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---
title: My Top Ten Albums from the 2010s
date: 2019-12-20
url: my-top-ten-albums-from-the-2010s
tags:
- music
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---
That Im a big ol music weirdo should come as no surprise to anyone who has read [some](https://cassie.ink/heres-what-i-was-listening-to-in-2015/) of my [previous](https://cassie.ink/revolutions/) writing [about](https://cassie.ink/canopies-and-drapes/) it. I have tracked just about all of my music listening to [last.fm](https://www.last.fm/user/wearebeautiful) since 2014, both to maintain a record and gather minute statistics about myself.
I turned 16 in 2010, and my 25th birthday was this past November. The latter half of my adolescent identity formation therefore took place during this past decade, and the music I listened to during those years acted as a score, a signpost, a catharsis, a reflection. Ive come to mark events in my life with the music I was listening to at the time. And having spent my teen years sitting in front of a computer listening to music at pretty much all times, I developed a pretty large collection.
As with any post in this series, I do want to offer a few caveats and disclaimers. A lot of music came out this decade, by artists I love and by artists I havent discovered yet. Im human. I havent heard it all. I track very few bands new releases, and instead seek out new albums as interest and whims guide me. So this list is limited to the music I actually listened to during these years and what music from that collection I consider influential on my personal taste or mindset. Its very likely that, a few years from now, Ill stumble upon an album released in 2013 that I absolutely love, just as I listened to and loved plenty of albums from before 2010. But this list will be limited to releases from the decade that I listened to a lot; I did briefly consider whether I would permit myself to include more than one album by the same artist, but as I narrowed down the possibilities, I found that was not an issue. I did not make any distinctions between full albums or EPs in my selection process either.
___
## #10. Grimes, *Visions* (2012)
![Visions album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/visions.jpg#album)
For the record, I am deeply uncomfortable being a Grimes fan in 2019. But 2012 was a different time — or, more accurately, 2013, when I started listening to Grimes.
A recurring theme through the albums on this list will be that they mark some kind of notable shift or change in my musical tastes. Id classify Grimes as “weird shit,” especially early Grimes, which I was no stranger to prior to picking up _Visions_. But Grimes was a new kind of weird for me: in _Visions_ especially, the vocals and lyrics are at times abstracted and indistinct. Theyre like another instrument, layered into wandering synthesizers and catchy beats. _Visions_ sports some genuine bops and poppy tunes, like “Genesis” and “Oblivion”, but theres still a darkness there — theres also angsty tracks that sound like they were composed and sang by some kind of sewer nymph reaching out to be heard, seen, loved, but whose voice cannot travel far enough (“Soft skin / Ill have you be near my heart / until I feel human / soft skin, oh / You were never in love to begin with / So now Im suffering”). Instead, that voice remains distant, reverberating from a far-off place.
Its really hard to recommend Grimes these days, as shes now inextricably linked to Elon Musk in my brain. But _Visions_ is still my favorite album shes put out, and its absolutely worth a listen, even if its probably bumping the speakers in the Cybertruck these days.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Skin”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8R00Vu7Ag7s), [“Genesis”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WizNXQGBMEk), [“Ambrosia”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9MXj9nVjkk), [“Oblivion”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtH68PJIQLE), [“Infinite ♡ Without Fulfillment”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txcZix5caF0)
___
## #9. Oberhofer, *Time Capsules II* (2011)
![Time Capsules II album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/timecapsules.jpg#album)
Of the albums on this list, _Time Capsules II_ is one of the most embedded in the a specific point in my life. I discovered Oberhofer when I rewatched a season one episode of *Broad City*, which featured their song “o0Oo0Oo.” This would have been in March or April of 2015 — which is also when I began dating my boyfriend, Joe.
_Time Capsules II_ became an early soundtrack for our relationship. For our one month anniversary (yes, we were/are big nerds), I gave Joe two mixtapes, the first of many Id create for him throughout our relationship — one called “You,” the other “Me.” On them, I tried to capture emotion in music, tell him through I was through the songs that spoke to me, and tell him how I felt about him through the songs that reminded me of him. Of the 29 tracks that spanned the two CDs, because I was still burning CDs in 2015, three were Oberhofer songs: “Homebro,” “o0Oo0Oo,” and “Away Frm U.” The opening guitar in “Away Frm U” still fills me with nostalgia.
Detaching the album from my own memories, its a fairly by the books indie rock tracks and surf rock revival, with some fun hints of Animal Collective mixed in for good measure. Its catchy enough to sing along to, with enough depth to sustain interest. Its the music you play when you drive through your hometown at night. But its hard to separate my memories from the album like this because Oberhofer is the soundtrack backing our early days. When I think back on the decade, I think about my relationship with Joe in the later half of it. So this album really is a bit of a time capsule for me, too.
**Favorite Tracks:”** [“Yr Face”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMGdn4ojxtA), [“Away Frm U”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Z40oHofP3E), [“Haus”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKMDY3T9eiM), [“Homebro”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wj_uKLk-dYM)
___
## #8. Mac Miller, *Swimming* (2018)
![Swimming album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/swimming.jpg#album)
When Mac Millers death was announced in September of 2018, I knew hardly anything about him. I recognized the name and knew he was a rapper. Id seen maybe a picture or two of him before, but Id never heard any of his music. And yet, I was shaken by the announcement, for reasons I couldnt fully comprehend. I read through pages and pages of folks pouring one out for another artist taken too young, grieving and despairing he never found the help he needed. I thought the only way to understand my reaction was to listen to his music — to pay my due to his passing, even if Id never particularly connected with rap before (and, to the tell truth, hadnt really tried). I downloaded his albums, skipped around, picked a few songs more or less at random, and rocked a playlist called “mac miller songs i think i like but idk.”
Just as I was entranced by Millers death, I was fascinated with his music. It was something new to me, something entirely out of my comfort zone. But there was something compelling — there was a pain and an insight to his lyrics, a density to his production. Macs discography takes some defined turns and evolutions, jumping between the ambition and optimism of _Best Day Ever_ to the troubled, strung-out suicidal ideation on _Faces_. It was, at times, hard for me to understand or digest — except for _Swimming_. His last release was the most accessible to me; it was my gateway to Mac, to comprehending the life journey that led to the albums creation and the tragedy of it being cut too short. Im not sure _Swimming_ is my favorite Mac release — that might be _Macadelic_, or maybe _GO:OD AM_, or maybe _Faces_ — but it was a doorway for me to step through into Macs world. _Swimming_ was produced from years lived in scrutiny and pain, and Miller never shies away from expressing that on the album (“Well, I didnt know what I was missing / Now I see a lil different / I was thinking too much / Got stuck in oblivion”). _Swimming_ is about walking on the pathway to peace but stumbling along the road. _Swimming_ taught me that youve got to jump in to swim.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Self Care”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SsKT0s5J8ko), [“2009”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6B3YwcjQ_bU), [“Perfecto”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbSuMV7ghm8), [“Jet Fuel”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnG7oL9Gg4o)
___
## #7. How to Dress Well, *"What Is This Heart?"* (2014)
![What Is This Heart? album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/whatisthisheart.jpg#album)
I discovered How to Dress Well in late 2011, at a time when I was awfully depressed and feeling trapped in my life. The ambiance and desperation in Tom Krells debut album, _Love Remains_, spoke to me in that time. I spent a lot of time with “Ready for the World” on repeat.
I also enjoyed How to Dress Wells next release, _Total Loss_, as it refined their sound, but it didnt grab me the way _Love Remains_ did, and so I was keen to see which direction their next release would take.
_“What Is This Heart?”_ is closer, sonically, to _Total Loss_ than _Love Remains_, but it hit me. Theres a pure emotion to it that _Love Remains_ concealed under lo-fi beats and distorted vocals that sound like they were somehow produced off a VHS tape recording. _“What Is This Heart_?” is clear, honest, and beautiful. _“What Is This Heart?”_ dissolves the weight of older tracks like “Ready for the World” and “Cold Nites,” replacing it with a kind of airy lightness that doesnt sacrifice depth. The album acts as an answer to its titular question — its How to Dress Well wearing their heart on their sleeve, bringing Tom Krells voice and lyrics to the center, no longer obfuscated by noise. The albums bare-faced, earnest emotion is embodied on no track better than “Pour Cyril,” which retains some of the noisy, warbling reverb of How to Dress Wells previous albums but mixes it with heartfelt strings and brass. Theres a heart to this album that is immensely vulnerable and is made all the more captivating for it.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Words I Dont Remember”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbOCLEIKZOo), [“Childhood Faith in Love (Everything Must Change, Everything Must Stay the Same”](https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/childhood-faith-in-love-everything-must-change-everything-must-stay-the-same), [“Pour Cyril”](https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/pour-cyril), [“Face Again”](https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/face-again), [“Repeat Pleasure”](https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/repeat-pleasure) (and a special shout to [A.G. Cooks remix of it](https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/repeat-pleasure-a-g-cook-remix))
___
## #6. The Peripheral Ones, *Chants* (2014)
![Chants album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/peripheral.jpg#album)
This album will be maybe the most idiosyncratic entry on this list.
In something like 2008 or 2009, I found a band on Myspace (!) called The Middle Ones. They made [charming little acoustic songs](https://themiddleones.bandcamp.com/track/goodnight-song) that were very of their time and place and are still very good. I sang along to them (badly) for a few years, and then they became another relic of my music library that Id revisit every now and then.
Jump ahead to 2015, when Im lurking on anorak for new music, and I see theres a Middle Ones thread. I give some of the recent posts a read through and find [someone has shared a link to a Middle Ones cover album](https://anorakforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=2918&start=140#p235243). Enter The Peripheral Ones.
I love these covers. I know its taboo to say, but sometimes I think I may love them more than the originals. _Chants_ is clearly a product of love and reverence for The Middle Ones, but its not afraid to experiment. Sometimes theyre covers with a new twist, as in “Young Explorer.” Other times, they include [a “lyrical interpolation” of Nicki Minajs “Superbass”](https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/morningtime) or replace the original harmonica [with music from _The Legend of Zelda_](https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/yeah-roy). _Chants_ is truly a special album to me — and it led me to other great projects by the members of The Peripheral Ones, namely Pigthe and Trust Fund. It is a goddamn shame that _Chants_ has less than 900 scrobbles on last.fm as of writing (and I account for around a third of them). Please do yourself a favor and listen to it. I may have conceived of this album review post as an excuse to shill for _Chants_.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Morningtime”](https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/morningtime), [“Young Explorer”](https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/young-explorer), [“Drops”](https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/drops), [“After”](https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/after)
_Download_ Chants _for free via The Peripheral Ones on [Bandcamp](https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/)._
___
## #5. Pigthe, *every morning i wake up covered in blood* (2019)
![every morning i wake up covered in blood album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/coveredinblood.jpg#album)
Pigthe is the only artist to appear twice on my ranking for the decade, albeit under different names. Pigthe is also probably the most obscure shit to appear on this list, which keeps my hipster cred in tact.
_every morning i wake up covered in blood_ seems, at times, to be a bizarre compilation. I dont always know what to make of _every morning_. Sparse details are available about it online, or even about Pigthe in general. Of its nineteen total tracks, eight clock in at under a minute long on _every morning_. Four of those eight are under ten seconds. Scattered throughout are short, spoken word segments that are sometimes their own track (like “bad,” a nine second track whose complete lyrics read “The singing was boring and the lyrics were bad / The singing was boring and the song was bad”) or compete for attention over vocal tracks and strumming guitars in “JaneaneG++.” Other times, _every morning_ covers Mariah Carey in “Beautiful” or laments on the desperation and emptiness that follow from the economic alienation in late-stage capitalism in “Consumer Blues part ii” or composes a thirteen minute opus in “Not Enough // Not Good Enough.” But as impenetrable as _every morning i wake up covered in blood_ can sometimes feel, it speaks to me in a way I havent yet figured out or defined. It manages to be both catchy and intensely brooding at the many peaks of the album. It has stayed with me since its release a few months ago — and I think it will continue to stay with me for quite a bit longer.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Consumer Blues part ii”](https://music.pigthe.com/track/consumer-blues-part-ii), [“Every Morning I Wake Up Covered in Blood”](https://music.pigthe.com/track/every-morning-i-wake-up-covered-in-blood), [“Not Enough // Not Good Enough”](https://music.pigthe.com/track/not-enough-not-good-enough)
_Download_ every morning i wake up covered in blood _for free via Pigthe on [Bandcamp](https://music.pigthe.com/album/every-morning-i-wake-up-covered-in-blood)._
___
## #4. Sylvan Esso, *Sylvan Esso* (2014)
![Sylvan Esso album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/sylvanesso.jpg#album)
_Sylvan Esso_ is a masterclass in grabbing your listener with the first track.
Their self-titled debut album opens with the infectious, repeated “Hey mami / I know what you want, mami.” It builds with slow claps and layered voices until the beat drops in. The songs lyrics might be about a woman getting catcalled in the street, but theres a breeziness, an airiness to “Hey Mami.” It sort of spreads in your brain, and it sticks there for a long time.
But as explosive and electronic as “Hey Mami” is, and many of the other tracks on the album, Sylvan Esso is also able to deliver a warmth when they pull back into muted beats and smooth, untouched vocals in “Coffee” or “Uncatena.” No song on _Sylvan Esso_ ever sounds forced, overproduced, or inorganic; its a wonderful fusion of beats and vocals. Sylvan Esso sounds like breathing in morning air with a twinkly piano in the background. _Sylvan Esso_ was a new, innovative sound when it first released, and no one has really come close to it since — aside from maybe their sophomore release. But _Sylvan Esso_ gets credit for being the first.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Hey Mami”](https://sylvanesso.bandcamp.com/track/hey-mami), [“Dress”](https://sylvanesso.bandcamp.com/track/dress), [“Dreamy Bruises”](https://sylvanesso.bandcamp.com/track/dreamy-bruises), [“Coffee”](https://sylvanesso.bandcamp.com/track/coffee-3)
___
## #3. Los Campesinos!, *Sick Scenes* (2017)
![Sick Scenes album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/sickscenes.jpg#album)
Los Campesinos! are my favorite band, and they have been since their 2008 debut album, _Hold On Now, Youngster…_ Whats absolutely remarkable about Los Campesinos! — and what has enabled them to hold their throne for so long — is that every one of their releases evolves their sound then adds something new. Theres a growth and progression inside their discography to which few artists can compare and which they have continued into their 2017 release, _Sick Scenes_.
Theres something sparse about _Sick Scenes_, which lies in stark contrast to their early discography and which I mean with the highest esteem. Consider, for example, the breakdown in “Got Stendhals,” when a lone guitar kicks in, then drums and vocals are slowly reintroduced. In the _Tweexcore_-era, this might have been a cacophony of instruments all trying to be heard over the other. If you listen to a track from _HONY_ then compare it to one from _Sick Scenes_, its hard to believe the same people were even remotely involved — and, indeed, much of their lineup has changed over the years, but theyve kept true to their vision of being “your ex-girlfriends favourite band.” In _Sick Scenes_, Los Campesinos! learn to pull back, to focus their sound into something deceptively simple. _Sick Scenes_ is Team Campesinos at their most refined and, Im inclined to say, at their best.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Heres To The Fourth Time!”](https://loscampesinos.bandcamp.com/track/here-s-to-the-fourth-time), [“Got Stendhals”](https://loscampesinos.bandcamp.com/track/got-stendhal-s), [“5 Flucloxacillin”](https://loscampesinos.bandcamp.com/track/5-flucloxacillin)
_Purchase_ Sick Scenes _in various formats starting at £7 on [Bandcamp](https://loscampesinos.bandcamp.com/album/sick-scenes)._
___
## #2. alt+J, *An Awesome Wave* (2012)
![An Awesome Wave album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/awesomewave.jpg#album)
2012 was a rough year for me. I graduated high school then, but the months leading up to it was the deepest depressions Ive ever fallen into. I felt totally alienated from my immediate world and circle; I cared very little for my schoolwork or my friends or myself. I was ready to move onto college and start fresh, with new people and new passion — but I had to trudge through six more months of high school first.
_An Awesome Wave_ released in May of 2012; I dont know when I first discovered alt+J (through “Breezeblocks,” like everyone else on the planet), but I listened to them a _lot_ in the weeks leading up to, and into, my first semester of college — and just like college, _An Awesome Wave_ was something fresh. It was something new. To me, at least. And thats precisely what I needed. It was a wave of relief — from my depression, and from months spent listening to “Hate for the Island” (from Los Campesinos!s _Hello Sadness_) and Xiu Xius _Dear God, I Hate Myself_ on repeat. (Not the healthiest choices, in retrospect.)
In 2019, _An Awesome Wave_ has perhaps lost some of its fresh novelty; it was eclectic and experimental in 2012, but weve had years now of [folks spoofing alt+Js sound](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlBskd3IaNw). I love it dearly still, perhaps for the sound memories it has left, the way that “Bloodflood” washes me over with calm, the way that “Something Good” is now forever attached to _Life is Strange_, one of my favorite games from the decade, the way I try to croon along (badly) with “Matilda.” The album has lost some of its neoteric magic seven years later; maybe its a nostalgia speaking, but I consider it a new classic.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Bloodflood”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lv-zbP7lyjA), [“Something Good”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNYjOVo5IEw), [“Breezeblocks”](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVeMiVU77wo)
___
## #1. Stolen Jars, *Kept* (2015)
![Kept album cover](https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/kept.jpg#album)
I fell in love with Stolen Jars in the first time I heard the scattered din of percussion that opens the title track on _Kept_ — and while Im about to describe that love in detail, I really recommend that you just [go ahead and hear it for yourself](https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/kept-2).
To set the scene of my first contact with Stolen Jars, it was back when I worked at RadioShack; shifts were often dull as we waited out the days until the store closed. We ran a Pandora station on some rad speakers, but mostly I just zoned out or did homework. When I heard that percussion stumble on out, the song immediately grabbed me. I knew I had to hear more.
Stolen Jars are not something entirely new or innovative, like some of my other entries on this list. Their music is accessible, even if it goes unnoticed by many. But what makes _Kept_ so entrancing is how ethereal it is. _Kept_ transports the listener to a dream-like state; theres a warmth and a comfort to it, like being wrapped in a fluffy comforter and snoozing off into the clouds, otherworldly voices whispering that living takes time, asking to keep your hands close. Theres something organic yet mystical about _Kept_, something artful yet catchy, something pensive yet grounded. Their lyrics are often abstract (“some nights / when Im alone / when Im alone / Ill look through faces of old occasions / of places, scattered now / on small plates painted / just to know them”), but they evoke sense memories embedded in the reflections of fleeting moments — of waking up to see your partner bathed in light, of the train whistle in your hometown, of golden memories of childhood games with friends. _Kept_ reaches into our reveries and holds tight to them. The songs are all light and air, space turned sonic. Its a beautiful piece of art that consistently leaves me in awe.
**Favorite Tracks:** [“Kept”](https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/kept-2), [“Another November”](https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/another-november), [“Wreaths Rakes”](https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/wreaths-rakes), [“Waves”](https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/waves)

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<time datetime="2019-12-20T00:00:00&#43;00:00">20 December 2019</time>
<h1>My Top Ten Albums from the 2010s</h1>
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my-top-ten-albums-from-the-2010s
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<p>That Im a big ol music weirdo should come as no surprise to anyone who has read <a href="https://cassie.ink/heres-what-i-was-listening-to-in-2015/">some</a> of my <a href="https://cassie.ink/revolutions/">previous</a> writing <a href="https://cassie.ink/canopies-and-drapes/">about</a> it. I have tracked just about all of my music listening to <a href="https://www.last.fm/user/wearebeautiful">last.fm</a> since 2014, both to maintain a record and gather minute statistics about myself.</p>
<p>I turned 16 in 2010, and my 25th birthday was this past November. The latter half of my adolescent identity formation therefore took place during this past decade, and the music I listened to during those years acted as a score, a signpost, a catharsis, a reflection. Ive come to mark events in my life with the music I was listening to at the time. And having spent my teen years sitting in front of a computer listening to music at pretty much all times, I developed a pretty large collection.</p>
<p>As with any post in this series, I do want to offer a few caveats and disclaimers. A lot of music came out this decade, by artists I love and by artists I havent discovered yet. Im human. I havent heard it all. I track very few bands new releases, and instead seek out new albums as interest and whims guide me. So this list is limited to the music I actually listened to during these years and what music from that collection I consider influential on my personal taste or mindset. Its very likely that, a few years from now, Ill stumble upon an album released in 2013 that I absolutely love, just as I listened to and loved plenty of albums from before 2010. But this list will be limited to releases from the decade that I listened to a lot; I did briefly consider whether I would permit myself to include more than one album by the same artist, but as I narrowed down the possibilities, I found that was not an issue. I did not make any distinctions between full albums or EPs in my selection process either.</p>
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<h2 id="10-grimes-visions-2012">#10. Grimes, <em>Visions</em> (2012)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/visions.jpg#album" alt="Visions album cover">
For the record, I am deeply uncomfortable being a Grimes fan in 2019. But 2012 was a different time — or, more accurately, 2013, when I started listening to Grimes.</p>
<p>A recurring theme through the albums on this list will be that they mark some kind of notable shift or change in my musical tastes. Id classify Grimes as “weird shit,” especially early Grimes, which I was no stranger to prior to picking up <em>Visions</em>. But Grimes was a new kind of weird for me: in <em>Visions</em> especially, the vocals and lyrics are at times abstracted and indistinct. Theyre like another instrument, layered into wandering synthesizers and catchy beats. <em>Visions</em> sports some genuine bops and poppy tunes, like “Genesis” and “Oblivion”, but theres still a darkness there — theres also angsty tracks that sound like they were composed and sang by some kind of sewer nymph reaching out to be heard, seen, loved, but whose voice cannot travel far enough (“Soft skin / Ill have you be near my heart / until I feel human / soft skin, oh / You were never in love to begin with / So now Im suffering”). Instead, that voice remains distant, reverberating from a far-off place.</p>
<p>Its really hard to recommend Grimes these days, as shes now inextricably linked to Elon Musk in my brain. But <em>Visions</em> is still my favorite album shes put out, and its absolutely worth a listen, even if its probably bumping the speakers in the Cybertruck these days.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8R00Vu7Ag7s">“Skin”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WizNXQGBMEk">“Genesis”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9MXj9nVjkk">“Ambrosia”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtH68PJIQLE">“Oblivion”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txcZix5caF0">“Infinite ♡ Without Fulfillment”</a></p>
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<h2 id="9-oberhofer-time-capsules-ii-2011">#9. Oberhofer, <em>Time Capsules II</em> (2011)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/timecapsules.jpg#album" alt="Time Capsules II album cover">
Of the albums on this list, <em>Time Capsules II</em> is one of the most embedded in the a specific point in my life. I discovered Oberhofer when I rewatched a season one episode of <em>Broad City</em>, which featured their song “o0Oo0Oo.” This would have been in March or April of 2015 — which is also when I began dating my boyfriend, Joe.</p>
<p><em>Time Capsules II</em> became an early soundtrack for our relationship. For our one month anniversary (yes, we were/are big nerds), I gave Joe two mixtapes, the first of many Id create for him throughout our relationship — one called “You,” the other “Me.” On them, I tried to capture emotion in music, tell him through I was through the songs that spoke to me, and tell him how I felt about him through the songs that reminded me of him. Of the 29 tracks that spanned the two CDs, because I was still burning CDs in 2015, three were Oberhofer songs: “Homebro,” “o0Oo0Oo,” and “Away Frm U.” The opening guitar in “Away Frm U” still fills me with nostalgia.</p>
<p>Detaching the album from my own memories, its a fairly by the books indie rock tracks and surf rock revival, with some fun hints of Animal Collective mixed in for good measure. Its catchy enough to sing along to, with enough depth to sustain interest. Its the music you play when you drive through your hometown at night. But its hard to separate my memories from the album like this because Oberhofer is the soundtrack backing our early days. When I think back on the decade, I think about my relationship with Joe in the later half of it. So this album really is a bit of a time capsule for me, too.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:”</strong> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMGdn4ojxtA">“Yr Face”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Z40oHofP3E">“Away Frm U”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKMDY3T9eiM">“Haus”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wj_uKLk-dYM">“Homebro”</a></p>
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<h2 id="8-mac-miller-swimming-2018">#8. Mac Miller, <em>Swimming</em> (2018)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/swimming.jpg#album" alt="Swimming album cover">
When Mac Millers death was announced in September of 2018, I knew hardly anything about him. I recognized the name and knew he was a rapper. Id seen maybe a picture or two of him before, but Id never heard any of his music. And yet, I was shaken by the announcement, for reasons I couldnt fully comprehend. I read through pages and pages of folks pouring one out for another artist taken too young, grieving and despairing he never found the help he needed. I thought the only way to understand my reaction was to listen to his music — to pay my due to his passing, even if Id never particularly connected with rap before (and, to the tell truth, hadnt really tried). I downloaded his albums, skipped around, picked a few songs more or less at random, and rocked a playlist called “mac miller songs i think i like but idk.”</p>
<p>Just as I was entranced by Millers death, I was fascinated with his music. It was something new to me, something entirely out of my comfort zone. But there was something compelling — there was a pain and an insight to his lyrics, a density to his production. Macs discography takes some defined turns and evolutions, jumping between the ambition and optimism of <em>Best Day Ever</em> to the troubled, strung-out suicidal ideation on <em>Faces</em>. It was, at times, hard for me to understand or digest — except for <em>Swimming</em>. His last release was the most accessible to me; it was my gateway to Mac, to comprehending the life journey that led to the albums creation and the tragedy of it being cut too short. Im not sure <em>Swimming</em> is my favorite Mac release — that might be <em>Macadelic</em>, or maybe <em>GO:OD AM</em>, or maybe <em>Faces</em> — but it was a doorway for me to step through into Macs world. <em>Swimming</em> was produced from years lived in scrutiny and pain, and Miller never shies away from expressing that on the album (“Well, I didnt know what I was missing / Now I see a lil different / I was thinking too much / Got stuck in oblivion”). <em>Swimming</em> is about walking on the pathway to peace but stumbling along the road. <em>Swimming</em> taught me that youve got to jump in to swim.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SsKT0s5J8ko">“Self Care”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6B3YwcjQ_bU">“2009”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbSuMV7ghm8">“Perfecto”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnG7oL9Gg4o">“Jet Fuel”</a></p>
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<h2 id="7-how-to-dress-well--2014">#7. How to Dress Well, <em>&ldquo;What Is This Heart?&rdquo;</em> (2014)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/whatisthisheart.jpg#album" alt="What Is This Heart? album cover">
I discovered How to Dress Well in late 2011, at a time when I was awfully depressed and feeling trapped in my life. The ambiance and desperation in Tom Krells debut album, <em>Love Remains</em>, spoke to me in that time. I spent a lot of time with “Ready for the World” on repeat.</p>
<p>I also enjoyed How to Dress Wells next release, <em>Total Loss</em>, as it refined their sound, but it didnt grab me the way <em>Love Remains</em> did, and so I was keen to see which direction their next release would take.</p>
<p><em>“What Is This Heart?”</em> is closer, sonically, to <em>Total Loss</em> than <em>Love Remains</em>, but it hit me. Theres a pure emotion to it that <em>Love Remains</em> concealed under lo-fi beats and distorted vocals that sound like they were somehow produced off a VHS tape recording. <em>“What Is This Heart</em>?” is clear, honest, and beautiful. <em>“What Is This Heart?”</em> dissolves the weight of older tracks like “Ready for the World” and “Cold Nites,” replacing it with a kind of airy lightness that doesnt sacrifice depth. The album acts as an answer to its titular question — its How to Dress Well wearing their heart on their sleeve, bringing Tom Krells voice and lyrics to the center, no longer obfuscated by noise. The albums bare-faced, earnest emotion is embodied on no track better than “Pour Cyril,” which retains some of the noisy, warbling reverb of How to Dress Wells previous albums but mixes it with heartfelt strings and brass. Theres a heart to this album that is immensely vulnerable and is made all the more captivating for it.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbOCLEIKZOo">“Words I Dont Remember”</a>, <a href="https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/childhood-faith-in-love-everything-must-change-everything-must-stay-the-same">“Childhood Faith in Love (Everything Must Change, Everything Must Stay the Same”</a>, <a href="https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/pour-cyril">“Pour Cyril”</a>, <a href="https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/face-again">“Face Again”</a>, <a href="https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/repeat-pleasure">“Repeat Pleasure”</a> (and a special shout to <a href="https://howtodresswellmusic.bandcamp.com/track/repeat-pleasure-a-g-cook-remix">A.G. Cooks remix of it</a>)</p>
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<h2 id="6-the-peripheral-ones-chants-2014">#6. The Peripheral Ones, <em>Chants</em> (2014)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/peripheral.jpg#album" alt="Chants album cover">
This album will be maybe the most idiosyncratic entry on this list.</p>
<p>In something like 2008 or 2009, I found a band on Myspace (!) called The Middle Ones. They made <a href="https://themiddleones.bandcamp.com/track/goodnight-song">charming little acoustic songs</a> that were very of their time and place and are still very good. I sang along to them (badly) for a few years, and then they became another relic of my music library that Id revisit every now and then.</p>
<p>Jump ahead to 2015, when Im lurking on anorak for new music, and I see theres a Middle Ones thread. I give some of the recent posts a read through and find <a href="https://anorakforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&amp;t=2918&amp;start=140#p235243">someone has shared a link to a Middle Ones cover album</a>. Enter The Peripheral Ones.</p>
<p>I love these covers. I know its taboo to say, but sometimes I think I may love them more than the originals. <em>Chants</em> is clearly a product of love and reverence for The Middle Ones, but its not afraid to experiment. Sometimes theyre covers with a new twist, as in “Young Explorer.” Other times, they include <a href="https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/morningtime">a “lyrical interpolation” of Nicki Minajs “Superbass”</a> or replace the original harmonica <a href="https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/yeah-roy">with music from <em>The Legend of Zelda</em></a>. <em>Chants</em> is truly a special album to me — and it led me to other great projects by the members of The Peripheral Ones, namely Pigthe and Trust Fund. It is a goddamn shame that <em>Chants</em> has less than 900 scrobbles on last.fm as of writing (and I account for around a third of them). Please do yourself a favor and listen to it. I may have conceived of this album review post as an excuse to shill for <em>Chants</em>.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/morningtime">“Morningtime”</a>, <a href="https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/young-explorer">“Young Explorer”</a>, <a href="https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/drops">“Drops”</a>, <a href="https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/track/after">“After”</a></p>
<p><em>Download</em> Chants <em>for free via The Peripheral Ones on <a href="https://theperipheralones.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a>.</em></p>
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<h2 id="5-pigthe-every-morning-i-wake-up-covered-in-blood-2019">#5. Pigthe, <em>every morning i wake up covered in blood</em> (2019)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/coveredinblood.jpg#album" alt="every morning i wake up covered in blood album cover">
Pigthe is the only artist to appear twice on my ranking for the decade, albeit under different names. Pigthe is also probably the most obscure shit to appear on this list, which keeps my hipster cred in tact.</p>
<p><em>every morning i wake up covered in blood</em> seems, at times, to be a bizarre compilation. I dont always know what to make of <em>every morning</em>. Sparse details are available about it online, or even about Pigthe in general. Of its nineteen total tracks, eight clock in at under a minute long on <em>every morning</em>. Four of those eight are under ten seconds. Scattered throughout are short, spoken word segments that are sometimes their own track (like “bad,” a nine second track whose complete lyrics read “The singing was boring and the lyrics were bad / The singing was boring and the song was bad”) or compete for attention over vocal tracks and strumming guitars in “JaneaneG++.” Other times, <em>every morning</em> covers Mariah Carey in “Beautiful” or laments on the desperation and emptiness that follow from the economic alienation in late-stage capitalism in “Consumer Blues part ii” or composes a thirteen minute opus in “Not Enough // Not Good Enough.” But as impenetrable as <em>every morning i wake up covered in blood</em> can sometimes feel, it speaks to me in a way I havent yet figured out or defined. It manages to be both catchy and intensely brooding at the many peaks of the album. It has stayed with me since its release a few months ago — and I think it will continue to stay with me for quite a bit longer.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://music.pigthe.com/track/consumer-blues-part-ii">“Consumer Blues part ii”</a>, <a href="https://music.pigthe.com/track/every-morning-i-wake-up-covered-in-blood">“Every Morning I Wake Up Covered in Blood”</a>, <a href="https://music.pigthe.com/track/not-enough-not-good-enough">“Not Enough // Not Good Enough”</a></p>
<p><em>Download</em> every morning i wake up covered in blood <em>for free via Pigthe on <a href="https://music.pigthe.com/album/every-morning-i-wake-up-covered-in-blood">Bandcamp</a>.</em></p>
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<h2 id="4-sylvan-esso-sylvan-esso-2014">#4. Sylvan Esso, <em>Sylvan Esso</em> (2014)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/sylvanesso.jpg#album" alt="Sylvan Esso album cover">
<em>Sylvan Esso</em> is a masterclass in grabbing your listener with the first track.</p>
<p>Their self-titled debut album opens with the infectious, repeated “Hey mami / I know what you want, mami.” It builds with slow claps and layered voices until the beat drops in. The songs lyrics might be about a woman getting catcalled in the street, but theres a breeziness, an airiness to “Hey Mami.” It sort of spreads in your brain, and it sticks there for a long time.</p>
<p>But as explosive and electronic as “Hey Mami” is, and many of the other tracks on the album, Sylvan Esso is also able to deliver a warmth when they pull back into muted beats and smooth, untouched vocals in “Coffee” or “Uncatena.” No song on <em>Sylvan Esso</em> ever sounds forced, overproduced, or inorganic; its a wonderful fusion of beats and vocals. Sylvan Esso sounds like breathing in morning air with a twinkly piano in the background. <em>Sylvan Esso</em> was a new, innovative sound when it first released, and no one has really come close to it since — aside from maybe their sophomore release. But <em>Sylvan Esso</em> gets credit for being the first.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://sylvanesso.bandcamp.com/track/hey-mami">“Hey Mami”</a>, <a href="https://sylvanesso.bandcamp.com/track/dress">“Dress”</a>, <a href="https://sylvanesso.bandcamp.com/track/dreamy-bruises">“Dreamy Bruises”</a>, <a href="https://sylvanesso.bandcamp.com/track/coffee-3">“Coffee”</a></p>
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<h2 id="3-los-campesinos-sick-scenes-2017">#3. Los Campesinos!, <em>Sick Scenes</em> (2017)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/sickscenes.jpg#album" alt="Sick Scenes album cover">
Los Campesinos! are my favorite band, and they have been since their 2008 debut album, <em>Hold On Now, Youngster…</em> Whats absolutely remarkable about Los Campesinos! — and what has enabled them to hold their throne for so long — is that every one of their releases evolves their sound then adds something new. Theres a growth and progression inside their discography to which few artists can compare and which they have continued into their 2017 release, <em>Sick Scenes</em>.</p>
<p>Theres something sparse about <em>Sick Scenes</em>, which lies in stark contrast to their early discography and which I mean with the highest esteem. Consider, for example, the breakdown in “Got Stendhals,” when a lone guitar kicks in, then drums and vocals are slowly reintroduced. In the <em>Tweexcore</em>-era, this might have been a cacophony of instruments all trying to be heard over the other. If you listen to a track from <em>HONY</em> then compare it to one from <em>Sick Scenes</em>, its hard to believe the same people were even remotely involved — and, indeed, much of their lineup has changed over the years, but theyve kept true to their vision of being “your ex-girlfriends favourite band.” In <em>Sick Scenes</em>, Los Campesinos! learn to pull back, to focus their sound into something deceptively simple. <em>Sick Scenes</em> is Team Campesinos at their most refined and, Im inclined to say, at their best.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://loscampesinos.bandcamp.com/track/here-s-to-the-fourth-time">“Heres To The Fourth Time!”</a>, <a href="https://loscampesinos.bandcamp.com/track/got-stendhal-s">“Got Stendhals”</a>, <a href="https://loscampesinos.bandcamp.com/track/5-flucloxacillin">“5 Flucloxacillin”</a>
<em>Purchase</em> Sick Scenes <em>in various formats starting at £7 on <a href="https://loscampesinos.bandcamp.com/album/sick-scenes">Bandcamp</a>.</em></p>
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<h2 id="2-altj-an-awesome-wave-2012">#2. alt+J, <em>An Awesome Wave</em> (2012)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/awesomewave.jpg#album" alt="An Awesome Wave album cover">
2012 was a rough year for me. I graduated high school then, but the months leading up to it was the deepest depressions Ive ever fallen into. I felt totally alienated from my immediate world and circle; I cared very little for my schoolwork or my friends or myself. I was ready to move onto college and start fresh, with new people and new passion — but I had to trudge through six more months of high school first.</p>
<p><em>An Awesome Wave</em> released in May of 2012; I dont know when I first discovered alt+J (through “Breezeblocks,” like everyone else on the planet), but I listened to them a <em>lot</em> in the weeks leading up to, and into, my first semester of college — and just like college, <em>An Awesome Wave</em> was something fresh. It was something new. To me, at least. And thats precisely what I needed. It was a wave of relief — from my depression, and from months spent listening to “Hate for the Island” (from Los Campesinos!s <em>Hello Sadness</em>) and Xiu Xius <em>Dear God, I Hate Myself</em> on repeat. (Not the healthiest choices, in retrospect.)</p>
<p>In 2019, <em>An Awesome Wave</em> has perhaps lost some of its fresh novelty; it was eclectic and experimental in 2012, but weve had years now of <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlBskd3IaNw">folks spoofing alt+Js sound</a>. I love it dearly still, perhaps for the sound memories it has left, the way that “Bloodflood” washes me over with calm, the way that “Something Good” is now forever attached to <em>Life is Strange</em>, one of my favorite games from the decade, the way I try to croon along (badly) with “Matilda.” The album has lost some of its neoteric magic seven years later; maybe its a nostalgia speaking, but I consider it a new classic.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lv-zbP7lyjA">“Bloodflood”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNYjOVo5IEw">“Something Good”</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVeMiVU77wo">“Breezeblocks”</a></p>
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<h2 id="1-stolen-jars-kept-2015">#1. Stolen Jars, <em>Kept</em> (2015)</h2>
<p><img src="https://cdn.cassie.ink/images/2019/kept.jpg#album" alt="Kept album cover">
I fell in love with Stolen Jars in the first time I heard the scattered din of percussion that opens the title track on <em>Kept</em> — and while Im about to describe that love in detail, I really recommend that you just <a href="https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/kept-2">go ahead and hear it for yourself</a>.</p>
<p>To set the scene of my first contact with Stolen Jars, it was back when I worked at RadioShack; shifts were often dull as we waited out the days until the store closed. We ran a Pandora station on some rad speakers, but mostly I just zoned out or did homework. When I heard that percussion stumble on out, the song immediately grabbed me. I knew I had to hear more.</p>
<p>Stolen Jars are not something entirely new or innovative, like some of my other entries on this list. Their music is accessible, even if it goes unnoticed by many. But what makes <em>Kept</em> so entrancing is how ethereal it is. <em>Kept</em> transports the listener to a dream-like state; theres a warmth and a comfort to it, like being wrapped in a fluffy comforter and snoozing off into the clouds, otherworldly voices whispering that living takes time, asking to keep your hands close. Theres something organic yet mystical about <em>Kept</em>, something artful yet catchy, something pensive yet grounded. Their lyrics are often abstract (“some nights / when Im alone / when Im alone / Ill look through faces of old occasions / of places, scattered now / on small plates painted / just to know them”), but they evoke sense memories embedded in the reflections of fleeting moments — of waking up to see your partner bathed in light, of the train whistle in your hometown, of golden memories of childhood games with friends. <em>Kept</em> reaches into our reveries and holds tight to them. The songs are all light and air, space turned sonic. Its a beautiful piece of art that consistently leaves me in awe.</p>
<p><strong>Favorite Tracks:</strong> <a href="https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/kept-2">“Kept”</a>, <a href="https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/another-november">“Another November”</a>, <a href="https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/wreaths-rakes">“Wreaths Rakes”</a>, <a href="https://stolenjars.bandcamp.com/track/waves">“Waves”</a></p>
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<time datetime="2019-12-20T00:00:00&#43;00:00">20 December 2019</time>
<h1>My Top Ten Albums from the 2010s</h1>
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@ -358,6 +358,22 @@ nav ul {
margin: auto;
}
.page article img[src$='#album'] {
float: left;
width: 300px;
margin-right: 25px;
}
@media only screen and (max-width: 700px) {
.page article img[src$='#album'] {
margin-right: 0;
margin-bottom: 25px;
width: 100%;
float: none;
}
}
.page .audio {
audio {