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Itâs late July already, so letâs review: Pusha Tâs razor-sharp Daytona led Kanye Westâs Wyoming summer of G.O.O.D Music, while Valee became the labelâs bonafide breakout star. Ariana Grande, pop music Mary Poppins, alighted with a prismatic umbrella and a spoonful of Sweetener. Stoner metal gods Sleep blessed 4/20 with their signature brain-melting, eye-glazing sludge. Tierra Whackâs imaginative, immersive 3D song creations and Ella Maiâs heartfelt retro-R&B stylings earned each a place on an international stage. Shawn Mendes coaxed us to cash in all our airline miles for just one night; Snail Mail only asked for honesty. Rising California rap crew SOB x RBE got âAnti Socialâ and super popular. Pop hopeful Kim Petras declared a âHeart to Breakâ and wore it on her sleeve. As we round up our favorite tracks weâve heard this year, weâre highlighting a resigned Courtney Barnett, a reenergized Janelle MonĂĄe, musicâs low-key MVP Ty Dolla $ign, dark horse songwriter Westerman, and two acts whose ambitious, accomplished new projects landed them two slots apiece. Plus, âNice for Whatâ and âIn My Feelingsââbut only the first one is by Drake. Here, according to critical judgement, uncritical passion, and a few last-minute decisions, are the 51 best songs of 2018 so far.
51. Post Malone ft. Ty Dolla $ign, âPsychoâÂ
Post Maloneâs âstyleâ is now officially approved by Karamo Brown of Queer Eye, which Iâm pretty sure means tide patterns are going to be thrown out of whack and satellites are going to fall from the sky. If you think Postyâs dirtbag aesthetic is everything the Fab Five would disapprove of, maybe the secret to understanding is his current inescapable #1 hit âPsycho.â The lethally addictive, skeletal balladâarchitected largely by featured guest by Ty Dolla $ign, itâs safe to sayâis an aural drop of CBD oil on a breezy summer morning. Unlike the thick-set trap elegy âRockstar,â Postâs megahit of last year, âPsychoâ preserves the featherweight nursery-rhyme appeal of his breakout single âWhite Iverson.â Instead of that songâs governing basketball metaphor, âPsychoâ has Post babbling semi-cogent phraseology of a different sport: âCome with the Tony Romo for clowns and all the bozos.â Lovingly engineered records like this one make it hard to stand ideologically opposed to Postâs sound, which seems to only be getting more popular. He may mostly be a savvy amalgamator of better work by previous artists. But at least he cleans up well.âWinston Cook-Wilson
50. Mount Eerie, âNow Onlyâ
Last year, Mount Eerie songwriter Phil Elverum marked the passing of his wife, the artist and musician GeneviĂšve CastrĂ©e, with the release of A Crow Looked at Me, an intimate 11-track album of songs about the fragility of life in the face of unforgiving circumstances. In the aftermath of the release, Elverum continued to write and tour extensively, eventually releasing a second collection of songs that, despite their similarly heartbreaking, stream-of-conscious composition, revealed a newfound lightness and acceptance amid chaos. The second LPâs title track, âNow Only,â opens with a singular image of the songwriter consumed by grief, only to laugh at himself a little for feeling so self-involved. Over optimistic major chord piano runs, Elverum confronts the profound banality of his solipsism, asking again if his devastation really is worth more than its merchandise. âThese waves hit less frequently / They thin and then they are gone,â he sings, describing the strangeness of a festival set billed alongside Skrillex and Father John Misty for âa bunch of young people on drugs.â Thereâs a candor in the callousness with which he sings here, and for the first time in over two years of meticulous documentation, it really feels like Elverum has found a small glimmer of peace. Like its title suggests, âNow Onlyâ is as much an examination of the present as it is apprehension toward what the future holds.âRob Arcand
49. Andre 3000 ft. James Blake, âLook Ma No HandsâÂ
On Motherâs Day, Andre 3000 quietly uploaded to SoundCloud the first music ever formally billed to him as a solo artist. Unexpectedlyâor notânone of it featured his legendary rapping. One of the two tracks didnât even have vocals, with the Outkast member picking up bass clarinet instead. âLook Ma No Handsâ is an unedited jam between Andre Benjamin the clarinetist and James Blake the pianist, both adept players, that lasts almost 20 minutes. An imperfect collage, it moves through a staggering succession of promising and unusual musical motives, with some inspired fumbling filling in the blanks. There are moments that sound like French classical music, fractured hard bop, Coltrane-like modality, Eric Dolphy skronk. Itâs the sound of two omnivorous, wildly intuitive and talented musicians just having a good time, then uploading and serving their unmediated ramblings directly to a bewildered public. âLook Ma No Handsâ is an impressive musical achievement, but also a welcome instance of a musician using the unique benefits of internet distribution for goodâto form a spontaneous close connection between artist and audience.âWCW
48. Nicky Jam, J Balvin, Osuna, & Maluma, âXâ (Remix)
Nicky Jam and J Balvinâs âXâ remix adds Puerto Rican crooner Ozuna and Colombiaâs self proclaimed âpretty boy dirty boyâ Maluma for a steamier take on their club-ready single. The result is four minutes of infectious reggaeton rhythms, bright air horns, and tropical thumps to keep your hips occupied. Ozuna opens the song, honeyed rap slithering around airy keys before the drum-heavy heartbeat kicks in and accelerates into a contagious Caribbean pulse. J Balvinâs deeper, rougher vocals come in second, contrasting Ozunaâs brighter sound and highlighting the songâs lustful tone. âI want you and I wonât neglect you,â he declares cheekily in Spanish. But the song climaxes with resident reggaeton heartthrob Maluma, whose sultry sighs echo what everyoneâs thinking: âWhat the hell is happening? / You asked for the remix, Iâm giving it to you here,â he coos, offering up flirtatious vows before Nicky Jam reenters to return the chorus to the dance floor. Netherlands-based DJ duo Afro Brosâ production comes down on the minimal side, but in such a talent-stacked field, the simplicity works.âIsabella Castro-Cota
47. Florence and the Machine, âHungerâ
Florence Welchâs grand baroque gestures can be a lot in high doses, which is why the distilled subtlety of âHungerâ works so well. From the confessional opening lines onward, Welch comes in swinging, landing her syllables with the weightless impact of shadowbox punches. The story of her teenage eating disorder was, in Welchâs words, ânever meant to be a song,â and out of consideration for others who have struggled similarly, sheâs declined to discuss the backstory to âHungerâ further. Itâs the responsible choice, of course, and a way of driving home something the song accomplishes more effortlessly: The recognition that certain pain may leave no obvious physical scar; that no matter how far youâve come, youâll see it still when you check the rearview mirror; and that youâll never stop seeking whatâs outside until you find it in yourself.âAnna Gaca
46. Jay Rock, Kendrick Lamar, Future, & James Blake, âKingâs Deadâ
What is there to say about âla-di-da-di-da, slob on mi knobâ that hasnât already been said? Some songs are born memes and some songs have memes thrust upon them, but âKingâs Deadâ came fully formed. Itâs not just that it has memorable moments: On this team-up, nearly every featured artist gets their own catchphrase. Jay Rock has âI gotta go get it / I gotta go get itâ; Kendrick Lamarâs ad-libs spawned âand I freaked itâ; Future needs no introduction. The would-be mess works because of Teddy Walton and Mike Will Made-Itâs disproportionately tough beat, a perfect complement to the zany spectacle of an introspective Pulitzer winner, an ever-prolific chart-topper, and an underrated member of the TDE arsenal one-upping each otherâs eccentricity. The extended single version adds more Lamar in the second half, rapping from the point of view of Black Panther antagonist TâChalla in trademark scorched-earth flow: âFuck integrity / Fuck your pedigree / Fuck your feelings / Fuck your culture.â If itâs not nearly as meme-heavy, the duality between the initial antics and the straight-ahead bars at the end ensure âKingâs Deadâ will be worth hearing long after internet forgets.âJoshua Copperman
45. Kim Petras, âHeart to Breakâ
On âHeart to Break,â Kim Petras makes new wave music for the YouTube set, filtered through two decades of punchy Max Martin-style pop. Over rubbery bass and plastic drums, her hook captures the sense of giddy unreality that accompanies any crush worth having. âItâs describing the part of you that is about to make a mistake and knows youâre making a mistake,â Petras told Billboard in an interview about the song. âBut you donât care because you still want to jump in and do it.â Sure, itâs not exactly a revolutionary theme, but some things are timeless for a reason.âEzra Marcus
44. Joan of Arc, âPunk KidâÂ
Youâll never forget having lice as a kid: Bugs, body horror, and shame is one of those enduring combinations. On âPunk Kid,â and throughout Joan of Arcâs latest album 1984, Melina Ausikaitis approaches such traumas of youth with real compassion and the quiet wisdom of experience. âAll my life, Iâve been eating shit / Look at me, Iâm a real punk kid,â she intones, a satire and an epitaph: Compared to what weâre dealing with now, how small were the perceived slights and inequities that first drove us to embrace the concept of âalternative?â And where would we be without them? Wonky bass and synthesizer atmospherics curve around gentle shaker percussion as Tim Kinsella plays piano like heâs soundtracking a documentary about supersonic flight. âPunk Kidâ isnât a punk song, not with this few guitars. Itâs something more serene, like a hymn.âAG
43. SOB x RBE, âAnti SocialâÂ
âAnti Socialâ is the most immediate single on Vallejo rap group SOB x RBEâs 2018 statement of purpose Gangin. It couples midnight disco synths out of Caliâs rich tradition of plush rap production with a punishing manic kick drum that belongs on a No Limit record. All four SOB x RBEsâDaBoii, Yhung T.O., Slimmy B, and Lul Gâattempt to dominate the high-BPM backbeats, and the roughshod nature of the results are the entire excitement of this music. When they have the right hook to anchor them, these four bullheaded, single-minded young kids feel unbeatable as a unit.âWCW
42. Camp Cope, âThe OpenerâÂ
An infuriated but undefeated underdogâs protest of male entitlement in music, Camp Copeâs âThe Openerâ was technically released last November, but it hit the coffin nail on the head like no other song this year. Itâs the same old storyâemotional immaturity, patronizing bullshitâtold with sharply observed details from guitarist and singer Georgia Maq. The downcast, couldnât-be-simpler bass-and-drum accompaniment is practically guaranteed to rile up the âanyone couldâve written thisâ dolts. But you didnât, did you?âAG
41. Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, âTalking Straightâ
âLay back, sink in / Youâre not talking straight,â Joe White of Aussie indie-rock band Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever counsels on the chorus of âTalking Straight,â a sparkling highlight of their debut full-length Hope Downs. Considering the way the song spins between vivid observation, romantic yearning, and philosophical inquiry, White might be directing those lines at himself. A faded blue coupe pulls up to a house, electricity illuminates the rain outside the window. He feels hopeless, but heâs nearly out. Now heâs even deeper down the well. The narrator is all over the place, but the music is not: effortlessly melodic, pushing forward with single-minded drive. The most memorable lines are also the most desperate, coming just before he tries in vain to calm down: âI wanna know where the silence comes from / Where space originates.â Is it an exclamation of dread at the vast emptiness of the universe, or just some anxiety over an unanswered text? When youâve fallen this hard, they can feel like the same thing.âAndy Cush
40. Janelle MonĂĄe ft. ZoĂ« Kravitz, âScrewedâ
Janelle MonĂĄeâs âScrewedâ featuring ZoĂ« Kravitz is a reckless and frisky protest packaged as a sex-positive anthem. The shadow of her late mentor Prince hovers over the âKissâ-inspired guitar riffs in the intro before descending into the steady, funk-driven wave that permeates the rest of the track. âWeâll funk it all back down!â MonĂĄe and Kravitz proclaim in every sense of the word, over a backdrop of synth loops, laughs, and futuristic beats light enough to permit a listener to digest the heavier side of the lyrics. âI hear the sirens calling / And the bombs are falling in the streets / Weâre all⊠screwed!â As the song slowly descends into Monaeâs rap solo denouncing the patriarchy, weâre reminded of the meaning behind her words and the truth of her world in general. The world is a shitty place, so we might as well dance.âICC
39. Kali Uchis ft. BIA, âMiamiâ
Catch Kali Uchis on âMiamiâ flipping Morrissey into Calabasas: âI was looking for a job and then I found one / He said heâd want me in his video like âBound 1âČ / But why would I be Kim? I could be Kanye,â she taunts. With this kind of confidence, whoâs to question her claim to move at light speed? Uchisâs videography speaks to her chops as a visual artist, but the witheringly sultry âMiamiâ evokes cinematic glamour all by itself. Girl-group coos rub up against ropey, trunk-rattling bass; a tendril of noir surf guitar curls through air thick with exhaust and smoke. Riding shotgun is Boston-based rapper BIA, the tough but sophisticated sidekick to Uchisâs self-made hustler fatale: âNever get it twisted, ainât too bougie for Corona.â Picture them both, peering over the tiniest cat-eye sunglasses through the windshield of a cherry-red convertible, sliding into the sunset. As the music fades, you can practically see âThe Endâ scrawled in lipstick at the top of the frame.âAG
38. Sons of Kemet, âMy Queen Is Harriet TubmanâÂ
âMy Queen Is Harriet Tubman,â by the jazz-inflected instrumental quartet Sons of Kemet, opens with a flurry of percussion that does not abate for the next five minutes. It is a dazzling indication of their loyalties, which lie with rhythm above all else. Sons of Kemetâs grooves are as deep and wide as the African diaspora itself, drawing on soca from Trinidad, hip-hop from New York, second-line bands from New Orleans, grime from their London hometown. This frenetic single is at its most dazzling when saxophonist and bandleader Shabaka Hutchings zeroes in on a single repeated low note, making it new with each articulation. The gestureâs thrilling simplicity points to James Brown as yet another unexpected lodestar. Hutchings and his band have learned well from one of the funk godfatherâs greatest teachings: horn, human voice, it doesnât matterâevery instrument can be a drum.âAC
37. Jacques ft. T-Pain, âRodeoâ
Much current R&B is content to offer stodgy outdated sounds for older audiences, or to superficially update them with cool atmospheric production for younger ones. Jacquees is somewhere in the middle. He wears his influences on his sleeve, a one-man Pretty Ricky singing over the trap beats of today. It might feel like a cheat to enjoy his music: Are you really enjoying Jacquees, or just the memories of the artists he reminds you of? But that question sells him short. Jacqueesâs steamy R&B is well-crafted enough to survive on its own merit, even if it doesnât push boundaries, and âRodeoâ is one of his strongest offerings yet. A devilish, writhing affair that is open in its longing for carnal pleasure, it reaches new heights when T-Pain bursts through the walls, playing the lothario to Jacqueesâs sensitive lover. The ending of âRodeoâ pits the two in friendly competition, trying to outdo each other with ethereal octave runsâa 45-second microcosm of the passion that courses through the entire song.âIsrael Daramola
36. Ella Mai, âBooâd Upâ
One of the best songs of 2018 didnât even come out in 2018. Ella Maiâs sugary pop ballad about true love took a year before it finally inexplicably connected with peopleâone of the signs of a truly powerful single. âBooâd Upâ is infectious and incredibly earnest, with its irresistible refrain of âfeelings, so deep in my feelingsâ that echoes a yearning heartbeat as its chorus. It has the hallmarks of the best pop songs: a glossy surface that allows a young, talented singerâs voice to glide and swerve through and an identifiableâif a bit embarrassingâfeeling of the overwhelming nature of teenage angst. Ella Maiâs unadulterated honesty feels singular in a way that you canât help but respond to strongly every time.âID
35. Shawn Mendes, âLost in Japanâ
If you were born before the 1990s, you may have only vague associations with the name Shawn Mendes, none of them particularly good: painful earnestness, social media stardom, hard-strummed acoustic guitar, a faint whiff of Jason Mraz. With âLost in Japan,â Mendes would like you to forget about those things for three minutes, along with anything else that might be troubling you. A luminous piece of funk-pop with a patently unbelievable premise, it tells the story of a transcontinental booty call to a woman in the Land of the Rising Sun. Shawnâs problem is that heâs not in Japan with her, but âa couple hundred miles away,â which would theoretically place him in either Korea or far southeastern Siberia. Judging by the music, heâs somewhere closer to Los Angeles or Miami, lounging poolside. âLost in Japanâ is a â70s throwback with lots of negative space and fizzy contemporary touchesâthe kind of single Calvin Harris was shooting for on Funk Wav Bounces Vol. 1, but with an effortless melodicism that record mostly couldnât muster. (âSlide,â Funk Wavâs lone transcendent moment, is an obvious touchstone.) For Mendes, convincing adults that heâs an artist worth caring about is a daring proposition. But if he really has the audacity to to board a plane to Tokyo just because heâs horny in the middle of the night, maybe heâs bold enough to pull this one off too.âAC
34. Mitski, âNobodyâ
As ambitious as her lyrics are, Mitski Miyawaki has really always been in dialogue with the electric guitar. Her unfettered embrace of all of indie rockâs most familiar sounds, structures, and dynamics has felt like a corrective gesture, a way of inverting male assumptions about the instrumentâs storied role in wooing women into a reclamation of ability, identity, and the baseline potential for something more. But on âNobody,â the songwriter largely abandons the guitar, masking brutally lonely lyrics in sparse piano, disco hi-hats, and the glossy surface of a pop song. Like a growing canon of Mitski songs, âNobodyâ reflects the frustration of feeling too much in the face of a chaotic and indifferent world. âIâve been big and small and big and small again and still nobody wants me,â she sings, crying out from behind the danceable veneer. Growing more and more catchy with each phonemic repetition, âNobodyâ gets existential without ever slowing down.âRA
33. Vein, âVirus://Vibranceâ
âVirus://Vibranceâ contains one of the most surprising musical moments of the year: a charging riff for the metalheads gives way to a breakbeat ripped straight from vintage Metalheadz. Vein arenât the first band to fuse hardcore with drum and bassâplease enjoy Atari Teenage Riot facing off against Berlin cops at a protest in 1999âbut theyâre interested in more than simple juxtaposition, an omnivorous approach characterized by the lead single from their vicious debut Errorzone. They use every trick in the book to make you feel uncomfortable and afraid. The grinding guitar tone sounds like chewing on tinfoil. The breakbeats summon cyberpunk dystopia (and memories of nu-metal white dreadlocks). Even the albumâs gory art, showing a scalpel bearing down on an eyeball, is designed for maximum unease. It adds up to a disturbing, visceral experience, summarized in one lyric: âIf you canât relate, stay the fuck away.ââEM
32. Iceage, âTake It Allâ
The main argument against Danish post-punks Iceage is that they rarely engage emotionally, preferring indifferent posturing. On âTake It All,â the band faces this unwillingness to be vulnerable with some of their most affecting music to date. As Elias Bender RĂžnnefelt witnesses âthe death of the West,â he internally debates taking solace in a âsmall and frail deityâ: âThe last thing I ever wanted to see was these brand new sparkles / Coming from your ever-loving goddamn eyes.â Messy, theatrical instrumentation expands on the fear of fully, sincerely giving oneself over to another. Any possible sonic anchor (the drum beat, the hammering piano) is buried under further layers of noiseâand because the recording was all-analog, nothing is snapped and quantized against a grid or overdubbed to oblivion. While studio trickery would be understandable for a song so grandiose, the off-kilter performances make âTake It Allâ feel more urgent. Yet despite the increased scope and the newfound emotional depth, RĂžnnefeltâs vocals remain as detached and mysterious as ever. Even when confessing to your own vulnerability, if you believe âthis world is a crime,â youâll want to keep your guard up.âJC
31. Tierra Whack, âFlea Marketâ
With her debut Whack World, Philadelphiaâs 22-year-old rising star Tierra Whack flipped all received ideas about ambitious albums on their heads. Rather than some sprawling three-disc set, itâs 15 songs in 15 minutes, each one proving just how much complexity, wit, and emotional depth can be packed into 60 seconds flat. The standout is the soulful âFlea Market,â a miniaturized version of Aaliyah or Brandyâs expressions of longing, but with a melodic rap style all Whackâs own. She spends Whack World jumping into different personas, from mush-mouthed Soundcloud rap to Chance the Rapper-style whimsy to cartoonish country twang. On âFlea Market,â sheâs tender and needy, but still manages to sound breezy, like sheâs not really sweating anything at all. With only a minute to get your feelings out, why spend any time worrying?âID
30. Deafheaven, âYou Without Endâ
âYou Without Endâ doesnât really sound quite like anything else from Deafheaven. The band is known for a singularly anthemic blend of black metal, shoegaze, and post-hardcore, combining these guitar-oriented subgenres into a light-drenched collage that is greater than the sum of its parts. Theyâve always approached the roaring force of history with a specific vision for their craft, but on âYou Without End,â the band extends this vision beyond their bibliographic beginnings into something else entirely. The seven-and-a-half minute opener of their fourth album Ordinary Corrupt Human Love starts with the sort of haunting, minor-chord piano arpeggios that wouldnât sound out of place on an Adele record, with a prominent slide guitar and spoken word passage that calls to mind Spiritualized. Against this steady Americana, frontman George Clark eventually dives into a howling vocal line, while distorted guitars well up with face-melting intensity around him. Part Smashing Pumpkins rock opera, part John Oswald studio experiment, âYou Without Endâ shows continued growth from a band now as committed to conceptual rigor as it is to Earth-shaking rock music.âRA
29. Ariana Grande, âNo Tears Left to Cryâ
If Ariana Grande had retired from music after last yearâs deadly attack in Manchester, no one would have faulted her. Instead she did what seemed impossible, and crafted a musical reintroduction thatâs fresh and cathartic without feeling flip. With its Max Martin-masterminded crystalline synths and submerged bass, âNo Tears Left to Cryâ is a strange, self-contained Möbius strip calculated for the streaming economy, where prevailing wisdom holds that music should consist mostly of its catchiest parts. One has the sense the track might begin at any given point and continue on three and a half minutes from there. But self-soothing music ought to have low barriers, or itâs no good at all. âNo Tearsâ isnât for crying but for the refresh that happens after, the moment we leave our burdens behind and start pickinâ it up.âAG
28. Amen Dunes, âBelieveâ
âLife goes on and this just a song,â sings Amen Dunesâ Damon McMahon toward the beginning of âBelieve,â vowels in his throat, a weirdo Dylan balladeer balanced at a wobbly angle. The build comes in slow, creeping, heavy-breathing, and the words begin to curl back his lips, the stubborn sneer of a man possessed: IâM NOT DOWN. In sinuous advance the band dig into a sultry swampbound tangle, a watery echo of âSweet Janeâ steaming like some succuban hellpool nightmare, a rank luscious doom, the sound of sex and older terror, a near perfect song.âAG
27. Playboi Carti ft. Chief Keef, âMileageâ
Die Lit, Atlanta rapper Playboi Cartiâs hypnotic sophomore album, finds pop clarity on the Chief Keef collaboration âMileage.â Over a thrumming, near-jazzy walking bass, âMiley Cyrusâ and âmollyâ are seeds from which the rest of the song germinates, phoneme by phoneme. Carti rattles off what sounds like a reading from Twitterâs trending terms bar (âKendall, Kylie, Adidas dealâ), while Keef delivers cogent punchlines that clarify the songâs central metaphor: âShe got more mileage than a car / And she just pull up to the spot.â On this spaced-out piece of modern art, Carti pulls off a mean feat: making Keef, his most crucial progenitor, sound positively traditionalist by comparison.âWCW
26. DJ Koze, âPick Upâ
DJ Kozeâs greatest skill might be his ability to zoom in on a perfect loop, giving it new depth and texture with every repetition. On the lead single from his latest album Knock Knock, Koze transforms a louche snippet of electric guitar and a few words from Gladys Knight into one of the yearâs most essential dance tracks. The endearingly goofy music video gives play-by-play commentary, summing up Kozeâs magic in a few phrases: âDisco sample slowly gets hypnotic⊠Brain realizes song consist only of these few elements⊠Deep feeling of happiness.ââEM
25. Pusha T, âCome Back Babyâ
Pusha Tâs âCome Back Baby,â a gloriously sleazy ode to drug dealers and the users who keep them rich, is the high point of Daytonaâboth in terms of Pushaâs presence and the production from Kanye West. Pusha takes a victory lap over earth-shaking 808s and a sermonic sample about choosing Jesus over drugs, deployed here with more than a little irony. âCocaine soldiers, once civilians / Bought hoes Hondas, took care children / Let my pastor, build out buildins,â he raps, fancying himself a modern Robin Hood. It can feel a little wrong to love a song like this, because you canât have a drug empire without a few tragic customers. Push nods their way too, with mentions of the glass pipes and burnt spoons they use to get high. He knows the costs of this life, but heâs not going to stop valorizing it. In the end, itâs not so different from the drug trade: As long as the product is this good, he knows weâll keep coming back.âID
24. Courtney Barnett, âCharityâ
âYou must be having so much fun / Everythingâs amazing,â Courtney Barnett sings on âCharity,â her voice slick with sarcasm. Is Barnett sneering at a lover, or herself? The next line provides a clue: âSo subservient, I make myself sick.â Either way, when she leans on the distortion pedal and lets off a squall of acid licks, it feels personal. There are few guitarists capable of squeezing so much feeling out of their axe, and here, the Australian songwriter shreds with the energy of someone flipping the bird out the window of a speeding car. The term âkiss-offâ is too gentle; this song is more like a âspit-on,â a testament to the joys of being mean as hell.âEM
23. Park Jiha, âAll Soulsâ Dayâ
At first, you might mistake Park Jihaâs debut solo album Communion for something like ambient music. The Korean composer and multi-instrumentalist has an affinity for the simple pulses and ringing chords of midcentury American minimalism. Her palette mixes traditional instruments like the double-reed piri and yangguem hammered dulcimer with jazzy western ones like saxophone and vibraphone, arranged into sonorities that shimmer in the air. But thereâs also a wildness to her playing, especially of the piri, whose edgy oboe-ish timbre she wields like a blade. The nine-minute âAll Soulsâ Dayâ begins placidly, with a lone yangguem that slowly expands into a latticework of mallets and winds. At the halfway point, the tension reaches its breaking point, and Jihaâs piri enters the fold with a scream. Her solo sounds more like Albert Ayler than anything youâd hear in a therapistâs waiting room or a âchill vibesâ Spotify playlist, and it brings âAll Soulsâ Dayâ to a peak that remains cathartic no matter how many times you hear it. As soothing as Jihaâs music can sometimes be, it fiercely refuses to settle into the background.âAC
22. SOPHIE, âIs It Cold in the Water?â
As an opening statement, âItâs Okay to Cryâ proved SOPHIE had a lot of ground left to cover. Unlike the delirious bubblegum rush of her early, largely-anonymous singles, âCryâ was soft and heartfelt, with artfully sculpted lyrics that looked inward with a forgiving grace. For the first time, the producerâs voice and image were central to her creative output, and as much as she racheted up the intensity of every club-ready, noise-drenched banger on Oil of Every Pearlâs Un-Insides, the album also revealed a newfound interest in the softer, more delicate side of electro-pop. A transitional moment on Un-Insides, âIs It Cold in the Water?â blends this duality of approaches into an uncanny cocktail of skull-rattling, synth-heavy bliss. With tense, trance-era arpeggios peeking out through a low-pass filter, the song builds to insurmountable heights, eternally delaying the satisfaction of a resolute beat drop. Guest vocalist Mozartâs Sister adds a spectral touch with lyrics that describe an icy venture into the unknown as the pressure builds with every painstaking synth pulse. If Oil of Every Pearlâs Un-Insides is best described as a rollercoaster, âIs It Cold in the Water?â might just be its biggest climb.âRA
21. Sleep, âMarijuanautâs Themeâ
How do you reintroduce yourself after a 20-year slumber? On the first proper song of The Sciences, Sleepâs first album since their 1998 masterpiece Dopesmoker, the stoner metal icons answer by indulging all of their most charming and distinctive tendencies more heavily than ever before. âMarijuanautâs Themeâ cuts straight to the chase, with a sample of a massive bong rip followed immediately by a guitar tone that could obliterate brain cells. âInitiate burn, never to return,â Al Cisneros sings with heavy-lidded affect. âA distant earth fades receding.â If that sounds like kitsch worthy of Spencerâs Gifts to you, youâre exactly not wrong, but youâve probably never heard Sleep. When guitarist Matt Pike brings âMarijuanautâs Themeâ to a peak with a firebreathing solo, and Cisnerosâs bass slides fluidly behind him, this much is clear: though Sleep may have a sense of humor, their music is anything but a joke.âAC
20. Parquet Courts, âFreebird IIâ
By all appearances, âFreebird IIâ should be a joke. Thereâs the fact that itâs called âFreebird II,â for starters, and the fact that Parquet Courts introduce it with a smattering of piped-in applause and announcement from singer/guitarist Andrew Savage: âThis next oneâs called âFreebird IIâ!â But instead it is the emotional centerpiece of Wide Awake, their fierce and funky latest album. Savage ditches jittery sermonizing and shifts into the open-hearted classic rock mode that has always been the secret ingredient of his bandâs appeal, sounding wistful but grounded as he recounts his relationship with his troubled mother. (Sheâs âstruggled with drugs and been incarcerated and struggled with housing and things to do with that,â according to a recent interview.) The refrain is uplifting with a touch of sadness: âFree, I feel free / Like you promised Iâd be.â Parquet Courts are always a political band, even when theyâre singing about their personal lives. Wide Awake is concerned in part with age-old American questions, like the supposed tension between individual liberty and collective solidarity. Savage understands that this is a false dichotomy, promoted by powerful forces invested in keeping us divided. When he sings about freedom, he doesnât sound conflicted at all.âAC
19. Christine and the Queens, âDoesnât Matterâ
âDoesnât Matterâ is spiritual crisis. The chorus turns on the eternal question, or one of them: What comes after death? The answer is keeping Christine and the Queensâ HĂ©loĂŻse Letissier awake at night. In high romantic style, sheâs drawn to the stricken and sufferingâthose who seem, of necessity, to have made their peace. Both impressionistic and fatally specific, the second single from the upcoming bilingual double album Chris exposes existential terror as exhilaration, a kinetic energy that unfolds over deep ripples of bass and a drum machine that hits like a defibrillator. It would scarcely be complete without a loose-shouldered dance like the one Letissierâin her new persona as the gender-subverting, James Dean-looking Chrisâperforms in the deceptively simple video, entangled in a loverâs arms. The second act comes with a plea: âRun if you stole a shard of sunlight / Donât ever tell them, Iâve got your back.â What that means, exactlyâit doesnât matter, so long as you can see the end of the tunnel.âAG
18. 03 Greedo, âIn My Feelingsâ
If falling in love could make a sound, it would be 03 Greedoâs ethereal melodic whimpering as he sings about getting close to a woman on âIn My Feelings.â The L.A. rapper was recording, performing, and releasing music at a frenetic pace before turning himself in to face a 20-year prison sentence in early July, exposing fans to the wide range of his style: from street-rap tough talk to dulcet tenderness. âIn My Feelings,â firmly in the latter category, is not the first song fans might think of as a highlight from his sprawling latest album God Level. But listening to Greedoâs voice quiver and break has he pours himself into his desire, itâs clear that this is a sterling example of a genre that doesnât get enough spotlight: the rap love song.âID
17. Stephen Malkmus, âMiddle Americaâ
You can roll your eyes at 50-something Stephen Malkmus singing about Mason jars and âmen being scum,â but then you might be missing the joke of his best single in years, âMiddle America.â Though Sparkle Hard, Malkmusâs latest LP with the Jicks, is frequently experimental and shambling, its whip-smart lead single channels vintage Pavement more than the jammier classic rock influences that he seems to hang his hat on these days. Thereâs a four-on-the-floor drum pattern to kick off the cathartic chorus, then some forceful off-time rockstar strums from Malkmus, and a strained move to the top of his rangeâa formula that recalls so many great songs by his former band. In that awkward stratosphere, he carves out a precariously beautiful central melody. Itâs almost childishly simple, and therefore the stuff of good pop. Pavement always shadowboxed with radio-ready allure abashedly, and it was that wry, reluctant kind of catharsis that allured indie fans in the first place. Itâs what keeps many of us sifting through every new Malkmus release looking for the handful of songs that rank among his best. Luckily, heâs a much better pop-minded writer than his detractors give him credit for, and he continues to write them. âMiddle Americaâ is one.âWCW
16. Rae Sremmurd ft. Young Thug, âOffshoreâ
The most exciting Young Thug moment of the year didnât even happen on a Young Thug song. The Atlanta shapeshifter guests on âOffshore,â a highlight from Rae Sreummurdâs third album SR3MM. It appears on Swaecation, the Swae Lee-led portion of the triple-disc set, and Swae sets the scene with a typically plaintive melody: barely more than nebulous, introducing negative space as one of the songâs crucial weapons. But Thug is the true star, with a verse that seems to never end, like the full uncut version of source material that would be edited down on a more standard-issue guest appearance. He leaves the hook in the dust, rapping for two and a half minutes about everything from slapping Donald Trump to the way his mother folds his clothes. Even for a stylist as wild as Young Thug, this kind of pure indulgence is rare, and it is thrilling.âWCW
15. Jon Hopkins, âEmerald Rushâ
Purists hate him: With one weird trick, Jon Hopkins collapses the tedious boundary between dancefloor hedonism and chin-stroking âintelligenceâ that plagues so much electronic music. Specifically, he combines bittersweet melodies and sparkling textural details with walloping tech-house basslines that wouldnât sound out of place at one of those European mega-festivals where the stage sits inside a 150-foot fire-breathing animatronic owl. âEmerald Rushâ may be the strongest bridge ever built between the worlds of imperious Resident Advisor acolytes and the molly-popping Camelbak set. At the end of the day, everyone wants to feel infinite.âEM
14. 03 Greedo & Nef the Pharaoh, âBlow-Up Bedâ
Two of the leading young lights of West Coast rap come together for âBlow-Up Bed,â the standout single from 03 Greedo and Nef the Pharaohâs collaborative EP Porter 2 Grape. Subdued snaps and bouncy low-end capture the rush of speeding down an endless California freeway; a gorgeous riff buried deep in the mix sounds like a thumb piano heard from a distant room at a mansion party. The slick sonics drip with Bay-to-L.A. funk, inspiring celebratory imagery from Nef and deep pathos from Greedo. âI been down before I blew up,â the latter sings on the chorus, his voice sounding ready to burst. Itâs an effortless blend of elation and sadness, one few other duos could pull off.âEM
13. Neko Case, âBad Luckâ
One of the best songs from Neko Caseâs brilliant new album Hell-On was recorded under duress, although youâd never know it from the bemused resignation in her vocals. Case wrote the lyrics for âBad Luckâ long before her house burned down, but she channeled the fury and frustration into a recording session scheduled just hours after she learned of the fire. That she was overseas when she fielded the call probably didnât help her stress levels, but sheâs not one to let a pesky thing like losing most of her worldly belongings get in the way of recording a vibrant and life-affirming track. âChipped my tooth on an engagement ring, and thatâs bad luck,â she sings, an elegant, musical shrug. âCould have stopped any one of these things, but that would have been bad luck.â At the risk of insulting Case, âBad Luckâ is a little like a sophisticated interpretation of the ponderous wordplay Alanis Morissette attempted on âIronicââand while theyâre both relentlessly catchy, Caseâs hard knocks sound earned.âMaggie Serota
12. Cardi B ft. J Balvin & Bad Bunny, âI Like Itâ
Cardi Bâs talent is undeniable, but this song belongs to Bad Bunny and J Balvin. The summer anthem works around Tito Nievesâs salsa classic âI Like It Like Thatâ and evokes the spirit of Latin pop icons like Celia Cruz to build a lasting, layered groove. Itâs a fully bilingual song, which speaks to the power of it reaching No. 1 on the charts, and its success lies in the juxtaposition of beats, where hints of reggaeton underlay salsa and the sort of Latin trap crossover that first brought Bad Bunny to the masses with âSoy Peor.â Topped off with Cardi and companyâs brash verses, âI Like Itâ was made for the raza. âThis shitâs the new religion, bang, itâs Latino gang!â Bad Bunny croons, as J Balvin echoes the sentiment: âNo salgo de tu mente / Donde quieres que viajas has escuchado âMi Gente.ââ âI Like Itâ slings and bounces and demands a good timeâit doesnât have to work hard to start a party, itâs too damn fun.âICC
11. Khalid ft. Ty Dolla $ign & 6lack, Â âOTWâ
On the surface, âOTWâ is just another radio-friendly love song: a pleasant, nostalgia-inducing R&B record with wistful electronic piano thatâs hypnotic when paired with the simple perfection of the hook, âMeet me in five, Iâll be outside, Iâll be on the way.â But when Ty Dolla $ign shows up, the proto-boy band jam surges and shines as a polished, millennial ballad. Tyâs grimy, lascivious voice makes him the most versatile artist working in rap radio right now, with an easygoing charisma appealing to kids and old heads alike. Here he gives the bubblegum pop of âOTWâ an unexpected sour element that ends up serving as the songâs main attraction. Khalid and 6lack are cool enough, and do their part to impart a trending neo-soul vibe, but itâs Ty whoâs at the heart of it.âID
10. Rico Nasty, âCountin Upâ
âCountin Upâ opens with the electric synths of Noreagaâs Neptunes-produced âSuperthugâ as Maryland breakout star Rico Nasty imitates one side of a phone call. Sheâs late for something and more audibly annoyed the longer sheâs questioned about it: âBitch Iâm coming, da fuck?â Sheâll keep you waiting as long as she sees fit, but once sheâs ready her rap kicks in and the song skyrockets. Her nerve and demeanor is charismatic from the word go. Sheâs energizing in a way that catches you off guard, oozing brash, outsized attitude as she indoctrinates her cult of personality. âYou got some followers, so what? Do you want you a cookie? / I got promoters throwinâ shows so they can say that they booked me,â she raps, with a confidence thatâs both earned and contagious. Sheâs zippy like a cartoon and ferocious like DMX. The balance feels impossible, but she threads it all the same. A thrilling track thatâs made for mosh pits, âCountin Upâ is a perfect crunk record for a younger generation.âID
9. Snail Mail, âPristineâ
Lindsey Jordanâs debut album as Snail Mail shows the songwriter is at her best in those moments when the partyâs dead, the friends you came with are wasted, and the weekly routine feels more like a burden than a home. On âPristine,â Jordan spills out with frustration at the aloofness of crushes, torn between caring too much about the people in front of her and the bigger plans sheâs got down the line. âDonât you like me for me?â âWhoâs your type of girl?â âWhat could ever be enough?â The lines read like the script of a breakup, but Jordan sings with the self-assurance of someone who knows sheâll walk away clean. âI know myself and Iâll never love anyone else,â she shouts in the hook, comfortable with letting the past fade. Hopelessly restless and tirelessly considered, âPristineâ cuts to the heart of whatâs made Jordan one of the strongest young voices in indie rock.âRA
8. Kacey Musgraves, âSpace Cowboyâ
In the American romantic imagination, the cowboyâs penchant for leaving is part of his mystique. Heâs physically unable to stay in one place: He has to find the next drink, the next treasure, the next shootout, the next woman. But thereâs collateral damage in all that leaving, and Kacey Musgraves evokes it gorgeously on âSpace Cowboy,â a ballad of heartbreak and moving on. âWhen a horse wants to run, there ainât no sense in closing the gate,â she sings, to a backdrop of dulcet horns, soft piano, and acoustic guitar. âYou can have your space, cowboy,â goes the hook, gracefully letting go of a love thatâs run its course as it rebukes the man who has no desire to stick around. With its story of heartache in the American heartland, âSpace Cowboyâ echoes the country-pop ballads of Lee Ann Womack and Faith Hill. Itâs one of those songs that can make you feel like youâre experiencing an old pain for the first time again.âID
7. Drake, âNice for Whatâ
Drake is like gentrification and heâs got his sights on your soon-to-be-hip rough neighborhood. Be it afrobeat, dancehall, or a regional rap scene, Drake is coming and heâs setting up condos. From the man who dipped into dancehall on 2016âs Views and discovered London grime on 2017âs More Life comes âNice for What,â flipping Lauryn Hillâs âEx-Factorâ into New Orleans bounceâan homage to the sceneâs penchant for turning popular R&B songs into bass-heavy dance records. With a sample of Big Freediaâs voice and production from No Limit Records collaborator 5th Ward Weebie, itâs authentic like a corporate chain designed to look like a hole in the wall. Itâs also a good fucking record, a reflection of the indomitable electricity of New Orleans bounce. The beat moves like a jackhammer, charging up a turbulent sound sliced by samples and mic checks. Drakeâs ode to independent women who are better than the men that want them (and know it) may be panderingâa âyou go girl!â anthem from a cheerleader whoâs spent a career casting the women in his life as the source of emotional strifeâbut itâs easy to forget watching a whoâs who of black women celebrities looking luxurious as they bob to the beat in Karena Evansâs video. Charming and infectious, âNice for Whatâ proves even the imitation version of authentic cuisine can still be delicious.âID
6. Oneohtrix Point Never, âBlack Snowâ
When âBlack Snowâ was released as the first single to Oneohtrix Point Neverâs Age Of, it marked a dramatic departure for the artist born Daniel Lopatin. Previous OPN records were all about immersion in unforgiving alien sound-worlds, where the ghosts of human voices turned up only occasionally as dramatic devices. âBlack Snowâ is a song: an unforgiving, alien song about nuclear holocaust, but a song nonetheless, and a catchy one at that. It was easy to wonder at the time whether Age Of would mark Lopatinâs move toward something like pop music. That was decidedly not the case. Though the album features vocals much more heavily than any past OPN work, Lopatin uses them to expand his uncanny palette rather than break from it entirely. In retrospect, that should have been obvious. The emotional high point of âBlack Snowâ comes not from the heavily autotuned singing, but a solo on an obscure instrument called a daxophone. Itâs known for its ability to produce voicelike timbres, but naturally, Lopatin does no such thing with it. In his hands, the sound of the daxophone is something closer to the grind of steel against bone.âAC
5. Westerman, âConfirmationâ
âConfirmation,â the glowing single that put Westerman on the map for many, can be read as a paean to the wonders of turning your brain off and letting it flow. âConfirmationâs easier,â the London songwriter sings in the chorus, âwhen you donât think so much about it.â Either heâs being coy or heâs got the kind of mental acuity while zoned out that most of us canât muster when weâre fully tuned in. âConfirmationâ is an ingenious composition, with chord changes like modern jazz, each opening a door you hadnât previously realized was there. It retains its accessibility as a piece of pop music thanks to Westermanâs way with melody and softly androgynous voice, leading you through the labyrinth by hand. There are strong shades of Joni Mitchell in his fluid phrasing, and his warm rounded vowels might occasionally remind you of Tracy Chapman. The arrangement is sparse and elegant, with fretless bass that nods toward art-pop inspirations of yesteryear and twitchy digital percussion that keeps it rooted in the present. Westerman is still relatively new to releasing music, and newer still to this style, after a few early hushed singles based around acoustic guitar. The most impressive thing about âConfirmation,â then, is that itâs the sound of an artist whoâs still finding his voice.âAC
4. U.S. Girls, âM.A.H.â
âAs if you couldnât tell, Iâm mad as hell,â U.S. Girlsâ Meg Remy sings on the bombastic âM.A.H.â Her artful fury is belied by the sunny, ABBA-inspired beats driving her subversively danceable indictment of Barack Obamaâs presidential legacy, but the combination works because she understands how to condemn drone warfare and still remain oblique. A line like, âYou took me for an eight-year rideâ could easily be about a relationship gone afoul, until itâs given a little more scrutiny. In turn, Remy proves that you donât have to to be as blunt as Jello Biafra to tackle weighty topics: Itâs possible to write an effective pop anthem about war crimes and sound like a late-â70s Debbie Harry in the process.âMS
3. Rae Sremmurd ft. Juicy J, âPowerglideâÂ
âSide 2 Sideâ is not the most obvious choice of Three 6 Mafia song for a reworking by Rae Sremmurd. That might be âStay Fly,â from the same album, whose chorus turns a single chopped up note into a mantra for the ages, prefiguring the Sremmsâ zenlike melodic minimalism by about a decade. âSide 2 Sideâ is a little tougher, less airy. Thatâs a good thing, because it gives Swae Lee and Slim Jxmmi more room to make it their own. They take all the most spaced-out elements of âSide 2 Sideââthe vaulting string arpeggios of the beat, the chanted melody of the hookâand transport them out of the club and into something like a Michael Mann action flick. As ever, Swae is the star, drifting through two tuneful verses filled with prototype cars and neon light before Jxmmi arrives to remind us that this is a rap song and not some newly discovered from of electronic devotional music. When Juicy J himself shows up to take âPowerglideâ home, itâs a nice moment of mutual appreciation across eras, but itâs not really necessary. Rae Sremmurd are on their own trip.âAC
2. Valee ft. Jeremih, âWomp WompâÂ
Chicago rapper and sometime producer Valee is a good candidate for the most promising rising hip-hop talent going right now. He earns the distinction for furthering a specific and singular musical signature through his work, rather than just crafting clever and well-lacquered hits within an established style. The March EP GOOD Job, You Found Me, his first release for G.O.O.D. Music, mostly served as a wider audienceâs introduction to hits from earlier mixtapes, with some retooling and one unnecessary new feature. GOOD Job had some new material too, but Mayâs âWomp Wompâ feels like his true debut single as a major-label artist. It features a Neptunes-style clanker of a beat, updated for 2018 by producer Cassio, over which Jeremih tries to meet Valee on his own eccentric playing field as a rapper. The coy flow shifts come frequently and tastefully, and Valeeâs signature goofy one-liners with them (âThese hoes fake, actress, my blunt stuffed, sinusâ). Like any great miniature from the laconic rapper, thereâs no time wasted, and always that lingering wish the song were a bit longer.âWCW
1. Amen Dunes, âMiki Doraâ
The late outlaw surfer Miki âDa Catâ Dora was a dubious American icon. An architect of ultra-chill Malibu beach bum culture of the â50s and â60s, he eventually grew disenchanted with the scene he helped build, busting out of California, reinventing himself as a prolific grifter, and running check scams on well-meaning acquaintances until the feds nabbed him in 1981. (Dora died of cancer in 2002.) âHe was a living contradiction,â in the words of Amen Dunesâ Damon McMahon, âboth a symbol of free-living and inspiration, and of the false heroics American culture has always celebrated.â At once an avatar of aspirational dreamers and sleazy, dissatisfied rebels, Dora was in a way a rock star in a genre of his own creation. Perhaps thatâs why Amen Dunes are able to meet him, not as a character in a history book, but in real time: on the beach, 1963, over a bassline as liquid and gripping as cresting waves. The slinkiest and most pop of the songs on the stellar Freedom, âMiki Doraâ plays like some half-remembered echo of the Beach Boys, shot through with guitar frisson and subtle stereophonic weight shifts, ringing with McMahonâs throaty rasp. He sounds drunk off his subjectâs once-in-a-generation talent, polarizing hubris, and breathtaking cool. What, in the end, went so badly wrong? âCouldnât suffer existence / It wasnât meant to be.ââMS
Source: https://www.spin.com/featured/best-songs-2018-midyear-list/