A Century of Music

Kanye West - The Life of Pablo (2016)
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Skeleton Tree (2016)
Chance the Rapper - Coloring Book (2016)

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An image of a black background. In the bottom-left centre, monospace-style green text reads Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds in uppercase and Skeleton Tree in normal-case. Underneath is a static text cursor.
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Must admit, I have not listened to much of Kanye post-Dark Twisted Fantasy because it's hard to separate the artist from the music, but pleasantly surprised at The Life of Pablo
Even as Nick Cave albums go, Skeleton Tree is pretty bleak (Cave's 15 yo son died at time of recording and he did amend some lyrics accordingly). More sparse than many of Cave's albums which highlights its darker themes.
 
Solange - A Seat at the Table (2016)
Bon Iver - 22, A Million (2016)

An unclothed woman with hair clips in her hair staring at the camera.
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Wrapping up 2016 first with Solange - modern R&B is not a genre I listen to so wanted to check this one out given reviews on the year
Was really surprised at the Bon Iver album - I didn't love his first two album, but integrating electronic music, samples, etc into his music with this one really works. :thumbsup:
 
A slow opening to the week (and have a bit of vacation starting Wed PM) but still hopeful to get through 2017
Started yesterday with the usual singles playlist
Not a huge amount of albums that I'm gonna spin this week but starting with some of the most acclaimed ones of the year:

SZA - Ctrl (2017)
Mount Eerie - A Crow Looked at Me (2017)
Kendrick Lamar - Damn (2017)
Lorde - Melodrama (2017)


SZA sits on grass, facing the camera. Behind her are various computer monitors and keyboards in a pile.
A man's hand holding the Joanne Kyger poem Night Palace in the foreground. Background is of a house illuminated by an orange light.
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A painting of Lorde resting on a pillow. In the painting, the subject wears a negligée as the bed sheets wrap below the shoulder's surface. It is mainly painted in cool hues while the subject appears in warm hues.
 
Have been away for the week but have rounded out 2017 listening with some more albums including:

Jay-Z - 4:44 (2017)
St. Vincent - Masseducation (2017)
Lana Del Rey - Lust for Life (2017)
LCD Soundsystem - American Dream (2017)
 
A shortened week back from vacation but starting 2018
Playlist going now that highlights how divorced I am from current music (most notably popular music). Sure I know "Old Town Road", Childish Gambino's "This is American", and "Shallow" from A Star Is Born, but lots of songs I don't know from Post Malone, Ariana Grande, Drake, or even Kacey Musgrave. Most not my style - still I do feel it's good touching base with current pop music.

The Revivalists "All My Friends" came up and coincidentally my 21 year old had a song by them playing at the beach the other day - good sound. :thumbsup:
 
A shortened week back from vacation but starting 2018
Playlist going now that highlights how divorced I am from current music (most notably popular music). Sure I know "Old Town Road", Childish Gambino's "This is American", and "Shallow" from A Star Is Born, but lots of songs I don't know from Post Malone, Ariana Grande, Drake, or even Kacey Musgrave. Most not my style - still I do feel it's good touching base with current pop music.

The Revivalists "All My Friends" came up and coincidentally my 21 year old had a song by them playing at the beach the other day - good sound. :thumbsup:
I'm not familiar with anything you've mentioned in this post and I don't care.
 
As a music lover in my 50s, one does reach a point of weighing not being interested in newer popular music vs. not wanting to admit that a whole generation listens to these hugely popular songs and perhaps popular music has passed me by. You have an inner peace about this debate (and in all fairness, you still listen to modern music just of different genres) - I sadly continue to listen (and in some cases subject myself to some dogs) with the delusion that I'm gonna hit a single as good as older pop music. I'm not expecting The Stones or Beatles but hey maybe songs as charming and toe-tapping as The Grass Roots or Boston. Sometimes I do hit a winner but it's definitely like a slot machine in yield (and we know that house always wins). :)
 
As a music lover in my 50s, one does reach a point of weighing not being interested in newer popular music vs. not wanting to admit that a whole generation listens to these hugely popular songs and perhaps popular music has passed me by. You have an inner peace about this debate (and in all fairness, you still listen to modern music just of different genres) - I sadly continue to listen (and in some cases subject myself to some dogs) with the delusion that I'm gonna hit a single as good as older pop music. I'm not expecting The Stones or Beatles but hey maybe songs as charming and toe-tapping as The Grass Roots or Boston. Sometimes I do hit a winner but it's definitely like a slot machine in yield (and we know that house always wins). :)

Great response! :thumbsup:

As for The Grass Roots and Boston, this lyric popped in(to) my head:

"In my midnight confessions,
When I know that it's more than a feeling."

P. S. No, it didn't hurt particularly much.

YMMV, tho'.
 
Starting albums of 2018:

Kacey Musgraves - Golden Hour (2018)
Idles - Joy as an Act of Resistance (2018)
Janelle Monae - Bad Computer (2018)

Kacey Musgraves - Golden Hour.png
Idles-Joy as an Act of Resistance.jpg
DirtyComputer.png



My daughter told me this weekend that Kacey Musgraves is an icon to the LGBT community. Who knew? (obviously plenty of people besides me)


As I have never heard of Idles or of this album, I was surprised/embarrassed to see it as the #1 album of the year on Acclaimed Music. Lots of positive reviews from the British press probably contribute. I was nicely surprised at their brand of punk

Janelle Monae has never done anything that I haven't enjoyed (had to parse that sentence twice more, but yes)

:)
 
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Starting albums of 2018:

Kacey Musgraves - Golden Hour (2021)
Idles - Joy as an Act of Resistance (2021)
Janelle Monae - Bad Computer (2021)

Kacey Musgraves - Golden Hour.png
Idles-Joy as an Act of Resistance.jpg
DirtyComputer.png



My daughter told me this weekend that Kacey Musgraves is an icon to the LGBT community. Who knew? (obviously plenty of people besides me)


As I have never heard of Idles or of this album, I was surprised/embarrassed to see it as the #1 album of the year on Acclaimed Music. Lots of positive reviews from the British press probably contribute. I was nicely surprised at their brand of punk

Janelle Monae has never done anything that I haven't enjoyed (had to parse that sentence twice more, but yes)

:)
Your 2018 albums are labeled 2021, which threw me for a loop because I thought Idles had put out a new album.
 
A bit of short shift I suppose, but will probably finish this shortened week with ten 2018 albums - still, have hit a diverse group of that year's music

Cardi B - Invasion of Privacy (2018)
Kendrick Lamar and others - Black Panther (Film Soundtrack) (2018)
Parquet Courts - Wide Awaaaaake! (2018)
Mitzki - Be The Cowboy (2018)

Cardi B - Invasion of Privacy.png
The cover image features a neck-ornament upon complete black background. It is made of animal incisors used as beads and worn by T'Challa.
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Some nice surprises here - I can't say I had heart of Mitzki and was a little hesitant when I saw the classification of "art pop" but felt I should check her own when she was high on most lists.
I haven't spun Parquet Courts since Sunbathing Animal from 2015. Nice, tight indie/punk
 
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