Death Don’t Have No Mercy: In Lieu of My Monthly List, Would You Care for My Mid-Year Francis Davis Memorial Jazz Critics Ballot?

My mother, Mary Jane Overeem, passed away from dementia in her assisted living facility early in the morning of Wednesday, June 18, 2025. I am sure it was a coincidence, but she left in the midst of 15-minute wind, lightning, thunder, and pouring rain storm that seemed to harness the furiousness of the battle between her physical determination to keep living and her spiritual will to be released–after months of begging to be. It was exceedingly difficult to witness. I had hoped to be there at her side when she finally passed, but I had to sleep. She might have been waiting for me to pass all the way out so she could slip away alone.

Once during her final four torturous days, the topic of music arose. One of her best friends in the community was an English octogenarian named Rita who happened to come by and check on her. My mom had mentioned to Rita that I kinda-sorta liked music, so she casually offered to tell me the story of her having seen the 1965 edition of The Rolling Stones in Coventry when she was 20. I have a very soft spot for the Jones-era Stones, so I was all ears—especially when she groused, “I was on the front row, and I tried to grab Mick’s balls but a cop grabbed me before I could get ‘em. I almost had his balls—I would have been on the cover of The Daily Mirror, you know?” I was doubled over, crying with laughter. She went on to mention that she’d only seen Gene Vincent three times (!!!) and Eddie Cochran once (!!!!). I will always treasure that pop-by, and when Rita rolled up to express her condolences after the funeral this past Sunday, I wanted to tell her, “I wish I could grab death by the balls,” but I settled for giving her a big hug, wetting her shoulder with tears, and whispering, “Sweet Gene Vincent.”

All of that is to say that I was not able to attend to a June new music inventory, though I will also say that passionate new records by the Irish folk legend Christy Moore, the fiery and spirited saxophone sprite Zoh Amba, and a heap of very inspired rock and rollers and zydeco masters paying tribute to Clifton Chenier will be crowned with four or five stars when I catch up, maybe this week or next.

What I can do is share the ballot I submitted to the Francis Davis Memorial Mid-Year Jazz Critics Poll, topped, naturally, by an album that came out in November of 2024 (that’s within the rules, since it barely had time to be distributed; also, see the video above). It’s a great year for jazz, and especially for piano records, four of which made my Top 10.

Enjoy yourself, and keep livin’….

NEW JAZZ ALBUMS (ranked)

Organic Pulse Ensemble: Ad Hoc (Ultraaani Records)

Cosmic Ear: TRACES (We Jazz)

Matthew Shipp: The Cosmic Piano (Cantaloupe Music)

William Hooker: Jubilation (Org Music)

Steve Lehman: The Music of Anthony Braxton (Pi Recordings)

Amina Claudine Myers: Solace of the Mind (Red Hook Records)

Zoh Amba: Sun (Smalltown Supersound)

Blacks’ Myths Meets Pat Thomas: The Mythstory School (self-released)

Trio Glossia: Trio Glossia (Sonic Transmissions)

Rocio Gimenez Lopez: La Forma Del Sueno (Blue Art)

RARA AVIS

(ranked—these are older recordings come to the light of day)

Marco Eneidi Quartet: Wheat Fields of Kleylehof (Balance Point Acoustics)

William Hooker: A Time Within—Live at the New York Jazz Museum, January 14, 1977 (The Control Group / Valley of Search)

Sun Ra and His Inter-Galactic Research Arkestra: Nuits de la Fondation Maeght 3rd August 1970 (Strut)

Masahiko Tagashi: Session in Paris, Volume 1—Song of the Soil (with Don Cherry and Charlie Haden) (We Want Sounds)

Michael Gregory Jackson: Frequency Equilibrium Koan (moved-by-sound)

June, Spoon, Moon…GOONS: My Favorite Albums of 2025, January 1st to June 1st, for Chasing Them Away

Is there balm in Gilead? Hell to the yeah, folks! It might last only 30-75 minutes, but that’s 30-75 minutes not staring into the abyss! Just for example, May gave us four of the best rap albums of 2025, from Canada (the so-on-a-roll-he-must-be-unconscious Buck 65), South Africa (Yugen Blakrok–remember her bar on the Black Panther soundtrack?), and the good ol’ States (billy woods & Aesop Rock); two African compilations that remind us that revolutions can be successful (if complicated); a live excavation that demonstrates what a group of likeminded individuals (The Pan African Peoples Orchestra) can do in their own ‘hood under the guidance of a dedicated leader (Horace Tapscott) to keep hope alive (seriously); the return of Christer Bothen with the band Cosmic Ear; and a transcendently eccentric throwback r&b record that proves that, while the bros squeezed the weird out of Austin, tryin’ that shit on Memphis would be a whole other story (MonoNeon). Also, please attend to 101-year-old Sun Ra Arkestra mainstay Marshall Allen’s live-from-home (aka Philly) album, which is a more proper celebration of his passage into centenarianism than his respectable but sometimes faint solo album. Please sample some of what I’m talking about via the cumulative Spitify playlist I have included at the very bottom. Tits up, people!

Aesop Rock: Black Hole Superette (Rhymesayers) ****
Ale Hop & Titi Bakorta: Mapambazuko (Nyege Nyege Tapes) *****
Marshall Allen’s Ghost Horizons: Live in Philadelphia, Volume 1 (Otherly Love Records) ****
The Ancients: The Ancients (Eremite)
Ichiko Aoba: Luminescent Creatures (Psychic Hotline)
Artemis: Arboresque (Blue Note) ****
Backxwash: Only Dust Remains (Ugly Hag)****
Bad Bunny: DeBI TiRAR MaS FOToS (Rimas Entertainment)****
Julien Baker & Torres: Send a Prayer My Way (Matador) ****
billy woods: GOLLIWOG (x) (Backwoodz Studios)
The Bitter Ends: The Bitter Ends (Trouble in River City)
Black Milk & Fat Ray: Food from the Gods (Computer Ugly / Fat Beats)
Blacks’ Myths Meets Pat Thomas: The Mythstory School (self-released) ***
Yugen Blakrok: The Illusion Of Being (I.O.T. Records) ***
Booker T & The Plasmic Bleeds: Ode To BC/LY… And Eye Know BO…. da Prez (Mahakala Music)
Benjamin Booker: Lower (Fire Next Time)
Johnny Bragg: Let Me Dream On (Org Music) ***
Brother Ali & Ant: Satisfied Soul (Mello Music)
Buck 65: Keep Moving (self-released)
clipping: Dead Channel Sky (Sub Pop)
Cosmic Ear: TRACES (We Jazz) *****
Sylvie Courvoisier & Mary Halvorson: Bone Bells (Pyroclastic)
Christopher Dammann Sextet: Christopher Dammann Sextet (Out of Your Head)
Deepstaria Enigmatica: The Eternal Now Is the Heart of a New Tomorrow (ESP-Disk)
The Delines: Mr. Luck & Ms. Doom (Jealous Butcher)****
DJ Dadaman & Moscow Dollar: Ka Gaza (Nyege Nyege Tapes)
DJ Shaun-D: From Bubbling to Dutch House (Nyege Nyege Tapes)
doseone & Steel Tipped Dove: All Portrait, No Chorus (BackwoodzStudios) ****
Ex-Void: In Love Again (Tapete Records)
Craig Finn: Always Been (Tamaric / Thirty Tigers)***
FKA twigs: Eusexua (Young Recordings Limited)
Robert Forster: Strawberries (Tapete) *****
Satoko Fujii GENAltitude 1100 Meters (Libra)
Satoko Fujii Trio: Dream a Dream (Libra)****
Satoko Fuji / This is It!: Message (Libra)
Keiji Haino and Natsuki Tamura: what happened there? (Libra)
Galactic and Irma Thomas: Audience with the Queen (Tchoup-Zilla)
Hamell on Trial: Harp (for Harry) (Saustex)
The Hemphill Stringtet: Plays the Music of Julius Hemphill (Out of Your Head Records)
Patterson Hood: Exploding Trees & Airplane Screams (ATO)***
William Hooker: Jubilation (Org Music)*****
William Hooker: A Time Within: Live at the New York Jazz Museum, January 14, 1977 (The Control Group / Valley of Search) ***
Horsegirl: Phonetics On and On (Matador)
HHY & The Kampala Unit: Turbo Meltdown (Nyege Nyege Tapes)****
Michael Gregory Jackson: Frequency Equilibrium Koan (moved-by-sound)
Jeong – Bisio Duo (featuring Joe McPhee): Morning Bells Whistle Bright (ESP-Disk) ****
Anthony Joseph: Rowing Up the River to Get Our Names Back (Heavenly Sweetness)****
JPEG Mafia: I Lay Down My Life for You (Director’s Cut) (self-released)*****
Kelela: In the Blue Light (Warp)***
KINGDOM MOLOGI: Kembo (Nyege Nyege Tapes) ***
Lady Gaga: Mayhem (Interscope)
Steve Lehman: The Music of Anthony Braxton (Pi Recordings)*****
Jinx Lennon: The Hate Agents Leer at the Last Agents of Hope (Septic Tiger)***
James Brandon Lewis: Apple Cores (Anti-)
Jeffrey Lewis: The Even More Freewheelin’ Jeffrey Lewis (Don Giovanni)
LOLO: LOLO (Black Sweat)
Rocio Gimenez Lopez: La Forma Del Sueno (Blue Art)****
K. Curtis Lyle, Jaap Blonk, Damon Smith, Alex Cunningham: A Radio of the Body
Jako Maron: Mahavelouz (Nyege Nyege Tapes)****
Mazinga: Chinese Democracy Manifest—Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 (Rubber Wolf)
The Mekons: Horror (Fire)***
Mean Mistreater: Do or Die (self-released)
Mac Miller: Baloonerism (Warner Records)
Billy Mohler: The Eternal (Contagious)
MonoNeon: You Had Your Chance…Bad Attitude! (Color Red) ****
Matthew Muneses and Riza Printup: Pag-Ibko, Volume 1 (Irabbagast Records)
David Murray Quartet: The Birdsong Project Presents Birdly Serenade (Verve)
Natural Information Society and Bitchin’ Bahas: Totality (Drag City)
NOBRO: Set Your Pussy Free (Dine Alone) ***
Isabelle Olivier: Impressions (Rewound Echoes)
The Onions: Return to Paradise (Hitt Records)
Bill Orcutt Guitar Quartet: Hauslive 4 (Palilalia)***
Organic Pulse Ensemble: Ad Hoc (Ultraaani Records)*****
Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra Led by Horace Tapscott: Live at Widney High December 26th, 1971 (The Village)***
Ivo Perelmamn and Matthew Shipp: Armageddon Flower (TAO Forms)
Pitch, Rhythm, and ConsciousnessSextet (Reva Records)
Marek Pospieszalski Octet & Zoh Amba: NOW! (Project financed by a scholarship from the Minister of Culture and National Heritage “Młoda Polska” & Katowice City of Music UNESCO)
Les Rallizes Denudes: Blind Baby Has Its Mother’s Eyes (Life Goes On)
R.A.P. Ferreira: Outstanding Understanding (Ruby Yacht)
Adam Rudolph, Dave Liebman, Billy Hart: Beingness (Meta)
Bobby Rush and Kenny Wayne Shepherd: Young Fashioned Ways (Deep Rush / RAM Records) ***
Sverre Sæbo Quintet: If, However, You Have Not Lost Your Self Control (SauaJazz)
SAULT: 10 (Sault Global)***
Serengeti: mixtape 2 (serengetiraps / self-released)
Serengeti: Palookaville (serengetiraps / self-released) 
The Sex Pistols: Live in the U.S.A. South East Music Hall, Atlanta, January 5th, 1978 (UME)
The Sharp Pins: Radio DDR (K / Perennial Death)****
Luke Stewart / Silt Remembrance Ensemble: The Order (Cuneiform)***
Ray Suhy / Lewis Porter Quartet: What Happens Next (Sunnyside) ***
SUMAC and Moor Mother: The Film (Thrill Jockey)
John Surman:Flashpoint and Undercurrents(Cuneiform Records) ***
Masahiko Tagashi: Session in Paris, Volume 1—Song of the Soil (with Don Cherry and Charlie Haden) (We Want Sounds)
Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’: Room on the Porch (Concord Jazz)
Taj Mahal & Keb’ Mo’: Room on the Porch for Everyone (UMG EP) 
Ebo Taylor, Adrain Younge, and Ali Shaheed Muhammad: Jazz Is Dead 22 (Jazz is Dead)
Trio Glossia: Trio Glossia (Sonic Transmissions)****
The Tubs: Cotton Crown (self-released)
Kali Uchis: Sincerely (Capitol) ***
Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory: Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory (Jagjaguwar)
Various Artists: African Jazz Invites O.K. Jazz (Planet Ilunga) ***
Various Artists: Prisoners’ Day Compilation (Majazz Project / Palestinian Sound Archive) ***
Various Artists: Roots Rocking Zimbabwe– The Modern Sound of Harare’ Townships 1975-1980 (Analog Africa) ****
Various Artists:Sweet Rebels—The Golden Era of Algerian Pop-Rai (We Want Sounds) ***
The War & Treaty: Plus One (Mercury Nashville)
Alfred White: The Definitive Alfred White (Music Makers Recordings)
Wheelhouse: House and Home (Aerophonic)
Simon Willson: Bet (Endectomorph Records)
Jeong Lim Yang: Synchronicity (Fully Altered Media) 

The Young Mothers: Better If You Let It (Sonic Transmissions)****
Hiroshi Yoshimura: Flora (Temporal Drift) ***

SAMPLE THIS STUFF ON SPOTIFY

No!vember ’24: A Spare Commentary on the Best New (and Newly Discovered) Music I Heard

I’ve got a cold Huey Piano Smith could write another song about, my new block-style teaching assignment is intense (but I like it), and I’ve been traveling throughout the month, so I’m scrambling to get this out on the first. You don’t want to hear me yammer anyway, even if I got to witness both Hailu Mergia and Nicole Mitchell live since last time. Thus:

Albums below in bold font strike me as possible Top Tenners in their respective categories.

NEW WORKS I DUG (in alphabetical order)

  1. Isaiah Collier & The Chosen Few: The World is on Fire (Division 81)—Collier and band are in a serious Trane mode, and the media clips make it sound like the record was made in 2020–but isn’t it really still, and might it possibly eternally stay, 2020?
  2. Jazz Sabbath: The 1968 Tapes (Blacklake)—Yes: early Sabbath jazzed impressively and with a wry sense of humor.
  3. Kenneth Jimenez: Sonnet to Silence (We Jazz)—It’s a musical sonnet to silence, not of silence, and bassist Jimenez’s quartet’s noise is splendid.
  4. Ava Mendoza: The Circular Train (Palilalia)—Is this a Year of the Guitar?
  5. Kendrick Lamar: GNX (pgLang/Interscope)—Sounds great to me, I guess because the music I’m loving most is his cadences and the production is brightly…defiant.
  6. Oaagaada: Music of Ogaadaa (We Jazz)—Finnish free quartet augmented by shruti box and log drum and generating serious energy that’s just contained enough for a dabbler.
  7. Kelly Lee Owens: Dreamstate (dh2)—My friend Kevin suggested this to somebody else when I was in a low mood, I stole the suggestion, and quickly added her to (a bit lesser light, but not by much) Jessie Ware as a mood shifter.
  8. Jeff Parker ETA IVtet: The Way Out of Easy (International Anthem)—Is this a Year of the Guitar?
  9. Paper Jays: Paper Jays (ESP-Disk)—Rhode Island instro-combo combines the spaciness of very early Meat Puppets with the weird, itchy vibe of Penguin Café and a touch of…the Middle East?
  10. Pascal & Baya Rays: Sonic Joy (Ultraani)—Freaky and fun Finnish funk.
  11. claire rousay: The Bloody Lady (Viernulvier)—Ambient master writes a mysterious score for Viktor Kubal’s 1980 film The Bloody Lady doesn’t require you to watch the film to be hypnotized.
  12. Various Artists: TRANSA (Red Hot Org)—Eight “chapters,” 46 songs, a dazzling array of performers (Larraji, Tweedy, Julien Baker, Sumney + ANOHNI, JLin + Moor Mother), consistent quality, surprising musical coherence, and good reason to worry made it easy for me to listen to this beginning to end.
  13. Wussy: Cincinnati Ohio (Shake It)—I really like the lyrics, I’m not too sure about the music, and I can’t hear Lisa well enough.
  14. Charli xcx: Brat and it’s completely different but also still brat (Atlantic)—This irresistibly trashy brat dragged me kicking and screaming and grinning ear to ear through this version.
  15. Dwight Yoakam: Brighter Days (Via/Thirty Tigers)—Dude really cannot make a bad album (always reminds me of Tom Petty that way) and this one (despite a very corny and terrible song and thanks to my favorite-ever cover of “Keep On the Sunny Side”) is no exception: sings great, surrounds himself with a crack band, and writes solidly—and, weirdly, often BRIGHTLY.
  16. Tucker Zimmerman: Dance of Love (4AD)—I was telling a friend the other day that, for a reason I can’t pin down that has to do with the way things are, I am tired of Americana even when it’s good…but I have a feeling I’m (and possibly you’re) gonna need this one, knocked out by a resurfaced legend who has his finger on the pulse o’things, Big Thief behind him, and his arms around a few friends.

EXCELLENT EXCAVATIONS

  1. Black Artists Group: For Peace & Liberty, in Paris, December 1972 (We Want Sound)—Too few recordings are available from a St. Louis, Missouri, gang of players who would later help fire up the NYC loft jazz movement, and this has never before been released.
  2. Emily Remler: Cookin’ at Queens (Resonance)This short-lived, Wes Montgomery-influenced guitarist had already raised the eyebrows of her fellow players and was poised for bigger things when she stepped on a narcotic rainbow; she is flying on these live recordings.
  3. B. B. King: B. B. King in France (Elemental)—The most famous of the several “King”s of the blues is in exceptional form on this unearthed ‘70s set.
  4. Sister Rosetta Tharpe: Live in France—The 1966 Limoges Concert (Elemental)—Her guitar is shorter on beautifully ugly noise than on other available live recordings, but otherwise, 51 and just seven years from passing on, she’s all the way on.
  5. Various Artists: Super Disco Pirata—De Tepito Para El Mundo 1965-1980 (Analog Africa)—Don’t we all need even more cumbia (and related contagious rhythms) in our lives right now?

Check the shit out aurally–though I wish I had a better option than Squatify.

THE SPRAWL: A Tentacular List of Really Good Records Released in 2023, Most of Which I Can Remember Listening To (November 1st Update)

Regarding Some of the Newbies:

  1. Soul Music! I thought Robert Finley‘s very solid Sharecropper’s Son, from 2021, was probably going to be the man’s one essential offering–it seems to me hard to follow up a kind of throwback record that appears out of the blue. Unsurprisingly, I was incorrect, as Finley’s new offering is just as powerful musically as its predecessor with a wider emotional range. If that weren’t enough of a blot on my critical faculties, I was also expecting some fall-off from Chicago’s multitalented, multifaceted Jamila Woods even though I advance-ordered her new album–her first two really hit me where I needed hitting, and I suppose I didn’t want to take a chance it might happen again. Well, it did: her writing’s grown; in fact, it’s taken on a personal dimension that reminds me of Joni Mitchell, and the music suits it. You cannot go wrong with either of these individuals’ new albums if my ranking of them hasn’t already convinced you.
  2. A writer whose work I have recommended before and will again now, and which I regularly envy, Brad Luen, remarked to me recently that there is simply a tidal wave (my quasi-paraphrase) of excellent jazz curling down upon us right now. So you love Charlie Parker? Check out Gabe Baltazar‘s lustrous bow to Bird. Can a jazz orchestra truly be supersonic? Buckle yourself in for Norwegian Gard Nilssen‘s proof (yes, it is a jazz orchestra). You can’t really interpret compositions as distinctly abstract as Roscoe Mitchell’s with vibes, can you? Well, Jason Adasiewicz thought so, and, strangely enough, his is one of my very favorite “Roscoe Mitchell” records and has helped me hear the man himself better. Can an intriguingly delicate two-record jazz set that, if you furrow your brow and bend your ear diligently enough, justifies its title The Depths of Memory, also justify its length? The nicely surnamed Kevin Sun says, “No problem,” and there’s a whole other one he has for us I’ve only sampled that seems to prove he’s not kidding. Steel guitar? Jazz? Experimental jazz? Susan Alcorn has news for us. And can Satoko Fujii turn out albums faster than John Zorn without some dip in quality, imagination, versatility, and intensity? Well, Hibiki, a trio also featuring the magic vibraphone of Taiko Saito (vibes are truly having a moment), is only the fourth record she’s on that’s made the list, so…yes. That isn’t even all of the NEW jazz records on the list–but the list is tapping its fingers on my desk.
  3. The Fugs live! And Ed Sanders is not done! (By the way, keep your eyes peeled for his reissuing of America: A History in Verse, which he thinks and I totally agree is the best thing he’s ever written.)
  4. Need some tranquility? Of course you do, if your eyes are open and your heart works! But none of that “nature sounds” or Muzak-y stuff, right? While it does seem like Japanese albums from the 1980s that evoke/create/embody tranquility have been pouring forth from specialty (boutique?) reissue labels for the last few years, Hiroshi Yoshimura‘s 1986 gift Surround (Temporal Drift–these folks know what they are doing) is a cut above. It will force you to sit back and take notice.
  5. Just when I’m thinking, “Rosalia is about to cut flamenco all the way loose” (not yet! not yet!), Maria Jose Llergo‘s Ultrabella saves the day.
  6. Tri-County Liquidators: remember their name. Their first singles were so good I pretended they were an EP and put them on earlier versions of this list, but their first full-length record, piquantly titled cut my teeth and released by Hitt Rex, justifies their growing reputation as Columbia, Missouri’s sharpest current band–and one of the best ever. I’ve lived in Columbia for 33 years and heard plenty of others, and I think that reputation is wholly justified, based on this album (I will witness for the first time Friday night). The music is dynamic and defies category–it evokes multiple subgenres within the arenas of indie, punk, and (I’m just gonna say) pandemic rock–the group operates democratically by design (everyone writes, plays, and sings), they can but don’t cover anyone else, writing songs with wide emotional range and occasional poetic dabs, and they employ a secret weapon. This does not quite honor their dedication to democracy (fucking music writers!), but Spenser Rook’s shape-shifting guitar is something well worth concentrating on. I must confess that I have known Spenser and bassist/singer/songwriter Marielle Carlos since they were high school sophomores–I taught Marielle (though I learned more from her than she did from me), and Spenser once physically guided me to play the riff to The Sonics’ “The Witch” (not exactly Joe Maphis fare in its degree of difficulty, but I am completely devoid of musical talent, so that’s a small miracle). I am straining but (I think) succeeding at maintaining critical distance, but please just listen for yourself. A band that hand-delivers its new vinyl to advance-orderers deserves at least THAT!

The Updated List

* If an album makes the list, it sounds and feels to me like the equivalent of a Pitchfork 7.5 or better, an All Music 3 ½ stars or better, or an Xgauvian **Honorable Mention or better.
* It can be assumed that my Top 30-40 sound to me the equivalent of an A-, but I’m a teacher in my other incarnation so watch me for grade inflation. It cannot be assumed safely, though, that my Top 10 are all straight A’s.
* After the first 50, my “rankings” are a bit loose; similarly, the entirety of my “Excavations and Reissues” I rank pretty loosely other than the Top 3. Also, I usually jigger the rankings every month upon reflection.
* Items in bold are new to the list I posted at the end of the previous month.

  1. Anohni: My Back Was a Bridge for You to Cross (Secretly Canadian)
  2. Olivia Rodrigo: Guts (Geffen)
  3. 100 gecs: 10,000 gecs (Dog Show/Atlantic)
  4. Gina Burch: I Play My Bass Loud (Third Man)
  5. James Brandon Lewis: For Mahalia (with Love) (AUM Fidelity 2-CD version)
  6. boygenius: the record (Interscope)
  7. Buck 65: Super Dope (self-released?)
  8. Jessie Ware: That! Feels Good! (Universal)
  9. Robert Finley: Black Bayou (Easy Eye)
  10. Romy: Midair (Young)
  11. Noname: Sundial (AWAL Recordings America)
  12. Mark Turner: Live at the Village Vanguard (Giant Step Arts)
  13. Jamila Woods: Water Made Us (Jagjaguwar)
  14. Big Freedia: Central City (Queen Diva)
  15. National Information Society: Since Time is Gravity (Eremite)
  16. Allen Lowe and the Constant Sorrow Orchestra: In the Dark (ESP-Disk)
  17. Ethnic Heritage Ensemble: Spirit Gatherer—A Tribute to Don Cherry (Spiritmuse)
  18. Jason Moran: From the Dancehall to the Battlefield (Yes Records)
  19. London Brew: London Brew (Concord)
  20. Fire! Orchestra: Echoes (Rune Grammofon)
  21. Wadada Leo Smith: Fire Illuminations (Kabell)
  22. billy woods & Kenny Segal: Maps (Backwoodz Studios)
  23. Liv.eGirl in The Half Pearl (Real Life / AWAL)
  24. Kelela: Raven (Warp)
  25. The Mark Lomax II Trio: Tapestry (CFG Multimedia)
  26. Ohad Talmor: Back to the Land (Intakt)
  27. Janelle Monae: The Age of Pleasure (Bad Boy)
  28. Les Raillizes Denudes: Citta’ ’93 (Temporal Drift)
  29. Dropkick Murphys: Okemah Rising (Dummy Luck Music)
  30. Isach Skeidsvoll: Dance to Summon (Ultraani Records)
  31. Miguel Zenon & Luis Perdomo: El Arte del Bolero, Volume 2 (ArcArtists)
  32. Wild Up: Julius Eastman, Volume 3—If You’re So Smart, Why Aren’t You Rich? (New Amsterdam)
  33. Parannoul: After the Magic (Poclanos/Top Shelf)
  34. Christian Scott aTunde Adjuah & Chief Adjuah: Bark Out Thunder Roar Out Lightning (Ropeadope)
  35. Corinna Bailey Rae: Black Rainbows (Black Rainbows)
  36. Gabe Baltazar: Birdology (Fresh Sounds)
  37. Yaeji: With a Hammer (XL Recordings)
  38. Jelly Roll: Whitsitt Chapel (Stoney Creek)
  39. The Urban Art Ensemble: “Ho’opomopono” (CFG Multimedia 16-minute single)
  40. Gard Nilssen’s Supersonic Orchestra: Family (We Jazz)
  41. Bettye LaVette: LaVette! (Jay-Vee)
  42. Felo Le Tee & Mellow & Sleazy: The Ill Wise Men (New Money Gang)
  43. Brandy Clark: Brandy Clark (Warner)
  44. Armand Hammer: We Buy Diabetes Test Strips (Backwoodz Studios)
  45. Rodrigo Campos: Pagode Novo (YB Music)
  46. The Necks: Travel (Northern Spy)
  47. Kali Uchis: Red Moon in Venus (Geffen)
  48. Bobby Rush: All My Love for You (Deep Rush / Thirty Tigers)
  49. Marina Sena: Vicio Inerente (Sony)
  50. Shabazz Palaces: Robed in Rareness (Sub Pop)
  51. Young Fathers: Heavy Heavy (Ninja Tune)
  52. Willie Nelson: I Don’t Know a Thing About Love—The Songs of Harlan Howard (Legacy)
  53. Withered Hand: How to Lov(Reveal)
  54. Lori McKenna: 1988 (CN Records / Thirty Tigers)
  55. Jason Adasiewicz: Roscoe Village—The Music of Roscoe Mitchell (Corbett vs. Dempsey)
  56. Tyler Keith & The Apostles: Hell to Pay (Black & Wyatt)
  57. Tri-County Liquidators: cut my teeth (Hitt Rex)
  58. Algiers: Shook (Matador)
  59. Ashley McBryde: The Devil I Know (Warner Nashville)
  60. Kari Faux: REAL BITCHES DON’T DIE (drunk sum wtr records)
  61. Peso Pluma: GENESIS (Double P)
  62. corook: serious person (part 1(Atlantic)
  63. Killer Mike: Michael (Loma Vista)
  64. Emil Amos: Zone Black (Drag City)
  65. Ice Cold Bishop: Generational Curse (Ice Cold Entertainment)
  66. Allen Lowe and The Constant Sorrow Orchestra: America—The Rough Cut (ESP-Disk)
  67. Tyshawn Sorey: Continuing (Pi Recordings)
  68. Morgan Wade: Psychopath (Ladylike)
  69. KAYTRAMINE: KAYTRAMIUNE, Amine, & KAYTRANADA (CLBN)
  70. ensemble 0: Jojoni (Crammed Discs)
  71. JLin: Perspective (Planet Mu)
  72. Sexyy Red: Hood Hottest Princess (Open Shift)
  73. Henry Threadgill: The Other One (Pi)
  74. Zoh Amba & Chris Corsano & Bill Orcutt: The Flower School (Palilalia)
  75. Chappell Roan: The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess (KRA)
  76. Lewis Capaldi: Broken By Desire To Be Heavenly Sent (Vertigo Berline)
  77. Idris Ackamoor & The Pyramids: Afro-Futuristic Dreams (Strut)
  78. Amanda Shires & Bobbie Nelson: Loving You (ATO)
  79. aja monet: when the poems do what they do (drink sum wtr)
  80. Knoel Scott (featuring Marshall Allen): Celestial (Night Dreamer)
  81. Ember: August in March (Imani)
  82. Kevin Sun: The Depths of Memory (Endectomorph Music)
  83. Florian Arbenz: Conversation #10—Inland (Hammer)
  84. Meshell Ndegeocello: The Omnichord Real Book (Blue Note)
  85. Taj Mahal: Savoy (Cheraw S.C.)
  86. DJ Sabrina the Teenage DJ: Destiny (Spells on the Telly)
  87. Haviah Mighty: Crying Crystals (Mighty Gang)
  88. Rome Streetz: Wasn’t Built in a Day (Big Ghost)
  89. Hein Westgaard Trio: First as Farce (Nice Things)
  90. Maria Jose Llergo: Ultrabella (Sony)
  91. Irreversible Entanglements: Protect Your Light (Impulse! / Verve)
  92. Jaimie Branch: Fly or Die Fly or Die ((world war)) (International Anthem)
  93. Steve Lehman & Orchestre National de Jazz: Ex Machina (Pi)
  94. Caroline Davis: Alula—Captivity (Ropeadope)
  95. Kiko El Crazy: Pila’e Teteo (Rimas)
  96. Islandman (featuring Okay Temiz and Muhlis Berberoglu: Direct-to-Disc Sessions (Night Dreamer)
  97. Edward SimonFemeninas (ArtistShare)
  98. Trio San (featuring Satoko Fujii and Taiko Saito): Hibiki (Jazzdor)
  99. Susan Alcorn: Canto (Relative Pitch)
  100. Lafayette Gilchrist: Undaunted (Morphius)
  101. Kill Bill—The Rapper: Fullmetal Kaiju (EXO)
  102. Speaker Music: Techxodus (Planet Mu)
  103. Andy Fairweather Low: Flang Dang (The Last Music Company)
  104. ARO40: On the Blink (Aerophonic Records)
  105. Money for Guns: All the Darkness That’s in Your Head (CD Baby)
  106. Matana Roberts: Coin Coin Chapter Five—In the garden (Constellation)
  107. Rough Image: Rough Image (WV Sorcerer Productions)
  108. Ingrid Laubrock: The Last Quiet Place (Pyroclastic)
  109. Victoria Monet: Jaguar II (Lovett Music)
  110. Havard Wiik & Tim Daisy: Slight Return (Relay)
  111. David Murray, Questlove, and Ray Angry: Plumb (J.M.I.)
  112. Rob Mazurek & Exploding Star Orchestra: LightningDreamers (International Anthem)
  113. Kaze & Ikue Mori: Crustal Movement (Circum/Libra)
  114. DJ Black Low: Impumelelo (Awesome Tapes from Africa)
  115. Belle and Sebastian: Late Developers  (Matador)
  116. Satoko Fujii & Otomo Yoshihide: Perpetual Motion (Ayler Records)
  117. feeble little horse: Girl with Fish (Saddle Creek)
  118. Rocket 88: House of Jackpots (12XU)
  119. L’Rain: I Killed Your Dog (Mexican Summer)
  120. Nasty Facts: Drive My Car (Left for Dead)
  121. Taiko Saito: Tears of a Cloud (Trouble in the East)
  122. JPEGMAFIA x Danny Brown: Scaring the Hoes (self-released)
  123. Water from Your Eyes: Everyone’s Crushed (Matador)
  124. Lakecia Benjamin: Phoenix (Whirlwind)
  125. Amaarae: Fountain Baby (Golden Angel/Interscope)
  126. Blondshell: Blondshell (Partisan)
  127. Satoko Fujii: Torrent (Libra Records)
  128. Javon Jackson: “With Peter Bradley”—Soundtrack and Original Score (Solid Jackson)
  129. Doja Cat: Scarlet (Kemosabe)
  130. Tianna Esperanza: Terror (BMG)
  131. YMA & Jadsa: Zelena (Matraca)
  132. Palehound: Eye on the Bat (Polyvinyl)
  133. J Hus: Beautiful and Brutal Yard (Black Butter)
  134. Das Kondensat: Anderen Planeten (Why Play Jazz)
  135. Iris DeMent: Workin’ On a World (FlariElla)
  136. David Mirarchi: Ink Folly, Orchid Gleam (Unbroken Sounds) (coming soon….)
  137. Tyler Childers: Rustin’ in the Rain (Hickman Holler)
  138. Baaba Maal: Being (Atelier Live/Marathon Artists)
  139. The Fugs: Dancing in the Universe (Fugs Records)
  140. Ed Sanders: The Sanders – Olufsen Poetry and Classical Music Project (Olufsen)
  141. Bob Dylan: Shadow Kingdom (Columbia)
  142. Lana Del Rey: Did you know that there’s a tunnel under Ocean Blvd (Polydor)
  143. Romulo Froes & Tiago Rosas: Na Goela (YB Music)
  144. Buselli – Wallarab Jazz Orchestra: The Gennett Suite (Patois Records)
  145. Florian Arbenz: Conversation #9—Targeted (Hammer Recordings)
  146. James Brandon Lewis: Eye of I (Anti-)
  147. Sofia Kourtesis: Madres (Ninja Tune)
  148. Joanna Sternberg: I’ve Got Me (Fat Possum)
  149. Tracey Nelson: Life Don’t Miss Nobody (BMG)
  150. Etran De L’Air: Live in Seattle (EP) (Sahel Sounds)
  151. Everything But the Girl: Fuse (Buzzin’ Fly)
  152. Tomas Fujiwara’s Triple Double: March On (self-released)
  153. Ice SpiceLike…? (10K Projects / Capitol Records EP)
  154. otay:onii: Dream Hacker (WV Sorcerer Productions)
  155. Sylvie Courvoisier & Cory Smythe: The Rite of Spring—Spectre d’un songe (Pyroclastic)
  156. Itamar Borochov: Arba (Greenleaf)
  157. Nourished by Time: Erotic Probiotic 2 (Scenic Route)
  158. Walter Daniels: “From Death to Texas” / “Seems Like a Dream” (Spacecase Records 45)
  159. Nakimbembe Embaire Group: Nakimbembe Embaire Group (Nyege Nyege Tapes)
  160. Shirley Collins: Archangel Hill (Domino)
  161. Karol G: Manana Sera Bonito (Universal Music Latino)
  162. Tinashe: BB/ANG3L (Nice Life)
  163. Hollie Cook: Happy Hour in Dub (Merge)
  164. Andrew Cyrille: Music Delivery / Percussion (Intakt)
  165. Kate Gentile: b i o m e i.i (Obliquity)
  166. Yves Tumor: Praise a Lord Who Chews but Which Does Not Consume; (Or Simply, Hot Between Worlds) (Warp)
  167. Open Mike Eagle: another triumph of ghetto engineering (AutoReverse)
  168. Yonic South: Devo Challenge Cup (Wild Honey)
  169. Rudy Royston: Day (Greenleaf Music)
  170. Chien Chien Lu: Built in System—Live in New York (Giant Step Arts)
  171. Pangaea: Changing Channels (Hessle Audio)
  172. Lewsberg: Out and About (Lewsberg / 12XU)
  173. Basher: Doubles (Sinking City)
  174. That Mexican OT: Lonestar Luchador (Good Talk)
  175. Daniel Villarreal: Lados B (International Anthem)
  176. Staples Jr. Singers: Tell Heaven (EP) (Luaka Bop) Note: the vinyl gets you more great minutes of testifying.
  177. Brandee Younger: Brand New Life (Impulse!)
  178. Babe, Terror: Teghnojoyg (self-released)
  179. Heinali: Kyiv Eternal (Injazero)
  180. Vinny Golia Quartet: No Refunds (Unbroken Sounds)
  181. Kresten Osgood / Bob Moses / Tisziji Munoz: Spiritual Drum Kingship (Gotta Let It Out)
  182. The Art Ensemble of Chicago: From Paris to Paris (Rogue Art)
  183. Clarence “Bluesman” Davis: Shake It For Me (Music Maker Foundation)
  184. The War and The Treaty: Lover’s Game (Mercury Nashville)
  185. Aroof Aftab, Vijay Iyer & Shahzad, Ismaily: Love in Exile (Verve)
  186. Asher Gamedze: Turbulence and Pulse (International Anthem)
  187. Normal Nada the Krakmaxter: Tribal Progressive Heavy Metal (Nyege Nyege Tapes)
  188. Natural Child: Be M’Guest (Natural Child Music)
  189. Tanya Tucker: Sweet Western Sound (Fantasy)

Excavations and Reissues

  1. Mahlathini and the Mahotella Queens: Music Inferno—The Indestructible Beat Tour 1988-89 (Umsakazo Records)
  2. Kashmere Stage Band: Texas Thunder Soul 1968-1974 (Now-Again)
  3. The Replacements: Tim—Let It Bleed Edition (Rhino)
  4. Dorothy Ashby: With Strings Attached (New Land Records)
  5. Walter Bishop, Jr.: Bish at the Bank—Live in Baltimore (Cellar Live)
  6. Various Artists: Yebo! Rare Mzansi Party Beats from Apartheid’s Dying Years (BBE)
  7. Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra: 60 Years (The Village)
  8. Os Tincoas: Canto Coral Afrobrasiliero (Sanzala Cultural)
  9. Various Artists: Ecuatoriana (Analog Africa)
  10. Leon Keita: Leon Keita (Analog Africa)
  11. Hiroshi Yoshimura: Surround (Temporal Drift)
  12. Nina Simone: You’ve Got to Learn (Verve)
  13. William S. Burroughs: Nothing Here But the Recordings (Dais Records)
  14. Balka Sound: Balka Sound (Strut)
  15. Sonic Youth: Live in Brooklyn (Silver Current)
  16. John Coltrane: Evenings at The Village Gate (Impulse!)
  17. Various Artists: Playing for The Man at The Door (Smithsonian Folkways)
  18. Hiatus Kaiyote: Choose Your Weapon (Flying Buddha / Sony Masterworks)
  19. Dream Dolphin: Gaia—Selected Ambient & Downtempo Works (1996 – 2003) (Music from Memory)
  20. Sonny Stitt: Boppin’ in Baltimore—Live at the Left Bank (Jazz Detective)
  21. Ihsan Al-Munzer: Belly Dance (BBE)
  22. Eddie & Ernie: Time Waits for No One (Mississippi Records)
  23. Various Artists: Purple Haze from East, Volume 1 (WV Sorcerer Productions)
  24. Various Artists: Purple Haze from East, Volume 2 (WV Sorcerer Productions)
  25. The Southern University Jazz Ensemble: Goes to Africa with Love (Now-Again)
  26. Roy Campbell / William Parker / Zan Matsuura: Visitation of the Spirits—The Pyramind Trio Live, 1985 (No Business)
  27. Sonny Rollins: Live at Finlandia Hall, Helsinki 1972 (Svart)
  28. Various Artists: The Best of Revelation Records 1959-1962 (NarroWay)
  29. Shizuka: Heavenly Persona (Black Editions)
  30. Jacqueline Humbert & David Rosenboom: Daytime Viewing (Unseen Worlds)
  31. Bob Dylan: Time Out of Mind Stripped Naked (Columbia)
  32. Various Artists: Blacklips Bar—Androgyns and Deviants / Industrial Romance for Bruised and Battered Angels 1992-1995 (Anthology Recordings)
  33. Various Artists: Con Piano, Sublime—Early Recordings from the Caribbean 1907-1921 (Magnificent Sounds)
  34. Various Artists: Space Echo—The Mystery Behind the Cosmic Sound of Cabo Verde Revealed! (Analog Africa)
  35. Ibrahim Hesnawi: The Father of Libyan Reggae (Habibi Funk)
  36. RP Boo: Legacy Volume 2 (Planet Mu)
  37. Les Raillizes Denudes: ’77 Live (Temporal Drift)
  38. Eddie Lockjaw Davis and Shirley Scott: Cookin’ With Jaws and The Queen (Craft)
  39. Professor James Benson:The Gow-Dow Experience (Jazzman Records)
  40. Little Bob and The Lollipops: Nobody But You (Mississippi Records)