Saturday, December 31, 2016

Ranking the NFL's 2016 Helmets

I was bored a couple of weeks ago, and I was watching the Bears lose a game that I wanted them to lose (got to draft a quarterback this year, need a nice high draft pick in all the rounds), I was like, "you now what's more interesting than this game? Football helmets! I'm going to make a ranking of all of them!" And so I did, and here it is. Please enjoy.


These rankings are of the whole helmet, so clearly, logo plays a factor in this biz.

The Worst Helmet in Football
32. Cleveland Browns

Not much to say about this one. It's one color, it's dumb as hell. Get more creative, Browns. Isn't it bad enough that your fans have to root for this team on the field, but then they don't even get a helmet that can be differentiated from one that would be worn in a football movie that didn't get the rights from the NFL to use any actual team names? I mean, geez, even T.C. Williams had numbers on their helmets in Remember the Titans and they were a high school team! You are a disgrace to the NFL, but you are not a disgrace to the city of Cleveland, because nothing could disgrace that garbage city!


Simplicity (Not in a Good Way)
31. New York Giants
30. Indianapolis Colts


These two are just super boring. The Giants logo is as plain as plain can be, everyone gets that. Blue on Red with lame light gray facemask. And the Colts helmet is just super plain. White helmets are hard to make extra interesting as it is, but the Colts really take it to a new level of boring. You have so many horse-related options to use on your helmet, and all the Indy fans get to look at every week is this horseshoe. When Indy wears their white jerseys and white pants, they look like a picture of football pre-color photography. This Colts helmet would really look a whole lot better with a blue facemask.


I Like the Innovative Spirit
29. Jacksonville Jaguars

This helmet is kind of a shame because the Jags logo is awesome. They incorporate their signature Teal in the Jag's eye, nose, and tongue. If they had picked just one color for the shell, either the gold or the black, it would look great, but this fade just doesn't work. Not to discourage the Jags though, because NFL jerseys in general can use as much innovative thinking as possible. I like what you're thinking Jacksonville, just not quite there with this one. But please keep trying! Your colors are awesome! There is good that can be done here!





Simplicity (Not in a Good Way) Pt. 2: Dyspeptic Boogaloo
28. New York Jets

27. Arizona Cardinals

These are ugly for the same reason as the Colts. Just boring plain white. While the Jets do have the nice green facemask, their logo is so boring and old timey, so I gave the Cardinals the slight edge here. The Cards' logo is pretty cool, I like red birds, and they at least have some edge, some anger on there! Some aggression! The Jets have their name and a football. This raises a bigger question: why do the Jets not have any airplane imagery in any of their team equipment? Winnipeg does it right. For shame New Jersey Jets, for shame!










A Damn Shame
26. Washington Redskins
This Helmet is actually pretty sweet. My high school's colors were Maroon, Gold, and White (Go Porters!), so I have always had a soft spot for that scheme. The gold face mask is a perfect pair with the gold stripe down the middle and the gold highlights in the logo border and the tail feathers. BUT, it's also super racist, and since I fashion myself to be a rather progressive fellow, I didn't think it would be fair to rank this helmet any higher than this spot. Washington needs to change it's team name, and when they become the Washington Warriors, they should go back to using this helmet.



It's A Shape


25. Dallas Cowboys


Look at it. What do I really need to say? The Cowboys' color scheme is mad boring. Dark Blue on Silver. Silver facemask. And a blue star. I will give them credit that this helmet does go well with their uniforms, but, this league has a lot of dynamic helmets, and this just isn't one of them.



They Only Work in Profile


24. Philadelphia Eagles

23. Seattle Seahawks


Looking at those pictures over there, these look like two fine helmets (although that picture of the Seattle helmet is not the greatest, I couldn't find a straight-up profile of that one with a white background). And in fact, they are two fine helmets when viewed in two dimensions as we are doing here. But, unfortunately, football is played in three dimensions, which means that when people watch the Eagles play the Seahawks, they will get angles like this where it looks like the Seahawks have two weird tubes with bird heads at the end wrapping around the back of their heads and the Eagles look like they have angel wings sprouting from their foreheads. Of course, the Eagles will probably never change their helmets, but the Sixers did have a big costume change lately, so there is hope. Seattle just needs to go with a straight up neon helmet and put a picture of a full bird up on that thing.



Nice Colors, Dumb Logo


22. Green Bay Packers


This low ranking is strictly an indictment on the logo of Green Bay. First off, it looks super dated. Second, I am not a huge fan of using just one letter on a helmet, let alone just one letter to represent a city that has two names. Where's the B? It should be GB! Third, this logo has been used by so many other teams (Georgia, most notoriously) that it hardly signifies the Packers in any meaningful way. I do love the colors, though, considering the Pack is the only current Big Four team that uses Green, Gold, and White (RIP Sonics). I am not sure what would be a better logo, but you've been running this G out since 1961, let's all put our minds together and see what we can replace it with! (Totally Biased Side Note: Aaron Rodgers, please die.)





The Cheese Pizza Group


21. Houston Texans

20. Carolina Panthers

19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers


From here on out, I like the rest of the helmets pretty much. The distance between 21 and 10 is much smaller than the distance between 32 and 22. Much like Cheese Pizza, which is delicious but is by no means anything fancy, these three helmets are nice. There's nothing wrong with them, and there's nothing that stands out too much.


The Texans are patriotic, which everyone knows is really boring, and their name is really stupid. But they make up with it with their badass Bull logo (although obviously not the best Bull in the logo business) which helps to distract from the redundancy of their stupid name.


The Panthers have an awesome logo also, with their signature blue and accenting the black fur. I think it's just how blasé the grey/silver color of the shell is. Still, a fine helmet.


Finally, Tampa's helmet is kind of something special, in that it's logo is so effing big! I once again tip my hat to any team who gets innovative with their uniforms, and I love the gigantic flag, I love the pewter shell. I have no complaints about this one. Although I also wouldn't have any complaints if the went back to the creamsicle unis and those beautiful helmets.





Bias Alert!


18. Chicago Bears


I love Blue and Orange. I went to University of Illinois, I root for the Bears. Blue and Orange run through various parts of my body. And this helmet is a beauty. But, in the same vein as my rant on the Packers, I don't much like the how generic the Bears C is. It is identical to the Cincinnati Reds logo, and also seven million different high schools from places like Crestwood and Canyon Springs or whatever. Two very simple solutions to get this helmet to be in the top five: 1) Change the face mask to Orange, 2) Change the C to the Roaring Bear. Boom! Fixed! Next!





The Silver Dynamo


17. Detroit Lions


I am giving the title of the Best Silver Shell helmet to the Detroit Lions. I'm not a huge fan of the silver shell, in the same way that I am not a fan of the white shell; I think it's too plain. Detroit does it right with the black facemask though, and the Lion logo is awesome. This helmet belongs in the Cheese Pizza category, but sometimes you make rankings and they don't fall into neat little piles like you want. Unlike this next group....





White Lightning: The White Shells Glory Story


16. San Diego Chargers

15. Tennessee Titans

14. Miami Dolphins

13. Buffalo Bills


White shells are boring....BUT there are still ways to use them successfully. These four are the best white cream of the white crop. (Wrote that sentence strictly so I could include the term "White Cream" in my helmet rankings.)


First, the San Diego Chargers, with really, a very understated helmet. We've seen these same helmets in dark blue in the past and the white shell is definitely an improvement. Not much to fix here, it's just a simple helmet with a simple logo to go with it.




Second, we have the Tennessee Titans helmet. I like their logo, even if it is just a fancy T. The Titans have awesome colors, and the logo highlights all of them, even the red that they never utilize. I like this helmet on its own, but I also like how well it matches with the uniforms, the light blue accent on the helmet matching the blue on the shoulders of the jersey. We all miss you Steve McNair!


The Dolphins recently made a change to their logo, and honestly, I don't think it really had any effect on the aesthetic of the helmet. So the Dolphin doesn't have its own little helmet anymore? Are we not going to realize that these are the Football Dolphins anymore? Nah. The new logo is sleek. I mean, sure, the last logo was great, and the new one is kind of generic. Whatever, they are equal in my mind. Let's move on. (Dolphins colors are fucking baller, btw).


And at number 13, we have officially reached the best White Shell Helmet, belonging to the Buffalo Bills! I love how big the logo is. The Bills have never really had a bad helmet. But the real winner here is the logo; the Bills logo is just really, really great. You can't go wrong with that beautiful Laser Buffalo. While it seems we may never see a successful Bills team on the field, we will at least always be graced by their ephemeral beauty.





The Human Heads on Human Heads


12. Oakland Raiders

11. New England Patriots


The Raiders are badasses. Their colors are Black, White, and Silver. Doesn't get much cooler than that (take note, White Sox, Black and White ain't enough!). Their logo has been around since the sixties, and it's still cool. Old pirate dude with an old-timey helmet, swords in the back. If we have learned anything from Johnny Depp, it's that we as a people freaking love pirates, and it turns out that I am no different. Don't change nothing bout these helmets Raiders!......(Unless they want to change that facemask to black, but I'm just thinking out loud here.)


Three words for the Patriots' Helmet: Red....Face....Mask. That face mask is so amazing. The logo is half decent as well, and it definitely is improved by being gigantic across the side, but the real winner is the red face mask. It's amazing. It makes this helmet amazing and it makes the rest of their ho-hum jersey repertoire a bit improved. They could do with bringing back the red throwbacks.


Welcome to the Top Ten helmets! These are the creme de la creme. All of these are glorious, and if these teams should feel like they have accomplished anything at all, they at least have beautiful helmets.





The Four Section Helmets


10. New Orleans Saints

09. Pittsburgh Steelers


The Saints and Steelers helmets are very similar: black facemask, logo that is essentially a glorified four point star, beautiful solid color shell. They both utilize their best color combination. I kept trying to put the Saints worse and worse on the list, mainly because the Fleur-de-lis is super boring, but the gold shell is really awesome, so they made it in to the top ten basically just on that.


The Steelers' Helmet, on the other hand, made it in to the nine spot based on a bunch of stuff. The black on black with the facemask and shell works really well. The cool looking logo (with a dumb backstory: the three different colors represent the three minerals in steel) has two colors in it (red and blue) that are not a part of the Steelers color scheme at all, a feature shared only by the Titans (whose red has only ever manifested itself as this fugly red Oilers dedication/abomination) and the Ravens (we'll get to them later). Additionally, black and yellow are just a good combo; something the entire city of Pittsburgh really appreciates.





The Filthy Animals


08. Los Angeles Rams

07. Baltimore Ravens

06. Denver Broncos


The Rams have a pretty great helmet. The color combo of gold and blue is very nice, and I am especially partial to helmets that are not trying to actually be helmets but rather are representing something else entirely. For instance, what we have here are a beautiful pair of golden ram's horns protruding from the skull of every LA Ram. It's glorious, there's two more helmets similar in style to this one, and they are topping the list. Keep up the helmet game Rams (Change everything else. Your team is a fucking joke).


Wow, so while I was doing research on the Ravens helmet, I discovered what their helmets used to look like. I can't even remember this jersey/helmet combo. This is the perfect case study of how a logo centered around a letter can succeed and fail. If you are going to put the first letter of your team name on the helmet, either do it crafty like the Titans did (you can hardly even tell it's a T) or bring an animal into the picture somehow. It worked for the old Broncos' helmets, and it works for the current Ravens configuration. Also, they rock the red eye on the Raven which has nothing to do with their colors. Pointless, but interesting.


Have I mentioned my love of Orange and Blue combos. The Broncos are not shy about jersey and helmet changes. But whatever they do, there's always a good amount of orange being represented and that is definitely the way to go. Football is pretty well set on orange teams, but basketball, get with it! Give us some orange! The Knicks are not enough! Anyway, the Broncos have a baller logo, that horse looks pissed, and he's got those mad neck veins (or she's got, Femanism 4 Lyfe!). Dark blue helmet, awesome logo, dark facemask. It all works.





Various Shades of Red


5. San Francisco 49ers

4. Kansas City Chiefs

3. Atlanta Falcons


The 49ers have what the Saints should be striving for: they use gold with an actual color instead of black. Get smart, New Orleans! If you use gold as the accent to a bolder color, it looks much better than using black as the accent, and gold as the main color. As far as logos go, I will admit that my love of the Niners' helmets does go against my railing about bland letter presentation, but sometimes there are exceptions to the rule, and the color scheme trumps the plainness of the logo's bare bones. Red and Gold, Ride or Die!



At Four, we have another team that has its city's letters in its logo but the Chiefs have something that no other team in football has: A RED SHELL. The red helmet is a thing of beauty. The Chiefs logo is fine, and the white facemask is a good compliment to the logo. As a two color helmet, it has the perfect distribution of the white on the red. It's just a great thing to look at.


The Falcons come it at number three because black helmets with black fasemasks are inherently badass. Also because their logo is really cool. Really, having black, red, and white as your colors, you are putting yourself into a good situation. Just ask the Bulls, or you could ask the Bulls, or if those guys don't tell you about that color scheme, you should go ahead and ask the Bulls. The logo is menacing and has the perfect amount of red in it. What if they had red facemasks, too? That would be amazing.







Almost The Greatest


2. Minnesota Vikings


The Vikings have so much going for them, it would have been near impossible for them to not make the top five. Their name is awesome and totally appropriate to the tundra that they live in. They have a purple shell. And they have been rocking the same helmet for their entire 55 year existence because it is perfect. There's no dumb M on the side, there's no V to tell you they are vikings. There's a damn horn sticking out both sides, and when you see it you know that they are the Vikings, because only Vikings would sit outside in December with no shirt on, rocking the horns, possibly catching hypothermia. Luckily for those dummies, their new stadium has a roof, but still, these are glorious helmets.







The Actual Greatest Helmet (For Now)


1. Cincinnati Bengals


The fact that this helmet is my favorite helmet and the helmet that I ranked worst is basically the exact same helmet, except the Browns have a stripe down the middle, and the Bengals have the tiger stripes, should show how easy it is to fuck up your helmet. The Bengals don't need to tell you that they are from Cincinnati (probably because they don't want you to know or because they are too stupid to spell their own city's name). They just stripe it up and you know what's up: you are probably about to see a ginger throw an interception, but damn will he look fine doing it. That ex-felon playing cornerback, he looks nice in Black and Orange. Damn nice! Keep up the high quality of football wear, Bengals!

Monday, January 18, 2016

Twenty Best Albums of 2015

2015 has come to an end and has left us with so many lasting memories: Cubs got good, Cutler got the respect he deserves, Bulls got rid of Thibs, GOP got stuck with Trump, Star Wars got awesomely dark, Don Draper got his enlightenment, and (most importantly) Jeremy got a new job. With a new job came less commute time (cutting down on my reading input), but also more time to listen to music at work, giving me plenty of time to wade through the musical landscape of 2015 and cherry pick out the albums that resonated with me. Also, with this new job came ample amounts of time off, allowing me to complete this list during January, rather than rolling it out at the beginning of February like I usually do. Jeremy - 1, Procrastination - 0!

Technical Side Note: At the bottom of each album is a Youtube window of my favorite song from the album. The window is supersmall, so you can play it and not watch the video, or you can enlarge the video, or you can not play it at all. It's just there for your reference. Do with it what you will. Well, make sure to ask it's permission first if what you want do is kinda dirty.

Without further ado, here is my list of the Twenty Best Albums of 2015!!!!!

20) Tame Impala - Currents
When I first moved to Chicago in 2010, I was working at the Lincoln Park Zoo, listening to mad amounts of Chillwave. And while I was living in this synth-reverb heaven, I would continuously read music critics bagging on the genre, writing off Chillwave as a fad, shitting on Toro Y Moi, Neon Indian, and Washed Out. Cut to last month, and every end of the year list has the newest Tame Impala album close to the top. Hey Critics! This is Chillwave!!! Not that I'm hating on the music itself, I love Chillwave, and this album does not disappoint. Written and recorded completely by singer Kevin Parker, Currents hits all of the DIY-Chillwave bench marks, fuzzy guitars, soft synths, simple drum beats, random samples and voice mods, but he does it with such a sunny atmosphere surrounding everything that you can't stop yourself from getting hooked. It sounds like a great Toro album, and that is nothing but the utmost compliment.
Song: The Moment


 19) Bjork - Vulnicura
Vulnicura was born from the ashes of the long-time relationship of Bjork and Matthew Barney, which ended in 2013. The heartbreak and pain from the breakup spurred Bjork to write her most personal (and best) album since Vespertine. The songs take their time. This is especially true of the dual epics of Black Lake and Family, which take up eighteen minutes of running time and both of which slowly build until all of the energy is unleashed in a tide of anguish. Those two split the album into two halves: the first pensive and gentle in it's consideration of what caused things to fall apart; the second more aggressive, angry about what this split has done to her psyche but resolute in her will to grow from it and to become stronger. Together these two concepts create an emotional musical experience that vaults Vulnicura into the echelon of Bjork's best.
Song: Mouth Mantra


 18) Slutever - Almost Famous
Almost Famous is a sixteen minute, six song EP from female rock duo, Slutever. It's almost unbelievable that only two ladies can produce so much sound and scuzzy atmosphere. This one's just a straightforward rocker, with grungy guitar snaking its way throughout, and the drums drunkenly stumbling along. With lines like "You're already drunk, it's 10 AM, I predict death's imminent"  are strung throughout, surrounded by reverb at each turn. Six killer cuts.
Song: I Miss America


17) Jamie XX - In Colour
What better way for Jamie XX to follow  up two critically acclaimed albums with his band The XX and a full remix album of Gil-Scott Heron's I'm New Here, than to put out his own dance album full of the simplest beats and the warmest atmosphere. Anyone familiar with The XX will not be surprised by how much energy pulses through this album; while The XX albums were always quiet, there was constantly a soft dance beat being suppressed. There are guest features throughout, including both of his bandmates, but the real gems are when Jamie XX goes straight for the dancefloor jugular, such as album opener Gosh, and the rhythmic Sleep Sound.
Song: Sleep Sound


16) Ought - Sun Coming Down
Ought sounds like a combination of Pinback's guitars, Interpol's rhythm section, led by Ian Curtis. Ought's version of Curtis is guitarist and singer Tim Darcy; his unique sing-speak is certainly the band's calling card, but he's surrounded by a swirl of guitars that churn along with him as he lament's the mundanity of life. This can be heard in the meandering seven minute Beautiful Blue Sky, when Darcy spouts out and repeats niceties such as "How's the family, How's your health been, Beautiful weather today, How's the job, How's the church?" It all comes together in a surprisingly powerful way, that when by the end he declares "I'm no longer afraid to die, for that is all that I have left, I'm no longer afraid to dance tonight, for that is all that I have left" you are right there with him, running to the dance floor to get out one last boogie.
Song: Beautiful Blue Sky


15) Levon Vincent - Levon Vincent
I like electronic music, I do. But I have gotten a little tired of the five minute long guitar solo that is popular EDM at the moment. As such, I end up gravitating towards two different kinds of electronic music: popcentric dance jams and ambient electronic instrumentals. Levon Vincent's self-titled album falls into the latter catagory. If you ever thought that the main beat from Axel F needed to be transposed onto a soft xylophone beat and then sampled over a series of gentle electronics, then this album is for you! Vincent functions as a more accessible Aphex Twin. That is not to say that this album isn't exciting; there are tons of dancey bits, but it really hits its stride when it sounds like Vincent is getting ready to introduce a musical deity, everything builds up until it hits its apex, followed by the gentle let down. I want to swim inside of this album.
Song: Small Whole-Numbered Ratios


14) Bully - Feels Like
The debut LP from Bully sounds like what the new Veruca Salt album should have sounded like. It's full of precise rocking jams with Alicia Bognanno's voice fluctuating from sing song to strained scream with ease. Bully takes the flannel covered chick rock from the nineties, and replicates it in a way that is so loyal that it remains enduring. Bognanno is able to portray such emotion with her voice that it raises up the instrumentals, which could have fit just as well on At the Drive In's debut album as they do here. Bognanno recalls the random details of a past relationship on I Remember: "I remember showing up at your house,
And I remember hurting you so bad" and later "I remember that naked photo, And I remember things getting better" painting the picture in a way that only angry rock music can do.
Song: Reason


13) All We Are - All We Are
This self-titled debut is so damn smooth. The trio move from disco beats to psychedelic freak-outs with all three members singing throughout. Having the female voice of bassist Guro Gikling to offset the falsetto of the two male members keeps a perfect balance leaving all the focus on Luis Santo's hypnotic guitar. This album would be the perfect thing to put on if you have just taken some acid and you are waiting for it to kick in, it'll be a nice marshmallow to land on when things stop making sense (or start making too much sense).
Song: Keep Me Alive


12) Pins - Wild Nights
The second album by British garage rockers, Pins, mixes beauty with the grim just as well as its predecessor. When the beat is slow, singer Faith Holgate befittingly delivers her vocals with a shrug, but Wild Nights really shines when things pick up and Holgate's delivery gets more aggressive like on Oh Lord and  Dazed By You. Pins, I was sick the last time you were in Chicago, please come back soon!
Song: Dazed By You


11) Earl Sweatshirt - I Don't Like Shit, I Don't Go Outside
Earl Sweatshirt sure knows how to make a breakup album sound like a breakup album. I Don't Like Shit... is at once both angry and melancholy, both pensive and rash. Sweatshirt stands out among most young rappers for me because he seems to understand his flaws, and he addresses them when he raps, so he can be boastful and showy but then immediately follow that with an acknowledgement that it was bullshit. His production on this album is of the same vein that was shown on his last album, Doris, but much murkier. The centerpiece is Grief when Sweatshirt spends half the track talking shit about being the best, "I was making waves, you were surfing in 'em" but by the end he ends up focusing on his insecurities and his plights and "Thinking 'bout my grandmama, find a bottle, I'ma wallow when I lie in that." Making sad look bad.
Song: Faucet


10) Viet Cong - Viet Cong
The debut album from the band formerly known as Viet Cong (new name pending) is an epic of winding post-punk, filled with spiky guitar riffs that hypnotize you into a stupor as the distant vocals of Matt Flegel drift in, sometimes barely comprehensible through all the layers of guitars and reverb running throughout but other times brutally aggressive, as if he is yelling though the wave of music that is drowning him out. The seven-track album runs just over thirty seven minutes long, ending in the droning epic Death, at eleven minutes long. Can't wait to hear what comes next from this currently unnamed band.
Song: Continental Shelf


09) The Decemberists - What a Terrible World, What a Wonderful World
The Decemberists have stretched their brand of literary folk into many different variations from album to album. What a Terrible World... finds them at their most radio friendly. No twelve minute songs dedicated to ancient Irish folktales, just four to five minute alt-folk gems. There are smatterings of blues guitar throughout, especially on Till the Water's All Long Gone, a gentle foreboding tune that you could easily imagine hearing at a bar set next to a moonlit Mississippi lake, and on Carolina Low, which consists solely of singer Colin Meloy, his guitar, and the occasional backing vocals to lull you into a resting slumber.
Song: Till the Water's All Long Gone


08) Nellie McKay - My Weekly Reader
Multi-instrumentalist singer-songwriter Nellie McKay has always been a little ahead of her time; her first album being much more mature than her nineteen years of age at the time of its recording. Thus it seems fitting that she went all the way back to the 60's for the source material of her sixth studio album. McKay covers a variety of songs from the 60's highlighting the darker side of that decade, including songs by The Beatles, Frank Zappa, Paul Simon, and Crosby, Stills, & Nash. The entire album is great, with McKay regularly improving upon the production of the original. The standouts of the album are Bold Marauder and Wooden Ships, when McKay gets to explore the psychedelic aspects of late sixties music, hinting at the grander mind-bending that would come in the 70's. "It's hi, ho, hey, I am the bold marauder! It's hi, ho, hey, I am the white destroyer!"
Song: Bold Marauder


07) Beach House - Thank Your Lucky Stars
Beach House did me a real favor this year. My love of them has vacillated from "enjoy" to "extremely enjoy" with every other album they release. So this year, Beach House decided to release two albums, thus eliminating the need for any vacillation. There is a darker tone to Beach House's trademark dream pop, and a seeming return to the more intimate sounds of their earlier works, most specifically it reminds me of 2008's Devotion. Victoria Legrand is the star of the album, her vocals setting the lush atmosphere that the music doesn't. There's even a roaring guitar solo that centerpieces the six minute plus Elegy to the Void. On Stars we get a very grounded Beach House, but one that's just as enjoyable as ever.
Song: The Traveller


06) The Hood Internet - The Mixtape Volume 9
Chicago's top mash-up duo, The Hood Internet, have been churning out quality mixtapes for nine years. And Mixtape Vol. 9 is easily their best work since Vol. 6 came out and changed the lives of three young gentleman sharing an apartment in Rogers Park in 2012. The album opens with a combo of Ratatat and No Diggity, and never stops dancing throughout it's twenty seven cuts. They used my favorite Daft Punk song, Around the World, as a backdrop to I Can't Feel My Face, and buried the rap from Still D.R.E. beneath the monster bass drops of Dillon Francis's Bruk Bruk. Hell, they even managed to salvage the abomination that is Nicki Minaj's Anaconda (worst produced song of all time), by extracting Nicki's raps and throwing them over the celebration beats of Galantis's Peanut Butter Jelly. Best of all, you can download this entire mixtape for free: Go Here.
Song: This is the whole album.


05) Screaming Females - Rose Mountain
It's pretty incredible how much aural presence New Jersey's Screaming Females have for only three members. This is due in no small part to Marissa Paternoster, whose guitar shakes the bones of every song and whose voice is the guiding light that navigates you through the storm. The riff that opens Ripe is so good that it changed the trajectory of the music I was getting into, pushing me back towards a more raw powerful guitar driven sound. This album also has it's truly poppy moments, especially the softest track on the album Hopeless, which is lead by Paternoster's voice rather with the guitar which is barely dragging along behind her. But the album reaches its highest points when it dives deep into the power of the guitar of their leading lady. This album will shred your face off.
Song: Ripe


04) My Morning Jacket - The Waterfall
This is the album that I wish My Morning Jacket would have released after Z. Instead we got the interesting, but wholly uneven, Evil Urges, followed by 2011's watered down Circuital. But The Waterfall returns as the best balance of the floating surrealism that Jim James's voice can help create and the jamming guitar solos of the old times. The range and beauty of the guitar is what really makes this album amazing: in the gentle acoustic of Like A River to the 70's scuzz guitar that gives out to the clearest, most beautiful guitar solo of the album on In Its Infancy (The Waterfall) to the Wanted Dead or Alive-esque intro to Tropics (Erace Traces). This would definitely be a great album to have a couple of drinks to and fall asleep on the beach. The Waterfall is My Morning Jacket at their most lush and beautiful.
Song: Spring (Among the Living)


03) Swervedriver - I Wasn't Born to Lose You
British 90's alt-shoegazers Swervedriver's first album in 17 years sounds like it could have been released immediately after its predecessor. Frontman Adam Franklin's guitar takes the forefront for most of the album, shining melodically through the fuzz of the other instruments. Despite his British heritage, Franklin's voice comes off more as a dreamy-eyed California gear head, softly weaving through the guitar's melodies. It's not often that a band returns after this much time off from the studio with such rejuvenation and fresh material, but the resulting album is a dream pop, shoegaze masterpiece. I often find myself drifting off into the universe that exists inside of the many layers of sound on Red Queen Arms Race, and Lone Star spins around and around, devolving into chaos and then righting itself, "You were always such a Lone Star."
Song: Last Rites


02) Chastity Belt - Time to Go Home
The best rock album of the year belongs to this Washington quartet. Singer Julia Shapiro's laconic delivery does nothing to undercut the angst that burns under each word. In opener Drone, she states "I never expect much from anyone, So I'm never disappointed, and I never have to trust" before lamenting that "he was just another man trying to teach me something." The lyrics and the accompanying music are equal parts genius. Chastity Belt delivers solid indie rock tracks throughout. The longest tracks on the album, On the Floor and Joke, serve as duel centerpieces; the best songs on each side, if we were talking vinyl or cassette. Each starting slow, with Shapiro throwing out apathetic lines like "I'm never satisfied, keep feeding myself lies" and "Nothing's serious, everything's a joke....let's light everything on fire" before each song breaks down into a long instrumental section. On the Floor stays slow, with the guitar slowly running itself out before the song gently ends, while Joke meanders its way into a guitar solo before whipping itself into a frenzy to end the track. These ladies know what's up.
Song: Joke


01) Sufjan Stevens - Carrie and Lowell
This album is fucking heartbreaking. Carrie and Lowell is the musical manifestation of the sadness and confusion that Stevens felt after the 2012 death of his mother: the titular Carrie, who was bipolar, schizophrenic, and mostly absent from his childhood; Lowell is her ex-husband, who currently runs Stevens's record label. The album is a stripped down affair, with only Stevens's voice, guitar, banjo, and the occasional sparse synths, used mostly as background atmosphere. Throughout the album, Stevens expresses his grief in the form of a longing for the lost chances to spend time with his mother and also that she will never know all of the pain that he feels by losing her. There are sections of this album where he embraces suicidal thoughts, as a possible method of dealing with his mother's ghost, but then later in the album he moves past those impulses and ruminates on memories he had with Carrie and Lowell in Oregon during three childhood summers. Fourth of July is the musical final conversation between himself and his mother, and it is endearingly soft and gentle and tragic with lines like "Did you get enough love, my little dove, why do you cry?" and "Make the most of your life, while it is rife, while it is light." Sufjan Stevens has created a beautiful, melancholy masterpiece, and in doing so, my favorite album of the year.
Song: All of Me Wants All of You


If you made it all the way to the end of this little article, then I thank you for reading my musical opinions of 2015. I hope you checked out some tunes on the way down here, and I look forward to hearing what the final year of Obama Camelot will bring us.