Wednesday 21 December 2022

My Top 22 of 2022: #10 - 8

10. First Aid Kit - Palomino

Every year I do these countdowns, I have a little whinge about the artists who wait till late November to release their records. Yeah, you might sell a few more copies in the Christmas shopping rush, but you don't really stand much chance in year end lists against records we've been living with for months. 

This is the fifth album by Swedish sisters Johanna and Klara Söderberg, who weren't even born until the 90s, but live forever in music's best decade, the 70s. Another gloriously catchy set of West Coast Americana-flavoured tunes that sound like you've known them all your life... though it's still unfair to ask them to compete, after only a couple of weeks, with the year's constant companions. Ask me again in March and this might well be in my Top 3.

First Aid Kit - Palomino

First Aid Kit - Turning Onto You



9. Jim Bob - The Essential Jim Bob

By contrast, here's another late entry, and another record that seems immediately familiar... perhaps because much of it was. Yes, it's a compilation, a "greatest hits" from the best chronicler of modern society in the world of "pop". I feel Jim Bob would appreciate those inverted commas. Did someone decree we can't have compilations in our Year End countdowns? Oops. You won't like the next entry either then.

Never mind. Here are three songs Jim Bob did release this year, from his excellent Beach Ready EP. None of them are on The Essential Jim Bob, though they're all strong enough to deserve a place. Jim Bob can do no wrong.





8. The Divine Comedy - Charmed Life (Deluxe Edition)

Another Greatest Hits collection (albeit one that does feature some actual hits), though it earns its place in my countdown from disc 3 of the Special Edition, the “Super Extra Bonus Album”, a collection of new and unreleased recordings. You well might expect a ragbag of outtakes and B-sides (although nothing wrong with that, depending on the artist, as has been demonstrated elsewhere in this countdown), but the quality of the tracks here makes this one of the best releases of the year for me, full of Neil Hannon's Coward-esque wit and self-deprecating wisdom. A wonderful treat, well worth paying £3 more than the double album.





3 comments:

  1. Somehow I missed out on that First Aid Kit album! Thanks for the heads up.

    ReplyDelete
  2. See, I'm a purist and have a separate chart for compilations.
    And those 2 are at the very top
    (despite being a tight wad and only forking out for the 2 disc Divine Comedy - disc 3 is Spotify only for me, but I do feel I should own it at some point)

    ReplyDelete

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