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March 10, 2017 - Hear Me Out by Chris Azzopardi

Best Albums Of 2016

Cover of Glory - Britney Spears10. Britney Spears, Glory
If you counted the Holy Spearit out after 2013’s weird let-down Britney Jean, you should know better. Brit’s next success is always her next comeback, but Glory wasn’t just the teeter-totter effect—she’s over, she’s back—in full swing. Her return to artistic, well, glory repositioned the Vegas-headlining mom somewhere between the hazy Blackout and In the Zone with its celestial pop and less-fabricated production. And the nod to her Southern roots, the country-licked “Liar,” where she’s actually, like, singing? More of this singing thing please and stat.

Cover of Excommunication  - Tyler Glenn9. Tyler Glenn, Excommunication
Mormonism—but really all organized religion—got a much-needed wake-up call thanks to Tyler Glenn. On his album Excommunication, the Neon Trees frontman was not about to sugarcoat his cutting words when he held the LDS Church accountable for his suicidal thoughts and made no apologies for being a glammed-out gay. In the process, Glenn’s first solo project as an out man sticks to his pop sensibilities, which make for the best music of his career. Standouts include the soaring “Midnight” and the sparsely produced “John, Give ‘Em Hell,” a sincere moment of encouragement that every shamed queer kid needs to hear.

8. Michael Kiwanuka, Love & Hate
It’s not until nearly halfway through “Cold Little Heart,” the cinematic-like launch song from Michael Kiwanuka’s stunning sophomore release, that we hear the British soul artist’s vintage-sounding croon wash over us like a warm bath. Kiwanuka is a modern-day Otis Redding, and his sensitive-man voice is unshakeable as it imprints an old-school vibe on each of these timeless tunes.

7. Angel Olsen, My Woman
Some voices make everything in their path disappear. Angel Olsen’s heavenly drawl is one of them. With My Woman, the St. Louis native tangled you within her intoxicating world of stirring melodies and whispery vocal flourishes. If she didn’t have you with the stark synth-specked opener “Intern,” well, that’s probably your fault. But there’s no way you could resist “Sister,” a guitar sprawl that will have you yearning right along with it.

6. Emeli Sandé, Long Live the Angels
Five years is practically a lifetime between albums in the transient pop world, but for Emeli Sandé, that time, it seems, is just what she needed. Reeling from the end of a longtime relationship to her childhood sweetheart, the gifted “Next to You” soprano let her forlorn feelings simmer into this devastating (the breathtakingly raw “Shakes”) and empowering (the lifting mid-tempo “Babe”) diary of a healing heart.

Cover ofThe Bird and the Rifle - Lori McKenna5. Lori McKenna, The Bird & the Rifle
Songwriter-to-the-stars Lori McKenna is nominated for four Grammys this year: one for Tim McGraw’s rendition of “Humble and Kind,” a song she wrote and also recorded for The Bird & the Rifle, along with best Americana album, American Roots performance and American Roots song. The recognition is overdue. As intimate as eavesdropping on a room full of revealing conversations, McKenna’s 10 character-driven songs—from the sincere  “Wreck You,” about a relationship that’s gone off course, to the sharp ageism-commentary “Old Men, Young Women”— are showcases for her unique ability to tap into the human condition.  

Cover of Weight of These Wings4. Miranda Lambert, The Weight of These Wings
Country music’s incipient legend wanted her double-disc divorce album to speak for itself. She eschewed the typical promo interviews. There was no buzzy primetime confessional. Instead, Lambert’s glorious 24-song narrative—easily some of her best work—plunges deep into the heart and renders insight through her drunken, cigarette-dragging, broken-hearted path to contentment. The journey starts and ends with a pair of steadfast mantras, “Runnin’ Just in Case” and “I’ve Got Wheels,” meanwhile also challenging gender norms on “Tomboy” and enlisting rebound sex to remedy her breakup woe on the glorious Grammy-nominated “Vice.” At least half of Lambert’s steel-pedal confessionals—undoubtedly, “Pushin’ Time,” which is sweet, tender, perfect—will be sitting comfortably amid country’s classics.

3. Frank Ocean, Blond
Out music maverick Frank Ocean is responsible for some of this past decade’s best R&B, and this year, Blond proved that his skillful debut Channel Orange wasn’t just a fluke. The open-hearted Blond works like magic, slow burning snapshots of childhood nostalgia, bygone relationships (with women and men) and one very moving car ride (the mesmerizing James Blake-assisted “White Ferrari”) into your life story as Ocean reveals his own.

Cover of 22 Million - Bon Iver2. Bon Iver, 22, Million
“It might be over soon,” a piping voice cuts in. Amid the loop, a gospel sample and garbled synths, Bon Iver laments the inevitably of dissolve. Throughout 22, Million, the Wisconsin-born songwriter is grappling with time through lyrical vignettes of life that are fleeting, just like this fly-by album and its transcendental back half. If you’re not moved to tears by the time you get to the album’s quiet coda, “00000 Million,” then it will purge you with its wistful reminder to surrender to the sometimes nasty doings of fate.

Cover of Lemonade - Beyonce1. Beyoncé, Lemonade
Who even remembers Beyoncé before 2016? With Lemonade, the Slay Queen recast herself as an edgy auteur, thrashing radio pop parameters with a few swings of her baseball bat. Yes, she pretty much ran the world—and yes, she definitely made earlier career efforts look like amateur hour. Suddenly, she was more than a song slayer—she was a black voice that mattered. A risk taker. A meme-starter. She was the reason we couldn’t stop talking about some good-haired hussy named “Becky.” The storybook narratives lifted the curtain to potential personal reflections on married life with Jay Z, but also took a broader look at current gender and racial divides. “Freedom” furnished the strength for us to survive Trump’s America. “Daddy Lessons” was the country song you never knew you needed from Beyoncé. And Lemonade as a whole? A cultural and genre-busting touchstone in both Bey’s career and pop music itself.

Chris Azzopardi is the editor of Q Syndicate, the international LGBT wire service. Reach him via his website or on Twitter (@chrisazzopardi).

 

‹ March 10, 2017 - Out Field by Dan Woog up March 10, 2017 - Straight Talk by David Garrett ›

Past Issues

Issues Index

  • November 17, 2017 - Issue Index
  • October 20, 2017 - Issue Index
  • September 22, 2017 - Issue Index
  • August 25, 2017 - Issue Index
  • August 11, 2017 - Issue Index
  • July 28, 2017 - Issue Index
  • July 14, 2017 - Issue Index
  • June 30, 2017 - Issue Index
  • June 16, 2017 - Issue Index
  • June 2, 2017 - Issue Index
  • May 19, 2017 - Issue Index
  • May 5, 2017 - Issue Index
  • March 31, 2017 - Issue Index
  • March 10, 2017 - Issue Index
    • March 10, 2017 - The Way I See It by Steve Elkins
    • March 10, 2017 - Speak Out - Letters to Letters
    • March 10, 2017 - In Brief
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMPmatters by Murray Archibald
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMP Out by Fay Jacobs
    • March 10, 2017 - It's My Life by Michael Thomas Ford
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMP Stories by Rich Barnett
    • March 10, 2017 - Amazon Trail by Lee Lynch
    • March 10, 2017 - Booked Solid by Terri Schlichenmeyer
    • March 10, 2017 - Volunteer Spotlight - Jerry Filbin
    • March 10, 2017 - Volunteer Thank You
    • March 10, 2017 - Out Field by Dan Woog
    • March 10, 2017 - Hear Me Out by Chris Azzopardi
    • March 10, 2017 - Straight Talk by David Garrett
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMPshots Gallery 1
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMPshots Gallery 2
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMPshots Gallery 3
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMPshots Gallery 4
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMP Arts by Doug Yetter
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMP Dates
    • March 10, 2017 - Ask the Doctor by Michael J. Hurd, Ph.D., LCSW
    • March 10, 2017 - More Briefs
    • March 10, 2017 - We Remember
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMP Feature - Susan Sarandon by Chris Azzopardi
    • March 10, 2017 - CAMP Rehoboth Women's FEST 2017
  • February 3, 2017 - Issue Index

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