Albums of the Year: Xylaroo - Sweetooth | reviews, news & interviews
Albums of the Year: Xylaroo - Sweetooth
Albums of the Year: Xylaroo - Sweetooth
Exquisite doomed loveliness for troubled times
As the late Leonard Cohen once growled, “Everybody knows that the war is over/Everybody knows that the good guys lost.” That’s how 2016 felt. Perhaps the moment that encapsulated my year was standing in a very muddy Somerset field, two days after the Brexit disaster, part of an exhausted but defiant Sunday night crowd, singing along with LCD Soundsystem for all we were worth; “So it’s us versus them, over and over again.” That repeating chorus, circling and circling, summing it all up.
In 2016 the scales tipped when we weren’t looking. The “good guys” suddenly became the minority. Meanwhile, short-sighted, misguided powers drag the gullible, the self-serving and the unfortunate rest of us slowly towards catastrophe. Music has, as ever, been a salve and an impetus. The mainstream may now be dominated by the predictable (NB: a few grime artists rapping on sappy pop songs does not constitute a protest movement), but in strange nooks and crannies brilliance thrives.
The self-titled debut from Californian metallers Eerie boasts an eye-boggling, dodgy cover but contains grungey psyched hard rock that brooks no argument, Croatian techno producer Petar Dundov’s At The Turn of Equilibrium is a delicious retro-synth adventure, the opening shot from Polly Scattergood and James Chapman's On Dead Waves project gorgeously musters Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood by way of the Jesus & Mary Chain, and Beyoncé’s sometimes bitter Lemonade proves there’s a place for invigorating imagination in hyper-commercial pop.
However, the album that dominated my year is by two well-travelled sisters from London, Holly and Coco Chant, AKA Xylaroo, whose debut, Sweetooth, is a smörgåsbord of delicious harmonizing, strummed, campfire girl-pop run through to its core with doomed mysticism perfectly attuned to these dangerous times. It’s an album that's at once optimistic and bleakly hedonistic, containing philosophical poetry worthy of mighty old Leonard Cohen himself, while also capable of lightness and even humour (as on the smile-inducing “Narwhal”).
In another age Sweetooth would have been as massive as Joni Mitchell or Johnny Cash, but instead, it exists in the peripheries, waiting to be found, a gem weighted with subconcsious prescience of the darkness to come. Not just an album for 2016, but an album of the century so far.
Two More Essential Albums from 2016
Beyoncé - Lemonade
Eerie - Eerie
Gig of the Year
LCD Soundsystem at Glastonbury Festival
Track of the Year
Yeasayer - "I Am Chemistry"
Overleaf: atch the video for “I Am Chemistry” by Yeasayer
As the late Leonard Cohen once growled, “Everybody knows that the war is over/Everybody knows that the good guys lost.” That’s how 2016 felt. Perhaps the moment that encapsulated my year was standing in a very muddy Somerset field, two days after the Brexit disaster, part of an exhausted but defiant Sunday night crowd, singing along with LCD Soundsystem for all we were worth; “So it’s us versus them, over and over again.” That repeating chorus, circling and circling, summing it all up.
In 2016 the scales tipped when we weren’t looking. The “good guys” suddenly became the minority. Meanwhile, short-sighted, misguided powers drag the gullible, the self-serving and the unfortunate rest of us slowly towards catastrophe. Music has, as ever, been a salve and an impetus. The mainstream may now be dominated by the predictable (NB: a few grime artists rapping on sappy pop songs does not constitute a protest movement), but in strange nooks and crannies brilliance thrives.
The self-titled debut from Californian metallers Eerie boasts an eye-boggling, dodgy cover but contains grungey psyched hard rock that brooks no argument, Croatian techno producer Petar Dundov’s At The Turn of Equilibrium is a delicious retro-synth adventure, the opening shot from Polly Scattergood and James Chapman's On Dead Waves project gorgeously musters Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood by way of the Jesus & Mary Chain, and Beyoncé’s sometimes bitter Lemonade proves there’s a place for invigorating imagination in hyper-commercial pop.
However, the album that dominated my year is by two well-travelled sisters from London, Holly and Coco Chant, AKA Xylaroo, whose debut, Sweetooth, is a smörgåsbord of delicious harmonizing, strummed, campfire girl-pop run through to its core with doomed mysticism perfectly attuned to these dangerous times. It’s an album that's at once optimistic and bleakly hedonistic, containing philosophical poetry worthy of mighty old Leonard Cohen himself, while also capable of lightness and even humour (as on the smile-inducing “Narwhal”).
In another age Sweetooth would have been as massive as Joni Mitchell or Johnny Cash, but instead, it exists in the peripheries, waiting to be found, a gem weighted with subconcsious prescience of the darkness to come. Not just an album for 2016, but an album of the century so far.
Two More Essential Albums from 2016
Beyoncé - Lemonade
Eerie - Eerie
Gig of the Year
LCD Soundsystem at Glastonbury Festival
Track of the Year
Yeasayer - "I Am Chemistry"
Overleaf: atch the video for “I Am Chemistry” by Yeasayer
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