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An annual Top 31 countdown of the best albums of the year

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#31 on the 2022 Bacon Top 31 — FKA twigs

January 01, 2023 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Welcome to the fourteenth annual Bacon Top 31. 14! At the completion of this list, I’ll have written a blog post for 436 albums since I began back in 2009. And I still look forward to writing and sharing my top albums, every year. It’s likely because I don’t write throughout the rest of the year. Rather, I listen. My music consumption remains as active as ever: I constantly seek out new albums, and I’m almost always listening to the album I most recently found. The act of collating, ordering, writing about and weighing each against the others as well as the events of the year that led them to be loved by me hits many different pleasure points in my brain.

14 years as an amount of time feels relatively short, until you really start to examine what has transpired in the interim. In 2009, for instance, Barack Obama was inaugurated as the 44th US president and Michael Jackson died; Captain Philips’ cargo ship was boarded by pirates and Captain Sully Sullenberger landed his plane safely in the Hudson River (both stories were recreated as movies with Tom Hanks in the lead, in 2013 and 2016, respectively). In 2009, the iPhone 3GS was released, Facebook had not quite reached 500 million users (they’re now at nearly 3 billion users monthly), and Instagram had not even been invented yet!

That’s enough about the past, let’s get back to the present. For the next 31 days I’ll be counting down my favorite albums from 2022. I hope you read and listen alongside me, confirm or deny your own preferences against mine, and find some new music you hadn’t yet heard. Let’s get to it.

CAPRISONGS by FKA twigs

By the time Tahliah Debrett Barnett, otherwise known as FKA twigs, released her first official recording, 2012’s EP1, at 24, she’d been making a name for herself as a backup dancer in music videos, for the likes of Kylie Minogue, Jessie J, and Ed Sheeran. EP1 had four songs, and a year later, EP2 came out with an additional four songs. Twigs learned early on how to channel the raw energy that comes from dancing in sex-and-image-first videos into her own music: she produced a video for each of those eight songs on the first two EPs, understanding the influence those visuals could have on her listening world.

In 2014 she released her first full length, LP1, which was the #10 album that year. That album had twigs singing in her signature falsetto, softly and intimately as if she’s lying next to you on the same pillow, with her lips next to your ear. CAPRISONGS is much more forward, more bold.

The album is technically a mixtape, but don’t look to me to define the difference between that and an album — I tried to figure it out, but failed. Twigs brings the term to the fore by peppering the album with the sounds of a cassette tape being loaded and a tangible, tactile PLAY button being pushed. Perhaps calling this a mixtape rather than an album is the easiest way twigs could break her own mold. Her falsetto is still there, but so, too, is her naturally-unaffected voice, sometimes pushed through machine modification, sometimes angrily barked. Many guest singers and rappers appear alongside twigs throughout the record: Pa Salieu, Dystopia, Rema, Daniel Caesar, Jorja Smith, and Unknown T all make an appearance. The Shygirl fueled “papi bones” is a personal favorite, with its driving, dance-heavy beat that demands the listener move their body. The Weeknd makes the biggest splash on the album, with the duet “tears in the club” featured in the video above.

fka Twigs is an enigma, a blend of beat-heavy indie pop, avant garde artistry, and primal urge. She flourishes at the intersection of Björk (artistic musical expression), Grimes (indie dance yumminess), and The Knife/Fever Ray’s Karin Dreijer (thrill and horror imagery), and if you like any one of those artists then you’ll feel right at home with CAPRISONGS. Seek it out at the links below, and then check back in tomorrow for something entirely different.

__________________________________________

There are many ways to listen to the 2022 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as they are revealed on the countdown!

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist
  • YouTube Music Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

  • Apple Music Radio Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Playlist
  • YouTube Music Radio Playlist

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 01, 2023 /Royal Stuart
2022, advented, fka twigs, the weeknd, bjork, grimes, the knife, fever ray, karin dreijer andersson
Top 31
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#3 on the 2021 Bacon Top 31 — Japanese Breakfast

January 29, 2022 by Royal Stuart in Top 31

Jubilee by Japanese Breakfast

Despite striving myself on my punctuality, I’m often late to the party. Japanese Breakfast, a band of indefinite size and location fronted by Korean-born, Oregon-raised renaissance woman Michelle Zauner, is a prime example. Their album, Jubilee, that I have so valiantly placed at #3 on my Top 31 for the entirety of 2021, did not enter my audio purview until December 28, 2021. If I’d posted my Top 31 in December, as I used to do until a few years ago, this album would have not been included at all.

Instead, I learned about it thanks to the fantastic KEXP community, who voted this phenomenal third album from the band as their #1 album of the year. I didn’t even hear the live broadcast of that announcement. I read about it a few days later, decided to listen to the album that had struck everyone’s fancy, and was subsequently left trying to figure out how to pick up the pieces of my exploded brain that had scattered around the living room.

This is pop music in its purest, most exciting form. Zauner’s wit, song structure, and bubbly voice – equal parts Grimes and Jenny Lewis – weave a tapestry of pure joy for ten solid songs. The peak of the joy comes at song #2, “Be Sweet,” featured in the video shown above. That chorus – “Be sweet to me baby. I want to believe in you, I want to belieeeeeeve” – is so sickly sweet, I die.

The last song on the album, “Posing for Cars,” is the least pop-like song on the album, but the extended, Doug Martsch-esque guitar solo showcases Zauner’s skills on the instrument. And skilled she is. In addition to having penned three albums with Japanese Breakfast, Zauner is also the director for nearly all of their music videos. And these aren’t some cheap band-performance videos. They’re full-on stories, sometimes strung together into epics. The other two videos from Jubilee are “Posing in Bondage” and “Savage Good Boy,” featuring Micheal Imperioli (best known as Christopher Moltisanti from the Sopranos), and is meant to be a prequel to the story shown in “Bondage.” Zauner has also directed videos for Better Oblivion Community Center, Charly Bliss, and Jay Som.

As if that weren’t enough, she released her first book in 2021. Crying in H Mart: A Memoir debuted at #2 on the NYTimes Best Seller List in April. And it’s now being adapted into a film by Orion Pictures, of which the soundtrack will be supplied by Japanese Breakfast.

Jubilee has been nominated for Best Alternative Music Album, and the band for Best New Artist Grammys (not sure how that works, given that this album is their third as a band). Pitchfork, in their 7.8/10 review of Jubilee, declared 2021 as “Jbrekkie Season,” and I have to agree. This doesn’t feel like the top – this feels like we’re only at the beginning of something huge, like, the birth of a new Michelangelo. I absolutely cannot wait to see what comes next.

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4. A Way Forward by Nation of Language
5. Things Take Time, Take Time by Courtney Barnett
6. Little Oblivions by Julien Baker
7. Valentine by Snail Mail
8. sketchy. by tUnE-yArDs
9. A Very Lonely Solstice by Fleet Foxes
10. Hey What by Low
11. Local Valley by José González
12. Head of Roses by Flock of Dimes
13. The Nearer the Fountain, More Pure the Stream Flows by Damon Albarn
14. Collapsed in Sunbeams by Arlo Parks
15. Loving In Stereo by Jungle
16. Flying Dream 1 by Elbow
17. Screen Violence by Chvrches
18. Blue Weekend by Wolf Alice
19. Mainly Gestalt Pornography by Pearly Gate Music
20. Peace Or Love by Kings of Convenience
21. These 13 by Jimbo Mathus & Andrew Bird
22. Mr. Corman: Season 1 by Nathan Johnson
23. Home Video by Lucy Dacus
24. I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico by Various Artists
25. Siamese Dream by Fruit Bats
26. NINE by Sault
27. Observatory by Aeon Station
28. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania by Damien Jurado
29. A Beginner’s Mind by Sufjan Stevens and Angelo De Augustine
30. Where the End Begins by Knathan Ryan
31. Private Space by Durand Jones & The Indications

There are many ways to listen to the 2021 Bacon Top 31. Subscribe now and enjoy the new albums / songs as the countdown is completed!

Full Album
All albums in their entirety.

  • Apple Music Full Album Playlist
  • Spotify Full Album Playlist

Radio Station
A single song selection pulled from each album.

  • Apple Music Radio Station Playlist
  • Spotify Radio Station Playlist

View all previous Bacon Top 31s

January 29, 2022 /Royal Stuart
2021, advented, japanese breakfast, grimes, jenny lewis, michelangelo, built to spill, michael imperioli
Top 31
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#16 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Sylvan Esso

January 16, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Free Love by Sylvan Esso

We’ve reached the apex of the curve, the middle point of the Top 31, and I couldn’t be happier to announce Sylvan Esso is strongly holding the #16 spot. On its surface, Free Love may sound quite similar to Grimes’ Miss Anthropocene, reviewed yesterday, but listen closer. Grimes’ has a knack for dark and gritty dance music, but where Sylvan Esso truly shines is crisp and clear vocals on top of crisp and clear melodies. There’s absolutely nothing gritty about Free Love.

I mean it when I describe them as “crisp and clear.” Put on some headphones and give the song “Free,” featured in the video above. It’s a very quiet tune, as if Meath is standing right next to you, barely singing directly into your ear. Listen for the movements of her tongue and lips in the recording — it’s all there, and it’s magical.

There are quite a few videos out for the album, which hasn’t been the case for most albums on the Top 31 this year (I assume because Covid made it quite difficult to pull a video crew together). I could have chosen any of these as the signature song to feature with this review:

  • “Frequency”
  • “Ferris Wheel”
  • “Train”
  • “Rooftop Dancing”

Sylvan Esso is two people, Amelia Meath on vocals and Nick Sanborn on the instrumentals, with both of them handling the production. Meath and Sanborn have been playing together since 2014, and they married in 2016. They’re adorable, and so is their music. They’ve been on the Top 31 once before, with their second album, What Now, having hit #19 in 2017. If they keep producing records like this, they’ll be on every Top 31 to come.

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1. Saint Cloud by Waxahatchee
2. Fetch The Bolt Cutters by Fiona Apple
3. Punisher by Phoebe Bridgers
4. folklore + evermore by Taylor Swift
5. Untitled (Black Is) + Untitled (Rise) by Sault
6. RTJ4 by Run The Jewels
7. Shore by Fleet Foxes
8. Serpentine Prison by Matt Berninger
9. The Ascension by Sufjan Stevens
10. Making a Door Less Open by Car Seat Headrest
11. Dreamland by Glass Animals
12. A Hero’s Death by Fontaines D.C.
13. Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez by Gorillaz
14. Mordechai + Texas Sun EP by Khruangbin
15. Introduction, Presence by Nation of Language
16. Free Love by Sylvan Esso
17. Miss Anthropocene by Grimes
18. 3.15.20 by Childish Gambino
19. Women In Music Pt. III by HAIM
20. The Third Mind by The Third Mind
21. Superstar by Caroline Rose
22. Impossible Weight by Deep Sea Diver
23. We Will Always Love You by The Avalanches
24. Ultra Mono by IDLES
25. Visions of Bodies Being Burned by clipping.
26. Thin Mind by Wolf Parade
27. The Loves of Your Life by Hamilton Leithauser
28. Palo Alto (Live) by Thelonious Monk
29. color theory by Soccer Mommy
30. Fall to Pieces by Tricky
31. Quarantine Casanova by Chromeo

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 16, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, advented, sylvan esso, grimes
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#17 on the 2020 Bacon Top 31 — Grimes

January 15, 2021 by Royal Stuart

Miss Anthropocene by Grimes

Grimes, the Vancouver-born digital dance music phenom, was seemingly able to do more than most in 2020. In addition to releasing her amazing fifth album Miss Anthropocene, she: voiced a singing character named Lizzy Wizzy in the highly-anticipated yet disastrously-released video game Cyberpunk 2077; released an hour-long DJ mix under the character’s name called This story is dedicated to all those cyberpunks who fight against injustice and corruption every day of their lives! (which will not make the Top 31); and had a baby boy in May with her boyfriend Elon Musk, which they named “X Æ A-12” but subsequently renamed “X AE A-XII” to be legally recognized under California state law (you may only use characters found in the modern English alphabet when naming children in California, apparently).

Grimes, whose given name is Claire Boucher, is called “c” by her friends because it is the universal symbol for the speed of light. The woman is clearly an AI-based robot trying to pose as a live human being and failing spectacularly. But hey, the music is great, so I say we keep her.

This is the second time Grimes has appeared on the countdown (unfortunately, as her three previous albums to that one escaped my radar until it was too late). Art Angels, her fourth album, appeared on the Top 31 back in 2015 at #12. Where that album was fairly straightforward, Miss Anthropocene has Grimes noticeably stretching her talents into new and different ways. It is very much a Grimes album, with her clear, soft high-pitched vocals spread across gritty driving beats. But there are also distinct guitar and bass-driven strings throughout, with “Delete Forever” (shown above) taking it to her full indie-pop potential.

If you’ve liked her music in the past, then you won’t be disappointed. If you’re new to the magic of Grimes, this is a great spot to dive in — let it be your main course, and the rest of her albums will be there for you when you’re ready for seconds.

P.S. currently, grimesmusic.com links directly a simple Google Doc titled “VOTING TOOLS” containing literal links to resources for registering to vote and learning about candidates and such. I love her.

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1. Saint Cloud by Waxahatchee
2. Fetch The Bolt Cutters by Fiona Apple
3. Punisher by Phoebe Bridgers
4. folklore + evermore by Taylor Swift
5. Untitled (Black Is) + Untitled (Rise) by Sault
6. RTJ4 by Run The Jewels
7. Shore by Fleet Foxes
8. Serpentine Prison by Matt Berninger
9. The Ascension by Sufjan Stevens
10. Making a Door Less Open by Car Seat Headrest
11. Dreamland by Glass Animals
12. A Hero’s Death by Fontaines D.C.
13. Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez by Gorillaz
14. Mordechai + Texas Sun EP by Khruangbin
15. Introduction, Presence by Nation of Language
16. Free Love by Sylvan Esso
17. Miss Anthropocene by Grimes
18. 3.15.20 by Childish Gambino
19. Women In Music Pt. III by HAIM
20. The Third Mind by The Third Mind
21. Superstar by Caroline Rose
22. Impossible Weight by Deep Sea Diver
23. We Will Always Love You by The Avalanches
24. Ultra Mono by IDLES
25. Visions of Bodies Being Burned by clipping.
26. Thin Mind by Wolf Parade
27. The Loves of Your Life by Hamilton Leithauser
28. Palo Alto (Live) by Thelonious Monk
29. color theory by Soccer Mommy
30. Fall to Pieces by Tricky
31. Quarantine Casanova by Chromeo

Subscribe to the 2020 Bacon Top 31 playlist: Apple Music / Spotify
All Top 31s

January 15, 2021 /Royal Stuart
2020, grimes, elon musk
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#4 on the 2018 Bacon Top 31 — Janelle Monáe

January 28, 2019 by Royal Stuart

Dirty Computer by Janelle Monáe

My daughter’s favorite album of her 15-month life is an exceedingly catchy, exceedingly raunchy album by the genius singer, songwriter, actress and producer Janelle Monáe. It just so happens to (thankfully) be one of my favorites of the year as well. Monáe is one of those people who is so insanely talented at everything she does that you kinda want to hate them. Like Justin Timberlake, Monáe can sing, dance, write, act, is drop dead gorgeous and can seemingly do no wrong. What an asshole.

If you haven’t yet heard of Monáe, you’ve probably seen her. She had a couple of great recent supporting roles: one in the Oscar-winning Best Picture of 2016 film Moonlight (her big screen debut), and another in the Oscar-nominated Best Picture of 2016 film Hidden Figures. Before she’d received the script for either of those fantastic movies, Monáe had started writing what would eventually became her third album. Once shooting was done, back into the studio she went, and out came 2018’s Dirty Computer.

The album is a pop music, sex-filled dream. Some of the lyrics within would make someone who’s not been listening to artists like Prince their entire lives blush, such as:

Pynk, like the inside of your... baby
Pynk behind all of the doors... crazy
Pynk, like the tongue that goes down... maybe
Pynk, like the paradise found

or

You know I love it, so please don't stop it
You got me right here in your jean pocket
Laying your body on a shag carpet
You know I love it so please don't stop it

Listening to the album will remind you of Prince, because his signature sound is all over the album. Prince worked with Monáe on the album before his death in 2016, and “Make Me Feel,” shown in the video above, is the climax of their joint effort. Just watch that video, but be warned: while there’s not a naked part in the whole video, it definitely toe’s the line of what’s safe for work viewing. In addition to having Prince’s fingerprints all over it, the album is chockablock with guest stars as well. Brian Wilson, Stevie Wonder and Grimes all make appearances.

Monáe took other cues from Prince, too, releasing Dirty Computer – An Emotion Picture along with the album. At just over 45 minutes, the film is a loose sci-fi story built around the sounds of the album. You can watch the long film and see all the music videos within, or you can watch them individually, too:

  • “I Like That”
  • “PYNK”
  • “Django Jane”

If you’re not familiar with Monáe, you’ve got a lot of catching up to do. Start with listening to this album, then watch out for her next thing. I guarantee, if she hasn’t done it already, she’ll be the next megastar to host Saturday Night Live as both the host and the musical guest, and she will kill it.

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5. The Horizon Just Laughed by Damien Jurado
6. Chris by Christine and the Queens
7. Wanderer by Cat Power
8. Tell Me How You Really Feel by Courtney Barnett
9. The Louder I Call, The Faster It Runs by Wye Oak
10. Ruins by First Aid Kit
11. Cocoa Sugar by Young Fathers
12. Loner by Caroline Rose
13. Big Red Machine by Big Red Machine
14. I’ll Be Your Girl by The Decemberists
15. The More I Sleep the Less I Dream by We Were Promised Jetpacks
16. Joy as an Act of Resistance by IDLES
17. Hell-On by Neko Case
18. Superorganism by Superorganism
19. Living in Extraordinary Times by James
20. Thank You for Today by Death Cab for Cutie
21. Black Panther: The Album by Kendrick Lamar
22. Suspiria (Music for the Luca Guadagnino Film) by Thom Yorke
23. Merrie Land by The Good, the Bad & the Queen
24. Room 25 by Noname
25. WARM by Jeff Tweedy
26. God's Favorite Customer by Father John Misty
27. Vessel by Frankie Cosmos
28. For Ever by Jungle
29. Twerp Verse by Speedy Ortiz
30. Remain in Light by Angélique Kidjo
31. This One’s for the Dancer & This One’s for the Dancer’s Bouquet by Moonface

Subscribe to the 2018 Bacon Top 31 Apple Music playlist
2009-2017 Top 31s

January 28, 2019 /Royal Stuart
2018, advented, janelle monáe, justin timberlake, prince, brian wilson, stevie wonder, grimes
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#12 on the 2015 Bacon Top 31

December 20, 2015 by Royal Stuart

Art Angels by Grimes

And now for the third installment of powerful female electronic pop singers here on the 2015 Bacon Top 31. I’ve been a fan of Grimes since I came across her 2012 album Visions sometime in 2013. You may remember her from this video I posted back in February of that year. Grimes is an alter-ego of Claire Boucher, a pixieish woman from just across the border, in Vancouver, BC. She is a tour de force, having written, recorded, engineered and produced the entire album herself. The only parts on the album not created by Boucher are the guest vocals on two songs, respectively from Grimes’ peers in the strong female-led pop, Taiwanese rapper Aristophanes and American performer Janelle Monáe.

There’s a lot going on within this album. According to wikipedia, Grimes learned how to play the guitar, drums, keys, ukulele, and violin for it. There’s intermittent screaming, and dark lyrics sung with her high-pitched and friendly-seeming vocals throughout, but most of it will get you moving in your seat.

With this album I’m breaking my own rules. Somehow it slipped past me that it didn’t come out until November 6, 2015, which means it technically shouldn’t be on this year’s Top 31. It’s too late now; I couldn’t just slot in some other previously-uncharted album here at #12.

I’m jealous of what Boucher has been able to accomplish by age 27. She is more talented than Madonna and less approachable overall, which makes her all the more intriguing. I can’t wait to see what she does next.

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13. The Horse Comanche by Chadwick Stokes
14. Grace Love & the True Loves by Grace Love & the True Loves
15. Shake Shook Shaken by The dø
16. La Di Da Di by Battles
17. Sky City by Amason
18. What a Terrible World, What a Beautiful World by The Decemberists
19. Untethered Moon by Built to Spill
20. Viet Cong by Viet Cong
21. The Magic Whip by Blur
22. Savage Hills Ballroom by Youth Lagoon
23. Not Real by Stealing Sheep
24. Beat the Champ by The Mountain Goats
25. Gliss Riffer by Dan Deacon
26. Dark Bird is Home by The Tallest Man on Earth
27. Gunnera by Pfarmers
28. Swimmer to a Liquid Armchair by Ricked Wickey
29. To Pimp a Butterfly by Kendrick Lamar
30. Live in Seattle by Moufang / Czamanski
31. High by Royal Headache

What is the Bacon Top 31?
Past years’ Top 31s

December 20, 2015 /Royal Stuart
2015, advented, grimes, aristophanes, janelle monáe, claire boucher, madonna
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#15 on the 2013 Musical Bacon Calendar

December 17, 2013 by Royal Stuart

Reflektor by Arcade Fire

And so it was writ: every three years, as the stars and moon align over Montreal, Quebec, Arcade Fire shall bestow upon the people an amazing indie rock album. This has proved true with uncanny regularity for the past 12 years, and you can look for the next one to come out in 2016, I’m sure.

The band’s last album, The Suburbs, landed at #8 on the 2010 Calendar. At this juncture, I don’t really care to listen to that album any more, but I find myself drawn to their first two albums, Funeral (2004) and Neon Bible (2007), with continued consistency. Don’t let the fact that I’m ranking this year’s album, Reflektor, lower than I ranked their last album even though I no longer wish to listen to that album. I’m fairly certain I like this new album much more than The Suburbs. There just happened to be a lot of good music to come out this year, so Reflektor finds itself at the mid-way point.

This new album has the band in a disco kind of mood. It’s a very danceable album, and if you listen to the album with headphones while sitting at your desk at work, I defy you to keep your foot from tapping and your body from bouncing to the beat. It’s a long album, a two-album set clocking in at 85 minutes. And it’s not without its dogs. But those dogs are easily skippable, and they make the rest of the album shine by comparison.

The video above, for the song “Afterlife,” is gorgeous. You should definitely take the time to watch it. Directed by videographer and photographer Emily Kai Bock, it tells the story of a man and his two sons, all dreaming of the wife/mother they’ve lost. The way the dreams are depicted in the video are particularly moving. Bock has directed other videos I’ve posted in the past, such as this one for Grimes and this one for Grizzly Bear. It‘s extremely satisfying to see all three of these videos in the light of each other, an über context that isn’t there when viewing any one of them alone.

Arcade Fire made it onto the Bacon Review a couple times with other videos recently. If you missed them the first time, go back and check them out here and here.

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16. We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic by Foxygen
17. Lanters by Son Lux
18. Howlin’ by Jagwar Ma
19. Impersonator by Majical Cloudz
20. Dream Cave by Cloud Control
21. Mole City by Quasi
22. Phantogram by Phantogram
23. Julia With Blue Jeans On by Moonface
24. Uncanney Valley by The Dismemberment Plan
25. Event II by Deltron 3030
26. Wise Up Ghost by Elvis Costello and The Roots
27. Us Alone by Hayden
28. Pure Heroine by Lorde
29. Shaking the Habitual by The Knife
30. False Idols by Tricky
31. Let’s Be Still by The Head and the Heart

2012 Musical Bacon Calendar
2011 Musical Bacon Calendar
2010 Musical Bacon Calendar
2009 Musical Bacon Calendar

December 17, 2013 /Royal Stuart
2013, advented, arcade fire, grimes, grizzly bear, emily kai bock
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February 16, 2013 by Royal Stuart

I saw this Grimes video a few months ago, but failed to post it then. Totally awesome video. Still not sure I’m either annoyed at Grimes or very much into Grimes. One of the two.

February 16, 2013 /Royal Stuart /Source
watched, grimes
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