a singular menacing mass represented by the most effective growling I have heard on a drone track in a while. V is the least like the others: a conflicting mood--a scramble of finality and triumph and hopelessness--a hollow victory to conclude an intensely dark and visceral musical journey.



    4. Swampborn - Beyond Ratio

    progressive black metal

    Sample tracks: Sleepingstatic, Transitions

    This album feels like it's going to be generic metal for about one minute before blitzing out the first of countless killer riffs. Maybe the discordant ear-piercing tremolo at 1:45 or the industrial funk solo and subtly mixed choir at 3:50 first clued me in that the ride would be far reaching. But by the end of my first spin through opening track Entropie, I was definitely aware that I was listening to something special. How far it would go, how much it would do, that's something I'm still soaking in dozens of plays later.

    There's an Eastern European black metal centerpoint to a lot of it that I could see feeling like a drag at times if that's very not your thing. That sound is one of the most satisfying mood trends in music to my ears, so I'm in for the long haul. I have no pressing desire to pay attention because I'm already content with it in the background, but there's soooo much going on. These songs have so many key moments and tight transitions and short-lived catchy melodies (the brass passage on Muscarum has been stuck in my head for months), I discover something new every time I put it on. It's hard to pick a sample track because each song is such a unique, self-contained package.

    It's a real shame this has been slept on. I did find out that about half of the album is rerecordings of demos they released eight years ago, so maybe that's a factor? But it just leaves me more impressed because it means they were using brass and sax in black metal before it was cool. Go experience this and tell me if I'm crazy to call it a strong album of the year contender.



    3. Ashenspire - Hostile Architecture

    avant-garde metal

    Sample track: Tragic Heroin

    I've made so many bad decisions creating these lists over the years that when I went to do a 20 year anniversary review in 2021 it was so cringe I couldn't motivate myself to write about it. 2015 was a respectable year for me, relatively speaking, but placing A Forest of Stars' Beware the Sword You Cannot See seventh was an atrocity. This album feels like its spiritual sequel, both in style and in quality.

    If you are familiar with Beware the Sword You Cannot See, that might come off as a pretty absurd statement. It was an incredibly unique work. But here we are, rambling furious spoken operatic Brit over violin and sax-driven melodies that meander between Pink Floyd-esque dreams and frantic blast beat explosions with the tangled strings of prog chaos tying them together.

    I couldn't bring myself to bump this album up to first place, but I'm fairly confident it's the one I'll still be listening to the most four years down the road.

    (I just realized this was my 666th Bandcamp purchase and now take full credit for it being an outstanding metal album.)



    2. Black Country, New Road - Ants From Up Here

    indie/post-rock. post-indie rock? not indie post-rock

    Sample track: Basketball Shoes

    As far as I can tell this has been the most hyped album of 2022 all year, so I don't know that it needs much of an introduction, but I can confirm that it's pretty damn brilliant. Beautiful, diverse orchestration accenting fragile, compellingly personal vocals. The songs often progress like post-rock anthems, but the getting there is arguably even more rewarding than the payout. I went back and sampled their previous album and couldn't care less about it, so I'm pretty sure my disconnect from the modern indie scene isn't swaying my opinion here. (Besides, I was a rabid indie consumer for the better part of a decade.) Bread Song aside, which uniquely irritates me for being so boring in the midst of so many gripping cuts, this album is in fact all it's hyped up to be.



    1. Chat Pile - God's Country

    sludge, nu metal

    Sample track: Slaughterhouse

    Echoing drums and a blood-curdling scream of hammers and grease set an immediately devastating stage on God's Country. Rhythmically keen, crushing guitar wades through a miasma of $%#! and ruin to Raygun Busch's barely coherent shrieks, briefly yielding to introduce his unnervingly fragile spoken vocal style before launching sky high in a shoegaze guitar siren accompanied by desperate shouts of if we could fly away now; if we could only fly away.

    And all the blood
    All the blood
    And the $%#!in sound, man
    You never forget their eyes
    Everyone's head rings here
    Everyone's head rings here
    And there's no escape
    There's no motherfucking exit
    Hammers and grease
    Pounding
    Pounding
    And the sad eyes, goddamnit
    And the screaming
    More screaming than you'd think
    There's more screaming than you'd think
    Everyone's head rings here
    Everyone's head rings here


    The genius of God's Country is in never losing intimate accessibility through descents into brutality. Instrumentally, the album is sludged out nu metal at its core, but the feel shares very little in common with the genre's tendency for ham-fisted mediocrity. The downtuned grooves are delivered with an introspective sensibility that reminds me more of Tool and Nirvana and Steve Albini than anything within the sphere of the actual style they're orbiting. There are endless subtleties that make every moment feel like unique, un-interchangeable components in the musical narrative.

    Raygun Busch puts the crown on the whole thing with a lyrical and vocal performance that's easier to think of as voice acting than singing. He is constantly addressing both the listener and the subject nightmares assaulting him in a spoken first-person string of consciousness that blurs lines between the narrative fiction (or in some cases uncomfortable reality) and a direct conversation. Have you ever had ringworm? The closing track depicts a drug-induced psychotic breakdown so vivid that it's hard to imagine he isn't actually having one in the studio.

    God's Country has some of the best lyrical delivery I have ever heard, and the musical backdrop for Raygun's performance is an intricately woven journey resurrecting and successfully blending tons of 80s and 90s innovations into a completely fresh sound. Easy album of the year choice.

  2. ISO #2
    Low Hanging Fruit LordQuas's Avatar Game Manager
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    i didn't listen to that much new music this year but heres a couple off the dome that shad missed

    DΛRKNΣSS - wear flowers in your hair


    Tl;dr smooth vaporwave beats. Magician Whisper also good by same artist

    foxtails - fawn


    Easily the best screamo album i've heard from the last... half a decade? Long time sucker for foxtails but the addition of the violin really elevates this above and beyond their stuff, along with a level of consistency and fleshed out songwriting that they haven't come close to on their previous stuff.




    second the pocket gnome, cervidae, white ward, boris, sadness, and black midi albums (the black midi one being my favorite of the year). Deffo gonna have to check out a few of this list, particularly ones you recommended to me in walrus. Also I heard the new Viagra Boys was pretty good so i'll have to check that out
    Last edited by LordQuas; December 15th, 2022 at 06:08 PM.
    :wiwe

  3. ISO #3
    Low Hanging Fruit MyNameIsNothing's Avatar
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    gonna post aoty/soty lists in the next couple days but finished my "First Listens of 2022 That Didn't Come Out in 2022" list and sharing that here now w rym genres so u can maybe find something you'd actually like bolded my personal top 5 as well!
    Ornette Coleman – The Shape of Jazz to Come (1959) (Avant-Garde Jazz, Free Jazz)
    Scott Walker – Scott 4 (1969) (Baroque Pop, Singer Songwriter)
    Iannis Xenakis – Persepolis (1971) (Electroacoustic, Tape Music)
    Willie Hutch – The Mack (1973) (Soul, Funk)
    Gary Stewart – Out of Hand (1975) (Honky Tonk, Nashville Sound)
    Glenn Branca – The Ascension (1981) (No Wave, Totalism)
    Manuel Göttsching – E2-E4 (1985) (Progressive Electronic, Berlin School)
    Prefab Sprout – Steve McQueen (1985) (Sophisti-Pop, Synthpop)
    Les Rallizes Dénudés – ’77 Live (1991) (Noise Rock, Psychedelic Rock)
    Ata Kak – Obaa Sima (1994) (Highlife, Hip House)
    Nav Katze – Gentle & Elegance (1996) (Ambient Pop, IDM)
    310 – AUG 56 (1996) (Downtempo, Ambient)
    Flowchart – Cumulus Mood Twang (1997) (Ambient Pop, Neo-Psychedelia)
    Yann Tomita – Music for Living Sound (1998) (Experimental, Sound Collage)
    Miyako Koda – Jupiter (1998) (Art Pop, Ambient Pop)
    Sugababes – One Touch (2000) (Pop, Contemporary R&B)
    Kulara – A Naked Landscape (2000) (Brutal Prog, Screamo)
    People Like Us, Wobbly, Matmos – Wide Open Spaces (2003) (Plunderphonics, Country)
    Mi-Gu – From Space (2006) (Art Pop, Post-Rock)
    Humming Urban Stereo – Baby Love (2007) (Dance-Pop, Lounge)
    Arthur Russell – Love Is Overtaking Me (2008) (Singer-Songwriter, Folk Rock)
    Chris Watson – El Tren Fantasma (2011) (Field Recordings, Trains!)
    Maria & The Mirrors – Vision Quest (2012) (Deconstructed Club, Power Noise)
    Nirosta Steel – Cool Fire (2014) (Folk Pop, Singer Songwriter)
    Paranoid London – Paranoid London (2014) (Acid House, Acid Techno)
    Elysia Crampton – American Drift (2015) (Latin Electronic, Epic Collage)
    SHINee – 1 of 1 (2016) (K-Pop)
    Shohei Amimori – Sonasile (2016) (Glitch Pop, IDM)
    Lee Jin-Ah – Jinah Restaurant (Full Course) (2018) (Jazz Pop, K-Pop)
    Liv.e – Couldn’t Wait to Tell You… (2020) (Neo-Soul, Hypnagogic Pop)
    Last edited by MyNameIsNothing; December 29th, 2022 at 01:06 PM.

  4. ISO #4
    1610 roro__b's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MyNameIsNothing (#3)
    gonna post aoty/soty lists in the next couple days but finished my "First Listens of 2022 That Didn't Come Out in 2022" list and sharing that here now w rym genres so u can maybe find something you'd actually like bolded my personal top 5 as well!
    Ornette Coleman – The Shape of Jazz to Come (1959) (Avant-Garde Jazz, Free Jazz)
    Scott Walker – Scott 4 (1969) (Baroque Pop, Singer Songwriter)
    Iannis Xenakis – Persepolis (1971) (Electroacoustic, Tape Music)
    Willie Hutch – The Mack (1973) (Soul, Funk)
    Gary Stewart – Out of Hand (1975) (Honky Tonk, Nashville Sound)
    Glenn Branca – The Ascension (1981) (No Wave, Totalism)
    Manuel Göttsching – E2-E4 (1985) (Progressive Electronic, Berlin School)
    Prefab Sprout – Steve McQueen (1985) (Sophisti-Pop, Synthpop)
    Les Rallizes Dénudés – ’77 Live (1991) (Noise Rock, Psychedelic Rock)
    Ata Kak – Obaa Sima (1994) (Highlife, Hip House)
    Nav Katze – Gentle & Elegance (1996) (Ambient Pop, IDM)
    310 – AUG 56 (1996) (Downtempo, Ambient)
    Flowchart – Cumulus Mood Twang (1997) (Ambient Pop, Neo-Psychedelia)
    Yann Tomita – Music for Living Sound (1998) (Experimental, Sound Collage)
    Miyako Koda – Jupiter (1998) (Art Pop, Ambient Pop)
    Sugababes – One Touch (2000) (Pop, Contemporary R&B)
    Kulara – A Naked Landscape (2000) (Brutal Prog, Screamo)
    People Like Us, Wobbly, Matmos – Wide Open Spaces (2003) (Plunderphonics, Country)
    Mi-Gu – From Space (2006) (Art Pop, Post-Rock)
    Humming Urban Stereo – Baby Love (2007) (Dance-Pop, Lounge)
    Arthur Russell – Love Is Overtaking Me (2008) (Singer-Songwriter, Folk Rock)
    Chris Watson – El Tren Fantasma (2011) (Field Recordings, Trains!)
    Maria & The Mirrors – Vision Quest (2012) (Deconstructed Club, Power Noise)
    Nirosta Steel – Cool Fire (2014) (Folk Pop, Singer Songwriter)
    Paranoid London – Paranoid London (2014) (Acid House, Acid Techno)
    Elysia Crampton – American Drift (2015) (Latin Electronic, Epic Collage)
    SHINee – 1 of 1 (2016) (K-Pop)
    Shohei Amimori – Sonasile (2016) (Glitch Pop, IDM)
    Lee Jin-Ah – Jinah Restaurant (Full Course) (2018) (Jazz Pop, K-Pop)
    Liv.e – Couldn’t Wait to Tell You… (2020) (Neo-Soul, Hypnagogic Pop)

    me looking for porridge radio and ethel cain like

    1610

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    Galaxy Brain Shad's Avatar
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    I'm bumping most of my list down to give Ancient Mastery - Chapter Two: The Resistance 10th place

    I've already listened to it as much as half of what else I top 10'd and I love it.

    Good for fans of symphonic folky metal things

  6. ISO #6
    scary pink lady staypositivefriend's Avatar Moderator
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    Top 5 favorite records of 2022:

    1. Preachers Daugther - Ethel Cain

    There might nothing more SPFcore than a folk record that uses the aesthetics of southern gothic horror while delving deep into topics like religion and generational trauma. Preachers Daughter is a dense, lengthy record, but not a single second is wasted. It tells such a beautiful and powerful story, and the way the album shifts seamlessly between different genres and aesthetics (pop, country, indie rock, noise) to enhance the narrative blows me away. It is such an intricately crafted record, and the type of record that makes me want to come back to it over and over and over again.

    While this album works wonderfully as a cohesive whole, it is also filled with individual moments that are still the most exciting moments I’ve heard in music this year. The jaw-dropping climax at the end of “Family Tree”, or the chilling outro of “Strangers”, or the full descent into visceral horror in “Ptolemaea” or the eerie beauty of “Televangelism” prove to me that Ethel is the most exciting and dynamic new artist in a long time

    2. Hellfire - Black Midi

    This record has the technical musical complexity of your average Black Midi album, but there is something very interesting happening here conceptually as well. It is a joy to hear these morbid, surreal, and dense tales of characters condemned to hell presented in the most bombastic and theatrical way possible.

    Every single moment of this record is a joy to listen to. 27 questions is a particularly stunning track.

    3. God’s Country - Chat Pile

    horrifying, visceral, humorous, bizarre, dissonant, uncomfortable, political, and impossible to ignore. the most urgent record of the year. listen to slaughterhouse.

    4. Waterslide, Diving Board, Ladder to the Sky - Porridge Radio

    this record contains some of the most beautiful, expressive and devastating songs I've ever heard. the end of last year is one of the best songs of the year. enough said.

    5. Forget Your Own Face - Black Dresses

    can we make something beautiful with no hope?" was the thesis question of Black Dresses 2021 album "Forever In Your Heart". while that album was fixated on creating something beautiful from a place of hopelessness, "Forget Your Own Face" is fixated on the act of creation itself, no matter how messy or unpleasant it may be. It is a furious, messy, and aggressive record, containing their most dissonant and angry work to date.

    while the record is aggressive to an extent that can be daunting, it is also frequently vulnerable, honest, and powerful. the fact that a terrifying song like "u_u2" can exist on the same record as the vulnerable synthpop ballad "Doomspiral" is a testament to the ridiculous amount of artistic range and talent that Black Dresses has. Sometimes it's OK that you aren't able to make something beautiful. Sometimes, as the last track puts it, it's enough to "just still try to have fun".

    Some of my favorite songs of 2022:

    The Crucifixion of Saint Anger by Rural Internet:

    Doin’ Fine raps her heart out for nearly 7 minutes about anger, transphobia, and the exhaustion of Being Queer in 2022. a messy song, but also the most honest song i’ve heard this year

    Walkin’ by Denzel Curry:

    One of my most listened to songs from this year. Cathartic, powerful, honest, and full of hope.

    Remorseless by Billy Woods:

    A lovely, heart-wrenching song from one of the best hip-hop records of the year.

    Foxglove Through the Clearcut by Death Cab for Cutie:

    A crowning achievement of a song. The best song DCFC has released in over a decade.

    Love, Try Not to Let Go - Julia Jacklin:

    Possibly the most beautiful song I’ve heard all year

  7. ISO #7
    Zack's Avatar Game Manager
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    everything everything - raw data feel


  8. ISO #8
    The Moon nutella's Avatar Discord Moderator
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    alright I wasn't gonna do this but I just have too many standouts from this year that haven't been mentioned yet so here's a long but still probably woefully incomplete list because this year was just absolutely insane (there are several albums from bands I love that came out this year that I didn't even include in this list, it's just overwhelming there's so many good ones) (but also this year has been so unlike any other for me because my top two are so many miles above the rest and instantly skyrocketed to the top of my all-time list so. yeah)

    going to start off by taking mnin's idea and sharing my favorite album that didn't come out in 2022 but I nevertheless heard for the first time this year and it also very quickly became one of my favorites: Adult Jazz - Gist Is (2014) (experimental art pop..?) - this album is just an experience that I can't really describe at all or compare to anything. it's got really unique vocal expression, peculiarly catchy rhythms, extremely bewilderingly cryptic yet poignant lyrics that explore queerness, religion, and other deep topics. I can't recommend this enough to the MU crowd.

    on to 2022 highlights:


    Richard Dawson - The Ruby Cord (progressive folk) - truly what this man is doing is unlike anything else. psychedelically weird, captivatingly poetic

    Death Cab For Cutie - Asphalt Meadows (indie rock) - love the direction they go in this record. addicting hooks, fuzzy outros that go hard af, great songs.

    Jukebox the Ghost - Cheers (indie pop) - you can count on these guys to put out solid piano rock bangers

    Hatchie - Giving the World Away (pop) - literally Australian CRJ and this album has more bangers than the loneliest time, fight me

    Porridge Radio - Waterslide, Diving Board, Ladder to the Sky (indie rock) - incredible songwriting and expressive delivery, spf probably already said it better

    Silversun Pickups - Physical Thrills (indie rock) - I lost track of these guys' last few albums as they could never really hold a candle to 2009's Swoon, an oops-all-bangers perfect record if you ask me. But this is the comeback I've been waiting for. Extremely satisfying shoegazey dreampoppy bassriffy bliss. Unlike Swoon it has its duds but the high points are in the clouds.

    Stars - From Capelton Hill (indie rock) - I'm a sucker for anything these guys ever do so while this one doesn't necessarily stand out much from the pack of their last few releases, it held up for several listens and they have my heart.

    Tall Heights - Juniors (indie folk/baroque pop) - another all-time favorite band I'm ever faithful to (and the one I've seen live the most times, they're really lovely people). while I didn't get as attached to most of the songs from this album as from their previous ones, it's still gorgeous.

    The Family Crest - The War, Act II (baroque pop) - my trio of "nutellacore bands that can do no wrong" would be incomplete without TFC. their bombastic, orchestral, extremely hype arrangements became an obsession of mine a few years ago and they've done it again with the second installment of their ambitious concept album series. also very lovely people with a chill discord server

    Will Wood - "In case I make it," (will wood) - truly what this man is doing is unlike anything else. psychedelically weird, captivatingly poetic funny how the richard dawson writeup works perfectly for will wood when they like almost couldn't be more different in their styles of weirdness. the first time I heard this album I followed along with the lyrics and was just utterly blown away by their complexity and emotional depth combined with the equally impressive musical composition.

    Sharon Van Etten - We've Been Going About This All Wrong (indie rock) - this album is just incredible. I hadn't gotten into her material in depth before but this hit all the right notes for me on expressiveness and compositional arrangement. Had a similar effect on me as Julien Baker's "Little Oblivions" in that regard. Masterful stuff.

    Ethel Cain - Preacher's Daughter (gothic ethereal dreampop horror americana and stuff) - again spf already said it better. emotionally devastating narrative, evocative use of a vast array of genres, truly stunning voice.

    The Smile - A Light For Attracting Attention (experimental art-pop?) - basically a Radiohead side project, and really felt like an extension of A Moon Shaped Pool which I loved. lots of engaging textures, unusual time signatures, angular bass hooks, and gorgeously immersive soundscapes.

    Beach House - Once Twice Melody (dream pop) - cannot emphasize enough how soothing and comforting beach house's music is for the soul. they have done so much for us. I enjoyed following as this album was released in four sections with cool lyric animations and it's chock-full of gorgeous melodies and fantastical dreamy atmospheres to just get lost in like a cozy blanket. "Superstar" and "ESP" are among the best songs released this year (of those that aren't from my top 2 albums below lol).

    black midi - Hellfire (uhh idk rym says avant-prog lmao) - a bizarre, rapid-fire-maximalist romp through some really oddly specific scenes. it's strange. it's a hell of a fun time.



    -----line here to denote that the following two albums are literally perfect and two of the best albums ever made in all time ever forever-----


    Everything Everything - Raw Data Feel (art pop) - I could not stop playing this album until I had every track memorized and then I kept not being able to stop listening over and over knowing all the words by heart and all the rhythms in my body. Every single track is a banger. No exceptions. I love each and every single moment of it. The lyrics are delightfully weird, with some inspiration taken from AI generators and with technological themes and other musings on society speckled throughout. The hooks are what hooks are meant to be, in that they latch onto your brain folds and don't let you get away without dancing. These guys are masters of their craft, and with an already impressive catalogue this is their best work.


    Black Country, New Road - Ants From Up There (art rock/chamber pop) - If you were in the discord when I listened through this album for the first time in February, you were lucky to witness me undergo an indescribable transformative experience. I was in awe. The whole time. From the first few seconds of the first track I fell in love and I trusted it to continue being amazing, and each moment of the record not only held up its end of that bargain but absolutely blew my already lofty expectations out of the water. Listening experiences like that are once-in-a-lifetime. This album is once-in-a-lifetime. Utterly gorgeous, perfectly executed musical greatness. The emotionally charged vocal expression, the instrumental builds and counterpoint, the sweeping orchestral sounds of the violin and saxophone and suspensefully satisfying drums, the dark and brooding yet triumphant majesty of it all. I don't care how pretentious I sound when I talk about this album. It is the pinnacle of artistic achievement.
    avatar art credit to chardonnay/bland

  9. ISO #9
    Season 7 Connect 4 Champion tonystarkprime's Avatar
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    TSP MENTIONS ALBUMS THAT NO ONE ELSE HAS MENTIONED:

    No need to sing the praises of Hellfire and Ants, but some records (both famous and not-famous) deserve mention, edited shamelessly from the list I shared elsewhere on the internet with numbers still attached:

    Rap-adjacent:

    2. JID—The Forever Story:
    This was the best hip hop album of the year. It's really really good. It's pretty mainstream, not as inaccessible as a lot of the hip hop albums that usually get tossed around places like this. But it's still good.

    4. Kendrick—Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers
    I really don't need to mention Kendrick either but it's his third best album and it's very good.

    6. Danger Mouse and Black Thought—Cheat Codes
    This was good.

    8. billy woods—Aethiopes, Church
    These were good too.

    Nas’s King’s Disease III
    This is actually Nas's 2nd best album ever and the first four tracks of this album is the best four track run on any album this year. Really enjoyable, makes you feel like it's 1998 again.

    Lupe Fiasco’s Drill Music in Zion
    Lupe does Lupe stuff. I really liked one half of this album. I forget which half. But my friend liked the other half, so between the two of us, huge approval for the full album. Contains another great Mural song for Lupe, very Chicago.

    Denzel Curry’s Melt My Eyez…
    This was good.

    Earl Sweatshirt’s SICK!
    I had a lot of fun with this one and it's 24 minutes long, not that hard to get through.


    Country:
    5. Tyler Childers—Can I Take My Hounds to Heaven?
    This was the best country release of the year, a compact 8-track project featuring a range of influences. And he released it three times! My pick is the jubilee version, but the hallelujah version is the most country-ish.

    Charley Crockett’s The Man From Waco and while I'm here Jukebox Charley (which I liked more but randomly forgot to put on my list when I shared it with my friends)
    I'm not a big fan of Crockett, but no denying he's a talented kid and a true historian of early country music. The former is a pretty easy listening album as Crockett continues his Willie Nelson appreciation streak by releasing an album in the vague vein of Red-Headed Stranger, the latter is the deepest-cut cover album I've ever heard, as Charley Crockett gives some straight takes on some forgotten gems and also Diamond Joe.

    Jazz:
    7. Brad Mehldau—Jacob’s Ladder
    Great album for anyone who likes Brad Mehldau or 70s prog. Probably terrible for everyone else.

    10. Tigran Hamasyan—StandArt
    My pick for best "normal" jazz album of the year, it's Tigran Hamasyan playing standards! Good piano jazz in the sorta standard modern style, but nothing out of the ball-park. Tigran Hamasyan joins the Vijay Iyer/Brad Mehldau association for doing standards with weird metric stuff. Joshua Redman makes an appearance, leading us into...

    Joshua Redman’s LongGone
    The olds get back to their old tricks! It's nice to hear the quartet (Redman, Mehldau, Christian McBride, Brian Blade) back together again, though I think Joshua Redman and Brad Mehldau feel less exciting than they did in the 90s. Maybe jazz is just weirder. Great album to put on and not think too hard. Best song is the cover of themselves.

    Classical:
    9. Andy Akiho—Oculus

    Best classical release of the year in my opinion, matching Akiho's brilliant 2021 release Seven Pillars. String Quartet plus percussion, good for fans of marimba.

    Pop:
    The Weeknd’s Dawn FM
    This is the best album The Weeknd has ever produced. It's fun, it's well-produced, and it's somewhat meaningful. Don't knock it just cause The Weeknd has a top 3 most streamed song.

    Cory Henry’s Operation Funk
    I just really like Cory Henry.

    Natalia Lafourcade’s De Todas las Flores
    One of my friends yelled at me for not copying Fantano and making this my number one album, but I only didn't because I don't know Spanish. Listen to Fantano, this album's really really good. It's so good. It's perfect. Probably. I don't know, I'm using google translate and backing up every 20 seconds.


    Finally:
    Tom Petty’s Live at the Fillmore, 1997 archival release
    This is technically the best release on this list per my RYM scores. Petty covers such a history of rock and roll and demonstrates technical proficiencies at so many styles and in so many ways of making his voice sound weird. Take a few hours and split this one up, it's worth it.
    Last edited by tonystarkprime; January 1st, 2023 at 10:09 PM.

  10. ISO #10
    Low Hanging Fruit LordQuas's Avatar Game Manager
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    been meandering my way through the albums posted here, gonna update this post w/ quick and dirty thoughts for the 0 ppl who care

    1. Chat Pile - God's Country

    https://chatpile.bandcamp.com/album/gods-country
    Been holding off listening to this all year and not a disappointment. The songs I had heard were good but didn't fully grab me until I combined the thing. Sludge metal to crush your bones and have a drug induced mental break to (like seriously, grimace_smoking_weed.jpeg, yes that's the name of the final song, sounds like he's losing it). Why is heartbreaking. The few lines he mirrors the guitar lick with his vocals on Pamela are godlike.


    2. Black Country, New Road - Ants From Up There

    https://blackcountrynewroad.bandcamp...-from-up-there
    Another one I was holding on listening to on request. I had heard one of the singles leading up and honestly wasn't that into it. Pleasantly surprised with the whole thing as a result. Indie proggy rock with saxophone love and elaborate song structures. The middle of the album has some lulls but the three song combo of The Place Where He Inserted The Blade into Snow Globe and finally Basketball Shoes (which is easily the best song on the album) at the end is the culmination of this entire style of music.


    3. Ashenspire - Hostile Architecture

    https://ashenspire.bandcamp.com/albu...e-architecture
    Really a combination of the previous two. Mesh of tried and true black metal aesthetics with a love for experimentation and somehow still more saxophone (seems to be a lot of that this year) that would bring a smile to the most hardened & crusty redditor (redditer? redditar?). The Law of Asbestos is an elite song name. The dude has a scottish accent so anything he says is obviously cooler than normal.


    4. Swampborn - Beyond Ratio

    https://hypnoticdirgerecords.bandcam...m/beyond-ratio
    I had also listened to some tracks off this one throughout the year and just had never got around to listening to it in full, which was a mistake. Love that signature droning sound that eastern european bm bands have. Somehow this album makes 7, 8, 10 minute songs pass in seconds. I could sit here listening to the intro for Augoeides for an eternity. Idk what's up with their bandcamp having all their merch listed for $999 dollars though, is this a money laundering thing? Is this what Putin has had to resort to in order to fund the military now?


    5. Aveilut - Scarcity

    https://scarcity-nyc.bandcamp.com/album/aveilut
    Auditory torment in the best way possible. Unsettling chord progressions that make me terrified as I attempt to do my usual black metal tradition of lying in bed and attempting to experience full body disintegration. In a genre that is obsessed with death, this stands alone as a far better auditory exploration of the concept... or at least it up there. When the drums and guitars truly kick in on II it's amazing, and the outro to V when the drums conversely are left alone is... well you really just have to experience it there's no words. Maybe I'll steal that youtube comment I saw awhile back that lives rent free in my head, "Full body absorption at end of cycle." Individual songs or moments are not the goal of this album though, as it's obviously meant for a more complete listening experience.


    6. Hath - All That Was Promised

    https://hathnj.bandcamp.com/album/all-that-was-promised
    Brutal death metal with interesting riffs and a really solid and varied vocal performance that keeps it fresh. Hard to name standouts because the whole album flows so well, but Name Them Yet Build No Monument has some of the most infectious riffs I've heard in ages, and it manages to hold up to what might be the stand-out track in All That Was Promised. Nothing super out of the box here, just a really solid piece of blackened death. That sounds dismissive but it's really not, good album. I listened to this mostly while playing Nuclear Throne, and it fit strangely well over the mutant dystopian warfield that is that game. Very evocative. Hath and Hoth collab when?


    7. Fortress Of The Pearl

    https://fortressofthepearl.bandcamp.com/album/the-grove
    Black metal's favorite Greek does it again. I love a good piano or synth element in my black metal, and this finds an aesthetic of a quiet hidden garden and nails it so masterfully. The metal sections are good, sure, but the piano ballad Walled Garden at the end is serene. When I heard it for the first time I had to instantly loop it back a couple of times. The first black metal album to make me fall in love again with the piano since Liturgy's Haqq back years ago when that came out. And let me tell you I LOVE that album, so this is high praise. The instrumentation in the 2nd half of A Solemn Sanctuary is gorgeous as well. Anything with harpsichord is something I will fall in love with and this is no exception. I love the album cover and the mood this thing evokes. Hit me at the perfect timing feels wise as well where I just needed some slightly melancholic wistful contemplation tunes.


    8. Immolation - Acts of God

    https://immolation.bandcamp.com/album/acts-of-god
    First one on this list to not really wow me. It's some solid death metal, don't get me wrong. Like I'd give this a single thumbs up but I don't think it goes quite as hard as the Hath album in comparison. Abandoned into An Act Of God is a great opener to it. Maybe part of it is the 15 track run time doesn't feel quite as nailed in? Like I wonder if this thing isn't just a little bloated. This is a pretty long album. Oh well, can't all be winners.


    9. Kostnatění - Oheň ho​ř​í tam, kde padl

    https://kostnateni.bandcamp.com/albu...o-tam-kde-padl
    Ok I was looking forward to this one for awhile after hearing it was a frantic blackened death cover of Turkish folk music. And it's good, and is pretty insane. But maybe like, a little too insane for me. I find it difficult to actively follow the first song in particular. However, the original folk songs are like, good as hell and I enjoyed them much more. Especially Çay benim çeşme benim. Like this dude goes crazy.


    10. Boris - fade

    https://boris.bandcamp.com/album/fade
    The third Boris full length of 2022 (among several EPs as well genuinely how the $%#! do they do it). This is bone crushing walls of drone. It's supposedly divided into tracks but as with the best stuff in this vein, is it really? I sure as hell can't tell when one starts and another begins. More or less exactly as advertised, it's no Flood but still solid.


    11. black midi - Hellfire

    https://bmblackmidi.bandcamp.com/album/hellfire
    Probably my album of the year. Insane lyrics, mindblowing performances, crazy riffs, and manages to capture a single theme throughout which was something that black midi had struggled to do in the past imo. Undoubtedly their best work in my eyes, and although not all tracks are created equal they all do a great job enhancing the experience. Eat Men Eat is chilling and unsettling, when the captain starts shouting is one of the hypest moments on the album. Sugar/Tzu features maybe the most scatterbrained zany riff ever concocted, Welcome To Hell not only grooves but has such poignant lines ("To die for your country does not win a war, to KILL for your country is what wins a war" is easily my favorite line in a song in recent memory). Dangerous Liaisons captures this old religious scare tale aesthetic and actually makes it interesting. The Defence is a shmultzy jazz piece that sounds like it came straight out of mid century Broadway, fitting the theme of the song PERFECTLY. And 27 Questions is the strongest album closer I could think of, highlighting both the most out there story & riffs. Even the tracks I'm less crazy about have their moments, the bridge in Still is infectious and The Race Is About To Begin does absolutely nail what it's going for in being uncomfortable to listen to. The whole thing comes together to weave these separate stories sharing themes of vices, unsettling behaviors, and Hell itself. Amazing album.


    12. FALLS OF RAUROS - Key to a Vanishing Future

    https://fallsofrauros.bandcamp.com/a...nishing-future
    Pretty standard but solid black metal album with hints of real brilliance. The album kicks off on a great note with Clarity, which has a stellar intro and is just one of the better tracks overall imo. This makes for great casual listening, which is both a blessing and a curse as when I'm actively tuning in to try and be immersed in it I think it kind of falls flat at times. That said, you know what on relistens this grew on me a bit. The sad plodding wintery guitars convey similar vibes to Empire of Love by Violet Cold (which is maybe an unhinged comparison), but I think I like that better.


    13. Blut Aus Nord - Disharmonium - Undreamable Abysses

    https://blutausnord.bandcamp.com/alb...amable-abysses
    ooh man do I love this. It evokes such strong soundscapes of lovecraftian madness. Absolute insanity the whole way through in the best possible way. Chants of the Deep Ones and The Apotheosis of the Unnamable are great bookends to this. But if you're not listening to this in full album succession you're really missing out. The vocals are inhuman. This truly sounds like an aliens interpretation of human music. And that's dope.


    14. Sadness - our time is here

    https://sadnessmusic.bandcamp.com/al...r-time-is-here
    Stay still my ever beating blackgaze heart. The mix of black metal aesthetics with sad boy pop punk emo ones and throw everything under some jpeg compression to get this. Really interesting take that seems to be a somewhat natural fit and I"m surprised I hadn't heard before. I'm not sure I so much enjoy this one on its own, but its absolutely worth a listen with only two tracks and barely over a 10 minute run time total. Also with the hindsight of 2023 Quas the latest Sadness release is just all around better imo. Worth a listen for sure.
    Last edited by LordQuas; March 16th, 2023 at 02:51 AM.
    :wiwe

  11. ISO #11
    Low Hanging Fruit LordQuas's Avatar Game Manager
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    https://gutterpink.bandcamp.com/albu...-recollections
    Gutterpink put out an album literally dec 28th but i'll throw it out there as worth listening to if you're into dnb/breakcore in any form. Growing on me quickly
    :wiwe

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    Zack's Avatar Game Manager
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    alex g - god save the animals


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    Low Hanging Fruit MyNameIsNothing's Avatar
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    may roll through with some thoughts on these later but i keep forgetting to post 'em!
    Last edited by MyNameIsNothing; January 11th, 2023 at 11:34 AM.

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The Crippler is a mafia-aligned player who may target another player each night. If that player is also targeted by another non-mafia-aligned player on the same night, they will die, unless they are protected.