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Filling up the teacup with gin in your secret postcard life

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Continuing my trip up  The Guardian's 50 best albums of 2017 . #26 :  After Laughter -  Paramore The perpetually feuding emo band returned last spring with a surprisingly jovial collection of tropical house-tinted powerpop. Revelling in the funky guitars and frantic synths of the 80s, the trio channelled their emo roots into the lyrics, which retain the raw drama of their previous work and share stories of romantic tension and torturous experiences with depression. Finally, almost halfway through the chart, we get to the first album we've already met  - and I liked it and have no problem with its position on the list. #25 :  Sleep Well Beast -  The National Music designed to soundtrack a midlife crisis was injected with unexpected exuberance on the Ohio band’s seventh record. From Turtleneck’s gnarly guitar-shredding to the breakneck tapestry of beats backing I’ll Still Destroy You, Matt Berninger and co transformed the sorrows of middle age into something ...

We came to you big city from our little country town

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Continuing my trip back through the 2017 album charts. 10/03/17 : Windy City - Alison Krauss Our first ever visit with Alison and we've had to somewhat bend the rules to do so - not because I desperately want to listen to Alison, but you'll completely understand why when I explain later. However, I am expecting to quite like her, but also find it all a bit too much from time to time. Hmmm - no. I like her voice, but I find the whole package too much all the time. There is country music out there that I like, but this is not it - sorry Alison. I'm also intrigued by how bad the album cover is in terms of lighting, but have to admit to a grudging respect for her hair.  We're all the way down at #6 with a new entry in the chart this week on the start of a very brief four week run (which I believe is the shortest of the year so far). The top five this week were the wildly varied  Ed , (a new entry starting a run of 377 weeks in the chart - it's currently at #44),  Rag...

You give me your love, it's a curious love

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Continuing my trip up  The Guardian's 50 best albums of 2017 . #29 :  Antisocialites -  Alvvays This Canadian crew channel the spirit of C86 with their jangly tunes – yet on their second record they embrace the slickness eschewed by their predecessors. Antisocialites might be a paean to indie’s formative years – In Undertow features Teenage Fanclub’s Norman Blake; Lollipop (Ode to Jim) is directed towards the Jesus & Mary Chain’s Jim Reid – but it is also a blast of fresh air. We met Alvvays on a later Guardian list and I liked it, so I'm hoping to like this one as well. Yup, this one was also definitely enjoyable. It's 80s style jangle-pop (think Lush or The Primitives) so it instantly takes me back to the old days, but there's not too many people making that sort of sound these days so it sounds kinda new as well  (although Amazon Music played a Wednesday track after the album and the sound was very similar) . If you like that kinda sound and haven't checked ...

All right, first things first, I've been putting in the work

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Continuing my trip back through the 2017 album charts. 17/03/17 : Gang Signs & Prayer - Stormzy Our third visit with Ol' Stormzy and it's safe to say it's not aimed at me, but I can at least recognise the man knows what he's doing, so I will admire some of it, but definitely not love it. Yeah, it's really not aimed at me, but he certainly knows how to put over a track - he has strong cadence and powerful delivery. He also works well with other artists, although  I wasn't expecting to see Lily Allen pop up. There's a decent amount of variety across the album, but none of it hits the spot for me and 58 minutes was definitely a bit too long for my liking. We're at #4 in the charts this week on his third week of an impressive 67 week run, with it having peaked at #1 in its debut week becoming the first grime album to top the chart - so yeah, we're going to see someone other than Ed at #1 very soon. The rest of the top five are obviously  Ed ,  Rag...

Prends-moi la main, s'il te plaît

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Continuing my trip up  The Guardian's 50 best albums of 2017 . #32 :  New Energy -  Four Tet Kieran Hebden returned in the autumn with this heavenly record, which may have promised fresh things in its title, but instead retreated into the electronica luminary’s past – to gratifying effect. Flowing between house and chill-out music and more, and incorporating Indian influences, Hebden’s sound experiments are a salve whatever the tempo. I've certainly liked some Four Tet stuff in the dim and distant past, but I'm not sure I've ever listened to a whole album of it - I'm expecting to like it though. Yeah, this is right up my street - a generally repetitive underlying musical motif with some pleasant noodly variation on top of it. It certainly won't be for everyone, but it's the sort of thing I like and feels like a fine example thereof - and I think that's all I've got to say. Wikipedia tells us this is his ninth album and it's more up-tempo and list...

We're going backwards ignoring the realities

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Continuing my trip back through the 2017 album charts. 24/03/17 : Spirit - Depeche Mode Our fourth visit with DM and this is another one I've never heard - I'm expecting it to be interesting, if not necessarily loveable. Yup, that's pretty much where we are. I appreciate they've done a good job in moving their music on throughout their career and taking their fans with them, but the problem I have is that I really like their early poppy stuff and their later gothy phase - and I just think they sound tired on their later albums (I guess they are old geezers now!). So whilst there's nothing wrong with this, there's nothing to make me listen to it again as opposed to sticking on one of their earlier best-ofs. We're at #5 in the charts with a new entry this week on the start of a surprisingly brief five week run - they've never really been appreciated here as much as they are elsewhere. The rest of the top five were  Ed Sheeran ,  Drake  (a new entry), Vera ...

Got a mind full of TNT - I need a lunatic just like me

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Continuing my trip up  The Guardian's 50 best albums of 2017 . #35 :  Green Twins -  Nick Hakim As the surreally gruesome album artwork suggests (it features a slime-trailing eyeball admiring itself in the mirror), Hakim’s debut album gives classic soul a psychedelic sheen. Like the memory of a dream, Green Twins is hazily impressionistic, and its subject matter includes a musing that his girlfriend bears a resemblance to God. Another first mention ever for an artist and I'm not entirely sure what my expectations for psychedelic soul are - I suspect it will either terrible or surprisingly bearable. Well, having listened to it, I'd say that psychedelic soul is actually a very good description for it and I found it surprisingly bearable. I was reminded of Prince when he was in one of his laid-back introspective moods - it's quite noodly, but not excessively so. It just has a good mellow vibe to it - but obviously, I'll never listen to it again. Wikipedia doesn't h...