My Top 50 Albums of 1969

Tuesday, February 03, 2026

 





Here's the Spotify playlist with one track from (almost) every album:

1. Neil Young with Crazy Horse – Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
2. The Velvet Underground - The Velvet Underground
3. Creedence Clearwater Revival - Willy And The Poor Boys
4. James Brown – Say It Loud – I’m Black And I’m Proud
5. Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin
6. Sly & The Family Stone – Stand!
7. The Beatles - Abbey Road
8. Joni Mitchell – Clouds
9. The Rolling Stones - Let It Bleed
10. King Crimson – In The Court Of The Crimson King
11. The Stooges – The Stooges
12. Miles Davis – In A Silent Way
13. Crosby, Stills & Nash – Crosby, Stills & Nash
14. The Meters – The Meters
15. Creedence Clearwater Revival - Green River
16. The Kinks – Arthur (Or The Decline And Fall of the British Empire)
17. The Who – Tommy
18. Isaac Hayes – Hot Buttered Soul
19. Dusty Springfield – Dusty In Memphis
20. Gun – Gun
21. Frank Zappa – Hot Rats
22. Grateful Dead – Live/Dead
23. MC5 – Kick Out The Jams (Live)
24. Taste – Taste
25. Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin II
27. Creedence Clearwater Revival - Bayou Country
26. Herbie Hancock – The Prisoner
28. Laura Nyro – New York Tendaberry
29. Townes Van Zandt – Townes Van Zandt
30. Merle Haggard and The Strangers – Okie From Muskogee
31. Nick Drake – Five Leaves Left
32. The Band – The Band
33. Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band - Trout Mask Replica
34. The Isley Brothers – It’s Our Thing
35. Joe Cocker – With A Little Help From My Friends
36. Tim Buckley – Happy Sad
37. Os Mutantes - Mutantes
38. Shocking Blue – At Home
39. Jimmy Cliff – Jimmy Cliff
40. The Beach Boys – 20/20
41. Grateful Dead – Aoxomoxoa
42. The Doors - The Soft Parade
43. Great Speckled Bird – Great Speckled Bird
44. Stevie Wonder - My Cherie Amour
45. The Allman Brothers Band - The Allman Brothers Band
46. Joe Byrd and the Field Hippies – The American Metaphysical Circus
47. Strawbs – Strawbs 
48. The Tony Williams Lifetime - Emergency! 
49. Bob Dylan - Nashville Skyline
50. The Shaggs – Philosophy of the World

Last year I completed my round of lists for every year of the 1970s, and I thought about starting to tackle the 1960s more quickly, but '69 is just an incredibly packed year so I had fun taking my time going through a ton of music and finding some more obscure gems (the London proto metal trio Gun, the Irish blues rock band Taste, Canadian country rock band Great Speckled Bird, etc.). But of course it was also the year of the Woodstock and the end of an era, the last year that all of the big four British Invasion bands released albums. The further back in time I go with these lists, the more common it was for artists to release multiple albums in a single year. So increasingly a lot of my listening time goes into figuring out which of an act's albums from that year should represent them in a list, or if they deserve multiple spots, which I'm kind of loathe to do because it takes a spot away from another artist. Sometimes it's necessary, though, and this is a rare time when I had to include three albums from one artist: Creedence Clearwater Revival's incredible trio of 1969 albums. And I know rock is going to crowd out jazz in the late '60s lists but as I go toward the beginning of the decade there's going to be more and more jazz representation here. Still haven't made up my mind about doing yearly lists for the 1950s as well, but it's a more and more attractive idea to me. 

Monthly Report: January 2026 Albums

Monday, February 02, 2026

























1. Zach Bryan - With Heaven On Top
Zach Bryan took a break from cranking out an album a year in 2025, sort of -- he released a bunch of non-album singles last year, announcing With Heaven On Top as an EP and then upgrading it to a typically bloated 78-minute album at the top of 2026. This guy is really good at what he does, and he keeps marking these unlikely career milestones -- a multiplatinum album, a #1 single, record-breaking concert attendance -- without changing much about the earthy, intimate music he's been making since he was a cult indie artist. Little controversies and feuds keep piling up that make me wonder if he could crash and burn at one point, but he's still here for now, simply shrugging at "all of this fame and other corny shit" on "Appetite." Bryan teasing a song on Instagram in October that was critical of ICE prompted a whole news cycle with several responses from government officials, but now that "Bad News" is actually out it feels a lot less pointed Bryan collaborator and influence Bruce Springsteen's recent protest song "Streets of Minneapolis." Bryan released an acoustic of With Heaven On Top three days after the proper album to preempt complaints that it's "overproduced," but it's got the same unvarnished grit as all his other stuff, and I like the addition of horns and strings on some songs. Here's the 2026 albums Spotify playlist that I fill with new releases that I listen to throughout the year. 

2. Nomad War Machine & Susan Alcorn - Contra Madre
Baltimore pedal steel guitarist Susan Alcorn passed away almost exactly one year ago -- the anniversary was on Saturday, and a day before that, her collaboration with the Philadelphia metal duo Nomad War Machine was released. When I interviewed Susan in 2023, we talked about several projects she'd recorded that hadn't been released yet, and this was the one that took the longest to finally see the light of day, and I was so excited to hear from my old City Paper mentor Lee Gardner a few months ago that his label VG+ Records would be releasing Contra Madre. It's a blast to hear Alcorn play in such a different context, "Face of Unknown Stars" is probably my favorite track but "Those Who Do Not Dance" and "Boing Vortex" are the ones where they really get wild and loud and show the full potential of this collaboration. 

3. Peaer - Doppelganger 
The Brooklyn-based band Peaer has been described as both slowcore and math rock, which sound almost like contradictory categories given that a lot of math rock is pretty intense and uptempo. But I've found that I really like the way that Peaer negotiates these tricky, unpredictable time signatures and meter changes at slower, more deliberate tempos on their 4th album, it allows me to savor the ingenuity of their arrangements. I particularly like the mid-album stretch of "No More Today" and "Rose in My Teeth." 

4. Courtney Marie Andrews - Valentine
Arizona-born singer-songwriter Courtney Marie Andrews started her career as an auxiliary keyboardist/backing vocalist for Jimmy Eat World circa 2010, and has since carved out a pretty successful niche as a solo artist, even getting a Grammy nomination in the Americana category in 2020. Valentine is her 9th album, but the first one I've heard, and I like it a lot, great distinctive guitar tones and vocal melodies on the side 2 highlights "Only the Best for Baby" and "Best Friend." 

5. Roc Marciano - 656
Hip hop careers are so often built on being around the right people at the right time, so I'm especially impressed by people who left a crew before their peak and created remarkable catalogs as free agents -- like Curren$y, who left Young Money before it became a star factory, and Roc Marciano, who left Flipmode Squad before they even released an album. Roc Marciano is a huge influence on the current wave of guys writing crime raps over drumless loops that define "underground rap" in the 2020s (mind you these guys are all pretty famous, underground just means they're not on the radio). But I think he still does it better than most of his disciples, his internal rhyme schemes are so tightly constructed and his punchlines can be so surprising and funny, and "Tracey Morgan Vomit" is my favorite kind of beat in that style, there's so many different textures but you still get a sense of a lot of empty space for the vocal to fill. 

6. Ari Lennox - Vacancy
It really seemed like Ari Lennox's career was going in the right direction when she released 2022's Age/Sex/Location, her second album with J. Cole's Interscope-distributed Dreamville label. But then she had a very public falling out with the label, and parted ways and released her third album directly through Interscope. And this is a good, confident album full of unapologetically horny slow jams like "Pretzel" and "Deep Strokes." She's gotten a lot of criticism for the kind of thirsty, catchphrase-driven singles she's made like "Soft Girl Era," it probably would've been better to leave that off the album, but it sounds fine in the context of Vacancy

7. The Soft Pink Truth - Can Such Delightful Times Go On Forever? 
Drew Daniel and M.C. Schmidt have created such a unique and ambitious catalog as Matmos that it's really impressive that Daniel has created a whole other very engrossing discography as The Soft Pink Truth that feels like its own little universe. Many of his albums zero in on a particular sound or genre -- dance or industrial or metal or punk -- while somehow all feeling like a connected tapestry of Daniel's various interests and convictions, and the classical instrumentation of Can Such Delightful Times Go On Forever? feels like a new frontier of conventional beauty in The Soft Pink Truth's catalog, with all these tickling, surprising textures embedded in the lush arrangements. And like many recent Soft Pink Truth records, it features piano by my friend and occasional Western Blot collaborator Koye Berry, big ups. 

8. Galecstasy & Mike Watt Trio - Wattzotica
Mike Watt is such an inspiration, it means a lot to me that he's still making records and finding new people to play with and new ways to challenge himself. And his latest record, a collaboration with the L.A. experimental duo Galecstasy, is probably the closest thing he's done to a straight-up jazz record, a way for him to work out some of the things he's gotten from the Coltrane records he often puts on the PA before shows. Galecstasy's Jared Marshall aka Primary Mystical Experience can really swing as a drummer and makes a good rhythm section sparring partner for Watt. 

9. various artists - Naive Melodies
Talking Heads were a great band in part because they were attuned to so much music outside of what contemporary rock bands were doing, and they molded those influences into a unique sound that belonged only to them. And it feels like a couple of generations of artists have taken the wrong lessons from the Talking Heads catalog and have simply imitating their particular quirks, streamlining them into a new default contemporary rock band sound, which is mostly what I heard on the star-studded 2024 compilation Everyone's Getting Involved: A Tribute to Talking Heads' Stop Making Sense. The new tribute album Naive Melodies from British dance/hip hop label Barely Breaking Even, by contrast, feels more true to the spirit of Talking Heads because the artists are a lot less beholden to singing like Byrne or recreating Frantz and Weymouth's fidgety grooves. Astronne covers "Psycho Killer" without that iconic massline, EBBA rearranges "Uh-Oh, Love Comes To Town" in a 7/8 rhythm, Pachyman does a dub reggae version of "Sugar On My Tongue," Theo Croker and Theophilus London do a jazz rap deconstruction of "Born Under Punches," and Bilal's version of "Seen And Not Seen" is a little quieter than the original, but it's not exactly R&B either. I already know the originals are great and can listen to them anytime I want, but it's fun to hear them in a new way and notice lyrics I never noticed before. 

10. Lucinda Williams - World's Gone Wrong
Lucinda Williams has such an unusual yowl of a voice that it's taken a long time to grow on me, but I've begun to appreciate that she write songs that suit it. And she sounds justifiably righteous and pissed off about current events on World's Gone Wrong. I was also pretty excited to see that Brittney Spencer, the Baltimore-born country singer I interviewed two years ago, guests on the two fired-up tracks that open the album, "The World's Gone Wrong" and "Something's Gotta Give." 

The Worst Album of the Month: SAULT - Chapter 1
I've enjoyed a decent amount of the British collective SAULT's voluminous output over the last few years, but I've been skeptical enough of their whole mysterious image and unorthodox career path that I was very amused last year when SAULT contributor Little Simz sued her mentor and SAULT mastermind Inflo over an unpaid debt (apparently a loan to fund SAULT's heavily hyped debut concert) and dropped a great album, Lotus, that repeatedly called out an unnamed "thief." Given that Simz is a rapper and Inflo is not, I didn't really expect this conflict to turn into a back-and-forth of diss tracks or anything, and since nobody's naming names on these songs that isn't necessarily what's happening here. But I put on Chapter 1 not really expecting anything that sounded like a respond, and the title track's refrain of "you're just a loser and hate that I'm a winner" just sounds like an incredibly childish and laughable thing to put out at this moment in time, and there's not much on this album of the caliber that attracted SAULT's diehard following anyway. 

Friday, January 30, 2026

 





My Deep Cut Friday column for Spin is about "Paint A Vulgar Picture" by The Smiths this week. 

Movie Diary

Thursday, January 29, 2026

 







a) The Rip
This is pretty cleverly plotted, a good use of Matt Damon and Ben Affleck's natural chemistry, and Sasha Calle is really a star, I hope she gets more good roles in non-superhero movies. Smokin' Aces director Joe Carnahan's whole visual style is really dated and suffocatingly gloomy, though, I hate this movie's color palette so much. As far as recent crime movies starring Ocean's Eleven guys, I thought The Instigators and Wolfs were a lot more enjoyable. 

b) F1
On paper, I think it's good for there to be the occasional Best Picture nominee that's a just a big loud crowd-pleasing movie with some charismatic stars and impressive setpieces with cool cars or planes (at least in the ten Best Picture noms era). In practice, though...F1 probably has a little more merit than Top Gun: Maverick as a contender, I rolled my eyes at it a lot less and was actually engaged in the plot, Damson Idris and Kerry Condon and Javier Bardem did a lot to make it feel like a little more than an empty Brad Pitt-and-fast cars spectacle. But a fast car movie should probably be better than this to get that kind of awards recognition. 

I can't think of many movies that have had worse word-of-mouth than Materialists in recent memory, and on one level I get it. There are probably a lot of people who went into the story of a love triangle with three glamorous movie stars hoping for a romcom, and probably some cinephiles who enjoyed Past Lives and found this almost overly academic and conceptual as an essay on contemporary dating and how people weigh income and height and all these superficial concerns against their actual emotions. I liked it, though, I thought it was pretty thoughtful and well done, aside from the supporting role from terrible person/terrible actress/podcaster Dasha Nekrasova. A lot of the criticisms I saw were from the kind of people that this movie is about who didn't seem to appreciate what it was saying about them. Definitely could be Chris Evans's best performance, if we're looking at MCU people who haven't always thrived in non-Marvel movies. 

d) Caught Stealing
The idea of Darren Aronofsky making a crime caper comedy is very intriguing, and it's probably for the best that he didn't write the screenplay for Caught Stealing. I wouldn't say there's a total lack of humor or levity in his other movies -- there's some playful, darkly funny cruelty in what he puts his protagonists through in stuff like Black Swan or Pi. But a lighter tone doesn't come naturally to him, and at a point it feels like Caught Stealing would've been a better movie if he just doubled down on how traumatic the events of the movie are to Austin Butler's character, all the colorful jaunty casual violence and punk rock needle drops felt a little inorganic, I just kind of walked away from the movie never laughing or feeling much of anything about it. 

e) Mickey 17
My wife read and enjoyed the novel Mickey7 but was apprehensive about watching Bong Joon Ho's adaptation because of what she'd heard about it. Finally, one night we decided to put it on, and she really hated the changes made to the story and found them all unnecessary. We also both really hated Robert Pattinson's weird Tobey Maguire voice, I really think Pattinson has this ambition to be a chameleonic adventurous actor who plays a wide range of roles but he should play British characters more often, most of his American accents are catastrophically bad and distracting. That being said, I liked Mickey 17 a lot, thinking about it as Joon-ho's follow-up to Parasite is pretty unflattering but I enjoyed it as a weird spectacle with great visual effects like Okja and Naomi Ackie is great in it. 

f) The Strangers: Chapter 1
Renny Harlin has made some bangers like The Long Kiss Goodnight but he's mostly an undistinguished journeyman who's taken all sorts of jobs, and a lot of his horror stuff has been just babysitting a franchise (the fourth Nightmare on Elm Street movie, an Exorcist prequel). The Strangers was a pretty good, pretty distinctive 2008 horror hit, but it wasn't so wildly popular that I really understand why someone decided to greenlight a Strangers trilogy directed by Renny Harlin 16 years after the original. Madelaine Petsch is adorable but she should stick to lighter stuff, she wasn't really up to the scream queen task here and that probably hurt the movie more than Harlin just blandly emulating the original. 

g) Call Me By Your Name
It's kind of funny to see Call Me By Your Name now, almost a decade later, while Timothee Chalamet has gone on to several more Oscar-nominated performances while Armie Hammer has become a disgraced laughing stock. They're both really good in this, though, the praise is deserved. As a straight guy I found it to be one of the more moving gay love stories I've ever seen in a film, but also predictably found myself infatuated with Esther Garrel. Luca Guadagigno is kind of a funny director sometimes -- the 6 seconds of the movie that were un infra red heat vision, though, what the fuck was that? -- but it still pretty great. Michael Stuhlbarg is also great even if I thought his speech at the end was, I don't know, gilding the lily a little. 

h) Depeche Mode: M
Depeche Mode on record, or even in music videos, have such a cool brooding mystique, and I feel like the totally different vibe of their live shows can demystify them a lot. It makes me like them more as people to watch Dave Gahan as an old man in a vest yelling "ARE YOU READY?" and "TAKE IT, BOYS!" over their hits, but I don't particularly think the songs sound as good live or take me back to how much I enjoy the records. I think I'd have a great time at a Depeche Mode concert, just didn't really dig them in the concert film format. I should watch 101 at some point, though, I've never seen that.

i) The New Yorker at 100
A decent little doc, I enjoyed seeing some big name writers and artists on film talking about their craft, but I dunno, felt a little bland and surface level for something celebrating a century of a cultural institution. 

j) Misery
Misery was such a huge pop culture phenomenon in the '90s and I've seen so many bits and pieces of it on TV, but I'd never actually watched it from front to back, and it was probably the most significant Rob Reiner movie I hadn't seen, so I put it on this week. What a ride, Kathy Bates really earned that Oscar. But what I enjoyed the most were the little things I didn't expect like the great scenes of Richard Farnsworth and Frances Sternhagen as the sheriff and his wife/deputy. 

Friday, January 23, 2026

 




David Bowie's Station To Station is 50 today and I wrote about "Word on a Wing" for Spin's Deep Cut Friday column. I also wrote a piece about artists who's appeared on the National Independent Venue Association's Live List over the years. 

TV Diary

Thursday, January 22, 2026

 







a) "Ponies" 
This delightful Peacock show is an "erotic buddy comedy-drama spy thriller" with Emilia Clarke and Haley Lu Richardson as the wives of two CIA agents in 1977 Moscow. As with any period piece that's not 100% serious, it helps to not worry about realism or historical accuracy, although the one thing that actually bothered me was the season finale that shoehorned Elton John into the plot, with an actor who looks nothing like Elton John. Richardson has been good in a lot of things but only seemed to get recognized for it after "The White Lotus," but this is easily her best performance to date. Highly recommended if you like "Poker Face" and aren't too mad at Peacock canceling it to give one of their new shows a try. 

Another new show starring another strikingly beautiful "Game of Thrones" actress, in this case Sophie Turner. I'm not a big fan of the "this season on..." teasers that are often at the end of a show's first episode these days, but the one for "Steal" at least made me curious to keep watching to see how the story escalates, the first episode felt like a generic heist mystery. 

Jon Bernthal did a respectable Baltimore accent in "We Own This City," so it's disappointing that he derails every scene of "His & Hers" that he's in with an atrocious southern accent. This is one of those situations where they should've cast a real southerner or told him not to worry about the accent. I know at some point Bernthal became 'the thinking man's tough guy' or something but I still suspect he's just an actual bonehead of no particular talent. The story, with Bernthal as a cop and Tessa Thompson as his ex, a journalist investigating the same murder case, had an interesting premise, and while I didn't hate the ending as much as many people did, I did kinda roll my eyes at the twist. 

People dislike Simu Liu for some valid reasons but he's a decent leading man, this spy show has a fun premise and he has decent chemistry with the wonderful Melissa Barrera. 

e) "Girl Taken"
As exhaustingly self-aware as most American TV is now, I find the somber melodrama of a lot of British TV kind of jarring and hard to watch. I mean, this is a psychological thriller about an abduction, there's no 'light' way of doing that, but there's just not much personality or style or originality here. 

f) "The Abandons"
It's funny to think that before Taylor Sheridan became one of the most successful producers in television, he was a bit player in a Kurt Sutter show. And now Sutter's latest show is a western that feels like a failed attempt to attract the target audience of Sheridan's shows (Netflix canceled "The Abandons" yesterday, 6 weeks after its released). It's fun to see Gillian Anderson in a show like this and the first episode was pretty good, but I dunno, hasn't held my attention, I'm not surprised it didn't take off. 

g) "Agatha Christie's Seven Dials" 
British miniseries always wrap things up too quickly, with only three episodes you might as well have just made a feature. After Mia McKenna-Bruce's rightfully award-winning performance in How To Have Sex, I'd love for her to have a leading role in something great, but this is just okay. 

h) "Ripple" 
This Netflix show has this touchy feely concept about strangers' intersecting lives and fate or something, kind of reminds of something that would've been on CBS in the '90s or something. I don't dislike it, though, the cast is charming. There's a whole music industry subplot and at one point in the second episode, Sydney Agudong (Nani in the Lilo & Stitch remake) goes onstage and sings a pretty acoustic cover of "Seasons" by Future Islands. Very surreal for me as someone who watched Future Islands rehearse that song a couple days before they went on Letterman back in the day. 

A mystery thriller about a baby with a head injury, maybe a little dark and stressful for me to watch more than one episode of. 

I don't care for these Harlan Coben miniseries that pop up on Netflix every few months or weeks, but I keep putting them on as little time wasters. And this one pissed me off because Minnie Driver is there in a generic thankless role when she deserves so much better (honestly "Speechless" should be wrapping up a 10-year Emmy-winning run right now, in a better world). There's one really committed, memorable supporting performance by Maeve Courtier-Lilley in "Run Away" but it's otherwise pretty mediocre.  

This Netflix series where Rowan Atkinson feuds with a baby for four episodes is pretty bad, but I just learned it's a sequel to a show called "Man vs. Bee," and I have to assume that NINE episodes of Rowan Atkinson feuding with an insect was even worse. 

l) "Fallout" 
I think my favorite thing about the second season of "Fallout" is that both the advertising and the show itself seem a lot more confident about Ella Purnell being the star of the show, Lucy is a great character. There are also some worthy additions to the whole cast of characters, including Justin Theroux and Macauley Culkin. 

Stephen Graham and Erin Doherty both won Emmys for their work in "Adolescence" (my #1 show of 2025) but I hope people don't sleep on the other completely different show they're both in that just returned for a second season. The Forty Elephants are such a fascinating chapter of history and Doherty is fantastic in this show, I adore her. 

"The Night Manager" was a miniseries that I watched and enjoyed and then more or less forgot about almost exactly ten years ago, I'm surprised they brought it back for another season but I'm happy to watch Tom Hiddleston (Gaga voice) MANAGE THE NIGHT again. It seems like they've done a decent job of picking up the story where it left off in a way that makes sense. 

This is just a 23-minute one-off special, but it's one of the most ambitious things Adult Swim has done in recent memory, with a few creators of Adult Swim shows ("Steven Universe," "Over the Garden Wall," "OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes") working separately on different pieces of a story that are assembled into one piece with totally different animation and storytelling styles woven together. The making-of doc is as interesting as the special itself, I hope they try more experiments along these lines, maybe a sequel installment or a whole feature-length film. 

I know it's not a fair expectation, but I always go into these things hoping they'll be at least half as funny and entertaining as The Lego Batman Movie and they never are. 

Apparently in Germany there's this 1963 comedy sketch called "Dinner For One" that's become a beloved annual tradition, always airing on new year's eve. And "Miss Sophie - Same Procedure As Every Year" is three episodess filling in the backstory. I feel like if someone made a miniseries prequel to a famous sketch that I knew -- the dead parrot "Monty Python" sketch or something -- I'd roll my eyes pretty hard, but watching this without much context, I liked it, it was a funny little farce. 

r) "The Dead Girls"
Another Netflix miniseries based on another country's cultural touchstone -- in this case Jorge Ibarguengoitia's 1977 novel Las Muertas -- that I wasn't familiar with, but I still found the series pretty enjoyable. 

I haven't watched most of the previous Taylor Swift documentary projects, but I really had a good time with this one. Of course it's a self-serving little PR puff piece of what she chooses to show you of the backstage work on The Eras Tour, but it was still fascinating to see a bit of the work that goes into such a colossal undertaking, to get these fun little portraits of some of the dancers and backup singers and band members. I also really loved Swift's speech to them before the last show that opens the first episode, I thought it was kind of profound and revealed a bit of how she approaches her work and how she got here. 

I didn't really care or know much about the Beatles, or at least as little as a 13-year-old classic rock fan could, back when "The Beatles Anthology" originally aired in 1995. So I'm kinda glad that I didn't even try to digest any of that stuff in 1995, so that I could devour all four Anthology albums and all the old and new episodes of the series as an adult in the last few weeks of 2025. I don't know how different this new Disney+ version is from what aired on ABC back in the day, but I was really pretty impressed with the quality of the doc, it didn't feel 'dated' at all outside of some of the '90s fashions in the interviews. They did a good job of getting the story from people that were there at the time, including Neil Aspinall, an old friend of Paul and George who worked for Apple Corp and pulled together all the archival footage for the first attempt at a career-spanning Beatles doc in the '70s. I particularly liked how much of George Martin's perspective you get through it all. And how sometimes Paul would be like "we're doing interviews on my boat today!" 

A self-congratulatory documentary where Simon Cowell celebrates his career and tries to engineer the return of non-Korean boy bands, pretty boring stuff from someone whose face is increasingly difficult to look at. 

My 10-year-old has been starting to watch more of the non-animated content on Netflix, including documentaries about animals and this recent series hosted by a former NASA engineer that kind of aims to teach STEM concepts to kids. I'm glad something like this exists, when I was growing up we had "Bill Nye the Science Guy" and "Beakman's World" and the generation before that had "Mr. Wizard." 

I find Will Smith's whole inspirational Instagram influencer persona these days a little wearying, but he's an ideal host for an upbeat docuseries like this about traveling the globe. 

This Apple TV series is about orphaned endangered species that need help from human specialists to get reintroduced into living in the wild. So it's interesting to learn about that side of the conservation process, but it's almost mostly about cute baby animals, and the episodes about cheetahs and lynxes were especially cute. 

One of the more interesting true crime shows I've seen in recent years, murder-for-hire plots are always such nasty stories and it's sometimes hard to believe that people every attempt them, they always seem to go off the rails in predictable ways. 

It's funny how modern game shows all have the same staging and lighting setups, this one looks like so many other shows with a slightly sillier title and slightly dumber concept that it almost feels like a parody, especially with Neil Patrick Harris as the host. It's pretty much just a boilerplate trivia show, though. What I find irritating is that when all the contestants have to answer the same question, you usually only hear the answer from the people that got it right or the closest to right, and a big part of the fun of trivia shows, in my opinion, is hearing the wrong answers people come up with. 

Friday, January 16, 2026


 










This week I ranked Kendrick Lamar's albums for Spin, and also wrote about the Tori Amos B-side "Alamo" for the Deep Cut Friday column. 

Monthly Report: January 2026 Singles

Thursday, January 15, 2026


 
















1. Edgehill - "Doubletake"
I was recently bitching about Geese bringing back the early 2000s trend of American indie rockers who wish they were Thom Yorke but don't have pretty voices, but Edgehill's singer has a suitably nice voice that I think they pull off a midtempo '90s Radiohead type song pretty well. Edgehill is a trio from Nashville that just signed to a major label a few months ago, some of their other songs have kind of annoying lyrics but I like their first alt-rock radio hit a lot. Here's my new 2026 singles Spotify playlist that I'll be updating throughout the year. 

2. John Morgan - "Kid Myself"
North Carolina's John Morgan has written a few hits for Jason Aldean, who guested on his first big single "Friends Like These," but I really like Morgan's full-on solo single "Kid Myself." It's been slowly building on country radio for the last 6 months, I hope it gains some momentum, he's got a good voice and shouldn't just be writing for other people. 

3. Ella Langley - "Choosin' Texas" 
Ella Langley's first couple country radio hits were some of my favorites of 2024 and 2025, but she's ascending to another level right now, with "Choosin' Texas" rising into the top 10 of the Hot 100 this month once the Christmas songs finally went away. And it's pretty exciting and unprecedented in modern times -- the last solo song by a female country singer in the top 10 was, well, I guess you'd have to define it by whenever Taylor Swift stopped being a country singer (her last top 10 that was a country radio hit was 2012's Red, so well over a decade ago). And before that it was Carrie Underwood in 2007. In fact, Miranda Lambert co-wrote "Choosin' Texas" and it's already the highest charting song she's ever had anything to do with. I don't know if it's more the song or just the timing of Langley's career momentum, but I'm happy to see it either way. 

4. Djo - "Delete Ya" 
Djo also just got his first top 10 single off the strength of the "Stranger Things" finale boosting the streaming numbers of every piece of music featured in the show or made by its cast members, especially Joe Keery. "End of Beginning" was already as big as it could get on alternative radio in 2024, though, so that's old news, I like his current radio single, hopefully it gets some runoff buzz as well. 

5. Sombr - "12 to 12" 
I like that this is a bit faster than the Sombr's first two big breakthrough hits, it feels so disco to me that I was a little surprised that it's done better on rock radio than pop radio. 

6. Bad Omens - "Dying To Love"
My wife's always been a little more into heavier contemporary rock than me and the Virginia metalcore band Bad Omens has been one of her favorites in the last few years. We're going to see them live in March and I'm looking forward to it, they've been growing on me and "Dying To Love" is my favorite of the singles they've released from their fourth album, it's almost like a power ballad but it had some cool noisy electronic bits. Bad Omens are in that weird point in their career where they've never even charted on the Billboard 200 but they're headlining arenas, I think the new album is gonna do numbers when it comes out. 

7. Pooh Shiesty - "FDO"
'First day out' songs that rappers release after getting out of prison or jail have a long history, with Gucci Mane's 2009 classic "First Day Out" being the definitive example. I was surprised when "FDO" was as big as it was, though. Pooh Shiesty was briefly pretty big in 2020 and 2021 before he caught a charge, but Lil Durk stole the spotlight on his biggest song at the time, and for the last few years it felt like his main impact was changing what people call a balaclava. "FDO" is a genuinely pretty impressive song, though, he really made the most of his comeback moment.

8. Wet Leg - "Mangetout"
Every Wet Leg song has at least one line that makes me roll my eyes very hard at this band and their YouTube boomer fanbase, including "Mangetout," but I think it's by far their best song, some really great riffs and vocal melodies. 

9. Teyana Taylor - "Bed of Roses" 
It's funny, Teyana Taylor is starting to win awards for One Battle After Another and has Oscar buzz, her acting career is really taking off, but I feel like the album she released a few months ago is kinda slept on, R&B radio is playing this and the Lucky Daye duet some but should definitely be playing them more. 

10. Offset f/ Gunna - "Different Species"
The Offset/Gunna tandem continues to be great, I'm glad they finally confirmed they're gonna do a collab album. 

The Worst Single of the Month: Xania Monet - "How Was I Supposed To Know?" 
This 'AI R&B singer'  is pretty disgusting stuff, and it's kind of insidious that they gave this character the same last name as current human R&B star Victoria Monet. People have been harping on the AI 'number one country hit' that's only appeared on digital sales/streaming charts, but this song has actually charted on R&B radio, it's pretty worrying that any stations would play this. 

Friday, January 09, 2026

 





This week on Spin I ranked T. Rex's albums and wrote a Deep Cut Friday column about Lenny Kravitz's "Spinning Around Over You." 

Movie Diary

Wednesday, January 07, 2026

 






a) Spinal Tap II: The End Continues
In the week between Christmas and New Year's, I mourned Rob Reiner by rewatching Spinal TapWhen Harry Met Sally, and The Princess Bride. Appropriately, Spinal Tap II felt a little more like a reunion tour than a sequel -- playing the hits rather than extending or resolving a narrative. It's hardly essential, although it got a few laughs out of me ("it won a Holdie," Nigel shredding with the Celtic pub band), but I was filled with appreciation for the fact that Reiner at least got to end his career with a nice little victory lap of one of his greatest achievements. 

b) Jay Kelly
Noah Baumbach has co-written some enjoyable movies (The Fantastic Mr. FoxBarbie) but I don't really rate him as a director at all, I think he's technically smart and occasionally insightful but not talented or original enough to make great art. And Jay Kelly is another movie where you can kind of see all the wheels turning and it never really takes off. George Clooney's performance carries the film, partly because it's so easy to substitute our world's feelings about him as a great movie star with Jay Kelly's world's feelings for him (although it felt kind of annoyingly lazy that a highlight reel of Jay Kelly's filmography was actual clips of Clooney hits). Unfortunately, Clooney is acting opposite Adam Sandler, who's given some great performances when a role is tailored to his strengths, but is just an absolute dogshit actor in a more straightforward role, stiffly reading lines, absolutely unconvincing as a normal man with a job and adult responsibilities and a deep yearning for love and friendship. His scenes with Laura Dern were particularly lifeless, which was especially annoying given that Dern was the best thing about Marriage Story and easily could've been given the room to repeat that here. 

I'm not a Paul Thomas Anderson hater like I am with Baumbach, but I definitely don't look at him as reverently as a lot of people do these days. In some ways I like early work the most, and I have vague plans to rewatch a lot of his post-'90s movies because they just didn't really connect for me the first time around. I liked One Battle After Another a lot the first time around, though, I don't know if it's the towering masterpiece it's been made out to be, but very good and not at all a disappointment, Leonardo DiCaptrio and Benicio del Toro and Chase Infiniti are all so great in this.

Eddington has been lumped in with One Battle After Another and some other recent movies as examples of auteurs making films that very directly address the political landscape of 2020s America. I think Eddington came out a little half baked, though, the weakest of Ari Aster's four features (even Beau Is Afraid, while flawed, is more than the sum of its parts, while this is less). The tonal ambiguity in Aster's movies is usually a strength, but it felt like he wanted to make a movie about COVID-19, Black Lives Matter, and antifa hysteria in an 'equal opportunity offender' way that felt progressively more toothless as the story escalated and got more violent. The live action equivalent of a "South Park" episode. 

e) Roofman
An excellent movie, either Channing Tatum's best performance or his best performance that wasn't in a full-on comedy, definitely not as lightweight as the commercials make it seem like it will be. 

f) Bugonia
I think if I could pick any job to have in the film industry, it would be a casting director, because so much of what works or doesn't work for me in a movie has to do with casting. For instance, Emma Stone is the absolute perfect actor for Bugonia and it's hard to imagine anyone else working as well in that role, much like her previous collaborations with Yorgos Lanthimos. But Jesse Plemons, I don't know, obviously a gifted actor who's been great in lots of things, but I feel like this movie could've had a different, better energy with someone else in that role. The closing montage was kind of amazing, but I didn't really feel anything about the twist that made it possible, in a weird way I think I liked Bugonia the exact same amount that I would have if the ending was a little more conventional and expected.

g) Together
Together is a great vehicle for its leads -- it's more fun to watch Alison Brie and Dave Franco play a troubled couple who are being physically forced together by a mysterious force while knowing that they're a happily married couple in real life. And they're both seasoned comedic actors who have enough dramatic range that they give the story some gravity when it's needed, but lean into how funny it eventually gets. But as someone who's very down with body horror films, I thought it wasn't a home run and it was easy to imagine a more seasoned horror director doing something much more impressive and memorable with this premise. 

h) Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
I wish Rian Johnson was alternating Benoit Blanc movies with other features -- it's been 13 years since Looper, his last movie that wasn't Star Wars or Knives Out -- but he's really good at this stuff, I can't complain, and so far each one is distinct enough that it feels like a worthy addition. Jeremy Renner going down the stairs got maybe the biggest laugh out of me of any moment in the series. 

A pretty good movie with Oscar buzz. Once again I felt a little nitpicky about casting, though. I've never really been blown away by Joel Edgerton, he did okay with quietly brooding through the whole movie, but as soon as William H. Macy showed up I thought about how much more engaged I'd be in the story if it was an actor as good as Macy in the lead role. I also didn't love Will Patton as the narrator, or the amount of narration, sometimes it feels like a crutch or creative failure for a screen adaptation of a book to have a lot of voiceover instead of channeling what was on the page into visual storytelling, dialogue, and the nonverbal expressions of the actors. 

Adapting Stephen King is particularly difficult work, and Mike Flanagan is one guy who's shown that he's up to the task. I haven't read the 2020 novella The Life of Chuck, but it feels particularly unsuited for adapting for the screen, like Flanagan was almost giving himself a heat check, especially since it's not a horror story -- although its depiction of climate change and environmental collapse in the near future is about as visceral and haunting as any I've ever seen. It's a really interesting, thought-provoking movie, I liked just about everything about it except the narration by Nick Offerman. I'm not even really faulting Flanagan for using narration because it was probably necessary in this instance, but Offerman just done way too much voiceover work in commercials (or, like, fake commercials on "Last Week Tonight") for his narration to not give The Life of Chuck this inappropriate feel of an or a work of satire. Like it annoyed me so much that I wish they'd just realized that and recut the movie with another narrator. 

After watching The Life of Chuck I decided to watch an earlier Flanagan adaptation of a Stephen King book that I'd missed. And I really liked it, Carla Gugino and Bruce Greenwood's performances really made the material work on the screen when there's a lot about the story that probably seemed unfilmable on paper. The whole 'moonlight man' thing almost felt like an unnecessary bonus subplot, though, it's a very Stephen King kind of flourish but I think the movie might have been stronger without it. 

"Lover, You Should Have Come Over" was one of the most incredible pieces of music I'd ever heard when I was 17, and I've read so much about Jeff Buckley over the decades since then and pored over so much music and ephemera. I was curious to see an actual feature documentary about him (named after a lyric from my favorite song!) but wasn't sure if it would feel like I had anything left to learn. But Jeff's mother, and two serious girlfriends, most of the members of his backing band, and a few other musicians he knew (Aimee Mann, Ben Harper) really shared a lot, in some instances I almost felt like they overshared. As much as I've obsessed over how sad the story of Jeff's tragically short life is, the movie left me feeling like it was even sadder than I ever knew, which is not a great feeling but I appreciated it as a fan. 

m) Counting Crows: Have You Seen Me Lately? 
Watching this soon after the Buckley doc felt like an interesting flipside -- Counting Crows came out around the same time as Buckley, sold a lot more records, and Adam Duritz lived through his personal crises to tell us about them now as an old man. But it's a similar snapshot of the same era, in fact it focuses so fully on the first two Counting Crows albums that there's just a very quick postscript at the end to note that the band is still around and released an album a few months ago. That means, fortunately, that almost half the film is about Recovering the Satellites, an album that I really adore, and it gave a lot of illuminating context to the experiences Duritz was writing about, and how purposeful he was in putting the band together and deciding how those records should sound, down to whether the guitarist should use pedals or not, or whether the keyboardist should just play piano and organ with no synths. I came away from the movie really admiring him more as a musician and a bandleader. 

n) Cover-Up
A great recent Netflix doc about Seymour Hersh, really gave me a renewed appreciation for what investigative journalism was in his era and the lengths people would go to to get a story. 

o) Let It Be
I watched Peter Jackson's "Get Back" miniseries without ever going back to the original 1970 film at the time, but after devouring "The Beatles Anthology" recently, I decided to keep going through all the Beatles stuff on Disney+ and watch this. Probably better than it gets credit for at this point, it captures a lot of great personal and musical moments, but it definitely feels like the Jackson version renders it a lot less essential. 

Monthly Report: December 2025 Albums

Monday, January 05, 2026


















1. Juliana Hatfield - Lightning Might Strike
The Lemonheads released their first new album in a long time in 2025 and it was pretty enjoyable, with some old collaborators like Juliana Hatfield making appearances. But while Evan Dando has gone years and years between new records like many aging rockers, Hatfield is one of those lifers who never stopped plugging away, and at this point has over 20 solo albums. Hatfield is easy to overlook or forget about, as much as I loved 1995's Only Everything and the Blake Babies song "Sanctify," but the fact that she keeps popping up with new music has given me repeated opportunities to keep going to her catalog and appreciating her songwriting more and more. And Lightning Might Strike is an excellent album with songs like "My House Is Not My Dream House" and "Harmonizing With Myself" that are wry, self-deprecating dispatches from the life of a middle aged working class musician. I finished my top 50 albums of 2025 list before really listening to any December releases, so this isn't on there, but it definitely could've been. 

2. Erick Sermon - Dynamic Duos: Volume 1
I wrote a Complex piece about the greatest duos in rap history that was originally published on 2/2/2022 but wound up making more waves in 2025, with people like Clipse and Fat Joe and Jadakiss reacting favorably to the list, which was really cool to see. Erick Sermon announced this album in 2024 so I'm not gonna jump to the conclusion that my piece inspired it in any way, but I was still excited about the project and he really delivered on the concept. I don't know that I would've thought of him as the perfect person to produce an album like this, but Sermon's sound really does fit with artists from so many different eras and regions that he can pull off Public Enemy, Cypress Hill, Tha Dogg Pound, Salt-N-Pepa and M.O.P. tracks equally well. The only track that feels like they kind of bended the rules on the concept for a forgettable filler song is the one with The Game and Conway The Machine. 

3. Nas & DJ Premier - Light-Years
I added this to my Spin ranking of Nas albums, so I've already said a bit about what I think works and doesn't work about Light-Years. I really like it, though, as much as DJ Premier was probably my first favorite hip-hop producer and could still be my all-time #1, his post-'90s track record hasn't been so stellar that I ever placed really high expectations on this project, I'll take the hard tracks like "Writers" and "Welcome to the Underground" happily and not sweat the songs that aren't as good. 

4. Anna of the North - Girl In A Bottle
I make a list of the year's best EPs every year, so I've become acutely aware of how often things that seem to be EP-length get labeled 'albums' on streaming services, and will often wrestle with how to categorize them. At 22 minutes, Girl In A Bottle is in that ambiguous zone, and I'm leaning toward calling it an EP since it's significantly shorter than Anna of the North's excellent 2022 album Crazy Life, but since I've already done my year-end lists, I'm not gonna overthink it too much and just enjoy breezy synth pop gems like "Call Me" and "Waiting For Love." 

5. Redveil - Sankofa
I write more about Baltimore music and spend a lot of time in the city, but I've lived in Prince Georges County, Maryland for over a decade. And it's been cool to see PG County's rap scene become more nationally celebrated in the last few years, particularly as its own thing that isn't just lumped in with 'the DMV' (a term I kind of hate), regional stars like Nino Paid, Jaeychino, ST6 JodyBoof, Yung Manny, Lil Dude, and KP Skywalka. Redveil has had a pretty high national profile for a few years now and is kind of on his own thing -- he performed at Camp Flog Gnaw in 2023, which feels appropriate, he's a PG County rapper the same way Tyler, The Creator is an L.A. rapper, the ties to other artists here are more geographic than musical. I love how lush and melodic tracks like "History" and "Pray 4 Me" are, it really feels like he's growing as a producer. 

6. Lor Mark - Mark Dugg 
In my top 10 albums list for the Baltimore Banner, I included the first album Lor Mark released in 2025, Still Figuring It Out, but he released his fourth album of the year, Mark Dugg, right under the wire a few days before Christmas. Great NASG Chaz and Kooda features, but I hate the ugly piss yellow ChatGPT cover art. 

7. Earl From Yonder - Skinwalker EP
Baltimore has one of the best scenes in the country for weirdo avant garde hip hop, and I became a big fan of Earl From Yonder's loud, funny Bad Brains-meets-Three 6 Mafia punk rap in 2025, when he released three projects, and The Wellness Check was close to making my Baltimore Banner list. The 15-minute blast of energy Skinwalker is probably the most guitar-heavy of those projects but "Bed Bath and Beyond" has a great drum'n'bass beat, highly recommended to fans of Infinity Knives & Brian Ennals or JPEGMafia. 

8. Icky Reels and Wave Generators - After The Wave (Icky Reels Version)
Height Keech is one of the greats of Baltimore's DIY weirdo rap scene, dozens of albums and over a thousand shows, although he's lived in Michigan and NYC over the last few years. 2025 was a particularly prolific year for Heightman, lots and lots of collaborations and production work, and I've started to see his work resonate more and more with people outside Baltimore, particularly his project with Doseone and the second album by Wave Generators, Height's group with Nosaj of New Kingdom. And at the end of the year he dropped a remix of the first Wave Generators album by producer Icky Reels that put Height and Nosaj's vocals over some pretty different beats, I think I like the original record the most but I really enjoyed the remixes too. 

9. B. Eveready - Tapas EP
I recently compared listening to a playlist full of EPs to dining in a tapas restaurant, so I was amused to see the title of Baltimore rapper B. Eveready's recent EP, which also makes for kind of a good companion piece for his other 2025 release, Crab Season. A very short but strong release, "Who?" and "Good $$$" are some of my favorite songs B. Eveready has made to date. 

10. Shy Glizzy - I Was Actually Being Humble
After a relatively quiet period, with only one project over the last 4 years, I Was Actually Being Humble felt like a great comeback moment for Shy Glizzy, a chance for him to stake his claim as one of the greats of D.C. rap, much as Wale did with his latest album in November. My favorite tracks are probably "Be On Time" with Nino Paid and No Savage and "On Da Flo." 

The Worst Album of the Month: The Game & DJ Drama - Gangsta Grillz: Every Movie Needs A Trailer
The only algorithmic Spotify playlist that I find useful is Release Radar, which shows you new tracks from artists you've listened to in the past. And I don't think I would've even known that The Game released something new in December, because I didn't even really like his music that much even when he was a big platinum star, but a song popped up on my Release Radar 'featuring' Hayley Williams which was really just an uncleared sample of Paramore's "Ain't It Fun." And I was amused that that song got pulled off the album on streaming services after a week or two, thank you, Hayley, that shit sucked. The whole tape sucks, in fact, this guy is beyond washed. 

Friday, January 02, 2026

 




I made a list of the best music videos of 2025 for Spin, and also wrote about "At the Atlantis" by Bad Brains for the Deep Cut Friday column. 

Monday, December 29, 2025

 




I made a list of the top 10 Baltimore albums of 2025 for the Baltimore Banner

Friday, December 26, 2025

 




I wrote about "This Will Be Our Year" by The Zombies for Spin's Deep Cut Friday column this week. I also wrote about independent artists you may have missed in 2025, and added Light-Years to my Nas album ranking

The Best of Me, 2025

Sunday, December 21, 2025




























As I do every year, it's time to take a look back at some of the work I did in 2025 that I'm proud of. There's a lot of bad news out there these days, it can feel sometimes a little futile to spend my time on music and arts and culture when there's some really serious shit happening in the world, but I hope I can keep doing what I do and we can all survive and find joy in things. 

- Obviously, my biggest project this year was my first book, Tough Breaks: The Story of Baltimore Club Music, which finally came out in August, many years after I first announced the project. If you've bought it, I'm incredibly grateful to you for supporting this labor of love and the city and the music it celebrates. If you haven't, I will point out that it's a pretty affordable little paperback, and my publisher Repeater Books is running a 50% off sale through December 31st. The rollout for the book has been a lot of fun, I did events with Normal's Books and Records and Red Emma's at the Baltimore Book Festival, Greedy Reads (some video footage here), Motor House (video footage here), and Idle Hour. I did interviews with Rinse FM, The Music Book Podcast, Music Book Club, and John's Music Blog. Last week I was a guest on Midday on WYPR, and you can now hear that interview in podcast form on streaming services.  The book was reviewed by The Wire magazine, and Stereogum published a lengthy excerpt of a couple of key chapters. 

- Speaking of Stereogum, I also wrote a fun look back at the Crazy Frog era for them.  

- On the Baltimore Banner, I interviewed Lafayette Gilchrist and Dapper Dan Midas, and wrote pieces mourning and celebrating the lives of Susan Alcorn and Darsombra's Ann Everton

- On Complex, I made lists of rapper/singer duos and country/rap collaborations, revamped my old list of the best remixes since 2000, and wrote about some of the most anticipated albums of 2025

- Over on Spin, I did a lot more interviews than in previous years, including profiles of Yellowcard, Rise Against, The Brian Jonestown MassacreElbow, Repelican, Haute & Freddy, Bones Owens, and Eyedress, and I also talked to Steve Rosenthal and Anna Canoni about the fascinating work of releasing Woody Guthrie's home recordings. We started the new weekly column Deep Cut Friday over the summer, and I've written about songs by Oasis, My Chemical Romance, Jeff BuckleyTracy ChapmanJohn Mellencamp, Harry Nilsson, and Blondie. And I ranked the albums of a lot of artists, including Michael Jackson, RushBjork, Elton JohnMarianne Faithfull, Black Sabbath, Public EnemyMatthew Sweet, and Van Halen

- Here on Narrowcast, I've spent the last few weeks writing about my favorite albums, singles, remixes, and TV shows of 2025. Throughout the year I also posted lists of my favorite TV shows of the 1990s, my favorite hard rock and metal singles and mainstream rock singles of the 1980s, and my favorite artists of the 1970s. I started to make lists of my favorite movies of every year, starting with 2024 and have so far gone back to 2018. And I made lots of Deep Album Cuts playlists including The Kinks, Phish, Jill SobuleSly and the Family Stone, Roberta FlackLuther Vandross, Angie Stone, The Beach Boys, and The S.O.S. Band

- The book kind of took up a lot of my time and energy the last two years, so I didn't release much of my own music this year, but a few things came out. I released three Western Blot tracks: one original song, and covers of songs by Lalo Schifrin and Olivia Newton-John. And I played drums on Jack Reidy's "Clockwork," a song on his debut album Raw Deal that came out in March.