Andrew Ryce's Top 50 Albums of 2013
A list every bit as flawed and idiosyncratic as my big-eared self. No Beyonce because I still don't know where it belongs, but if it were released earlier it'd certainly be in this post. I kept the formatting bare to keep it as simple as possible—hit me up if you need help figuring out what something is.
1. Autre Ne Veut - Anxiety
Perfectly glossy ‘80s pop contorted into by stomach-twisting insecurity, with endless hooks that twist and turn like overgrown vines.
3. Jessy Lanza - Pull My Hair Back
The year’s most welcome surprise—rarely do albums this catchy sound this unassuming. Haim for the Hyperdub set.
Grime torn apart in a spastic fit and then set loose to float disparately through space, where no one can hear your gun cocking sounds.
Trying to capture the magic of ‘60s psychedelia through the lens of house and techno sounds like a disaster, but if anyone could do it, it’s Koze, who proves there doesn’t have to be any clear line between dance music and pop songwriting.
6. Special Request - Soul Music
The jungle and ‘ardkore-inspired album that kicked UK dance music into full gear, too spirited to be derivative.
7. Natasha Kmeto - Crisis
One of the strongest voices in American underground electronic music both artistically and literally (she’s a powerhouse singer), Crisis is a collection of 21st century torch songs.
8. Drake - Nothing Was The Same
More of the same in spite of the title, and all the more welcome for it.
A live album showcasing the true breadth of one of modern classical’s most distinctive voices, and there’s not much classicist about him.
10. Blue Hawaii - Untogether
Moonlit pop exploring a breakup in wrenching detail, where vocal outbursts and skittering beats are cathartic.
Uncommonly beautiful dub techno that escapes cliche by virtue of simplicity.
12. Vampire Weekend - Modern Vampires Of The City
Wherein they make good on all those Paul Simon comparisons in a much more palatable way.
13. Erika - Hexagon Cloud
An update on classic Detroit electro made to mimic the city’s sad and crumbling state, all weeping machines and lonely reverb.
14. Dawn Richard - Goldenheart
An epic R&B-as-holy-war tale that's equally ambitious as it is cohesive.
15. Marcel Fengler - Fokus
A reflective turn from the Berghain resident that no one really expected.
A triumphant comeback for a strong R&B singer whose career seemed permanently mired in major label politics.
17. Alix Perez - Chroma Chords
Modern drum & bass injected with Eglo soul and just enough Radio 1 sheen to make it slippery and shiny.
18. Ariana Grande - Yours Truly
Timeless teen pop that borrows from trap, doo-wop and Mariah Carey, all delivered with one of the year's most unforgettable new voices.
19. Blood Orange - Cupid Deluxe
An ensemble R&B album that unfolds like a Woody Allen movie.
20. Moon B - Untitled [PPU]
Stoned analogue funk from Atlanta that stands head-and-shouders above a legion of producers who have been doing similar work on the West Coast for years.
21. DJ Rashad - Double Cup
Footwork goes international, and wears it well.
22. Function - Incubation
The former Sandwell man turns in one of the year's most well-rounded techno albums.
23. Holden - The Inheritors
James Holden "builds 'is own fucking synths" (in the words of my editor) and makes krautrock that sounds like a coven ritual circa 1540.
Where much of the noise world spent 2013 turning to techno-inspired rhythms, Pharmakon combined the form with black metal nihilism and created arguably the year's scariest record.
25. Jon Hopkins - Immunity
The guy who occasionally works with Coldplay makes a techno album, and it's exactly as good and as bad as you'd expect.
26. The Knife - Shaking The Habitual
Let's talk about gender, baby, over ten-minute beds of sputtering synths and malfunctioning machines. It's The Who's Quadrophenia dressed up in a Swedish spacesuit, and yes, that's a good thing.
27. Forest Swords - Engravings
Dub inspired by a thick of English countryside instead of the Caribbean isles—mossy as fuck.
28. Marcos Cabral - False Memories
Braindead IDM experiments from the late '90s that ended up the most forward-thinking material on L.I.E.S. all year.
29. Daniel Avery - Drone Logic
Relentless techno that goes off like a firecracker in all the right places.
30. Darkstar - News From Nowhere
The dudes who made "Aidy's Girl Is A Computer" continue down their early '70s Floyd rabbit hole (one dude even looks like David Gilmour now) and craft some indelible pop melodies in the process.
31. Lumigraph - Nautically Inclined
The best of a healthy Opal Tapes batch this year, Nautically Inclined was techno submerged in spit and vinegar that built itself off samples torn haphazardly like construction paper.
32. CHVRCHES - The Bones Of What You Believe
A Glaswegian sugar rush of the highest import, with deceptively complex song structures to keep you guessing.
33. Machinedrum - Vapor City
A refinement on its predecessor Room(s) instead of another radical reinvention, what Vapor City lacks in forceful impact it makes up for in enduring earworms and svelte production values.
You don't have a heart if you don't like at least a few songs on this record—and the joke's on you, because there isn't a bad one in sight.
35. August Alsina - Downtown: Life Under The Gun
The man frequently billed The-Dream's protege outshone his mentor with this short mixtape where he laughs, cries and triumphs, sometimes in the span of a single track.
36. Date Palms - The Dusted Sessions
Desert rock in a baroque style, viola never sounded so badass.
37. Laurel Halo - Chance Of Rain
The closest I've heard anyone approach Actress' level of sublime rhythmic confusion.
38. The Haxan Cloak - Excavation
The psychological thriller companion to Pharmakon's gorefest, Excavation doesn't let you get comfortable for even a millisecond.
39. Earl Sweatshirt - Doris
The most hyped member of Odd Future delivers their best record not by Frank Ocean, a pleasantly blunted collection of old-school jams that sounds like 36 Chambers made by a bunch of apathetic teenagers.
40. Dadub - You Are Eternity
Stroboscopic Artefacts continue their great juggling game with this one, an ambitious techno album whose inventiveness outshines its clumsily political messages.
41. Deerhunter - Monomania
I fell in love with their sumptuous psychedelic rock and stayed for the frayed acid folk.
42. Vatican Shadow - Remember Your Black Day
It's still a pretty meagre offering, but his first "official album" is the noise head's most representative techno work yet.
43. Perera Elsewhere - Everlast
"A gothic atmosphere that actually kind of sounds like it was recorded in a frigid castle, her vocals echoing through chambers of cold stone."
44. Ryan Hemsworth - Guilt Trips
Just as meek and unassuming as the man himself, Guilt Trips feels more like a bedroom indie record than the club-busting DJ sets he's become known for.
Mathematical techno that sounds like it was made on an assembly line, frightening robot arms and all.
46. Sky Ferreira - Night Time, My Time
Neither disappointing nor mind-blowing, Ferreira's long-awaited debut is just a collection of well-written songs delivered in an affable, '90s-alt-rock-inspired palette of flannel and other loose, draping fabric.
One of Japan's most underrated electronic music producers siphons all his influences into an unclassifiable album of technoid paranoia and spacey explorations.
48. Chevel - Air Is Freedom
A young Italian producer finding his sound right before our ears.
A sprawling album from a nine-strong Bristol collective that represent their city's most fearless new musical minds—it shouldn't work as an album, but its ramshackle flow is part of the charm.
The infamous duo continue to bring the emotion back to their music after a decade of aggravatingly precise digital ice sculptures—not that the music here doesn't feel randomly generated, rhythm patterns budding and falling away on command.