Not only are there way too many Best Album lists, they are also remarkably homogenous. Over at FiveThirtyEight, Hayley Munguia’s meta-analysis of 19 year-end album lists revealed that every single one of them listed Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly. This list also reveals that our finger is very much on the pulse of contemporary music (or at the least that our cognitive agenda is very much set by what shows up in the music press). Several of our favorite TFT albums were mentioned in a majority of the lists that 538 analyzed, including Carly Rae Jepsen’s Emotion, Courtney Barnett’s Sometimes I Sit and Think and Sometimes I Just Sit, Joanna Newsom’s Divers, Sleater-Kinney’s No Cities to Love, Björk’s Vulnicura, and Sufjan Stevens’s Carrie & Lowell.
The dirty secret about top ten lists is that the really interesting activity — the thing actually worth arguing about with your smart friends — is hidden from view. It’s one thing to wonder about the relative merits of the albums in the #1 and #2 spots — or, often more heatedly, #10 and whoever got edged off the list and wound up in the honorable mention section. It’s another thing entirely to argue about what the criteria for “best” is: What counts as legitimate or valuable achievement in a field as vast as music, situated in a cultural landscape whose fragmentation has become a truism almost not worth mentioning?
Is it novelty? Virtuosity? Cool? Sentimentality? Production? Vocal performance? Instrumental arrangement? Personal emotion? Political statements? Are the best albums the ones we find most compelling and original on first listen? The ones whose lyrics we find ourselves muttering as we walk down the street? Or are they the ones we are going to want to return to again and again, the ones we are going to add to our shuffle playlists and ride the train or vacuum the floor to, the ones that will become the unacknowledged soundtrack of our lives, barely registering to consciousness but always there, just below the level of our attention?
So each of these lists is not just a history of what was best, but a polemic concerning the nature of “bestness.” “This is what you should value,” each critic says. “This is the kind of thing that is important.” And in this light, we see another dynamic operating, one that has to do with storytelling and self-deception. The question is not exactly “What kind of year has it been?”, but rather something closer to “What kind of year do we want to tell ourselves it has been?” In Robert Frost’s poem The Road Not Taken, which is quoted out of context more often than in context, the speaker has chosen a path more or less randomly at a fork in the road, but concludes:
I shall be telling with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence,
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I,
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
The story we tell — what mattered? what made a difference? — is always constructed ex post facto, under different conditions than what we faced when we stood at the fork in the road. We are maybe not ages and ages hence — months and months or in some cases weeks and weeks, but proximity in time doesn’t dull the urge to fudge the conclusions and even the facts in the name of a good story.
As a result, we’re not going to be the 140th website to tell you how great To Pimp a Butterfly is (and it is indeed that great, just listen to our podcast episode on it, in which we name it the record of the year, if not the album of the year). Instead, we decided that we’d much rather be the only publication to wade through the the hundreds of year-end album lists to identify the ten best top-ten lists of the year. We’ll mention their rankings, sure, but we’re more interested in who told us the most interesting story about who we are, where we were, and what we liked in 2015.
The Theory for Turntables Podcast’s Ten Best “Best Albums of 2015” Lists of 2015
10. Gorilla vs. Bear– “Gorilla vs. Bear’s Albums of 2015”
If you want to hear our take on Art Angels, check out Episode 184 of the TFT Podcast: “let grimes be grimes bb”.
9. People Magazine–“People Picks the Best Albums of the Year”
For an in-depth analysis of 25, listen to Episode 186 of the TFT Podcast: “Adele has Phoned Home”.
8. Entertainment Weekly– “The 40 Best Albums of 2015”
We didn’t get around to discussing Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz in the current semester of TFT, but we dug into our vaults to share our episode on Cyrus’s 2013 album, Bangerz.
7. NME– “NME’s Albums of the Year 2015”
For more on Every Open Eye, check out Episode 178: “Real People Have Arena Rock Feelings”. For our discussion of Carly Rae Jepsen’s album, listen to the following week’s episode: “Slap Bass In the Face”.
6. The Daily Beast– “The Best Music Albums of 2015”
For more detail on why we found lots to love in No Cities to Love, check out Episode 146: “The Periodic Table of Indie Rock“.
5. Pitchfork– “The 50 Best Albums of 2015”
For our discussion of To Pimp a Butterfly, download Episode 191: “It’s Not the Album of the Year, It’s the Record of the Year”.
4. Pitchfork– “Albums of the Year: Honorable Mention”
Grab a bottle of Remy Martin 1738 cognac and join us for our discussion of Fetty Wap in Episode 181: “Offering the Bottle”.
2. Album of the Year– “2015 Music Year End List Aggregate” and Metacritic–“Best of 2015: Music Critic Top Ten Lists” (Tie)
Although Pitchfork’s “50 Best Albums” list makes a compelling case for To Pimp a Butterfly’s status as the overall album of the year, the aggregate year-end lists from Album of the Year and Metacritic make the same point even more forcefully by simply crunching the numbers. Although AOTY and Metacritic use different formulas and sets of publications, the results are broadly similar: on both lists To Pimp a Butterfly has more than double the points of the runner-up album (on AOTY‘s list, Sufjan is #2; on Metacritic, Courtney Barnett has the second slot). Other patterns in the two aggregate lists are robust to methodology. On both lists, Art Angels by Grimes holds down the number 5 spot and Sleater-Kinney is ranked 8. At the same time, other rankings are more sensitive to methodology. In particular Metacritic‘s larger sample favors Courtney Barnett, Tame Impala, Björk, and Adele over Sufjan, Father John Misty, Jamie XX and Julia Holter. These (and many other meta-patterns) revealed by these two lists provide a lot of the raw data that inspired this meta-list. In another five years, all top ten lists will be aggregate lists ranking their favorite aggregate list, in a perfect year-end-list ouroboros.
Check out our discussions of the #2 albums on each of these aggregate lists. Episode 160 (“Spoiler Alert: Jesus Dies”) is on Album of the Year’s #2 album, Sufjan Stevens’s Carrie and Lowell, while Episode 157 (“Ironic Clown Posse”) is on Metacritic’s #2 album, Courtney Barnett’s Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit.
1. Vogue– “The Year in Music: The Best Albums of 2015”
The Vogue list stands out for recognizing something that we’ve long argued in our analysis of contemporary and classic albums on the TFT Podcast– it is not particularly useful (or even possible) to analyze and rank albums on a single dimension. Instead, the ideas and influences that matter in any given moment are continuous and hyperdimensional. Vogue’s year-end list by Peter Macia recognizes this idea by eschewing a ranked list in favor of a set of linked mini-essays that place many of the albums that topped other lists (To Pimp a Butterfly, Art Angels, Vulnicura, No Cities to Love) in the context of many other noteworthy albums that were absent from other lists (Drake & Future’s What a Time to Be Alive, Enya’s Dark Sky Island, Rustie’s EVENIFUDONTBELIEVE) to identify a set of connected trendlets and micro-genres that characterize the state of popular music in 2015. More than any other list, Vogue‘s list helped me to synthesize my thoughts on the year in music, helpfully pointed me towards albums and genres that I maybe have overlooked earlier in the year, and got me excited to gear up for the albums and meta-trends that are headed our way in 2016.
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