- Low: Double Negative
- Autechre: NTS Sessions 1-4
- Damien Jurado: The Horizon Just Laughed
- Actress & London Contemporary Orchestra: Lageos
- Marianne Faithfull: Negative Capability
- Idles: Joy as an Act of Resistance
- Rival Consoles: Persona
- Andy Sheppard Quartet: Romaria
- Julia Holter: Aviary
- Kira Skov: The Echo of You
- Ancient Methods: The Jericho Records
- Barre Phillips: End to End
- Jon Hassell: Listening to Pictures
- Ital Tek: Bodied
- Alva Noto: Unieqav
- Rosalía: El mal querer
- Beach House: 7
- Moon Relay: IMI
- Charles Lloyd & The Marvels with Lucinda Williams: Vanished Gardens
- Deena Abdelwahed: Khonnar
- The Good, The Bad And The Queen: Merrie Land
- Puce Mary: The Drought
- Danish String Quartet: Prism I
- Tuomo Väänänen: A Small Flood
- Andris Nelsons & Boston Symphony Orchestra: Dmitri Shostakovich Sinfonien 4 & 11
- Frode Haltli: Avant Folk
- Die Nerven: Fake
- DJ Richard: Dies Irae Xerox
- Sonar with David Torn: Vortex
- Amen Dunes: Freedom
- Anna Calvi: Hunter
- Ah! Kosmos: Beautiful Swamp
- Michael Gordon & Kronos Quartet: Clouded Yellow
Autechre’s NTS Sessions is the most convincing piece of world-building in music today. Its universe is one whose causal networks are as beautifully balanced and interconnected as our own. (…) comprising around eight hours of music (culminating in an hour-long track, „all end“), this is a magnum opus from one of electronic music’s most influential acts, and proof that, in the quarter century they’ve been making music, Rob Brown and Sean Booth have never stopped moving forward. (Resident Advisor staff pick their favourite electronic albums from the last 12 months.)
You thought the Duluth trio’s 25 years of slow, minimalist indie rock was gloomy? Well, now it’s doubled down, triple distilled, quadruple concentrated, resulting in the masterpiece that their hugely impressive catalogue has been heading inexorably towards. (…) the rhythm section is closer to Mika Vainio or Thomas Köner than a rock group: shuddering blooms of static in place of snares, blurred whorls of noise for bass, sounds that are violence itself. The bass impact on Quorum and Always Trying to Work it Out is like an angry father beating a fist on the dinner table, the rest of each song shrinking away from him. (…)
Indeed, the erosion of America and our wider ecosystem, and the psychic state of living amid that erosion, is the focus here, enacted in the very music as well as the lyrics. (…) Across the album, there’s a trudging, incantatory tone that feels almost pagan, like the last rites of a nation – even the planet – are being read out. This ranks alongside the likes of Anselm Kiefer and Cormac McCarthy as a document of contemporary social collapse, and as such is the most important, devastating album of the year.
(Double Negative review – the sound of the world unravelling)
favorite EP: SØS Gunver Ryberg: SOLFALD
music DVD: Ryuichi Sakamoto – Coda / async at the Park Avenue Armory
re-release: Belong: October Language (2006)
box release: Art Ensemble of Chicago and Associated Ensembles
archive release: Prince: Piano and a Microphone 1983
potential top 20 albums in 2017, but discovered only in 2018:
EMA: Exile in the Outer Ring / Wadada Leo Smith: Najwa / Niels Rønsholdt: Songs of Doubt
Other (Re-)Discoveries:
- Alice Coltrane: Journey in Satchidananda (1971)
- Herbie Hancock: Mwandishi (1971) / Crossings (1972)
- Moor Mother: Fetish Bones (2016)
- Curve: Doppelgänger (1992)
- Stephen Malkmus